Report: Karzai Suspects U.S. behind Afghan Bombings
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربيةAfghan President Hamid Karzai suspects the United States may have backed insurgent-style attacks to undermine his government but has no evidence to support his theory, the Washington Post reported Tuesday.
Karzai, whose relations with Washington have steadily deteriorated over the years, has compiled a list of dozens of attacks that he believes the U.S. government may have been involved in, the Post wrote, citing unnamed Afghan officials.
Karzai even harbors suspicions that the Americans may have been behind an attack this month on a Lebanese restaurant frequented by foreigners in Kabul, the newspaper said, quoting a presidential palace official.
However, the Afghan official acknowledged that the government had no concrete proof of a U.S. role in any of the attacks.
The Taliban often claims responsibility for bombings employing homemade explosives and other assaults, including the recent deadly attack on the Lebanese restaurant.
In Kabul, Afghan officials were unavailable to comment on the report. U.S. officials privately scoffed at the allegations.
The United States paved the way for Karzai's coming to power by toppling the Taliban regime in 2001 over its support of al-Qaida.
Washington and its NATO allies have since poured billions of dollars of aid money into Afghanistan and sent tens of thousands of troops to the country to battle the Taliban.
Karzai himself has admitted to accepting regular deliveries of cash from the Central Intelligence Agency.
The Afghan leader has long railed against U.S. and NATO military operations that have left Afghan civilians dead but it remains unclear why the mercurial president would try to pin blame on the Americans for attacks associated with the insurgents.
Karzai has held up a crucial bilateral security agreement negotiated with the U.S. government that would allow for a smaller contingent of American troops to stay in the country after the end of the year.
NATO combat troops are due to withdraw by December and without a legal agreement, the United States and NATO would have to drop the idea of a post-2014 force.
Karzai's suspicions of a conspiracy may offer an explanation why he has refused to sign the security accord, the Post wrote.
It also was possible Karzai wanted to demonstrate he was no puppet of Washington or that he wanted to persuade the Taliban he was ready for reconciliation talks.
In any case, the revelation is sure to exacerbate the already strained ties between Karzai and his American counterparts, who have long complained about his mood swings and lack of gratitude for American and NATO sacrifices.
A former U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan, Karl Eikenberry, once referred to Karzai's erratic behavior with exasperation, writing in a note that was later leaked: "He's on his meds, he's off his meds."
Eikenberry also wrote in a 2010 cable to Washington that Karzai "continues to shun responsibility for any sovereign burden" and cited the Afghan president's lack of reliability as a reason not to send more U.S. troops to the country.