Monday, April 26, 2010 - 8:36 AM

The
drumbeat grows louder
Two blasts within a minute rattled
downtown Kandahar earlier today, one reportedly targeting the city's
police chief, and two hours later a third attack hit north of the city (AP, Pajhwok, BBC,
CNN). Two civilians were killed and three others,
including an Afghan policeman, were wounded. On Sunday morning, the 12th
assassination in two months left the brother of an Afghan senator dead (NYT). Ahead of major coalition operations in the
southern Afghan province, elite U.S. Special Operations Forces are
"picking up or picking off" Taliban leaders in order to weaken the
insurgency; the overt parts of the offensive are expected to begin "in
coming weeks" (NYT).
On Sunday morning, around 100 Afghan
protesters burned 12 NATO trucks carrying fuel to a base in eastern
Afghanistan, objecting to two raids by joint U.S.-Afghan forces over the
weekend that allegedly left civilians dead (NYT, Wash Post, Quqnoos, ISAF). Afghan and NATO officials said the men
killed and captured were insurgents, however, and collected AK-47s and
pistols along with Pakistani passports from the home in the raid. In
Zabul, a suicide bomber detonated his explosives in the Shah Joy Bazaar,
the first such attack there since the Afghan new year began in March (NYT, BBC). And British forces based in Helmand may be
among the last to turn over authority to local security forces (Tel).
Around 80 girls in three different
schools within a few miles in northern Kunduz province have mysteriously
fallen ill after complaining of a strange smell in their classrooms (AP, AP, BBC,
NYT). Some local authorities have blamed the Taliban
for attacking girls' education, but no scientific evidence has been
brought forth showing that the illness was caused by anything ingested
or inhaled, and the Taliban's spokesman denied involvement (Independent, Pajhwok). More than 1,500 girls stayed home from
school yesterday (Pajhwok).
Afghan President Hamid Karzai is in
India today meeting with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and other
Indian officials to discuss a host of issues including the security of
Indian workers in Afghanistan, talks with the Taliban, and Indian aid to
Afghanistan (Guardian, Pajhwok, AFP). The AP describes India and Pakistan's
competition over influence in Afghanistan, and a senior adviser to the
Afghan Foreign Ministry commented wearily, "We don't want to be forced
to choose between India and Pakistan" (AP). Al-Jazeera reports that a Pakistani army
officer was among 16 people arrested recently in Kabul on suspicion of
planning suicide attacks, which Pakistan denied (AJE).
Of drones in Pakistan
A handful of alleged
militants were killed in a suspected U.S. drone strike in North Waziristan earlier this morning, two days
after a drone reportedly killed as many as eight in a nearby area (Geo, AFP, AP, Reuters, BBC;
CNN, Geo, AP, Geo, AFP, Reuters). Joby Warrick and Peter Finn have today's
must-read reporting that the CIA, which operates the drone strikes, has
been using smaller missiles to minimize civilian casualties in
Pakistan's northwest (Wash Post). The Agency is also using unarmed
surveillance drones "roughly the size of a pizza platter" that are so
quiet that they "can be outside your window and you won't hear a
whisper," according to a former official who worked with them.
In
a possibly unprecedented such attack on Pakistan's Punjab province,
suspected militants opened fire on NATO tankers parked at a gas station
in Chakwal district, then set at least six oil trucks on fire (AP, AJE, Dawn, AFP, AFP/ET). Up to four Pakistani
policemen were killed. In Lower Dir on Saturday morning, a suicide car
bomber attacked a prison van in Timergarah that was picking up prisoners
to take to the nearby Swat Valley (AP). Ten Pakistani policemen were
injured. And fighting continues in Orakzai, with as many as 28 suspected
Taliban fighters killed over the weekend (ET, AP/Dawn, Daily Times).
The Zazi plot thickens
The Wall
Street Journal reports that in spite of a warning from the FBI to stop
and search would-be New York City subway bomber Najibullah Zazi's car as
it crossed the George Washington Bridge last September, Port Authority
police waved him across and failed to find the two pounds of explosives
hidden inside (WSJ). Zazi, a onetime coffee cart
vendor, reportedly met with two senior al-Qaeda operatives in
Waziristan, Saleh al-Somali and Rashid Rauf (NYT, Tel, AP). Zazi has pleaded guilty and his
sentencing is set for June 25.
Happy
birthday Pajhwok!
Pajhwok Afghan News celebrated its sixth
anniversary on Saturday night with an event at a hotel in Kabul that
ended with traditional Afghan music and dancing (Pajhwok). Pajhwok, which means "reflect" in Dari,
has 44 reporters, 10 editors, 15 translators, four photographers, and
four copy editors.
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