Tuesday, July 27, 2010 - 8:01 AM

Damage control
U.S.
officials are reportedly in damage control mode as they seek to limit
the impact of the Wikileaks disclosures on the U.S.'s relationship with
Pakistan, after Pakistani officials hotly objected to reports that the
Pakistani spy service aids the Taliban (NYT, WSJ, AP, ET, Geo, FT, WSJ, McClatchy, Reuters).
One senior ISI official reportedly said that if the CIA does not
"denounce the suggestions" of ISI-Taliban complicity, the ISI might need
to "reexamine its cooperation" (Wash Post).
Gen. Hamid Gul, a former ISI chief frequently mentioned in the
documents as a link with the Taliban, called the reports "completely
baseless" (Times, WSJ).
Current
and former intelligence and military officials are concerned about the
operational repercussions of the Wikileaks, though the disclosures are
not expected to affect the passage of a $60 billion war funding bill
currently in the House or drastically change public opinion about the
war in Afghanistan (AP, CNN, Wash Post, LAT).
White House and Pentagon officials and analysts have emphasized that
the documents contained few new revelations, did not generally
contradict official assessments of the war, and consisted of mostly
low-level material, unlike the Pentagon Papers, to which Wikileaks
founder Julian Assange likened this disclosure (Wash Post, CNN, Wash Post).
The
U.S. military is on the hunt for the Wikileaker, as some speculate that
the Army specialist already awaiting trial for allegedly leaking
information about the Iraq war to Wikileaks may be involved (Reuters, Tel, AJE). And Assange said yesterday that 15,000 more documents are currently being reviewed for possible release (Independent).
Resource:
the NYT, Britain's Guardian, and Germany's Der Spiegel all received
advance notice of the Wikileaks disclosures; their full coverage is
available here (NYT, Guardian, Spiegel).
Bargaining chips
The
AP reports on a video from Col. Imam, the former Pakistani spy
kidnapped four months ago by a militant group he said is called
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi al-Alami, in which the colonel threatened to reveal
the Pakistani government's "weaknesses" unless it releases the some 160
prisoners demanded by the militants holding him captive (AP).
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi al-Alami is believed to be an offshoot of
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, an anti-Shiite militant organization that has
increasingly targeted the Pakistani government. The group is also
holding a British journalist, Asad Qureshi (The News).
The bodies of around 20 suspected militants have been found in Khyber in northwest Pakistan following Pakistani military operations there (Dawn).
And Emily Wax has a must-read interview with the chief minister of
Indian Kashmir, Omar Abdullah, a "third-generation scion of Kashmir's
most famous political family" (Wash Post).
Mixed accounts
Afghan
President Hamid Karzai and other Afghan officials have alleged that 52
Afghan civilians were killed on Friday in the Rigi village of Sangin, a
district in the southern province of Helmand, in a NATO airstrike, which
the alliance disputes (NYT, AP, AFP, BBC, LAT, Bloomberg, CNN). If the Afghan government's account is true, it would be the highest number of civilians killed since September 2009.
Justin
McNeley, one of the two U.S. Navy personnel kidnapped by the Taliban in
Afghanistan's eastern Logar province last week, has been confirmed dead
and his body recovered, after the Taliban claimed to have killed him
because he resisted arrest (AP, LAT, Pajhwok, AJE, AFP). NATO has offered a $20,000 reward for information leading to the location of the surviving sailor, and the search continues.
U.S.
authorities have arrested two U.S. former soldiers and suspended two
Afghan trucking companies from doing business with the U.S. government
for at least 18 months because of allegations that the companies helped
the soldiers steal $1.6 million in fuel from a base in Logar (WSJ, AP).
The two ex-soldiers, who were discharged, were allegedly caught with
some $400,000 in cash and have been charged with conspiracy to commit
theft of government property; authorities don't know what happened to
the stolen fuel.
Next: bin Laden doppelganger franchise
The actor who played Osama bin Laden in the political comedy Tere Bin Laden, Pradhuman Singh, is considering playing the terrorist leader again in the future, after the success of the satire (Hindustan Times). Singh commented, "I've gotten so used to being dressed as Laden...I had almost forgotten what I really look like."
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US deserves to be duped by Pakistan
After having poured billions of dollars in aid, US deserves to be treated with such contempt by Pakistani establishment (Pakistani Army, ISI and Government) since US has intentionally ignored Pakistani complicity in Afghan insurgency until now.
Files leaked by Wikileaks more or less corroborate ‘The sun in the sky’ report published by Harvard Professor Matt Waldman from London School of Economics on 6/13/2010.
That report states that “support for the Afghan Taliban is ‘official Pakistani ISI policy’ and is backed at the highest levels of Pakistan’s civilian administration. Pakistan appears to be playing a double game of astonishing magnitude. There is thus a strong case that the ISI orchestrates, sustains and shapes the overall insurgent campaign in Afghanistan.”
According to Afghan Taliban commanders’ interviews with Matt Waldman, the Pakistani ISI orchestrates, sustains and strongly influences the Taliban insurgency movement. The Afghan Taliban commanders also say that ISI gives sanctuary to both Taliban and Haqqani groups, and provides huge support in terms of training, funding, munitions, and supplies. In the words of these Afghan Taliban commanders, this is ‘as clear as the sun in the sky’.
The ISI is said to compensate families of suicide bombers to the tune of 200,000 Pakistani rupees, claims the report. Thus US AID TO BANKRUPT PAKISTAN FINANCES THE DEATH OF US/NATO SOLDIERS in Afghanistan. So in a way, US is financing the death of its OWN troops in Afghanistan.
Pakistani government issued its usual denials just as it had denied umpteen times the existence of Mullah Mohammed Omar’s ‘Quetta Shura Taliban (QST)’ in the provincial capital Quetta of Baluchistan. But General Stanley McChrystal called QST as the biggest threat to US Afghan mission in his report to President Obama in August, 2009.
Pakistan has denied presence of Osama bin Laden on Pakistani soil umpteen times and just yesterday Adm Mike Mullen repeated in Islamabad that Osama is hiding in a very secure place in Pakistan.
The most breath-taking part of this sordid saga is that US is NOT holding Pakistan responsible for sheltering, protecting and supporting Haqqani’s HQN network and Mullah Omar’s QST network all these years while those networks have been causing daily deaths of US/NATO soldiers ever since 2002 even though Pakistan was SUPPOSED to have joined US fight against same Taliban back in 2001!
Can American CIA not know what Matt Waldman knows? How come Obama administration is continuing Bush’s mollycoddling of Pakistan with such incriminating evidence against Pakistan’s double game? How can US mission in Afghanistan succeed if Obama administration continues to ignore such Pakistani duplicity like Bush had done it before Obama? How long will US continue to evade what is as obvious as a ’bright sun’ in the sky on a summer day?
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