The Afghan government is part of a three-way peace dialogue involving the US and the Taliban, Afghan President Hamid Karzai reportedly said, despite the militia’s denunciation of his “puppet regime.”
Kabul has expressed fear of being marginalized as US officials explore a dialogue with the Islamist Taliban, who in turn have said they have no intention of talking to the president’s US-backed government, but in an interview with the Wall Street Journal published yesterday Karzai said the Afghan government was indeed involved in the dialogue and that most Taliban were “definitively” interested in a peace deal as foreign troops exit.
“There have been contacts -between the US government and the Taliban, there have been contacts between the Afghan government and the Taliban, and there have been some contacts that we have made, all of us together, including the Taliban,” Karzai was quoted as saying in the interview, conducted on Wednesday.
Photo: AFP
The president, who was scheduled to hold summit talks in Islamabad with the leaders of Pakistan and Iran yesterday, did not give any further details about the contacts.
Karzai did not mention any Pakistani involvement in the Taliban dialogue, but said the cooperation of Afghanistan’s fractious neighbor “would make the whole matter easier for us, for the Taliban and for the US.”
The Taliban said last month that it planned to set up a political office in Qatar ahead of possible formal talks with the US. Afghan and US officials have said that exploratory contacts are already under way.
To build confidence, the administration of US President Barack Obama has confirmed tentative talks with the Taliban on a possible transfer of five inmates from Guantanamo Bay to Qatar and on potential local ceasefires with the militia.
The nascent dialogue comes as the US and its foreign allies prepare to draw down their combat troop presence and hand full control of Afghanistan’s security to Afghan forces by the end of 2014.
The Taliban have often decried Karzai’s government as a “puppet regime” propped up by foreign troops and cash, but the president dismissed such talk as rhetoric.
In the interview, he said the Taliban might even accept a peace deal that allows for the long-term presence of US troops.
“There are a lot of people in the Taliban who are the sons of the soil and who do not want this country, the people of this country, to suffer,” he said.
Karzai also signaled flexibility about long-running negotiations with the US over a strategic partnership to govern Afghan-US relations after foreign combat troops leave.
Afghanistan could give ground on the question of legal immunity for US personnel in Afghanistan, he said, a stumbling block that prevented a similar strategic pact between the US and Iraq last year.
“That’s an issue that we can discuss,” the president told the Wall Street Journal. “We want a partnership with America and we will do all we can to make that possible.”
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