Wednesday, October 19, 2011

DTN News - AFGHAN WAR NEWS: Hillary Clinton Arrives In Kabul, Show Of Commitment

DTN News - AFGHAN WAR NEWS: Hillary Clinton Arrives In Kabul, Show Of Commitment

(NSI News Source Info) KOTTAKKAL, Kerala, India - October 20, 2011: Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will discuss possible peace talks and the handover of security to Afghan forces when she meets Afghan President Hamid Karzai and other key leaders in Kabul on Thursday.


Her arrival on Wednesday follows several high profile attacks in the Afghan capital, including an assault on the U.S. embassy in September and days later the assassination of Karzai's top peace envoy, former President Burhanuddin Rabbani.

"The secretary wants to show our commitment to Afghanistan," one U.S. official told reporters traveling with Clinton.

Efforts to reach a political solution to a conflict now over a decade old will be on her agenda, along with support for Afghans as foreign forces hand over security control of parts of the country and start heading home, the official said.

Clinton will meet Karzai and Foreign Minister Zalmai Rassoul on Thursday, U.S. officials said, and hold a round-table meeting with non-government leaders and civil society activists.

She is expected to discuss U.S. strategic relations with Afghanistan and ties between Afghanistan and Pakistan, as well as preview plans for conferences on the future of Afghanistan due to be held in Istanbul in November and Bonn in December.

Ties between Kabul and Islamabad have been particularly strained since the assassination of Rabbani, who was killed by a suicide bomber posing as a Taliban reconciliation envoy.

Many Afghans, including senior officials, have accused the Pakistan government of having links to the killing, and accused their neighbor of fomenting instability to further its own political interests. Pakistan denies this.

Karzai has been more circumspect, but hinted after the killing that he had lost hope in pursuing peace talks with the Taliban and suggested negotiations with Pakistan instead.

Top U.S. officials accused Pakistan of supporting insurgent groups in Afghanistan after September's 20-hour attack on diplomatic targets in Kabul, including the U.S. embassy.

Clinton said last week the United States could not abandon Pakistan but if Islamabad did not help solve Afghanistan's difficulties it would "continue to be part of the problem."

She has also suggested Washington would remain open to exploring a peace settlement in Afghanistan that includes the Haqqani network, but one of the group's leaders told Reuters it did not think the United States was sincere about peace.

Clinton's visit to Kabul follows a visit to Libya where she urged its disparate militias to unite around their new leaders.

(Writing by Christine Kearney, editing by Emma Graham-Harrison and Tim Pearce)

Related Images ~ Kabul Afghanistan




U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton shakes hands with U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan Ryan Crocker as Afghan chief of protocol Hamid Saddiq (2nd R) and Lt. General Curtis Scaparotti  (L) look on upon Clinton's arrival in Kabul October 19, 2011.  REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

Related Images ~ Tripoli, Libya









No comments:

Post a Comment