US President George W. Bush and visiting Afghan President Hamid
Karzai vowed on Monday to continue their efforts to fight against
terrorism in Afghanistan.
They have agreed to make no concession for the release of 21
South Korean hostages seized by the Taliban last month, US National
Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe said.
"Both leaders agreed that in negotiations for the release, there
should be no quid pro quo for the hostages. The Taliban are brutal
and should not be emboldened by this," Johndroe said.
The White House official made the remarks after Bush and Karzai
held a two-day talks at Camp David, Maryland.
Taliban militants abducted 23 South Koreans on July 19, and have
shot dead two of them so far. They threatened to execute the
remaining if the Afghan government fails to meet their demand which
includes the release of their eight Taliban comrades.
South Korea, which has been striving for the release of the
hostages, said Friday that the withdrawal of South Korean troops
from Afghanistan would be implemented by the end of this year as
scheduled.
The US-Afghanistan summit focused on issues like the release of
21 surviving South Korean hostages, combat the aggressive Taliban
insurgency and rein in Afghanistan's flourishing opium poppy
trade.
However, Lee Jeong-hoon, the father of one of the captives, told
reporters that "the families of the hostages don't seem to expect
much from the summit meeting between Afghanistan and the United
States, They don't think that the meeting will secure the hostages'
release."
A South Korean presidential spokesman meanwhile warned against
any "premature expectations" about the summit.
"It is our government's standpoint that we should work
separately from the summit to resolve the hostage issue. It is
inappropriate to have any premature expectations or to overly
interpret the summit," Cheon Ho-sun said in Seoul.
But in Afghanistan, a purported Taliban spokesman, Qari Yousef
Ahmadi, said the lives of those being held are in the hands of Bush
and Karzai.
Seoul has asked Kabul to be flexible in its policy of
non-negotiation with terrorists.
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"We will not do anything that will encourage hostage-taking, that
will encourage terrorism. But we will do everything else to have
them released," Karzai said in a CNN interview broadcast on
Sunday.
In Seoul, about 150 demonstrators rallied at the US Embassy,
praying for the hostages' release and demanding US help.
On Iran, Bush told reporters after talks with Karzai that he
would continue efforts to isolate Iran because the government in
Tehran is "not a force for good" in the world.
"Because of the actions of this government, this country is
isolated, and we will continue to work to isolate it because
they're not a force for good as far as we can see, they're a
destabilizing influence wherever they are," Bush said.
Bush made the remarks after US and Iranian experts held their
first meeting in Baghdad's Green Zone earlier in the day over how
to improve bilateral cooperation on the Iraqi security in the
war-torn country.
"It is an established channel of communication and we will see
in the future as to whether or not it is a useful channel of
communication," US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told
reporters in Washington.
Mass media has noticed that what Bush's remarks about Iran
contradict what Karzai said before the US-Afghanistan summit.
Karzai told CNN Saturday that he is investigating reports that
Iran is fueling violence in Afghanistan by sending in weaponry such
as sophisticated roadside bombs.
But he insisted that "Iran has been a supporter of Afghanistan,
in the peace process that we have and the fight against terror, and
the fight against narcotics in Afghanistan."
The Afghan top leader said that Afghanistan and Iran had "very,
very good, very, very close relations. ... We will continue to have
good relations with Iran."
(Xinhua News Agency,China Daily via agencies August 7,
2007)