U.S. Army Lt. Col. Mark Martin, center, and U.S. Army Spc. Vancil Casebolt, left, talk with Mawlawi Guhlam M. Ruhaani, director of hajj and endowment, during a leadership meeting in Farah City, Afghanistan, Dec. 29, 2012. Martin is civil affairs team lead and Casebolt is a civil affairs team member for Provincial Reconstruction Team Farah. U.S. Navy photo by Chief Petty Officer Josh Ives
Is Peace Really In The Air In Afghanistan? -- Jim Maceda, NBC News
KABUL, Afghanistan - There’s something wafting in the air in Afghanistan, and for once it’s not the smell of detritus, diesel or cordite. People – rivals, even enemies -- are talking about peace. Not just talks about talks – those have been going on – and off – for a couple of years now. But serious, genuine moves toward reconciliation are – for the first time since I can remember – actually squeezing into an otherwise depressing narrative of stalemate and loss.
Take the Pakistani government’s Dec. 31 release from prison of eight former Taliban members, including Taliban leader Mullah Omar’s right-hand man and former justice minister, Mullah Turabi. This move, Afghan analysts say, is part of a new strategy, formulated in a November meeting between Afghan and Pakistani officials in Islamabad. The release, they say, was more than a goodwill gesture between bitter rivals. The clear hope was that freed former Taliban officials with the stature of Turabi would serve as emissaries, clearing the way for peace talks between Hamid Karzai’s government and the current Taliban leadership – based in Pakistan – and with the Pakistan government’s blessing.
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My Comment: Sectarianism, tribalism, religious animosities .... there has been war and conflict on these isues in this part of the world for centuries .... if not more. So no .... peace is not really in the air in Afghanistan?
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