The new Afghan government offered cabinet positions to members of the Taliban, but the posts were refused.
However, Ghani has promised to announce a cabinet within a week, as the continuation of the current state of affairs would have been intolerable. A source close to Ghani has argued that the government should be drawn “not just from the two teams, but from all parties in Afghanistan.” In this spirit, Ghani’s team offered the Taliban three cabinet positions. Mullah Zaeef, the former Taliban ambassador to Pakistan, Wakil Muttawakil, the former Taliban foreign minister, and Ghairat Baheer, a close relative of warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar are the three individuals who were offered positions in the Ghani cabinet. The posts earmarked for them included the Ministry of Rural Affairs, the borders, and the Ministry of Hajj and Religious Affairs. Ghani also considered appointing Taliban governors to three southern provinces: Nirmuz, Kandahar, and Helmand.
While the Afghan government has not yet commented on this news, sources close to the Taliban indicate that the Taliban turned down the offer because of the signing of security arrangements which would allow American and other foreign soldiers to remain in Afghanistan. Other Taliban demands for joining the government include changes to the constitution and immunity from prosecution.
Any move by the Taliban to join the government would have been controversial, especially from the perspective of Afghanistan’s western allies. It is still unclear as to whether the Taliban are fully committed to talks and normalization or are simply using talks as a tactic to give them some legitimacy while stalling for time. However, growing distrust of Pakistan among the Afghan Taliban and Chinese efforts at brokering talks between the Taliban and the Afghan government suggest that the Taliban are seriously interested in normalization if the right conditions are met. Such a move would ultimately stabilize Afghanistan, however distasteful it may seem to the country’s western partners.
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