Showing posts with label Afghanistan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Afghanistan. Show all posts

Saturday, September 8, 2012

US adds Haqqani group to terror blacklist, puts pressure on Pakistan

Vladivostok, Russia: In a report to Congress on Friday, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton formally designated the militant Haqqani network - responsible for some of the deadliest attacks against American troops in Afghanistan - as a terrorist organization, two days before a Congressional deadline.

Mrs Clinton signed the order in Brunei before departing to Vladivostok for the annual Asia Pacific Economic Conference, and State Department officials began notifying senior lawmakers. She issued the report after a last round of internal debate that took place in Washington on Thursday hours before President Obama spoke at the Democratic National Convention.

Mrs Clinton and others have already discussed the issue with their counterparts in Pakistan, and the administration's special envoy, Marc Grossman, is expected to formally inform Pakistan's leaders on Friday.

The decision is the culmination of nearly two years of spirited debate inside the administration that reached a peak in the past month under the pressure of Sunday's reporting deadline.

Several State Department and military officials had argued that designating the organization would help strangle the group's fund-raising activities in countries like Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates and pressure Pakistan to open a long-expected military offensive against the militants.

Many other senior officials, including several in the White House, expressed deep reservations that blacklisting the group could further damage badly frayed relations with Pakistan, undercut peace talks with the Taliban and possibly jeopardize the fate of Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl, the only American soldier known to be held by the militants.

But in the past few days, supporters of designating the group apparently eased most concerns or put forward contingencies to mitigate the risks and potential consequences.

"This shows that we are using everything we can to put the squeeze on these guys," said one administration official who was involved in the process, and who spoke on the condition of anonymity on Thursday because the decision had not yet been formally announced.

Another senior administration official said the designation "is a very strong signal of our resolve to combat the Haqqanis."

Critics had contended that a designation by the Treasury Department or the United Nations could achieve largely the same result as adding the network to the much more prominent State Department list, with far fewer consequences.

But many senior counterterrorism officials as well as top American military officers, including General John R Allen, commander of American and NATO troops in Afghanistan, had said designating the organization should be a top priority.

"FTO designation could reduce a critical capability of the Haqqani network by increasing the cost of doing business, reducing access to capital, and constraining the network's financial resources, thereby limiting their freedom to operate in a local, regional, and international context," Jeffrey Dressler, senior Afghanistan analyst for the Institute for the Study of War, a research organization here, said in a paper issued this week, referring to foreign terrorist organizations.

Mr Dressler said the Haqqani network's business interests stretched from Afghanistan and Pakistan, to the Persian Gulf, and included car dealerships, money exchanges and construction companies, import-export operations and smuggling networks.

Since 2008, Haqqani suicide attackers have struck the American Embassy and Indian Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, as well as the headquarters of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force and hotels and restaurants there.

American officials confirmed last week that a senior member of the Haqqani family leadership, Badruddin Haqqani, the network's operational commander, was killed recently in a drone strike in Pakistan's tribal areas.

Pressure in Congress to add the group to the terrorist list had grown this year. "The Haqqani network is engaged in a reign of terror," Representative Mike Rogers, a Michigan Republican who is chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said in July. "Now is the time for action, not simply paperwork and talk."

With virtually unanimous backing, Congress approved legislation that President Obama signed into law on August 10 giving Mrs Clinton 30 days to determine whether the Haqqani network was a terrorist group, and report her decision to lawmakers by Sunday, coincidentally three days after the end of the Democratic National Convention.

Critics of designating the group a terrorist organization say the action could drive a wedge between the United States and Pakistan, just as the countries are gingerly recovering from months of gruelling negotiations to reopen NATO supply routes. Pakistan closed the routes through its territory after an allied airstrike near the Afghan border last November killed 24 Pakistani soldiers.

These same critics say such a move would appear to bring Pakistan a step closer to being designated as a state sponsor of terrorism. American officials say Pakistan's main spy agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate, is secretly aiding the insurgents. Pakistani officials have said the agency maintains regular contact with the Haqqanis, but deny that it provides operational support.

Two Pakistani officials said last week that the decision was "an internal American issue." American analysts believe that Pakistan would be reluctant to publicly protest the designation, because to do so would substantiate American beliefs that Pakistan supports the Haqqanis.

© 2012, The New York Times News Service

Saturday, September 1, 2012

7-year-old girl, 12-year-old boy found beheaded in Afghanistan

Kabul: The decapitated bodies of a 7-year-old girl and a 12-year-old boy found Friday in the country's south and east continued a spate of grisly beheadings in Afghanistan this week.

The body of the boy was discovered in the rural Panjwai district of Kandahar Province in the south, where the Taliban retain command of some areas despite regular clearing operations by American and Afghan forces.

Local residents and officials said the Taliban had killed the boy because his brother and uncle were members of the local police. The Taliban denied killing him.

There was no immediate explanation for the killing of the girl, whose body was found in a garden in the Tagab district of eastern Kapisa Province, said the governor of Kapisa, Mehrabudin Safi. Mr. Safi said she had been killed on Thursday. "So far it is not clear to the security forces who was behind this beheading," he said. "The Taliban have not claimed responsibility for it."

On Sunday, 15 men and 2 women were beheaded in a Taliban stronghold in Helmand Province, in the south.

The boy who was killed had been sent by his father from their home in the Zhari district to Spirwan in the Panjwai District to borrow money from a landowner on Wednesday. The journey would take at least a couple of hours through a dusty desert region of mud-bricked villages and vineyards in western Kandahar. But four Taliban fighters on motorcycles picked up the boy, local officials said.

"He was killed because I am supporting the government," said the boy's uncle, Mullah Zianullah, who was a former Taliban commander in Panjwai but last year joined the peace and reintegration process in Kandahar and is now leading the local police in Spirwan. "There is nothing else except killing."

Mullah Zianullah has a reputation for tough dealing with the Taliban, ordering his officers to shoot insurgents on the spot, local residents said. The Taliban, in turn, had warned him that no one in his family was safe.

A village elder who did not give his name offered another reason that the boy, who was not named, set out through Taliban territory: he had worked on a poppy field last year but had not been paid and was going to claim his wages.

Whatever the reason for the boy's journey, as soon as the Taliban discovered his family's involvement with the Afghan Local Police, a local militia trained by American forces, they were swift with their punishment, local officials said.

"The boy was beheaded immediately and his headless body dumped on the main road in Spirwan," said Jawad Faisal, the spokesman for the Kandahar governor.

A spokesman for the Taliban, reached by phone, denied the accounts. "Our supreme leader strictly prohibited beheading," said the spokesman, Qari Yousuf Ahmadi, referring to the Taliban leader Mullah Muhammad Omar. "We are not only rejecting it, but condemning whoever carried it out."

But this was no consolation for the boy's uncle, who said in a telephone interview that he could not go to Spirwan to claim his nephew's body for fear of further Taliban retribution.

"We have been told by people living there that the body was buried there, but we cannot go to bring the body back and the other people are afraid to help us," he said.
 
© 2012, The New York Times News Service