US President Barack Obama's envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan met Hamid Karzai yesterday, the first direct contact between the Afghan president and the new administration that has distanced itself from him.

Once a darling of the Bush administration, Karzai is out of favour with Obama's team. Obama last week described Karzai's government as "very detached" from its people and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has called Afghanistan a "narco-state".

Obama's special envoy, Richard Holbrooke, met Afghan ministers, officials, parliamentarians and foreign diplomats on Friday in a fact-finding mission that began in Pakistan and will end in India. Holbrooke has said little publicly the whole trip.

Karzai said on Friday he had not spoken to Obama since he took office more than three weeks ago. Holbrooke is the first representative of the new administration to visit Afghanistan since then.

Asked whether there was a crisis between the US and his government, Karzai told Al Jazeera: "Yes, yes. There is."

As the Taliban insurgency steadily grows in Afghanistan more than seven years after US-led forces toppled the hardline Islamist government, so relations between Washington and Kabul have become increasingly strained.

Washington and its allies have repeatedly spoken of the need for good governance, meaning the lack of effective rule outside Kabul and Karzai's failure to tackle rampant corruption undermine the efforts of Western troops battling to bring security.

Karzai, perhaps with one eye on elections this year, has hit back at his Western backers, complaining time and again about the killing of Afghan civilians in mistaken air strikes.

"There is tension between us and the US government on issues of civilian casualties, arrests of Afghans, nightly raids on homes and the casualties they cause," Karzai told Al Jazeera. "Afghan children were dying in the bombardments."

More than 2,100 civilians were killed in fighting in Afghanistan last year, including around 700 by international and Afghan forces, mostly in air strikes, the UN said.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.