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Daily brief: explosion kills top Pakistani police official

By Andrew Lebovich, August 5, 2010 Share

Fallen

A suicide bomber on foot killed the chief of Pakistan's Frontier Constabulary, Sifwat Ghayur, as his car waited in traffic in Peshawar (AJE, NYT, Wash Post, Daily Times, Geo, ET). The Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) took credit for the blast, which also killed two of Ghayur's bodyguards and a bystander. Ghayur was known as a brave and honest officer, and the Frontier Constabulary, a 25,000-strong paramilitary organization drawn mostly from natives of Khyber-Pukhtunkhwa, often sees battle against militant forces (ABC, LAT). The Associated Press looks at the Pakistani army school in the Swat Valley where young men recruited by the Taliban, some as young as 12, receive an religious and secular education, vocational training, and psychological assistance to overcome their sometimes violent pasts (AP).


At least 1.1 million acres of farmland in Pakistan's Punjab region have been destroyed by raging flood waters, as the World Food Program warned that up to 2 million people may need immediate food aid to avoid starvation (Tel, VOA, Reuters, WSJ,

NYT, Reuters, AP). In a televised speech yesterday from the State Department, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said that the $10 million in U.S. flood aid to Pakistan was "just the start" of assistance to the beleaguered country (VOA, AP, BBC, CSM). Donations can be made to the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees by texting "swat" to 50555, and CNN has a list of charities currently working to help flood victims (CNN).

The death toll in Karachi climbed to at least 86 since Monday, and six people were injured after unidentified assailants threw a grenade into a mosque during evening prayers Wednesday (ET, Daily Times, AFP, Reuters). While authorities have arrested large numbers of militants for their role in the killing that sparked the bloodshed or subsequent rioting, some analysts fear that local authorities do not genuinely intend to crack down on extremist groups (CSM).

Protecting the population?

At least seven Afghan police officers were killed when a suicide bomber struck their joint-Afghan Police and NATO convoy in the once-relatively peaceful northern province of Kunduz (AJE, AP, BBC, Reuters, Dawn). And ISAF commander Gen. David Petraeus issued his first tactical directive yesterday, restricting the use of airstrikes and artillery while emphasizing the need to protect the Afghan population (VOA, McClatchy, LAT, Wash Post, AP, Daily Times). While much of the partially-classified document hews to a directive released by former ISAF commander Gen. Stanley McChrystal last year, Petraeus' directive orders U.S. troops to have Afghan security forces with them at all times to avoid civilian casualties, and said that no changes can be made to the rules of engagement for international forces without his approval.

As part of a growing spat between Afghan President Hamid Karzai and the U.S. government, Karzai ordered a probe into the investigations of two U.S.-mentored anti-corruption bodies, the Sensitive Investigative Unit (SIU) and the Major Crimes Task Force (MCTF) (WSJ, Wash Post, AP). Both groups use sophisticated technology such as wiretapping to investigate corrupt officials, and have angered Karzai by investigating and arresting several of his top aides and allies, including the head administrator for the Afghan National Security Council, Mohammed Zia Saleh, arrested by the MCTF last week.

Bibi Aisha, the 18-year old woman whose nose and ears were cut off under Taliban orders and whose picture on the cover of TIME magazine has elicited controversy over the last week, is on her way to the U.S. for facial reconstruction surgery (NYT, CNN, AP). While her image has alternately been used as a symbol of what may happen to women when the U.S. withdraws from Afghanistan and as an example of the media's use of graphic images, Aisha told a reporter, "I don't know if it [the picture] will help other women or not...I just want to get my nose back."

Flashpoint

Fresh riots broke out in Indian-administered Kashmir after paramilitary forces killed two protesters, bringing to 48 the number of Kashmiris killed in recent protests (AP, Guardian, Dawn). Violent protests against Indian rule have rocked the disputed province all summer, and thousands turned out yesterday to break a police-ordered curfew in the region's summer capital of Srinagar, despite orders to "shoot on site" any violators (NYT). And new flooding has struck villages in Pakistani-administered Kashmir (Dawn).

Not unexpected

Matthew Hastings, the Rolling Stone reporter who broke the story that led to the sacking of Gen. McChrystal, has been denied an embed with the U.S. military in Afghanistan (Guardian, CNN). A military spokesman said Hastings could not be trusted to abide by the ground rules for reporters in a war zone, and that, "[e]mbeds are a privilege, not a right."

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HASHAM AHMED/AFP/Getty Images

 

MARTY MARTEL

3:24 PM ET

August 5, 2010

Pakistan suffering from self-inflicted wounds

Pakistan projects sympathetic image as a victim of terror, even as it is, in fact, the creator of terrorism. So Pakistan is suffering from self-inflicted wounds and will continue to do so as long as it shelters, nurtures, supports and protects innumerable terrorist outfits on its soil.

Nobody forced Pakistani government to facilitate relocation of Osama bin Laden from Sudan to Afghanistan in 1996. Benazir Bhutto’s democratic government of Pakistan chose to do so of its own free will.

Nobody forced Pakistani Army and Intelligence to create what ex-CIA official Bruce Reidel called a ‘jihadist Frankenstein monster’ in 1990s. Pakistani Army and Intelligence chose to do so with the full financing provided by Pakistan’s democratic governments at the time.

Pakistan boldly holds the Western world to ransom. It garners generous financial aid and military supplies from the US and has successfully projected itself as recourse of last resort in its geographical theatre. It runs circles around international sanctions and bans by nurturing a large number of home-grown terrorist outfits forever changing nomenclature. In addition, it maintains seemingly freelance non-state actors that allow it the fig-leaf of plausible deniability.

And in a masterful demonstration of how to manage chaos, Pakistan keeps its domestic situation in destabilized ferment and flux by stoking sectarian, that is, Sunni versus Shiite violence, and religious tensions between Islamic progressives and fundamentalists, rent-collecting on such issues from the oil-rich Islamic world as well.

For the further bamboozling of the West, Pakistan uses its blow-hot-blow-cold relationship with the Pakistani and Afghan Taliban and its hosting of the Al Qaeda as adroit bargaining chips.

It flaunts its strategic relationship with China with the latter’s tacit support. This enables Pakistan to be muscular about its armed nuclear options and hint menacingly about the possibility of its nuclear weapons falling to the Taliban as well.

 

CEOUNICOM

11:36 PM ET

August 5, 2010

Is 'bamboozling' the new 'mollycoddling'?

...

really, you're losing your edge.

And again, is there any money to be made in the troll game? I'm down. Seriously. I'm pro-India! Just not as boring and ridiculous as you. I think I'd have much more impact with english speakers. No one here reads you anymore. You might need to change both your name, and heavily revise your style before you have any impact again.

 

ASHOK2718

9:20 AM ET

August 6, 2010

Mr CEO I expect better from west

be pro value

moreover you made me laugh when you said money can be made in India and that too from a non sweatshop job like trolling

anyway why don't you make an anti troll software and sell it to FP. I am sure the one or two persons running FP will be very thankful

 

TRYINGTOBERATIONAL

9:53 AM ET

August 6, 2010

actually Marty Does a service to Pakistan

Just like A Khan just by being what he is, draws a caricature of Pakistan, Marty does that to India ( admitted, nearly not as obscene). Pakistani Policy makers are doing every bit it can and some more to remove any doubts as to what their nefarious intentions are. They do not need Marty's help.
Frankly, I do not think they should be caricatured. Anybody who loves India should encourage folks like AHsan and IZ etc.... because sincerely, the Best Pakistan India could have is a friendly Pakistan, the second best would be a Pakistan that looks west to the Arab lands and has nothing to do with India. Let them have their Islam if that is what they want it.
The worst that could happen is what is happening, an unstable paranoid and India obsessed entity that can consume itself and seriously wound India in the process.
Indians should post to counter any obvious white-wash and illogical discrepancies. But beyond that they should not caricature Pakistan.

Pakistani's are by far the FIRST victims of Pakistani policy. Not Indians!!

 

INFIDEL4LIFE

1:52 PM ET

August 6, 2010

our enemy

they hate us and are playing us. I wish we could run an armored div. right into-and over-Quetta. 2 faced swine, WAKE UP WEST!!!