CIA is undermining British
war effort, say military chiefs
Confidential report speaks of 'serious tensions' in the
coalition over strategy in Iraq and Afghanistan
By Robert Fox
12/10/06 "The
Independent" -- - - British intelligence
officers and military commanders have accused the US of
undermining British policies in Iraq and Afghanistan,
after the sacking of a key British ally in the Afghan
province of Helmand.
British sources have blamed pressure from the CIA for
President Hamid Karzai's decision to dismiss Mohammed
Daud as governor of Helmand, the southern province where
Britain deployed some 4,000 troops this year. Governor
Daud was appointed in mid-year to replace a man the
British accused of involvement in opium trafficking, but
on Thursday Mr Karzai summoned him to Kabul and sacked
him, along with his deputy.
"The Americans knew Daud was a main British ally," one
official told The Independent on Sunday, "yet they
deliberately undermined him and told Karzai to sack
him." The official said the Defence Secretary, Des
Browne, was "tearing his hair out".
Meanwhile, a confidential assessment of the situation in
Iraq, seen by the IoS, has reported "serious tensions"
in the American-British coalition. American commanders
in the country are believed to oppose the British
strategy for handing over Maysan and Basra provinces to
Iraqi control as part of an exit strategy.
The disclosures come only days after differences between
the US and Britain were on display during Tony Blair's
visit to Washington, and the Iraq Study Group issued a
report containing withering criticism of President
George Bush's policies. With British commanders warning
that they may not be able to succeed in Afghanistan
unless forces in Iraq are drawn down, cracks in the
transatlantic alliance are likely to widen.
The disagreements have come into the open after the
summary sacking of Britain's protégé, Governor Daud.
Although rival delegations from Helmand were in Kabul
last week, one calling for his removal and the other
demanding that he stay, a diplomatic source said Mr
Karzai had listened to advice from "other powerful
Western players".
Mr Daud, who had survived several Taliban assassination
attempts, was seen as a key player in Britain's
anti-drugs campaign in Helmand. He was also the
architect of a deal under which British forces moved out
of the town of Musa Qala, where they had been involved
in fierce combat with Taliban fighters. But the
Americans publicly criticised truces in Musa Qala and
other Helmand towns, saying they effectively gave in to
the Taliban.
A British diplomatic source said yesterday: "We backed
Mohammed Daud because he was an honest man and a
progressive man, so obviously this is very
disappointing. However, it is also true that he was
under tremendous pressure and his position was getting
weakened. Where does this leave our policy? Well, we
shall have to wait and see."
The British commander of the Nato force in Afghanistan,
Lieutenant-General David Richards, has also come in for
American criticism as "too political". The American
supreme commander of Nato, General Jim Jones, has let it
be known, according to sources, that General Richards
"would have been sacked if he had been an American
officer".
General Richards, for his part, has been frustrated that
his call for extra Nato troops to form a strategic
fighting reserve has been largely unheeded.
While the tensions between Britain and the US have burst
into the open in Afghanistan, they have been simmering
in Iraq. The confidential assessment of the situation
there says American commanders want the British to be
far more robust in confronting Shia militias in the
south.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited
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