Thursday, April 29, 2010 - 9:24 AM

The
one that got away?
The
Guardian reported yesterday that Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan leader
Hakimullah Mehsud survived a drone
strike in January that was previously
believed to have killed him (Guardian). An unnamed "senior official" in
Pakistan's Inter-Service Intelligence
agency (ISI) told the paper that Mehsud was only wounded in the
strike, but may no longer be in control of the group; the AP reports
that four intelligence officials now believe he is alive, based on
sources in the field and electronic surveillance (AP, LAT). None of the officials has
explained how earlier statements by officials that he had died were
wrong, and Hakimullah has not spoken out since January. And Newsweek
reports that the Pakistani military has released Abdul Qayum Zakir,
Quetta Shura Taliban number two Mullah Baradar's top military commander,
from detention after capturing him for "a week or two" earlier this
year (Newsweek).
The House Subcommittee on National
Security and Foreign Affairs held a hearing yesterday with four law of
war experts over the legality of the drone
strikes (House, CNN, AP). While the panelists
offered divergent
opinions about what U.S. and international laws say about targeted
killings outside of combat zones, a rough consensus seemed to emerge
among most of the panelists that CIA officers controlling the drones
could be subject to U.S. laws regarding
the killing of combatants abroad.
Karen DeYoung
reports that the delivery of 18 new
F-16 fighter aircraft to Pakistan this year will require 50 new U.S.
military
personnel to deploy to the country, an increase of 25 percent (Wash Post). The 200 U.S. military currently in
Pakistan are involved in security assistance; Pakistan prohibits U.S.
combat troops.
Bloody day
Clashes
in North Waziristan continued yesterday after Taliban
forces attacked a Pakistani army checkpoint east
of Miram Shah, resulting in the deaths of four Taliban fighters and at
least two Pakistani soldiers (Dawn, AP). The attack is the second on the
Pakistani army in the agency in the past week, and comes as
Pakistani forces have resisted international pressure to stage a full
offensive in
North Waziristan. Other clashes in Swat and Buner districts killed several
militants, including a "close aide to Swat Taliban leader Maulana
Fazlullah" (Daily Times). Fierce fighting also
continued yesterday in Orakzai, as militants blew up three schools in
Mamozai (Geo,
The
News, Daily Times, Dawn).
It turns out
that the much-heralded video of a girl from Swat being whipped by the
Taliban -- a video partially credited with turning Pakistani public
opinion in
favor of army intervention against the group -- may not be authentic (LAT). And
China has agreed to build two new civilian
nuclear reactors in Pakistan, complicating U.S. efforts to combat the
proliferation of nuclear technology and demonstrating the importance of
China's ties with Pakistan (FT).
The second coming?
Two years
after
elections ousted him as Pakistan's military ruler and criminal charges
sent him
abroad, Gen. Pervez Musharraf is reportedly contemplating a return to
Pakistan in the near future and has applied to register a new political
party with authorities in Islamabad (Telegraph, AFP). Musharraf could face trial over
his imprisonment of judges in 2007 and questioning in the assassination
of Benazir Bhutto; his new party will be called All Pakistan Muslim
League.
Mixed
signals
A Congressionally-mandated Pentagon review of
progress in Afghanistan was released yesterday (available here),
finding that only one in four Afghans in "key regions" of the country
support or are sympathetic to the Afghan government (AP, McClatchy, DoD, CSM, Wash Post). The report also
states that more Afghans feel "secure" now than did six months ago,
while support for insurgents is dropping. And while the report found that coalition offensives and
arrests have sown confusion among the Taliban, the movement's reach and
military capability is expanding (LAT).
Another Pentagon report released yesterday stated that
Pakistan has moved more than 100,000 soldiers off of its border with
India to fight insurgents along the Afghan border (Times of India, Reuters). Calling this redeployment "unprecedented,"
the report still concluded that the attitude and troop shift in
Pakistan was not likely to have an immediate impact on the war in
Afghanistan. Pakistan and India's prime ministers met earlier today at a
regional meeting in Bhutan, their first encounter in more than nine
months, potentially indicating a thaw in the frosty relationship (AP, AFP, ET).
Uneasy
balance of power
Joshua Partlow has today's must-read on
U.S. efforts to bolster the governor of Kandahar, who faces obstacles
posed by his nominal constituents, powerful men like Afghan President
Hamid Karzai's half-brother Ahmed Wali Karzai, and his own status as an
outsider in the run-up to this summer's expected military offensive in
Kandahar (Wash Post). And more
details
have emerged about the widely-respected tribal elder, Abdul Rahman,
who was killed near Kandahar yesterday (BBC, NYT). Rahman was known for having
sharply criticized Afghan President Hamid Karzai at a meeting in
Kandahar earlier this month, describing the fear among the people of
being
killed for siding with the Afghan government.
Protests
broke out near the eastern Afghan city of Jalalabad after a NATO-led
raid on a female parliamentarian's home resulted in the shooting death
of her brother-in-law last night (Reuters, Pajhwok, AFP, AP). While NATO spokespeople contended
the shooting was legitimate, the sharp reaction shows the anger caused
by "night raids," which top U.S. and NATO commander Gen. Stanley
McChrystal has sought to limit.
The Afghan government yesterday
disputed U.N. findings that Afghan police officers may have been
responsible for the deaths of four out of the five U.N. employees killed
in an attack in October on a U.N. guesthouse in Kabul (LAT). And in the United Arab Emirates, six men were
imprisoned for funneling money to the Taliban in Afghanistan (Times).
"Chalet"
in Dari
The breathtaking scenery of Afghanistan's Bamiyan
province has inspired ideas for a new kind of tourist industry there:
skiing (Guardian). Despite the lack of trained skiiers and
virtually no ski infrastructure, provincial officials hope Bamiyan's
mountains and bountiful snow could bring much-needed "ecotourist"
dollars to the region.
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