Afghan President Hamid Karzai could invite militants to attend a “Loya Jirga”, or grand council meeting, aiming to seek peace and reconciliation with the Taliban, a spokesman said Sunday. The plans signal a more public effort to engage with militants during Karzai's second term as leader, measures that Washington has encouraged in its counter-insurgency strategy. Afghanistan's Constitution recognizes the Loya Jirga - Pashtu for grand assembly - as “the highest manifestation of the will of the people of Afghanistan”. Karzai announced plans for a Loya Jirga in his inauguration speech last week, describing it as a measure to promote peace but giving few details. Under the Afghan constitution, a Loya Jirga made up of parliamentarians and chiefs of district and provincial councils can amend the constitution, impeach the president and “decide on issues related to independence, national sovereignty, territorial integrity as well as supreme national interests”. The rare, colorful mass gatherings of elders have played crucial roles over the course of Afghan history. Two have been held since the fall of the Taliban in 2001: one that named Karzai interim leader and a second that adopted the Constitution. A third gathering of tribal chiefs from both sides of the Afghan-Pakistan frontier, was held in Kabul in 2007 to smooth over relations between the two countries. The giant marquee tent where those assemblies were held is still standing in a Kabul field. Hamid Elmi, a spokesman for Karzai, said the assembly envisioned by the president would not be the “Constitutional Loya Jirga” described formally under Afghan law but a “Traditional Loya Jirga”, which could have a different make