Out going Afghan President Mr. Hamid Karzai |
Outgoing Afghan President Hamid Karzai punctuated on Tuesday his
tumultuous 13-year relationship with the United States, alleging that
America invaded Afghanistan in 2001 for “its own interests” and never
really wanted peace in the region.
Karzai, the only Afghan
president since the 2001 US-led invasion, said the United States
only wanted war in Afghanistan "because of its own
interests,” and that Pakistan colludes with Washington to
back perpetual violence in his country.
"If America and
Pakistan really want it, peace will come to Afghanistan,"
Karzai said, according to AP. "War in Afghanistan is based on
the aims of foreigners. The war in Afghanistan is to the benefit
of foreigners. But Afghans on both sides are the sacrificial
lambs and victims of this war."
Karzai criticized
neighboring Pakistan for the lasting Taliban-led insurgency while
warning the incoming government to "be extra cautious in
relations with the [United States] and the West," Reuters
reported.
Karzai’s successor,
President-elect Ashraf Ghani, and his opponent Abudullah Abdullah
signed a power-sharing
dealover the
weekend. After a fairly bitter electoral process, with Ghani and
Abdullah both alleging voter fraud, Ghani stressed that the
agreement struck between the two - which makes Abdullah the
government chief executive, a newly-created role with prime
ministerial duties - marks an extraordinary transfer of power in
Afghanistan.
"The government of
national unity will be the government of accountability, justice,
the rule of law and the implementation of the constitution,"
Ghani said Monday during a press conference, according to TOLO News.
In his farewell speech,
Karzai thanked a host of nations for help in the post-invasion
development of Afghanistan: China, Germany, India, Iran, Japan,
Saudi Arabia, South Korea, and Turkey. But he did not mention the
United States, which has given Afghanistan more than $100 billion
in aid since 2001 for the country’s security forces,
infrastructure projects, hospitals, schools, and more.
While Karzai’s
relationship with US President Barack Obama has deteriorated, Secretary of State John Kerry was
successful in bringing about a political deal that led to the
current unity-government agreement.
For years, Karzai has denounced US military strikes, many of
which have caused loss of civilian life while wounding or
displacing scores of others. As of earlier this year, independent
estimates found that at least 21,000 Afghan civilians had died
since fighting began following the US-led invasion in 2001. The
United Nations, meanwhile, says around 8,000 civilians have died
from the US-Taliban conflict in the last five years alone.
Afghan rival presidential candidates Abdullah Abdullah (L) and Ashraf Ghani shake hands after exchanging signed agreements for the country's unity government in Kabul September 21, 2014 |
Earlier this year, the UN said violence against civilians,
especially children,
went up in 2013 thanks to renewed vigor of Taliban fighters,
boosted by knowledge that Western forces are largely on the way
out. The UN later
reported that the number killed or injured in the first six
months of 2014 rose by a quarter from 2013 levels, to almost
5,000 people.
Amnesty International reported
in August that apparent war crimes committed in the last
decade-plus by US and NATO troops against Afghan civilians have
rarely led to justice for victims and their loved ones.
“Thousands of Afghans have been killed or injured by US
forces since the invasion, but the victims and their families
have little chance of redress. The US military justice system
almost always fails to hold its soldiers accountable for unlawful
killings and other abuses,” said Richard Bennett, Amnesty
International’s Asia Pacific Director.
“None of the cases that we looked into – involving more than
140 civilian deaths – were prosecuted by the US military.
Evidence of possible war crimes and unlawful killings has
seemingly been ignored.”
Karzai’s “extreme
anger” with US forces in his nation kept him from singing a
security agreement that would set the legal underpinnings for
about 10,000 American military advisers to stay in the country
next year. Ghani has said he will sign the agreement upon taking
office.
US president Mr. Obama |
Samehullah Samem, a parliamentary member from the western
province of Farah, said though Karzai has gained respect in
Afghanistan, he must be more careful with his words, as the
Afghan economy is still reliant on international aid.
"We are completely dependent on the international community.
We need the support of the international community, especially
the United States of America," Samem said, according to AP.
"Afghanistan still hasn't reached a point where it can defend
iteslf or have a self-sufficient economy."
Ghani is a former finance minister who has worked at the World
Bank and has earned a PhD from Columbia University in New York.
In the runoff vote between he and Abdullah, Ghani ended with 55
percent of the vote.
(RT)
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