Monday, November 28, 2011 - 10:13 AM

"Tragic and unintended"
NATO
fighter aircraft and helicopters struck two Pakistani border posts in
Mohmand agency under unclear circumstances Saturday, killing at least 24
Pakistani soldiers (NYT, LAT, AP, BBC, Post, Reuters, WSJ).
NATO and Afghan officials say the strikes, called in by Afghan troops
on a joint patrol with international forces near the border with
Pakistan, were a response to fire from near the border posts, while
Pakistani officials say the attack was "unprovoked" and that the
positions of its border posts have been repeatedly given to NATO (Guardian, AP, AFP, Tel, BBC, AP).
The raid, which a NATO spokesman called "tragic and unintended"
provoked a furious response in Pakistan, which closed the country's
Western border into Afghanistan to NATO supplies -- permanently,
according to Interior Minister Rehman Malik in a statement Monday -- and
ordered the United States to depart the airbase at Shamsi in
Balochistan, which the United States is said to use for drone strikes into Pakistan's tribal areas (AJE, Tel, AP, Reuters, BBC, Post).
The
strike, the deadliest friendly fire incident in Pakistan since the war
in Afghanistan began, has put further strain on the already tense
U.S.-Pakistan relationship, prompting senior American leaders to reach
out to their Pakistani counterparts as Pakistan buried its military dead
(WSJ, BBC, NYT, Post, CNN, AFP, The News, AFP, ET).
Pakistani leaders condemned the attack Monday and Pakistani army
spokesman Gen. Athar Abbas termed NATO's apology "not good enough," as
American and Afghan leaders readied themselves for a possible outbreak
of violence in Afghanistan from insurgent groups (Dawn, ET, Guardian).
Abbas also said that the attack could lead to reduced Pakistani efforts
to help negotiate a solution to the violence in Afghanistan, after the
government announced Sunday that it would reconsider participating in
the international conference on Afghanistan scheduled to begin December 5
in Bonn, Germany (Reuters, Guardian, ET).
Pakistan's border closure will also test NATO efforts to diversify its
supply lines into Afghanistan, as supply drivers fear attacks on their
trucks, now sitting idle in Pakistan (WSJ, Guardian, AP, AP, Dawn).
Thousands
of Pakistanis staged anti-U.S. rallies in Islamabad and Karachi Sunday
and Monday, as the main Pakistani association of fuel suppliers to
Afghanistan said this weekend that it would not resume deliveries in the
near future (Dawn, Dawn, Dawn). And
a Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) commander in Mohmand told a
journalist that Pakistan should abandon ties with the United States in
the wake of the attack, adding that America, "can never be a friend of
Pakistan" (ET).
"Memogate" redux
American
officials praised outgoing Pakistani ambassador to the United States
Husain Haqqani last week, even as courts in Pakistan and investigative
officials debated whether or not Haqqani could face legal sanction for
his alleged role in an attempt to seek American assistance to prevent a
military coup in Pakistan in return for Pakistan's government unseating
its top military and intelligence leaders (ET, Dawn, ET, ET).
Pakistan's Supreme Court has accepted a petition from the opposition
Pakistan Muslim League - Nawaz (PML-N) calling for an investigation into
the incident, dubbed "Memogate," as Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar
said in an interview with the BBC Friday that the incident has prompted
questions about the authority of Pakistan's civilian government (ET, BBC). Bonus read: Peter Bergen and Andrew Lebovich, "What's behind the furor in Pakistan?" (CNN).
Former
Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi announced at a rally
Sunday that he was joining Imran Khan's Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaf (PTI)
party (ET, Tel, ET).
Qureshi accused Paksitan's leaders of "loot and plunder" and said that
the country's nuclear weapons were not safe with President Asif Ali
Zardari in office, a day after Khan called on Pakistan's leaders to
abandon its alliance with the United States (ET, Dawn).
Indian Foreign Minister SM Krishna told reporters Saturday on the third anniversary of the deadly Mumbai attacks that India was still waiting for Pakistan to "act decisively" against the attack's perpetrators (AP, AFP).
The banned Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) front group Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) held
three rallies in Lahore this week against trade normalization with
India, and also called for a "jihad" against American and NATO forces
following Saturday's strike against Pakistani troops (ET). Dawn and the Daily Times look at efforts to reduce trade barriers between India and Pakistan (Dawn, DT). And the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is predicting a difficult economic situation for Pakistan in the coming year (Dawn).
Five
stories round out the Pakistan news: Two Pakistani security forces were
killed Sunday following an annual anti-Shi'a Muslim protest by the
sectarian group Sipah-e-Sihaba Pakistan (SSP) (Dawn, ET). Pakistani authorities arrested a "key terrorist commander" in the Swat Valley this weekend (ET).
Pakistani police are seeking the extradition of an American man of
Pakistani origin in a suspected "honor killing" of the man's daughter
and son-in-law in the Punjabi city of Gujrat (AFP, Tel).
Police in Karachi said Friday that they had arrested a woman for
allegedly killing and boiling her husband, so as to dispose of the body (CNN, AP).
And former Pakistani cricket captain Salman Butt and star player
Mohammad Amir lost their appeals in a British court Wednesday of their
convictions for match fixing (Tel, CNN, AFP, AP).
Moving on
Afghan
President Hamid Karzai announced the next stage of security transfers
to Afghan control on Sunday, naming 18 new areas, including districts in
Helmand province still facing insurgent threats and the Sarobi district
east of Kabul (NYT, AP, Reuters, CNN, BBC, Guardian, AFP, LAT).
The top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, Gen. John R. Allen, is
reportedly preparing a request for more American trainers to be deployed
to Afghanistan, as the Commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps Gen. James
F. Amos said this weekend that the Marines' mission in Afghanistan will
end in the next 12 to 18 months (LAT, AP).
Afghanistan's former anti-drug head Gen. Khodaidad said this weekend
that opium production would "explode" in Afghanistan following the
withdrawal of international forces (Tel).
And the AFP reports on the rise in people smuggling in Afghanistan as
desperate Afghans concerned with their country's future attempt to get
to Europe (AFP).
Senior
Afghan High Peace Council (HPC) official Masoom Stanekzai said this
weekend that the Afghan government was ready to resume negotiations with
the Taliban, provided the insurgents formed a "political office" first (Guardian, The News).
The Afghan delegation investigating the killing of former President and
HPC chair Burhanuddin Rabbani arrived in Pakistan Wednesday, and shared
intelligence from their investigation with their Pakistani counterparts
(BBC, ET, DT).
Greg Jaffe, meanwhile, has a must-read on attempts to cut down on the
flow of Pakistani fertilizer that fuels cheap Improvised Explosive
Devices (IEDs) in Afghanistan (Post).
And British forces in Afghanistan are pursuing a "reintegration"
program that pays Taliban fighters who leave the insurgency
approximately $150 per month, while allowing them to keep their weapons (Tel).
Afghanistan's
parliament on Saturday approved the appointment of a new governor for
Afghanistan's Central Bank, Noorullah Delawari, who previously occupied
the post between 2004 and 2007 (BBC, AP, Bloomberg, AFP).
The position had been vacant since June, when the previous governor,
Abdul Qadir Fitrat, fled to the United States after saying his life was
threatened by his investigations into the troubled Kabul Bank.
Finally,
international forces said Thursday that they were investigating an
airstrike in the province of Kandahar that reportedly killed seven
civilians, six of them children (NYT, AP, CNN, Tel, BBC, AFP).
At least 10 Afghan security guards protecting a NATO supply convoy were
killed Thursday in the western Farah province by Taliban fighters (BBC, AFP).
And nearly 5,000 have people signed a petition delivered to Karzai
Sunday calling for the release from prison of an Afghan rape victim,
Gulnaz, who was imprisoned for adultery following her report of the
attack and forced to marry her attacker (CNN).
Turkey day
For
the first time since 2003, the U.S. military anticipated sending more
Turkey, stuffing, and sweet potato meals last week to troops stationed
in Afghanistan than to those stationed in Kuwait and Iraq (Bloomberg).
The Defense Department anticipated needing to airlift nearly a quarter
of the 160,000 Thanksgiving meals to troops out in the field, on account
of Afghanistan's treacherous terrain.
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Why does Pakistan harbor terrorists to begin with?
If Pakistani state is really threatened by terrorists as it often claims, then it must accept such deaths as a necessary price to pay for its own survival.
Pakistan shelters Mullah Omar’s QST and Haqqani’s HQN. Pakistan allows QST and HQN to stage cross-border terrorist raids in Afghanistan from locations close to Pakistani border check posts where Pakistani troops are manning the posts.
Pakistani Army has repeatedly refused to take military actions against Haqqani’s HQN and Mullah Omar’s QST.
NATO strikes QST and HQN terrorist staging points close to Pakistani border check posts where Pakistani troops are.
And NATO is to be blamed for missing the targets?
Instead of holding Pakistan responsible for allowing HQN/QST terrorist staging points who kill US/NATO troops, why is US on the back foot, apologizing for death of Pak troops?
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