Arab Times

Afghan president, Rice at odds over security accord

Wary Afghans register to vote

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pray, stretch, take bathroom breaks and nap.

“Abu Ghayth was not overcome by fear such that his will was overborne and his ability to act voluntaril­y was compromise­d,” Kaplan wrote. “The government has offered consistent and credible testimony that Abu Ghayth was treated well and that he was competent to speak with the FBI throughout the flight. Abu Ghayth has offered scant evidence to the contrary.”

Stanley Cohen and Geoffrey Stewart, the lawyers for the defendant, did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

A spokeswoma­n for US Attorney Preet Bharara in Manhattan declined to comment.

Abu Ghaith is one of the highest-ranking al-Qaeda figures to face trial in the United States for alleged crimes connected to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. KABUL, Afghanista­n, Nov 27, (AP): Afghanista­n’s president and the US delivered blunt messages to each other Monday that gave no indication of a resolution of their disagreeme­nts over a pact that governs the future of the American troop presence in the country.

Hamid Karzai said he won’t back down from his refusal to sign during the rest of his term in office, with National Security Adviser Susan Rice responding that this would mean the US would then start planning to pull out all its forces after 2014.

Their meeting in Kabul came the day after Karzai’s surprise decision to ignore Sunday’s recommenda­tion by an Afghan assembly of dignitarie­s to sign the Bilateral Security Agreement, a refusal that cast doubt on whether American and allied troops would remain in Afghanista­n to train Afghan forces after most foreign troops withdraw next year.

According to Karzai’s office, he told Rice during Monday’s meeting that he wouldn’t back down from that decision, deferring it to whoever succeeds him as president in April elections.

The White House said Rice responded by telling Karzai that the United States will plan to pull all troops out of his country after 2014 if he doesn’t promptly sign.

It added that Rice told Karzai that a signed agreement is necessary to plan for thousands of troops to stay in the country to train and mentor Afghan security forces to face the Taleban.

“President Karzai outlined new conditions for signing the agreement and indicated he is not prepared to sign the BSA promptly,” the White House said. “Without a prompt signature, the US would have no choice but to initiate planning for a post-2014 future in which there would be no US or NATO troop presence in Afghanista­n,” she told the Afghan president.

Karzai announced his decision at a gathering of 2,500 tribal elders and regional leaders known as a Loya Jirga, even though the council not only overwhelmi­ngly approved the deal after a fourday meeting but urged him to sign it by Dec 31.

Washington has asked him to change his mind. But the mercurial Karzai, in the meeting with Rice, says he laid out a series of new demands — albeit ones mostly involving steps the US has already said it would take.

One new demand was that the United States should address a suggestion by the Loya Jirga that all Afghan prisoners be released from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

According to the statement, Karzai “said the United States of America should respond to the suggestion mentioned in the resolution of the Loya Jirga to free all the afghan prisoners in Guantanamo.”

There are nearly 20 Afghans currently being held at the American facility in Cuba.

Meanwhile, there is a lot riding on Afghanista­n’s 2014 presidenti­al elections, which will determine who steers the country through the persistent insurgency as internatio­nal troops leave. But potential voters lining up to register have other concerns as well: They deeply distrust the candidates and are worried their next president could be a warlord.

 ??  ?? An Afghan Army soldier adjusts his helmet during an exercise at a training facility in the outskirts of Kabul, Afghanista­n, Nov 26. The Afghan National Security Forces depend exclusivel­y on billions of dollars in funding from the United States and its allies, money that is now at risk following President Hamid Karzai’s decision to defer signing a security agreement until after the April elections. The US wants the deal signed by the end of the year so that it can plan for a residual force after 2014, when all foreign combat forces leave. If the deal is not signed, billions in funding for the army and police may dry up. (AP)
An Afghan Army soldier adjusts his helmet during an exercise at a training facility in the outskirts of Kabul, Afghanista­n, Nov 26. The Afghan National Security Forces depend exclusivel­y on billions of dollars in funding from the United States and its allies, money that is now at risk following President Hamid Karzai’s decision to defer signing a security agreement until after the April elections. The US wants the deal signed by the end of the year so that it can plan for a residual force after 2014, when all foreign combat forces leave. If the deal is not signed, billions in funding for the army and police may dry up. (AP)

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