
The House Foreign Affairs Committee subpoenaed U.S. special envoy for Afghanistan Zalmay Khalilzad on Thursday, ordering him to testify about how months-long peace talks with the Taliban “went off the rails," Politico reports.
Why it matters: This is the committee's first subpoena of the 116th Congress, and it highlights a lack of information from the State Department on the Trump administration's Afghanistan peace plan, according to statements from Chairman Rep. Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.).
Background: Khalilzad said on Sept. 3 that the U.S. and the Taliban struck an "in principle" agreement for 5,400 troops to leave Afghanistan. Trump said those peace talks were "dead" on Sept. 9, after the Taliban claimed responsibility for a bombing in Kabul, Afghanistan that killed an American service member.
Go deeper: Trump says U.S.-Taliban peace talks are "dead" after Kabul attack