Friday, January 8, 2010 - 9:50 AM

Event notice: New
America Foundation counterterrorism research fellow Brian Fishman will
be speaking Monday, January 11 at 2:30pm in Washington, DC on "Making
the Next Bin Laden." Details here.
Not-so-safe house
An
apparently accidental explosion at a house in Karachi killed up to
eight alleged Taliban militants this morning at a suspected safe house (Guardian, AFP, WSJ, NYT, BBC, Dawn, AJE).
Authorities believe the explosion, in a working-class neighborhood
known to be used as a hideout by Taliban fighters, was caused by a
suicide vest stored in the house. Police seized guns, ammunition,
grenades, and suicide vests from the wreckage of the demolished house,
as well as militant literature (AP).
A day in court
Two
former employees a subsidiary of Xe, the security contractor formerly
known as Blackwater, were arrested and charged with second degree
murder, attempted murder and weapons violations over the shooting
deaths of two Afghans at a Kabul intersection last May (FBI, BBC, Times of London).
The men were reportedly on a contract to train Afghan police and claim
they thought they were under attack after a car struck their convoy at
night on busy Jalalabad Street in Kabul (AFP, Wash Post, TIME).
The indictment comes on the same day that Xe reached a settlement with
victims of a 2007 shooting in Iraq that killed 17 people, and amidst
increasing accusations of lawlessness and dangerous practices leveled
against the company in the past few years (CNN).
Mystery still surrounds the life, personality, and beliefs of the alleged Jordanian
suicide bomber who killed seven CIA agents and contractors -- including
two employed by Xe -- and one Jordanian intelligence officer December
30 in Khost, Afghanistan (NYT, NYT).
While his mother described him as a loner, Human Khalil Abu Mulal
al-Balawi's Turkish widow described him as a believer, and said she was
"proud" of him for attacking Americans in Afghanistan (AP, AFP). And in today's must-read, Newsweek
has an exclusive interview with the widow, Defne Bayrak, providing a
glimpse at the world of extremist internet forums and the
radicalization of affluent and well-educated Muslims (Newsweek).
Dark shadows at Bagram
The
U.S. military has launched an investigation into the possible abuse
last year of three Afghan teenagers at a secret "black prison" run by
U.S. Special Operations forces at Bagram Air Base (Wash Post).
Two of the teenagers remain imprisoned, while the other has told
investigators that they were slapped, punched, humiliated and otherwise
mistreated during interrogations at the prison.
And despite
pleas from Afghanistan's Independent Election Commission (IEC) for up
to $50 million in order to hold parliamentary elections in May,
international donor nations are hesitant to give more money without
major reforms, fearing disastrous results from another fraud-tainted
national election after the uproar over Afghanistan's August 2009
presidential contest (McClatchy).
Fighting in the streets
Indian
security forces have ended a nearly 24-hour seige in Srinagar,
Indian-administered Kashmir, killing two alleged anti-India militants
holed up in a hotel in the city's central business district (BBC).
The militants opened fire on police and civilians after being stopped
at a police checkpoint, and killed a police officer and a civilian
before seeking refuge in the hotel. The attack was the "highest
profile" terrorist operation in India since the November 2008 Mumbai
attacks, and the first major gunbattle in Indian-administered Kashmir
since 2006 (AP, FT).
The group Jamiat-ul-Mujahideen claimed responsibility
for the attack, though some press reports suggest that one or both of
the attackers may have belonged to Lashkar-e-Taiba, the group allegedly
responsible for the Mumbai attacks (NYT, Times of India).
Additionally, the Times of India quoted police officials claiming that
the militants received directions from "handlers" in Pakistan
throughout the course of the attack, another feature reminiscent of
Mumbai.
The
attacks highlighted the precarious security situation in Kashmir, where
violence has dropped significantly but many Muslims still dislike
Indian rule (AJE).
Al Jazeera English reports that after the attack began Wednesday,
crowds of Kashmiris flocked to the scene chanting pro-independence
slogans, and had to be dispersed by Indian police.
Drone confusion
U.S.
Senators John McCain (R-AZ) and Joseph Lieberman (I-CT) expressed
support for the use of drone strikes against militants in a trip to
Afghanistan and Pakistan, despite the fact that the U.S. government
does not officially acknowledge the strikes (Wash Post, Reuters).
Sen. McCain said the drone strikes, "have been very effective, and they
have knocked al Qaeda and other Islamic extremist organizations off
balance." He also appeared to acknowledge the Pakistani government's
cooperation with drone strikes, despite repeated official Pakistani
objections (CNN).
In
a meeting with the senators, Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari
warned that the drone strikes hurt the "national consensus" supporting
military action against militants in the country's troubled northwest,
and again urged the U.S. to give Pakistan drone technology so that the
government could directly target fighters (AFP).
And Islamabad police claim to have captured the "deputy chief" of the
Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) along with an explosives-laden truck,
though police did not identify the man by name (Dawn).
Good morning, Afghanistan
A
group of French Foreign Legion officers and Afghan civilians have
launched the first FM radio station ever in Surowbi district east of
Kabul, but unlike other military radio stations "Radio Surowbi" does
not promote NATO and is not geared towards attacking the Taliban (AP).
Instead, most of the Pashto-language station's 12-hour daily broadcast
time is devoted to music, as well as broadcasting community news and
book readings, and the station sometimes receives calls and requests
from Taliban-held villages.
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Editor's note: today's AfPak Channel Daily Brief was prepared by Andrew Lebovich, a research associate at the New America Foundation, and Katherine Tiedemann.
How to bring peace in the region
No doughts things are very complicated in that region and its very hard to bring peace their and offcouce without any dought world peace is also related to things happening there but the million dollar question is how to bring peace their and kill religious fundamentals and millitants. I believe unless their is rivalry between India and Pakistan its very very hard to do progress in that region . The world must resolve the issues between them if we want peace in the world.
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