Friday, July 30, 2010 - 7:31 AM

Wonk Watch: The Pakistani Army's changing officer corps, by Shuja Nawaz and C. Christine Fair (Journal of Strategic Studies).
Bloods on the hands
Investigators
have reportedly found concrete evidence linking Bradley Manning, the
Army intelligence analyst already charged with leaking classified
information about Iraq to Wikileaks, to the Wikileaks Afghanistan
disclosures (WSJ).
U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said the FBI has been called in to
help with the investigation, and criticized the disclosures, saying,
"The battlefield consequences of the release of these documents are
potentially severe and dangerous for our troops, our allies and Afghan
partners, and may well damage our relationships and reputation in that
key part of the world" (BBC, AP, Reuters, NYT, Tel, Times).
A
Taliban spokesman has said the group is examining the Wikileaks
documents, commenting of the names of Afghan informants in the
disclosures, "If they are U.S. spies, then we know how to punish them,"
as chairman of the Joint Chiefs Adm. Mike Mullen asserted that Wikileaks
founder Julian Assange "can say whatever he likes about the greater
good he thinks he
and his source are doing, but the truth is they might already have on
their
hands the blood of some young soldier or that of an Afghan family" (Tel, Wash Post, Channel 4).
Some
of the Wikileaks documents reportedly suggest al-Qaeda may have planned
9/11-style attacks in 2009 on Hamid Karzai's presidential palace, NATO
headquarters in Kabul, British and U.S. embassies, and the Ariana hotel (Guardian, Times, FT).
The reports, however, are imprecise and categorized as "C3," meaning
the information was "possibly true" and the source was regarded as
"fairly reliable" (Guardian).
Yesterday,
the Obama administration's Afghanistan-Pakistan team met for the
seventh time and reportedly focused little on the Wikileaks disclosures,
instead focusing on the recent Kabul conference, U.S.-Pakistan
dialogue, and a briefing from top commander in Afghanistan Gen. David
Petraeus (USAT, VOA).
Gen. Petraeus reportedly made his first visit to the southern province
of Helmand earlier this week, where British, U.S., and Afghan forces
have just launched the biggest operation of the summer, Operation Tor
Shezada ("Black Prince") (Pajhwok, Tel, BBC). The 6,000-person town of Saidabad is the last population center fully under Taliban control in central Helmand (Channel 4).
In neighboring Kandahar, continued insecurity and threats of Taliban
assassination have made it difficult to fill local government positions (AP).
South and north
July
is now the deadliest month ever for U.S. troops in Afghanistan, as 63
soldiers have been killed so far, surpassing last month's record of 60
fatalities (AP, BBC).
Coalition commanders had warned that casualties would rise as forces
make moves against Taliban strongholds in southern Afghanistan.
In
the northern Afghan province of Baghlan, the Taliban continue to make
inroads: in June, a group of 80 Taliban fighters briefly gained control
of a bazaar in one of the troubled districts; have since blocked many
roads in the district; and have ordered the closure of local cell phone
towers at night (NYT). The area's corrupt judiciary, lack of government services, and ethnic differences have all been exploited by the Taliban.
And Karen DeYoung reports that the "Afghan First" program designed to
give Afghans contracting jobs to support U.S. efforts in Afghanistan,
rather than promoting small and medium business and spreading the
wealth, may be enriching traditional power brokers and creating new ones
instead (Wash Post).
The crashing waves
As
many as 320 people have been killed in the last three days of severe
flooding triggered by monsoons across Pakistan, with Khyber-Pukhtunkhwa
the hardest hit province (AP, AFP, Geo, Dawn, ET, Daily Times, BBC). Pakistani officials say the floods are the worst in 80 years; hundreds of thousands of people have been affected.
A poll released yesterday
at the New America Foundation by the Pew Global Attitudes Project
surveyed 2,000 Pakistanis about concerns about the extremist threat in
the country, views of foreign powers, aid from the United States,
Pakistani domestic politics, drone strikes, and other topics (Pew, AJE, AP, BBC).
The headline finding is that Pakistanis are less concerned about a
potential Taliban takeover of Pakistan than they were last year. Bonus watch: discussion of the poll with Steve Coll and Andrew Kohut (NAF).
Pakistan's Daily Times reports that 10 people were killed yesterday in Kurram
in northwest Pakistan after Shia men attacked a Sunni village, and Dawn
writes that 12 militants were killed by security forces in central
Kurram (Daily Times, Dawn).
Flashpoint
Indian
forces opened fire on a crowd of rock-throwing anti-India protesters in
the summer capital of Indian Kashmir earlier today, wounding two (AP, PTI).
A police officer said the separatist protesters had marched on the main
road in the Chanapora neighborhood of Srinagar; security forces also
used tear gas to quell the protests.
A big deal
The
department of education in Afghanistan's northern Kunduz province has
started a program to offer free health care to 6,500 teachers (Pajhwok). The program could be extended to include the families of teachers in the future.
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US finances the death of its own troops
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?
Pakistan and the Afghan Taliban
You cut off the head, the snake will die.
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