Friday, January 22, 2010 - 10:18 AM

Busy trip
Defense
Secretary Robert Gates continued his swing through Pakistan yesterday,
meeting with Pakistani military leaders and attempting to address
"misconceptions" about American policies towards the country (AFP, LAT, AJE).
In an interview with Pakistani television, Gates indicated that the
United States would begin supplying the Pakistani military with unarmed
"Shadow" reconnaissance drones, in a bid to increase military efforts
against the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and allied groups (NYT, CSM, AFP, BBC, Daily Times). And the German newspaper Die Welt reported
last week that they had unearthed a recent video showing Islamic
Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) leader Tahir Yuldashev, who had previously
been thought killed in a drone strike last summer (Die Welt - in German, Daily Times).
Gates also confirmed the presence of the security contractor Xe, formerly Blackwater, on Pakistani soil (Department of Defense).
However, Gates was careful to say that any security groups operating
under contract for the U.S. government would comply with strict
American rules and Pakistani law.
Despite statements from
Pakistani military leaders yesterday that no offensive in North
Waziristan would occur for six to twelve months, Reuters reports today
that Pakistani troops backed with helicopter gunships attacked a
"militant hideout" near Miram Shah, the agency's main town, while the
AP writes that a handful of fighters were killed in a
search-and-clearance operation nearby (Reuters, AP). And amidst
reports that a group of Mehsud tribal elders had agreed to surrender
militants as well as TTP leader Hakimullah Mehsud, the TTP has issued
pamphlets warning Mehsud tribesmen not to return to South Waziristan
"for their own safety." (Dawn).
High alert
India
has put a high alert on airports in the country after receiving
intelligence that militants linked to al Qaeda and the Pakistan-based
Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorist group were planning to hijack an Air India or
Indian Airlines flight traveling to a neighboring South Asian country (AP, AJE, CNN, BBC, AFP, WSJ, Times of India, Indian Express).
Sky marshals have been deployed on certain planes, and passengers are
being subjected to intense screening at least until the end of the
month.
Whirlwind Washington tour
Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton announced a new strategy for civilian
engagement in Afghanistan yesterday, one that involves an increased,
long-term civilian presence in Afghanistan beyond the nearly 1,000
civilians already there or slated to arrive in the near future (Department of State, Reuters).
The plan addresses issues from agriculture development to corruption
and reconciliation efforts with Taliban fighters, though some doubt
whether the ambitious strategy, developed by Special Representative for
Afghanistan and Pakistan Amb. Richard Holbrooke, will receive
sufficient support from Congress (AFP).
Appearing
with Holbrooke before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Thursday,
British Foreign Secretary David Miliband stressed the need for a
revised political strategy in Afghanistan, telling the Committee that
in order to defeat the Taliban, "[w]e have to make sure we are not
outgunned, but we always have to make sure we are not out-governed (Independent, AP).
Miliband also said ahead of next week's conference in London on
Afghanistan that he wanted to shift responsibility for security to the
Afghan government and support Afghan President Hamid Karzai's plan to
reconcile some Taliban fighters with the Afghan government in part
through money and job programs, an idea Secretary Gates also supports (Telegraph, WSJ, NYT, AFP, Dawn, McClatchy, BBC).
Even the Afghan warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, who leads one of the major
insurgent factions in Afghanistan, has expressed a recent willingness
to cooperate with Karzai's government under certain conditions, though
he has a long history of switching sides (WSJ).
COIN adjustments
U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan Karl Eikenberry has slowed
the implementation of a program meant to arm and train local
anti-Taliban militias, reflecting an ongoing debate between military
and civilian officials over the best way to fight the Taliban in the
Afghan countryside (Wash Post). Meanwhile, the Afghan government moved quickly in the
wake of Monday's deadly assault on Kabul to claim victory in the
engagement, holding a news conference and a medal ceremony
for some Afghan soldiers who helped subdue Taliban fighters (WSJ). Afghan officials emphasized the fact that Afghan commandos
responded to the attack with little foreign assistance (Economist).
NATO
will soon curtail "night raids" in Afghanistan, in
an effort to reduce the hostility these operations engender among many
Afghans (AP).
Night raids have received more attention since top U.S. and NATO
commander Gen. Stanley McChrystal limited the use of air strikes and
other tactics last year in an effort to reduce civilian casualties and
grievances. Dexter Filkins looks at the mystery surrounding a recent night
raid that killed four in Ghazni Province and sparked intense protests from Afghan civilians (NYT).
Afghanistan's
government has banned the common fertilizer ammonium nitrate, after an
investigation found that it was used in a number of bombs targeting
Afghan and western forces (AP).
Afghan farmers have 30 days to turn in their supplies of the chemical
or face punishment. And an American gunsight
manufacturing company that aroused controversy this week over Bible
references stamped on their equipment will voluntarily remove the
markings from future sights and provide kits so troops in the
field can remove them (AJE, VOA, CNN).
Pitch battles
Pakistani
civilians, cricket players, and government officials alike have
expressed anger that no Pakistani players were chosen in this week's
Indian Premier League auction, held this week (WSJ).
While Indian officials insist that they have nothing to do with the
selection of players for India's most important cricket league,
Pakistani Interior Minister Rehman Malik complained publicly about the
snub, and Pakistanis protested in several cities.
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I believe this is a very positive and effective step to give spy drone technonoly to PAk army it will really increase their efficiancy and capacity in war against terrorists as we have seen that sri lankan used such planes to stop militancy in their country. It will also ease the pressure on US ans NATO forces in the region.
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