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Afghan Warlord Changes His Conditions for Peace with Kabul

The former Afghan Prime Minister Hekmatyar has dropped his demand for all foreign troops to leave Afghanistan.

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A notorious Afghan warlord who lives in hiding has dropped a key condition for ending his war of more than 40 years with Kabul, an associate said on Tuesday.

According to Amin Karim, an official of the Hezb-i-Islami Party, the party’s leader, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, is no longer demanding that all foreign troops leave Afghanistan.

Hekmatyar is designated a “global terrorist” by the United States and blacklisted by the United Nations. He is widely believed to live in Pakistan, though his supporters say he is in Afghanistan.

Last year, he briefly came out of the shadows to set his conditions for peace that included the withdrawal of foreign forces.

Karim told that for Hekmatyar, the departure of foreign troops is not a condition, it is a goal and added that the warlord’s followers have no conditions but they have principles.

The move by Hekmatyar, whose current following is hard to gauge, is likely as much an overture to the government of President Ashraf Ghani as it is an attempt to stay relevant on the Afghan political scene.

Hekmatyar’s mujahideen followers were responsible for the deaths of thousands during the devastating Afghan civil war. He is said to have offered himself as an interlocutor to former President Hamid Karzai in 2008 but was deflected amid concerns over his extremist reputation and human rights abuses. The last known attack carried out by his militant group was in 2013, when at least 15 people, including six American soldiers, were killed in central Kabul.

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Ghani’s Office Welcomes Hekmatyar’s Move

On the other hand, current Afghan President Ghani came to power in 2014 promising to end the 15-year war with the Taliban. A diplomatic offensive aimed at getting Pakistan to bring the Taliban into peace talks has so far failed, and this year is expected to be as brutal on the battlefield as 2015, when 11,000 civilians were killed or wounded, according to UN figures.

Afghan officials have said that a peace deal with Hekmatyar, a former prime minister of Afghanistan, could be useful in potentially convincing Taliban commanders on the battlefield to join the peace process.

Hekmatyar’s move to drop the condition on foreign forces could also raise questions among Taliban leaders and commanders about their own goals. Like Hekmatyar and his followers, the Taliban have long said they are waging their insurgency to expel all foreign forces from Afghanistan.

Hekmatyar’s representatives are to hold the third round of discussions with Kabul’s High Peace Council this week, an Afghan official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak about the talks.

If an agreement is signed between Hezb-i-Islami and the government, Hekmatyar could visit Kabul for the first time since he fled the capital as the Taliban swept into power in 1996.

Ghani’s office welcomed Hekmatyar’s move and said his cooperation with peace efforts could lead to a reduction of violence. However, peace talks between Kabul and the Taliban, which were hosted by Islamabad, fell apart last year and chances for their resumption have grown increasingly dim.

If the warlord does join the peace process, Hezb-i-Islami would be the first group to walk through the gate Ghani had opened, a brief statement from the president’s office said.

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