May 9, 2010 8:26 AM

Karzai Threatened to Join Taliban, Sources Say

By
CBSNews
(AP)  Afghan President Hamid Karzai threatened over the weekend to quit the political process and join the Taliban if he continued to come under outside pressure to reform, several members of parliament said Monday.

Karzai made the unusual statement at a closed-door meeting Saturday with selected lawmakers - just days after kicking up a diplomatic controversy with remarks alleging foreigners were behind fraud in last year's disputed elections.

Lawmakers dismissed the latest comment as hyperbole, but it will add to the impression the president - who relies on tens of thousands of U.S. and NATO forces to fight the insurgency and prop up his government - is growing increasingly erratic and unable to exert authority without attacking his foreign backers.

Special Report: Afghanistan

"He said that 'if I come under foreign pressure, I might join the Taliban'," said Farooq Marenai, who represents the eastern province of Nangarhar.

"He said rebelling would change to resistance," Marenai said - apparently suggesting that the militant movement would then be redefined as one of resistance against a foreign occupation rather than a rebellion against an elected government.

Marenai said Karzai appeared nervous and repeatedly demanded to know why parliament last week had rejected legal reforms that would have strengthened the president's authority over the country's electoral institutions.

Two other lawmakers said Karzai twice raised the threat to join the insurgency.

The lawmakers, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of political repercussions, said Karzai also dismissed concerns over possible damage his comments had caused to relations with the United States. He told them he had already explained himself in a telephone conversation Saturday with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton that came after the White House described his comments last week as troubling.

The lawmakers said they felt Karzai was pandering to hard-line or pro-Taliban members of parliament and had no real intention of joining the insurgency.

Nor does the Afghan leader appear concerned that the U.S. might abandon him, having said numerous times that the U.S. would not leave Afghanistan because it perceives a presence here to be in its national interest.

Karzai spokesman Waheed Omar's phone was turned off and another number for him rang unanswered Monday. Deputy spokesman Hamed Elmi's phone rang unanswered.

The comments come against the background of continuing insurgent violence as the U.S. moves to boost troop levels in a push against Taliban strongholds in the south.

NATO forces said they killed 10 militants in a joint U.S.-Afghan raid on a compound in Nangarhar province's Khogyani district near the Pakistani border early Monday, while gunmen seriously wounded an Afghan provincial councilwoman in a drive-by shooting in the country's increasingly violent north.

NATO also confirmed that international troops were responsible for the deaths of five civilians, including three women, on Feb. 12 in Gardez, south of Kabul.

A NATO statement said a joint international-Afghan patrol fired on two men mistakenly believed to be insurgents. It said the three women were "accidentally killed as a result of the joint force firing at the men."

International force officials will discuss the results of the investigation with family of those killed, apologize and provide compensation, he said.

The two men killed in the Gardez raid had been long-serving government loyalists and opponents of al Qaeda and the Taliban, one serving as provincial district attorney and the other as police chief in Paktia's Zurmat district.

Their brother, who also lost his wife and a sister, said he learned of the investigation result from the Internet, but had yet to receive formal notice.

Mohammad Sabar said the family's only demand was that the informant who passed on the faulty information about militant activity be tried and publicly executed.

"Please, please, please, our desire, our demand is that this spy be executed in front of the people to ensure that such bad things don't happen again," Sabar said.

In the latest of a series of targeted assassination attempts blamed on militants, Baghlan provincial council member Nida Khyani was struck by gunfire in the leg and abdomen in Pul-e Khumri, capital of the northern province, said Salim Rasouli, head of the provincial health department. Khyani's bodyguard was also slightly injured.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the shooting, although suspicion immediately fell on Taliban fighters who often target people working with the Afghan government and their Western backers.

One month ago, a member of the Afghan national parliament escaped injury when her convoy was attacked by Taliban insurgents in eastern Afghanistan. Female government officials regularly report receiving threats to their safety. Some women leaders, including a prominent policewoman, have been assassinated.

The Taliban rigidly oppose education for girls and women's participation in public affairs, citing their narrow interpretation of conservative Islam and tribal traditions. Militants, who are strongest in the south and east, carry out beatings and other punishments for perceived women's crimes from immodesty to leaving home unaccompanied by a male relative.

Also Monday, the organizer of a national reconciliation conference - known as a jirga - scheduled for early May said it would not include insurgent groups such as the Taliban. There has also been indications it would include discussion of the withdrawal of 120,000 foreign troops in the country.

Ghulam Farooq Wardak, the minister of education who is organizing the conference, said it will focus on outlining ways to reach peace with the insurgents and the framework for possible discussions.

Out of the jirga will come the "powerful voice of the Afghan people," Wardak said. "By fighting, you cannot restore security. The only way to bring peace is through negotiation."

AP
Add a Comment See all 29 Comments
by myopinionpal April 6, 2010 5:20 PM EDT
Karzai wasn't complaining when he was enjoying all that free money he was getting from the United States. I say pull out all troops and make that place a bombing range.
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by ffoulkes-2009 April 6, 2010 1:12 AM EDT
Ok...that's it. Time to move all our troops out of Afghanistan, and just turn the darned place into a giant parking lot.
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by Overruled1 April 6, 2010 1:30 AM EDT
I have to agree, our interests are more important than any corruption in that drug lord infestation going on there.
The opium trade has increased exponentially and their people are not represented by their government...hint.
The society still puts women as second class, only it would be worse under Taliban guidance.
We aren't there to look for Bin Laden any longer even though if we found him we'd take him, but we are there to support democracy where the people have the rights to control their destines.
The mujaheddin were great warrior allies fighting oppression, but the Taliban are extreme and cannot be trusted or followed.
by baileyccc April 6, 2010 12:59 AM EDT
This is what we get when we deal with looney tunes.
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by hickoryguy April 5, 2010 7:36 PM EDT
Remember a soldier killed in my son's company... PFC James Miller, 21, who died March 29th in Afghanistan.

Friends and Families of the Tomahawks,

On Wednesday 14 April 2010, 3:00pm at North Fort Chapel, JBLM, WA, the Rear Detachment of 4-23 IN Battalion will be holding a Memorial Ceremony to remember PFC James Miller.

Please join us as we pay tribute to this fine Soldier who has given his life while fighting in support of Operation Enduring Freedom.

V/R,

CPT XXXXXXXX

http://www.defense.gov/releases/release.aspx?releaseid=13421
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by jxknowles April 5, 2010 7:05 PM EDT
Pulling together all of the political, religious and social sects in Afghanistan into a cohesive group is not possible. Karzai needs to take what he can or step down.
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by pensacola8-2009 April 5, 2010 7:00 PM EDT
If you want Afghanistan to succeed with Democracy, find a qualified woman to be the leader. Females have the most to gain upon success and the most to lose upon failure. The oppressive treatment of females under Taliban rule is second to none in modern times.
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by toldyouso21 April 5, 2010 11:23 PM EDT
Are you on drugs--in a ruthlessly war lord patriarchal society--a woman in charge would guarantee total anarchy and she'd be dead within a year--even those who sympathize with the US would not follow her--it is against the Koran for a woman to "rule" or be in charge in a man's world--females are given rulership over a different world--that to done with raising kids and the household.

Since Afghanistan is an Islamic state--it is not likely they will disregard this tenet.
by blondenblueeyed April 5, 2010 6:49 PM EDT
Go for it Karzai and if....IF Obama had any backbone he'd pull all the USA money we send to you for foreign aid.
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by ToolMangler1 April 5, 2010 10:06 PM EDT
where are the Drones when you need one
by bradkt1 April 5, 2010 6:38 PM EDT
Karzai must be thinking about what the Taliban did to the stooge that the Russians installed. The Taliban strung him up on a soccer field goal post and he was tortured to death.

Nobody ever explained why the Bush Administration picked Karzai in the first place. Was he the only Afghan they knew...or what?

Karzai seems pretty useless as an ally to me.
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by myopinionpal April 5, 2010 6:29 PM EDT
Karzai wasn't complaining when he was enjoying all that free money he was getting from the United States. I say pull out all troops and make that place a bombing range.
Reply to this comment
by babooph April 5, 2010 5:55 PM EDT
Sounds like time to admit we should just leave...
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