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Karzai Says U.S. Wants to Keep Nine Bases in Afghanistan

Afghan President Hamid Karzai vowed Thursday to wring concessions from the United States in negotiations to sign a security pact, saying Washington wanted to retain nine military bases in the country.

After more than 11 years of U.S.-led military intervention in Afghanistan, the two countries are hammering out a deal to allow a limited U.S. troop presence to remain after the international coalition leaves next year.

The size of the "residual" force has not been agreed, with numbers ranging from 2,500 to 12,000, according to U.S. officials, as Washington winds down a war that has become deeply unpopular at home.

Soldiers kept in Afghanistan would target al-Qaida militants and help train the local army and police -- but a hasty withdrawal could also threaten fragile gains secured since the Taliban were ousted in 2001.

"We are in very serious and delicate negotiations with America," Karzai said. "America has got its demands, Afghanistan too has its own demands, and its own interests... They want nine bases across Afghanistan.

"Our conditions are that the U.S. intensify efforts in the peace process, strengthen Afghanistan's security forces, provide concrete support to the economy -- power, roads and dams -- and provide assistance in governance.

"If these are met, we are ready to sign the security pact," he told the audience during a speech at Kabul University.

U.S. officials have reportedly said that if 6,000 troops were kept in Afghanistan after 2014, only two bases, in Kabul and at Bagram airfield, would be maintained.

Source: Agence France Presse


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