British intelligence is handing "bundles" of cash to Hamid Karzai, the President of Afghanistan, for special peace projects despite warnings that handouts are promoting corruption in his regime.
MI6 officials have acknowledged that the organisation has made direct cash payments to their Afghan counterparts periodically over the 12 years that Britain has been at war in Afghanistan.
Karzai declared handouts from the CIA and MI6 are an "easy source of petty cash" for his Government as it attempts to seal alliances with regional warlords and secure defections from the Taleban.
The CIA support is believed to have amounted to tens of millions of dollars since 2001, while Britain has channelled a smaller fraction into "special projects" undertaken by Karzai's officials.
MPs expressed concern that by simply handing over so-called "ghost money" to Karzai and his lieutenants, British spies could not be sure that the money would not be lost to corruption.