Kabul, Feb 4 : Afghan President
Hamed Karzai returned from his latest trip to Washington with a series of
concessions on the timetable for withdrawing international forces from
Afghanistan and the transfer of American-held detainees.
But his critics
at home were left unsatisfied, with some saying he should have secured a pledge
that all foreign troops would be gone by the end of 2014, and other voices
raised against granting United States troops immunity from
prosecution.
On his return from talks with President Barack Obama in
Washington, Karzai set out the agreements they had reached at a Kabul press
conference.
The NATO-led international force will begin pulling troops
back from the Afghan countryside in three months’ time – earlier than
anticipated, although their withdrawal from the country remains scheduled for
2014. Also this spring, US forces will focus on training their Afghan
counterparts, an effort that Karzai said would not end until 2017, with a
possible extension to 2024.
He also said he had obtained a promise that
US-run prisons in Afghanistan and all detained persons in the country would be
handed over to Afghan jurisdiction within two weeks. That is one of several
issues that has been an irritant in US-Afghan relations, and it is no
coincidence that both Obama and Karzai made remarks underlining the importance
of Afghan sovereignty.
Another contentious point, and one that Karzai had
to concede at his Washington talks, was the issue of US servicemen being immune
from prosecution under Afghan law.
For the US, this is a non-negotiable
condition if a small contingent of American troops is to remain in Afghanistan
beyond 2014. When a similar question arose in Iraq, the Baghdad government’s
refusal to grant immunity led to the US pulling out all military personnel at
the end of 2011.
In Afghanistan, many oppose any exemption from the rule
that foreign and local nationals alike are subject to the country’s own legal
system when they commit offences.
On his return, Karzai distanced himself
from a final decision on the immunity question, and said a “loya jirga” or
traditional assembly would have to be convened to rule on the matter.
“A
decision on judicial immunity for American soldiers, on its nature, extent and
terms, and on whether it should happen or not is something the Afghan government
cannot take,” he said. “A loya jirga of the Afghan people will decide whether to
grant immunity and – if it does – under what conditions.”
Afghan
political analyst Satar Saadat believes the president is shirking his duty to
deal with this controversial matter himself.
“Karzai has taken this
decision in order to evade responsibility. Yet decisions made at a jirga are
advisory only, and do not have legal status,” he said.
Saadat said any
deal on immunity would need to be carefully crafted.
“We must set limits
for them. For instance, they could have immunity while on their bases, but not
outside them. Another solution would be to hold joint trials [when Americans are
prosecuted]. A third option would involve monitoring – the Afghan government
would monitor the process when a foreign suspect went on trial.”
Sayed
Fazel Hussein Sancharaki, spokesman for the opposition National Coalition,
agrees that this was not a matter for a loose assembly of local elders to deal
with.
“Decisions about judicial immunity for the Americans, signing
security pacts and the like are not a task for people who come in from the
districts and villages to gather for a loya jirga. They have no knowledge of
such issues,” he said. “What’s needed is to gather together the political,
economic, military, legal and social elites rather than these
people.”
Assuming a deal is reached and a limited contingent of US forces
remains in the country past 2014, they would operate under a new security
agreement, which Karzai and Obama also touched on during their talks. Back in
Kabul, Karzai said it would take eight or nine months to nail down the content
of this document.
Once again, Karzai’s domestic critics wanted more
detail on the specifics of the agreement, over and above the framework Enduring
Strategic Partnership Agreement which Washington and Kabul signed in 2012.
“The president should have consulted with all sides in the country,”
Sancharaki said. “A security agreement could have as many negative as positive
implications for us. We don’t know what the conditions of the pact the president
will sign are.”
Many politicians are opposed to a continued US military
presence even in a reduced form.
Member of parliament Nazir Ahmad Hanafi,
for example, argues that “the foreigners are the reason for the war and lack of
security”.
“In areas where they have withdrawn, fighting has receded and
security has been established,” he continued. “I am certain that if the
foreigners leave Afghanistan, the roots of war will dry up.”
Former
parliamentarian Hajji Farid expressed similar views in stronger terms, saying
that NATO commanders had “admitted that most al-Qaeda members in Afghanistan
have been eliminated and that the terrorist bases are located outside
Afghanistan.”
“So what’s the purpose of them remaining in Afghanistan?”
he asked. “The US has failed to create stability in Afghanistan over the last
ten years despite the presence of NATO and ISAF [International Security
Assistance Force] troops. It systematised corruption to world-record levels, it
breached the constitution and other Afghan laws, it showed no respect for Afghan
culture and beliefs, it killed tens of thousands of innocent people. After this
experience, do they need to stay?”
Others, however, insist that continued
US involvement is essential to Afghanistan’s future.
“We need a legalised
US presence in order to uphold our national interests, to ensure stability and
security and to maintain the achievements of the past ten years,” said Asef
Ashna of the Truth and Justice Party. “We must not sacrifice these opportunities
because of the judicial immunity issue.”
Saadat warned that Afghanistan
would face a range of geopolitical and economic threats if it cut its security
ties with Washington.
“Signing such pacts is an imperative of the times,
provided they are based on our national interest, and on respect for Afghans’
culture, beliefs and national sovereignty,” he said.
As for the specific
terms of a deal, Saadat said it should have a clear end date, be monitored by a
bilateral committee, and set out explicit obligations for both parties. He
recalled that after the strategic partnership agreement was signed last year,
eastern border areas of Afghanistan suffered a spate of shell and rocket fire
from Pakistan. In his view, the US “ignored” these attacks instead of applying
pressure to get them stopped.
Ends
SA/EN
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Controversy over Afghan-US deal
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