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Hamid Karzai

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Hamid Karzai
حامد کرزي
Image:Hamid Karzai 2006-09-26.jpg

Incumbent
Assumed office 
22 December 2001
Vice President Ahmad Zia Massoud
Karim Khalili
Preceded by Burhanuddin Rabbani

Born 24 December 1957 (1957-12-24) (age 51)
Kandahar, Afghanistan
Political party Independent
Spouse Zeenat Karzai
Religion Sunni Muslim

Hamid Karzai (Persian: حامد کرزى and Pashto: حامد کرزي) (b. 24 December 1957) is the current President of Afghanistan, since 07 December 2004. He became a prominent political figure after the removal of the Taliban regime in late 2001. From December 2001, Hamid Karzai had been the Chairman of the Transitional Administration followed by the Interim President from 2002 until he won the 2004 Presidential election of Afghanistan.

Contents

Early years and personal life

Hamid Karzai, an ethnic Pashtun of the Popalzai clan of the Durrani tribe, was born in Kandahar, Afghanistan. He comes from a family that were strong supporters of the former king, Zahir Shah. He has six brothers and one sister. Karzai is well-versed in several languages, including Pashto, Persian, Urdu, Hindi, English and French.[1]

From 1979 to 1983, Karzai took a postgraduate course in political science at Himachal Pradesh University in Shimla, Himachal Pradesh, India. He then returned to work as a fund-raiser by supporting anti-Soviet Mujahideen in Afghanistan during the Soviet intervention for the rest of the 1980s. After the fall of Najibullah's Soviet-backed government in 1992, he served as Deputy Foreign Minister in the government of Burhanuddin Rabbani.

In 1999, Hamid Karzai married Zeenat Karzai, an obstetrician by profession who was working as a doctor with Afghan refugees living in Pakistan. They have a son named Mirwais, who was born on January 25th, 2007.[2]. Karzai is known for his trademark Karakul hat, which is made from the skin and fur of aborted lamb fetuses.[3][4][5][6]

Involvement in the Soviet war in Afghanistan

Karzai was a member of the Mujahideen and took active part in driving the Soviets out of Afghanistan during the Soviet invasion in the 1980s. The Mujahideen were secretly supplied and funded by the United States, and Karzai was a top contact for the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) at the time. He had close personal contact with CIA Director William Casey and George H. W. Bush, who was Vice President of the United States.[citation needed] Karzai and his brothers later immigrated to the U.S. under CIA protection, where Karzai continued to work with the US government and to prepare for further developments in Afghanistan.[citation needed]

Taliban supporter

Image:Hamid Karzai 150.jpg
Hamid Karzai in 2003, with a longer beard and his traditional turban.

When the Taliban emerged in the 1990s, Karzai was at first one of their supporters but later he broke with them and refused to serve as their U.N. ambassador. However on August 20, 1998, after an attempt by the United States to kill Osama bin Laden with a cruise missile, Karzai praised the Taliban saying,

...there were many wonderful people in the Taliban.[7]

He lived in exile in Quetta, in Pakistan where he worked to reinstate the Afghan king, Zahir Shah. His father was assassinated, presumably by Taliban agents, on July 14 1999, and Karzai swore revenge against the Taliban by working to help overthrow them.[citation needed] In 2001, Hamid Karzai worked closely with the Ahmad Shah Massoud to help gather support for the anti-Taliban movement.

On February 11, 2005, in an interview with the Oxford International Review, Karzai criticizes the role the U.S. played in empowering the Taliban to take control in Afghanistan. He claims he spent many years before the 9/11 attacks warning embassies about the threat, but the West failed to respond, an act of “neglect, selfishness and short-sightedness." While he highlights the key role the United States and other donors have played in rebuilding and developing Afghanistan, his tone is not without bitterness.

It’s just that we could have done all this before September 11th. We could have had these improvements here and the Twin Towers...We could have stopped terrorism before it reached you.
 
— Hamid Karzai

Chairman to Interim President

In the months following the September 11, 2001 attacks, Mujahideen loyal to the Northern Alliance worked with the United States to overthrow the Taliban in Afghanistan and muster support for a new government. In December 2001, Hamid Karzai and his group survived an American "friendly fire" missile attack in southern Afghanistan. The group received injuries and were treated in the United States, Karzai received injuries to his facial nerves. Later in the month political leaders gathered in Bonn, Germany, to agree on new leadership structures. Under the December 5 Bonn Agreement they formed an interim Transitional Administration and named Karzai Chairman of a 29-member governing committee. He was sworn-in as leader on December 22. The Loya Jirga of June 19 2002 appointed Karzai Interim holder of the new position as President of the Afghan Transitional Administration.

Image:Hamid Karzai at the US Congress on Capitol Hill.jpg
Hamid Karzai as Interim President in June 2004 being applauded by politicians at the United States Congress in Washington, D.C.

After being installed into power Karzai's actual authority outside the capital city of Kabul was said to be so limited that he was often derided as the "Mayor of Kabul". Former members of the Northern Alliance remained extremely influential, most notably Vice President Mohammed Fahim, who also served as Defense Minister.

In 2004 he rejected a US proposal to end poppy production in Afghanistan through aerial spraying of chemical herbicides, fearing that it will harm the economic situation of his country men. Moreover, Karzai's younger brother, Ahmed Wali Karzai, who partially helped finance Karzai's presidential campaign, is rumored to be involved in the drug trade[8] (although Karzai's family were quite wealthy already from owning well established restaurants in the United States.[9][10][11]) The situation was particularly delicate since Karzai and his administration have not been equipped either financially or politically to influence reforms outside of the region around the capital city of Kabul. Other areas, particularly the more remote ones, are currently and have historically been under the influence of various local leaders. Karzai has been, to varying degrees of success, attempting to negotiate and form amicable alliances with them for the benefit of Afghanistan as a whole, instead of aggressively fighting them and risking an uprising.

Assassination attempts

Karzai in early 2003, wearing his traditional clothes and a karakul hat.
Karzai in early 2003, wearing his traditional clothes and a karakul hat.
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