The Taliban said Monday in Tehran that it will continue its “fight and jihad” if foreign troops do not withdraw from Afghanistan by May 2021 as agreed with the US.
A delegation from the movement headed by its co-founder Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar arrived in Iran’s capital last week at the invitation of the foreign ministry and met with Tehran’s top diplomat Mohammad Javad Zarif on Sunday.
“The staying on of troops beyond 14 months, whether American or NATO troops, means the continuation of Afghanistan’s occupation,” Suhail Shaheen, a member of the movement’s negotiating team, told reporters at a press conference.
Read more: Afghanistan’s Ghani urges Biden to increase pressure on Taliban
Washington struck a deal with the Taliban in Qatar in February last year to begin withdrawing its troops in return for security guarantees from the militants and a commitment to kickstart peace talks with the Afghan government.
“We have fought occupation for 20 years. Therefore, in that case, we are forced to continue our fight and jihad,” Shaheen added.
The United States has about 2,500 troops in Afghanistan, down from close to 13,000 a year ago.
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani on Friday urged new US President Joe Biden to put pressure on the Taliban and to avoid rushing into withdrawing more American troops.
@POTUS and @US4AfghanPeace must put pressure on Taliban to end killing Afghans. Any interim regime would mean civil war. Afghan wants the continuation & strenghtening of current political institutions.@menapal1 @StateDept @coe @UN
— Gul Marjan (@gul_marjan) January 29, 2021
His appeal came days after the Biden administration said it intends to reconsider last year’s agreement between former president Donald Trump’s administration and the Taliban.
“If they want to reevaluate, they can, but they are obliged to remain committed” to the agreement, Shaheen said.
The Afghan government blames the Taliban for the lack of progress in peace negotiations that started in September last year and resumed early January in Doha.
Kabul is pushing for a permanent ceasefire and to protect governance arrangements in place since the ouster of the Taliban by a US-led invasion following the September 11, 2001 attacks in New York.
But violence has escalated across Afghanistan, with the Taliban refusing to make concessions.
Read more: Taliban are not sticking to the promises made in the Afghan peace deal: Pentagon
The Taliban’s violent activity during the last three months of 2020 included increased attacks in Kabul city and an uptick in targeted assassinations of Afghan government officials, civil-society leaders and journalists, the US Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) said in a report released on Monday.
The report said there were 2,586 civilian casualties during the quarter, including 810 deaths and 1,776 injuries.
“This quarter’s casualties remain exceptionally high for the winter months when fighting normally subsides,” the report said.
It also said that US airstrikes in Afghanistan increased during the quarter as US forces provided defensive support to Afghan forces.
Afghan officials said that two journalists survived assassination attempts in Afghanistan on Monday.
Read more: White House reveals Biden’s plan to review the US-Taliban agreement
Shaheen maintained that Washington and Kabul have violated their ceasefire pledge since the Doha agreement and the Taliban has only “defended” itself as “a reaction”.
“They attribute violence to us, while it is not so,” he said.
AFP with additional input by GVS News Desk