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Afghanistan
Karzai announces peace talks with Taliban
2010-09-05
[Al Arabiya] Afghanistan's Caped President Hamid Maybe I'll join the Taliban Karzai Saturday announced that he had set up a council to pursue peace talks with the Taliban, who have been waging an insurgency in Afghanistan for almost nine years.
Before that they ran the place, and were fighting against an insurgency made up of the non-Pashtun tribes, if I recall correctly.
The formation of the High Peace Council was "a significant step towards peace talks," a statement from Karzai's office said.

The move is one of the most significant steps Karzai has taken in his oft-stated efforts to open a dialogue with the Taliban leadership aimed at speeding an end to the long war.
It'd probably be a generation before the Afghan Army could sustain the fight against the ISI-trained and supplied Taliban on their own. But President Obama promised to pull out troops in a year. The situation is impossible, even were President Karzai and his relatives ever so incorruptible.
The establishment of such a panel was approved in June at a national peace conference in Kabul, a move welcomed by foreign governments working to stabilize the Afghan government and economy.

Although the Taliban leadership has shown no appetite for talks, Karzai hopes the reconciliation process will help split the movement between its hardcore members and those less committed to its strict Islamic ideology.

The council was mooted as a negotiating body, to be made up of representatives of a broad section of Afghan society, to talk peace with the Taliban, who have been waging war since their regime was toppled in late 2001.

Officials met Karzai at his palace on Saturday to finalize the list of members, who would include "jihadi leaders, influential figures and women," the statement said.

The complete list of members would be announced after the Eid holiday next week, it said.

Karzai's announcement had been expected some days ago, after he met last week with former mujahedeen leaders Burhanuddin Rabbani and Abdul Rasul Sayyaf,
... Arabia's man on the ground...
as well as officials, to discuss the make up of the council.

His front man Simak Herawi said last week that it would include "some (former) Taliban and Hizb-i-Islami members," a reference to a minor bad turban group led by former prime minister and mujahedeen leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar.
... who used to be known as The Most Evil Man in the World but who now seems merely run-of-the-mill evil...

"This council will... certainly be effective in decreasing the level of violence in Afghanistan," Herawi said.
Or not. But while he is meeting, wheeling and dealing, Mr. Hekmatyar won't be able to do much nefarious plotting. The local villagers will appreciate the result, no doubt.
Hekmatyar's Hizb-i-Islami is currently in a tenuous alliance with the Taliban, although both sides remain suspicious of each other.

Hekmatyar's power has waned over the years and he commands far fewer fighters than the Taliban. Nevertheless, the group is active across part of Afghanistan's northern and eastern provinces.

The Taliban have repeatedly spurned peace overtures, deriding Karzai's government as a puppet of the United States and saying they will not talk peace until all foreign forces have left the country.

The announcement comes as the insurgency escalates and the number of foreign troop casualties so far this year nears the 2009 toll, at 485 with the deaths on Tuesday of five US soldiers in two separate incidents.

The United States and NATO have almost 150,000 troops in Afghanistan fighting the Taliban-led insurgency, most of them in the southern hotspots of Helmand and Kandahar provinces.
Posted by:Fred

#2  The Taliban have repeatedly spurned peace overtures, deriding Karzai's government as a puppet of the United States

As an observation, that's pretty much the same thing the Russian government's been saying.
Posted by: Pappy   2010-09-05 23:21  

#1  The Taliban have repeatedly spurned peace overtures, deriding Karzai's government as a puppet of the United States and saying they will not talk peace until all foreign forces have left the country.

I wonder what percentage of the Taliban fighters are "foreign forces"? Your foreign forces leave first....

The Taliban are anti-democratic. Exactly what kind of government would they be joining? Oh yeah, a corrupt one.

Posted by: Mike Ramsey   2010-09-05 11:08  

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