Pakistan: 'All indicators' confirm US killed Taliban leader


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ISLAMABAD (AP) — Taliban chief Mullah Akhtar Mansour was traveling under a false name with fake Pakistani identity documents when he was killed by a U.S. drone strike last week, the foreign affairs adviser to Pakistan's prime minister said Thursday.

At a news conference in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, Sartaj Aziz said authorities were awaiting DNA test results, after which Mansour's body will be handed over to his relatives.

But "all indicators" at present point that it was Mansour, Aziz added.

He spoke a day after the Taliban announced that the group's council of leaders — at a meeting, presumably in Pakistan — had unanimously selected Mullah Haibatullah Akhundzada as its new head following the death of Mansour.

Mansour had entered Pakistan from Iran under a false name, with a Pakistani ID card and passport, Aziz told reporters. He refused to elaborate, saying that Pakistani authorities were still investigating the reason for Mansour's trip to Iran.

Pakistani authorities have detained two officials from southwestern Baluchistan who helped Mansour obtain his Pakistani national identity card, the interior ministry said.

The Afghan Taliban have been fighting to overthrow the Kabul government since 2001, when their extremist Islamic regime was removed by the U.S.-led invasion. Pakistani authorities have long been accused by both Kabul and Washington of giving shelter and support to some Taliban leaders — an accusation that Islamabad denies.

Aziz condemned the U.S. drone strike, saying it was a "violation of Pakistan's sovereignty" and said Pakistan had "conveyed our serious concern to the United States on this issue."

The drone attack had "undermined the Afghan peace process," Aziz said, but he added that he still believed that the way to resolve the Afghanistan's conflict is through negotiation.

"In our view there is no military solution to the conflict in Afghanistan. The use of force for past 15 years has failed to deliver peace," he said.

During an official visit to Japan Thursday, President Barack Obama said that he was not optimistic about a change for the better any time soon after the killing of Mansour.

"In the short term, we anticipate the Taliban will continue to pursue an agenda of violence," he said. But Obama added that he was hopeful that eventually there will be more progress "when there are those within the community that surround the Taliban that recognize their goals are best achieved by negotiations."

Obama, speaking at a news conference in Shima, Japan, on the sidelines of a summit of world leaders, said he never expected "a liberal Democrat to be the newly appointed leader of the Taliban."

"This continues to be an organization that sees violence as a strategy for obtaining its goals and moving its agenda forward in Afghanistan," Obama said.

"My hope, although not my expectation, is that there comes a point at which the Taliban recognizes that they are not going to simply be able to overrun the country and that what they need to be doing is to enter into serious reconciliation talks that are led by Afghans," the U.S. president also said. "If that happens, that's something that the United States and others would support. But I am doubtful that that will be happening any time soon and we'll have to wait and see how those things develop."

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Associated Press Writer Nancy Benac in Shima, Japan contributed to this report

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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