Extending on olive branch, the United States has said that the new Taliban leader Haibatullah is not on its list of designated terrorists and urged him to opt for peace, not war.
“Our olive branch would be simply that we have long said that we support an Afghan-led, Afghan-owned peace process and reconciliation process, and we would welcome any efforts by the new Taliban leadership to engage,” said a State Department spokesman, Mark Toner.
Last week a US drone killed Haibatullah’s predecessor, Mullah Akhtar Mansour, in a remote area of Balochistan and on Monday the Taliban elected him as their new chief.
Asked if the United States would offer the new Taliban leader Mullah Haibatullah an olive branch to encourage him to join the peace process, Toner said the elimination of his predecessor last Saturday has created an opportunity for Mullah Haibatullah to quit violence.
US official once again refused to offer an assurance that American drones would not target the new Taliban leader if he chose to join negotiations.
Toner, however, explained that the strike against Mullah Mansour was based on both his previous actions and his intent to carry out additional strikes not only against Afghan forces, but also against United States military forces on the ground in Afghanistan.
“The fact that he was not playing a productive role or any role in leading us towards negotiations or peace talks,” also contributed to this decision, he said.
“The new leadership — they have an opportunity here to engage — re-engage on peace talks, and it’s our hope that they make that choice,” Toner added.
Asked why he thought the new Taliban leadership would want to engage in talks when the United States had just killed its leader, the US official said: “First and foremost, our action against Mansour was predicated on the fact that we believed he was going to carry out lethal attacks on US servicemen and women in the field as well as against Afghan forces.”
US President Barack Obama had said in a statement that Mullah Mansour was killed because he had rejected efforts to seriously engage in peace talks and end the violence that took the lives of countless Afghan men, women and children.
Obama said that Mullah Mansour’s death had created an opportunity for peace and the Taliban should seize the opportunity to pursue the only real path for ending this long conflict joining the Afghan government in a reconciliation process that leads to lasting peace and stability.
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