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Monday, December 4, 2006

Pakistan promotes Taliban's approval

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By

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -- Senior Pakistani officials are urging NATO countries to accept the Taliban and negotiate a series of regional peace agreements similar to those that Pakistan has reached in tribal areas along its border with Afghanistan.

Prior to last week's NATO summit in Latvia, Pakistani Foreign Minister Khurshid Kasuri told foreign ministers from some NATO member nations that the Taliban was winning the war in Afghanistan and that NATO was bound to fail.

"Kasuri is basically asking NATO to surrender and to negotiate with the Taliban," said one Western official who met the minister recently.

British Lt. Gen. David Richards, NATO's force commander in Afghanistan, and Dutch Ambassador Daan Everts spent five days in Islamabad before the summit urging the Pakistani military to do more to rein in the Taliban, but left less than fully satisfied.

Lt. Gen. Ali Mohammed Jan Orakzai, governor of Pakistan's North West Frontier Province, said in an interview with Reuters news agency late last month that U.S. and British military actions in Afghanistan were merely feeding a "snowballing" insurgency.

"Either it is a lack of understanding or it is a lack of courage to admit their failures," he said of the two countries.

Gen. Orakzai also said the Taliban now lead a Pashtun-based "national resistance" movement whose aim is to throw out Western occupation forces.

But his comments have deeply angered many Pashtuns on both sides of the border.

Gen. Orakzai is the mastermind of peace deals between the Pakistan army and fiercely independent Pashtun tribes on the Pakistani side of the border.

While the agreements require tribal leaders to stop al Qaeda and Taliban fighters from crossing into Afghanistan, U.S. commanders in the region say attacks have increased since they were negotiated. Critics also say strict Islamist rule is being introduced in the areas.

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