14 novembre, 2010

INTERNET HEAD:

Afghanistan’s president says he wants the United States to reduce the visibility and intensity of its military operations in his country.

In an interview Sunday in The Washington Post, Hamid Karzai said he wants the U.S. to stop night raids, which he says aggravate Afghans and could incite people to join the Taliban insurgency. The newspaper reported the Afghan president is seeking veto power over those nighttime operations, saying the time has come to “reduce the intrusiveness into daily Afghan life.”

He said Afghans have become impatient with the presence of U.S. soldiers in their country and that Afghan troops are ready to take more responsibility for the country’s security. Mr. Karzai told the Post he hopes his candid remarks will help improve what he called a “grudging” relationship between the U.S. and Afghanistan.

U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham, who met with Mr. Karzai on a recent visit to Afghanistan, said he was “stunned” by the comments.

In violence Sunday, a series of bomb blasts and insurgent attacks in Afghanistan killed 11 people, including five NATO service members and three Afghan police officers.

Denmark’s military said a roadside bomb killed a Danish soldier during a joint operation with Afghan security forces in southern Afghanistan. A British solider died from an explosion while on patrol in Helmand Province, also in the south. Three more coalition service members were killed during an insurgent attack in eastern Afghanistan.

Afghan officials say a motorcycle bomb killed two civilians and wounded 11 at a market in Spin Boldak, in southern Kandahar province. A blast in the eastern city of Jalalabad killed one person and wounded nine others.

Also Sunday, suspected militants torched a convoy of 12 fuel tankers destined for NATO forces in Nangarhar province. A provincial government spokesman said no one was killed in the attack.

The Washington Post story says Mr. Karzai’s comments come as U.S. officials are stressing that the combat mission in Afghanistan will not end until 2014. The newspaper says U.S. officials are “playing down” the importance of July 2011, the date U.S. President Barack Obama has set to begin withdrawing U.S. troops from Afghanistan.

Comments Sunday by the U.S. Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan seemed to support that strategy. Richard Holbrooke said “substantial combat forces” will not be phased out in Afghanistan until 2014.

Some information in this story was provided by AP, AFP and Reuters.

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