- Associated Press - Monday, March 25, 2013

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — U.S. Secretary of State John F. Kerry and Afghan President Hamid Karzai made a show of unity Monday, shortly after the U.S. military ceded control of its last detention facility in Afghanistan, ending a longstanding irritant in relations between the two countries.

Mr. Kerry, in Afghanistan for an unannounced visit, said he and Mr. Karzai were “on the same page” when it comes to peace talks with the Taliban.

Mr. Karzai has infuriated U.S. officials by accusing Washington of colluding with Taliban insurgents to keep Afghanistan weak even as the Obama administration pressed ahead with plans to hand off security responsibility to Afghan forces and end NATO’s combat mission by the end of next year.

But Mr. Kerry told a joint news conference, “I am confident (Mr. Karzai) does not believe the U.S. has any interest except to see the Taliban come to the table to make peace.”

“So we’re on the same page. I don’t think there is any disagreement between us, and I am comfortable with his explanation,” Mr. Kerry said.

For his part, Mr. Karzai said that “today was a very good day,” citing the turnover of the detention facility at the U.S.-run Bagram military base north of Kabul.


SEE ALSO: U.S. hands over Bagram prison in Afghanistan


The two spoke at a joint news conference during which Mr. Kerry also praised what he said was Afghanistan’s commitment to “safe, secure” and transparent elections, scheduled for April 2014.

During Mr. Kerry’s 24-hour visit to the country — his sixth since President Obama became president but his first as secretary of state — Mr. Kerry also planned to meet with civic leaders and others to discuss continued U.S. assistance to the country and how to wean it from such aid as the international military operation winds down, as well as upcoming national elections.

Mr. Karzai has infuriated U.S. officials by accusing Washington of colluding with Taliban insurgents to keep Afghanistan weak even as the Obama administration presses ahead with plans to hand off security responsibility to Afghan forces and end NATO’s combat mission by the end of next year.

Earlier, U.S. officials accompanying Mr. Kerry said he did not plan to lecture Mr. Karzai or dwell on the apparent animosity but would make clear once again that the U.S. did not take such allegations lightly. They said he would press Mr. Karzai on the need for the April 2014 elections to meet international standards and continue to stress the importance of Afghan reconciliation and U.S. support for a Taliban office in Qatar where talks could occur.

Mr. Karzai is expected to travel to Qatar within the week, and some movement on the opening of an office is likely then.

Mr. Kerry, who arrived in Kabul from Amman, Jordan, had hoped also to travel to Pakistan on his trip to the region but put it off because of elections there. Instead, he met late Sunday in Amman with Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, the Pakistani army chief, officials said.

The pair had a private dinner at the residence of the U.S. ambassador to Jordan as Pakistan continued to seethe in the aftermath of the return from exile to the country of former President Pervez Musharraf, himself a former army chief.

Earlier Monday, the U.S. military ceded control of the Parwan detention facility near the U.S.-run Bagram military base north of Kabul, a year after the two sides initially agreed on the transfer. Mr. Karzai demanded control of Parwan as a matter of national sovereignty.

The top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr., handed over Parwan at a ceremony there after signing an agreement with Afghan Defense Minister Bismullah Khan Mohammadi.

“This ceremony highlights an increasingly confident, capable and sovereign Afghanistan,” Gen. Dunford said.

The dispute over the center threw a pall over the ongoing negotiations for a bilateral security agreement that would govern the presence of U.S. forces in Afghanistan after 2014.

An initial agreement to hand over Parwan was signed a year ago, but efforts to follow through on it constantly stumbled over American concerns that the Afghan government would release prisoners that it considered dangerous.

The U.S. has reason to worry. Zakir Qayyum, a former Guantanamo detainee, was released into Afghan custody in 2007. He was freed four months later and rejoined the Taliban. He reportedly has risen to become the No. 2 in the Taliban.

A key hurdle was a ruling by an Afghan judicial panel holding that administrative detention — the practice of holding someone without formal charges — violated the country’s laws. The U.S. argued that international law allowed administrative detentions and also argued that it could not risk the passage of some high-value detainees to the notoriously corrupt Afghan court system.

An initial deadline for the full handover passed last September and another earlier this month.

The detention center houses about 3,000 prisoners, and the majority are already under Afghan control. The United States had not handed over about 100, and some of those under American authority do not have the right to a trial because the U.S. considers them part of an ongoing conflict.

There are also about three dozen non-Afghan detainees, including Pakistanis and other nationals, who will remain in American hands. The exact number and nationality of those detainees has never been made public.

A new agreement, or memorandum of understanding, was signed at the ceremony by Gen. Dunford and Mr. Mohammadi, but the U.S. military said it will not be made public. The agreement supplants one signed last March, which had been made public.

The U.S. military said in a statement that the new agreement “affirms their mutual commitment to the lawful and humane treatment of detainees and their intention to protect the people of Afghanistan and coalition forces,” an apparent reference to the release of detainees deemed to be dangerous.

About 100,000 coalition troops are in Afghanistan, including about 66,000 from the United States. American officials have made no final decision on how many troops might remain in Afghanistan after 2014, although they have said as many as many as 12,000 U.S. and coalition forces could remain.

The U.S. started to hold detainees at Bagram Air Field in early 2002. For several years, prisoners were kept at a former Soviet aircraft machine plant converted into a lockup.

In 2009, the U.S. opened a new detention facility next door. The number of detainees incarcerated at that prison, renamed the Parwan Detention Facility, went from about 1,100 in September 2010 to more than 3,000.

After Monday’s handover, it was renamed the Afghan National Detention Facility at Parwan, and the U.S. military said it would provide the Afghan army with advisers and $39 million in funding.

The United States has spent about a quarter-billion dollars to build the Bagram facility, along with Kabul’s main prison, located in the capital.

• Patrick Quinn in Kabul and Rahim Faiez in Bagram, Afghanistan, contributed to this article.

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