Pakistan and Afghanistan agreed to form a Joint Reconciliation Commission comprising the Foreign Ministers and military and intelligence officials as part of enhanced bilateral consultations in the run-up to the reduction US troops in the war-torn country.
The decision to form the joint commission was announced at a news conference by Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi and his visiting Afghan counterpart Zalmay Rassoul in Islamabad.
The commission will have two tiers, one comprising the Foreign Ministers and another consisting of representatives of the foreign ministries, military and intelligence services, Qureshi said. Kabul and Islamabad have stepped up consultations, especially on Afghanistan's reconciliation process with the Taliban, ahead of American plans to scale down its military presence in Afghanistan from July this year.
The US plans to completely withdraw its troops by 2014. The reintegration and reconciliation efforts in Afghanistan are part of an Afghan-led process and Pakistan will facilitate and assist these moves, Qureshi said. The two sides decided to form the joint commission as there was a need for a formal mechanism for consultations by the "political, military and intelligence components", he said.
Rassoul said the Afghan peace process comprised two parts reintegration and reconciliation. The Afghan government is now involved in reintegration by "bringing on board foot soldiers which are not ideologically linked to Al Qaeda and other terrorist groups",he said. Reconciliation is only possible with those elements who accept the Afghan constitution and women's rights and do not oppose education, he said.
Qureshi said Thursday's meeting with his Afghan counterpart also focussed on consultations for a trilateral meeting with
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