Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - 8:59 AM

By the hand of a soldier
In
a little-publicized move, the Obama administration has authorized
sending 13,000 more soldiers to Afghanistan, though not combat troops
-- those to be deployed are mostly support forces, including engineers,
medical personnel, intelligence experts and military police (Washington Post).
The new support units do not change the total number of forces soon to
be deployed in the country, at 68,000 by the year's end, but do suggest
that a significant number of support troops would be required to meet
any commanders' requests for more combat forces.
Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates make a
somewhat unlikely pair, but the two moderate pragmatists are the likely
proponents of a compromise between sending a huge influx of soldiers to
Afghanistan and narrowing the focus to targeting only al Qaeda fighters
using drone strikes (New York Times).
A key part of the Obama administration's Afghanistan strategy is
boosting Afghan security forces, but British and coalition officials
say that Afghan National Army recruits are being rushed into combat
with insufficient training, making them "cannon fodder" (Times of London).
Wanted: bailout
Al
Qaeda is suffering from a shortage of funding and as a result, its
influence is "waning," while the Taliban is benefiting from its use of
organized criminal activities like extortion and so-called 'protection
payments' from Afghan businesses, according to the Treasury Department (Guardian, AP, BBC).
A recent U.S. intelligence estimate found that the number of Taliban
fighters in Afghanistan has nearly quadrupled since 2006, from 7,000 to
25,000, bolstering claims that the militant network is a resurgent
threat (Al Jazeera, AP, Reuters).
One
of the two Afghan government's nominees to the five-person U.N.-backed
body tasked with investigating claims of fraud in the country's August
20 presidential election has quit because he reportedly felt his inputs
were ignored by the "foreigners" (Pajhwok, McClatchy, BBC, AP).
Maulavi Mustafa Barakzai claimed that the Dutch, American, and Canadian
members of the organization "were making all decisions on their own,"
and a spokeswoman for the Electoral Complaints Commission rejected
Barakzai's allegation (Globe and Mail, AP).
Officials
say an announcement could be made by the end of this week about the
fraud allegations and whether the election will go to a second round,
but the bitter wrangling between the two main candidates, incumbent
President Hamid Karzai and Abdullah Abdullah, is likely to continue (AP).
For his part, Karzai, speaking on Good Morning America, again defended
the validity of the election even as he acknowledged "irregularities" (ABC News, AP).
Fighting back
On
the heels of a series of brutal militant attacks in Pakistan this
month, Pakistani jets are bombing the Taliban strongholds of South
Waziristan, where the Pakistan Army says 80 percent of extremist
attacks in the country are planned, and Bajaur, another tribal agency
in northwest Pakistan (AP, Reuters, Daily Times, Dawn, AFP, Pajhwok).
The four deadly assaults in the last eight days -- in Shangla,
Rawalpindi, Peshawar, and Islamabad -- highlight the omnipresent threat
of extremist violence, varied range of targets, and the militants'
reach across the country (Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, Guardian). In light of this spate of attacks, analysts are debating the safety of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal (AP).
U.S.
officials in Islamabad are reportedly focusing on Pashtunabad, a dusty
suburb of the capital of Pakistan's southern Baluchistan province,
Quetta, where the 12 to 15 member Afghan Taliban leadership council is
based and serving as the Taliban's "post office" -- that is, a vital
link between the Quetta shura and Taliban militants operating in Afghanistan proper (Financial Times).
Residents of Baluchistan and Pakistani intelligence officials alike are
worried that the U.S. may strike Quetta using the Predator drones that
have eliminated top al Qaeda and Taliban leaders in Waziristan (Reuters, Dawn).
Lawful meaning in a lawful act
A
court in Lahore has dropped charges against Hafiz Muhammed Saeed, the
alleged terrorist mastermind behind the attacks in Mumbai in November
of last year and founder of the banned militant group responsible for
them (New York Times, BBC, The News).
He was charged last month with giving speeches "glorifying" jihad, and
his release -- though he remains under virtual house arrest -- is
likely to raise concerns in India (BBC, Reuters, Bloomberg).
Some
of the conditions on the aid bill designed to give Pakistan $7.5
billion over the next five years have raised a ruckus among Pakistan's
military brass and thrust the U.S. into the middle of an increasingly
tendentious relationship between Pakistan's civilian government, led by
President Asif Ali Zardari, and the army, headed by Gen. Ashfaq Parvez
Kayani, reports Jane Perlez in an excellent analysis of the situation (New York Times). Sumit Ganguly opines that accountability from the Pakistan Army is long overdue (Foreign Policy).
Buffering, please wait
The
world's first online museum dedicated to Afghanistan's culture is
likely to go live in early 2010 and will feature not only existing
works of art but many that have been lost or destroyed during the
country's tumultuous history (Pajhwok). Afghanculturemuseum.org is the brainchild of a French-Hungarian artist.
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