Taliban rejects 2014 pullout date
THE Taliban yesterday vowed to keep fighting the United States-led coalition and force them to abandon Afghanistan ahead of a 2014 date set by the alliance for the transition of security to Afghan control.
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in message e-mailed to the media that NATO will be unable to establish a stable government in Afghanistan by that date. He did not mention an offer from President Hamid Karzai for peace talks and eventual reconciliation - an offer rejected by the hard-line Taliban leadership.
During the summit, NATO leaders agreed to begin handing off security responsibility to Afghan security forces in early 2011, with a full transition targeted for the end of 2014. No timetable was set for the gradual transition of Afghanistan's 34 provinces to Afghan control and some troops are expected to remain in a combat role after 2014, although most international troops will be in a training role.
Mujahid said the Taliban "will not remain silent even for a single night until and unless the goal of complete freedom and the formation of an independent government is achieved. They will not wait for the time of implementation of a given decision or timetable of withdrawal."
NATO officials have said in Kabul that the transition will not necessarily mean that troops will be withdrawn, but could be moved to regions where they are needed.
US President Barack Obama has said a decision to withdraw would be conditional on the situation on the ground. In late 2009, Obama had spoken of starting a gradual pullout in July 2011.
Obama last year ordered an extra 30,000 US troops to Afghanistan to regain ground lost to the Taliban in the years following the US-led invasion of the country just one month after the September 11, 2001 attack. The US has the largest contingent with about 100,000 troops while other countries have about 40,000.
"In the past nine years, the invaders could not establish any system of governance in Kabul and they will never be able to do so in future," Mujahid said, adding that until 2014 "various untoward and tragic events and battles will take place as a result of this meaningless, imposed and unwinnable war."
A coalition spokesman in Kabul said the surge in troops had helped stop the Taliban's momentum in some regions and turn the tide in others.
"With additional forces and resources, we and our Afghan partners have been able to extend our influence to most key Afghan population centers," German Brigadier General Josef Blotz said. "Recent developments have shown that progress is possible. Our job now is to build on that progress to increase the momentum that has been achieved."
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in message e-mailed to the media that NATO will be unable to establish a stable government in Afghanistan by that date. He did not mention an offer from President Hamid Karzai for peace talks and eventual reconciliation - an offer rejected by the hard-line Taliban leadership.
During the summit, NATO leaders agreed to begin handing off security responsibility to Afghan security forces in early 2011, with a full transition targeted for the end of 2014. No timetable was set for the gradual transition of Afghanistan's 34 provinces to Afghan control and some troops are expected to remain in a combat role after 2014, although most international troops will be in a training role.
Mujahid said the Taliban "will not remain silent even for a single night until and unless the goal of complete freedom and the formation of an independent government is achieved. They will not wait for the time of implementation of a given decision or timetable of withdrawal."
NATO officials have said in Kabul that the transition will not necessarily mean that troops will be withdrawn, but could be moved to regions where they are needed.
US President Barack Obama has said a decision to withdraw would be conditional on the situation on the ground. In late 2009, Obama had spoken of starting a gradual pullout in July 2011.
Obama last year ordered an extra 30,000 US troops to Afghanistan to regain ground lost to the Taliban in the years following the US-led invasion of the country just one month after the September 11, 2001 attack. The US has the largest contingent with about 100,000 troops while other countries have about 40,000.
"In the past nine years, the invaders could not establish any system of governance in Kabul and they will never be able to do so in future," Mujahid said, adding that until 2014 "various untoward and tragic events and battles will take place as a result of this meaningless, imposed and unwinnable war."
A coalition spokesman in Kabul said the surge in troops had helped stop the Taliban's momentum in some regions and turn the tide in others.
"With additional forces and resources, we and our Afghan partners have been able to extend our influence to most key Afghan population centers," German Brigadier General Josef Blotz said. "Recent developments have shown that progress is possible. Our job now is to build on that progress to increase the momentum that has been achieved."
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