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Karzai orders probe into NATO killing in Afghanistan

US alarmed at 'corrupt, paranoid' Afghans: leaks
Washington (AFP) Dec 2, 2010 - The United States is exasperated at the pervasiveness of corruption in Afghanistan and President Hamid Karzai's "paranoid" view of the world, leaked cables said Thursday. The latest batch of US diplomatic correspondence obtained by the WikiLeaks website also said that the United States worried about Iran's involvement in Afghanistan including accounts Tehran is supporting Taliban insurgents. One secret US cable said that more than 190 million dollars left Kabul's airport for Dubai between July and September, the time of Karzai's re-election that triggered an international outcry over allegations of fraud.

While much of the cash may come from Afghans worried about stability, one cable said that Ahmad Zia Massoud -- a first vice president until last year and brother of slain anti-Taliban commander Ahmad Shah Massoud -- was caught entering the United Arab Emirates carrying 52 million dollars. The New York Times, which reprinted the cable, said Massoud denied any wrongdoing in an interview with the newspaper, which reported however that a Rolls-Royce was recently spotted outside his luxury house in Dubai. US Ambassador Karl Eikenberry is quoted in cables as voicing concern at the extent of corruption in Afghanistan and the mindset of Karzai, who would ask conspiracy theories about the United States weakening him or dividing Pakistan.

"Two contrasting portraits emerge. The first is of a paranoid and weak individual unfamiliar with the basics of nation building and overly self-conscious that his time in the spotlight of glowing reviews from the international community has passed," Eikenberry said in a cable shortly before the election. "The other is that of an ever-shrewd politician who sees himself as a nationalist hero who can save the country from being divided" by the United States and rivals' agenda, Eikenberry said. In another cable, Eikenberry rued how difficult it was to "fight corruption and connect the people to their government, when the key government officials are themselves corrupt." He made the remark after meeting with the president's brother Ahmad Wali Karzai, a power broker in the southern city of Kandahar who was portrayed in other leaked cables as a corrupt drugs baron.
by Staff Writers
Kabul (AFP) Dec 2, 2010
Afghan President Hamid Karzai ordered an investigation Thursday into the killing by NATO forces of a former governor in southern Afghanistan, his office said.

According to Karzai's office, troops broke into the house of Haji Ibrahim, a former district governor in the southern province of Helmand, earlier this week, killing him and arresting six members of his family.

Gulab Mangal, the Helmand governor, told Karzai preliminary investigations had revealed Ibrahim was innocent, the president's office said in a statement.

Six members of Ibrahim's family who also appeared to be "innocent" were detained, the statement said.

Karzai had ordered Mangal to open an investigation into the killing, the statement added.

Daud Ahmadi, a spokesman for the Helmand provincial administration, told AFP an investigation was already under way.

"The governor has written to the NATO forces inquiring the reason behind the killing. But so far, they have not written back," Ahmadi told AFP.

NATO's International Security Assistance force (ISAF) confirmed it carried out a raid but said it had killed an "insurgent."

"As the security force began to search the compound, an insurgent attempted to engage the force with a grenade and was killed," said an ISAF statement Monday, resent to AFP after a query.

"During the search of the compound, the security force found several men who were suspected to be insurgents. Also found in the compound were IED components and explosive detonators," it added.

ISAF did not comment on Karzai's statement.

The US-led ISAF force, currently numbering around 150,000 and based in Afghanistan to defeat a Taliban-led Islamic insurgency is usually accused of killing civilians during operations against militants.

earlier related report
US soldier gets nine months in Afghan case
Joint Base Lewis-Mcchord, Washington (AFP) Dec 1, 2010 - A US soldier was sentenced to nine months in prison Wednesday after pleading guilty to shooting at Afghan civilians.

Staff Sergeant Robert Stevens, 25, also was demoted to the rank of private but was spared discharge from the military under the sentence handed down in the first court martial linked to a rogue army unit alleged to have killed Afghans for sport.

Stevens pleaded guilty to four of the five charges against him, including shooting "in the direction of" men he knew to be civilians rather than enemy fighters.

He also admitted to wrongly having a grenade that he claims Staff Sergeant Calvin Gibbs, the alleged ringleader of the rogue soldiers, gave him near the end of last year.

As part of the plea agreement, Stevens will also now testify against other soldiers accused of more grisly crimes in Afghanistan.

A dozen soldiers face charges related to attacks on Afghan civilians earlier this year, including three murders, in which victims' bodies were alleged to have been mutilated.

All belong to the Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Division's Stryker brigade at Forward Operating Base Ramrod.

Stevens, who is not accused of murder, described the March shooting under questioning by the judge, Lieutenant Colonel Kwasi Hawks.

Stevens said that, while on patrol, the soldiers saw Afghan men in a field. "I knew they weren't a threat," he said, adding that the men were walking around in the open, not hiding from the soldiers.

But then Gibbs told Stevens and the other soldiers to prepare to fire, saying one of the men had a rocket-propelled grenade, he said. Stevens fired, but says he intentionally missed by a wide margin.

"Sergeant Gibbs then mentioned that we needed to work on our accuracy," Stevens testified. He said he later lied to army investigators about the incident, claiming that one of the Afghans had a rocket-propelled grenade, as stated by Gibbs.

"It sounds like you made a real effort to not hit them," Hawks said.

The outcome of Stevens' court martial could have a significant impact on the cases of the other accused soldiers, said Lieutenant Colonel David Frakt, a former military prosecutor.

"If the person is convicted and hammered, that would certainly incentivize the other accused to potentially try to work out a plea bargain," said Frakt, who serves in the Air Force reserves.

But Frakt noted that it is also an advantage to other defendants that Stevens' trial is happening first. "It gives them a good preview of the government's case against them."



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THE STANS
US soldier gets nine months in Afghan case
Joint Base Lewis-Mcchord, Washington (AFP) Dec 1, 2010
A US soldier was sentenced to nine months in prison Wednesday after pleading guilty to shooting at Afghan civilians. Staff Sergeant Robert Stevens, 25, also was demoted to the rank of private but was spared discharge from the military under the sentence handed down in the first court martial linked to a rogue army unit alleged to have killed Afghans for sport. Stevens pleaded guilty to f ... read more







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