It played ‘the game of death’ in Afghanistan for four decades. After facing the defeat in August last year, it may have pulled its troops from Afghanistan but it is still making lives of Afghans miserable on one or the other pretext.
It is a fact that the United States has neither recognized the Taliban government nor allows other countries to recognize their government is Afghanistan. On top of all it has frozen Afghan foreign exchange reserves. The acts of United States tantamount to worst kind of aggression against Afghans, as the country find it almost impossible to import even basic necessities due to non-availability of foreign exchange.
To maintain the US hegemony in Afghanistan, Secretary of State Antony Blinken has launched the US-Afghan Consultative Mechanism (USACM), which would enable Afghan citizens to communicate directly with American policymakers.
Addressing the launching ceremony, the top US diplomat said that besides Pakistan, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, Qatar and Turkey, and others were also backing US efforts to convince the Taliban to reverse their decision to keep Afghan girls out of school.
The new platform — USACM — is aimed at bringing together Afghan women, journalists, and at-risk ethnic and religious communities with the representatives of the US State Department. It will facilitate regular engagement with the US government on issues ranging from human rights documentation to women in Islam.
With USACM’s launch, “We are taking these relationships to the next level. That’s why I’m so pleased about today,” Secretary Blinken said. He identified the group’s priorities as supporting income-generating activities for Afghan women; strategizing ways to help Afghan human rights monitors safely document abuses, and devising new methods to promote religious freedom.
The United States has discussed with Taliban officials the possible release of Afghan central bank’s assets frozen after the fall of Kabul in August last year. The two sides discussed ongoing efforts to enable the US$3.5 billion Afghan central bank reserves to be used for the benefit of the Afghan people.
However, in nearly one year, the US administration has failed in addressing the urgent humanitarian situation in Afghanistan.
To further complicate the situation a meeting, involving Special Representative for Afghanistan Thomas West and Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Brian Nelson, took place on Wednesday in Tashkent. The meetings took place after the conclusion of the Tashkent Conference on Afghanistan that Uzbekistan hosted on July 26.
Media reports on the meeting claimed that the talks had made some progress and the US and Taliban officials had exchanged proposals for unfreezing the assets. But some differences remained unresolved.
One of the key differences was over the Taliban’s refusal to replace the bank’s top political appointees, “one of whom is under US sanctions as are several of the movement’s leaders,” one of the reports added.