Thursday, August 19, 2010 - 9:01 AM
Internship opportunity: The New America Foundation's Counterterrorism Strategy Initiative is looking for qualified and motivated interns for the fall semester. More information can be found here.
Unwelcome news
The
U.N. announced yesterday that up to 4 million people have been made
homeless as a result of flooding in Pakistan, as increased aid struggles
to keep up with demand and Pakistan's top meteorologist said the
floodwaters would not fully recede until the end of this month (Reuters, AP, NYT, BBC, ET).
The
U.N. will convene a conference today to push governments to give more
to Pakistan's relief effort, and the U.N. official in charge of the
response to the 2004 tsunami said of the response, "[i]t's been abysmal,
it's been terrible. There is no relationship between
the number of people in acute need of help and what has actually been
provided in this first month" (AP, BBC, Wash Post, Daily Times, NYT). Disease continues to break out among those displaced by flooding, especially children (Reuters, Dawn, ET).
The
United States has increased its aid to Pakistan to $90 million, as
Senator John Kerry, currently in Pakistan to tour flooded areas and meet
with officials, said that number would climb to $150 million (NYT, VOA, ET, Guardian, Dawn).
Saudi Arabia has pledged to give $107 million to the relief effort,
with $5 million to be in cash and the rest in material relief goods (ET, Guardian).
And the Asian Development Bank will give Pakistan a $2 billion
assistance package, though with no indication of how much will be in
grants and how much will be loans (Reuters, Dawn).
A
Pakistani health official testified yesterday that relief operations
were not possible in the area around Jacobabad in Sindh province because
the United States controls the airbase there, presumably for launching drone strikes (Dawn).
Police
in Sindh have arrested two alleged members of the banned group
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi in relation to the killing of Muttahida Qaumi Movement
(MQM) parliamentarian Raza Haider, whose death August 2 sparked a wave
of killings in Karachi (ET). And Pakistani militants continued to attack police posts in northwest Pakistan yesterday (Tel).
Going hungry
A
British risk-consulting firm has ranked Afghanistan as the least
food-secure country in the world, with the next 11 countries behind it
all in Africa (Bloomberg, AFP). Afghanistan's poverty, ongoing conflict, and food production problems in other countries all contributed to the ranking (CNN, Guardian).
A
suicide bomber killed a district police commander in Kandahar province
along with three other officers, while in Zabul province gunmen killed a
respected tribal elder and government official (NYT).
Protests also continued in response to a disputed raid that killed two
Afghans, with Afghan security forces disputing the U.S.' assertion that
the men killed were Taliban. And in a series of incidents Taliban
attacked a road crew in Helmand province this morning, killing several,
U.S. forces killed 12 fighters in Logar province including a local
Taliban commander, and in eastern Afghanistan NATO and Afghan forces
killed three members of the Pakistani group Jamaat-ud-Dawa, believed to
be linked to the banned Lashkar-e-Taiba (AP).
The
Afghan government announced yesterday that it would recruit thousands
of local militiamen to serve in southern Afghanistan, with the program
to eventually extend to the rest of the country (AFP).
And the U.S. military said yesterday that 1,300 improvised explosive
devices (IEDs) were "detonated or defused" in Afghanistan in July 2010, a
record high number (USA Today).
The
organization WikiLeaks and the Pentagon are disputing each others'
statements after a WikiLeaks spokesperson said Wednesday that the
Pentagon had agreed to negotiate to help redact names from a final batch
of unreleased classified documents (AFP, AP, NYT).
Saying the U.S. military has a responsibility to protect those
mentioned in the documents, Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman countered,
"we are not going to negotiate minimizing or sanitizing classified
documents. They are property of the United States government and they
should be returned and removed from the website" (VOA).
And
20 years after Soviet forces departed Afghanistan, Russia is attempting
to renew and build fresh ties with Afghanistan, at a regional
conference in Moscow that included Afghan President Hamid Karzai and
Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari (NYT, CNN, AP).
Flashpoint
India
accused Pakistan of firing at its troops from across the Line of
Control in Kashmir, though no one was killed in the fire or ensuing
retaliation (BBC).
Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi told Christiane
Amanpour yesterday that militants, not India, are the main threat facing
Pakistan (ABC).
And Lydia Polgreen has a dispatch from Indian-held Kashmir, detailing
the ongoing challenge to India's government and self-image posed by
pro-independence protesters in Kashmir (NYT).
What's the deal with airline magazines?
While
most airline magazines offer fluff and unoriginal content, the magazine
for Safi Airways, which flies between Kabul and Frankfurt, Dubai and
Kuwait, tries to offer an unvarnished picture of Afghanistan (WSJ).
The German-edited magazine discusses suicide bombings, dog fighting,
Kabul dining, and features ads for war-zone car repair services and
armor plating.
Sign up here to receive the daily brief in your inbox. Follow the AfPak Channel on Twitter and Facebook.
EXPLORE:AFPAK, AFGHANISTAN, AFPAK CHANNEL, AFPAK DAILY BRIEF, DISASTERS, PAKISTAN, TALIBAN, TERRORISM, U.S. FOREIGN POLICY
The time is ripe for winning hearts and minds
Instead of wasting $100 billion per year in a useless occupation of Afghanistan, America and NATO should simply retract and withdraw its troops.
And then invest $100 billion per year in Pakistan, to stabilise the situation from Neo-Noah's Floods AND make Afghanistan a ward of Pakistan for the foreseeable future with clear instructions to stabilise it also sans religious extremism.
This may take the form of schools in every village, iphone in every child's hand for education in far off places (think iphone apps for K – 12 and MIT OpenCourseware etc.), health clinics whilst following the standards of schools like the Presentation Convent School in Murree that I attended whilst there.
Duplicate and replicate Presentation Convent Schools in all of Pakistan and Afghanistan and thus kill two birds with one stone.
For the naysayers, I will say this that, 90% of the boarders at the Presentation Convent were Pashtuns. Their families were sending their children there to get the right educations and many of the boarders were as young as six years old.
The time is ripe for winning hearts and minds.
lalqila.wordpress.com
"make Afghanistan a ward of Pakistan" indeed !!!
So what has it been since Bhutto built up Haqqani and Massoud in the 70s? A harlot that you could abuse ?
After the Islamist support came the the mujaheddin support (admittedly with CIA support), then Taliban support and then the use of Afghanistan territory for training terrorists for proxy wars...
If there's one thing that should not happen again, it's precisely this.
...make Afghanistan a ward of Pakistan... !
This kind of lunatic thinking led to Pakistan's loss of Bangladesh and has since turned Pakistan into a basket case, despite hundreds of $billions of foreign aid!
Afghanistan is nobody's to give and nobody's to take. It is the home of a diverse people who have a great and ancient claim to nationhood. This is a fact of cultural and national history that no madrassa trained Pakistani can truly appreciate. It is clear that Pakistan covets the one thing that Afghanistan has and Pakistan desperately lacks - a history stretching back to antiquity! Pakistan did not exist before 1947 and tracing its history requires that it accept its roots in India - a mission impossible to the India hating Pakistani military, their mullahs and kennels filled with brainwashed jihadists, all of whom imagine that their progenitors were all Arab - what a bunch of nut-jobs!
It is absurd to suggest that Pakistan deserves anything more than a few coins thrown into its outstretched bowl. Peace in the region is possible only with a tight leash on the Punjabi generals who call the shots in Pakistan.
Do me a favor...
remind me who you really are again. I know you're one of the regular cast of characters, but I can't remember which one. You're not one of the Lal Qila clones, I know, but probably one of the indian homies who lurk here. Please to inform me at your leisure.
(5)
HIDE COMMENTS LOGIN OR REGISTER REPORT ABUSE