Military pressure must back Afghan peace talks: Nato


ATHENS  - NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said on Thursday the Western alliance would maintain military pressure on Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan in parallel with efforts to negotiate an end to the decade-old conflict.
Rasmussen was speaking after Afghan President Hamid Karzai told The Wall Street Journal the US and Afghan governments had begun secret three-way meetings with the Taliban to try to bolster US-led efforts to convene fully-fledged peace talks.
“The stronger the military pressure on the Taliban, the better the chance that they realise they have no chance whatsoever militarily, so (they had) better go to the negotiation table,” he told reporters during a trip to Greece. “We will keep up the military pressure that will also facilitate a political solution,” added Rasmussen.
Karzai’s govt had previously been excluded from early contacts between the Taliban and the United States, with the insurgents seen as resisting the involvement of a local administration they regard as a puppet of Washington. Rasmussen said the Afghan govt must be ‘in the driver’s seat’ of any negotiations and that any parties involved must renounce terrorism and respect the Afghan constitution, including clauses on women’s rights and other human rights.
“I don’t know whether it will be possible to find a negotiated solution ... If these conditions are fulfilled, I think we should give it a try,” he said.

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