KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — The Taliban launched an attack on a second Afghan city in as many days on Sunday, an official said, even as a United States envoy says the U.S. and the Taliban are “at the threshold of an agreement” to end America’s longest war.
The spokesman for the Baghlan province police chief, Jawed Basharat, said gunbattles continued on the outskirts of its capital, Puli Khumri. There was no immediate word on any casualties.
The attack came a day after the Taliban attacked Kunduz, one of Afghanistan’s largest cities, in the province to the north and killed at least 16 people and wounded nearly 100. The interior ministry on Sunday said the Taliban had been cleared from that city but some fighters had fled to Baghlan.
“We hear the sound of blasts. The people are so worried,” Safdar Mohsini, chief of the Baghlan provincial council, told The Associated Press. “The Taliban are in residential areas fighting with Afghan security forces. We need reinforcements to arrive as soon as possible, otherwise the situation will go from bad to worse.”
If the Taliban enter the city they will be very difficult to repel, Mohsini added, saying security forces at some checkpoints had run away without resistance. The city is 140 miles (230 kilometers) north of Kabul.
The attacks are seen as strengthening the Taliban’s negotiating position in the talks with U.S. envoy Zalmay Khalilzad, who for nearly a year has sought a deal on a U.S. troop withdrawal in exchange for Taliban guarantees that Afghanistan will not be used as a launch pad for global attacks. Critics have warned, however, that the Taliban are merely waiting out the U.S. and that another U.S. goal of the talks, a cease-fire, likely will not happen as foreign troops leave.
Khalilzad said he was visiting Kabul on Sunday to brief the Afghan government on the details of a deal that is not yet final. The latest round of talks with the Taliban in Qatar had ended, he said.
The new attack in Baghlan came hours after Khalilzad said he raised the Kunduz attack in his talks with the Taliban and told them “violence like this must stop.” Despite the warning, the U.S. envoy appeared determined to move forward on a deal that plans for the withdrawal of some 14,000 remaining U.S. troops in Afghanistan, where they train and support Afghan forces but also come to their aid with airstrikes and counterterror operations.
The approaching agreement with the Taliban “will reduce violence and open the door for Afghans to sit together to negotiate an honorable & sustainable peace and a unified, sovereign Afghanistan that does not threaten the United States, its allies, or any other country,” the Afghan-born Khalilzad said on Twitter.
A U.S. official with the negotiation team said Khalilzad in Kabul would meet with a wide range of Afghans, including the government leadership.
“We can tell you that any potential peace deal will not be based on blind trust, but will instead contain clear commitments that are subject to our monitoring and verification,” the official said. “Any potential deal would bring together all sides for negotiation, enable the withdrawal of American forces and ensure the security of the American homeland.”
The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the official wasn’t authorized to discuss the matter with the media.
The official said that “if and when we are able to announce an agreement, the process will pivot to intra-Afghan negotiations where the Taliban will sit with other Afghans and together they will commit to a permanent and comprehensive cease-fire.”
That reference to “other Afghans” instead of the Afghan government is another reminder of the challenges in any intra-Afghan talks ahead, as the Taliban have refused to negotiate with the government of Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, calling it a puppet of the U.S.