Just When You Thought that the Karzai Family Could Not Get Any Sleazier

Would you buy a used car from this man?

It turns out that Ahmed Wali Karzai, the brother of Hamid Karzai is multi-tasking something fierce, he’s not just a major figure in Afghan opium production, but he is also on the CIA payroll:

Ahmed Wali Karzai, the brother of the Afghan president and a suspected player in the country’s booming illegal opium trade, gets regular payments from the Central Intelligence Agency, and has for much of the past eight years, according to current and former American officials.

The agency pays Mr. Karzai for a variety of services, including helping to recruit an Afghan paramilitary force that operates at the C.I.A.’s direction in and around the southern city of Kandahar, Mr. Karzai’s home.

The article then notes that this “raises questions” about our current Afghanistan policy.

Well duh!!! The army fights the Taliban, which is supported to a large degree by opium money, and the CIA pays money to one of the biggest opium producers and smugglers in the region, which would imply that in some small part, the CIA is paying the Taliban to kill American troops.

Those boyz from Langley are such kidders.

7 comments

  1. Sortition says:

    Did the CIA ever carry out any operation that the American people would approve of? It seems that every CIA operation is either despicable or detrimental to the interests of the American people or, quite often, both. The entire agency should be simply eliminated.

  2. Matthew G. Saroff says:

    Actually, the CIA has conducted operations that Americans would approve of, most notably the surveillance of Soviet strategic capabilities during the cold war.

    The problem is that its culture is broken.

    It was founded by OSS guys who were used to parachuting agents into Germany in WWII, and when they tried to do the same in the USSR after WWII, it failed, because there were no conquered peoples to aid them, so they flipped out.

    BTW, most of the crap they pulled, like overthrowing governments in latin America for the benefit of United Fruit Company, existed well before the CIA was created.

  3. Guest says:

    > Actually, the CIA has conducted operations that Americans would approve of, most notably the surveillance of Soviet strategic capabilities during the cold war.

    If a decades old surveillance operation (of little practical value, it seems to me) is the highest achievement the CIA can claim, then it is definitely the cause of much more harm than good.

    > BTW, most of the crap they pulled, like overthrowing governments in latin America for the benefit of United Fruit Company, existed well before the CIA was created.

    That's true, but that's no excuse for having a government agency which specializes in such activities.

  4. vonners says:

    Its funny really that Ian Flemming (of James Bond fame) had a big hand in the development of what became the CIA.

    The problems in the CIA go back all the way to the 50's and the start of the first 'gap' issue. In this case the so called bomber gap. The CIA lost to the Air Force in that fight.

    The CIA, primarily an analysis organisation, soon became involved in some of the more crazy schemes (Bay of Pigs to assassinations) proposed by its 'special ops' dept.

    This is what happens when you decided to set up something to provide you with good information and then decide that this organisation should also mount operations. We can see now how the conflicts of interest within (and externally) the CIA has created a corrupt and rogue intelligence element.

    There are fine CIA officers who have served with distinction and gave the ultimate sacrafice. Sadly it seems these sacrafices were futile as it seems we are still on a slippery slope to keeping vested interests (often it seems ones that are detrimental to the US and the world) in power.

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