Edmonton Journal

Pakistan denies backing Taliban

NATO report says security services back Afghan insurgents

-

Pakistan Wednesday rejected accusation­s that it was secretly supporting Taliban insurgents in Afghanista­n, while the Taliban denied plans for peace talks with the Afghan government in Saudi Arabia.

The statements came as a leaked NATO report charged that Pakistan’s security services were backing the Taliban militia, who consider victory inevitable once Western combat troops leave in 2014.

The leak was spectacula­rly bad timing for Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar, who was in Kabul for the first time since taking office last year in a bid to thaw frosty ties between the two neighbours.

“We have no hidden agenda in Afghanista­n,” Khar told reporters after meeting President Hamid Karzai. “These claims have been made many, many times. Pakistan stands behind any initiative that the Afghan government takes for peace.”

The Taliban chose the same day to deny that they would soon hold talks with Karzai’s government in Saudi Arabia to end the decadelong war since they were toppled by a U.s.-led invasion in 2001.

“There is no truth in these published reports saying that the delegation of the Islamic Emirate would meet with representa­tives of the Karzai government in Saudi Arabia in the near future,” the Taliban said on their website.

Afghan officials had suggested that talks in Saudi Arabia would be in addition to contacts in Qatar between the Taliban and the United States.

But it was never clear whether the Taliban, who have resisted talks with the Afghan government, or the Saudis, who have conditione­d involvemen­t on the Taliban renouncing alQaida, would come on board.

Taliban negotiator­s have begun preliminar­y discussion­s with the United States in Qatar on plans for peace talks aimed at ending the war.

But they said in their statement Wednesday that they had not yet “reached the negotiatio­n phase with the U.S. and its allies.”

“Before there are negotiatio­ns there should be a trust-building phase, which has not begun yet,” the statement said.

One of the Taliban’s demands is for the United States to free five of its leaders from detention in the U.S. military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The leaked NATO report — seen by The

Times newspaper and the BBC — was compiled from informatio­n gleaned from insurgent detainees and was given to NATO commanders in Afghanista­n last month.

The “State of the Taliban” document claims that Islamabad, via Pakistan’s ISI intelligen­ce agency, is “intimately involved” with the insurgency and that the Taliban assume victory is inevitable once Western troops leave in 2014.

The Times quoted the report as saying the Taliban’s “strength, motivation, funding and tactical proficienc­y remains intact,” despite setbacks in 2011.

“Many Afghans are already bracing themselves for an eventual return of the Taliban,” it said. “Once (NATO force) ISAF is no longer a factor, Taliban consider their victory inevitable.”

NATO’S Internatio­nal Security Assistance Force (ISAF), however, appeared to distance itself from the contents of the document.

The document “may provide some level of representa­tive sampling of Taliban opinions and ideals but clearly should not be used as any interpreta­tion of campaign progress,” spokesman Lt.-col. Jimmie Cummings told AFP.

NATO spokeswoma­n Oana Lungescu downplayed the impact of the leaked report on the eve of a two-day meeting of NATO defence ministers in Brussels. She said it was “basically a summary” of statements made by Taliban detainees during interrogat­ions.

 ?? SHAH MARAI, AFP/GETY Image
s ?? U.S. airmen and soldiers treat a patient on an HC-130 Hercules aircraft
during a medical evacuation at Camp Bastion, Afghanista­n.
SHAH MARAI, AFP/GETY Image s U.S. airmen and soldiers treat a patient on an HC-130 Hercules aircraft during a medical evacuation at Camp Bastion, Afghanista­n.
 ??  ?? Khar
Khar

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada