Articles found June 29, 2009
Pakistan Rejects Talks With Militants, Says Army Taking Action
By Paul Tighe and Farhan Sharif
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June 29 (Bloomberg) -- Pakistan’s Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said there will be no talks with militants as the army is taking decisive action against terrorists in the tribal region and in the Swat Valley.
“Our army is fighting very efficiently against cowardly people,” the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan cited Gilani as saying in Lahore yesterday. It’s not the time for dialogue with terrorists and extremists, he said.
The army is engaged in a guerrilla fight, not a conventional war, Gilani said. “Elements who are against Pakistan are terrorists,” he said.
Pakistan’s army is now engaging Taliban forces in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas bordering Afghanistan after an offensive that began in April in nearby Swat. The U.S. is pressing Pakistan to tackle Taliban and al-Qaeda fighters operating in the region and President Barack Obama has said an aid package to Pakistan worth $1.5 billion a year is conditional on the government fighting extremists.
Twelve soldiers were killed in the North Waziristan tribal area yesterday when their convoy was hit by a explosive device, APP reported, citing the military.
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Nato and Russia to resume security ties
By James Blitz in London Last updated: June 29 2009 03:00
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Nato and Russia took an important step towards the resumption of dialogue at the weekend, agreeing to re-establish military ties and discuss greater co-operation over counter-terrorism, Afghanistan and nuclear proliferation.
In a move that marks the final break with the "no business as usual" policy imposed by the US-led -alliance after last year's Georgian war , foreign ministers from the two sides meeting in Corfu agreed to resume formal co-operation on a range of security threats.
The accord is the latest attempt by the US and Russia to "reset" their relationship after Barack Obama's election in the US. It paves the way for Mr Obama's visit to Moscow next month, during which he will discuss arms control, Afghanistan and Iran with Dmitry Medvedev, the Russian president.
US officials have made it clear that they regardthe Nato-Russia meeting as a critical test of whether Moscow is interested in improving its relationship with western powers.
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Gunbattle rages in Afghan police HQ
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A provincial police chief is among 10 people reportedly killed in a gun fight with US-trained Afghan troops inside a Kandahar police headquarters.
The head of the criminal department and eight other officers were also killed, according to Ahmad Wali Karzai, the head of the area's provincial council.
Monday's clash reportedly happened as troops tried to remove a prisoner from the prosecutor's office.
'Extraordinary scenes'
Al Jazeera's David Chater, reporting from the capital Kabul, said: "The head of the provincial council in Kandahar, President Karzai's brother, said the Afghan security forces - we believe it was the special forces under the control of the Americans in Kandahar - were stopped by the police and their vehicle taken.
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Britain to continue poppy eradication in Afghanistan despite US reversal
Britain will continue to fund the destruction of opium fields in Afghanistan despite the United States condemning poppy eradication as a waste of money.
By Ben Farmer in Kabul Published: 3:39PM BST 28 Jun 2009
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The British Government said destroying poppy fields remained a key deterrent to growers and one of the "seven pillars" of its anti-opium strategy in Helmand province, just a day after Richard Holbrooke, the US envoy to Afghanistan, said that destroying the crop only drove poor farmers to join the insurgency.
In a reversal of policy, he said the United States would stop funding poppy eradication and instead concentrate on encouraging farmers to grow alternative crops.
The Afghan government backed Britain's stance and defended its previous efforts, which relied heavily on ripping up or flattening poppy plants, as "perfect".
General Khodaidad, Afghan minister for counter narcotics, said his strategy had been "the right path".
"We are happy with our strategy and we are working according to our strategy. I don't see any deficiencies in our strategy, our strategy is perfect, our strategy is good."
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Iraq lessons learned, US Marines turn to Afghanistan
Sun Jun 28, 2009 10:12am EDT By Peter Graff
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DESERT OF DEATH, Afghanistan, June 28 (Reuters) - After five years coping with the most dangerous province in Iraq, the U.S. Marines have been given their next assignment: the most dangerous province in Afghanistan.
But this time around, they say they will talk a little more and shoot a little less.
"We spent so much time in Iraq learning from our mistakes," said Corporal Mahmoud Awada, a 21-year-old Lebanese-American Marine from Utah, who spent the second half of 2007 and early 2008 in Anbar west of Baghdad.
"We learned that we can't just go around kicking down doors because that won't work. In Iraq, what really helped us win over there, make the situation better, was gaining the trust of the people, becoming friends with them."
The Marines that have arrived in recent weeks in Afghanistan's wild southern Helmand province are a different force from the Marines who blasted their way into Anbar.
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Taliban contemptuous of large Canadian offensive
By Colin Perkel, THE CANADIAN PRESS Last Updated: 28th June 2009, 12:24pm
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KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — Defiant Taliban heaped scorn on Canada’s recent anti-insurgent operation in the village of Salavat, calling the impact on their operations minimal and claiming immediate retaliation for the offensive.
Qari Yousaf Ahmadi, the Taliban’s spokesman for the south, was contemptuous of the military’s delighted summation of the two-day incursion into the village in the Panjwaii district of southern Afghanistan.
“They are most welcome with these kinds of operations,” Ahmadi said by telephone.
“This kind of operation affects our strategy very positively, because even more people came to join us.”
Ten days ago, hundreds of Canadian soldiers along with Afghan forces invaded the village of 1,500 amid firm intelligence the insurgents were using two compounds.
Salavat has been dubbed one corner of Panjwaii’s “Taliban Triangle,” a known hub of insurgent activity and movement.
While soldiers found no sign of insurgents themselves after smashing their way into the two compounds, a thorough search of the village did turn up enough explosives and electronics for about a dozen roadside bombs, along with a few weapons. One man was arrested.
The action was one of the first big counter-moves by the Canadians as the “fighting season” got into full swing with escalating violence throughout the region ahead of next month’s national elections.
Battlegroup commander, Lt.-Col. Jocelyn Paul, called the operation a big success in putting a damper on the ability of insurgents to move about and mount their own attacks.
Ahmadi shrugged that off.
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U.S. officials look to influence Canada to stay in Afghanistan
By Murray Brewster, THE CANADIAN PRESS 28th June 2009, 12:30pm
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OTTAWA — Obama Democrats have quietly sounded out power-brokers in Ottawa looking for advice on how to convince war-weary Canadians to keep military forces in Afghanistan after 2011.
Conscious of the deep political and public opposition to extending the mission further, American officials — political and military — are struggling to understand those concerns and identify the right arguments to make to the Harper government to “keep Canadian boots on the ground,” said defence sources.
The U.S. has not formally — or even informally — requested Ottawa extend the deployment of 2,850 combat troops, trainers and aircrew in volatile and bloody Kandahar, where 120 soldiers and one diplomat have died over seven years.
The questions being asked are meant to lay the groundwork for a potential request, which the administration could make late this year or in early 2010, said one source familiar with the process.
It’s unclear whether the U.S. would ask Canada to stay on in Kandahar or elsewhere in the country.
The sophisticated, below-the-radar project reflects Washington’s new approach to dealing with allies, and marks a sharp departure from the days when former U.S. president George W. Bush declared: “You’re either with us or against us in the fight against terror.”
The informal exercise comes as no surprise to seasoned diplomats, who say Canada’s self-imposed pull-out deadline of 2011, and a Dutch plan to withdraw its troops in July next year, complicate America’s long-term strategy in the region.
President Barak Obama has made it clear Afghanistan is the central front in the war against al-Qaida and terrorism.
Any discussion of Canadian involvement beyond 2011 will likely make Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s minority government squirm because there’s no appetite for extending such a costly war.
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