KABUL, Afghanistan — The Taliban said Saturday it will not participate in a peace process with the Afghan government until foreign forces stop attacking its positions and leave the country.
A statement e-mailed to The Associated Press by spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said the insurgents “reject” peace talks and that reports of their participation were “rumors.”
Face-to-face talks were expected to take place in Pakistan in early March, but Afghan officials said in recent days that they have been postponed for at least a week. Senior government officials had characterized the meeting as the first real step in a peace process aimed at ending the war, now in its 15th year.
Javid Faisal, a spokesman for Afghan Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah, said the government “has no problem holding the first round of direct peace talks.”
The Taliban has meanwhile accused the United States of boosting troop numbers and carrying out airstrikes and night raids on residential compounds. It also accuses Afghan forces of stepping up operations.
Mujahid said the leader of the Afghan Taliban, Mullah Akhtar Mansoor, had not given any order to take part in talks and that the “leadership council of the Islamic Emirate” had not discussed the matter.
The talks were decided on by delegates of four countries — Afghanistan, Pakistan, China and the United States — who met in Kabul last month.



