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Afghanistan/South Asia
US offers olive branch to Taleban
2004-12-02
The US ambassador to Afghanistan says that members of the Taleban who disarm will not be punished. Zalmay Khalilzad exhorted them to contact tribal elders and lay down their arms to avoid being targeted. He said that continued resistance is contrary to the will of the Afghan people and of Islam. It is not clear on what legal basis Mr Khalilzad, in his role as a representative of a foreign country, made his offer to the Taleban.
He's our ambassador to Afghanistan. He's offering to let them lay down their arms and surrender. Go consult your lawyer for further details.
There are 18,000 US troops in Afghanistan. Mr Khalilzad made his plea to the Taleban during a press conference in the Afghan capital, Kabul. "There's no need to fight, to stay in Pakistan the mountains," he said. "Afghanistan has entered a new stage." Taleban fighters should pledge allegiance to the government of President Hamid Karzai. "In return, they will not be punished," Mr Khalilzad promised. However, the offer would not apply to Taleban members guilty of serious crimes. A Taleban spokesman, Mufti Latifullah Hakimi, has rejected the appeal, Reuters news agency reports. "This is just a deception," Mr Hakimi said, the agency reports.
"I spit on your offer!"
The Taleban regard President Karzai as a puppet of the American government. Mr Karzai has spoken out in the past about the need to include former Taleban moderates in Afghanistan's political process. He has said that Taleban fighters who lay down their arms would be granted an amnesty if they renounced terrorism and dissociate from Osama Bin Laden's al-Qaeda network. The United States has staunchly supported Mr Karzai as leader of Afghanistan and its troops are leading the fight against the Taleban and its supporters. The US ambassador is an expatriate Afghan, and is the highest ranking Muslim in George Bush's administration. He is credited for brokering a peace deal between rival militia commanders in the western city of Herat in August, and is believed to have been instrumental in persuading the warlord Ismail Khan to step down as provincial governor in September.
Posted by:tipper

#1  "This is just a deception," Mr Hakimi said

"Besides cutting off hands in front of a capacity crowd at a soccer stadium really turns me on. I want my power back!", Hakimi added...

Posted by: BigEd   2004-12-02 1:08:29 PM  

00:00