Afghan leaders support US deal
AFGHAN political and community leaders support the idea of a strategic partnership deal that will govern Afghanistan's relationship with the United States, they said yesterday, but with caveats that could prove tough obstacles to surmount.
A declaration made after a meeting of around 2,000 delegates said they wanted foreign troops to stop carrying out night raids -- one of the most hated military tactics in Afghanistan - and that they opposed the idea of a permanent American military presence in the country.
The four-day meeting in the capital city Kabul, known as a loya jirga, or grand assembly, is not a lawmaking body, but its participants have discussed some sensitive subjects: the scope of a US military presence after 2014 and the idea of peace talks with the Taliban.
"Your declaration ... was comprehensive and acceptable," Afghan President Hamid Karzai told the jirga after the declaration was read.
The strategic partnership agreement, which Washington and Kabul are still negotiating, will be the framework for US involvement in Afghanistan beyond 2014, when the last foreign combat troops are due to leave Afghanistan.
"All conditions and suggestions you proposed were for the national interest. The Afghan defense and interior ministers must come up with a plan so that we fund our own troops in the long term. Foreigners are not going to give money forever," Karzai said in a brief closing address.
While foreign combat troops must leave Afghanistan by the end of 2014, there will still be an international military presence with Western experts continuing to train Afghan security forces.
A declaration made after a meeting of around 2,000 delegates said they wanted foreign troops to stop carrying out night raids -- one of the most hated military tactics in Afghanistan - and that they opposed the idea of a permanent American military presence in the country.
The four-day meeting in the capital city Kabul, known as a loya jirga, or grand assembly, is not a lawmaking body, but its participants have discussed some sensitive subjects: the scope of a US military presence after 2014 and the idea of peace talks with the Taliban.
"Your declaration ... was comprehensive and acceptable," Afghan President Hamid Karzai told the jirga after the declaration was read.
The strategic partnership agreement, which Washington and Kabul are still negotiating, will be the framework for US involvement in Afghanistan beyond 2014, when the last foreign combat troops are due to leave Afghanistan.
"All conditions and suggestions you proposed were for the national interest. The Afghan defense and interior ministers must come up with a plan so that we fund our own troops in the long term. Foreigners are not going to give money forever," Karzai said in a brief closing address.
While foreign combat troops must leave Afghanistan by the end of 2014, there will still be an international military presence with Western experts continuing to train Afghan security forces.
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