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Afghanistan hasn't fully dropped off the radar
Published August 8, 2007 at midnight
The Afghan government can be forgiven for feeling the United States might have forgotten about it, and its leaders may have mixed feelings about being recently rediscovered.
President Bush accorded Afghan President Hamid Karzai the image-building accolade of a two-day visit to Camp David. The visit is also intended to reinforce Karzai's standing as a key U.S. ally in advance of a meeting between himself and senior tribal leaders and Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf.
The question of Pakistan raised a point of contention between Bush and Karzai, who believes Musharraf has been sitting on his hands while Taliban forces conduct cross-border raids and al-Qaida bides its time waiting to return to its old sanctuary.
Bush might privately share Karzai's concern, but Musharraf is an important if uncertain U.S. ally with a weakening grip on power.
Another area of disagreement is Iran. Karzai described relations with Iran as "very, very good, very, very close" and Iran itself as "a helper and a solution."
This is decidedly not Bush's view. But when the president was asked he diplomatically replied that Karzai "knows best about what's taking place in his country, and, of course, I'm willing to listen."
The visit did serve to show that Afghanistan has not completely fallen off the Bush administration's list of priorities.
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