Afghan defense minister resigns

Afghan defense minister resigns
Updated on

Summary Abdul Rahim Wardak resigned Tuesday after losing a no-confidence vote in parliament.

Wardak, in charge of the army and one of the countrys two key security ministers, told reporters he respected parliaments decision, which could complicate NATO plans to hand security responsibilities to Afghan forces before the end of 2014.I respected the parliaments decision to twice appoint me as defence minister, and now I accept the parliament decision to remove me. I resign my position, Wardak told journalists.The fractious parliament voted on Saturday to remove Wardak and Interior Minister Bismillah Mohammadi after recent insurgent assassinations of senior officials, as well as cross-border attacks blamed on Pakistan.Wardaks decision leaves the vital position of defence minister vacant at the peak of the summer fighting months and as U.S. and French troops draw down numbers and hand over to Afghan forces.It was not immediately clear how soon Karzai would be able to replace the veteran four-star general and ethnic Pashtun from eastern Wardak province, who is credited by Western diplomats with helping forge the fledgling Afghan National Army into an increasingly effective force against insurgents.Violence in Afghanistan is at its fiercest since U.S.-led Afghan troops overthrew the Taliban government in 2001. Insurgents have extended their reach from traditional strongholds in southern and eastern areas to parts of the country once considered relatively safe.Insurgents on Tuesday detonated a remote-control bomb under a mini-bus on Kabuls outskirts, killing nine civilians, while a truck bomb also exploded outside a NATO base south of the city, wounding 11 people, including several foreign soldiers.
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