The partially redacted email exchanges between US officials, available on the State Department's website since Friday reveal that the Fund's board had criticised the Frenchman's "poor fiscal management" and unanimously backed his departure.
They also appear to confirm reports that Kazatchkine was pushed out in part over accusations that USD 2.8 million were handed out without proper accountability by the Fund to a campaign launched by the wife of French then-president Nicolas Sarkozy.
Kazatchkine's fate was decided during a board meeting for the Geneva-based Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, in the Ghanaian capital Accra in November 2011.
Hillary Clinton, then serving as top US diplomat, was kept abreast of the developments, with the United States exerting much pressure for the Frenchman to step down.
A high-level panel cited Kazatchkine for "weak management of secretariat operations, a fractured relationship with the Fund's inspector general and insufficient attention to oversight of funds," State Department special advisor John Monahan wrote to Clinton's chief of staff Cheryl Mills.
On the first day of its meeting, the Fund's board decided to dismiss Kazatchkine by December 31, 2011, wrote then US global AIDS coordinator Eric Goosby.
"French and EC (European Commission) representative threw MK under the bus when the board chair presented a letter to the board from the CFO that referred to unapproved funds at 2.8 mil for FLO Fr," Goosby said, referring to Bruni-Sarkozy as first lady of France.
"We had votes anyway after personnel review but this made it unanimous."
In order to circumvent Kazatchkine, the board authorised the appointment of a general manager who would report directly to the board.
"MK will have choice to resign, stay (in newly-defined ED role), or fight in court," Monahan added, using an acronym for executive director.
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