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RASC News > Afghanistan > From “Donkey” to Tribal Leadership: The Political and Familial Secrets Behind Hamid Karzai’s Rise Among the Popalzai
AfghanistanNewsWorld

From “Donkey” to Tribal Leadership: The Political and Familial Secrets Behind Hamid Karzai’s Rise Among the Popalzai

Published 12/03/2026
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RASC News Agency: In the book A Man and a Motorcycle, Dutch journalist Bette Dam recounts episodes from the years before Hamid Karzai emerged as a central figure in Afghan politics. One of the pivotal moments occurred in 1996, when Karzai’s attempt to represent the Taliban at the United Nations failed an episode that triggered severe tension within his own family.

At the center of this tension was his father, Abdul Ahad Karzai, a highly influential elder of the Popalzai branch of the Pashtun community. The family residence in Quetta served as a gathering place for Popalzai leaders traveling from Kandahar and Uruzgan. According to Dam’s account, Abdul Ahad Karzai would at times publicly humiliate his son during these meetings, even referring to him as a “donkey” in front of tribal guests an illustration of the generational and political tensions that marked Karzai’s early career.

Despite these familial pressures, Hamid Karzai maintained close connections with several early Taliban leaders, particularly figures from the Popalzai tribal network. Among them was Mullah Wakil Ahmad Muttawakil often referred to as Mullah Ghous in some accounts who served as the Taliban’s foreign minister.

Muttawakil reportedly prepared an official letter endorsing Karzai’s appointment to Afghanistan’s seat at the United Nations. However, the document was never sent due to objections from Mullah Omar, the movement’s supreme leader at the time. This rejection effectively ended Karzai’s attempt to gain international diplomatic legitimacy through the Taliban government.

In July 1999, Abdul Ahad Karzai was assassinated in Quetta by gunmen widely believed to be linked to Taliban elements. The elder Karzai had reportedly grown deeply dissatisfied with what he perceived as his son’s inability to make decisive political and tribal choices.

Following his father’s death, Hamid Karzai despite facing internal opposition eventually succeeded him as the leading figure, or khan, of the Popalzai tribal network.

After being sidelined by Mullah Omar, Karzai began cultivating ties with anti-Taliban factions and increasingly advocated for greater international involvement particularly by the Central Intelligence Agency and the United States of America in Afghanistan’s political future.

These efforts reportedly built upon contacts Karzai had maintained with U.S. intelligence channels for several years. His growing political activism placed him under pressure from Islamic Republic of Pakistan, whose authorities at one point threatened to expel him from the country. According to various accounts, however, diplomatic intervention by the United States Embassy Islamabad helped prevent that decision from being carried out.

The September 11 attacks dramatically reshaped Afghanistan’s political landscape and Karzai’s personal trajectory. As the United States launched military operations against the Taliban regime, Karzai emerged as a key political intermediary and soon entered a phase of unprecedented international engagement and influence.

Within months, he would become the central political figure in the U.S.-backed transitional administration, eventually serving as president of Afghanistan from 2001 to 2014.

The author of this account notes that further insights into this critical period may soon emerge. Plans are underway for a podcast conversation with Bette Dam, author of a major biography of Mullah Omar, as well as with a former CIA operative who reportedly accompanied Karzai during the early stages of the U.S. intervention in Afghanistan.

Such discussions may shed additional light on the complex intersection of tribal politics, international intelligence networks, and geopolitical strategy that shaped the rise of Hamid Karzai in Afghanistan’s post-2001 political order.

 

Shams Feruten 12/03/2026

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