this week, and his top adviser on the reconciliation process with the
insurgents said in an interview Monday that the country must learn to
forgive the extremist group.
“If they (the
join the peace process, then why not?” Masoom Stanekzai, the senior
adviser to Karzai on the reintegration and reconciliation plans, told
The Obama administration has repeatedly voiced its opposition to including the
At a conference in
that was intended to entice rebel foot soldiers into the mainstream.
The U.S. and its allies, however, oppose using the separate
“reconciliation” track to reach out to Mullah Mohammed Omar and other
While the West favors a bottom-up approach to engaging with the
Karzai’s U.S.-backed government is pursuing a broader political deal
with the insurgents. “We, as Afghans, are trying to reach as high (up
the
The
The Karzai government’s attempts to engage the
Karzai will meet Saudi King Abdullah this week to
ask him to aid the peace process, according to presidential spokesman
Siamak Herawi. The Saudis held secret talks between the Afghan
government and figures associated with the
Karzai adviser Stanekzai said that
“confidence-building measures” are needed to convince the international
community that a dialogue with insurgent leaders should proceed. He
denied rumors that the Saudi visit would bring the Afghan government
into contact with the militants, saying there was “no such plan” to
meet
At an earlier news conference, Stanakzai pushed the
theme of forgiveness and said: “We need to look forward and ask
ourselves: For how long can we endanger our children for the problems
of the past?”
He said that talks already were under way, without
giving any detail: “We have contacts on the local, regional, national
and — at the same time — broader political level, but it is too early
to talk about the outcome of those contacts.”
Speaking at the same news conference, Afghan Foreign Minister
The
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(c) 2010, McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
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