Friday, March 19, 2010 - 8:33 AM

Taliban
talks torpedoed
In his first interview since leaving his
post as top U.N. representative in Afghanistan last month, Norwegian
diplomat Kai Eide told the BBC that the recent arrests of high-ranking
Taliban leaders in Pakistan abruptly halted "a channel of secret
communications" between the U.N. and the insurgency in Afghanistan (BBC). Eide disclosed that the "talks about talks"
were ongoing for about a year, with an "increase in intensity of
contacts," and included face-to-face meetings with leaders of the
militant movement in Dubai and elsewhere (AP). Regarding Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Omar's
involvement, Eide commented, "I find it unthinkable that such contact
would take place without his
knowledge and also without his acceptance."
Three thousand of the
additional troops the Obama administration has ordered deployed to
Afghanistan will be deployed in the northern province of Kunduz, where
the Taliban may be trying to stage a resurgence, under pressure in the
south and hoping to force coalition forces to spread out (Wash Post, AFP). A senior German general said the offensive in
the north would be "similar" to current operations in Helmand.
Michael
Furlong, the Pentagon official who allegedly ran an unauthorized spy
operation using contractors to gather intelligence that was later used
to target militants in Afghanistan and Pakistan, now claims his program
was requested by the former top general in Afghanistan, Gen. David
McKiernan, and approved by CENTCOM (San Antonio Express News, Wash Post, AP). Furlong has reportedly been locked out of his
office at Lackland Air Force Base in Texas, where he said he is a
'principal strategist' for Stratcom.
Export: terror
David
Coleman Headley, the U.S. citizen accused of scouting targets in Mumbai
before the deadly 2008 terrorist attacks in the Indian city and of
plotting to kill a Danish cartoonist, yesterday pleaded guilty in
Chicago to 12 conspiracy charges as part of a plea agreement in exchange
for prosecutors avoiding to seek the death penalty in his case (LAT, WSJ, Wash Post, AFP, AJE, BBC,
Reuters, CNN, Sun Times). Headley acknowledged spending time in
training camps run by the Pakistani military group Lashkar-e-Taiba, and
he could end up in prison for life. The Indian paper The Hindu reports
that Indian authorities want access to Headley's wife for questioning,
though he will not be extradited (Hindu, Wash Post). For an analysis of the LeT, check out a
recently released paper by scholar Stephen Tankel (NAF).
In Philadelphia, the woman who called
herself "JihadJane" online pleaded not guilty yesterday to charges of
conspiring with terrorists in a plot to kill a Swedish artist (AP, LAT, WSJ, ABC, NYT,
Inquirer).
Colleen LaRose is due back in court on May 3 and if convicted, could
face a fine of $1 million and life in prison.
The LA Times
reports that U.S. intelligence officials now believe al-Qaeda and its
affiliates have adapted their tactics in order to allow them to be more
flexible and hit targets of opportunity, as opposed to "sophisticated
plots involving synchronized strikes on multiple targets" (LAT). Officials are concerned that while these
smaller plots are less likely to cause mass casualties, they're more
difficult to prevent.
Pakistan
jirga ahead
Some 3,000 tribal elders representing the 20
largest tribes in Pakistan's northwest are holding a jirga tomorrow in
Peshawar to discuss strategies for ceasing support for militants (Bloomberg). And yesterday, Pakistani authorities in
Karachi nabbed a close aide to the former Pakistani Taliban chief
Baitullah Mehsud, a commander named Ismail Mehsud, and two other TTP
militants also affiliated with Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (Dawn, Daily Times).
Pakistan's Supreme Court is
set to rule on a case against the government alleging that the state
used the pretext of the "war on terror" to secretly arrest and detain up
to 1,600 people between 2001 and 2008, though the families of the
missing say the figure is more like 8,000 (AJE, Daily Times). The country's attorney general
recommended that the court set up a 'judicial council' to examine the
matter more closely.
Two more stories round out the day: a highly
regarded former World Bank executive has been appointed as Pakistan's
finance minister after Shaukat Tarin, a vocal critic of government
corruption, resigned three weeks ago (WSJ); and when Pakistani military and civilian
leaders come calling on Washington next week, they will be asking for a
civil nuclear deal much like the one the U.S. offered India several
years ago (McClatchy).
Pigeoning
in Karachi
The Daily Times entertainingly profiles the
pigeon-feeding industry in Karachi, where pigeon feed vendors can make
up to Rs 1,200 (Daily Times). Some of the pigeon feed vendors
objected to the idea that stray cats and dogs might be similarly fed,
asserting, "Dogs are unclean creatures... a cat can never be loyal, but
our pigeons pray for us."
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