Afghan Taliban announce fresh offensive in apparent snub to peace efforts

AFP  |  Kabul 

The launched their annual spring offensive today, in an apparent rejection of calls for the militants to take up the Afghan government's offer of peace talks.

The said the offensive was partly a response to US Donald Trump's new strategy for announced last August, which gave US forces more leeway to go after insurgents.

The annual spring offensive traditionally marks the start of the so-called fighting season, though this winter the continued to battle Afghan and US forces.

The group also launched a series of devastating attacks in the Afghan capital Kabul, killing and wounding hundreds of civilians.

will mainly focus on "crushing, killing and capturing American invaders and their supporters", the said.

It added the presence of American bases "sabotages all chances of peace" and were key to "prolonging the ongoing war", which began with the US-led intervention in 2001 that overthrew the regime.

Afghanistan's largest militant group has been under pressure to accept Afghan Ashraf Ghani's February offer of peace talks, but the statement made no mention of the proposal.

Western and Afghan experts said the announcement was an apparent rejection of the offer and heralded more intense fighting in the drawn-out war.

"We're in for a hot and busy summer," a in told AFP.

Afghan said the appeared to consider America's rejection of the group's own request for direct peace talks with the US in February as leaving them with "no other choice but to fight".

"This year they will try to weaken the (Afghan) government even further. They will try to derail the election process," the University told AFP.

"A weak government would eventually mean forcing the US to talk to them." dismissed the announcement as "propaganda".

The US-backed is under pressure on multiple fronts this year as it prepares to hold long-delayed legislative elections even as its security forces struggle to get the upper hand on the battlefield and prevent civilian casualties.

On Sunday, a suicide bomber blew himself up in a crowd outside a voter registration centre in Kabul, killing 60 people and wounding 129, according to the latest figures from the health ministry.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the bomb, but Western and Afghan officials suspect IS receives assistance from other groups, including the Taliban's Haqqani Network, to carry out attacks.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, April 25 2018. 13:20 IST