Exclusive: US has left Afghanistan with no hope of fighting Taliban, says 'Butcher of Kabul'
The Americans are being 'irresponsible' leaving the Afghans alone to fight a major oncoming war with the Taliban, he tells The Telegraph
He gained the nickname 'the
Butcher of Kabul' by raining down rockets on the Afghan capital in the early
1990s.
But Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, a
notorious warlord who has twice served as prime minister, is now warning that
the 'irresponsible' American withdrawal is leaving behind a government unable
to fight off the Taliban.
In an interview with the Telegraph
at his office near the Afghan parliament, he said: “The Americans are
withdrawing with an urgency, and I might add irresponsibly, and they are
leaving behind a coming war as well,” he told the Telegraph.
“The current war that the sides are engaged in,
it has escalated to unprecedented levels and they are just leaving that to the
Afghans.
"A 20-year war that had billions and trillions
of cost associated with it and thousands of American troops injured and killed,
and they leave without taking responsibility for the formation of a possible
future government in Afghanistan.”
The comments from one of
Afghanistan's most significant yet controversial figures came as American and
Nato troops have only weeks before they are expected to leave the country.
The withdrawal comes as intense
fighting has gripped the nation from a Taliban offensive.
The 71-year-old is known as a
canny political operator and his criticism of America follows a career in which
he has both attacked the US and profited from its patronage.
Mr Hekmatyar rose to prominence in
the 1980s when his hardline Hezb-e-Islami faction received lavish CIA support
to fight the Soviet occupation.
He reportedly refused to meet
President Ronald Reagan at the White House in 1985, where other rebel leaders
were dubbed the 'moral equivalent' of the US' founding fathers. The invite had
not come from Reagan himself, one aide told Al Jazeera.
He went on to twice serve as prime
minister during the 1990s, but was accused of war crimes as one of the Mujahideen
warlords who squabbled for control and plunged the country into anarchy.
Mr Hekmatyar went into hiding for
years after he was swept from power by the Taliban. He led his own insurgent
force before he finally made peace with the current president, Ashraf Ghani, in
2016.
A prolific writer, in one of
thousands of letters he described the US-led Coalition as "unkind,
Beast-like followers of the Cross".
Despite the peace deal with Mr
Ghani, he has remained a sharp critic of the president. The current
administration had failed and was corrupt, lacked popular support and riven by
divisions, he said.
“With the current structure and strategy of the
Afghan government, it seems very improbable for the Afghan government and its
military to be able to sustain this fighting.”
Mr Hekmatyar has launched his own
peace proposal, suggesting a temporary interim government that would include
members of the Taliban and oversee elections.
Mr Hekmatyar said he blamed the
Western media for his reputation. He claimed the loss of life during the civil
war was nothing compared to the killing due to foreign occupation.
Talking to the Telegraph, he
insisted speaking in Pashtu, despite his aides admitting he spoke fluent
English.
“Atrocities were committed, but the major player
or actor to these atrocities were foreign elements and foreign states that imposed
a war on the Afghan people," he said.
"It's been 43 years that we
have been fighting. If we look at the casualties committed by the existence of
foreign troops within Afghanistan in one month it would not match how many were
killed by the infighting among the Afghans.”