Why Karzai brought the hammer down on Ashdown

CATE GILLON/Getty Images I’m not surprised Hamid Karzai recently blocked veteran British diplomat Paddy Ashdown from becoming U.N. envoy to Afghanistan, even though it looked to be a done deal. U.S., British, and U.N. officials were strongly behind Ashdown before Karzai pulled the plug during the latter’s trip to Davos. Ashdown is known to be ...

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596472_080213_ashdown2.jpg

CATE GILLON/Getty Images

CATE GILLON/Getty Images

I’m not surprised Hamid Karzai recently blocked veteran British diplomat Paddy Ashdown from becoming U.N. envoy to Afghanistan, even though it looked to be a done deal. U.S., British, and U.N. officials were strongly behind Ashdown before Karzai pulled the plug during the latter’s trip to Davos. Ashdown is known to be assertive and, frankly, effective. That no doubt worried Karzai, who is struggling to hold together his government and surely would not look kindly on an outspoken and influential international figure poking around dark corners of Kabul.

The search for Ashdown’s replacement is still ongoing, but his op-ed in Wednesday’s FT on what the international community needs to be doing in Afghanistan makes one feel all the more acutely that an opportunity was lost here. Ashdown paints a sober and realistic picture of the country’s challenges, acknowledging that “defeat is now a real possibility” — in sharp contrast to President Bush’s recent rosy assessment. What’s more, Ashdown had real strategies for change: winning over moderate Afghans, seriously tackling corruption, and working with, not against, the grain of the country’s tribal structure. We can only hope that Ashdown’s successor — rumored to be NATO commander John McColl — has the will to be so frank.

Carolyn O'Hara is a senior editor at Foreign Policy.

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