Defense Secretary Mark Esper was the latest US official to discuss the
draft peace agreement with the Taliban in Afghanistan on Wednesday, and he was no more helpful about specifics than the other officials who came before him.
Esper seemed to go out of his way to not provide a lot of specific
details about what the deal actually says, saying in particular that
with negotiator Zalmay Khalilzad still in the region he feels the need
to limit his comments on what by all other indications was a finalized
deal. Esper even claimed that negotiation is still ongoing “in some
ways.”
Esper did reiterate the plan to withdraw 5,000 troops in 135 days, the
first stage of the pullout, and that President Trump still had to
approve the pact before it was actually signed. These were, of course,
both signs established days ago.
Esper added that he planned to meet with NATO’s Secretary-General Jens
Stoltenberg later in the day to discuss the deal, which almost certainly
is going to include more substantive discussion of the actual deal. He
did confirm US and NATO forces would withdraw “together.”