AhlulBayt News Agency

source : FNA
Monday

23 March 2020

2:17:16 PM
1019852

Iran blames US “irresponsible haste” for Afghanistan crisis

The Iranian foreign ministry in a statement took Washington responsible for the current political crisis in Afghanistan after the presidential election, saying that the US made a hasty deal with the Taliban group without paying attention to the war-torn country’s internal issues.

AhlulBayt News Agency (ABNA): The Iranian foreign ministry in a statement took Washington responsible for the current political crisis in Afghanistan after the presidential election, saying that the US made a hasty deal with the Taliban group without paying attention to the war-torn country’s internal issues.

“Giving priority to the US president’s propaganda needs for the forthcoming election in November and the irresponsible haste shown by this country to get negotiations [with the Taliban] going without due attention to the region’s interests and security, led to inattention to [Afghanistan’s] internal issues with the end result being the current situation,” the statement said on Sunday.

"With the differences between Ashraf Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah [still unresolved], unfortunately, we are still witnessing continuation of unilateral policies of the US administration and the victimization of the Afghan people's national interests in order to serve propaganda purposes of that country's [US] president," it added.

The statement said that the final outcomes of Washington's policies are intensified crisis and political rifts in Afghanistan.

The Islamic Republic invites Afghanistan's political leaders and regional countries to use their utmost capacities to find a solution to the current differences between the two leaders in line with the public interests of the Afghan people and in order to maintain peace and stability in the country, which would have great impact on the entire region, the ministry pointed out, it underlined.

"The Islamic Republic of Iran is ready, as it was in the past, to play an active role in regional efforts aimed at settling problems in Afghanistan and to use its capacities to establish peace and stability in Afghanistan and the entire region," the statement concluded.

The United States signed a deal with the Afghan Taliban in the Qatari capital, Doha, on February 29. Under the deal, the Taliban agreed to sever ties with al-Qaeda and other terrorist groups and sit down for peace talks with the Afghan government. In return, Washington will start a phased withdrawal of troops.

The Afghan government was a party neither to the negotiations nor to the deal that was primarily aimed at reducing violence in the war-torn country.

Since it was signed, however, violence has escalated with the militants carrying out dozens of deadly attacks across the country.

On March 10, the United Nations Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution endorsing the deal.

The deal came few days before a new row between Afghan President-elect Ashraf Ghani and his rival Abdullah Abdullah.

Abdullah, who serves as the chief executive officer of the outgoing administration, has rejected a decision by Afghanistan’s Election Commission last month to announce Ghani as the winner of the presidential election, proclaiming himself to be president-elect. On March 9, Ghani and Abdullah both held inauguration ceremonies in the capital Kabul.

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