Taliban fighters put their weapon down after they joined the...

Taliban fighters put their weapon down after they joined the Afghan government forces during a ceremony in Herat on January 5, 2012. Nine fighters left the Taliban to join government forces in western Afghanistan. Credit: Getty/AREF KARIMI

Rajan Menon is a professor of international relations at Lehigh University. This is from the Los Angeles Times.

 

The Taliban's on-again, off-again approach to negotiations on a political settlement appears to be on again. Or so it seems from the announcement last week that it will open an office in Qatar to have a secure "address" (the diplomatic term of art) from which it can participate in talks.

Even those optimistic about the prospects for a deal strong enough to actually end the war in Afghanistan are treading warily, lacing prognostications with caveats. And rightly so in light of what has happened in the past.

In November 2010, for example, an impostor posing as a top Taliban emissary seeking to begin a peace process with the Afghan government purloined a huge stash of cash earmarked to grease the skids and get things moving. Less than a year later, Burhanuddin Rabbani, the head of a committee appointed by Afghan president Hamid Karzai to initiate talks with the Taliban, was blown up by a visitor who concealed a bomb in his turban. Police said the visitor claimed to be carrying a message from the Taliban.

Apart from uncertainty about the Taliban, the ambivalence -- and even opposition -- of other interested parties clouds the prospects for serious peace talks. Pakistan worries that the United States might cut a deal with the Taliban that reduces the advantages Islamabad has by virtue of its special contacts with the Taliban leadership. The Tajiks in Afghanistan (the largest ethnic group after the Pashtuns, the Taliban's base) revile the Taliban, having fought them intermittently from 1996 to 2001.

Then there's Karzai, a Pashtun, who was initially opposed to giving the Taliban a perch in Qatar. He, rightly, sees America's interest in negotiating with the Taliban -- whose leaders want to deal directly with the United States, not the government in Kabul -- as evidence of war fatigue. His question: Will the Americans reach a face-saving accord and leave me to deal with the Taliban?

But the talks are likely to proceed, albeit with uncertain results, because of a convergence of interests between the Obama administration and the Taliban.

President Barack Obama has insisted that the conflict in Afghanistan has no military solution. His rationale for the 2009 surge that added 30,000 troops was that the Taliban had to be squeezed before its leaders would negotiate in good faith. Since then, he has set out to diminish America's military role: 10,000 troops were withdrawn late last year, an additional 23,000 are to return home by this fall, and the president wants all major combat operations terminated before the end of 2014. But U.S. hawks have lambasted Obama's disengagement, claiming that it will reverse the gains of the surge, demoralize Afghans and convince the Taliban that victory is nigh.

Given the election season, anti-exit vitriol will increase, and Obama needs political cover. So it is valuable to show that the Taliban has in fact been battered enough to bargain and that the withdrawal is proceeding under prudent circumstances.

For its part, the Taliban has suffered serious losses because of the surge and stepped-up drone attacks. It believes that the talks will sow doubts in Afghanistan about America's staying power -- thus giving it a psychological edge.

True, the Taliban has said in the past that it won't negotiate until foreign troops depart. But it can spin the talks as a win by boasting that the United States was forced to bargain because the Taliban proved invincible.

The Taliban and Obama have this much in common: Both want a reduction in American forces, albeit for very different reasons. A cessation -- even a diminution -- of the war makes it more likely that Obama can implement his timetable.

The Taliban's adage has been that the Americans have the watches but it has the time. Its leaders know that the insurgency lacks the muscle to defeat U.S. troops, but that's never been the Taliban's strategy. Its plan all along has been to persist till war weariness and the weakening of allied support nudge the United States toward the exit. There's no distinction between war and peace in the Taliban's mind. The new address in Qatar isn't a case of the Taliban crying uncle -- it's a new phase in a long struggle.

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