BFF-19 US doesn’t want ‘precipitous’ withdrawal from Afghanistan: senator

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BFF-19

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US doesn’t want ‘precipitous’ withdrawal from Afghanistan: senator

KABUL, April 15, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – The United States does not want to
pursue a “precipitous” withdrawal from Afghanistan, a top Democratic lawmaker
said in Kabul on Monday amid an ongoing push to end the war.

Senator Jeanne Shaheen, who sits on the influential Senate Armed Services
Committee that oversees the US military, also stressed that women must have a
place at the table as the US tries to negotiate with the Taliban.

President Donald Trump last year told advisors he wanted to slash
America’s 14,000-strong troop presence in Afghanistan by about half,
prompting criticism he was seeking to rush a withdrawal.

“What we’ve heard here (is) that whatever negotiated settlement ends the
conflict, that it be done in a way that’s very deliberate, that ensures a
transition that all sides can participate in, and that there should not be a
precipitous withdrawal from Afghanistan,” Shaheen told reporters at the US
embassy.

Congressional colleagues agreed, she said, adding “that’s the position of
the administration as well”.

“There is a deliberate position that may not always be reflected in the
tweets that come from the White House,” she said, referring to Trump’s
penchant of firing off unexpected foreign policy messages.

Shaheen also sits on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and is the
only woman on the panel.

She said it is vital for women to be included in talks with the Taliban,
whose regime shredded any Western notion of women’s rights and executed women
for allegations of adultery.

“What we know from the data is that when women are engaged, there is about
a 35 percent more likely chance that those negotiations will … endure for a
longer period of time,” Shaheen said.

It’s important that “whatever comes out of any peace negotiations, that we
support having women at the table.”

A fresh round of talks is expected to take place later this month between
Afghan political leaders, including some officials from the Kabul government,
and the Taliban in the Qatari capital Doha.

The Taliban have long refused to speak officially with Kabul, dubbing the
government a “puppet” of the West, and the militants have insisted that
government officials are attending only in a “personal capacity”.

The makeup of the delegation has not yet been announced, but an initial
list reportedly only had two female participants.

BSS/AFP/SSS/1657 hrs