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Pakistan to host 4-nations, Pakistan, China and the United States meeting on ending Afghan war

Foreign invasions in these countries messing up the entire law and order of these countries. Left Afghanistan, Taliban controlled it. Left Iraq, ISIS controlled it. More convenient is the advamced weaponry not secured and evently comes in the hand of these terrorists.

Sir.. Agreed but I think this time we should play our role during exit process so after transition things would be favourable rather controlled by Indian proxies though unrest in backyard is an annoying thing and can cause loosing grip on situation. Things are pretty messed but maximum could be gained rather it turns into a total graveyard.
 
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Four-way Afghanistan peace talks begin
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  • From the sectionAsia
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Image copyrightAFP
Image captionThe Taliban, divided following a leadership struggle, are not attending the talks

Key Afghan, Pakistani, Chinese and US officials are meeting for talks aimed at establishing a roadmap for peace between Afghanistan and the Taliban.

The Afghan government has been locked in a bloody conflict with Taliban militants for more than a decade.

Delegates hope the talks, hosted by Pakistan, will help pave the way for negotiations with the Afghan Taliban.

However, the Taliban, who are divided by factional infighting, are not attending Monday's talks.

Peace talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban last year collapsed, after news emerged that Taliban leader Mullah Omar had in fact died in 2013.

His deputy Mullah Mansour was declared leader in July - but a number of senior Taliban commanders refused to pledge allegiance to him and a faction opposed to him was set up under Mullah Mohammad Rasool.

Analysis: M Ilyas Khan, BBC News, Islamabad

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Image copyrightEPA
Image captionPakistani foreign affairs adviser Sartaj Aziz (centre), Afghan Deputy Foreign Minister Hekmat Khalil Karzai (right) and US special representative Richard Olson (left) at the talks
Perhaps the most significant aspect of these talks is the participation of the US and China, which can to an extent dilute Kabul's scepticism about Pakistani motives.

But the complexity of links between Pakistan and the Taliban are likely to make the reconciliation process trickier, and protracted.

The question of whether the Taliban could end up being happy with what Kabul can offer may be closely linked to the extent to which Pakistan is satisfied with the direction of the talks. This is because Pakistan is widely understood to be housing the Taliban leadership on its soil and has influence over them, though it denies this.

Pakistan would like the participants to reduce the impact of anti-Pakistan elements in Kabul, and persuade the Afghan government to be less enthusiastic about its relations with India, Pakistan's rival.

The rift within the Taliban may also figure as a hurdle in successful reconciliation - but many say this could be just a political ploy because the breakaway Taliban faction is too weak and without a safe sanctuary and resources.

The Taliban has launched several high-profile attacks in recent months.

In December, the militant group launched an attack on the strategic district of Sangin, briefly seizing the police headquarters and main government building.

And in September, the Taliban briefly overran the northern Afghan city of Kunduz, in one of their biggest victories since 2001.

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Image copyrightEPA
Image captionSangin has seen fierce clashes between the Taliban and government troops.

Afghan peace talks resume in Pakistan
Hopes pinned on negotiations, which also involve US and China, to lead to renewed efforts to engage the Taliban.
11 Jan 2016 10:38 GMT | Politics, War & Conflict, US & Canada, Asia Pacific, Asia


Factors influencing peace talks
    1. Infighting within the Taliban: Ever since the appointment of new leader Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Mansour, there have been divisions, and it is unclear who would represent the group if talks went forward.
    2. The rise of ISIL in eastern Afghanistan: The armed group has been fighting the Taliban.
    3. Lack of trust and confidence between Pakistan and Afghanistan: There is hope that with the involvement of the US and China, this could be mended.

    Talks aimed at kickstarting negotiations for a final peace settlement in Afghanistan have begun in Pakistan.

    Monday's meeting could revive a process that collapsed last summer after Afghanistan announced that Mullah Mohammad Omar, founder and leader of the Taliban, had died in a Pakistani hospital more than two years ago.

    The announcement led the Taliban to pull out of the talks after just one meeting hosted by Islamabad.

    The discussions on Monday will also include the governments of the US and China.
    Javid Faisal, deputy spokesman for Afghan Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah, said that Pakistan would present a list of Taliban members who are and are not willing to participate in talks with Kabul on ending the 15-year war.

    The agreement would also include "bilateral cooperation on eliminating terrorism", Faisal said.

    "Those who are interested in peace can join the dialogue, but those who wish to continue the fight will be targeted through joint counterterrorism platforms," Faisal said.

    Speaking at the meeting on Monday, Sartaj Aziz, a foreign affairs adviser to Pakistan's prime minister, said: "The primary objective of the reconciliation process is to create conditions to bring the Taliban groups to the negotiation table and offer them incentives that can persuade them to move away from using violence as tool for pursuing political goals."

    Aziz said that neither preconditions nor threat of military action should be attached to the start of the negotiation process.

    Attempts at peace talks have occurred in the past, but Al Jazeera's Omar al-Saleh, reporting from Kabul, said: "What is different this time is that when the Pakistani army chief [General Raheel Sharif] came to Kabul last month, the two sides [Afghanistan and Pakistan] agreed that this time Pakistan will use force alongside the Afghan government against any Taliban members who oppose the peace talks."

    He identified several factors the parties must be taking into consideration, including what he called "the splinter within the Taliban".

    "The Taliban is not one united faction ever since the appointment of their new leader, Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Mansour," he said.

    ISIL phenomenon

    This power struggle within the Taliban has raised questions about who would represent the group if and when the talks with the Afghan government restart.

    "There is also the emergence of ISIL [the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant group] in eastern Afghanistan, which is fighting the Taliban. And, finally, the lack of confidence and trust between Pakistan and Afghanistan is a major issue, and they will try with the Americans and the Chinese to resolve these issues," the Al Jazeera correspondent said.

    The Taliban has stepped up attacks since the US and NATO formally ended their combat mission in Afghanistan a year ago, and the fighters are battling local Afghan security forces on several fronts.

    The group is expected to keep up the fight even if peace talks get off the ground in order to secure territory and improve their leverage in the negotiations.

    When Taliban opened its office in Qatar in June 2013, it outlined its two-pronged strategy of fighting and negotiating simultaneously.

    It appears now that the group has made good its pledge, Al Jazeera's Hashmat Moslih says.

    "The Taliban has always made the [complete] withdrawal of foreign forces from Afghanistan as one of its main demands for peace," he said.

    "The fighters also want constitutional reform with the word 'sharia' mentioned in the constitution.

    "Since the Taliban is a predominantly Pashtun force, the main challenge is how to integrate the group into the national unity government without disturbing the delicate ethnic balance that has arguably been achieved."


    Inside Story - The Taliban's growing reach


    Source: Al Jazeera and agencies
 
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Four countries call on Taliban to come to Afghan peace table
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A second round of peace talks includes delegates from the U.S., Afghanistan, Pakistan and China at the presidential palace in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Monday. Representatives from the Taliban did not attend. (Jawad Jalali / European Pressphoto Agency)

Ali M. Latifi

Delegates from four countries called on the Taliban to resume peace talks with the government of Afghanistan as the U.S.-backed diplomatic push gathered momentum.


Representatives of the governments of Afghanistan, Pakistan, China and the United States met in Kabul on Monday, one week after the first meeting was held in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad.

Representatives of the Taliban did not attend. Although some insurgent leaders had previously indicated interest in opening talks with the Kabul government, there have been fewer signs recently of the Taliban’s willingness to negotiate as the group seizes more territory in parts of Afghanistan.

In a statement, the countries said they called on Taliban factions to “enter into early talks with the Afghan government to resolve all differences.” The next meeting of the group was set for Feb. 6 in Islamabad.

Monday’s meeting came as the Taliban and other militant groups, including fighters claiming allegiance to the Iraq- and Syria-based Islamic State, continue to conduct increasingly audacious attacks throughout Afghanistan.

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The head of Pakistan's delegation, Aizaz Chaudhry, center, listens to discussions about a road map for ending the war with the Taliban. (Rahmat Gul / Associated Press





[URL='http://www.latimes.com/world/asia/la-fg-afghanistan-peace-talks-20160111-story.html']Four nations, including U.S., try to jump-start peace talks in Afghanistan
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Waheed Muzhda, a former official in the Taliban government that ruled Afghanistan until the U.S.-led invasion in 2001, said the reports of infighting have been exaggerated.

“There have been internal conflicts within the Taliban as far back as 2001, but a few leaders took the announcement of Mullah Omar's death as an advantage to announce publicly their disagreements with Mullah Mansoor,” Muzhda said.

The men challenging Mansoor lack the battlefield resources to present a military threat to the main Taliban movement, Muzhda said.

Despite the questions surrounding the Taliban, and its significant territorial gains in the southern province of Helmand in recent months, the four-nation group said it remained optimistic about the prospect of “Afghan-led and Afghan-owned talks.”

This is the latest attempt to bring the Taliban to the negotiating table to end more than 14 years of conflict. The Afghan government has previously tried to start both direct and indirect talks, and the United States and several European governments initiated contacts with Taliban delegates based in the Persian Gulf sheikhdom of Qatar that eventually fell through.

The current process is seen as having the best chance because of the involvement of Pakistan, where the Taliban’s main leadership is based.

Afghan leaders have called on Pakistan to take action against Taliban factions that reject talks. The four nations’ joint statement said they all were committed to “eliminate all forms of terrorist groups, regardless of their national origin, operating in their respective territories.”

Latifi is a special correspondent.
Four countries call on Taliban to come to Afghan peace table - LA Times

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A second round of four-country talks aimed at reviving peace negotiations with the Taliban began in Kabul on Monday, even as the insurgents wage an unprecedented winter campaign of violence across Afghanistan.

Delegates from Afghanistan, Pakistan, China and the United States (US) convened in the Afghan capital for a one-day meeting seeking a negotiated end to the bloody 14-year insurgency.

Foreign Minister Salahuddin Rabbani opened the meeting which is taking place at the Presidential Palace in the centre of the capital, Tolo News reported.

Early restoration of peace in Afghanistan is a precondition for peace in the wider region, especially Pakistan, he said, adding that it had not remained immune to the scourge of terrorism.

He urged “all Taliban groups to accept our call for peace through dialogue, and to come to the table for talks so that we can resolve all differences politically and ensure the rightful and just desire of the Afghan people for lasting peace”.

Speaking about the importance of peace in the country, he said, “There isn’t a single Afghan family that hasn’t been affected by the daily acts of brutal and deadly terrorism carried out across our cities, towns, and villages. Our children ─ girls and boys ─ are attacked on their way to school and our mosques and public spaces are blown up all in the name of a noble religion, which in reality stands for peace and peaceful coexistence.”

He said any further delay on the part of the group to join the peace talks would further isolate them in the eyes of the Afghan people, and expressed hope that the Quadrilateral Coordination Committee (QCC) would “find ways to collectively deal with those refusing to come to talks”.

He said determining mechanisms for collaborating effectively to ensure regional stability was a priority for the group.

The Afghan government is encouraged by the “the repeated strong commitment of Pakistan’s leadership during this time to cooperate with us on a range of issues, including counter-terrorism and facilitating a result-oriented peace and reconciliation process”.

“While we understand achieving a lasting peace would require patience and determination, it is equally important to keep in mind that the Afghan public will not accept an open-ended process without tangible results,” Rabbani said.

Foreign Secretary Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhary is representing Pakistan at the meeting, Foreign Office Spokesman Qazi Khalilullah confirmed.

Afghan Foreign Ministry Spokesman Shekib Mostaghni said the meeting would be attended by the same officials that met in Islamabad last week: Afghanistan’s Deputy Foreign Minister Hekmat Karzai, US envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard G. Olson, his Chinese counterpart Deng Xijun and the Pentagon’s senior envoy to Pakistan, Lt. Gen. Anthony Rock.

The Taliban have not been invited to this meeting.

Security in parts of the capital was tight with a heavy armed police presence.

The first round of the “roadmap” talks was held in Islamabad last week as the four nations try to lay the groundwork for direct dialogue between Kabul and the Taliban.

During the meeting, Sartaj Aziz proposed four points to help guide the reconciliation process: Creating conditions to incentivise the Taliban to move away from using violence to pursue political goals and come to the negotiating table; Sequencing actions and measures appropriately to pave the way for direct talks with the Taliban; Using confidence-building measures to encourage Taliban groups to join the negotiating table; A realistic and flexible roadmap which broadly defines steps and phases ─ but avoids unrealistic targets and deadlines ─ is important for charting the course of action.

At last week’s talks in Islamabad, Javid Faisal, deputy spokesman to the Afghan Chief Executive, said Pakistan would unveil a list of Taliban members who are ready for talks, but no names have so far been released and Sartaj Aziz has refused to say whether Pakistan is in possession of such a list.

Analysts caution that any substantive talks or reconciliation between the Afghan government and the Taliban are still a long way off.

The Taliban have stepped up attacks on government and foreign targets in Afghanistan this winter, when fighting usually abates, underscoring a worsening security situation.

Last week, the Pakistani consulate in Jalalabad was the target of an hours-long gun and bomb siege. The attack was claimed by the militant Islamic State group which has battled the Taliban for leadership of the insurgency in Nangarhar province.

Late Sunday a rocket launched by the militants landed very close to the Italian embassy compound. The foreign ministry in Rome reported no casualties and said it was unsure if their compound was the target.

Observers say the intensifying insurgency highlights a push by the militants to seize more territory in an attempt to wrangle greater concessions during talks.

Pakistan hosted a milestone first round of talks directly with the Taliban in July 2015.

But the negotiations stalled when the insurgents belatedly confirmed the death of longtime leader Mullah Omar, sparking infighting within the group.

Afghanistan sees the support of Pakistan as vital to bring the Taliban to the negotiating table.
 
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