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Afghanistan |
Karzai holds secret talks with Taliban |
2010-06-27 |
Afghan president Hamid Karzai has reportedly met with the Taliban's most senior commander Serja-eddin Haggani in Kabul as UK calls for peace with the militants. The report said the meeting was mediated by Pakistan's spy agency, the Inter-Services intelligence (ISI). The talks come as NATO forces are experiencing some of their bloodiest days in Afghanistan since the US-led invasion of the country began in 2001. Haggani has been reported to have close ties with the ISI and al-Qaeda group. Haggani's group has carried out most of the sophisticated terrorist operations in Afghanistan. The meeting also comes as British army chief has called for talks with the Taliban militants in the war-weary country. General David Richards has insisted that negotiations with the Taliban should begin soon as part of an exit strategy for NATO. Moreover, US officials have also been pressing, covertly as well as overtly, for opportunities to hold negotiations with the Taliban using Pakistan as an intermediary. Previously, however, both the US and the UK had insisted that they would never negotiate with terrorists, vowing to uproot the Taliban and their operatives in the region. Observers believe the new Western strategy reflects yet another double standard in terms of their slogan of "war against terror." Richards added that any counter-insurgency campaign will end up in talks between the warring sides. Senior officials in the UK have floated the idea of engaging in peace talks with the Taliban -- the militant group whose uprooting was one the main objectives of the 2001 invasion. This is while a Guardian report said in late May that US army helicopters regularly deliver supplies behind Taliban lines and even fund their madrasas (religious schools). The paper said if the US wanted to remove the Taliban, as it promised in 2001, the thousands of international troops stationed in the country could easily crush a couple of thousands of militants in Helmand. The Taliban were toppled in the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan by US-led forces. The invasion of Afghanistan was launched with the official objective of curbing militancy and bringing peace and stability to the country. Nine years on, however, Afghanistan remains largely unstable with innocent civilians continuing to pay the heaviest price. |
Posted by:tipper |
#2 Long War Journal reports that Karzai, Pak General Kayani and Pak ISI Chief Pasha met with the leader of the Haqqani network because Kazai has no faith in the Americans defeating the Taliban. |
Posted by: Lumpy Anguting2786 2010-06-27 22:51 |
#1 PressTV (consider the source) me thinks enemy psych-opps when I read this. |
Posted by: Mike Hunt 2010-06-27 13:55 |