US,
AFGHANISTAN REACH DEAL ON STRATEGIC PACT
Hamid Karzai in Kabul
By HEIDI VOGT
April 22, 2012
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) ~ The U.S. and
Afghanistan reached a deal Sunday on a long-delayed strategic partnership
agreement that ensures Americans will provide military and financial support to
the Afghan people for at least a decade beyond 2014, the deadline for most
foreign forces to withdraw.
The pact is key to the U.S. exit
strategy in Afghanistan because it establishes guidelines for any American
forces who remain after the withdrawal deadline and for financial help to the
impoverished country and its security forces.
For the Afghan government, it is also a
way to show its people that their U.S. allies are not just walking away.
"Our goal is an enduring
partnership with Afghanistan that strengthens Afghan sovereignty, stability and
prosperity and that contributes to our shared goal of defeating al-Qaida and
its extremist affiliates," said U.S. Embassy spokesman Gavin Sundwall. "We
believe this agreement supports that goal."
After 10 years of U.S.-led war,
insurgents linked to the Taliban and al-Qaida remain a threat and as recently
as a week ago launched a large-scale attack on the capital Kabul and three
other cities.
The draft agreement was worked out and
initialed by Afghan National Security Adviser Rangin Dadfar Spanta and U.S.
Ambassador Ryan Crocker. It must still be reviewed in both countries and signed
afterward by the Afghan and American presidents.
U.S. forces have already started
pulling out of Afghanistan, and the majority of combat troops are scheduled to
depart by the end of 2014. But the U.S. is expected to maintain a large
presence in the country for years after, including Special Forces, military
trainers and government-assistance programs.
The agreement is both an achievement
and a relief for both sides, coming after months of turmoil that seemed to put
the entire alliance in peril. It shows that the two governments are still
committed to working together and capable of coming to some sort of
understanding.
"The document finalized today
provides a strong foundation for the security of Afghanistan, the region and
the world and is a document for the development of the region," Spanta
said in a statement issued by President Hamid Karzai's office.
Neither Afghan nor U.S. officials would
comment on the details of the agreement. A Western official familiar with the
negotiations said it outlines a strategic partnership for 10 years beyond 2014.
Reaching any agreement is likely to be
seen as a success given more than a year and a half of negotiations during
which the entire effort appeared in danger of falling apart multiple times.
Since the beginning of the year,
U.S.-Afghan relations have been strained by an Internet video of American
Marines urinating on the corpses of presumed Taliban fighters, by Quran
burnings at a U.S. base that sparked days of deadly protests and by the alleged
killing spree by a U.S. soldier in a southern Afghan village.
Tensions were further heightened by a spate
of turncoat attacks by Afghan security forces on their international
counterparts.
White House National Security Council
spokesman Tommy Vietor said President Barack Obama expects to sign the document
before a NATO summit in Chicago next month, meeting the deadline set by the two
sides. Many had started to worry in recent weeks that Karzai and Obama would
miss that goal as talks dragged on and Karzai continued to announce new demands
for the document.
Much of the disagreement was about how
to handle activities that the Afghan government saw as threatening its
sovereignty, in particular, night raids and the detention of Afghan citizens by
international forces. Those two major issues were resolved earlier this year in
separate memorandums of understanding.
But closed-door talks continued for
weeks after those side-deals were signed. And then as recently as last week,
Karzai said that he wanted the agreement to include a dollar figure for funding
for the Afghan security forces ~ a demand that would be hard for the Americans
to sign off on given the need for congressional approval for funding. U.S.
officials have said previously that they expected the document to address
economic and development support for Afghanistan more generally.
The final document is likely to be
short on specifics. U.S. officials involved in the negotiations have said
previously that the strategic partnership will provide a framework for future
relations, but that details of how U.S. forces operate in the country will come
in a later agreement.
The initialing ceremony means that the
text of the document is now locked in. But the countries will have to go
through their own internal review processes, Sundwall said.
"For the United States, that will
mean inter-agency review, consultation with Congress as appropriate and final
review by the president," Sundwall said.
In Afghanistan, the agreement will have
to be approved by parliament. The Afghan foreign minister will brief Afghan
lawmakers about the document Monday, the Afghan president's statement said.
No comments:
Post a Comment
If your comment is not posted, it was deemed offensive.