Wednesday, September 30, 2009 - 8:57 AM
Event notice: Join David Loyn, author of In Afghanistan,
and Peter Bergen, AfPak Channel editor, on Friday October 2 at 3:30pm
in Washington, DC for a discussion of Afghanistan's recent history.
Details and RSVP available here.
It wasn't me
The
24-year-old Afghan immigrant and resident of Colorado who is accused of
terrorism conspiracy charges for an alleged plan to detonate homemade
bombs in the United States has pleaded not guilty to the charges
against him (New York Times, Voice of America, Denver Post).
Though Najibullah Zazi is the only one who has been publicly identified
with involvement in the bomb plot so far, he is suspected of having at
least three accomplices who have yet to be named, and the one-time
airport shuttle driver's next day in court is December 3 (AP, Los Angeles Times, CNN). Reporter James Gordon Meek has the answers to four commonly asked questions about the Zazi case (The New Republic).
Droning on
A
U.S. Predator drone reportedly killed at least six militants, including
some Arabs, in a small village about 12 miles east of the main town in
North Waziristan, Miram Shah, in a strike early this morning (Reuters, AFP, Geo TV, The Nation Pakistan).
And yesterday morning, another drone targeted a village about 2 miles
from Miram Shah, which is home base for the Haqqani militant network,
killing several suspected extremists and targeting the house of a known
Afghan militant (AP, BBC, Dawn). There have been four drone strikes in North and South Waziristan in the last week, and more than 40 this year.
The
BBC has obtained what is purported to be a video of the body of
Baitullah Mehsud, the Pakistani Taliban leader who was killed by a
drone strike in South Waziristan on August 5 (BBC).
The video reportedly shows Baitullah covered in a white funeral shroud
and attended by at least one man "stricken with grief," and it's
unclear why the militant organization decided to release this video
now. Yesterday, a Taliban commander claimed that the entire Taliban
leadership is in Afghanistan, not Pakistan, saying, "Pakistan is not
safe for us. More of our people have been captured in
Pakistan than in Afghanistan so everybody is here [in Afghanistan]
including Mullah
Omar," the head of the Afghan Taliban (Reuters).
And
U.S. and international intelligence officials point to the drone
strikes, in addition to the use of spies and more cooperation from
local governments, as key reasons why al Qaeda's effectiveness as an
organization has diminished over the past several months (Washington Post). "Human sources have begun to produce results," said the head of the United Nations' al Qaeda and Taliban monitoring group.
Alive and well
The
extremist organization behind last November's terror attacks in Mumbai,
India's financial capital, is "largely intact and determined to strike
again," according to current and former members of the group and
American, Indian, and Pakistani intelligence officials (New York Times).
Lashkar-e-Taiba, whose members number as many as 150,000 according to
an officer in Pakistan's chief spy agency, experienced a jump in
recruitment after the Mumbai attacks, and one senior Lashkar operative
told the New York Times, "Our funds increased and more people wanted to join us."
War council
U.S.
President Barack Obama will reportedly be meeting today with some of
his top advisers on Afghanistan, including Vice President Joe Biden,
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton,
National Security Adviser Gen. James Jones, Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff Adm. Mike Mullen, and CENTCOM commander Gen. David
Petraeus (Wall Street Journal, New York Times).
The meeting will also include via video conference top U.S. and NATO
commander in Afghanistan, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, who has not spoken
to Obama since submitting his grim assessment of the war one month ago.
Today's meeting is one of five scheduled in the coming weeks designed
to review the situation on the ground and consider options for the
future.
Yesterday, NATO's chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen assured
Obama in a meeting at the White House that the alliance will stay in
Afghanistan "as long as it takes to finish our job," though he did not
offer any additional troops (Reuters, Bloomberg, Al Jazeera). And reciprocally, Obama asserted, "This is not a American battle, this is a NATO mission as well" (AFP).
Tragically,
a young Afghan girl was killed in late June by a box of information
leaflets falling from a British military plane over Afghanistan's
southern Helmand province, in a case that the U.K.'s Ministry of
Defense said it was investigating earlier this morning (Reuters, AP). The box failed to break open mid-air as planned and struck the girl, who later died of her injuries (BBC).
Michael Evans details the case and writes that this is believed to be
the first time a civilian has been killed by a box of information
leaflets (Times of London). And Taliban attacks on Afghanistan's roads and highways have made travel in the country treacherous (AP).
The comforts of home
North
American fast food chains are doing battle at Kandahar Airfield in
southern Afghanistan, as McDonald's was scheduled to build a restaurant
there earlier this year to compete with the Burger King, Subway, and
Pizza Hut already in place (National Post).
KAF, one of the busiest airports in the world and a key link in the
supply chain for the war in Afghanistan, also hosts a beauty salon and
cafes.
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Rob Jensen/USAF via Getty Images
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