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Pakistan can help broker US-Taliban talks: Maj Gen Abbas

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    Pak Army is still in contact with Taliban commanders like Mullah Omar, says Maj Gen Athar Abbas.
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    The Pakistan army has admitted that it is in contact with Afghan Taliban leaders, including Mullah Mohammad Omar, and can bring them to the negotiating table with the US if its concerns with India are addressed.

    Pakistan's chief military spokesman Maj Gen Athar Abbas has been quoted by CNN in an interview as saying that the military is still in contact with Taliban commanders like Mullah Omar, Jalalladin Haqqani, Mullah Nazir and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar of the Hizb-e-Islami.

    Within hours of CNN airing the report on Friday, the Inter-Services Public Relations issued a denial, saying the remarks attributed to Abbas were "totally baseless, fabricated and unfounded as well as out of context".

    "No intelligence organisation in the world shuts its last door on any other organisation. So therefore, the contacts are there. The communication remains," CNN quoted Abbas as saying in the interview.

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    Abbas said in return for any role as a broker between the US and the Taliban, Pakistan wants concessions from Washington over Islamabad's concerns with long-time rival India, the channel reported.

    It claimed that senior US officials had told the channel that President Barack Obama's administration is "willing both to talk to top Taliban leaders and to raise some of Pakistan's concerns with India".

    Asked if the US can talk to the militant groups in Afghanistan, Abbas said, "There are reconcilable elements...in these Taliban groups...and one has to identify those." He said there was no harm in opening negotiations with them.

    In reply to another question on whether Pakistan could provide assistance to a US mission for dialogue, he replied:"I think yes that can be worked out, that's possible."

    ... contd.

    Next12
    Big Names – No EthicsBy: Jerry Gold | 20-Jul-2009 Reply | Forward I was surprised to see an interviews aired by CNN in their program “Dialogue with Taliban” on 10 July, 09 and later their transcript of the same program. Whatever was said by Michael Ware has been written under Abbas, Pak Army spokesman. Same is being quoted by other news sources and columnists i.e Washington Post and Kuldip Nayar etc. The question is who will guard the ethics of Journalism?Listen the interview and read following misquoted lines of transcript, where Michael Ware said and attributed to Abbas:“When historically you sit back and you look…………….And how does that make Pakistan's situation more precarious?”
    THEIR IS A VERY LITTLE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PAKISTAN AND TALIBANBy: darvan | 12-Jul-2009 Reply | Forward Both are 'twin brothers',perhaps conjoint twins,who need to be surgically separated. So that Osama Bin Laden could be brought to justice for killing millions and mastermineding Mumbai Torture. Pakistan would serve the world peace well,by facillitating arrest of Osama Bin Laden or his extinction in a battle with the Allied offensives in Afghanistan. The posturing of Pakistan as a peace maker reeks of ulterior motives in preserving Taliban movement.Which has now served it pupose of ousting the Soviets from Afghanistan. Existence of Taliban in Pakistan is unhealthy and dangerous as Pakistan knows well Taliban subversion in Democratic secular institutions has undermined progress in Pakistan.
    US - Taliban TalkBy: George Thakur | 12-Jul-2009 Reply | Forward Talk! Why?!
    Deal with Taliban.... by PakBy: VG Prabhakar | 12-Jul-2009 Reply | Forward Recently the US tripled it's financial help to Pakistan to fight terrorism. Look what it is talking now!!!!!!!!!!!It is sheer opportunistic, cunning nature to extract money from other countries for not doing anything. The whole world knows that the Pak army is in close contact with the Al Qaida group... and this statement confirms that. Or whether the US and Pak armies are looking for a face saving exit a la Vietnam?
    Pakistan can broker talks between US-TalibanBy: kaye | 12-Jul-2009 Reply | Forward When will the US ever see Pakistan in its real perspective .The Republicans of course turned a blind eye to any wrong doings of Pakistan. Obama gave an impression that he is out to chasten errant Pakistan . Somethings will never change . It speaks for Pak's foreign policy that the US establishment, be it Bush or Obama, that they put so much faith in a failed state, repeatedly , licensing it to continue with terrorism as its state policy. As long as US is assured of home security by Pakistan's establishment, they are least concerned if it continues nurturing Taliban or terror outfits against India or Afghanistan.
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