Hamid Karzai's chief of staff said Kabul was concerned about growing closeness between Pakistan and the United States, and that there was still a huge rift with Washington despite top-level efforts to patch up the disastrous fall-out over the office.
The remarks from someone so close to Karzai cast a spotlight on the depth of distrust between Kabul and Washington and between Kabul and Islamabad. They are also likely to play havoc with already troublesome efforts to find a peace deal to end 12 years of Taliban fighting.
When the Taliban opened their office on June 18, it was hailed as a first step towards a potential peace deal, but a furious Karzai slammed it as an unofficial embassy for a government-in-exile.
He reacted by breaking off security talks with Washington and threatening to boycott any peace process altogether.
"We have concerns and those concerns have increased since January, and that is over US closeness with Pakistan, specially over issues linked to Afghanistan," Khorram said.
Pakistani-US relations, often tense, have largely recovered from a series of disasters in 2011 and the West has long viewed Pakistan as vital to shoring up any peace deal in neighbouring Afghanistan.
Khorram is one of Karzai's closest advisors and considered a key member of a more conservative faction around the Afghan president, deeply distrustful of both Pakistan and the United States.
He is a former information and culture minister who courted controversy for criticising some private television channels for broadcasting un-Islamic content and for making other statements considered anti-democratic.
"If the Afghan government had not reacted as it did, Afghanistan could have gradually become like a place you would have had the Islamic Republic in Kabul and the Islamic Emirate in another place.
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