Afghan fears grow after US rejects military support

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KABUL: Afghan President Ashraf Ghani’s much-vaunted meeting with his US counterpart has proved to be a “damp squib” amid Washington’s failure to promise future military support, several MPs said on Saturday.

 

MPs were hoping for a US pledge to ensure the Kabul government’s survival after all foreign troops leave Afghanistan on Sept. 11.

 

President Joe Biden held his first face-to-face meeting with Ghani at the White House on Friday amid a phased withdrawal of troops from the war-torn country that will end Washington’s 20-year involvement in Afghanistan.

 

Ghani has for long sought an audience with Biden, hoping that the US leader would either abandon the total pullout of troops or provide aerial support for local forces to limit the Taliban’s territorial gains.

 

Instead, the US president urged Afghans on Friday “to decide their future,” saying that it was “time for Washington to step back,”

 

Biden also promised economic support to ensure stability and peace in Afghanistan.

 

Ghani said that he “respects and supports” Biden’s “historic” decision to withdraw US troops.

 

However, Afghan officials say that the “dialogue without deliverance” has failed to guarantee the Kabul government’s survival.

 

“The power monopoly, infighting, corruption and other problems have harmed the image of the (Afghan) government not only at home but also on the international stage. Ghani went to America, but achieved nothing,” Sediq Ahmad Osmani, an MP from northern Parwan, told Arab News on Saturday.

He said that Biden’s promise of humanitarian and diplomatic aid to Afghanistan “was aimed at showing the world that the US, morally at least, was not abandoning the country after the troops leave.”

 

Washington hopes to see a new, all-inclusive government in Afghanistan, based on an agreement that helped to launch Afghan peace talks in Doha nine months ago.

 

Abdul Hafeez Mansoor, a government-appointed delegate for the Qatar talks with the Taliban, told Arab News that he saw “nothing new” in Washington’s commitment to Kabul.

 

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