Tuesday, June 1, 2010 - 8:22 AM

The world's most dangerous job?
U.S. and Pakistani
officials and an al-Qaeda statement all claim the organization's current
no. 3 leader and one of its
co-founders Mustafa Abu al-Yazid was recently killed in Pakistan's
tribal regions (The News, Reuters, AFP, BBC, NYT, NBC, Wash Post). Intelligence officials say
Yazid, an Egyptian who was al-Qaeda's commander in Afghanistan and
Pakistan and had served as an adviser to Osama bin Laden, was killed in a
suspected U.S. drone strike in North Waziristan last week; his death
has been reported before, but this is the first time al-Qaeda has
acknowledged such claims.
The Qaeda release said Yazid's wife,
three daughters, and granddaughter were also killed in the attack (NBC, BBC). Yazid was reportedly the link
between bin Laden and his second in command, Ayman al-Zawahiri, and the
terrorist group, and as a fluent Pashtu speaker with "impeccable
manners" was close to Taliban leader Mullah Omar (AP).
A suspected U.S. drone
struck a town in South Waziristan close to the Afghan
border on Friday, killing at least 8 alleged militants reportedly at a
meeting of leaders (Dawn, Nation, Geo,
CNN, Wash Post). It is the first reported drone strike in South Waziristan this year, and Dawn
writes that the targeted house belonged to an ally of Taliban commander
Mullah Nazir (Dawn). On Thursday, U.N. special
rapporteur for extrajudicial, summary, or arbitrary executions Philip
Alston will deliver a report calling for the drones to be operated by
regular armed forces rather than the CIA, contrasting how the military
and intelligence agencies respond to allegations of civilian casualties (ET, NYT, NPR, AP).
Carnage in Lahore
Seven men allegedly linked to
the Pakistani Taliban have been arrested in connection with bloody,
coordinated attacks on two Ahmedi mosques in Lahore on Friday that left
nearly 100 dead (Geo,
Dawn, NYT, FT, Wash Post, Times, AP, NYT, WSJ, Reuters). Pakistan's two to five million Ahmedis
are reviled by many mainstream Muslims, who consider them heretics
because they believe the founder of their movement was the messiah
foretold by the Prophet Muhammad. The six attackers -- 17 to 28 year old
men, of whom two have fled, two have been killed, and two have been
arrested -- reportedly traveled from Miram Shah, the main town in North Waziristan, last week, and
scouted out the two mosques, which had some 1,500 worshipers at the time
of the attack on Friday afternoon (NYT, Times). Connections to
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi are also being investigated, and the self-described
Punjabi chapter of the Pakistani Taliban took credit for the attack (ET, Wash Post).
And late on
Monday, several gunmen wearing Pakistani police uniforms stormed
Lahore's Jinnah Hospital, where one of the attackers and many of the
victims of the mosque attacks were being treated, reportedly to try and
either kill or rescue their fellow militant (ET, Daily Times, The News, Dawn, AFP, NYT, AJE, Geo,
Times). At least five were killed, and
the alleged suspect has been transferred to a jail hospital (AP, Reuters, Geo,
AP).
Fighting continues in Pakistan's
Orakzai agency, as jets and helicopter gunships targeted militant
hideouts in the upper part of the tribal region, where hundreds of
Taliban fighters have reportedly been killed in the last several months (Daily Times, ET, Reuters). Ihsan Farooqi, a Tehrik-i-Taliban
Pakistan commander who allegedly ran training centers in Orakzai, was
reportedly killed in airstrikes on Sunday.
The Lahore High Court
ordered the unblocking of Facebook in Pakistan yesterday, almost two
weeks after it banned the site because of a page encouraging depictions
of the Prophet Muhammad (The News, NYT, Guardian, AP). A judge ruled, however, that
Pakistani authorities must continue to block specific 'blasphemous'
content.
Released and sentenced
A
former Pakistani Army major who was detained in mid-May in connection
with Faisal Shahzad's failed attempt to car bomb Times Square has been
released after Pakistani authorities determined he had no links to the
would-be attacker (LAT, WSJ, AP). The U.S. is pushing Pakistan to
turn over more information about Pakistani airline passengers, including
recent travel histories and method of payment, a politically unpopular
move in Pakistan that could allow U.S. investigators to track terrorist
travel patterns (NYT). In the "wake of Times Square,"
U.S. planning for a unilateral strike in Pakistan has been
"reinvigorated," and the U.S. and Pakistan have recently set up a joint
military intelligence center outside the northwestern Pakistani city of
Peshawar and are negotiating to do the same near Quetta (Wash Post).
A federal jury in
Houston, Texas convicted a 33 year old Pakistani community college
student of two counts of conspiracy and seven firearms violations after
allegedly participating in paramilitary exercises in the Houston area in
2006 and raising money for the Taliban (NYT, Geo,
CNN, AP, AFP). Adnan Mirza faces five years in
prison on each of the conspiracy charges and ten years on the weapons
counts on his sentencing, set for September 1.
Security and politics in Afghanistan
Several
days after capturing the administrative center of a remote Afghan
district and after about a week of pitched fighting, Taliban militants
mainly from Pakistan have been pushed back after NATO dropped 200 Afghan
commandos and a smaller number of U.S. Special Operations troops into
Barg-e-Matal in Nuristan (NYT, Pajhwok, NYT, AP, AFP, NYT, FT, AJE, McClatchy). The recapture operation was carried out
with no shooting or injuries.
Six U.S. military officers were
disciplined after an Air Force drone strike in Afghanistan's Uruzgan
province in February left up to 23 Afghan civilians dead, according to a
scathing military report released Saturday, which faulted the
Nevada-based drone crew and U.S. ground commanders for "inaccurate and
unprofessional reporting," among other reprimands (NYT, WSJ, LAT). The report's findings are available here (ISAF).
Separately, NATO said an airstrike
in Kandahar on Sunday morning killed "one of the two most senior Taliban
leaders" in the province, Haji Amir (ISAF, FT). And Gen. Stanley McChrystal, top U.S. and NATO
commander in Afghanistan, said there is "clear evidence" of
"inappropriate" Iranian support for Taliban fighters in Afghanistan (Reuters, AP, NYT).
Afghanistan's much-anticipated peace
jirga, expected to be attended by some 1,600 Afghan delegates, is set to
begin in Kabul tomorrow and run for three days, with Afghan President
Hamid Karzai to roll out his plans for reconciliation for the Taliban,
who are not sending official representatives (AP, FT, Independent, LAT, Pajhwok, NYT). Pajhwok reports that Afghan opposition leader Dr. Abdullah Abdullah will be boycotting the jirga (Pajhwok).
Sustainable
investments
Rajiv Chandrasekaran reports that the U.S.
government's plans to hand out millions of dollars in economic and
reconstruction aid in Nawa district in southern Afghanistan is raising
concerns about the sustainability of the effort and tensions in the
local community (Wash Post). USAID currently spends about $300
million per month in Afghanistan, a level expected to continue for at
least a year. Today, a U.S. general is assuming command of British
forces in Helmand (Times).
Afghanistan's government has
suspended two Christian relief organizations, Church World Service and
Norwegian Church Aid, on suspicion of converting Afghans to
Christianity, which is outlawed in the country (NYT, Reuters, AP). Both groups have denied the allegations.
Anthony
Loyd looks at the flow of Saudi Arabian money to Afghanistan, where
financial intelligence officials say more than 920 million pounds has
entered via Pakistan over the last four years (Times). And C. J. Chivers profiles the case of a
five year old Afghan boy whose father sought help for a snakebite from
U.S. forces, quoting a U.S. commanding officer in Helmand who commented,
"We can't be Afghanistan's E.M.S., but right now we are."
(NYT).
Pakistan's
Bono
The Pakistani rock star Salman Ahmad, inspired by
the Beatles and Led Zeppelin, is in the U.K. promoting his
autobiography, "Rock and Roll Jihad," and spreading his message of
nonviolence through music (BBC). His band, Junoon, has sold more than 30
million albums worldwide and has been called South Asia's U2.
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Regarding the latest drone "success" ...
Isn't it a bit strange that they quickly admitted there leader had been killed? It's not very common as usually they deny any weakening or deaths. Is this an attempt for liberal sympathy since they also claim women and children died, or is this a lie to throw off the US military? In other news, why are the drone programs continued to go on without barely any oversight after the last few disasters? This is killing US image abroad... !! Cheers, JuJu penpals
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