Hamid Karzai is the new leader of Afghanistan, as agreed by participants to the UN Talks on Afghanistan in Bonn today, 5 December 2001. He will head a transitional administration for six months, leading up to the convening of a Loya Jirga or Grand Council, which will promulgate a new constitution.

Karzai is an ethnic Pashtun, a moderate who is trying to take over the besieged city of Kandahar from the remnant of Taleban rule. As a Pashtun he should be more acceptable to players like Pakistan, who dislike the idea of the new Afghanistan being dominated by the United Front (Northern Alliance).

The new 30-member council will take power on 22 December. Three of the key portfolios have gone to the Northern Alliance: Mohammed Fahim in Defence, Dr Abdullah Abdullah in Foreign Affairs, and Yunis Qanuni in Interior. They have about half the posts altogether. Two women are included in the government.

Chief of the Popolzai tribe of the south-west, of the same clan as the King, he was deputy foreign minister in the Burhanuddin Rabbani government of the 1990s. He did not at first oppose the Taleban when they came to power; but he blamed them for the assassination of his father in exile in Peshawar two years ago. After the killing of Abdul Haq, a representative of the King, seeking support for an anti-Taleban rebellion, Hamid Karzai also re-entered Afghanistan to try to drum up support among his own people.

On the same day as he was selected premier, he was injured by an American bomb that killed three American troops and injured 19 others. He was only slightly injured. A senior officer at the Joint Chiefs of Staff in Washington, one Rear Admiral Stufflebeem, said "I don't know what the intended target was. It was being called on enemy troops." Later he added, no doubt feeling that his explanation had not covered everything, "a 2,000 pound weapon is a devastating weapon."

In October 2004 democratic elections were held in Afghanistan, with Karzai the winner. He was sworn in as the country's first elected president in December.

< Burhanuddin Rabbani - Afghanistan

Since 1747, before the United States of America even existed, nearly every king of Afghanistan has been a member of the Popalzoi, a roughly half-million member clan belonging to the Durrani, one of the two major groupings of the Pashtuns. The Durrani, the second-largest Pashtun clan, was founded by Ahmed Shad Durrani, a Persian who conquered Kandehar in 1747 and became the country's first king.

Down through the centuries there has been a continuous state of friction between the Durrani and the Ghilzai, the other larger Pashtun clan. The Ghilzai is the backbone of the Taliban, and thus is naturally opposed to any effort to reinstate Afghanistan's aged King Zahir Shah, who was deposed in 1973.

Hamid Karzai, the new leader of Afghanistan's interim government and America's handpicked choice for the job, is a Popalzoi and a Durrani, just like King Zahir Shah.

Karzai's grandfather was Abdul Ahad Karzai, president of the national council under Zahir Shah. He retired from public office in 1983 and moved his family to Quetta.

The middle son of seven brothers and a sister, Karzai, 46, is married with no children. Though his father had fought the Soviet Union as a holy warrior, a mujahedeen during the 1980's, Karzai served as an advisor and diplomat, and thus was a frequent visitor to foreign embassies during the Soviet years.

Karzai was the deputy foreign minister in the government of Burhanuddin Rabbani, which assumed power after the Soviet Union withdrew in 1987. He represented his tribe in the government until the Taliban came to power.

Like many Afghans, he was frustrated by the mujahedeen warlords' inability to set aside their tribal differences and rebuild their country. "Like so many mujahedeen," he told Ahmed Rashid, author of Taliban: Militant Islam, Oil and Fundamentalism in Central Asia, "I believed in the Taliban when they first appeared on the scene in 1994 and they promised to end the warlordism, establish law and order, and then call a Loya Jirga to decide upon who should rule Afghanistan."

"I gave the Taliban $50,000 US to help run their movement and then handed over to them a large cache of weapons I had hidden away. I met Mullah Omar several times," he said wistfully.

The Taliban originally took great pains to cultivate Mr. Karzai, going so far as to offer him the post of Taliban ambassador to the United Nations. Karzai , a moderate Muslim, initially regarded the Taliban simply as Pashtun, like himself, but he became disenchanted with Osama Bin Laden's "hosts" when he realized that they had been infiltrated by unsavory foreign elements including Pakistanis, Chechens, and—particularly—Arabs.

"By 1997 it was clear to most Afghans that the Taliban were unacceptable because Osama bin Laden was playing a leadership role in the movement. I warned the Americans many times, but who was listening—nobody," said Karzai.

Karzai, who speaks six languages, and with several brothers owns a chain of restaurants in Chicago, San Franciso, Boston and Baltimore, became the head of the Popalzoi clan in 1999 when his father was murdered by the Taliban in Quetta after returning from a mosque. Defying both Pakistan and the Taliban, Karzai showed his mettle by assembling a 300 vehicle convoy of tribal chiefs and mourners and taking his father's body from Quetta to be buried in Kandehar.

Additionally and perhaps most importantly for American strategic purposes, Karzai became convinced that the Taliban had been compromised by ISI, Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence organization. And he would be the man to know, since he himself has connections with former ISI Director Akhtar Abdur Rahman going back to the early 1980's when Karzai and his father were befriended by the ISI.

On October 8th, 2001, Karzai, like the murdered Taliban foe, nationalist Abdul Haq, reentered Afghanistan the day after the US bombing started in order to drum up support and amass tribal warriors against the Taliban. It took the United States over a month to decide to back the Afghani native son in his effort to create a new government in his country. This is, to me, quite surprising—considering that Hamid Karzai also has ties to the CIA that go all the way back to the day he met former CIA Director William Casey in Pakistan.

Hamid Karzai is the CIA's man in Afghanistan, that little country with the big problems and the back door to Pakistan, a nuclear power and perennial enemy to India. We might well pray that Hamid Karzai is as wise and as respected in that part of the world as he appears to be, for our historical record in these matters has not always been beyond reproach.



Regarding American Espionage:

George Washington, Spymaster
the first American Intelligence failure in New York
Thomas Knowlton

Wild Bill Donovan
Operation Overcast
the Stars of Project Paperclip
burning crosses in the Fatherland
doing drugs for fun and profit
the CIA wants YOU!
When is a monkey's orgasm more than just fun and games?
The Johnny Appleseed of LSD
Sidney Gottlieb, the real-life "Q"
The Nuremberg Code

The Bureau and the Mole


Taliban: Militant Islam, Oil and Fundamentalism in Central Asia, Ahmed Rashid, Yale University Press, 2001
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/south_asia/newsid_1634000/1634618.stm
http://www.geostrategy-direct.com/geostrategy-direct/
http://www.eurasianet.org
http://www.cbc.ca/news/indepth/targetterrorism/backgrounders/karzai_hamid.html

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