Kabul, Washington end customs dispute over US military cargo

Kabul, Washington end customs dispute over US military cargo
Updated 02 August 2013
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Kabul, Washington end customs dispute over US military cargo

Kabul, Washington end customs dispute over US military cargo

KABUL: Afghanistan has dropped efforts to collect $70 million in customs fines on US military cargo being shipped out of the country, officials said Thursday, resolving the allies’ latest dispute.
Kabul’s attempt to impose the penalties triggered outrage in the US, which has provided billions of dollars of civil support and military assistance to Afghanistan since the Taleban regime was ousted in 2001.
Huge volumes of US hardware are being transported home, and the Afghan government had insisted that US forces pay $1,000 for each shipping container lacking what it called valid customs forms.
But Abdul Qadir Jelani, spokesman for the Afghan finance ministry, told AFP that the government and US-led NATO forces had “reached an agreement after a series of discussions.”
“The council of ministers have decided to waive customs fees on NATO forces,” he said.
“NATO forces have assured the Afghan government that they will process their customs documents according to the law.”
Nearly two weeks ago, Afghanistan announced that it was owed $70 million in unpaid customs fees and fines on the withdrawal of US equipment. Border crossings were blocked for a short time due to the dispute.
NATO’s International Security Assistance Force confirmed the deal, saying Afghanistan had agreed to scrap its demand for cash.
“This agreement provides our forces with the freedom of movement necessary to effectively support our Afghan counterparts as they secure the Afghan people,” commander General Joseph Dunford said in a statement.
Two influential US senators had proposed withholding $5 in aid for every $1 imposed in fines as the US winds down 12 years of fighting the Taleban.
US defense officials said that the row had forced the military to fly out cargo at vast extra cost rather than using road crossings into neighboring Pakistan and Uzbekistan.
As the NATO exit looms next year, the US and Afghanistan have been caught in a series of spats over stalled peace talks with the Taleban and the control of jails holding suspected insurgents.