Monday, November 4, 2013

Afghanistan's Karzai Bitches Out America for Timing of Killing Pakistani Taliban Leader

You have got to be kidding me.

Afghanistan's President has literally criticized the United States for the ill timing of our killing the leader of the Pakistani Taliban with a drone strike - apparently Karzai is afraid this terrible thing might derail peace talks - what that really means is he sees this as taking away about six months of his chance not to be killed by the Taliban but he is quick to forget all of the American lives taken out by the Taliban leader.

Karzai has gone from bad to worse to what should be a target.  I'm sick of this bastard covering for the very enemy he begged us to save him from.

The story comes from DAWN.



Karzai criticises timing of Hakimullah's killing


ISLAMABAD: Afghan President Hamid Karzai has criticised the “unsuitable” timing of the US killing of Pakistani Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud and expressed hope it will not derail regional peace efforts.

Islamabad was taking the first steps towards initiating talks with the militants when Mehsud was killed, prompting Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar to accuse Washington of “scuttling” peace efforts.

“A delegation was about to be sent for talks to the Taliban tomorrow (Saturday),” Nisar had said Friday after news of Mehsud’s killing in the US drone strike.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai added his voice to the criticism, telling a US Congress delegation visiting Kabul that the drone strike “took place at an unsuitable time”, his office said in a statement released late Sunday.

The statement said Karzai hoped the peace process, still at an embryonic stage, did not suffer as a result.

The Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) operates separately from the Afghan Taliban but notionally pledges allegiance to the same leader, Mullah Omar.

Karzai has been seeking to open peace talks with the Afghan Taliban to end 12 years of war, but the militants have refused to negotiate with his appointees, dismissing him as a puppet of Washington.

Karzai, who recently held talks with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif in London, said fraught relations between Kabul and Islamabad had improved.

Sharif came to power in May partly on a pledge to hold talks to try to end the TTP’s bloody insurgency that has fuelled instability in the nuclear-armed nation.

He is to hold a meeting of his cabinet national security committee on Monday evening after a furious Nisar said “every aspect” of Islamabad’s ties with Washington would be reviewed.

Relations had appeared to be warming after lurching from crisis to crisis in 2011 and 2012.

Opposition parties led by Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaf party have demanded the government close Pakistan’s roads to convoys supplying Nato forces in Afghanistan.

The party has said it will block Nato convoys in the northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa where it is in power, which would cut off one of the main crossing points into Afghanistan.

Pakistan blocked Nato convoys for seven months in 2012 after a botched US air raid killed 24 troops.

With Nato withdrawing 87,000 troops from Afghanistan by the end of next year after 12 years of war, the ground supply lines through Pakistan are of vital importance.

Last month US President Barack Obama welcomed Sharif to the White House and the State Department announced the release of $1.6 billion in aid, including $1.38 billion for the military.

The money had been frozen as relations plummeted amid a series of crises in 2011 and 2012 including the US raid to kill Osama bin Laden at his hideout in Pakistan – carried out without Pakistani knowledge.

Washington has said the issue of whether to negotiate with the TTP was an internal matter for Pakistan but stressed the US and Pakistan had “a vital, shared strategic interest in ending extremist violence”.

The TTP announced on Sunday that Asmatullah Shaheen Bhittani, the head of the militants’ supreme council, had been appointed temporary leader while a permanent replacement for Mehsud is chosen.

Bhittani, who was seen as close to Mehsud, has been touted as a potential permanent replacement, as has the movement’s number two Khan Said, alias Sajna.

2 comments:

The Duhnmharu said...

Poor Poor hamid Karzai, that paragon of virtue and trust . What he misses is the timing was perfect. By Killing the taliban leader, the others who come to negotiate will be more conciliatory after all they hate teh drones they cant see em, or hear em until hellfire lets loose and kills them. They will talk because Karzai could say he can control the drones (which he cant) Drones put fear in Taliban hearts and Karzai is too dumb to realize teh ace up his sleeve this gives him. Cooperate with me come to a deal and teh strikes will stop. Its called peace at teh muzzle of a gun. Karzai is corrupt, dishonest has no integrity truth is specious and random he is in it to win it though and by winning it, I mean as much aid as he can skim off the top. Karzai needs to go on the wanted list someone pass me teh controls, I can fly a drone right up his ass.

Holger Awakens said...

Duhn,

I love the way you think.

:Holger Danske