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From CNN
(CNN)The top US military officer said Saturday that the Taliban "are not losing" in Afghanistan, and much more needs to be done to bring peace to the war-torn country.
"They are not losing right now, I think that is fair to say," Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said of the Taliban during a discussion at a security forum in Halifax, Nova Scotia. "We used the term stalemate a year ago and, relatively speaking, it has not changed much."
Dunford said that while there would never be a "military solution" on its own to bring peace to Afghanistan, the United States and its Nato partners are working to leverage military, political and economic pressure to convince the Taliban it is in their interest to negotiate a political solution to the crisis with the government in Kabul.
"Without going into detail here, we do believe the Taliban know that at some point they do have to reconcile," he said. "The key to success is to combine all that pressure to incentivize the Taliban" to negotiate.
COMMENT:-
When one side is "fighting the long war" and the other wants to quit, "not losing" (for the side that is "fighting the long war") is almost the same thing as "winning".
The US which wanted to get the Taliban out of Afghanistan now wants to negotiate its way out of Afghanistan while the Taliban wants to stay in Afghanistan. If the price for getting out of Afghanistan is letting the Taliban stay in Afghanistan, and the US pays it - who "won"?
Top US military officer says Taliban 'are not losing'
(CNN)The top US military officer said Saturday that the Taliban "are not losing" in Afghanistan, and much more needs to be done to bring peace to the war-torn country.
"They are not losing right now, I think that is fair to say," Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said of the Taliban during a discussion at a security forum in Halifax, Nova Scotia. "We used the term stalemate a year ago and, relatively speaking, it has not changed much."
Dunford said that while there would never be a "military solution" on its own to bring peace to Afghanistan, the United States and its Nato partners are working to leverage military, political and economic pressure to convince the Taliban it is in their interest to negotiate a political solution to the crisis with the government in Kabul.
"Without going into detail here, we do believe the Taliban know that at some point they do have to reconcile," he said. "The key to success is to combine all that pressure to incentivize the Taliban" to negotiate.
COMMENT:-
When one side is "fighting the long war" and the other wants to quit, "not losing" (for the side that is "fighting the long war") is almost the same thing as "winning".
The US which wanted to get the Taliban out of Afghanistan now wants to negotiate its way out of Afghanistan while the Taliban wants to stay in Afghanistan. If the price for getting out of Afghanistan is letting the Taliban stay in Afghanistan, and the US pays it - who "won"?