Afghan President Ghani implores Pakistan to battle Taliban

Updated 25 April 2016
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Afghan President Ghani implores Pakistan to battle Taliban

KABUL: Afghan President Ashraf Ghani Monday implored Pakistan to battle the Taliban instead of trying to bring them to peace talks, in a new hard-line stance after a brazen insurgent attack killed at least 64 people.
The assault last Tuesday on a security services office in the heart of Kabul appeared to be the deadliest on the Afghan capital since the Taliban were ousted from power in 2001.
It cast a pall over international efforts in recent months to jumpstart Pakistan-brokered peace talks, which stalled last summer after the Taliban belatedly confirmed the death of longtime leader Mullah Omar.
“I want to make it clear that we no longer expect Pakistan to bring the Taliban to the negotiating table,” Ghani said in a somber address to both houses of the Afghan parliament.
“But we expect them to launch a military operation against their sanctuaries and leadership based on their soil. If they can’t target them they should hand them over to our judiciary.”
Afghanistan for years has accused longtime nemesis Pakistan of sponsoring the Taliban insurgency.
The Pakistani government recently admitted after years of official denial that the Taliban leadership enjoys safe haven inside the country.
“There are no good or bad terrorists... Pakistan should act on them as a responsible government,” Ghani said.
Ghani’s remarks reflect his frustration after he expended substantial political capital since coming to power in 2014 in courting Pakistan in the hope of pressuring the militants to the negotiating table.
“Ghani is clearly running out of patience with Pakistan,” Kabul-based analyst Mia Gul Waseeq said.
“His risky and ambitious diplomatic outreach to Pakistan has failed to yield results.”
Ghani vowed a tough military response against the insurgents and pledged to enforce legal punishments, including executions of convicted militants.
“The time for amnesty is over,” he said.
“For the Taliban who are ready to end bloodshed, we have left the door open for talks. But the door will not be open forever.”
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid rebuffed Ghani’s remarks, saying the group would press on with their jihad against the US-backed government.
The Taliban earlier this month announced the start of their annual spring offensive, vowing “large-scale attacks” across Afghanistan.
The announcement came even after a four-country group comprising Afghanistan, the United States, China and Pakistan held meetings since January aimed at ending the drawn-out conflict.
Last Tuesday’s attack, which also left nearly 350 people wounded, was seen as the opening salvo in this year’s Taliban offensive, widely expected to be the bloodiest in 15 years.


Trump vows Iran war will ‘end very soon’

US President Donald Trump speaks during a press conference at Trump National Doral in Miami, Florida, on March 9, 2026. (AFP)
Updated 7 sec ago
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Trump vows Iran war will ‘end very soon’

  • Iranian state media carried images of tens of thousands of people celebrating Mojtaba Khamenei’s selection in central Tehran, many carrying his picture
  • Global shipping giant MSC announced it was formally halting some export shipments from the Gulf, meaning goods sitting on ships would be unloaded
  • President Vladimir Putin on Monday promised “unwavering support”

TEHRAN: President Donald Trump said Monday that US military operations in Iran would be ending soon, reassuring markets that have been thrust into chaos by a war that is still reverberating across the Middle East.
The war had sent stock markets slumping and oil prices soaring again on Monday as Tehran, under new leader Mojtaba Khamenei, fired a fresh barrage of missiles at its Gulf neighbors and signaled that the strategic Strait of Hormuz would likely remain closed.
But Wall Street then climbed into positive territory with Trump’s repeated signals of a short-term conflict, despite the lack of details and amid threats that the United States could step up a war campaign that has hit more than 5,000 targets so far, according to the US military.
“It’s going to be ended soon, and if it starts up again they’ll be hit even harder,” Trump told a news conference in Florida, after telling an audience of lawmakers that the campaign would be a “short-term excursion.”
Trump’s remarks came on the first day in power for the 56-year-old son of slain leader Ali Khamenei, with Iranian forces launching a fresh wave of missile and drone attacks on Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, the UAE and Israel.
Another missile was also fired at NATO member Turkiye — the second such incident in five days — with the alliance’s air defenses intercepting it before it could reach its target.
With the Strait of Hormuz blocked to nearly all oil tankers, the price of benchmark crude oil contracts rocketed past $100 a barrel on Monday — their highest levels since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022 — before pulling back.
French President Emmanuel Macron said his country and its allies were working on a “purely defensive” mission to reopen the strait, through which nearly 20 percent of the world’s crude oil usually transits.
The mission would aim to escort ships “after the end of the hottest phase of the conflict,” but experts say it would mean putting naval vessels at risk of fire from the nearby Iranian coast.
Kamal Kharazi, a foreign policy adviser to Iran’s supreme leader, told CNN that Tehran was calculating that economic pressure would eventually prompt other countries to intervene and end the war.
Benchmark oil prices are up 40-50 percent since the US and Israel launched their attack on Iran on February 28, while stock markets worldwide are down, hitting pension funds and savings.
But those trends began to ease with oil prices dropping nearly eight percent at open of trade on Tuesday, though stock futures on Wall Street remained volatile amid Washington’s mixed messaging.

- Rallies -

Iran faced a fresh blitz of US and Israeli strikes after its Assembly of Experts, the top clerical body, appointed its first new supreme leader in 37 years.
Iranian state media carried images of tens of thousands of people celebrating Mojtaba Khamenei’s selection in central Tehran, many carrying his picture.
Iran’s rebel Houthi allies in Yemen and the Hezbollah armed group in Lebanon pledged allegiance, while Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday promised “unwavering support.”
Trump told reporters he was “disappointed” about Khamenei’s appointment, but remained open to a replacement from inside the Islamic republic, citing the recent transition of power in Venezuela as “a formula that has been very good so far.”
Ali Ansari, a professor of Iranian history at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland, told AFP the new supreme leader was a hard-liner who had “been involved in all the most violent repressions that have taken place over the last 15-16 years.”
Ali Vaez, of the International Crisis Group think tank, said the appointment was intended to send a defiant message that Trump’s war “has only replaced one Khamenei with another.”

- Oil risks -

Oil traders, policymakers and central bankers are all watching the Middle East for news about Gulf energy infrastructure, which is crucial for the world economy.
About 10 vessels in or near the Strait of Hormuz have come under attack since Iran blocked the waterway in retaliation for the US-Israeli strikes, shipping experts say.
Global shipping giant MSC announced it was formally halting some export shipments from the Gulf, meaning goods sitting on ships would be unloaded.
Following strikes on Bahrain’s Al Ma’ameer oil facility that ignited a fire, the country’s state-owned energy company Bapco joined its counterparts in Qatar and Kuwait in declaring “force majeure” — a warning that events beyond its control may lead it to miss export targets.
The Saudi defense ministry said Monday it had thwarted a drone attack targeting an oil field in the kingdom’s east, near the Emirati border.

- ‘Resistance’ -

In Bahrain, the interior ministry said early Tuesday an Iranian attack on a residential area in the capital Manama killed one person and injured others.
In Israel earlier, around 10 explosions were audible in Tel Aviv after the military announced it had detected missiles inbound from Iran.
At least one Israeli was killed when he was hit by shrapnel, emergency services said.
The multi-front war also intensified in Lebanon, where Israeli and Hezbollah exchanges of fire since March 2 have killed at least 486 people and wounded more than 1,300.
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun accused Hezbollah of working to “collapse” the state, while the head of the group’s parliamentary bloc said it had “no other option... than the option of resistance.”