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18 March 2009 The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan
rejects reports suggestion that Amir-ul-Momineen
(Leader of the Believers) Mullah Mohammad Omar Mujahid
(May Allah preserve him) has given his approval for
talks aimed at ending the war in Afghanistan and has
allowed his representatives to attend Saudi-sponsored
peace negotiations.
These are all false and baseless reports. Ours is the
same old stand there is no other way except jihad in
Afghanistan until the invader forces are present in
Afghanistan. If you wait for 3000 years, our stand is
the same that Taliban will never hold talks in
presence of invader forces in Afghanistan. The Taliban
have not met with Afghan president, Hamid Karzai
brother Qayum Karzai, as it is being claimed by Qayum
Karzai.
The false reports
"Taliban chief backs Afghan peace talks"
THE TALIBAN leader, Mullah Omar, has given his
approval for talks aimed at ending the war in
Afghanistan and has allowed his representatives to
attend Saudi-sponsored peace negotiations.
“Mullah Omar has given the green light to talks,” said
one of the mediators, Abdullah Anas, a former friend
of Osama Bin Laden who used to fight in Afghanistan
but now lives in London.
One of those negotiating for the Afghan government
confirmed: “It’s extremely sensitive but we have been
in contact both with Mullah Omar’s direct
representatives and commanders from the front line.”
The breakthrough emerged after President Barack Obama
admitted that US-led forces are not winning the war in
Afghanistan and called for negotiations with “moderate
Taliban”.
“A big, big step has happened,” Anas said. “For the
first time, there is a language of . . . peace on both
sides.”
His words were echoed by the brother of the Afghan
president, Hamid Karzai, who has been attending talks
on his behalf. “I have been meeting with Taliban for
the last five days and I can tell you Obama’s words
have created enormous optimism,” said Qayum Karzai.
“There is no other way left but talks. All sides know
that more fighting is not the way.”
Source:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article5908498.ece
The West Is Repeating The Mistakes Of The Soviet
It was in the year 1982. The family of Abdul Bashir
was in the middle of celebrating the wedding of a
daughter. A few moments later, a bomb exploded in the
midst of the village which had a dense population,
killing 30 civilians including children and women.
"At that time I was only nine years old. It was still
in the early morning, we were preparing the wedding
party of my sister, suddenly a Soviet jet fighter
battered our village," Abdul Bashir said, as reported
by Reuters.
"You all could see, I had lost one of my eyes and some
teeth. My relatives were wounded. My sister, father
and auntie were killed in an instant," he remembered.
"I could never forget that incidence," he continued.
Those who were saved from the bomb trained themselves
to carry weapons and fight the Soviet forces that had
invaded Afghanistan since 1979, along with the
Mujahideen.
The strength of the forces of Allah combined with the
civilians, helped making Moscow pulled itself out from
Afghanistan in 1989.
Twenty years after the defeat of the Soviet, the West
is repeating the same mistakes in Afghanistan.
"There have been the same mistakes in the military
operations carried out by the West in Afghanistan,"
Burhanuddin Rabbani, an ex-member the anti-Soviet
forces, said.
More than 455 civilian populations of Afghanistan had
been killed in the bombardments launched by the US and
NATO members last year (2008), according to the UN’s
calculations.
The Same Confusion
The reliance of the West on their military strength to
break the solution in Afghanistan is exactly the same
mistake as what the Soviet had done in the past.
The US considered of sending additional forces, as
much as 30,000 troops, to Afghanistan.
"Those numbers are not the solutions," a Soviet
veteran, Shamil Tyukteyev, 59, said.
"You cannot allocate a soldier to every house or a
defense base at every mountains. The more troops you
send, the greater the resistance will be, that was
what we had experienced," he continued.
All along the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, Moscow
had deployed around 120,000 of its troops in
Afghanistan.
"It was like battling with the sand. There is no
military forces in the world that could win the war in
Afghanistan," Oleg Kubanov said.
The best lesson for the West is to learn from the
experience of the Soviet in Afghanistan.
"They could never win!"
"The West must pull out before it is too late." |