Wednesday, February 3, 2010 - 8:49 AM

A bomb blast
Three
U.S. soldiers who were in Pakistan as part of a small, low-profile unit
that trains members of the Pakistani Frontier Corps were killed earlier
this morning when a remote-control roadside bomb exploded near a girls'
school celebrating its opening in the tribal area of Lower Dir (NYT, AP, AFP, Reuters, BBC, Dawn, Geo, Islamabad Embassy statement).
At least seven others, including four schoolgirls and a Frontier Corps
soldier, were also killed in the blast, and around 70 children and a
few journalists were wounded; the Pakistani Army last year declared Dir
free of the Taliban, and this is one of the deadliest attacks on
Americans in Pakistan in decades (ABC).
The Pakistani Taliban took responsibility for the attack and claimed
those Americans killed were employees of the security contracting firm
Blackwater (AFP).
In
an unusually heavy barrage, a suspected U.S. drone fired at least 17
missiles targeting militant bunkers in the tribal agency of North
Waziristan, on the Afghan border, killing as many as 31 yesterday (Daily Times, Dawn, AP, AP, Reuters, AFP, AFP, NYT, BBC, CNN, WSJ). It is the 13th reported strike this year.
The
Pakistani Taliban continue to refuse to prove their leader, Hakimullah
Mehsud, is alive, after rumors of his death in an alleged drone strike
in mid-January percolate (FT, AP).
Chatter is also growing that one of Hakimullah's likely successors, the
trainer of suicide bombers Qari Hussain, was also killed in the same
suspected drone strike (TOI). Dawn
reports that the Obama administration's recently released budget calls
for more funding for Predator and Reaper drones to be added to the U.S.
military's arsenal in a few years (Dawn).
Violent
clashes between activists from rival political parties in the southern
Pakistani city of Karachi continue for a fifth day, as the death toll
reaches at least 37 (AFP, Dawn, Daily Times, Dawn).
Karachi has mostly avoided the militancy that plagues Pakistan's
northwest, but analysts say the crime and kidnappings in the city can
fund the insurgency.
The epicenter
Yesterday,
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Adm. Mike Mullen encouraged the Senate
Armed Services Committee to approve the Pentagon's request for $192
billion on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan over the next 18 months,
$33 billion of which would go toward the 30,000-soldier increase in
Afghanistan (Wash Post, AFP, The News). Adm. Mullen's and Defense Secretary Bob Gates' prepared testimonies are available here (SASC).
Also
testifying before the Senate yesterday, Director of National
Intelligence Dennis Blair presented his annual threat assessment and
said that an attempted al Qaeda terrorist attack on the United States
within the next six months is "certain" (WSJ, CNN, Wash Post, NPR).
The threat assessment is a must-read for those seeking the understand
the intelligence community's understanding of the global security
situation (DNI-pdf).
Delegations and investigations
Afghan
President Hamid Karzai, currently on a trip to Saudi Arabia to discuss
negotiations with the Taliban, has canceled a meeting scheduled with
the Organization of Islamic Conference, the world's top Muslim body,
reportedly because the Afghan delegation wanted to visit Medina (Reuters, Independent).
A senior OIC official said the canceled meeting was supposed to address
the organization's role in containing Afghan tensions and to follow up
on an offer for the OIC to host a conference for Islamic scholars to
discuss Afghanistan. Karzai is scheduled to meet the Saudi king later
today, and complications about the scope and reach of potential
negotiations are numerous (Pajhwok, WSJ).
A
military investigation into the battle at Wanat in the summer of 2008
that left nine U.S. soldiers dead and 27 wounded recommends that the
Army consider taking disciplinary actions against three U.S. commanders
who oversaw the mission, including one who was awarded a Silver Star
for calling in air strikes during the attack (Wash Post).
The investigation, which runs nearly 4,000 pages, will reportedly be
released after a decision regarding any disciplinary action has been
made and the families of the deceased informed.
Rod Nordland
takes a look at the fairly dismal current state of the Afghan National
Police, writing that one in five police recruits tests positive for
drugs, fewer than one in ten is literate, and a fourth of the force
quits every year (NYT).
And two U.S. soldiers were killed by a roadside bomb in southern
Afghanistan; IEDs are responsible for up to 90 percent of foreign troop
fatalities in the country (BBC, AFP, NYT, ISAF).
Going for the gold
Afghanistan defeated Sri Lanka yesterday in a soccer match at the South Asian Games, currently underway in Dhaka, Bangladesh (Pajhwok). The team will advance to the next round of competition.
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