No honesty in U.S. words and behavior, Iran says
TEHRAN - Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi said on Monday that there is no honesty in the United States’ words and behavior.
The comments came as Zalmay Khalilzad, the United States’ chief negotiator with the Afghan Taliban, claimed about Iran’s lack of support for a U.S.-led attempt to get the Taliban militant group and the Afghan government to negotiate.
According to Press TV, Khalilzad claimed, “Iran has not been as supportive as it should be in the effort to get to intra-Afghan negotiations and an Afghan settlement largely due to our (the U.S.’s) relations with them.”
Mousavi said, “There is no honesty in the United States’ words and behavior towards our region, especially cooperation in Afghanistan. Iran does not consider the United States honest. We consider their [the U.S. forces] presence in the region, especially in Afghanistan, source of instability and insecurity.”
He reiterated Iran’s position that Tehran fully backs intra-Afghan talks to settle long-running disputes.
“We reject any foreign interference in this respect. However, the Islamic Republic of Iran has capacities that can be used to help establish peace and stability in Afghanistan,” he said.
Iran’s embassy in Kabul has issued a statement reiterating support for peace talks in Afghanistan led by the Afghan leaders.
The Iranian embassy in Kabul advised the U.S. officials to study Iran’s position on Afghanistan precisely before making claims.
Also, Mohammad Ebrahim Taherianfard, the special envoy of Iran’s foreign minister for Afghanistan, on Sunday said, “Iran highlights the necessity of establishing peace based on inter-Afghan talks led by the Afghan leaders.”
Taherianfard also said, “We advise American officials that before making remarks about the views of the officials of the Islamic Republic of Iran about the issues in Afghanistan and the region first study these positions carefully.”
‘U.S. peace does not guarantee security in Afghanistan’
Nozar Shafiei, an expert on international affairs, has said that the U.S. peace does not guarantee security and political stability in Afghanistan.
“The United States defines peace in Afghanistan within the framework of Washington’s national interests. Such so-called peace process cannot guarantee security and political stability in Afghanistan,” he told IRNA in an interview published on Monday.
If peace in Afghanistan is based on the Afghan people’s interests, Iran will support it, he noted.
However, he added that if peace process in Afghanistan threatens the Afghans, no country will support it.
Late in February, the U.S. and Taliban negotiators signed an agreement in Qatar that was supposed to end 19 years of war in Afghanistan and allow President Donald Trump to begin the promised withdrawal of American troops.
The deal imposes obligations on the Afghan government, however, negotiations that led to the agreement did not involve the Afghan government’s representatives.
The four-page pact spells out a timetable for the United States to withdraw its 13,000 troops from Afghanistan; in exchange, the Taliban agreed to sever its ties with al-Qaeda, the terrorist group that launched the 9/11 attacks against the U.S.
The agreement was supposed to set the stage for further negotiations between Afghanistan's government and the Taliban, a militant group that once ruled Afghanistan.
Iran has opposed the U.S. military occupation of Afghanistan and has expressed readiness to cooperate with any effort for intra-Afghan dialogue.
NA/PA