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US Defense Secretary Esper in Kabul on unannounced visit
by Staff Writers
Kabul (AFP) Oct 20, 2019

US Defense Secretary Mark Esper arrived in Kabul on Sunday for an unannounced visit to meet with US troops and Afghan President Ashraf Ghani.

Esper's visit -- his first to Afghanistan since being confirmed as Pentagon chief in July -- comes amid deep uncertainty about the fate of the US military mission in Afghanistan after talks between Washington and the Taliban collapsed.

"I'm looking ... to get a really good feel for what's happening on the ground in Afghanistan, and to talk what the way ahead may look like as well," Esper told reporters accompanying him, according to a Pentagon transcript.

The United States and the Taliban were last month on the brink of signing a deal that would have seen US forces begin to withdraw from Afghanistan in return for various insurgent security commitments.

But negotiations collapsed at the last minute when President Donald Trump declared talks "dead" following a Taliban attack that killed a US soldier.

Zalmay Khalilzad, the US special envoy leading negotiations, has since spoken informally with Taliban officials in Pakistan, raising the possibility that Washington is seeking to resume talks.

"We think a political agreement is always the best way forward with regard to next steps in Afghanistan," Esper said.

Currently the United States has around 14,000 troops in Afghanistan.

Esper said that footprint could shrink to about 8,600 forces with no impact on counter-terrorist operations against groups such as the Afghan affiliate of the Islamic State group.


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THE STANS
Glaciers and tribal dancing: William and Kate visit Pakistan's north
Bumburate, Pakistan (AFP) Oct 16, 2019
Wearing traditional headgear and clapping to music, Britain's Prince William and his wife Kate met a tiny animist tribe in northern Pakistan on Wednesday, after flying by helicopter to a remote Hindu Kush glacier near the Afghan border. The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge spent the afternoon witnessing the effects of climate change on the Kalash, Pakistan's smallest religious minority - an ancient, polytheistic tribe who live in three valleys. Believed to be descended from Alexander the Great, th ... read more

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