Obama
break up with Karzai? US considers total Afghanistan pullout
The
Obama administration is considering a quick ‘zero option’
withdrawal from Afghanistan after relations with the Karzai
administration have degraded to a record low, the NYT reports. With
no US troops left, Kabul would be left to face the Taliban alone.
RT,
9
July, 2013
Stern
words between the American and Afghan presidents during a
videoconference arranged to ease tensions between the countries could
bring painful consequences.
For
the first time ever Karzai has dared to accuse Obama to his face of
conducting an unfair game.
The
videoconference was organized on June 27 to get the parties’
positions closer on the matter of Taliban contacts and troop
withdrawals, but the talks ended in a bad way, the New York Times
reported, referring to American and European sources.
According
to the paper’s sources among both American and Afghan officials,
Karzai accused Washington of leaving its ally all alone against its
enemies - the Taliban and its sponsors in Pakistan - while US
diplomats attempt to negotiate safe withdrawal of the US troops from
Afghanistan.
Talking
to his compatriots, Karzai has already voiced such accusations
before, saying that talks in Doha gave Taliban insurgents a
legitimacy they have not deserved, but this time something forced him
to be brutally honest with the American president.
In
response, Obama pointed out to Karzai that American soldiers have
been paying with their lives to prop up the regime in the country.
Apparently the tete-a-tete may also have forced the American leader
to change his mind on the timing of a pullout from Afghanistan.
Last
month Washington started separate negotiations with Taliban in Doha,
Qatar, a move Kabul regards as betrayal. Once the Karzai
administration learnt about the separate talks in Doha, it
immediately ended negotiations with the US over keeping some US
troops in Afghanistan after official withdrawal by the end of 2014.
Karzai
stressed there will be no talks until Taliban representatives contact
Kabul directly, which may put the Americans in a position when they
have to organize talks between Karzai and the Taliban.
"As
long as the peace process is not Afghan-led, the High Peace Council
will not participate in the talks in Qatar," Karzai said in a
statement in June, referring to a government body he created in 2010
to seek a negotiated peace with the Taliban.
Putting
Taliban and Karzai behind a negotiating table might be a hard task
for the US to pull because previously the Taliban refused to
negotiate with the Karzai government, deriding it as a puppet of the
United States and its NATO allies.
If
previously a total withdrawal from Afghanistan ‘to the last man’,
like the US did in Iraq, was regarded as a last option and was used
as leverage to apply additional pressure on Karzai’s government,
now it is on the table for real.
“There’s
always been a zero option, but it was not seen as the main option,”
a senior Western official in Kabul told NYT.
“It
is maybe now being seen as a realistic path,” the same official
said, “They’re learning now, not later, when it’s going to be
too late.”
However
itchy to leave Afghanistan the American authorities might be, the
legacy of over 10 years of war in Afghanistan would not be so easily
left behind.
“Washington
could potentially pull the vast majority of its troops out of
Afghanistan, but given the instability of the country, it would be
strange if every single solider was withdrawn, leaving various
American diplomatic compounds unsecured,” political analyst Nile
Bowie told RT.
There
is an “underlying jab” at Karzai in Obama’s early pullout
initiative, given the fact that Karzai has called for US troops to
remain as a residual military training force, Bowie explained.
He
pointed out that presidential elections are scheduled to take place
in Afghanistan in April 2014, and the current regime “likely views
American presence on the ground as a counterweight to the Taliban.”
“Either
way, the vast majority occupying forces will soon depart, leaving
behind a state where none of their initial goals have been realized,
so it shouldn’t surprise anyone if Afghanistan in 2014 starts
looking a lot like Iraq today,” Bowie concluded.
On
top of all, the Afghani government remains on the US payroll and at
least half of the country’s budget consists of the American
funding, it is hard to imagine how President Karzai’s government is
going to make ends meet while confronting Taliban.
Still,
senior Afghan officials close to Karzai have already expressed their
skepticism regarding full American withdrawal from the region,
Reuters reports.
"Both
sides understand how to pressure each other. But both the US and
Afghanistan fully understand the need for foreign troops, especially
US ones, to stay beyond 2014 and that it is vital for security here
and in the wider region," a senior official close to Karzai told
Reuters on Tuesday on condition of anonymity.
"We
don't think the US will compromise on that, because past experience
of abandoning Afghanistan was that the country descended into chaos,"
the official added, recalling the civil war in the country that
followed the 1989 Soviet withdrawal.
Other
Afghan politicians have dubbed the US early pullout initiative
‘propaganda’.
"The
US officials saying they are considering leaving no troops behind
after 2014 is just propaganda to put pressure on Afghan government so
Washington can get an outcome it wants in a bilateral security pact,”
former Karzai political adviser Nasrullah Stanikzai told Reuters,
adding that tensions between Obama and Karzai prevent Afghan
government from pursuing country’s strategic and political
interests.
A
senior official of the Obama administration originally told Reuters
that “All options remain on the table but a decision is far from
made.”
It
was announced earlier that most of 63,000 American troops would be
out of Afghanistan by the end of 2014, with the first half to leave
the country by February 2014. According to the NYT, now the Obama
administration would not mind to have them all out by summer 2014.
On
Tuesday, the Pentagon clarified to Reuters that the president has not
yet decided on how many troops if any will remain after 2014,
although the option of a total pullout remains open for
consideration. Pentagon spokesperson George Little declined to
provide the media with any comment on what recommendation Defense
Secretary Chuck Hagel will make to Mr. Obama, but White House
spokesperson Jay Carney said it was possible Obama would adopt a
"zero option" that would involve all troops leaving
Afghanistan by the end of next year. Carney said the exact number of
troops left, if any, would rely on a negotiation between the US and
Afghan government.
Still
it remains unclear whether the US generals would support the idea of
withdrawing ahead of the schedule, taking into consideration heavy
logistics and security matters.
Because
the US troops make up the cornerstone of the international contingent
in Afghanistan, the other participating countries are highly unlikely
to keep their forces in the country once the Americans are gone.
Today
the news from Afghanistan resembles a lull before a storm. There are
no major battles and operations, but foreign servicemen continue to
die regularly as Taliban insurgents continue to attack the allied
forces and Afghan governmental residences.
Last
month the US handed the security control in the country to the Afghan
national army and police force. Still, over a dozen American troops
were killed in Afghanistan in June.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.