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Karzai opposes US use of Afghan soil against Iran

July 15, 2008 00:00:00


KABUL, Jul 14 (Reuters): Afghanistan opposes US use of its territory for launching a possible attack against neighbouring Iran, President Hamid Karzai said in an interview broadcast Monday.

Iran has threatened to target Israel and US interests in the region in the event of an attack against the Islamic Republic which is locked in a dispute with the West over its nuclear programme.

Karzai said his government, which came to power after U.S.-led and Afghan forces overthrew the Taliban in 2001, had always tried to "keep the balance between the powers."

"We are attentive to the dangers," Karzai told Radio Liberty when asked about the possible repercussions of a conflict between Iran and the United States.

"Afghanistan should not become the battleground of differences of any country," he said in a wide-ranging interview. "Afghanistan does not want its soil to be used against any country and Afghanistan wants to be a friend of Iran as a neighbour which shares the same language and religion."

Karzai said his government had facilitated talks between Tehran and Washington, and had also served as a messenger between both in the past.

Washington, which has some 32,000 troops in Afghanistan and is the biggest aid donor to Kabul, has not ruled out military force against Iran.

Meanwhile, Karzai said foreign troops had ignored his repeated calls to coordinate operations with Afghan forces to avoid civilian casualties.

Nearly 700 Afghan civilians have been killed in the first six months of 2008, the United Nations says, 255 of them by Afghan and international forces.

"This in reality is a disaster ... many innocent people have been killed in the bombardment. For five years, routinely, I have been trying to prevent foreign forces from possibly harming our nation. Unfortunately, this effort has not had outcome I wanted, and as the nation expects," Karzai said.

Karzai brushed aside reports about a possible postponement of next year's presidential election due to rising violence.

Meanwhile, in another report from Paris adds: Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said Monday a military attack on Iran over its nuclear programme would have grave consequences for the United States, Israel and the world.

Speculation of a strike against Iran's nuclear facilities has mounted following a report that Israel staged an air force exercise which was a rehearsal for such an attack.

"It will cost the United States and the planet dear," Assad said in an interview with France Inter radio, adding that such an attack, if it occurred, would have an impact on Israel.


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