April 7, 2010 8:38 AM

White House May Cancel Karzai Visit over Remarks

(CBS/AP)  In a new indication of strained relations, the White House said Tuesday it would consider canceling an upcoming visit by Afghan President Hamid Karzai if he continues to make troublesome remarks. Such a move would be a remarkable diplomatic slap likely to infuriate the mercurial leader.

Despite the public reproach, senior administration officials said the tough statement was really meant as a warning and a sign of Washington's continued unhappiness with the Afghan leader's comments. The officials, one of whom described it as "a shot across the bow," said canceling Karzai's invitation was not being seriously considered, at least not yet.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the administration's strategy, which they were not authorized to discuss publicly.

Karzai has infuriated the White House with accusations that the United Nations and the international community interfered in last year's fraud-tarnished presidential election in Afghanistan.

Karzai also threatened to join the Taliban insurgency if the U.S. continues pressuring him publicly to do more to end graft, cronyism and electoral fraud, more comments that stunned U.S. officials.

Meanwhile, a former U.N envoy to Afghanistan, Peter Galbraith, told MSNBC on Tuesday that he believes Karzai may have a substance abuse problem.

"He's prone to tirades. He can be very emotional, act impulsively. In fact, some of the palace insiders say that he has a certain fondness for some of Afghanistan's most profitable exports," Galbraith said - apparently referring to opium, or its derivative heroin.

"We certainly would evaluate whatever continued or further remarks President Karzai makes, as to whether that's constructive to have such a meeting, sure," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs told reporters Tuesday. "Our position on this is that when the Afghan leaders take steps to improve governance and root out corruption, then the president will say kind words," Gibbs said. "When leaders need to hear stern language from this administration about the consequences of not acting, we'll do that as well."

White House officials said no cancellation was imminent. While irritated by Karzai, the U.S. military also wants closer cooperation ahead of a potentially decisive offensive this summer.

But just the fact that President Barack Obama's chief spokesman raised the possibility so bluntly and in such a public setting, very rare in the careful, nuanced world of diplo-speak, showed the depth of anger and frustration in Washington toward Karzai. Declining to schedule a meeting is one thing, as the White House seemed close to doing twice with Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu. But scotching one that is already on the calendar is another.

Karzai was due to meet with Obama at the White House on May 12.

Obama extended the long-sought invitation during his own visit to Kabul late last month after telling Karzai and his cabinet that he was pleased with progress on anti-corruption measures and the fight against insurgents. At the time he stressed more needed to be done in both areas.

Since then Karzai has grown more defiant, launching the scorching accusation about Western interference in his elections, which prompted a phone conversation with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Friday to smooth things over. After that came the threat to join the Taliban.

"I don't know why somebody continues to insinuate that there was some sort of foreign corruption when the very thing that he speaks of was looked into," Gibbs said of Karzai's accusation regarding election fraud. "So I can't begin to decide what reasoning he had for making those comments."

A delicate diplomatic dance also surrounded Netanyahu's visit to Obama two weeks ago. In a break with custom, reporters were not invited to see the two leaders shake hands and begin their talks, and neither side has provided a substantive account of the session. A rift over new Israeli housing planned in east Jerusalem has contributed to the deepest dispute between the U.S. and Israel in decades.

Meanwhile, the administration's point man for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Richard Holbrooke, has canceled plans to visit the region later this week for medical reasons, his office said. Holbrooke informed his staff Tuesday that he may have some blocked arteries and will be getting treated in New York this week instead of making the trip.

Holbrooke was to have accompanied a number of other senior U.S. officials, including the top military commander for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Gen. David Petraeus, and USAID administrator Rajiv Shah, on the tour, which will still go ahead.

It will be the second high-level visit Holbrooke has not made to the region in recent weeks. Holbrooke's absence was noticed when he did not go with Obama when he made his surprise trip to Afghanistan last month.

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 11 Comments
by cc293 April 7, 2010 7:14 AM EDT
Cancel the meeting. He will only smile in your face then stab America in the back...Remember, a warning comes before destruction. Be vigilante and alert for your enemies America.

CC
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by babooph April 7, 2010 4:33 AM EDT
When he was put in ,they should have been clear to him as to what a stooge is-the same problem came up in Nam....
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by decotoguy April 7, 2010 4:01 AM EDT
The Practitioners of Deception convinced every KNUCKLE-HEAD,NUMB-SKULL American to believe this WAR is necessary to SAVE AFGHANISTAN from
the AFGHANS..
The MUGAHIDIN FORCES,which are presently called TALIBAN are now the Enemy.
Strangely enough in the 1980's America thought the TALIBANS were the
FREEDOM FIGHTERS of MIDDLE ASIA.
Now the Honorable Afghan President Karzai is only suggesting
that the FOREIGN OCCUPATION FIGHTERS are conducting themselves
like COMMON CRIMINALS.
Now is this the TRUTH?
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by Forbus56 April 7, 2010 3:08 AM EDT
Hug and bow to dictators and diss our allies. Great foreign policy.
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by notparicular April 7, 2010 3:00 AM EDT
Saddam will have company soon- Karzai.
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by gunslug50 April 7, 2010 2:26 AM EDT
The American should send the Pope butt to Afghan to perform an exorcise on this crazy Karzai before he start spitting green-slop out of this mouth and his head turn 360 degree around..then he really would want to be a taliban.
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by newsworthy8 April 7, 2010 1:06 AM EDT
This dude is most likely behind the large drug operations in that country..America, get out, we don't need any more lives lost over this poppy head.
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by retm-w April 6, 2010 11:48 PM EDT
The heck with canceling his vist, just bring the troops home now. Let him deal with the problems.
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by pensacola8-2009 April 6, 2010 10:10 PM EDT
Such a comment is a wide open opportunity to criticism. Some perceive the Afghan leader's temperament as decay and are eager to learn how extensive it is or how steadfast his faith really is. The Obama administration is wise to refer to the existing plans and remain predictable. All citizens of the USA know that ultimately the future of Afghanistan is in the hands of Afghan Citizens. The recent election stall in Iraq is clear evidence that democracy doesn't make citizens civil and peaceful, but instead that peaceful and civil citizens can make a democracy. Insurgency and combat operations do little to make citizens civil and peaceful.
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by HGOODGUY April 6, 2010 9:31 PM EDT
Sure--I mean it isn't like we are sending troops to be killed or spending tons of money over there!!
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