Afghan President Hamid Karzai denies that CIA cash delivered to his office each month was used to buy the support of warlords who could tip the country into another civil war. Karzai insists the cash was used for above-board purposes.
Karzai’s statement comes less than one week after The New York
Times alleged that Afghan top officials had been receiving payments
from the CIA and that some of those funds were used to bribe
warlords into supporting Karzai’s US-backed government, ahead of
NATO’s troop withdrawal next year.
While Karzai openly admitted to receiving the cash, he adamantly
denied that any of it was used to buy the loyalty of warlords.
Instead, he said the money – which was allegedly packed in
suitcases, backpacks, and plastic shopping bags – was used for such
causes as healthcare and scholarships.
"This money was not given to warlords," he told a Saturday
press conference in Kabul. "The major part of this money was
spent on government employees such as our guards...it has been paid
to individuals, not movements…we give receipts for all these
expenditures to the US government."
Karzai declined to confirm just how much money his office received
each month from the CIA, although he previously stated that the
cash was a "small amount."
“Yes, the office of the national security has been receiving
support from the United States for the past 10 years,” Karzai
said in an earlier statement. “Monthly. Not a big amount. A
small amount which has been used for various purposes.”
However, Karzai’s former and current advisers said that tens of
millions of dollars were given to the leader over the past
decade.
Despite protests in Washington and criticism from Afghan opposition
groups, Karzai asked US officials on Saturday to continue the cash
deliveries.
"Just this morning I met with the station chief of the CIA in
Kabul and I thanked him for the support given to us in the past 10
years and I asked him to continue the support," Karzai said. He
added that the money was "flowing to" Afghanistan's
intelligence agency, the National Directorate of Security.
"In the situation of Afghanistan where there is so much
need...it proves extremely helpful."
After 11 years of fighting in Afghanistan, international experts
worry that NATO’s planned 2014 pullout will leave Kabul unable to
survive a Taliban onslaught – and that Karzai’s government won’t
last without US support.
A report by a British Ministry of Defense think tank, which was
released in March, said NATO troops will leave Afghanistan in a
fragile state.
“The country will again be left with a severely damaged and very
weak economic base, heavily dependent upon external aid,” the
report said.