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 Delegates discuss Afghan war 10 years on: Turkey 
(Right) Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, left, and his Afghan counterpart Zalmay Rasoul speak during the Istanbul Conference for Afghanistan in Istanbul, Turkey, Wednesday.(AP)



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Delegates discuss Afghan war 10 years on: Turkey

ISTANBUL -- A decade after the Taliban were ousted from power, regional leaders Wednesday pledged to find ways to improve security and economic development in Afghanistan as international combat forces prepare to leave by the end of 2014.

The one-day conference in Istanbul followed the September assassination of an Afghan peace envoy and other high-profile assaults in Afghanistan that have diminished prospects for a negotiated settlement and intensified suspicion of Pakistani support for the insurgency, an allegation that Pakistan's government denies.

In an opulent hall on the shores of the Bosporus Strait, delegates delivered speeches promising support for Afghan sovereignty, and endorsed a transition to Afghan security leadership, efforts for a political solution to the war and economic development.

As a show of solidarity, the meeting was a success, but it was also a reminder of how much remains unsolved.

“The terrorism, extremism, as well as drugs and human trafficking that Afghanistan is struggling against are not problems that one country can deal with on its own,” Turkish President Abdullah Gul said.

“It is our duty as neighbors to contribute to Afghanistan's unity, stability and prosperity,” Gul said. “It is also a necessity for the sake of our common interests.”

Afghan President Hamid Karzai and his Pakistani counterpart, Asif Ali Zardari, discussed a joint inquiry into the Sept. 20 killing by a suicide bomber of Burhanuddin Rabbani, a former Afghan president and peace council leader. But the relationship is strained. Afghan and U.S. officials want Pakistan to crack down on militants who operate on its territory and cross into Afghanistan to conduct attacks.

“As recent setbacks have indicated, the peace process will not succeed unless we are able to get the top leadership of the Taliban, based in Pakistan, to join it,” Karzai said in a speech. “Our hope is that, with help from our brothers in Pakistan, we will manage to wean away the Taliban leadership from some of the long-established networks of support they enjoy outside Afghanistan and integrate them into the peace process.”

Pakistan denies it shelters militants and notes the deaths of many Pakistani soldiers in battles with such groups. Its leaders bristle at U.S. criticism that they play a double game, fighting militants in some areas and supporting them in others where they might be useful proxies in a future conflict with India, its archenemy.

China, India and Iran were among countries with envoys at the conference. The United States and other Western countries with troops in Afghanistan also sent representatives.

“Ten years of conflict in Afghanistan have taught us that military means alone are not sufficient to solve this crisis,” German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said in a speech to the delegates. “We need a political solution with active support from the region.”

Karzai said his country was looking for a major international conference on Afghanistan, which will be held next month in Bonn, Germany for “steadfast support” of its international partners for an economic transition.

“At the Bonn Conference, we will share our vision for the next ten years - it will be a vision of consolidating Afghanistan as a stable and democratic country, with a prospering economy,” Karzai said. “And we will seek a commitment from our friends in the international community to continue to support us as we work towards that vision.”

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