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What Taliban want ??? Sirajuddin Haqqani Answers in Open Editorial for New York Times

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What the Taliban Want ???


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A man waving an Afghan flag during an Independence Day celebration in Kabul in 2019.Credit...Rafiq Maqbool/Associated Press

When our representatives started negotiating with the United States in 2018, our confidence that the talks would yield results was close to zero. We did not trust American intentions after 18 years of war and several previous attempts at negotiation that had proved futile.

Nevertheless, we decided to try once more. The long war has exacted a terrible cost from everyone. We thought it unwise to dismiss any potential opportunity for peace no matter how meager the prospects of its success. For more than four decades, precious Afghan lives have been lost every day. Everyone has lost somebody they loved. Everyone is tired of war. I am convinced that the killing and the maiming must stop.

We did not choose our war with the foreign coalition led by the United States. We were forced to defend ourselves. The withdrawal of foreign forces has been our first and foremost demand. That we today stand at the threshold of a peace agreement with the United States is no small milestone.


Our negotiation team, led by my colleagues Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar and Sher Mohammed Abas Stanekzai, has worked tirelessly for the past 18 months with the American negotiators to make an agreement possible. We stuck with the talks despite recurring disquiet and upset within our ranks over the intensified bombing campaign against our villages by the United States and the flip-flopping and ever-moving goal posts of the American side.



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Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, second from left, with members of a Taliban delegation in Russia in 2019.Credit...Alexander Zemlianichenko/Associated Press

Even when President Trump called off the talks, we kept the door to peace open because we Afghans suffer the most from the continuation of the war. No peace agreement, following on the heels of such intensive talks, comes without mutual compromises. That we stuck with such turbulent talks with the enemy we have fought bitterly for two decades, even as death rained from the sky, testifies to our commitment to ending the hostilities and bringing peace to our country.


We are aware of the concerns and questions in and outside Afghanistan about the kind of government we would have after the foreign troops withdraw. My response to such concerns is that it will depend on a consensus among Afghans. We should not let our worries get in the way of a process of genuine discussion and deliberation free for the first time from foreign domination and interference.


It is important that no one front-loads this process with predetermined outcomes and preconditions. We are committed to working with other parties in a consultative manner of genuine respect to agree on a new, inclusive political system in which the voice of every Afghan is reflected and where no Afghan feels excluded.



I am confident that, liberated from foreign domination and interference, we together will find a way to build an Islamic system in which all Afghans have equal rights, where the rights of women that are granted by Islam — from the right to education to the right to work — are protected, and where merit is the basis for equal opportunity.

We are also aware of concerns about the potential of Afghanistan being used by disruptive groups to threaten regional and world security. But these concerns are inflated: Reports about foreign groups in Afghanistan are politically motivated exaggerations by the warmongering players on all sides of the war.


It is not in the interest of any Afghan to allow such groups to hijack our country and turn it into a battleground. We have already suffered enough from foreign interventions. We will take all measures in partnership with other Afghans to make sure the new Afghanistan is a bastion of stability and that nobody feels threatened on our soil.

We are conscious of the immense challenges ahead. Perhaps our biggest challenge is to ensure that various Afghan groups work hard and sincerely toward defining our common future. I am confident that it is possible. If we can reach an agreement with a foreign enemy, we must be able to resolve intra-Afghan disagreements through talks.




Another challenge will be keeping the international community interested and positively engaged during the transition to peace and after the withdrawal of foreign troops. The support of the international community will be crucial to stabilizing and developing Afghanistan.

We are ready to work on the basis of mutual respect with our international partners on long-term peace-building and reconstruction. After the United States withdraws its troops, it can play a constructive role in the postwar development and reconstruction of Afghanistan.

We acknowledge the importance of maintaining friendly relations with all countries and take their concerns seriously. Afghanistan cannot afford to live in isolation. The new Afghanistan will be a responsible member of the international community.

We will remain committed to all international conventions as long as they are compatible with Islamic principles. And we expect other countries to respect the sovereignty and stability of our country and consider it as a ground for cooperation rather than competition and conflict.




More immediately, there will be the challenge of putting into effect our agreement with the United States. A degree of trust has been built through our talks with the American negotiators in Doha, Qatar, but just as the United States does not trust us completely, we too are very far from fully trusting it.

We are about to sign an agreement with the United States and we are fully committed to carrying out its every single provision, in letter and spirit. Achieving the potential of the agreement, ensuring its success and earning lasting peace will depend on an equally scrupulous observance by the United States of each of its commitments. Only then can we have complete trust and lay the foundation for cooperation — or even a partnership — in the future.

My fellow Afghans will soon celebrate this historic agreement. Once it is entirely fulfilled, Afghans will see the departure of all foreign troops. As we arrive at this milestone, I believe it is not a distant dream that we will soon see the day when we will come together with all our Afghan brothers and sisters, start moving toward lasting peace and lay the foundation of a new Afghanistan.

We would then celebrate a new beginning that invites all our compatriots to return from their exile to our country — to our shared home where everybody would have the right to live with dignity, in peace.

Sirajuddin Haqqani is the deputy leader of the Taliban.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of lettersto the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And here’s our email: letters@nytimes.com.

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https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/20/...ar-haqqani.html#click=https://t.co/Ur7gz3c6ps


https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/20/opinion/taliban-afghanistan-war-haqqani.html

@Horus @Oscar @Jango @jaibi @Path-Finder @Maarkhoor @Arsalan @Tipu7 @Sulman Badshah @Multani
 
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Well that's a start. The most notorious Haqqani network, they have been blaming us for haqqani network all those years. With bastards in kabul saying the Haqqani network is in Pakistan.
With no big attack in last 5 years done by them...and now their article in newyork Times. What a change or heart.
What would have amerullah salleh say now? I wonder.
What's more would be in store. A dinner at White House?
A trip to the pentagon etc?
 
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Well that is a start. The most notorious Haqqani they have been blaming us all those years with bastards in kabul saying the Haqqanis are in Pakistan.
With no big attack in last 5 years done by them...and now their article in newsyork Times. What a change or heart.
What would have merullah salleh said? I. Wonder and what's more would be in store. A dinner at White House?
A trip to the pentagon etc?
Haqqanis and Talibs be like:

Camp David here we come(again).
 
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HAHAHAHAHA. I am sorry but this is EXTREMELY hilarious.

Siraj Uddin Haqqani is the head of the so called "Haqqani network" which Pakistan all these years was accused of sheltering, and according to western establishments and their local pet dogs, the NDS and RAW, the reason why America couldn't gain the military victory in Afghanistan. :omghaha::omghaha::omghaha::omghaha::omghaha:
 
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Haqqanis and Talibs be like:

Camp David here we come(again).
Yesterday there was an article like pompeo telling that he has the secret of achiveing world peace or something. Didn't read it, but it was along the same lines.
Well this would be most famous expectations vs Reailty example for the Americans. The kind of the victory they expected, the kind of the victory they get.
 
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Someone please tag this to the head of "real Haqqani network" , Hussain Haqqani, with a smiley please. :D
 
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