The Star Early Edition

Taliban dismisses talks as ploy to lull it into surrender

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KABUL: The Taliban yesterday issued a cool response to proposals that it should begin peace talks with the Afghan government, a day after President Ashraf Ghani offered a pact to recognise the insurgents as a legitimate party in negotiatio­ns.

The movement has not yet given any formal answer to Ghani’s invitation, made at a conference of officials from countries in the “Kabul Process” aimed at creating a platform for talks to end more than 16 years of war.

But its chief spokesman did reply to an “Open Letter” published this week in the New Yorker magazine by Barnett Rubin, a respected commentato­r on Afghan politics, who urged the Taliban to accept talks with the Kabul government.

“Our country has been occupied, which has led to an American-style supposed Afghan government being imposed upon us,” the Taliban response read.

“And your view that we talk to them and accept their legitimacy is the same formula adopted by America to win the war,” it said, adding that the Kabul Process was simply aimed at seeking the “surrender” of the Taliban.

The comments came a month after the Taliban claimed responsibi­lity for an attack in which an ambulance packed with explosives blew up in Kabul, killing nearly 100 people, in the worst attack seen in months.

As part of its new regional strategy announced last year, the US has stepped up assistance to the Afghan military and greatly increased air strikes against the Taliban, in a bid to break the stalemate and force the insurgents to the negotiatin­g table.

However, Taliban fighters control large parts of the country, the Kabul government itself is deeply divided and thousands of Afghan soldiers and civilians are being killed every year.

The Taliban has itself twice offered to talk to the US in recent weeks, but ruled out talks with the Kabul government, a key sticking point that must be resolved before any talks can start.

While the internatio­nal community sees Ghani’s administra­tion as the sole legitimate government of Afghanista­n, the Taliban see it as an artificial, foreign-imposed regime that does not represent the Afghan people.

The Taliban statement said the movement was “sincerely committed” to meeting internatio­nal concerns over Afghanista­n being used as a base for terrorist attacks and had no wish for conflict with the US or other powers.

“The crux of the matter is, what is the vital concern of America, is it really terrorism?” it asked.

“Or is it extracting the mineral wealth of Afghanista­n, imposing a self-styled government, preventing establishm­ent of an Islamic system and pursuing imperial ambitions in the region from this land?

“In such circumstan­ces, we do not care about America, neither do we want to talk, nor end resistance, nor will we get tired,” the Taliban said. – Reuters

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