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Troops out! It’s time to leave Afghanistan

The Army is lost in Helmand and there are better ways to crush al-Qaeda, says Robert Fox

It's time to bring British troops out of Helmand province and home from Afghanistan. President Hamid Karzai, the man the British came to defend and build up, doesn't agree with our strategy there and the attempts by 10 Downing Street to smooth over the catty critique he dished out at Davos are a waste of effort, for they fly in the face of reality.

Karzai told the Times that he believed the British coming to Helmand in May 2006 had made matters worse. It opened up space for the Taliban, who are now operating across southern Afghanistan in far greater numbers than envisaged. "Both the American and the British forces guaranteed to me they knew what they were doing and I made the mistake of listening to them," he said. "And when they came, the Taliban came."

The idea that everything was just fine in Helmand and across the drug-growing

areas until the British and the Americans arrived is ludicrous, of course. Karzai has blamed the British for demanding the removal of Sher Muhammad Akhunazad as governor in Helmand in 2006. Yet he is credited with being the major drug broker of his district. Similarly Karzai decries the British removal at the same time of Abdul Wali Khan 'Koka' as police chief - whom the British accuse of still being an active warlord.

But Karzai has now proved himself a serial critic, and the British must start taking him at his word. He didn't want Lord Ashdown as the international coordinator, and he insisted on the removal of the two brilliant diplomats Martyn Patterson and Michael Semple of the UN and EU for talking to the 'wrong' people about the Taliban in Musa Qala. (The Karzai entourage then planted the story with the BBC that the two men were 'spies' running their own private intelligence networks.)

Karzai runs a highly idiosyncratic personalised form of government - "he rules by mobile phone," a disgruntled diplomat said recently. His personal network includes a number of provincial governors who 

Hamid Karzai
Karzai believes the British presence in Helmand 2006 has made matters worse

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