Thursday, September 9, 2010 - 8:09 AM

The air war
Two more drone strikes have been
reported in the Pakistani tribal region of North Waziristan,
bringing the total number of strikes in the last 24 hours to four and strikes
this month to eight (Geo, AP, AFP, CNN, Geo, AP). Two separate
explosions have killed at least 13 people in Pakistan today: a remote-controlled
roadside bomb in the tribal agency of Kurram killed at least
ten Sunni Muslims in a reported sectarian attack, and an explosion outside the
home of the provincial finance minister of Baluchistan left three dead (AP, Reuters, AFP, ET, Dawn, Geo).
Pakistan
has banned five Baluchi militant organizations, and Pakistani interior minister
Rehman Malik promised "targeted operations" against the groups, though not on
the scale of those in the Swat Valley last year
(ET, Daily Times, Dawn, The News). Pakistan's
paramilitary Frontier Corps have been given policing powers in the province.
Pakistani authorities reportedly plan to bring charges against three
"educated, relatively wealthy" Pakistanis suspected of having helped failed
Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad meet with
top Pakistani Taliban leaders in the tribal regions and sending him money (AP, LAT, Dawn, Samaa). The three have
been held since early May.
Flood
watch: Al Jazeera has today's must-read describing how a growing number
of Pakistanis in need of flood aid are complaining that minority groups like the
Shia and Ahmadi communities are being discriminated against (AJE). Pakistani
ambassador to the U.S. Husain Haqqani told the AP that the flooding has
stretched Pakistan's military thin and affected its ability to fight extremists
in the tribal areas, particularly North Waziristan (AP).
Message from Mullah Omar
In a message to
the United States distributed in four languages, leader of the Taliban in
Afghanistan Mullah Omar asserted that the Taliban is winning and commented that
U.S. leaders "have wasted hundreds of billion of dollars of your tax money in
the shape of financial expenditures and your manpower in Afghanistan and have
still been wasting them" (AJE, BBC, AP).
The
"long-delayed push" by coalition forces in the Taliban stronghold of Kandahar
has begun "in fits and starts, and with mixed results," reports the NYT (NYT). In neighboring
Helmand province, NATO has reportedly opened the first police station in Marjah,
site of a major offensive this spring, with some 300 trained police officers (NYT). And the last
brigade of U.S. soldiers ordered to Afghanistan as part of the Obama
administration's 30,000-troop surge has assumed authority for a swath of Paktika
in eastern Afghanistan (WSJ).
ABC News
reports that a former employee of a company with contracts to supply
interpreters to the U.S. Army has claimed that more than a quarter of
translators failed their language exams and were deployed anyway (ABC). The Army is
reportedly investigating the company. The Guardian reports on 12 U.S. soldiers
who face charges for murdering or covering up the murders of three Afghan
civilians who were allegedly "killed for sport" earlier this year (Guardian).
Hands off those anti-corruption
agencies
Afghan President Hamid Karzai reportedly plans to limit
the direct involvement of Western investigators in two anti-corruption
organizations in the Afghan government, prompting one U.S. official to assess,
"What he's proposing would effectively neuter these two bodies" (Post). Afghanistan's
attorney general added that while Karzai supports the work of the
anti-corruption groups, he wants them to be Afghan-led (AP).
In light of
the ongoing crisis at the Kabul Bank, some Afghans are reportedly questioning
whether Western-style banking is the right plan for Afghanistan, where the
hawala system dominated for centuries (Post). Some five percent
of Afghans have bank accounts, and depositors have withdrawn $300 million of
Kabul Bank's $500 million cash assets in the last week. The FT profiles the
"high life" of Afghanistan's elite in Dubai, and, according to Hamid Karzai's
brother and the third largest shareholder of the Kabul Bank, "When the Taliban
took over, anyone with money moved away, mostly to Dubai" (FT). Mahmoud Karzai
lives in a beachside villa in Dubai.
The UNODC reportedly plans to
announce that opium poppy production in Afghanistan has fallen this year because
of a disease in the crops, but that there are still enough stocks to keep heroin
production in business (Reuters).
Nine years later
Today is the nine year
anniversary of the assassination of Ahmad Shah Massoud, the "Lion of Panjshir,"
the legendary anti-Taliban rebel leader in Afghanistan (Tolo, MSNBC, Reuters). Afghan Army
soldiers attended a memorial ceremony in Kabul last night -- photos here (MSNBC).
Sign up here to receive the daily brief in your inbox. Follow the AfPak Channel on Twitter and Facebook.
(1)
HIDE COMMENTS LOGIN OR REGISTER REPORT ABUSE