Hamid Karzai said that Taliban insurgents ‘can't move a finger’ without Pakistani support.
As the war in Afghanistan hit the 10-year mark Friday, President Hamid Karzai claimed the Taliban are being propped up by neighbouring Pakistan, saying the militants can t lift a finger without the Pakistanis.
The war will only end when something is done to rout insurgents from their sanctuaries across the border in Pakistan, Karzai said in an interview with the BBC that aired on Friday, exactly 10 years after the US and its allies invaded Afghanistan on Oct. 7, 2001.
The invasion was aimed at toppling the hard-line Taliban regime and punishing it for giving safe harbor to Al Qaeda, which orchestrated the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States. Over the years, the US-led coalition became mired in a battle against insurgents who have been weakened by international troops yet continue to plant bombs and stage suicide attacks and assassinations of top Afghan figures.
"Definitely, the Taliban will not be able to move a finger without Pakistani support," Karzai said. "The fact is the Taliban were and are stationed, in terms of their political headquarters and operational headquarters, in Pakistan. We all know that. The Pakistanis know that. We know that."
Militant sanctuaries in Pakistan won t go away unless the government of Pakistan cooperates with Afghanistan and the international community finds an effective way to remove the hide-outs, he said.
"We re not saying this in a manner of accusation and reprimand," Karzai added, trying not to inflame already strained relations between the two nations. "We are saying this in a manner of a statement intended towards a solution of the problem."
Pakistan maintains it cut off ties to the Taliban and other militants following the US invasion of Afghanistan, but Washington and Kabul say otherwise.
In the wide-ranging interview, Karzai candidly said the Afghan government and international allies have failed to provide security for the Afghan people. He also said that his government wants to talk to the Taliban, but doesn t know where to contact legitimate representatives of the insurgency.
Former Afghan President Burhanuddin Rabbani, who was leading the government s US-backed effort to talk peace with the Taliban, was killed Sept. 20 by an assassin who claimed to be an emissary from the Taliban. Upon meeting Rabbani, the killer detonated explosives he had tucked into his turban a deadly blast that dealt a major setback to efforts to find a political resolution to the war.
The Afghan government with support from its international allies has been making peace overtures to the Taliban for years. But after Rabbani s death, Karzai shifted his policy, saying he was giving up trying to talk to alleged Taliban envoys. He said Pakistan holds the only key to making peace with insurgents and must do more to support reconciliation.
"We have not said we will not talk to them (the Taliban)," Karzai said. "We ve said we don t know who to talk to.
"We re not dealing with an identifiable individual as a representative of the Taliban, or a place that we can knock on and say, Well, here we are. We want to talk to you. "
"Until that place emerges an address and a representative we will not be able to talk to the Taliban because we don t know where to find them," he said.
Dunya News: Pakistan:-Taliban can't move finger without Pakistan: Karzai...