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25 March 2010

Afghan Peace Plan, from the other side

The NY Times is reporting that one of the insurgent factions has a plan for peace that the Afghan government is at least considering.

Representatives of a major insurgent faction have presented a formal 15-point peace plan to the Afghan government, the first concrete proposal to end hostilities since President Hamid Karzai said he would make reconciliation a priority after his re-election last year.

The delegation represents fighters loyal to Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, 60, one of the most brutal of Afghanistan’s former resistance fighters who leads a part of the insurgency against American, NATO and Afghan forces in the north and northeast of the country.

His representatives met Monday with President Karzai and other Afghan officials in the first formal contact between a major insurgent group and the Afghan government after almost two years of backchannel communications, which diplomats say the United States has supported.

Though the insurgent group, Hezb-i-Islami, or Islamic Party, operates under a separate command from the Taliban, it has links to the Taliban leadership and Al Qaeda and has fought on a common front against foreign forces in Afghanistan.


Hey, at some point you gotta listen to see if you can find some common ground; I get that. But you have to wonder if the Afghan government cuts a deal, how right-wing radio in the US will characterize it. I'm sure they'd lump Obama in with "the French" if they did, even though he's got no real say in it.

By: Brant

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