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US Playing Double Game In Afghanistan, Says Ahmedinejad

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Wednesday that it's the United States that is playing a “double game” in Afghanistan, fighting terrorists it once created.At a news conference in the Afghan capital, Ahmadinejad was asked to

PTI PTI Updated on: March 10, 2010 23:37 IST
us playing double game in afghanistan says ahmedinejad
us playing double game in afghanistan says ahmedinejad

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Wednesday that it's the United States that is playing a “double game” in Afghanistan, fighting terrorists it once created.

At a news conference in the Afghan capital, Ahmadinejad was asked to respond to U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates, who earlier in the week accused Tehran of “playing a double game” by trying to have a good relationship with the Afghan government while undermining U.S. and NATO efforts by providing some support to the Taliban.

Tehran has said it supports the Afghan government and denies allegations that it helps the Taliban.

Iran and the U.S. have long viewed the Taliban as a common enemy.

Taliban forces killed eight Iranian diplomats in 1998, the militant group profits from drug-smuggling across the Iran-Afghan border and Iran believes the Taliban have warped Islam.

But while Iran supported efforts inside Afghanistan at ousting the regime, it opposed the U.S.-led offensive that followed the 2001terrorist attacks, wary of a long-term U.S. military presence in the region.

Iran calls the accusation by Gates part of a broad anti-Iranian campaign by the U.S. and says it makes no sense that Iran's Shiite-led government would help the fundamentalist Sunni movement of the Taliban.

“I believe that they themselves,'' who are now fighting militants in Afghanistan, “are playing a double game,'' said Ahmadinejad, who has made several visits to the country.

“They themselves created terrorists and now they're saying that they are fighting terrorists.''

During the 10 years the that the Soviet Union fought in Afghanistan, the U.S. supplied rebels with supplies ranging from mules to advanced weaponry, including Stinger anti-aircraft missiles that helped neutralize Soviet air power.

After the U.S. money evaporated, the world watched Afghanistan plunge into chaos and eventually harbor al-Qaida terrorists.

Gates, who left Afghanistan shortly before Ahmadinejad spoke, called Ahmadinejad's visit to Kabul “certainly fodder for all the conspiratorialists.''

“We think Afghanistan should have good relations with all its neighbors, but we want all of Afghanistan's neighbors'' to deal fairly with President Hamid Karzai's government,” Gates said.

Karzai said Iran was assisting Afghanistan with reconstruction projects, improving education and helping provide electricity.

“We are very hopeful that our brother nation of Iran will work with us in bringing peace and security to Afghanistan so that both our countries will be secure,'' Karzai said, adding that Afghanistan has a very good relationship with Tehran.

“We have mentioned several times to our brother nation, Iran, that we don't want any one to use our soil against any of our neighbors,'' he said.

Ahmadinejad and Karzai both spoke at the presidential palace, but it was the Iranian leader who did nearly all of the talking.

He said the best way to fight terrorists was not on the battlefield, but through the use of intelligence, which does not result in the death of troops or civilians.

He repeatedly he raised the Iranian capture of Abdul malik Rigi, former leader of an insurgent group known as Jundallah. Iran has accused the U.S. and Britain of supporting Jundallah in an effort to weaken the Iranian government, a charge that both nations deny.

He said the U.S. and other nations would be better off using intelligence, not military force, to fight militants in Afghanistan.

“Iran didn't kill any innocent civilians,'' in the arrest of Rigi, he said, adding later that the U.S. was trying to bring civilization to Afghanistan “by gun and bomb.”

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