Monday, June 20, 2011 - 9:15 AM

Talks about talks
Outgoing U.S. defense
secretary Robert Gates confirmed for the first time this weekend that
the United States was engaged, along with several other countries, in
"outreach" talks with the Taliban, but said that any real negotiations
about reconciliation would not come until at least the winter (NYT, BBC, Times, Reuters, AFP, Guardian, Bloomberg, WSJ, DT). Gates said that negotiations had begun only a few weeks ago.
The
talks were first revealed officially in a live speech Saturday from
Afghan president Hamid Karzai, who sharply criticized the motivations of
foreign forces in Afghanistan, and said that ongoing military
operations were causing environmental damage in the country (NYT, Post, LAT, Tel, McClatchy, Globe and Mail, Independent).
In a surprisingly emotional response, departing U.S. ambassador to
Kabul Karl Eikenberry called the increasing criticism of international
forces "hurtful and inappropriate," and said, "When Americans, who are
serving in your country at great cost - in terms of life and treasure -
hear themselves compared with occupiers...my people, in turn, are
filled with confusion and grow weary of our effort here" (State, NYT, Post, WSJ, Reuters, Tel, AFP). And the Times reports on the slow pace of efforts to reintegrate some of Afghanistan's nearly 40,000 Taliban fighters (NYT).
Up
to four Taliban suicide bombers wearing Afghan army uniforms staged a
coordinated gun-and-bomb attack on a police station in a Kabul market
Saturday, shattering the relative calm that had prevailed in the city
and killing at least nine (NYT, CNN, Reuters, AFP, Globe and Mail, McClatchy, AP).
The attack comes as U.S. and Afghan forces killed an Afghan soldier
believed to have shot dead his Australian "mentor" three weeks ago (Pajhwok, AP). And in the northern city of Kunduz on Sunday, a suicide bomber targeting a German military convoy killed three civilians (CNN, AFP, Globe and Mail, DW, BBC).
In other news, concern continues to grow about the behavior of U.S.-trained local militias in Afghanistan's south (Tel, AFP).
The governor and local intelligence chief in Badakshan province
survived assassination attempts this weekend, while the secretary of the
provincial council in Logar province was kidnapped, and militants
destroyed two cell phone towers in the provinces of Ghazni and Paktia (Pajhwok, Pajhwok, Pajhwok).
And due to summer vacations, Afghan lawmakers will reportedly be unable
to deal with a cash crisis brought on by the Kabul Bank scandal for
another month (Reuters).
Uneasy allies
CNN
reported Saturday that Pakistani officials knew of "increased U.S.
intelligence activity" in the country several weeks before the May 2
raid in Abbottabad that killed Osama bin Laden, though officials claim
they did not know where the activity was focused (CNN, ET).
Pakistan's army chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani is reportedly trying to
bolster his position within the military in the wake of the raid, as
Pakistani ambassador to the United States Husain Haqqani took to the
airwaves this weekend to defend Pakistan's questioning of alleged CIA
informants as well as others who may have known about bin Laden's
presence in the country (AP, Dawn, ET, DT, ABC). Interior Minister Rehman Malik this weekend said that the CIA is not operating in Pakistan (ET).
The
AP reported this weekend that two additional bombmaking sites were
evacuated in Pakistan's tribal areas after the United States provided
Pakistani authorities with intelligence on their locations (AP, NYT).
And Gen. Kayani reportedly told a visiting European delegation that,
"Pakistan wants a stable Afghanistan but not at the cost of Pakistan" (ET).
The
Pakistani government on Sunday formally requested that the country's
Supreme Court appoint a justice to head the commission tasked with
investigating the raid that killed bin Laden (Dawn, DT).
The court's chief justice is also scheduled to appoint a commission to
investigate the killing of journalist Saleem Shahzad today, while the
Tribune reports that the commission report on the attack last month on
Pakistan's Mehran naval base was an "eyewash" that "states the obvious" (ET, Dawn, ET).
In
other al-Qaeda news, the AP reports on how a cash-strapped al-Qaeda
Central in Pakistan saw kidnapping as an effective fundraising
technique, while the Telegraph notes that documents seized in bin
Laden's compound depict a fractured al-Qaeda leadership, with bin Laden
behaving as a "ranting chief executive" (AP, Dawn, Tel). On Friday, a U.S. federal court in New York formally dismissed the charges filed more than a decade ago against bin Laden (NYT).
And the Somali militant group al-Shabaab expressed support for
al-Qaeda's new leader Ayman al-Zawahiri in a statement Saturday, and
re-affirmed, "we are part of al-Qaeda" (CNN).
Out of area
Suspected U.S. drone strikes
targeted Kurram agency for the first time this morning, hitting a
vehicle and a compound and killing at least 12 people in a vehicle and
compound, including some suspected Haqqani Network fighters, an attack
that prompted protests from armed tribesmen in neighboring North
Waziristan (AP, AFP, ET, AJE, CNN, Reuters, Tel).
In Mohmand agency, up to 50 militants on Sunday attacked an army
outpost, killing at least four soldiers and triggering a furious
counterattack that saw Pakistani jets attacking militant bases,
reportedly killing at least 25 fighters (ET, AFP, DT, Reuters). Elsewhere in the agency dozens of militants attacked the homes of two anti-Taliban tribal elders, killing at least six (AFP, AP, BBC). Militants also attacked a checkpoint in South Waziristan this weekend, killing one soldier (ET).
And police in Lower Dir this morning arrested a young girl wearing a
suicide vest, who says she was kidnapped by militants and given
sedatives before being left by her abductors near a security post (ET, Reuters).
The
trial of seven men accused of playing a role in the death of an unarmed
teenager in Karachi begins today, as the Daily Times looks at the often
excessive force used by Pakistan's paramilitary units (ET, DT).
Targeted killings continue to roil the city, as at least 11 were killed
this weekend in the ongoing violence, and Karachi police are reportedly
confused as to which militant groups they are allowed to target (DT, Dawn, ET, ET). Saba Imtiaz looks at the perilous state of Karachi's minority Ahmedi community (ET).
And the AP talks about the work for tolerance being conducted by the
daughter of the slain governor of Punjab, Salman Taseer, while the
Tribune investigates how spurious blasphemy allegations are being used
to seize property (AP, ET).
Guardian
journalist Waqar Kiani was reportedly dragged from his car and beaten
by men in police uniforms Saturday, who Kiani says told him, "We're
going to make an example of you" just days after he wrote a story of
abuses committed by Pakistan's intelligence agencies (Guardian, Dawn, ET, DT).
In Baluchistan four people were killed, including two children, when a
remote-detonated bomb exploded next to a vehicle carrying Pakistani
security forces this weekend (CNN, AFP). And unidentified gunmen in the province destroyed a NATO fuel truck, after killing its driver (AFP).
Rounding
out the news this week, a U.N. report has found that Pakistan hosts the
largest number of refugees of any country in the world, 1.9 million
people (AFP).
And a Pakistani commission tasked with dispensing millions on flood
relief was instead found to have spent nearly all of it on advertising (ET).
Flashpoint
Less
than a week before talks between the foreign secretaries of India and
Pakistan are set to begin, an Indian and a Pakistani warship brushed
against each other in the Gulf of Aden, triggering protests and
accusations of dangerous behavior from both countries (AP, DT, AFP, Dawn, ET, AP).
Double duty
Pakistan's
military is funding a T.V. show to boost awareness of its fight against
the Taliban, "Beyond the Call of Duty," that uses real soldiers and
weapons instead of actors and props to keep costs down (WSJ). The show has proved popular, especially in rural parts of the country.
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Peace with Pushtoons ( afghans = "Bani Isreal" )
First of all let me clear some misconceptions,.
Afghan mean Pukhtoons, Tajik Hazara and Uzbiks are not Afghans , they are only Afghan nationals,( Like their are English and British ) .
Now, Peace with Afghans or Pukhtoons , im not using "Taliban" because this war is fought by Pukhtoons or Afghans. Afghan will never do peace or subdue , unless and until their are foreigner troops on our soil. We are "bani - Isreal " , we are the chosen one , God love us , this is just purification going on . Masai-ch will come from us , because " Hashem " promise that , than no body will kill us.
Inshallah
Aghanistan needs to be divided
between Northern and southern.
The southern areas of Pashtoons can merge with NWFP and form the new south Afghanistan.
O Children of Israel! call to mind the (special) favour which I bestowed upon you, and fulfil your covenant with Me as I fulfil My Covenant with you, and fear none but Me. [Qur'an, sura 2:40]
Children of Israel! call to mind the (special) favour which I bestowed upon you, and that I preferred you to all other nations (for My Message). [Qur'an, sura 2:47]
"God made a covenant with the Israelites and raised among them twelve chieftains [the princes of the twelve tribes of the twelve sons of Jacob/Israel]". [Qur'an, sura 5:12, "The Table"]
Ignominy shall be their portion [the Jews'] wheresoever they are found... They have incurred anger from their Lord, and wretchedness is laid upon them... because they disbelieve the revelations of Allah and slew the Prophets wrongfully... because they were rebellious and used to transgress. [Surah 111, v. 112]
[The Jews] knowingly perverted [the word of Allah], know of nothing except lies ... commit evil and become engrossed in sin. [Surah II, v. 71-85]
They [the Jews] spread evil in the land .... [Surah V, v. 62-66]
"They [the Jews] are the heirs of Hell.... They will spare no pains to corrupt you. They desire nothing but your ruin. Their hatred is clear from what they say ... When evil befalls you they rejoice." Ibid. [Surah 111, v. 117-120]
Pakistani and American perfidy
The seeds of the ‘current Afghan tragedy’ were sowed in Washington when Bush administration decided to allow Musharraf to spirit away by airlift hundreds, if not thousands, of Taliban operatives cornered by the advancing Northern Alliance in Kunduz in November, 2001. Pakistan relocated those Taliban cadres including Mullah Mohammed Omar in Quetta, the provincial capital of Baluchistan (now relocated to Karachi by Pakistani ISI to protect them from possible US drone attacks) and Haqqani network (HQN) in North Waziristan from where Mullah Omar’s QST and Haqqani’s HQN have been planning raids in Afghanistan ever since.
Duplicitous Pakistan has poor U. S. over the barrel of a gun. US can NOT use its aid 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.
Adm Mullen had following to say about America’s primary ally in its fight against terrorism, to the foreign news media on 1/13/2011: “I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, it [Pakistan] is the epicenter of terrorism in the world right now. It is absolutely critical that the safe havens in Pakistan get shut down. We cannot succeed in Afghanistan without that. It’s not just Haqqani Network anymore, or Al Qaeda or TTP (Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan), the Afghan Taliban, or LeT (Lashkar-e-Tayyeba), it’s all of them working together.”
And previous US ambassador Anne Patterson to Pakistan, wrote in a secret review in 2009 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‘, diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks show.
However US has been deliberately ignoring Taliban’s Pakistani connections in fueling and sustaining Afghan insurgency as reported by Matt Waldman in ‘The sun in the sky‘ on 6/13/2010, corroborated by WikiLeaks leaks on 7/25/2010 and then further corroborated by Chris Alexander, Canadian ambassador to Afghanistan from 2003 to 2005 and Deputy Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for Afghanistan from 2005 until 2009 in his article on 7/30/2010 titled ‘The huge scale of Pakistan‘s complicity‘.
American soldiers are dieing in Afghanistan because of their own government’s misguided policies. For deliberately ignoring Taliban’s Pakistani connections, US deserves to be duped by Pakistan.
At this stage in the game, as far as the US is concerned, the war on terror is over; feeble clarifications by the State Department, that the larger war on Al Qaeda shall continue, are inconsequential. Pakistan knows that by skillfully holding out till now, it is close to getting its proxy regime in place in Kabul. If it is able to sell the idea of an Islamabad-friendly Government as being of strategic utility to Washington, there’s no reason why the Americans should object to that. Pakistani and American interests, both short-term and medium-term, converge at this point; a broke America cannot afford to look at long-term interests, not at this moment.
And thereby hangs a tale — of Pakistani and American perfidy. The US has been, and shall remain, mindful of the “paranoia of Pakistan”; Islamabad’s sensitivities, its faux victimhood, will always take precedence over Afghanistan in Washington.
Obama administration is already asking Pakistan to provide access to Afghan Taliban leaders safely ensconced under Pakistani ISI's protection. A facade of peace deal will be reached with Afghan Taliban leaders chosen by Pakistan and as dictated by Pakistan. US will begin its drawdown and finally exit the theatre of a war it is desperate not to be seen as having lost, not so much to the Taliban and Al Qaeda as to the wily Generals of Rawalpindi who have proved to be smarter than the Americans.
That facade of peace will crumble within few years after the departure of US troops and Pakistan will bring Afghanistan under its suzerainty with reimposition of Taliban rule just as it did in 1996 as Uncle Sam helplessly will look the other way.
(4)
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