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Pakistani
President Asif Ali Zardari flew back to Pakistan Sunday night from
Dubai, where he was receiving treatment after suffering "stroke-like
symptoms," landing in the city of Karachi (NYT, Dawn, ET, Reuters, BBC, AJE, WSJ, CNN, Tel).
Zardari's return comes as Pakistan's Supreme Court begins hearings into
the "Memogate" scandal Monday, while tension between Pakistan's
civilian government and military continue to mount (NYT, AP, ET, Post, DT, FT). Prime
Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani sought to dispel talk of discord between
the military and the government after meeting for three hours with army
chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani Friday (AP, ET, Dawn, ET, AFP, Dawn).
Former U.S. National Security Advisor Gen. James L. Jones, the man who
forwarded the memo in question to then-Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff Adm. Mike Mullen, also filed an affidavit Friday in which he said
he did not consider the memo credible, and did not think it came from
former ambassador to Washington Husain Haqqani, as Pakistani-American
businessman Mansoor Ijaz claims (ET).
Haqqani
will appear Monday before the commission investigating the covert May 2
raid that killed Osama bin Laden in Abbottabad, after responding to
allegations that he authorized visas for "several hundred" alleged CIA
operatives ahead of the operation (ET, Dawn).
Asma Jahangir, Haqqani's lawyer, said Monday that Pakistani
intelligence chief Lt. Gen. Ahmad Shuja Pasha should have resigned in
the wake of the raid (Dawn). Meanwhile,
Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) founder Hafiz Saeed led a massive protest in
Lahore this weekend against U.S. and NATO forces, and promised to
continue to fight India (ET, AFP).
The Tribune reports on the fragmentation of the Tehrik-i-Taliban
Pakistan, as sources suggest that TTP leader Hakimullah Mehsud is
isolated and afraid to meet even with his most trusted lieutenants (ET). And a British law firm representing a Pakistani man who says his father was killed in a U.S. drone strike
has submitted questions to British Foreign Secretary William Hague,
demanding to know the British government's policy on the strikes (BBC, ET).
Three
Pakistani soldiers were killed in an explosion in Kurram Saturday,
while a former councilor to the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) was
shot dead by unknown assailants in Balochistan this weekend (The News, AFP, ET). Sindh's
government has filed a request for private security guards working in
the province to be allowed to carry automatic weapons (Dawn). In Peshawar, community police will guard schools following repeated attacks by militant groups (Dawn).
And Rob Crilly reports that the parents of some of the "drug addicts"
found chained in the basement of a religious school in Karachi last week
knew of and even approved of the treatment (Tel).
Six stories finish off the weekend Pakistan news: Roughly
30 politicians and former government ministers are set to join Imran
Khan's opposition Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaf (PTI) party, as former
President and military dictator Pervez Musharraf announced Sunday that
he would return to Pakistan this coming January (Dawn, ET, ET).
Pakistan's border with Iran has reportedly re-opened after being closed
for nearly three months, while the United States is said to have
offered to help finance the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-Iran
(TAPI) gas pipeline (Dawn, ET). Twelve Indian fisherman were detained this weekend after allegedly crossing over into Pakistani waters (ET).
And Pakistan mourned the death this weekend of Air Marshall Nur Khan,
who led Pakistan's Air Force in the 1965 war against India (DT, Dawn).
So many talks, so little time
Reuters
reports that half-dozen secret meetings between the United States and
Taliban representatives over the last 10 months have led negotiations
between the two sides to a "turning point," with the U.S. said to be
considering the transfer of Taliban prisoners from Guantánamo Bay (Reuters). An
Afghan government negotiator with the Taliban said Sunday that the
insurgent group was ready to open a political office in an "Islamic
country," though Afghan President Hamid Karzai said this weekend that
face-to-face talks with the group could not begin until they established
a clear representative (Reuters, CNN).
Karzai
also said Sunday that strategic partnership negotiations with the
United States may involve the presence of U.S. troops in the country
after the 2014 withdrawal date, a position supported by leading American
military officers (AFP, National Journal, CNN). A
NATO spokesman said Monday that controversial night raids, conducted by
NATO and Afghan forces, will continue despite facing major opposition (AP). NATO
also announced Monday that Pakistan had sent liaison officers back to
coordination posts manned by U.S. and Pakistani forces on the
Afghanistan-Pakistan border (Reuters). And the Post looks at the ongoing Twitter war between the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and the Taliban (Post).
Insurgents
attacked a district police station in western Kabul Friday, though no
casualties were reported in what was initially described as a suicide
attack (WSJ, AFP, BBC, Reuters). On Monday, two suicide bombers struck a market in Nimroz province, though they failed to kill anyone but themselves (AFP). In
Kandahar, Taliban fighters on Sunday killed a government adviser and
former provincial minister of border and tribal affairs, Abdul Baqi
Raghbat (LAT, AP). The
Afghan government this weekend denied having made a deal with the
Taliban to avoid targeting schools, even as analysts argue that such a
deal might have been behind the drop in attacks against schools recently
(AFP). And international and Afghan forces this weekend freed 11 Afghan policemen held captive for two weeks by militants (AP).
Finally,
the newly-appointed governor of Afghanistan's central bank, Noorullah
Delawari, said Sunday that he believed that up to 80 percent of the $825
million it cost to bail the bank out after a massive fraud scandal
could be recovered (AFP).
There's an app for that
Using
$30,000 of his own money, a U.S. Army officer has built an iPhone
application that uses GPS technology and the phone's camera to help map
coordinates and guide artillery fire (Bloomberg).
Nearly 8,000 American, Canadian, and Australian soldiers have
downloaded the app, and the Department of Defense is trying to create a
an "app store" to securely download a whole network of programs designed
to help soldiers fight.
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