The Taliban denounced this week’s international conference on Afghanistan’s future, saying the “vague and terrible agenda” shows that the US and its allies intend to abandon the country and blame their ultimate defeat on the Afghan government.
Representatives of the US and 60 other countries met on Tuesday to endorse Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s plan for Afghan police and soldiers to take charge of security nationwide by 2014. Karzai also urged his international backers to distribute more of their development aid through his government.
In a statement posted in English on their Web site, the Taliban said the conference showed that the US “has lost the initiatives and is unable to resolve Afghanistan issue.”
The statement was distributed to news organizations by the SITE Intelligence Group that monitors extremist communications.
“Whatever actions are taken in this regard have already been doomed to a failure,” the statement said. “It is evident from the vague and terrible agenda of the conference ... that America and the international community intend to pull out of Afghanistan” and blame “all the coming destruction’s [sic], humiliation and defeat on Kabul puppet regime,” meaning the Karzai administration, it said.
A massive security crackdown prevented the Taliban from launching any major attacks in the capital during the conference.
However, rockets fired at the Kabul airport on Tuesday forced the plane carrying UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt to divert to Bagram Air Field north of the city.
The Taliban said the attack “turned the moments of peace and safety of the US invaders into disaster” and left conference participants “scared to death.”
Also on Wednesday, NATO said insurgents beheaded six Afghan policemen after attacking their checkpoint in northern Afghanistan the day before. The coalition said militants attacked a number of government buildings and the checkpoint on Tuesday in Baghlan Province’s Dahanah-ye Ghori district. The attackers overran the checkpoint and decapitated the six policemen, NATO said.
Elsewhere, NATO reported three more service member deaths in roadside bombings on Wednesday in southern Afghanistan. The alliance did not report nationalities, but the Danish military said one of the dead was a Danish soldier.
Another Dane was wounded, the Danish military said.
The deaths brought the number of NATO service members killed this month to 67.
Violence and casualties have surged in recent months as the US and its allies have stepped up the fight against the Taliban. Last month was the deadliest month of the war for international troops with 103 deaths, including 60 Americans.
In Australia, the defense ministry said the main NATO base outside the southern city of Kandahar came under Taliban rocket fire late on Monday, causing minor damage but no Australian casualties.
No further details were released. The NATO base at the Kandahar Air Field comes under rocket and mortar fire from time to time, usually without causing major damage or casualties.
China yesterday held a low-key memorial ceremony for the 1937 Nanjing Massacre, with Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) not attending, despite a diplomatic crisis between Beijing and Tokyo over Taiwan. Beijing has raged at Tokyo since Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi last month said that a hypothetical Chinese attack on Taiwan could trigger a military response from Japan. China and Japan have long sparred over their painful history. China consistently reminds its people of the 1937 Nanjing Massacre, in which it says Japanese troops killed 300,000 people in what was then its capital. A post-World War II Allied tribunal put the death toll
The Burmese junta has said that detained former leader Aung San Suu Kyi is “in good health,” a day after her son said he has received little information about the 80-year-old’s condition and fears she could die without him knowing. In an interview in Tokyo earlier this week, Kim Aris said he had not heard from his mother in years and believes she is being held incommunicado in the capital, Naypyidaw. Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, was detained after a 2021 military coup that ousted her elected civilian government and sparked a civil war. She is serving a
‘NO AMNESTY’: Tens of thousands of people joined the rally against a bill that would slash the former president’s prison term; President Lula has said he would veto the bill Tens of thousands of Brazilians on Sunday demonstrated against a bill that advanced in Congress this week that would reduce the time former president Jair Bolsonaro spends behind bars following his sentence of more than 27 years for attempting a coup. Protests took place in the capital, Brasilia, and in other major cities across the nation, including Sao Paulo, Florianopolis, Salvador and Recife. On Copacabana’s boardwalk in Rio de Janeiro, crowds composed of left-wing voters chanted “No amnesty” and “Out with Hugo Motta,” a reference to the speaker of the lower house, which approved the bill on Wednesday last week. It is
FALLEN: The nine soldiers who were killed while carrying out combat and engineering tasks in Russia were given the title of Hero of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea North Korean leader Kim Jong-un attended a welcoming ceremony for an army engineering unit that had returned home after carrying out duties in Russia, North Korean state media KCNA reported on Saturday. In a speech carried by KCNA, Kim praised officers and soldiers of the 528th Regiment of Engineers of the Korean People’s Army (KPA) for “heroic” conduct and “mass heroism” in fulfilling orders issued by the ruling Workers’ Party of Korea during a 120-day overseas deployment. Video footage released by North Korea showed uniformed soldiers disembarking from an aircraft, Kim hugging a soldier seated in a wheelchair, and soldiers and officials