Even when
President Trump called off the talks, we
kept the door to peace open because we
Afghans suffer the most from the
continuation of the war. No peace agreement,
following on the heels of such intensive
talks, comes without mutual compromises.
That we stuck with such turbulent talks with
the enemy we have fought bitterly for two
decades, even as death rained from the sky,
testifies to our commitment to ending the
hostilities and bringing peace to our
country.
We are aware
of the concerns and questions in and outside
Afghanistan about the kind of government we
would have after the foreign troops
withdraw. My response to such concerns is
that it will depend on a consensus among
Afghans. We should not let our worries get
in the way of a process of genuine
discussion and deliberation free for the
first time from foreign domination and
interference.
It is
important that no one front-loads
this process with predetermined
outcomes and preconditions. We are
committed to working with other
parties in a consultative manner of
genuine respect to agree on a new,
inclusive political system in which
the voice of every Afghan is
reflected and where no Afghan feels
excluded.
I am
confident that, liberated from
foreign domination and interference,
we together will find a way to build
an Islamic system in which all
Afghans have equal rights, where the
rights of women that are granted by
Islam — from the right to education
to the right to work — are
protected, and where merit is the
basis for equal opportunity.
We
are also aware of concerns about the
potential of Afghanistan being used
by disruptive groups to threaten
regional and world security. But
these concerns are inflated: Reports
about foreign groups in Afghanistan
are politically motivated
exaggerations by the warmongering
players on all sides of the war.
It is
not in the interest of any Afghan to
allow such groups to hijack our
country and turn it into a
battleground. We have already
suffered enough from foreign
interventions. We will take all
measures in partnership with other
Afghans to make sure the new
Afghanistan is a bastion of
stability and that nobody feels
threatened on our soil.
We
are conscious of the immense
challenges ahead. Perhaps our
biggest challenge is to ensure that
various Afghan groups work hard and
sincerely toward defining our common
future. I am confident that it is
possible. If we can reach an
agreement with a foreign enemy, we
must be able to resolve intra-Afghan
disagreements through talks.
Another challenge will be keeping
the international community
interested and positively engaged
during the transition to peace and
after the withdrawal of foreign
troops. The support of the
international community will be
crucial to stabilizing and
developing Afghanistan.
We
are ready to work on the basis of
mutual respect with our
international partners on long-term
peace-building and reconstruction.
After the United States withdraws
its troops, it can play a
constructive role in the postwar
development and reconstruction of
Afghanistan.
We
acknowledge the importance of
maintaining friendly relations with
all countries and take their
concerns seriously. Afghanistan
cannot afford to live in isolation.
The new Afghanistan will be a
responsible member of the
international community.
We
will remain committed to all
international conventions as long as
they are compatible with Islamic
principles. And we expect other
countries to respect the sovereignty
and stability of our country and
consider it as a ground for
cooperation rather than competition
and conflict.
More
immediately, there will be the
challenge of putting into effect our
agreement with the United States. A
degree of trust has been built
through our talks with the American
negotiators in Doha, Qatar, but just
as the United States does not trust
us completely, we too are very far
from fully trusting it.
We
are about to sign an agreement with
the United States and we are fully
committed to carrying out its every
single provision, in letter and
spirit. Achieving the potential of
the agreement, ensuring its success
and earning lasting peace will
depend on an equally scrupulous
observance by the United States of
each of its commitments. Only then
can we have complete trust and lay
the foundation for cooperation — or
even a partnership — in the future.
My
fellow Afghans will soon celebrate
this historic agreement. Once it is
entirely fulfilled, Afghans will see
the departure of all foreign troops.
As we arrive at this milestone, I
believe it is not a distant dream
that we will soon see the day when
we will come together with all our
Afghan brothers and sisters, start
moving toward lasting peace and lay
the foundation of a new Afghanistan.
We
would then celebrate a new beginning
that invites all our compatriots to
return from their exile to our
country — to our shared home where
everybody would have the right to
live with dignity, in peace.
Sirajuddin Haqqani is the deputy
leader of the Taliban.