U.S. troubles mounting in Afghanistan
The Afghan leader wants coalition troops out of rural areas. The Taliban halts dialogue.
President Hamid Karzai demands a NATO troop pullback from rural areas, and the Taliban suspends dialogue.
In twin blows to American efforts to wage war and negotiate peace in Afghanistan, President Hamid Karzai on Thursday demanded a pullback of NATO troops from rural areas as part of a sped-up overall withdrawal while the Taliban movement declared a suspension of dialogue with the United States.
In practical terms, both developments might prove largely symbolic. Karzai does not have the power to enforce specific demands as to where Western troops are deployed, and U.S. contacts with the Taliban were in the very early stages.
However, taken together, the moves point to a rapidly souring mood on the part of two major players in the conflict and to a growing sense of disarray in the Americanled coalition’s plans to find a way out of this decade-old war.
The Afghan leader’s call for coalition forces to abandon outposts in the countryside was explicitly tied to the shooting rampage allegedly carried out Sunday by a U.S. Army staff sergeant in a rural patch of Kandahar province, which left 16 civilians dead, including nine children. Karzai’s office said he told visiting U.S. Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta that American troops should be garrisoned only in large installations, not in small bases like the one in Kandahar’s Panjwayi district where the accused soldier was posted.
“Afghanistan’s security forces have the capability to provide security in the villages of Afghanistan,” the statement from the presidential palace said.
That demand, however, raises the prospect that Taliban fighters could move in the upcoming fair weather “fighting season” to recapture strongholds in the countryside of southern Afghanistan from which they were chased in 2010 and failed to regain last year. Panjwayi, outside Kandahar city, was a case in point: a longtime Taliban stronghold where U.S. special forces had been trying to reach out to villagers and train them to fend off the insurgents.
The president also called for a significant acceleration in the handing over of security responsibilities to Afghan forces, saying the North Atlantic Treaty Organization should wind down its combat role in 2013, a year earlier than planned. Western commanders have acknowledged that it will be a daunting challenge to bring the Afghan police and army up to a reasonable fighting standard even by the 2014 deadline.
Karzai, however, asserted that Afghanistan “is ready right now to take all security responsibilities,” adding: “Our demand is to speed up this process.”
The president’s strongly worded statement appeared to take the official entourage traveling with Panetta by surprise. The Defense secretary had spoken to reporters after his meeting with Karzai without making reference to the new demands.
Asenior U.S. defense official said Karzai’s approach would not be workable.
“Afghanistan is a country of villages,” said the official, who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to publicly discuss the private meeting. He said it was not clear that training and advising the Afghan army, together with special operations raids, would be possible if Western forces were banned from countryside outposts.
U.S. officials sought to play down the disagreement, insisting that the current strategy in any event calls for Afghanistan to take over lead responsibility for security across the country next year. But the plan also calls for NATO troops to remain involved in combat until 2014, which would be impractical if coalition troops were prevented from entering villages, the same officials acknowledged.
As is often the case, Karzai presented a different picture to Western interlocutors and his domestic constituency. He raised the idea of Afghan forces “being in charge in the villages” in his meeting with Panetta, but it was not framed as a demand, according to the Americans.
Until Thursday, Karzai had been relatively restrained in his reaction to the shootings in Panjwayi. Although he called the killings “unforgivable,” he had also worked to calm public anger in Kandahar, his home province.
Although the Kandahar killings did not trigger violent protests like those seen last month after what U.S. officials have described as the inadvertent burning of Korans at a U.S. base, the grief and distress has been palpable. Some Afghan lawmakers were caught by surprise by the U.S. military’s decision to move the soldier accused in the shooting out of the country, and reiterated calls that he be tried in Afghanistan.
Mohammad Nahim Lalai Hameedzai, a member of the parliament from Kandahar, urged the Karzai administration not to sign any longterm strategic accord with the United States unless that demand is met.
At the same time that Karzai was rebuking Panetta for the “oppression and cruelty” represented by the Kandahar killings, the Taliban movement was heaping scorn on the Afghan leader. In a statement posted on its website and emailed to journalists, the insurgent group declared that Karzai “cannot even make a single political decision without the prior consent of the Americans.”
Most of the vitriol, however, was reserved for the U.S. administration. The group’s leadership blamed an American representative for presenting “unacceptable conditions” that left the Taliban “compelled to suspend all dialogue with the Americans.”
Three months ago, the Taliban announced readiness to open an office in the Persian Gulf nation of Qatar to try to reach an understanding with the United States. The move was seen as a prelude to eventual negotiations, and contacts were underway to try to arrange confidence-building measures such as a prisoner exchange.
Thursday also brought a reminder of the danger permeating life in many parts of Afghanistan. A roadside bomb killed 13 people, all civilians, in Oruzgan province, north of Kandahar.