The plan of the Afghan intelligence of trying to work with the Al Qaeda allies was ‘disrupted’ after United States Special Forces raided an Afghan convoy that was ushering a senior Pakistan Taliban militant Latif Mehsud to Kabul for secret talks last month.
Mehsud is in custody but the ‘bungled attempt by the Afghan government to cultivate a shadowy alliance with Islamist militants escalated into the latest flash point in the troubled relationship between Afghanistan and the US,’ the New York Times said in a report, according to new accounts by officials from both countries. The Afghan intelligence was seeking to work with the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan in order to find a ‘trump card in a baroque regional power game’ that will unfold once the American forces withdraw from the country. Behind this plan was that the Afghans could ‘later gain an advantage’ in negotiations with the Pakistani government by offering to back off their support for the militants. Aiding the Pakistan Taliban was an ‘opportunity to bring peace on our terms,’ the report quoted one senior Afghan security official as saying.
Mehsud is in custody but the ‘bungled attempt by the Afghan government to cultivate a shadowy alliance with Islamist militants escalated into the latest flash point in the troubled relationship between Afghanistan and the US,’ the New York Times said in a report, according to new accounts by officials from both countries. The Afghan intelligence was seeking to work with the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan in order to find a ‘trump card in a baroque regional power game’ that will unfold once the American forces withdraw from the country. Behind this plan was that the Afghans could ‘later gain an advantage’ in negotiations with the Pakistani government by offering to back off their support for the militants. Aiding the Pakistan Taliban was an ‘opportunity to bring peace on our terms,’ the report quoted one senior Afghan security official as saying.