Thursday, July 29, 2010 - 7:48 AM

More backlash
The
backlash against Wikileaks continues as its founder Julian Assange
defended his decision to publish documents containing identification of
Afghans who had provided information to NATO forces, reportedly
insisting that "any risk to informants' lives was outweighed by the
overall
importance of publishing the information" (Times, NYT). Afghan President Hamid Karzai called the disclosures "shocking" and "irresponsible" (AP).
Tom
Coghlan reports that one pro-government Afghan named in the documents,
who had given an account of the Taliban in his area to U.S. forces in
2006, was killed by the militants in 2008 on suspicion of spying for the
coalition (Times).
The three news organizations that received advance notice of the
Wikileaks documents -- the New York Times, the Guardian, and Der Spiegel
-- chose to publish selected excerpts that had been redacted to remove
names and other identifying information (NYT).
The
LA Times considers the threat from portable heat-seeking surface-to-air
missiles if used by the Taliban, writing, "Most experts believe that
the antiaircraft threat currently posed by the
insurgents is relatively limited, and that they don't have significant
stocks of surface-to-air missiles, at least for now" (LAT).
In and out
Beginning
Sunday, the nearly 2,000 Dutch soldiers in Afghanistan's Uruzgan
province will be replaced by Australian, U.S., Slovak, and Singaporean
forces, as the Netherlands' mission, often cited as successful, comes to
an end after four years (AFP, CP).
NATO had asked the Dutch to extend the troops' deployment until August
2011, which caused the collapse of the Dutch government in February. The
Taliban have reportedly congratulated the Dutch government on the
withdrawal (RNW, Volkskrant).
The
Pacific Island nation of Tonga will, at the request of the British
government, send 275 soldiers over the next two years to provide force
protection for a British base in Helmand province, after judging
Afghanistan "safer than Iraq" (Matangi Tonga, AFP, Tel, CNN). The British government will pay for the cost of deployment and the Tongans will serve as part of Britain's armed forces.
More like guidelines, anyway
Gen.
David Petraeus, top commander in Afghanistan, has reportedly issued new
counterinsurgency guidelines to troops in the country that instructs
forces to be "good guest[s]" and "confront the culture of impunity"
while "identify[ing] and confront[ing] corrupt officials" (AFP).
Special envoy to the region Amb. Richard Holbrooke said yesterday that
corruption is often mentioned in Taliban propaganda as the insurgency's
"no. 1 recruiting tool," and the Afghan security forces are still
troubled by corruption, pervasive drug use, and poor discipline (NYT, WSJ).
The
body of Petty Officer 3rd Class Jarod Newlove, the 25 year old who was
believed to have been kidnapped by the Taliban last week in the eastern
Afghan province of Logar, has been found, after a Taliban spokesman said
the insurgents left "the body of a dead American soldier" for U.S.
forces to recover (AP). The spokesman did not offer an explanation for Newlove's death.
The
U.S. commander in eastern Afghanistan said yesterday that male
insurgents have taken to dressing up in burqas to avoid detection, after
the first reported suicide attack by a woman on June 22 in Kunar (AFP).
There have been around 450 suicide attacks in Afghanistan since 2001.
And Karin Brulliard profiles Haji Ghani, the "illiterate,
hashish-growing former warlord who directs a semiofficial police force"
west of Kandahar who is nonetheless a "good friend to have" for U.S.
forces (Wash Post).
Bonus reads: Steve Coll and Peter Bergen on Afghanistan in the latest New Republic (TNR, TNR).
The export of terror
Yesterday
at a speech in Bangalore, India, British Prime Minister David Cameron
said, "We cannot tolerate in any sense the idea that this country
[Pakistan] is allowed to look both ways and is able in any way to
promote the export of terror," sparking immediate protests from
Pakistani politicians and government officials (FT, Independent, Hindu, CNN, Guardian, Times, Guardian).
Cameron defended his comments, saying it is important to "speak
frankly," and acknowledged that Pakistan has "made progress in chasing
down militants," though needs "to do more" (BBC).
Karzai, in a clear reference to Pakistan, said in a press conference
earlier today that "The international community is here to fight
terrorism, but there is danger elsewhere and they are not acting" (AP).
At
least 100 people have been killed in flooding across northwest Pakistan
in the last several days, as monsoon rains continue to fall (ET, ET).
The rains are hampering the recovery efforts from yesterday's airplane
crash in the Margalla Hills outside Islamabad that left 152 people dead,
as Pakistan observes a day of mourning for the worst aviation accident
on Pakistani territory (Dawn, ET, AFP, Reuters).
The investigation
Indian
authorities have asked two former Indian judges to investigate the
deaths of 17 Kashmiris in clashes between Indian security forces and
protesters over the last several weeks (AFP, CP, Hindu, BBC).
The commission's report is due in three months. Separatists are calling
for three days of strikes and demonstrations across Indian Kashmir, and
riot police are reportedly patrolling downtown Srinagar, the summer
capital of the region (AFP).
Food pyramids
USAID
is funding the construction of a $738,000 fruit and vegetable market in
the northwestern Afghan province of Badghis, which will have 78 shops
and cold storage (Pajhwok). The market will bring together green grocers currently scattered across the capital, Qala-i-Naw.
Sign up here to receive the daily brief in your inbox. Follow the AfPak Channel on Twitter and Facebook.
US finances the death of its own troops in Afghanistan
As long as US continues to ignore Taliban’s Pakistani connections, problems faced by US Afghan mission will continue to not only persist but compound.
All American officers in southern Afghanistan know that they can not prevail in the ongoing military operations, unless Taliban strongholds across the Durand Line in North Waziristan and Baluchistan are neutralized. Adm Mullen and Gen Patraeus evidently do not want to acknowledge that hard options have to be considered if their soldiers are not to die at the hands of radicals, armed and trained across the Durand Line. This is where rubber meets the road for the famous General.
As Times of London dated 6/13/2010 reported on Matt Waldman’s report titled ‘The sun in the sky’ from London School of Economics, “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.”
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?
(1)
HIDE COMMENTS LOGIN OR REGISTER REPORT ABUSE