KABUL: Suhail Shaheen, a spokesperson for the Taliban’s political office in Qatar, has warned that the Taliban would retaliate if the Doha agreement is violated and foreign troops stay back in Afghanistan after the deadline.
“All foreign troops will have to leave Afghanistan by a certain date, otherwise they will respond,” Shaheen told an international new channel, adding that the Taliban leadership would decide what form that retaliation will take.
The Taliban spokesperson reiterated that foreign forces, including military contractors, should not remain in Afghanistan after the withdrawal deadline. “We are against the foreign military forces, not diplomats, NGOs and workers and NGOs functioning and embassies functioning – that is something our people need. We will not pose any threat to them,” he added.
Meanwhile, he also denied that the militant group had played any part in the recent uptick in violence. He insisted that many districts had fallen to the Taliban through mediation after Afghan soldiers refused to fight.
The Taliban spokesman described the current government as “moribund” and referred to the country as the “Islamic emirate” – an indication that the group envisaged a theocratic basis for governing the country and were unlikely to agree to Afghan government demands for elections.
The statement comes amid reports that 1,000 mainly US troops could remain on the ground to protect diplomatic missions and Kabul’s international airport. NATO’s 20-year military mission in Afghanistan has all but ended.
Under a deal with the militant group, the US and its NATO allies agreed to withdraw all troops in return for a commitment by the Taliban not to allow al-Qaeda or any other extremist group to operate in the areas they control.
President Joe Biden set a deadline of 11 September – the 20-year anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the US – for American troops to fully withdraw.