By

Charlie D'Agata /

CBS News/ March 10, 2013, 2:14 PM

U.S. and Taliban deny Afghan president's claims

Updated at 6:30 p.m. ET

KABUL Even for President Hamid Karzai it was an astonishing accusation.

He said the two suicide bombings that killed 19 people Saturday were proof the United States and the Taliban were working together to spread fear among Afghans.

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"The explosions in Kabul and Khost yesterday showed that they are at the service of America" he said in a nationally televised speech here this morning. "They are trying to frighten us into thinking that if the foreigners are not in Afghanistan, we would be facing these sorts of incidents."

The top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, General Joseph Dunford, rejected the allegations as "categorically false."

"We have fought too hard over the past 12 years, we have shed too much blood over the last 12 years, to ever think that violence or instability would be to our advantage," Dunford said.

Karzai's accusations came out of the blue, in the middle of a televised address honoring Afghan women, an address his office scheduled just Saturday, right in the middle of a visit by U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel.

The Taliban suspended talks with U.S. negotiators a year ago saying Washington was giving mixed signals over a possible Afghan reconciliation process.

But President Karzai said the United States and the Taliban continue to hold "daily negotiations" in the Gulf state of Qatar, working in coordination to destabilize Afghanistan. He did not offer any proof.

A Taliban spokesman denied that talks had resumed or that any progress had been made since they were halted.

Shortly after Karzai's stinging rebuke, the news conference between the Afghan President and the defense secretary was scrubbed. The defense secretary and Karzai eventually met behind closed doors, and Hagel said he told Karzai there are no talks.

Pentagon Press Secretary George Little said the press conference cancellation was not due to Karzai's remarks but related to security concerns.

But it raises questions, and underscores the rising tensions between the United States and Afghanistan.

That tension escalated even more later in the day when Karzai's office issued a decree banning all foreign forces from universities unless they obtain prior permission from the Afghan government.

The president's office cited the detention of a university student in Kandahar on Saturday by Afghan forces working for the CIA.

Karzai's antagonistic tone began days before Defense Secretary Hagel even arrived.

Last Wednesday, he bragged to Parliament that he had succeeded in getting the U.S. to hand over the last of the inmates at Bagram Prison. He said many of those inmates were innocent and would be released after it was completely under Afghan control.

That handover was supposed to take place on Saturday. Only it didn't. It was postponed until 'technical issues' can be resolved.

The U.S. military has insisted some prisoners should be considered enemy combatants and therefore cannot be put on trial, much less released, and that the U.S. should have final veto power over any release.

To underline that point, General Dunford said: "If there are people that need to be detained, we will make sure they are detained."

There's another deadline looming.

Karzai has demanded that all U.S. Special Forces withdraw from the province of Wardak, near Kabul, after accusing them of overseeing murder and torture in the province.

The U.S. has flatly denied any involvement. Again, General Dunford has said he expected to have a solution to the problem, but it remains unclear whether U.S. special forces will meet that deadline, or indeed if they're even trying to.

© 2013 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
40 Comments Add a Comment
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SamRamierez says:
There is an interesting article at International Policy Digest about how Karzai's policies are not only alienating the coalition forces, but also undermining the nation's chance at a stable future:

http://www.internationalpolicydigest.org/2013/03/14/hamid-karzai-champion-of-alienation/
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andthetruthis says:
George H Bush pulled Noriega,and we put our puppet in there.
George W Bush pulled Saddam,and we put our puppets in there.
Bush and Cheney flat out put Karzai in.

Panama is nice and quiet.
Iraq has turned into Hatfields and McCoys.
But,this puppet here,Karzai,is attacking the people who made him.

People have said - "Truth is stranger than fiction".
Don't talk to people like we're children as to 'Good Guy - Bad Guy'.
Who do you think has stopped the Army Rangers and Marines,looking at poppy fields growing heroin,from burning it?
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brwing says:
Karzai is a pirate, dishonest and a crook.
We have wasted lives and some $534B on this pit and poorly managed most of it.
Congress needs to examine how ineffective they have been on policy and over sight. Agencies need to be cleansed of ineffective managers and contractors need to be investigated for fraud. The Joint Chiefs need to be replaced with performance driven younger officers who are not kissers.
This entire enterprise is a waste of time and we need to take as much hardware as possible with us and leave. And do not forget to stop the foreign aid that has propped up this crook Karzai.
We could have won over huge swathes of the population but blew every project proposed both in Afghanistan and Iraq. How can the President's tolerate such failure?
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lucitee replies:
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That is what the AGENDA was of the Foreign and Domestic Factions that Created OUR Leader! Sweet persimmon wine for his adoring and gullible supporters and unripe green persimmons for the rest of us! Instant adoration from them, permanent pucker for us!
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comingaliveat55 says:
This has to be the last straw. I am a conservative who has supported our involvement in Afganistan since we first went in looking for Bin Laden. I think that we have honored an American tradition of standing up for those who need help and, while I have mourned the death and pain suffered by our fine soldiers, I am proud of what we have done. But the time has come to say "good-bye and good luck." Even Jesus told his disciples that if they were not received in a community they were to shake the dust off of their sandals and move on. Let's shake the dust off of our feet and move on and the sooner the better.
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alaskan1st replies:
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Nothing we have done has been Jesus like. Don't use Him as a comparison. The profiteers of war aren't done with Afghanistan, and until they are, we will remain.
CuriousServant replies:
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Agreed, ComingAlive... We went there to fight the Taliban (though we were on the other side of things way back when they first came, fighting the Soviets)... But it is clear they do not want us there, are ungrateful for our sacrifices, and spurn our values.

Shake the dust from our sandals indeed.
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Bendech says:
If anyone needs more proof that the war in Afghanistan was a huge waste of US resources and personnel, all you need to do is listen to the guy who the Bush Administration hailed as the leader of the new Afghanistan. Who can forget the face of Karzai beaming at President Bush during his state of the Union address?
Well, now that man has come back to haunt the US. He's saying he's fed up with US intervention in Afghanistan and it's time for the US to pack its bags and go home.
No thanks for the hundreds of billions of dollars in military and economic aid. No thanks for the thousands of Americans who gave their lives or were severely wounded in Afghanistan.
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ldantemd says:
Someone posting here is either a computer generated "person" left over from the last Presidential election, or is exercising their first amendment rights and displaying a profound blindness as to which party has been actually pushing our country towards Fascism. Can Karl Rove do that Jedi thing where they wave their hand and plant false beliefs in the minds of the weak?
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pitai replies:
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Are you awaking from a bad dream, a nightmare even? Go back to sleep; nothing to worry about.
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thatchmo62 says:
Karzai is there only because the U.S. put him there and have protected him and his corrupt family. He knows his own people will kill him as soon as the U.S. leaves. IF he doesn't, he is a very stupid puppet.
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JoseofTexas says:
The Taliban doesn't want to admit that they are selling drugs to the US.
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alaskan1st says:
As if the Taliban would ever collude with the US. Come on Karzai. What's the problem? Your check is late?
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badbites says:
Yet another reason to let the middle east take care of their own problems. It is exceedingly obvious that we are unwelcome and unwanted there. We should not be wasting the lives of our military or the funds it takes to try to protect people who not only don't want and have no appreciate it but deliberately take the time to spit in our face for our efforts.
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onefeather2 replies:
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Well said.
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