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  US warns Taliban over dialogue

US warns Taliban over dialogue

PTI
Published : Apr 29, 2016, 2:31 am IST
Updated : Apr 29, 2016, 2:31 am IST

The Taliban must “face the consequences” for calling off peace talks with the Afghan government, the US said on Thursday as it once again asked Pakistan to go after terrorists that threaten its neigh

The Taliban must “face the consequences” for calling off peace talks with the Afghan government, the US said on Thursday as it once again asked Pakistan to go after terrorists that threaten its neighbours.

“Unfortunately, the Taliban have refused to come to the table, so it is our view that they should face the consequences of that decision,” Special US Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Richard Olson, told members of the House Foreign Relations Committee during a hearing.

“We’ve long expressed our concerns to the Pakistanis about their reluctance to go after terrorists that threaten their neighbours with the same degree of assiduousness that they go after their own terrorists. We think that they are at a moment of needing to make a very strategic and fundamental choice,” Mr Olson said when asked what Pakistan is doing to bring the Taliban to the negotiation table.

“Their (Pakistan’s) stated policy, which we agree with, is not to discriminate among terrorist groups. We believe there is considerable room for improvement in the application of that policy on the ground and we believe in particular that Pakistan has not taken as vigorous action against groups that threaten its neighbours as it has against those that threaten it domestically,” he noted.

“So Pakistan has also been very helpful in the reconciliation process, but I do believe that there is a strategic choice right now. With the Taliban having refused to come to the table, it seems to us that it is time to address more robustly the question of groups that threaten Afghanistan,” Mr Olson said.

The US, he said, has pressed the Pakistan government on its commitment not to discriminate among terrorist groups.

“We believe across regions there must be zero tolerance for safe havens,” he said.

Location: United States, Washington