The Christian Science Monitor

Why US talks with the Taliban are suddenly on the table

The United States has a lot invested in Afghanistan: a longer war than both world wars and its intervention in Vietnam combined, more than $2 trillion, and more than 2,370 service members’ lives lost.

So why would the US choose now to enter into talks with the Taliban, the Afghan insurgency the US pushed out of power in Kabul in 2001 for harboring the Al Qaeda masterminds of the 9/11 attacks?

To understand the mounting signs of the Trump administration’s interest in negotiating some form of political deal with the Taliban, consider the conjunction of two key factors.

First is a US president, in Donald Trump, who has long considered Afghanistan a “bad investment” and who wants the nearly 15,000 US troops he begrudgingly agreed to keep there withdrawn – sooner rather than

Concern at State and DefenseRisk for Taliban, tooA not-so-distant withdrawal

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Christian Science Monitor

The Christian Science Monitor16 min read
Samuel Paty Was Murdered, And Teaching In France Has Never Been The Same
It was a Friday afternoon in October 2020, and Coralie, a junior high school French teacher at Collège du Bois d’Aulne, had just gone for a walk in the nearby woods with her dog to clear her mind before the two-week school vacation. It had been a str
The Christian Science Monitor5 min readAmerican Government
Trump May Lose Immunity Case – But In A Way That Gives Him A Big Win
In the last case to be argued before the U.S. Supreme Court this term, the justices once again heard from former President Donald Trump, this time to consider a question that strikes at a foundational principle of American democracy. Just how excepti
The Christian Science Monitor3 min readWorld
‘Out Of Captivity.’ When Will Passover’s Promise Reach Gaza Hostages?
At sundown Monday evening, as hundreds of Israelis sat down to the Jewish Passover ceremony, the Seder, in Hostages Square in downtown Tel Aviv, a digital clock loomed over them. One hundred ninety-eight days, 11 hours, nine minutes, and three second

Related Books & Audiobooks