Taliban launches 2 days of attacks in Afghanistan, 14 killed

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In this picture take on Friday, May 27, 2016, members of a breakaway faction of the Taliban fighters walk during a gathering in Shindand district of Herat province, Afghanistan. A senior leader of a breakaway faction of the Taliban faction says they support peace talks to end Afghanistan’s 40 years of conflict. Mullah Abdul Manan Niazi says they have no faith in either the Kabul government or the current four-country peace talks process. (AP Photos/Allauddin Khan)

 

KABUL: Taliban fighters launched a wave of attacks against security outposts in the east and south of Afghanistan over the last two days, even as efforts to jump-start peace talks were renewed. The violence left 14 police dead and 10 others wounded, officials said Friday.

Recent overtures by the US administration indicating a willingness to concede to the Taliban’s long-standing demand for direct talks has increased expectations of progress toward a peaceful end to the protracted violence.

Despite that, insurgents have carried out waves of assaults against the Afghan National Security Forces that have left scores dead in recent weeks.

The Taliban issued a statement earlier this week ordering fighters not to attack civilians. This wasn’t the first such order and in the past similar ones did not put an end to civilian casualties, but it comes amid the most significant and wide-reaching attempt yet at kick-starting peace negotiations.

A Taliban representative tells The Associated Press the group has yet to receive a specfic offer of talks from Washington. The Taliban have been demanding direct talks to discuss foreign troop withdrawal as well as to know US concerns about their involvement in a future Afghan administration and put those concerns to rest.

The Taliban representative spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the media.

When the Taliban ruled Afghanistan before the 2001 US-led assault that followed the terrorist attacks on the United States, Taliban leaders complained that a powerful US would never accept their presence in Afghanistan.

Taliban officials say they want direct talks with the US to address their concerns and get Washington’s guarantees, which they say is necessary because the Afghan government acts on the instruction of Washington.

In an International Crisis Group (ICG) report released Friday the organization called for talks, welcomed the US offer of direct talks and noted that a brief cease-fire during the Muslim holiday of Eid-al-Fitr last month showed that both sides in the conflict had control over their fighters in that they successfully ended hostilities. The Taliban and government declared cease-fires independent of the other.