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Karzai welcomes Obama's truce call toward Taliban

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  • Karzai welcomes Obama's truce call toward Taliban

    Karzai welcomes Obama's truce call toward Taliban

    http://www.ngrguardiannews.com/world/arti cle02/indexn2_html?pdate=090309&ptitle=Karzai% 20welcomes%20Obama's%20truce%20call%20toward%20Tal iban
    Monday, March 09, 2009


    AFGHANISTAN President Hamid Karzai has welcomed his United States
    (U.S.) counterpart, Barack Obama's, call to identify moderate elements
    of the Taliban and encourage them to reconcile with the Afghan
    government.

    Obama's call "was good news because this has been the stand of the
    Afghan government", the Associated Press (AP) quoted Karzai as telling
    a gymnasium full of Afghan women during a speech to commemorate
    International Women's Day.

    Obama said in an interview with The New York Times published yesterday
    that there might be opportunities to reach out to moderates in the
    Taliban, but the situation in Afghanistan is more complicated than the
    challenges the American military faced in Iraq.

    "There may be some comparable opportunities in Afghanistan and in the
    Pakistani region", Obama said, while cautioning that solutions in
    Afghanistan will be complicated.

    U.S. troops were able to persuade Sunni Moslem insurgents in Iraq to
    cooperate in some instances because they had been alienated by the
    tactics of al-Qaeda terrorists.

    Karzai warned that there are Taliban fighters who are beyond
    reconciliation - those who have joined with al-Qaeda, for instance. But
    he said talks should go forward "with those who are afraid to come back
    to their country, or who feel they have no choice but to stay with the
    Taliban for various reasons. They are welcome".

    Obama cautioned that Afghanistan is a less-governed region than Iraq
    with a history of fierce independence among tribes, creating a tough
    set of circumstances for the United States to deal with.

    The American leader last month ordered 17,000 more troops to
    Afghanistan to bolster the record of 38,000 American forces already in
    the country. Obama has promised to increase the U.S. focus on
    Afghanistan and away from Iraq, as the U.S. begins to draw down its
    forces there.

    In the latest violence, a roadside blast killed a North Atlantic Treaty
    Organisation (NATO) service member and wounded two U.S. coalition
    members in eastern Afghanistan on Sunday, the NATO-led force said. The
    alliance did not disclose the troops' nationalities or the exact
    location of the attack, but the majority of troops in eastern
    Afghanistan are American.

    Another roadside blast in central Ghazni province hit a police vehicle,
    killing six policemen and wounding another six officers, said Ismail
    Jahangir, the spokesman for the provincial governor.

    A joint Afghan-coalition patrol, meanwhile, killed two Afghan policemen
    late on Friday who opened fire on their team in north-eastern Kapisa
    province, the coalition said in a statement yesterday.

    The joint patrol, which was on foot, attempted to identify themselves
    as friendly forces to the police without success, the statement said.
    "In self-defense, the patrol returned fire killing two individuals", it
    said.

    The string of deaths continues an upward spike in violence that has
    spread throughout Afghanistan in the past three years even as Obama's
    administration is trying to come up with a new approach to dealing with
    the Afghan war.

    In a separate development, Turkey's Foreign Minister, Ali Babacan, has
    said there was a "risk" that Obama would recognise the massacre of
    Armenians a century ago as genocide.

    Babacan, in an interview with the NTV television channel, said that
    such a move would only impede efforts to reconcile Turkey and Armenia.

    Obama, who is expected to visit Turkey in April, said several times
    during his election campaign that he would recognise the 1915-1917
    massacres under the Ottoman Empire as genocide.

    The United States has previously condemned the killings while not
    calling them genocide to avoid tensions with Turkey, a NATO member and
    key Middle East ally.

    "I still see a risk", Babacan said. "Mr Obama made the promise five
    times in a row", he added.

    He added, however, that "the new American administration understands
    Turkey's sensibilities better today" and called on the United States
    not to interfere in the dispute between the neighbours.

    "It would not be rational for a third country to take a position on
    this topic. A bad step by the United States would only worsen the
    process" of reconciliation between Armenia and Turkey.

    The two countries offer starkly different accounts of the events and
    the dispute has been a major obstacle in relations between Ankara and
    Yerevan.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million people died between 1915 and 1917 in
    orchestrated killings as the Ottoman Empire fell apart. More than 20
    countries have recognised the killings as genocide.

    Turkey rejects the genocide label and argues that between 300,000 and
    500,000 Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife when
    Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided
    with invading Russian troops.

    U.S. Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, announced during a visit to
    Ankara on Saturday that Obama would visit Turkey "within the next month
    or so". The visit is expected in April.
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