|
No proof Iran
arming Taliban: Afghanistan
HERAT—Afghanistan said on Friday it had no evidence the government of
Iran was behind a shipment of weapons to Taliban insurgents.
The commander of NATO-led troops in Afghanistan said on Thursday a
shipment of hi-tech roadside bombs intercepted in Afghanistan on
September 5 had originated in Iran and it was difficult to conceive
Tehran’s military did not know about it.
“Iran is our neighbor, is our friend and Iran has had major role in the
reconstruction of Afghanistan,” Foreign Minister Rangeen Dadfar Spanta
said during a visit to the western city of Herat on the border with
Iran.
“The government of Afghanistan has no documents (to show) that Iran’s
government is involved in the shipment of arms,” he told reporters.
U.S. leaders have accused Iran of supplying weapons to Taliban
insurgents, but Afghan officials have refrained from repeating the
charge and insist Iran and Afghanistan enjoy warm neighborly relations.
Tehran strongly denies the charge. On a visit for an economic conference
in Herat, Iran’s Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki repeated the denial
on Friday. “These are the allegations that they make. The reasons for
the allegations are clear for us,” he told reporters without elaborating
on the reasons.
But while there is little love lost between Shi’ite Iran and the
hardline Sunni Taliban, Tehran has an interest in undermining U.S. and
Western forces inside its eastern neighbor, security analysts say.
Weapons from neighboring countries only exacerbated the problems of
achieving those goals, the U.S. general added.
ISAF, McNeill said, “intercepted a weapons convoy on September 5 in the
western part of this country. This weapons convoy clearly geographically
originated from Iran. This convoy contained a number of advanced
technology improvised explosive devices.
“It is difficult for me to conceive that this convoy could have
originated in Iran and come to Afghanistan without at least the
knowledge of the Iranian military,” McNeill told a news conference. U.S.
leaders have accused Iran of supplying weapons to Taliban insurgents,
but Afghan President Hamid Karzai has refrained from repeating the
charge and insists Iran and Afghanistan enjoy warm neighborly relations.
Tehran strongly denies the charge. But while there is little love lost
between Shi’ite Iran and the hardline Sunni Taliban, Tehran has an
interest in undermining U.S. and Western forces inside its eastern
neighbor, security analysts say.
McNeill said his forces had made tangible progress against the Taliban
in southern Afghanistan, where the rebels are strongest. “This time
several weeks ago last year there was much fear and anxiety about the
imminent collapse of Kandahar province,” he said. “That’s not the case
this year. Kandahar is a lot more secure a province than it was last
year.”
In response though, the Taliban have increased the number of suicide and
roadside bomb attacks across the country.
McNeill said military efforts were hampered by a lack of good
governance. Frustration with the slow pace of development and widespread
corruption are credited with boosting Taliban support and spreading
their influence northwards and closer to the capital — areas considered
safe a little more than a year ago.
“We have worked very hard in the dimension of enabling governance and we
probably have not had as much success in helping the Afghan people as
any of us would have liked,” said McNeill.
He added that the success of counter-insurgency efforts depended on the
strengthening the Afghan army and police.
“We are simply buying space and time for the development of the Afghan
security forces,” he said. Poppy cultivation also aided Taliban rebels,
McNeill said, estimating profits from Afghanistan’s record-breaking
opium crop provided between 20 to 40 percent of insurgent funds.
Western diplomats and military leaders concede there is no purely
military solution to defeat the Taliban, who were ejected from power by
U.S.-led and Afghan forces in late 2001.
The Afghan government has been trying to coax moderate Taliban leaders
to give up the fight and enter the political arena. Karzai has even
offered to hold face-to-face talks with Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad
Omar if necessary. The problem, McNeill said, was that the Taliban is a
fractured force with many local factions and commands.
“One group of Taliban say they want to come back in and be part of a
process, but here are the conditions. Another one is saying there are no
conditions and we’re not going to talk,” he said.
“Who is the Taliban in this case? I see it as a splintered and fractured
organization that only exists under a general framework ... If you
negotiate with extremists or insurgents, you should do so from a
position of strength”.—Agencies
|