Tuesday, March 16, 2010 - 7:38 AM

At
cross purposes?
Yesterday's big news is that Mullah
Baradar, the Afghan Taliban second-in-command who was captured last
month in Karachi in a joint U.S.-Pakistani raid, was reportedly involved
in talks with the Afghan government at the time of his arrest, and had
given the "green light" to participating in next month's peace jirga in
Kabul (AP). According to an aide, Afghan President Hamid
Karzai was furious at the capture, and he and his Western counterparts
are reportedly at odds over who should be at the negotiating table.
Reuters reports that the U.N. is ready to continue "discreet" talks with
members of the Taliban (Reuters). Meanwhile, U.S. and British intelligence
reportedly assess that Mullah Omar, the leader of the Afghan Taliban,
may be in Karachi (BBC).
Earlier this morning, a suspected U.S. drone strike hit the
town of Datta Khel, west of Miram Shah, the main city in North
Waziristan, killing around ten people (BBC,
AFP, AJE, The
News, Dawn/Reuters, AP). A local official told BBC Urdu the target was a
compound of local Taliban commander Hafiz Gul Bahadur, and the strike
is the 22nd reported this year (NAF).
And yesterday, a Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan spokesman and amir in Mohmand offered a "deal" to
the government of Pakistan's Punjab province, volunteering to stop
targeting public institutions in exchange for not being punished (Daily Times).
After last week's pair of
deadly suicide attacks on the Punjabi capital of Lahore, Pakistani
police have discovered two major weapons caches there in the last two
days, today recovering 4,400 pounds of explosives, guns, and suicide
vests in a fruit market warehouse, and yesterday more than 3,300 pounds
of explosives from an unused shop (AP, Daily Times, AP). Pakistani police also seized a van full of
explosives en route from Peshawar to Islamabad yesterday (The News).
South
Waziristan: check
The chief of the Pakistani Army, Gen.
Ashfaq Kayani, said yesterday that the military had achieved its goals
in the South Waziristan operations, which began last October in an
effort to rid the area of militants, and would therefore turn over
control of the agency to its civilian counterparts on March 30 (Daily Times, Dawn). However, the general said the Army would
remain present in some areas to prevent a militant resurgence.
And
in the latest round of drama between Pakistani President Asif Ali
Zardari and Supreme Court Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry, the
Pakistani government is planning to ask the country's parliament (led by
Zardari's party, the PPP) to take the power to reject Supreme Court
appointments out of the hands of the chief justice (WSJ). The Journal
has the details.
A close hold
in Afghanistan
In the wake of Saturday's coordinated
suicide attacks in the southern Afghan province of Kandahar, a
stronghold of the Taliban, Karzai reportedly ordered extra forces
including more than 1,000 Afghan police to the provincial capital (AP, AFP). Kandahar is reportedly the site of an
upcoming military offensive, following recent operations in Marjah, a
town in neighboring Helmand province, that have left many refugees
adrift (Tel).
The New York Times' big story today
is that top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan Gen. Stanley
McChrystal is taking more direct control over U.S. Special Operations
forces operating in Afghanistan, out of concern that they are not making
limiting civilian casualties a "paramount objective" (NYT). Two Afghan officials quoted in the article
made comments to the effect that these troops were not accountable, and
the Army's Delta Force and the Navy's Seals are believed to be exempted
from Gen. McChrystal's new directive limiting Special Operations forces.
Women in politics
Afghanistan's
youngest elected politician, the 31-year-old Malalai Joya, is hoping to
engineer a political comeback in this September's parliamentary
elections, having been expelled from the legislative body and barred
from Afghan media after she denounced the role of warlords in the
country (NYT). And the Post
looks at the depressing state of the role of women in Afghanistan,
observing that the women's affairs minister was not invited to the
much-heralded London conference in late January and that requests for
women to be involved in the late April peace jirga in Kabul have been
met with silence (Wash Post).
A handful of other stories
round out the day: the GAO blocked a contract for the security firm
formerly known as Blackwater to train Afghan police, leaving who will
train the struggling 90,000-strong paramilitary force unclear (Wash Post); a former British Army officer and
senior employee at a firm providing security for diplomatic personnel at
the British Embassy in Kabul was arrested on corruption charges (Times); and Pajhwok reports that 600 U.N. workers
who left Afghanistan for the UAE after last October's deadly attack on a
U.N. guest house in Kabul are returning to the country (Pajhwok).
Actual
conjoined twins
A pair of infant girls conjoined at the
head were born in Punjab province several days ago (Dawn). Doctors in Islamabad are studying whether
they will be able to operate and separate the twins.
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