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Canada should try talking to Taliban: lawmakers

The committee urged the Canadian military to start talking to "all locals, including Taliban, finding out about their needs and using this to our advantage."
by Staff Writers
Ottawa (AFP) June 11, 2008
Canadian diplomats and troops should try talking to the Taliban to stem their insurgency in Afghanistan, a Canadian senate committee said Wednesday in a report.

Otherwise, the NATO-led battle for Afghanistan could last "a very long time if there is no attempt to resolve the issue through diplomacy," the committee warned.

In May, Defense Minister Peter MacKay said Ottawa would never negotiate with the militant Taliban in Afghanistan, where Canada has 2,500 troops posted in the volatile southern province of Kandahar as part of the International Security Assistance Force.

"We are not talking to the Taliban. We are not having direct discussions with terrorists. We won't, will not, that will not change," MacKay said.

The senate panel concluded the ultimatum is flawed.

"Drawing lines in the sand is one of those child-rearing mechanisms that doesn't always work in the adult world of conflict resolution," the report said.

"'Go to your room until you're ready to behave like an adult.' That sometimes works with kids," it noted.

"It gets trickier with resistance movements, who inevitably believe they are going to win in the long run and play by their own rules."

The committee urged the Canadian military to start talking to "all locals, including Taliban, finding out about their needs and using this to our advantage."

"Every effort needs to be made to win over moderate Taliban supporters who are looking for evidence that there are better options than continued insurgency."

Since 2002, 85 Canadian soldiers and one senior diplomat have died in the war-torn country.

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Pakistan slams 'cowardly' US for killing 11 soldiers
Peshawar, Pakistan (AFP) June 12, 2008
Pakistan said a "cowardly" air strike by US-led forces killed 11 Pakistani troops on Wednesday near the Afghan border and warned that it had harmed cooperation in the war against terrorism.







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