Afghanistan - Obama’s next test
STEVEN R. HURST
Fresh from a bruising victory on health care and a nuclear arms deal
with Russia, President Barack Obama turned to a third campaign promise
victory and an honourable exit from Afghanistan. That could prove
tougher than any challenge overcome so far, and the president appears to
know it.
Seldom does a US leader devote more than 24 hours flying to and from
a war zone to spend only 6 hours on the ground. But the stakes are
enormous.
Since taking office, Obama has nearly tripled the number of US forces
committed to Afghanistan, which hasn’t known peace in at least three
decades. After eight years of war, the US military says it now is
blunting advances by Taliban militants, but Afghan President Hamid
Karzai still has little power outside Kabul, the capital and his
Government is riddled with corruption.
Al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, key lieutenants and foot soldiers
still hide across the mountainous border in Pakistan even though US
drone strikes have killed dozens of the terrorist group responsible for
the 9/11 attacks on the United States. Al-Qaida enjoyed sanctuary from
Taliban militants who ruled Afghanistan, before they were driven out in
the US-led invasion at the end of 2001.
Obama campaigned on a pledge to focus on the Afghan war, which he
said, unlike the fight in Iraq, was critical to American security and
being overlooked and poorly resourced by the Bush administration.
Despite the highly charged partisan atmosphere, where no Republican
voted for the health care legislation in either house of Congress, the
president enjoys broad GOP support for his intensification of the Afghan
war. There appears, as well growing support among the public for Obama’s
Afghan policy.
The latest Associated Press-GfK poll at the beginning of March found
that 57 percent of those surveyed approved his handling of the war
compared with 49 percent two months earlier.
The Obama-Karzai meeting lasted about 30 minutes and Obama told the
Afghan leader he saw some progress since they last talked in video
conference two weeks ago. They discussed good governance, merit-based
appointments of Afghan officials and corruption. The administration has
routinely chastised Karzai for failing to make progress on those issues.
National security adviser James Jones said after the meetings that
Karzai ‘needs to be seized with how important that is.’ The long
journey, Jones said, was “something that simply has to be done. We have
to have the strategic rapport with President Karzai and his Cabinet to
understand how we are going to succeed this year in reversing the
momentum of the Taliban.”
Karzai spokesman Waheed Omar, however, said reports that Obama was in
Kabul to order a recalcitrant Karzai to get his government in line were
inaccurate. “This was an extremely friendly discussion,” Omar said. “It
was a discussion between partners.” He said Obama pledged not to abandon
Afghanistan.
“President Obama assured President Karzai and the Afghan people of
America’s long-term commitment to Afghanistan,” Omar said.
Obama’s surprise visit underscores the political stakes for him. As
he dispatched the most recent installment of his 30,000-troop increase
to Afghanistan, the president pledged to begin withdrawing US forces in
July 2011, when his campaign for a second term would be well under way.
That will be a difficult pledge to keep if Karzai doesn’t intensify a
corruption purge.
Karzai pledged after the fraud-marred August election to mop up the
stain of corruption by making officials declare assets and giving the
country’s anti-corruption watchdog more power.
The Afghan leader has tried with little success to tackle corruption
in the past and the non-governmental organization Transparency
International last year ranked Afghanistan 176th out of 180 countries.
Its annual poll assessing perceptions of corruption among public
officials and politicians found only Haiti, Iraq, Myanmar and Somalia
ranking lower.
AFP
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