Trump rejects peace talks with Taliban in departure from Afghan strategy

President condemned the militant group for Kabul carnage and pledged to “finish what we have to finish”

epa06478145 Afghan medics carry people injured in a bomb explosion for medical treatment to a hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan, 27 January 2018. A huge explosion rocked Kabul on 27 January, killing at least 40 people and injuring several dozens.  EPA/JAWAD JALALI
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US President Donald Trump rejected the idea of talks with the Taliban on Monday after a series of deadly attacks in Afghanistan, in an apparent contradiction of his strategy to end America's longest foreign war.

Mr Trump condemned the group for the carnage in Kabul and pledged to "finish what we have to finish".

His comments suggest he envisages a military victory over the Taliban, an outcome that military and diplomatic officials said cannot be achieved with the resources and manpower he has authorised.

When he announced an increase in American troops to Afghanistan in August, US officials said the goal was to force the Taliban to negotiate a political settlement.

“I don’t see any talking taking place,” Mr Trump told reporters as he began meeting at the White House with members of the United Nations Security Council.

“I don’t think we’re prepared to talk right now. It’s a whole different fight over there. They’re killing people left and right. Innocent people are being killed left and right.”

The president last year ordered an increase in US troops to Afghanistan, air strikes and other assistance to Afghan forces. America's ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, said this month that the strategy was working and pushing the insurgents closer to the negotiating table.

That was before a suicide bomber penetrated the highly-guarded centre of Kabul on Saturday and detonated an explosives-laden ambulance, killing more than 100 people and wounding 235. That attack followed a Taliban assault on the city's Intercontinental Hotel and other acts of violence.

Four US citizens were killed and two wounded in the January 20 attack on the Intercontinental, the US State Department said last week. At least 20 people were killed in the hotel assault.

“When you see what they’re doing and the atrocities that they’re committing, and killing their own people, and those people are women and children ... it is horrible,” Mr Trump said.

“We don’t want to talk to the Taliban. We’re going to finish what we have to finish, what nobody else has been able to finish, we're going to be able to do it," he said.

Current and former US officials said that despite the carnage, the United States had no choice but to promote peace talks.

A US official expressed surprise at Mr Trump’s comments and said there was an understanding that defeating the Taliban was not purely a military problem. “You can never really take talks off the table,” the official said.

Laurel Miller, who served as acting US special representative to Afghanistan and Pakistan until June, said the stated goal of Mr Trump’s Afghanistan strategy was “to increase military pressure on the Taliban in order to motivate them to engage in a political settlement”.

There is no evidence, she said, “that suggests that the US and Afghan forces can defeat the Taliban on the battlefield”.

Afghanistan’s UN ambassador, Mahmoud Saikal, told Reuters on Monday that fighting needed to continue against certain elements of the Taliban.

“There are two categories of Taliban: One is the reconcilable elements who are in touch with us, who are talking to us, and one is the irreconcilable,” Mr Saikal said.

“The irreconcilables and those who have chosen to fight, we need to fight. We need to fight against them, we need to have the capability to withstand against them and to defend our people,” he said.