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Richard Holbrooke, U.S. special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan, attributed an increase in contacts with individuals linked to the Taliban to stepped up military pressure that NATO and its Afghan allies were placing on the insurgents. Wakil Ahmad Muttawakil, a former foreign minister and confidant of Taliban leader Mullah Omar also denied that top Taliban leaders were engaged in talks. "There is no trust line between the U.S. and international community and the Taliban," Muttawakil said Tuesday in an interview. "Because of this, the Taliban are not serious about talking." He demanded that the U.S. and its international partners release Taliban prisoners being held at Guantanamo Bay and remove the names of Taliban figures from the U.N. sanctions list to build trust. Muttawakil said face-to-face talks would be too difficult right now. He suggested that if formal negotiations are eventually held, it would be better to hold them in Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates or Germany. Some analysts believe the detention of the Taliban figures, including some who were exploring reconciliation, was driven by Pakistan's desire to influence any peace deal in Afghanistan. A senior Pakistani security official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to discuss the issue publicly, said Islambad has not been asked to assist in the talks and does not know the identities of the participants. The arrests abruptly halted secret U.N. contacts with the insurgency at a time when the efforts were gathering momentum, according to Kai Eide, a Norwegian diplomat and the U.N.'s former envoy to Afghanistan. Eide said the discussions that he and others had with senior Taliban members began in the spring of 2009 and included face-to-face conversations in Dubai and elsewhere. He played down reports of current negotiations. "There have been contacts for years," Eide said in a telephone interview on Wednesday. "My feeling is that this is a lot of spin that the war strategy is working
-- that things are moving forward more than they are."
[Associated
Press;
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