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Tuesday's bombing appeared to be a symbolic strike against the government. Later in the day, President Hamid Karzai was scheduled to give a speech marking the anniversary of the country's post-Taliban constitution
-- a document signed in 2004 that laid out a new course of the nation. The Taliban had ruled Afghanistan for five years with a strict interpretation of Islamic law until it was ousted in 2001 by a U.S.-led invasion. It later became the main insurgent group fighting the U.S.-backed government in Kabul. Karzai has repeatedly pushed to bring the insurgents into the political mainstream if they accept the country's constitution and repudiate al-Qaida. Insurgents have so far rebuffed the efforts. Much of the insurgency's leadership is believed to be hiding in Pakistan, and Afghan and NATO officials argue that the ability to secure Afghanistan hinges in large part on Pakistan's willingness to crack down on militants who use its territory as a staging ground for attacks. The High Peace Council delegation is also expected to meet with Pakistan's president and prime minister.
[Associated
Press;
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