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Wednesday, September 30, 2009

UN: Discussion with North Korea 'more fruitful' now

by DPA




New York - Talks between the United Nations and North Korea have become "much more fruitful," the UN chief of political affairs said Monday. UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon met on Sunday with Pak Gil Yon, North Korea's vice foreign affairs minister, to discuss a range of unsettled issues like the country's nuclear programme and humanitarian aid.





"The discussion has been much more fruitful than in past months," said UN Undersecretary General for Political Affairs B Lynn Pascoe, but added he does not believe North Korea has become friendlier despite the efforts to remain engaged with the UN. No details were given about whether UN-Pyonyang talks have resolved outstanding issues.




"We are always interested in the processes and the UN secretary general encouraged them to return to the six-party talks, which we thinks is a valuable way to move forward," Pascoe said. But he added that North Korea has indicated it is not yet ready to return to the talks.




The six-party talks involve China, the United States, Russia, Japan and North and South Korea. The talks have failed to convince North Korea to abandon its nuclear ambitions.




A UN statement issued late Sunday following Ban's meeting with Pak called for dialogue between the two sides to resolve outstanding issues. It said North Korea has the intention to engage in bilateral and multilateral dialogue with the concerned parties to settle those issues.




The statement said Ban voiced concerns over the humanitarian and human rights situations in North Korea.




"He highlighted the need for proactive action to enhance donor commitments to meet the serious food security needs," the statement said. "He encouraged the Democratic People's Republic of North Korea to increase access and information sharing."




Copyright DPA

Northern Afghan Violence Undercuts US Supply Route


Rising Taliban Control In Afghanistan's North Cuts Through US Supply Route



(AP) Growing Taliban influence in northern Afghanistan is threatening a new military supply line painstakingly negotiated by the U.S., as rising violence takes hold on the one-time Silk Road route.





The north has deteriorated over just a few months, showing how quickly Taliban influence is spreading in a once peaceful area. Local officials say the Taliban are establishing a shadow government along the dilapidated road that ultimately could prevent vital supplies carried in hundreds of trucks every week from reaching the military. It also raises the danger that the supplies could end up in militant hands as fodder for suicide attacks.




People in Baghlan and Kunduz provinces complain that international forces, the government in Kabul and aid have passed them by in favor of more troublesome regions. Militants are taking advantage of that resentment, and control by either Afghan or international forces is slipping.




"For the past two to three years, it's deteriorated day by day," said Ahmad Jawid, 43, a car dealer who sat in the shade with a half-dozen friends watching the highway in Baghlan's provincial capital, Pol-i-Kumri. "The people are demoralized."




A young man in the group had an easy smile but spoke bitterly on Wednesday when asked about the Taliban.




"I'm engaged and I can't go to the village of my fiancee," said 23-year-old Farshad, who like many Afghans goes by only one name. The village fell to the Taliban before the wedding could be planned. "I'm going to wait for the situation to get worse or get better. Otherwise I'll have to become a Talib."




Just to the north, Kunduz province is home to the first leg of the highway. The full northern route, which starts in Europe and snakes through Central Asia to Afghanistan, was cobbled together by the U.S. earlier this year after Taliban violence repeatedly disrupted the two main Pakistani routes.




Local officials and analysts say the militants want to show they can control the north and take over the supplies. Taliban militants hijacked two fuel trucks on the highway on Sept. 4, and German forces in Kunduz called in an airstrike by U.S. fighter pilots, saying they feared the trucks could be used in suicide bombings. Thirty civilians and 69 armed Taliban died in the strike, according to a probe by an Afghan presidential commission.




"The mere fact that the trucks were hijacked, the mere fact that we had this level of challenge to the government's control and sovereignty to me shows we need an effort here," U.S. Gen. Stanley McChrystal said in a recent news conference.




Kunduz was among the last Taliban strongholds during the 2001 U.S. invasion that drove the Islamic government from power, and _ until this year _ had been relatively peaceful, despite a largely Pashtun population sympathetic to the militants. That began to change after the Taliban solidified control in the south as U.S. supply lines from Pakistan came under increasing attack.




The U.S. looked to Afghanistan's north for alternatives. So did militants.




The more than 200-mile (300 kilometer) highway from Kunduz down to the Kabul area is one of four overland lifelines for the supplies that enter Afghanistan every day. By Afghan standards the road is good, but the highway is punctuated every few miles by stretches that are nothing more than rough rock and passes under towering mountains through a crumbling tunnel that is often flooded and barely paved.




Navy Capt. Carl Weiss, of the U.S. Transportation Command, which handles the logistics of supplying American troops, said the northern route, which also includes a train line from Uzbekistan, supplies about 300 containers a week to coalition forces.




"We move the cargo in plain sight. Our containers look like every other container on the road," Weiss said. Because they are unmarked and the U.S. contracts with local transportation companies, he said, they don't draw particular attention.




aul Quinn-Judge, Central Asian project director for International Crisis Group, suggested the U.S. reliance on the northern route may be a miscalculation.




"I think they are overly sanguine about the amount they can push through Central Asia and you really hope that they're doing some planning. This is one of those situations where things could conceivably go bad very fast," he said.




Meanwhile, Quinn-Judge said, the newly paved highway and bridge leading into Central Asia essentially means "the jihadists' own route has been reopened."




Abdul Razaq Yaqoubi, the Kunduz police chief, said the convoys have made a tenuous situation worse. The Americans, he complained, tell no one when the trucks are coming through or how many to expect and the police forces are understaffed.




In Baghlan, Zalmay Mangal, the province's deputy police chief, said violence worsened right around the same time that the supplies started moving through in large numbers. He does not blame the convoys, but he and the Kunduz police chief said the truck traffic is a tempting target.




"One of the main reasons (for the new insecurity) is the NATO and coalition supply convoys," said Yaqoubi. The other reasons, he added, are poverty and anger at the government.




Mangal said more coalition troops could help; McChrystal and the Germans prefer to emphasize building up local Afghan forces.




"The enemy is not afraid of us," Mangal said of his police force. "They are afraid of our international allies."



Associated Press writers Rahim Faiez and Frank Jordans contributed to this report.

US Plans Will Lead To A Pakistani Civil War


A pro-US fifth column inside Pakistan is now talking about southern Punjab as the hub of Al-Qaeda just as it earlier pointed to Balochistan in the same manner. For those who had failed to connect the dots to the US grand design of targeting Pakistan a year ago, it should be easier today. There are covert US operatives now spread across the length and breadth of Pakistan; drone attacks have increased in frequency since Obama took office; aid packages are demanding unacceptable conditions; the military is being pushed on all fronts, with India increasing its deployments along the western border with Pakistan and aiding low intensity conflict through Afghanistan.





By THE NATION


ISLAMABAD, Pakistan-The US design to destabilize Pakistan is becoming clearer by the day, even for the most blinkered Pakistani.


As the US continues to be stalemated in Afghanistan, it has sought to move the centre of gravity of the "war on terror" to Pakistan. Initially it was assumed that this shift would be restricted to FATA, but now it is evident that the US is seeking to engulf the whole of Pakistan in an asymmetric conflict, which will eventually pit the people against the state, especially the military.


Reports of a US plan to target Balochistan, including its capital city Quetta are, in all likelihood, correct - more so because the US has not issued even a half-hearted denial on this count.


Pakistani officials are admitting that the US has sought to extend drone attacks to Balochistan, especially Quetta. Given the present government's proclivity to accede to all US demands, it should not come as a surprise to soon see these drone attacks taking place.





However, for Pakistan such a development will be suicidal, given the prevailing instability in Balochistan and the continuing lack of trust between the Pakistani Baloch people and the Pakistani federation. Worse still, Quetta is an urban centre with a concentration of population. It is also a major military station with the Command and Staff College as well as other formations present in the heart of the city.


How far is our military prepared to accommodate the US desire to undermine the country's sovereignty?


After all, the drones will push the separatists closer to their goal, while the US will think it can move towards its concept of Greater Balochistan through the breakup of Pakistan and Iran.


Unfortunately for the US, the Iranian leadership shows no signs of falling prey to such US designs, unlike their Pakistani counterparts.


Again, if today drones are allowed to target an expanded area of the country, what will stop the US from expanding into southern Punjab next? With receding red lines, the whole country could be up for targeting by the US in its growing despair over the inevitable failure in Afghanistan.


There are many fifth columnists in our midst now talking of southern Punjab as the hub of Al-Qaeda just as earlier they pointed to Balochistan in the same manner. For those who had failed to connect the dots to the US grand design of targeting Pakistan a year ago, it should be easier today. There are covert US operatives now spread across the length and breadth of Pakistan; drone attacks have increased in frequency since Obama took office; aid packages are demanding unacceptable conditionalities; the military is being pushed on all fronts, with India increasing its deployments along the western border with Pakistan and aiding low intensity conflict through Afghanistan, and the US demanding we withdraw more troops from the eastern border to FATA and begin a premature conventional operation there; and the US-dominated IMF and World Bank pushing through threatening price hikes and taking charge of policy making in Balochistan and NWFP.


This editorial appeared today under the title, US War On Pakistan.

Nkorea promises UN to combat nuclear proliferation

UNITED NATIONS - North Korea's atomic weapons were for deterrent purposes only and will be handled "in a responsible manner" to ensure there was no nuclear proliferation, a senior official said on Monday.




But in a speech to the U.N. General Assembly, Vice Foreign Minister Pak Kil-yon said the Korean peninsula could only be denuclearized if the United States abandoned a policy of "confrontation" with Pyongyang.




Pak's speech came less than four weeks after the isolated communist state said it was in the final stage of enriching uranium, a process that would give it a second path to making a nuclear weapon. Hitherto it has mostly used plutonium.




In May, North Korea conducted a second nuclear test. Before that, U.S. officials said it had produced about 50 kg (110 pounds) of plutonium, which experts say would be enough for six to eight weapons.




North Korea has not shown, however, that it has a working nuclear bomb.




Charging that Washington had made nuclear threats against North Korea, Pak said Pyongyang had concluded it had no choice but to "rely on our dependable nuclear possession to ensure nuclear balance of the region."




But, he said, "The mission of our nuclear weapon is to deter a war. We will only possess nuclear deterrent to such an extent as to deter military attack and its threat against our country."




North Korea, he said, "while in possession of nuclear weapons, will act in a responsible manner in management, use and non-proliferation of nuclear weapons as well as in nuclear disarmament."




North Korea joined the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty in 1985 but left in 2003 after the United States confronted it with evidence Washington said pointed to a covert uranium enrichment program. The United States suspects the impoverished North has sought to sell its nuclear know-how abroad.




Pak said Pyongyang had always sought denuclearization of the Korean peninsula, but for that, "the U.S. administration must discard (its) old concept of confrontation and show the 'change' in practice, as it recently stated on several occasions."




The minister said it was North Korea's policy to react to dialogue with dialogue but he made no direct reference to nuclear talks among the two Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and the United States, which halted about a year ago.




China said on Monday its prime minister, Wen Jiabao, would visit North Korea next week, raising speculation the trip could help revive the stalled talks.




Pak launched a stinging attack on the U.N. Security Council, which approved expanded sanctions in June against North Korea after its nuclear test. He said the 15-nation body had "become more arrogant, resulting in further inequality and prevalent double standards in international relations."




Pak proposed that Security Council decisions should be submitted to the 192-nation General Assembly for approval. (Editing by Philip Barbara)



© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved

A new cold war in Kashmir

By Arundhati Roy




While we're still arguing about whether there's life after death, can we add another question to the cart? Is there life after democracy? What sort of life will it be? By "democracy" I don't mean democracy as an ideal or an aspiration. I mean the working model: Western liberal democracy, and its variants, such as they are.




So, is there life after democracy?




Attempts to answer this question often turn into a comparison of different systems of governance, and end with a somewhat prickly, combative defense of democracy. It's flawed, we say. It isn't perfect, but it's better than everything else that's on offer. Inevitably, someone in the room will say: "Afghanistan, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia , Somalia ... is that what you would prefer?"




Whether democracy should be the utopia that all "developing" societies aspire to is a separate question altogether. (I think it should. The early , idealistic phase can be quite heady.) The question about life after democracy is addressed to those of us who already live in democracies, or in countries that pretend to be democracies. It isn't meant to suggest that we lapse into older, discredited models of totalitarian or authoritarian governance. It's meant to suggest that the system of representative democracy - too much representation, too little democracy - needs some structural adjustment .




The question here, really, is what have we done to democracy ? What have we turned it into? What happens once democracy has been used up? When it has been hollowed out and emptied of meaning? What happens when each of its institutions has metastasized into something dangerous? What happens now that democracy and the free market have fused into a single predatory organism with a thin, constricted imagination that revolves almost entirely around the idea of maximizing profit?




Is it possible to reverse this process? Can something that has mutated go back to being what it used to be? What we need today, for the sake of the survival of this planet, is long-term vision. Can governments whose very survival depends on immediate, extractive, short-term gain provide this? Could it be that democracy , the sacred answer to our short-term hopes and prayers, the protector of our individual freedoms and nurturer of our avaricious dreams, will turn out to be the endgame for the human race? Could it be that democracy is such a hit with modern humans precisely because it mirrors our greatest folly - our nearsightedness?




Our inability to live entirely in the present (like most animals do), combined with our inability to see very far into the future, makes us strange in-between creatures, neither beast nor prophet. Our amazing intelligence seems to have outstripped our instinct for survival. We plunder the earth hoping that accumulating material surplus will make up for the profound, unfathomable thing that we have lost. It would be conceit to pretend I have the answers to any of these questions. But it does look as if the beacon could be failing and democracy can perhaps no longer be relied upon to deliver the justice and stability we once dreamed it would.




A clerk of resistance




As a writer, a fiction writer, I have often wondered whether the attempt to always be precise, to try and get it all factually right, somehow reduces the epic scale of what is really going on. Does it eventually mask a larger truth? I worry that I am allowing myself to be railroaded into offering prosaic, factual precision when maybe what we need is a feral howl, or the transformative power and real precision of poetry.




Something about the cunning, Brahmanical, intricate, bureaucratic, file-bound, "apply-through-proper-channels" nature of governance and subjugation in India seems to have made a clerk out of me. My only excuse is to say that it takes odd tools to uncover the maze of subterfuge and hypocrisy that cloaks the callousness and the cold, calculated violence of the world's favorite new superpower. Repression "through proper channels" sometimes engenders resistance "through proper channels." As resistance goes this isn't enough, I know. But for now, it's all I have. Perhaps someday it will become the underpinning for poetry and for the feral howl.




Today, words like "progress" and "development" have become interchangeable with economic "reforms," "deregulation," and "privatization". Freedom has come to mean choice. It has less to do with the human spirit than with different brands of deodorant. Market no longer means a place where you buy provisions. The "market" is a de-territorialized space where faceless corporations do business, including buying and selling "futures". Justice has come to mean human rights (and of those, as they say, "a few will do").




This theft of language, this technique of usurping words and deploying them like weapons, of using them to mask intent and to mean exactly the opposite of what they have traditionally meant, has been one of the most brilliant strategic victories of the czars of the new dispensation. It has allowed them to marginalize their detractors, deprive them of a language to voice their critique and dismiss them as being "anti-progress," "anti-development", "anti-reform", and of course "anti-national" - negativists of the worst sort.




Talk about saving a river or protecting a forest and they say, "Don't you believe in progress?" To people whose land is being submerged by dam reservoirs, and whose homes are being bulldozed, they say, "Do you have an alternative development model?" To those who believe that a government is duty bound to provide people with basic education, health care, and social security, they say, "You're against the market." And who except a cretin could be against markets?




To reclaim these stolen words requires explanations that are too tedious for a world with a short attention span , and too expensive in an era when free speech has become unaffordable for the poor. This language heist may prove to be the keystone of our undoing.




Two decades of "progress" in India has created a vast middle class punch-drunk on sudden wealth and the sudden respect that comes with it - and a much, much vaster, desperate underclass. Tens of millions of people have been dispossessed and displaced from their land by floods, droughts, and desertification caused by indiscriminate environmental engineering and massive infrastructural projects, dams, mines and special economic zones. All developed in the name of the poor, but really meant to service the rising demands of the new aristocracy.




The hoary institutions of Indian democracy - the judiciary, the police, the "free" press, and, of course, elections - far from working as a system of checks and balances, quite often do the opposite. They provide each other cover to promote the larger interests of union and progress. In the process, they generate such confusion, such a cacophony, that voices raised in warning just become part of the noise. And that only helps to enhance the image of the tolerant, lumbering, colorful, somewhat chaotic democracy . The chaos is real. But so is the consensus.




A new cold war in Kashmir




Speaking of consensus, there's the small and ever-present matter of Kashmir. When it comes to Kashmir the consensus in India is hard core. It cuts across every section of the establishment - including the media, the bureaucracy, the intelligentsia, and even Bollywood.




The war in the Kashmir Valley is almost 20-years old now, and has claimed about 70,000 lives. Tens of thousands have been tortured, several thousand have "disappeared", women have been raped, tens of thousands widowed. Half a million Indian troops patrol the Kashmir Valley, making it the most militarized zone in the world. (The United States had about 165,000 active-duty troops in Iraq at the height of its occupation.) The Indian army now claims that it has, for the most part, crushed militancy in Kashmir. Perhaps that's true. But does military domination mean victory?




How does a government that claims to be a democracy justify a military occupation? By holding regular elections, of course. Elections in Kashmir have had a long and fascinating past. The blatantly rigged state election of 1987 was the immediate provocation for the armed uprising that began in 1990. Since then elections have become a finely honed instrument of the military occupation, a sinister playground for India's deep state. Intelligence agencies have created political parties and decoy politicians, they have constructed and destroyed political careers at will. It is they more than anyone else who decide what the outcome of each election will be. After every election, the Indian establishment declares that India has won a popular mandate from the people of Kashmir.




In the summer of 2008, a dispute over land being allotted to the Amarnath Shrine Board coalesced into a massive, non-violent uprising. Day after day, hundreds of thousands of people defied soldiers and policemen - who fired straight into the crowds, killing scores of people - and thronged the streets. From early morning to late in the night, the city reverberated to chants of "Azadi! Azadi!" (Freedom! Freedom!). Fruit sellers weighed fruit chanting "Azadi! Azadi!" Shopkeepers, doctors, houseboat owners, guides, weavers, carpet sellers - everybody was out with placards, everybody shouted "Azadi! Azadi!" The protests went on for several days.


The protests were massive. They were democratic, and they were non-violent. For the first time in decades, fissures appeared in mainstream public opinion in India. The Indian state panicked. Unsure of how to deal with this mass civil disobedience, it ordered a crackdown. It enforced the harshest curfew in recent memory with shoot-on-sight orders. In effect, for days on end, it virtually caged millions of people. The major pro-freedom leaders were placed under house arrest, several others were jailed. House-to-house searches culminated in the arrests of hundreds of people.




Once the rebellion was brought under control, the government did something extraordinary - it announced elections in the state. Pro-independence leaders called for a boycott. They were re-arrested. Almost everybody believed the elections would become a huge embarrassment for the Indian government. The security establishment convulsed with paranoia. Its elaborate network of spies, renegades, and embedded journalists began to buzz with renewed energy. No chances were taken. (Even I, who had nothing to do with any of what was going on, was put under house arrest in Srinagar for two days.)




Calling for elections was a huge risk. But the gamble paid off. People turned out to vote in droves. It was the biggest voter turnout since the armed struggle began. It helped that the polls were scheduled so that the first districts to vote were the most militarized districts even within the Kashmir Valley.




None of India's analysts, journalists, and psephologists cared to ask why people who had only weeks ago risked everything, including bullets and shoot-on-sight orders, should have suddenly changed their minds. None of the high-profile scholars of the great festival of democracy - who practically live in television studios when there are elections in mainland India, picking apart every forecast and exit poll and every minor percentile swing in the vote count - talked about what elections mean in the presence of such a massive, year-round troop deployment (one armed soldier for every 20 civilians).




No one speculated about the mystery of hundreds of unknown candidates who materialized out of nowhere to represent political parties that had no previous presence in the Kashmir Valley. Where had they come from? Who was financing them? No one was curious. No one spoke about the curfew, the mass arrests, the lockdown of constituencies that were going to the polls.




Not many talked about the fact that campaigning politicians went out of their way to de-link Azadi and the Kashmir dispute from elections , which they insisted were only about municipal issues - roads, water, electricity. No one talked about why people who have lived under a military occupation for decades - where soldiers could barge into homes and whisk away people at any time of the day or night - might need someone to listen to them, to take up their cases, to represent them.




The minute elections were over, the establishment and the mainstream press declared victory (for India) once again. The most worrying fallout was that in Kashmir , people began to parrot their colonizers' view of themselves as a somewhat pathetic people who deserved what they got. "Never trust a Kashmiri," several Kashmiris said to me. "We're fickle and unreliable." Psychological warfare, technically known as psy-ops, has been an instrument of official policy in Kashmir . Its depredations over decades - its attempt to destroy people's self-esteem - are arguably the worst aspect of the occupation. It's enough to make you wonder whether there is any connection at all between elections and democracy.




The trouble is that Kashmir sits on the fault lines of a region that is awash in weapons and sliding into chaos. The Kashmiri freedom struggle, with its crystal clear sentiment but fuzzy outlines, is caught in the vortex of several dangerous and conflicting ideologies - Indian nationalism (corporate as well as "Hindu," shading into imperialism), Pakistani nationalism (breaking down under the burden of its own contradictions), US imperialism (made impatient by a tanking economy), and a resurgent medieval-Islamist Taliban (fast gaining legitimacy, despite its insane brutality, because it is seen to be resisting an occupation).




Each of these ideologies is capable of a ruthlessness that can range from genocide to nuclear war. Add Chinese imperial ambitions, an aggressive, reincarnated Russia, and the huge reserves of natural gas in the Caspian region and persistent whispers about natural gas, oil, and uranium reserves in Kashmir and Ladakh, and you have the recipe for a new cold war (which, like the last one, is cold for some and hot for others).




In the midst of all this, Kashmir is set to become the conduit through which the mayhem unfolding in Afghanistan and Pakistan spills into India, where it will find purchase in the anger of the young among India's 150 million Muslims who have been brutalized, humiliated and marginalized. Notice has been given by the series of terrorist strikes that culminated in the Mumbai attacks of 2008.




There is no doubt that the Kashmir dispute ranks right up there, along with Palestine, as one of the oldest, most intractable disputes in the world. That does not mean that it cannot be resolved. Only that the solution will not be completely to the satisfaction of any one party, one country, or one ideology. Negotiators will have to be prepared to deviate from the "party line."




Of course, we haven't yet reached the stage where the government of India is even prepared to admit that there's a problem, let alone negotiate a solution. Right now it has no reason to. Internationally, its stocks are soaring. And while its neighbors deal with bloodshed, civil war, concentration camps, refugees, and army mutinies, India has just concluded a beautiful election. However, "demon-crazy" can't fool all the people all the time. India's temporary, shotgun solutions to the unrest in Kashmir (pardon the pun), have magnified the problem and driven it deep into a place where it is poisoning the aquifers.




Is democracy melting?





Perhaps the story of the Siachen Glacier, the highest battlefield in the world, is the most appropriate metaphor for the insanity of our times. Thousands of Indian and Pakistani soldiers have been deployed there, enduring chill winds and temperatures that dip to minus 40 degrees Celsius. Of the hundreds who have died there, many have died just from the elements.




The glacier has become a garbage dump now, littered with the detritus of war - thousands of empty artillery shells, empty fuel drums, ice axes , old boots, tents, and every other kind of waste that thousands of warring human beings generate. The garbage remains intact, perfectly preserved at those icy temperatures, a pristine monument to human folly.




While the Indian and Pakistani governments spend billions of dollars on weapons and the logistics of high-altitude warfare, the battlefield has begun to melt. Right now, it has shrunk to about half its size. The melting has less to do with the military standoff than with people far away, on the other side of the world, living the good life . They're good people who believe in peace, free speech, and in human rights. They live in thriving democracies whose governments sit on the United Nations Security Council and whose economies depend heavily on the export of war and the sale of weapons to countries like India and Pakistan. (And Rwanda, Sudan, Somalia, the Republic of Congo, Iraq, Afghanistan ... it's a long list.)




The glacial melt will cause severe floods on the subcontinent, and eventually severe drought that will affect the lives of millions of people . That will give us even more reasons to fight. We'll need more weapons. Who knows? That sort of consumer confidence may be just what the world needs to get over the current recession. Then everyone in the thriving democracies will have an even better life - and the glaciers will melt even faster.





Arundhati Roy was born in 1959 in Shillong, India. She studied architecture in New Delhi, where she now lives. She has worked as a film designer and screenplay writer in India. Roy is the author of the novel The God of Small Things,
for which she received the 1997 Booker Prize. Her new book, just published by Haymarket Books, is Field Notes on Democracy: Listening to Grasshoppers. This post is adapted from the introduction to that book.

US urges Israel to probe Gaza crimes to boost peace



Stephanie Nebehay






GENEVA: The United States called on its close ally Israel Tuesday to conduct credible investigations into allegations of war crimes committed by its forces in Gaza, saying it would help the Middle East peace process. Michael Posner, US Assistant Secretary of State, said that Hamas leaders also had a responsibility to investigate crimes and to end what he called its targeting of civilians in Israel and use of Palestinians as human shields.


The UN Human Rights Council held a one-day debate on a report issued this month by Richard Goldstone, a South African jurist and former UN war crimes prosecutor.


His panel found the Israeli army and Palestinian militants committed war crimes and possibly crimes against humanity during their December-January war. Israel did not cooperate with the UN inquiry and has rejected the report as biased.


"We encourage Israel to utilize appropriate domestic [judicial] review and meaningful accountability mechanisms to investigate and follow up on credible allegations," Posner said during a speech to the Geneva forum.


"If undertaken properly and fairly, these reviews can serve as important confidence-building measures that will support the larger essential objective which is a shared quest for justice and lasting peace," he said.


But he also said Goldstone's report was "deeply flawed," without providing any details. Washington disagreed with the report's "methodology and many of its recommendations," he said.


He added that the Council paid "grossly disproportionate attention" to Israel, but said that the United States delegation was ready to engage in balanced debate.


Goldstone told a news conference it was encouraging that the United States "has called for acceptable investigations of the allegations by both sides. I think that's important support."


"We believe deeply in the rule of law, humanitarian law, human rights and the principle that in armed conflict civilians should to the greatest extent possible be protected from harm," Goldstone told the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva that commissioned the report.


Earlier, he said a lack of accountability for war crimes committed in the Middle East had reached "crisis point," undermining any hope for peace in the region.


Israeli human rights group B'Tselem says 773 of 1,387 Palestinians killed were civilians. Israel says 709 combatants and 295 civilians were killed. But Israel includes policemen, who are legally viewed as non-combatants, in its militant death toll. Thirteen Israelis, 10 soldiers and three civilians, died.


Goldstone's report urges the UN Security Council to refer the allegations to the International Criminal Court in the Hague if either Israeli or Palestinian authorities fail to investigate and prosecute those suspect of such crimes within six months.


"International courts are courts of last resort, not first resort," he said on Tuesday.


UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said that the Council had a duty to follow up on Goldstone's recommendations in the interest of all victims. In a speech, she also decried the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Gaza.


Later this week, the Council is due to consider a resolution presented by Arab and Islamic countries condemning Israel's failure to cooperate and calling on all parties to implement the report's recommendations. A vote is expected on Friday.


Israel's ambassador Leshno Yaar rejected the report as "shameful" and "one-sided." Israel had opened more than 100 investigations, 23 of which had led to criminal proceedings.





Lawyers want Barak arrested in UK over Gaza war



LONDON: Lawyers have asked a British court to issue an arrest warrant for Israeli defense chief Ehud Barak, who is in the country to meet with Prime Minister Gordon Brown and other officials.


Tayab Ali, one of several lawyers representing a coalition of Palestinian groups, said papers his group filed in the City of Westminster Magistrates Court accuse the Israeli defense minister of violating the Geneva Conventions and committing war crimes while directing the Israeli offensive against the Gaza Strip that began late last year.


"We think anybody suspected of war crimes should be brought to justice," said Ali.


He added that it was possible a hearing would be held on the request late Tuesday afternoon or Wednesday morning, adding that allegations are "narrowly focused" on Barak's actions as defense minister and do not deal with his earlier tenure as Israel's prime minister.


Israeli officials said that Barak, who is in Britain to speak to the Labor Friends of Israel group at the ruling Labor Party's conference in the English seaside city of Brighton, would not change his plans or curtail his trip because of the attempt to have him arrested.


Barak's office said he would have immunity from arrest due to his status as a senior minister, and Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said the bid to have Barak arrested had no merit.


"We haven't had the time to see all the details of the suit, but apparently this is a typical case of legal ha­rassment," Palmor said. "It is based on nothing but bad will and political propaganda, maybe some newspaper clippings, nothing more. We have seen these cases of legal ha­rassment in other countries and they have all had the treatment they deserved and we believe this time also this will not be taken further than today's headlines." - AP

OIC panel calls for early settlement of Kashmir dispute


By Iftikhar Ali


UNITED NATIONS, Sept 29 (APP): A ministerial-level panel of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) on Monday adopted a declaration expressing regret that India had put a "pause" on the dialogue with Pakistan as it called for an early resolution of the Kashmir dispute. The OIC Contact Group, which met on the sidelines of the 64th session of U.N. General Assembly on Monday, welcomed the July meeting between prime ministers of India and Pakistan in Sharm-el-Sheikh, saying that dialogue between the two neighbours was the only way forward.


In this regard, the declaration took note of India's statement after the Sharm-el-Sheikh meeting that it was ready to discuss all issues with Pakistan, including Jammu and Kashmir.




The declaration, which was unanimously adopted, called for a peaceful settlement of the Kashmir dispute "in accordance with UN resolutions and as agreed upon in the 1972 Simla Agreement". The Contact Group met under the chairmanship of OIC secretary-general Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu for an annual review of the development relating to the decades-old dispute Kashmir dispute. Opening the meeting, the OIC secretary-General expressed the organization's solidarity with the Kashmiri people and hoped that the peace process between India and Pakistan would resume soon and become result-oriented.


Attending the meeting, held in a U.N. conference room, were Turkish foreign minister Ahmet Davutoglu and ambassadors of Saudi Arabia and Niger, representing their respective foreign ministers. The Pakistan delegation was led by Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, who underscored the imperative of a meaningful and result-oriented dialogue to amicably resolve the Kashmir dispute. "We believe that a settlement of this long festering dispute can help establish durable peace in the region," he said in a speech before the adoption of the declaration. "It can also open numerous vistas of mutually beneficial cooperation between Pakistan and India".


Representatives of the Kashmiri people, from both the Indian-Occupied Kashmir and Azad Kashmir-APHC Chairman Mirwaiz Umar Farooq and Azad Kashmir Prime Minister Sardar Muhammad Yaqoob Khan, respectively, also participated in the meeting. In addition, Dr. Ghulam Nabi Fai, executive director of the Kashmiri-American Council, was present.


Recalling previous OIC and relevant U.N. resolutions, the Contact Group urged India and Pakistan to "expeditiously resolve all outstanding issues, including the core issue of Jammu and Kashmir." The declaration referred to the murder in May of two Kashmiri women in Shopian and condemned all human rights violations being committed against the people of Kashmir. It called on India to put an end to the suffering of Kashmiri people by repealing the "draconian laws" imposed in Kashmir.


The declaration also urged the international community to take "effective steps" for safeguarding the rights of Kashmiri people, including the right to self-determination. It asked India to allow an OIC fact-finding mission in Indian-occupied Kashmir, and to cooperate with Pakistan, the U.N. and the international community and to to accept the strengthening of UNMOGIP, the U.N. observer force monitoring the Line of Control in the disputed state. In his opening remarks, OIC Secretary General Ihsanoglu reiterated OIC's continued support to the Kashmiri people in their struggle to achieve their right to self-determination. Addressing the Contact Group, the Pakistan foreign minister said even after the passage of sixty years, the Kashmiri people continue to demand their basic right to self-determination promised to them by the international community. "For years, Pakistan, OIC, and the international community, have expressed concern on the consistent violation of human rights of the Kashmiri people," Qureshi said. "Unfortunately, the Indian security forces have shown little regard for these expressions of concern.


The violations which are a direct result of massive presence of Indian security forces in Indian occupied Kashmir, continue". Last year's indigenous uprising ignited by the Amarnath Shrine land issue had added another sad chapter to the sufferings of the Kashmiri people, the Pakistani foreign minister said.


"The Kashmiris were subjected to prolonged economic blockade. Their lives and properties were attacked. Many Kashmiris were martyred including Sheikh Abdul Aziz, a prominent Hurriyat leader. "These events are a reflection of the indigenous struggle of the Kashmiri people for "Azadi"." The Government and the people of Pakistan, he said, have stood by their Kashmiri brethren. "As in the past, we condemn the use of force and demand respect for human rights of the people of Kashmir". Davutoglu, the Turkish foreign minister, reaffirmed his country's support for the Kashmiri people's struggle and expressed solidarity with them. He urged the international community to help bring about a lasting settlement of the Kashmir dispute. The minister also called for improvement in the human rights conditions of the Kashmiri people and an end to their sufferings.


Ambassadors of Saudi Arabia and Niger also voiced solidarity with the Kashmiri people and called for steps to bring about a durable settlement of the Kashmir dispute. Mirwaiz Farooq gave an extensive background to the Kashmir dispute and enumerated in detail the atrocities committed by Indian security forces, saying more than 100,000 innocent civilians have been killed in the past 20 years. In resolving the Kashmir issue, he said time was of essence and would require a continuation of Kashmiri representation in a more desirable tripartite format. "Kashmiri involvement in the talks can and will be the key to finding a lasting solution of the dispute".


The APHC chairman called for the demilitarization of the state as the first step towards reducing Indian and Pakistani forces; allowing Kashmiris to freely express their views; release of all political prisoners; repealing of draconian laws; withdrawal of troops from urban areas and city centres; dismantling bunkers, and allowing Kashmiri political leaders to travel abroad. "Our endeavour to resolve the Kashmir issue is not just a quest for peace for the people, we cannot overlook that South Asia is a region that is expanding, growing and becoming more and more a major player and competitor in international markets," Farooq said. "While we are not opposed to India's unprecedented growth, we want India to allow Kashmir to grow and prosper as well." Azad Kashmir Prime Minister Sardar Muhammad Yaqoob Khan also made a strong case for the Kashmiri people's right to self-determination.


"The international community, particularlly OIC countries, must impress on India to immediately repeal its repressive laws and put an end to the gross human rights violations against the innocent Kashmiris." "We have shown the required resolve and steadfastness in the course of our struggle. It is our belief that the sufferings and enormous sacrifices made by the Kashmiri people will be ultimately rewarded."


Access to EU markets key to helping Pakistan: Zardari


Daily Times




* Pakistan looking forward to increased cooperation with Italy


* Italian businessmen say interested in investing in Pakistan





ROME: President Asif Ali Zardari on Tuesday called for enhanced access to the European Union markets, saying it would strengthen Pakistan's economy.




During his meeting with Italian President Giorgio Napolitano at the presidential palace in Rome, President Zardari said Europe should weigh the impact of militancy on a nation while considering giving access to its markets.




Briefing reporters on the meeting, the president's spokesman Farhatullah Babar said increased cooperation with Italy in agriculture, edible oil and leather sectors, export of semi-skilled and unskilled manpower and technology for mining and shaping marble were also discussed.




President Zardari said Pakistan looked forward to increased cooperation with Italy in these sectors.




Support: The president thanked Italy for supporting Pakistan in the European Union on the enhanced market access on the issues of the Generalised System of Preferences Plus scheme and free trade agreements.




On the fight against the Taliban, Zardari recalled how the Taliban had been created decades ago as the result of a deliberate policy to engage religious fanaticism for the achievement of certain strategic objectives.




Investors: Also on Tuesday, leading Italian business executives and industrialists expressed keen interest in investing in various sectors of Pakistan's economy, including agriculture, transport, oil and gas, textile and infrastructure.




Chairing 'Investment Colloquium', President Asif Zardari said Pakistan was the hub of future economic ventures with several untapped potentials, which provided tremendous opportunity for foreign investment. app

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Blackwater's Black Shadow


Ghalib Sultan


Much water-most of it black-has flowed under the bridge ever since the Pakistani media started educating their viewers on the mercenary contractor Blackwater and its many clones. By now it is clear that the US relies on contractors like Haliburton, Blackwater, Xe International and others to provide 'security' and 'training' services that include intelligence, surveillance, target identification and illumination, use of weapons, explosives, extraction operations, subversion, sabotage and elimination of selected personnel. It is also clear that mercenaries of all nationalities are hired and 'host' country organizations and personnel are used to give an acceptable 'face' to the broad range of activities by these 'specialists'. Most of this information has been culled from US sources where there is domestic concern stemming from ethical and financial concerns. There is confirmation of some stories by the media like hiring of hundreds of houses in Islamabad and special security measures as well as involvement of local firms like Inter Risk that now stands exposed for illegal activities but there is no clear statement from the government backed by statistics and proof. Till that happens there will continue to be speculation based on misinformation.


If, as is being made out, there has been clandestine penetration of Pakistan and the departments responsible are silent for some reason then the question is being asked that -- who will confront these elements and force them to leave? The answer is not hard to guess but the result will be chaos and that is leading to the next question that-- is internal chaos the environment required to do what these people are in Pakistan to do? The fact that there is also confirmation of massive embassy and consulates' expansion plans adds fuel to the speculation about motives and intentions. Again a factual report by the government would clear the air---in the absence of such a report questions will continue to be asked and debated in the media.



Read Complete Article : http://why-who-where-when.newsvine.com/_news/2009/09/29/3328177-blackwaters-black-shadow-

Mistake to set date for Afghanistan exit, says Robert Gates


Daniel Nasaw in Washington







Robert Gates, US secretary of defence. Photograph: Susan Walsh/AP


The US secretary of defence, Robert Gates, has revealed that President Barack Obama's re-evaluation of US strategy in Afghanistan could take several more weeks. Gates denied there was a rift between the civilian and military leadership over the course of action in the conflict and rejected calls from the president's liberal allies for a timetable for withdrawal from Afghanistan.


"The notion of timelines and exit strategies and so on would all be a strategic mistake," he said today on CNN's State of the Union programme. "Taliban and al-Qaida, as far as they're concerned, defeated one superpower. For them to be seen to defeat a second would have catastrophic consequences in terms of energising the extremist movement."


He said he had received a request for more troops from General Stanley McChrystal, Nato's commander in Afghanistan, but had not passed it on to Obama. "I'm going to sit on it until I think - or the president thinks - it's appropriate to bring that into the discussion of the national security principles," he said on ABC's Face the Nation programme.


Asked whether Obama's call for a strategic review at the same time as McChrystal requests more troops amounts to a rift between the political leadership and the generals, Gates said no. "McChrystal was explicit in saying he thinks this assessment is exactly the right thing to do."


Insurgent attacks and a storm killed six Nato troops at the weekend. A soldier from 2nd Battalion The Royal Welsh died after an explosion in southern Afghanistan; one US soldier was killed by a roadside bomb and another in an insurgent strike; and three French soldiers died during bad weather in north-eastern Afghanistan.

The New Sputnik

By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN


Most people would assume that 20 years from now when historians look back at 2008-09, they will conclude that the most important thing to happen in this period was the Great Recession. I'd hold off on that. If we can continue stumbling out of this economic crisis, I believe future historians may well conclude that the most important thing to happen in the last 18 months was that Red China decided to become Green China.


Yes, China's leaders have decided to go green - out of necessity because too many of their people can't breathe, can't swim, can't fish, can't farm and can't drink thanks to pollution from its coal- and oil-based manufacturing growth engine. And, therefore, unless China powers its development with cleaner energy systems, and more knowledge-intensive businesses without smokestacks, China will die of its own development.


What do we know about necessity? It is the mother of invention. And when China decides it has to go green out of necessity, watch out. You will not just be buying your toys from China. You will buy your next electric car, solar panels, batteries and energy-efficiency software from China.


I believe this Chinese decision to go green is the 21st-century equivalent of the Soviet Union's 1957 launch of Sputnik - the world's first Earth-orbiting satellite. That launch stunned us, convinced President Eisenhower that the U.S. was falling behind in missile technology and spurred America to make massive investments in science, education, infrastructure and networking - one eventual byproduct of which was the Internet.


Well, folks. Sputnik just went up again: China's going clean-tech. The view of China in the U.S. Congress - that China is going to try to leapfrog us by out-polluting us - is out of date. It's going to try to out-green us. Right now, China is focused on low-cost manufacturing of solar, wind and batteries and building the world's biggest market for these products. It still badly lags U.S. innovation. But research will follow the market. America's premier solar equipment maker, Applied Materials, is about to open the world's largest privately funded solar research facility - in Xian, China.


"If they invest in 21st-century technologies and we invest in 20th-century technologies, they'll win," says David Sandalow, the assistant secretary of energy for policy. "If we both invest in 21st-century technologies, challenging each other, we all win."


Unfortunately, we're still not racing. It's like Sputnik went up and we think it's just a shooting star. Instead of a strategic response, too many of our politicians are still trapped in their own dumb-as-we-wanna-be bubble, where we're always No. 1, and where the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, having sold its soul to the old coal and oil industries, uses its influence to prevent Congress from passing legislation to really spur renewables. Hat's off to the courageous chairman of Pacific Gas and Electric, Peter Darbee, who last week announced that his huge California power company was quitting the chamber because of its "obstructionist tactics." All shareholders in America should ask their C.E.O.'s why they still belong to the chamber.


China's leaders, mostly engineers, wasted little time debating global warming. They know the Tibetan glaciers that feed their major rivers are melting. But they also know that even if climate change were a hoax, the demand for clean, renewable power is going to soar as we add an estimated 2.5 billion people to the planet by 2050, many of whom will want to live high-energy lifestyles. In that world, E.T. - or energy technology - will be as big as I.T., and China intends to be a big E.T. player.


"For the last three years, the U.S. has led the world in new wind generation," said the ecologist Lester Brown, author of "Plan B 4.0." "By the end of this year, China will bypass us on new wind generation so fast we won't even see it go by."


I met this week with Shi Zhengrong, the founder of Suntech, already the world's largest manufacturer of solar panels. Shi recalled how, shortly after he started his company in Wuxi, nearby Lake Tai, China's third-largest freshwater lake, choked to death from pollution.


"After this disaster," explained Shi, "the party secretary of Wuxi city came to me and said, 'I want to support you to grow this solar business into a $15 billion industry, so then we can shut down as many polluting and energy consuming companies in the region as soon as possible.' He is one of a group of young Chinese leaders, very innovative and very revolutionary, on this issue. Something has changed. China realized it has no capacity to absorb all this waste. We have to grow without pollution."


Of course, China will continue to grow with cheap, dirty coal, to arrest over-eager environmentalists and to strip African forests for wood and minerals. Have no doubt about that. But have no doubt either that, without declaring it, China is embarking on a new, parallel path of clean power deployment and innovation. It is the Sputnik of our day. We ignore it at our peril.

Pakistan doesn’t need lectures on terror war: Gilani










* Cabinet has no say in utility tariff hikes


* Pakistan seeks laser-guided ammunition for law enforcement agencies





ISLAMABAD: Nobody should try to instruct Pakistan on how it should conduct the war on terror, Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani said on Monday.




After attending a cultural show arranged by the Chinese embassy at the National Art Gallery, he told journalists Pakistan was fighting the war on terror in its own interest and was not acting as a "proxy". The army, the political leadership and the people are united in the war against the terrorists, the APP news agency reported him as saying.




Not us: To questions, the premier said Pakistan had not received any aid through the Kerry-Lugar Bill yet, adding any discussion on the matter of its usage was premature at this point. He said the cabinet had no role in deciding whether to raise the rates of utilities, adding the increase in tariff of gas and oil was decided by regulatory authorities such as the Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (OGRA) and the National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (NEPRA). He said the government had provided Rs 55 billion in subsidy since June 2009 to facilitate the people following the last increase in the power tariff.




To questions on drone attacks in Balochistan, Gilani said the US should not conduct drone strikes anywhere in Pakistan. "Anyone who has any information in this regard should come forward and share it with us and the government will itself carry out the required action," he added.




Help out: Also on Monday, the prime minister told a French Senate delegation at PM House that friendly nations should enhance their support for Pakistan. "Friendly countries should help Pakistan combat militancy, particularly in the capacity-building of law enforcement agencies, as they have already exhausted most of their laser-guided ammunition in the military operation in Malakand and FATA," he said. He said urgent replacement of night-vision goggles, helicopters and drone technology was required. Gilani also said he was anticipating President Nicolas Sarkozy's visit to Pakistan early next year to sign framework agreements on further defence and economic cooperation.




During the meeting, delegation chief Josselin de Rohan lauded Pakistan's role in the war on terror and assured Gilani of France's complete support. "It would not be possible to succeed in this effort without Pakistan's efforts," he said. Rohan also said he would convey the Pakistani law enforcement agencies' requirements for ammunition and military hardware to his government. staff report/agencies

French arms exports rise 13%





Deals with countries including Brazil, Saudi Arabia and Morocco have pushed French arms sales up to their highest level since 2000.







France is trying to move away from its heavy reliance on sales to the Middle East [AFP]


The increase of 13 per cent on last year's sales follows a drive by Nicolas Sarkozy, the country's president, to support defence export companies.


The government argues that the industry provides 50,000 jobs in France.


French companies took new orders worth $9.7bn, meaning they have about seven per cent of the world's arms market, according to the defence ministry's annual report released on Monday.


France remains the world's fourth largest arms exporters behind the United States, Britain and Russia.



Sarkozy delegation


However, the ministry said France, which sold weapons systems worth $12bn in 2000, was struggling to maintain its world ranking in an increasingly competitive market.


"France has had trouble holding on to its position" since the start of the decade, the ministry said in its annual report published on Monday.



"
We are getting away from the classic idea that France only exports to the Middle East" - Laurent Teisseire, defence ministry spokesman


Sarkozy led an arms export delegation to Brazil this month, which finalised a deal to buy four conventional submarines and is pondering whether to buy French Rafale warplanes, built by Dassault Aviation.


"We are getting away from the classic idea that France only exports to the Middle East and we are doing what is necessary to respond to the needs of Europe, Asia and Latin America," Laurent Teisseire, a defence ministry spokesman, said.


Brazil and France signed a defence accord in December last year worth up to $12.6bn, including the supply of 50 EC725 Super Cougar helicopters built by EADS subsidiary Eurocopter.



Rafale snubbed


Morocco was France's second-largest client in 2008 with a contract to buy FREMM frigates built by a state-controlled company.


France has seen its defence exports come under pressure for most of the decade after it struggled to repeat the success of Dassault's previous generation of Mirage warplanes with the multi-role Rafale, which has not yet found a buyer.


France suffered an embarrassing setback at the end of the previous year when Morocco snubbed a French offer of Rafales in favour of Lockheed Martin F-16 fighters, prompting Sarkozy to order a shake-up of France's arms export system.


In third place last year for French arms sales was Saudi Arabia, thanks in part to a deal to buy air-refuelling tankers converted from passenger aircraft built by EADS subsidiary Airbus.

Testing Afghanistan Assumptions

The lesson of Vietnam is don't commit troops without a clear strategy.


By JOHN KERRY


In the coming weeks, President Barack Obama will make the most difficult choice a commander in chief can face: whether to send more troops into harm's way.


The challenge of making the right decision was dramatized recently by the grim disclosure that Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, has warned that unless he gets more troops the eight-year war there "will likely result in failure."


The general provided a bleak catalogue of misaligned military operations, a corrupt Afghan government, and an increasingly lethal insurgency. He wants more troops and civilians to execute a nation-building counterinsurgency strategy that he hopes will reverse the slide. He says success is still achievable. As the commander on the ground, Gen. McChrystal fulfilled his assignment from the president, producing a tightly reasoned blueprint for a complex and increasingly dangerous conflict.


Now, we in Congress have our own assignment: to test all of the underlying assumptions in Afghanistan and make sure they are the right ones before embarking on a new strategy.


For example, one assumption of the proposed counterinsurgency plan is that our troops and civilians will be working in partnership with a legitimate and reliable government in Afghanistan. After the deeply flawed presidential election last month, we must ask whether we can succeed if our partner is weak and viewed with deep suspicion by his own people.


We also need to know whether a full-blown counterinsurgency, with its increased footprint and inevitably higher casualties, is a fundamental part of our plans to go after al Qaeda and avoid destabilizing Pakistan. Could a far smaller, well-honed counterterrorism strategy work as well or better?


Some have argued that counterterrorism commandos and sophisticated surveillance might be effective at targeting al Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan. But critics contend that a counterterrorism campaign can succeed only as a component within a larger counterinsurgency.


If we increase our commitment, we might be able to develop "good enough governance" in Afghanistan, to quote the words Clare Lockhart (co-author of the insightful book "Fixing Failed States") used at a recent Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing. But even that would not guarantee that we achieve another vital objective: avoiding the destabilization of neighboring Pakistan. Chaos there could put nuclear weapons in the hands of terrorists.


The situation in Afghanistan has clearly changed since last March when the president unveiled his goal of defeating al Qaeda in Pakistan and Afghanistan. He and his advisers are exploring alternatives in light of the conditions on the ground and we should welcome the careful reassessment.


So far, the debate has focused on absolute numbers-how many U.S. and allied troops are required, how many Afghan soldiers and police do we need to train, how many more billions must we pour into that impoverished country? All the numbers are meaningless if the goal is ambiguous or the strategy is wrong.


Before we send more of our young men and women to this war, we need a fuller debate about what constitutes success in Afghanistan. We need a clearer understanding of what constitutes the right strategy to get us there. Ultimately, we need to understand, as Gen. Colin Powell was fond of asking, "What's the exit strategy?" Or as Gen. David Petraeus asked of Iraq, "How does it end?"


Why? Because one of the lessons from Vietnam-applied in the first Gulf War and sadly forgotten for too long in Iraq-is that we should not commit troops to the battlefield without a clear understanding of what we expect them to accomplish, how long it will take, and how we maintain the consent of the American people. Otherwise, we risk bringing our troops home from a mission unachieved or poorly conceived.


Gen. McChrystal offers no timetable or exit strategy, beyond warning that the next 12 months are critical. I agree that time is running out and that troops are dying without a sustainable strategy for victory. But we cannot rush to judgment.


Mr. Obama promises not to send more troops to Afghanistan until he has absolute clarity on what the strategy will be. He is right to take the time he needs to define the mission. We should all follow his lead and debate all of the options.


It may be that Gen. McChrystal has provided the road map to victory. Or it may be that some other strategy would work better, with fewer risks. We can't know until we test every assumption and examine every option.


At the end of the day, we need to answer every question to the best of our ability. Doing so will help develop the clarity required to establish goals and strategies that minimize risk to our troops, maintain regional stability, and protect our long-term national security.



Mr. Kerry, a Democrat, is a U.S. senator from Massachusetts.

Swat operation successful: Clinton

Daily Times




* US secretary of state foresees continuation of 'close coordination' with Pakistan





WASHINGTON: Terming the anti-Taliban operation in Swat and Malakand division "absolutely successful", US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Islamabad had demonstrated increased commitment in the fight against Al Qaeda and the Taliban.




In an interview with CBS News, Clinton also foresaw continuation of "close coordination" with Pakistan in the fight against Taliban.




"Look at, again, what has happened in the last nine months. Pakistan has increased its commitment in the fight against the Taliban and Al Qaeda," Clinton said, citing Pakistan's "absolutely successful" campaign against the Taliban in Swat.




She said, "A lot of people thought that would never happen. I believe that if we engaged very intensively with our Pakistani friends, and we did through meetings in Washington and Islamabad, if we shared information, we listened to each other, that there would be a decision by the civilian and military leadership that the threat was directed at them, that it could undermine their government, in fact, you know, would lead to very dangerous consequences in terms of the survivability of the state in many parts of the country. So, yes, have they taken action? Absolutely." app

Iran warns Israel of "last breath" if it attacks


TEHRAN, Sept 28 (Reuters) - Iran's defence minister warned arch-foe Israel on Monday against launching any attack on the Islamic Republic, saying it would only speed up the Jewish state's own demise.


"If this happens, which of course we do not foresee, its ultimate result would be that it expedites the Zionist regime's last breath," Defence Minister Ahmad Vahidi said on state television.


He made the comment after Iran said it had test-fired missiles with ranges that could put Israel and U.S. bases in the region within striking distance.


Israeli leaders have repeatedly expressed alarm over Iran's nuclear ambitions and refused to rule out pre-emptive military action to stop Iran developing an atomic weapon.


Iran, which says its nuclear work is for peaceful power generation, has often shrugged off the possibility of any such strikes.


Vahidi, a former Revolutionary Guards commander, said that in the event of an Israeli attack its "lifespan, which is today coming to an end, would be speeded up."


He added that the "Zionist regime", the term Iran uses for Israel, was on a "slope of destruction".


Iran's hardline president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has also repeatedly predicted Israel's downfall.


On Saturday, Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said a newly disclosed nuclear facility in Iran was proof the Islamic Republic was seeking nuclear weapons, and called on the world to make an "unequivocal" response.


Israel, widely assumed to be the Middle East's sole nuclear power, has described Iran's uranium enrichment as a threat to its existence. It says "all options" are on the table in preventing Tehran from building nuclear missiles.


The head of Iran's Civil Defence Organisation, which is affiliated to the Revolutionary Guards, said 10 million members of a volunteer Islamic militia, Basij, were ready to defend Iran against any attacker.


"(That is why) no one would dare to aggress against it ... One million (members of) the Basij force can move to the country's borders within the smallest notice," Commander Qolam-Reza Jalali was quoted as saying by the Guards' website. (Reporting by Hossein Jaseb and Hashem Kalantari; writing by Fredrik Dahl; Editing by Charles Dick)



© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved



End of America's moment


A stunning retreat from superpower status


By


America is no longer a superpower. Led by President Obama, its retreat on the world stage has been sudden, swift and stunning. His administration is actively pursuing a foreign policy of detente and self-abnegation. Washington no longer wants - or believes it is possible - to remain the last, sole hyperpower.


"In an era where our destiny is shared, power is no longer a zero-sum game," Mr. Obama told the United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday. "No world order that elevates one nation or group of people over another will succeed. That is the future America wants."


It also is the future the United Nations wants. For decades, Turtle Bay has been a major source of anti-Americanism. The majority of its member states are not genuine democracies. Rather, they are a grim collection of Third World tyrannies, socialist dictatorships and quasi-kleptocracies. They care little for human rights, democracy and peace.


The United Nations' recent record is abysmal: the genocide in Darfur, China's brutal repression of Tibet, Russia's war of aggression against Georgia, Hamas' relentless rocket attacks on Israeli towns and villages, Iran's crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators, Saudi Arabia's systematic persecution of Christians and Venezuela's efforts to spread authoritarian socialism across Latin America - all this has been met with little or no action by the international body. The United Nations is useless.


Yet, the one thing it has sought to create is a multipolar system, one in which American power is contained and, eventually, rolled back. The champion of the West must be laid low.


Mr. Obama has given the United Nations what it wants: a denuded America that is voluntarily abandoning its international pre-eminence. Mr. Obama is a postmodern leftist whose goal is to transform the United States into another European Union. He does not believe in preserving our national sovereignty or distinct cultural identity. Rather, he champions social democracy; open borders; multilateralism; diplomacy; and a strong, activist United Nations. As he outlined in his speech, he seeks to subordinate America's national interests to globalist goals such as combating climate change, ridding the world of nuclear weapons, ending poverty and achieving Middle East peace.


Mr. Obama's approach will fail for one simple reason: It is built on fantasy. His U.N. address was a classic example of the perils of liberal utopianism. Man-made global warming is a myth; in fact, the Earth's temperatures have been cooling during the past few years. Moreover, his cap-and-trade policies will stifle growth and job creation - as they have all across Europe. They are a recipe for economic stagnation.


Serious nations - China, Russia, Pakistan - will never give up their nukes. The nukes are an absolute deterrent against any invasion from a rival power. The call for worldwide nuclear disarmament is more than a naive dream. It reveals a profound lack of understanding of great-power politics.


Mr. Obama is not a political Messiah. He cannot part the waters or eradicate world poverty and disease. He is striving to achieve something that has never been done in history - anywhere. This is because the natural state of humanity is poverty; it has been with us since the beginning of time. For most of the world, it has been the predominant condition. Hence, it is not poverty that needs to be understood, but the creation of wealth.


The unique achievement of the West has been to erect a capitalist system based on the rule of law and private property rights that has lifted hundreds of millions into prosperity. Unless other nations are willing to adopt free-market economics, they are doomed to perpetual misery. Billions in foreign aid will not change this fundamental reality and results only in squandering precious taxpayer dollars.


Moreover, establishing an independent Palestine will not foster regional security. The withdrawal of Israel in 2005 from the Gaza Strip did not lead to a peaceful embryonic Palestinian state; rather, it led to the creation of Hamastan. Hamas is the most potent force in Palestinian society. Its radical brand of Islamic fundamentalism - with its call for the destruction of Israel, the glories of jihad and the defeat of America - are openly embraced by most Palestinians. Carving out a separate Palestinian homeland, alongside Israel, will only sow the seeds of future conflict: It is a stake aimed at the heart of the Jewish state - one that will enable Hamas, as well as other Islamist terrorists, to deliver the final death blow to the "Zionist entity."


Mr. Obama is wrong. Power is - and always will be - a zero-sum game. If the United States is weakened, then Russia and China, along with North Korea, Iran and other rogue states eagerly fill the vacuum.


In almost every corner of the globe, American strength and prestige are dwindling. The scrapping of missile defense in Poland and the Czech Republic means America is abandoning Eastern Europe to Russia's sphere of influence. The premature withdrawal of troops from Iraq is leading to a U.S. defeat. The bullying of Israel is demoralizing our staunchest ally in the Middle East. Iran is on the verge of acquiring the bomb. Communist China is buying up our soaring national debt; we are slowly becoming Beijing's economic vassal. North Korea remains defiant. Japan is turning away from Washington. Latin America seethes with Bolivarian revolution. In short, America's enemies are being emboldened while our friends are being betrayed.


Mr. Obama's speech was well-received at the United Nations because it confirmed the end of the American moment. The post-1945 U.S.-led world order, which represented the greatest advance of human freedom in history, is over. Mr. Obama believes it is his crowning glory. Rather, it is his shame.



Jeffrey T. Kuhner is a columnist at The Washington Times and president of the Edmund Burke Institute, a Washington-based think tank.

The U.S.-Iranian Triangle

By ROGER COHEN


NEW YORK - France and Germany fought three wars in 70 years before the bright idea dawned of enfolding their problem into something larger: the European Union. The United States and Iran have not gone to war but have a relationship of psychotic mistrust. The answer can only be the same: Broaden the context.


The revelation that Iran has built a second uranium enrichment plant in secrecy did not change the nuclear equation if that's measured by the country's ability to produce a bomb. No uranium has entered the facility. Iran's eventual capacity to produce weapons-grade fissile material, let alone deliver it, is unaffected.


What has changed is the psychology of the Iranian nuclear program. Mistrust, already deep, is now fathomless.


With an enrichment facility at Natanz able to accommodate 54,000 centrifuges (just over 8,000 are installed), and its single nuclear power plant still in stop-go mode, there do not appear to be 54,000 reasons for Iran to burrow into a mountain near the holy city of Qum to install 3,000 more.


Tehran wants a military nuclear option even if it's nervous - and hesitant - about the reality.


The Qum-nuclear twinning reveals the Iranian mindset: The enrichment program has attained sacred status as a symbol of Iranian independence - comparable to oil's nationalization in the 1950s.


(Iran will argue its obligations to the International Atomic Energy Agency only required it to give notification of the new facility 180 days before introducing nuclear material. Western nations will contest that. The technicalities are debatable - and irrelevant. This is about trust betrayed by Tehran.)


The effect of Natanz-Qum was to make new sanctions more likely sooner. President Nicolas Sarkozy of France spoke of imposing them in December, absent an "in-depth change." President Obama - who likes to leave hawkishness to Europeans - avoided the "s" word but did his best resolute thing.


More significant than the words, however, were the no-shows. Iran would have sat bolt upright had Obama been flanked by the leaders of Germany, Russia and China. Those three countries are principal sources of Iran's trade.


Chancellor Angela Merkel could not find time (although she "associated" herself with Obama.) Russia expressed "serious concern." China mumbled about "dialogue." This was less a line in the sand than a faint squiggle.


I've said this before: Sanctions won't work. Ray Takeyh, who worked on Iran with Dennis Ross at the State Department before losing his job last month and returning to the Council on Foreign Relations, told me that "sanctions are the feel-good option."


Yes, it feels good to do something, but it doesn't necessarily help. In this case, sanctions won't for four reasons.


One: Iran is inured to sanctions after years of living with them and has in Dubai a sure-fire conduit for goods at a manageable surtax. Two: Russia and China will never pay more than lip-service to sanctions. Three: You don't bring down a quasi-holy symbol - nuclear power - by cutting off gasoline sales. Four: sanctions feed the persecution complex on which the Iranian regime thrives.


A senior German Foreign Ministry official last week told an American Council on Germany delegation: "The efficiency of sanctions is not really discussed because if you do, you are left with only two options - a military strike or living with a nuclear Iran - and nobody wants to go there. So the answer is: Let's impose further sanctions! It's a dishonest debate."


Dishonesty is a staple of Iran's nuclear program. Tehran has dissembled. Israel, which introduced nuclear ambiguity in the region, has - repetitively - predicted an Iranian bomb is just a few years away since the early 1990s. It still is some years off in the view of U.S. intelligence.


The choice is indeed between a military strike and living with a nuclear Iran. But what is a "nuclear Iran?" Is it an Iran that's nuclear-armed - a very dangerous development - or an Iran with an I.A.E.A,-monitored enrichment facility?


I believe monitored enrichment on Iranian soil in the name of what Obama called Iran's "right to peaceful nuclear power" remains a possible basis for an agreement that blocks weaponization. Zero enrichment is by now a non-starter.


For fruitless sanctions to be avoided, the mantra of William Burns, the U.S. under secretary for political affairs who will attend multilateral talks with Iran starting Thursday, must be: "Widen the canvas."


The Iranian regime is weak. Its disarray was again evident last week; it actually feels threatened by George Soros. Significant factions now view an American breakthrough as needed. They have a favorable view of Burns.


Burns must seek to open a parallel bilateral U.S.-Iran negotiation covering at least these areas: Afghanistan and Iraq (where interests often converge); Hezbollah and Hamas (where they do not); human rights; blocked Iranian assets; diplomatic relations; regional security arrangements; drugs; the fight against Al Qaeda; visas and travel.


Isolated, nuclear negotiations will fail. Integrated, they may not. Iran's sense of humiliation is rooted in its America complex; its nuclear program is above all about the restoration of pride. Settle the complex to contain the program. Triangulate. Think broad. Think E.U., not Versailles.

Monday, September 28, 2009

A time to act







Words alone cannot stem the tide of climate change. True, there is room for hope now that more environment-friendly leaders are occupying the world stage. George W. Bush in Washington and John Howard in Canberra consistently refused to ratify the Kyoto Protocol on mandatory carbon emissions, a contract that expires in 2012.







Chinese President Hu Jintao addresses the Summit on Climate Change at the United Nations headquarters in New York. -Reuters Photo/Shannon Stapleton


They are no longer in office. China and India, two other major polluters, also seem to be softening their hitherto rigid stances - but, and here's the rub, without agreeing to binding emission-reduction targets. That is precisely why many believe that the likes of the US, China and India are concerned more with image-building than taking concrete measures to save a planet that is heading for catastrophe. As one commentator pointed out, 'Hundreds of millions of people would [as a result of climate change] be forced from their homes by sea level rises, storms, floods and drought. And our planet's biodiversity would face the greatest extinction since the dinosaurs were wiped out 65 million years ago.'


There was more talk of controlling carbon emissions at the UN this week. But with the exception of the EU, genuine commitment towards meeting this goal seems to be lacking. Progress has been so slow, in fact, that it is unlikely a post-Kyoto agreement will be finalised at a key climate summit in Copenhagen in December.


Emerging economies such as China, India and Brazil argue that western countries have enriched themselves at the expense of the environment since the advent of industrialisation, and that others too have the right to economic growth. But this is a short-sighted view.


In the long term, major polluters in the developing world will only make their countries poorer, for the simple reason that global warming is not sustainable. India, for instance, is facing a major drought that could push millions more into poverty. The Himalayan glaciers are receding at a rapid rate, with severe consequences for agriculture in the subcontinent as well as China and Tibet. A shrinking Arctic ice cap may submerge entire nations in a matter of decades. This is a time to act, not just talk.

The nuclear tipping point


Franco Frattini, George Shultz and Sam Nunn


Barack Obama's UN security council summit on nuclear issues is a critical moment in the effort to eliminate nuclear weapons


The potential spread of nuclear weapons to states and terrorists, the spread of nuclear technology and know-how and the residual nuclear threat from the cold war have brought us to the precipice of a new and dangerous nuclear era. This unprecedented challenge to global security is the context for an extraordinary head-of-state-level meeting of the UN security council this week in New York, chaired by President Barack Obama.




We have arrived at this nuclear tipping point at a time when there are multiple challenges to our economic and national security. The global financial crisis, climate change and the enduring conflict in Afghanistan all rightly demand the urgent attention and focus of leaders and governments - and complicate efforts to maintain focus on any one challenge. Nevertheless, we are encouraged that over the past year, individuals and governments around the globe are daring to put forward bold approaches to reduce nuclear risks.




In April, we had the privilege of hosting with former President Mikhail Gorbachev in Rome a conference on overcoming nuclear dangers that brought together more than 100 leaders and experts from around the world. We agreed on the importance of deep reductions in nuclear weapons as required by the treaty on the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons (NPT) and on the crucial imperative of reducing the role of nuclear weapons in security policies.




We also addressed the challenges and opportunities posed by the expansion of nuclear energy, as well as the key issue of strengthening the security of nuclear materials. The most essential point of agreement from the Rome conference: We must work together in a joint enterprise to effectively reduce nuclear dangers, involving both nuclear and non-nuclear countries in working on urgent and practical steps towards achieving the vision of a world free of nuclear weapons.




Such a global effort is essential to reverse reliance on nuclear weapons, to prevent their spread into potentially dangerous hands and ultimately to end them as a threat to the world. Disarmament, non-proliferation and the right to the peaceful use of nuclear energy remain, as matter of fact, the three mutually reinforcing pillars of the NPT. Reducing nuclear dangers means strengthening, in the first place, all three pillars.




The call from the Rome conference for a joint enterprise among nations was given a substantial boost at the recent G8 summit in Italy, which was preceded by a similar appeal at the G8 ministerial meeting in Trieste. At the L'Aquila summit, the G8 - including four nuclear-weapon states that are party to the NPT - committed to seeking a safer world for all and to creating the conditions for a world without nuclear weapons.




The G8 also made substantial progress in defining the necessary and practical steps that must be taken to improve our security now. There was strong support for ratification of the comprehensive test ban treaty in the US and entry into force of that agreement, as well as efforts by the US and Russia to conclude a replacement for the Start treaty before it expires this year and for the early commencement of multilateral negotiations on a treaty banning the production of fissile material for weapons.




The G8 also made clear their support for the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and the IAEA safeguards agreement and additional protocol with tougher inspections as essential international standards. Importantly, they agreed that measures are needed to address non-compliance, to include real and immediate consequences for states that withdraw from the NPT while in violation of it, including appropriate action by the security council of the United Nations.




The G8 also addressed head-on the serious concerns presented by Iran and North Korea. The G8 re-affirmed the inalienable right of all NPT parties - including Iran - to the peaceful uses of nuclear energy, and made clear that Iran does have an opportunity for reaching a comprehensive, peaceful and diplomatic solution to the Iranian nuclear issue.




But the G8 made clear there can be no cutting corners: Iran must recognise its obligation to restore confidence in the peaceful nature of its nuclear activities through compliance with the relevant UN security council resolutions and full cooperation with the IAEA. The G8 also condemned in the strongest terms the nuclear test conducted by North Korea, which undermines peace and stability in the region and beyond.




The G8 under Italy's presidency has set out a daring and essential agenda. Now, the challenge - for governments, nongovernmental organisations and individuals - is to endure with the necessary unity and commitment to turn words into deeds. There are a number of crucial tests ahead of us, including the NPT review conference, which will start in April next year. In the face of the nuclear threat, we cannot fail.




Franco Frattini is the foreign minister of Italy. George Shultz was US secretary of state from 1982-1989 and is a distinguished fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University. Sam Nunn is co-chairman of the Nuclear Threat Initiative and a former US senator.

Even The InterPol Ignores Indian Evidence On Mumbai

Hafiz Mohammed Saeed and the Jamaat al Daawa have nothing to do with Mumbai attacks, regardless of what the Indians keep saying. If you don't believe me, ask the InterPol. They also don't believe what India says.


By Abdullah Muntazir


WWW.AHMEDQURAISHI.COM











Hafiz Mohammed Saeed (left) and Pakistani Hindus who benefited from the social work of Jamaat al Daawa demonstrating in Hyderabad after the government decision to seal schools run by the charity after accusations from India and the United States it supported terror.


LAHORE, Pakistan-Pakistani interior minister Abdul Rehman Malik has invited his Indian counterpart for a public debate on the issue of Mumbai attacks.


He claims that Pakistan has done more than India as far as investigations into the Mumbai attack are concerned. He also said that his country cannot take action against Ameer Jamat-ud-Dawah Prof. Hafiz Saeed because of "hearsay" and needs more time to assess the genuineness of information provided by India on him.


On the other hand Indian foreign minister SM Krishna has said that Pakistan has a vested interest in blocking the inquiry into the Mumbai attacks and is safeguarding Hafiz Saeed. Indian interior minister has visited United States to intervene in the issue and press Pakistan to act against Hafiz Muhammad Saeed.


Hafiz Muhammad Saeed has become bone of contention between the two countries. Instead of appreciating and recognizing Pakistan's efforts against Mumbai suspects, India has hinged everything on the prosecution of Hafiz Saeed.


Pakistan has arrested top commanders of Lashkar-e-Taiba including its chief operations commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi and despite the risk of public anger and backlash all the arrested suspects were booked under the antiterrorism law.


It was not easy for Pakistan to arrest and charge the top commanders of a militant group under anti-terrorism law especially when the said commanders are seen as 'pro-Pakistan' and have enjoyed enormous public support in the past.


Notwithstanding Indian allegations against Lashar-e-Taiba, the group is generally considered 'freedom fighters' in Pakistan and Kashmir. The group had also opposed armed attacks against Pakistani security forces and thus enjoyed a good reputation in Pakistani security circles.


But despite this 'good' reputation Pakistan arrested almost all of its important commanders who were believed to be looking after the group's armed activities in occupied Kashmir.


Unfortunately, India could not understand and recognize the enormity of the steps Pakistan has taken against the group. Instead, New Delhi tried to press Pakistan to 'do more'.


India also ignored Pakistan's compulsions and complications while its security forces were busy in N.W.F.P in military operation against Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).


The understanding in Islamabad is that instead of cooperating with Pakistan in its war against extremism, India wants to use Mumbai attacks as a tool to press Pakistan to accept Indian hegemony in the region.


This understanding forced Pakistan to give a message of 'No more' to India in case of Hafiz Muhammad Saeed. Pakistan has rightly asked India to provide concrete evidence against him that can stand in a court of law.


What India has provided so far in the case of Hafiz Muhammad Saeed is not sufficient for any legal action. Even Interpol is not satisfied with Indian dossier against Hafiz Saeed. Under immense Indian pressure, Interpol has issued a Red Corner Notice against Hafiz Saeed but the notice itself shows that the international body has ignored the entire Indian dossier against Hafiz Saeed and used only confessional statements of Ajmal Qasab, the lone survivor of Mumbai attacks. In his confession statement, Ajmal Qasab mentioned meeting a "Hafiz Saab", and at another point, "Sayed bhai. Interpol mixed 'Hafiz Saab' and 'Sayed Bhai' as one name and the 'Red Corner Notice' reads the name 'Hafiz Saab, Sayed'.



Prominent Indian newspaper The Hindu criticized the Interpol for issuing such an ambiguous and vague notice. In its report on Thursday, Aug 27, 2009 the Hindu writes:



There is much excitement in India about the Interpol red corner notice for Hafiz Saeed, but the person for whom the international police organisation has put out the notice is virtually impossible to connect with the Jamat-ud-Dawa chief, so vague is the information about him.



On a request from the CBI, Interpol is reported to have issued red corner notices on Tuesday for Jamat-ud-Dawa chief Hafiz Saeed, who is also the founder of the Laskhar-e-Taiba, the group blamed for the November 2008 Mumbai attacks, and for Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, the LeT operations commander.



While the red corner for Lakhvi is straightforward enough, not so the other one. It names only a "Sayed, Hafiz saab" with no other determining details about him except his Pakistani nationality and a date of birth. Sayed is a title used by those who trace their ancestry to the Prophet Mohammed, while Saeed is a common name.



The report further says:



Not only is the name wrong, as there is no accompanying photograph - "Not Available" is stamped across the rectangular space for a mug shot - it is impossible to figure out that the red corner notice is, in fact, for Hafiz Saeed.



It also makes no mention of his affiliation with the Jamat-ud-Dawa, or with the Laskhar-e-Taiba, or of his designation by the United Nations 1267 Al-Qaeda and Taliban Sanctions Committee.



The paper says that Interpol ignored all the material provided by India against Hafiz Saeed. It says:



The Hindu has learnt that in forwarding the request to Interpol for the red corner notice for both Hafiz Saeed and Lakhvi, the CBI attached all the information from the Mumbai investigations, including the confessional statements of the surviving gunman Ajmal Amir 'Kasab,' and the two Indian suspects in the case, Fahim Ansari and Sabahuddin. They also forwarded the U.N. Security Council designation of both Lakhvi and Hafiz Saeed by the 1267 sanctions committee, CBI sources told The Hindu in New Delhi. Photographs of both individuals - there is no dearth of them - were also included in the material sent by the CBI to Interpol. In his confessional statement, 'Kasab' mentioned meeting a "Hafiz Saab", and at another point, "Sayed bhai." Interpol's red corner notice for "Hafiz Saab Sayed" appears to be drawn from the 'Kasab' statement.It is not clear why Interpol chose to overlook all the other material sent to them.


If Indian dossier against Hafiz Muhammad Saeed could not convince Interpol, how it can stand in a court of law. Government of Pakistan has already lost its case against Hafiz Saeed in Lahore High Court and in Supreme Court too, it was unable to provide anything substantial to back its appeal against Lahore High Court's decision of setting him free. Interior minister Abdur Reman Malik is rightly confident to challenge India for a public debate because he knows that India can not convince any court of law in the world against Hafiz Saeed on the basis of its dossiers provided to Pakistan. India should appreciate and accept what Pakistan has done so far in the case if it really wants Pakistan to cooperate otherwise unnecessary pressure will bring only 'unwanted' situations for India.



Mr. Muntazir is an expert on militancy and regional security issues. He can be reached at
abdullah.muntazir@hotmail.com

 
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