WASHINGTON
(AP) — Intelligence that Afghan militants might have accepted Russian
bounties for killing American troops did not scuttle the U.S.-Taliban
agreement or President Donald Trump’s plan to withdraw thousands more
troops from the war.
It did give critics of the deal another reason to say the Taliban shouldn’t be trusted.
The
bounty information was included in Trump’s president’s daily
intelligence brief on Feb. 27, according to intelligence officials, and
two days later, the U.S. and Taliban signed an agreement in Qatar. The
agreement clears the way for America to end 19 years in Afghanistan and
gives Trump a way to make good on his promise to end U.S. involvement in
what he calls “endless wars.”
On
March 3, three days after the agreement was signed, the president had a
35-minute phone call with Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, a co-founder of
the Taliban and head of their political office in Qatar. After reports
of the bounties broke in late June, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had a
video conference with Baradar to make it clear that the U.S. expects
the Taliban to live up to their commitments,
Under
the agreement, the U.S. will pull all its troops out of Afghanistan by
May 2021. So far the U.S. has reduced U.S. troop presence in Afghanistan
from 12,000 to 8,600 — a target reached ahead of schedule. Now, Trump
is considering when and how quickly to further shrink the U.S. military
footprint.
For
its part, the Taliban committed to reducing violence, cutting ties with
al-Qaida and sitting down with other Afghans to craft a political road
map for their country’s future. The Taliban have pledged to ensure that
the areas they control — about half the country at this time — are not
used by militant groups to target the U.S. and its allies.
Critics of the deal like Rep. Mike Waltz, R-Fla., say the agreement is simply a “cover for withdrawal.”
“I
have serious concerns with how this agreement has been pursued,” Waltz
said. “The Taliban has shown repeatedly — through violence and bombings
both before and after the deal was signed — that they are not serious
about adhering to their end of the bargain.”
The
White House insists the president was not aware of the intelligence but
that the administration responded to the information to protect troops.
Administration officials say Russia — along with other countries,
including Iran — have been providing the Taliban money and guns for
years, although bounties would signal stepped up Russian aggression.
Military
experts note that the Taliban didn’t need any monetary incentive to
kill Americans. They also point out that the U.S. worked against the
Soviets in the late 1980s, providing militants with shoulder-held
anti-aircraft Stinger missiles, which turned around the course of the
war and sped-up negotiated Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan.
“Bounties
or not, what we judge the Taliban on is whether they honor the deal,”
said Scott Smith, an expert on Afghanistan peace processes with the U.S.
Institute of Peace.
Both
Republican and Democratic lawmakers, defense officials and Afghan
experts claim the Taliban has not taken steps to live up to the now
four-month-old agreement and they are skeptical the Taliban will ever
break with al-Qaida, which conducted the 9/11 attacks.
The
U.S. general overseeing American military operations in Afghanistan,
Marine Gen. Frank McKenzie, said in mid-June that he is dubious of the
Taliban’s intentions to fulfill its commitments, suggesting that he
would not favor a rapid U.S. withdrawal. McKenzie said it is an open
question whether the Taliban will keep Afghanistan from being the
launchpad for attacks on the U.S.
“They have not yet completely made that case,” McKenzie said, adding that “time is now beginning to grow short.”
Mike
Morell, former CIA acting and deputy director, told the House Homeland
Security Committee’s intelligence and counterterrorism panel on June 24
that the Taliban is militarily and politically stronger than at any time
since 2001 when the Taliban refused to hand over al-Qaida leader Osama
bin Laden, who orchestrated the 9/11 attacks.
“I
believe that the Taliban, in its peace negotiations with the United
States, have told us what we want to hear in order to encourage us to
leave the country,” Morell said.
Thomas
Joscelyn, a long time critic of the deal at the Foundation for the
Defense of Democracies, said the Taliban have repeatedly said al-Qaida
has not been in Afghanistan since 2001. “Without any verification or
enforcement mechanisms — and there are no such provisions specified in
the text of the deal released to the public — there is no reason to
think the Taliban is telling the truth now,” he said.
The
Defense Department’s latest report on the war said the Taliban has
stepped up violence against Afghan forces, but has avoided attacks on
U.S. or coalition troops.
The
militants have joined with Afghan and U.S. forces in hitting Islamic
State fighters hard, pressuring the group to relinquish control of an
area in eastern Afghanistan. But IS still has the ability to conduct
mass-casualty attacks, the report said.
The
report also said U.S.–led counterterrorism operations have degraded
al-Qaida, which now poses only a “limited threat” to the U.S. The
Pentagon report said, however, that the Taliban maintain close ties to
al-Qaida.
Pompeo
says only a couple hundred active al-Qaida fighters remain in
Afghanistan. On Thursday, Pompeo hinted, without elaborating, that he’d
seen indications that the Taliban are no longer going to let al-Qaida
operate in Afghanistan.
“I
can’t talk about the things that I have seen,” Pompeo said on Fox News
Channel’s Special Report. “But know this. I spoke with the Taliban again
just this week in an effort to further the peace negotiations to try to
get them to the table with the Afghan government.”
However,
a May report by the United Nations says al-Qaida is “quietly gaining
strength in Afghanistan while continuing to operate with the Taliban
under their protection.” The report says 400 to 600 al-Qaida operatives
are active in 12 of Afghanistan 34 provinces. The U.N. report also
reported six meetings between al-Qaida and Taliban senior leaders during
the past 12 months — while U.S.-Taliban talks were ongoing.
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