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Gates also was to meet in Kabul with Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan. Petraeus is preparing recommendations on the July troop drawdown. He has been nominated to succeed Leon Panetta as CIA director; Panetta has been nominated to succeed Gates. In a question-and-answer session with members of his audience after the Singapore speech, Gates said the United States and its allies fighting in Afghanistan will have to keep up military pressure on the Taliban in order to eventually reach a peace deal. "The Taliban are probably a part of the political fabric of Afghanistan at this point," he said, so they could have a political role in the future. But to get to the point of a possible negotiated settlement, he said, the Taliban first will have to see their battlefield fortunes reversed. Gates said that "perhaps this winter" some form of political negotiation with the Taliban could begin, but only if NATO keeps up heavy military pressure to force the insurgents to the table. "The prospects for a political settlement do not become real until the Taliban and our other adversaries begin to conclude that they cannot win militarily," Gates said.
[Associated
Press;
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