Fri 20 September 2019:
He said that money allocated to “serve the interests of all Afghan citizens” had instead been wasted due to “government corruption and financial mismanagement.” Pompeo promised that the proposed energy project would still be completed using an alternative funding method.
.@SecPompeo: “We expect the assistance funds we provide to Afghanistan to serve the interests of all Afghan citizens. Due to identified Afghan Government corruption & financial mismanagement, the U.S. Government is returning approximately $100 million to the U.S. Treasury…”
— Ryan Browne (@rabrowne75) September 19, 2019
Whether or not corruption is the real reason for the US punishing Kabul, the news couldn’t come at a worse time for the government there, which faces serious political and security hurdles. Afghanistan is holding a presidential election at the end of the month, but campaigning has been marred by a sharp uptick in violence.
The situation in the country took a turn for the worse in September, after Washington called off peace talks with the Taliban following a car bomb attack that killed one US soldier.
The Taliban responded by saying they are ready to keep fighting US forces on the Afghan soil even if takes “a hundred years.” There is “no solution to the conflict except negotiations and except peace on the table,” and Washington should rethink its move, top Taliban negotiator Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai told media
The war has dragged on for nearly two decades, costing American taxpayers an estimated $877 billion dollars as of March 2019. This includes both fighting the Taliban and trying to rebuild the country after the US invasion in October 2001.
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