Hamid Karzai

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Contents

See also: President of Afghanistan
See also: 2009 Afghanistan presidential election

Hamid Karzai (1957-) is the President of Afghanistan, and a candidate for reelection in the 2009 Afghanistan presidential election. A member of the Popalzai tribe of Durrani Pashtun born in Kandahar, he is related to the last king, Mohammad Zahir Shah. His post-secondary studies were in India.

Karzai, since he assumed the interim presidency in 2001, has had to carry out a continuing balancing act. The Northern Alliance forces that overthrew the Taliban were primarily non-Pashtun, with some of the top leaders being Tajiks. Relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan are by no means between two stable countries, but with constantly shifting factions. While the U.S. and other Western powers had much to do with his gaining power and continuing both security and economic assistance, he cannot be seen as too Westernized by his own constituencies; indeed, being criticized by the West may even help him at times.

The 2001 Bonn Peace Conference named him interim president, taking office in June 2001, and he was elected to a five-year term in 2004. In December 2001 Mr. Karzai was named chairman of an interim government that replaced the defeated Taliban, making him the leader of Afghanistan. The Taliban attempted to assassinate him in April 2008.

In August 2009, he faces a new election. The New York Times said a private poll, in May, suggested 85 percent of the electorate plan to vote for someone else. The Times observed, however, that he remains the strongest politician in the country. [1]

The West, indeed, criticizes. While he took office during the George W. Bush Administration, Barack Obama, during the campaign, called him ineffective.

No solution to Afghanistan is possible without a solution to issues in Pakistan. Karzai and Pakistani Prime Minister Zardari held a three-way summit with Obama in May 2009. [2]

Soviet invasion

He was a student outside Afghanistan at the time of the Soviet invasion. After receiving his master's degree in international relations in 1983, he went to Peshawar, Pakistan, and joined the Political Office of the National Liberation Front led by Professor Sebghatullah Mujadidi. After the formation of the transitional government of the Mujahideen in 1989, he was appointed Director of the Foreign Relations Unit in the Office of the President of the Interim Government.[3]

He became Deputy Foreign Minister in the post-Soviet government, but resigned as the Taliban took control.

Relations with the Taliban prior to 2001

Hamid Karzai told Ahmed Rashid that, at first, he believed in the Taliban as a force that would bring order and end worlordism, and then call a loya jirga. He initially gave them money, and met Mullah Omar, who offered to make him their envoy to the UN. "They were good people initially, but the tragedy was that very soon after they were taken over by the ISI and became a proxy...I realized what was happening when I was called into the Pakistan Foreign Office to discuss the modalities for my becoming the Taliban envoy at the UN."[4]

Selected to succeed his father as Khan of the half-million Popalzai. He defied both the Pakistan and Taliban governments by leading a convoy of tribal mourners to carry his father's body home for burial in Kandahar, a stronghold of the Taliban. The This act of defiance made Hamid Karzai the most visible leader of resistance to the Taliban among the Pashtun people. [5]

Actions after 9-11 attack

He entered Afghanistan from Pakistan, with 4 men, on October 8-9, and, over the next 20 days, met with local groups, and assembled a force of perhaps 50 men. He had been told "You must come with strength. Go to the United States, come back with the resources and money and weapons, and all that, and begin from a point with strength and then we'll do that. But if you just take the population and march it on the cities, they will take the cities, but then they would also get killed. Why should the civilians suffer?" [6] Karzai used his satellite telephone to call the U.S. consulate and ask for support. Within a day or two, he designated his position, and large amounts of weapons and supplies were parachuted to him, greatly increasing his status. Soon afterwards, he asked for advisers, and United States Army Special Forces Operational Detachment A 574 flew to him on November 14. [7]

He took a major role in the capture of Kandahar, the Taliban stronghold.

Initial Presidency

On assuming the interim presidency, he needed to establish a balance among the various ethnic groups. The immediate problem was seen as an overrepresentation of Tajiks, who held ministries including defense, foreign affairs, and the interior.

In the first attempt to find balance, he kept the defense minister, Mohammed Qasim Fahim and also naming him one of three vice presidents, but appointed a Pashtun, Taj Muhammed Wardak, as interior minister. Defending the retention of Fahim, "He's the minister of defense... He has people that he has, the coalition is working with him and we have an antiterrorism campaign to complete. We cannot just turn things upside down and bring changes overnight."

Also named as vice presidents were the Hazara leader, Karim Khalili, and Abdul Qadir, the Pashtun governor of Nangarhar Province. Two of the most powerful regional warlords, the Uzbek general from the north, Abdul Rashid Dostum, and Ismail Khan, from Herat in the west, declined to be take vice presidential posts unless they could maintain their regional interests. Dostum appears to have left Afghanistan.

Wardak, accrording to Karzai, "...is a man who has experience of provincial matters, who has governed before. Let's give him a chance...We have to have technical people in the interior ministry, to take away the political character of this ministry, and we need a technical and professional minister."

Dr. Abdullah Abdullah, another of the influential Tajiks, stayed as foreign minister. Yunus Qanooni, who resigned as interior minister, but stayed in the Cabinet as minister of education. Abdullah is challenging Karzai in the 2009 Afghanistan presidential election. Abdul Qadir, the elder brother of Abdul Haq, was also named minister of public works, and was assassinated in 2002. [8]

Another warlord, Padsha Khan Zadran, who defied Karzai and attacked his own town with rockets to try to seize power, was effectively sidelined by the loya jirga, or grand council of 1,600 delegates. Karzai said of him, "The loya jirga voted overwhelmingly for me...And he was there. And he campaigned." Karzai also removed Zadran's brother, Amanullah, from the cabinet, complaining that he had attended only two cabinet meetings.[9]

Work in office

After George W. Bush's January 29, 2002, State of the Union Address, in which the Axis of Evil was announced, he visited Iran, met Iranian President Mohammad Khatami and and announced, "Our presence here is like going to your brother's house, because Iran is our brother country. Iran is not only a neighbor, but also a friend." In August 2002, Khatami visited Karzai in Kabul. [10]

He has had three-way summit security talks with Pakistan and the US. [2]

Current situation

Karzai has been known more for his alliance-building skills than for governance. There have been initiatives, probably Western-initiated, to give him a "Chief Executive Officer", who would have at least some aspects of head of government. U.S. diplomat Zalmay Khalizad, born in Afghanistan, was first mentioned for this role. It has been offered to Ashraf Ghani, former Finance Minister, who declined it, is running for President, but has not ruled out accepting if Karzai wins.

He is the leading candidate for reelection as president in 2009, running with Mohammed Qasim Fahim and Karim Khalili as vice-presidential candidates. While he is favored, it is less that he has strong national support as he is the most organized candidate. A runoff is likely, with Abdullah Abdullah, former Foreign Minister, the strongest opponent.

References

  1. "Times Topics: Hamid Karzai", New York Times, May 5, 2009
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Obama urges Afghanistan and Pakistan leaders to get tougher on the Taliban", Guardian (U.K), May 6, 2009
  3. President Hamid Karzai, Embassy of Afghanistan
  4. Ahmed Rashid (2006), Descent into Chaos: The United States and the Failure of Nation Building in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Central Asia, Viking, ISBN 9780670019700, p. 13
  5. "Hamid Karzai: A profile", CBC News Online, September 21, 2006
  6. "Interview: President Hamid Karzai", PBS Frontline, May 7, 2002
  7. History 1987-2007, United States Special Operations Command, p. 94
  8. Jason Burke (7 July 2002), "Minister's killing rocks Afghanistan", Guardian (UK)
  9. Carlotta Gall, James Dao (June 20, 2002), "A Buoyant Karzai Is Sworn In as Afghanistan's Leader", New York Times
  10. Warren Mass (14 August 2009), "Upcoming Afghan Presidential Election", New American
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