US’s Pelosi calls Afghan Karzai “unworthy partner”

Pelosi, a skeptic on sending more troops to Afghanistan,  also said in an interview with National Public Radio aired yesterday that there was not strong support among her fellow  Democrats in Congress for “any big ramp-up of troops” to oppose  resurgent Taliban forces.

She told NPR she had asked fellow Democrats to give  President Barack Obama room to decide his Afghan strategy,  which is expected to be announced in the coming weeks. Once  Obama, also a Democrat, announces his decision, lawmakers would  “not be shy” about responding, she said.

“The president of Afghanistan has proven to be an unworthy  partner. We cannot fund a mission where we don’t have a  reliable partner and where whatever civilian investments we  want to make, which are so necessary, will be diverted for a  corrupt purpose,” Pelosi told NPR News’ Morning Edition.

“How can we ask the American people to pay a big price in  lives and limbs and also in dollars if we don’t have a  connection to a reliable partner?”

Pelosi’s comments came a day after Karzai was sworn in for  his second five-year term. He has faced tough pressure from  Western leaders to clamp down on widespread corruption and  replace former guerrilla leaders and cronies with able  technocrats in his new government.
In his inauguration speech, Karzai said he wanted Afghan  forces to take the lead from foreign forces in securing the  whole country in five years. There are about 110,000 foreign  troops, including 68,000 U.S. soldiers, in Afghanistan.

Obama is weighing whether to send up to 40,000 more U.S.  troops that his top commander in Afghanistan, Army General  Stanley McChrystal, says is needed to quell the strengthening  insurgency.