Edmonton Journal

Karzai may sign U.S. pact: official

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KAY JOHNSON

KABUL, AFGHANISTA­N — President Hamid Karzai’s national security adviser expressed optimism Thursday that the Afghan leader will sign a key U.S. security pact before leaving office this year, a positive sign after weeks of deadlock and antiAmeric­an rhetoric from the government.

Rangin Dadfar Spanta said there have been recent talks with the U.S. to try to resolve the issue.

“We are working very intensivel­y together with the United States authoritie­s to reach and sign this agreement soon,” Spanta said. “I cannot go today into detail, but I don’t know — since two, three, four days, I am more optimistic compared to last week. Let us wait a few days more.”

Washington has been frustrated by Karzai’s refusal to sign the pact that would allow some U.S. troops to remain and keep training Afghan soldiers after the planned withdrawal of most troops by the end of this year. Without the agreement, American military trainers will be forced to pull out of Afghanista­n, weakening the government’s ability to fight the Taliban insurgency.

Also Thursday, U.S. Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel warned that at some point Karzai’s indecision will interfere with Washington’s need to plan the post-2014 military mission that the Afghan president himself has said he favours.

“You can’t just keep deferring and deferring, because at some point the realities of planning and budgeting — it collides,” Hagel said.

However, Hagel said he respects Karzai’s right to decide the matter as he sees fit, and noted that the United States’ ability to influence Karzai’s decision-making is “limited.”

Along with elections to be held in April, the Bilateral Security Agreement is a pillar of the U.S.-led coalition’s plan to end its 12-year mission in Afghanista­n and hand over full security authority to the Afghan government at the end of 2014. But Karzai repeatedly has declined to sign the document, instead saying he wants to wait to sign it after the country elects his successor in the coming April 5 presidenti­al election.

If the deal falls apart, Afghanista­n could lose up to $15 billion a year in aid, effectivel­y collapsing its fragile economy and making it unable to pay its 350,000-strong army and police.

Insurgents in Afghanista­n have intensifie­d attacks recently in a campaign to regain territory as foreign forces prepare to leave the country. A suicide car bomber killed two police officers in eastern Afghanista­n on Thursday, officials said. In the western province of Herat, another car bomb driven by a suicide attacker slammed into the vehicle of a police chief.

 ??  ?? Rangin Dadfar Spanta
Rangin Dadfar Spanta

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