Afghanistan says Taliban must be defeated after Trump rejects talks

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US President Donald Trump last year ordered an increase in US troops, air strikes and other assistance to Afghan forces. (Reuters)
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Taliban launched an assault on Kabul’s Intercontinental Hotel on January 20, in which more than 20 people, including four Americans, were killed. (Reuters)
Updated 30 January 2018
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Afghanistan says Taliban must be defeated after Trump rejects talks

KABUL/PESHAWAR, Pakistan: Afghanistan said on Tuesday the Taliban would have to be defeated on the battlefield after US President Donald Trump rejected the idea of talks with the militants following a series of deadly attacks.
The Taliban reacted to Trump’s announcement by saying they never wanted to talk to the US anyway, but one senior member of the group said he suspected efforts would still be made to get negotiations going.
Talking to reporters at the White House on Monday, Trump condemned the militant group for recent carnage in Kabul and said the US was not prepared to talk now. He pledged to “finish what we have to finish.”
His comments suggested he sees a military victory over the Taliban, an outcome that US military and diplomatic officials say cannot be achieved with the resources and manpower he has authorized.
A spokesman for Afghan President Ashraf Ghani said while the government had encouraged the Taliban to talk, the attacks in Kabul, including a suicide bomb attack on Saturday that killed more than 100 people, was a “red line.”
“The Taliban have crossed a red line and lost the chance for peace,” said the spokesman, Shah Hussain Murtazawi.
“We have to look for peace on the battlefield. They have to be marginalized.”
He declined to comment directly on Trump’s announcement.
A Taliban spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, said they never wanted to hold peace talks with the US anyway.
Trump last year ordered an increase in US troops, air strikes and other assistance to Afghan forces.
The US ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, said this month the strategy was working and pushing the insurgents closer to talks.
That was before a suicide bomber penetrated the highly guarded center of Kabul on Saturday and detonated an ambulance laden with explosives, killing more than 100 people and wounding at least 235.
That attack followed a brazen Taliban assault on the city’s Intercontinental Hotel on January 20, in which more than 20 people, including four Americans, were killed.
The Taliban said the attacks were a message to Trump that his policy of aggression would not work.
Another Taliban member said the US had been approaching states that have relations with the Taliban to try to get them to push the insurgents to the negotiating table.
“President Trump is saying this for public consumption,” the ‎Taliban member, who declined to be identified, said of Trump’s rejection of talks. “He and his team are making every effort to bring us to the negotiating table.
“Actually, the latest attack in Kabul awakened President Trump and his puppets in Afghanistan about the capability of the Taliban and their ability to mount big attacks anywhere.”
The Taliban, fighting to oust foreign forces and impose their version of Islamic rule, refer to the Afghan government as US “puppets.”
The US believes the Haqqani network, a faction within the Taliban, was behind Saturday’s bomb blast in Kabul.
It and Afghanistan have long accused Pakistan of supporting the Taliban, and the Haqqani network in particular, as assets to be used in its bid to limit the influence of old rival India in Afghanistan.
This month, Trump ordered big cuts in security aid to Pakistan over its failure to crack down on militants.
Pakistan denies accusations it fosters the Afghan war, and condemned the recent attacks in Afghanistan.


Putin says developing Russia’s nuclear forces ‘absolute priority’

Updated 23 February 2026
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Putin says developing Russia’s nuclear forces ‘absolute priority’

  • Putin vowed to keep “strengthening the army and navy” and draw on military experience from the nearly four-year conflict in Ukraine

MOSCOW: President Vladimir Putin said Sunday that developing Russia’s nuclear forces was now an “absolute priority” following the expiry of its last remaining nuclear treaty with the US.
“The development of the nuclear triad, which guarantees Russia’s security and ensures effective strategic deterrence and a balance of forces in the world, remains an absolute priority,” Putin said in a video message.
His speech came on Russia’s “Defender of the Fatherland Day,” a holiday that is an occasion for military pomp and Kremlin-sponsored patriotism.
Putin vowed to keep “strengthening the army and navy” and draw on military experience from the nearly four-year conflict in Ukraine.
All branches of the armed forces would be improved, he said, including their “combat readiness, their mobility, and their ability to operate in all conditions, even the most difficult.”
Putin’s remarks came just two days before the fourth anniversary of Russia’s assault on Ukraine that sparked a war that has shattered towns, uprooted millions and killed large numbers on both sides.
Moscow and Washington — the world’s two main nuclear powers — are no longer bound by any arms control pact since the New START agreement expired earlier this month.
But Russia said it would continue taking a “responsible” approach to strategic nuclear capability and respecting the limits set on its arsenal.