iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Karzai's Taliban Threat: Afghan Leader TWICE Said He Might Join Insurgency

Karzai Taliban

AMIR SHAH and CHRISTOPHER BODEEN   04/ 5/10 11:20 PM ET   AP

KABUL — Afghan President Hamid Karzai threatened over the weekend to quit the political process and join the Taliban if he continued to come under outside pressure to reform, several members of parliament said Monday.

Karzai made the unusual statement at a closed-door meeting Saturday with selected lawmakers – just days after kicking up a diplomatic controversy with remarks alleging foreigners were behind fraud in last year's disputed elections.

Lawmakers dismissed the latest comment as hyperbole, but it will add to the impression the president – who relies on tens of thousands of U.S. and NATO forces to fight the insurgency and prop up his government – is growing increasingly erratic and unable to exert authority without attacking his foreign backers.

"He said that 'if I come under foreign pressure, I might join the Taliban'," said Farooq Marenai, who represents the eastern province of Nangarhar.

"He said rebelling would change to resistance," Marenai said – apparently suggesting that the militant movement would then be redefined as one of resistance against a foreign occupation rather than a rebellion against an elected government.

Marenai said Karzai appeared nervous and repeatedly demanded to know why parliament last week had rejected legal reforms that would have strengthened the president's authority over the country's electoral institutions.

Two other lawmakers said Karzai twice raised the threat to join the insurgency.

The lawmakers, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of political repercussions, said Karzai also dismissed concerns over possible damage his comments had caused to relations with the United States. He told them he had already explained himself in a telephone conversation Saturday with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton that came after the White House described his comments last week as troubling.

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said reports Karzai threatened to abandon the political process and join the Taliban insurgency if he continued to receive pressure from Western backers to reform his government are troubling.

"On behalf of the American people, we're frustrated with the remarks," Gibbs told reporters.

The lawmakers said they felt Karzai was pandering to hard-line or pro-Taliban members of parliament and had no real intention of joining the insurgency.

Nor does the Afghan leader appear concerned that the U.S. might abandon him, having said numerous times that the U.S. would not leave Afghanistan because it perceives a presence here to be in its national interest.

Karzai spokesman Waheed Omar's phone was turned off and another number for him rang unanswered Monday. Deputy spokesman Hamed Elmi's phone rang unanswered.

The comments come against the background of continuing insurgent violence as the U.S. moves to boost troop levels in a push against Taliban strongholds in the south.

NATO forces said they killed 10 militants in a joint U.S.-Afghan raid on a compound in Nangarhar province's Khogyani district near the Pakistani border early Monday, while gunmen seriously wounded an Afghan provincial councilwoman in a drive-by shooting in the country's increasingly violent north.

NATO also confirmed that international troops were responsible for the deaths of five civilians, including three women, on Feb. 12 in Gardez, south of Kabul.

A NATO statement said a joint international-Afghan patrol fired on two men mistakenly believed to be insurgents. It said the three women were "accidentally killed as a result of the joint force firing at the men."

International force officials will discuss the results of the investigation with family of those killed, apologize and provide compensation, he said.

The two men killed in the Gardez raid had been long-serving government loyalists and opponents of al-Qaida and the Taliban, one serving as provincial district attorney and the other as police chief in Paktia's Zurmat district.

Their brother, who also lost his wife and a sister, said he learned of the investigation result from the Internet, but had yet to receive formal notice.

Mohammad Sabar said the family's only demand was that the informant who passed on the faulty information about militant activity be tried and publicly executed.

"Please, please, please, our desire, our demand is that this spy be executed in front of the people to ensure that such bad things don't happen again," Sabar said.

In the latest of a series of targeted assassination attempts blamed on militants, Baghlan provincial council member Nida Khyani was struck by gunfire in the leg and abdomen in Pul-e Khumri, capital of the northern province, said Salim Rasouli, head of the provincial health department. Khyani's bodyguard was also slightly injured.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the shooting, although suspicion immediately fell on Taliban fighters who often target people working with the Afghan government and their Western backers.

One month ago, a member of the Afghan national parliament escaped injury when her convoy was attacked by Taliban insurgents in eastern Afghanistan. Female government officials regularly report receiving threats to their safety. Some women leaders, including a prominent policewoman, have been assassinated.

The Taliban rigidly oppose education for girls and women's participation in public affairs, citing their narrow interpretation of conservative Islam and tribal traditions. Militants, who are strongest in the south and east, carry out beatings and other punishments for perceived women's crimes from immodesty to leaving home unaccompanied by a male relative.

Also Monday, the organizer of a national reconciliation conference – known as a jirga – scheduled for early May said it would not include insurgent groups such as the Taliban. There has also been indications it would include discussion of the withdrawal of 120,000 foreign troops in the country.

Ghulam Farooq Wardak, the minister of education who is organizing the conference, said it will focus on outlining ways to reach peace with the insurgents and the framework for possible discussions.

Out of the jirga will come the "powerful voice of the Afghan people," Wardak said. "By fighting, you cannot restore security. The only way to bring peace is through negotiation."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST WORLD

KABUL — Afghan President Hamid Karzai threatened over the weekend to quit the political process and join the Taliban if he continued to come under outside pressure to reform, several members of ...
KABUL — Afghan President Hamid Karzai threatened over the weekend to quit the political process and join the Taliban if he continued to come under outside pressure to reform, several members of ...
Filed by Nico Pitney  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 2,104
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Bloggers
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (35 total)
10:11 PM on 04/06/2010
Karzai Threatens to Join Cast of 'Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat'
http://satiricalpolitical.com/2010/04/06/karzai-threatens-to-join-taliban/
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Balzac
04:37 PM on 04/06/2010
This is called asserting sovereignty. President Karzai has to keep this option on the table. Obviously, he cannot accept that Afghanistan should be governed from outside, or else he is only a puppet, just as his critics say.

Hamid Karzai's nation and his personal legacy are at stake, so he is forced to assert sovereignty because of the untenable demands to end "corruption". One man's "corruption" is another man's benevolent governance.

Karzai's government must be the monopoly on force and tax his whole economy in order to deprive his opposition of power. This so-called "corruption" is the way forward for the government of Afghanistan to establish security. Karzai must not be weakened, even as he asserts more control.
02:39 PM on 04/06/2010
Once again, our alliance with Israel has haunted us even in Afghanistan.
We cannot do anything in the world as long as we allow Israelis to kill women and children in Gaza!

We have to get out from ME, force Israel to make peace with Arabs and then we will be more accepted in foreign countries.
photo
OutAtFirst
Mountain goat, desert rat and sea dog
01:43 PM on 04/06/2010
Go ahead and join the taliban, will it make it any worse for us over there?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joseph Bethea
musician
12:57 PM on 04/06/2010
the way i see it the united states can blame its self for what going on with the middle east to start we were the ones who armed bin laden and his army during the russia conflict now he uses them toward us now we have armed this nut karzai have the USA not learned from the mistakes of the past
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tbone99
cruisin' duality
11:39 AM on 04/06/2010
How many years before we will be spending billions to take this guy out?

America seems incapable of learning or...

is it that we just need to keep funding pointless wars to keep the military industrial complex oiled?
One of these days these exercises in futility is going to do us in.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JoeBlough
The Horror. . .The Horror. . .
12:14 PM on 04/06/2010
It's not a matter of learning. It's a matter of government paid war profits.
10:00 AM on 04/06/2010
Bring back the Afghani royal family.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
jwredd
09:57 AM on 04/06/2010
How fckinglong will it take for us to realize that this is not doable? Our only solution has been to prop up a crook and expect him to wipe out corruption and start and maintain a thriving democracy. It's time for Obama to explain the logic of this one to the American people.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JoeBlough
The Horror. . .The Horror. . .
10:50 AM on 04/06/2010
But he's Bush's crook and we must learn to love him.
09:47 AM on 04/06/2010
Karzai is not stupid......He knows that Obama has him a choke hold and doesn't trust him.....If Obama doesn't trust you...then he has no use for you......Karzai is looking for a life raft...from the Taliban or whomever....He sees the writing on the wall....in fact the U.S. would love for him to join the Taliban....it would make things easier...the matter of civilian casualities would move from the embarassing category to the collateral damage category............
09:45 AM on 04/06/2010
President Obama should instruct Sec. of State Clinton to call Karai to deliver the message: "The moment you join the Taliban you will be shot on sight. So much for our sacrifice of blood and money.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
garymc8
We got OBL- not gop
11:03 AM on 04/06/2010
We are there for the WAR PROFITEERS. NOTHING ELSE.
09:45 AM on 04/06/2010
That's like a T Bagger threatening to join the GOP
bring our troops home
09:31 AM on 04/06/2010
And the T Baggers get a new member will they have karzai carry a sign or just yell obscenities
09:29 AM on 04/06/2010
By now, it is obvious to anyone with half a brain and an open mind that the past decade's activities in this region have primarily been conducted fo the benefit of the military-industrial complex Old Ike warned us about lo those many years ago. How about this: why don't we just let our bribed politicians award nominal sums of our tax dolars to Halliburton and Xe and whomever else is actually profiting from our Middle Eastern militarism and bring our troops home where we spend the rest of the money we're wasting over there to rejuvenate our own economy and address our myriad infrastructure needs and turn the cycle of death into a cycle of life?
We need to end this pattern of "creating conflicts" and "inventing governments" in foreign lands that merely feed the beast and kill and maim our own, and we need to do it now.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
tyger
09:28 AM on 04/06/2010
Bush appointed leader.
09:19 AM on 04/06/2010
Good riddance now lets give him a mastodon bone and let him start carving stone wheels in the mountains where he came from.