Monday, December 7, 2009 - 8:54 AM
Wonk Watch: The
Combating Terrorism Center at West Point recently released a study,
based on Arabic-language sources, finding that 85 percent of those
killed in al Qaeda attacks from 2004 to 2008 were Muslims (CTC-pdf). If you would like us to consider featuring your research in Wonk Watch, email it to tiedemann@newamerica.net.
Afghanistan hearings on Capitol Hill, Gen. Stanley McChrystal and Amb. Karl Eikenberry*
Tuesday 9:30am, House Armed Services Committee (HASC)
Tuesday 1:30pm, Senate Armed Services Committee (SASC)
Wednesday 10:00am, Senate Foreign Relations Committee (SFRC)
Thursday 9:30am, House Foreign Affairs Committee (HFA)
Behind the scenes
The New York Times and the Washington Post
have a pair of lengthy must-read articles from this weekend detailing
the behind the scenes action of U.S. President Barack Obama's decision
process on sending more troops to Afghanistan, both showing a
metamorphosis in the president's thinking over the course of the three
month strategy review (NYT, Wash Post).
Politico's Mike Allen has the inside look at the making of the
articles, giving the White House a "mission accomplished grade" for
"amplifying the West Wing's desired storyline: a smart, probing
president cuts through the fog of competing visions to come up with his
own unique version of a surge" (Politico).
Meanwhile,
Operation Cobra's Anger continues in the strategically significant Now
Zad valley in northern Helmand province in Afghanistan, as more than
1,000 British, American, and Afghan troops seek to disrupt Taliban
communication routes and supply lines (AFP, Reuters, NYT, McClatchy).
The current offensive, which is one of 22 similar operations being
carried out across the country according to a military spokesman, may
be a precursor to a larger assault against the Taliban sanctuary town
of Marja, which has been compared to the Iraqi town of Fallujah circa
late 2004 (AP, LAT).
The U.K. probably will not send any more troops to
Afghanistan on top of its announced increase of approximately 1,200
extra soldiers, of which only 500 have yet to deploy (WSJ).
British troops are considered particularly valuable by the U.S. because
they fight in Helmand. Meanwhile, Afghan police killed a local Taliban
commander in Afghanistan's northern Faryab province over the weekend,
while NATO pounded a Taliban stronghold in the eastern Afghan province
of Kunar earlier today (AP, AFP).
And
the U.S. is reportedly leaving some equipment in Iraq that could be
useful in Afghanistan, though in some cases the labor and
transportation costs outweigh the costs of the equipment (Wash Post).
Meanwhile, comparisons between Iraq and Afghanistan remain rife, though
one of the strategists "deeply involved" in the White House's
Afghanistan debate remarked, "We spent a lot of time discussing the
fact that the only thing Iraq and Afghanistan have in common is a lot
of sand" (NYT).
The talk show circuit
A
slew of Obama's national security advisers hit the Sunday talk show
circuit yesterday; many of the transcripts are available here.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, Meet the Press (NBC); Clinton and Gates, This Week (ABC); Clinton and Gates, Face the Nation (CBS); National Security Adviser Gen. James Jones, State of the Union (CNN); Amb. Richard Holbrooke, Fareed Zakaria GPS (CNN); Gen. David Petraeus, Fox News Sunday (Fox).
The
main takeaway from the host of interviews is that Obama's stated
timeline of beginning a U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan in July 2011
is a "ramp," not a "cliff," as General Jones commented, and the U.S.
should expect to maintain a presence in Afghanistan for two to four
more years, according to Gates (NYT, CNN, BBC, Guardian, NYT, AP, WSJ).
And Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top U.S. and NATO commander in
Afghanistan, has seen his plan remain mainly intact, as a senior
Pentagon official involved in Afghanistan policy told the Washington Post, "There won't be a radical change in the way he executes" (Wash Post).
A
topic that has gotten more traction lately is the hunt for Osama bin
Laden; Gates told 'This Week' that it has been "years" since the U.S.
has had good intelligence on the terrorist leader's location, and
General Jones said, "The best estimate is that he is somewhere inside
North Waziristan, sometimes on the Pakistani side of the border,
sometimes on the Afghan side of the border" (Telegraph, AFP, AP). The U.S. will be launching a new effort to track down bin Laden, according to a senior U.S. government official (AFP).
Corruption and cabinets
Afghan
President Hamid Karzai is set to announce at least part of his cabinet
of ministers tomorrow for the approval of the Afghan parliament, as he
faces massive pressure to clamp down on corruption in his government (AFP, Reuters).
Christiane Amanpour of CNN interviewed Karzai yesterday, and he called
the issue of corruption "overplayed," though he did say he "will be
firing people" (CNN).
The governor of Balkh province, Atta Muhammad Noor, who is known to be
opposed to Karzai, has reportedly rejected an offer to participate in
the president's cabinet and would like to stay on as governor (Pajhwok).
And the mayor of Kabul City, Mir Abdul Ahad Sahibi, has been sentenced
to four years in jail and fined on corruption charges, though he plans
to appeal (Pajhwok).
A
human rights group just released a report saying that Afghan women are
among the worst off in the world, calling violence against them
"endemic," based on 120 interviews across different Afghan provinces,
and warning that conditions "could deteriorate" (Reuters, Guardian). The full report is available from Human Rights Watch (HRW).
Politics and war in Pakistan
As
Pakistan's Supreme Court starts hearing arguments that could invalidate
a corruption amnesty for embattled Pakistani President Asif Ali
Zardari, a suicide bomber struck outside a courthouse in the
northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar, killing at least 11 in the
frequently-targeted capital of the Northwest Frontier Province (AFP, AP, Dawn, Geo TV, CNN).
The hearings could lead to challenges to the legality of the
increasingly unpopular Zardari's rule, though he currently has immunity
from prosecution as the sitting president (AP, Dawn).
The
Pakistani Taliban have claimed responsibility for last Friday's
coordinated attacks on a mosque in Rawalpindi, saying they "will do
more which are already planned," and Pakistani police reportedly picked
up at least six people in relation to the assault, which left around 40
people dead (CNN, Dawn).
Pakistani police also arrested five suspects believed to be involved
with the recent spate of bombing attacks in Peshawar, following a
gunbattle that lasted more than two hours (AP).
And
elsewhere over the weekend, a roadside bomb outside a mosque in the
tribal region of Bajaur left two anti-Taliban tribal elders dead,
further demonstrating the threat to those who opposed the militant
group (Dawn, Daily Times, AP).
However, Pakistan's interior minister Rehman Malik praised some of
Pakistan's tribes on the border for assisting the anti-Taliban
offensive currently underway in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas
(Bloomberg).
The
Pakistani version of the FBI has a new chief, announced over the
weekend, as the outgoing head of the Federal Investigation Agency,
Tariq Khosa, has been promoted to the Ministry of Narcotics (The News, Dawn, Daily Times). Zaffarullah Khan, former commander of Pakistan's Frontier Corps, is the FIA's new director general.
Inside of your head
Sabrina
Tavernise talked to some of Pakistan's top psychiatrists to try and
understand the deep and intense anti-Americanism felt by many
Pakistanis, and one commented in a harsh tone but not an uncommon
sentiment, "The real terrorists are not the men in turbans we see on Al
Jazeera... They are wearing Gucci suits
and Brit hats. It's your great country, Madam" (NYT). And Scott Shane looks at the Pashtun aspect of the Taliban insurgency (NYT).
Grazie, Italia
Italy has donated $1.2 million to upgrade facilities at the western Afghan province of Herat's main hospital (Pajhwok). The funding will provide for heating in a pediatric unit, among other improvements.
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