Posts Tagged Afghanistan

Ivan Bial: Trickle down didn’t work before. Why now, Willard? – South Florida Sun-Sentinel.com


 

Ivan Bial: Trickle down didn’t work before. Why now, Willard?

 

Ivan Bial

September 5, 2012

When President Reagan took office the U.S. was a creditor nation, when he left office we were a debtor nation. 

When President G. W. Bush took office we had a surplus, and a robust economy, when he left office the debit bulged into the trillions, unemployment skyrocketed. Think about this he tricked us into the war in Iraq when we should have gone into Afghanistan, both wars were not paid for, the Medicare prescription drug plan also unpaid for, leave no child behind, unpaid for and several other debit busting unpaid for programs.

What do President Reagan, President G. W. Bush and Gov. Romney have in common? The three believe in “Trickle Down” Economics and no restrictions on financial institutions. 

Willard while you want to reward your wealthy friends and PAC contributors with increased tax breaks; you increase the tax burden on seniors, the middle class and cripple the poor. 

Willard, while a one term governor, your drove unemployment up, making Massachusetts the 47 state in unemployment claims. You created the model for the Affordable Healthcare Act, supported woman’s rights, increased spending for schools, which now you run away from, and you claim you balanced the budget when you had no choice since it’s a Massachusetts constitutional requirement. Fact is your poll numbers were so poor you did ran away from a second term rather than face an embarrassing defeat. 

Willard we tried “Trickle Down” and no restrictions on financial institutions.  IT DOES NOT WORK.

 Ivan Bial: Trickle down didn’t work before. Why now, Willard? – South Florida Sun-Sentinel.com.

 

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Borowitz Report – Struggling to Fill No. 2 Post, Al-Qaeda Resorts to LinkedIn


Struggling to Fill No. 2 Post, Al-Qaeda Resorts to LinkedIn

Desperate Times for Terror Group’s HR Dept.

 

 

KARACHI (The Borowitz Report) – President Barack Obama has created one job that is proving difficult to fill: the No. 2 post at al-Qaeda.

That’s what they’re saying at the global terror group, whose Human Resources department has recently turned to the social networking site LinkedIn in hopes of filling the slot.

“It used to be that madmen would just walk through the door hoping for a crack at seventy-two virgins,” says Hassad el-Medfaii, director of HR for al-Qaeda.  “Now we have to go looking for these guys, and they all want dental.”

Complicating the terror group’s recruitment efforts for the tricky-to-fill No. 2 position: the recent publicity about President Obama’s so-called “kill list,” which the HR director calls “a big turn-off for a lot of applicants.”

“I’ve had to sit down with them and tell them that the kill list has been totally overblown,” he says.  “No one’s talking about the list of all the people they’ve missed.  It’s way longer.”

Mr. el-Medfaii says that he has spent a lot of time on LinkedIn over the last week “trying to spread the good news about working for al-Qaeda.”

“This is a great job for anyone who likes to travel, especially back and forth between Pakistan and Afghanistan,” he says.  “Plus – and I’m really trying to get the word out about this – we have one of the biggest caches of porn in the world.”

While he says that he has found some “promising candidates” on LinkedIn for the No. 2 position at al-Qaeda, he and his staff are taking extra care in vetting resumes.

“We don’t want to find ourselves in the same kind of mess Yahoo is in,” he says. 

 Borowitz Report.

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Official: 160 girls poisoned at Afghan school – CNN.com


Official: 160 girls poisoned at Afghan school

From Masoud Popalzai, CNN

updated 10:53 AM EDT, Tue May 29, 2012

Click to play

Afghan girls traumatized after poisoning

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

·         Poison may have been sprayed into classrooms before girls entered, police spokesman says

·         Girls complained of headaches, dizziness and vomiting; many remain hospitalized

·         It’s the second such poisoning in a week’s time

·         A police spokesman blamed the Taliban, which has demanded the closure of some schools

 

Kabul, Afghanistan (CNN) – A hospital in northern Afghanistan admitted 160 schoolgirls Tuesday after they were poisoned, a Takhar province police official said.

Their classrooms might have been sprayed with a toxic material before the girls entered, police spokesman Khalilullah Aseer said. He blamed the Taliban.

The incident, the second in a week’s time, was reported at the Aahan Dara Girls School in Taluqan, the provincial capital.

The girls, ages 10 to 20, complained of headaches, dizziness and vomiting before being taken to the hospital, said Hafizullah Safi, director of the provincial health department.

More than half of them were discharged within a few hours of receiving treatment, Safi said. The health department collected blood samples and sent them to Kabul for testing.

Girls hospitalized after poison attack

Taliban take forceful control of schools

Saving after Taliban attack

Last week, more than 120 girls and three teachers were admitted to a hospital after a similar suspected poisoning.

“The Afghan people know that the terrorists and the Taliban are doing these things to threaten girls and stop them going to school,” Aseer said last week. “That’s something we and the people believe. Now we are implementing democracy in Afghanistan and we want girls to be educated, but the government’s enemies don’t want this.”

But earlier this week, the Taliban denied responsibility, instead blaming U.S. and NATO forces for the poisonings in an attempt to “defame” the insurgent group.

Taliban tightens grip on Afghan schools

There have been several instances of girls being poisoned in schools in recent years.

In April, also in Takhar province, more than 170 women and girls were hospitalized after drinking apparently poisoned well water at a school. Local health officials blamed the acts on extremists opposed to women’s education.

While nearly all the incidents involve girls, earlier this month, nearly 400 boys at a school in Khost province fell ill after drinking water from a well that a health official said may have been poisoned.

The Taliban recently demanded the closure of schools in two eastern provinces. In Ghazni, the school closure was in retaliation for the government’s ban on motorbikes often used by insurgents. People in Wardak said the Taliban has been a little more lenient and has allowed schools to open late after making changes to the curriculum.

Tortured Afghan teen: ‘The same should be done’ to attackers

The battle indicates broader fears about Afghanistan’s future amid the drawdown of U.S. troops in the country.

NATO leaders last week signed off on U.S. President Barack Obama’s exit strategy from Afghanistan, which calls for an end to combat operations next year and the withdrawal of the U.S.-led international military force by the end of 2014.

During the Taliban’s rule from 1996 to 2001, many Afghan girls were not allowed to attend school. The schools began reopening after the regime was toppled by the U.S.-led invasion in 2001. However, observers say abuse of women remains common in the post-Taliban era and is often accepted in conservative and traditional families, where women are barred from school and sometimes subjected to domestic violence.

Afghan Education Minister Dr. Farooq Wardak told the Education World Forum in London in January 2011 that the Taliban had abandoned its opposition to education for girls, but the group has never confirmed that.

 Official: 160 girls poisoned at Afghan school – CNN.com.

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US Remembers The Dead, Forgets About The Living – OpEd


US Remembers The Dead, Forgets About The Living – OpEd

May 28, 2012

 

By Vladimir Gladkov

This Monday is Memorial Day in the US, a holiday observed in the US every year since the Civil War to remember American soldiers who died in the line of duty. Today, however, US servicemen continue to suffer as a result of incompetence and lawlessness on the part of the authorities. A raft of high-profile incidents of late demonstrates that the country’s military elite, while ever ready to use the memory of the dead for their own time-serving purposes, tend to forget about the living.

The unprofessionalism and incompetence of the US military leadership and state-run organizations responsible for the maintenance of US soldiers has led to many a scandal recently. The report that triggered a particularly wide-ranging outcry said that the US army had been saving for years on servicemen who suffered from psychic disorders.

A journalistic inquiry revealed that military doctors intentionally refused to diagnose soldiers with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder in order to avoid paying compensation and pensions. Information leaked to the press that the medical leadership urged doctors to ignore the disorder in order to “save taxpayer money”.

This budgetary money saving policy led to a tragedy. A US army soldier, Robert Bales, who was suffering from post-traumatic stress, killed 17 civilians in southern Afghanistan. The incident exacerbated the US’ relations with Afghanistan, a key NATO ally in the struggle against global terrorism. Bales had repeatedly complained of health problems caused by a head injury in Iraq. Nevertheless, he was dispatched to Afghanistan and as it happens, was not the only victim of the money saving program. It turned out that doctors at the Lewis-McChord base to which Bales was assigned had canceled the diagnosis of a psychic disorder for 40 percent of servicemen thereby contributing to the dispatch of mentally ill people to conflict zones.

American war veterans have been affected by this arbitrariness as well. US veteran unions have been expressing concern over an alarming percentage of suicides among servicemen who return from hot spots. In the opinion of war veterans and human rights campaigners, the main reason behind the increasing number of suicides is dereliction of duty on the part of public service employees. And in most cases, the US Veterans Department, a state-run institution created to support servicemen who return from conflict zones, is at the center of disputes.

According to veteran organizations, the Department is bogged down in bureaucracy, doesn’t react to phone calls from police and relatives, and ignores regular duties. Its employees refuse to hospitalize veterans suffering from psychic disorders. One of the most outrageous instances of that was the death of William Hamilton, a 26-year veteran of the Iraq war who was suffering from regular hallucinations in the form of visits by a demonic woman and the man he killed during combat operations. Despite Hamilton’s deteriorating condition, the Department’s officials doggedly refused to provide him with treatment. As a result, the man committed suicide throwing himself under a train.

The US authorities haven’t got the slightest idea as to where all this could lead to. As the public discontent continues to increase, the government manages to turn a blind eye on the problem. The recent incident in which war veteran Scott Olsen received a grave head injury during a police raid on the participants in the Occupy march in California, is equally unlikely to contribute to the myth that the government is taking good care of people who risked their lives putting the US government’s plans into practice. A steady rise in public protests demonstrates that Americans are getting more and more reluctant to play dubious games.

 US Remembers The Dead, Forgets About The Living – OpEd.

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NATO has fight on its hands in Afghanistan: Panetta | Reuters


NATO has fight on its hands in Afghanistan: Panetta

 

U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta (R) testifies next to U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, (C) and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, U.S. Army General Martin Dempsey (L), at the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in Washington May 23, 2012. REUTERS/Gary Cameron

U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta (R) testifies next to U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, (C) and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, U.S. Army General Martin Dempsey (L), at the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in Washington May 23, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Gary Cameron

 

WASHINGTON | Sun May 27, 2012 1:17pm EDT

 

(Reuters) – NATO forces still have a fight on their hands in Afghanistan, where the Taliban has displayed resilience although its fighters have not regained territory they lost during the decade-long war, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said on Sunday.

Panetta said plans for foreign troops to hand over security responsibilities to Afghan forces starting in mid-2013 were on track and necessary to ensure that the Taliban, which governed Afghanistan before the U.S.-led invasion, is kept at bay.

U.S. President Barack Obama, who ordered a surge of U.S. troops in Afghanistan in 2009, has outlined plans to withdraw foreign combat forces from there by the end of 2014 and to take on a supportive role for the Afghan army.

Afghanistan security forced have grown to around 330,000 but still lack capabilities in intelligence, air power and logistics. At the same time, a spate of attacks against foreign troops this year by Afghans in military uniforms have raised questions about their loyalty to the government and whether some are under the influence of the Taliban.

“The world needs to know that we still have a fight on our hands,” Panetta told ABC’s “This Week” program. “We’re still dealing with the Taliban. Although they’ve been weakened, they are resilient.”

The defense secretary said the Taliban has been unable to conduct any kind of organized attack to reclaim territory lost to NATO and Afghan forces, adding: “We’ve seen levels of violence going down. We’ve seen an Afghan army that is much more capable at providing security.”

The White House, looking toward the November presidential election, is keen to dispel notions that Obama is rushing for the exits in Afghanistan, at a time when public support for the war is plummeting.

The broad concern, however, is that the Taliban is staying out of harm’s way and will resurface quickly once the bulk of foreign troops have left.

“Have you ever heard the word ‘victory’ come through the lips of this president, because we’re always talking about withdrawal, withdrawal, withdrawal,” Senator John McCain, ranking member of the Foreign Relations Committee and the Republican candidate for president in 2008 who lost to Obama, told Fox News Sunday.

“The Taliban believes we are leaving” after Obama’s announcements of a withdrawal schedule, McCain said.

“The president has overridden the recommendation of his military commanders who he has put in their positions, and the president has increased the risk every time.”

Panetta said there continues to be concerns about the Taliban operating from safe havens inPakistan. He said U.S. relations with Pakistan were “complicated”.

“This has been one of the most complicated relationships that we’ve had, working with Pakistan. You know, we have to continue to work at it. It is important. This is a country that has – that has nuclear weapons,” Panetta said.

“So our responsibility here is to keep pushing them to understand how important it is for them to work with us to try to deal with the common threats we both face,” Panetta added.

Panetta said it was “so disturbing” that the Pakistani government sentenced a doctor to 33 years in prison on treason charges for helping the CIA track down al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.

Dr. Shakil Afridi “was not working against Pakistan. He was working against al Qaeda. And I hope that ultimately Pakistan understands that,” he said. “Because what they have done here, I think, you know, does not help in the effort to try to re-establish a relationship between the United States and Pakistan.”

 NATO has fight on its hands in Afghanistan: Panetta | Reuters.

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Why wait to exit Afghanistan? – Chicago Sun-Times


Why wait to exit Afghanistan?

STEVE HUNTLEY shuntley.cst@gmail.com May 21, 2012 6:02PM

Story Image 

President Barack Obama addresses troops May 2 at Bagram Air Field, Afghanistan. | Charles Dharapak~AP

Updated: May 21, 2012 8:20PM

The good news out of Afghanistan is that disease has blighted the opium poppy fields, depriving the Taliban of a vital source of revenue. The bad news out of Afghanistan is that disease has blighted the poppy fields, so devastating to poor farmers that it may drive hordes of them into the insurgency.

That paradoxical development crystallizes the seemingly endless futility of the Afghan war.

The military reports that Taliban attacks are down this year — but there’s been an alarming increase in NATO casualties coming from “green on blue” attacks, coalition troops being killed by Afghan security forces, our allies.

President Barack Obama traveled to Afghanistan to declare that “we broke the Taliban’s momentum” and that the “tide had turned.” Days later the heads of Congress’ intelligence committees — Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) and Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.) — returned from the war zone to report that “the Taliban is stronger.”

At the NATO Summit, Obama proclaimed to Afghan President Hamid Karzai that a “transformational decade” lies ahead for Afghanistan. Behind the scenes, according to the New York Times, the president has concluded that Karzai is corrupt and unreliable, and Obama has ordered that U.S. combat operations will end in the summer of 2013 whether the Afghan military can secure the country or not. Also, reports the Times, the administration has reduced its goals to the level of “good enough for Afghanistan.”

“Good enough for Afghanistan” — is that a cause worth another American life? Why wait until the summer of 2013 to end the U.S. combat mission? What’s wrong with this summer? Or tomorrow? I understand that would be seen as “rushing to the exits.” But what is telling the Taliban that we’re leaving next year anything other than a slow walk to the exits?

I understand that a quick pullout might jeopardize the gains made at great cost. But if Feinstein and Rogers are right, the Taliban are just waiting us out. That was always the flaw in Obama’s surge-with-a-withdrawal-timetable strategy. Now that flaw appears to be reality.

Presumptive Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney can complain about the strategy all he wants, but he hasn’t advanced a credible alternative. He would be better off planning for the reality he would face if he were elected in November.

Pakistan, increasingly radical Islamist and nuclear armed, is deemed by the White House a bigger threat in the region. Pakistan has proved to be an uncertain ally. But how will more Americans dying in remote areas of Afghanistan change that? Better to bolster our relationship with Pakistan’s rival, India, a natural U.S. ally as the world’s largest democracy.

Amnesty International called on Obama to stay the course to safeguard the gains made in women’s rights in Afghanistan. That’s a legitimate worry. But I don’t hear Amnesty banging the drums urging its members to flock to recruiting stations to volunteer for Afghanistan. Maybe this is a time for the United Nations to prove its worth by sending peace-keeper troops from all member nations to Afghanistan to secure the progress made for women and girls.

The bottom line is we shouldn’t ask brave U.S. troops to put their lives on the line when it appears the administration has already written off Afghanistan.

 Why wait to exit Afghanistan? – Chicago Sun-Times.

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White House sees Afghan-Pakistan talk as chief NATO Summit victory – Chicago Sun-Times


White House sees Afghan-Pakistan talk as chief NATO Summit victory

BY ABDON M. PALLASCH  AND LYNN SWEET Staff Reporters May 21, 2012 7:00

 Story Image

President Barack Obama speaks with President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan, center, and President Asif Ali Zardari of Pakistan at the McCormick Place Convention Center during the NATO Summit in Chicago, Illinois, May 21,2012. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

Updated: May 21, 2012 9:15PM

 


Here is the image the White House sought to convey from the just-concluded NATO Summit in Chicago: President Barack Obama talking with Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Pakistan President Ali Zardari.

Even though Afghan forces are only prepared now to start taking charge of 75 percent of the country. And even though Zardari is not fully ready to open the supply lines into Afghanistan as Obama and Karzai would like, the photo of the hastily-arranged chat released by the White House Monday shows they are talking.

Among the many declarations adopted by the 28 NATO member countries and their partners meeting in Chicago Monday was a commitment to remove combat troops from Afghanistan by 2014 but leave support staff there to aid development.

Obama started his final day at the summit Monday seated at a massive round table at Chicago’s McCormick Place with other world leaders, welcoming Karzai and the leaders of neighbor countries deemed vital to Afghanistan’s success.

“I want to welcome the presence of President Karzai, as well as officials from central Asia and Russia — nations that have an important perspective and that continue to provide critical transit for … supplies,” Obama said.

Obama met for an hour Sunday with Karzai. Karzai has fully signed on to NATO pulling its combat troops out by 2014 for better or worse. Ten years is long enough, Obama emphasized in a news conference Monday.

“We’ve been there 10 years,” Obama said. “No matter how much good we’re doing and how outstanding our troops and our civilians and diplomats are doing on the ground, 10 years, in a country that’s very different, that’s a strain, not only on our folks but also on that country, which at a point is going to be very sensitive about its own sovereignty.”

Pakistan could help that transition and Obama and other NATO leaders have been frustrated with the ostensible U.S. ally’s reluctance to confront Taliban and al-Qaida elements on its soil.

“My discussion with President Zardari was very brief as we were walking into the summit,” Obama said. “I emphasized to him what we’ve emphasized publicly as well as privately: We think Pakistan has to be part of the solution in Afghanistan. It is in our national interest to see a Pakistan that is Democratic, that is prosperous and that is stable; That we share a common enemy in the extremists that are found not only in Afghanistan but also within Pakistan.”

Obama, who toured Pakistan as a college student and pronounces it correctly as “PAHK’-i-stahn,” is the president who ordered a raid into Pakistan to kill Osama bin Laden without telling Pakistani leaders. He emphasized that progress is being made.

“We need to work through some of the tensions that have inevitably risen after 10 years of our military presence in that region,” Obama said. President Zardari shared with me his belief that these issues can get worked through We didn’t anticipate that the supply-line issue was going to be resolved by this summit. We knew that before we arrived in Chicago. But we’re actually making diligent progress on it.”

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta echoed that sentiment at the North Chicago VA Hospital Monday: “You know, we still have a ways to go, but I think the good news is that we are negotiating and that we are making some progress.”

Obama’s Republican rival for president Mitt Romney criticized him in a letter to the Chicago Tribune Sunday for inadequate leadership of NATO because Obama has not leaned hard enough on other NATO countries to pay their fair share — leaving the U.S. to fund 75 percent of NATO operations.

The Chicago Summit was not intended to lock in funds for post-2014 Afghanistan; still, NATO Secretary-General Anders Rasmussen said progress was made in Chicago towards the goal of NATO partners chipping in towards the estimated $4 billion — with the U.S. to pay most of the tab.

 White House sees Afghan-Pakistan talk as chief NATO Summit victory – Chicago Sun-Times.

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NATO Formally Agrees to Transition on Afghan Security – NYTimes.com


Afghans to Take Over Security Next Year, NATO Agrees

Doug Mills/The New York Times

President Barack Obama, first row, left of center, with Anders Fogh Rasmussen, NATO’s secretary general, center, Afghan President Hamid Karzai, center right, and other leaders at the end of the NATO summit in Chicago on Monday.

 

By HELENE COOPER and MATTHEW ROSENBERG

Published: May 21, 2012

 

CHICAGO — President Obama and leaders of America’s NATO allies on Monday agreed to end their lead role in the decade-long war inAfghanistan next summer, saying it is time for the Afghan people to take responsibility for their own security and for the American-led international troops to go home.

Bob Strong/Reuters

Hina Rabbani Khar, the Pakistani foreign minister, left, with Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai at the NATO Summit in Chicago, on Monday.

Declaring that “our forces broke the Taliban’s momentum,” Mr. Obama used the summit meeting of NATO leaders here in his hometown to begin an exit from a conflict he initially embraced during his campaign for president as America’s good war.

But at a news conference, Mr. Obama conceded that “real challenges” remain in dealing with the problems across the border in Pakistan, and that the conference had not resolved the impasse over reopening supply lines or the other tensions about the fight against insurgents operating from safe havens there.

“We think that Pakistan has to be part of the solution in Afghanistan,” he said. “Neither country is going to have the kind of security, stability and prosperity that it needs unless they can resolve some of these outstanding issues.”

So deep are the differences that Mr. Obama exchanged only a few words with Pakistan’s president, Asif Ali Zardari — “very brief, as we were walking into the summit,” he noted.

The plans to withdraw are “irreversible,” Mr. Obama and the world leaders said pointedly in their communiqué, a deliberate word choice that underscored the political reality in America and in Europe: after 10 years of war and with the global economy reeling, the nations of the West no longer want to continue to pay, either in treasure or in lives, the costs of their efforts in a place that, for centuries, has resisted foreign attempts to tame it.

Mr. Obama and his fellow leaders said that they were not abandoning Afghanistan. “ISAF’s mission will be concluded by the end of 2014,” they declared in their formal statement, using the acronym for the coalition of NATO forces in Afghanistan. “But thereafter Afghanistan will not stand alone; we affirm our close partnership will continue beyond the end of the transition period.”

That transition period begins now. Afghan national security forces will soon be in the lead role keeping the peace for around 75 percent of the population, NATO and Afghan officials said. But significantly, Afghan forces are not in the lead in many heavily contested areas in the south and the east of the country, where Taliban and Pakistan-based insurgents continue to engage NATO troops in day-by-day battles for control.

By next summer, the Afghan forces will have to assume those lead roles even in the heavily contested areas, according to the “irreversible” transition plan announced by the NATO leaders.

“Transition means the people of Afghanistan increasingly see their own Army and police in their towns and villages providing their security,” NATO’s secretary general, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, said on Sunday. “This is an important sign of progress toward our shared goal: an Afghanistan governed and secured by Afghans for Afghans.”

How that will actually come to pass remains to be seen; American military officials, as recently as Sunday, said they fully expected that American troops would continue fighting after next summer. In fact, the American presence in Afghanistan will continue even after 2014. The strategic partnership agreement between the United States and Afghanistan calls for a residual troop presence after 2014 to act in an advisory role.

In Afghanistan, the Taliban released their own statement on the NATO conference, according to the intelligence monitoring service SITE. The Taliban commended President François Hollande of France for saying he would bring French troops home early, adding that “the mujahedeen of the Islamic emirate will keep proceeding with their ongoing jihad until it attains its goal.”

For Mr. Obama, the NATO agreement is a turning point in what has been an evolving position on how to manage America’s longest war. Mr. Obama staked his own campaign for president in part on his opposition to the war in Iraq; the war in Afghanistan, by contrast, was the one he said needed American troops and attention. But in so doing, Mr. Obama forever tied his own legacy to Afghanistan at a time when Americans and his NATO allies were suffering from combat fatigue.

NATO says it will cost about $4.1 billion a year to finance the Afghan forces. Officials at the summit meeting were looking for ways to come up with the money; it is expected that the United States and other donor countries will finance the training and support.

While officials at the summit meeting sought to highlight the progress made by Afghan forces, especially the Army, in the past two years, many conceded privately that the shift still represented a significant gamble on Afghanistan’s future stability. It is far from certain that the Afghans can hold areas that coalition troops have wrestled from the Taliban in recent years, even with close support from Western allies.

The Afghan Army has become a more effective fighting force and less of a threat to its own people — there are far fewer reports these days of soldiers getting high on patrol, for instance. But the force still remains “a work in progress,” according to an American official.

The ranks of the police, meanwhile, are filled with drug users, thieves and “shakedown artists,” said the official, who asked not to be identified because he works with the Afghans. If the hand-over strategy is going to work, “it’s going to be on” the Afghan Army, who are going to need a lot of hands-on American support well past the end of the NATO combat mission in 2014, the official said.

American field commanders say they are already pushing Afghan forces to the forefront. Their reasoning: Better to have the Afghans make mistakes while American forces are still thick on the ground rather than a year from now, when there may not be enough backup for the Afghans to recover from battlefield stumbles.

Gen. James L. Huggins of the Army, the top coalition commander in southern Afghanistan, said in an interview that he was telling his Afghan counterparts: “If you will step forward now, we’ll help back you up. You may learn what you don’t know and stumble somewhere, but it won’t be a catastrophic failure, because we have your back.”

The Afghan Army is going to require support for years to come — it lacks almost all the support functions needed to fight the war. Many of its units depend on the coalition units they live alongside for everything from fuel to clean drinking water. Only recently have American commanders at small outposts scattered across Afghanistan begun refusing to supply their Afghan comrades in arms, insisting that they get their own supplies, in an effort to break the dependence ahead of the coming drawdown.

Nor do the Afghans have any capacity to handle medical evacuations from the battlefield. Few Afghan troops are trained to handle explosive ordnance disposal, a crucial role in a fight dominated by hidden bombs, and even basic communication between Afghan infantry companies and their battalion and brigade headquarters is still routed through coalition forces on the ground.

Despite those obvious shortcomings, coalition officials have over the past three years increasingly labeled operations as “Afghan-led,” and in the coming months Afghan forces will be technically responsible for security in 75 percent of Afghanistan.

But in many of those areas, coalition commanders make many of the most crucial decisions. Operations are often led by Afghans whose hands are being held by their coalition counterparts.

Consider a recent operation to clear the Taliban from a village in Zhari district, outside the southern city of Kandahar, that was billed as Afghan-led. The infantry force that cleared the village was split evenly between Afghan and American forces. But every other unit that took part in the operation — mine clearers, communications, surveillance and others — were American.

The rehearsal drills for the operations were organized by American officers, who did most of the talking during the meetings. The Afghans watched and listened — but many, including the most senior officers in the room, also readily took cigarette breaks as the meeting continued without them.

The operations nonetheless went off without a hitch, said American and Afghan officers involved.

 NATO Formally Agrees to Transition on Afghan Security – NYTimes.com.

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Supply Lines Cast Shadow at NATO Meeting on Afghan War – NYTimes.com


Supply Lines Cast Shadow at NATO Meeting on Afghan War

A Majeed/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Traffic lined up on Sunday at Torkham, at the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan. Pakistan prevented NATO trucks from taking supplies to Afghanistan.

 

By HELENE COOPER and MATTHEW ROSENBERG

Published: May 20, 2012 

 

CHICAGO — President Obama was struggling to balance the United States’ relationship with two crucial but difficult allies on Sunday, after a deal to reopen supply lines through Pakistan to Afghanistan fell apart just as Mr. Obama began talks on ending the NATO alliance’s combat role in the Afghan war.

 

Doug Mills/The New York Times

President Obama met with President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan at a NATO summit in Chicago on Sunday, but refused to meet with President Asif Ali Zardari of Pakistan.

 

As a two-day NATO summit meeting opened in Chicago, Mr. Obama remained at loggerheads with President Asif Ali Zardari of Pakistan, refusing even to meet with him without an agreement on the supply routes, which officials in both countries acknowledged would not be coming soon.

Mr. Zardari, who flew to Chicago with hopes of lifting his stature with a meeting with Mr. Obama, was preparing to leave empty-handed as the two countries continued to feel the repercussions of a fatal American airstrike last November, for which Mr. Obama has offered condolences but no apology. Mr. Zardari did, however, meet with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton to discuss the supply routes.

Pakistan closed the routes into Afghanistan after the strike, heightening tensions with Pakistani officials who say that the United States has repeatedly infringed on their sovereignty with drone strikes and other activities.

“This whole breakdown in the relationship between the U.S. and Pakistan has come down to a fixation of this apology issue,” said Vali Nasr, a former State Department adviser on Pakistan. The combination of no apology and no meeting, Mr. Nasr said, “will send a powerfully humiliating message back to Pakistan.”

American officials hope the summit of the 28-member alliance will set in motion an orderly conclusion of the decade-long war in Afghanistan, a huge undertaking. NATO aims to give Afghan forces the lead in combat operations next year to pave the way for the departure of NATO troops by the end of 2014. The NATO summit will also focus on financing Afghan forces for the next several years.

In a sign of the tensions surrounding Afghanistan, hundreds of protesters took to the streets of Chicago on Sunday in opposition to the war and to NATO. The police clashed with some demonstrators who refused to disperse after a march down Michigan Avenue to McCormick Place, where world leaders were meeting.

Mr. Obama and his other tenuous ally in the region, President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan, huddled together Sunday morning to grapple with stalled reconciliation talks with the Taliban.

It was a measure of just how bad things have gotten between the United States and Pakistan that, by contrast, Mr. Obama’s relationship with Mr. Karzai — which has been rocky ever since Mr. Obama came into office vowing to end what he viewed as former President George W. Bush’s coddling of the mercurial Afghan leader — looked calm and stable on Sunday.

The two men, fresh off Mr. Obama’s unannounced trip to Kabul this month to sign a strategic partnership agreement with Mr. Karzai that set the terms for relations after the departure of American troops in 2014, presented a united front before reporters after a one-hour meeting on the outskirts of the NATO summit. It was a sharp contrast with the past, when Mr. Karzai berated American troops, threatened to join the Taliban and chastised the American-led NATO mission.

There was none of that on Sunday. During their session, the two men joked about limits in both of their countries that would prevent them from serving more than two terms; Mr. Obama trotted out his familiar “look at all the gray hair I have now” line that he likes using to describe how tough his term has been.

“I want to express my appreciation for the hard work that President Karzai has done,” Mr. Obama said after the meeting, standing next to Mr. Karzai. “He recognizes the enormous sacrifices American troops have made.”

Mr. Obama quickly added: “We recognize the hardships that Afghans have been through during these many many years of war.”

Mr. Karzai, for his part, said he would work to make sure that Afghanistan is not a “burden on the shoulders of our friends” in the international community.

“For all the twists and turns in this relationship, we now very much want to get to very much the same place,” one Obama administration official said. He credited the strategic partnership agreement, which he says has given Mr. Karzai a level of reassurance that the United States and NATO will not abandon Afghanistan once combat troops leave the country. “The discussion today was very much about what do we have to do over the next two years to close out our piece of the war.”

On the Pakistani front, however, things seem to deteriorate.

American and Pakistani officials expressed optimism last week that an agreement on re-establishing supply routes was imminent. Negotiators were narrowing their differences after three weeks of intense deliberations, they said, and it was hoped that an invitation for Pakistan to attend the summit would engender the good will needed to close the gap between the two sides.

The invitation was accepted, and Mr. Zardari arrived in Chicago on Saturday. But a deal on the supply lines remained elusive, and Mr. Obama would not meet with Mr. Zardari without it, American officials said.

The supply lines, through which about 40 percent of NATO’s nonlethal supplies had passed, were closed in late November after 24 Pakistani soldiers were killed in American airstrikes along the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan. The deaths capped a year of crises between the United States and Pakistan that put immense strain on the two countries’ already fragile relationship.

The failure to strike a deal on the supply routes ahead of the summit injects new tension into the relationship. “When NATO extended the invitation, we thought it would move the Pakistanis off the dime,” a senior American official said. Without the deal, “it’s going to be really uncomfortable” for Mr. Zardari at the summit, which runs through Monday, said the official, who requested anonymity to speak candidly about the talks.

American officials said the main sticking point was the amount NATO would pay for each truck carrying supplies from Karachi, on Pakistan’s Arabian Sea coast, to the Afghan border. Before the closing, the payment per truck was about $250. Pakistan is now asking for “upward of $5,000” for each truck, another American official said.

Mr. Obama called off a planned visit to Pakistan last year after the raid in Abbottabad, Pakistan, that killed Osama bin Laden. That Bin Laden had been living there confirmed what American officials had long suspected: Despite Pakistani protests to the contrary, the man behind the Sept. 11 attacks had been hiding in the country for years.

Mr. Obama did telephone Mr. Zardari a few hours after the raid to inform him that Navy Seals had done an incursion into Pakistani territory to kill Bin Laden, and during that conversation Mr. Zardari “spoke with emotion about the fact that these people were associated with the killing of his wife,” Benazir Bhutto, the senior official said.

The NATO summit formally opened on Sunday, with leaders listening to taps to honor the soldiers killed in the Afghan conflict.

In remarks at the opening session, Mr. Obama said the end of the war was in sight. Officials hope to announce on Monday that by the middle of 2013, American soldiers will no longer be in the lead in any combat operations around the country, and Afghanistan’s own national security forces will assume control.

It remains unclear just how smooth that transition will go, as Afghan forces have not demonstrated a lasting ability to secure the country. But after more than a decade of war, there is combat fatigue in the NATO countries.

Mr. Obama, who has pushed to bring troops home, has been at odds with his own military commanders over the pace of the American withdrawal. Speaking to reporters on Sunday, Gen. John Allen, the top United States military commander in Afghanistan, said that American troops will still be involved in combat next year even after the United States shifts to a support role.

Eric Schmitt contributed reporting from Washington, and Salman Masood from Islamabad, Pakistan.

 Supply Lines Cast Shadow at NATO Meeting on Afghan War – NYTimes.com.

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At NATO summit, warm welcome for most leaders, but not Pakistan’s – chicagotribune.com


At NATO summit, warm welcome for most leaders, but not Pakistan’s

President Obama won’t meet with Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari. U.S. officials are furious over Pakistan’s refusal to reopen supply routes to Afghanistan.

Obama and Karzai

Afghan President Hamid Karzai, left, and President Obama shake hands at the NATO summit in Chicago. ( Shawn Thew / May 21, 2012)By David S. Cloud and Kathleen Hennessey, Los Angeles Times

11:06 p.m. CDT, May 20, 2012

CHICAGO — As thousands of protesters marched in the streets, President Obama welcomed more than 60 world leaders to his heavily guarded hometown for a NATO summit that will start the clock for America and its allies to begin pulling combat troops from Afghanistan.

The two-day summit, the largest in the 63-year history of the military alliance, came as White House officials made it clear they were furious over Pakistan’s continued refusal to reopen ground routes used to move fuel and other war supplies into Afghanistan, a six-month standoff that the White House had hoped to resolve before Obama arrived in Chicago.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton met with Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari on the sidelines of the summit Sunday. But White House officials ruled out a meeting between Obama and Zardari, and NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen canceled a meeting with the Pakistani leader, citing scheduling conflicts.

Aides said Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta planned to meet with officials from five Central Asian countries that have provided an alternative, but considerably more expensive, northern land route for NATO supplies since Pakistan closed its roads after U.S. airstrikes killed 24 Pakistani soldiers in November.

After weeks of closed-door negotiations with Zardari’s government, U.S. officials did not deny that they are seeking to send the Pakistanis a public message.

“If they’re feeling a little bit of pressure this weekend, they should,” said a U.S. official, who requested anonymity because of diplomatic sensitivities. “The U.S. and NATO are ready to move beyond this issue.”

During the summit, North Atlantic Treaty Organization nations are expected to ratify a U.S.-backed plan to withdraw most of the 130,000 foreign troops by the end of 2014 and then provide the government in Kabul with billions of dollars in military aid to battle the Taliban insurgency.

In his opening remarks, Obama said he looked forward to when the war “as we understand it is over.” The ambiguous message reflects his determination to end U.S. involvement in an unpopular war as he runs for reelection, even though years of tough fighting probably lie ahead for Afghans.

Mounting economic turmoil around the globe, and the growing sense that 11 years of war is enough, produced powerful undercurrents of tension amid a facade of unity.

The alliance is split on key details about how to prevent Afghanistan from falling under Taliban control once NATO troops leave. There were clear signs of discord over how quickly to pull troops out over the next 2 1/2 years, and growing doubts about whether NATO nations will meet financial pledges in the future.

“We still have a lot of work to do and there will be great challenges ahead,” Obama told reporters after meeting for more than an hour with Afghan President Hamid Karzai. “The loss of life continues in Afghanistan and there will be hard days ahead.”

One of the challenges is from an ally. Pakistan closed its roads to trucks that deliver food, fuel and other nonlethal supplies to NATO forces in Afghanistan after the U.S. airstrikes on Nov. 26. Pakistan called the attacks unprovoked and deliberate, but U.S. officials insisted they were an error. The incident capped months of crises that added intense pressures to the long-fraught relationship between Washington and Islamabad.

Pakistan recently demanded that the United States and NATO pay more than $5,000 for each truck entering its territory, a substantial increase over the previous $200 charge. In an interview last week, Panetta all but ruled out paying that much, although U.S. officials are willing to pay a higher rate than before to reopen the supply route from the port of Karachi to the Afghan border.

If Pakistan doesn’t reopen the routes, NATO will face additional difficulties and expenses as it seeks to withdraw combat forces and military equipment from Afghanistan.

Inside Chicago’s McCormick Place, a cavernous convention center, the summit began with Obama and other leaders seated at a vast circular table. They stood at attention as uniformed service members from the 28 NATO nations solemnly marched in, and a drummer beat cadence. Obama bowed his head as the gathering observed a moment of silence to honor troops killed or injured in NATO operations, and a bugler played taps.

Several thousand antiwar and other demonstrators took to the streets for mostly peaceful protests, chanting “No NATO, no way!” and “Hey hey, ho ho, NATO has got to go!” In the late afternoon, knots of protesters scuffled with police in helmets and black body armor, but officers used billy clubs and shields to push them back.

At least 20 people were reported arrested during the day. But the protests were far smaller and less violent than what many people in Chicago, a city still deeply scarred by memories of bloody confrontations during the 1968 Democratic National Convention, had feared.

Since approving the deployment of 30,000 additional troops in 2010, Obama has steadily reduced his definition of success in Afghanistan. At a briefing Sunday, White House officials described the U.S. goals as modest and narrow: defeating Al Qaeda and preventing the terrorist network from taking root again.

Ben Rhodes, deputy national security advisor for strategic communication, said the aim is not to leave Afghanistan “eradicated of any vestige of the Taliban or any vestiges of some form of violence. It’s leaving behind an Afghanistan that can stand on its own two feet…. And so that’s the goal we’re planning against and we’re confident that we can achieve it.”

Under the NATO plan, Afghanistan’s army and police will take over the lead combat role in the summer of 2013. Gen. John Allen, commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan, warned, however, that substantial fighting is still likely beyond then, especially against Taliban insurgents, militants from the Pakistani-based Haqqani network and a small number of Al Qaeda members in eastern Afghanistan.

“There is a narrative that combat operations for the U.S. stop at milestone 2013,” Allen said. “That is not, in fact, correct. We fully expect that combat is going to continue.”

But the mid-2013 shift may also spur some countries to leave. Nervous European allies may start withdrawing troops well before the end of 2014. France is expected to pull most of its 3,300 troops out by the end of this year, but leave small numbers of military personnel as trainers or in other support roles. The Netherlands and Canada already have sharply reduced their combat roles.

Obama has not said how quickly U.S. troops will leave Afghanistan. The current force of about 90,000 is due to drop to 68,000 by the fall. The pace of later withdrawals is not yet decided, though Obama has said the pullout will be steady.

Officials also have not resolved who will pay for Afghanistan’s long-term development, although they say they are making progress. The Obama administration has offered to pay about half the estimated $4.1 billion per year required for the Afghan national security forces after 2014. Afghanistan has agreed to pay $500 million, while Germany, Britain, Australia and others have made commitments totaling more than $400 million. Other countries have yet to make up the difference.

“We are very, very close to obtaining our full goal,” said Douglas E. Lute, special assistant to the president on Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Though Afghanistan is dominating the session, the alliance also gave final approval to several other initiatives, including plans to buy five unarmed Global Hawk surveillance drones and declaring an interim capability for a basic missile defense system in Europe.

The missile defense system consists of several U.S. guided-missile cruisers in the eastern Mediterranean and a sophisticated radar system in Turkey. They provide a limited ability to shoot down short- and medium-range missiles from Iran, officials say.

Rasmussen, the head of NATO, said he was hopeful that Russia, which has strongly objected to the system, would agree to a joint antimissile effort. But Russian officials have given no sign of changing course and did not attend the summit.

 At NATO summit, warm welcome for most leaders, but not Pakistan’s – chicagotribune.com.

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