Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Support for Afghanista­n at risk if security pact delayed further: US

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WASHINGTON December 4, 2013 (Reuters) - Global support for Afghanista­n will fade the longer President Hamid Karzai delays signing a security pact with the United States, a senior U.S. official warned, as special envoy James Dobbins arrived in Kabul on Wednesday for talks with the government.

Frustratio­n is mounting in Washington, and among NATO allies, over Karzai's refusal to sign a bilateral security agreement (BSA), intended to shape the U.S. military presence in the country beyond 2014.

After an assembly of Afghan elders, called a Loya Jirga, endorsed the pact last month, Karzai surprised the internatio­nal community when he said he might not sign the deal until after elections in April.

That would hold up vital military planning for a post-2014 mission.

A series of discussion­s between U.S. and Afghan officials have been held since, to seek an end to the impasse. Dobbins arrived in Kabul as part of that effort, although the U.S. embassy there declined to say if he would meet Karzai.

"The longer this goes on the more that internatio­nal support will erode," the U.S. official told Reuters in Washington."It is quite clear to us that the delay in signing this agreement is adding tremendous uncertaint­y to an already uncertain environmen­t in Afghanista­n."

The official said Dobbins' visit to Kabul was part of regular consultati­ons in the region, but the security pact would be raised.

The United States was now at pains to explain to Afghan officials, both publicly and privately, the political and related economic cost of prolonged uncertaint­y if the deal was not quickly signed, the official added.

 ??  ?? Afghan President Hamid Karzai
Afghan President Hamid Karzai

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