Taliban want to end Afghan war through dialogue
KABUL: The Taliban said on Wednesday they want to end Afghanistan´s war through dialogue but warned that their willingness to find peace did not mean they were exhausted and that their armed campaign would be sustained no matter how powerful the US opposition.
A more aggressive US strategy in Afghanistan including a surge in air strikes introduced by President Donald Trump in August has pushed the Taliban back from several district centres and two provincial capitals. But the militants control large parts of the countryside and have responded to the more aggressive US strategy with two attacks in Kabul in the past few weeks, killing nearly 150 people.
The attacks have toughened both the US and Afghan government stand on trying to initiate talks to end nearly 17 years of war that neither side seems capable of winning. The Taliban offer of dialogue came in a statement addressed to the American people. "Our preference is to solve the Afghan issue through peaceful dialogue," the Taliban said.
In their statement, the Taliban did not mention a Jan. 27 raid on a top Kabul hotel, in which more than 30 people were killed, nor a bomb attack on a crowded street a week later that killed more than 100. They claimed both attacks.
The Taliban, fighting to oust foreign forces and defeat the US-backed government, said the United States must end its "occupation" and accept the Taliban right to form a government "consistent with the beliefs of our people". The militants only mentioned the Afghan government to deride it on various grounds.
A government spokesman declined to comment on the statement and a spokesman for Afghanistan´s Nato-led military mission was not immediately available for comment.
It was not too late for the American people to realise the Taliban can solve problems with every side "through healthy politics and dialogue", the militants said, adding the chances for dialogue were "not exhausted". Preliminary talks on ending the war that kills thousands of people each year have stalled. But low-level contacts between the government, international groups including the United Nations and groups close to the Taliban have continued even as the insurgency has escalated.
Progress has been blocked by the deep mistrust between the government and the Taliban, as well as uncertainty about the position of neighbours including Pakistan, which Afghanistan has long accused of aiding the insurgents. Pakistan rejects accusations that it sponsors the Taliban.
-
Savannah Guthrie Expresses Fresh Hope As Person Detained For Questioning Over Kidnapping Of Nancy -
ByteDance Suspends Viral Seedance 2.0 Photo-to-voice Feature: Here’s Why -
Tom Hanks Diabetes 2 Management Strategy Laid Bare -
Bad Bunny Wins Hearts With Sweet Gesture At Super Bowl Halftime Show -
Why Angelina Jolie Loves Her 'scars' Following Double Mastectomy -
‘World Is In Peril’: Anthropic AI Safety Researcher Resigns, Warns Of Global Risks -
Meghan Markle Receives Apology As Andrew Puts Monarchy In Much Bigger Scandal -
Catherine O’Hara Becomes Beacon Of Hope For Rectal Cancer Patients -
Nancy Guthrie: Is She Alive? Former FBI Director Shares Possibilities On 10th Day Of Kidnapping -
Siemens Energy Profit Surges Nearly Threefold Amid AI Boom For Gas Turbines, Grids -
TikTok's ByteDance To Develop Advance AI Chips With Samsung -
Princess Beatrice, Eugenie In Dilemma As Andrew, Fergie Scandal Continues -
Tumbler Ridge School Shooting Among Canada’s Deadliest — Here’s Where It Ranks -
Suspect Detained As Authorities Probe Nancy Guthrie’s Abduction -
Tumbler Ridge Tragedy: Nine Killed, 25 Injured After School Shooting In British Columbia -
FDA Sends 'refusal-to-file' To Moderna Over New Flu Vaccine