Corruption tiff ruffles U.S.-Afghan relations

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President Obama, accompanied by Vice President Joe Biden (left) and Afghan President Hamid Karzai, makes a statement May 6 at the White House after meetings with Karzai and Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari. (AP file photo)
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KABUL, Afghanistan – A bribery probe involving a top adviser to President Hamid Karzai has angered the Afghan leader and threatens to damage U.S. relations with Kabul just three months after a White House visit that seemed to smooth ties at a critical stage in the war.

Instead, tensions have risen over the aide’s arrest by a U.S.-advised team, and the U.S. says it is watching the next anti-corruption steps closely.

In the days that followed, Karzai bluntly criticized U.S. war strategy and ordered private security companies in the nation to disband in four months. He also signed off on the forced retirement of a veteran corruption-fighter amid allegations by the ousted prosecutor and others that cases against high-ranking government officials were being blocked.

U.S. officials have been pressing Karzai to step up efforts to root out corruption, and he has pledged to do that. At the same time, he has pushed back, saying the international community needs to do more to eliminate corruption in its own procedures involving contractors and eliminate terrorist havens outside Afghanistan’s borders.

Uncertainty about Karzai’s commitment to combat graft and corruption comes as the last of 30,000 U.S. reinforcements arrived in Afghanistan. U.S. and NATO military officials are stressing the need to follow security gains on the battlefield with improvements in governance – and do it posthaste.

“What we are seeking to do is to encourage the development of good governance – that which serves the people rather than that which preys on the people,” said Gen. David Petraeus, the top commander of U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan.

The recent arrest of Mohammad Zia Salehi, the chief of administration for Afghanistan’s National Security Council, might have stymied that goal.

Salehi, who has not been formally charged, was arrested in July for allegedly accepting a car in exchange for his help in thwarting another corruption case involving a company that handles huge money transfers worldwide.

Outraged by the arrest, Karzai intervened and ordered his release. Western law enforcement officials who advised on the case said investigators followed Afghan law in taking Salehi into custody for questioning.

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