KABUL
OCTOBER 25 2008 13:04h
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`It will be impossible for the invader armies to delay the progress of jihad and the stop Muslim ummah in Afghanistan` Taliban said.
With no end in sight to the conflict which has now entered its eighth year, Western leaders now admit the war cannot be won militarily and that ultimately peace talks will have to be held to bring an end to fighting that has killed 4,000 people this year.
Saudi Arabia hosted a meeting of pro-government Afghan figures and former Taliban officials last month which analysts say could be a first small step toward more substantial dialogue.
But the Taliban have denied any involvement in the Saudi talks and said news of the meeting was leaked to try to split the movement which has managed to launch more attacks this year and extend its influence to the outskirts of the capital, Kabul.
"It will be impossible for the invader armies to delay the progress of jihad and the stop Muslim ummah (nation) in Afghanistan," the Taliban said in a statement on their Web site.
"The Islamic emirate wants to make it clear that the only solution and the most successful path for resolving the Afghan problem is for foreign forces to leave Afghanistan unconditionally," it said.
Afghanistan this year has suffered from the worst violence since U.S.-led and Afghan forces toppled the Taliban in late 2001 for refusing to give up al Qaeda leaders behind the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States.
Washington has ordered a major review of military strategy in Afghanistan and both U.S. presidential candidates have vowed to refocus efforts on the war which has long been over-shadowed by the conflict in Iraq.
While there is a growing Western realisation that the war in Afghanistan will not end in outright victory, analysts say the Taliban are unlikely to enter into serious peace talks while they feel they are gaining ground and sense disarray among their foes.
The Taliban were on the "verge of victory", the insurgents said on their Web site.
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