Saturday, December 10, 2011

Pakistani Taliban Confirm That They Are In Peace Talks With Pakistan Government


So the Pakistani Taliban are back at the peace talks tables with the Pakistani government...for those new to this blog, I'll highlight what will be the details of this new "peace" and the assured outcome.

1. The Taliban will be allowed to keep all of their weapons and artillery and ammunition
2. The Taliban will be allowed to roam wherever they want
3. The Taliban will be allowed to rest up, reorganize and rearm over the next few months
4. The Taliban will be allowed to venture into Afghanistan to kill American soldiers and Marines
5 The Pakistani government will get to announce in a newspaper that they have a peace agreement with the Taliban...that is ALL that the government will get.

And how will it end? Simple. Same as the other dozen or so times they've done this - the Taliban will wait until they are fully recovered, resupplied and reorganized and then they'll simply ambush and kill about 20 Pakistani soldiers and it will be on again.

Mark my words. You heard it here first.

The story is from DAWN.



Pakistani Taliban confirm peace talks with Islamabad


PESHAWAR: The deputy commander of the Pakistan Taliban, who have been waging a four-year war against the government in Islamabad, confirmed the two sides were in peace talks.

“Our talks are going in the right direction,” Maulvi Faqir Mohammad, the commander of the Pakistani Taliban in the Bajaur tribal agency and the No. 2 commander overall, told Reuters.

“If negotiations succeed and we are able to sign a peace agreement in Bajaur, then the government and the Taliban of other areas such as Swat, Mohmand, Orakzai and South Waziristan tribal region will sign an agreement. Bajaur will be a role model for other areas.”

At the end of September, Pakistan’s government pledged to “give peace a chance” and talk with its homegrown militants.

There was no immediate comment from the administration on whether talks were actually taking place with the militants.

The United States is unlikely to look kindly on peace talks with the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which it has labelled a terrorist group.

Past peace pacts with the TTP have failed to bring stability, and merely gave the umbrella group time and space to consolidate, launch fresh attacks and impose their austere version of religion on segments of the population.

Mohammad said Pakistan had released 145 members of the group as a gesture of goodwill, and the militants had pledged a cease-fire.

He heads the TTP faction based in Bajaur, at the northeast end of the Pashtun belt along the border. He is known to be close to Al Qaeda.

Mohammad was believed to have been behind several attacks on Pakistani security forces. The army launched an offensive in Bajaur in August last year and largely cleared the region after months of at times heavy fighting.

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