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Karazi to US: Extreme Anger

Karazi to US: Extreme Anger
folder_openAfghanistan access_time11 years ago
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Local Editor

Afghani President Hamid Karzai expressed "extreme anger" towards the United States as it prepares to end its 13-year war in Afghanistan, intensifying his criticism in his final months in power.

Karazi to US: Extreme AngerKarzai has taken an increasingly antagonistic view of the US role in Afghanistan.
The president, who will stand down after elections on April 5, lashed out at the US government and described al-Qaeda as "more a myth than a reality".

"To the American people, give them my best wishes and my gratitude. To the US government, give them my anger, my extreme anger," Karzai told the Washington Post in an interview published on Monday.

There was no immediate response from the US embassy in Kabul, but relations between the two countries have plunged to a new low as the final 55,000 U.S.-led NATO troops prepare to head home and Karzai enters his final months in office.
The president made a surprise decision late last year not to sign an agreed deal that would see 8-12,000 US troops stay in Afghanistan.

"It's good for them [the US] to sign it with my successor," he said.

In the interview Karzai vented his fury over civilian casualties caused during the war against the Taliban, who had sheltered al-Qaeda while in power in Kabul from 1996-2001.
"There is no war to be fought in Afghanistan. I believe that much of the conflict is a creation in which the Afghans suffer," he said.

"Why is America here? I can't answer for America. The American president says they are here to fight extremism and terrorism and to secure America.

"If the way toward securing America is raiding Afghan homes, fighting in Afghan villages - well, that will not secure America."

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team