A spokesperson for the Taliban has said the US should “withdraw all their forces” from Afghanistan by 9/11, but that it was “committed not to attack them”, after the militant group retook Kabul.
Suhail Shaheen, in an interview with Sky News on Tuesday, said the Taliban had already announced a “general amnesty” to people in Afghanistan, and that it would not attack remaining US forces in the country.
The US has sent 6,000 troops to assist in the evacuation of civilians and refugees from Kabul’s international airport following the sudden collapse of the country’s armed forces and government — just weeks after most US forces left.
Asked how long the Taliban was giving the US to evacuate, Mr Shaheen said US president Joe Biden should respect the Doha agreement signed by the Trump administration last year, which had committed Washington to pulling out of Afghanistan by mid-May.
That deadline was extended to 9/11, and the 20th anniversary of the terror attacks that led to the US invasion in 2001, after Mr Biden took office in January.
“I think they should get their troops out of Afghanistan, Mr Shaheen told Sky News. “[The US] have already violated the time frame which was enshrined in the Doha agreement. Then they announced that they will withdraw all their forces by September 11, so they should withdraw all their forces”.
He went on to say that the Taliban was “committed not to attack them” and that “we have not attacked”.
The US suggested on Tuesday that “between 5,000 and 9,000” people could be evacuated per day, with American troops still stationed at the airport for the “coming weeks”, according to reports.
It follows images of hundreds of Afghans amassing at the airport in an attempt at fleeing the Taliban, who Mr Shaheen said on Tuesday had the support of “the people”.
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