KABUL The Afghan government demanded clarification from Washington on Tuesday after President Donald Trump said that the country would be wiped off the face of the Earth if he decided to win the conflict there.
Trump made his remarks at the White House ahead of a meeting with Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan on Monday in which he sought to mend ties with Islamabad and seek its help to end the war in Afghanistan, the longest and most unpopular conflict in US history.
I could win that war in a week. I just dont want to kill 10 million people, Trump said, referring to what he claimed were prepared military plans in Afghanistan.
If I wanted to win that war, Afghanistan would be wiped off the face of the Earth, it would be gone, it would be over in literally 10 days.
The US leaders comments could be a blow for President Ashraf Ghanis government, which signed a security pact with Washington in late 2014 allowing US-led troops to stay in Afghanistan and, in 2017, hailed the US after it dropped the worlds largest non-nuclear bomb in the east of the country.
Trumps remarks come amid rising violence in Afghanistan, which has claimed the lives of hundreds of Taliban, government troops and civilians in recent months. Many Afghans are asking why the worlds leading superpower has failed to defeat the insurgents 18 years after the ouster of the Taliban regime.
“Trumps comments highlight Washingtons failure to defeat the Taliban in Afghanistan- Political analyst Wahidullah Ghazikhail
The Afghan government, which relies heavily on US troops and funding in the war against the Taliban, has sought official clarification over Trumps comments.
Our partnership and cooperation with the world, and in particular with the US, is based on mutual interest and respect, a statement issued by the presidential palace said on Tuesday.
The Afghan nation has never allowed and will not permit any foreign power to choose its destiny, it added.
Many Afghans, including former government officials, reacted angrily to Trumps comments.
Rahmatullah Nabil, a presidential candidate who served as Afghanistans spy chief, said in a tweet that Trumps comments should prompt Afghan leaders to set aside their differences.
In reply to the insults of #Afg by @realDonalTrump, all Afg politicians, including Ashraf Ghani and Taliban leaders, should drop their selfishness and announce that we will make peace among ourselves & there is no need for mediation for US/Pak, he said.
Modaser Islami, a leading Afghan religious scholar, said that Trumps remarks showed hostility toward Afghans and questioned if Trump was fighting the Taliban, as terrorists or as Afghans? His recent remarks show he is enemy of latter.
Veteran journalist Bilal Sarwary described the comments as offensive, stupid and arrogant, while another senior journalist called the remarks an insult to the entire Afghan nation.
Political analyst Wahidullah Ghazikhail told Arab News that Trumps comments highlight Washingtons failure to defeat the Taliban in Afghanistan.
Obviously, the US wants to strike a deal with the Taliban and Pakistans role is key in the peace process, he said.
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