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Afghanistan
AP Exclusive: Hek splits with Taliban
2007-03-08
KARACHI, Pakistan - Fugitive Afghan rebel leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar
stuck his wet finger in the air, determined which way the wind was blowing, and
told The Associated Press that his forces have ended cooperation with the Taliban and suggested that he was open to talks with embattled President Hamid Karzai. In a video response to questions submitted by AP, Hekmatyar said that his group contacted Taliban leaders in 2003 and agreed to wage a joint jihad, or holy war, against American troops. "The jihad went into high gear but later it gradually went down as certain elements among the Taliban
proved to be bat shiat crazy and
rejected the idea of a joint struggle against the aggressor," Hekmatyar said in the video, which was received Thursday. Hekmatyar wore glasses and a black turban as he spoke in front of a plain white wall at an undisclosed location. He offered no details of the split or its timing, but said his forces were now mounting only restricted operations, partly because of a lack of resources. "It was not a good move by the Taliban to disassociate themselves from the joint struggle," he said. "Presently we have no contact with the Taliban."
"Also my fighters kept turning into red smears on the rocks, and the harrangues from their widows was starting to get to me, man."
Hekmatyar's Hezb-i Islami fighters, who have been most active in eastern Afghanistan, were central to the CIA-backed resistance to the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s, and in the civil war that followed, but were sidelined by the Taliban militia's rise to power in the mid-1990s.Hekmatyar nevertheless opposed the U.S.-led invasion in late 2001 that pushed the Taliban from power, and his followers have since waged a campaign of violence against American and allied forces. Hekmatyar's exact whereabouts have been unknown since he returned to Afghanistan from exile in Iran in 2002.

AP's questions to Hekmatyar were submitted through an intermediary three weeks ago. There was no indication of where or exactly when the video was shot.
Roughly one half-hour after Dick Cheney's plane left Islamabad.
Asked if he would consider opening negotiations with Karzai, Hekmatyar said dialogue was the best way to resolve Afghanistan's problems — albeit with conditions the U.S.-backed government would be unlikely to accept — apparently a cease-fire followed by negotiations. "We say that dialogue can only be fruitful if the aggressors truly allow the Kabul government to halt the fighting, negotiate with the mujahedeen and honor what Kabul and the resistance decide," Hekmatyar said. "This is the prime and basic demand of the Afghan nation and if such a conducive environment could be provided, we can go for dialogue with Karzai," he said.

The U.S. government considers Hekmatyar a terrorist. A CIA drone fired a missile at him near Kabul in 2002, but missed. Hekmatyar said American forces had twice come close to him on the ground. He insisted he had a large pool of fighters who could sustain a long struggle. And, while his tone was more conciliatory toward both the West and Karzai than in the past, he sent a defiant message to President Bush that he had no hope of defeating the insurgency.

The Taliban is vowing to intensify its resistance this spring, and says it has thousands of forces deployed in southern Afghanistan, where NATO this week launched its biggest offensive yet. "You must have realized that attacking Afghanistan and Iraq was a historical mistake. You do not have any other option but to take out your forces from Iraq and Afghanistan and give the Iraqis and Afghans the right to live their own way and select the system of their choice."
Posted by:tu3031

#5  lol Ship. Hopefully they won't recruit his troops for the Afghan Grenardiers or the national baseball team. They couldn't afford the insurance premium
Posted by: Frank G   2007-03-08 20:06  

#4  The one they call "The Arm" has spoken!
Posted by: Shipman   2007-03-08 19:39  

#3  possibilities

1. The taliban has decided Hek is worthless, more or less, and theyre shorting him on money, arms, and influence, and he figures coming in from the cold is the best bet

2. Cheney put the squeeze on the Pakis, and Hek is a creature of the Pakis, and the Pakis put the squeeze on Hek


3. Hes a Pashtun, man, he cant help trying play both sides.

4. This is being done with a wink from the Taliban, to undermine the coalition
Posted by: liberalhawk   2007-03-08 15:43  

#2  Hek is playing bait and switch, sequel #3.
Posted by: RD   2007-03-08 14:59  

#1  Hekmatyar's Hezb-i Islami fighters, who have been most active in eastern Afghanistan, were central to the CIA-backed resistance to the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s,


Hekmatyar's forces were central to nothing: they spent more time fighting Massood than the Soviets. And got bloody noses for it.
Posted by: JFM   2007-03-08 11:53  

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