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MI6 negotiate with Taliban

I/Ops

MI6 HELD SECRET TALKS WITH THE TALIBAN - GOVERNMENT SAID WE WOULD NEVER NEGOTIATE IN THE 'WAR ON TERROR'!



Officers from the Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) staged discussions, known as "jirgas" with senior insurgents on several occasions over the summer while British troops were involved in heavy fighting with the Taliban.

An intelligence source said: "The SIS officers were understood to have sought peace directly with the Taliban with them coming across as some sort of armed militia. The British would also provide 'mentoring' for the Taliban."

The disclosure comes only a fortnight after the Prime Minister told the House of Commons:
"We will not enter into any negotiations with these people." Opposition leaders said that Mr Brown had "some explaining to do". The Government was apparently prepared to admit that the talks had taken place but Gordon Brown was thought to have "bottled out" just before Prime Minister's Questions on 12 December, when he made his denial instead.

It is believed that the Americans were deeply unhappy with the news becoming public that an ally was negotiating with terrorists who supported the September 11 attackers. The delicate balance in Afghanistan was underlined as it emerged that two diplomats had been ordered by the Kabul government to leave the country after allegations that they had met Taliban insurgents without the administration's knowledge.

The pair, a top European Union official and a United Nations staff member, were declared "persona non grata" and said to be "threatening national security". They are both Afghan 'experts' who have been working in the country since the 1980s. They are in their forties but cannot be named. One man works as a 'political adviser' to the European Union while the other is employed as a 'political adviser' to the UN mission in Kabul.

One of the men described the charges as "banal and preposterous" and said he hoped the Afghan government would quickly drop its threat to deport them. MI6's meetings with the Taliban took place up to half a dozen times at houses on the outskirts of Lashkah Gah and in villages in the Upper Gereshk valley, to the north-east of Helmand's main town. The compounds were surrounded by a force of British infantry providing a security cordon.

To maintain the stance that President Hamid Karzai's government was leading the negotiations the clandestine meetings took place in the presence of Afghan officials. "These meetings were with up to a dozen Taliban or with Taliban who had only recently laid down their arms," an intelligence source said. "The impression was that these were important motivating figures inside the Taliban."

The Prime Minister had denied reports of talks with the Taliban under questioning from David Cameron, the Tory leader. Liam Fox, the shadow defence secretary said: "If this turns out to be untrue the Prime Minister will have some explaining to do to the British public."

But serious observers of British Intelligence will not be surprised by this latest covert operation to negotiate 'peace' with an embattled enemy given the fact that MI6 during the 1970s attempted to negotiate 'peace' with the IRA in the infamous 'back-channel' scandal.

Of greater concern to the Government now is the huge damage to 'War on Terror' propaganda driven into a fearful population. Despite what the New Labour regime tells the public, the 'War on Terror' is not being won and our leaders are in fact prepared to negotiate with terrorists while our brave soldiers are being killed in action against the same 'enemy'. And of course MI6 have a long and notorious history of consorting with terrorists and hiring Al Qaeda fanatics to assassinate Colonel Gaddaffi.



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