Fear Spurs New Drive For Talks With Afghan Taliban -- McClatchy News
ISLAMABAD — For the last decade, the United States and Afghanistan have viewed Pakistan as part of the problem as they worked to subdue the Afghan insurgency. Yet suddenly the three countries are working together for an Afghan peace, with Pakistan handling one of the trickiest aspects of the effort: bringing the Taliban to the talks.
From villain, Pakistan has emerged as the key to working out a deal, an amazing transformation for a country that was long seen as the Taliban’s main foreign backer when they were in power in Afghanistan, and whose territory, willingly or unwillingly, provided a haven when U.S. and NATO drove the Taliban from power in 2001.
Read more ....
More News On Afghanistan
US soldier killed in attack on Nato base in Afghanistan -- BBC
Bomb attack kills 3 after Panetta leaves -- UPI
Suicide Bomber Kills 3 Outside Kandahar Air Field After Panetta Visit -- ABC News
Taliban take credit for bomb that killed American, Afghans -- CNN
Panetta: Karzai to meet Obama in Washington next month -- AP
Obama, Karzai to Discuss U.S. Future in Afghanistan -- US Department of Defense
Obama to Meet Karzai to Talk of U.S. Troops After 2014 -- Bloomberg Businessweek
Karzai To Visit Washington Next Month To Discuss U.S. Future In Afghanistan -- RTT
US officials in Kabul give Panetta rosy picture of Afghan situation -- Washington Post
Washington has no plan to leave Afghanistan: Grossman -- Khaama Press
US urges Pakistan crack down on bomb fertilizer production -- ANI
US Uniforms Still Found in Kabul Shops -- Military.com/Stars and Stripes
Georgia Vows to Continue Afghan Military Mission -- Voice of America
UN reports 28% increase in Afghan civilian casualties -- Khaama Press
Taliban release helps Afghan-Pakistani ties and raises hopes for peace deal -- The Guardian
Security agreement with Washington vital for Afghanistan -- Khaama Press
Q&A: What does the future hold for Afghanistan? -- CNN
How Many U.S. Troops To Stay In Afghanistan And For How Long? -- Boris Volkhonsky, Global Research
War in Afghanistan: The Unseen Sacrifice -- James Wright, Huffington Post
No comments:
Post a Comment