Tuesday, March 20, 2012 - 8:37 AM

No more: A Pakistani parliamentary commission convened Tuesday to debate the future of relations with the United States, demanding an end to drone strikes on Pakistani soil, and an apology for the deadly NATO airstrike in November that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers (AP, NYT, Reuters, Dawn, AFP, ET). The commission also recommended that if and when NATO supply routes to Afghanistan are reopened, the shipments using Pakistan's roads should be taxed. Bonus read: Teresita and Howard Schaffer, "Resetting the U.S.-Pakistan relationship" (FP).
A roadside blast killed five suspected militants on Monday in a remote area of Pakistan's Khyber Agency (DT, The News). And Pakistan is reportedly looking to Russia to fill the financing gap that has opened up in the plans for an Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline since a Chinese bank withdrew its promise of investment (ET).
Memory loss
The lawyer for U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, who is accused of murdering 16 Afghan civilians last Sunday, said Monday that Bales "does not remember everything" from the night of the attacks (CNN, AP, Tel, AJE, WSJ). Bales' wife also released a statement, offering her condolences to the families of the victims, calling the acts "completely out of character," and asking for privacy for her family (AP, LAT, Reuters). And financial records reveal that Bales was found liable for "fraud" and "unauthorized trading" while working as a stock broker before joining the military (Post, Tel). The Army is expected to file formal charges against Bales late this week, but a verdict could take years in a slow-moving military justice system (LAT, NYT).
Some residents of the villages targeted in Bales' alleged murders used the word "they" to describe the attackers, while others report "he" was American, and much of the wider Afghan public doubts the U.S. account of a lone soldier as the perpetrator (CNN, Guardian). The top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, Gen. John Allen, is expected to argue today in testimony before the House Armed Services Committee that funding for the war should not be cut, as the United States must stay the course in Afghanistan despite recent setbacks (Post,AP). Bonus read: Douglas Ollivant, "The Afghan trust deficit" (FP).
The Afghan government has reportedly given extensions to some private security companies, ranging from a few weeks to 90 days beyond tomorrow's deadline for all private security guards to become state-employed forces (AP, AFP, BBC). U.S. military officials have said that the United States is offering the Afghan government some control over night raids, a move which could help overcome a key stumbling block in establishing the future of U.S.-Afghan relations (WSJ, Reuters). Afghanistan's vice president Mohammad Qasim Fahim pledged Tuesday that any long-term military deal with the United States would respect his country's sovereignty (AP).
Child prodigy
Residents of Lahore can purchase a 64-page English-language book entitled "The Dangerous Pet" written by a local nine-year-old girl, Aiman Waheed (ET). Aiman describes the impressive feat with modesty, saying the "the story just went with the flow."
-- Jennifer Rowland
How do you make 'demands' to an 800 lb. gorilla?
You sernd in the Taliban 'warriors', of course.
US should offer more targeted aid to Pakistani parliamentarians to change their votes to allow continuation of drone strikes.
That way Pakistani State can continue ‘to run with the Haqqani and Mullah Omar terrorists while hunting with the American hounds’.
Former Pentagon official Gen (rtd) Jack Keane said at a discussion on Afghanistan organized by the Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think-tank on June 30, 2011: "The truth is, the (Pakistani) ISI aids and abets the sanctuaries in Pakistan that the Afghan (Taliban) operate out of. They provide training for them, they provide resources for them and they provide intelligence for them. From those sanctuaries, every single day Afghan fighters come into Afghanistan and kill and maim us (US/NATO troops)". General Keane also added that “There are two ammonium nitrate factories in Pakistan. 80 per cent of the explosive devices that are used to kill our soldiers, kill Afghan security forces and kill Afghan people come from Pakistan."
US deserves to be duped for recruiting an ally to fight against the terrorists that Pakistani State itself created to begin with.
Always have gone with the underdog (Nope, never a Yankee's baseball fan... maybe the Met's, OH YES!). Always have chosen 'Right is right' over 'Power makes right.' Always chose air to air combat (just him against me and 100 rounds of 20mm cannon shells and one sidewinder left to speak for me) over dropping napalm and cluster bombs 'on innocent women and their babies.'
Used to love this country, 'like crazy.' Now I cheer as a tattered group of PTSD 'wracked' tough-as-nails' mountain men warriors of little means, struggling with the saddest of antiquated Vietnam era AK47's and RPG-7s... maybe even a few WW I Enfield rifles too boot, 'kick ass' on my country as they seek to eject the thugs and murderers that wear the stars and bars on their shoulders as if aggression and war crimes against civilians was what had made America great - NOT!
Knee high to a grasshopper, I used to think that the 'bible' had given us real hero's; like, gallant little David and his trusty sling shot; Josha won the batte of Jeriecho, whooppee! The Red sea opens up and the 'good guys' tattered and enslaved escaped to freedom. YES!
Today, as an old man with only faded memories of yesteryears glories ... and defeats, I see those criminal 'Bible demons' and I wonder... how much longer God... how much longer until you send your once beloved delinquents straight to hell on the business end of a crude trucked in dirty nuke into Tel Aviv's harbour... and KA-BOOOOOOM! Free at last! Free at last! The Judenrein Middle East has finally found peace... at last!
Sorry FP, you've put your shekel's on the wrong horse.... better luck next time. I hope you've learned something from this 'experiment in futility.' As for the 'complicit' Paki's who won't do as the Great Satan sez, ... hey Bubba, remember that 'blood is thicker than water!'
C'est Le Vi!
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