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File photo showing Taliban fighters at a checkpoint in Nangarhar province, Afghanistan. Rahmat Gul/AP/Press Association Images

Karzai confirms US involved in Taliban peace talks

Afghan president’s comments are the first official acknowledgement of such negotiations.

AFGHAN PRESIDENT Hamid Karzai says his government and the US are negotiating with Taliban fighters to bring peace to the country. It is the first official acknowledgement of such talks to end the decade-long war through negotiation.

Karzai told journalists today in Kabul that “peace talks have started with (the Taliban) already and it is going well.”

He said “foreign militaries, especially the United States of America, are going ahead with these negotiations.”

Officials at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul could not be immediately reached for comment today.

Karzai has been making peace overtures to members of the Taliban, which ruled Afghanistan for five years and sheltered al-Qaida before being driven out of power in the US-led invasion in late 2001.

Convoy attacked

Meanwhile, officials said today that insurgents attacked three convoys ferrying fuel and supplies to NATO troops stationed in western and eastern Afghanistan, killing nine Afghan security guards and torching at least 15 fuel tankers.

The Taliban recently launched its long-awaited spring offensive as the insurgents try to regain territory lost in the fall and winter to the US-led coalition. Unable to match NATO’s firepower, the militants instead frequently conduct small-scale strikes — on convoys or NATO patrols — as well as brazen suicide bombings on government targets.

Two of the attacks on the supply convoys took place today in eastern Ghazni province, where a pair of roadside bombs killed four Afghan security guards escorting the trucks to a nearby base for Polish troops, said provincial police chief Mohammed Hussain.

Insurgents also ambushed a NATO fuel convoy late yesterday along the border between Herat and Farah provinces in the west, killing five Afghan guards. Seven other guards were wounded in the attack after insurgents opened fire on the convoy, said Abdul Rashied, a local police chief. Insurgents later set fire to 15 fuel tankers.

The vast majority of the fuel for the roughly 132,000 international troops is ferried in by truck from Pakistan before it is distributed to NATO forces across Afghanistan. It takes roughly 100 truckloads of fuel — about 6 million litres — to keep coalitions forces moving for a single day.

Insurgents frequently target NATO fuel tankers in both Afghanistan and Pakistan, though the coalition said in February that fewer than 1 per cent of all supply convoys face militant attack.

Meanwhile, NATO said Saturday its forces killed “several” insurgents in a gunbattle a day earlier in Ghazni, seizing rocket-propelled grenades, AK-47s and body armor. NATO offered no further details, but Hussain, the Ghazni police chief, identified the dead militants as eight Pakistanis.

NATO also said Saturday that a coalition service member died in an insurgent attack in southern Afghanistan. So far in June, 31 international soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan, raising the death toll for 2011 to 237.

- AP

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