Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Afghanistan War News Updates -- May 4, 2011



With Bin Laden’s Death, U.S. Sees A Chance To Hasten The End Of The Afghan War -- Washington Post

The Obama administration is seeking to use the killing of Osama bin Laden to accelerate a negotiated settlement with the Taliban and hasten the end of the Afghanistan war, according to U.S. officials involved in war policy.

Administration officials think it could now be easier for the reclusive leader of the largest Taliban faction, Mohammad Omar, to break his group’s alliance with al-Qaeda, a key U.S. requirement for any peace deal. They also think that bin Laden’s death could make peace talks a more palatable outcome for Americans and insulate President Obama from criticism that his administration would be negotiating with terrorists.

Read more ....



More News On Afghanistan

Bin Laden death will not change Afghan strategy: Govt. -- Yahoo News/AFP
NATO chief says Afghan mission on track after bin Laden -- Reuters
France mulls quicker Afghan withdrawal after Osama bin Laden's death -- Christian Science Monitor
Osama bin Laden dead: Britain's Afghanistan strategy unchanged -- The Telegraph
Afghanistan Intensifies Anti-Pakistan Rhetoric in Aftermath of Bin Laden Raid -- New York Times
Afghanistan’s Ministry of Defence openly accuses Pakistan of knowing bin Laden’s whereabouts -- Globe And Mail
Afghan Taliban likely to rethink ties to al-Qaida -- Forbes/AP
Inside the Taliban's jailbreak tunnel -- CNN
New footage of captured US soldier: SITE -- Yahoo News/AFP
After bin Laden: Why the US wants military access to Afghanistan beyond 2014 -- Christian Science Monitor
Wesley Clark: Tough it out in Afghanistan -- CNN
The Crossroads. Can we win in Afghanistan? -- Peter Bergen, The New Republic
A decade in Afghanistan is enough -- Star Ledger editorial
An opportunity for peace talks with the Taliban -- Julius Cavendish, The Independent
Osama dead: Afghans see it as another chapter in conflict -- Aunohita Mojumdar, Economic Times
Afghanistan: time for the US to go -- Amy Goodman, The Guardian
US military deaths in Afghanistan at 1,461 -- AP

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