Afghan gathering agrees peace moves with Taliban

KABUL, (Reuters) – Afghan tribal elders and  religious leaders agreed yesterday to make peace with the  Taliban, handing President Hamid Karzai a mandate to open  negotiations with the insurgents who are fighting foreign  forces and his government.

Karzai had called the “peace jirga” to win national support  for his plan to offer an amnesty, cash and job incentives to  Taliban foot soldiers while arranging asylum for top figures in  a second country and getting their names struck off a U.N. and  U.S. blacklist.

“Now the path is clear, the path that has been shown and  chosen by you, we will go on that step-by-step and this path  will Inshallah, take us to our destination,” he told the  delegates gathered in a tent under heavy security.

He urged the Taliban, who have virtually fought tens of  thousands of U.S.-led NATO forces and the Afghan army to a  bloody stalemate, to stop fighting.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon welcomed the decisions  of the three-day jirga, saying it was a significant step toward  reaching out to all Afghans to promote peace and stability.

“The United Nations supports these national efforts to end  conflict in Afghanistan, and remains fully committed to working  with the Afghan authorities as they strive for a peaceful  life,” he said in a statement.

U.S. State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said the Obama  administration believed the jirga had accomplished its  objectives.

“It has provided a national consensus to pursue a political  strategy to reduce the danger posed by the insurgency and we  will continue to support Afghanistan as it goes forward,”  Crowley said in Washington, without commenting further.

Washington, however, has been wary of overtures to senior  Taliban leaders, including supreme leader Mullah Omar and  others on the U.S. blacklist, until there is more momentum on  the battlefield.