Monday, March 22, 2010 - 4:40 AM

Special
invitation: Join the New America Foundation tomorrow at 11am for a discussion about
counterinsurgency in Afghanistan from a British perspective, featuring
lead British spokesman on Afghan operations, Maj. Gen. Gordon Messenger (NAF).
Pakistan's power plays
Pakistan's
Army chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani visited CENTCOM in Tampa this
weekend and heads to Washington this week for meetings with U.S.
officials, causing some analysts to worry that Pakistan's military is
gathering more power over its civilian government (NYT). Meanwhile, the Telegraph reports that Pakistan
is preparing to unveil a set of "sweeping" reforms designed to remove
powers from the presidency that had once been seized by military
dictators (Tel). Under the new system, the prime minister, not
the president, would be the most powerful figure in the government.
On
Saturday, a rare meeting of more than 700 tribal leaders met in
Peshawar and demanded that the Pakistani Army do more to fight the
Taliban in the troubled northwest (WSJ, AP). One tribal elder called for the Army to conduct
a "genuine military operation like the Sri Lankans did against the
Tamil Tigers."
Pakistani security forces claimed to have killed
as many as 25 militants in air strikes and gun battles in the tribal
agencies of Orakzai and Kurram over the weekend (The News, Daily Times, Geo, AFP). And in Pakistan's southwestern Baluchistan
province, nearly 20 people including several police officers and a
college president have been killed in roadside bombings and targeted
assassinations in the last several days (Dawn, Dawn, AJE).
Praising
Panetta
A pair of articles in the Post and the Journal
this weekend looked at CIA director Leon Panetta's record so far, with
the Journal assessing that Panetta's experience as a politician and
chief of staff to President Bill Clinton has helped him improve
relationships, especially with "mercurial Pakistan" (WSJ). The Post, describing Panetta as "an
earthy former congressman with exquisitely honed Washington smarts,"
disclosed that Panetta authorizes every drone strike in northwest
Pakistan, a program which has been dramatically ramped up under the
Obama administration (Post).
A drone
strike reportedly killed between 4 and 13 suspected militants in a
village some 50 miles west of the main town of North Waziristan on
Sunday (CNN, AP, Dawn, Reuters, AFP). Several miles east of Miram Shah, in Mir Ali,
the bodies of four Pakistani tribesmen accused by the Taliban of spying
for the U.S. were found on Sunday morning, after the men were kidnapped
some 10 days ago (AP, Geo).
Face-to-face with insurgent commanders in
Afghanistan
A five-member delegation from the Afghan
insurgent group Hezb-i-Islami, the organization led by Gulbuddin
Hekmatyar, is currently in Kabul pitching their plan for peace in
Afghanistan to various members of the Afghan government, including
President Hamid Karzai (AP, BBC,
Pajhwok, Reuters, AFP). The 15-point-plan is said to include a
provision calling for the withdrawal of foreign forces beginning in July
of 2010, a full year before the Obama administration's stated deadline,
and this marks the first time Karzai has met personally with
representatives from the insurgent group.
Ten Afghan civilians
were killed yesterday when a suicide attacker missed his intended target
of an Afghan National Army vehicle and instead hit a picnic on a bridge
in Gereshk, a district in the southern province of Helmand (BBC, CNN, AP, AFP, NYT). About 45 miles south of Gereshk, U.S. and NATO
forces in Marjah are, writes Rod Nordland, in the "unusual position of
arguing against opium eradication, pitting them against some Afghan
officials who are pushing to destroy the harvest" (NYT). Though there is a constitutional ban on
cultivation, opium is the main livelihood for up to 70 percent of
Marjah's farmers, and 22 percent of Helmand's arable land is devoted to
poppy farming. U.S. Marines are offering cash to farmers to destroy
their own poppy crops and grow legal alternatives (Reuters).
The London Times reports that
Iranian "officials" paid Taliban commanders and insurgents to attend
three-month training courses an hour's drive from Zahidan, a city in
southeastern Iran, where they were taught techniques for attacking
convoys, storming checkpoints, and placing the roadside bombs that have
been so deadly in Afghanistan (Times). Militants in Afghanistan are building
bigger, more powerful IEDs, some at least twice as large as those seen
in Iraq, and a military official said insurgents now "routinely" bury
additional bombs designed to harm medical personnel or bomb technicians
who respond to an initial blast (WSJ).
A
new Guantanamo?
The Obama administration is reportedly
considering whether to expand the prison at Bagram north of Kabul,
Afghanistan to detain international terrorism suspects, which would lead
to another prison with the same purpose as Guantanamo (LAT, Times). However, top U.S. and NATO commander in
Afghanistan Gen. Stanley McChrystal has already expressed his opposition
to that idea, concerned about its effects on stabilizing Afghanistan.
Alissa Rubin considers another aspect of detention policy in
Afghanistan, describing the process by which detainees deemed not to be
threats are turned over to their tribal elders, who vouch for their good
behavior (NYT).
Newsweek is running a story on what it
dubs the "fiasco" of Afghanistan's police force, writing that although
the U.S. has spent more than $6 billion training the ANP since 2002,
fewer than 12 percent of the country's police units can function
independently (Newsweek).
Let's not go fly a kite
In
Lahore, the cultural capital of Pakistan recently struck again by
terrorist attacks, authorities have cracked down on the centuries-old
kite-flying festival called Basant out of safety concerns related to the
razor-sharp kite strings (Wash Post). However, critics of the ban say it's a
way for the city's powerful religious leaders to eliminate the parties,
drinking, and dancing that went along with the kite-flying celebrations.
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