WASHINGTON — Afghan President Hamid Karzai walked among the graves of U.S. servicemen and -women who gave their lives in the war in his country.
Karzai strolled slowly today among the tombstones at Arlington National Cemetery’s Section 60 — often called “the saddest acre in America,” and the resting place for military killed in Afghanistan as well as Iraq, Vietnam, World War II and other conflicts.
The visiting Afghan leader earlier this week came face-to-face with another painful American sacrifice made in the war in his country.
He went to Walter Reed Army Medical Center, where he visited wounded troops, some who had multiple limbs amputated in a war where homemade explosives are the single most deadly insurgent weapon.
Karzai was wrapping up a four-day visit to Washington, D.C., with a televised give-and-take with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton.
The Obama administration has done its best to repair strained relations with the Afghan leader, its partner in the war against militants in Afghanistan.
After a Capitol Hill lunch hosted by Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry, D-Mass., Karzai was to appear with Clinton at the U.S. Institute of Peace for what was billed as a “moderated discussion.” They were expected to talk about the ups and downs of the relationship and the way ahead.
Karzai leaves Washington on Friday. Before heading back to Kabul he is expected to visit Fort Campbell, Ky., home of the 101st Airborne Division, which is going to Afghanistan over the next several weeks, according to U.S. and Afghan officials.
Today’s events in Washington cap a series of meetings aimed at ending months of sniping and frustration over management of the war and fraud surrounding Karzai’s re-election last year. Both Obama and Karzai said at the White House on Wednesday that such disagreements are normal with so much at stake.
“There are moments when we speak frankly to each other, and that frankness will only contribute to the strength of the relationship,” Karzai said at a joint news conference with Obama.
Despite noting gains that have been made since he ordered thousands of additional U.S. troops into Afghanistan, Obama said the war will get worse before it gets better. He stressed, though, that his plan to begin withdrawing U.S. forces next summer remains on track.
“What I’ve tried to emphasize is the fact that there is going to be some hard fighting over the next several months,” Obama said.
He spoke as the U.S.-led force in Afghanistan readies to push hard into the Taliban’s birthplace in Kandahar Province in June. The campaign for Kandahar, already under way in districts outside the city, is expected to be among the bloodiest of the nearly nine-year-old war.
In his meetings with U.S. officials, including Clinton and Defense Secretary Robert Gates, Karzai repeatedly has called for the U.S. to respect Afghanistan’s sovereignty and has expressed frustration with operations that have killed innocent bystanders.
Obama said Wednesday that the U.S. has taken “extraordinary measures” to avoid civilian deaths in the war. “I do not want civilians killed,” Obama said, adding that he ultimately is accountable when they are.
The comment was a nod to Karzai’s warnings that killing innocents is making enemies of those who might be friends.
Karzai also has sought reassurance from Washington that his country will not be abandoned after U.S. forces withdraw. Obama, Clinton and others have obliged, saying America will not cut and run.
“We are not suddenly as of July 2011 finished with Afghanistan,” Obama said Wednesday. “After July 2011 we are still going to have an interest in making sure that Afghanistan is secure, that economic development is taking place, that good governance is being promoted.”
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