Pompeo's visit to Doha comes immediately after a trip to the Afghan capital of Kabul, where he met with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and his political rival, Abdullah Abdullah, who has also claimed to have won the September 2019 presidental election.
"Secretary Pompeo is going to meet with Taliban officials in Doha including Mullah Baradar, Taliban’s chief negotiator, to press the Taliban to continue to comply with the agreement signed last month," State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus told reporters at Qatar's El Udeid Air Force Base on Monday.
The February peace deal, which saw the Taliban agree to reduce violence and begin talks with the Kabul government as the US withdraws several thousand troops from Afghanistan, hit several snags very quickly, including Kabul's unwillingness to abide by a US-promised mass amnesty of Taliban prisoners, as well as the lack of a comparable ceasefire between the Taliban and the Kabul government, which the Taliban doesn't recognize as legitimate.
Pompeo's trip comes amid a travel ban by the State Department on Americans going abroad in a bid to quell the spread of the COVID-19 virus, which has infected more than 350,000 people worldwide, including nearly 40,000 Americans.