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U.S. shames Afghan leaders' obstinance as pandemic looms

Rift between President Ashraf Ghani and former Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah — both linked to warlords — put a pall over the deal since its signing.
Image: An Afghan health worker measures the temperature of Afghan passengers in an effort to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, as they enter Kabul trough Kabul's western entrance gate, in the Paghman district of Kabul
A health worker measures the temperature of citizens in an effort to prevent the spread of the coronavirus at Kabul's western entrance gate on Sunday. Rahmat Gul / AP

KABUL, Afghanistan — Washington's unprecedented threat to cut $1 billion in Afghanistan funding — a response to the refusal of rivals in Kabul to work together to advance peace — comes at a time when the impoverished nation risks being overwhelmed by the coronavirus pandemic.

On Tuesday both President Ashraf Ghani and his rival, former Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah, blamed one another for failing to resolve the feuding, which prompted Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to threaten the massive funding cut.

Pompeo called out the two leaders as he ended a rushed visit to Afghanistan on Monday, defying a near-global travel ban because of the virus. He left Kabul without being able to secure a power-sharing deal.

Ghani told the nation in a televised address that Abdullah's power-sharing demands were unconstitutional. For his part, Abdullah said Pompeo's visit was a missed opportunity.

Pompeo said the Trump administration would slash $1 billion in assistance to Afghanistan and reduce all cooperation unless Ghani and Abdullah agree on forming a new government. Speaking to reporters aboard his plane on the return flight home, Pompeo said he was hopeful the two rivals “will get their act together and we won’t have to” cut the assistance. “But we’re prepared to do that,” he said.

Earlier, he said Ghani and Abdullah's “leadership failure poses a direct threat to U.S. national interests." Apart from reducing assistance by $1 billion this year, another $1 billion will be cut in 2021 if the bickering continued, Pompeo said.

Ghani seemed unphased, though his government covers barely 25 percent of its budget, according to John Sopko, the U.S. Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction. More than 75 percent of all expenses, including the running of government ministries, is covered by the international community.

Sopko's regular reports have also criticized the Afghan government for widespread corruption and Transparency International has ranked Afghanistan among the most corrupt at 173 out of 180 countries. The United States alone pays $4 billion annually toward Afghanistan's security forces.

“I can assure you that the reduction of the U.S. assistance would not have a direct impact on the system,” Ghani said in his speech.

From Kabul, Pompeo flew to the Persian Gulf to meet with a leader of the Taliban, the Afghan insurgent group that last month signed a peace deal with the U.S. as a first step toward withdrawing American troops from Afghanistan by mid-2021.

As part of the deal, rival factions in Afghanistan were to come together in all-Afghan talks about shaping the country's future. However, Washington made clear from the start that the pace of a U.S. troop withdrawal is linked to the Taliban clamping down on terror groups and aiding in the fight against the militant Islamic State group — not on the success of intra-Afghan talks.

Image: Afghanistan's President Ashraf Ghani poses for a picture with US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo during their meeting in Kabul
President Ashraf Ghani poses for a picture with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo during their meeting in Kabul on Monday.Press Office of President of Afghanistan / AFP - Getty Images

Ghani and Abdullah, his main rival in last September's disputed presidential polls, have been waging a bitter power struggle that has seen both men declare themselves president in competing inauguration ceremonies earlier this month.

After meeting the chief Taliban negotiator Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar in Qatar, Pompeo told reporters he was satisfied the Taliban were keeping their side of the deal, had reduced violence and were ready to start negotiations with the leadership in Kabul.

In an English-language statement Tuesday, the Taliban said Baradar's meeting with Pompeo stressed that only a strict implementation of the peace deal would “pave the way for intra-Afghan negotiations along with enduring peace and cease-fire, including a future Islamic government in accordance with the agreement.”

The statement also said Pompeo assured the Taliban that the U.S. forces' withdrawal “will continue in accordance with the declared timetable.”

The squabbling between Ghani and Abdullah — both linked to powerful warlords, all with heavily armed militias — put a pall over the deal since its signing on Feb. 29.

Ghani has also refused to release 5,000 Taliban prisoners the deal promised would be freed as a good-will gesture ahead of intra-Afghan talks. Separately, the Taliban were to free 1,000 Afghan officials and military personnel they hold captive.