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Tuesday, May 21 2013
The Russian Spring
On September 24, when it was announced at the congress of the ruling party of Russia that our next president will once again be Vladimir Putin, my wife said to me: "That's it. We need to leave. I don't not want to spend the rest of my life ...
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Karzai discloses holding peace talks with rebels

AP

KABUL AFGHANISTAN’S President Hamid Karzai said on Saturday that he personally held peace talks recently with the insurgent faction Hizb-i- Islami, appearing to assert his own role in a US-led bid for negotiations to end the country’s decade-long war.

Karzai made the announcement hours before he was to meet with American special representative Marc Grossman to discuss progress and plans for bringing the Taliban insurgency into formal talks for the first time.

“Recently, we met with a delegation from Hizb-i-Islami ... and had negotiations,” Karzai told a meeting of the Afghan parliament, adding, “We are hopeful that these negotiations for peace continue and we will have good results.” Hizb-i-Islami is a radical Islamist militia that controls territory in Afghanistan’s northeast and launches attacks against US forces from Pakistan. Its leader, powerful warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, is a former US ally now listed as a terrorist by Washington.

The president has met before with representatives of Hekmatyar, whose political allies hold seats in the Afghan parliament and Cabinet, but Saturday’s public announcement seemed intended to bolster Karzai’s insistence on inclusion in the US-led peace process.

Karzai’s statement was also a reminder that any negotiations to end Afghanistan’s war will be more complex than just talking to the Taliban’s Pakistan-based leadership, headed by Mullah Mohammad Omar.

Hizb-i-Islami, also based over the Pakistan border, has ties to Al Qaeda and has launched deadly attacks on US troops in Afghanistan.

Fighters loyal to Hekmatyar also have strongholds in Baghlan, Kunduz and Kunar provinces in the north and northeast Afghanistan.

There is also the feared Haqqani network, which maintains close ties to both Al Qaeda and the Taliban and commands the loyalties of an estimated 10,000 fighters.

The Haqqanis have been blamed for a series of spectacular attacks, including suicide bombings inside Kabul.

By showing he can bring at least one major faction to the negotiating table, Karzai may hope to increase his standing in a tentative peace process that has recently been dominated by Washington. The US has repeatedly said that formal negotiations must be Afghan-led, but Karzai is reportedly uneasy with his government not being directly involved in recent preliminary talks with Taliban representatives.

“It should be mentioned that the Afghan nation is the owner of the peace process and negotiations,” Karzai said. “No foreign country or organisation can prevent (Afghans) from exercising this right.” US representative Grossman recently stressed that any future negotiations would include Afghanistan’s government, and said he would meet Karzai on Saturday.

“After our meeting with President Karzai, we will decide what to do next because we take his guidance and advice in an Afghanowned and Afghan-led process,” Grossman said Friday at a stop in India.

The Taliban have vowed to keep fighting as they explore a possible political resolution to the war.

A member of the NATO military force in Afghanistan was killed Saturday in an insurgent attack in southern Afghanistan, the coalition said. The statement gave no other details, nor the nationality of the casualty.

The attack comes a day after an Afghan soldier opened fire on French troops during a training exercise, killing four of them and prompting France to suspend its training programmes.


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