Afghan President Ashraf Ghani had no more than 20 minutes to study a draft accord between the
United States and the
Taliban on pulling thousands of U.S. troops out of his country, but upcoming
elections could put him back at the heart of talks to end decades of war.
What he read in the draft outlining the now collapsed deal left Ghani and his officials - who were shut out of the talks by the Taliban refusal to negotiate with what they considered an illegitimate "puppet" regime - badly shaken and resentful, said a senior
Kabul official close to the Afghan leader.
"Doesn't this look like surrender to the Taliban?" Ghani asked Zalmay Khalilzad, the veteran Afghan-born diplomat who led negotiations for
Washington, at a meeting the two held immediately afterwards, according to the source who was present.