Never
believe rumours until they have been officiallly denied
‘Categorically
false’: US dismisses Karzai’s accusations of Taliban terror
collusion
The US has denied that it is collaborating with Islamic terrorists in Afghanistan to prolong the stay of its forces beyond next year, refuting an accusation made by President Hamid Karzai in the wake of a series of suicide bombings.
10
March,
2013
Two explosions on
Saturday killed 19 people in two different locations, including one
in front of the Defense Ministry in the country's capital Kabul.
"Yesterday's
bombings in the name of the Taliban were aimed at serving the
foreigners and supporting the presence of the foreigners in
Afghanistan and keeping them in Afghanistan by intimidating us,"
Karzai said in a televised speech, who has been in power since 2001.
Afghan
National Army soldiers remove a damaged car from the site of a
suicide attack in Kabul March 9, 2013 (Reuters / Mohammad Ismail)
"This attack was
a message to him," Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid
said in the aftermath of the detonations.
Chuck
Hagel speaks to the press following his meeting with Afghanistan's
President Hamid Karzai in Kabul on March 10, 2013 (AFP Photo / Jason
Reed / Pool)
But this is not
how Karzai saw the incidents.
"Taliban leaders
and representatives are talking with the US abroad every day," he
claimed.
The Taliban, a radical
Islamic movement that controls swathes of the country, refuses to
recognize Karzai’s legitimacy.
The Taliban has “strongly
rejected” the accusations in an email communiqué.
The US and NATO forces
commander in the country, General Joseph Dunford, also rebuffed
Karzai’s allegations.
``We have fought too
hard over the past 12 years, we have shed too much blood over the
last 12 years, to ever think that violence or instability would be to
our advantage,'' Dunford said.
Meanwhile, the US embassy
in Kabul reminded Karzai that it has not even held talks with
radicals following a breakdown in negotiations exactly a year ago,
and insisted that it has “long supported an Afghan-led
process for Afghans to talk to Afghans”.
Karzai has form of making
dramatic anti-American statements – including referring to NATO
troops as“pillaging occupiers” – whether out of
personal frustration, or a desire to portray himself as a sovereign
leader and not an American puppet to his domestic audience.
Gen Dunford stated that
he had never heard Karzai express similar views to him in private.
The explosions and the
fallout appear to have derailed what already promised to be
tumultuous talks between uneasy allies.
Karzai and Hagel
cancelled a joint news conference on Sunday, although US officials
maintained that this was simply a security precaution, insisting the
two men would still meet one-to-one.
They have a lot to
discuss, following a string of apparent disagreements.
The US has just reneged
on a promise to hand over Bagram prison, in the east of the country,
which harbors those US intelligence believes to be some of the most
dangerous Taliban insurgents.
Although no official
reason has been given, Karzai proclaimed last week that “we know
there are innocent people in these jails, and I will order their
release, as much as I am criticized for it”, and the statement
appears to have infuriated Washington.
Karzai also recently
admonished NATO forces for a raft of alleged wrongdoings.
He has demanded that US
troops move out of the region of Wardak, which borders Kabul, after
alleged incidents of torture and extrajudicial killings by US troops,
which have been strenuously denied by the Pentagon.
He also accused the US of
directing CIA-trained local operatives, to kidnap an Afghan student,
before releasing him at the Afghan President’s insistence. The US
says that it has neither captured nor released anyone.
The points of contention
come amid a US withdrawal from the mountainous country, after more
than a decade at war.
There are currently about
66,000 US troops in Afghanistan, but that number will be halved next
year. It is not clear how many will remain beyond that time.
``We will tell the
NATO where we need them, and under which conditions. They must
respect our laws. They must respect the national sovereignty of our
country and must respect all our customs,'' Karzai declared
on Sunday.
The US has poured
billions of dollars into training local police, army and security
forces, to ensure that order does not collapse as soon as its ground
forces leave. But the initiatives have met with local resistance
(with recruits frequently shooting their NATO mentors) and suspicion
from Karzai, who says the new organizations are opaque and are not
under full command of his government.
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