From Reuters:
“Blinken says Qatar to act as
U.S. diplomatic representative in Afghanistan”
The United States and Qatar
signed an accord on Friday for Qatar to represent U.S. diplomatic interests in
Afghanistan, an important signal of possible future direct engagement between
Washington and the Taliban after two decades of war. U.S. Secretary of State
Antony Blinken and his Qatari counterpart, Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani,
signed the agreement making Qatar the U.S. "protecting power" in
Afghanistan at a State Department ceremony after holding talks.
"Qatar will establish a U.S.
interest section within its embassy in Afghanistan to provide certain consular
services and monitor the condition and security of U.S. diplomatic facilities
in Afghanistan," Blinken said. The move will further strengthen relations
between Washington and the small, wealthy Gulf monarchy, which forged close
ties with the Taliban by hosting the militants' only official office outside
Afghanistan and by playing a key role in the talks that led to the 2020 deal
for the U.S. troop pullout this year. The agreement comes as the United States
and other Western countries grapple with how to engage with the hardline
Islamists after they took over Afghanistan in a lightning advance in August as
U.S.-led forces were completing their pullout. The United States and other
Western countries shut their embassies and withdrew their diplomats as the
Taliban seized Kabul, following which the militants declared an interim
government whose top members are under U.S. and U.N. sanctions.
The United States, European
countries and others are reluctant to formally recognize the Pashtun-dominated
Taliban, accusing them of backtracking on pledges of political and ethnic
inclusivity and to uphold the rights of women and minorities. But with winter
approaching, many governments realize they need to engage more to prevent the
deeply impoverished country from plunging into a humanitarian catastrophe. According
to the new agreement, which comes into effect on Dec. 31, Qatar will dedicate
certain staff from its embassy in Afghanistan to a U.S. Interests Section and
will coordinate closely with U.S. State Department and with U.S. mission in
Doha. A senior State Department official said the United States would also
continue its engagement with the Taliban's political office in the Qatari
capital, Doha. Consular assistance may include accepting passport applications,
offering notarial services for documentation, providing information, and
helping in emergencies, the U.S. official said on condition of anonymity. "The
protecting power arrangement envisions that Qatar would facilitate any formal
communication between the United States and Afghanistan," the senior U.S.
official said.
SECOND AGREEMENT Millions
of Afghans face growing hunger amid soaring food prices, a drought and an
economy in freefall, fueled by a hard cash shortage, sanctions on Taliban
leaders and the suspension of financial aid. The Taliban victory saw the
billions of dollars in foreign aid that had kept the economy afloat abruptly
switched off, with more than $9 billion in central bank reserves frozen outside
the country. In a second agreement with Washington, Qatar will continue
to temporarily host up to 8,000 at-risk Afghans who have applied for special
immigrant visas (SIV) and their eligible family members, the U.S. official
said. "SIV applicants will be housed at Camp As Sayliyah and
al-Udeid Air Base," the official said. At a press conference after
signing the accords, Blinken praised Qatar for aiding ongoing evacuations of
American citizens, green cards holders and SIV applicants.
Qatar, he said, allowed to
transit through Doha roughly half of the 124,000 people evacuated from
Afghanistan since August in the hastily arranged and chaotic U.S. evacuation
operation. Since then, Qatar has funded at least 15 evacuation flights by Qatar
Airways of hundreds of U.S. citizens and others and will continue providing
charter flights for SIV holders and other Afghans, he said. Tens of thousands
of Afghans potentially at risk of Taliban retribution for aiding the United
States and its allies or working for foreign organizations remain in
Afghanistan.
^ The United States (and the UN,
NATO, EU, Canada, Japan, Russia, China, Germany, the UK, Poland, Spain, France,
etc.) should not recognize the Taliban since they have not shown any real signs
that they have changed from when they were in power 20 years ago. They continue
to hunt down and torture members of the former Government and Military, they
continue to hunt down and harass Afghans who worked for the US and other
Western Countries, they continue to harass Afghan women and keep them from
working, getting an education and in many places from even leaving their homes
without a Male Guardian. The only leverage the world now has over the Taliban is
giving them official recognition and so no major power should until the Taliban
actually change their ways rather than simply saying they have.
With that said the US also needs to keep an eye on Qatar since they (along with Pakistan) have worked with the Taliban for a long time now and there is clearly more to their help then diplomatic or humanitarian.
Hopefully this will allow all American Citizens and Afghan Workers for Western Countries to now be able to leave Afghanistan where the Taliban harass and hunt them down. ^
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