US-Afghan Strategic Partnership

An important topic which will shape the future of the region:Highlights of US-Afghanistan strategic partnership deal signed by Obama and Karzai - The Washington Post

Highlights of the strategic partnership agreement signed by President Barack Obama and Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai outlining the relationship between their countries after the U.S.-led war ends in 2014:

— U.S. commits to support Afghanistan’s social and economic development, security, institutions and regional cooperation for 10 years, through 2024.

— Afghanistan commits to strengthen government accountability, transparency and oversight, and to protect the human rights of all Afghans, both men and women.

— U.S. does not seek permanent military bases in Afghanistan, but Afghanistan will provide U.S. personnel access to and use of Afghan facilities beyond 2014.

— Allows U.S. possibility of keeping forces in Afghanistan after 2014 for purposes of training Afghan forces and targeting al-Qaida.

— Does not commit the U.S. to any specific troop levels or funding levels in the future, an acknowledgement that those decisions will be made in consultation with Congress.

— Commits the U.S. to seek funding from Congress on an annual basis to support the Afghan Security Forces, as well as for social and economic assistance.

— Designates Afghanistan as a “major non-NATO ally” of the U.S. to provide a long-term framework for security and defense cooperation.

— Requires written notification by either side to amend or terminate the agreement, which would take effect a year after that notification, and establishes that it may be renewed by mutual agreement in 2024.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Re: US-Afghan Strategic Partnership

It seems as if the war will still continue after 2014, the Americans will remove most of their troops but some will stay behind for “training purposes” (we know what the trainers do in Pakistan). Anyways the controversial drone strikes as well as night raids in Afghanistan will continue even after 2014.

Asia Times Online :: US-Afghan pact won’t end war - or night raids

WASHINGTON - The optics surrounding the Barack Obama administration’s “Enduring Strategic Partnership” agreement with Afghanistan and the memorandums of understanding (MoUs) accompanying it emphasize transition to Afghan responsibility and an end to US war.

**But the only substantive agreement reached between the US and Afghanistan - well hidden in the agreements - has been to allow powerful US Special Operations Forces (SOF) to continue to carry out the unilateral night raids on private homes that are universally hated in the Pashtun zones of Afghanistan.
**
The presentation of the new agreement on a surprise trip by Obama to Afghanistan, with a prime-time presidential address and repeated briefings for the press, allows Obama to go into a tight presidential election campaign on a platform of ending an unpopular US war in Afghanistan.

It also allows President Hamid Karzai to claim he has gotten control over the SOF night raids while getting a 10-year commitment of US economic support.

**But the actual text of the agreement and of the MoU on night raids included in it by reference will not end the US war in Afghanistan, nor will they give Karzai control over night raids.
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**The Obama administration’s success in obscuring those facts is the real story behind the ostensible story of the agreement.
**
**Obama’s decisions on how many US troops will remain in Afghanistan in 2014 and beyond and what their mission will be will only be made in a “Bilateral Security Agreement” still to be negotiated. **Although the senior officials did not provide any specific information about those negotiations in their briefings for news media, the Strategic Partnership text specifies that they are to begin the signing of the present agreement “with the goal of concluding within one year”.

That means Obama does not have to announce any decisions about stationing of US forces in Afghanistan before the 2012 presidential election, allowing him to emphasize that he is getting out of Afghanistan and sidestep the question of a long-term commitment of troops in Afghanistan.

The Bilateral Security Agreement will supersede the 2003 “Status of Forces” agreement with Afghanistan, according to the text. That agreement gives US troops in Afghanistan immunity from prosecution and imposes no limitations on US forces in regard to military bases or operations.

Last month’s MoU on night raids was forced on the US by Karzai’s repeated threat to refuse to sign a partnership agreement unless the US gave his government control over any raids on people’s homes. Karzai’s insistence on ending US unilateral night raids and detention of Afghans had held up the agreement on Strategic Partnership for months.

But Karzai’s demand put him in direct conflict with the interests of one of the most influential elements of the US military: the SOF. Under General Stanley A McChrystal and General David Petraeus, US war strategy in Afghanistan came to depend heavily on the purported effectiveness of night raids carried out by SOF units in weakening the Taliban insurgency.

**Central Command (CENTCOM) officials refused to go along with ending the night raids or giving the Afghan government control over them, as Inter Press Service (IPS) reported in February (seeKarzai demand on raids snags US pact, Asia Times Online, Feb 22, 2012).
**
The two sides tried for weeks to craft an agreement that Karzai could cite as meeting his demand but that would actually change very little.

In the end, however, it was Karzai who had to give in. What was done to disguise that fact represents a new level of ingenuity in misrepresenting the actual significance of an international agreement involving US military operations.

The MoU was covered by cable news as a sea change in the conduct of military operations. CNN, for example, called it a “landmark deal” that “affords Afghan authorities an effective veto over controversial special operations raids”.

But a closer reading of the text of the MoU as well as comments on by US military officials indicate that it represents little, if any, substantive change from the status quo.

The agreement was negotiated between the US military command in Kabul and Afghan Ministry of Defense, and lawyers for the US military introduced a key provision that fundamentally changed the significance of the rest of the text.

In the first paragraph under the definition of terms, the MoU says, “For the purpose of this Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), special operations are operations approved by the Afghan Operational Coordination Group and conducted by Afghan Forces with support from US Forces in accordance with Afghan laws.”

That carefully crafted sentence means that the only night raids covered by the MoU are those that the SOF commander responsible for US night raids decides to bring to the Afghan government. Those raids carried out by US units without consultation with the Afghan government fall outside the MoU.

Coverage of the MoU by major news media suggesting that the participation of US SOF units would depend on the Afghan government simply ignored that provision in the text.

**But Pentagon spokesman John Kirby told reporters flatly on April 9 that Karzai would not have a veto over night raids. “It’s not about the US ceding responsibility to the Afghans,” he said. **

Kirby would not comment on whether those SOF units which operated independently of Afghan units would be affected by the MoU, thus confirming by implication that they would not.

Kirby explained that the agreement had merely “codified” what had already been done since December 2011, which was that Afghan Special Forces were in the lead on most night raids. That meant that they would undertake searches within the compound.

The US forces have continued, however, to capture or kill Afghans in those raids.

The disparity between the reality of the agreement and the optics created by administration press briefings recalls Obama’s declarations in 2009 and 2010 on the withdrawal of US combat troops from Iraq and an end to the US war there, and the reality that combat units remained in Iraq and continued to fight long after the September 1, 2010, deadline Obama he had set for withdrawal had passed.

Fifty-eight US servicemen were killed in Iraq after that deadline in 2010 and 2011.

But there is a fundamental difference between the two exercises in shaping media coverage and public perceptions: the Iraq withdrawal agreement of 2008 made it politically difficult, if not impossible, for the Iraqi government to keep US troops in Iraq beyond 2011.

In the case of Afghanistan, however, the agreements just signed impose no such constraints on the US military. And although Obama is touting a policy of ending the US war in Afghanistan, the US military and the Pentagon have public said they expect to maintain thousands of SOF troops in Afghanistan for many years after 2014.

**Obama had hoped to lure the Taliban leadership into peace talks that would make it easier to sell the idea that he is getting out of Afghanistan while continuing the war. But the Taliban didn’t cooperate.
**
Obama’s Kabul speech could not threaten that US SOF units will continue to hunt them down in their homes until they agree to make peace with Karzai. That would have given away the secret still hidden in the US-Afghan “Enduring Strategic Partnership” agreement.

**But Obama must assume that the Taliban understand what the US public does not: US night raids will continue well beyond 2014, despite the fact that they ensure enduring hatred of US and North Atlantic Treaty Organization troops.
**
*Gareth Porter is an investigative historian and journalist specializing in US national security policy. The paperback edition of his latest book, Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam, *was published in 2006.

(Inter Press Service)**

Re: US-Afghan Strategic Partnership

US drones could strike even after 2014 - thenews.com.pk

KABUL: The pact between the United States and Afghanistan could leave the door open for continued drone strikes against insurgent targets in Pakistan after 2014, U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker indicated Wednesday.

“There is nothing in this agreement that precludes the right of self-defense for either party and if there are attacks from the territory of any state aimed at us we have the inherent right of self defense and will employ it,” he said.

Crocker was responding to a question about controversial drone strikes on Taliban and Al-Qaeda targets in Pakistan at a briefing on the deal signed in Kabul overnight by U.S. President Barack Obama and Afghan leader Hamid Karzai.

The Strategic Partnership Agreement states that the United States will not use its presence in Afghanistan to launch offensive actions against other states from Afghan soil.

However, it does say that in the event of threats to Afghanistan the two countries would consult on an appropriate response.

“This is defensive in nature, not offensive, doesn’t threaten any one, but I hope the region takes notice,” Crocker said.

US officials are loath to discuss the secretive CIA program, the source of sharp tensions between Washington and Islamabad. Drones have killed scores of what the U.S. government says are Al-Qaeda suspects in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Yemen.

This week, Obama aide John Brennan insisted that the missile strikes were legal, ethical, proportional and saved U.S. lives.

On Tuesday, the Pentagon warned that insurgent sanctuaries in Pakistan and corruption posed “long-term and acute challenges” to security in Afghanistan.

Crocker urged Pakistan to take action against safe havens and prevent cross-border attacks by the Taliban.

“I hope Pakistanis will take a look at this agreement and say ‘Wow, the Americans are not going to cut and run this time. We don’t need to hedge our bets, we don’t need to put up with these guys any longer’ and either take control of them or press them into the reconciliation process.” (AFP)