The U.S. president visited American troops at Bagram airfield, a sprawling base north of
But a massive dust storm prevented him from making the short helicopter
trip to meet with Karzai at his presidential palace in the capital, as
the two men had planned.
Obama instead reportedly held a videoconference meeting with his Afghan counterpart.
Already-tense relations with Karzai have been
worsened in recent days by leaked U.S. diplomatic cables portraying the
Afghan leader as a weak and paranoid figure at the helm of a government
riddled by corruption.
While the broad outlines of this diplomatic
depiction came as little surprise, the timing was awkward, coming only
days before the
This has been the war’s most lethal year for U.S.
forces, and Obama faces intense political pressure to justify the long
and costly conflict — a task made more difficult by his own envoy’s
scathing assessment of Karzai. American criticism of the Afghan
president has been widely reported, but the damning details in the
leaked documents laid bare a relationship beset by mutual mistrust.
At the presidential palace in
Obama’s previous trip to
nine months earlier, was a similarly speedy fly-in, but one that left
lingering feelings of acrimony on both sides. Karzai’s inner circle
deeply resented blunt criticisms leveled on the press plane by
An aide said Obama had not been carrying any “major new piece” of news to deliver to Karzai. The two men met just before
Even the release of diplomatic cables in recent days
did not occasion the need for a detailed conversation between the two
leaders. The Obama administration has “weathered those kinds of
revelations before as it relates to President Karzai and the Afghan
government,” said the aide, deputy national security adviser
Though Obama missed an opportunity Friday to try to
establish some sort of personal chemistry with the increasingly distant
and mercurial Afghan leader, his three-hour trip gave him an
opportunity to meet with U.S. troops — a holiday-season morale boost
amid a long slog of a war.
The two top U.S. officials in
In his speech to troops, delivered in a drafty
aircraft hangar, Obama seemingly sought to balance the optimism
expressed of late by his field commanders and a somber acknowledgement
that Western forces face a resilient and resourceful foe.
“We said we were going to break the
momentum; that’s what we’re doing,” the president, clad in a leather
jacket and dark sweater and slacks, told the assembled troops, who
cheered raucously as he listed their branches of service. But he added:
“I don’t need to tell you this is a tough fight. … Progress comes at
a high price.”
American commanders have pointed to significant success in recent months in driving
spiritual base. But it remains to be seen how durable that progress
will prove to be. Senior Western commanders have acknowledged that
insurgents are likely to regroup in the spring after a winter break in
Most of the troops present at Obama’s speech were with the
In the moments before the president spoke, his hosts
broadcast a security reminder — ominous to the visitors, but a daily
fact of life for those stationed in
“If we get indirect fire while this ceremony is
going on,” the announcement went, “stay put. Do not go anywhere. If you
have to do something, get down. Do not move out of this building.”
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(c) 2010, Tribune Co.
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.