President Ghani replaces top security chiefs amid rising Taliban insurgency

Young journalists club

News ID: 33217
Asia » Asia
Publish Date: 19:55 - 23 December 2018
TEHRAN, December 23 - Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has replaced two of the country's top security chiefs with staunch anti-Taliban officials in the wake of intensified assaults by the militant group across the war-ravaged country.

President Ghani replaces top security chiefs amid rising Taliban insurgencyTEHRAN, Young Journalists Club (YJC) - In a presidential decree on Sunday, the president appointed Amrullah Saleh and Assadullah Khaled to the critical posts of interior minister and defense minister, respectively. Both men will serve as acting ministers until the parliament approves their appointments.

Saleh, who fought against the Taliban in the 1990s, served as head of the National Directorate of Security (NDS), the Afghan spy agency, from 2004 to 2010. Khaled was briefly the NDS chief in 2012 before being wounded by a Taliban bomber.

There was no official explanation for the sudden reshuffle, but it comes months after Ghani rejected the resignations of former Interior Minister Wais Ahmad Barmak and Defense Minister Tariq Shah Bahrami following criticism over an increasingly deadly insurgency.

Four top security officials in Afghanistan's government resigned in August. The president later rejected the resignations of three of them. He then directed the interior and defense ministers and the spy master to continue their duties, rejecting their letters of resignation.

Ghani, who is planning to seek re-election in April, could also be trying to strengthen his security credentials ahead of the vote.

US President Donald Trump has ordered the start of withdrawing some 7,000 troops from Afghanistan. The figure accounts for about half of the total number of American boots on the ground in the country.

The US State Department's special envoy, Zalmay Khalilzad, confirmed he held "productive" meetings in Abu Dhabi with Afghan and international partners "to promote intra-Afghan dialogue towards ending the conflict."

Khalilzad, the Trump administration’s special envoy to Afghanistan, said the Taliban’s demand remained an agreement over the withdrawal of foreign forces from Afghanistan. The US, meanwhile, has sought assurances from the militant group that its forces would not be attacked. 

The militant group also said they had held "extensive" meetings with delegates from Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates - the only three countries to recognize the Taliban government during its five-year rule in the late 1990s, reiterating demands for international troops to be withdrawn from Afghanistan.

The meetings are the latest in a flurry of diplomatic efforts aimed at putting an end to a 17-year-old war in Afghanistan which began with the US invasion in 2001.

Source: Press TV

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