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Friday, April 4, 2008

Security agencies arrests four Turkish al Qaeda suspects

QUETTA  ( 2008-04-04 12:09:44 ) : 

Pakistani security agencies have arrested four Turks with suspected links to al Qaeda, intelligence officials said on Friday.
Explosives, some 1,400 rounds of ammunition, and a laptop containing "jihadi" material were found on the suspects, who were detained by paramilitary troops late on Thursday as they were travelling on a bus from the western province of Baluchistan to neighbouring Sindh, the officials said.
Interrogations revealed they were Turkish, and three were carrying Turkish passports, although they all had fake identity cards.
"They are between the age of 30 and 35 and were carrying identity cards showing them as Afghan refugees," said an intelligence official who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
"We have arrested them on suspicion they may have links to al Qaeda."
A Frontier Corps official said the men were arrested in Dera Murad Jamali town after a tip-off, and had been handed over to an intelligence agency.
The United States is concerned that al Qaeda has regrouped in the ethnic Pashtun tribal lands straddling the Pakistan-Afghan border and is working with the new government in Pakistan to find the best approach to tackling the problem.
Arab and Central Asian militants have taken refuge in the region and young radicals from Europe have also sought militant training there, according to Western intelligence agencies.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Three killed, Iraqi TV cameraman maimed in bomb attack

BAGHDAD  ( 2008-04-02 16:09:40 ) : 

Three people were killed and 13 others wounded, including a cameraman with Iraq's independent Al-Diyar satellite television, in a roadside bombing in Baghdad on Wednesday, officials said.
A security official said the bomb exploded in the eastern neighbourhood of Talbiyah and killed three people.
Thirteen people, including Al-Diyar cameraman Maytham Ibrahim, were wounded in the attack, the official said.
Ibrahim survived but lost a leg, news editor Imed al-Abadi of the station told AFP.
Ibrahim is being treated in Imam Ali hospital in Sadr City, the sprawling bastion of the Mahdi Army militia of powerful Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr that bore the brunt of violence this week.
The station has asked for him to be transferred to a more sophisticated facility in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone, Abadi said.
The Paris-based media watchdog Reporters Without Borders, meanwhile, has called for the release of Ahmed Mahmud Hassan, a journalist for Al-Sumariya satellite television channel.
It said Hassan was arrested on March 30 in Mahmudiyah, 30 kilometres (20 miles) south of Baghdad, "while covering clashes between Iraqi forces and rebel insurgents."
The journalist is thought to be detained at a military base, Reporters Without Borders said.
"A score of journalists have been arrested across Iraq since the start of 2008," it said. "Arbitrary arrest has become commonplace in Iraq. The Iraqi authorities must stop this growing obstruction to the work of the media."
According to the Iraqi Journalists Freedom Observatory (JFO), which monitors violence against the media, 233 Iraqi and foreign journalists and media workers have been killed in Iraq since the US-led invasion of March 2003.

Bush calls on Nato allies for Afghan troops

 

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BUCHAREST  ( 2008-04-02 15:13:42 ) : 

US President George W. Bush urged Nato allies on Wednesday to send more troops to Afghanistan, saying the alliance could not afford to lose its battle against Taliban insurgents and al Qaeda militants.
In a keynote speech before a summit of the 26-nation defence alliance in the Romanian capital, Bucharest, Bush said: "As (French) President (Nicolas) Sarkozy put it in London last week, we cannot afford to lose Afghanistan. Whatever the cost, however difficult, we cannot afford it, we must win. I agree completely.
Noting that France and Romania were due to send more troops, he said: "We ask other nations to step forward with additional forces as well."
Nato allies want the Bucharest summit, starting later on Wednesday, to send the message that its 47,000-strong peacekeeping force will stay in Afghanistan for as long as necessary to battle the insurgency.
"Our alliance must maintain its resolve and finish the fight... If we do not defeat the terrorists in Afghanistan, we will face them on our soil," Bush said.
French Prime Minister Francois Fillon said on Tuesday Paris was looking to send several hundred more troops to Afghanistan.
That was far short of the 1,000 extra soldiers that some Nato allies had been expecting and it was not clear whether it would be enough to cover a Canadian demand for reinforcements in the south.
Ottawa has said it could pull its 2,500 troops out of the fight next year if the reinforcements were not forthcoming.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Al Qaeda in Yemen says it attacked foreign oil assets: Site

DUBAI  ( 2008-04-01 01:37:00 ) : 

Al Qaeda's wing in Yemen has said it carried out separate attacks on a French oil pipeline and a Chinese oilfield last week in Yemen, web monitoring group Site said on Monday.
The attackers, calling themselves the Jund Al-Yemen Brigades claimed they detonated a timed explosive on Thursday on a pipeline belonging to France's Total in the western Saah district, the Site Intelligence Group reported.
In a statement posted on a website, the group also said it fired mortars on Saturday at an oilfield owned by an unidentified Chinese firm in the eastern district of Hadramut.
"Both these operations are stated as means of support against the enemy," Site reported, adding that the authenticity of the message could not be verified.
There were no previous reports of the alleged attacks.

US charges al Qaeda leader with Africa bombings

 

 

 

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WASHINGTON  ( 2008-04-01 01:57:43 ) : 

Military prosecutors have charged a Tanzanian al Qaeda leader held at Guantanamo Bay with war crimes for the US embassy bombings in Africa, and want his execution, the Pentagon said on Monday.
The Defense Department said Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani had been charged on nine counts including murder related to the August 1998 bombing of the embassy in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, which killed 11 people and injured hundreds.
"Six of the nine charges carry the maximum penalty of death," Brigadier General Thomas Hartman, legal adviser to the Office of Military Commissions at Guantanamo Bay, told reporters.
Hartman said the military trials gave full protection to defendants, including the right to view evidence, to call witnesses and to pursue appeals against any conviction all the way up to the US Supreme Court.
The legal rights "are specifically designed to ensure that every accused receives a fair trial consistent with American standards of justice," he said, adding that a unanimous jury of 12 is needed to deliver the death penalty.
But the Pentagon's announcement sparked an outcry from campaigners who insisted the Guantanamo Bay system enacted to prosecute the US "war on terror" was a travesty of justice.
"These commissions aren't fit to try anybody, still less to condemn anybody to death," Amnesty International USA lawyer Jumana Musa told AFP, noting that Ghailani still faced a federal court indictment issued in 1998.
In October 2001, just after the devastating attacks on New York and Washington, four al Qaeda extremists were sentenced to life without parole by a Manhattan court for their part in the embassy bombings in Tanzania and Kenya.
"There's absolutely no reason why Ghailani's trial shouldn't proceed there instead of in a military commission," Jennifer Daskal of Human Rights Watch said.
"It's a particular concern that he could be sentenced to death under a system that allows, in certain circumstances, the use of evidence obtained through highly abusive interrogations, and lacks established rules and procedures," she said.
Ghailani was arrested in Pakistan in July 2004 after a shootout with police, and transferred to US custody about five months later. He had been on the FBI's most-wanted list and had a five million dollar bounty on his head.
The Pentagon said that after the twin bombings in East Africa, which altogether killed more than 200, Ghailani worked as a bodyguard for al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, and forged documents and trained recruits.
When he was arrested, Ghailani was drawing up plans for a missile strike on an airliner at Nairobi airport in Kenya as well for attacks on London's Heathrow Airport and US financial institutions, Pakistani officials said.
Military prosecutors accused Ghailani of playing an instrumental role in the Dar es Salaam bombing, including buying explosives and detonators, and moving the bomb components to various safe houses around Tanzania's biggest city.
They alleged the al Qaeda suspect scouted the US embassy with the suicide bomb driver, met with conspirators in Nairobi, Kenya, shortly before the bombing, and joining them on a flight to Pakistan a day prior to the attack.
A total of 15 Guantanamo detainees have now been charged under the Military Commissions Act, which was hurriedly passed by Congress in 2006 to answer Supreme Court objections to the previous system of military justice.
Only one case has completed its course through the controversial Guantanamo trial system. "Aussie Taliban" David Hicks reached a plea deal with prosecutors and completed his sentence on home soil when he returned to Australia in May.

Turkish police detain 45 in al Qaeda crackdown: report

ISTANBUL  ( 2008-04-01 20:50:52 ) : 

Turkish anti-terror police on Tuesday detained 45 people on suspicion of belonging to the al Qaeda extremist network and planning attacks, Anatolia news agency reported.
The suspects, rounded up in simultaneous operations in eight districts of Istanbul, were being questioned by police, the report said.
A court was to decide later whether they should be charged and jailed pending trial or released.
In January, police raided 18 locations in southeast Turkey on intelligence that a local al Qaeda cell was planning car bomb attacks. Four alleged militants and a policeman were then killed in a gunfight, and 17 suspects arrested.
A Turkish cell of the extremist network was blamed for truck bombs that targeted two synagogues in Istanbul on November 15, 2003, and the British consulate and a British bank five days later. The attacks killed 63 people, injured hundreds and caused huge material damage.

Iraqi casualties at highest level since mid-2007

BAGHDAD  ( 2008-04-01 15:27:03 ) : 

Violent civilian deaths in Iraq climbed to their highest level since mid-2007, Iraqi government figures showed on Tuesday, due to a spike in violence between Iraq security forces and Mehdi Army militia fighters.
A total of 923 civilians died violently in March, up 31 percent from February and the deadliest month since August 2007, according to figures released by Iraq's interior, defence and health ministries.
Hundreds died and many hundreds more were wounded in last week's fighting, sparked by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's crackdown on fighters loyal to Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.
The southern Iraqi city of Basra, the focal point of last week's fighting, was relatively calm for a second straight day on Tuesday after Sadr called his fighters off the streets.
Despite the sharp rise in casualties, the March 2008 figure was still significantly lower than the 1,861 civilians who died violently in the same month a year ago. A total of 1,358 civilians were wounded, compared with 2,700 a year ago.
Violence has fallen since last summer when the US military added an extra 30,000 troops and Sadr declared a ceasefire.
But analysts warn that fighting could easily spike up again as groups vie for political control ahead of provincial elections, expected to take place by October.
The Iraqi government says the military operation in Basra last week was intended to impose law and order, but Sadr's followers say it was politically motivated.
The latest Iraqi data showed 102 policemen and 54 soldiers were killed, compared with 65 and 20 respectively in February, and that 641 insurgents had been killed and 2,509 detained.

Friday, March 28, 2008

UN Human Rights Council resolves to pressure Sudan over Darfur

 

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GENEVA  ( 2008-03-28 02:16:43 ) : 

The UN Human Rights Council on Thursday pushed through a resolution pressuring Sudan to punish those responsible for human rights violations in the Darfur region's civil war.
The document -- a compromise between European and African countries -- condemns Khartoum for its role in attacks on civilians committed in Darfur. It was adopted unanimously, without a vote, by the 47 members.
In the resolution, the Council "expresses its deep concern at the seriousness of the ongoing violations of human rights and international humanitarian law in some parts of Darfur".
International organisations estimate Darfur's ongoing five-year civil war has left 200,000 dead -- a toll Khartoum places at only 9,000 -- with around 2.2 million people displaced, out of a total population of six million.
The Council insisted Sudan "address urgently this question by thoroughly investigating all allegations of human rights and international humanitarian law violations, promptly bringing to justice the perpetrators of those violations".
However, the Council's Canadian representative said those living in Darfur "deserve better" than this resolution.
Last week, the United Nations issued a report on what it said were deliberate attacks carried out on Darfur's civilians by the Sudanese army in the past two months.
According to the investigation, these attacks in western Darfur left at least 115 dead and another 30,000 forced away from their homes, mainly in the direction of Chad.

Baghdad locked down after violent clashes

 

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BAGHDAD  ( 2008-03-28 12:40:47 ) : 

Baghdad was locked down on Friday amid a weekend curfew with pedestrians and vehicles keeping off the roads after violent clashes this week between security forces and Shia fighters.
An AFP correspondent said most of the capital's main roads were deserted after the city's military command imposed a curfew since Thursday night till Sunday 5:00 am (0200 GMT).
The curfew has been imposed to contain the fighting between Shia militants and Iraqi troops, security officials told AFP.
Dozens of people have been killed in Baghdad and at least 105 countrywide in clashes since Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki ordered his troops to crack down on "lawless gangs" in the southern city of Basra on Tuesday, according to official reports. Some sources have put the toll at double that.
On Friday, Sadr City -- the bastion of radical cleric Moqtada al-Sadr -- which saw brutal clashes since Tuesday, was largely calm, an AFP correspondent said.
He said relatives in Sadr City were preparing to arrange for the funerals of those killed in the clashes.

Mohammed (PBUH) caricatures̢۪ author plans charges against Dutch MP

COPENHAGEN  ( 2008-03-28 16:13:03 ) : 

The Danish cartoonist whose caricature of the Prophet Mohammed PBUH outraged Muslims said on Friday that he would press copyright charges against a far-right Dutch MP for reproducing it in his controversial anti-Islam video.
Kurt Westergaard's cartoon was among those that sparked a worldwide outcry and fierce debate about freedom of speech after they were first published in 2005. He said he was bringing the charge against Geert Wilders after the far-right MP published his anti-Islam video online on Thursday.
Wilders' video contains an image of Westergaard's cartoon showing the prophet with a bomb, its fuse burning, protruding from his turban.
"You can't just steal other people's works. This has nothing to do with freedom of speech, it's all about copyright," Westergaard told AFP.
"I won't accept my cartoon being taken out of its original context and used in a completely different one."
Westergaard has been in hiding since Danish police in February said they had foiled an assassination attempt against him.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

US stepping up unilateral attacks in Pakistan: report

WASHINGTON  ( 2008-03-27 21:50:06 ) : 

The United States has stepped up unilateral strikes against al Qaeda and foreign fighters in tribal areas, partly because of fears the country's new leaders will insist they be scaled back, the Washington Post reported on Thursday.
The Pentagon declined to comment on the substance of the report, which said US-controlled Predator aircraft have struck at least three sites used by al Qaeda operatives over the past two months.
"Our operations with Pakistan are closely coordinated," said Bryan Whitman, a Pentagon spokesman. "Pakistan recognizes that we fight a common enemy when it comes to terrorists."
Musharraf's allies lost elections last month, and new Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani told US President George W. Bush this week that a broader approach to the "war on terror" is necessary, including political solutions.
The strikes followed a "tacit understanding" with Musharraf and army chief General Ashfaq Kayani that permits US strikes on foreign militants in Pakistan, but not against Pakistanis, the Post quoted officials as saying.
It quoted one senior official as describing the strikes as a "shake the tree" strategy designed to force al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden and key lieutenants to move in ways that US intelligence can detect.
There was no immediate response from Pakistani officials on the report.
Pakistan has never formally admitted to allowing such missile strikes and Musharraf earlier this year said that unauthorized military actions on Pakistani soil would be treated as an invasion.
The report came as two senior US diplomats, Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte and Assistant Secretary of State for South Asian affairs Richard Boucher, continued a visit to Pakistan apparently aimed at wooing the new government.
A senior partner in the new coalition government, former premier Nawaz Sharif, warned the envoys earlier this week that parliament would review Musharraf's "one-man" strategy against extremism.
Sharif said he told them that it was unacceptable for Pakistan -- which has suffered a recent wave of suicide bombings blamed on militants -- to become a "murder-house" for the sake of US policies.

No single solution to tribal unrest: Negroponte

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KARACHI  ( 2008-03-27 20:55:44 ) : 

US Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte said on Thursday there were no single solution to militancy in the tribal areas and stressed that the problem would require a combination of measures.
Negroponte however opposed talks with militants who could not be persuaded to renounce violence in the region bordering Afghanistan.
"Security measures obviously are necessary when one is dealing with irreconcilable elements who want to destroy our very way of life," he told reporters in Karachi.
"You cannot talk with those kinds of people. On the other hand there are reconcilable elements in any of these situations who hopefully can be persuaded to participate in the democratic political process," he said.
"The common ground that we have in discussing the issue of how to deal with violent extremism in this country or elsewhere where it occurs in the world is that it calls for a multi-faceted approach, there is no single solution."
Asked if the purpose of his visit is to rescue President Pervez Musharraf, Negroponte said it was for the political process in Pakistan to decide the future of Musharraf.
"As far as Musharraf's status, he is the President of the country. We met with him in that capacity and any debate or disposition with regard to his status is of course something that is to be addressed by (the) Pakistani political process."
He said the US would "certainly respect what is decided in that regard."
Negroponte reaffirmed the United States' commitment to the people and stressed there was no hidden agenda behind his visit to Pakistan.
Political observers say the US visit was designed to woo the new government and smooth its relations with Musharraf amid fears that instability in the nation will hurt efforts to tackle militancy.

Baghdad security plan spokesman kidnapped--police

BAGHDAD: A spokesman for the Baghdad security plan, designed to make the Iraqi capital safer, was kidnapped from his home by armed gunmen on Thursday, police said.
Armed men stormed the home of Tahseen al-Sheikhli in theal-Amin neighbourhood of southwestern Baghdad, set the building on fire, disarmed his bodyguards and took him away, a police source said.
No one was reported hurt in the raid.
Sheikhli, a university professor, is one of two main spokesmen for the security plan, launched by the government more than a year ago to reduce bombings and ethnic attacks by flooding the streets with U.S. and Iraqi troops.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

DPOs directed to set up village force

PESHAWAR: Inspector General of Police Malik Naveed Khan has directed police highups to establish special police force at village level as per Police Order 2002 with immediate effect. These directives were issued to all DIGs and DPOs in a special order issued from CPO Tuesday, says a press release.

While spelling out the method of selection of the special police force, Malik Naveed said that in every village there should be one respectable, impartial, resourceful and well-reputed helper of police who will head the special police officers of the village, who shall be nominated on the recommendation of the local SHO, SDPO, subject to the approval of the DPO, the press release said.

It further said that the local police should give patronage to the heads of special police officers created so that their authority is established in the village.

They were also directed that the police officers concerned while recommending/appointing the special police officers shall ensure that all special police officers are apolitical i.e. not members or workers of any political party. Similarly the head of the special police officers will recommend the names of village police officers who shall be selected in consultation with the local SHO and SDPO, to be finally approved by the DPO. He shall be a Razakar, voluntary worker.

The duties of the special police officers will include: to keep peace in the area and their jurisdiction under the umbrella of local police; to help the police in detection, prevention of crime and apprehension of offenders; to patrol with police in the villages and assist in formation of and join "chagha parties"; to inform police about the persons who have no obvious source of income and are suspicious character; to inform police about the presence of POs and BCs, disputes which are likely to lead to crime or law and order situation, epidemic disease amongst the people, animals, birds etc, the refugees and other aliens and their activities; to report all unreported crimes, to help the police during natural disasters; to help improve the image of the local police.

The order further stated that the head of the special police force will report to the SHOs of local police station periodically either in person or through diaries once in a fortnight, or could do more frequently depending on the importance and urgency of information. Similarly the SHO/beat officer while visiting the village will periodically meet the special police officers for seeking information and assistance. Likewise the SHO will maintain a separate register which should record the activities of the special police force.

Some guidelines have also been laid down for the special police force. Quarterly meeting of all heads of special police officers with DPO will also be held regularly. It further maintained that the DPO will be overall supervising authority over village police thus all the activities conducted by such special police officers shall be monitored by the DPO.

The order further elaboratd that the DPO could either club in a number of small villages to organise the village police officers to perform their duties in the beats that they have already laid out for a police station or bigger villages with complex problems and crimes could be taken separately. The discretion will be with the local police.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

FUTURE FLIGHT

Kabul looks for anti-terror unity with Gilani

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KABUL  ( 2008-03-25 15:45:13 ) : 

Afghanistan said on Tuesday it hoped the election of a new government and prime minister in Pakistan would lead to closer co-operation in efforts to fight extremism plaguing both countries.
President Hamid Karzai issued a statement congratulating Yousuf Raza Gilani who was sworn in by President Pervez Musharraf on Tuesday.
Karzai "deemed terrorism and extremism a serious problem against stability and development in the region and hoped the new Pakistan parliament and prime minister achieve huge success against this destructive phenomenon," it said.
The president also wanted relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan -- both key allies in the United States' so-called "war on terror" -- to expand under Gilani, the statement said.
Ties between the neighbours are fragile with both accusing each other of not doing enough to tackle militants behind a wave of violence on both sides of the border.
The Afghan defence ministry said separately that the election showed people in Pakistan "are weary of extremism."
It also "in part promises a new development in regional co-operation on the war on terrorism," it said.

Friday, March 14, 2008

SUICIDAL ATTACK IN LAHORE

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

2008 Workplace Resolutions

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

4 Uzbeks among 5 killed in shootout

LAKKI MARWAT: Four militants and a villager were reportedly killed in a fierce gunbattle in Khankhel (Tajori) area bordering Frontier region after the suspected Uzbek militants kidnapped a union council nazim along with his two friends on Tuesday.

During the course of firing locals also captured a militant and handed him over to law enforcement agencies", sources told.

Nazim Union council Bakhmal Ahmadzai Malik Muhammad Idrees Khan and his two friends Musawwar Gul and Hayatullah were coming to Serai Gambila in a car when five armed suspected Uzbek militants intercepted them near Manzar Faqir area and whisked them away along with the car", DSP Naurang circle Umar Faraz Khattak said. He said that the personnel of law enforcement agencies were put on high alert while the roads connecting the area with the tribal region of Janikhel Wazir were closed. "The news of nazim's kidnapping spread like a jungle fire in the nearby villages upon which a 'Chagha Party' (force of armed villagers) was formed to secure the release of the nazim and his friends", sources told. DSP Khattak said that heavy contingent of police force and Frontier Constabulary rushed to the area to foil any possible attempt of shifting the hostages to the tribal belt. The armed villagers, sources said, zeroed in on the criminals in a dry rainy watercourse Nunger/Chall Nullah near Khankhel and got freed the kidnapped nazim and his friends through talks.

"Law enforcers backed by the Chagha Party laid a siege to the militants when they were stuck in the nullah after police barricaded the roads connecting the district with the tribal belt", DSP told.

Sources further said that fierce fighting started between the personnel of law enforcement agencies assisted by local armed villagers and militants when the former reportedly refused to give a safe passage to the militants to drive out of the area.

"The militants (suspected to be Uzbeks) took shelter in a long caves locally called 'Kuri' situated on vast tract of eroded lands near Khankhel and exchanged heavy firing with the personnel of law enforcing agencies backed by villagers", sources maintained, saying that several explosion were also heard.

"Fighting lasted several hours wherein four militants and a villager identified as Dilawar Khan, resident of Bachkan Ahmadzai were killed while one of the militants was captured", sources told and said: "The arrested militant seems to be an Uzbek national from his appearances".

Bilawal Bhutto Zardari

Bilawal Bhutto Zardari

Friday, February 22, 2008

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Monday, February 11, 2008

Motorola, Nortel reportedly in talks to combine units

The talks could create a joint venture with sales of around $10 billion, combining businesses that make network equipment for wireless phone carriers, the newspaper said.

read more | digg story

White PS3 now approved for Stateside use

The FCC just approved the 40GB Ceramic White PS3 for US consumption. It's apparently the same model announced for Japan back in October.

read more | digg story

Lego Volvo

I wonder if it runs?

read more | digg story

US charges six suspects over 9/11

_44419061_khal He said there would be "no secret trials" and that they would be "as completely open as possible".

"Relatively little amounts of evidence will be classified," Gen Hartmann said.

The other five defendants are Ramzi Binalshibh, a Yemeni, Walid bin Attash, also from Yemen, Ali Abd al-Aziz Ali, who was born in Balochistan, Pakistan, and raised in Kuwait, Mustafa Ahmad al-Hawsawi, a Saudi, and Mohammed al-Qahtani.

Gen Hartmann said the charges included conspiracy, murder in violation of the laws of war, attacking civilians, destruction of property and terrorism.

All but Mr Qahtani and Mr Hawsawi are also charged with hijacking or hazarding an aircraft.

The charges listed "169 overt acts allegedly committed by the defendants in furtherance of the September 11 events".

Gen Thomas Hartmann said: "The accused will have his opportunity to have his day in court.

Guantanamo Bay

The US has about 275 prisoners left in the detention centre

"It's our obligation to move the process forward, to give these people their rights."

In listing more details of the charges against the defendants, Gen Hartmann alleged that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed had proposed the attacks to al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden in 1996, had obtained funding and overseen the operation and the training of hijackers in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, a Kuwaiti of Pakistani extraction, was said to have been al-Qaeda's third in command when he was captured in Pakistan in March 2003.

He has reportedly admitted to decapitating kidnapped US journalist Daniel Pearl in 2002 but these charges do not relate to that.

The BBC's Vincent Dowd in Washington says Khalid Sheikh Mohammed has said he planned every part of the 9/11 attacks but that his confession may prove problematic as the CIA admitted using controversial "waterboarding" techniques.

Human rights groups regard the procedure as torture.

Legal challenge

The charges will now be sent to Susan Crawford, the convening authority for the military commissions, to determine whether they will be referred to trial.

Any trials would be held by military tribunal under the terms of the Military Commissions Act, passed by the US Congress in 2006.

The Act set up tribunals to try terror suspects who were not US citizens.

The law is being challenged by two prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, who say they are being deprived of their rights to have their cases heard by a US civilian court.

Nineteen men hijacked four planes in the 9/11 attacks. Two planes hit the World Trade Center in New York, another the Pentagon in Washington and the fourth crashed in Pennsylvania.

The Pentagon has announced charges against six Guantanamo Bay prisoners over their alleged involvement in the 11 September 2001 attacks in the US.

Prosecutors will seek the death penalty for the six, who include alleged plot mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.

The charges, the first for Guantanamo inmates directly related to 9/11, are expected to be heard by a controversial military tribunal system.

About 3,000 people died in the hijacked plane attacks.

The Guantanamo Bay detention centre, in south-east Cuba, began to receive US military prisoners in January 2002. Hundreds have been released without charge but about 275 remain and the US hopes to try about 80.

Tribunal process

Brig Gen Thomas Hartmann, a legal adviser to the head of the Pentagon's Office of Military Commissions, said the charges alleged a "long-term, highly sophisticated plan by al-Qaeda to attack the US".

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Al-Qaeda, Taliban threat to Pakistan government: Gates

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MUNICH, Germany: Al-Qaeda and Taliban forces in Pakistan’s northwest frontier region pose a direct threat to the Islamabad government, US Defense Secretary Robert Gates warned here Sunday.
The presence of the Islamic extremists in the tribal region is not just "a nuisance" to Pakistan, but "is potentially a threat to their government," Gates told an international security conference in this southern German city.
Gates, who has been calling for NATO reinforcements to defeat the Taliban and Al-Qaeda in neighbouring Afghanistan, suggested the time had come for a Pakistani anti-insurgency sweep on its own side of the Afghan border.
Pakistan has dismissed US claims that Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden and Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar were operating from its northwestern tribal areas. Washington has placed multi-million dollar rewards on the two men's heads.
A top Al-Qaeda operative, Abu Laith al-Libbi, was recently killed in a suspected US missile strike in Pakistan's north Waziristan tribal area early this month.
The Islamic extremist Taliban militia ruled Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001 and gave sanctuary to bin Laden, who masterminded the September 11 attacks in the United States.
A US-led invasion in October 2001 ousted the Taliban from power in Afghanistan, but they have regrouped and are putting up increasingly stiff resistance to NATO-led international forces.

Pakistani militants declare cease-fire

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DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan — Taliban militants declared a cease-fire Wednesday in fighting with Pakistani forces, and the government said it was preparing for peace talks with al-Qaida-linked extremists in the lawless tribal area near the border with Afghanistan.

Any deal that allows armed Islamic extremists to operate on Pakistani soil would run counter to U.S. demands for the government to crack down on militants. The Bush administration contends a failed truce last year allowed al-Qaida to expand its reach into this turbulent, nuclear-armed country, and the U.S. has sounded warnings in recent days about a revival of militant strength.

A spokesman for Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, a militant umbrella group, said the new cease-fire would include not only the tribal belt along the Afghan border but also the restive Swat region to the east where the army has also battled pro-Taliban fighters.

Tehrik-e-Taliban is led by Baitullah Mehsud, an al-Qaida-linked commander based in South Waziristan whom President Pervez Musharraf's government has blamed for a series of suicide attacks across Pakistan, including the Dec. 27 assassination of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto.

The government has repeatedly tried to strike peace deals with local pro-Taliban militants, urging them to expel foreign al-Qaida militants the U.S. has warned may use their sanctuary inside Pakistan's tribal regions to plot terror attacks around the globe.

If a cease-fire sticks and militants halt attacks, it could boost Musharraf's popularity as his political allies prepare for crucial Feb. 18 parliamentary elections.

But the negotiation strategy, has mostly backfired in the past, with militants failing to honor agreements. A cease-fire in North Waziristan in September 2006, which collapsed in July, was widely seen as a setback in the war against terror, giving the Taliban and al-Qaida a freer hand to stage cross-border attacks into Afghanistan and extend their control of areas within Pakistan.

In Washington, the State Department signaled it would oppose any agreement that resembled the last truce.

"I think everyone understands, including President Musharraf, that that agreement with tribal leaders did not in fact produce the results that everyone, including President Musharraf, had intended," deputy spokesman Tom Casey told reporters.

"We would certainly want to see that any arrangement made was effective at pursuing President Musharraf's goal and pursuing our goal, which is being able to defend against these kinds of extremist groups," he said. "We want to see an agreement that is effective; the last agreement was not effective by President Musharraf's own admission."

Adm. Michael Mullen, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in a report submitted Wednesday to Congress that the next attack on the United States will most likely be launched by al-Qaida operating in those "under-governed regions" of Pakistan.

Mike Vickers, assistant secretary of defense for special operations, told reporters Wednesday the volatile border area "remains a source of sanctuary for the al-Qaida senior leadership."

Vickers gave the Pakistani military high marks for keeping al-Qaida in check in Pakistan's cities and other "settled" locations.

"They have been less effective in the tribal areas of western Pakistan, and that's the problem we face right now," he said. "They have suffered large numbers of casualties in military operations."

As the cease-fire was declared, the army announced that eight soldiers — including three generals — were killed Wednesday when their U.S.-supplied Bell 411 helicopter crashed in South Waziristan. Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas, the military spokesman, said it appeared the crash was due to technical problems and not hostile fire.

On Tuesday, U.S. intelligence chief Mike McConnell told a Senate hearing the tribal areas have provided al-Qaida with a safe haven similar to what it enjoyed in Afghanistan before the U.S.-led war on terror began in 2001.

Thousands of civilians have been displaced by the fighting in the border region, and many are sheltering in open areas in the towns of Dera Ismail Khan and Tank, just outside South Waziristan, during a bitter winter.

Ismail Khan, a journalist who reports on the border area for the newspaper Dawn, said both sides appeared to be respecting the truce. But he said the military's apparent decision to halt its operation against militants in South Waziristan raised questions about Pakistan's strategy in dealing with the Taliban.

"Why did the government launch the military operation and then abandon it half way through without achieving its objective?" Khan told Dawn News TV. "It boggles the mind."

Maulvi Mohammed Umar, a spokesman for the Tehrik-e-Taliban militants, told The Associated Press the cease-fire was "for an indefinite period," and was the "result of our talks with the government."

Abbas denied knowledge of any talks, but said militants in South Waziristan had stopped shooting at security forces for the past two days and had withdrawn somewhat from positions in the area.

However, Interior Minister Hamid Nawaz said the government would soon form a jirga, or tribal council of influential figures, "for a dialogue with the militants." He claimed security forces had "broken the back" of Mehsud's fighters.

A truce, even if short-lived, may help authorities maintain order during the crucial Feb. 18 elections aimed at restoring civilian government after eight years of military rule. The balloting was postponed for six weeks after Bhutto was assassinated in a bombing and gun attack during a campaign rally in Rawalpindi.

In January, Mehsud fighters launched a series of assaults on military bases in South Waziristan, underscoring the government's weak grip on the region U.S. officials say is a safe haven for al-Qaida.

Last week, a U.S. missile strike killed Abu Laith al-Libi, a top al-Qaida commander, in neighboring North Waziristan.

U.S. officials have said they believe Osama bin Laden is hiding in the border region, a finding the Pakistanis dispute.

Pakistan's government said Wednesday it remained committed to the fight against Islamic extremism. Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammed Sadiq told reporters that Pakistan had already made "more sacrifices than any other country" in the war against Islamic terrorism.

Saturday, February 9, 2008

Where in the World is Osama bin Laden?

Friday, February 8, 2008

Benazir’s death not caused by bullet: SY

ISLAMABAD: The Scotland Yard team, which conducted an investigation into the death of former PPP Chairperson Benazir Bhutto, said her death was not caused by a bullet.
The text of probe report, which was presented to the interior ministry, said the death of Benazir Bhutto was caused by the force and intensity of suicide bomb blast, which hurled her head to dash into some part of the vehicle resulting into her death.
The report does not tell about which elements were involved in the Benazir Bhutto case.
The report has not been formally issued.
The report concluded that a lone attacker fired shots at Bhutto before detonating explosives at a political rally in Rawalpindi on December 27, but said that bullets were not the cause of death.
"In essence, all the evidence indicates that one suspect has fired the shots before detonating an improvised explosive device," said an executive summary of the report, signed by Detective Superintendent John MacBrayne.
"The blast caused a violent collision between her head and the escape hatch area of the vehicle, causing a severe and fatal head injury," it added.
The British team of forensics and other experts spent two and a half weeks in Pakistan in January at the invitation of President Pervez Musharraf.
It said the team's task was complicated by the "lack of an extended and detailed search of the crime scene, the absence of an autopsy, and the absence of recognised body recovery and victim identification processes."
But it said that the "evidence that is available is sufficient for reliable conclusions to be drawn."
Bhutto's party has previously rejected the Pakistani government's account of her death, which also said that she was killed by the impact of a bomb, but had no immediate comment.

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Deep Background: CIA reveals more than ever

U.S. officials have said they believe that bin Laden is taking refuge in the Pakistani tribal region, likely on the Pakistani side of the border.

Still, McConnell praised Pakistan’s cooperation in the fight against extremists, saying that hundreds of Pakistanis have died while fighting terrorists. He said Islamabad has done more to “neutralize” terrorists than any other partner of the United States.

Despite the Pakistani cooperation, Lt. Gen. Michael Maples, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, said the Pakistani military has been unable to disrupt or damage al-Qaida terrorists operating in the tribal border region. And the U.S. military is prohibited by Pakistan from pursuing Taliban and al-Qaida fighters that cross the border to conduct attacks inside Afghanistan.

U.S.: Al-Qaida shifting from Iraq to Pakistan-Senators hear from officials, including CIA chief, on who was waterboarded

 

 

3d571577-562c-44fa-a8a1-be63a174319d.hmedium WASHINGTON - Al-Qaida, increasingly shut down in Iraq, is establishing cells in other countries as Osama bin Laden’s organization uses a “safe haven” in Pakistan’s tribal region to train for attacks in Afghanistan, the Middle East, Africa and the United States, the U.S. intelligence chief said Tuesday.

“Al-Qaida remains the pre-eminent threat against the United States,” Mike McConnell told a Senate hearing more than six years after the 9/11 attacks.

He said that fewer than 100 al-Qaida terrorists have moved from Iraq to establish cells in other countries as the U.S. military clamps down on their activities, and “they may deploy resources to mount attacks outside the country.”

The al-Qaida network in Iraq and in Pakistan and Afghanistan has suffered setbacks, but he said the group poses a persistent and growing danger. He said that al-Qaida maintains a “safe haven” in Pakistan’s tribal areas, where it is able to stage attacks supporting the Taliban in Afghanistan.

The Pakistani tribal areas provide al-Qaida “many of the advantages it once derived from its base across the border in Afghanistan, albeit on a smaller and less secure scale,” allowing militants to train for strikes in Pakistan, the Middle East, Africa and the United States, McConnell said.

Terrorists use the “sanctuary” of Pakistan’s border area to “maintain a cadre of skilled lieutenants capable of directing the organization’s operations around the world,” McConnell told the Senate Intelligence Committee.

Next strike seen from Pakistan
The next attack on the United States will most likely be launched by al-Qaida operating in “under-governed regions” of Pakistan, Adm. Michael Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, planned to tell Congress on Wednesday.

“Continued congressional support for the legitimate government of Pakistan braces this bulwark in the long war against violent extremism,” Mullen states in remarks prepared for a separate budget hearing and obtained by The Associated Press.

The U.S. has expressed growing concern that al-Qaida figures who fled Afghanistan after the ouster of the Taliban regime in 2001 have been able to regroup inside tribal regions, posing a threat not just to U.S. forces across the border, but offering a potential base for global operations.

Friday, January 25, 2008

40 militants killed in S Waziristan

 

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ISLAMABAD: Forty miscreants have been killed in the last 24 hours and 30 miscreants apprehended while many injured in South Waziristan, the ISPR said in a statement on Thursday.
Eight soldiers had also been killed and 32 wounded, it said.
Security forces have carried out operations in Spinkai Raghzai, Nawazkot, Tiarza and its surrounding areas, where all militants have been reportedly cleared out of these areas.
Militants were killed in a series of raids on Wednesday and Thursday during clashes with the army who were backed by artillery and helicopter.
Security forces have moved 3 tanks in Jandola to protect military convoys that are on the move as the army advances in the area.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Iraq sees need for foreign military until 2018

 

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BAGHDAD: Iraq's defense minister said that his country would need foreign military help to defend its borders for another 10 years and would not be able to maintain internal security until 2012.
"According to our calculations and our timelines, we think that from the first quarter of 2009 until 2012 we will be able to take full control of the internal affairs of the country, "Qadir said.
"In regard to the borders, regarding protection from any external threats, our calculation appears that we are not going to be able to answer to any external threats until 2018 to 2020," he said.
Qadir is currently visiting the United States for weapons acquisitions for the new, U.S.-trained Iraqi army. According to the report, these included ground vehicles, helicopters, tanks, artillery and armored personnel carriers.

14 killed in southern Philippine unrest

 

 

 

COTABATO: Fourteen people have been killed in two days of violence on the volatile southern Philippine island of Mindanao, officials said Tuesday.
Twelve Muslims were killed on Monday when rival commanders of the Muslim separatist Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) clashed in Mamasapano town over a land dispute, said MILF spokesman Eid Kabalu.
In a separate incident on Tuesday, gunmen attacked a military outpost in the town of Palayan near Mamasapano, leaving two soldiers dead, said military spokesman Colonel Julieto Ando.

Al-Qaida cannot take control of Pakistan: Musharraf

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ISLAMABAD: President Pervez Musharraf said that the extremists cannot take control of Pakistan.
He said that the Al-Qaida is not so strong militarily to defeat Pakistan and it is not powerful politically. There is no possibility of its taking part and winning in the elections.
Talking with a German magazine, President Musharraf said that whenever he feels that the majority of the people is against him then he would not take a moment to step down from the position of the president.
The president said that he would never allow the US army to launch operation in the Pakistani land.
He said that if any need arises then Pakistan itself ask for help and only the local forces are doing operation in Pakistan.

Bin Laden's son applies to move to U.K.

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CAIRO: Al Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden's son has applied for a visa to the United Kingdom where he intends to live with his British wife.
According to a British daily, the British woman changed her name to Zaina Al Sabah Bin Laden after her marriage to Omar.
If the couple's application is accepted, they will move to Jane's $1.1 million home in Cheshire, near Manchester.
It further said that Umar has divorced his first wife, the mother of his two-year-old son.

6 Gomal Zam project staffers abducted

up02 WANA: Some unidentified armed men kidnapped six employees of the Gomal Zam project including assistant officer Abdullah Marwat along with their official vehicle from Girdawai area in South Waziristan Agency on Monday.

According to reports, Abdullah Marwat, suppliers Shahid Mehood, HameedUllah Afghani, Sohail Khan and Khalil Khan were abducted while traveling in their official vehicle.

They were intercepted by the abductors near Girdwaai area and whisked them away at gunpoint, leaving the vehicle midway.

The project always is hit by snags as some time its employees were either harassed or abducted as a result of which the gigantic Gomal Zam dam project is much behind schedule.

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Excerpt: ‘Memo to the President Elect’--Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright has advice for next president

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Former Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright has some advice for the next president of the United States, whomever he or she may be. Here's an excerpt from “Memo to the President Elect: How We Can Restore America's Reputation and Leadership.”

Chapter 1: A mandate to lead
memorandum (personal and confidential)
To: The President Elect
From: Madeleine K. Albright
Date: Election Night, 2008

Congratulations on your success. Well done! You have won a great victory. But with that victory comes the responsibility to lead a divided nation in a world riven by conflict and inequity, wounded by hate, bewildered by change, and made anxious by the renewed specter of nuclear Armageddon.

In days to come, leaders you’ve never heard of, from countries you can barely locate, will assure you of their friendship and offer you assistance. My advice is to accept, for you will need help.

We Americans like to think of ourselves as exemplars of generosity and virtue, but to many people in many places, we are selfish, imperious, and violent. The voters will want you to transform this perception while also protecting us, defeating our enemies, and securing our economic future — in other words, to do as promised during your campaign.

The president of the United States has been compared to the ruler of the universe, a helmsman on a great sailing ship, the Mikado’s Grand Poo-bah, a lonely figure immersed in “splendid misery” (Jefferson’s description), and “the personal embodiment [of the] ... dignity and majesty of the American people” (William Howard Taft’s).

Students of the office have identified an array of presidential roles: commander in chief, master diplomat, national spokesperson, head administrator, top legislator, party leader, patron of the arts, congratulator of athletic teams, and surrogate parent. Your political advisors will want you to focus on activities that will keep your poll numbers high and get you reelected. I urge you to concentrate on duties that will restore our country’s reputation and keep us safe.
On January 20, 2009, you will place your hand on the Bible and, prompted by Chief Justice Roberts, swear in front of three hundred million Americans and six billion people worldwide to “preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.”

Following George Washington’s example, you will add a heartfelt “so help me God.” The oath completed, you will become the world’s most powerful person. It will no longer be happenstance when you enter a room and the band strikes up “Hail to the Chief.” You have attained our nation’s highest office; the question, not yet answered, is whether you have what it takes to excel in the job.

•••

Eight years ago, as the second millennium drew to a close, the outlook for America could not have been brighter. The world was at peace, the global economy healthy, and the position of the United States unparalleled. The platform on which George W. Bush ran for president in 2000 referred to the era as “a remarkable time in the life of our country.” Colin Powell, the incoming secretary of state, told Congress, “We will need to work well together because we have a great challenge before us. But it is not a challenge of survival. It is a challenge of leadership. For it is not a dark and dangerous ideological foe we confront, but the overwhelming power of millions of people who have tasted freedom. It is our own incredible success that we face.”

Like any inheritance, incredible success can be invested productively or not. Tragically, America’s political capital has been squandered. When comparing notes with former cabinet members — Democrat and Republican alike — I have seen people shake their heads in disbelief at the manner in which presidential power has been misused. The consensus question: What could they have been thinking? From day one, the wrong people were in top positions. The decision-making process was distorted or bypassed. Ideological conformity was valued over professionalism, and falsehoods were allowed to masquerade as truth. Principles that are central to America’s identity were labeled obsolete, and historic errors were made without accountability. Important national security tools, including diplomacy, were set aside. I had hoped that President Bush would salvage his administration during its final years, but the gains made were both belated and marginal. Sad to say, you will enter office with respect for American leadership lower than it has been in the memory of any living person.

As a child in Europe, I hid in bomb shelters while Nazi planes flew overhead. Listening to the radio, I exulted at the voice of Churchill and the wondrous news that American troops were crossing the Atlantic. I was seven years old when Allied forces hit the beaches at Normandy and later repelled Hitler’s army at the Battle of the Bulge. By the time the war was won I was eight, anxious to discover what peace might be like, and already in love with Americans in uniform.

To Abraham Lincoln, the United States was “the last best hope of Earth.” To me, it will always be the land of opportunity. I could not imagine wanting to live anywhere else, nor conceive what the twentieth century would have been like without my adopted country. That is why it is so disturbing to learn of reports that most people in most countries now believe that America “provokes more conflicts than it prevents” and that we have a “mainly negative” influence in the world.

The tragic blunder of Iraq stands out, but there have been others — neglect of our allies, overreliance on the military, allowing the likes of Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld to be the face of America. Yes, we have an excuse: the world is different now, but that is all the more reason to be mindful of proven strengths. The terrorist outrage of 9/11 was shocking, but we have lived for decades with the knowledge that death could arrive from across the sea. The attacks were cause for grief and anger, and for reassessing our institutions and strategies; they were not good reason for panic or for abandoning our principles when we needed them most.

After 9/11, the Bush administration started well but soon forgot who our country’s most serious enemies were. Many Americans were convinced that we had invaded Iraq because Saddam Hussein was responsible for 9/11. Thus a majority felt that confronting Hussein would strike a blow against Al Qaeda. Many agreed with the president that the world could be divided neatly into those aligned with the United States and those cheering on the terrorists. Many admired the president’s certainty even as we came to have doubts about what he seemed most certain about.

I am an optimist who worries a lot. The reasons for worry surround us, some hidden, others visible daily on CNN, Fox News, and Al-Jazeera. The turbulence and vitriol may seem overwhelming. The poison of hate is in the air. Still, my overriding message to you as you prepare to assume the presidency is to have confidence in who we are and what we believe, for, even in my lifetime, we have faced graver risks, kept our nerve, and overcome.

We might assume that a memo such as this, if written half a century ago, would have painted a picture of a safe and strong America. After all, Osama bin Laden was, at that time, still an infant. Al Qaeda did not exist, and international terrorism was not a major concern. The United States was the unchallenged leader of the free world. The globe, itself, was less complicated and slower paced. Yet in the 1950s, George Kennan wrote that “Our national consciousness is dominated at present by a sense of insecurity.” Walter Lippmann worried that “We are living in an age of disorder and upheaval. Though the United States has grown powerful and rich, we know in our hearts that we have become ... insecure and anxious .... For we are not sure whether our responsibilities are not greater than our wisdom.” Even my favorite college text concluded gloomily that “Only the most stubborn and obtuse would venture optimistic predictions for the future ... men everywhere are gripped by fear ... man’s technical knowledge and capacity have outstripped his moral capacity.”

This foreboding was traceable not to human failures but to human ingenuity. The advance from the conventional to the nuclear bomb was of a magnitude greater than any since the first short-tempered man picked up a piece of wood and used it as a club. From Hiroshima on, the possibility of immediate, collective extinction became a part of our lives. We worried that the knowledge and means to build nuclear weapons would spread rapidly; some felt it a sign from God that the end of the world was at hand.

We were anxious, as well, that the American dream was not living up to its billing. While a comic book Superman fought for “truth, justice and the American way,” our international adversaries labeled us as greedy and racist. We didn’t wholly disagree. “The superiority of our way of life,” the political theorist Hans Morgenthau wrote fifty years ago, “is no longer as obvious either to us or to the rest of the world as it used to be. To hundreds of millions of people, the communist way of life appears to be more attractive than ours.”

At home, congressional committees competed to root out communist sympathizers in the State Department and army, quarreling over who was responsible for putting the red in Red China. Soviet leaders boasted of their economic and industrial prowess, predicted that they would bury us, and triumphantly launched into space the first satellite (Sputnik), first dog (Laika), and first man (Yuri Gagarin). Ninety miles from Florida, a communist dictator established a revolutionary beachhead, and threatened to create others throughout the hemisphere. The superpowers were in a race to build and test ever more destructive warheads. Schoolchildren practiced hiding under desks; community planners stocked underground shelters with Spam and chicken noodle soup. Then, as now, America yearned for fresh leadership.

In 1960, America elected a new president. John Kennedy brought with him a tonic he called “vigah” and a dynamic way of looking at the world. His inaugural is well remembered for his brash pledge to “pay any price, bear any burden ... in order to assure the survival and the success of liberty.” He also spoke of “a long twilight struggle ... against the common enemies of man: tyranny, poverty, disease, and war itself.” This broad focus reflected Kennedy’s belief that the West could not compete against communism through military might alone. We had to gain the allegiance of marginalized populations for, while America claimed to have a unique and all-encompassing vision, so did the communists. To win converts, we had to explain our ideas to people who had no experience with freedom and only hostile encounters with the West. We had to convince the widest possible audience that we were on their side.

Kennedy’s inaugural responded to this challenge by speaking in turn “to those old allies whose cultural and spiritual origins we share,” then to “those new states whom we welcome to the ranks of the free,” to “those peoples in huts and villages across the globe striving to break the bonds of mass misery,” to “our sister republics south of the border,” to “the United Nations,” and “finally, to those nations who would make themselves our adversary.”

In the months that followed, Kennedy honed America’s image by creating the Alliance for Progress, the Peace Corps, and the Agency for International Development; declaring a moratorium on atmospheric nuclear tests; and conveying his desire for “genuine peace, the kind of peace that makes life on earth worth living ... not merely peace for Americans but peace for all men and women — not merely peace in our time but peace for all time.”

John Kennedy understood that Americans must practice effective diplomacy on every continent. An early supporter of independence for colonies in Africa and Asia, he was considered a hero in such places as Algeria, Kenya, and Indonesia. The picture of our first Catholic president hung on the walls of huts and haciendas throughout Latin America. JFK won over French speakers by referring to himself jauntily as “the man who accompanied Jacqueline Kennedy to Paris.” When the Berlin Wall went up, he asked the people of West Berlin “to lift your eyes beyond the dangers of today, to the hopes of tomorrow, beyond the freedom merely of this city of Berlin .. . to the advance of freedom everywhere, beyond the wall to the day of peace with justice, beyond yourselves and ourselves to all mankind.” Kennedy’s eloquence seemed to exemplify an America sure of its direction and skilled in the art of bringing others along.

An assassin’s bullet brought a shocking end to JFK’s presidency, but not to the demand for global diplomacy at which he had excelled. Lyndon Johnson, though burdened by the albatross of Vietnam, enhanced America’s international standing through his fight against poverty and support for civil rights. Richard Nixon eased anxieties by pursuing détente with the Soviet Union and an opening to communist China. Gerald Ford engineered approval of a means for monitoring and reporting on the status of freedom behind the Iron Curtain — the Helsinki Final Act. Jimmy Carter elevated human rights to the center of U.S. foreign policy, declared America’s opposition to apartheid, and brokered a historic peace between Israel and Egypt. Ronald Reagan emphasized U.S. support for democracy and pushed against the shaky underpinnings of the Soviet empire. The senior President Bush supported German unification and forged a broad coalition to roll back Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait.

As decade gave way to decade, presidents from both parties created a clear role for America as leader of the international system — as a defender of law and builder of global institutions, a country whose influence was felt in all regions and whose views were widely respected. Though far from unblemished, theirs was a record of profound achievement. The nuclear weapons we so much feared were not again used, and the number of declared nuclear powers paused at five. The division of Europe ended. The Soviet Union broke up. Democracy spread. Old enemies became friends. Civilization itself seemed to be on the move, taking the stairs two steps at a time.

And yet, in the years immediately following the cold war, I surprised my students by saying that I thought the world would grow more perilous. We had become accustomed to the risks of superpower rivalry and had painstakingly developed the means to contain them. The new era, though freer, would also prove less predictable. Nations and people redefined their interests; old grievances resurfaced. We would have to exert ourselves to keep from slipping back.

Thus, in the 1990s, Bill Clinton brought Kennedy-style zest to the task of governing in a time of change — expanding and reforming NATO, supporting debt relief for the poorest countries, promoting democracy without trying to impose it, pursuing peace, and doing more than any other leader to rally the world against international terror.

On the eve of NATO’s intervention to prevent mass killing in Kosovo, Clinton called me at the time he usually did, the middle of the night, because he rarely slept and didn’t think anyone else might need to. Together, we reviewed the steps we had taken to find a diplomatic solution to the crisis. Prior to the fighting, Clinton had pushed us for every scrap of information. Sitting at his desk, trying to ward off a headache by pressing a can of Diet Coke to his temple, he questioned everything — the history, personalities, social and cultural factors, risks to our troops, potential cost to civilians, and whether our post-conflict plans were realistic. He was determined to do the mission right because he knew he could be wrong. He was thorough; that was his style on Kosovo and on every issue that mattered.

To his secretary of state, Clinton’s approach was a precious asset. It was not hard for me to convince people overseas that the United States understood and cared. They already knew, because they had been listening for years to a president who had taken the time to learn about them, who had shown that he was concerned about their futures and who wanted to help if he could.

In his second inaugural address, Bill Clinton referred to our country as “the indispensable nation.” I liked the phrase so much I borrowed it until it became associated with me. Some thought the term arrogant, but that is not how I meant it. Rather, I felt it captured the reality that most large-scale initiatives required at least some input from the United States. I also hoped the phrase would create a sense of pride among Americans, so we would be more willing to invest in overseas projects and less reluctant to take on tough assignments.

Although our country has much in common with others, it has no current competitor in power and reach. This creates opportunities but also temptations. For better or worse, American actions serve as an example. If we attempt to put ourselves outside the law, we invite others to do the same. That is when our moral bearings are lost and the foundation of our leadership becomes suspect. I have always believed America is an exceptional country, but that is because we have led in creating standards that work for everyone, not because we are an exception to the rules.

Today, as you prepare to assume the presidency, the preeminence of American power remains among the major facts of twenty-first-century life, but our ability to control events through the use of that power has eroded. This, too, is among the major facts of twenty-first-century life.

The reasons are well known. We have made a muddle of fighting terror — lacking a coherent strategy and failing to establish a clear connection between the steps we take and the results we desire. Our promotion of democracy has caused unease even among those advocating democratic reforms in their countries — because when we speak of democracy, many people think of Iraq, nobody’s desired model. With our attention focused on the Persian Gulf, we have lacked effective policies toward transcendent challenges such as energy and the environment. We have responded slowly and with an unsteady hand to emerging problems in Asia, Latin America, and Africa. Once the premier practitioners of global diplomacy, we have behaved as amateurs. 

Thursday, January 10, 2008

U.S. warplanes flatten ‘safe havens’ in Iraq--Military says 38 bombs dropped in 10-minute strike on Baghdad's outskirts

 

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BAGHDAD - U.S. bombers and jet fighters unleashed 40,000 pounds of explosives during a 10-minute airstrike Thursday, flattening what the military called al-Qaida in Iraq safe havens on the southern outskirts of the capital.

The strikes, carried out above approaching troops, was part of Operation Phantom Phoenix, a nationwide campaign launched Tuesday against al-Qaida in Iraq.

A military statement said two B-1 bombers and four F-16 fighters dropped the bombs on 40 targets in Arab Jabour in 10 strikes. Al-Qaida fighters are believed to control Arab Jabour, a Sunni district lined with citrus groves and scarred by daily violence.

Thirty-eight bombs were dropped within the first 10 minutes, with a total

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tonnage of 40,000 pounds,” the statement said.

The attack came a day after the U.S. military reported that nine American soldiers were killed north of the capital in the first two days of a new offensive.

Fleeing militants
Many militants have fled U.S. and Iraqi forces massing north of Baghdad in Diyala province. Like Arab Jabour, Diyala is an agricultural area of palm and citrus groves that has defied the trend toward lower violence.

The campaign’s scope is nationwide but is mainly focused on gaining control of Diyala and its most important city, Baqouba, which al-Qaida has declared the capital of its self-styled Islamic caliphate.

Six soldiers were killed and four were wounded Wednesday in a booby-trapped house in Diyala, the U.S. command said. It also announced that three U.S. soldiers were killed and two wounded in an attack Tuesday in Salahuddin province, north of Diyala.

The toll marked some of the deadliest days for U.S. forces in Iraq since last fall. For all December, 23 U.S. soldiers died in Iraq

Monday, January 7, 2008

Iraq militants turn to women for suicide attacks-U.S. military says recent cases show pressure may be forcing tactic

"There's a sense that this is an act of desperation," said Col. Donald Bacon, a U.S. military spokesman in Baghdad.

Small but increasing role
Female suicide bombers are a small part of the insurgents' battle to force U.S. troops from Iraq and rattle Shiites from newly acquired power. Women have been responsible for 14 of 667 suicide attacks since May 2005, or 2 percent. They have caused at least 107 deaths, or 5 percent of the 2,065 people killed during this time period, according to Associated Press statistics.

But those attacks appear to be increasing.

In November and December, women carried out three suicide bombings in Diyala province, one of Iraq's most violent areas, where al-Qaida in Iraq has a stronghold. The last female suicide bombing had been in July.

On Nov. 4, a woman detonated an explosives vest next to a U.S. patrol in Diyala's regional capital, Baqouba, 35 miles northeast of Baghdad, wounding seven U.S. troops and five Iraqis. On Dec. 7, a woman attacked the offices of a Diyala-based Sunni group fighting al-Qaida in Iraq, killing 15 people and wounding 35. Then, on Dec. 31, a bomber in Baqouba detonated her suicide vest close to a police patrol, wounding five policemen and four civilians.

Devastating attacks continue in Iraq even as Iraqi casualties are down by 55 percent nationwide since June 2007, according to an AP count. American and Iraqi forces, and thousands of Sunni tribal groups who turned against al-Qaida in Iraq, have pushed the extremist group from Baghdad and Anbar province west of the capital. The al-Qaida fighters have moved into Diyala northeast of Baghdad and farther north into Mosul, 225 miles northwest of the capital.

BAGHDAD - It goes against religious taboos in Iraq to involve women in fighting, but three recent suicide bombings carried out by women could indicate insurgents are growing increasingly desperate.

The female suicide attacks come as U.S.-led coalition forces are increasingly catching militants suspected of training women to become human bombs or finding evidence of efforts by al-Qaida in Iraq to recruit women, according to military records.

With coalition forces pushing extremists out of former strongholds and shrinking their pool of potential recruits, the militants are being forced to come up with other methods to penetrate stiffened security measures, said Diaa Rashwan, who follows Islamic militancy for Egypt's Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies.

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

U.S. official dies after Sudan shooting--Embassy: 'Too early to tell' if terror related; driver also killed


KHARTOUM, Sudan - A 33-year-old U.S. diplomat and his driver were shot to death Tuesday in an attack a day a joint African Union-United Nations force took over peacekeeping in Sudan's Darfur region, the U.S. Embassy said.

NBC has learned that the slain diplomat was John Granville, from South Buffalo, N.Y. He worked for the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) on a program to bring radios to the population of South Sudan, according to USAID's Web site. Granville's family has been notified of his death.

It was unclear whether the early morning attack was targeted, or a random crime. "This afternoon, the American officer succumbed to his injuries and passed away," said Walter Braunohler, the spokesman at the U.S. Embassy in Khartoum.

Braunohler said it was "too early to tell" if the attack was al-Qaida or terror related.

Earlier, the Sudanese Foreign Ministry said the American was shot five times in the hand, shoulder and belly and underwent surgery.

The ministry identified the Sudanese driver who was killed as 40-year-old Abdel Rahman Abbas and said the attack occurred around 4 a.m. as the car was heading to a western suburb of Sudan's capital, Khartoum.

Crime is fairly high in Khartoum, Sudan's capital, although much lower than in other east African cities like Nairobi, Kenya.

Sudan: 'no political' ties
The Sudanese state news agency SUNA quoted the Foreign Ministry as saying the incident was "isolated and has no political or ideological connotations" and pledged to bring the culprits to justice.

On Monday, a joint peacekeeping force took over in Darfur — a long-awaited change that is intended to be the strongest effort yet to solve the world's worst humanitarian crisis but which already is struggling. Also Monday, President Bush signed legislation to allow states and local governments to cut investment ties with Sudan because of the bloodshed in Darfur.

Al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden and his deputy Ayman al-Zawahri have called in the past for "jihad," or holy war, in Sudan if U.N. peacekeepers deploy in Darfur — most recently in a September video by al-Zawahri. Bin Laden was based in Sudan until the late 1990s when the government expelled him, but there has been little sign of activity by the terror network in the country recently.

Last year, a group calling itself al-Qaida's branch in Sudan claimed responsibility for the slaying of a Sudanese newspaper editor accused of blasphemy for articles run in his Al-Wifaq newspaper. It was the first time a group in Sudan claimed allegiance to al-Qaida, but Sudanese officials have said the claim was fake and the slaying was not al-Qaida-linked.

Anti-Western sentiment fostered
At the same time, the Sudanese government often drums up anti-Western sentiment in the state media, often accusing the West of seeking to re-colonize Sudan using Darfur as a pretext.

In November, a small protest was held after a British teacher at a Khartoum private school was arrested for allegedly insulting Islam by letting her students name a teddy bear Muhammad — she was sentenced to prison but quickly deported.

A U.S. diplomat was killed in 2002 in the Jordanian capital Amman. The assassination was blamed on al-Qaida-linked militants.