{"id":117321,"date":"2023-08-30T23:37:04","date_gmt":"2023-08-30T23:37:04","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/blogcamlodipine.com\/?p=117321"},"modified":"2023-08-30T23:37:04","modified_gmt":"2023-08-30T23:37:04","slug":"two-years-after-afghanistan-exit-biden-resists-calls-for-more-taliban-contact","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogcamlodipine.com\/politics\/two-years-after-afghanistan-exit-biden-resists-calls-for-more-taliban-contact\/","title":{"rendered":"Two Years After Afghanistan Exit, Biden Resists Calls for More Taliban Contact"},"content":{"rendered":"
When the last American soldier flew out of Afghanistan on Aug. 30, 2021, leaving the country to Taliban rule, the world braced for a human rights nightmare.<\/p>\n
In that sense, the Taliban have met expectations. The country\u2019s extremist rulers, who seized power from an American-backed government of 20 years, have carried out revenge killings, torture and abductions, according to international observers. They have also imposed the world\u2019s most radical gender policies, denying education and employment to millions of Afghan women and girls \u2014 even shutting down beauty parlors.<\/p>\n
On Aug. 14, a group of United Nations officials issued a report saying the Taliban had engaged in \u201ca continuous, systematic and shocking rescinding of a multitude of human rights, including the rights to education, work, and freedoms of expression, assembly and association.\u201d<\/p>\n
Some analysts and U.S. officials had clung to the hope that the Taliban had moderated since they last controlled the country in the 1990s, or that they would at least make concessions to Western demands on human rights to win diplomatic recognition or economic aid as the country suffers a deepening humanitarian crisis.<\/p>\n
It was not to be.<\/p>\n
\u201cThe concept of a \u2018reformed\u2019 Taliban has been exposed as mistaken,\u201d the U.N. experts wrote.<\/p>\n
As a result, Biden administration officials have ruled out the possibility that they would agree to Taliban demands for international recognition, sanctions relief and access to billions of dollars of assets frozen in the United States.<\/p>\n
At the same time, aspects of Taliban rule have modestly surprised some U.S. officials. Fears of civil war have not materialized, and the Taliban have cracked down on corruption and banned opium poppy cultivation, although it remains to be seen how strictly the ban will be enforced.<\/p>\n
And on President Biden\u2019s top priority for the country \u2014 preventing a return of terrorist groups that might threaten the United States \u2014 the Taliban leaders appear to be meeting Washington\u2019s approval. That is crucial, given that the United States invaded Afghanistan in 2001 because the Taliban harbored leaders of Al Qaeda who plotted the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.<\/p>\n
\u201cI said Al Qaeda would not be there,\u201d Mr. Biden said on June 30, in response to a reporter\u2019s question about the American withdrawal. \u201cI said we\u2019d get help from the Taliban. What\u2019s happening now?\u201d<\/p>\n
The question was rhetorical; Mr. Biden\u2019s clear implication was that he had been vindicated by his decision to withdraw American troops.<\/p>\n
That has not been enough to persuade Mr. Biden to restore any U.S. support to the country. But some humanitarian groups and Afghanistan experts are calling on the Biden administration to soften its position and, at a minimum, provide the Taliban with direct economic assistance to alleviate the country\u2019s desperate poverty and hunger.<\/p>\n
\u201cThe world needs to think hard about what it\u2019s trying to achieve in Afghanistan these days, and most of the stuff we want to do requires working with the Taliban,\u201d said Graeme Smith, an analyst at the Crisis Group who has worked in Afghanistan since 2005 and recently spent months in the country assessing conditions under Taliban rule.<\/p>\n
Mr. Smith recently wrote an essay in the publication Foreign Affairs urging Western governments and institutions \u201cto establish more functional relationships with the Taliban.\u201d That could include assistance with the country\u2019s electricity grid, banking system and water management, Mr. Smith said.<\/p>\n
The need is especially acute, Mr. Smith added, given that international humanitarian aid \u2014 which the United States and other countries currently send directly to aid groups, circumventing the Taliban government \u2014 has been dwindling.<\/p>\n
Such cooperation is unlikely in the near term, Mr. Smith said, given what he called the \u201ctoxic politics\u201d of Afghanistan. Republicans have attacked Mr. Biden for what they called a poorly managed and undignified exit from the country, a dynamic that may be making the president more risk averse.<\/p>\n
\u201cIf Biden is re-elected, that will buy him a little bit of operating space for some practical solutions,\u201d Mr. Smith said.<\/p>\n
Taliban officials say U.S. policies are exacerbating suffering in Afghanistan, because longstanding American sanctions against Taliban leaders discourage foreign investment and trade in the country.<\/p>\n
They insist that the United States has no right to hold $7 billion in assets deposited by their predecessors at the Federal Reserve in New York. (Mr. Biden last year ordered half that money into a trust for the humanitarian needs of Afghanistan\u2019s people.)<\/p>\n
The Biden administration has some contacts with Taliban representatives. Over the past two years, Thomas West, the State Department\u2019s special representative for Afghanistan, has traveled to Doha, Qatar, for several meetings with Taliban officials, most recently on July 30 and 31.<\/p>\n
An official State Department description of that session criticized the Taliban and \u201cthe deteriorating human rights situation in Afghanistan, particularly for women, girls and vulnerable communities,\u201d and said U.S. officials \u201cexpressed grave concern regarding detentions, media crackdowns and limits on religious practice.\u201d<\/p>\n
But the summary also offered some positive words about declining opium poppy production, promising economic indicators and counterterrorism efforts, and it hinted that further cooperation might be possible. At a meeting with Afghan government finance and banking officials, the description said, Mr. West and his colleagues \u201cvoiced openness to a technical dialogue regarding economic stabilization issues soon.\u201d<\/p>\n
When it comes to cooperation against terrorism, however, some officials and analysts remain deeply mistrustful, fearing that the Taliban are merely containing Al Qaeda in the short term to avoid provoking the United States. The Taliban are also battling a local branch of the Islamic State terrorist group. But some say that means little, given that the Islamic State openly challenges Taliban rule, making such operations clearly in the Taliban\u2019s self-interest.<\/p>\n
\u201cSeeking to engage the Taliban on terrorism while ignoring what they do to women is a mistake,\u201d Lisa Curtis, a National Security Council official in the Trump White House, said at a panel hosted by the Middle East Institute in July.<\/p>\n
The Biden administration draws clear limits on such contacts, however. \u201cAny kind of recognition of the Taliban is completely off the table,\u201d a deputy State Department spokesman, Vedant Patel, told reporters in April. And officials say American diplomats will not return to Kabul, the capital, any time soon.<\/p>\n
Zalmay Khalilzad, who served as President Donald J. Trump\u2019s envoy to the Taliban and negotiated the troop withdrawal plan that Mr. Biden inherited, argued for a change in U.S. policy. \u201cWe have wished the problem to go away,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n
Mr. Khalilzad is among those who say that, relative to the worst expectations, the Taliban have shown some restraint.<\/p>\n
\u201cMany thought things would be a lot worse than they are \u2014 that there would be a lot more terrorism, a lot more refugees, and that there would be bloodshed\u201d on a much wider scale, he said.<\/p>\n
But granting the Taliban any credit remains highly controversial. Last month, a senior Conservative Party member of Britain\u2019s parliament, Tobias Ellwood, traveled to Afghanistan and posted a video declaring it \u201ca country transformed\u201d \u2014 in many ways for the better. \u201cSecurity has vastly improved, corruption is down, and the opium trade has all but disappeared,\u201d he asserted, adding that the economy was growing.<\/p>\n
Mr. Ellwood called for Britain to reopen its embassy in Kabul, which was shuttered in August 2021, and for his government to engage with the Taliban rather than \u201cshout from afar.\u201d<\/p>\n
But after being widely denounced, he deleted the video from X, the site formerly known as Twitter, and now faces a vote of no confidence in his chairmanship of the House of Commons\u2019 defense committee.<\/p>\n
Michael Crowley<\/span> is a diplomatic correspondent in the Washington bureau. He joined The Times in 2019 as a White House correspondent in the Trump administration and has filed from dozens of countries. More about Michael Crowley<\/span><\/p>\n