Friday, May 14, 2010 - 9:09 AM

Rounding up suspects
Three Pakistani men were
arrested yesterday in Massachusetts and Maine on suspicion of providing
money to failed Times Square car bomber Faisal Shahzad (Wash Post, NYT, BBC,
AFP, Times). All three were detained on immigration
violations and have not yet been charged, and the FBI also carried out
raids in New York and New Jersey in connection with the case.
Greg
Miller reports that Pakistani authorities have arrested a suspect with
alleged connections to the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan who claims he acted
as an accomplice to Shahzad, and while U.S. investigators say the broad
outlines of the two accounts of Shahzad's training in Waziristan and travel match up, there are some
"conflicts, disconnects" with the chronology (Wash Post). Both men claim to have met TTP chief Hakimullah Mehsud, though officials and analysts
think the militant leader would be unlikely to risk meeting face-to-face
with an unproven American recruit, and believe the men have
exaggerated.
A Pakistani man arrested at the U.S. Embassy in
Chile on Monday after traces of explosives were found on his clothes is
not believed to be connected to the Times Square plot, and was on a
watch list before the May 1 event (NYT). Mohammad Saif ur Rehman's father believes his
son's detention was a "setup" resulting from racial profiling (Dawn). Dawn reports that U.S. authorities said
Rehman is linked to an extremist organization, and that the Pakistani
Embassy claims Rehman is suspected of involvement with the 'Khilafat
movement' (Dawn).
A
flood of refugees
Some 25,000 Pakistanis have fled dozens
of villages in the Hunza Valley in northern Pakistan, close to the
border with China, after the Ataabad lake swelled to submerge homes and
roads in the area following a landslide in early January (NYT, AJE, Geo, AP, Dawn). The water is rising at a rate of three feet
per day, and Pakistani Army engineers have built a spillway to drain the
lake, which they expect to do by the end of the month.
A leader
of the Awami National Party, a secular Pashtun nationalist group, was
shot and killed in Karachi yesterday, and clashes between the Pakistani
military and militant fighters continues in the Tirah Valley in
Pakistan's Khyber agency (Daily Times, Daily Times). Al Jazeera reports that a conflict
between coalition forces and Taliban militants on the Afghan border near
North Waziristan spilled over into Pakistani
territory, though Pakistani military officials deny it (AJE).
Cooperation
for Kandahar
At the end of Afghan President Hamid
Karzai's visit to Washington, the Afghan leader and U.S. Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton emphasized that upcoming coalition operations in
the southern Afghan province of Kandahar are part of a "process," while
Karzai said he had raised the issue of his powerful half-brother Ahmed
Wali Karzai's role in Kandahar with U.S. President Barack Obama and now
considers it "resolved" (NYT, Reuters). And Clinton said Taliban militants who
reconcile with the Afghan government must respect women's rights (AP, AFP). Today, Karzai is visiting U.S. troops who are
being deployed to Afghanistan (AFP).
As Clinton stated the U.S.
will not destroy Kandahar in order to save it from the Taliban, top commander in Afghanistan
Gen. Stanley McChrystal went so far as to say, "We're not
using the term operation or major operations, because that often brings
to mind in people's psyche the idea of a D-Day and an H-hour and an
attack" (BBC,
AJE, DoD). Karzai said the U.S. needs to do a better job
of "selling" the Kandahar operations, which McClatchy assesses are
"already faltering" (WSJ, Independent, McClatchy, BBC,
NYT, McClatchy).
The Senate
Appropriations Committee yesterday approved an additional $33.5 billion
in funding for the Pentagon and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and
just under $4 billion for the State Department, in addition to the $130
billion Congress already approved for the two conflicts through
September 30, 2010 (Reuters).
Night raids
Eleven civilians
were reportedly killed in a joint NATO-Afghan night raid in the eastern
Afghan province of Nangarhar, sparking hundreds of protesters to take to
the streets in gathering that turned deadly when Afghan police fired
on the crowd, which was chanting, "Death to Americans, long live the
Taliban," killing one (Reuters, BBC,
AJE, NYT, ISAF, AP, Pajhwok). A U.S. military spokesman said
all those killed in the night raid were insurgents.
Tom Coghlan
reports on the mysterious "White Taliban" in Zabul province, where there
are consistent reports of Arab, Uzbek, and Chechen fighters and a crude
campaign of intimidation is underway; local residents have been
forbidden to leave the area (Times).
"American al-Qaeda"
Paul
Cruickshank, Nic Robertson, and Ken Shiffman report on the
radicalization of Bryant Neal Vinas in the first of a two-part series
resulting from a ten-month investigation of the onetime Long Island
resident's involvement with an al-Qaeda plot to attack the Long Island
Rail Road (CNN). The documentary "American al-Qaeda" is airing
on CNN on Saturday, May 15, at 8:00 p.m.
Burqa wars
Foreign
Policy is featuring a fascinating photo essay on burqas, the garment
worn by many Afghan women to cover up (FP). They come in a variety of colors
and are often shades of blue.
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