TIME: Kabul: Tense Moments
on the Palace Grounds
Monday, October 07, 2002
By MICHAEL WARE
The Special Forces soldiers assigned to protect
president Hamid Karzai in Afghanistan have learned to
trust no one. That lesson was made abundantly clear
when a gunman dressed as a soldier in the newly formed
Afghan army attempted to assassinate their charge in
early September. It's not hard to imagine how a recent
altercation between Special Forces and Afghan
government troops nearly erupted into a bloody melee
inside the Presidential Palace grounds — a
confrontation that says a lot about the future of the
American presence in Afghanistan.
On September 30 just after 8:00 am, one of Kabul's top
generals, Bismillah Khan, commander of the city's
garrison and a deputy to the defense minister, arrived
at the Presidential Palace to meet one of the former
king's advisers. The general and his bodyguard glided
past an Afghan army checkpoint at the visitors' gate
only to be stopped forty yards later by U.S. soldiers
assigned to protect Karzai. The Americans wanted to
search the car and the general, but Khan refused. When
the U.S. soldiers attempted to physically remove him
from the car, fifteen Kandahari mujahedin (bodyguards
for the former king) cocked their weapons and took aim
at the Special Forces. The other Afghan government
troops followed. "It was one of those times when you
realize a minute is actually sixty seconds, and that
can be an awfully long time," Hayatullah Diani, a
royalist official, told TIME. "I thought they were
going to start killing each other."
Before the scene turned bloody, members of Karzai's
office appeared and negotiations began. Khan was
released and the Afghan troops lowered their weapons.
What had flared in just seconds was over in minutes.
Had violence erupted the consequences would have been
catastrophic, ripping open divisions within the new
government and unsettling allegiances with factions
already feeling sidelined in the new order. The near
miss also demonstrates just how delicate a balance the
U.S. faces in Afghanistan between appearing as a force
of safety for some and source of agitation to so many
others.
The incident comes at a precarious time as Washington
seeks a deeper engagement in the country, stepping up
from combat missions to take on the complexities of
nation building. That has meant supporting a relatively
isolated president while pacifying, or at least
deterring, his rivals. Building up Karzai is seen to
have come at the expense of America's allies against
the Taliban, the Northern Alliance, which dominates
much of the government.
One of the biggest sources of friction comes from the
creation of the Afghan National Army, a U.S.- and
French-trained force to be commanded by the president,
not the defense minister. Weapons, munitions and gear
are being flown into a U.S. airbase north of Kabul,
unloaded onto Special Forces convoys and distributed
directly to the ANA. Already feeling threatened by
Washington's support for Karzai, last week's incident
has cemented the Northern Alliance's view of itself as
a forgotten partner. But the U.S. military is making no
apologies. "President Karzai's personal security team
will continue to exercise the level of control
necessary to ensure the physical security of the
President," Central Command spokesman Col. Ray Shepherd
told TIME from Tampa, Fl.
In the days since the showdown key Northern Alliance
leaders have become vitriolic. "We're asking ourselves
is this an Afghan palace or an American palace?" a
senior general says. Western diplomats in Kabul are
waiting to assess the fallout. "I can't gauge yet
whether this is a very very serious thing or whether it
will pass as just something that happened," says one.
General Sharif's reaction is not heartening. "The U.S.
has turned its back on us," he says, "So let me tell
you something: the Russians helped the Vietnamese
defeat America, then the Americans helped the Afghans
beat Russia, and now is the time again for the
Russians. America should not try to step forward here
in Afghanistan."
Trouble is, that is precisely what Washington intends
to do.