US to start direct negotiations with Taliban

simple_and_peacefull

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Source of news : Dunyia news

A US newspaper reported that the Obama administration was directly engaged in negotiating with Taliban and discarded the option of Pakistan’s mediation by calling it “unnecessary.”A US representative attended three meetings in Qatar and Germany, with a Taliban official considered close to Mullah Muhammad Omar, the report said.It said that Washington was hoping to make progress in these talks before July, when President Barack Obama announces the first troop withdrawals from Afghanistan, part of a process of handing over responsibilities to Afghan forces by 2014.The report about the talks comes more than two weeks after the death of Osama bin Laden by the US special forces, which analysts said helped clear the path for a political settlement in Afghanistan by making it easier for the Taliban to sever ties with al Qaeda.The paper said the talks with the Taliban had taken place through non-government intermediaries and Arab and European governments. The Taliban, it said, had insisted on direct negotiations with the US and proposed opening a formal office, with Qatar as a possible venue.US special envoy for Pakistan and Afghanistan is expected to play a key role in the talks. According to the paper, the Taliban had transmitted a longstanding list of demands, including the release of up to 20 men detained at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. They also wanted withdrawal of all foreign troops and a guarantee of a substantive Taliban role in the government.The report said that the discussions were being conducted with the part of the Taliban that answered to Mullah Omar as the US envisioned no future role of Haqqani network.
 

sngilani

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
The real problem in the Afghan war is India, Pakistan and Kashmir. The United States is struggling to implement a strategy for Afghanistan. Fighting terrorists or fighting Taliban -- or indeed, fighting in Afghanistan at all -- addresses symptoms rather than the disease in South Asia. The horrific, wasteful, tragic and dangerous six-decade confrontation between India and Pakistan over Kashmir cannot be ignored. Northern Alliance is backed by money and weapons from India, and militant groups among the southern Pashtuns are backed by Pakistan. Ignoring Kashmir, as the US is doing, will not solve the conflict in this region. The US has to include Kashmir in the picture, and then it would all make sense.