Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

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Prem
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by Prem »

http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and- ... is-doomed/
Frank Ruggiero may well be the best diplomat to fill the shoes of the towering Holbrooke as special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan. It’s the job itself that is impossible.Frank Ruggiero was having a drink with a State Department official at The Duck and Cover, a bar tucked inside a trailer that was surrounded by sandbags, at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul. It was the fall of 2009 and the staffer, Matthew Hoh, who reported to Ruggiero, had decided to resign in protest of the war.State Department officials were upset with Hoh’s decision to take a public stance and, as Ruggiero told him at the bar, Richard Holbrooke, the special representative to Afghanistan and Pakistan, was determined to convince him to stay, even throwing in a promotion to sweeten the deal. “I told him, ‘All you’re going to do is insult him,’” Hoh recalls Ruggiero saying. Ruggiero recognized a principled stance when he saw one; besides, he was a good listener. “He was willing to sit back and go into receive mode,” says Hoh. Ruggiero is “intelligent, personable,” says a retired Army officer who met him in Kandahar, and “a really nice guy,” says C. Christine Fair, a South Asia specialist.
The portfolio of special representative’s office, known as SRAP, is limited to Pakistan and Afghanistan, while India and Iran have been shut out, and this restricted purview makes it nearly impossible for anyone to be an effective broker. Instead of trying to salvage the office, administration officials should close up shop and let ambassadors Cameron Munter in Islamabad and Karl Eikenberry in Kabul do their jobs.In truth, whether administration officials decide to install Ruggiero as the new special rep, hire a big-name star, or reorganize the flow chart is beside the point, since none of that will solve the real problem in Afghanistan. As Matthew Hoh once asked, “Do you want Americans fighting and dying for the Karzai regime?” Sadly, the failures of President Hamid Karzai affect not only the American troops, but also millions of people who live in the region.“Irrespective of who becomes the head of SRAP,” as Christine Fair says, “Afghanistan is ******.” That is a situation no special representative, no matter how affable or magnificent, can fix.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by ramana »

An Indian POV in Tribune:

Let TSP be trapped in Afghanistan
Plan B for India in AfghanistanLet Pakistan remain entrapped
by D. Suba Chandran

With the Lisbon summit of the NATO countries (in November 2010) and the Afghanistan Review by President Barack Obama (in December 2010) over, it is time for New Delhi to take stock of the situation in Afghanistan, and rework its strategy to achieve those primary objectives. And as Robert Blackwill has done for the US (“Plan B in Afghanistan: Why de facto partition is the least bad option,” Foreign Affairs, January/February 2011), perhaps India should also prepare a Plan B if the present strategy is unlikely to yield the desired results.

First, what is our own assessment of the situation in Afghanistan? And what are our alternatives? The Lisbon summit makes it clear that NATO would be withdrawing its troops from Afghanistan by 2014. President Hamid Karzai’s statement at the Lisbon summit that the Afghans should take ownership of their security and governance was more an ultimatum than a request. For the US and NATO, this serves their purpose and they should be glad to exit as early as possible.

Will Mr Karzai be able to secure Afghanistan on his own? The Afghan security forces — the Afghan National Army (ANA) and the Afghan Police — are far from ready, both in terms of training and equipment. In terms of recent history, there is no single operation that the ANA has undertaken successfully on its own against the Taliban. More importantly, in terms of military leadership, there is no leader who has the charisma to attract the loyalty of diverse components. The command and control structure of the ANA is far from complete. Once the international troops leave, the ANA will not be able to secure even Kabul and protect their President.

There is no doubt that Mr Karzai will not be able to convince the Afghans that his government will deliver and provide safety and security to the common people vis-à-vis the Taliban. His government is seen as corrupt and opportunist even by most Pashtuns, people of his own tribe. Neither the Afghan educational institutions nor the legal structures will be able to provide education and justice, the two most important demands that would ultimately force most of the Pashtuns to go back to the Taliban.

On its part, the Taliban infrastructure remains intact. Though the CIA and the US take pride in telling that they have disrupted (if not completely dismantled) the Al-Qaeda network, the Taliban network led by the Quetta Shura and the Nangarhar Shura (popularly known as the Haqqani network) are intact. It will not take more than six months or one year for both these networks to overrun the Karzai government. The Quetta Shura led by Mullah Omar is strongly positioned in Balochistan with regular inputs from Southern Afghanistan. The Haqqani network, according to recent reports, has shifted its base to FATA in Pakistan. The drone attacks have targeted Al-Qaeda, but top and second-rung leaders of these networks are alive and receive constant support from both sides of the Durand Line.

{The US efforts against the AlQ and Taliban are a brutus fulmen.}

Finally, the umbilical cord between Pakistan and the Taliban remains uncut. Available reports do not suggest that the ISI and the military in Pakistan have totally distanced themselves from the above-mentioned groups. Besides, Islamabad has succeeded in pressurising Mr Karzai to reach an understanding on trade and transit between the two countries, and signing the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India gas pipeline agreement. The ISI has also succeeded in removing the anti-Pakistani elements in Mr Karzai’s Interior Ministry — Interior Minister Hanif Atmar and Afghan Intelligence Chief Amrullah Saleh were removed due to pressure from Pakistan.

Equally importantly, Islamabad also seems to have succeeded in convincing the international community (read the US and Europe) that the road to any moderate success in Kabul runs via Islamabad and the Khyber Pass. Today the US and other major powers, including the UK, (perhaps reluctantly) agree that there is no alternative in Kabul other than to concede an increased role for Pakistan in what they consider as “Endgame Afghanistan”.

{Short summary: Karzai is weak, Taliban are resurgent, US will cut and run. TSP will get its strategic depth. In other words the decade of 2000-2010 has been wasted for the US and West. All the restraint India showed in 2001-2003 is also wasted.}

How should India secure its interests against this backdrop? What are the alternatives? India has invested more than a billion US dollars in Afghanistan. How should it protect them and continue to maintain a presence in Afghanistan? More importantly, what should be done to negate the growing influence of Pakistan?

The first alternative is to work with whichever regime that remains in Kabul. But what if that regime, under Islamabad’s influence, is unwilling to work with India? The hard truth is that Mr Karzai has started looking outside already; the chances of his support to New Delhi’s enlarged engagement in Afghanistan are minimal. If the Taliban factions come back to power, in one form or the other, even this minimal space will get completely shut. The possibility of the Northern Alliance — which could provide a larger role to India — getting back to power is slim.

The second alternative is to form a coalition of regional powers — including Iran, Pakistan, Russia and some Central Asian countries — to ensure that Afghanistan remains neutral and no single country/ actor makes it as its backyard and allows it to be the centre of radical Islam.

The third alternative is to ensure a small presence, perhaps along with the US. It is widely expected that the US would leave a small force primarily to operate the drones for attacking Al-Qaeda. This is where India should seriously reconsider its obsession in negating the Pakistani influence in Afghanistan. Instead of India trying to obstruct the Pakistani presence, New Delhi should attempt to trap Pakistan in Afghanistan. Any historical analysis of Afghanistan-Pakistan relations would reveal that Pakistan has not succeeded in establishing a positive relationship with the Afghan nation, including the Taliban. There is hardly a section that will appreciate Pakistan’s role in Afghanistan.

Pakistan, on the other hand, has not gained anything substantial from Afghanistan. Most of Pakistan’s recent problems actually originate from across the Durand Line. In fact, Afghanistan does not provide strategic depth any more to Pakistan. India should have a symbolic presence in Afghanistan, adequate enough to annoy Pakistan and involve more, and get trapped.

The last alternative is to cut its losses and get out of Afghanistan. This is where India will have to relook its strategic objectives in Afghanistan. There is so much of an intellectual discussion, without much of an understanding of geography, saying that Afghanistan is India’s gateway to Central Asia. Is there a secret passage or grand tunnel which makes Afghanistan a gateway to Central Asia, jump-starting Pakistan from the Wagah border?

Plan B for India would be to cut its losses and leave Afghanistan, perhaps with a minimal presence, adequate enough to trap Pakistan. Let Pakistan consider Afghanistan as its strategic depth and remain embroiled.

The writer is Deputy Director, Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, New Delhi.
OK.
1) If TSP gets control of Afghanistan, its Durand problem goes away and it can then concentrate all its new weaponry and resources agaisnt India.

2) Afghanistan can act as its training ground for all those jihadis and they will be turned against Kashmir. This is a return to the times of Ghazni when Afghanistan fell to the jihadis. The historical ghost of north-west raiders (janjawees) returns even after a modern nation state is created.

3) Even if Taliban take over Afghanistan population wise they are 35% of the Afghanistan population and their stronghold is southwest Afghanistan. The Northern Alliance areas are not Pashtun areas and have only a few enclaves. Who ever controls Kabul controls Afghanistan. So India should support whoever controls Kabul.

4)Once the West cuts and runs by being in Afghanistan, India has a presence to leverage. And support the efficacy of the ANA. They can't complain about India taking care of her interests as they are not there anymore.

5) And the TAPI pipeline is pipe dream once they takeover. All the products have meaning only if they sell to India.


6) I think the writer's idea to be an adjunct to West in Kabul is fraught with danger of falling between two stools.


But good idea he is writing about the post Western exeunt.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by SaiK »

It is very important we have US presence in Pakistan, and it is also very important for talibans be confined near afpak border, so that cashmere remains as soft as it can be without any external goats to shed the wool, and corrupt the quality of peace it can generate right now without changing anything from a security angle.

For US to remain more permanently, their ops against the pakibans must not yield results in terms of total withdrawal due to decreased signatures of talibans., since everyone knows their hide and engage capabilities.

However, India should increase its mil presence in afgh or higher up the CAS area.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by krisna »

The coming conflict
The US and Iran may pump up the Af-Pak terrorists to meet their own narrow ends, further destroying Pakistan, says N.V.Subramanian. India beware.
Whichever way this writer looks at the emerging situation in the Af-Pak region, it spells greater trouble for India. The Af-Pak region may become a new battleground for Iran and the United States as Iran strives to assert its supremacy in the Middle East but particularly in the Gulf.
This can only be countered with greater safeguards against terrorism emanating from Pakistan, and pronounced internal Indian political unity, which appears to be missing now especially in the wake of the 2G scandal. The analysis for all this runs as follows.
He(Ombaba) let himself be guided by the defence secretary, Robert Gates, and the secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, to approve a surge. But with no clear signs of military victory against the Taliban or Al-Qaeda, he is bending to the "wisdom" of his vice-president, Joe Biden, who has won him new bipartisanship with the Republicans.
Biden wants out of Afghanistan. He wants any campaign against the Af-Pak terrorists restricted to drone and other forms of aerial attacks preferably conducted from outside of Afghanistan, with no American fighting presence in that country.

Biden's strategy will fail. But it is not a strategy for victory anyway. It is merely to get America out of the Afghanistan war which is clearly unsustainable.
As long as the American mainland is safe, and US soldiers are back or out of the war, it gives Obama a fighting chance for re-election. At least that is the reasoning.
India's trouble comes from the certainty that a substantial portion of the bribe money given to the Pakistan military and ISI will be ploughed back into the terrorist campaign against it. It has happened in the past with American aid to Pakistan and it will repeat.
But there is the Iran angle which complicates matters. Iran is opposed to the Sunni Al-Qaeda/ Taliban. But to spite the Americans, it has provided material support to the Af-Pak terrorists.
(Iran supported the NA not the taliban/al keedas in the past which are mainly sunnis)
Without provoking another American intervention in the region (after leaving Iraq), Iran will do everything to destabilize Saudi Arabia to establish its supremacy. In the Al-Qaeda, Iran has a powerful instrument to torment the Saudi rulers. Along with the Americans, Iran would be tempted to nurse the Al-Qaeda but against Saudi Arabia just enough to soften its opposition to it.
(enemy's enemy is my friend)
At some stage, the competitive bribers, the US and Iran, will clash, because Saudi Arabia is a key American ally. The clash may be localized to the Af-Pak region or could manifest in the Middle East where the Al-Qaeda conceivably radiates with Iran's assistance.

With all this money and arms flowing, and with emerging competing interests, the Sunni terrorist movement will splinter, leading to a bloodbath. To the extent that the internal terrorist war (with the Shia forces joining the fray) is located in Af-Pak and within Pakistan proper, Pakistan will be affected. It will further descend into turmoil and destruction.( Give peace a chance destroy TSP by 1000 cuts- ekonomy, terrorism,bious abduls, soosai bums ......)

For India, this will come as more of the same, but with heightened levels of terrorism. Hence the cautionary advice in the beginning of this piece. India has to be more on guard than before, and the internal political squabbling has to end if peace is to be preserved.
(the intelligence and security related issues should not be made hostage to the political squabbling. they should be separated. somehow does not jell with the overall scenario. I hope the writer is terribly wrong :( )
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by ramana »

No Link but source quoted
CENTRAL ASlA; Myth of 'One Afghanistan'
Los Angeles Times; Los Angeles, Calif.; May 25, 2003
-BY Charles Santos

At the end of 2001, the Taliban and Al Qaeda were broken and in utter confusion. Today, they are growing stronger and more active. They have reemerged forcefully in their base in the southern and eastern regions of Afghanistan, challenging the Kabul administration of President Hamid Karzai. And American policy is partly at fault.

The U.S. believed that establishing a democracy in Afghanistan would prevent its reversion to an extremist, terrorist state, and so it looked to the standard democratic model of a highIy centralized state run by an elected government. But this model ignored the complex regional and ethnic divides within Afghanistan.

In focusing on finding a single leader it could work with and building a centralized state, policymakers have ignored a basic precondition for a peaceful society in Afghanistan: building trust and goodwill among the different tribes, ethnic groups and regions. This is especially necessary after decades of war and a century of brutal ethnic and religious persecution.

Instead, the U.S. and United Nations have focused on building national institutions and providing strong support to Karzai, a Pushtun whose family is originally from Kandahar .They continue to hope that this approach will have a unifying effect on the country, but it has had the opposite result.

To understand what went wrong --and how to make it right -it is important to understand the roots of the problem. U.S. policymakers have accepted the optimistic view of many Pushtun leaders that Afghans see each other as brothers undivided by differences. Any talk of addressing issues of ethnicity or diversity is characterized as a plot by outsiders to divide the country. Consequently, necessary dialogue among communities has been squelched by Kabul authorities. We have returned to trusting in the myth that he who controls Kabul controls Afghanistan.

The U.S., by buying into the notion of a single happy family of Afghans, is aggravating the situation and denying diverse groups constructive political expression. Our policy in Afghanistan is in sharp contrast to our lraq policy, which recognizes that country's diversity and the political rights of groups long oppressed there.

The reality in Afghanistan is that from the perspective of many of the regions, Kabul is not so much a capital as it is another region. Though the Pushtuns may be the largest ethnic group in the country, and though they have historical1y ruled and dominated, they are not a majority.

Afghanistan is a country of minorities. In the aftermath of a century of oppression of the non-Pushtun peoples, more than a decade of communist rule, a devastating civil war and the excesses of the Taliban regime, there will be no permanent peace or security without recognizing this fact and restoring the confidence of ethnic groups traumatized by the numerous campaigns to homogenize the country.

U.S. policymakers need to understand that Afghanistan's failure to fully centralize in the past was not due to a lack of nerve or force. It's that centralization has always amounted, essentially, to "Pushtunizing" the country, a near-impossible task given the scale of the diversity. In previous times, Kabul has usually required foreign intervention to sustain the subjugation of non-Pushtun peoples and even some Pushtun tribes. Today's attempt, too, seems to be heading that way, with Karzai requesting help from the international community to subdue regional discord and restore central power.

If this all sounds familiar, that’s because it is. Karzai is not a Taliban supporter. But he is, as were the Taliban’s leaders, Pushtun. Instead of repudiating their notion that Pushtuns should rule the country from Kabul because of their religious piety and ethnic superiority, he has attempted to impose the kind of centralized rule the envisioned –if not its religious principles. In doing so, he has emboldened Taliban supporters. Terms from the lexicon of ethnic domination are cropping up again, as those who claim rights for their people and regions or who talk of diversity are dismissed as “infidels,” their leaders as “warlords”. Karzai has, to his credit, appointed many non-Pushtuns to positions of power. But he has also worked hard to ingratiate himself with people— including Taliban supporters-- in Pushtun regions where his support is weak.

Centralization can't work in Afghanistan, and so the U.S. should abandon its support for a Kabul-dominated state in favor of a more decentralized one. The fractured relations and history of violence among communities demand that a greater political space be created in Afghanistan. A two-track political approach, with both a national government in Kabul and regional power centers within a loosely federated or confederated democratic system, could create that space.

In Kabul today there is serious opposition to such a regional approach. Those charged by Karzai with drawing up a new constitution say such an idea can't work. But they ignore the fact that regional political organization has been a de facto reality for many years now. It's part of the reason the Taliban was so quickly toppled. Regional organizations have provided local conflict mediation, economic activity and political resistance to some of the worst abuses of misrule.

An additional benefit of a decentralized System is that it is the only approach that directly repudiates ethnic and religious extremism. As the growing number of attacks by Taliban and AI Qaeda remnants in Pushtun regions dramatically demonstrates, ethnic and religious extremism is rising again. At the same time, many non- Pushtuns believe that radical Pushtuns in the Afghan government are using their positions to reestablish Pushtun domination of the country. A federalist state would challenge the dogma of domination with a more tolerant and moderate political order.

For the U.S., the war on terrorism in Afghanistan is more a battle against ideology than a battle over land. Cultural, ethnic and religious notions of superiority are interrelated in complex ways that sustain the extremist movements, so it is against them that our battle must be waged.
So by early 2003 they knew what was wrong, yet persisted in wrong choices and played Pashtun domination and thus led to the current.
Prem
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by Prem »

http://www.dawn.com/2011/01/19/partitio ... ation.html
Partition and liberation
The argument for partitioning Afghanistan has most recently been championed by Robert Blackwell, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington, D.C. In his essay, ‘Plan B in Afghanistan: Why a De Facto Partition Is the Least Bad Option’, Blackwell argues that given the current inability to make inroads into stabilising the Afghan south, a partition of the two swathes of the country may be the elusive panacea for a costly war.
Enumerating the other options, the unlikelihood of stemming corruption in the Karzai government, the inability of the Afghan National Army to take on the pestering Taliban insurgency with any degree of success and, most troublingly, the presence of an occupying army largely ignorant of local mores and customs, Blackwell presents a good case. Nato forces in Afghanistan currently number 150,000, or 30,000 more than the Soviets had in the region at the peak of their military presence. And yet, despite the huge number of troops, a barrage of drone attacks in neighbouring Pakistan and the deaths of hundreds of militant leaders, the conflict has failed to yield a viable state to which power can be handed over.
Creating north and south Afghanistans also makes sense from the Pakistani perspective. If, as many analysts have suggested, much of the conflict in that region is a proxy war between India and Pakistan, separating the two may provide arenas of influence to both countries without distorting the delicate balance of power in the region. A partition of Afghanistan would also deliver Pakistan from its increasingly entrenched reputation as the reason for Isaf failure in Afghanistan.
While giving the south away to a Taliban-dominated set-up could well be characterised as an Isaf defeat, it would be a bounded one, offering territorial containment of a problem that could then be addressed with more precision. Concentrating military efforts on Taliban-controlled areas would better fit into the model of conventional conflict instead of the largely failed hearts-and-minds model that supposes it can win over civilian populations while killing off insurgents enmeshed within them.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by menon s »

25 Tons of Bombs Wipe Afghan Town Off Map
http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/01 ... f-the-map/

After two failed attempts at clearing the village resulted in U.S and Afghan casualties, Flynn’s response was to take the village out. He ordered a mine-clearing line charge, using rocket-propelled explosives to create a path into the center of Tarok Kolache.

And that was for starters, Broadwell writes. Airstrikes from A-10s and B-1s combined with powerful ground-launched rockets on Oct. 6 to batter the village with “49,200 lbs. of ordnance” — which she writes, resulted in “NO CIVCAS,” meaning no civilians dead.

It seems difficult to understand how Broadwell or the 1-320th can be so confident they didn’t accidentally kill civilians after subjecting Tarok Kolache to nearly 25 tons worth of bombs and rockets. The rockets alone have a blast radius of about 50 meters [164 feet], so the potential for hitting bystanders is high with every strike.
Wonder what the difference was between Soviet and American action?
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by ramana »

And that of the Brits in India after 1857. Apparently they razed a town of weavers and people are still looking for the location.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by Prem »

Karma of last few hundred years catching up with Kandhari pathans.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by ramana »

x-post...
Gagan wrote:Should the US remain in Af-Pak or leave?
Multi-Billion dollah question. Biradhers please add to this summary.

A. If the US remains in Af-Pak:
1. Pakistan keeps getting Jaziya by means of Kerry-lugar bill, other random military assistance, MUNNA donations of hand-me-down used mil hardware. Without US support, Pakistan as a nation will completely sink, its elite will be lost - their days of whiskey drinking and mujra watching will be endangered.
2. The fervor for Jihad will be high: As it is it has crossed a certain critical mass. At least now the Jihadis or their sympathizers (who are like 70+% of the population have a handy target in the form of the US in the west). The US has sought to deflect attention from it and tried to reduce it and shift it elsewhere (Remember there was a bit of takleef in the media that the US has pipped traditional 'enemy' India to become the most hated in Pakistan).
3. The more the US tries to appease the mullahs, the more they get suspicious of the US. Err, BTW, the mullahs come in two varieties - the bearded ones, and non-bearded rest of the population.
4. If the US remains, and wants to take out the Jihadis - specifically the groups that target allied forces in Afghanistan, Pakistani army will be pressured to do the dirty job themselves, with the US giving out intel, and monitoring progress closely. If the Pakistani army doesn't do the job properly, Jaziya payment will get delayed, pressure points will be squeezed etc. Like I've said earlier, the US has taken over the entire spectrum of issues that have existed in the western part of pakistan, and is running the show.

B. If the US leaves:
1. If the Jihadi infrastructure is intact, the ISI and the Pak-army is intact, you can bet they will be sullen that the US has ditched them once again. Just like a woman spurned (even more a woman engaged in the world's oldest profession), they will take it badly, and will lash out at the US and the west. Not good for the west at all.
2. If the Jihadis are intact, they will declare a Hezbollah victory and claim that they have defeated yet another superpower. Please note that according to the Ghazi folklore they have already defeated the British, the Soviets, and now the Americans.
3. But the problem for Pakistanis is that if the US leaves, there is not going to be any introspection to reform the Jihadi lovin' ways. The Jihadis will take the two pronged approach of trying to liberate Kashmir, and at the same time making Pakistan more Pure, i.e. killing both Kafirs and munafiqs.
4. The religious minorities will go through hell and might well be ethnically cleansed. (My recommendation to the minorities in Pakistan - get out NOW if you can, or prepare to convert NOW. A delay might not get the brownie points that will save lives later). The elite and the upwardly mobile are trying hard to get refugee status in the western countries - most have dual citizen-ships as it is, already have shifted money to safe western banks, and might even have airline tickets at hand with bags packed up and ready to go kinda scenario.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by Ravi Karumanchiri »

THE SPY WHO QUIT - Former Head of the Afghan NDS, Amrullah Saleh

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline ... e=bigimage

EXCERPTS...

...

Were you in Kabul on the day that the Indian Embassy was bombed [in 2008]?

Yes.

You got the news and then you began to gather evidence.

Yes. The evidence directly linked the bombing to [the Pakistani Islamist group] Lashkar-e-Taiba and ISI.

Specifically what?

Very specific, because we got the guy who prepared the car; we got the guy who planned together with ISI in Pakistan. And we had sufficient evidence that it was ISI's plan, because prior to the bombing, I had passed many other assets they had if they could do it. So we knew they were trying to do something against the Indian Embassy.

But what was the evidence that you had?

We had the remaining members of the network arrested.

And they told you --

That they were working for Lashkar-e-Taiba.

But what was the evidence linking those Lashkar-e-Taiba operatives to the ISI?

Lashkar-e-Taiba is an ISI child, A. B, prior to the bombing, we had detected ISI surveillance of the Indian Embassy through proxy, meaning they would train people in surveillance and casing and task them to go after the Indian targets in Afghanistan and bring back information. So we knew ISI were planning to do something against the Indian Embassy.

What was the evidence that linked those proxies to the ISI?

Because it's very direct and it's very simple. Indian Embassy in Kabul is not a target for Al Qaeda. India is not doing anything against Al Qaeda, one. That's circumstantial evidence.

But hard evidence means we get the guy. He tells us about his safe house in a Pakistani city. He gives us telephone numbers. He gives us the name of this mysterious clean-shaven person who came and gave them the equipment, showed them the map and gave them the training and the money, which clearly shows ISI's hand. And we go to the ISI, and we say, "Brother, this is the location where the bombing was found."

Months later they come by and say, "Yes, we did go to the location; the house was empty." Sure, if the house was empty, you could see the register. Who are running it? Very frustrating. Very frustrating. Yeah, they were involved. They were involved. ...

And when did you present your evidence to your U.S. counterparts in the CIA?

As far as investigations were concerned, I don't know now. It was shoulder to shoulder it worked. ... On this particular incident there was nothing that we were withholding from CIA. They knew everything we were doing in the investigation, everything.

So they concluded that as well as you did that this was an ISI-sponsored operation.

We were not telling the CIA to share with us their conclusion. We were empowering them with evidence. And we were assuming that overwhelming evidence will allow them to have good judgment. ...

...

You have numerous incidents, operations that you've investigated. But can you recount for us now ... perhaps something you haven't talked about before that makes very crystal clear the involvement of the Pakistani intelligence service, the ISI, in Taliban operations inside Afghanistan?

... There is an individual called Tajmir. Tajmir, during the Taliban, was chief of their intelligence for Jalalabad. By virtue of his job he was very close to Al Qaeda, and he was trained by ISI. He's an ISI graduate, and he hails from Paktia province. Very professional in training, he uses about 70 aliases and fake names. But we know it's Tajmir.

He is directing operations from Tal, from Waziristan, from tribal areas. And more than a dozen times after we found out this particular operation was carried out with blessings of Tajmir, we told ISI: "This guy is not hiding in mountains. He is either in Peshawar, or he is in a specific building with this telephone number." They never arrested Tajmir because Tajmir is their man. CIA knows about this. The U.S. military knows about it. The FBI knows about it. And Tajmir is like chief of operations of Al Qaeda assisted by ISI. And he's responsible for more than half of the deadly, the spectacular attacks that have happened since 2004 in Kabul.

You just said that he was chief of operations for Al Qaeda or for the Taliban?

Both. For that particular region of Afghanistan.

He was trained by the ISI?

Yes, he was trained.

...

You've called the ISI?

Yes.

Who do you talk to?

I used to talk to [Pakistan army chief Ashfaq Parvez] Kayani, [former ISI chief] Nadim Taj and [ISI chief] Gen. [Ahmed Shuja] Pasha.

And when you talked to Kayani or Pasha, you mentioned this Tajmir?

Yes.

And they said?

They would say, "We will look into it."

Did they deny that he worked for the ISI?

Of course.

So they're denying it? And you're saying that your proof that he works for the ISI is that they don't arrest him?

He's not an ISI officer, but without ISI's protection, he cannot live where he is living. When he does an operation, he then moves to Peshawar, [where] he has a shop. ... And ISI knows about it.

Well, there's a difference, though, between hands-off policy by the ISI toward operatives and actually running them.

I am afraid the United States is becoming again so legalistic like before 9/11, and that will hurt you.

...

Did you encourage the Americans to increase their use of drones?

I encouraged America to use Air Force, bomb Pakistan, force it to stop supporting Taliban and Al Qaeda, period; let alone drones. I said: "Drones are not sufficient. ... Do night raids the way you do in Kandahar." This is global war against terror. It was never declared global war against terror in Kandahar. I am very, very direct on that.

I do not consider Pakistan an asset. I consider Pakistan a global liability. So I'm very direct on that. Not that I hate Pakistan. I consider Gen. Pasha to be the most decent, knowledgeable, intelligent person I have ever met in Pakistan. But he represents a notorious, blood-sucking organization.

...

When [Gen. Stanley] McChrystal takes over [as commander of U.S. forces and the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan] in June of 2009, there is an increase then in the use of night raids?

Yes. And it broke the backbone of the midlevel Taliban leadership inside Afghanistan. When President Obama came and when President Karzai allowed me to speak, I praised the special operations. ...

What were your views on the use of night raids?

You see, this is a special way of conducting a war, and the special operations are the most useful ways of hurting the enemy. You cannot roll your tanks; there is no enemy territory per se. These are cells. The enemy is hiding among greater civilian population. What I do want to add is after so many years, why [don't we] have Afghan special forces? They should be doing such things.

You do have Afghan special forces. You have Afghan militia.

Not with the same capabilities.

Why not?

Because they have not been given those capabilities.

Have you pressed McChrystal or [Gen. David] Petraeus, [current commander of U.S. and ISAF forces in Afghanistan,] for those things?

For as long as I was in the government. ...

...

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline ... e=bigimage
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by menon s »

Burhani Initiative? Has the turnaround happened in Afghanistan?
However, as soon as Biden’s visit to Pakistan was announced, The Washington Post, based on his briefings by senior officials, listed his priorities for the visit which, apart from reassuring Pakistan on a long-term commitment, included three important shifts in the US policy towards Pakistan: a) The US would no longer insist on an operation in North Waziristan; b) Biden would categorically reassure Pakistan that the US would not undertake ground-based, cross-border operations in Pakistan territory and c) US recognises that “Pakistan has an important, if not dominant, role in negotiating with the Taliban”.

http://tribune.com.pk/story/107159/why- ... -pakistan/
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by shyamd »

Folks, anyone heard of Kestral Consulting/Trading/Logistics?? These guys are the ones working with Blackwater apparently and are also got some contracts with the Frontier corps. They run some logistics to Af-Pak for your famous US def firms.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by ramana »

It looks like a all seeing eye (ISI) jernail entity! Like those Mullah diesel trucking companies.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by shyamd »

Supposedly its staffed by former senior govt/military officials from Pak. Works with Blackwater, they are both engaged in NWFP. Kestral has some contract from Pak ministry of INterior to work with Frontier corps - and Blackwater is "sub contracted" by Kestral. So MoI if caught can say, no we hired Kestral to do missions in NWFP not BW. So MoI maintaining deniability.

Ramana, yes, check out their activities and their clients. All big fish. There are photo's there too on their website.

Think about it, imagine how many companies TSPA have like this.
Kestral trading is a Multinational Company. It was established in Early 80's. Mr Liaqat Ali Baig is the Chief Executive of Kestral Group of Companies. Its Corporate Office is in Islamabad. It deals in procuring Equipment for Pakistan Defence Forces and various other Civil Organisationst. The Trading wing of Kestral Company carries out business in import/export of trading items. Kestral Holding is the mother Company and has its offices in North America,UK, China, Dubai, SriLanka and Bangladesh.It has more than 200 Employess worldwide.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by shyamd »

Blackwater arms warehouse in Capital?
By: Imran Mukhtar | Published: October 20, 2009
Kestral Logistics, a warehouse located in the industrial area of Sector I-9/3, and involved in arms trading, is working as the subcontractor of US security company, Xe Worldwide (Blackwater), TheNation has learnt.
The sources claimed that the company had arms deals with Blackwater and was importing heavy arms as well as ammunition for the US company for its ongoing illicit operations in Pakistan.
The sources said that Kestral Logistics was also involved in importing sensitive monitoring instruments for Blackwater, which had been installed at Sihala by the said security company to monitor activities of Khan Research Laboratories (KRL), Kahuta, as well as to keep an eye on the nuclear assets of Pakistan.
It has been learnt that Col (Retd) Shahid Latif and Mujahid, who run Kestral Logistics, manage weapons and such type of sensitive instruments for Blackwater with the support of US Embassy.
This scribe visited the industrial area himself and the suspicious activities of the warehouse employees made it quite evident that the company was involved in some extra-legal business. The warehouse has high walls, barbed wires and no signboard outside the boundary wall, making the activities of the house more doubtful.
Heavy security of the building was also witnessed as scores of security guards were deployed inside and on the main gate of the building. It is pertinent to mention here that even the people working in plainclothes inside the building were equipped with sophisticated weapons.
When the warehouse in charge was asked what kind of business they were running inside the building, he refused to answer, saying “I am not authorised to answer such type of questions” The people of the area were ignorant of the activities of the company and were also curious to know that what type of business activities were being done inside the building?
It is surprising that when the local police was contacted to know that if they had any information about the business activities of the company, the police was also unaware about that.
Habit Khan, additional SHO of Industrial Area Police Station said that the police was already conducting a survey about the complete details of business activities of all the warehouses of that area but he had no information about such activities of any warehouse involved in weapons’ trading business so far.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by shravan »

link
A spokesperson for the US State Department's Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC), which is responsible for issuing licenses to US corporations to provide defense-related services to foreign governments or entities, would neither confirm nor deny for The Nation that Blackwater has a license to work in Pakistan or to work with Kestral. "We cannot help you," said department spokesperson David McKeeby after checking with the relevant DDTC officials. "You'll have to contact the companies directly." Blackwater's Corallo said the company has "no operations of any kind" in Pakistan other than the one employee working for the DoD. Kestral did not respond to inquiries from The Nation.

According to federal lobbying records, Kestral recently hired former Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs Roger Noriega, who served in that post from 2003 to 2005, to lobby the US government, including the State Department, USAID and Congress, on foreign affairs issues "regarding [Kestral's] capabilities to carry out activities of interest to the United States." Noriega was hired through his firm, Vision Americas, which he runs with Christina Rocca, a former CIA operations official who served as assistant secretary of state for South Asian affairs from 2001 to 2006 and was deeply involved in shaping US policy toward Pakistan. In October 2009, Kestral paid Vision Americas $15,000 and paid a Vision Americas-affiliated firm, Firecreek Ltd., an equal amount to lobby on defense and foreign policy issues.

For years, Kestral has done a robust business in defense logistics with the Pakistani government and other nations, as well as top US defense companies. Blackwater owner Erik Prince is close with Kestral CEO Liaquat Ali Baig, according to the former Blackwater executive.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by svinayak »

Another fake information connection India to Pakistans problem.

http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Asia-Sou ... y/(page)/2
How the Afghanistan war became tangled in India vs. Pakistan rivalry
India-Pakistan tensions muddy US efforts in Afghanistan, where Pakistan's cooperation is needed. One key issue: Islamabad is wary of India's broadening regional role.

Rafiq Maqbool/AP
By Ben Arnoldy, Staff Writer / January 20, 2011

New Delhi
The resolution of the US war in Afghanistan is getting tangled up in one of the world's most stubborn rivalries: India versus Pakistan.
Pakistan cites India's influence in Afghanistan as one of its top concerns. And with Pakistan increasingly crucial to any military or diplomatic progress in the war, it's a concern that Washington has to manage.

Some current and retired Pakistani officials are hinting that as both the war and the peace efforts become more and more difficult, Washington and its Afghan allies might do more to reassure Islamabad that India won't play a major role in a future Afghan settlement.

"That, to my mind, is one of the mysteries: why the Americans have not recognized why the Pakistanis have a legitimate reason to worry about Indian involvement in Afghanistan," says Najmuddin Shaikh, a former Pakistani foreign secretary.

IN PICTURES: Afghanistan aid

Instead, he says, the US is looking for a "regional solution" that would involve negotiations with not just Pakistan, but nonbordering countries like Russia and India. He calls the inclusion of India "bothersome," and says the only countries for which Afghanistan is "critical" are Pakistan, Iran, and, to a lesser extent, the Central Asian republics.

In the end, Pakistan wants a friendly government in Kabul, and friendship is defined in reference to India.

"They are two sovereign countries, India and Afghanistan, and they have the right to have good relations. But what we are saying is that their relations should not be at the cost of Pakistan-Afghanistan relations, or in any way harm Pakistan's interests," says Abdul Basit, the spokesman for Pakistan's Foreign Ministry.

Pakistan worries about having to defend both its eastern and western borders if India and Afghanistan grow too close. Pakistan has also alleged that India uses its consulates in Afghanistan to conduct espionage, stirring up antigovernment forces in Pakistan's frontier regions.

Verging on paranoia

Sometimes the Pakistani fears verge on paranoia, says Marvin Weinbaum, an Afghan expert at the Middle East Institute in Washington.

"I've had Pakistani diplomats tell me, 'You know, there are 15 [Indian] consulates,'" he says. (There are four.) "When you press them on it, they say that, in effect, this is our line," suggesting that they sometimes fabricate in order to have some bargaining leverage.

India did use Afghanistan to aid Balochistan separatists in the 1970s, Dr. Weinbaum says, but no evidence has turned up of meddling in recent years. That said, consulates are "listening posts," he adds.

Ramesh Chopra, a retired head of Indian intelligence, dismisses the idea that consulates are being used for espionage, noting that the border regions are an impenetrable war zone.

Beyond security concerns, Pakistan worries that India has historically supported minority ethnic factions in Afghanistan, creating tensions with the more numerous Pashtuns who live on both sides of the Afghanistan-Pakistan border.

"Pakistan's interest is really that the Pashtuns should have their due share so that they don't then create resentments among the Pashtuns in Pakistan," says Mr. Shaikh. Many Pashtuns are unhappy with the current makeup of the Afghan government and military and that has contributed to the Pashtun-dominated insurgency.
To help stabilize Afghanistan, India has pledged $1.3 billion in assistance since the Taliban's ouster. It has also implemented some 50 development projects including a road to Iran and transmission wires to Uzbekistan. The country's involvement has come with risk: Militants have launched multiple deadly attacks on the Indian embassy.

"They have an investment there now as far as they are concerned. If things go badly there, you can bet that they will [send] military advisers," says Weinbaum.

India has not contributed militarily to the coalition effort because Afghan President Hamid Karzai has not sought its help, perhaps under US pressure not to antagonize Pakistan.

Quietly the US has talked to the Afghan government about listening to Pakistan's concerns, says Weinbaum.

But publicly the US has mostly celebrated Indian involvement in Afghanistan, not called for less.

Partly this is because India shares American antipathy toward the return of a radical Islamic government, and partly because the US wants to deepen its ties to India.

Asking India to leave "would be contrary to any diplomatic political norms," says Michael Semple, an expert on the current peace process. Instead, a legitimate way to address Pakistan's concerns is by "providing an effective check on any threatening or unhelpful activities."
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by ramana »

Atlast discussion of Indian options being expressed:

...Let die
...let die
India should keep its hands clean as Pakistan sinks, says N.V.Subramanian.

24 January 2011: While either denouement seems far away, some influential US scholars and strategists are advising the breakup of Afghanistan or the Balkanization of Pakistan to safeguard America from jihadi terrorism. How should India deal with all this?

For nearly fifteen months now (see Commentary, "Northern Alliance II," 30 October 2009), this writer has been focusing on the dead-end for India in Afghanistan. While India has done exemplary development work in Afghanistan, it still represents nothing in terms of hard power.

It is a fact that circumstances have prevented India from exercising hard power. But India also has been extremely disinclined in that direction from first. The reasons for that are beyond the scope of this piece to discuss.

It has been, therefore, clear that India's exercise of soft power in Afghanistan would remain valid till the US and NATO forces hold that country. Those forces are not withdrawing as early as the middle of this year, as originally planned. But their proposed gradual drawdown, with the Afghan army taking up their security duties, won't be able to hold back the Taliban/ Al-Qaeda invasion of southern Afghanistan for long.

Regardless of how the US plays the game then, India's reflexive position would be to resurrect Northern Alliance II with Russia and maybe Iran. Effectively, Afghanistan will be plunged into a Taliban/ Al-Qaeda versus non-Pashtun civil war again.

Unfortunate as this will be, it is India's only way to prevent a Talibanic spillover into sensitive Jammu and Kashmir. If the US comes on the side of Northern Alliance II, the Taliban/ Al-Qaeda advance (with Pakistani military/ ISI assistance) will be blocked.

Thwarted in their aim to gain all of Afghanistan, this writer expects the Taliban to turn against Pakistan, and attempt to make a grab of its contentious Pashtun territories. The logic is that if a united Taliban-ruled Afghanistan is impossible, then in compensation, a greater Pakhtunistan has to be fought for and won.

Thus will commence the breakup of Pakistan. The Punjabi-dominated Pakistan military/ ISI will, against their best efforts, be pitted against the Pashtun Taliban armies. This is a war that the Pakistan -- or rather the Pakistan Punjab -- army will lose.

Without the uniting might of the military (which will internally splinter), the other two provinces, Baluchistan and Sindh, will break away. A full-scale rebellion is underway in Baluchistan. And Sindhi nationalism has been always formidable.

Iran will collude with the Balkanization of Pakistan. It means one less Sunni power. The headache of the world will be the safe disposal of Pakistan's nuclear weapons. If Pakistan reduces to tiny land-locked Punjab, it can have no use for nukes. But that nukes' disposal will have to take place at an appropriate time -- not too soon and not very late.

Now India should have no part in the destruction of Pakistan. One ingrate Bangladesh is bad. If Pakistan implodes on its own -- as it shows clear signs of doing -- its puny successor state cannot blame it on India.

It will also bury the Two-Nation Theory forever. Pakistan's self-destruction will increase too the shine of India's plural democracy. It will additionally increment trust on India's peaceful rise. If it can be analyzed that China contributed to Pakistan's fall (by nuclear-arming and pitting it against India), attitudes about India will turn further favourable. :mrgreen:

Certainly, it is possible that events may not take this trajectory. After all, the big sticking point is Pakistani nukes. Pakistan may once again blackmail the world that if it goes down, it cannot prevent the jihadis from becoming nuclear-armed. But the situation has gone beyond retrieval.

Afghanistan cannot be regained and democratized on the present military strategy. The US and NATO cannot keep their forces locked in that country endlessly. But if they take the most minimum counter-terrorist cover by opting to divide Afghanistan by going with Northern Alliance II, then the Balkanization of Pakistan will follow.

What this boils down to is this. To keep America and the rest of the West safe, Pakistan must be stripped off its nuclear weapons. Without those weapons (as somebody has argued before), nobody really cares what happens to either Pakistan or Afghanistan. At bottom, presumably that is India's position too.

But at no cost should India be involved with the dismantling of Pakistan. If it comes to that and Pakistan's nukes must be evacuated, then India would be duty-bound to assist.

So for now, India should play the waiting game. And as Pakistan (and Afghanistan) move towards self-destruction, India should firewall itself against fallouts. It will not be beyond the terroristic Pakistani military/ ISI to attempt Mumbai II or to provoke a J and K war to save Pakistan from sinking.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by ramana »

In other words he says that Blackwill plan will lead to TSP break-up as the Taliban Pashtuns will seek to erase Durand Line. This analysis ignores teh fact that the Taliban are hand-maidens ( in more ways than one) of the TSPA. Its a stretch to think they will turn on the TSPA.

But agree that India should have hands off approach as any thing contrary to that will unite the dregs despite Blackwill's admonshment that US should tell India it wont fight India's battles in Af-Pak!
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by Prem »

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/MA25Df02.html
US wants to clip Karzai's wings
Besides weakening Karzai, the US hopes to deal a body blow to the Afghan leader's initiative to kick start an intra-Afghan dialogue. Karzai is banking on a pan-Afghan alliance to support his audacious plan to reconcile the Taliban, and the US is using the ethnic card to unravel Karzai's alliance system. Why such venom toward America's own one-time prot้g้? Washington finds Karzai increasingly acting as an Afghan nationalist rather than as a US surrogate. What is at issue is how to secure a long-term US military presence in Afghanistan. Washington is negotiating a new Status of Forces Agreement with Kabul but Karzai is resisting the US plan to keep permanent military bases. US Vice President Joe Biden's visit to Kabul last month failed to clear the deadlock. Meanwhile, Karzai is making sustained efforts to develop ties with Iran and Russia, including military cooperation, so as to reduce his dependence on the US by the 2014 timeline. Moscow has proposed a key role for Kabul in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. Last week, Karzai visited Moscow and openly said that the Russians made better friends for the Afghan people than the Americans. This was the first official visit by an Afghan head of a state to Moscow since the departure of Soviet troops in 1989. The US reportedly tried to dissuade Karzai from undertaking the visit. Karzai also recently deputed former Northern Alliance stalwarts Burhanuddin Rabbani (who heads the Afghan High Council for Peace in charge of reconciling with the Taliban) and Mohammad Fahim (the first vice president) to Tehran to seek Iranian support for his policies.
Clearly, the specter of a peace initiative on the Afghan problem at a regional level has begun haunting Washington for the first time. Biden openly flirted with the idea of a long-term American military presence in Afghanistan. Middle-level US officials have shifted gear to reinforce Biden's thought process. A recent speech entitled "The Obama Administration's Priorities in South and Central Asia" by Assistant Secretary of State Robert Blake at the James A Baker III Institute for Public Policy falls into this category.

Red rag, intransigent bull

Blake underscored that Washington intends to expand its engagement with Central Asia, "this critical region", which is situated at a "critical crossroads, bordering Afghanistan, China, Russia and Iran".

What emerges from Blake's speech is that Washington and Delhi may have drawn closer on Afghanistan. Arguably, this was bound to happen. India is perhaps the only regional power that still seeks a military solution in Afghanistan. :rotfl: India quietly favors a long-term US military presence in Afghanistan. The US is edging toward the one-dimensional Indian view of Pakistan as the "epicenter" of global terrorism. The US views India as a red rag to taunt the intransigent Pakistani bull and India may not mind it. Blake made a stunning claim that India is the key US partner in Afghanistan and Central Asia: These projects with India in Afghanistan mark a small but important part of a significant new global development - the emergence of a global strategic partnership between India and the US ... India's democracy, diversity and knowledge-based society make it special, a model of a tolerant pluralistic society in the region, and one that now actively seeks to work with the US and others to help solve problems on a global level ... The strength of India's economy makes it the powerhouse of South and Central Asia's growth.
He said one of the three "primary objectives" for the US in the "dynamic regional context" of South and Central Asia would be to "build a strategic partnership with India". This may seem like hyperbole, but it makes for geo-strategy.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by ramana »

Leaving that aside the US attitude towards Karzai are strange and don't seem to understand the ground realities and tribal culture of Afghan Pashtuns.
Karzai and his ilk will be the acceptable Pashtun rulers of Afghanistan. The TSP supported Taliban dont have legitimacy. Its simple as that. They lost it in 1760s. Can't recover with any super power help or not. Due to the complexity of Afghan politicial establsihement the best option is to support whoever emerges to the top legitimately. Trying to undermine that will led to further chaos.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by krisna »

India stood up for dear friend Iran: WikiLeaks
The two countries also explored the possibility of an Indian troop deployment in Afghanistan to prevent the country falling again to Pakistan-based elements, the documents revealed.
Another cable reveals India’s deep-seated fears of a US ‘abandonment’ of Pakistan and the “deep trouble” that it will cause to India itself.

In a chat with US counter-terrorism official Virginia Palmer, former Indian high commissioner to Pakistan, G Parthasarathy and other officials are portrayed as being extremely worried about any US scaling down in Afghanistan. They, however, were all for the US exit from Iraq.

The cost of losing Afghanistan is too great for India,” Parthasarathy is quoted as saying. When asked if India would consider putting troops on the ground in northern Afghanistan, Parthasarathy responded that it would depend on “how it’s politically played,” acknowledging that the idea has some strategic value, the cable went on.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by ramana »

These leaks seem to be inclined or slanted to induce behavior modification in TSP by invoking fear of proacive role of India in Afghanistan.

Just because its in a US diplomatic cable it does not mean its true!

Also note G. Parthasarathy, who writes a column in Pioneer and is available on TV as a commentator, hardly needs to be quoted in classified cable as if he is giving confidential information. He says it openly in many op-eds!

Classified waste or sacred poop!
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by ramana »

Attock the town at the confluence of Kabiha(Kabul) river and Indus was the historical border town between Afghanistan and India through the centuries. The British moved the border to Khyber pass by creating the Durand Line however they signed the treaty for 100 years as they thought they would be there and no one in Kabul! It turned out other way and now we have Af-Pak turning Fak-Ap.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by Johann »

ramana wrote:Attock the town at the confluence of Kabiha(Kabul) river and Indus was the historical border town between Afghanistan and India through the centuries. The British moved the border to Khyber pass by creating the Durand Line however they signed the treaty for 100 years as they thought they would be there and no one in Kabul! It turned out other way and now we have Af-Pak turning Fak-Ap.
Ramana,

The border moved West in two phases, one Sikh, one British.

The Sikh Empire operating out of Lahore fought the Afghans, and kept pushing all the way to Peshawar from the 1810s to the 1830s. The Khyber pass was the boundary after the battle of Jamrud in 1837.

The second phase began in the 1870s with the British "Forward Policy" in reaction to the Russian advances in to Central Asia. That was when much of what is now FATA was taken.

Both phases led to Anglo-Afghan wars. The first was a bloody failure, and the second a success.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by ramana »

MEQ has this article:
What Waziristan Means for Afghanistan

by Andrew M. Roe
Middle East Quarterly
Winter 2011, pp. 37-46 (view PDF)

http://www.meforum.org/2830/waziristan-afghanistan


The Afghan conflict has refocused world attention on Waziristan. Once one of the British Empire's most volatile territories, the remote small province in northwestern Pakistan is now home to Taliban insurgents, al-Qaeda fighters, rogue elements within the Pakistani military, and Western jihadists, who use it as a base to rest, heal, rearm, train, and plan before they launch again across the porous border into Afghanistan. It is also the area where Osama bin Laden and many of his top lieutenants are probably hiding and a regular target for U.S. air strikes against key Taliban personnel. Pakistani military operations destroyed insurgent forces and caused mass civilian dislocation, yet efforts to produce a lasting peace deal with the local tribesmen and the Taliban have proved futile. Waziristan remains a dangerous and unpredictable region with the potential to unhinge President Hamid Karzai's fragile regime in Afghanistan, threaten the Pakistani government, and pose a major challenge to regional stability.

Photo courtesy of the Green Howards Museum, Richmond, N. Yorkshire, England. A British battalion patrols in Waziristan, 1938. Military operations were finite in duration and localized in their employment. Against a fiercely independent and fanatical foe, any enduring occupation of tribal territory by foreigners was hotly contested.

The pertinent lessons from Britain's experience in the region can help policymakers understand and address present-day challenges in the same geographical area, not least since the British faced the same issues and had several of the same internal arguments. To be sure, there are significant differences separating the British experience in Waziristan from that which now confronts the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), which in turn set restrictions to what can be derived from the past. As Captain John Girling, a south Waziristan scout veteran, recalled in 2009: "Up to ten years ago there were [contemporary] similarities, but since the coming of the Taliban, I can't see any similarities."[1]

However, despite the passage of time and the change in technological and geopolitical circumstances, some of the parallels between the British experience of Waziristan and NATO's remain pertinent and provide valuable insights to today's political and military strategists.
The British System of Control

During the nineteenth and early twentieth century, the British colonial administration was responsible for the complex task of maintaining law and order in Waziristan. After decades of unwanted and costly experimentation, the British decided that hands-off "containment" was the best policy. Control, as in the Indian states, was neither necessary, desirable, nor practicable. With limited resources, control was exercised by the distribution of allowances to sympathetic maliks (tribal representatives or elders) and by the employment of locally recruited kassadar (tribal policemen) and indigenous forces, known as scouts or the Irregular Frontier Corps.[2] Each proved invaluable in maintaining order and relieving regular troops of the expensive work of garrisoning frontier outposts. In the event of any situation escalating out of control, the army of India was the fallback force on the frontier. This multilayered structure brought effective governance to the fractious inhabitants via a sliding scale of violence: first enticements, rewards, and threats; next tribal kassadars, then the lightly-armed scouts; only in extremis, when outbreaks were too excessive to be controlled by the scouts, would the political authorities call on the army to conduct a punitive expedition in order to administer punishment.{Sama, dana, bheda and danda} Working with the forces in society and grounding policy in regional realities offered the only hope of controlling the unpredictable and confrontational tribesmen.

Despite this deft approach, based on organizations that were relatively optimal to the demands of the region and sympathetic to local conditions, the constant threat of tribal unrest remained. In 1936, a compelling leader and frontier personality, known as the Fakir of Ipi, began a political career that tested the British administrative and military apparatus from the time he instigated a rebellion in Waziristan until Britain's departure in 1947.[3] Even though he possessed no formal military training, the fakir provided a charismatic figurehead to the rebellion and maintained his position through dogged determination, strength of personality, and an elevated religious position. As a rebel leader he was uncompromising and his hatred of the British celebrated. Such was his belief in local Muslim grievances and desire for an independent Pashtunistan that he possessed the nerve and courage to face considerable danger and privation. The more the fakir eluded government forces and guided the insurrection, the more his divine status was confirmed. Despite the employment of more than 40,000 British and Indian troops to locate his whereabouts in Waziristan, the fakir continued to evade capture and frustrate his pursuers. He died of natural causes in 1960, having never faced a magistrate's bench.

Despite injecting large numbers of military reinforcements into tribal territory in 1936-37 in pursuit of the fakir, the British never sought full control in the latter years of the colonial period. Military operations were finite in duration and localized in their employment. Against a fiercely independent and fanatical foe, any enduring occupation of tribal territory by foreigners was hotly contested. Political primacy remained paramount, and routine control occurred via the locally recruited scouts and kassadars. This approach was based on a light touch, commitment, and continuity but was underpinned by an early and firm response if the tribes stepped out of line. As a rule, the rights and customs of the tribesmen were respected; nothing was ever done to interfere with their religious beliefs and customs. Only a deep-seated knowledge of the region, gained through regular contact and an enduring desire to learn, helped point to the conditions necessary to help maintain tribal control.

Waziristan Has Changed Little

There are many aspects of Waziristan that remain the same. Predictably, the topography has altered little since the British departed in 1947, and the mountainous terrain still influences tribal culture and linkages.[4] Likewise, the region is still inhabited by a complex mixture of independent tribes that have changed little over the years. For the majority of tribesmen, life is still tedious, and opportunities for excitement and travel are rare. Moreover, the inaccessible terrain continues to make the region an impregnable base in which to hide, train, and launch attacks. Insurgent and fugitive forces have little difficulty in finding long-term sanctuary in the region; it is almost impossible to distinguish militants from peaceful tribesmen. Equally, the terrain helps to mitigate technological advances and frustrates regular forces. Accurate or timely intelligence is rarely available. The climate remains extreme, and the region still suffers from elevated levels of poverty and underdevelopment.[5] Unemployment, illiteracy, and infant mortality remain high. Access to medical facilities in many remote regions is almost nonexistent. It remains an area in desperate need of social and economic development. Likewise, the tribes remain particularly susceptible to blood feuds and religious extremists. As with their ancestors, the tribesmen continue to resist outside influence or control, regardless of its legitimacy, and regard any foreign presence as a personal affront to their independence. The Hindu and the Westerner are equally foreign to the tribesmen. Pashtunwali—the tribal code of honor—still usurps Islamic Shari'a (Islamic law), and internal politics still govern tribal behavior.

These similarities notwithstanding, there are a number of notable differences that have occurred over recent years. Perhaps the most disturbing is the number of maliks who have been intimidated or killed by the local Taliban. In a sustained process of creeping "Talibanization" across Waziristan, the militants have employed a reign of terror against tribal maliks and alleged government sympathizers. Such targeted violence has generated new tensions that have further added to the region's volatility and unpredictability. This is not without precedent. As one tribesman warned the British commander in the province, Mountstuart Elphinstone, in 1809: "We are content with discord; we are content with alarms; we are content with blood ... we will never be content with a master."[6] Nonetheless, many local leaders have been replaced by radicalized Taliban substitutes. Several have established tacit control over large areas, imposing a strict interpretation of Islam. Such leaders provide a recognized chain of command and a clear hierarchy. They also provide basic, if limited, training and engender tribal discipline. However, in overriding the traditional tribal hierarchy, the Taliban have unconsciously damaged long-established Pashtun civil society and reinforced ethnic suspicion. Fortunately, the damage is repairable and the foundations of society remain strong. It is not surprising, therefore, that Christian Tripodi, a lecturer at the U.K. Joint Services Command and Staff College, cautions that the difficulties experienced by Pakistan's political and military initiatives to control the federally administrated tribal areas indicate that the tribes are just as complex to handle today as they ever were in colonial times "even for those sharing the same religious and cultural affiliation."[7]

Significant parallels exist between the pursuit of the Fakir of Ipi and that of Osama bin Laden. These have not gone unnoticed, and the fakir's celebrated exploits have experienced a superficial renaissance in recent years. Several newspaper articles have suggested that bin Laden can draw lessons from the fakir's insurgency and the inability of the British to kill or capture him.[8] Others point to the practical frustrations of trying to capture a high profile outlaw in tribal territory. Or as one 2007 article cautioned:

"For nearly a decade, the British army chased him [the Fakir of Ipi] and his followers through the remote reaches of Waziristan and the North-West Frontier Province—the same ground where allied troops have spent the past five years searching fruitlessly for bin Laden, and where the remnants of Afghanistan's Taliban fled to lick their wounds and recover their strength. The region was then, as it is today, a powder keg of fractious tribes and fundamentalist firebrands, and Britain's experience with trying to capture Khan mirrors the frustrating hunt for bin Laden.'[9]

Despite well-developed political and military machinery, the British government consistently failed to kill or capture the fakir or fully negate his influence. Bombing raids by the Royal Air Force and several division-strength operations proved futile. The fakir's superior local intelligence, mobility, and ability to blend in with the indigenous tribesmen routinely thwarted British efforts despite the most troop-intensive British counter-insurgency of the twentieth century. Similarly, coalition forces, despite employing advanced technology, have failed to kill or capture bin Laden or eradicate al-Qaeda from the Pashtun tribal areas astride the border.[10] Yet far from being frustrated by this similarity, coalition forces can draw some comfort from one aspect of this important parallel. Both leaders experienced a high point in their popularity followed by a gradual decrease in their influence. In the case of the fakir, he lost most of his influence with India's independence and became little more than an irritant to the Pakistani government. Likewise, bin Laden's authority has diminished considerably in recent years. No longer the real impetus behind al-Qaeda, he remains the notional or spiritual head but has largely been eclipsed by his deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri, who has emerged as the organization's strategist and driving force, supported by a network of independent and autonomous leaders.[11]

At the same time, this hydra-like insurgency, based on a highly decentralized and geographically localized approach, also highlights the difficulties of countering a distributed insurgency under local control. Delegating responsibility to a changing structure of loyal lieutenants, who have a profound interest in the continuation of hostile activities because their stature and raison d'être often depend on their militant activity, is particularly difficult to counter. They can exhaust and overstretch occupation forces and frustrate the penetration of the state. Decapitating any of the current leadership will therefore do little more than buy time. As recent history proves, there are always plenty of ambitious individuals in the wings ready to take on the challenge of leadership. Tackling the cause of the violence and not the symptoms is the key to lasting success.

The Significance of Cultural Acuity

Failure to understand cultural norms and practices or to dismiss their significance can lead to extreme danger and adversely affect campaign authority. In March 2006, Canadian soldiers conducting a routine meeting with tribal leaders in the Shah Wali Kot district in southern Afghanistan were assaulted by an axe-wielding tribesman who seriously wounded an officer. Members of the patrol had assumed that they would be relatively safe from assault while conducting the meeting "primarily because of the supposed protection and application of pashtunwali."[12] Immediately following the event, the resident Canadian unit undertook a highly focused information operations campaign, exploiting the pashtunwali tenet of hospitality (melmastia) to discredit both the attacker and the village in which the meeting occurred. At the tactical level, this approach experienced some success with the village losing honor with many of the tribesmen in the region. However, the incident exposed two important aspects of the tribal code:

First, the question must be asked as to whether or not the villagers saw the soldiers as legitimate guests, or as unwanted visitors? ... If guests, then the provision of pashtunwali should have applied and our [the Canadian army's] resultant actions can be seen as appropriate. If the soldiers and their leaders were not invited, then there is certainly scope to view the attack as justifiable in the mind of the attacker and his fellow insurgents.

Second, in using the principles and practices of pashtunwali to bring discredit to the village involved, one has to ask whether or not our actions reinforced the legitimate government of Afghanistan or eroded its authority in that particular district? Certainly there was nothing wrong with a response to the attack that would be understood by local villagers, as well as demonstrating that we understood elements of their cultural makeup. However, in reinforcing the legitimacy of the jirga [assembly or parliament of tribal representatives] and the code itself, we were not reinforcing the short-term perspective with regard to the authority of President Karzai in that one particular region of Kandahar province.[13]

As the British experienced in the colonial period, cultural acuity must extend beyond those engaged in everyday contact with the tribesmen. Since policy is often determined by those in distant capitals, politicians and senior military commanders must also understand regional culture, customs, ethnicity, and religion. This is equally true of nongovernmental organizations, such as private military companies and aid organizations. Failure to understand these complex dynamics can have a damaging effect on campaign consent.[14] Likewise, policymakers must be tolerant of indigenous assumptions, methods of behavior, and everyday life choices. These will undoubtedly pose moral dilemmas for foreign and regional governments. Western values, free markets, and standards of government are often alien to indigenous populations. Expecting either a strong centrist or Western-style administration to take hold in a conservative tribal region with no recent history of strong central government is unreasonable.

Cultural understanding between governmental and nongovernmental organizations is just as important and will help to reduce friction. It will also assist in building effective working relationships and negate procedural barriers. Linked to cultural understanding is the ability to communicate. As one commentator on the frontier noted, "The gain in personal influence, besides other advantages, which an ability to converse directly with the people gives an Englishman among Pathans is so obvious that I need not dilate on it."[15] The same is equally true today. However, due to the difficulty of learning Pashtu, few Western politicians or military commanders possess the ability to converse with the tribesmen without the use of an interpreter.

Cultural acuity remains an important but insufficiently resourced goal. Regular rotations of military commanders and political reshuffles continue to thwart an in-depth understanding of cultural norms and standards on the frontier. Not surprisingly, this has resulted in some Western policymakers disregarding or downplaying the primacy of cultural values in their efforts to shape policy along the Afghan-Pakistani border. In contrast, the Taliban and al-Qaeda cleverly exploit them for "recruitment, shelter, and social mobilization."[16] The key to success is translating cultural understanding into effective frontier policy, enabling NATO better to achieve its goals. However, to do this effectively requires a lifetime of specialized study and long periods of unbroken service. Creating an organization similar to the Civil Service of Pakistan in southern Afghanistan may be one initiative to help address the deficiency of cultural awareness and regional knowledge along the border.
The Importance of Border Control

The Afghan-Pakistani border, the Durand Line, is 1,640 miles long. It follows arbitrary geographical features and represents the historical limits of British authority in 1893. With little consideration for tribal or ethnic boundaries, the border divided the Pathan tribes between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Since its establishment, the artificial border has been viewed with disdain and is largely ignored by politicians and tribesmen on both sides of the divide. In practical terms, the border is not enforced and, arguably, not enforceable. In countless places, the line of demarcation remains contested. In others, it dissects villages and even individual homes between two opposing governments. Tribesmen from both sides of the border continue to cross freely, often using hidden mountain tracks. A significant number of tribesmen have family ties on both sides.

The Soviets, like the British, tried to exert greater control along the border in the 1980s, but their efforts proved futile. Due to growing frustrations, they resorted to draconian measures, including mining trade routes throughout the area.[17] This failed to bring an end to cross-border movement and the supply of vital aid. After the Soviet withdrawal, the security of the border was largely ignored, and both sides only saw fit to hold key entry and exit points. However, as a result of growing coalition pressure, this policy has changed. Increasing efforts are now being made to secure the border through a combination of manned crossing points, improved surveillance, and focused patrolling. Pakistani projects are also underway to "fence off" sections of the border and to restrict movement in and out of Pakistan, primarily through the use of antipersonnel mines. In the long term, this initiative aims to contain the Taliban and al-Qaeda in Afghanistan although in the short to medium term, it is expected to fuel more fighting on Pakistani soil.[18]

Restricted access and antipersonnel mines will only go so far. Atlantic Monthly correspondent and author Robert Kaplan points to one reason why: "Only Pathans could make walking through a minefield a test of manhood."[19] To overcome such realities, both governments should formally recognize the international border and place historical bitterness and mistrust behind them. They will also have to view the border as a joint problem, requiring joint solutions. Likewise, both armies must patrol their side of the border effectively and work together to monitor militant activity and provide early warning of cross-border movement. They should also combine the use of information operations to influence the local tribesmen.

Indigenous forces, like the paramilitary Frontier Corps, are best placed to undertake the difficult task of controlling the frontier.[20] Should regular forces be required, these must consist of Pashtun units—mixed battalions, as the British experienced, will have little success. Outsiders will not be tolerated in tribal territory. This will prove particularly challenging for the Pakistanis. Ethnic Punjabis dominate the army, and their presence in tribal territory will be a constant affront to the tribesmen. Moreover, efforts to control the border must not challenge the autonomy and freedom of the tribesmen. Communication, economic development, and cultural ties must not be severed. Achieving an effective balance will be difficult. In 1975, Wali Khan, the National Awami Party leader, was asked if he was "a Muslim, a Pakistani, or a Pashtun first?" His reply highlighted the complexity of the border problem. Khan responded by saying that he was "a six-thousand-year-old Pashtun, a thousand-year-old Muslim and a twenty-seven year old Pakistani."[21]

The coalition presence in Afghanistan continues to provide a visible target and rallying point for the extremists. As the British experience proved, the presence of Western forces in tribal territory is a constant affront to the tribesmen and provides a welcome opportunity to test their manhood and courage against a recognized foe. To overcome this, the coalition should give thought to reducing its footprint in the provinces along the Afghan-Pakistani border and make better use of locally recruited forces, for example, the nascent Afghan border police. Despite ethnic tensions and desertions, the Afghan National Army has the skill and weaponry to maintain stability along its side of the border. However, it lacks specialist technology, so intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance, and communication assistance will be required in the short term. It should also conduct operations on terms that the tribesmen accept and understand. This will undoubtedly require compromise. The same shortfalls are equally true of the Pakistani army, which, in addition, can also rely on the highly skilled militias of the Frontier Corps.[22] Should Western coalition forces be required in tribal territory on the Afghan side of the border, they should only deploy for a finite period of time against a recognized target. Only in extremis should coalition forces cross the border into Pakistan. Advanced technology and long-range weapons should be used where possible to negate the need for inserting troops on the ground.
Lessons of History

The past provides a useful blueprint for adaptation, and Waziristan provides good proof of this. Certain combined measures worked to settle, suppress, and pacify the region during the colonial period. For example, the establishment of a robust network of roads, medical missions, the payment of allowances, and the employment of political officers, indigenous scouts, and tribal police all helped to control the region within recognized limitations. Predictably, this was not lost on the Pakistanis, and the established methods of British tribal control remained largely in place until late 2001.[23]

Growing U.S. political pressure resulted in President Musharraf resorting to greater military action, including the use of helicopter gunships and artillery, to quash the upsurge of violence emanating from tribal territory. Unfortunately, the Pakistani army was an organization structured and trained for a conventional fight against India, Pakistan's arch-rival, and ill-prepared for guerrilla warfare on the frontier. The army's ham-fisted approach to the unique problems of the frontier irritated and alienated the indigenous tribesmen. The ensuing breakdown in relations was entirely predictable.

A return to the British approach to tribal management has merit for the entire Pashtun tribal belt. A small number of politicians and military commanders have drawn valuable lessons from the British historical experience. Gen. Sir David Richards, commander of the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan from May 2006 to February 2007, for example, pointed to the contemporary utility of establishing influence through the "lavish use of money":

Our modern scruples might not permit it, but I think you could buy off 90 percent of the opposition tomorrow in the way our grandfathers would have done. Instead, today we seek influence through reconstruction and development—but that is in danger of not keeping pace with people's expectations. Nor does such an approach chime with the feudal nature of a society … Our colonial forebears understood the way feudal societies worked; for the most part, we don't.[24]

Richards went on to highlight another important historical parallel:

we always worked very hard on achieving and maintaining consent: Countless hours were spent talking to tribal elders and other influential people. We had to justify ourselves to them, explain what we were trying to achieve, and work to retain their support. That is an abiding lesson from our own historical experience, which we relearned and applied pretty aggressively.[25]

However, at the psychological level, the notion of a colonial model of control will be unacceptable to the tribesmen unless re-branded within a recognized, ethnic framework.[26] This is best achieved by electing empowered, provincial governors and providing them with clear jurisdiction. Selected individuals could be tasked with overseeing regional security and reconstruction. However, proficiency will be based on education, experience, and personality; selecting the right individual will be the key. Moreover, in addition to decentralized control, multiple lines of economic and social development will be central to controlling the region in the long term. These need to be approved by tribal leaders and have the consent of the tribesmen and their families. They must also reflect population densities. For example, the lines of development in sparsely populated rural areas must be different from those in the densely populated urban areas. One size will not fit all.

Pan-regional initiatives should focus on strengthening traditional tribal structures and on bringing rapid improvements to the lives of the tribesmen. Health programs and food aid are also essential and would go some way to addressing allegations of regional discrimination. Even a small amount of the US$80 million a month "coalition support fund," paid to reimburse Pakistan's military for the cost of their counterinsurgency operations, would help to redress the perceived imbalance.[27] But the reality is that social and economic development will take a long time, and patience is essential. Moreover, aid must be administered by the tribesmen themselves, no matter how haphazardly they do it. Outsiders operating in tribal territory would polarize the tribesmen and further add to the volatility of the region.
A Wider Regional Solution

The disturbing growth of al-Qaeda and the Taliban in the isolated Pashtun tribal belt astride the Afghan-Pakistani border is a major cause for concern. A growing alignment of the Pasthun nationalist movement and radical, militant leadership could lead to the unification of approximately forty million tribesmen on both sides of the Durand Line.[28] In theory, this could result in the breakup of Afghanistan and Pakistan, both fragile multiethnic states, and allow the emergence of a new radicalized state: Pakhtunistan. Fortunately, two prominent fault lines exist in this hypothesis. First, many of the tribesmen dislike the extremists and would not throw in their lot with religious fanatics and suicide bombers. The growing friction between the Taliban and the tribal leadership (both malik and mullah) is evidence of this growing rift.[29] Second, the notion of a unified Pashtunistan has always been predominantly symbolic. Trying to unite the fiercely independent and autonomous tribes into a cohesive whole would be difficult. This could only occur under extreme duress or under the inspiration of a charismatic leader. However, the signs are increasingly apparent that this might be possible. As the Pakistani ambassador, Mahmud Ali Durrani, cautioned in March 2007, "I hope the Taliban and Pashtun nationalism don't merge. If that happens, we've had it, and we're on the verge of that."[30]

Unlike the challenges faced by the British in the first half of the twentieth century, this is no longer simply a regional dilemma. Instead, the tribal complexities demand an international approach, based on shared security objectives. Political efforts must be made to succeed in driving an irreparable wedge between the moderate or reconcilable Taliban and extremist and irreconcilable Taliban associated with al-Qaeda. Provincial autonomy should also be considered. It worked well for the British and could help reinforce the long-term survival of Pakistan in its current form. Likewise, both governments must address the long-standing conflicts over the frontier region. In short, the border tribesmen must be a key part of the solution and not just the target audience.
Conclusion

If the past is prologue, the British experience of Waziristan points to a difficult and frustrating road ahead. A violence-truce-violence cycle can be expected along the border with cease-fires both fragile and short-lived. For the most part, government forces will not encounter direct military confrontation. Organized resistance will consist of sniping, ambushing, and the use of mines, homemade explosive devices, roadside bombs, and suicide bombers. Insurgents will not employ the rules of conventional warfare, and tactical errors will never go unpunished. Militant tribesmen will display remarkable levels of ingenuity, physical endurance, and tenacity; opportunities for decisive effect will be fleeting and unconventional. Initiative will be required at all levels. Government reprisals will struggle to achieve surprise, and tribesmen will regularly withdraw to isolated caves or remote valleys to seek sanctuary where it will be problematic to distinguish between friend and foe. The danger is that military operations will run at a tempo and a momentum that misleads commanders into thinking that they are succeeding. Only a holistic, joint, and measured approach, employing all the elements of national power, will offer the greatest opportunity for pacifying the region and gaining consent. This must be consistent, sensitive, agile, and coherent.

In the short term, perhaps the best that can be achieved is containment; a safe, democratic, and prosperous area may be too much for which to hope. Political objectives must be realistic and born of pragmatism. However, failure to address the long-term challenges of the region with a firm and consistent policy could be disastrous for both Afghanistan and Pakistan. The stakes are high, and it would be wise to heed Lord Curzon, a former viceroy: "No man who has ever read the pages of Indian history will ever prophesy about the frontier."[31] When governments are short of ideas, and the "Talibanization" of the frontier is gaining momentum, the historical British approach to Waziristan offers a number of valuable insights and practical measures worthy of consideration.

Andrew M. Roe, a British infantry officer, who recently served as an Afghan kandak commander mentor for six months, is the author of Waging War in Waziristan (University Press of Kansas, 2010) from which this article is adapted.

[1] Frank Ellis, "Arts and Books," The Salisbury Review, Sept. 2010.
[2] W. I. Moberly, Raj and Post-Raj (Edinburgh: Pentland Press, 1985), p. 69.
[3] Alan Warren, Waziristan, the Faqir of Ipi, and the Indian Army (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000).
[4] Hugh R.C. Pettigrew, Frontier Scouts (Selsey: privately printed, 1964), p. 100.
[5] Barnett R. Rubin and Abubakar Siddique, "Resolving the Pakistan-Afghanistan Stalemate," Special Report 176 (Washington, D.C.: United States Institute of Peace, Oct. 2006), p. 13.
[6] Stephen Tanner, Afghanistan: A Military History from Alexander the Great to the Fall of the Taliban (New York: Da Capo, 2002), p. 134.
[7] Christian Tripodi, "Cultural Understanding: Its Utility and Influence: The British Experience on the North-West Frontier, 1918-1939," British Army Review, Spring 2008, p. 26.
[8] T. Harding, "How the British Empire Failed to Tame the Terrorist Fakir of Ipi," The Daily Telegraph (London), Nov. 15, 2001; Newsweek, May 30, 2005.
[9] Time, Apr. 19, 2007.
[10] Pervez Musharraf, In the Line of Fire (New York: The Free Press, 2006), p. 220.
[11] "Profile: Ayman al-Zawahiri," BBC News, Sept. 27, 2004.
[12] Richard Tod Strickland, "The Way of the Pashtun: Pashtunwali," Canadian Army Journal, Fall 2007, p. 44.
[13] Ibid, p. 53.
[14] Montgomery McFate, "Does Culture Matter? The Military Utility of Understanding Adversary Culture," Joint Forces Quarterly, 38 (2005): 42-8.
[15] Septimus S. Thorburn, Bannu, Our Afghan Frontier (Whitefish, Mont.: Kessinger Publishing, 2004), p. 166.
[16] Thomas H. Johnson and M. Chris Mason, "No Sign until the Burst of Fire," International Security, Spring 2008, p. 64.
[17] Sean M. Maloney, Enduring the Freedom (Washington, D.C.: Potomac Books, 2005), p. 294.
[18] Usman Ansari, "Cobras over the Frontier," Air Forces Monthly, Apr. 2008, p. 66.
[19] Robert D. Kaplan, Soldiers of God: With Islamic Warriors in Afghanistan and Pakistan (New York: Vintage Books, 2001), p. 22.
[20] Robert F. Baumann, "Russian-Soviet Unconventional Wars in the Caucasus, Central Asia, and Afghanistan," Leavenworth Papers, no. 20, Combat Studies Institute, U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, Leavenworth, Kans., 1993, p. 167.
[21] Selig S. Harrison, "Pashtunistan: The Challenge to Pakistan and Afghanistan," Real Instituto Elcano, Madrid, Apr. 2, 2008, p. 3.
[22] Musharraf, In the Line of Fire, p. 271.
[23] Ibid., pp. 201-4; Maloney, Enduring the Freedom, p. 294.
[24] Richard Cobbold, "RUSI Interview with General David Richards," Journal of the Royal Artillery, Autumn 2007, p. 57.
[25] Ibid, p. 56.
[26] Rory Stewart and Sherard Cowper-Coles, "Are We Failing in Afghanistan?" British Army Review, Spring 2008, p. 10.
[27] The U.S. provided approximately $10.5 billion in aid to Pakistan from 2002-07. Just over $5.5 billion was earmarked by Islamabad for the tribal territory, but only 4 percent was used on nonmilitary projects.
[28] New World Encyclopedia, Nov. 27, 2008, s.v. Pashtun people.
[29] Abdulkader H. Sinno, Organizations at War in Afghanistan and Beyond (New York: Cornell University Press, 2008), pp. 237-45.
[30] Harrison, "Pashtunistan: The Challenge to Pakistan and Afghanistan," p. 5.
[31] George N. Curzon, Speeches as Viceroy and Governor-General of India, 1898-1905 (London: Macmillan, 1906), p. 43.


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ramana
Forum Moderator
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by ramana »

Nightwatch reports

Afghanistan: The United States is seeking to establish permanent bases in Afghanistan to target al Qaeda and the Taliban in the region, Afghan President Hamid Karzai announced during a press conference on 8 February. Afghanistan and the United States are still negotiating the legal and strategic features of the agreement, Karzai said, adding he believes a long-term relationship with the United States is in the interest of Afghanistan. Any long-term partnership will need approval by the parliament and Loya Jirga and U.S. bases would not be used against other countries. Afghanistan is not a place from where our neighbors could be threatened, Karzai said.


Comment: Karzai's public statements such as this always have seem to be double-edged. This statement looks calculated to elicit reaction. More later.
I think this is Blackwill Plan B being implemented. For Plan B, US needs permanent bases in Northern Afghanistan and around Kabul.

For who controls Kabul controls Afghanistan.
vijayk
BRF Oldie
Posts: 9419
Joined: 22 Jun 1999 11:31

Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by vijayk »

^^ There is already a base in Afghanistan which is totally independent of the outside world. There is an airport where flights directly come in with a lot of foreign workers who stay there and never step out of base. There is a restaurant inside there. People come in directly into the base and get out of there never stepping into Afghanistan where they can become prey for ISI or Taliban. A friend of mine went there to supervise the completion of the restaurant work.

Plan B is in full swing. Hope they succeed in it. End Pakistan as it is now. That will bring a lot of stability to the region. Create Phakttonistan and vivisect Paki land into multiple nations.
ramana
Forum Moderator
Posts: 60273
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by ramana »

M.K. BhadraKumar in Asia Times:
US and Pakistan square off
By M K Bhadrakumar

The United States State Department has announced that the trilateral United States-Pakistan-Afghanistan meeting at foreign minister level, scheduled to take place in Washington on February 23-24, has been indefinitely postponed. Washington ascribes the postponement due to a cabinet reshuffle in Islamabad on Friday in which foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi was replaced.

Islamabad has also signaled that the proposed visit by Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari is in doubt - "There is no clear date for the president's visit".

Meanwhile, there have been threatening noises from Washington that US aid to Pakistan might be in jeopardy and, if ABC News is
to be believed, a top White House official warned the Pakistani ambassador that diplomatic ties might be curtailed.

All this is happening on account of the continued detention of a single American national commonly known as "Raymond Davis" in the Pakistani city of Lahore, despite the urgings by senior US officials at the political and diplomatic level that he should be forthwith released.

Davis is employed by the US government and is accused of shooting dead two armed men in Lahore. The US Embassy in Islamabad said the man, who it claims fired in self-defense, is covered by diplomatic immunity and should be immediately released.

Davis' detention ought to have been a perfect case for some quiet, patient diplomacy. The incident has impacted on Pakistan's fragile political situation. The widespread "anti-Americanism" that lurks just below the surface in Pakistani society; popular indignation bordering on anger that the government is colluding with the US's war in Afghanistan; tensions between the federal government in Islamabad and the opposition-run provincial government in Lahore (which arrested Davis); the tenuous equations between the civilian government and the military; and the sheer ambiguity surrounding the incident (who is "Davis" actually, what was his mission on that fateful evening in Lahore, and so on) - all these complicate the Davis case.

Despite all this, Washington has deliberately opted for a course of muscular diplomacy, of openly pressuring the Pakistani authorities in full public view. The abrasive diplomacy appears unwarranted, and it is common sense that given the sensitivities involved it would incur the risk of being counter-productive.

Even vis-a-vis Iran and North Korea, Washington prefers to painstakingly use back channels when diplomatic feathers get ruffled. Pakistan is also a traditional ally of the US, and Washington has no lack of communication lines to get through to the powers that be in Islamabad and the garrison city of Rawalpindi. Discretion demanded that Washington allow a "cooling-off" period and in the meanwhile work through confidential channels of communication to arrive at a satisfactory solution.

Astoundingly, what we are witnessing is exactly to the contrary. An "area specialist" in the US with links to the establishment wrote:
Better relations will require Washington and Pakistan to confront the edifice of ossified fictions that surround and ultimately undermine this complex and strained relationship. Washington needs to aggressively combat the historical untruths that have become legendary fact as vigorously as it needs to understand the Pakistan that is, not the Pakistan it might want to be ... If the United States and Washington can ever re-optimize their bilateral relationship, both will have to make a concerted effort to resist rehearsing past fictions and creating new ones.

Tirades like this and the steady stream of American official threats in the past fortnight directed at Pakistan over the Davis case aren't having the desired effect.

Islamabad is not impressed by the US's posturing. Even after Secretary of State Hillary Clinton spoke to Pakistani army chief General Ashfaq Pervez Kiani on the sidelines of the 47th Munich security conference 10 days ago, Pakistan crossed the Rubicon with the decisive step to formally charge Davis in a court of law in Lahore with pre-meditated murder and on that basis got him remanded to prison for another 14 days for interrogation.

Again, the ousted Qureshi has plunged into the controversy without any foreplay, alleging that Clinton pressured him to "publicly confirm diplomatic immunity of Davis. However, I refused to do so because it was against the factual position in the case."

He said, "The kind of blanket immunity Washington is pressing for Davis is not endorsed by the official record of the Foreign Ministry," adding that Washington even "threatened that Hillary Clinton would not meet me at the Munich conference on February 6 if the request was not granted." Qureshi possibly has a motivation to link his removal as foreign minister with his firm stance on the Davis case, but the damage has been done.

Why are the stakes so heavily loaded? What raises eyebrows among observers in Delhi is that Davis, who as a highly trained operative killed two motorcyclists who were tailing his car in obtrusive intelligence work for over an hour, knowing full well who they were. As a former US special forces officer, Davis was knowledgeable enough to estimate that such obtrusive intelligence was not meant to be life-threatening but was intended to be intimidating and obstructive. In short, Davis lost his cool at some point when he found he couldn't shake off his "tail".

The Pakistani authorities have been leaking to the media that they knew Davis was in touch with the "Pakistani Taliban". The Washington Post quoted Pakistani intelligence officials to the effect that the two motor cyclists were warning Davis that he was crossing some "red line" (meaning, he was about to do something unacceptable to Pakistan's national security interests) and it was at that point he shot them.

Clearly, the US has every reason to believe that the Pakistani side knows much more than it is prepared to admit, and if Davis breaks down after sustained interrogation in police custody, he might spill explosive stuff. This explains the highly contradictory versions that the US has given about Davis' identity and the nature of his assignment in Pakistan.

What emerges from the pattern of the US reaction is that Davis' detention has sent alarm bells ringing all the way to the White House. The US is apprehensive that the Davis case has the potential to shake up the very foundations of its alliance with Pakistan. Therefore, it has done the most natural thing that most countries facing a grave predicament vis-a-vis a foreign country would do - take the high moral ground straightaway and place itself in denial mode, come what may.

So, what did Davis do for a living? From the adamant fashion in which Islamabad (despite being highly vulnerable to US aid cutoff) is reacting, it seems it has no real choices in the matter. This seems to be a situation in which, as someone once said, you only live once.

The heart of the matter is that Pakistan has been wondering for a long time who it is who could be instigating the so-called "Pakistani Taliban" to inflict such bloody wounds on the Pakistani military and weaken and incrementally destabilize the Pakistani state.

It has been convenient to point the finger from time to time at the Indians, but when Pakistani state institutions were attacked, especially the military and the Inter-Services Intelligence, as precise targets, Islamabad would have had deeper suspicions, especially asa the close links between the former Afghan intelligence chief Amrullah Saleh and the US security establishment was a fact known to Pakistani agencies.

Conventional wisdom, especially among Indian propagandists, :mrgreen: has been that what is happening inside Pakistan is a kind of "blowback" of terrorism. Some Indian pundits even claimed that the "serpent" that the Pakistani state nurtured over the years (namely, extremist outfits) for poisoning India's environs has now turned against the Pakistani state itself.

While this thesis has its seductive power, it is based on simplistic assumptions regarding the processes going on within Pakistan, especially the dialectics involving the vehicles of militancy and extremism and the state security apparatus. The Pakistani military and its highly efficient intelligence set-up could have concluded a long time ago that under the cover of the "Pakistani Taliban", all sorts of free-wheeling forces were at work. Washington is openly doing hero-worshipping of Amrullah Saleh even months after Afghan President Hamid Karzai sacked the spymaster almost as a prerequisite for improving Afghan-Pakistan relations.

Davis can most certainly provide the proverbial "missing link" to Pakistan to connect several dots on an intriguing chessboard. Conceivably, he will be sent back home at some point, but by then he may be a "burnt-out case" and Pakistan would have gained a far better understanding of the US's regional policies.

With over 100,000 American troops out on a limb in Afghanistan and the snow melting on the Hindu Kush mountains and a new "fighting season" just round the corner, the prospect surely unnerves Washington. The postponement of the trilateral meeting in Washington shows up the uncertainties.

Ambassador M K Bhadrakumar was a career diplomat in the Indian Foreign Service. His assignments included the Soviet Union, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Germany, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Uzbekistan, Kuwait and Turkey.
So he is throwing a grenade in the TSP-US relationship. Recall the wikipees about taskforces setup to go hunting in badlands? This one could be for urban jungles.
ramana
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by ramana »

Article from NVS at newsInsight .net

Beyond redemption


Beyond redemption

The Raymond Davis affair could disengage the US from Af-Pak faster than it had planned for, says N.V.Subramanian.

14 February 2011: The Raymond Davis affair will complicate US efforts to moderate and further democratize Pakistan and to win in Afghanistan. Here's why.

The first major political casualty of the Davis affair is Shah Mahmood Qureshi, who was dropped as foreign minister in the recent cabinet reshuffle. Almost certainly, the US had him removed (just as it ensured an extension for General Ashfaq Kayani).

According to the Pakistani press, Qureshi refused to grant Davis diplomatic immunity. Qureshi is a Punjab politician and was playing politics.

Punjab more than any other province has been on the boil since Davis killed his two armed assailants in a crowded Lahore street. It is no coincidence that the governor of Punjab was murdered for his anti-blasphemy views and his police-guard killer is being venerated there.

Among others, the Lashkar-e-Toiba terrorist leader, Hafiz Mohammed Sayeed, based in Punjab, has warned against releasing Davis. After NWFP and FATA, Punjab is probably most anti-American.

Obviously, Qureshi wanted to feed on this hate for his own politics. Anti-India feelings also run highest in Punjab. Qureshi was active here too, deriding Manmohan Singh as powerless and running down the Indo-Pak dialogue.

On the Indian foreign minister's last visit to Pakistan, Qureshi toed the Pakistan military line to misbehave with S.M.Krishna. He hoped to get away by being tough on Davis. But he overplayed his hand.

And yet, Qureshi has done the damage. Whatever happens to his personal political career after this is not relevant to this piece. But Qureshi has essentially sowed the seeds of discord between Punjab and Sind on the Davis issue.

The Pakistan Punjab police have called Davis a cold-blooded murderer. It is not accidental that Punjab is ruled by Nawaz Sharief's brother Shahbaz.The US has opposed Nawaz Sharief and prefers Asif Zardari. This is Nawaz Sharief's revenge.

Knowing that he needed a Punjabi foil to rule, Zardari got a Punjab politician, Syed Yousaf Raza Gilani, as PM. Qureshi got into rivalry with Gilani for his job and went too far. But in the process, Gilani too has been damaged on the Davis affair in Punjab, and more than him, Zardari.

If immediate moves are made to let Davis go, the attacks will commence on Zardari as Sindhi. His attempts to balance Punjabi and Sindhi politics in the government will be upset. This writer does not see how Davis can be released anytime soon, whatever pressure America brings on.

Indeed, the US itself has raised the stakes on Davis by some of its actions. It is understandable that America has suspended all engagement with Pakistan till Davis is released. The pressure of this on Pakistan, which survives on US dole, cannot be minimized. :mrgreen:

According to media reports, the US has also held up all drone attacks on FATA since Davis' arrest. Clearly, the US does not wish to aggravate matters until Davis is brought back. But it shows up US vulnerabilities.

In case Davis does get released, the drone attacks may resume. They will have too. Because short of a ground invasion, the US and NATO forces have no means other than drones to counter the Al-Qaeda and Taliban leadership directing the Afghan war from Pakistani hideouts.

But after the Davis affair, how far bold will the US get in Pakistan? Will it continue with its policy to increment its presence in Pakistan to moderate it or, embracing caution, downsize? If Davis gets off, will Zardari be able to survive the backlash from Punjab, not to speak of the rabidity of fundamentalist and terrorist forces elsewhere in Pakistan?

Probably, all these questions are being tossed about in Islamabad and Washington as Pakistan and the US size up the messy Davis affair. This comes on top of a very bad situation in Afghanistan, where the war is not going to plan, and the US will have to leave the country with unfulfilled objectives.

Presumably, the only certainty is that Davis will have to be released. But his release will raise the tide of anti-Americanism. This could be countered with pressure on India on Kashmir. But this won't come to pass.

This writer thinks that the Davis affair marks a watershed in Pak-US relations. Alongside of cutting its losses in Afghanistan, the US may pitch for reducing its presence in Pakistan, and letting it sink.

The only factor that prevents the US -- and the rest of the world -- from consigning Pakistan to its wretched fate is its growing stockpile of nuclear weapons and fissile material. Sooner or later, a solution has to be found for this.

As of now, Pakistan is beyond redemption.



So we see the unravelling is coming from many sides or fronts.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by rgsrini »

^^^from Beyond redemption above.
This could be countered with pressure on India on Kashmir.
Potential terrorist attack on India as a magician's misdirection...
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by abhischekcc »

Regarding the Bhadrakumar article:

If it is true that Davis is responsible for inciting the Pakistani taliban to attack PA and paki government, then it fits in very nicely with the US gameplan to breakup pakistan and establish itself in Sindh. This along with an expanded pashtoonistan will give US access to Central Asia at a lower cost than what they pay currently to PA/pak govt.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by Philip »

So as predicted,Gen.Petra-ass,the intellectual "thinking" general has bitten the dust of Afghanistan and is returning home with his tail between his legs in traditional manner of western military men who ventured into the badlands of Afghanistan.A galaxy of American and British military men have described the Afghan War as "unwinnable" and that the US/NATO were losing ground by the day,neccessitating a retreat asap.US spin doctors will now proclaim a "victory" over the Taliban in the south to salvage Patra-ass's wounded pride and cover-up the dsperate situ that it finds itself in.Obama wants the retreat completed long before the American election machine gets intoi operation as his re-election campaign begins,with Af-Pak not an electoral issue like Iran that defeated Jimmy Carter.It remains a mystery why the,Americans and the British yet again, never took Kilping's words to heart and stayed away from "Afghanistan's dusty plains".

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldne ... ander.html

General Petraeus 'to quit as Afghanistan commander'
General David Petraeus is expected to leave his role as commander of US and Nato forces in Afghanistan as part of changes to be introduced by the Pentagon.
Gen Petraeus took over in July and has been lauded in America for his achievements in southern Afghanistan. The Pentagon insisted replacing him was part of a natural rotation.

President Barack Obama and Robert Gates, the US Defence Secretary, were said to be planning to install a successor by the end of the year, the Washington Post reported.

The general, who has become the most popular US solider of his day following the Iraq surge of 2007, has repeatedly dismissed talk of running for the White House in the future.

But speculation on his next role has also included becoming Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the post from which Mike Mullen is expected to retire in October. There have also been suggestions that he could become Defence Secretary.

Geoff Morrell, the Pentagon press secretary said: "I can assure you General Petraeus is not quitting as ISAF commander, but nor does he plan to stay in Afghanistan forever. Obviously he will rotate out at some point, but that point has not yet been determined and it will not occur anytime soon. Until then, he will continue to ably lead our coalition forces in Afghanistan."
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by shyamd »

Marc Grossman is expected to replace Holbrooke as US Special envoy to Af-pak. Grossman used to work at the Cohen Group which used to be highly active in India. Still listed as Vice-Chairman @ http://www.cohengroup.net/

The group is also heavily linked to USIBC and advises many defence firms on their Indian entry. Nicholas Burns works there too. Interesting eh?!
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by Pranav »

Philip wrote:So as predicted,Gen.Petra-ass,the intellectual "thinking" general has bitten the dust of Afghanistan and is returning home with his tail between his legs in traditional manner of western military men who ventured into the badlands of Afghanistan.
Actually Petraeus has been doing a reasonably good job, giving a fair amount of takleef to the Paks.
ramana
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by ramana »

There are five wars going on in Af-Pak. Not two.
In Afghanistan we have the Pak supported Taliban fighting the US and Karzai govt forces.

In Pakistan we have
- US fighting the Taliban in FATA/WANA with drones
- US fighting the Taliban with Pashtun militias in FATA/WANA per leaks
- US and TSP fighting the TTP or the Pakiban in FATA/WANA
- TTP fighting the TSPA in Pak cities due to above
- US fighting the AlQ and the Taliban in Pak cities (RD types)

So we can see that the war is shifting to TSP.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by Johann »

Ramana,

Correct.

This began in the summer of 2008 under Bush, and has expanded under Obama after the working group's report in 2009.

As I said earlier the biggest stumbling block to change was Donald Rumsfeld who didn't want anything to get in the way of his fight with Baathist Iraq and Syria and the mullah's Iran which he and those around him regarded as bigger threats.

Rumsfeld's departure at the end of 2006 opened the door to bring the focus back to Pakistan.
ramana
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by ramana »

My drafting book on why we need nomenclature:

"Calling things by right name is begining of wisdom"
Chinese proverb.


Rumsfield was shadow boxing and fighting his imagined demons while the Paki nuclear monster was adding more capability by way of 4th Pu plant ?

Who lost Af-Pak? Or rather the world?

Until US does a mea culpa and stop trying to obfuscate its role in TSP's nuke rise it will not see any progress in addressing the core issues.

Awhole bunch of beltway bandits have made a life time career peddling lies to US govt which willingly listened, taking good money and are stillout there giving more bad advice.
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Re: Af-Pak -> Pak-Af Watch

Post by Prem »

Hil-ghaye
Clinton: Taliban must choose war or peace
http://dailycaller.com/2011/02/18/clint ... -or-peace/

NEW
YORK (AP) — Amid an escalating diplomatic crisis with Pakistan that may complicate strategy next door in Afghanistan, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is warning the Taliban and other Afghan extremists that they must choose war or peace.In a speech to be delivered to The Asia Society in New York on Friday, Clinton will say that reconciliation is the only way to ensure Afghanistan’s lasting stability and challenge extremists to abandon al-Qaida and to align themselves with the government for the good of the country and their own safety.“They cannot wait us out,” Clinton says in her prepared remarks. “They cannot defeat us. And they cannot escape this choice.”Relations with Pakistan have plummeted to their lowest point in recent years with the arrest of an American in Lahore. The U.S. embassy employee shot and killed two Pakistani men he says were trying to rob him on Jan. 27. The U.S. insists that the man, Raymond Allen Davis, was acting in self-defense and qualifies for diplomatic immunity because he worked for the embassy. U.S. officials are demanding Davis be released immediately.

Pakistani authorities have refused thus far to release Davis and have questioned his immunity status.Excerpts of Clinton’s address released by the State Department on Friday did not mention the Davis case.
“The escalating pressure of our military campaign is sharpening a similar decision for the Taliban: break ties with al-Qaida, give up your arms, and abide by the Afghan Constitution and you can rejoin Afghan society,” Clinton says. “Refuse and you will continue to face the consequences of being tied to al-Qaida as an enemy of the international community.”Her remarks come as the U.S. increases military pressure on extremists, and says it has the Taliban on the run in key areas of the country. Heavy fighting is expected this spring, along with a continued heavy reliance on unmanned drone attacks and secret ground raids targeting militant leaders along the Pakistan border.The United States plans to begin withdrawing troops from the country this summer, and President Barack Obama has promised that the U.S. combat role will end in 2014.The administration will begin assessing conditions for possible troop drawdowns next month as it determines where Afghan security forces can take the lead. The top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, Gen. David Petraeus, said last week that intelligence reports indicate Taliban leaders are worried and that there is “friction and discord” between the guerrillas in the field and their leadership in Pakistan.
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