Motoring1 min ago
Time to talk?
The front of the independent has the headline that GB thinks we should talk to the Taliban. Is it possible to reason with extremists who are pledged to convert or erradicate us?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Loosehead. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'm al in favour of talk - jaw-jaw better than war-war and all that, to quote Churchill. I thought Brown missed a trick by refusing to meet Mugabe, thus giving Angela Merkel the credit for being the one who told him off. I think he should be talking to Iran, and I don't think talking to the Taliban can hurt either. If nothing comes of it, at least he can say he tried.
UPDATE: What Brown has just said
"He said Britain and its coalition partners were "isolating and eliminating the leadership of the Taleban, not negotiating with them".
But he supported Afghan leaders' moves towards "political reconciliation" - including with former insurgents now prepared to denounce the insurgency."
Newspaper reports had suggested that Mr Brown would say it was "time to talk" to the Taleban.
"He said Britain and its coalition partners were "isolating and eliminating the leadership of the Taleban, not negotiating with them".
But he supported Afghan leaders' moves towards "political reconciliation" - including with former insurgents now prepared to denounce the insurgency."
Newspaper reports had suggested that Mr Brown would say it was "time to talk" to the Taleban.
There was an interesting passage in the Alistair Campbell diaries, pre 9-11, where they asked Musharraf about the Taleban leaders in next door Afghanistan.
"Can we talk to them?" He asked.
"There is no point," he said. "He talks completely in the context of the afterlife."
I think traditional diplomacy has long since failed.
In fairness, the easiest political thing for Brown to do is play the strong-leader 'i'll never talk to them' card.
But one thing that the aftermath of Iraq has shown is that excluding those who used to be in power completely is simply not sensible, no matter how unpalatable that option appears to be.
"the Taleban" is a disparate group and there will of course be sections more inclined actually to pursue peace rather than power.
"Can we talk to them?" He asked.
"There is no point," he said. "He talks completely in the context of the afterlife."
I think traditional diplomacy has long since failed.
In fairness, the easiest political thing for Brown to do is play the strong-leader 'i'll never talk to them' card.
But one thing that the aftermath of Iraq has shown is that excluding those who used to be in power completely is simply not sensible, no matter how unpalatable that option appears to be.
"the Taleban" is a disparate group and there will of course be sections more inclined actually to pursue peace rather than power.
Has anyone asked the question 'why can't the Taliban be defeated. Talking to them is too divergent as their views will not be accepted and women will be treated like slaves.
Russia could not defeat them!
the USA with their 500lb bombs could not.
We are said to be there for the next 10 years.
Where do they escape to? Pakistan of course where they also receive training and backup.
The answer, tackle Pakistan, where Al Qaeda is also trained and stop pussyfooting around!
Russia could not defeat them!
the USA with their 500lb bombs could not.
We are said to be there for the next 10 years.
Where do they escape to? Pakistan of course where they also receive training and backup.
The answer, tackle Pakistan, where Al Qaeda is also trained and stop pussyfooting around!