Kerry hints that Taliban-Afghan government peace deal is possible
Afghanistan's recent peace deal with a notorious warlord could be a model for reconciliation with the Taliban, US Secretary of State John Kerry has said.
He implored the country's former leaders to lay down their arms so US-led military forces can leave.
Speaking at an international conference on Afghanistan, Kerry said the Kabul government's agreement last week with Gulbuddin Hekmatyar requires his commanders to cease violence, cut ties with terrorist groups and accept the Afghan constitution's rights for women and minorities.
In return, Hekmatyar, a man once dubbed the "Butcher of Kabul", can rejoin Afghan society.
The 29 September peace treaty was Afghanistan's first since the Taliban's overthrow in 2001.
Hekmatyar is believed to have killed thousands of Afghans in sustained rocket attacks on the Afghan capital during civil war in the 1990s.
The US declared him a "global terrorist" in 2003. The UN blacklisted him the same year. Both are considering lifting sanctions.
"The message from every person here today to the Taliban would be: Take note," Kerry said at a conference including top diplomats from more than 70 countries.
Kerry hailed Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and his rival, Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah, for "being willing to take this risk".
But the Taliban, Kerry said, is still "trying to test the Afghan government's resolve".
He condemned an attack last month on the American University of Afghanistan, saying any movement that targets youth "has no legitimacy whatsoever to claim to lead the country's future".
"There is a path toward an honorable end to the conflict that the Taliban have waged," Kerry insisted.
"It is a conflict they cannot and will not be won on the battlefield. A political settlement negotiated with the Afghan government is the only way to end the fighting, ensure lasting stability and achieve a full drawdown ultimately of international military forces, which is their goal."
The US has been promoting reconciliation as part of its strategy to remove American troops from Afghanistan.
But efforts have shown little momentum, beset by divisions within Afghanistan's government and the Taliban.
President Barack Obama has ordered 8,400 US forces to remain in the country though 2017, unable to fulfill his promise to end Washington's involvement in the war.
Hekmatyar had lived for the last two decades in exile. He is widely disliked and distrusted by ordinary Afghans for his past extremism, including support for al-Qaeda.
Human Right Watch has branded him "one of Afghanistan's most notorious war crimes suspects" and said his return would "compound a culture of impunity" that has denied justice to the many Afghan victims of violence.
Under the peace agreement, Hekmatyar and his followers received immunity and full political rights.
Afghanistan has been mired in conflict for decades. The US-led intervention after the 11 Septmber 2001, terrorist attacks sent billions of dollars into the country, creating a false economy with double-digit growth.
The economy tumbled as troops drew down in 2014 and many aid workers and international agencies departed or scaled back operations.
Unemployment may be as high as 50 percent. Insecurity throughout much of the country has deterred investment and driven many Afghans to Europe as migrants.
At the Brussels conference, Western countries were expected to pledge more than $3 billion in development aid through 2020.