Stabroek News Sunday

Former Afghan president calls decision to drop massive US bomb ‘treason’

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KABUL (Reuters) - Former Afghan president Hamid Karzai accused his successor yesterday of committing treason by allowing the US military to drop the largest convention­al bomb ever used in combat during an operation against Islamic State militants in Afghanista­n.

Karzai, who also vowed to “stand against America”, retains considerab­le influence within Afghanista­n’s majority Pashtun ethnic group, to which President Ashraf Ghani also belongs. His strong words could signal a broader political backlash that may endanger the US military mission in Afghanista­n.

Afghan defence officials have said the 21,600pound (9,797-kg) GBU-43, dropped late on Thursday in the eastern province of Nangarhar, had killed nearly 100 suspected militants, though they acknowledg­ed this was an estimate and not based on an actual body count.

“How could you permit Americans to bomb your country with a device equal to an atom bomb?” Karzai said at a public event in Kabul, questionin­g Ghani’s decision. “If the government has permitted them to do this, that was wrong and it has committed a national treason.”

Ghani’s office said the strike had been closely coordinate­d between Afghan and US forces and replied to Karzai’s charges with a statement saying: “Every Afghan has the right to speak their mind. This is a country of free speech.”

Public reaction to Thursday’s strike has been mixed, with some residents near the blast praising Afghan and US troops for pushing back the Islamic State militants.

While the bomb has been described as one of the largest non-nuclear devices ever used, its destructiv­e power, equivalent to 11 tonnes of TNT, pales in comparison with the relatively small atomic bombs dropped on Japan in 1945, which had blasts equivalent to between 15,000 and 20,000 tonnes of TNT.

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