Taliban dismisses NATO security handover to Afghans

KABUL, Afghanistan — The Taliban scoffed Sunday at NATO plans to hand over most security responsibilities to Afghan forces in the coming three years while retaining an option to keep international troops in the country beyond that time if necessary.

In a statement issued the day after the alliance wrapped up a summit in Lisbon, the Islamist movement also denounced the Western-backed government of President Hamid Karzai, saying it had no legitimacy in the eyes of the Afghan people.

“In the past nine years, the invaders could not establish any system of governance in Kabul, and they will never be able to do so in the future,” said the Taliban statement, which was e-mailed to journalists and posted on the group’s website.

Although preliminary contacts have taken place between envoys from the Taliban and Karzai’s government, the Taliban said no peace negotiations were possible until NATO troops had left.

“The real solution of the Afghan issues lies in the withdrawal of foreign forces,” the statement said, adding that Afghans “are not ready to tolerate foreign invasion and occupation of their country.”

Even as the summit was wrapping up, NATO forces pressed ahead with a campaign of targeted raids and airstrikes aimed at capturing and killing midlevel Taliban leaders.

Karzai sharply criticized night raids on Afghan homes days before the summit. Some senior U.S. military officials were dismayed by both the substance and timing of the Afghan leader’s remarks.

In a speech to alliance leaders in Lisbon, Karzai was more conciliatory, saying that “the maturity of our partnership allows us to discuss difficult issues and find agreement.” But U.S. Army Gen. David Petraeus, who commands all Western forces in Afghanistan, told summit participants that night raids and drone strikes would remain an important part of the coalition’s arsenal.

Underscoring that, the NATO force said Sunday that an airstrike had targeted a meeting of Taliban field commanders in Helmand province a day earlier, killing 10 insurgents.

Heavy fighting continued over the weekend in a dangerous district of Helmand province, where U.S. Marines recently took over command from British forces.

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