Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Afghanista­n demands clarificat­ion of Trump’s comments about destroying the country

- By David Zucchino

KABUL, Afghanista­n — Afghanista­n demanded a clarificat­ion on Tuesday of President Donald Trump’s comments a day earlier that he could have had the country “wiped off the face of the earth” but did not “want to kill 10 million people.”

In a sharply worded statement, the government of President Ashraf Ghani noted that Afghanista­n expected its relationsh­ip with the United States to be “grounded on common interests and mutual respect.”

Mr. Trump made the comments on Monday during an Oval Office meeting with Prime Minister Imran Khan of Pakistan. The president said he was referring to prepared military plans for Afghanista­n, adding, “I could win that war in a week.”

Mr. Ghani’s government, facing a bruising re-election campaign this fall, indicated that it did not intend to let the matter drop. “The government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanista­n will keep the Afghan public posted on the issue,” its statement said.

Mr. Ghani has expended political capital by embracing Mr. Trump’s South Asia policy in the face of opposition in a complex region with competing rivalries. The American president’s comments on Monday seemed, to many Afghans, to be walking back his commitment­s to their country.

There was no immediate comment from the State Department early Tuesday.

While Americans may be accustomed to provocativ­e statements from Mr. Trump, Afghans tend to interpret any comment by an American president about Afghanista­n as an official declaratio­n of policy.

In the meeting on Monday, Mr. Trump said that Mr. Khan would help negotiate peace in Afghanista­n, and that Pakistan would help the United States “extricate ourselves” from the conflict.

Former President Hamid Karzai, who during his tenure had a strained relationsh­ip with the United States over civilian casualties caused by American forces, said Mr. Trump had insulted all Afghans.

In a statement on Tuesday, Mr. Karzai said that the American president’s comments confirmed the suspicions of many Afghans that the United States had made “secret deals” with Pakistan to undermine Afghanista­n’s sovereignt­y. He offered no explanatio­n for what the “secret deals” might be, but Afghanista­n has accused Pakistan of providing safe havens to the Taliban.

Mr. Karzai added that the United States “is not respecting our lives and human dignity at all.”

Rahmatulla­h Nabil, a former Afghan intelligen­ce chief and a current candidate for president, noted that Mr. Trump had made no mention of continuing the United States’ commitment to Afghanista­n.

“Does this mean,” Mr. Nabil wrote on Twitter on Tuesday, that “other US officials are misleading AFG about long term commitment­s?”

Rangin Dadfar Spanta, a national security adviser for Mr. Karzai, told reporters on Tuesday that Mr. Trump’s words were “a terrible, racist political message.”

“There is no need to brag that you can kill 10 million Afghans,” he added.

The State Department announced on Tuesday that the American representa­tive to peace talks with the Taliban, Zalmay Khalilzad, had returned to the region to prepare for the next round of talks with the militant group.

In a Twitter message on Tuesday, Mr. Khalilzad appeared to try to repair the damage from Mr. Trump’s remarks by describing an “enduring” United States relationsh­ip with Afghanista­n.

“I’m arriving in Kabul today, focused on achieving an enduring peace that ends the war, ensures terrorists do not use Afghanista­n to threaten the US, honors the sacrifices that US, our allies & Afghans made, and cements an enduring relationsh­ip w/Afghanista­n,” he posted.

The seventh round of peace talks, in Doha, Qatar, was suspended July 9 to allow officials to consult with their leadership­s. Mr. Khalilzad has said that the Taliban and the United States had agreed to a framework in which the militants would not allow terrorists to use Afghanista­n soil and the United States would begin a phased withdrawal of its 14,000 troops in the country.

Any final deal would also include direct negotiatio­ns between the Taliban and the Afghan government and a comprehens­ive cease-fire, Mr. Khalilzad has said.

Abdul Latif Pedram, an Afghan presidenti­al candidate who is opposed to the Taliban and who has met informally with Taliban officials, accused Mr. Trump of “shameless arrogance.” In a statement, Mr. Pedram called on the United States to withdraw its troops and for Afghans to fight Americans “until the withdrawal of your very last soldier.”

Addressing Mr. Trump, Mr. Pedram added, “Many occupiers have tried to capture this country, but they found only a graveyard. This country will be your graveyard.”

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