US gives Karzai a promotion
Associated Press
KABUL
After days of discord, U.S. officials went one step further in their new, gentler approach to Afghan President Hamid Karzai, expressing sympathy Sunday for the pressure he faces and promoting him as commander in chief of the warring nation.
U.S.-Afghan relations grew tense earlier this month when Karzai, seeking to bolster his own political stature, lashed out against the U.N. and the international community, accusing them of perpetrating a “vast fraud” in last year’s presidential polls as part of a conspiracy to deny him re-election or tarnish his victory — accusations the U.S. and the United Nations have denied.
Two days later, Karzai told a group of parliament members that if foreign interference in his government continued, the Taliban would become a legitimate resistance — one that he might even join, according to several lawmakers present.
White House spokesman Robert Gibbs described Karzai’s remarks as “troubling,” but the American tone quickly softened. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Defense Secretary Robert Gates blitzed Sunday morning news shows in the U.S. to call Karzai a reliable partner.
“I have to say that some of these outlandish claims that are being made and accusations that are being hurled are really unfortunate,” Clinton told CBS’ “Face the Nation” in an interview taped Friday and aired Sunday.
“This is a leader who is under enormous pressure. And I wonder sometimes how anybody can cope with the kind of relentless stress that you face after having been in some military activity or war footing for 30 years, which is what the reality is in Afghanistan.”
Gates stressed that Karzai deserved respect as the leader of a sovereign country and said he had a cooperative relationship with U.S. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan.
“This is a man who’s, first of all, a political leader,” Gates told ABC’s “This Week.” “He has domestic audiences as well as foreign audiences.”
He said Karzai and McChrystal meet regularly and “have a very positive relationship.”
Gates said the Afghans want their president to be treated with respect as the leader of a sovereign nation. Gates said it’s only natural that when a political leader feels he or his nation is being pressured or disrespected, “he’s going to react strongly,” Gates said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
Richard Holbrooke, special U.S. envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, and Gen. David Petreaus, who oversees the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, echoed the comments Sunday in the Afghan capital.
“President Karzai is the commander in chief — he is the president of a sovereign country,” Petreaus told reporters. “Yes, there’s a partnership, but he is the commander in chief.”
Petreaus praised Karzai for traveling to Marjah in Helmand province where thousands of U.S., NATO and Afghan troops pushed out the Taliban earlier this year, and to the Taliban’s birthplace in neighboring Kandahar province. Kandahar is the site of a joint offensive ramping up to clear neighborhoods of insurgents and rush in new governance and aid to stall the Taliban’s momentum.
NATO reported that another international service member was killed Sunday by a bomb in southern Afghanistan but gave no further details. But the Canadian command said a Canadian soldier was killed Sunday near Kandahar in the south.
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