Moscow: The United States has planned to withdraw around 4,000 of its servicemen from Afghanistan next week in the wake of the resumption of the talks between Washington and the Taliban.
After the possible withdrawal, about 8,000-9,000 US soldiers would remain in the war-torn country while the total pullout would be phased and occur over a few months.
Last Sunday, the Taliban announced that the talks with the US had resumed in Doha after a three-month hiatus.
A source close to the Taliban told that both sides had discussed in Doha the reduction of violence and conditions that could spur intra-Afghan talks to begin.
However, on Thursday, US Special Envoy for Afghanistan Zalmay Khalilzad announced a brief pause in Taliban peace talks following an attack on Bagram aUS intends to announce withdraw 4,000 troops from Afghanistan next week.
Read Also: Trump impeachment vote underscores a harshly partisan era
Khalilzad said that the Taliban must show a willingness to respond to the Afghan desire for peace.
The US and the Taliban had for nearly a year been attempting to negotiate a peace deal that would ensure the withdrawal of foreign troops in exchange for the group's guarantee that the country will not become a haven for terrorists.
The talks, however, excluded the Afghan government over the Taliban's unwillingness to talk to Kabul.
The negotiations, last week, ended with no results as US President Donald Trump announced in September that the talks were dead after the Taliban had claimed responsibility for a terrorist attack in Kabul that killed a US serviceman.
Read Also: US warns Iran of decisive response if interests harmed in Iraq