Friday, September 10, 2010 - 8:37 AM

Event notice: Peter Bergen, Maj.
Michael Waltz, and Shuja Nawaz will be discussing the Battle for
Afghanistan and Pakistan on Tuesday, September 14 in DC. Details and
RSVP available here (NAF).
Wonk watch: Peter Bergen and Bruce Hoffman, "Assessing the terrorist threat," Bipartisan Policy Center (BPC). News coverage: WSJ, AP, CNN, NPR.
Fighting fire with fire
Thousands
of enraged Afghans and Pakistanis protested a small evangelical
church's plans, currently on hold, to burn Qurans on September 11 by
burning American flags and chanting "Death to Christians" (BBC, Pajhwok, AP, AFP, Post). Insurgents have reportedly handed out pamphlets in some areas of Afghanistan comparing the Quran burning to Draw Muhammad Day earlier this year, and a Pakistani Taliban commander in South Waziristan said his group is telling people the planned Quran burning is on par with drone strikes (ABC, Newsweek).
Thousands of Afghans hurled rocks at a small NATO base in the
northeastern province of Badakhshan in protest, and according to the
head of UNAMA Staffan de Mistura the country-wide protests could delay
Afghan parliamentary elections, scheduled for September 18 (AFP, AP, Reuters, Tolo).
The
top U.S. and NATO intelligence officer in Afghanistan Maj. Gen. Michael
Flynn is reportedly leaving his post for a senior position with the
director of national intelligence, James Clapper (Post, AP).
An insurgent commander who was reportedly planning attacks before the
parliamentary elections has been killed in a NATO airstrike in Kabul
district (AP).
Afghan
President Hamid Karzai's Eid message said he hopes that Taliban leader
Mullah Omar will "[join] the peace process, [give] up fratricide, [give]
up bombings and blasts, [stop] causing casualties to Afghanistan's
children, women and men" (AFP, NYT).
Karzai's attempts to reach out to the Taliban have not been popular
with Afghanistan's minority Tajik, Uzbek, and Hazara populations, who
are concerned that the Taliban could return to power with civil war (WSJ).
A senior administration official told the Post that "Our big push to help build Afghan institutions for transparency and
anti-corruption has had the dismaying effect of bringing a lot of stuff
to light that has sparked political crises," highlighting the ongoing paradox of addressing corruption in Afghanistan (Post).
Ashraf Ghani, former Afghan presidential candidate and former World
Bank official, has urged Afghanistan to stress test its banking system
in light of the crisis at the Kabul Bank (FT).
Flood watch
Weekend must-reads: Terry McDermott's "The Mastermind," a profile of Khalid Sheikh Muhammad (New Yorker); Newsweek's al-Qaeda package (Inside al-Qaeda, Why bin Laden still matters); Ahmed Rashid's National Interest cover story on Pakistan (NI).
Flood watch: 20 more villages in Sindh have been flooded, as more rain slows down rescue efforts in southern Pakistan (ET, Dawn, Dawn).
The U.N.'s top emergency relief official, Baroness Amos, visited a
relief camp in Nowshera yesterday and said she would seek more aid for
victims of Pakistan's floods, which have affected at least 21 million
people (NYT).
Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari said small farmers affected by the
flooding will get free seed and fertilizer to begin cultivation in
areas where the water has receded (Dawn).
Flashpoint
In
honor of Eid, Indian authorities have lifted curfews across the Kashmir
Valley, and separatists have called for a break in strikes (PTI, ToI).
India is reportedly withdrawing an emergency powers act that gave
Indian forces the right to open fire on anyone holding a "deadly weapon"
(Tel). Some 70 people have been killed in clashes with security forces in Kashmir since June.
Serving up peace
Pakistani tennis player Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi is paired up with India's Rohan Bopanna
in tonight's men's doubles final of the U.S. Open, and the duo calls
themselves the "Indo-Pak Express" and seeks to promote peace through
sports (CNN, Reuters, Fox). They wear sweatshirts emblazoned with "Stop War, Start Tennis" when they play.
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