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This is an archive article published on October 29, 2009

Obama signs bill that will pay Taliban for switching sides

Facing a resurgent Taliban in Afghanistan,the Obama administration seems to believe in a “buyout” formula which involves paying the militants to leave the outfit and reintegrate to the society.

Facing a resurgent Taliban in Afghanistan,the Obama administration seems to believe in a “buyout” formula which involves paying the militants to leave the outfit and reintegrate to the society.

Hours before attending a solemn event to receive the flag-draped cases of 18 Americans killed in Afghanistan arrived at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware,President Barack Obama signed a USD 680 billion defence appropriations bill,which will pay for military operations in the 2010 fiscal.

The bill includes a Taliban reintegration provision under the Commander’s Emergency Response Programme,which is now receiving USD 1.3 billion. CERP funding also is intended for humanitarian relief and reconstruction projects at commanders’ discretion.

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Some experts on the region believe a US programme to pay Taliban fighters to quit the militant organisation is buying temporary loyalty,CNN reported.

The “buyout” idea,according to the Senator Carl Levin,chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee,is to separate local Taliban from their leaders,replicating a programme used to neutralise the insurgency in Iraq.

But Nicholas Schmidle,an expert on the Afghanistan- Pakistan region for the non-partisan New America Foundation,said that while the plan has a “reasonable chance for some success,” the old Afghan saying — “You can rent an Afghan,but you can’t buy him” — will eventually be borne out.

The bill comes as an uptick in violence claimed the lives of several American troops in Afghanistan.

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