Despite some nonsense being posted here, Karzai has been on his way out since Obama took office. Obama has been increasingly working around Karzai, and it turns out it has been with three very specific ministers: Omar Zakhilwal, Mohammad Hanif Atmar and General Abdul Raheem Wardak, the ministers of finance, interior and defense. Obama finally tipped his hand by demanding those three participate in the whirlwind meeting in Kabul recently -- he's been working to empower them
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100328/ap_on_re_as/as_obama_afghanistan">"as a way of reducing the influence of presidential cronies."
Imagine my surprise at being right for a change. But if you'd been watching carefully, you'd have come to the same conclusion.
Unlike his predecessor, who backed Karzai unconditionally and enjoyed weekly teleconferences with him, Obama out of the gate made it clear he'd accept nothing less than complete legitimacy; when Karzai balked at the UN tossing out hundreds of thousands of fraudulent ballots cast for him in the August election, the Obama administration
told him they wouldn't send troops unless he accepted the UN's finding -- and until there was a legitimate president in power.
The move was meant to force a run-off election between Karzai and his closest challenger, Abdullah Abdullah. Didn't happen, Abdullah dropped out of the race,
http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2009-11-01-abdullah-afghan-election_N.htm">saying even the runoff would be rigged. Truth be told he was probably right.
Obama's answer was to skip Karzai's swearing-in ceremony, and send Secretary of State Clinton there instead -- to deliver a message.
http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2009/11/19/91756.html">"Build an accountable, transparent government, or else."
Karzai found ways to fire back; once a staunch ally of all things USA, he seized upon every opportunity to highlight civilian casualties in US air raids -- appointing Assadullah Wafa to head investigations into them, investigations that produced much press but zero results. I've gone into
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x7384258">great detail here about why choosing Wafa was significant in Afghanistan, where he is pretty much
the face the citizens associate with being angry with the West for their indiscriminate killing -- sheer comedy given his own history, but there it is.
Notably, despite greater numbers of civilian casualties before Obama took office, Karzai was utterly absent from any discussion of the matter until Clinton told him off.
Even Obama's decision to put off a visit to Kabul until recently was part of a diplomatic message sent to Karzai -- and when he showed up, he spent much his time talking to the three ministers, notably a
lengthy discussion with finance minister Zakhilwal about the need to build the capacity of Afghan institutions.
I said this in January:
Karzai increases his relevancy with the Afghan people every time he wags his finger at Americans. Nothing over there happens in a vacuum. He has been ratcheting up his anti-U.S. rhetoric ever since Obama's election. This is not an accident, and it won't be the last time.
...but I'll admit I hadn't exactly figured out
why at the time. The new boss, especially from Karzai's perspective, is
not the same as the old boss, and to suggest as much ignores events we've seen. Bush and Cheney were accidental or deliberate idiots in handling Afghanistan politics; Obama's team is acting like they grew up wearing pawkul hats.
I'm still taking bets for anyone who thinks Karzai will still be President by the time I'm out of summer strawberries.