Karzai squirming under US pressure to clean up his act

The Afghan president made two anti-Western speeches in three days, writes JOSHUA PARTLOW in Kabul

The Afghan president made two anti-Western speeches in three days, writes JOSHUA PARTLOWin Kabul

PRESIDENT BARACK Obama’s visit to Kabul last week, intended in part to forge a closer working relationship with President Hamid Karzai, has helped produce the opposite: an angry Afghan leader attacking the West for what he perceives as an effort to manipulate him and weaken his rule.

Karzai’s relationship with his US backers has taken a sharp turn for the worse in the past week after two anti-Western speeches in three days, remarks some officials see as a rehearsed, deliberate move away from the United States.

In comments to parliament members on Saturday, Karzai said that if foreign interference in his government continued, the Taliban would become a legitimate resistance – one that he might even join, according to deputies present.

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“When I heard Karzai’s remarks, it really shocked me. It scared me, ”a senior Afghan official who works closely with the president said. “We should not take this lightly. This is a golden opportunity to have the West here; we can’t squander it.”

Karzai’s comments have angered US officials and some of his prominent Afghan colleagues in the government, who fear he is jeopardising international funding and military support because his pride has been injured. “That guy’s erratic, he’s unpredictable. I don’t get him,” said a senior US military official in Kabul.

Obama’s visit was far from the only aggravation for Karzai in a partnership that has simmered with mistrust since the Afghan leader narrowly won re-election last year. But it helped propel him to his new antagonistic stance, according to Afghan and US officials.

Karzai wanted Obama to publicly praise his plans for a “peace jirga”, the planned meeting of tribal elders and political leaders to discuss reconciliation with insurgents, said the senior Afghan official, who requested anonymity in order to speak candidly. Karzai also wanted support for his views on how to reform the electoral law ahead of parliamentary elections in September.

What he got was Obama prodding him to perform. He pushed Karzai to keep two foreigners on an elections commission that investigates fraud; to appoint cabinet ministers on the basis of merit rather than personal ties; and to fight corruption by giving more authority and independence to the corruption oversight agency, among other things. Karzai saw the visit less as a public show of partnership than the United States coming to scold an ineffectual leader, according to his supporters.

“Our most important ally is constantly criticising us: ‘You’re corrupt. You need to do this and that,’” said Hekmat Karzai, director of the Center for Conflict and Peace Studies in Kabul, and a cousin of the president.

“You cannot talk down to the Afghans like they’re children or they don’t understand.”

The perceived slight of Obama’s lectures was compounded by the lower house of parliament’s rejection of Karzai’s decree that would reform the nation’s election law and give him more power over the commission that investigates voting fraud. The latter is a sore subject for him, since the panel ruled last year that widespread fraud of the presidential vote erased his first-round majority.

Karzai’s first speech on Thursday harshly criticised foreigners and the United Nations for conspiring to weaken his government and accused foreign embassies of orchestrating the voting fraud. This caused a diplomatic uproar that was quelled only by a call from Karzai the next day to US secretary of state Hillary Clinton the next day, in which he expressed his commitment to their partnership.

But on the following day, Karzai told a gathering of deputies that foreign interference was fuelling the insurgency. One deputy reported that Karzai said that if he was compelled to obey foreigners, “I’ll join the Taliban.”

“I know he’s co-operating with the US, but he just wants to give us a wrong perception. He’s trying to prove himself as a hero, a nationalist,” the deputy said.

Some of the president’s supporters said people had overreacted to the statements, and that Karzai was well aware of how reliant he is on the United States and other countries fighting in Afghanistan. The United States pours billions of dollars monthly into Afghanistan, and 30,000 new troops are arriving to fight the Taliban.

Speaking at a meeting of about 1,200 tribal leaders and local officials in the southern city of Kandahar on Sunday, Karzai again suggested that US pressure was counterproductive.

“Afghanistan will be fixed when its people trust that their president is independent and not a puppet,” he said. “We have to demonstrate our sovereignty. We have to demonstrate that we are standing up for our values.”

Despite his displeasure with the US government, Karzai made the trip to Kandahar to build public support for a top US and Nato goal of combating the insurgency with a major military push into the districts around Kandahar.

He asked his listeners if they were happy about the upcoming operation. A loud murmur echoed across the vast meeting room. “Listen to me carefully: until you’re happy and satisfied, we will not conduct this operation,” he said to loud applause.