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Saturday, August 13, 2011

If it's a secret, why do we all know about it?

I love the headline for the article because it is so surreal.  We are in secret talks with the Taliban yet the secret manages to get leaked and the talks collapse. 

OK, why are we talking to Islam when the end result will be that we lose and Islam advances, and who is the person leaking this secret information?  The fact the the Obama administration would even consider talking to the Taliban shows that the people around him; Karen Armstrong, Dalia Mogahed, Harold Koh, John Esposito and others are so smooth at taqiyya that they effectively have the White House in their own back pocket concerning jihad and Islamic expansion.  I have said this before and it bears repeating: Obama may not be a Muslim but he sure acts like one.


From The Telegraph August 12 by Dean Nelson

Secret peace talks between US and Taliban collapse over leaks


Tayyab Agha
Tayeb Agha, Taliban negotiator and fashion statement
 
The breakdown in the talks at such an early stage has led to recriminations and claims that the details of the meetings and the identity of the Taliban's chief negotiator were deliberately leaked by 'paranoid' Afghan government figures.
 
Absolute confidentiality had been a key condition for the meetings which were held in Germany and Qatar earlier this year between Tayeb Agha, Taliban leader Mullah Omar's former private secretary, and senior officials from the US State Department and Central Intelligence Agency. The meetings were chaired by Michael Steiner, Germany's special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan.
 
The talks were described as a preliminary exercise aimed at agreeing a series of confidence-building measures to persuade the Taliban that the United States and its allies are serious about a negotiated settlement, sources close to the talks told The Daily Telegraph.
 
They said Taliban leaders were extremely nervous about entering talks because of widespread scepticism among their own commanders who believed the Americans were only seeking dialogue to divide their movement and fears that any discussions would damage their own credibility.
 
But after only three sessions details of two meetings in Germany and one in Qatar – held in March and April - were leaked to the Washington Post and Der Spiegel news magazine which named Tayeb Agha as the key Taliban negotiator.
 
According to diplomatic sources and others close to the talks, Tayeb Agha has not been seen since and American officials have not been able to contact him through intermediaries in Quetta and Peshawar in Pakistan, where he is believed to live.
 
"The talks were a big deal, the real thing. I hope people will learn the lesson on the importance of confidentiality in the early stages. People in the US are horrified about what has happened," said one source close to the talks.
 
Sources in Kabul confirmed the talks appeared to have been "blown out of the water" by the publicity.
 
After years of the Taliban rejecting Hamid Karzai's overtures, news of contact with a senior aide to Mullah Omar had kindled cautious hope in Kabul.
 
Abdul Hakim Mujahid, the Taliban's former envoy to the United Nations and now a member of Mr Karzai's High Peace Council, told the Daily Telegraph in June that the contacts were "helpful".
 
He said: "[Tayeb Agha] is still very close to Mullah Mohammad Omar, it's a good sign. Not only close to Mullah Omar, but also close to Pakistan."
 
That is a very bad sign.

Read it all

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