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THE STANS
Outside View: Can. U.S. succeed

India, Pakistan foreign ministers to meet
New Delhi (UPI) May 12, 2010 - The foreign ministers of India and Pakistan will meet July 15 in Islamabad in an effort to restart stalled security talks. The meeting is part of efforts by both countries to improve the security situation at the highest level after relations deteriorated in the wake of the deadly Mumbai terrorist attacks. A Mumbai court recently found a Pakistani man, Mohammad Ajmal Amir Qasab, guilty of masterminding the attacks that killed more than 170 people and injured hundreds in November 2008. The invitation for India's External Affairs Minister S. M. Krishna to visit the Pakistani capital came during a half-hour telephone conversation Krishna had with Pakistani Foreign Affairs Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi.

"The foreign minister of Pakistan has invited me to go to Islamabad on the 15th of July," Krishna told reporters in New Delhi. "So I am planning to visit Islamabad for my talks with Foreign Minister Qureshi and I am looking forward to the talks. Let us hope that these talks will be helpful in bringing our two countries closer together." He also said that the talks would be marked with "cordiality" and be "fruitful." The date for a meeting comes after Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his Pakistan counterpart Yusuf Raza Gilani met April 29 in Bhutan while attending a meeting of regional heads of state. Relations between the neighboring countries sank to a low after New Delhi blamed the Mumbai attacks on the Lashkar-e-Toiba militant group based in Pakistan.

The attack, known as 26/11 within India, was a diplomatic set back following five years of security talks between India and Pakistan that included an easing of tensions in the disputed northern border state of Jammu and Kashmir. A Mumbai court is considering what penalty, possibly hanging, is to be handed down to Qasab, 22, for his role in the 26/11 attacks. Earlier this month he was found guilty on 86 charges including murder, waging war on India and possessing explosives in the 2008 attack that also killed nine other militants. India also has been pressing the United States for access to another 26/11 suspect, David Headley. "We work together in historic ways on providing access to people like David Headley where the U.S. is cooperating at the highest level to eventually provide access to this person who helped pull off the savagery of the attack on Mumbai on 26/11," U.S. Ambassador to India Timothy J. Roemer.

He was speaking to reporters after paying tributes to the victims of the 26/11 attacks during a visit to Marine Drive in Mumbai where the attacks happened. "We have been providing indirect access to sharing intelligence for months about that acquired information and now the door is open," Roemer said. "The opportunity is there for India in the weeks ahead to get direct access in the appropriate way and appropriate time to David Headley." Roemer also said Islamabad needs to do a lot more to combat terrorism. "Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's comments underscore that while Pakistan has done a lot, they need to do more," he said. Last weekend in Pakistan police arrested a man at Karachi Airport after batteries and an electrical circuit were found in his shoes as he tried to board a plane. A representative for the airport's security force said the Pakistani civil engineer, in his 30s, was arrested when a scanner sounded an alarm. He was to travel to the Omani capital Muscat on Thai Airways.
by Harlan Ullman
Washington (UPI) May 12, 2010
This week's very visible visit of Afghan President Hamid Karzai to Washington, combined with the fallout from Faisal Shahzad's failed bombing attempt in New York's Times Square and the specter of forcing Pakistan to go after terrorist training camps in North Waziristan, raises the question of whether "we" can succeed in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The correct answer is a resounding no!

"We," meaning the United States and its allies alone, cannot succeed in bringing peace and security to the region.

The correct answer is whether Afghanistan and Pakistan under current leadership can prevail in the existential battles both are waging. Yet, for Afghan and Pakistani leadership to succeed, two potentially fatal contradictions in the Obama (and NATO) strategy must be overcome. And then the two governments must be up to the task of assuming broader responsibility for their security.

The announced U.S. aim in Afghanistan, accepted by NATO, has been to disrupt, disband and destroy al-Qaida and prevent its return. The means have been for U.S. and NATO forces to "hold, clear, build and transfer" responsibility to the Afghans. Because only a handful of al-Qaida operates in Afghanistan, the strategy has implicitly merged and combined al-Qaida with the Taliban. Hence, the focus of both military and "civilian" operations has been almost exclusively on disrupting, disbanding and destroying the Taliban.

Resolving the first contradiction is recognizing that, despite Sept. 11, 2001, al-Qaida is not and has not been the crux of the matter. The Pashtun populations are.

An old Afghan expression reminds us that while all Taliban are Pashtuns, not all Pashtuns are Taliban. In simplest terms, to ensure al-Qaida and the Taliban are indeed rendered impotent and their threat minimized, unless or until the Pashtuns in both Afghanistan and Pakistan are enfranchised in some form, success will be elusive and probably impossible. Unfortunately, our strategy doesn't overtly recognize this contradiction although attempts at reconciliation and reintegration implicitly do.

In Afghanistan, the solutions are governance, governance and governance. Regarding transfer of responsibility and despite hope and expectation, Afghanistan under Karzai has been incapable of providing the necessary governance to bring long-term stability.

Here, the will and resolve of Karzai are essential. Despite promises by the Afghan president to those ends including a piece in Sunday's Washington Post, the betting is at best 50/50 Karzai will be able to follow through on his pledges. Efforts to work around the president through reliance on strong Cabinet ministers and local leaders, jirgas and strong men may not be the answer although they must be tried even at the expense of offending Karzai.

Much of the strategy depends on building Afghan security forces. The Afghan army has gotten mixed reviews. The Afghan National Police, however, are a disaster. Advisers close to Karzai have recommended shutting the police down and starting afresh. It may be too late. Another avenue is open.

The ultimate approach may well be to contain violence within Afghanistan. That could lead to Afghanistan becoming a connected series of city states, anchored around Kabul, Herat and Jalalabad for example, protected by the army with parts of the country under the control of local strongmen in some kind of cease-fire or status quo arrangement provided Pashtun reconciliation can be settled. Clearly, this isn't the ideal outcome. But there are far worse.

Pakistan, as the Obama administration has consistently and correctly argued, is the strategic center of gravity. Given the various foiled terrorist attacks in the United States, great pressure is being placed on the Pakistani government to clean out training camps and insurgent bases in North Waziristan.

If and when one of these terrorist attacks succeeds in the United States, that pressure could become overpowering.

The fatal contradiction in our Pakistan strategy is that, while the administration is absolutely right in its placement of the critical strategic importance of Pakistan, it hasn't provided the tools Pakistan needs to do the job either in righting its economy or giving its military the stuff it needs to defeat the insurgency.

Critics of Pakistan and the administration will argue that the United States has provided plenty in military and economic aid and support. Unfortunately, compared with what has been spent in Iraq and Afghanistan, with populations one-fifth or one-sixth of Pakistan's, those amounts have been minor -- a reality unlikely to gain much sympathy or political traction.

Two years ago, an Atlantic Council report warned: "Make no mistake. NATO is not winning in Afghanistan."

Today, that warning still applies. And, regardless of the United States and its NATO allies reconciling these strategic contradictions, only the governments in Kabul and Islamabad will answer the question of whether Afghanistan and Pakistan will succeed.

(Harlan Ullman is chairman of the Killowen Group that advises leaders of government and business and senior adviser at Washington's Atlantic Council.)

(United Press International's "Outside View" commentaries are written by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United Press International. In the interests of creating an open forum, original submissions are invited.)



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THE STANS
Obama: U.S. on right track in Afghanistan
Washington (UPI) May 12, 2010
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