Calling the death "an important milestone", Obama said Mansour had
rejected peace talks and had "continued to plot against and unleash
attacks on American and Coalition forces".
US President Barack Obama confirmed on Monday that the leader of the Afghan Taliban had been killed in an American air strike, an attack likely to trigger another leadership tussle in a militant movement already riven by internal divisions.
Obama,
on a three-day visit to Vietnam, reiterated support for the government
in Kabul and the Afghan security forces, and called on the Taliban to
join peace talks.
The president authorised the drone strike that killed Mullah Akhtar Mansour
in a remote region just on the Pakistani side of the border with
Afghanistan on Saturday, and Afghan authorities have said the mission
was successful.
But U.S. officials held back from
confirming that the Taliban leader had been killed in the attack until
intelligence had been fully assessed.
Calling the death "an important milestone", Obama said Mansour had rejected peace talks and had "continued to plot against and unleash attacks on American and Coalition forces".
"The
Taliban should seize the opportunity to pursue the only real path for
ending this long conflict - joining the Afghan government in a
reconciliation process that leads to lasting peace and stability," he said.
However,
he stressed that the operation against Mansour did not represent a
shift in U.S. strategy in Afghanistan or a return to active engagement
in fighting following the end of the international coalition's main
combat mission in 2014.
The U.S. currently has 9,800 troops in Afghanistan, divided between a NATO-led mission to train and advise local forces and a separate counterterrorism mission fighting militant groups such as Islamic State and al Qaeda.
A
decision is expected later this year on whether to stick with a
timetable that would see the number of troops cut to 5,500 by the start
of 2017.
CAN TALIBAN UNITE?
The
Taliban has been pushing Afghan security forces hard since the launch
of their spring offensive in April, but the attack is likely to disrupt
the movement, at least temporarily.
Although some
individual Taliban members have been quoted in media reports saying that
Mansour was killed, the group's leadership, keenly aware of the need to
limit damaging splits, has not issued its own confirmation.
"The leadership is being very careful because one wrong step could divide the group into many parties like former mujahideen,"
one Taliban official from the eastern province of Nangarhar said,
referring to guerrilla leaders who fought the Soviets in the 1980s
before splitting into warring factions.
A shura,
or leadership council, has already begun meeting to choose a successor, a
task that will be vital to protecting the unity of the movement.
Serious
splits emerged last year when it was confirmed that Mullah Mohammad
Omar, the group's founder, had been dead for two years, leaving his
deputy Mansour in effective charge of the movement and open to
accusations he had deceived his commanders.
One
senior member of the shura, which is based in the western Pakistani city
of Quetta, said that the choice for the next leader appeared to be
shaping around Mansour's deputy, Sirajuddin Haqqani, or a member of the
family of Mullah Omar, such as his son, Mullah Mohammad Yaqoob.
Haqqani,
leader of an affiliated network blamed for a series of high-profile
suicide attacks in Kabul, had the backing of Pakistan, while Yaqoob had
support among members of the Afghan Taliban, the shura member said.
"We prefer someone from Omar's family to put an end to all internal problems," he said.
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