Afghan President Hamid Karzai on Friday condemned U.S. troops for killing a four-year-old boy in the southern province of Helmand, in an incident set to add fresh strain to troubled relations between Washington and Kabul.
Helmand governor Naeem Baloch told Karzai during a meeting in Kabul about the shooting, which comes as the U.S. and Afghanistan wrangle over a deal to allow some U.S. troops to remain in the country after this year.
The U.S.-led NATO coalition in Afghanistan issued a statement expressing "deepest sympathies to the family who suffered the loss of a loved one" in the incident on Wednesday and vowing to investigate "what happened and why".
Relations between Washington and Kabul have been poor for years, and negotiations over the bilateral security agreement (BSA) have erupted into a long-running public dispute.
Karzai made a surprise decision not to sign the agreement promptly despite having vowed to do so, leading to the threat of a complete withdrawal of NATO troops by the end of 2014.
"We condemn the killing of this boy in the strongest terms," presidential spokesman Aimal Faizi told Agence France Presse.
"We have been calling for the complete end of military operations in residential areas. This demand has not been taken seriously by foreign troops and the result is civilian casualties including women and children."
Civilian casualties have been one of the most sensitive issues of the 13-year military intervention in Afghanistan, and Karzai has often used accidental shootings and misguided airstrikes to berate foreign countries and stir public anger.
Faizi said a ban on military operations in civilian areas was one of the Afghan conditions of signing the BSA.
"The ball is the U.S. court," he said. "We are waiting for practical steps to be taken to end these operations and for the launch of a peace process. We believe the U.S. can deliver on these demands."
Signing the BSA is a precondition for the delivery of billions of dollars in Western aid for Afghanistan, which will hold an election to choose Karzai's successor in April.
In a classified cabled reported by the Washington Post this week, U.S. Ambassador James Cunningham said he did not expect Karzai to agree to sign the document before the vote.
The BSA would see several thousand U.S. troops remain in Afghanistan to provide training in the fight against Taliban insurgents after the NATO combat mission ends in December.
Afghanistan's army and police have developed rapidly in the last four years, but the country risks slipping into turmoil without foreign military assistance as Islamist militias and warlords vie for power.
In a separate move this week, Afghanistan said it would release scores of alleged Taliban fighters from jail as there was no evidence against them, despite U.S. objections that the men could return to the battlefield.
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