Yesterday Hamid Karzai offered Taliban leader Mullah Omar safe passage to Afghanistan for peace talks, a move that I considered a thrown gauntlet. Now Omar’s
“„“As long as foreign occupiers remain in Afghanistan, we aren’t ready for talks because they hold the power and talks won’t bear fruit … The problems in Afghanistan are because of them,” Brother said.
“„“We are safe in Afghanistan and we have no need for Hamid Karzai’s offer of safety,” he told Reuters by satellite telephone from an undisclosed location, adding that the Taliban jihad, or holy war, would go on.
“„In a bizarre way, I think this revelation actually strengthens rather than undercuts the case for exploring talks with reconcilable elements of the Taliban – if the argument for this plan is born out of a desire to probe and expose the fissures that are believed to exist within the Taliban movement, then a rejection of negotiation does about as much good as a tentative acceptance. There is clarity either way. At the very least, it sets up a position with which the various elements of the Taliban can either agree or disagree.