Monday, January 11, 2010 - 8:50 AM

Event notice: New
America Foundation counterterrorism fellow Brian Fishman will be
speaking today at 2:30pm in Washington, DC on "Making the Next Bin
Laden." Details here.
At the polls
Newly
released annual polling in Afghanistan conducted in the country's 34
provinces in December 2009 from BBC/ABC/ARD suggests that Afghans are
more optimistic about the future; 70 percent believe the country is
headed in the right direction, up from 40 percent a year ago (BBC).
83 percent of those surveyed have a favorable opinion of Afghan
President Hamid Karzai, while the U.S. military forces in Afghanistan
are supported by 68 percent of Afghans and the Taliban by 10 percent; 72 percent of Afghans support the more than 30,000 additional U.S. and NATO troops being sent to the country. The full polling results are available here (BBC-pdf).
Karzai
submitted a second round of picks for his cabinet on Saturday, after
the Afghan Parliament roundly rejected 17 of his 24 original choices,
though lawmakers indicated that Karzai faces another uphill battle in
getting his choices confirmed as the new nominees have been criticized
for lacking necessary credentials, being too close to warlords, or were
selected for supporting Karzai (AP, BBC, Globe and Mail, LAT, NYT). Three women were included, after the only woman nominated in the first round was rejected; a full list is available here (AP).
Casualties
A defense correspondent for the Sunday Mirror
tabloid newspaper has become the first British reporter to die covering
the war in Afghanistan after his vehicle drove over a roadside bomb on
Saturday in Helmand province during a patrol with U.S. Marines (AFP, Reuters, NYT, AP, Guardian, Telegraph, Mirror, AJE, BBC, WSJ).
Rupert Hamer is the second Western journalist to be killed in
Afghanistan in ten days; Canadian reporter Michelle Lang of the Calgary Herald died in neighboring Kandahar province from a roadside bomb on December 30.
Three
U.S. soldiers were killed earlier today while fighting insurgent forces
in volatile southern Afghanistan, bringing the total number of U.S.
troops killed in the country in 2010 to 10 (AP, AFP, Pajhwok).
NATO forces seized more than 5,300 pounds of processed opium in a
search of a "suspicious vehicle" in Kandahar on Friday, and the
commander of all Marines in southern Afghanistan Brigadier General
Larry Nicholson told the AP that Marjah, just west of the provincial
capital of Helmand province, is "where we're going next" to fight the
Taliban (AFP, AP).
Top
U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan General Stanley McChrystal said
in an interview with ABC that the additional U.S. troops being sent to
the country has "changed the way we operate" and cautioned that
although "we've made progress, it's not a completed mission" (ABC, AP).
Media appearances
The
Jordanian doctor and al Qaeda double agent believed to be behind the
Dec. 30 suicide attack at a CIA base in Khost, Afghanistan, which
killed seven CIA operatives and a Jordanian spy, appeared in a video
aired over the weekend alongside Pakistani Taliban chief Hakimullah
Mehsud, underlining the connections between the Taliban and al Qaeda (CNN, Aaj, NYT, McClatchy, BBC, Wash Post). Humam
Khalil Abu Mulal al-Balawi was shown vowing revenge for Hakimullah's
predecessor, Baitullah Mehsud, who was killed by a U.S.-operated drone
in August 2009.
The Washington Post
has today's must-read describing how al-Balawi detonated his explosives
"just before" he was going to be searched at Forward Operating Base
Chapman (Wash Post). And on Sunday, CIA director Leon Panetta protested public commentary about the attack "suggesting that those who gave their lives somehow brought it upon
themselves because of "poor tradecraft." That's like saying Marines who
die in a firefight brought it upon themselves because they have poor
war-fighting skills" (Wash Post).
The Afghan government agreed on Saturday to assume
responsibility for the management of the U.S.-run military prison at
Bagram air base, which houses more than 700 detainees captured by U.S.
forces (NYT, AJE, AP).
Initially, the Afghan Ministry of Defense will run Bagram, and
eventually transition control to the Ministry of Justice, possibly by
the end of year.
Drone watching
Christopher
Drew has another fascinating read today describing the deluge of data
generated by U.S.-operated drones in Afghanistan and Iraq, writing that
Air Force drones gathered 24 years' worth of video over the two
countries last year, three times as much as in 2007 (NYT).
And a handful of suspected militants were killed by the sixth reported
drone strike in Pakistan this year in the Ismail Khel village in the
Datta Khel region of North Waziristan on Saturday (AP, AFP, CNN, Geo, Times of India). Another reported drone strike targeted the town of Tappi in North Waziristan on Friday (AFP,
AP, CNN, Geo).
Dozens of people have been killed in a wave of targeted attacks since the beginning of the year in Karachi,
Pakistan's largest city, among rival political groups that "some say is
aimed at destabilizing the country's ruling coalition" (AP, Dawn, Daily Times). There were 86 targeted killings in Karachi in 2008, and 152 in 2009.
Pakistani
police have detained five female would-be suicide bombers in Islamabad
and the Swat Valley in Pakistan, and one of the girls told members of
the media that she had been trained by Maulana Fazlullah, the leader of
the Pakistani Taliban in Swat (Pajhwok). And Sarah Kershaw reviews a "range of patterns" that has emerged from the study of the psychology of terrorism (NYT).
Barnes and Noble Kabul
The
government of Denmark is funding the construction of three bookstores
in Kabul that will have the capacity to store up to 15 million books (Pajhwok). The facilities are scheduled to be completed within a year.
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