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Afghanistan
Pakistani Military Does Not Want Taliban in Power: Official
2014-02-08
[Tolo News] A representative of the Pakistain Peace Committee for Taliban Talks has said that the Pak military is not interested in seeing the Taliban come back to power in Afghanistan.

"In my opinion, as far as I had discussions and talks with military individuals, they think that if the Taliban come to power in Afghanistan it wouldn't be good, and the problems between the Taliban and Pakistain would increase," Committee member Rahimullah Yusufzai said. "On one hand, foreign aid will end in Afghanistan and on the other, many people won't accept Taliban government and war will start, that will encourage the Pak Taliban."

His comments come as many in Afghanistan and the West struggle to predict what lays in store for the country as the NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. A single organization with differing goals, equipment, language, doctrine, and organization....
coalition withdraws after 13 years of war.

Rustam Shah Mohmand, another member of the Committee and former Pak Ambassador to Kabul, has said that as long as foreign troops are present in Afghanistan, the Taliban will not participate in peace talks.

"The Taliban will not accept this government and Parliament," Mohmand said. "Whenever these troops leave, any government that is formed after their exit, the Taliban will be ready to talk to."

If true, Mohmand's assessment would likely mean a peace deal is impossible if the Kabul-Washington Bilateral Security Agreement (BSA) gets signed and foreign troops stay in Afghanistan post-2014.

Many Afghan leaders have said that Pakistain is the key to peace with the Taliban. However,
a poor excuse is better than no excuse at all...
Islamabad has shown piecemeal commitment to facilitating the grinding of the peace processor for Kabul. Instead, Pak officials have seemed more focused on brokering peace with the snuffies in their own country.

The Pakistain Peace Committee for Talks With Taliban has four members. The nature of the Committee's contact with the Taliban, and whether or not any progress has been made, are unknown.
Posted by:Fred

#4  The ISI, on the other hand, likely is doing all they can to make this happen. CIA should have covertly gone to war on the ISI a decade ago. Bush blew it by not clearing out the leadership that brought us 911 and later politically leaked and sabotaged him. CIA would now require a flamethrower to clear it enough to where it would be fixable as the HUMINT agency. NSA has gone in a similar path under Obama, minus the deliberate politically motivated leaks. -- they have been fully on board with Obama so they can increase their power.
Posted by: OldSpook   2014-02-08 10:59  

#3  And a 17 years old hetero boy isn't interested in having sex with every (reasonably) good looking women he meets.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2014-02-08 08:18  

#2  Pak military and Pak intel service are two different things.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2014-02-08 07:14  

#1  the Pak military is not interested in seeing the Taliban come back to power in Afghanistan.

Well, that's damned decent of them.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2014-02-08 04:51  

00:00