Wednesday, March 16, 2011 - 9:16 AM

Day in court
Raymond Davis, the CIA contractor who shot and killed two Pakistanis in Lahore in late January, has just been released by Pakistani authorities after the families of the victims agreed to accept compensation from him (BBC, Reuters, AP, AFP, ET). A lawyer for the family said they were "forcibly taken" to the jail and "made to sign papers" pardoning him (ET, Reuters). Davis has flown to London, according to some reports. Earlier today, a judge in Lahore had formally charged Davis with two counts of murder (AJE, Reuters, Dawn, ET).
Pakistan's Federal Investigation Agency yesterday arrested former religious affairs minister Hamid Saeed Kazmi on charges related to a scam that allegedly defrauded Hajj pilgrims who rented housing in Saudi Arabia through the government (ET, Dawn, Daily Times, Geo, AP). Police in Karachi have arrested a suspect in the murder two weeks ago of minority affairs minister and outspoken opponent of Pakistan's controversial blasphemy laws, Shahbaz Bhatti (Dawn). And a Pakistani Christian sentenced to life in prison for violating the blasphemy laws has died under "mysterious circumstances" in a jail in Karachi, while at a Hyderabad prison, Pakistani authorities broke up a riot, sparked by a search for illegal cell phones kept by the inmates, that left seven dead (BBC, AP, AP, ET).
A suspected U.S. drone strike on a house in the North Waziristan town of Datta Khel has reportedly killed up to six alleged militants (CNN, ET, Dawn, AFP, BBC, AP). And four people were killed in Baluchistan when a bomb exploded near a security patrol (CNN).
Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn yesterday filed a 10-count indictment against Canadian Ferid Imam on charges that he facilitated the travel of New York subway plotter Najibullah Zazi and his co-conspirators, Zarein Ahmedzay and Adis Medunjanin, to Pakistan's tribal areas, where they reportedly received explosives training (CSM). Imam was also charged with terrorism offenses by Canadian authorities (CP).
Testify
In testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee yesterday, top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan Gen. David Petraeus said that the Taliban's momentum had been stopped in several key parts of the country, and that 700 Taliban commanders and 2,200 fighters had been "reconciled" with the Afghan government, but that progress in the country is "fragile and reversible" (Post, Tel, LAT, VOA). Still, Petraeus said the progress will allow an unknown, undetermined number of U.S. troops to leave Afghanistan this summer, though he and Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Michèle Flournoy spoke of the need for a long-term training partnership with Afghan security forces, and possibly joint basing of Afghan and American troops after 2014 (NYT, AP, Dawn, Pajhwok). Petraeus's prepared statement is available here and Flournoy's here (pdfs).
And the Guardian reports that according to American and British commanders, the Taliban have been "decimated" in Helmand province, though it is unclear when Afghan forces will be able to take over security control in the embattled area (Guardian).
Disband and dissolve
Officials at USAID have suspended a contract with the consulting firm Deloitte, which was advising Afghanistan's Central Bank, after an investigation reportedly concluded that the firm could have warned American officials about risky practices at Kabul Bank that eventually led to a bank crisis and a government takeover (Post, WSJ). Afghanistan's interior minister announced yesterday that seven private security firms are being disbanded as part of Afghan president Hamid Karzai's effort to clamp down on the firms, which he claims slow down the development of Afghan security forces (AFP). Bonus read: the real story behind the ban on contractors (FP).
The International Committee for the Red Cross (ICRC) said yesterday that the deteriorating security situation in Afghanistan was making life "untenable" for civilians, on a day when Afghan officials said two young brothers were killed in a coalition airstrike in Kunar province while they were watering fields (Reuters). An Afghan police officer and his father were killed in a bombing in Khost province, and Taliban forces kidnapped a commander and nine men who defected from the insurgency earlier this month (Pajhwok, Pajhwok). And the New York Times has a must-read about Afghan kiln workers in Nangarhar province living in indentured servitude to the kiln owner (NYT).
Out, out, damn book!
The British Ministry of Defense has bought and destroyed the entire first print of a book that is highly critical of Britain's performance in southern Afghanistan, written by a friend of the most senior British officer to be killed in action since the 1982 Falklands war (Guardian). The MoD was reportedly concerned that the book contained "information that could damage national security and put at risk the lives of members of the armed forces," and the new edition will have 50 words excised.
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The Pakistanis did the right thing...
The Raymond Davis saga basically destroyed the fabric of US-Pakistan relations.The Pakistanis did the right thing by letting Mr. Davis go. If the families of the victims have been awarded compensation, this almost two month long atrocious episode has met a fair end.
Now the 'event' is hopefully behind us, Islamabad and Washingon need to spot the faulty areas in the lines of communication and work on avoiding miscommunication going foward.
How much US Paid in Blackmail?
It would be interesting to find out what US was made to give to Pakistan's blackmail machine AKA ISI.
Will CIA stop following LeT now (which seem to have caused argument in in this case between CIA and ISI as Davis was supposed to have followed LeT against wishes of ISI?
And what else is in the goody bag? Additional US Dollars as "Support" for counter insugency (to indirectly support Pakistan's Nuclear weapon programme)? No more pressure on mad rush of Pakistan to make as many Nukes as possible? No questions on additional Chinese Nucleaer reactors?
Our partners in peace.
Just be careful about what you say.
General Petraeus's 'poisonous snakes'
General Petraeus called the terrorists safely ensconced in North Waziristan and Baluchistan as ’poisonous snakes’ at Senate Armed Services Committee hearing and went on to add that ’sooner or later they're going to turn around and cause problems in your backyard’!
But does Pakistani government agree with General’s pretension that these ‘poisonous snakes’ are going to cause problems in Pakistan? May be the esteemed General has NOT read previous US ambassador Anne Patterson’s secret review in 2009 in which she wrote that ‘Pakistan's Army and ISI are covertly sponsoring four militant groups - Haqqani‘s HQN, Mullah Omar‘s QST, Al Qaeda and LeT - and will not abandon them for any amount of US money‘, as diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks show.
Senator Levin intimidated that ‘Pakistan government basically (is) looking the other way in two key areas, that's North Waziristan and down in Quetta, where they know where those people are who are crossing the border and terrorizing Afghan citizens, attacking us, attacking Afghan forces, coalition forces’.
Has Senator Levin read above mentioned secret review by previous US ambassador to Pakistan? Did Anne Patterson have any reason to mislead US government when she wrote that secret review in which she clearly stated that “Pakistani Army and ISI are SPONSORING these ‘poisonous snakes’ of HQN, QST, LeT and even OSAMA BIN LADEN‘S Al Qaeda” itself? How can Pakistani government feel threatened from these ’poisonous snakes’ if Pakistani Army and ISI are SPONSORING them?
Is Pakistani government looking ‘the other way’ as Senator Levin implies or is Pakistani government really sheltering and supporting these terrorists but US government and military is looking ’the other way’ about such Pakistani duplicity?
Pakistani ISI has already relocated most of the Mullah Omar’s QST leadership to Karachi to protect them from possible US drone attacks. Now a country would not relocate such ’poisonous snakes’ if it felt threatened by them, will it?
And Pakistani government has been sheltering these ’poisonous snakes’ that are killing US/NATO troops in Afghanistan since 2002. What makes Michele Flournoy, Senator Levin and General Petraeus think that Pakistan will now change its stripes and stop such sponsorship when it has NOT done so for all these years in spite of umpteen visits to Pakistan by Adm Mullen, General Petraeus, Defense secretary Gates, Secretary Clinton and many other top US officials and billions of dollars in US aid?
Bottom line is duplicitous Pakistan has poor U. S. over the barrel of a gun. US does NOT have any leverage to force Pakistan to stop supporting terrorist groups who kill US/NATO troops in Afghanistan day in and day out because US needs Pakistan’s help in ferrying supplies to those very US/NATO troops. US has NO choice but to keep succumbing to Pakistani blackmail no matter how US tries to varnish it.
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