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April 30, 2011

How Syria and Libya Got to Be Turkey's Headaches

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2068633,00.html
Time
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:50:45 AM] [*]
Saturday, Apr. 30, 2011
How Syria and Libya Got to Be Turkey's Headaches
By Pelin Turgut / Istanbul [commentary] [an author with loads of expertise in Turkey] [who thinkgs that Arab Spring is Turkey’s problem, not America’s or even EU’s-NATO’s?] [interesting argument] [use psci 363, 363, 355-455?] [*]
With neighboring Syria in crisis, the Arab Spring has finally arrived on Turkey's doorstep — and with it, one big headache for a government that has spent recent years staking its political fortunes on the region.
Since coming to power in 2002, the Islamic-rooted government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has sought to become a kingpin in the Muslim world, driven by shared religious sensibility and economic expansionism. [I think it’s pretty understandable that Turkey would seek to return to its once-prominent role as leader of Islamic nations] [if not the caliphate, exactly, the modern iteration of it?] [*] Turkish ministers have jetted between Middle Eastern capitals, signing trade deals and political cooperation protocols even as

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2068633,00.html
Time
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:50:45 AM] [*]
Saturday, Apr. 30, 2011
How Syria and Libya Got to Be Turkey's Headaches
By Pelin Turgut / Istanbul [commentary] [an author with loads of expertise in Turkey] [who thinkgs that Arab Spring is Turkey’s problem, not America’s or even EU’s-NATO’s?] [interesting argument] [use psci 363, 363, 355-455?] [*]
With neighboring Syria in crisis, the Arab Spring has finally arrived on Turkey's doorstep — and with it, one big headache for a government that has spent recent years staking its political fortunes on the region.
Since coming to power in 2002, the Islamic-rooted government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has sought to become a kingpin in the Muslim world, driven by shared religious sensibility and economic expansionism. [I think it’s pretty understandable that Turkey would seek to return to its once-prominent role as leader of Islamic nations] [if not the caliphate, exactly, the modern iteration of it?] [*] Turkish ministers have jetted between Middle Eastern capitals, signing trade deals and political cooperation protocols even as long-standing efforts to join the European Union have cooled. Erdogan stepped up criticism of Israel and became a hero on Arab streets for it.
Called neo-Ottomanism [*]by some, the new foreign policy was based on the maxim "zero problems with neighbors." As long as trade flourished and business was good, the argument went, why couldn't everybody just get along. Bashir Assad's Syria — which shares a 700km border with Turkey — was a key player in this scenario. Although the two countries came to the brink of war in the late 1990s, they became close political allies under Erdogan. The two leaders holidayed together on the Turkish coast and last year, lifted visa restrictions on travel. Unlike the revolution in Egypt, where Erdogan was quick to denounce Hosni Mubarak and call for a handover, he has been largely silent on the current uprising in Syria. [*](See photos of the ongoing turmoil in Syria.)
That parallels Turkey's response to the uprising in Libya, where Turkish companies had billions of dollars in construction contracts and some 25,000 workers. Libyan rebels have since accused Ankara — a NATO member — of supporting Muammar Gaddafi's regime.
Yet, despite strong economic ties, Erdogan does not appear to have the ear of either Assad or Gaddafi. "Turkey styled itself as a 'wise elder' and role model in the region, but when push comes to shove, it has become apparent that it has little influence over what is happening," says Soli Ozel, international relations professor at Bilgi University and a political columnist. "This is the point where Turkish foreign policy hits the wall." [*](See Turkey's call for change in Egypt.)
"In pursuing its economic interests in a region such as the Middle East, where the state is heavily involved in economic decision making, Turkey has had to create strong bonds with many — though not all — existing regimes, " wrote Turkey expert Henri Barkey in an article for the Carnegie Endowment for Peace. "Paradoxically, these linkages have made Turkey into a status-quo power, unwilling to see dramatic change. And not surprisingly, first Libya, and now Syria, is creating serious headaches for Turkey." [that is, Turkey is complexly interconnected economically with most of the region’s regimes—in places like Syria and Libya the state controls most of the means of production—which has made Turkey rely on the status quo; therefore, Arab Awakening has become Turkey’s nightmare] [*]
In addition to being a political embarrassment for Ankara and its ambitions, the worsening turmoil in Syria could have serious political consequences for Turkey — most worryingly, a mass influx of refugees across the border. Senior Turkish government negotiators traveled to Damascus on Thursday to urge reform, while the Turkey's National Security Council met in Ankara to discuss the crisis. [*]"It is important that necessary steps are taken rapidly and in a determined way in order to establish social peace and stability in brotherly, friendly Syria, to put an end to the violence and to maintain security of life, basic rights and freedoms," a council statement said later. [it’s interesting to see Turkey act like Libya or other Mediterranean nation-states when émigrés come pouring over their borders] [*]
Erdogan's reticence in addressing the violent crackdowns on civilians in Libya and Syria has also sparked criticism that he has double-standards when he picks his fights. Just two years ago, he caused an international stir by vocally condemning Israel's killing of civilians in Gaza. Relations with Israel never recovered: Turkey has not had an ambassador in Tel Aviv for months. "Turkey now finds itself very alone on the world stage," says Ozel. [at very least, Erdogan is in cross hairs of global opprobrium as having double standard: when Israel does it, it’s genocide; when Arab regimes do it, it’s considered complex?] [*] "Relations with Europe have soured, and what will happen in the Middle East is uncertain. But it didn't need to be this way."

Is Ahmadinejad Islamic Enough for Iran?

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/29/is_ahmadinejad_islamic_enough_for_iran
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:41:21 AM] [*]
Is Ahmadinejad Islamic Enough for Iran?
Why the Iranian president's latest fight with the supreme leader could be his last.
BY ABBAS MILANI | APRIL 29, 2011 [commentary] [Stanford expert on Iran] [if I had a dollar for every time I’ve read or heard that Ahmadinejad was on his way out I’d be rich] [nevertheless, two things are certain about Iran: factionalism drives politics of all kinds in Iran; and, eventually, Ahmadinejad will have to go] [is this latest fracas, reported in pieces archived on this site, the one that exhausted the surpreme leader’s patience with his unruly surrogate in the presidency?] [I haven’t the slightest clue] [I thought it was a simple matter of time after the 2009 elections] [that is, I couldn’t see how Ahmadinejad could survive such overwhelming disrepute in which Ahmadinejad was held by large segment of Iranian society?] [turned out, the lower class in particular supported him and evenied the upper-class ingrates trying to dump Ahmadinejad—or something like that] [with Arab Awakening so close by, there’s got to be tremendous strain on the thugocracy’s mechanics?] [but often it’s those very times when people pull together and rally around, even unpopular leaders?] [this author has predicted Ahmadinejad’s demise previously and Ahmadinejad is still there]

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/29/is_ahmadinejad_islamic_enough_for_iran
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:41:21 AM] [*]
Is Ahmadinejad Islamic Enough for Iran?
Why the Iranian president's latest fight with the supreme leader could be his last.
BY ABBAS MILANI | APRIL 29, 2011 [commentary] [Stanford expert on Iran] [if I had a dollar for every time I’ve read or heard that Ahmadinejad was on his way out I’d be rich] [nevertheless, two things are certain about Iran: factionalism drives politics of all kinds in Iran; and, eventually, Ahmadinejad will have to go] [is this latest fracas, reported in pieces archived on this site, the one that exhausted the surpreme leader’s patience with his unruly surrogate in the presidency?] [I haven’t the slightest clue] [I thought it was a simple matter of time after the 2009 elections] [that is, I couldn’t see how Ahmadinejad could survive such overwhelming disrepute in which Ahmadinejad was held by large segment of Iranian society?] [turned out, the lower class in particular supported him and evenied the upper-class ingrates trying to dump Ahmadinejad—or something like that] [with Arab Awakening so close by, there’s got to be tremendous strain on the thugocracy’s mechanics?] [but often it’s those very times when people pull together and rally around, even unpopular leaders?] [this author has predicted Ahmadinejad’s demise previously and Ahmadinejad is still there] [*]
While most of the Middle East region has been risking life and limb for the sake of a democratic future, in Iran, different factions in the regime have been busy debating the virtues of the ancient Persian King Cyrus the Great. Neither side brings any new historical insight, but it hasn't been an exercise in mere navel-gazing -- in Iran, debates on ancient history have been a high-stakes affair. [*]Today, the question is whether the Islamic Republic should pay closer attention to the country's pre-Islamic Iranian heritage; the answers recently offered by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad threaten the collapse of the current regime. [is it really?] [*]
The dispute itself is nothing new. For decades, if not centuries, the twin enigmas of Iran's identity and the nature of Islam in Iran have bedeviled [*]Iranian scholars and politicians alike. Iranian identity is bifurcated, split between the pre-Islamic traditions of Zoroastrian and Manichean millennium before Islam, and the Islam-influenced developments of the last 1,300 years.
But there has never been a consensus about which side of this bifurcation should be privileged. Even in the first centuries after the arrival of Islam in Iran, though Iranians had a decisive role in formulating Islamic laws, governance, and literature, there was considerable tension between Arabs and Persians: The former routinely referred to the latter with the pejorative [*]moniker Ajam. Some Arabs (and some Iranians) even questioned whether Shiism -- the dominant sect in Iran today -- qualifies at all as a legitimate branch of Islam, arguing that it was actually a thinly disguised form of Iranian nationalism. Indeed, many scholars have pointed out that key ideas singular to Shiism in the Islamic world -- like the concept of a messiah (mahdi), and millenarian optimism -- are in fact a reincarnation of pre-Islamic Iranian ideas and concepts drawn from Zoroastrian and Manichean philosophies. [*]
Negotiating these tensions has long been a requirement for any Iranian regime. The shahs of the Pahlavi era, seeking to blunt Islam's role in public life, accentuated the pre-Islamic age. The grandest example of that campaign came in 1976, when the shah spent several hundred million dollars to celebrate 2,500 years of Persian monarchy in a tent-city he specially erected outside Persepolis, the capital of ancient Persia. He even changed the national calendar for the occasion, away from one of Islamic origin to one that claimed to have its genesis in the age of Cyrus, the ancient Persian king praised in the Old Testament for freeing Jews from their Babylonian captivity [*](though the change lasted only two years).
But when the Islamic regime came into power in 1979, it attempted to obliterate the Persian pre-Islamic past and emphasize only the Islamic component. It was an agenda that required some heavy cultural lifting, to say the least, in a country where people still routinely decried the "Arab invasion" of a millennium past, and practiced with pride and care a language that had survived the era of Arab imperialism. [*]Ayatollah Khomeini, the Islamic Republic's founder, made Iran's pre-Islamic Persian holidays a special target: He derided Nowruz, the Iranian New Year celebration held on the first day of spring, as a "pagan" festivity. [*]
Iranians, for the most part, resisted the regime's ambitions in this regard. The popular response has been to insist on even more ostentatious celebrations of traditional Persian festivities and support for campaigns to "purify" the language of any Arabic words and names. [thus, the sentimentality associated with Persia (ancient Iran) versus Iran (seen as Islamic, mondern Iran)?] [*] And just a few years ago, during the days of Mohamad Khatami, Ahmadinejad's reformist predecessor, an Iranian scholar published a five-volume treatise chronicling the two centuries of fierce fighting by Iranians before they accepted Islam, contradicting the regime's official history that Iranians accepted Islam eagerly and as soon as they had heard its message. [oops, that’s most awkward] [*]
It is this sort of national pride that Ahmadinejad and his closest advisor, Esfandiar Mashaei, have been tapping into with their recent calls for an "Iranian Islam." They have made Iranian nationalism a pillar of the Ahmadinejad government, repeatedly and profusely praising pre-Islamic Iranian grandeur. [is that the basis of the current unpleasantness?] [*]
Rather than neglect Nowruz, Ahmadinejad marked the occasion this year by inviting 20 heads of state to Persepolis -- once so reviled by Shiite clerics that in the early days of the revolution Sadegh Khalkhali, a hard-line judge, tried to have it bulldozed (he was stopped by angry locals). Though Ahmadinejad gave in to heavy criticism and decided against having his celebration at the ancient site, he refused to heed the threats and advice of conservatives and held it in Tehran. It was rightly seen as a direct challenge to the clerical authorities. [*]
Ayatollah Khamenei, the supreme leader, pointedly refused to meet with any of the invited guests and even left town during the festivities. Ahmadinejad and Mashaei also played a key role in the much-celebrated temporary return to Iran from its permanent home in London's British Museum of the Cyrus Cylinder, a small clay cylinder inscribed with words considered the first declaration of human rights in history. Ahmadinejad has openly praised Cyrus on numerous occasions, including when the cylinder first arrived in Iran. [does surpreme leader see it as zero-sum game?] [if so, Persia’s win his mullah’s loss, and vice versa???] [*]
The actions of Ahmadinejad and his alter ego may seem innocuous enough, but they have deeply angered the conservative clergy. [it’s as plausible an explanation as I’ve heard?] [*] In any country, such faint praise for a past ruler of international, even Biblical, stature would have been normal. In Islamic Iran, it is considered something akin to sedition. [*]In the first days of the Islamic revolution, key clerical figures in the regime, particularly the infamous Khalkhali -- a favorite disciple of Khomeini, who appointed him head of the revolutionary courts -- went on to call Cyrus a "Jew boy" and a "sodomite." Now, Ahmadinejad was spending millions to bring the Cyrus Cylinder back to Iran and praising its value and singularity. Meanwhile, in spite of an increasingly louder chorus of critics, some from the highest echelons of clerical power in Iran, Mashaei continued to wax eloquent about Cyrus, Iranian nationalism, and Iranian Islam. [Ahmadinejad’s buddy who has people so riled up] [*]
What appeared as cause for a minor irritation has now morphed into one of the biggest challenges facing Iran's leaders since June 2009's contested presidential election. This new rift within the Islamic regime has appeared while the leaders of the Green Movement continue to be under house arrest and show no sign of compromise. Even Ali Hashemi Rafsanjani, the powerful cleric, has refused to fully rejoin Khamenei's camp. Every indication is that serious economic hard times are ahead for the regime. There is open talk of Ahmadinejad's impeachment; [how could this have happened so quickly?] [*]Akbar Ganji, the well-known and usually reliable dissident journalist now residing in the United States, has alleged that the Ahmadinejad team worked with European Union to prepare the list of Iranian officials banned from travel for complicity in human rights abuses -- a list he alleges is composed only of Khamenei's allies, and includes no one from the Ahmadinejad team. [?] [*]According to Ganji, the president has sent a team of reliable aides to open secret negotiations with the United States and the EU. Other sources inside Iran allege that the president's team was trying to steal documents from the Intelligence Ministry to blackmail other leaders. [?] [*]
The crisis came to a boil about 10 days ago when Ahmadinejad fired the minister of intelligence --the second cleric he has fired from that position in less than two years -- and Khamenei resisted the move. A few weeks earlier, Ahmadinejad had fired the foreign minister, another Khamenei ally. Instead of trying to solve the crisis behind closed doors, as has been his wont in the past, this time Khamenei wrote a letter, pointedly not to the president, but to the dismissed minister, and reappointed him to his post. [I have it archived on this site] [but I’ve been unable to make much sense of it to date] [if this is accurate, things start to fit?] [*] There is absolutely no constitutional provision that allows him to unilaterally appoint a minister.
Although a majority of members of the parliament have written an open letter to Ahmadinejad asking him to comply with Khamenei's egregious breach of the constitution, the president has hitherto refused to accept the leader's interference. He has refused to attend cabinet meetings and has yet to make a public comment about the decision. [*]Either Khamenei must cave and allow Ahmadinejad to fire the minister -- yet another major blow to his authority -- or Ahmadinejad might have to go, [*]creating a political crisis just when the regime least can afford it. Of course, if Ahmadinejad caves, he will be more vulnerable to his many foes, and that can only add to the political instability in the regime.
So what kind of game is Ahmadinejad playing? Why the sudden surge of Iranian patriotism? And why the public fight over the Intelligence Ministry? Some see the moves as part of his calculated effort by to prepare for the upcoming elections by creating some distance from Khamenei and the clerical regime. According to this theory, Ahmadinejad knows how reviled the clergy are in Iran and is keen on either challenging them or at least distancing himself from them. His decision to dismiss the minister of intelligence simply brought what had been a mere confrontation to the point of explosion. [that would make him more clever, than I and others with far more expertise on Iran than I, have permitted him??] [*]
Another key question is why Khamenei and his allies in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) have decided to pick this fight now. On the one hand, Khamenei and the IRGC have been increasingly tightening the political screws, and ruling more and more through brazen force. But more crucially, with the economy heading toward a crisis -- the central bank just announced that the inflation rate for foodstuffs is 25 percent, another official announced the real unemployment to be near 30 percent and an influential member of the parliament declared that government economic statistics are either kept secret and those made public are all unreliable -- and with the continued winds of democracy blowing in the region, [wow] [staggering numbers?] [*] Khamenei seems to be preparing to sacrifice the president and blame him for the financial calamities faced by the country. But will Ahmadinejad go down without a fight?
Abbas Milani is the Hamid and Christina Moghadam director of Iranian studies at Stanford University. His most recent book is The Shah.

Wishful Thinking

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/29/wishful_thinking
Foreign Policy
[Accessed4/30/11 8:35:58 AM] [*]
Wishful Thinking
Top 10 examples of the most unrealistic expectations in contemporary U.S. foreign policy.
BY STEPHEN M. WALT | APRIL 29, 2011 [Walt’s commentary] [on US foreign policy generally] [sort of the too-often unspoken truths of American foreign policy] [not nearly as sanitized as we normally hear] [while I’m not as cynical as Walt, no one can study U.S. foreign and national-security policy for long or in depth and not become somewhat cynical about how it works] [use psci 355-455] [*]
A realistic foreign policy seeks to deal with the world as it is, shorn of political illusions. Realists emphasize that even close allies often have conflicting interests, that cooperation between states is difficult to achieve or sustain, and that the conduct of nations is frequently shaped by some combination of fear, greed and stupidity.
Above all, realists warn against basing policy on wishful thinking, on the assumption that all will go as we want it to. Yet the pages of history are littered with episodes where leaders

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/29/wishful_thinking
Foreign Policy
[Accessed4/30/11 8:35:58 AM] [*]
Wishful Thinking
Top 10 examples of the most unrealistic expectations in contemporary U.S. foreign policy.
BY STEPHEN M. WALT | APRIL 29, 2011 [Walt’s commentary] [on US foreign policy generally] [sort of the too-often unspoken truths of American foreign policy] [not nearly as sanitized as we normally hear] [while I’m not as cynical as Walt, no one can study U.S. foreign and national-security policy for long or in depth and not become somewhat cynical about how it works] [use psci 355-455] [*]
A realistic foreign policy seeks to deal with the world as it is, shorn of political illusions. Realists emphasize that even close allies often have conflicting interests, that cooperation between states is difficult to achieve or sustain, and that the conduct of nations is frequently shaped by some combination of fear, greed and stupidity.
Above all, realists warn against basing policy on wishful thinking, on the assumption that all will go as we want it to. Yet the pages of history are littered with episodes where leaders made decisions on the basis of false hopes, idealistic delusions, and blind faith. And I regret to say that there's no shortage of this sort of wishful thinking today. As evidence, here are my "Top 10 Examples of Wishful Thinking in Contemporary U.S. Foreign Policy."
1. China Won't Act Like a Great Power
Although most foreign-policy gurus recognize that China's rising power will have profound effects on world politics, some still assume that a more powerful China will somehow act differently than other great powers have in the past. In particular, they maintain that China will cheerfully accept the institutional arrangements that were "made-in-America" after World War II. They also believe that Beijing will be content to let the United States maintain its current security posture in East Asia, and will not seek to undermine it over time. Maybe so, but that's not how great powers have acted in the past, and it's certainly not how the United States behaved during its own rise to world power (remember the Monroe Doctrine?). This illusion is gradually being dispelled, I think, but one hears its echoes every time some official says that the United States "welcomes" China's rise.
2. Using the Big Stick Will Bring Big Benefits
Since the end of the Cold War, U.S. leaders have repeatedly exaggerated the efficacy of using military power, and tended to assume that a little bit of military power will produce large, predictable, and uniformly beneficial results. In 1999, the Clinton administration thought a few days of air strikes would cause Slobodan Milosevic to fold -- in fact, it took weeks of bombing and Russian diplomatic intercession to end the Kosovo War. In 2002, the Bush administration assumed that the rapid ouster of the Taliban would solve our problems in Afghanistan, and in 2003 it thought toppling Saddam Hussein would trigger a radical transformation of the whole Middle East. More recently, the Obama administration's decision to intervene in Libya seems to have been based on the hope that Muammar al-Qaddafi's support would quickly dissolve as soon as NATO jumped into the fray. It might have been nice if it had, but it was wishful thinking to assume it.
3. It Won't Take Long to Achieve Results
A closely related form of wishful thinking is to assume that a particular policy goal will be easy to achieve, and that it won't take long to see concrete results. Obama thought he could get a two-state solution in the Middle East in his first term, and believed he could get Israel to stop building settlements just by making a speech or two and by talking tough during Netanyahu's first visit. Ooops. The president later told us that the "surge" in Afghanistan would bring decisive results within a year. Obama also seemed to think that sending Iran a few friendly video messages would turn the U.S.-Iranian impasse around; when that didn't work, they decided that ratcheting up sanctions would convince Tehran to fold instead. Wishful thinking, in every case.
4. Our Allies Will Do More if We Ask Them To
For the past five or six decades, U.S. leaders have repeatedly pushed U.S. allies to make larger contributions to common projects like Iraq or Afghanistan, and to do more of the heavy lifting in their own regions, with at best modest success. You'd think we'd know better by now, but each new administration seems to succumb to this familiar form of wishful thinking. For reasons well explained by the theory of collective action, U.S. allies have usually chosen to free-ride, because they understand that they can get away with it. So they make the minimum contribution necessary to keep us on the hook, and let Uncle Sucker do a disproportionate share of the work. And we let them.
5. We Have Just Fought the Last War
Now, this kind of wishful thinking is a hardy perennial: the end of every major conflict is heralded as ushering in some new era of peace and prosperity. World War I was "the war to end all wars," and World War II was supposed to make the world "safe for democracy." Victory in the Cold War was said to have ushered in a peaceful "new world order" (or even the "end of History!"), and so on and so on. And once we're finally out of Iraq and (someday) Afghanistan, no doubt plenty of people will claim that all our problems are now over and that we won't have to do anything like that again.
There is evidence that the total level of global conflict has declined in recent years, but only a cockeyed optimist would believe that the danger of international conflict -- including great power conflict -- has been eradicated forever. I'd like to think so too, but I'm a realist.
6. Spreading Democracy is Easy
A central tenet of both neo-conservatism and liberal internationalism/interventionism is the idea that democracy is both the ideal form of government but also one that is relatively easy to export to other societies. [contrary to every case study ever done!] [*] Never mind that democratization tends to shift the distribution of power within different societies, thereby provoking potentially violent struggles for power between different ethnic or social groups within society. Pay no attention to the fact that it took several centuries for stable democracies to emerge in the Western world, and that process was frequently bloody and difficult. And you should ignore the fact that U.S. efforts to spread democracy in the past have a decidedly mixed track record, yet this continues to be a central pillar of U.S. foreign policy.
7. Anti-Americanism Can Be Cured By Skillful "Public Diplomacy"
Ever since 9/11, there's been a tendency to assume that anti-Americanism in the world was mostly due to poor marketing, and that it would decline if we just came up with a better sales pitch. So the Bush administration appointed a former advertising executive to work on polishing America's "brand" (without success). [ambassador Patterson?] [*] This response is understandable, because Americans (and some other countries) don't want to admit that a lot of the opposition they face isn't due to a misunderstanding about what they stand for or what they are doing. On the contrary, opposition has arisen because other societies do understand what we are doing, and they don't like it anymore than we would if someone were doing the same thing to us.
To be sure, President Obama is more popular in many parts of the world than President Bush was (admittedly a low bar to clear), but in the areas where opposition to U.S. policy is most apparent (i.e., most of the Middle East), he has had little positive impact. Bottom line: To believe that you can fool people into liking policies that are contrary to their interests is a pernicious form of wishful thinking, because it discourages us from asking whether it is the policies themselves that ought to change. [*]
8. The United States Is a Benign Hegemon
Americans tend to see their own global role in glowing terms: Because we think our intentions are noble, we tend to think that most other countries ought to appreciate what we are doing. In short, we see ourselves as a benign hegemon, and we are quick to assume that other states appreciate us and want to be like us. Although some countries are undoubtedly grateful for U.S. protection, and some people admire certain aspects of American society, we probably exaggerate the degree to which other societies either welcome U.S. dominance or want to emulate U.S. society. Weaker actors often resent being dependent on a stronger actor's good will, and especially if the stronger actor is constantly telling others what to do and using its power arbitrarily. Yet weaker actors may not always tell us what they really think, precisely because the United States is stronger and they still hope to get things from us. In short, it may be wishful thinking to believe that the United States is as popular as Americans think they deserve to be, and it may go a long way to explaining why we aren't doing very well in places like Afghanistan or Pakistan. [broad brush strokes] [I think America’s form of empire is far-more benign than previous models] [e.g., it doesn’t require others’ resources] [but I don’t think that means everybody likes having America rule the world] [and I don’t use it to assume that nowhere are there governments that don’t truly wish American ill—there are such governments and they wish American ill, absolutely] [but many of these same people see China’s rise as ominous] [it goes back to his foundation: one must look at such things soberly, realistically, not through rose-colored glasses] [*]
9. We Can Control Our Foreign Policy Agenda
During a presidential campaign, staffers and transition team members draft memos and position papers laying out what the new administration is going to do once in office. But once in power, they invariably end up wrestling with issues they never anticipated and sometimes get blown off course completely. This shouldn't really be surprising: International affairs is unpredictable and there are almost 200 other countries out there whose actions may suddenly impinge on U.S. interests. So George W. Bush came into office intending to focus on great power politics and to avoid "nation-building," but then he got blindsided by 9/11 and ended up neck deep in nation-building in Iraq and Afghanistan. [*] Similarly, Barack Obama's foreign policy team didn't expect to be dealing with transitions in the Arab world, along with a tsunami and nuclear meltdown in Japan. [*]
More than any other realm of public policy, international affairs demands a capacity to improvise, and to deal with events that were wholly unforeseen. And that's why an overly ambitious foreign policy is usually a mistake: you need to leave some capacity in reserve to deal with the unexpected. [it’s much bigger than Walt suggests] [there’s the pretend, controlled world of campaigns versus the real world over which America has little actually control] [and this happens repeatedly every 4 or 8 years] [*]
10. Everything Will Be OK after the Next Election
Despite the low regard that Americans have for politicians, there is a surprising tendency to assume that everything will be OK once we toss out the current leaders and bring in a new team. [I get nearly the opposite sense: nobody thinks America’s leaders can get anything right anymore?] [*] When Bush was elected in 2000, some of my Republican friends were positively gleeful in announcing that the "grownups" were back in charge once again. They saw the Clinton team as a bunch of amateurs who didn't know how to do foreign policy, and they were certain that Bush's victory had put the pros back where they belonged. (It would have been nice if it had been true, but Bush's first term managed to make Clinton's performance look good.) And then in 2008, it was the Democrats' turn to go euphoric about Obama, and to argue that his administration would quickly reverse Bush's blunders and lead the United States back to its rightful position as the (much-loved) Leader of the Free World. [I get what he’s saying but think he’s simplified it too much] [*]
Both hopes were illusory, of course. As I've noted before, there's just not that much difference between the Democratic and Republican foreign policy establishments, which means that tossing one party out doesn't affect the mainstream consensus on foreign affairs. [now, that’s where we agree] [it’s axiomatic] [put differently, the president (and his particular party) is almost irrelevant compared ot other inputs] [hence, continuity] [*] Furthermore, the other forces that drive U.S. policy (interest groups, lobbies, alliance commitments, legal constraints, geopolitics, etc.) don't disappear just because there's a new resident at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. Which is why Obama's policy on a host of issues is remarkably similar to Bush's (especially in the latter's second term), even in those areas (e.g., Guantanamo, war powers, etc.) where candidate Obama took a different view.
There's a flipside too: Instead of indulging in wishful thinking, one can also err by assuming that difficult problems are insoluble and therefore not worth addressing. In other words, "worst-casing" can be just as serious an error as excessive optimism.
Stephen M. Walt, the Robert and Renée Belfer professor of international affairs at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government and a contributing editor at Foreign Policy, is the author of Taming American Power: The Global Response to U.S. Primacy and, with co-author John J. Mearsheimer, The Israel Lobby. He blogs at walt.foreignpolicy.com.

Will Pakistan erupt like Egypt?

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/will_pakistan_erupt_like_egypt/2011/04/28/AFNjwyGF_story.html
Will Pakistan erupt like Egypt?
By David Ignatius, Friday, April 29, 9:21 PM [oped] [columnist] [on Pakistan and the Arab Awakening?] [Paksitan has few enduring institutions: military and ISI; civil society hangs usually be a thread in Pakistan] [plus which, it’s an amalgam of ethnicities, each of whom sees Pakistan differently] [Pashtun who share Afghanistan’s heritage, Baluchis (Balucishtan) who believe the elites of the others are robbing Balucistan, the Sindhis (the labor class of Paksitan in many ways), and the Punjabis of Lahore, who have traditionally run things in Paksitan] [how might the Arab Awakening affect it?] [as usual, Igantius writes a provocative piece] [*]
Think of Pakistan for a moment as the equivalent of Hosni Mubarak’s Egypt. Both countries have strong militaries and weak civilian governments. Both are nominally America’s partners in the war against al-Qaeda, but both chafe at U.S. pressure. In each nation, the street is buzzing with talk of the nation’s shame and humiliation under American hegemony. [*]
In Egypt, this pressure cooker led to a revolution whose loudest slogan was “dignity.” The same

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/will_pakistan_erupt_like_egypt/2011/04/28/AFNjwyGF_story.html
Will Pakistan erupt like Egypt?
By David Ignatius, Friday, April 29, 9:21 PM [oped] [columnist] [on Pakistan and the Arab Awakening?] [Paksitan has few enduring institutions: military and ISI; civil society hangs usually be a thread in Pakistan] [plus which, it’s an amalgam of ethnicities, each of whom sees Pakistan differently] [Pashtun who share Afghanistan’s heritage, Baluchis (Balucishtan) who believe the elites of the others are robbing Balucistan, the Sindhis (the labor class of Paksitan in many ways), and the Punjabis of Lahore, who have traditionally run things in Paksitan] [how might the Arab Awakening affect it?] [as usual, Igantius writes a provocative piece] [*]
Think of Pakistan for a moment as the equivalent of Hosni Mubarak’s Egypt. Both countries have strong militaries and weak civilian governments. Both are nominally America’s partners in the war against al-Qaeda, but both chafe at U.S. pressure. In each nation, the street is buzzing with talk of the nation’s shame and humiliation under American hegemony. [*]
In Egypt, this pressure cooker led to a revolution whose loudest slogan was “dignity.” The same upheaval could spread to Pakistan, and given the strength of Islamic extremism there, it would have devastating consequences. Meanwhile, the relationship between Islamabad and Washington becomes more poisonous by the week. [the latter is indisputable] [*]
What’s behind this dysfunctional relationship, and what, if anything, can be done to repair it? Is there a way to encourage greater Pakistani independence and confidence without rupturing ties with the United States?
International affairs are sometimes more like a playground fight than a gathering of diplomats in striped pants. Countries feel “disrespected” in the same way as kids on urban streets; they worry about “losing face,” they sometimes place national honor before pragmatic interests. They talk past each other, as was the case for years between Mubarak and a string of U.S. presidents. And then things blow up, and people wonder why it happened. [*]
Here are four recent snapshots of the miscommunication [*]that is the U.S.-Pakistan relationship. Each suspects the other of bad faith, as these examples show, but the larger picture is one of persistent misunderstanding. Consider:
l Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha, the chief of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence, went to Washington last month to see CIA Director Leon Panetta and patch up a feud over the arrest of CIA contractor Raymond Davis and U.S. drone attacks. Pasha lost face at home by coming to Washington, but the meeting seemed to go well. The day he left, the U.S. launched a big drone attack in North Waziristan that a Pakistani intelligence official described as an “FU.” [I’ve got to say, I had the same thought] [my guess is that it was bureaucracy that determined the attack and just bloody bad luck] [but I sure the Pakistanis saw it as intentional] [*]
l Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, traveled to Pakistan two weeks ago to try his hand at mending fences. On the way, he stopped in Afghanistan and got a hair-raising briefing about ISI connections with the Haqqani network — a Taliban faction that is America’s main adversary in eastern Afghanistan. During two news conferences, Mullen unloaded on the Pakistanis. The Pakistanis were miffed at being chastised in public. [was it that impromptu?] [I wondered that myself or did the WH clear it?] [*]
l Gen. Ashfaq Kiyani, the Pakistani army chief of staff, met last year with Richard Holbrooke, the late special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan. Kiyani was carrying an underlined copy of Bob Woodward’s book “Obama’s Wars,” whose revelations included some sharp criticism of Pakistan by top U.S. officials. “Mr. Ambassador, can you tell me how this happened?” demanded Kiyani. [I think I said once, the Pakistanis read these kiss-and-tell memoirs too] [*]
l And then there are the drone attacks: In its frustration with Pakistan, the administration sharply increased its Predator strikes over North Waziristan last year. But a Pakistani military official says that in the 118 drone attacks they counted last year, only one al-Qaeda “high-value target” was killed. Meanwhile, the Pakistani public seethed at what it saw as a violation of sovereignty.
When you ask administration officials about the U.S.-Pakistan relationship, people just shake their heads in exasperation. They see a country beginning to crumble at the seams.
Maybe Pakistan needs a popular revolution, like Egypt’s, where people demand a stronger role in determining their future. But it’s hard to see this working out to the advantage of anyone at this point, except perhaps Osama bin Laden. And it might put Pakistan’s nuclear weapons up for grabs. [*]
One way to bolster Pakistani sovereignty, short of such an uprising, would be for Pakistan to take a stronger role in ending a Taliban insurgency that is driving Washington and Islamabad nuts. A Pakistani intelligence official outlined to me a “framework for negotiations.” The Pakistanis would demand of Taliban groups with which they have contact — and yes, that includes the Haqqani network — that they meet U.S. requirements for a deal by rejecting al-Qaeda, halting fighting and accepting the Afghan constitution. [**]
For Taliban groups that refuse this peace framework, says the Pakistani intelligence official, there will be “military therapy.” [*]
There’s no way of knowing if the Pakistanis could deliver. But by putting them to the test — and granting their role in the region’s future — the United States might at least speak to the national yearning for dignity and independence. This relationship doesn’t need a divorce but maybe a little separation — to break a potentially ruinous cycle of mutual disrespect. [*]
davidignatius@washpost.com© 2011 The Washington Post Co

Israel's 'Syria option' was never one

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/apr/30/israel-syria-option-assad-iran
The Guardian
[Accessed 4/30/11 9:05:32 AM] [*]
Israel's 'Syria option' was never one
Many Israelis assumed Assad's Iran alliance was not a happy one. On the contrary, that axis is ensuring the dictator's survival
Jonathan Spyer [Guardian of London] [appears to be a columnist, oped or commentary] [on Israel and Syria] [Syria currently struggling to overcome the Arab Awakening, as the al Assad family has killed 500-plus at this point] [how and why Israel is fascinated while concomitantly panicked?] [*]
'If you mess around with Assad [right], you are issuing a challenge also to Iran [and Ahmadinejad, left] … the west doesn't want to do that.'
One early casualty of the Syrian uprising has been the "Syrian option" favoured by an influential section of Israel's policymaking elite. The case within Israel for engagement with and potential concessions to Damascus rested on a number of assumptions. [I’m not so sure it was ever really an option?] [I no a flurry of activity existed around it but it was frenetic and without much substance and it was based in the idea that Syria and Israel could make a big bold move that would shake up other things] [in retrospect, that seems almost quaint?] [*]

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/apr/30/israel-syria-option-assad-iran
The Guardian
[Accessed 4/30/11 9:05:32 AM] [*]
Israel's 'Syria option' was never one
Many Israelis assumed Assad's Iran alliance was not a happy one. On the contrary, that axis is ensuring the dictator's survival
Jonathan Spyer [Guardian of London] [appears to be a columnist, oped or commentary] [on Israel and Syria] [Syria currently struggling to overcome the Arab Awakening, as the al Assad family has killed 500-plus at this point] [how and why Israel is fascinated while concomitantly panicked?] [*]
'If you mess around with Assad [right], you are issuing a challenge also to Iran [and Ahmadinejad, left] … the west doesn't want to do that.'
One early casualty of the Syrian uprising has been the "Syrian option" favoured by an influential section of Israel's policymaking elite. The case within Israel for engagement with and potential concessions to Damascus rested on a number of assumptions. [I’m not so sure it was ever really an option?] [I no a flurry of activity existed around it but it was frenetic and without much substance and it was based in the idea that Syria and Israel could make a big bold move that would shake up other things] [in retrospect, that seems almost quaint?] [*]
Most centrally, Syria's strategic alliance with Iran was thought of as an uncomfortable fit for the non-Islamist rulers of Syria – so it was assumed that President Assad was looking for a way out if it. [*]Assad's relations with allied Islamist movements such as Hezbollah and Hamas were considered similarly instrumental in nature, and hence similarly susceptible to alteration. The Israeli "Syria firsters" therefore advocated a process whereby Syria would receive territorial concessions from Israel in return for a strategic realignment away from Iran and toward the US. [?] [does that even sound realistic?] [not really] [though in terms of settlers, far fewer in Golan than elsewhere and that’s probably what made this seem simple initially?] [*]
These assumptions were noteworthy in that they were not only untrue, but in many ways represented the precise opposite of the truth. [*]Syria's alignment with Iran and its backing of local paramilitary and terrorist clients are not flimsy marriages of convenience. They were and are the core of a successful regional policy. Through it, Damascus has magnified its local and regional influence, and obtained an insurance policy against paying any price for its activities. [Syria-Iran relations much firmer than doubters hoped] [*]
This insurance policy is now paying dividends. Syria's alignment with the regional axis led by Iran represents Assad's best hope of survival. Indeed, western fear of Iran is the crucial factor making possible the crackdown in Syria and hence the survival of the regime. [well it’s a crucial if not quite the crucial] [*]
The pro-western Arab authoritarian rulers, Ben Ali of Tunisia and Hosni Mubarak of Egypt, were forced aside by a combination of internal and subsequent western pressure. Non-aligned, isolated Muammar Gaddafi now finds himself fighting in Libya against a coalition of local rebels and western air power.
Assad, by contrast, who is aligned with the coalition of anti-western states and movements led by Iran, is currently facing only nominal and minimal western pressure. This is despite the fact that he appears to be engaged in the energetic slaughter of his own people.
The US administration disapproves of the repression, but the US ambassador to Syria, Robert Ford, remains firmly in place. The British foreign secretary finds the violence unacceptable but the defence secretary makes clear that a Libya-type option is not on the cards.
This is because if you mess around with Assad, you are issuing a challenge also to Iran, Hezbollah, Hamas, and their various regional allies and interests in Iraq and further afield. The leaders of the west don't want to do that. [*]
According to opposition reports, Iranian personnel are on the ground helping to crush the rebellion in Syria. Many Syrians believe that the snipers whose bullets are reaping a terrible toll among the protestors are Iranians. Syrian-Iranian military co-operation is formalised (a co-operation treaty was signed in 1998) and intensive. [*]Syria gives Iran a presence on the Mediterranean, and is the key arms conduit between Tehran and its Hezbollah client in Lebanon. It is also a major recipient of Iranian arms and aid. And Iran, evidently, sticks by its allies. [I keep hearning anecdotally of it] [I’d like to see the evidence, any evidence] [I don’t doubt it and, in fact, it makes sense to me—I’d be surprised if Iran was not helping] [but I’d like to see specific evidence of it?] [*]
Since the west's commitment to regional liberty and freedom does not appear to extend to entangling itself in a general confrontation with the Iran-led regional bloc, Assad may feel reasonably confident. Now he just needs to crush the internal challenge.
Which brings us back to our Israeli Syria-firsters. There is now an interesting split developing in this camp. Some of its members have realised the moral and political absurdities of advocating concessions to a bloodstained dictatorship (and not even a stable one) and are issuing mea culpas. [rather awkward?] [*] Others are recommending that the west offer to underwrite Assad's regime in return for his aligning away from the Iranians. [I’ve heard this for years] [either the US or Saudi or both] [*]
But in the end, the Israeli "Syrian option" advocates don't matter much. Israel is not going to decide whether Assad survives or not. And Assad is not going to align away from his key Iranian guarantor – whatever his would-be Israeli friends want. [that’s for sure] [*]
There are more crucial matters at stake here than the fate of a dead-end policy option in Israel. The Syrian dictator is currently getting away with slaughtering large numbers of his people because of western fear of Iran and its proxies. The question of whether the Arab spring stops at the borders of the Iran-led regional alliance will thus be decided in Syria. [*]
The Iranians and their allies, who enthusiastically cheered the demonstrations in Egypt and Tunisia, are keen to ensure that it does end there. Western policy, meanwhile, looks likely to be too confused and hesitant to ensure that it does not. This matter will be decided in the weeks and months ahead. [but does that not suggest, over the medium to long term, that Iran is finished as it now exists?] [does it not mean Iran’s thugocracy has been discovered as so openly hypocritical, duplicitous, and so on, that the Iranian people cease to fear its presumed competence?] [I’m not suggesting that thugocracy will not fight like hell to keep its grip but at some point, does it not lose its legitimacy with Iranians?] [and perhaps while it’s not always inevitable, when a regime like the Soviets created losses its legitimacy, is it not on its way out the door] [*]
The fall or weakening of the Assad regime in Syria would constitute a serious body blow to Iranian regional ambitions. Its resurgence under the protective tutelage of Tehran, by contrast, would prove that membership of the Iranian alliance provides a handy guarantee for autocratic rulers hoping to avoid the judgment of their peoples. In the ongoing cold war that remains the key strategic process in the Middle East, the west should see preventing this outcome as a key objective. guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2011

The ‘strange death’ of Liberal Canada

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/opinions/jeffrey-simpson/the-strange-death-of-liberal-canada/article2004564/
The Globe and Mail
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:49:00 AM] [*]
The ‘strange death’ of Liberal Canada
JEFFREY SIMPSON
From Saturday's Globe and Mail
Published Saturday, Apr. 30, 2011 2:00AM EDT [Canada] [oped piece in a interesting newspaper in Canada] [I publish from it a few times per year] [not much but I do like to check it with some regularity] [to wit, as now, much handwringing in Canada about the end of civil Canadian discourse in Canada’s polity] [it’s mostly amusing from my perspective, though I can see why Canadians might be so exercised!?!] [Canada continues to devolve into the American system of politics, along with the atavistic trajectory of discourse, the realities of democratic governance (only the people with money really matter), and so forth] [Canada has so long thought of itself as the other great American experiment and it’s shocking to certain Canadians when they suss out they are little different] [perhaps a 3-5 year time warp separates the U.S. and Canada] [of course, Canada’s parliamentary system typically favors smaller parties as parliamentary systems do] [but practically speaking, Canada has similarly reduced down to two lodestar parties, one representing liberal and

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/opinions/jeffrey-simpson/the-strange-death-of-liberal-canada/article2004564/
The Globe and Mail
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:49:00 AM] [*]
The ‘strange death’ of Liberal Canada
JEFFREY SIMPSON
From Saturday's Globe and Mail
Published Saturday, Apr. 30, 2011 2:00AM EDT [Canada] [oped piece in a interesting newspaper in Canada] [I publish from it a few times per year] [not much but I do like to check it with some regularity] [to wit, as now, much handwringing in Canada about the end of civil Canadian discourse in Canada’s polity] [it’s mostly amusing from my perspective, though I can see why Canadians might be so exercised!?!] [Canada continues to devolve into the American system of politics, along with the atavistic trajectory of discourse, the realities of democratic governance (only the people with money really matter), and so forth] [Canada has so long thought of itself as the other great American experiment and it’s shocking to certain Canadians when they suss out they are little different] [perhaps a 3-5 year time warp separates the U.S. and Canada] [of course, Canada’s parliamentary system typically favors smaller parties as parliamentary systems do] [but practically speaking, Canada has similarly reduced down to two lodestar parties, one representing liberal and progressive causes while the other represents conservative principles?] [*]
Michael Ignatieff, being a man of letters and cultivated intelligence, is quite likely familiar with George Dangerfield’s 1935 classic book, The Strange Death of Liberal England.
The years before, during and after the First World War, swallowed up the British Liberal Party in a “strange death,” strange because of “the approaching catastrophe of which the actors were unaware.”
Now, peering into the electoral abyss at the end of a campaign Mr. Ignatieff and his party so resolutely sought, Liberals might be witnessing their own “strange death,” or at least a new stage of political deterioration that spells the end of Liberal Canada. [*]
Liberal Canada lasted a long time, from the election of Wilfrid Laurier in 1896 to Pierre Trudeau’s departure in 1984. A recovery ensued under Jean Chrétien for almost a decade starting in 1993, but the conservative forces were foolishly divided in those years and the Liberals themselves were corrosively split into two factions that time eventually made devastatingly public in the sponsorship scandal.
Liberal Canada’s singular contribution had been to keep French Quebeckers and other Canadians united in one country. In retrospect, the 1981-1982 patriation of the Constitution, engineered brilliantly by Mr. Trudeau, weakened that bridge by turning many francophones away from the Liberals. In reinforcing a country, he lost a large part of a province for his party. [*]
The Liberals have not won a majority of Quebec’s seats in a general election since 1980, and now they’re reduced to a shrunken harvest of largely non-francophone voters. They are the party, honourably, that stands for a strong central government in a province that doesn’t want one. [yikes, that’s a long time to be in the opposition] [*]
Liberals thought they could count on the immigrant communities for whom Mr. Trudeau and his legacy were so popular. But when the Harper Conservatives began contesting some of those communities with sustained attention, changed policies and repeated blandishments, even this pillar of the shrunken Liberal coalition, already weakened by the long-ago departure of Western Canada and the more recent disaffection of Quebec, began to shake. [*]
So, too, Liberals were being ousted from the industrial and northern cities of Ontario they had dominated for so long. And for a party that had pioneered protection for the official languages, they were even losing ground in French-speaking areas outside Quebec, such as Acadia, Eastern Ontario and St. Boniface.
The arching coalition of Liberal Canada, therefore, had been shrivelling for years, even if “the actors were unaware” of the unfolding decline. [*]Mr. Ignatieff and his advisers convinced themselves that the anti-democratic tactics of the Harper Conservatives and economic uncertainties post-recession had made the electorate ready for a change, although there was little evidence of such a readiness. [*]
As a student of Tolstoy’s War and Peace, Mr. Ignatieff forgot the lessons of the Russian general Kutusov, who waited and waited for events to destroy Napoleon, refusing to give battle until the French had been weakened by their own follies sufficiently to be defeated in combat.
The “approaching catastrophe” wasn’t what Mr. Ignatieff and his advisers had in mind when they precipitated an election the country mostly didn’t want. That they might be replaced by the NDP as the alternative to the Conservatives never crossed their minds, for when had that party climbed above 20 per cent in the polls? [*]
They were confident that the more the country saw of Mr. Ignatieff, the more they’d admire him. But the reverse occurred, and some of those who couldn’t abide the Harper Conservatives turned to Jack Layton, who’d been around for almost a decade as NDP Leader and who kept repeating much of what he always said, a threat no Liberal took seriously until it was far too late.
Defeat will mean less public money and fewer private contributions. It will cost the party MPs, morale and purpose. Liberals have burned through three leaders in six years, convened a policy conference, tried campaigns of bold ideas and less courageous ones, and now can only recall through the mists of memory a time when there was a Liberal Canada. [I suspect this overreaction] [times are hard; economic havoc has been wreaked on global scale not seen since great depression] [simultaneously, globalization is creating unfathomable changes] [does all that mean the end of liberal, progressive ideas?] [I rather doubt that] [but those ideas might need re working, and a new set of clothes?] [generalizing based on extreme times strikes me as unwise?] [*]

Balloons vs. Buffoon: Aerial Propaganda Hits Kim Jong Il

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/04/balloons-vs-bufoon-aerial-propaganda-hits-kim-jong-il/
Wired
Danger Room Blog
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:34:59 AM] [*]
Balloons vs. Buffoon: Aerial Propaganda Hits Kim Jong Il
By Adam Rawnsley
April 29, 2011, 1:47 pm
Categories: Info War [normally I post Danger Room in societal, as blog] [but this seems to be straight reporting of news] [ROK-DPRK relations] [propaganda from either side] [but on the Korean Peninsula, something as innocuous as progaganda can lead to war] [use psci 350] [the strange relations of the Korea Peninsula] [*]
The United States may be hooked on “internet freedom” as its method of choice for undermining dictatorships. But activists in South Korea are using a hybrid of old-school and new technologies to get the word out in North Korea against Kim Jong Il and his pals: balloons packed with paper and digital propaganda. They’re easy to produce and distribute — but potentially dangerous. [*]
South Korean activists floated another cluster of balloons packed with pro-democracy and

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/04/balloons-vs-bufoon-aerial-propaganda-hits-kim-jong-il/
Wired
Danger Room Blog
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:34:59 AM] [*]
Balloons vs. Buffoon: Aerial Propaganda Hits Kim Jong Il
By Adam Rawnsley
April 29, 2011, 1:47 pm
Categories: Info War [normally I post Danger Room in societal, as blog] [but this seems to be straight reporting of news] [ROK-DPRK relations] [propaganda from either side] [but on the Korean Peninsula, something as innocuous as progaganda can lead to war] [use psci 350] [the strange relations of the Korea Peninsula] [*]
The United States may be hooked on “internet freedom” as its method of choice for undermining dictatorships. But activists in South Korea are using a hybrid of old-school and new technologies to get the word out in North Korea against Kim Jong Il and his pals: balloons packed with paper and digital propaganda. They’re easy to produce and distribute — but potentially dangerous. [*]
South Korean activists floated another cluster of balloons packed with pro-democracy and anti-regime news into North Korea today, defying the Hermit Kingdom’s threats to shell them into oblivion for the aerial info-war tactic. Voice of America’s ace Asia correspondent Steve Herman tweets that this latest balloon salvo also carries some nastygrams making fun of Kim Jong Il and his family. [*]
Though it’s one of the poorest countries on earth, some North Koreans do have access to DVD players and televisions, sometimes used for the illicit viewing of popular South Korean soap operas. For them, the balloons released today contain anti-regime DVDs. Printed leaflets — 200,000 of them in today’s release — and radios are packaged in as well, accessible to the millions of North Koreans who can’t afford more advanced technologies.
Activists have used a variety of methods to make sure the balloons pop over a specific target. Senders have used everything from acid timers that eat through the payload’s tether after a given period to electric and clockwork timers in order to hit a target area. One anti-Kim group has even used GPS devices to track the balloons — which seems like it could risk either North Korean GPS jamming or tracking by North Korean authorities. [*]
Activists have been sending balloons across the border for years, floating things like bible verses into the North’s notoriously closed dictatorship. South Korean authorities tried to prevent the releases following a 2004 agreement with the North. [*]
But The New York Times quotes an anonymous South Korean Unification Ministry as saying authorities have been content to turn a blind eye to the launches ever since a North Korean submarine sank the South Korean ship Cheonan in March 2010. [yes, I’d say that qualified as a breach of treaty obligations from DPRK?] [*]
Threats are a familiar currency for North Korea, often printed and only occasionally acted on. The balloon launches are starting to garner their fair share of them.
North Korea has pledged to lob artillery at the senders to get them to stop. In March, North Korea’s official Korea Central News Agency mouthpiece carried a threat to “blow up through sighting firings the bases for the anti-DPRK psychological warfare including the spots from which leaflets are scattered” and said they’re helping to bring the Korean peninsula to the “brink of war.” Only last week, the “North again promised to be merciless” in its response to the balloon barrages. [it’s more than known to use ridiculous hyperbole so the Koreans from ROK discount it] [*]
The launches and the threats they provoke do raise concerns. North Korea’s been pretty aggro as it undergoes a leadership transition, shelling a South Korean island near the two countries’ disputed border and showing off a new nuclear weapons facility. Provoking the North with a balloon bombardment during this sensitive time might provide some inspiration to North Koreans — but it might also provoke another showdown with an increasingly itch-trigger-fingered North

'Hamas denies reports it plans to relocate leadership from Syria to Qatar'

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/hamas-denies-reports-it-plans-to-relocate-leadership-from-syria-to-qatar-1.358963
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:30:34 AM] [*]
Published 11:15 30.04.11
'Hamas denies reports it plans to relocate leadership from Syria to Qatar'
According to Al-Hayat, Qatar agrees to host Hamas leaders, currently in exile in Syria, after Egypt and Jordan deny the request.
By Haaretz Service Tags: Israel news Hamas Syria [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [past few days now, fast and furious news of PA (Fatah) and Hamas setting aside differnces and forming unity government] [while I find it hard to believe they could do it, clearly something is at work here and everyone is quite concerned about what it might mean for any number of reasons] [as I said elsewhere today, probably over reporting things?] [here, Hamas denies report it plans to relocate from Syria to you-name it?] [*]
A top Hamas official denied Saturday reports that the party's leadership planned to relocate from Damascus to Qatar, Israel Radio reported.
London-based Arab daily Al-Hayat reported on Saturday that Hamas' Syria-based leader, Khaled Mashaal and other senior Hamas officials are planning to relocate from Syria to the

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/hamas-denies-reports-it-plans-to-relocate-leadership-from-syria-to-qatar-1.358963
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:30:34 AM] [*]
Published 11:15 30.04.11
'Hamas denies reports it plans to relocate leadership from Syria to Qatar'
According to Al-Hayat, Qatar agrees to host Hamas leaders, currently in exile in Syria, after Egypt and Jordan deny the request.
By Haaretz Service Tags: Israel news Hamas Syria [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [past few days now, fast and furious news of PA (Fatah) and Hamas setting aside differnces and forming unity government] [while I find it hard to believe they could do it, clearly something is at work here and everyone is quite concerned about what it might mean for any number of reasons] [as I said elsewhere today, probably over reporting things?] [here, Hamas denies report it plans to relocate from Syria to you-name it?] [*]
A top Hamas official denied Saturday reports that the party's leadership planned to relocate from Damascus to Qatar, Israel Radio reported.
London-based Arab daily Al-Hayat reported on Saturday that Hamas' Syria-based leader, Khaled Mashaal and other senior Hamas officials are planning to relocate from Syria to the Arab emirate city of Qatar. [would surely be safer] [but also he’d be easier to get at by potential enemies!] [I would think that an unwise move] [but I’m glad to see the Arab Awakening is making it difficult for he and his ilk to sleep at night] [*]
The Hamas official told Israel Radio that the party leadership did not intend to leave the Syrian capital, and denied reports that Egypt had agreed to open an official Hamas office in Cairo.
According to Al-Hayat, Qatar had agreed to host the leaders after Egypt and Jordan denied the request, but refused to host the party's military leaders. [it’s hard to see how any of them would want the responsibility of hosting Mashaal?] [*]
The report added that Hamas' military echelon was planning to relocate to the Gaza strip. [which is where they ought to be if they are truly representing Palestinians] [I’ve always thought it strange that Mashaal pop off so often from relative safety of Damascus?] [if I recall correctly, PM Netanyahu and Mashaal have a history?!] [*] There was no mention of a reason for the relocation, which was reported just days after Hamas and the leading West Bank party Fatah signed an historic reconciliation deal.
On Wednesday, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah movement hammered an historic reconciliation deal with the rival Hamas group, agreeing to form an interim government and fix a date for general election within the year.
The deal, which took many officials by surprise, was thrashed out in Egypt and followed a series of secret meetings. [I have a feeling it’s still being thrashed out] [*]

Report: Hamas military leader in Egypt for Shalit talks

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/report-hamas-military-leader-in-egypt-for-shalit-talks-1.358961
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:29:11 AM] [*]
Published 10:46 30.04.11
Report: Hamas military leader in Egypt for Shalit talks
Egypt may return to serve as mediator in talks between Israel and Hamas, Al-Hayat reports; parents of kidnapped IDF soldier meet new Israeli negotiator for their son's release.
By Avi Issacharoff Tags: Israel news Hamas Gilad Shalit Egypt [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [past few days now, fast and furious news of PA (Fatah) and Hamas setting aside differnces and forming unity government] [while I find it hard to believe they could do it, clearly something is at work here and everyone is quite concerned about what it might mean for any number of reasons] [here, Hamas military leaders reportedly in Egypt to discuss Shalit, the Israeli solider they kidnapped in 2006?] [almost any issue having to do with Hamas and Israel is pregnant with fear, loathing, and anxious

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/report-hamas-military-leader-in-egypt-for-shalit-talks-1.358961
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:29:11 AM] [*]
Published 10:46 30.04.11
Report: Hamas military leader in Egypt for Shalit talks
Egypt may return to serve as mediator in talks between Israel and Hamas, Al-Hayat reports; parents of kidnapped IDF soldier meet new Israeli negotiator for their son's release.
By Avi Issacharoff Tags: Israel news Hamas Gilad Shalit Egypt [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [past few days now, fast and furious news of PA (Fatah) and Hamas setting aside differnces and forming unity government] [while I find it hard to believe they could do it, clearly something is at work here and everyone is quite concerned about what it might mean for any number of reasons] [here, Hamas military leaders reportedly in Egypt to discuss Shalit, the Israeli solider they kidnapped in 2006?] [almost any issue having to do with Hamas and Israel is pregnant with fear, loathing, and anxious anticipation] [we are probably witnessing a fair amount of over reporting as every breath is reported but???] [*]
Hamas military leader Ahmed Jabri is in Egypt for talks with current Director of the Egyptian General Intelligence Directorate Murad Muwafi about abducted Israel Defense Forces soldier Gilad Shalit, [*]London-based Arab daily Al-Hayat reported on Saturday. [I suppose Shalit could be a bold move for Hamas?] [return him to Israel for what in return?] [*]
According to the report, Jabri has been in Egypt for several days, during which he held talks with Muwafi about the stalled negotiations between Israel and the Hamas for Shalit's release. [*]
Shalit was captured by Gaza-based militants in 2006, during a cross-border raid. Red Cross officials have been denied permission to see the soldier. [*]
Hamas has been insistent in its demand that some 1,400 prisoners be released from Israeli jails in return for handing over the Shalit. Israel has balked at a number of the names on Hamas' list - which includes some responsible for deadly terror attacks in Israel - agreeing to free around 980 prisoners. [that seems generous?] [*]
Negotiations have stalled numerous times. Hamas last year accused Israel of changing its stance over points to which it had already agreed. Hamas sources have said that Israel is delaying the completion of the Shalit deal by refusing to release 50 Hamas officials it holds in its jails. [let’s be honest] [both sides have pulled stunts] [Israel is imfamous for “changing its stance over points to which it had already agreed” with various negotiating partners, including the US] [I remember former CIA director’s memoirs in which Israelis did that with Wye River Plantation deal—after a deal struck putting Pollard on table as deal breaker?] [negotiations in the region—Arabs, Israelis, others—well known as contact sport!] [no blood no foul] [*]
Speaking to Israel Radio, a top Hamas official refused to comment on the report.
Earlier this week, Noam and Aviva Shalit met with Netanyahu's new negotiator for their son's release, David Meidan.
Speaking after the meeting, Noam Shalit said that he would not "confirm or deny" any details of the proceedings. "I do not report on meetings that we have with authority officials in this matter."
David Meidan, a Mossad official, took over from predecessor Hagai Adas last week.

Egypt warns Israel: Don't interfere with opening of Gaza border crossing

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/egypt-warns-israel-don-t-interfere-with-opening-of-gaza-border-crossing-1.358969
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:28:19 AM] [*]
Published 13:04 30.04.11
Egypt warns Israel: Don't interfere with opening of Gaza border crossing
Rafah's opening would be a violation of an agreement reached in 2005 between the U.S., Israel, Egypt, and the EU; Israel official tells the Wall Street Journal developments in Egypt could affect Israel's national security.
By Haaretz Service Tags: Israel news Gaza Egypt Middle East peace [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [last night I saw a stunner come across the Times world desk] [namely, the PA and Hamas had agreed to put aside their differences and work together?!?!] [coverage over past few days] [understandably, many Israelis are hypersensitive to the slightest suggestion of trouble with Egypt on Israel’s southern flank] [Arabs could not effectively wage war against Israel without the Sinai desert and the Golan: it allows for multiple columns of mechanized death from different directions forcing Israelis to defend themselves on multiple fronts] [. . .] [followup] [*]
Chief of Staff of the Egyptian Armed Forces General Sami Anan warned Israel against

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/egypt-warns-israel-don-t-interfere-with-opening-of-gaza-border-crossing-1.358969
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:28:19 AM] [*]
Published 13:04 30.04.11
Egypt warns Israel: Don't interfere with opening of Gaza border crossing
Rafah's opening would be a violation of an agreement reached in 2005 between the U.S., Israel, Egypt, and the EU; Israel official tells the Wall Street Journal developments in Egypt could affect Israel's national security.
By Haaretz Service Tags: Israel news Gaza Egypt Middle East peace [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [last night I saw a stunner come across the Times world desk] [namely, the PA and Hamas had agreed to put aside their differences and work together?!?!] [coverage over past few days] [understandably, many Israelis are hypersensitive to the slightest suggestion of trouble with Egypt on Israel’s southern flank] [Arabs could not effectively wage war against Israel without the Sinai desert and the Golan: it allows for multiple columns of mechanized death from different directions forcing Israelis to defend themselves on multiple fronts] [. . .] [followup] [*]
Chief of Staff of the Egyptian Armed Forces General Sami Anan warned Israel against interfering with Egypt's plan to open the Rafah border crossing with Gaza on a permanent basis, saying it was not a matter of Israel's concern, [which is technically true] [but it would be like Mexico telling the US not to interfere with shared border?] [it illustrates the sensitivity to Sinai and Camp David!] [*] Army Radio reported on Saturday.
Egypt announced this week that it intended to permanently open the border crossing with Gaza within the next few days.
The announcement indicates a significant change in the policy on Gaza, which before Egypt's uprising, was operated in conjunction with Israel. The opening of Rafah will allow the flow of people and goods in and out of Gaza without Israeli permission or supervision, which has not been the case up until now. [*]
An Israeli official on Friday told The Wall Street Journal that Israel was troubled by the recent developments in Egypt saying they could affect Israel's national security at a strategic level.
Israel's blockade on Gaza has been a policy used in conjunction with Egyptian police to weaken Hamas, which has ruled over the strip since 2007. [Israel’s blockade has been around a long time, well before Hamas even existed] [but over past few years, yes, the blockade has allowed Israel more control of Hamas than elsewhere] [*]
Rafah's opening would be a violation of an agreement reached in 2005 between the United States, Israel, Egypt, and the European Union, which gives EU monitors access to the crossing. [*] The monitors were to reassure Israel that weapons and militants wouldn't get into Gaza after its pullout from the territory in the fall of 2005. [it’s sort of hard to imagine Egypt simply doing it without getting buy-in from various stakeholders?] [*]
Before Egypt's uprising and ousting of longtime leader Hosni Mubarak, the border between Egypt and Gaza had been sealed. It has occasionally opened the passage for limited periods.

Yemeni security forces forcibly end Aden sit-in

http://www.haaretz.com/news/mideast-in-turmoil/yemeni-security-forces-forcibly-end-aden-sit-in-1.358980
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:26:54 AM] [*]
Published 16:27 30.04.11
Yemeni security forces forcibly end Aden sit-in
At least 10 wounded when government forces disperse protesters from square where they had been camped out for two months; Yemen president set to sign transitional deal that will grant him immunity if he steps down.
By The Associated Press Tags: Israel news Yemen [Israeli media] [reporting on Arab Awakening] [this is specifically concerned with Yemen] [as with others, many Israelis worry that the vaccum of Awakening is exploited by jihadis and Islamists] [both present potential problems] [though jihadis even more troubling] [well established that al Qaeda and al Qaeda of Arabian Pensinsula (AQAP) both active in Yemen] [followup] [*]
Yemeni forces with heavy weapons on Saturday drove hundreds of anti-government protesters out of a square they had been camping for months in the southern city of Aden, said witnesses.
At least 10 people suffered bullet wounds in the early morning melee and then later when demonstrators angrily marched through several neighborhoods denouncing the move, said

http://www.haaretz.com/news/mideast-in-turmoil/yemeni-security-forces-forcibly-end-aden-sit-in-1.358980
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:26:54 AM] [*]
Published 16:27 30.04.11
Yemeni security forces forcibly end Aden sit-in
At least 10 wounded when government forces disperse protesters from square where they had been camped out for two months; Yemen president set to sign transitional deal that will grant him immunity if he steps down.
By The Associated Press Tags: Israel news Yemen [Israeli media] [reporting on Arab Awakening] [this is specifically concerned with Yemen] [as with others, many Israelis worry that the vaccum of Awakening is exploited by jihadis and Islamists] [both present potential problems] [though jihadis even more troubling] [well established that al Qaeda and al Qaeda of Arabian Pensinsula (AQAP) both active in Yemen] [followup] [*]
Yemeni forces with heavy weapons on Saturday drove hundreds of anti-government protesters out of a square they had been camping for months in the southern city of Aden, said witnesses.
At least 10 people suffered bullet wounds in the early morning melee and then later when demonstrators angrily marched through several neighborhoods denouncing the move, said activist Wajdi al-Shaabi.
He said a building and a small hostel were on fire, sending plumes of smoke over the city, and crackling gunfire and wailing ambulance sirens could be heard throughout the city.
Demonstrators had camped in the port city of Aden's al-Mansour district for around two months, seeking the ouster their president of 32 years, Ali Abdullah Saleh.
Similar sit-ins have been taking place in other cities across this impoverished country.
A delegation from the neighboring Gulf Cooperation Council is meeting with Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh to invite him to the Saudi capital to sign a deal for him to step down in return for immunity from prosecution. [*]
While Yemen's opposition political parties have also accepted the deal, the organizers of the protests themselves have rejected it because it will keep Saleh from being tried. [they apparently all think it’s useful to keep fighting, a little strange to the rest of the world?] [Yemenis carry nearly sacred knive-machete-sword-dagger?] [*]

Barak to UN chief: Hamas must recognize Israel

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/barak-to-un-chief-hamas-must-recognize-israel-1.358986
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:26:02 AM] [*]
Published 17:07 30.04.11
Barak to UN chief: Hamas must recognize Israel
Defense Minister Ehud Barak tells UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon that the world should only support a joint Palestinian government if it accepts the Quartet's conditions.
By Haaretz Service and Reuters Tags: Middle East peace Ehud Barak Hamas Palestinian Authority [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [recently announced raaprocment between tthe PA and Hamas?] [coverage over past few days] [understandably, many Israelis are hypersensitive to the slightest suggestion of trouble with Egypt on Israel’s southern flank] [former PM and current Defense Minister Ehud Barak to UN’s General Secretary Ban Ki-moon] [obviously, from Israel’s standpoint Hamas is non starter unless and until Hamas rejects its long-held position that Israel has not right to exist] [ . . . ] [*]
Defense Minister Ehud Barak spoke with United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Saturday and expressed concerns about the unity agreement that was recently reached between Fatah and Hamas.

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/barak-to-un-chief-hamas-must-recognize-israel-1.358986
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/30/11 8:26:02 AM] [*]
Published 17:07 30.04.11
Barak to UN chief: Hamas must recognize Israel
Defense Minister Ehud Barak tells UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon that the world should only support a joint Palestinian government if it accepts the Quartet's conditions.
By Haaretz Service and Reuters Tags: Middle East peace Ehud Barak Hamas Palestinian Authority [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [recently announced raaprocment between tthe PA and Hamas?] [coverage over past few days] [understandably, many Israelis are hypersensitive to the slightest suggestion of trouble with Egypt on Israel’s southern flank] [former PM and current Defense Minister Ehud Barak to UN’s General Secretary Ban Ki-moon] [obviously, from Israel’s standpoint Hamas is non starter unless and until Hamas rejects its long-held position that Israel has not right to exist] [ . . . ] [*]
Defense Minister Ehud Barak spoke with United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Saturday and expressed concerns about the unity agreement that was recently reached between Fatah and Hamas.
"Hamas is a terrorist organization that fires rockets at Israeli towns and recently used an anti-tank missile against a school bus," Barak said. [*]
"Therefore, we expect that world leaders, including, of course, the head of the UN, to make cooperation with such a joint government, if it is established, conditional on the government accepting the Quartet's conditions, which are the recognition of Israel, the abandonment of the path of terror and the acceptance of all previous agreements with Israel," Barak continued. [surely, this position surprises no one?] [*]
Barak also told the UN chief that the Palestinian Authority and Hamas must accept those demands explicitly before the establishment of a joint government.
"This demand needs to be heard beforehand in order to influence the behavior of the Palestinians," he said.
On Friday, the UN leader cautiously welcomed the unity agreement aimed at ending the rivalry among the ruling Palestinian factions. He stressed, however, that it should not undermine peace with Israel. [*]
"The Secretary-General welcomes efforts being made to promote Palestinian reconciliation and the important contribution of Egypt in this regard," UN spokesman Martin Nesirky said in a statement. "He hopes that reconciliation will now take place in a manner that promotes the cause of peace, security and non-violence."
Nesirky indicated that the UN leader wanted Abbas' more moderate Fatah movement to lead any unity government. [ya think?] [*]
"The United Nations has long underscored the need for progress towards Palestinian unity within the framework of the Palestinian Authority led by President Abbas and the commitments of the Palestine Liberation Organization," he said.
"The United Nations will study carefully the agreement as soon as the details are available," Nesirky added.

U.S. imposes sanctions on Syria’s intelligence service, security officials

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/thousands-of-syrians-protest-military-crackdown/2011/04/29/AFeX9aDF_story.html
U.S. imposes sanctions on Syria’s intelligence service, security officials
By Joby Warrick and Liz Sly, Friday, April 29, 7:24 PM [Obama administration] [112th congress, 1st session] [Arab Awkending generally and Syria specifically] [NSC to state to DoD] [bureaucracy] [why the US and others are so cautious (timid?) when it comes to Syria] [Syria is crucial to so many for so much that neither neighbors nor outsiders are anxious to see mayham become de riguer there?] [use psci 355-455] [*]
The Obama administration slapped sanctions on three Syrian officials and Syria’s intelligence service on Friday in what was described as a warning shot against President Bashar al-
Assad’s government after weeks of steadily worsening violence against protesters. [I doubt it was a warning shot] [everybody knows there’s little the US can do to affect things!] [**]
The measures targeting key members of Assad’s security apparatus came amid reports of dozens more deaths across the country as Syrians rallied in several cities — including, for the first time, in large numbers in Damascus, the capital — for a national “Day of Rage” denouncing government brutality.
Tens of thousands of Syrians poured out of mosques and into the streets after Friday prayers for

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/thousands-of-syrians-protest-military-crackdown/2011/04/29/AFeX9aDF_story.html
U.S. imposes sanctions on Syria’s intelligence service, security officials
By Joby Warrick and Liz Sly, Friday, April 29, 7:24 PM [Obama administration] [112th congress, 1st session] [Arab Awkending generally and Syria specifically] [NSC to state to DoD] [bureaucracy] [why the US and others are so cautious (timid?) when it comes to Syria] [Syria is crucial to so many for so much that neither neighbors nor outsiders are anxious to see mayham become de riguer there?] [use psci 355-455] [*]
The Obama administration slapped sanctions on three Syrian officials and Syria’s intelligence service on Friday in what was described as a warning shot against President Bashar al-
Assad’s government after weeks of steadily worsening violence against protesters. [I doubt it was a warning shot] [everybody knows there’s little the US can do to affect things!] [**]
The measures targeting key members of Assad’s security apparatus came amid reports of dozens more deaths across the country as Syrians rallied in several cities — including, for the first time, in large numbers in Damascus, the capital — for a national “Day of Rage” denouncing government brutality.
Tens of thousands of Syrians poured out of mosques and into the streets after Friday prayers for what appeared to be the biggest demonstrations yet in the country. The large turnout, after days of deadly clashes, suggests that the will of the protesters remains unbroken despite the government’s stepped-up efforts to crush the uprising. [*]
Human rights groups said that at least 48 people were killed nationwide when troops opened fire on demonstrators on Friday. Fifteen of them were killed outside the southern town of Daraa, the epicenter of the protests and a rallying point for the uprising after civilians there were besieged by army tanks on Monday.
The Obama administration, facing pressure at home and abroad to act against the Assad regime, announced that it was freezing the assets of Syria’s intelligence service and its director, Ali Mamluk, as well as those of Maher al-Assad, the president’s brother and a brigade commander in Syria’s 4th Armored Division. White House officials said the army unit and the intelligence agency played leading roles in the violent attacks that have killed hundreds of people since March 16. [it was simply something that could be done] [I don’t think it was much more complex than look like they are doing something?] [*]
The administration also announced sanctions on Atif Najib, the president’s cousin and a political operative in Daraa province, and on Iran’s Quds Force, a paramilitary division of that country’s Revolutionary Guard Corps. A Treasury Department statement announcing the sanctions accused the Iranian group of providing material support to the Syrian intelligence service in the crackdown.
U.S. officials made clear that the sanctions were intended to pressure Assad to halt the violence. The presidential order authorizing the economic penalties also permits the administration to add the names of any Syrian government officials who participated in the attacks on protesters or were “complicit” in them. [?] [I doubt anyone really thinks such things] [they hope but don’t think such marginal levers are going to affect outcomes] [rather, they see the spreading of opposition as a slow deterioration of al Assads] [everyone is happy but they are not eager to see it go much faster than at presents due to how many moving parts] [*]
“This sharpens the choice for Syrian leaders who are involved in the decisions,” Jake Sullivan, the State Department’s director of policy planning, told reporters shortly after the sanctions were announced.
Another administration official familiar with internal discussions about Syria policy added: “If this continues, Assad could be next.”
Few diplomatic options
The White House has been frustrated by a lack of diplomatic options in dealing with Syria, a country that is barred from most trade with the United States and is labeled a terrorist-sponsoring nation by the State Department. [that sounds more like it?] [doesn’t this contradict they authors’ earlier claims???] [*] Washington continues to maintain formal diplomatic ties with Damascus, and the administration has not called on Assad to step down, as it did in the case of Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi and now-deposed Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.
Several key congressional leaders this week pressed the administration to break publicly with Assad, saying the Syrian leader has lost legitimacy. On Friday, the U.N. Human Rights Council, meeting in Geneva, added to the pressure with a resolution condemning the killing of protesters and appointing a delegation to travel to Damascus to investigate the crackdown.
Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John F. Kerry (D-Mass.), who has met repeatedly with Assad and publicly encouraged the Syrian leader’s past efforts at political reform, applauded the imposition of sanctions by the White House.
“Decisions to kill unarmed civilians have consequences,” Kerry said.
The protests in Syria on Friday reportedly occurred in more than a dozen cities and included a large gathering in the central Damascus neighborhood of Midan, adjoining the historic old city, where demonstrators marched down a main street chanting, “The people want to topple the regime.” They were dispersed by troops firing live ammunition and tear gas.
Until Friday, Damascus had remained largely immune from the surge of unrest that has engulfed Syria for weeks, posing the biggest challenge yet to 40 years of Assad family rule. There were also reports of protests in dozens of other locations that previously had not experienced any unrest, said Wissam Tarif of the human rights group Insaf. He said he counted demonstrations in 104 towns and villages, compared with 43 a week earlier.
“The whole country was on the streets,” said Razan Zeitouneh, a human rights lawyer in Damascus. “This shows the Syrian people are not afraid of anything anymore.”
In the town of Deir al-Zour, several thousand people chanted “not scared, not scared,” in a challenge to the regime’s use of military force to suppress dissent, according to a video posted on YouTube. “We are going bravely to heaven in our millions,” the crowds roared.
‘Regime is in big trouble’ [*]
Although the opposition movement in Syria has yet to attract the kind of huge crowds that toppled the leaders of Egypt and Tunisia, the army’s willingness to use force has seemingly backfired, said Salman Shaikh, director of the Brookings Doha Center in Qatar’s capital.
“The regime is in big trouble and at a critical stage of survival,” he said. “We’re consistently seeing new demonstrations, and though some of them are small in scale, they are taking place across the length and breadth of the country.”
The death toll appeared to be lower than it was the previous Friday, when soldiers killed more than 100 protesters. But human rights groups said casualties were expected to rise as reports of shootings emerged from remote areas and as protests and killings continued into the night.
Although troops clearly used force to disperse protesters in some areas, demonstrations proceeded unhindered in other places, suggesting that local authorities and army units may not be united behind the regime’s strategy of using overwhelming force. Dozens of low-ranking politicians in several areas resigned last week to protest the brutality of the crackdown, and there have been persistent reports of defections from the army in the besieged town of Daraa.
Syrian state television reported that four soldiers had been killed in Daraa, though the circumstances were unclear. The government has portrayed the situation as a rebellion by armed Islamist extremists. [reflexive claims] [*]
Sly reported from Beirut. Staff writers Mary Beth Sheridan and Scott Wilson contributed to this report. © 2011 The Washington Post Co

U.S. Moves Cautiously Against Syrian Leaders

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/30/world/middleeast/30policy.html
April 29, 2011
U.S. Moves Cautiously Against Syrian Leaders
By MARK LANDLER [Obama administration] [112th congress, 1st session] [Arab Awkending generally and Syria specifically] [NSC to state to DoD] [bureaucracy] [why the US and others are so cautious (timid?) when it comes to Syria] [Syria is crucial to so many for so much that neither neighbors nor outsiders are anxious to see mayham become de riguer there?] [use psci 355-455] [*]
WASHINGTON — A brutal Arab dictator with a long history of enmity toward the United States turns tanks and troops against his own people, killing hundreds of protesters. His country threatens to split along sectarian lines, with the violence potentially spilling over to its neighbors, some of whom are close allies of Washington. [and threatenes to take down Lebanon and affect Iran with it] [making the stakes quite high] [*]
Libya? Yes, but also Syria.
And yet, with the Syrian government’s bloody crackdown intensifying on Friday, President Obama has not demanded that President Bashar al-Assad resign, and he has not considered military action. Instead, on Friday, the White House took a step that most experts agree will

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/30/world/middleeast/30policy.html
April 29, 2011
U.S. Moves Cautiously Against Syrian Leaders
By MARK LANDLER [Obama administration] [112th congress, 1st session] [Arab Awkending generally and Syria specifically] [NSC to state to DoD] [bureaucracy] [why the US and others are so cautious (timid?) when it comes to Syria] [Syria is crucial to so many for so much that neither neighbors nor outsiders are anxious to see mayham become de riguer there?] [use psci 355-455] [*]
WASHINGTON — A brutal Arab dictator with a long history of enmity toward the United States turns tanks and troops against his own people, killing hundreds of protesters. His country threatens to split along sectarian lines, with the violence potentially spilling over to its neighbors, some of whom are close allies of Washington. [and threatenes to take down Lebanon and affect Iran with it] [making the stakes quite high] [*]
Libya? Yes, but also Syria.
And yet, with the Syrian government’s bloody crackdown intensifying on Friday, President Obama has not demanded that President Bashar al-Assad resign, and he has not considered military action. Instead, on Friday, the White House took a step that most experts agree will have a modest impact: announcing focused sanctions against three senior officials, including a brother and a cousin of Mr. Assad. [hopefully, he’s learned not to voice his thoughts publicly?] [*]
The divergent American responses illustrate the starkly different calculations the United States faces in these countries. For all the parallels to Libya, Mr. Assad is much less isolated internationally than the Libyan leader, Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi. He commands a more capable army, which experts say is unlikely to turn on him, as the military in Egypt did on President Hosni Mubarak. And the ripple effects of Mr. Assad’s ouster would be both wider and more unpredictable than in the case of Colonel Qaddafi.
“Syria is important in a way that Libya is not,” said Steven A. Cook, senior fellow for Middle East studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. “There is no central U.S. interest engaged in Libya. But a greatly destabilized Syria has implications for Iraq, it has implications for Lebanon, it has implications for Israel.” [*]
These complexities have made Syria a less clear-cut case, even for those who have called for more robust American action against Libya. Senator John McCain, along with Senators Lindsey Graham and Joseph I. Lieberman, urged Mr. Obama earlier this week to demand Mr. Assad’s resignation. But Mr. McCain, an early advocate of a no-fly zone over Libya, said he opposed military action in Syria.
Human rights groups are even more cautious. “If Obama were to call for Assad to go, I don’t think it would change things on the ground in any way, shape or form,” said Joe Stork, [*]deputy director of the Middle East division of Human Rights Watch, which had supported military action in Libya. In this case, he said, sanctions were the right move.
Those measures freeze the assets of three top officials, most notably Maher al-Assad, President Assad’s brother and a brigade commander who is leading the operations in Dara’a. But Syrian leaders tend to keep their money in European and Middle Eastern banks, putting it beyond the reach of the Treasury.
The measures also take aim at Syria’s intelligence agency and the Quds Force of the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, an elite paramilitary unit already under heavy sanctions from the United States. Iran, officials said, is using the force to funnel tear gas, batons and other riot gear to Syria. [*]
The administration did not impose sanctions on President Assad, saying it focused on those directly responsible for human-rights abuses. A senior official said the United States would not hesitate to add him to the list if the violence did not stop. But the White House seemed to be calculating that it could still prevail on him to show restraint.
“Our goal is to end the violence and create an opening for the Syrian people’s legitimate aspirations,” said a spokesman for the National Security Council, Tommy Vietor. [?] [*]“These are among the U.S. government’s strongest available tools to promote these outcomes.”
The European Union said Friday that it was preparing an arms embargo against Syria and threatened further sanctions and cuts in aid. And in Geneva, the United Nations Human Rights Council passed a resolution condemning the violence, though the statement was diluted from one drafted by the United States.
The debate over the United Nations resolution demonstrated the difficulty in marshaling international censure of Syria. In Geneva, 26 countries supported the resolution, but nine voted against it, including Russia and China. The two countries blocked a similar effort to pass a resolution at the Security Council this week, a stark contrast to the tough action on Libya.
Even for the Obama administration, abandoning Mr. Assad has costs. For two years, it cultivated him in hopes that Syria would break the logjam in the Middle East peace process by signing a treaty with Israel. The United States tried to lure Syria away from Iran, the greatest American nemesis in the area.
Even the possibility of a change in leadership in Syria had reverberations this week, with the surprise agreement between Hamas and the Palestinian Authority to form a unity government. By most accounts, Hamas was motivated in part by a fear that if Mr. Assad were forced from power, it could lose its patron in Damascus. [really?] [*]
Disarray in Syria could threaten Israel’s security more directly. While Israeli officials point out that Mr. Assad has hardly been a friend of Israel, if he were replaced by a militant Sunni government, this could pose even greater dangers. [it could but Israel could also benefit from disarray in Syria?] [*]
Israel’s sensitivity about Syria is so acute that when reports began circulating this week that Israeli officials were pressing the White House to be less tough on Damascus, Israel’s ambassador to the United States, Michael B. Oren, called reporters to insist that his government was doing nothing of the sort. [*]
Among other countries that are sensitive: Turkey, which shares a border with Syria and a Kurdish population that could be stirred up by unrest; and Saudi Arabia, which does not want to see another Arab government topple. While Mr. Assad’s fall would damage Iran’s regional ambitions, analysts offer caveats. [*]
“The regime coming down in a speedy, orderly transition to a Sunni government would be a setback for Iran, but that’s not what’s happening,” said Andrew J. Tabler, a Syria expert at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “We’re headed for something much messier. The Iranians can play around in that.”
As the administration weighs its options, it faces a sobering fact: The United States has little influence over Damascus. Still, some analysts said the United States must leave open the possibility of tougher measures. [*]
“If a Benghazi-style massacre is threatened, we would have to consider a humanitarian intervention under the same principle,” said Martin S. Indyk, Brookings Institution’s director of foreign policy. “Hard to imagine at this point when the death toll is 400. But if it rises to tens of thousands?”
Stephen Castle contributed reporting from Brussels.

Afghanistan War Report Cites Progress by Troops

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/30/world/asia/30military.html
April 29, 2011
Afghanistan War Report Cites Progress by Troops
By THOM SHANKER Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [NSC and bureaucracy] [continuity in USFP] [Arab Spring, GSAVE, AfPak] [the Pentagon publishes report that claims progress] [followup] [use psci 355-455] [all this looks to be preparation for the closing of the surge window this summer—July or soon after?] [on way to America getting more or less out by 2014?] [follwoup] [not that such reports are entirely made up, but it was predictable that the Pentagon (and WH) would claim victory near the end of the surge and redeploy at least some of surge troops elsewhere] [*]
WASHINGTON — Tangible progress has been made in expanding security across Afghanistan, the Pentagon reported on Friday, saying that successes on the battlefield over the past several months could be attributed to the 30,000 additional troops sent to the war by President Obama. [shocker: the surge worked] [*]
But the optimistic tone of the report was tempered by assessments from senior officials in Kabul and Washington that the Taliban and other insurgent groups were expected to attempt spectacular counterattacks, perhaps in the near future. [nor is that surprising as they have already begun a building cresendo of spring attacks] [*]
Fighting across Afghanistan usually increases each year with the spring thaw, and Pentagon

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/30/world/asia/30military.html
April 29, 2011
Afghanistan War Report Cites Progress by Troops
By THOM SHANKER Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [NSC and bureaucracy] [continuity in USFP] [Arab Spring, GSAVE, AfPak] [the Pentagon publishes report that claims progress] [followup] [use psci 355-455] [all this looks to be preparation for the closing of the surge window this summer—July or soon after?] [on way to America getting more or less out by 2014?] [follwoup] [not that such reports are entirely made up, but it was predictable that the Pentagon (and WH) would claim victory near the end of the surge and redeploy at least some of surge troops elsewhere] [*]
WASHINGTON — Tangible progress has been made in expanding security across Afghanistan, the Pentagon reported on Friday, saying that successes on the battlefield over the past several months could be attributed to the 30,000 additional troops sent to the war by President Obama. [shocker: the surge worked] [*]
But the optimistic tone of the report was tempered by assessments from senior officials in Kabul and Washington that the Taliban and other insurgent groups were expected to attempt spectacular counterattacks, perhaps in the near future. [nor is that surprising as they have already begun a building cresendo of spring attacks] [*]
Fighting across Afghanistan usually increases each year with the spring thaw, and Pentagon and military officials say they expect insurgent leaders to make a major effort soon to prove that their loss of territory to Mr. Obama’s troop increase could be reversed this year.
A senior Pentagon official agreed that the latest update’s tone was more optimistic, even if cautiously so, than that of previous reports, which since 2009 have described the security situation in Afghanistan as deteriorating. Congress requires the progress reports twice a year.
American, allied and Afghan forces have halted the insurgency’s momentum and have achieved “tangible progress in some really key areas,” the Pentagon official said. [*]
Echoing a view often expressed by Gen. David H. Petraeus, the top commander in Afghanistan, the official warned that the assessment clearly noted that the advances were fragile and reversible.
“It does show progress,” said the official, who briefed reporters under ground rules imposed by the Pentagon that precluded identifying him by name. “It also points out that we do have a resilient enemy,” the official added. [*]
There remain significant shortages of foreign trainers, hampering the development of Afghan security forces, the official noted. And progress in economic development and governance has not kept pace with advances on the battlefield. In addition, corruption across all levels of government puts the military’s gains at risk.
“There is still a lot to do,” the official said. He agreed with military and intelligence officers who said that the public should “expect spectacular attacks” by the insurgency. [*]
The Taliban recently scored both a tactical and a propaganda victory with a major prison break of insurgent fighters. In anticipation of an increasing pace of attacks and bombings, the official contended that individual acts of insurgent violence would not be enough to derail the allied and Afghan campaign.
Noting advances made by allied and Afghan security forces, in particular in the insurgent heartland of southern Afghanistan, the official said that “the pushback of the Taliban out of these key areas in the last year is really a strategic defeat for the Taliban.”
“How they respond, whether it’s attacks there, attacks elsewhere, I don’t know,” the official said. “But given that strategic setback that they’ve suffered, they’re going to try and send messages to the population in other ways that they’re going to be able to come back. And that’s going to be a big challenge for the Afghan forces, for us, as those efforts are made.”
The report on progress and stability in Afghanistan again cited the harmful effects of the safe havens that insurgent fighters maintain across the border in Pakistan, allowing them to rest, plan and train before moving back into Afghanistan to mount attacks. [Pakistan] [*]
The report was released as General Petraeus was finalizing his proposals for how quickly to start withdrawing American forces from Afghanistan in July, as ordered by the president.

Obama’s Russian lessons: How the Soviets withdrew from Afghanistan

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/obamas-russian-lessons-how-the-soviets-withdrew-from-afghanistan/2011/04/29/AFd4ZUGF_story.html
Obama’s Russian lessons: How the Soviets withdrew from Afghanistan
By Artemy Kalinovsky, Friday, April 29, 5:52 PM [oped] [Russian, and scholar of Russia] [on Afghanistan withdrawal in 1989] [lessons for America today?] [use psci 355-455] [*]
Twenty years ago, the Soviet Union’s client regime in Afghanistan was starting to unravel.
For two years, Mohammed Najibullah, the latest leader the Soviets had helped install, had been trying to keep his country together without the Soviet 40th Army — relying on a combination of crack troops, Soviet weaponry, patronage, and the divisions and overconfidence of his enemies. His tenacity had even impressed President George H.W. Bush, who in mid-1990 told U.N. Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar that “I was dead wrong about Najibullah; I thought he would fall when the Soviet troops withdrew.” But with the Soviet Union itself crumbling and crucial financial support for Kabul drying up, Afghanistan’s prospects of emerging as a semblance of a stable state were beginning to look hopeless. [*]
The cliches about Afghanistan as the graveyard of empires — an ungovernable mix of ethnic groups, tribes and harsh terrain where conquering armies find themselves lost and unable to fight committed insurgents — are familiar and perhaps too fatalistic. Even so, as President Obama

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/obamas-russian-lessons-how-the-soviets-withdrew-from-afghanistan/2011/04/29/AFd4ZUGF_story.html
Obama’s Russian lessons: How the Soviets withdrew from Afghanistan
By Artemy Kalinovsky, Friday, April 29, 5:52 PM [oped] [Russian, and scholar of Russia] [on Afghanistan withdrawal in 1989] [lessons for America today?] [use psci 355-455] [*]
Twenty years ago, the Soviet Union’s client regime in Afghanistan was starting to unravel.
For two years, Mohammed Najibullah, the latest leader the Soviets had helped install, had been trying to keep his country together without the Soviet 40th Army — relying on a combination of crack troops, Soviet weaponry, patronage, and the divisions and overconfidence of his enemies. His tenacity had even impressed President George H.W. Bush, who in mid-1990 told U.N. Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar that “I was dead wrong about Najibullah; I thought he would fall when the Soviet troops withdrew.” But with the Soviet Union itself crumbling and crucial financial support for Kabul drying up, Afghanistan’s prospects of emerging as a semblance of a stable state were beginning to look hopeless. [*]
The cliches about Afghanistan as the graveyard of empires — an ungovernable mix of ethnic groups, tribes and harsh terrain where conquering armies find themselves lost and unable to fight committed insurgents — are familiar and perhaps too fatalistic. Even so, as President Obama approaches the initial July 2011 deadline that he set a year and a half ago to begin scaling down forces in Afghanistan, he and his advisers would do well to look back on how the Soviets grappled with their own decision to withdraw from their decade-long war in that country. [*]
Soviet Premier Mikhail Gorbachevmade leaving Afghanistan a priority as soon as he became general secretary of the Communist Party in 1985 — but three years later, more than 100,000 Soviet troops were still there. Records of Politburo discussions show a pattern of deadlines set and then abandoned; one or two more years and then we’re out, Gorbachev insisted in 1985. He said the same in 1986 and again in 1987. [*]
Gorbachev may have disagreed with his predecessors’ decision to intervene in Afghanistan in the first place, but he was committed to preserving the Soviet Union’s great-power status. He did not have the chauvinistic or xenophobic patriotism of some of his colleagues, but Gorbachev did believe in the achievements of the Soviet Union and the promise of socialism. [*]He viewed the Afghan war through this prism and could not countenance, at least in his early years in power, the notion of defeat. Certainly, there were real security considerations as well — Afghanistan was the Soviets’ southern neighbor, after all — but the collapse of central authority in Kabul would make the Soviet Union look like a poor ally indeed: all those years of fighting, only to abandon ship.
Throughout the occupation, Soviet leaders launched a series of initiatives aimed at helping their Afghan allies stand on their own feet — to gain domestic and international legitimacy and to develop the wherewithal to fight off insurgent campaigns. This would in turn allow the Soviets to withdraw honorably. Each effort was announced with great fanfare, implemented and eventually found wanting. [now that sounds familiar] [*]
Years of economic and development aid — employing thousands of Soviet specialists and costing billions of rubles — were found to have been largely wasted because of poor planning and corruption, and programs were pared back. The advisers the Soviet Union had placed at every level of the Afghan government, military and ruling party were doing the Afghans’ work for them, rather than developing competent and independent bureaucratic cadres, and Gorbachev withdrew them. Ambassadors were changed, generals shuffled, military strategies adjusted. Special forces were used with increasing frequency, and there was an effort to push the Afghan military into taking a more prominent role in operations — an effort made more difficult because Soviet officers often didn’t trust the Afghans.
And early in 1987, the Afghans announced a “policy of national reconciliation,” advocated and planned by Soviet officials, in the hope of facilitating some accommodation between the communist government, its various political opponents and insurgents. Soviet representatives even sought out top mujaheddin leaders and conducted meetings with them. [*]
But by the fall of 1987, Gorbachev and many of his top advisers thought that none of their efforts to salvage Afghanistan were going to work. Their last hope was an agreement with the United States that would at least stop American aid to the mujaheddin while letting Moscow continue to supply Kabul with arms. (A deal was eventually reached but proved too vague to be effective.) At this point, though, Moscow had lost faith in being able to achieve anything in Afghanistan, and senior Soviet officials seemed to be mentally preparing for Najibullah’s defeat. [*]
Today, the Obama White House seems to be going through a similar process regarding its own Afghan war. Recent books and news reports about the administration’s decision-making reveal that the president came to office well aware that Afghanistan had been neglected at the expense of the war in Iraq and was sliding into chaos. And since then, the administration’s debates and initiatives echo the Soviets’ in the waning years of their conflict. [*]
From pretending the Taliban was a spent force, the United States has moved to talks not just with minor commanders but with the group’s leadership. The appointment of the late ambassador Richard Holbrooke as special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan was reminiscent of Gorbachev’s appointment of veteran diplomat Yulii Vorontsov as a sort of Afghanistan factotum. And an early small-footprint approach has given way to a troop surge through which the U.S. military — with decreasing NATO support — is hoping to break the back of the insurgency, even as the date that a reliable Afghan army will be ready moves further into the future.
A cynic might say that Obama has doubled down in Afghanistan because he is afraid of domestic criticism should that country collapse on his watch. [*]And Gorbachev’s concerns about how failure in Afghanistan could be used against him no doubt figured into his calculations as well. Yet it is likely that, for both men, worries about defeat centered on what it would mean for their country’s power and prestige. Like the Soviet Union, the United States is not just a country but an idea and a mission; like Gorbachev, Obama wants to fulfill rather than discredit his country’s promise.
What enabled Gorbachev to ultimately withdraw the troops — and to do so with almost no domestic opposition — was the shared realization that all policies had failed and that if peace were to come to Afghanistan, the Afghans themselves would have to make it happen, with Moscow playing only a supporting role. [*]
I suspect that any remaining optimism about the Afghan war is fading within the Obama administration. Meanwhile, the deadlines have shifted: 2014 seems like the real date for a drawdown, rather than this summer. When this administration or another one decides to withdraw, it will not be because the war is too costly but because it no longer makes sense. [quickly approaching that point?] [*] At that point, perhaps, the president will say, as Gorbachev did to his colleagues: “We are not going to save the regime. We’ve already transformed it.” It is worth remembering that for a while, at least, the regime did manage to hold out on its own. As for the Soviet withdrawal, it was a popular move, perhaps the last uncontroversial and universally well-received decision Gorbachev made in the Soviet Union’s twilight years.
Artemy Kalinovsky is an assistant professor at the University of Amsterdam and the author of “A Long Goodbye: The Soviet Withdrawal From Afghanistan.”
Read more from Outlook, friend us on Facebook, and follow us on Twitter. © 2011 The Washington Post Co

A future for nuclear

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/a-future-for-nuclear/2011/04/22/AFdxPgHF_story.html
A future for nuclear
By Editorial, Friday, April 29, 9:17 PM [editorial] [nuclear energy given Japan’s tragedy?] [*]
AFTER THE CHERNOBYL meltdown 25 years ago last Tuesday, the prospects for America’s nuclear energy industry were grim. But by 2008 nuclear had bounced back in the United States. Support for building more reactors reached 44 percent in public polling. In the works were innovative reactive designs, such as small, efficient “modular” units that would be extremely safe and that could be deployed with more flexibility and less overhead than their behemoth cousins. Improvements in regulation promised to bring down compliance costs. Prominent voices in both parties unapologetically insisted that nuclear had to be part of America’s energy future. [*]
But now, after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in Japan?
As robots begin cleaning up the mess, the good news is that the Fukushima accident doesn’t appear to have been another Chernobyl. Barring effects yet unseen, the number of people who

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/a-future-for-nuclear/2011/04/22/AFdxPgHF_story.html
A future for nuclear
By Editorial, Friday, April 29, 9:17 PM [editorial] [nuclear energy given Japan’s tragedy?] [*]
AFTER THE CHERNOBYL meltdown 25 years ago last Tuesday, the prospects for America’s nuclear energy industry were grim. But by 2008 nuclear had bounced back in the United States. Support for building more reactors reached 44 percent in public polling. In the works were innovative reactive designs, such as small, efficient “modular” units that would be extremely safe and that could be deployed with more flexibility and less overhead than their behemoth cousins. Improvements in regulation promised to bring down compliance costs. Prominent voices in both parties unapologetically insisted that nuclear had to be part of America’s energy future. [*]
But now, after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in Japan?
As robots begin cleaning up the mess, the good news is that the Fukushima accident doesn’t appear to have been another Chernobyl. Barring effects yet unseen, the number of people who will suffer is drastically lower. [*]
Its effects on public opinion have been more modest, too. A new Post-ABC News poll indicates that a small majority of Americans still thinks nuclear power is safe. Just over half also say that Fukushima hasn’t fundamentally altered their confidence in American nuclear facilities. Politicians haven’t made a major effort to reverse pro-nuclear policies, at least not yet.
Still, The Post poll found, two-thirds of Americans now don’t want to see new plants built anywhere in the country, and 84 percent oppose building one close to them. [*]Anti-nuclear activists are already cheering the first victim of renewed concerns. NRG, a major power company, this month decided to scrap plans to build two reactors. Part of the reason was simple economics: low wholesale power prices in Texas, where NRG wanted to put the plants. But part of the company’s concern came from regulatory uncertainties following the accident in Japan. Fukushima, certainly, hasn’t helped America’s nuclear renaissance.
Anti-nuclear advocates and commentators, no doubt, welcome this. The only reason nuclear is attractive, some insist, is concern over global warming. Yet, even if that is the only cause, it is compelling. As of now there is no other proven, scalable low-carbon source of electricity that produces the reliable, “always on” power that utilities require. [*]America may never get as much of its electricity from nuclear plants as France, which generates 80 percent of its power that way. But if it is serious about cutting carbon emissions, the United States should keep nuclear on the table. © 2011 The Washington Post Co

Russia: 10 Suspects Killed in Caucasus Raid

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/30/world/europe/30briefs-Russia.html
April 29, 2011
Russia: 10 Suspects Killed in Caucasus Raid
By MICHAEL SCHWIRTZ [Russia] [former USSR] [Russia’s “Near Abroad” and/or extant parts of Russia, all of which Russia considers its sphere of influence?] [use psci350] [use ir text] [various insurgencies that are brewing in the Trans Caucasus region of Russia?] [things appear to be working to a head again?] [followup] [*]
Russian security forces said Friday that at least 10 Islamist militants had been killed in a special operation in the volatile and mostly Muslim North Caucasus region. At least two women were killed in the operation, which was spurred by a shootout between security forces and militants in the village of Progress on the border between the regions of Stavropol and Kabardino-Balkaria, Russia’s Investigative Committee said. [*]It was the latest raid in a campaign to eliminate Islamist fighters and their bases in the North Caucasus after a deadly terrorist attack at a Moscow airport in January that was linked to militants there.

[full piece may be found above the jump] [*]

Qaddafi Says He’s Ready to Talk, but Not to Leave

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/01/world/africa/01libya.html
April 30, 2011
Qaddafi Says He’s Ready to Talk, but Not to Leave
By KAREEM FAHIM [Libya] [Middle East proper, including the Gulf] [regimes continues slow, plodding, political-eco liberalization] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [NATO alliance providing air cover] [as many, many predicted, it has stalemated] [Qaddafi gives another bizaare speech: he seems on drugs or mentally ill?] [can someone act that crazy?] [followup] [*]
BENGHAZI, Libya — In a disjointed, defiant speech broadcast early Saturday morning on Libyan state television, Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi said that he was ready for a cease-fire but that he had no plans to leave the country. [*]
“Come France, Italy, U.K., America, come we’ll negotiate with you,” Colonel Qaddafi said as NATO warplanes bombed the capital, Tripoli. “You lie and say I’m killing my own people. Show us the bodies.”[?] [*]
The speech, which was broadcast about 2:30 a.m., was the latest in a season of rambling proclamations from the Libyan leader, and it came as NATO forces have said they will broaden their list of targets to include palaces, communication centers and other administrative buildings that Colonel Qaddafi relies on to maintain power.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/01/world/africa/01libya.html
April 30, 2011
Qaddafi Says He’s Ready to Talk, but Not to Leave
By KAREEM FAHIM [Libya] [Middle East proper, including the Gulf] [regimes continues slow, plodding, political-eco liberalization] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [NATO alliance providing air cover] [as many, many predicted, it has stalemated] [Qaddafi gives another bizaare speech: he seems on drugs or mentally ill?] [can someone act that crazy?] [followup] [*]
BENGHAZI, Libya — In a disjointed, defiant speech broadcast early Saturday morning on Libyan state television, Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi said that he was ready for a cease-fire but that he had no plans to leave the country. [*]
“Come France, Italy, U.K., America, come we’ll negotiate with you,” Colonel Qaddafi said as NATO warplanes bombed the capital, Tripoli. “You lie and say I’m killing my own people. Show us the bodies.”[?] [*]
The speech, which was broadcast about 2:30 a.m., was the latest in a season of rambling proclamations from the Libyan leader, and it came as NATO forces have said they will broaden their list of targets to include palaces, communication centers and other administrative buildings that Colonel Qaddafi relies on to maintain power.
The NATO bombing on Saturday struck a government complex, which reporters were told housed a commission for women and children along with the parliamentary staff offices, The Associated Press reported. A television tower nearby was unharmed, though the broadcast went dark three times during the colonel’s speech, The A.P. reported.
During the speech, Colonel Qaddafi repeated assertions that the rebel forces belonged to Al Qaeda or that they were terrorists and mercenaries, but he asked them to lay down their arms. “We are one family,” he said. [*]
A rebel spokesman in Benghazi, Jalal al-Gallal, dismissed the offers in the speech as “public relations for the world.”
“We know he’s not being genuine,” Mr. Gallal said. “He’s not once offered anything and followed through.”

Syrian Forces Shoot at Protesters in Dara’a Siege

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/30/world/middleeast/30syria.html
April 29, 2011
Syrian Forces Shoot at Protesters in Dara’a Siege
By ANTHONY SHADID [Syria] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [Syria pretends to be a modern secular republic, but is far from it] [no monarchy but long run by a minority sect (al Assads) and the Baath Party] [Bashir has seemingly lost control but cannot seem to suss out how to resolve things?] [followup] [hard to know as Syria keeps most western media out] [but appears al Assad has decided to crush the rebellion?] [now that al Assad has decided crackdown, the world watches somewhat perplexed?] [see today’s govt for Washington’s timid response] [*]
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Soldiers fired on protesters carrying olive branches and seeking to break the military’s siege of a rebellious town in Syria on Friday, killing at least 16 people, as thousands took to the streets in what organizers proclaimed a “Friday of Rage” against the government’s crackdown on a six-week uprising, witnesses and activists said.
The bloodshed in the besieged town, Dara’a, was the worst episode on another violent Friday. At least 40 people were killed across the country, repeating a cycle that has become a fixture of the most serious challenge to the Assad family’s four decades [*]of dictatorial rule. For

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/30/world/middleeast/30syria.html
April 29, 2011
Syrian Forces Shoot at Protesters in Dara’a Siege
By ANTHONY SHADID [Syria] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [Syria pretends to be a modern secular republic, but is far from it] [no monarchy but long run by a minority sect (al Assads) and the Baath Party] [Bashir has seemingly lost control but cannot seem to suss out how to resolve things?] [followup] [hard to know as Syria keeps most western media out] [but appears al Assad has decided to crush the rebellion?] [now that al Assad has decided crackdown, the world watches somewhat perplexed?] [see today’s govt for Washington’s timid response] [*]
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Soldiers fired on protesters carrying olive branches and seeking to break the military’s siege of a rebellious town in Syria on Friday, killing at least 16 people, as thousands took to the streets in what organizers proclaimed a “Friday of Rage” against the government’s crackdown on a six-week uprising, witnesses and activists said.
The bloodshed in the besieged town, Dara’a, was the worst episode on another violent Friday. At least 40 people were killed across the country, repeating a cycle that has become a fixture of the most serious challenge to the Assad family’s four decades [*]of dictatorial rule. For weeks, demonstrators have poured into the streets after noon prayers, only to face the determination of the government to disperse them, often with live ammunition.
But the cries of grief in Dara’a and angry chants in dozens of towns and cities on Friday seemed to signal a new dynamic in the uprising. As much as calls for freedom and an end to President Bashar al-Assad’s rule, the protest movement appeared to be feeding off its own symbols and legitimacy, as the demonstrators’ anger grows over the suffering inflicted on Dara’a and the deaths of more than 500 protesters — by activists’ count — since March. [*]
“Stop the siege of Dara’a!” demonstrators shouted in Homs, Syria, near the Lebanese border.
“We cannot challenge the government,” said an opposition figure in Damascus who asked not to be identified. “They’re armed, and we’re unarmed. If they want to kill us, they can kill us. If they want to arrest us, they can arrest us. But no matter how much blood gets spilled and how violent it gets, this is our country, and we’re not giving it up.” [*]
Friday was viewed as a test of sorts for both sides — whether the government might ease its crackdown after killing 112 protesters a week earlier, and whether demonstrators would defy blunt warnings and the threat of more force by returning to the streets. In the end, neither budged, and organizers seemed buoyed by the turnout.
“I’m amazed,” Wissam Tarif, executive director of Insan, a Syrian human rights group, said early in the day. “People are in the streets. I can’t believe it.
“The government is going to have to reconsider their strategy,” he added. [?] [we’ll see] [*]
So far, there are few signs of it doing so, despite international condemnation, American moves to place sanctions on Syrian officials and a European effort to impose an arms embargo.
In the uprising’s early weeks, the government tried to stanch the unrest with a mix of mostly hollow concessions and force. Since last week, it has emphasized the latter, an indication underscored by the shootings on Friday.
Some cracks have emerged in its façade, with reports this week of desertions from the military in Dara’a and even fighting among troops, along with the resignations of nearly 300 low-level members of the Baath Party, which has ruled in some fashion since 1963.
Though the government has vast resources to draw on — and bastions of support, particularly among religious minorities — it faces an evolving revolt that it has proven unable to crush and that may be widening.
“There really isn’t a coalesced movement yet or official organizers of the protests,” an Obama administration official said. “It’s almost an organic thing. The more violence happens, the more the cycle continues, the more people hit the street.” [*]
Residents and activists painted a wrenching portrait of the scene in Dara’a, a poor town in southern Syria near the Jordanian border where protests last month helped galvanize nationwide demonstrations.
The military had stormed the town on Monday, effectively occupying it, but the ensuing hardships — shortages of food, water and even baby formula, in addition to dozens of reported deaths — have become a rallying cry of the revolt, unleashing solidarity protests in other towns and neighboring countries.
Inside the town, residents said people were too afraid to go into the streets, or even to attend Friday Prayer. Instead, they shouted “God is great!” from within their homes, the chants growing louder as residents in building after building took up the cry.
As they did, residents said, soldiers fired into the air.
“We are living in complete isolation,” a resident said.
In the afternoon, residents said, hundreds tried to march to the town, either to break the siege or to bring food and medicine. As they approached, reportedly carrying olive branches and white sheets to signal their peacefulness, security forces opened fire.
“There was a lot of screaming,” Mr. Tarif said by telephone, citing the accounts of residents there. “It was a massacre. It was another bloody massacre.”
A resident, Abdullah al-Hariri, added, “The protesters were just trying to get here.”
The Syrian military said that in another episode, four soldiers were killed by terrorists at a checkpoint in Dara’a earlier in the day. Two others were captured, it said.
Abdullah Abazid, a protester there, offered another account: The soldiers were killed by fighters from a division loyal to Mr. Assad’s brother, Maher, for trying to defend the residents there.
There were conflicting reports on the number of civilians killed in Dara’a. Mr. Tarif said a nearby hospital received 16 bodies and many people who were wounded. Others put the death toll at 19.
For weeks, diplomats and protest leaders have watched to see whether the demonstrations would spread to Syria’s two largest cities, Damascus and Aleppo. On Friday, hundreds of protesters gathered near the Hassan mosque in a conservative neighborhood of the capital, Damascus; it was a youthful crowd and bigger than in past weeks, but still relatively small. They were confronted by hundreds of police officers, in both riot gear and plain clothes.
“One, one, the Syrian people are one!” they shouted. [*]
Within minutes, police officers moved against them, beating protesters with sticks and firing tear gas. The opposition figure in Damascus said one person had been wounded.
“The regime has a very long breath, and they haven’t used all their resources so far,” he said. “They have the security solution, they have the army and they have their supporters, who they have cultivated over four decades. They haven’t used the street yet, and that remains the wild card because it would immediately take us to a civil war.”
The other deaths on Friday were reported in Homs, in towns around Damascus and in Latakia, near the heartland of the ruling elite.
More demonstrations were reported in the coastal towns of Jabla and Baniyas, Kurdish regions in the east, and the central town of Hama. [*]
The turnout in Kurdish towns appeared bigger than in past weeks, but a local leader said the demonstrators had been careful not to call for the government’s overthrow.

Iraq: Attacks Kill 10, Including 8-Year-Old

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/30/world/middleeast/30briefs-Iraq.html
April 29, 2011
Iraq: Attacks Kill 10, Including 8-Year-Old
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [-ir] [maliki govt trying to arrange things so US may withdraw later this year] [recall the SOFA that President Bush signed in 2008 provided for U.S. to leave by December 31, 2011] [Obama hopes to keep it on track] [and things are such that it will almost certainly be a big ceremonial withdrawal] [meanwhile, additional signs that civil society may be emerging?] [AQI and other insurgents trying to force the US to stay past Dec 31 date?] [in consequence, AQI and others strike out at it] [*]
Ten people were killed in attacks around Iraq on Friday. In Baghdad, a bomb went off in a predominantly Shiite neighborhood, killing three police commandos and a civilian, and wounding 24 police officers and 5 civilians, the police and medical officials said. In a small village in Diyala Province, gunmen stormed the home of an imam who had preached against sectarian violence, killing him, his wife and their 8-year-old daughter. Gunmen in Buhriz killed three brothers, members of a militia opposed to Al Qaeda, in their home.

[full piece may be found above the jump] [*]

Fatal Bomb in Morocco Shows Signs of Al Qaeda

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/30/world/africa/30morocco.html
April 29, 2011
Fatal Bomb in Morocco Shows Signs of Al Qaeda
By SOUAD MEKHENNET and STEVEN ERLANGER [Morocco] [Maghreb] [northern Africa] [jihadis] [hydra] [Islamists too] [Islamic culture in its northern Africa iteration] [al Qaeda affiliate, at least] [probably associated with Algeria’s Salfist movement (now known as al Qaeda of the Maghreb or Islamic Maghreb][use psci363 (formerly 469)] [followup] [too early to know if jihadis but the mo looks familiar?][today claims that the bomb had telltake signs of al Qaeda?] [*]
MARRAKESH, Morocco — The terrorist bomb that killed 16 people in a crowded tourist cafe on Thursday was packed with nails and was set off remotely, most probably by a cellphone, Morocco’s interior minister and security officials said Friday.
The bomb appeared to have all the hallmarks of Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, [*]Interior Minister Taieb Cherkaoui said, briefing the government in Rabat. “The manner reminds us of the style used generally by Al Qaeda,” he said. “And this leads us to think that there is a possibility of more dangers to come.” [**]
But there was no claim of responsibility on Friday by Al Qaeda or any other group.
“This was not a suicide attack,” Mr. Cherkaoui said, adding that “it appears the bomb was set

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/30/world/africa/30morocco.html
April 29, 2011
Fatal Bomb in Morocco Shows Signs of Al Qaeda
By SOUAD MEKHENNET and STEVEN ERLANGER [Morocco] [Maghreb] [northern Africa] [jihadis] [hydra] [Islamists too] [Islamic culture in its northern Africa iteration] [al Qaeda affiliate, at least] [probably associated with Algeria’s Salfist movement (now known as al Qaeda of the Maghreb or Islamic Maghreb][use psci363 (formerly 469)] [followup] [too early to know if jihadis but the mo looks familiar?][today claims that the bomb had telltake signs of al Qaeda?] [*]
MARRAKESH, Morocco — The terrorist bomb that killed 16 people in a crowded tourist cafe on Thursday was packed with nails and was set off remotely, most probably by a cellphone, Morocco’s interior minister and security officials said Friday.
The bomb appeared to have all the hallmarks of Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, [*]Interior Minister Taieb Cherkaoui said, briefing the government in Rabat. “The manner reminds us of the style used generally by Al Qaeda,” he said. “And this leads us to think that there is a possibility of more dangers to come.” [**]
But there was no claim of responsibility on Friday by Al Qaeda or any other group.
“This was not a suicide attack,” Mr. Cherkaoui said, adding that “it appears the bomb was set off remotely,” in remarks carried by the official news agency, MAP. He said the bomb contained ammonium nitrate. A Moroccan security official, asking for anonymity, said the bomb also contained triacetone triperoxide, or TATP, an explosive easily made and popular among bombers in the Middle East, including those from Al Qaeda. [actually, in past al Qaeda has used both suicide bombers and not] [*]
The bombing is a serious blow to Morocco’s tourism industry, already hurt by the economic crisis and anxieties about popular protests that are stirring much of the Arab world. The site — a popular cafe facing the historic Djemma el Fna square — is a regular tourist stop, and the bombing appeared aimed at foreigners.
Fourteen of the 16 dead were foreigners, mostly French citizens, as well as two Canadians, a Briton and a Dutch tourist, officials said. There were 25 people wounded, 14 of whom remained in hospitals, [*]Mr. Cherkaoui said.
Morocco’s king, Mohammed VI, has tried to respond to popular demands for more democracy by beginning constitutional reforms and releasing or commuting the sentences of 190 radical Islamic prisoners arrested after the last big terrorist bombing, in Casablanca in 2003, when 45 people died, including 12 suicide bombers.
On May 1, protesters plan another rally in Moroccan cities to demand a faster transition to a constitutional monarchy, the third such protest since Feb. 20. [*]
Mohamed Darif, a political scientist at King Hassan University in Casablanca, said, “The finger is pointed at Al Qaeda,” and suggested that Al Qaeda in the Islamic Mahgreb had singled out a cafe popular with French tourists. The same group holds four French hostages and demands that for their return, France pull its troops out of Afghanistan.
“They would find no better spot than Marrakesh, which has become a French village, with a strong French presence,” Mr. Darif said.
But he suggested other possible culprits, including radical Islamists who want all their colleagues released from prison — nearly 2,000 or so are detained — and those who do not favor the king’s recent movement toward democratic reform. [*]
Jean-Yves Moisseron, editor in chief of the France-based magazine Maghreb-Machrek, said the way the bombing was carried out pointed to Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, “since Marrakesh is a very touristy place with a bad reputation, a spot for prostitution and sexual tourism, with international jet-setters” who own houses in the old city.
“There is a very clear will to target tourists; otherwise they would have bombed 50 meters away,” he said, adding that the bombers had to get through significant police controls to hit the square, which is well protected. “They were surely well organized and significantly trained.” [*]
Two of the dead were Michal Zekry, 29, an Israeli-Canadian who was pregnant, and her husband, Messod Wizman, 30, a Moroccan-Canadian. They had come from Shanghai to visit Mr. Wizman’s parents, who live in Casablanca, for Passover, and then took a trip to see Marrakesh.
“They were lovely together, married for three years and have a boy, 2,” said Mr. Wizman’s aunt. “She was pregnant. What happened was that they went to the hotel in Marrakesh, but their room was not ready, so they thought, ‘Why not have a coffee?’ and went to the Argana.” She paused, then said: “There are no words for that.” The couple had left their son with his grandparents.
Mr. Wizman, she said, grew up in Casablanca, studied in Paris and then went to Montreal, where he met his wife.
On Friday evening, the square was packed with people, but the coffee shops and restaurants normally filled with tourists were nearly empty.
Around the corner, the Mabrouka cinema was open, showing “Femmes en Miroirs,” about a young Moroccan photographer living in Paris who returns home to see her sick mother. Rashiq Moulay Alarbi, a literature student, said: “We are not afraid, we are going out. I want these people who did this to us to know that they have not succeeded.” [*]
His friend Abdellah al-Khalaoui, a driver, expressed sorrow for the deaths and concern for the city. “We fear that the tourism will drop; it has already started,” he said. “Already the coffee shops in which people used to sit are empty.”
Nearby, a Spanish couple ate with friends at a small restaurant, undeterred. They were near the square on Thursday but did not hear the explosion. “We’re very sad for the people, but something like this could have happened in Barcelona or Paris as well,” said Manuel Sanroma, a mathematics professor at the University of Barcelona who was making his second visit to Marrakesh.
“We love the Arab world,” he said. “Terrorists can attack you anywhere.”
Souad Mekhennet reported from Marrakesh, and Steven Erlanger from Washington. Maïa de la Baume contributed reporting from Paris.

Al Qaeda Attack Was Thwarted by Three Arrests, Germany Says

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/30/world/europe/30germany.html
April 29, 2011
Al Qaeda Attack Was Thwarted by Three Arrests, Germany Says
By MICHAEL SLACKMAN and STEFAN PAULY [Germany] [EU3] [immigration and jihadism] [recall how many of the 9/11 cells grouped in Germany] [after Afghanistan, Germany was a major departure point before cells moved to U.S.] [al Qaeda] [German authorities claim to have disrupted an al Qaeda plot?] [use psci 355-455, 363 (formerly 469)] [*]
BERLIN — The German police arrested three men suspected of being members of Al Qaeda on Friday, saying they represented “a concrete and imminent danger” to the nation and had been planning an attack using explosives. [attack(s) targeted Germany] [*]
The German authorities presented the bare outlines of a terrorism plot that they said involved at least one person trained at a militant camp in Afghanistan or Pakistan and a cache of material for producing explosives. The men had been under surveillance for seven months, but the authorities said they decided to move fast when the three began preparations for testing an explosive device. [*]
“We succeeded in preventing a concrete and imminent danger,” the interior minister, Hans-Peter Friedrich, said in a statement that acknowledged assistance from foreign investigators. “This proves that Germany continues to be in the cross hairs of international

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/30/world/europe/30germany.html
April 29, 2011
Al Qaeda Attack Was Thwarted by Three Arrests, Germany Says
By MICHAEL SLACKMAN and STEFAN PAULY [Germany] [EU3] [immigration and jihadism] [recall how many of the 9/11 cells grouped in Germany] [after Afghanistan, Germany was a major departure point before cells moved to U.S.] [al Qaeda] [German authorities claim to have disrupted an al Qaeda plot?] [use psci 355-455, 363 (formerly 469)] [*]
BERLIN — The German police arrested three men suspected of being members of Al Qaeda on Friday, saying they represented “a concrete and imminent danger” to the nation and had been planning an attack using explosives. [attack(s) targeted Germany] [*]
The German authorities presented the bare outlines of a terrorism plot that they said involved at least one person trained at a militant camp in Afghanistan or Pakistan and a cache of material for producing explosives. The men had been under surveillance for seven months, but the authorities said they decided to move fast when the three began preparations for testing an explosive device. [*]
“We succeeded in preventing a concrete and imminent danger,” the interior minister, Hans-Peter Friedrich, said in a statement that acknowledged assistance from foreign investigators. “This proves that Germany continues to be in the cross hairs of international terrorists, and we need to remain vigilant.”
The authorities said more information would be released at the federal prosecutor’s headquarters in Karlsruhe on Saturday, when the men would be brought before a judge. But some details emerged from law enforcement officials and the German news media, which said at least two of the men were Moroccan, one with German citizenship and the other living in Germany illegally. The third was said to be a German of Iranian descent, though some reports said he was of Moroccan descent. [weird, that one was Iranian?] [Shi’a] [*]
It was not at clear if there was any connection between the arrests and the terrorist attack in Morocco on Thursday, when at least 16 people were killed after a bomb was detonated in a packed cafe in the popular tourist city of Marrakesh. But experts said it was likely that Moroccan and German intelligence services had recently cooperated.
The German news media reported that the three suspects had been taken into custody in the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia and that the authorities had confiscated materials for making explosives, including acetone, a volatile substance that terrorists often use. Officials identified the suspects only as Abdeladim K., Jamil S. and Ahmed Sh. German authorities do not typically release the names of criminal suspects.
According to the newspaper Bild, one of the men was from Düsseldorf and the other two were from nearby cities, Essen and Bochum. All three were arrested at 6:30 a.m. in raids in Düsseldorf and Bochum.
The target was uncertain. Bild, Germany’s most widely read and generally reliable newspaper, reported that the terrorist cell might have planned to hit the popular Eurovision Song Contest on May 14, though that event’s organizers said they had not been alerted to any such threat. [sounds pretty early in plot, thus imminent not at issue?] [*]
The newspaper Die Welt anonymously quoted an investigator as saying that the suspects were planning to attack public transportation in a large German city. An American official who was briefed on the operation said the plot was aimed at buses or depots.
The arrests and accusations, which combined elements of homegrown terrorism with concerns about the lawless Afghanistan-Pakistan border region, shook Germany’s sense of calm. The country was put on edge last year as well after a terrorism alert involving what the authorities said was concrete information of a planned attack. [*]
The increased security measures established at public areas like transportation hubs had eased in recent months, but law enforcement had quietly continued to pursue leads on the threats aggressively, including a suggestion that terrorists planned to strike the Reichstag, home to the lower house of Parliament.
Wolfgang Bosbach, a member of the lower house and chairman of the Committee on Internal Affairs, said investigators had closely monitored travel to the Afghan border area and noted “a significant number of returnees.”
“The recent arrests must not surprise anyone who deals seriously with the matter,” Mr. Bosbach said.
The Rhine-Main region has a large population with ties to North Africa and is one of Germany’s centers of the Salafist movement, a radical fundamentalist school of Islamic thinking, along with Hamburg, Berlin and the region around Frankfurt, [*]according to Guido Steinberg, an expert on terrorism with the German Institute for International and Security Affairs.
“We do not know yet exactly how big this is,” Mr. Steinberg said. “But that something could happen this year is anything but absurd. The Salafist scene has grown significantly in Germany in recent years. The number of converts has increased substantially as well.” [*]
According to the official Germany News agency, the three men had planned to test an explosive on Thursday night, but delayed for some reason. The authorities said the men were arrested without previously issued warrants, perhaps indicating a decision to move quickly.
Souad Mekhennet contributed reporting from Marrakesh, Morocco; Jack Ewing from Frankfurt; and Eric Schmitt from Washington.

April 29, 2011

The LWOT: 16 dead in Marrakesh bombing; Gitmo lawyer seeks WikiLeaks access

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/29/the_lwot_16_dead_in_marrakesh_bombing_gitmo_lawyer_seeks_wikileaks_access
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/29/11 10:21:07 AM] [*]
The LWOT: 16 dead in Marrakesh bombing; Gitmo lawyer seeks WikiLeaks access
Foreign Policy and the New America Foundation bring you a twice weekly brief on the legal war on terror. You can read it on foreignpolicy.com or get it delivered directly to your inbox -- just sign up here.
BY ANDREW LEBOVICH | APRIL 29, 2011 [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [federal judiciary of which FBI is a part] [continuity in USFP] [GSAVE] [gitmo and an array of associated issues] [TSPs, rough interrogations, so forth] [LWOT] [followup] [some external on Morocco] [I decided earlier this semester to begin indexing here in govt, as they were principally reporting, not advocating policy] [it’s been an excellent series] [but as usual, today’s has some external also] [*]
Suspected suicide bomber strikes Marrakesh café
A suspected suicide bomber struck the popular Café Argana in the heart of Marrakesh's Jamâa el-Fna, a favorite area for tourists, killing 16 - including five Moroccans, eight French

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/29/the_lwot_16_dead_in_marrakesh_bombing_gitmo_lawyer_seeks_wikileaks_access
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/29/11 10:21:07 AM] [*]
The LWOT: 16 dead in Marrakesh bombing; Gitmo lawyer seeks WikiLeaks access
Foreign Policy and the New America Foundation bring you a twice weekly brief on the legal war on terror. You can read it on foreignpolicy.com or get it delivered directly to your inbox -- just sign up here.
BY ANDREW LEBOVICH | APRIL 29, 2011 [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [federal judiciary of which FBI is a part] [continuity in USFP] [GSAVE] [gitmo and an array of associated issues] [TSPs, rough interrogations, so forth] [LWOT] [followup] [some external on Morocco] [I decided earlier this semester to begin indexing here in govt, as they were principally reporting, not advocating policy] [it’s been an excellent series] [but as usual, today’s has some external also] [*]
Suspected suicide bomber strikes Marrakesh café
A suspected suicide bomber struck the popular Café Argana in the heart of Marrakesh's Jamâa el-Fna, a favorite area for tourists, killing 16 - including five Moroccans, eight French citizens, one Briton, and an Israeli (AP, BBC, CNN, NYT, Washington Post, Reuters). The attack is the deadliest since a series of bombings struck Casablanca in 2003, killing 45 people, among them 12 suicide bombers. [*]
No one has claimed responsibility for the bombing, originally attributed to exploding gas canisters by Moroccan officials, though suspicion fell on either local militants or Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) (Guardian, NYT, Telegraph). The attack comes at a sensitive time for Morocco, which has experienced an increase in protests recently and whose economy depends heavily on tourism. [*]
Gitmo lawyer seeks WikiLeaks access
Attorney David Remes, who has devoted his law practice to representing Guantánamo Bay detainees and is currently representing detainee Saifullah Paracha, went to court on Wednesday challenging government prohibitions on how Guantánamo lawyers can view [I have to say, I find it strange that the stuff is not now available through discovery?] [*]and discuss WikiLeaks documents (NYT). The lawyers were warned on Monday that the documents are still classified, and had to be treated accordingly; however, in his petition, Remes said that he wanted to see the documents at home or at the office, and "print, copy, disseminate and discuss" the materials without being prosecuted (NYT, NYT).
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said on Apr. 26 that the documents were damaging, but likely will not impact future court proceedings for Guantánamo detainees [well, thank god we have his word for it?!] [*](Reuters). NPR describes how often, intelligence analysts and federal judges interpreted the same information about detainees in starkly different ways (NPR). Such divergent analysis led to the eventual dismantling of the case against detainee Mohammed el-Gharani, an accused al Qaeda member who was freed in mid-2009 (NYT). And the Miami Herald notes that due to judicial practice and restrictions on detainee transfers, the documents are unlikely to help free current prisoners (Miami Herald).
Meanwhile, the United Kingdom continues to press for the return of Shaker Aamer, the last British detainee at Guantánamo, who was cleared for release by military officials in 2007 but remains at the prison (BBC). And British courts this week regained the authority to deport terrorism suspects, as the country continues to grapple with its legacy of sheltering extremists, a history that appears in some of the WikiLeaks documents (Telegraph, Telegraph, Telegraph).
Study asserts Gitmo doctors ignored abuse
A study released Apr. 26 by Physicians for Human Rights of the medical files of nine Guantánamo detainees concluded that, while detainees were given first-class medical care for a range of issues, doctors at the prison systematically ignored evidence of intentional abuse, including, "bone fractures, lacerations, and symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder," evidence that often did not make it into the detainees' medical files [why wouldn’t they treat such things?] [doesn’t make a lot of sense?] [*] (ABC, Bloomberg, Telegraph). Multiple lawsuits are pending in state courts to force investigations into psychologists who advised and helped design the interrogation program at Guantánamo (NYT).
Post-9/11 surveillance tool removed
The government on Apr. 27 announced that it had scrapped the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System (NSEER) a program instituted after 9/11 that required people from 20 mostly-Arab countries [*]to complete a special registration process when traveling to the United States, saying that technology had made the process unnecessary (WSJ).
In a ruling Apr. 27, a federal judge said that a group of Muslims in California cannot see their FBI files, though he also strongly criticized the government for making "blatantly false" assertions about the documents (NYT). [?] [*]
And in an unusual step, the judge presiding over a suit filed by the family of a 9/11 victim against United Airlines has ruled that each side will have the same amount of time, 50 to 60 hours, to present its case (NYT).
Terrorism watch list no obstruction for gun buyers
The Associated Press reports yesterday that last year 247 people on the government's terrorism watch list were able to purchase firearms, and that of the 1,453 people on the list who tried to buy guns between Feb. 2004 and Dec. 2010, 90 percent were successful [of course; there’s nothing easier in America than buying a firearm] [even getting basic id is much harder?] [I get that we have a constitutional amendment that is clear; I don’t get why that means people can buy weapons that are only made to kill others?] [or clips that can hold so many rounds or cop-killer ammo?] [it doesn’t make any sense?] [*](AP). The government can stop someone from buying a gun for 11 reasons, but not for being on the secret watch list, which is believed to include some 450,000 names of people suspected of terrorist links or activities.
Trials and Tribulations
AQIM this week released audio statements from four French hostages it kidnapped from the uranium mining town of Arlit, Niger last September, in which the men pleaded for France to withdraw from Afghanistan [*](Reuters, Bloomberg, AFP). The men were kidnapped with three others, who were released earlier this year, and reports continue to circulate that AQIM has asked for a ransom of 90 million euro in return for the release of the final four hostages (France24).
A panel of judges in Indonesia found Abdullah Sonata guilty this week of aiding the operations of a terrorist training facility in Aceh province, sentencing him to 10 years [*]in prison (Jakarta Post). Police in Aceh reportedly made seven arrests this week in relation to ongoing terror investigations (Jakarta Post).
A Somali man, Ahmad Dhakane, was sentenced to 10 years in prison Apr. 28 for lying to federal authorities about his links to two terrorist-linked groups (AP). Dhakane, an alleged human smuggler, sparked an alert last year on the southern border of the United States for a suspected member of the Somali militant group al-Shabaab. Andrew Lebovich is a program associate in the National Security Studies Program at the New America Foundation.

Why Palestinian unity won’t lead to peace.

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/28/a_bad_deal
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/29/11 10:16:52 AM] [*]
A Bad Deal
Why Palestinian unity won’t lead to peace.
BY DORE GOLD | APRIL 28, 2011 [see my comments in external, governmental, and even societal the past few days] [ever since the deal was announced (Wednesday p.m.?) I have questioned whether it’s a possibility] [and I have enumerated specific reasons why it’s unlikely to work] [Dore Gold is former Israeli diplomat—in fact may still be?—and here’s his look at same] [clearly, his audience is policymakers, mostly on Capitol Hill] [use psci 350, 355-455, 363 (formerly, 469)] [oped piece by a former Israeli diplomat that, unsurprisingly, sees Israel’s acts as benign while Palestinians’ acts as malfeascence] [*]
On Wednesday, representatives of Fatah and Hamas, the two main Palestinian factions, announced in Cairo that they had suddenly reached a reconciliation agreement. The emerging deal, which calls for the establishment of a Palestinian unity government to pave the way for elections within a year, has a lot to do with the Palestinians' drive to gain the

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/28/a_bad_deal
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/29/11 10:16:52 AM] [*]
A Bad Deal
Why Palestinian unity won’t lead to peace.
BY DORE GOLD | APRIL 28, 2011 [see my comments in external, governmental, and even societal the past few days] [ever since the deal was announced (Wednesday p.m.?) I have questioned whether it’s a possibility] [and I have enumerated specific reasons why it’s unlikely to work] [Dore Gold is former Israeli diplomat—in fact may still be?—and here’s his look at same] [clearly, his audience is policymakers, mostly on Capitol Hill] [use psci 350, 355-455, 363 (formerly, 469)] [oped piece by a former Israeli diplomat that, unsurprisingly, sees Israel’s acts as benign while Palestinians’ acts as malfeascence] [*]
On Wednesday, representatives of Fatah and Hamas, the two main Palestinian factions, announced in Cairo that they had suddenly reached a reconciliation agreement. The emerging deal, which calls for the establishment of a Palestinian unity government to pave the way for elections within a year, has a lot to do with the Palestinians' drive to gain the U.N. General Assembly's backing this September for the establishment of an independent state. [surely true] [*]
But the world should not cheer this bargain. Although the agreement may solve some of the short-term problems of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas's statehood drive, it will create larger problems that promise to doom the plan to irrelevancy -- and make a historic peace agreement with Israel far less likely. [also, very likely true] [I find it hard to believe they will be able to put aside years of torture, maiming, and death simply to get support in the UNGA???] [*]
Abbas's plan suffers from a fundamental misconception -- that the General Assembly has any authority to decide about the existence of new states. In fact, the assembly only has the power to make a non-binding recommendation [well, if Dore were so certain of that he wouldn’t have take the time to write this] [clerly, he and other Israelis fear it means more than simple non-binding recommendations!] [*]to the world community that a Palestinian state should be established; Abbas would then have to actually declare a state and, by doing so, set the stage for gaining formal recognition by the major powers of the world.
What are the outlines of the new Palestinian state Abbas is hoping the international community will endorse? By all accounts, Abbas would like a U.N. resolution to delimit the borders of his new Palestinian state; [support for 1967 borders, already part of UN Resolution 242] [*] in this context, he will seek control not only of the entire West Bank but the Gaza Strip as well. However, since Hamas's violent takeover in 2007, Abbas has been powerless in Gaza -- a fact that has complicated international recognition of Abbas's authority. Presumably, Abbas hopes to address that problem by merging Hamas with his Ramallah-based government. [I think Dore is right] [this just seems so unlikely in the short term that it’s difficult to understand exactly what the PA hopes to gain from reconciliation?] [*]
But Abbas's reconciliation with Hamas contains more risks than it does advantages. Hamas is designated as an international terrorist organization not only by Israel, but also by Canada, the European Union, and the United States. [I tend to agree with that as well] [it at least risks a lot] [*] Moreover, it serves as a proxy force for Iran, which provides Hamas with funding, training, and weapons. So even though the Palestinians can always depend on the Non-Aligned Movement bloc for 120 or 130 General Assembly votes, these facts will imperil the Palestinians' ability to gain the backing of major Western powers, including the EU countries.
Since coming to power in the 2006 Palestinian legislative elections, Hamas has steadfastly refused to accept the conditions of the Quartet -- the Middle East contact group that includes the United States, the U.N., the EU, and Russia -- for becoming part of the diplomatic process: renouncing violence, recognizing Israel's right to exist, and accepting past agreements. [more or less accurate] [*] Mahmoud al-Zahar, the senior Hamas leader who participated in the Hamas-Fatah talks, clarified after the agreement was reached: "Our program does not include negotiations with Israel or recognizing it." [also true] [*] As recently as April 17, Hamas's military wing, the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades, reminded its supporters on its website: "We are going on the path of jihad." Hamas's intractability will no doubt jeopardize European diplomatic support for the Palestinian statehood drive, as well as financial assistance for any Palestinian government in which Hamas plays a role. [again, I think it’s mostly a statement of fact not conjecture] [he’s perhaps showing a little wishful thinking?] [I don’t know if it will jeopardize ultimately?] [had he said make it problematic, I’d say absolutely correct] [*]
These concerns come on top of other serious European reservations. For example, the 1995 Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement, also known as Oslo II, clearly established: "Neither side shall initiate or take any step that will change the status of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip pending the outcome of the Permanent Status negotiations." [with dure respect, Israel has done a bunch of things proscribed by Oslo] [so for Israeli to make that argument, if it in fact makes it, is disingenuous at best] [*] The EU signed Oslo II as a witness. If the EU supports the Palestinian initiative at the U.N., it will be violating a core commitment of the peace process, which is that the territories' fate should be determined only by direct negotiations between the parties.
The problems with including Hamas don't stop there. Abbas's hope is that a General Assembly resolution will reference the pre-1967 boundaries, which have assumed almost holy status among Palestinians. [he tries to make it sound like pipedream] [it was their borders, prior to the 6-Day War] [*] (Never mind that these were only armistice lines from the 1948 war, and were not regarded as final political borders.) In Jerusalem, the pre-1967 line will put the entire Old City, with its holy sites, like the Western Wall, under Palestinian control. Israelis will not agree to such a division of their capital in any case, but will European governments risk putting the Church of the Holy Sepulchre under a regime even partly controlled by Hamas? They know that many members of Gaza's small Christian community have been seeking refuge abroad in order to flee Hamas rule. [lots to disentangle in that] [partly accurate but one sided view] [*]
The last time Abbas co-governed with Hamas was after the Palestinian legislative elections in early 2006, which Hamas won. By June 2007, their power-sharing arrangements broke down and Hamas overthrew Abbas's forces in the Gaza Strip. Israel is concerned that, in the aftermath of their new agreement, Hamas will try to exploit Abbas's weakness and take over the West Bank as well. [if Israel was thusly concerned, it might have been more prudent when undermining PA and making it more vulnerable to the very thing Dore now cites as concern?] [*] If, under the agreement, the Palestinian Authority releases Hamas operatives from its prisons in the West Bank and at the same time calls off security sweeps against Hamas, the terrorist group's power in the field will undoubtedly rise. And what will happen to the Palestinian security forces that were trained by the United States and Jordan and have been acclaimed in the West in recent years?
Abbas needs to choose his priority: working with Hamas, or working with Israel. Faced with the departure of his old regional ally, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, and the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas's parent organization, Abbas appears to be recalculating his interests. He must also make a final decision about how to proceed in dealing with his differences with Israel -- through unilateral action that seeks to mobilize support at the United Nations, or by sitting down and negotiating with Israel, as past agreements require. [well, I personally agree, so long as Hamas has not changed its view of Israel] [but it’s a little like telling Israel what rightwing nuts can run in the Knesset?!?!] [in fact the current government has a couple in the cabinet who are basically anti-Arab racists!] [I suppose what’s good for the goose . . . ] [*]
The pathway to peace is open. But by reaching out to Hamas, Abbas has plainly moved even further away from it. Dore Gold, a former Israeli ambassador to the United Nations, is president of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs.

The Iraq Syndrome Revisited

http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/67681/john-mueller/the-iraq-syndrome-revisited
Foreign Affairs
[Accessed 4/29/11 10:12:26 AM] [*]
March 28, 2011
POSTSCRIPT
The Iraq Syndrome Revisited
U.S. Intervention, From Kosovo to Libya
John Mueller
JOHN MUELLER is Professor of Political Science at Ohio State University. He is the author of Atomic Obsession: Nuclear Alarmism From Hiroshima to Al Qaeda and the co-author of the forthcoming Terror, Security, and Money: Balancing the Risks, Costs, and Benefits of Homeland Security Spending. [Note: cannot post due to copyright restrictions] [CSUSM students who are interested in article] [go to Kellogg and use electronic data bases] [CSUSM subscribes to Foreign Affairs, but limited collection of hard copies] [thus, use JSTOR or whichever database indexes Foreign Affairs] [an interesting piece by Mueller, from The Ohio State University] [obviously, I have some bias: mea culpa] [still, he’s updated a piece from 5-6 years ago and nicely done] [use psci 355-455] [*]
In a November/December 2005 Foreign Affairs article, “The Iraq Syndrome,” I concluded that Americans, because of the experience in Iraq, were likely acquiring a perspective on intervening in overseas conflicts somewhat like the one that followed the Vietnam War.

[must have subscription for portion below the jump] [see comments above] [*]

Unfollowed: How a (Possible) Social Network Spy Came Undone

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/04/unfollowed-how-a-possible-social-network-spy-came-undone/
Wired
Danger Room Blog
[Accessed 4/29/11 10:10:12 AM] [*]
Unfollowed: How a (Possible) Social Network Spy Came Undone
By Spencer Ackerman
April 28, 2011, 3:11 pm
Categories: Spies, Secrecy and Surveillance [mostly amusing infor on a would-be spy?] [but it sounds like the community of analysts-policymakers-wonks completely bought it?] [that’s a little scary] [*]
It started out with a leggy, bikini-clad avatar. She said she was a missile expert — the “1st Lady of Missiles,” in fact — but sometimes suggested she worked with the CIA. With multiple Twitter and Facebook accounts, she earned a following of social media-crazed security wonks. Then came the accusations of using sex appeal for espionage.
Now everyone involved in this weird network is adjusting their story in one way or

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/04/unfollowed-how-a-possible-social-network-spy-came-undone/
Wired
Danger Room Blog
[Accessed 4/29/11 10:10:12 AM] [*]
Unfollowed: How a (Possible) Social Network Spy Came Undone
By Spencer Ackerman
April 28, 2011, 3:11 pm
Categories: Spies, Secrecy and Surveillance [mostly amusing infor on a would-be spy?] [but it sounds like the community of analysts-policymakers-wonks completely bought it?] [that’s a little scary] [*]
It started out with a leggy, bikini-clad avatar. She said she was a missile expert — the “1st Lady of Missiles,” in fact — but sometimes suggested she worked with the CIA. With multiple Twitter and Facebook accounts, she earned a following of social media-crazed security wonks. Then came the accusations of using sex appeal for espionage.
Now everyone involved in this weird network is adjusting their story in one way or another, demonstrating that even people in the national security world have trouble remembering one of the basic rules of the internet: Not everyone is who they say they are. [*]
“I think anyone puts pictures out online to lure someone in,” the woman at the center of the controversy insists. “But it’s not to lure men in to give me any information at all… I liked them. They’re pretty. Apparently everyone else thought so too.”
This is a strange, Twitter-borne tale of flirting, cutouts, and lack of online caution in the intelligence and defense worlds. Professionals who should’ve known better casually disclosed their personal details (a big no-no in spook circles) and lobbed allegations they later couldn’t or wouldn’t support (a big no-no in all circles). It led to a Pentagon investigation. And it starts with a Twitter account that no longer exists called @PrimorisEra.
The subject of much confusion and even more speculation, @PrimorisEra purports to be a woman in her late 20s named Shawn Elizabeth Gorman. Many have corresponded with her through Google Chat, IM, Facebook, and Twitter. Very few of them have met her in person. She claims to hold a security clearance and work for a Defense Department contractor that she won’t identify. According to Johns Hopkins University, a woman with that name is pursuing a masters’ degree in government and business. [?] [*]
That is not how she has presented herself on the Internet.

The Islamists Have Brainwashed General Petraeus!

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/04/the-islamists-have-brainwashed-general-petraeus/
Wired
Danger Room Blog
[Accessed 4/29/11 10:07:59 AM] [*]
The Islamists Have Brainwashed General Petraeus!
By Spencer Ackerman
April 28, 2011, 7:14 pm
Categories: Info War
You only think he’s fought religious fanatics in two wars. What are David Petraeus’ real sympathies, anyway?
Only Frank Gaffney, who fears for your liberty every time a Muslim prays, has the courage to ask that question. In a recent talk, Gaffney, a Pentagon official in the Reagan era, said that Petraeus’ recent umbrage at the burning of a Koran was tantamount to “a kind of submission to this program” — Islamic law, don’tcha know — lest we give offense, which is a blasphemy and a capital crime under Sharia.” [with due respect to Gaffney, who is a wingnut for the most part, don’t mess with Petraeus] [it would be hard to find a person in America public service who has sacrificed more for American over past deacade than Patraeus] [I don’t always agree with him, but he’s more or less beyond reproach!] [*]
My God. And President Obama nominated this man on Thursday to become director of the CIA! Everyone who’s watched Petraeus’ career has seen his obvious identification with

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/04/the-islamists-have-brainwashed-general-petraeus/
Wired
Danger Room Blog
[Accessed 4/29/11 10:07:59 AM] [*]
The Islamists Have Brainwashed General Petraeus!
By Spencer Ackerman
April 28, 2011, 7:14 pm
Categories: Info War
You only think he’s fought religious fanatics in two wars. What are David Petraeus’ real sympathies, anyway?
Only Frank Gaffney, who fears for your liberty every time a Muslim prays, has the courage to ask that question. In a recent talk, Gaffney, a Pentagon official in the Reagan era, said that Petraeus’ recent umbrage at the burning of a Koran was tantamount to “a kind of submission to this program” — Islamic law, don’tcha know — lest we give offense, which is a blasphemy and a capital crime under Sharia.” [with due respect to Gaffney, who is a wingnut for the most part, don’t mess with Petraeus] [it would be hard to find a person in America public service who has sacrificed more for American over past deacade than Patraeus] [I don’t always agree with him, but he’s more or less beyond reproach!] [*]
My God. And President Obama nominated this man on Thursday to become director of the CIA! Everyone who’s watched Petraeus’ career has seen his obvious identification with America’s most implacable enemies. Thankfully Gaffney had the stones to tell the hysterical, spittle-flecked truth.

How America Must Respond to the Massacre in Syria

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/28/how_america_must_respond_to_the_massacre_in_syria
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/29/11 9:56:39 AM] [*]
How America Must Respond to the Massacre in Syria
It’s time for President Obama to back up his rhetoric with firm action. The first step: Recall the U.S. ambassador from Damascus.
BY MARCO RUBIO | APRIL 28, 2011 [commentary] [clearly, Mr. Rubio is thinking about running for president] [if not 2012, then 2016?] [here he uses a pretty important journal in U.S. foreign policymaking, to criticize president Obama’s multilateralism] [and it’s a fair critique] [if one wishes, one may use George W. Bush’s unilaterialism (though he did many things multilaterally) and option A and Barak Obama’s (although he’s done some things rather unilaterally) as contrasts between benefits of unilaterialism versus multilaterialism] [more importantly, however, demonstrates Rubio is serious about running for presidency some day] [he’s a young, influential Republican from an important state] [he’s an executive instead of US legislator (important because he’sll be perceived as having executive experience and because he won’t have to defend a bunch of votes on Capitoll Hill!)] [use psci 355-455] [multiple types of societal inputs] [*]
In recent days, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime has used its army to murder

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/28/how_america_must_respond_to_the_massacre_in_syria
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/29/11 9:56:39 AM] [*]
How America Must Respond to the Massacre in Syria
It’s time for President Obama to back up his rhetoric with firm action. The first step: Recall the U.S. ambassador from Damascus.
BY MARCO RUBIO | APRIL 28, 2011 [commentary] [clearly, Mr. Rubio is thinking about running for president] [if not 2012, then 2016?] [here he uses a pretty important journal in U.S. foreign policymaking, to criticize president Obama’s multilateralism] [and it’s a fair critique] [if one wishes, one may use George W. Bush’s unilaterialism (though he did many things multilaterally) and option A and Barak Obama’s (although he’s done some things rather unilaterally) as contrasts between benefits of unilaterialism versus multilaterialism] [more importantly, however, demonstrates Rubio is serious about running for presidency some day] [he’s a young, influential Republican from an important state] [he’s an executive instead of US legislator (important because he’sll be perceived as having executive experience and because he won’t have to defend a bunch of votes on Capitoll Hill!)] [use psci 355-455] [multiple types of societal inputs] [*]
In recent days, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime has used its army to murder hundreds of innocent civilians as part of a vicious campaign of violence against unarmed Syrian demonstrators. What we are witnessing in Syria is another tragic outrage in the Middle East that requires immediate condemnation backed by specific measures from the United States and the international community. U.S. President Barack Obama needs to make clear whose side America is on, back up our rhetoric with action, and clearly articulate why Syria matters to the United States. [a little bit of neoconservative rhetoric?] [I have not known Rubio as neconservative previously] [this suggests he has aides now from that important constituency in the Republican Party!?] [same thing happened to McCain and I suspect GOP candidates feel they must defer to neconservatives on key foreign-policy issues!?] [**]
Clearly, we should be on the side of the Syrian people longing for freedom and challenging the regime's corrupt and repressive rule. Unfortunately, the Obama administration's hesitancy to weigh in has been mistaken for indecision at best and indifference at worst. The president needs to speak directly to the Syrian people to communicate American support for their legitimate demands, condemn Assad's murderous campaign against innocent civilians, and sternly warn Assad and his cohorts that they cannot continue grossly violating human rights, supporting terrorism, and sowing instability among Syria's neighbors. [of course, in a simplistic way, he’s right] [but it’s far more complicated and he’s smart enough to know that] [nevertheless, this is the neconservative critique] [it’s a little ironic given how much Obama has adopted of Bush administration but that’s politics] [*]
But his words must be backed by clear, firm actions. As ill-advised as it was to restore diplomatic relations with Syria by sending an American ambassador to Damascus last year, we should now sever ties and recall the ambassador at once. While Syria is already under heavy U.S. sanctions as a designated state sponsor of terror, we should expand sanctions to include persons identified as authorizing, planning, or participating in deplorable human rights violations against unarmed civilians. [that’s pretty inconvenient so he clevery simply said Obama doesn’t have enough sanctions] [*] Our partners in Europe, Turkey, and the Arab Gulf share many of our interests in Syria and play a large role in that country, and the president must put the full diplomatic weight of the United States behind an effort to convince them to adopt meaningful economic and diplomatic sanctions targeting Assad and his enablers in the regime.
America has an obligation to weigh in strongly about the situation in Syria. [so Rubio’s policy prescription: weigh in strongly vis-à-vis Syria!?!?!] [*] For years, its regime has aided the terrorist operations of Hezbollah and Hamas, supported Iran's destabilizing policies, and helped terrorists kill Americans in Iraq. The regime has not only destabilized the region but also directly acted against the national security interests of the United States. We simply cannot sit silently as innocent people peacefully challenge a regime committed to undermining the United States and its allies.
This administration must stop sitting on the sidelines as innocent Syrian people are mowed down by the regime's tanks. At an early point in the Libyan struggle, when a clear U.S. policy could have achieved significant successes at lower costs, the president failed to act. [it’s an old argument that neoconservatives have long clung to: Democrats are not firm enough] [they think the world would simply work if only the president said clearly where America stands] [in fact, the world functioned no more clearly when Bush did so in the first term that when Bush engaged in multilateralism in his second term] [it’s a specious argument] [*] Now in Syria, we are faced with a challenge requiring the United States to find its voice in defense of the Syrian people and to implement meaningful actions in the immediate term. The administration must stop dithering as innocent Syrians die at the hands of a merciless regime. Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) is a member of the Senate Foreign Relations and Intelligence Committees.

Egypt FM: Gaza border crossing to be permanently opened

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/egypt-fm-gaza-border-crossing-to-be-permanently-opened-1.358690
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/29/11 10:05:05 AM] [*]
Published 22:24 28.04.11
Egypt FM: Gaza border crossing to be permanently opened
Egyptian FM tells Al-Jazeera that preparations are already underway to permanently open Rafah border crossing, which would allow goods and people in and out of Gaza with no Israeli supervision.
By Avi Issacharoff [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [last night I saw a stunner come across the Times world desk] [namely, the PA and Hamas had agreed to put aside their differences and work together?!?!] [see coverage in comments past few days] [understandably, many Israelis are hypersensitive to the slightest suggestion of trouble with Egypt on Israel’s southern flank] [Arabs could not effectively wage war against Israel without the Sinai desert and the Golan: it allows for multiple columns of mechanized death from different directions forcing Israelis to defend themselves on multiple fronts] [I’m quite sure the Israelis have been anticipating much of this—they knew they had a deal with the Camp David Accords Sadat signed (and was murdered for signing) and Mubarak has enforced] [*]
Egypt's foreign minister said in an interview with Al-Jazeera on Thursday that preparations

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/egypt-fm-gaza-border-crossing-to-be-permanently-opened-1.358690
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/29/11 10:05:05 AM] [*]
Published 22:24 28.04.11
Egypt FM: Gaza border crossing to be permanently opened
Egyptian FM tells Al-Jazeera that preparations are already underway to permanently open Rafah border crossing, which would allow goods and people in and out of Gaza with no Israeli supervision.
By Avi Issacharoff [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [last night I saw a stunner come across the Times world desk] [namely, the PA and Hamas had agreed to put aside their differences and work together?!?!] [see coverage in comments past few days] [understandably, many Israelis are hypersensitive to the slightest suggestion of trouble with Egypt on Israel’s southern flank] [Arabs could not effectively wage war against Israel without the Sinai desert and the Golan: it allows for multiple columns of mechanized death from different directions forcing Israelis to defend themselves on multiple fronts] [I’m quite sure the Israelis have been anticipating much of this—they knew they had a deal with the Camp David Accords Sadat signed (and was murdered for signing) and Mubarak has enforced] [*]
Egypt's foreign minister said in an interview with Al-Jazeera on Thursday that preparations were underway to open the Rafah border crossing with Gaza on a permanent basis. [the simple truth is many Egyptians (and probably most?) don’t understand why Egypt cooperated with Israel on Rafah?] [now, the emerging new govt that will possibly be reflective of Egyptian sensiblitites is grappling with same] [*]
Egyptian Foreign Minister Nabil al-Arabi told Al-Jazeera that within seven to 10 days, steps will be taken in order to alleviate the "blockade and suffering of the Palestinian nation."
The announcement indicates a significant change in the policy on Gaza, which before Egypt's uprising, was operated in conjunction with Israel. The opening of Rafah will allow the flow of people and goods in and out of Gaza without Israeli permission or supervision, which has not been the case up until now.
Israel's blockade on Gaza has been a policy used in conjunction with Egyptian police to weaken Hamas, which has ruled over the strip since 2007. The policy also aims to reduce Hamas' popularity among Gazans by creating economic hardship in the Strip. [*]
Rafah's opening would be a violation of an agreement reached in 2005 between the United States, Israel, Egypt, and the European Union, which gives EU monitors access to the crossing. The monitors were to reassure Israel that weapons and militants wouldn't get into Gaza after its pullout from the territory in the fall of 2005. [so the Egyptians must procede cautiously] [*]
Before Egypt's uprising and ousting of longtime leader Hosni Mubarak, the border between Egypt and Gaza had been sealed. It has occasionally opened the passage for limited periods.

Iran cleric warns Ahmadinejad not to overestimate his power

http://www.haaretz.com/news/international/iran-cleric-warns-ahmadinejad-not-to-overestimate-his-power-1.358882
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/29/11 10:04:16 AM] [*]
Published 14:58 29.04.11
Iran cleric warns Ahmadinejad not to overestimate his power
Ahamdinejad is reportedly involved in a dispute with Iran's clergy for allegedly having ignored the orders of Ayatollah Khamenei over the dismissal of the intelligence chief.
By DPA Tags: Iran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad [Israeli media] [reporting on Arab Awakening generally] [with the tumult of Arab Awakening has come many other pieces falling into or out of place] [over past week or so, Syria has captivated most observers whether Israeli or other] [Syria’s relationship to Iran (it’s the Arab country that helps Iran) is the focus of this piece] [another piece of evidence that factionalism in Iran has reared its ugly head again] [however, since it’s adversely affecting Iran, I suppose it must be characterized as rearing its timely and useful head?] [another cleric warns Ahmadinejad to remember his place in the thugocracy] [three big parts: the bureaucracy, the presidency (Ahmadinejad) and the mullah structure] [*]
A senior Iranian cleric on Friday warned President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad not to overestimate his power.

http://www.haaretz.com/news/international/iran-cleric-warns-ahmadinejad-not-to-overestimate-his-power-1.358882
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/29/11 10:04:16 AM] [*]
Published 14:58 29.04.11
Iran cleric warns Ahmadinejad not to overestimate his power
Ahamdinejad is reportedly involved in a dispute with Iran's clergy for allegedly having ignored the orders of Ayatollah Khamenei over the dismissal of the intelligence chief.
By DPA Tags: Iran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad [Israeli media] [reporting on Arab Awakening generally] [with the tumult of Arab Awakening has come many other pieces falling into or out of place] [over past week or so, Syria has captivated most observers whether Israeli or other] [Syria’s relationship to Iran (it’s the Arab country that helps Iran) is the focus of this piece] [another piece of evidence that factionalism in Iran has reared its ugly head again] [however, since it’s adversely affecting Iran, I suppose it must be characterized as rearing its timely and useful head?] [another cleric warns Ahmadinejad to remember his place in the thugocracy] [three big parts: the bureaucracy, the presidency (Ahmadinejad) and the mullah structure] [*]
A senior Iranian cleric on Friday warned President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad not to overestimate his power.
Ahmadinejad is reportedly involved in a dispute with the country's clergy for allegedly having ignored the orders Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei over the dismissal of the intelligence chief. [why is this dragging on?] [someone must think Ahmadinejad is weak or wounded else they wouldn’t so openly attack him?] [*]
According to the Iranian constitution, Khamenei has the final say on all state matters and can even veto decisions by the president on certain cabinet matters. [hence the appellation, the surpreme leader] [*]
"The president should know that the majority vote for him was not absolute but conditional on his obedience towards the orders by the supreme leadership," the influential Ayatollah Ahmad Khatami said at the Friday prayer ceremony.
"The top of the system is the constitution, which has clarified the power structure," said Khatami, who is deputy head of the Experts Assembly, a clergy body. [Khatami has been quiet for some time] [he was Ahmadinejad’s predecessor and was in office when 9/11 occurred, even offering to cooperate with U.S.] [*]
The controversy started earlier this month after Ahmadinejad dismissed his intelligence chief Heydar Moslehi but faced a veto by Khamenei, who insisted that Moslehi should stay in his post.
Ahmadinejad has not yet reacted to the issue and for more than week has avoided any public appearance and reportedly has not attended the weekly cabinet session. [very odd] [usually he’s a frenetic pace] [*]
There are even rumors that Ahmadinejad is at his home in eastern Tehran and no longer at the presidential office and plans to resign. [interesting?] [*]
These rumors have not been officially confirmed but, according to the local press, Ahmadinejad is supposed to hold a speech on state-run television within the next days.
Khamenei last week reiterated his constitutional right to veto any decisions by Ahmadinejad he considered as not being in line with national interests.
The leader firmly supported Ahmadinejad following his 2009 re-election, although the vote itself was overshadowed by fraud charges. Khamenei is reportedly not satisfied by some of the president's economic and political decisions.
According to observers, one of the main disputes between Khamenei and Ahmadinejad is the president's chief of staff, Esfandiar Rahim-Mashaei, who has stressed the Iranian rather than the Islamic status of the country. [*]
The clergy reacted with anger to his remarks and also blamed the president for supporting Mashaei, whose daughter is married to Ahmadinejad's son, for his anti-Islamic and nationalistic remarks. [nationalism is quite useful in nation-states so I can understand why Ahmadinejad might wish to foster it?] [but it’s dangerous to absolute authority of the clerics] [*]
Another controversy is Ahmadinejad's alleged plan to make Mashaei his successor in the 2013 presidential election. Asked by the local press, Mashaei only said he would comment on the issue when time was ripe.

To Lead Afghan War, Obama Chooses Marine Known for Swaying Sunnis in Iraq

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/29/world/asia/29allen.html
April 28, 2011
To Lead Afghan War, Obama Chooses Marine Known for Swaying Sunnis in Iraq
By THOM SHANKER [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [the second-year shuffle] [NSC principals and others] [SecDef Gates was already scheduled to leave this year] [now, with Mullen’s second term up, the possibility for a musical chairs in the NSC] [it’s now official: Panetta to head DoD and Petraeus to lead CIA] [also, Ryan Crocker to replace Eikenberry in Afghanistan] [followup] [use psci 355-455] [now we learn of Petraeus’ replacement: John R. Allen] [cross in individual] [*]
WASHINGTON — Lt. Gen. John R. Allen was called to the White House on Thursday for the formal announcement that he would take custody of the war in Afghanistan, now the focus of attention as the Obama administration moves toward withdrawing troops and handing over responsibility to the government in Kabul.
General Allen is not well known beyond the Marine Corps and national security circles. But he was President Obama’s first choice to succeed Gen. David H. Petraeus,

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/29/world/asia/29allen.html
April 28, 2011
To Lead Afghan War, Obama Chooses Marine Known for Swaying Sunnis in Iraq
By THOM SHANKER [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [the second-year shuffle] [NSC principals and others] [SecDef Gates was already scheduled to leave this year] [now, with Mullen’s second term up, the possibility for a musical chairs in the NSC] [it’s now official: Panetta to head DoD and Petraeus to lead CIA] [also, Ryan Crocker to replace Eikenberry in Afghanistan] [followup] [use psci 355-455] [now we learn of Petraeus’ replacement: John R. Allen] [cross in individual] [*]
WASHINGTON — Lt. Gen. John R. Allen was called to the White House on Thursday for the formal announcement that he would take custody of the war in Afghanistan, now the focus of attention as the Obama administration moves toward withdrawing troops and handing over responsibility to the government in Kabul.
General Allen is not well known beyond the Marine Corps and national security circles. But he was President Obama’s first choice to succeed Gen. David H. Petraeus, easily the most recognizable officer in the American military, in no small part for his work enticing Sunni tribal elders in the restive Anbar Province of Iraq to turn their backs on the insurgency and foreign fighters and to join the American cause during 2007 and 2008. [so reconciliation will be his job?] [*]
Mr. Obama described General Allen as “the right commander for this vital mission” in Afghanistan. “As a battle-tested combat leader, in Iraq he helped turn the tide in Anbar Province,” the president added.
To be sure, Afghanistan is not Iraq. The regimented tribal structure that allowed the United States to build an indigenous counterinsurgency force by winning over the sheiks in western Iraq cannot be perfectly replicated in Afghanistan, a society whose social structures have been destroyed by decades of war. And the enemy in Afghanistan is far more entrenched and experienced.
But military officers who work with General Allen, 57, say he understands the complex challenges presented by commanding a campaign in Afghanistan that is as much diplomatic and economic as military in a nation with a historic, and understandable, distrust of foreigners. [*]
He told Mr. Obama as much himself on Thursday, turning from the lectern to look straight in the president’s face and say, “I understand well the demands of this mission.”
General Allen has a reputation as a strategic thinker, and he holds advanced degrees from Georgetown University and the National War College. He was the first Marine officer inducted as a term member into the Council on Foreign Relations, [*]and he served as a Marine Corps fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. [so he’s learned policymaking chops from CSIS] [*]
He also will be the first Marine to be the top commander in either Afghanistan or Iraq.
Marine Corps colleagues cite his abilities to understand the consequences of military and political actions on all parties in a conflict — enemies, allies and civilians. They say those insights played a significant role in the successes of the Anbar Awakening, as the Sunni counterinsurgency in Iraq was known.
During his deployment as the second in command in Anbar Province, General Allen spoke of how the Marines operated as a “shock absorber” between the local officials and the central government in Baghdad. [*]
Their role was especially relevant because Sunni tribal elders deeply distrusted the Shiite-dominated national government, even as they were turning away from supporting an insurgency that was seeking to bring down that government and throw out its American backers. [*]
“The challenge for us is to connect the province to the central government,” General Allen said at the time, in words that apply just as well across Afghanistan today.
He spoke of the dynamic tensions between military force and economic development that prompted Anbar sheiks to turn on the insurgents and foreign terrorists. “Out here it’s been ‘Who can defend his people?’ ” General Allen said in describing a typical conversation with a Sunni tribal elder. “After the war it’s ‘Who was able to reconstruct?’ ”
If the Senate confirms him as commander of the International Security Assistance Force, the allied coalition in Afghanistan, General Allen will move to Kabul in September. In the interim, he will be assigned as a special assistant to Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to prepare for command. [to become socialized] [to learn of the institutional memory, such that it exists] [*]
He has served in the Pentagon as a senior officer developing policy for Asia and the Pacific region. From his current post as the No. 2 officer at the Central Command, overseeing American military operations across the Middle East and Central Asia, he has been involved in planning for the Afghanistan mission.

President Assad’s Crackdown

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/29/opinion/29fri1.html
April 28, 2011
President Assad’s Crackdown
[editorial] [Syria’s belated crackdown] [what they lost in time, they’ve made up for in intensity] [*]
When Bashar al-Assad succeeded his father, Hafez, as Syria’s president in 2000, the United States and many others hoped that Syria might finally stop persecuting its people and become a more responsible regional power.
That didn’t happen. Now Mr. Assad appears determined to join his father in the ranks of history’s blood-stained dictators, sending his troops and thugs to murder anyone who has the courage to demand political freedom. [*]
More than 400 people have died since demonstrations began two months ago. [*]On Monday, the Syrian Army stormed the city of Dara’a, the center of the popular opposition. Phone, water and electricity lines have been cut and journalists barred from reporting firsthand what is really happening there.
Mr. Assad finally outlined a reform agenda last week, abolishing emergency laws that for nearly 50 years gave the government a free hand to arrest people without cause. But his bloody crackdown belied the concession, and he is fast losing all legitimacy. [it’s pretty difficult to see where he’s abolished when he uses for present

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/29/opinion/29fri1.html
April 28, 2011
President Assad’s Crackdown
[editorial] [Syria’s belated crackdown] [what they lost in time, they’ve made up for in intensity] [*]
When Bashar al-Assad succeeded his father, Hafez, as Syria’s president in 2000, the United States and many others hoped that Syria might finally stop persecuting its people and become a more responsible regional power.
That didn’t happen. Now Mr. Assad appears determined to join his father in the ranks of history’s blood-stained dictators, sending his troops and thugs to murder anyone who has the courage to demand political freedom. [*]
More than 400 people have died since demonstrations began two months ago. [*]On Monday, the Syrian Army stormed the city of Dara’a, the center of the popular opposition. Phone, water and electricity lines have been cut and journalists barred from reporting firsthand what is really happening there.
Mr. Assad finally outlined a reform agenda last week, abolishing emergency laws that for nearly 50 years gave the government a free hand to arrest people without cause. But his bloody crackdown belied the concession, and he is fast losing all legitimacy. [it’s pretty difficult to see where he’s abolished when he uses for present crackdown] [he simply did a bait and switch in parliament] [*]
President Obama came into office determined to engage Syria and nudge it away from Iran and toward political reform. Even after the violence began, Mr. Obama and his aides kept quietly nudging in hopes that Mr. Assad would make the right choice.
In retrospect, that looks naïve. Still, we have sympathy for Mr. Obama’s attempts. Years of threats from the George W. Bush administration only pushed Syria further into the arms of Iran — and did nothing to halt the repression or Syria’s support for Hezbollah.
The president’s patience has apparently run out. Last Friday — the bloodiest day of the uprising — he issued a statement condemning the violence and accusing Mr. Assad of seeking Iranian assistance in brutalizing his people. That is a start, but it is not nearly enough.
Let’s be clear: Another war would be a disaster. Syria has one of the more capable armies in the region. And while there is no love for Mr. Assad, he is no Qaddafi, and the backlash in the Arab world would be enormous. [it’s not all that capable but I agree] [*]
What the United States and its allies can do (British, French and Italian leaders have also been critical) is rally international condemnation and tough sanctions. They can start with their own unilateral punishments — asset freezes and travel bans for Mr. Assad and his top supporters and a complete arms embargo.
Washington and its allies need to press the Arab League and the United Nations Security Council to take strong stands. Muammar el-Qaddafi had no friends, so the league had little trouble supporting action against Libya. Syria is far more powerful, and Mr. Assad’s autocracy uncomfortably familiar to many Arab leaders. [Moammar has one friend: Hugo Chavez] [*]
So far, all the Arab League has been willing to do is issue a statement declaring that pro-democracy protesters “deserve support, not bullets” — conspicuously without mentioning Syria. If the Arab League and its leaders want to be taken seriously, including in their own countries, they are going to have to do better.
The Security Council hasn’t even been able to muster a press statement. Russia and China, as ever, are determined to protect autocrats. That cannot be the last word. [?] [*]
The International Criminal Court should investigate the government’s abuses. And we welcome the Obama administration’s push to have the United Nations Human Rights Council spotlight Syria’s abuses in a session on Friday. Ultimately, Syrians will determine their country’s fate. Mr. Assad commands a powerful security establishment, but he cannot stifle the longing for freedom forever.

Belgium: Parliament Passes Burqa Ban

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/29/world/europe/29briefs-Belgium.html
April 28, 2011
Belgium: Parliament Passes Burqa Ban
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Belgium] [Brussels] [EU] [Europe’s 2nd and 3rd generation jihadis partly a result of Europe’s colonial histories] [immigration challenges] [recent evidence that local Muslims not particularly religious are (some?) nevertheless becoming radicalized] [followup, May 2010] [veil bans and the anger they create among non radicals Muslims] [*]
The lower house of Parliament overwhelmingly backed a measure on Thursday that would ban burqa-type Islamic dress in public. The bill must be passed by the senate in order to become law.

[full piece may be found above the jump] [*]

Palestinian Factions Give Differing Views of Unity Pact

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/29/world/middleeast/29mideast.html
April 28, 2011
Palestinian Factions Give Differing Views of Unity Pact
By ETHAN BRONNER [Palestine] [domestic intersects with foreign policy] [a deal between Hamas and PA?] [WTF?] [a blow to Israel, who counts on PA not being able to get its house in oder] [will this create movement between Israel and Palestine?] [I don’t see how PA could expect Israel ot negotiate with Hamas absent Hamas making some kind of statement that could possibly be considered recognition of Israel’s right to exist??] [really interesting and surprising, though it’s been clear for couple weeks big things were in the works] [as I noted repeatedly yesterday’s external and govt, I’ll believe it when I see it] [*]
RAMALLAH, West Bank — A day after the two main Palestinian factions announced surprise plans for a unity government, the challenge of bringing together two rival parties with distinct ideologies burst into view, with each side presenting a different picture of what the accord means and what produced it. [hardly surprising] [*]
Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian Authority president, said Thursday that because he was also chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization he remained in charge of peace efforts with Israel. The future unity government, he said, will have only two functions, to rebuild Gaza and set up elections within a year.
“The new government and peace talks are two different things,” Mr. Abbas told a

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/29/world/middleeast/29mideast.html
April 28, 2011
Palestinian Factions Give Differing Views of Unity Pact
By ETHAN BRONNER [Palestine] [domestic intersects with foreign policy] [a deal between Hamas and PA?] [WTF?] [a blow to Israel, who counts on PA not being able to get its house in oder] [will this create movement between Israel and Palestine?] [I don’t see how PA could expect Israel ot negotiate with Hamas absent Hamas making some kind of statement that could possibly be considered recognition of Israel’s right to exist??] [really interesting and surprising, though it’s been clear for couple weeks big things were in the works] [as I noted repeatedly yesterday’s external and govt, I’ll believe it when I see it] [*]
RAMALLAH, West Bank — A day after the two main Palestinian factions announced surprise plans for a unity government, the challenge of bringing together two rival parties with distinct ideologies burst into view, with each side presenting a different picture of what the accord means and what produced it. [hardly surprising] [*]
Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian Authority president, said Thursday that because he was also chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization he remained in charge of peace efforts with Israel. The future unity government, he said, will have only two functions, to rebuild Gaza and set up elections within a year.
“The new government and peace talks are two different things,” Mr. Abbas told a group of Israelis who signed what they called the Israeli Peace Initiative this month and were invited to his headquarters for lunch. He said no activists of either his party, Fatah, or of the Islamists of Hamas would serve in the new government.
He added that negotiations with Israel were his preferred path to statehood rather than recognition from the United Nations, which he is also pursuing. But he repeated that for negotiations to begin, he needed a moratorium in Israeli settlement building in the West Bank, a condition that Israel rejects.
Aides to Mr. Abbas, who were not authorized to speak publicly, said one central reason the two sides were reconciling after four years of enmity was that Hamas had suddenly found itself in a position of weakness. Hamas is based in Syria, which is in turmoil, and it may not be able to stay there over the long term. Moreover, the aides said, Egypt may be friendlier to Hamas than it was under President Hosni Mubarak, but it is not heading down an Islamist path, [*]as Hamas had hoped.
“They are in trouble, and so they reached out,” one Abbas aide said of Hamas.
Hamas figures presented a different picture of what led to the accord. They focused on Mr. Abbas’s frustrations with Israel and the United States in failed peace efforts and said that Fatah was therefore heading more in the direction of Hamas. [Hamas appears not to have any big change in store] [how far can this go?] [not far, it would seem to me] [*]
“There are no negotiations now, so let’s not speak about illusions that may or may not happen,” Taher al-Nounou, a Hamas spokesman, said when told of Mr. Abbas’s comments. “The Israeli government has nothing to offer to the Palestinians. It even refused to freeze settlements.” But he said that Hamas would abide by any P.L.O. negotiations and that it expected the P.L.O. to be reconfigured after elections in a year.
Mahmoud Zahar, a Hamas leader who was in Cairo for the Egyptian-brokered Palestinian negotiations, said he saw no place for peace talks with Israel under the new arrangement.
“Our program does not include negotiations with Israel or recognizing it,” Mr. Zahar told Reuters. “It will not be possible for the interim national government to participate or bet on or work on the peace process with Israel.”
Ahmed Youssef, a former deputy foreign minister of Hamas who now serves as a consultant to it in Gaza, said by telephone that Palestinians were “really disappointed in the Obama administration” and what they had originally been led to believe was a new American vision for the region. He added that the warmth of the new leadership in Egypt allowed it to place its confidence in its good offices.
In Gaza, people received the news of the accord with a mixture of skepticism and cautious optimism.
“I’m happy for the reconciliation but unhappy about the reasons that led to this agreement,” said Khalil Ghabin, 48, a grocer. “The changes in the region forced them to reconcile, and they did this because they were afraid that the flames of change would burn them. If there was no upheaval, they would not have agreed.”
Israeli officials reacted with horror to the prospect of a Palestinian government involving Hamas, saying it could have no place in peace talks, a stand supported by the United States.
Defense Minister Ehud Barak said in a statement: “Hamas is a murderous terrorist organization that fires rockets at citizens and recently fired an antitank missile at a school bus. It is an organization with which we have nothing to discuss, and therefore we have nothing to talk about with it.”
He said earlier in a radio interview that Israel would talk to a Palestinian unity government only if Hamas accepted internationally agreed conditions for its legitimacy, including recognizing Israel, accepting previously signed Israeli-Palestinian agreements and abandoning terrorism. Hamas officials have repeatedly rejected all three conditions.
Israelis on the left said they believed the Fatah-Hamas agreement could prove useful to achieving a two-state solution.
“I have always felt that divisions within Palestinian politics were not good for peace and see this as a step forward,” said Tamar Hermann, who leads public opinion polling on peace questions at the Israel Democracy Institute and was at the Abbas lunch on Thursday.
Efraim Halevy, a former chief of Mossad, Israel’s intelligence agency, said in a telephone interview that he had always believed that “there will be no serious progress in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict without some way of including Hamas in the process so as to transform them from being part of problem to being part of the solution.”
But this is a minority view in Israel.
In his lunch with the visiting Israelis, Mr. Abbas was asked to provide details about the accord. He said that too much needed to be worked out to say anything now. He said he was taken by surprise on Wednesday to learn that Hamas had agreed to sign and asked for time to work things out. [he and about everybody else] [it appears to be very little—a tactical move from Hamas] [let’s all stop hyperventilating] [*]
Asked about the future of Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, a favorite of Western powers, he said it remained undecided. But he sought to assure the Israelis that he would never allow Hamas militias to take up positions in the West Bank. Some Israeli officials have said they feared that Hamas could take over the area.
Reporting was contributed by Isabel Kershner from Jerusalem, David D. Kirkpatrick and Mona El-Naggar from Cairo and Fares Akram from Gaza.

In Shift, Egypt Warms to Iran and Hamas, Israel’s Foes

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/29/world/middleeast/29egypt.html
April 28, 2011
In Shift, Egypt Warms to Iran and Hamas, Israel’s Foes
By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK [Egypt] [Arab Awakening, began in Tunisia has spread elsewhere in Arab (and Muslim?) world] [followup] [while caretaker minds the store, groups scrambling to compete with Muslim Brothers organization] [military caretaker govt] [transitional, military-based govt has apparently summoned Mubarak] [followup] [let’s all take deep breath] [some of these things Egypt is bound to take close look at] [Egypt has had deals that have abused Egyptian sovereignty] [that they look does not mean the end of the world] [*]
CAIRO — Egypt is charting a new course in its foreign policy that has already begun shaking up the established order in the Middle East, planning to open the blockaded border with Gaza and normalizing relations with two of Israel and the West’s Islamist foes, Hamas and Iran. [the first part is undoubtedly true] [a new Egypt sans Mubarak is going to reconsider many treaties and deals] [let’s not presume we know how that will turn out when they don’t know how it will turn out] [moreover, it is important Arab Sunni nation-state] [it’s been fearful of Shi’a crescent like Saudi and Jordan and Lebanon] [Egypt is not going to change its stripe overnight] [*]
Egyptian officials, emboldened by the revolution and with an eye on coming

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/29/world/middleeast/29egypt.html
April 28, 2011
In Shift, Egypt Warms to Iran and Hamas, Israel’s Foes
By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK [Egypt] [Arab Awakening, began in Tunisia has spread elsewhere in Arab (and Muslim?) world] [followup] [while caretaker minds the store, groups scrambling to compete with Muslim Brothers organization] [military caretaker govt] [transitional, military-based govt has apparently summoned Mubarak] [followup] [let’s all take deep breath] [some of these things Egypt is bound to take close look at] [Egypt has had deals that have abused Egyptian sovereignty] [that they look does not mean the end of the world] [*]
CAIRO — Egypt is charting a new course in its foreign policy that has already begun shaking up the established order in the Middle East, planning to open the blockaded border with Gaza and normalizing relations with two of Israel and the West’s Islamist foes, Hamas and Iran. [the first part is undoubtedly true] [a new Egypt sans Mubarak is going to reconsider many treaties and deals] [let’s not presume we know how that will turn out when they don’t know how it will turn out] [moreover, it is important Arab Sunni nation-state] [it’s been fearful of Shi’a crescent like Saudi and Jordan and Lebanon] [Egypt is not going to change its stripe overnight] [*]
Egyptian officials, emboldened by the revolution and with an eye on coming elections, say that they are moving toward policies that more accurately reflect public opinion. In the process they are seeking to reclaim the influence over the region that waned as their country became a predictable ally of Washington and the Israelis in the years since the 1979 peace treaty with Israel.
The first major display of this new tack was the deal Egypt brokered Wednesday to reconcile the secular Palestinian party Fatah with its rival Hamas. “We are opening a new page,” said Ambassador Menha Bakhoum, spokeswoman for the Foreign Ministry. “Egypt is resuming its role that was once abdicated.” [*]
Egypt’s shifts are likely to alter the balance of power in the region, allowing Iran new access to a previously implacable foe and creating distance between itself and Israel, which has been watching the changes with some alarm. [*]“We are troubled by some of the recent actions coming out of Egypt,” said one senior Israeli official, citing a “rapprochement between Iran and Egypt” as well as “an upgrading of the relationship between Egypt and Hamas.” [of course the Israelis are troubled] [Camp David gives them super power over Sinai] [let’s see where this goes before we all freak out about it] [I frankly don’t see an embrace of Iran] [*]
“These developments could have strategic implications on Israel’s security,” the official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because the issues were still under discussion in diplomatic channels. “In the past Hamas was able to rearm when Egypt was making efforts to prevent that. How much more can they build their terrorist machine in Gaza if Egypt were to stop?”
Israel had relied on Egypt’s help to police the border with Gaza, where arms and other contraband were smuggled to Hamas through tunnels.
Balancing its new independence against its old allegiances, Egypt is keeping all its commitments, including the peace treaty with Israel, Ambassador Bakhoum emphasized, and she said that it hoped to do a better job complying with some human rights protocols it had signed.
But she said that the blockade of the border with Gaza and Egypt’s previous enforcement of it were both “shameful,” and that Egypt intended soon to open up the border “completely.” [a lot of Egyptians feel the same way] [that’s not pro Iran] [it’s pro Palestine and Israel is going to have t deal with it] [*]
At the same time, she said, Egypt is also in the process of normalizing its relations with Iran, a regional power that the United States considers a dangerous pariah.
“All the world has diplomatic relations with Iran with the exception of the United States and Israel,” Ambassador Bakhoum said. “We look at Iran as a neighbor in the region that we should have normal relations with. Iran is not perceived as an enemy as it was under the previous regime, and it is not perceived as a friend.” [exactly, it’s perceived as potential problem causer] [*]
Several former diplomats and analysts said that by staking out a more independent path, Egypt would also regain a measure of power that came with the flexibility to bestow or withhold support.
If Egypt believes Israel’s refusal to halt settlements in the West Bank is the obstacle to peace, for example, then “cooperating with the Israelis by closing the border to Gaza did not make sense, as much as one may differ with what Hamas has done,” argued Nabil Fahmy, dean of the public affairs school at the American University in Cairo and a former Egyptian ambassador to the United States.
Many Egyptian analysts, including some former officials and diplomats who served under then-President Hosni Mubarak, say they are thrilled with the shift. “This is the new feeling in Egypt, that Egypt needs to be respected as a regional power,” said Emad Gad, a foreign policy expert on relations with Israel at the official Al Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies.
Egypt is recognizing Hamas, he said, for the same reason the Egyptian prime minister recently had breakfast with his family at a public restaurant without heavily armed body guards: any official who wants to stay in government is thinking about elections. “This is a new thing in Egyptian history,” Mr. Gad said.
Mahmoud Shokry, a former Egyptian ambassador to Syria under Mr. Mubarak, said: “Mubarak was always taking sides with the U.S., but the new way of thinking is entirely different. We would like to make a model of democracy for the region, and we are ensuring that Egypt has its own influence.”
In the case of Iran, a competing regional power, Ms. Bakhoum noted that although Egypt broke off relations with the Islamist government after its 1979 revolution, the countries reopened limited relations in 1991 on the level of a chargé d’affaires, so normalizing relations was more of an elevation than a reopening.
The deal between the Palestinian factions capitalized on the forces unleashed around the region by Egypt’s revolution. In its aftermath, Hamas found its main sponsor, the Assad government of Syria, shaken by its own popular protest movement, while the Fatah government in the West Bank faced throngs of young people adapting the chants of the Egyptian uprising to the cause of Palestinian unity.
Egypt had laid out a proposal virtually identical to the current deal for both sides as early as 2009, several participants from all sides said. But the turning point came in late March, about six weeks after the revolution.
For the first time in years of talks the Hamas leaders were invited to the headquarters of the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs instead of merely meeting at a hotel or the intelligence agency — a signal that Egypt was now prepared to treat Hamas as a diplomatic partner rather than a security risk.
They also met with Egypt’s interim head of state, Field Marshal Mohamed Tantawi, the leader of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces and Mr. Mubarak’s longtime defense minister.
“When I was invited to the meeting in the Foreign Ministry, that was something different, and this is what the agreement grew out of,” said Taher Nounou of Hamas. “We definitely felt that there was more openness from the new Egyptian leadership.” Foreign Minister Nabil el-Araby told the Palestinians that “he doesn’t want to talk about the ‘peace process’ any more, he wants to talk about the peace,” Ambassador Bakhoum said.
She said the Egyptian government was still studying how to open the border with Gaza, to help the civilians who lived there, and to determine which goods might be permitted. But she said the government had decided to move ahead with the idea. [people conflate Palestine and Iran at their peril] [*]
Mona El-Naggar contributed reporting.

Libyan Forces Chase Rebels Into Tunisia

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2011/04/29/world/middleeast/AP-ML-Libya.html
April 29, 2011
Libyan Forces Chase Rebels Into Tunisia
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Libya] [Middle East proper, including the Gulf] [regimes continues slow, plodding, political-eco liberalization] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [NATO alliance providing air cover] [as many, many predicted, it has stalemated] [Qaddafi loyalists push opposition all the way across Tunisia border] [followup] [*]
TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) — Libyan forces in more than a dozen military vehicles and armed with anti-aircraft guns and rocket launchers crossed the border with Tunisia and were involved in clashes in a frontier town Friday, [?] [*]witnesses said. Tunisia's government was outraged and demanded Libya halt all incursions into its territory.
There were different accounts from witnesses of exactly what happened in the Tunisian border town of Dhuheiba, about three miles (five kilometers) from the border. But several said Tunisian troops captured and disarmed some of the loyalists of Libya leader Moammar Gadhafi and drove others out of town. Three Tunisians were hurt, they said.

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2011/04/29/world/middleeast/AP-ML-Libya.html
April 29, 2011
Libyan Forces Chase Rebels Into Tunisia
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Libya] [Middle East proper, including the Gulf] [regimes continues slow, plodding, political-eco liberalization] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [NATO alliance providing air cover] [as many, many predicted, it has stalemated] [Qaddafi loyalists push opposition all the way across Tunisia border] [followup] [*]
TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) — Libyan forces in more than a dozen military vehicles and armed with anti-aircraft guns and rocket launchers crossed the border with Tunisia and were involved in clashes in a frontier town Friday, [?] [*]witnesses said. Tunisia's government was outraged and demanded Libya halt all incursions into its territory.
There were different accounts from witnesses of exactly what happened in the Tunisian border town of Dhuheiba, about three miles (five kilometers) from the border. But several said Tunisian troops captured and disarmed some of the loyalists of Libya leader Moammar Gadhafi and drove others out of town. Three Tunisians were hurt, they said.
The Tunisian government expressed "extreme indignation" over the violation of its territory. [*]
Ismail al-Wafi, a Dhuheiba resident, said the Libyan forces drove into the town and fired indiscriminately. He said Dhuheiba residents clashed with the Libyans and Tunisian troops eventually captured some and took their weapons.
Another witness said Libyan troops clashed with Libyan rebels in Dhuheiba before they were defeated by Tunisian troops. Some of the Libyans were captured and the others chased out, said the witness, who only gave his first name, Akram, for fear of reprisals.
"Gadhafi forces are no longer in Dhuheiba. They were defeated," he said.
The Tunisian news agency TAP said Tunisian forces fired in the air, but did not clash with Libyan troops.
Dhuheiba resident Mohamed Hedia said angry civilians in the town and the families of Libyan rebels who had been staying there set upon the Gadhafi troops, creating a "chaotic situation." Tunisian forces fired warning shots, Hedia said.
The Dhuheiba border crossing between Libya and Tunisia has been a flashpoint in recent days. The crossing has been changing hands repeatedly between rebels and regime forces.
At some point Friday, rebels retook the crossing, according to an Associated Press Television News crew at the scene. That restored a vital supply line to besieged rebel strongholds in western Libya.
The AP crew saw two bodies of Libyan troops near the crossing and were told rebels were chasing two dozen Libyan military vehicles on the Libyan side in hopes of securing a supply corridor to the mountain area.
The Nafusa mountain range in western Libya, close to Tunisia, has emerged in recent days as a more troublesome pocket of resistance to Gadhafi forces. The mountain area is home to members of Libya's ethnic Berber community who have complained of systematic discrimination by the Libyan government. Throughout the uprising, there have been reports that rebels dominate towns in the area and fight Gadhafi troops.
Along with the besieged western city of Misrata, the Nafusa range is one of the major centers of opposition to Gadhafi in the western half of Libya, which is mostly controlled by the regime. Rebels have controlled much of eastern Libya since early on in the uprising that began in February.
Thousands of Libyans from the Nafusa mountain communities have fled to Dhuheiba and other Tunisian border towns in recent weeks, as rebels and government forces battled for control of the border crossing.
On Thursday, Libyan troops recaptured the crossing from the rebels, and some of the fighting spilled over into Tunisia, witnesses said. Mongi Slim, a representative of the Tunisian Red Crescent in the area, said at least two people were killed and 20 wounded Thursday, all Libyan troops.
Late Thursday, the Tunisian Foreign Ministry issued an angry statement.
"Given the gravity of what has happened ... the Tunisian authorities have informed the Libyans of their extreme indignation and demand measures to put an immediate stop to these violations," the statement said.
On Friday morning, fighting resumed but the chaotic situation produced different accounts of the border fighting.
On the Misrata front, regime forces fired shells, mortars and rockets into the besieged coastal city.
A doctor at Misrata's main hospital said two people were killed and 17 wounded Friday. One of the dead, a middle-aged man, had been shot in the chest while sitting outside his home in a southern neighborhood, next to Misrata's airport where some of Gadhafi's forces have taken up positions. Last week, rebels chased Gadhafi loyalists from the center of town, but government troops have continued to shell the city from the outskirts.
Misrata, Libya's third-largest city with 300,000 people, has been under siege for two months, and hundreds of people have been killed.
___
Associated Press writers Ben Hubbard in Misrata, Libya, Bouazza Ben Bouazza in Tunis, Tunisia and Angela Charlton in Paris contributed reporting.

Syrians Take to Streets Despite Recent Crackdown

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/30/world/middleeast/30syria.html
April 29, 2011
Syrians Take to Streets Despite Recent Crackdown
By ANTHONY SHADID [Syria] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [Syria pretends to be a modern secular republic, but is far from it] [no monarchy but long run by a minority sect (al Assads) and the Baath Party] [Bashir has seemingly lost control but cannot seem to suss out how to resolve things?] [followup] [hard to know as Syria keeps most western media out] [but appears al Assad has decided to crush the rebellion?] [now that al Assad has decided crackdown, the world watches somewhat perplexed?] [*]
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Thousands of Syrians took to the streets of several towns and cities Friday in what organizers had proclaimed a “Friday of Rage” against the government’s bloody crackdown of a six-week uprising that has begun to reshape politics in one of the Arab world’s most authoritarian countries, activists said. [*]
At least three people were killed, the activists said. The toll so far pales before that from a week earlier, when at least 112 people were killed in the uprising’s bloodiest day, but activists said some phone lines and cellphone networks were cut, making

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/30/world/middleeast/30syria.html
April 29, 2011
Syrians Take to Streets Despite Recent Crackdown
By ANTHONY SHADID [Syria] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [Syria pretends to be a modern secular republic, but is far from it] [no monarchy but long run by a minority sect (al Assads) and the Baath Party] [Bashir has seemingly lost control but cannot seem to suss out how to resolve things?] [followup] [hard to know as Syria keeps most western media out] [but appears al Assad has decided to crush the rebellion?] [now that al Assad has decided crackdown, the world watches somewhat perplexed?] [*]
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Thousands of Syrians took to the streets of several towns and cities Friday in what organizers had proclaimed a “Friday of Rage” against the government’s bloody crackdown of a six-week uprising that has begun to reshape politics in one of the Arab world’s most authoritarian countries, activists said. [*]
At least three people were killed, the activists said. The toll so far pales before that from a week earlier, when at least 112 people were killed in the uprising’s bloodiest day, but activists said some phone lines and cellphone networks were cut, making information incomplete.
The turnout Friday was seen as a test of whether the government’s assault this week on Dara’a, one of the most restive towns, would have a chilling effect on the turnout of demonstrators. Though reports were largely anecdotal, activists said they believed at least some form of protest took place in 34 towns and cities — including Kurdish regions in the east and the capital, Damascus, a symbol of the Assad family’s four decades of rule.
The deaths on Friday were reported to be in Latakia, a coastal city near the heartland of the country’s elite, where activists said security forces fired on protesters. The activists said security forces in Damascus fired tear gas at thousands of demonstrators there.
“With our blood, with our souls, we will sacrifice for you, Dara’a,” demonstrators chanted in Homs, the site of some of the biggest protests in the uprising so far.
Others simply chanted, “Bye, bye, Bashar. Have a good night,” referring to President Bashar al-Assad. [*]
More demonstrations were reported in the coastal towns of Jablah and Baniyas.
Protests last month in Dara’a, a poor town in southern Syria near the Jordanian border, helped galvanize the nationwide demonstrations. The military stormed the town Monday, effectively occupying it, and the hardships — shortages of food, water and even baby formula in addition to reported dozens of deaths — have become a symbol of the uprising, unleashing solidarity protests in other towns and even neighboring countries.
“We are living in complete isolation,” a resident there said.
Mr. Assad has been president since 2000, inheriting office from his father, Hafez, who ruled with an iron first for three decades and never hesitated to use brutal force to crush dissent. In 1982, he ordered a major military campaign, including air attacks, to crush an uprising by Sunni Islamists centered in the central city of Hama, with a death toll estimated to have exceeded 10,000. [Hama] [*]
“Bashar is applying Hama in Dara’a,” a resident said by phone Friday. “But we will not give up, we will not be crushed and we will resist until the last living person.”
The Syrian government reportedly moved 45 military units to Dara’a on Thursday, signaling that any demonstrations there will be quashed forcefully.
Human rights groups estimate that across Syria, about 450 people have died since major protests began in the country on March 15.
The faltering international efforts to censure Syria over violence against protesters shifted to Geneva on Friday, where a special session of the United Nations Human Rights Council debated a resolution drafted by the United States condemning the government’s actions. It became clear early in the debate that many members of the council, including Russia, China, Cuba and the Palestinian Authority, would not support the draft, which expresses “deep concern” about the deaths in Syria and demands that Syria protect civilians and end human-rights violations.
“To the Syrian government, we are sending a clear and unequivocal message that we will not turn a blind eye as you arbitrarily imprison, torture and kill your own citizens,” the American representative, Eileen Chamberlain Donahoe, said during the session.
Syria’s representative to the United Nations in Geneva, Faisal al-Hamwi, called the draft unjust and said that while his government had taken important steps toward reform, including lifting a decades-old state of emergency, “we will not be lenient with anyone who threatens our national security.”
Syria’s important role in the Arab-Israeli dispute and its influence over Lebanese politics are making it difficult to rally international action against President Assad. So are developments in Libya, where the consensus supporting military action against the government of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi seems to have cracked. Unlike the case in Libya, there has been no call for intervention in Syria from the Arab League, which has instead called for restraint.
Hwaida Saad contributed reporting from Beirut, Matthew Saltmarsh from Geneva, and employees of The New York Times from Beirut and Damascus, Syria.

12 Die as Shiite Mosque in Iraq Is Bombed Again

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/29/world/middleeast/29diyala.html
April 28, 2011
12 Die as Shiite Mosque in Iraq Is Bombed Again
By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT and ZAID THAKER [-ir] [maliki govt trying to arrange things so US may withdraw later this year] [recall the SOFA that President Bush signed in 2008 provided for U.S. to leave by December 31, 2011] [Obama hopes to keep it on track] [and things are such that it will almost certainly be a big ceremonial withdrawal] [meanwhile, additional signs that civil society may be emerging?] [AQI and other insurgents trying to force the US to stay past Dec 31 date?] [the sorts of attacks that recently compelled CJCS Mullen to suggest a change in SOFA with al Maliki] [cross in govt] [*]
BAGHDAD — A suicide bomber on Thursday attacked a large Shiite mosque in Diyala Province, killing at least 12 people and wounding dozens, according to an Iraqi security official. Sunni and Shiite clerics were meeting in the mosque at the time as part of an effort to show that tensions between the groups had subsided.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/29/world/middleeast/29diyala.html
April 28, 2011
12 Die as Shiite Mosque in Iraq Is Bombed Again
By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT and ZAID THAKER [-ir] [maliki govt trying to arrange things so US may withdraw later this year] [recall the SOFA that President Bush signed in 2008 provided for U.S. to leave by December 31, 2011] [Obama hopes to keep it on track] [and things are such that it will almost certainly be a big ceremonial withdrawal] [meanwhile, additional signs that civil society may be emerging?] [AQI and other insurgents trying to force the US to stay past Dec 31 date?] [the sorts of attacks that recently compelled CJCS Mullen to suggest a change in SOFA with al Maliki] [cross in govt] [*]
BAGHDAD — A suicide bomber on Thursday attacked a large Shiite mosque in Diyala Province, killing at least 12 people and wounding dozens, according to an Iraqi security official. Sunni and Shiite clerics were meeting in the mosque at the time as part of an effort to show that tensions between the groups had subsided.
It was the fifth attack on the Imam Hussein mosque in the past five years.
The authorities say they believe that the attack was planned by insurgents seeking to disrupt the recent stability in the Balad Ruz district, where the mosque is located, according to the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he did not want to jeopardize his access to delicate information.
“I heard the sound of a big explosion, and then winds of fire came towards me and they hit my chest and pushed me for meters inside the mosque and I lost my consciousness,” said Bassam Jasim, 40, in an interview at a local hospital where he was being treated. His arm was wounded in the attack.
A police officer at the scene, Capt. Mohammed al-Ettibi, said: “You can smell the burned bodies. It’s so strong that you can smell it from 100 meters away.”
There had been about eight months of relative calm in the district after years of violence among Shiites, Sunnis, Turkmens and Kurds. Although violence has significantly decreased in Iraq over the past two years, it has spiked in recent weeks. Recent attacks included the assassinations of local politicians and law enforcement authorities.
In the northern province of Kirkuk on Thursday, a car bomb exploded, killing a local police chief, three of his guards and two others. Twelve people were wounded in the attack.
American and Iraqi officials have said they expect violence to increase during the next several months when the United States is scheduled to withdraw all its troops.
Employees of The New York Times contributed reporting from Diyala and Kirkuk Provinces.

Move to C.I.A. Puts Petraeus in Conflict With Pakistan

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/29/world/29petraeus.html
April 28, 2011
Move to C.I.A. Puts Petraeus in Conflict With Pakistan
By JANE PERLEZ and ERIC SCHMITT [Pakistan] [AfPak] [hub of the al Qaeda and Taliban activity in AfPak] [and of al Qaeda globally] [use psci 355-455, 469] [under Obama administration, Bush’s policy of drones (sticks) and carrots( $) has increased to Zardari] [Pakistan is really where U.S. interests converge: nukes, India-Pakistan, and GSAVE] [use psci 355-455] [what does the president’s nonimation of Petraeus to head CIA mean?] [followup] [probably that the US is going to transition from COIN to CT plus and COIN light?] [Pakistanis react predictably] [*]
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The appointment of Gen. David H. Petraeus as director of the Central Intelligence Agency puts him more squarely than ever in conflict with Pakistan, whose military leadership does not regard him as a friend and where he will now have direct control over the armed drone campaign that the Pakistani military says it wants stopped. [Pakistan just tried to throw US under buss vis-à-vis Afghan and now U.S. is responding] [*]
Pakistani and American officials said that General Petraeus’s selection could further

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/29/world/29petraeus.html
April 28, 2011
Move to C.I.A. Puts Petraeus in Conflict With Pakistan
By JANE PERLEZ and ERIC SCHMITT [Pakistan] [AfPak] [hub of the al Qaeda and Taliban activity in AfPak] [and of al Qaeda globally] [use psci 355-455, 469] [under Obama administration, Bush’s policy of drones (sticks) and carrots( $) has increased to Zardari] [Pakistan is really where U.S. interests converge: nukes, India-Pakistan, and GSAVE] [use psci 355-455] [what does the president’s nonimation of Petraeus to head CIA mean?] [followup] [probably that the US is going to transition from COIN to CT plus and COIN light?] [Pakistanis react predictably] [*]
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The appointment of Gen. David H. Petraeus as director of the Central Intelligence Agency puts him more squarely than ever in conflict with Pakistan, whose military leadership does not regard him as a friend and where he will now have direct control over the armed drone campaign that the Pakistani military says it wants stopped. [Pakistan just tried to throw US under buss vis-à-vis Afghan and now U.S. is responding] [*]
Pakistani and American officials said that General Petraeus’s selection could further inflame relations between the two nations, which are already at one of their lowest points, with recriminations over myriad issues aired publicly like never before. [Pakistanis need to understand while the U.S. is not trying to embarrass or ruin them, neither is it in the business of having Pakistan undermine U.S. and its substantial commitment to region under two presidents] [*]
The usually secretive leader of the Pakistani Army, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, has made little secret of his distaste for General Petraeus, calling him a political general. [as if Kayani isn’t] [generals in glass billets out not to throw stones] [*] General Petraeus has privately expressed outrage at what American officials say is the Pakistani main spy agency’s most blatant support yet for fighters based in Pakistan who are carrying out attacks against American troops in Afghanistan.
Officials on both sides say they expect the two nations’ relationship to become increasingly adversarial as they maneuver the endgame in Afghanistan, where Pakistan and the United States have deep — and conflicting — security interests. [*]
Repairing the frayed ties between the C.I.A. and Pakistan’s primary spy agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate, will be difficult, American officials say. “In its current form, the relationship is almost unworkable,” said Dennis C. Blair, a former American director of national intelligence. “There has to be a major restructuring. The ISI jams the C.I.A. all it wants and pays no penalties.” [just because Petraeus is going to lead it doesn’t mean its mission changes] [though I suspect this demonstrates Obama has decided to wind down COIN surge per plan and increase CT plus as substitute] [*]
One American military official sought to play down the animosity with Pakistani officials, noting that the general had regularly met with the Pakistanis for nearly three years, most recently on Monday. Still, the official acknowledged that with General Petraeus leading the C.I.A., “the pressure may be more strategic, deliberate and focused — to the extent that it can be.”
A Pakistani official described the mounting tensions as a game of “brinkmanship,” with both Adm. Mike Mullen, who as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff has been the Obama administration’s point man on Pakistan policy, and General Kayani growing impatient because they have little to show for the many hours they have invested during more than two dozen visits over the past three years.
Admiral Mullen surprised Pakistani officials by publicly accusing the ISI of sheltering fighters from the Haqqani network, a Taliban ally that has long served as a proxy for Pakistan’s military and intelligence establishment in Afghanistan. [it’s far broader than that] [it’s WH, NSC, Pentagon, secdef and secstate, others] [*]American commanders in eastern Afghanistan say they have killed or captured more than 5,000 militants in the past year, but fighters continue to pour across the border from sanctuaries in Pakistan to Paktia, Khost and Paktika Provinces in Afghanistan.
In a private meeting here in Islamabad last week, Admiral Mullen told General Kayani that the C.I.A. would not reduce the drone strikes until Pakistan launched a military operation against the Haqqani network in Pakistan’s tribal areas, an American official said, pleas that the admiral has been making for the past two years with nothing to show for them.
Pakistan’s military and its intelligence agency are increasingly embarrassed by the United States’ drone campaign, which they publicly condemn but quietly allow. They have asked the C.I.A. to remove its personnel from Shamsi air base, about 200 miles southwest of Quetta, the capital of Baluchistan Province, where some of the drones are based, a senior American official said. [not bloodly likely though they will try to be less obvious] [*]
The withdrawal has not occurred but is expected soon, the official said. The drone attacks would then be flown out of Afghanistan, where some of them are already based, [they are still going to use spotters in Pakistan—it’s increased leathality and accuracy] [*]the official said.
There have also been sharp disagreements over a proposed code of conduct that would define what American soldiers and intelligence agents can do in Pakistani territory, a Pakistani official said. The Pakistanis have, for now, dropped the idea of such an accord, fearing that the Americans are looking for “legal cover” for intelligence operatives like Raymond A. Davis, the C.I.A. contractor who killed two Pakistanis in January, a Pakistani official said.
“The relationship between the two countries is very tense right now,” said Representative William M. Thornberry of Texas, a senior Republican on the House Armed Services Committee, who visited Pakistan last week. “And the Pakistan government fuels the anti-American public opinion to increase pressure on us.” [they had better be careful lest they create the self-fulfilling prophecy they fear: America seizing and securing Pakistani nukes] [*]
Newly disclosed documents obtained by WikiLeaks have also stoked tensions. One of them, from the prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, lists the ISI along with numerous militant groups as allies of Al Qaeda and the Taliban, an indication of how deep American suspicions run when it comes to Pakistani intelligence. The document is undated but appears to be from 2007 or 2008.
A former general said the alliance established after 9/11 to get rid of Al Qaeda on Pakistani soil was built on shaky ground, with few aligning interests beyond stopping the terrorist group. Tensions over issues big and small — like accounting for American grants to the Pakistani military and the failure of the United States to deliver helicopters that would help in counterterrorism efforts — clouded the hastily arranged alliance from the start, he said. [*]
But now the collision of interests over how to end the war in Afghanistan, and the bitterness over the Davis affair, have exposed deep-seated differences, he said.
The drone campaign, which the C.I.A. has run against militants in Pakistan’s tribal areas since 2004, will now become the preserve of General Petraeus, and it has moved to center stage, at least for the Pakistanis. Since Mr. Davis’s release from custody in Pakistan after the killings, the C.I.A. has carried out three drone attacks, each one seemingly tied to sensitive events in the United States-Pakistan relationship and aimed at Afghan Taliban militants that Pakistan shelters.
The day after Admiral Mullen left Pakistan last week, a drone attack in North Waziristan killed 23 people associated with Hafiz Gul Barhadur, whose forces are fighting NATO in Afghanistan. Earlier in April, after Lt. Gen. Ahmad Shuja Pasha, the ISI chief, left Washington, a drone attacked another group of Afghan Taliban.
Another former Pakistani general who speaks to General Kayani said he believed that the Pakistan Army’s leader had concluded that the drone campaign should end because it hurt the army’s reputation among the Pakistani public. Those being killed by the drones are of midlevel or even lesser importance, the general said.
The Americans say the drones are more important than ever as a tool to stanch the flow of Taliban foot soldiers coming across the border to fight American and NATO forces. [*]
The easy access into Afghanistan was on full display last week in Wana, the main town of South Waziristan, according to a local resident.
There, militants loyal to Maulvi Nazir, a Taliban leader who maintains a peace agreement with the Pakistani military and whose forces often cross into Afghanistan, showed high morale and were moving around freely in front of the Pakistani Army, the resident said. “It looked,” he said, “as though the army was giving them a free hand.”
Jane Perlez reported from Islamabad, and Eric Schmitt from Washington. Ismail Khan contributed reporting from Peshawar, Pakistan, and Scott Shane from Washington.

April 28, 2011

America must regain the initiative abroad

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/856e3e96-7035-11e0-bea7-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1KiQhVzqN
Financial Times
[Accessed 4/28/11 9:58:27 AM] [*]
America must regain the initiative abroad
By Philip Zelikow
Published: April 26 2011 20:24 | Last updated: April 26 2011 20:24 [for students: Zelikow was the staff director of 9/11 report] [he’s a Republican who was—and I presume still is—very close to Condi Rice] [Condi Rice much more traditional, moderate Republican than the neoconservatives, though she moved a bit right herself in response, at least for first term] [anyway, he’s smart guy and interesting perspectives so read what he says carefully] [use psci 355-455] [interestingly, Zelikow makes the case that Afghanistan is zapping America’s strength and resources and the US must rethink] [I rather suspect that’s what’s happening?] [but it’s difficult to disengage properly without losing existing gains] [Zelikow uses the underemphasized concept of strategic initiative to explain the situation and does so quite cleverly, I think] [normally, I would post as external since it’s a British newspaper] [but the author is American and a former policymaker; moreover, his audience is clearly US policymaking-academic communities] [*]
The revolution in Syria is well under way. The revolution in Libya struggles on. The Middle East is alight, yet most of America’s military commitment, and the political attention

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/856e3e96-7035-11e0-bea7-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1KiQhVzqN
Financial Times
[Accessed 4/28/11 9:58:27 AM] [*]
America must regain the initiative abroad
By Philip Zelikow
Published: April 26 2011 20:24 | Last updated: April 26 2011 20:24 [for students: Zelikow was the staff director of 9/11 report] [he’s a Republican who was—and I presume still is—very close to Condi Rice] [Condi Rice much more traditional, moderate Republican than the neoconservatives, though she moved a bit right herself in response, at least for first term] [anyway, he’s smart guy and interesting perspectives so read what he says carefully] [use psci 355-455] [interestingly, Zelikow makes the case that Afghanistan is zapping America’s strength and resources and the US must rethink] [I rather suspect that’s what’s happening?] [but it’s difficult to disengage properly without losing existing gains] [Zelikow uses the underemphasized concept of strategic initiative to explain the situation and does so quite cleverly, I think] [normally, I would post as external since it’s a British newspaper] [but the author is American and a former policymaker; moreover, his audience is clearly US policymaking-academic communities] [*]
The revolution in Syria is well under way. The revolution in Libya struggles on. The Middle East is alight, yet most of America’s military commitment, and the political attention associated with it, remains in Afghanistan. Every day that the US worries about events such as the escape of hundreds of painstakingly detained insurgents from an Afghan jail is a day in which America loses the power of initiative elsewhere.
Two months ago Robert Gates, defence secretary, gave a speech about the future of the US army at West Point, saying that “any future defence secretary who advises the president to again send a big American land army into Asia or into the Middle East or Africa should ‘have his head examined,’ as General MacArthur so delicately put it”. Mr Gates, a principal architect of the present commitment in Afghanistan, has since complained through his spokesman that this line was “hijacked” by critics. Gen MacArthur, also a principal advocate of a large-scale war in Asia, may not have uttered the words, but it is worth reflecting on what both these men were saying about the troubles of American grand strategy. [*]
Mr Gates’ remarks came just as the new flare-up in Libya began and as pressure to develop military plans for a possible confrontation with Iran continues. It was a prepared remark, uttered with deliberation, by an experienced statesman. [Gates] [*]He had inherited an Afghan and Iraqi war. He helped to escalate the Iraq war in order to get to the place where he could pull out of it by the end of this year. He also helped to escalate the Afghan war, if with a longer-term vision that is harder to discern. Surely, whatever his prognosis, he regards the Afghan fight as a frustrating experience. Listening to his West Point address, I hear exasperation in his voice and the implied words: “Enough already.” [*]
The quote Mr Gates used was borrowed from the historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr, describing how Gen MacArthur in 1961 advised President John F. Kennedy to avoid intervention in Laos. For reasons so strange to us now that it needs a historian to explain them, many serious men then thought this little landlocked nation was a pivot of world security. Gen MacArthur was a fervent anti-communist, so his argument made a strong impression on Kennedy. In today’s terms, Gen MacArthur was making an argument about America’s strategic initiative. [*]
Strategic initiative is a vital but neglected concept in foreign policy. It is about who sets the agenda and who reacts. It is about who plays offence politically and who plays defence. The side with the strategic initiative is the side that chooses the time, place and manner of a clash. Gen MacArthur was urging Kennedy not to get bogged down in a war in a time, place and manner chosen by China or the Soviet Union. [excellently done] [*]
When he took his job in 2006 Mr Gates inherited a world in which the US had lost a great deal of strategic initiative. Its military capability, and the time and attention of its leaders were tied down, “fixed” in military parlance, in draining, inconclusive conflicts. At the highest level the task for American national defence remains to recover this initiative, by recovering the capacity to manoeuvre.[he’s commeting in Financial Times, thus the British English spelling] [*] The apt word President Barack Obama has used, which he also means in the sense of American domestic concerns, is “rebalance.”
Libya may be the irritable object of some experts who are fatigued with or even disgusted by American overcommitment. It is not, however, the impediment to recovering this initiative. With Libya, a little patience and perspective would help. There is no persuasive evidence that Muammer Gaddafi enjoys any broad base of public support. [too true] [his only friend is Hugo Chavez] [he still has some African leaders scared but that’s different] [*] The revolution is broad and spontaneous. It is also, of course, unready, untrained and fractious. But Colonel Gaddafi has a particular, venomous history with the US and several European and Arab countries. They thus have an interest in the outcome and are acting accordingly.
But Col Gaddafi’s military forces are not formidable and his economy is based on the Libyan National Oil Company, an entity already under international sanctions. Tens of billions of dollars in frozen Libyan assets are ready to be released to an alternative government. It is possible that the revolutionaries and their foreign supporters will mismanage their efforts so disastrously that Col Gaddafi will eventually triumph, but the level of collective incompetence would need to be the stuff of legend. No “big American land army” should be desired or needed at any point. [thank god he said it] [just be a little patient] [Obama has got to stop listening to the flame throwers in the media, though it’s hard to do] [*]
Taking stock of the so-called “three wars” in which America is now embroiled, Libya is not even at the level of effort expended in the less important Kosovo conflict of 1999. Another – Iraq – is on an apparently inexorable path to being wound up this year. The main impediment to US strategic initiative is therefore Afghanistan. That conflict is the real subtext for Mr Gates’ now-famous remark, and the proper context for recalling Gen MacArthur’s warning to another president, 50 years ago. [well it obviously got cut off by editor but he was just getting to the key: Afghanistan] [it threatens to zapp America’s strategic initiative] [*]
The writer is a professor of history at the University of Virginia. From 2005 to 2007 he was the counsellor of the US Department of State
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2011. Print a single copy of this article for personal use. Contact us if you wish to print more to distribute to others. © Copyright The Financial Times Ltd 2011.

Winding Down the War in Iraq

http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/67481/emma-sky/iraq-from-surge-to-sovereignty
Foreign Affairs
[Accessed 4/28/11 9:51:57 AM] [*]
Iraq, From Surge to Sovereignty
Winding Down the War in Iraq
By Emma Sky
March/April 2011
Article Summary [Do NOT Post] [commentary] [her view of the “surge” in Iraq, under Petraeus] [its success, but also the necessary things for transition to sovereign state] [interesting] [I can only post the first couple paragraphs] [students interested, go to Kellogg and use electronic data base] [CSUSM subscribes to Foreign Affairs] [use psci 355-455] [*]
By September 2008, when General Raymond Odierno replaced General David Petraeus as the top commander of the Multi-National Force-Iraq, there was a prevalent sense among Americans that the surge of additional U.S. forces into the country in 2007 had succeeded. With violence greatly reduced, the Iraq war seemed to be over. In July 2008, U.S. President George W. Bush had announced that violence in Iraq had decreased "to its lowest level since the spring of 2004" and that a significant reason for this sustained progress was "the success of the surge." [*]
The surge capitalized on intra-Shiite and intra-Sunni struggles to help decrease violence, which created the context for the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq. With U.S. troops on pace to

[see full excerpt above the jump] [to read article, please go to Kellogg Library and use electronic database] [Foreign Affairs is subscription only] [I can not post more due to copyright restrictions] [*]

Drones Spray, Track the Unwilling in Air Force Plan

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/04/crop-duster-drones/
Wired
The Danger Room Blog
[Accessed 4/28/11 9:49:47 AM] [*]
Drones Spray, Track the Unwilling in Air Force Plan
By Adam Rawnsley
April 28, 2011 7:00 am
Categories: Drones [hard to know whether this is reporting or speculation?] [I suppose I’ll cross list in govt, in case the former] [on drones, and new ideas that may change the way we use them] [quite interesting] [*]
Here’s how the U.S. Air Force wants to hunt the next generation of its enemies: A tiny drone sneaks up to a suspect, paints him with an unnoticed powder or goo that allows American forces to follow him everywhere he goes — until they train a missile on him. [I love it] [*]
On Tuesday, the Air Force issued a call for help making a miniature drone that could covertly drop a mysterious and unspecified tracking “dust” onto people, allowing them to be tracked from a distance. The proposal says its useful for all kinds of random things, from identifying friendly forces and civilians to tracking wildlife. But the motive behind a covert drone tagger likely has less to do with sneaking up on spotted owls and more to do with painting a target on the backs of tomorrow’s terrorists. [*]
Effectively tracking foes has become a high priority — and deeply secret — research effort

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/04/crop-duster-drones/
Wired
The Danger Room Blog
[Accessed 4/28/11 9:49:47 AM] [*]
Drones Spray, Track the Unwilling in Air Force Plan
By Adam Rawnsley
April 28, 2011 7:00 am
Categories: Drones [hard to know whether this is reporting or speculation?] [I suppose I’ll cross list in govt, in case the former] [on drones, and new ideas that may change the way we use them] [quite interesting] [*]
Here’s how the U.S. Air Force wants to hunt the next generation of its enemies: A tiny drone sneaks up to a suspect, paints him with an unnoticed powder or goo that allows American forces to follow him everywhere he goes — until they train a missile on him. [I love it] [*]
On Tuesday, the Air Force issued a call for help making a miniature drone that could covertly drop a mysterious and unspecified tracking “dust” onto people, allowing them to be tracked from a distance. The proposal says its useful for all kinds of random things, from identifying friendly forces and civilians to tracking wildlife. But the motive behind a covert drone tagger likely has less to do with sneaking up on spotted owls and more to do with painting a target on the backs of tomorrow’s terrorists. [*]
Effectively tracking foes has become a high priority — and deeply secret — research effort for the Pentagon, which has struggled at times to sort out insurgent from innocent in places like Afghanistan. The Navy has a $450 million contract with Herndon, Virginia’s Blackbird Technologies, Inc. to produce tiny beacons to make terrorists trackable. [*]The Defense Department has been pouring serious cash — $210 million that they’ll admit to — into find advanced new ways to do this so-called “Tagging, Tracking and Locating” work, as Danger Room co-founder Sharon Weinberger noted in Popular Science last year. [are these DARPA contracts?] [*]
The research she cataloged is as mind-boggling as it is varied. Ideas range from uniquely-identifiable insect pheromones to infrared gear that tracks people with their “thermal fingerprint.” One company, Voxtel, makes tiny nanocrystals that can be hidden in clear liquids and seen through night vision goggles.
A 2007 briefing from U.S. Special Operations Command on targeting technology stated that SOCOM was looking for “perfumes” and “stains” that would mark out bad guys from a distance. The presentation listed a “bioreactive taggant” as a “current capability” next to a picture of what looks like a painted or bruised arm.
Another tracking technology is “smart dust” — a long-forecast cloud of tiny sensors that stick to target human or his clothes. And that seems to be what the Air Force wants its mini drone configured for.
The solicitation floats the idea of dropping a “dust-like” cloud of electromagnetic signal-radiating taggants, either on top of the target or in his path so that he’ll walk into it. To do that, they’d need to either do some high-altitude “crop-dusting” of the target or launch a small munition that would blow out the taggant in mid-air when it was nearby. [?] [*]
It may be a signal that the smart-dust technology is at least feasible enough to plan a vehicle around. In her article, Weinberger notes that Darpa-funded researchers had drones that could drop clouds of taggants the size of a grain of rice as early as 2001.
It’s hard to say for certain, but accounts of drone targeting tech from Taliban and al-Qaida leaders indicate that the current tracking beacons — which rely on radio frequency pulses, radar or infrared flashes — pale in comparison to some of the proposals. According to statements from a Pakistan Taliban commander, the U.S. gives local spies tracking “chips” in their cell phones order to train Hellfire missiles on militants. The battery-powered infrared beacons that al-Qaida says it found spies using, are a well-known technology that dates back to at least 1984. [I’m not sure that’s a great source] [but they are the ones getting tagged] [*]
What form will the Air Force’s dusting drone take? The Air Force states the design isn’t set in stone — they’re open to “other innovative methods” — so it’s as-yet unformed. But the “References” section of the solicitation name-checks a 1997 study for Darpa, “Small Scale Propulsion: Fly on the Wall, Cockroach in the Corner,” [pdf] which may contain some clues.
The study examines the feasibility of Micro Air Vehicles (MAVs) on the battlefield to deliver a payload of taggants or explosives and mentions that while animal-like robots would be great, the technology to replicate their movement isn’t quite available yet. Al-Qaeda might want to keep an eye out for strange birds in the coming years, because one of the companies mentioned in the 1997 study as having promising MAV technology, AeroVironment, has been perfecting a robotic hummingbird that can fly remotely for up to 10 minutes.

A Radical Plan for Cutting the Defense Budget and Reconfiguring the U.S. Military

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/26/a_radical_plan_for_cutting_the_defense_budget_and_reconfiguring_the_us_military
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/28/11 9:46:36 AM] [*]
A Radical Plan for Cutting the Defense Budget and Reconfiguring the U.S. Military
Total savings: $279.5 billion.
BY DOUGLAS MACGREGOR | APRIL 26, 2011 [commentary] [on how the Pentagon could change?] [I don’t know who he is, except his bio blurb at bottom] [decorated colonel who is apparently retired] [*]
In the spirit of spending wisely, here is my plan to reconfigure the military for the demands and threats of the 21st-century world and, in doing so, dramatically cut the Pentagon budget:
Estimated annualized savings resulting from withdrawals from overseas garrisons and restructuring the United States' forward military presence: $239 billion
The place to start reducing defense spending is with U.S. overseas commitments, which are vast.
Lean, Mean Fighting Machine
By Douglas Macgregor
Today, there are more than 317,000 active-duty U.S. military personnel stationed or deployed overseas. In the Central Command theater of operations, encompassing Iraq and Afghanistan,

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/26/a_radical_plan_for_cutting_the_defense_budget_and_reconfiguring_the_us_military
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/28/11 9:46:36 AM] [*]
A Radical Plan for Cutting the Defense Budget and Reconfiguring the U.S. Military
Total savings: $279.5 billion.
BY DOUGLAS MACGREGOR | APRIL 26, 2011 [commentary] [on how the Pentagon could change?] [I don’t know who he is, except his bio blurb at bottom] [decorated colonel who is apparently retired] [*]
In the spirit of spending wisely, here is my plan to reconfigure the military for the demands and threats of the 21st-century world and, in doing so, dramatically cut the Pentagon budget:
Estimated annualized savings resulting from withdrawals from overseas garrisons and restructuring the United States' forward military presence: $239 billion
The place to start reducing defense spending is with U.S. overseas commitments, which are vast.
Lean, Mean Fighting Machine
By Douglas Macgregor
Today, there are more than 317,000 active-duty U.S. military personnel stationed or deployed overseas. In the Central Command theater of operations, encompassing Iraq and Afghanistan, there are approximately 180,000 active-component personnel as well as over 45,000 reservists. Approximately 150,000 active-component U.S. military personnel are officially assigned to Europe and Asia. [*]And some estimates note that there are two civilians and supporting contractors for each service member in certain locations.
The United States long stayed secure without this kind of sprawling imperial apparatus. [*]But as the Cold War drew to a close, instead of adjusting force structure and spending to a strategic environment newly friendly to U.S. and allied interests, the U.S. military began a dramatic expansion of its overseas presence into areas where, historically, it had been episodic at best. America's Cold War commitments, meanwhile, continued without interruption. After expelling the Iraqi Army from Kuwait in 1991, the U.S. military was directed to stay in the Persian Gulf and build massive facilities. And following the 9/11 attacks, the global war on terror resulted in major new Army and Air Force installations from Europe to Central Asia.
Why does America need all these facilities? The original Cold War goal of protecting European and Asian societies from communist threats and internal subversion has long ago been met, and many overseas U.S. bases are now redundant. What better time than now, when the United States faces fiscal calamity but few real military threats, to judiciously sort those that are truly needed from those the Pentagon can live without? It's time to declare victory and go home.
Of course, the United States often has multiple aims in mind when it stations troops overseas. U.S. politicians tend to think of forward-presence forces as "critical enablers" -- soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines who train with the host country and others. But another, usually unstated reason for their presence is that allies want to ensure the United States automatically becomes a co-belligerent in any future regional conflict, something that made sense when America's allies confronted an existential threat from the Soviet Union, but not today. Future conflicts won't look like those of the Cold War. [I more or less agree] [I’ve questioned the basis for NATO?] [it was created to stop Soviets] [I cannot find where NATO has come up with a new missions statement] [unless and until it does, why is the US so committed and willing to dump so much into it?] [answer: vague notion that it does America’s bidding or maintains the status quo but we need more than vague notions] [let’s sit down and think it through and adapt it to 21st century, then resource is if it needs resources!] [*]
U.S. troops remained ashore in Europe and Asia long past the point when it was clear that a military presence was a needless drain on American resources. Today, new technology and a different mix of forces enables a lighter, less intrusive footprint. For instance, area control is no longer a mission that demands a large surface fleet on the World War II model. The U.S. nuclear submarine fleet augmented with fewer surface combatants employing long-range sensors, manned and unmanned aircraft, communications, and missiles can dominate the world's oceans, ensuring the United States and its allies control access to the maritime domain that supports 91 percent of the world's commerce.
In the Islamic world, the U.S.-led interventions were and remain speculative investments with questionable returns on taxpayers' investments. For the moment, operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, and more recently over Libya, have resulted in less and less funding available to reorganize and replace obsolescent, unsustainable, or worn-out Cold War-era forces designed for aerospace, maritime superiority, and ground combat -- one more reason to end or drastically reduce U.S. involvement in those conflicts as soon as possible.
Fortunately, as U.S. ground forces withdraw from Afghanistan and Iraq, the appeal of the Islamists' anti-American recruiting pitch will dramatically weaken, de-escalating the conflict. International cooperation combined with effective police action, border defenses, and immigration control is a far more economical way to prevent future large-scale terrorist action. [*]
Estimated annualized savings from reorganizing the Army and Marine Corps: $18 billion
The changes in America's overseas commitments must of necessity involve reductions in force structure and personnel inside the country's general-purpose ground forces, currently bloated by the misguided and historically disproven counterinsurgency model. While U.S. ground forces withdraw over the next three years from their overseas garrisons, Congress should establish new end-strength ceilings for the combined active strength of the Army and Marine Corps: 600,000 active-duty service members (480,000 in the Army and 120,000 Marines).
As noted earlier, the proliferation of new strike weapons, conventional or nuclear, makes the massing of large ground forces extremely dangerous. Consequently, future ground combat forces must mobilize organic combat power that is disproportionate to their size and numbers and execute mobile, distributed, yet coherent joint operations. This description points toward Army and Marine ground forces designed for operations of limited duration and scope, forces that can be organized, trained, and equipped at far lower cost than mass armies created for long-term territorial occupation that beget second- and third-order budgetary effects we see in the current bloated "services and logistics" contracts, contracts that run into the billions of dollars over time.
Reductions in ground forces should also preserve and, where possible, increase the numbers of professional soldiers and Marines who can actually deploy and fight. This force transition must also be accompanied by an overall reduction in redundant or unnecessary overhead, support, and services force structure to increase the tooth-to-tail ratio and operational returns on military investments.
In a fiscally constrained environment, the country must re-examine the roles and missions of its land warfare services -- the Army and Marine Corps. Reorganizing the manpower and capabilities in these large forces within an integrated, joint operational framework to provide a larger pool of ready, deployable ground forces on rotational readiness that can perform a range of missions is essential.
Estimated annualized savings from reductions in naval surface forces and Marine fixed-wing aviation: $10 billion
Command of the sea, which today includes the air and space above the surface and the water beneath it, is still the precondition for the exercise of effective influence beyond U.S. borders. Fortunately, there is no other power in the world that is able, or likely to be able, in the next quarter-century to build a fleet that could seriously challenge U.S. naval supremacy. This includes China.
However, the Navy needs a different mix of capabilities than it had during the last years of the Cold War, a mix based on reconfigured strike platforms, new platforms, and manned and unmanned submersibles with an increasingly deep operational focus. Ideally, the mix should include fewer giant aircraft carriers and more flexible ships -- ships that are more easily sustained "forward" without the support of friendly, modern, deep-water harbors to improve operational agility and flexibility. [at the very least] [I think Gates has begun this process but I worry it will not continue?] [*]
These points suggest Congress should direct the reduction of the Navy's surface fleet from 11 to eight carrier battle groups over a period of 36 months and rebalance their home porting in acknowledgement of national priorities in the Pacific Command and Central Command areas of responsibility. This action would include concurrent "right-sizing" of all associated combatants, supporting vessels, forward deployed naval forces, and shipyards, depots, and other support facilities, excluding submarines. Combatant commanders should be directed to re-evaluate "presence versus surge" naval requirements given improved long-range precision strike and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance capabilities of smart presence alternatives.
Simultaneously, the Department of the Navy should be directed to disband the 20-plus Marine Corps F-18 fighter jet and AV-8B Harrier jet squadrons. Retire all the AV-8Bs and the older F/A-18s, retaining the newer F/A-18C/Ds and EA-6Bs until replaced with Navy aircraft. Reassign the carrier Marines to naval air groups until the remaining Marine jets are retired; and require the Marine Corps to call on the Navy and Air Force for tactical fixed-wing air cover. Marine manned aviation should be limited to an appropriate number of V-22 Ospreys or rotor-driven aircraft within the new end-strength limits. This approach enables reorganization of the United States' three manned air forces -- the Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps -- into two affordable air forces, one sea-based and one land-based.
Estimated annualized savings from eliminating the F-35B: $2.5 billion
Between 2003 and 2009, the U.S. Air Force cut 160 fighter/attack and 19 bombers from its active component. As a result of authorization bills in 2010, the Air Force will be required to retire about 300 older F-15, F-16, and A-10 aircraft without replacements until 2015. The cuts mandated as part of the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (New START) will probably result in the loss of a few more bombers.
Further cuts in U.S. aerospace power would seem ill-advised given the need to rely on air power during America's withdrawal from its overseas commitments. The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) program, however, bears serious re-examination. At an average $92 million per plane, the JSF is very expensive for the capabilities it promises versus the performance it has delivered to date.
In practical terms, the JSF is an investment issue. Will Congress flush $44 billion of investment down the drain when the U.S. Armed Forces stand to receive at least some number of aircraft that are more capable than the very old F-16s and early-model F/A-18s? On the other hand, scaling back the complexity and size of the total buy is very reasonable and still saves a great deal of money. One way is to eliminate the F-35B version of the JSF for the Marines, especially given the disbandment of the Marine Corps jet aircraft wings. The development of a naval unmanned deep-penetrating strike capability mitigates operational risk in this approach.
Estimated annualized savings from reducing the number of unified commands and single service headquarters: $1 billion
Withdrawal of most of U.S. garrison forces (particularly its ground forces) from overseas will necessitate the elimination of many military commands. It also offers opportunities for savings through a modification of the current Unified Command Plan and U.S. Code Title 10 to reduce the current number of regional and functional unified commands from six to four. U.S. Northern Command and U.S. Southern Command would remain, but Mexico would fall into Southern Command's area of responsibility. U.S. European Command and U.S. Africa Command should be reintegrated and relocated to the facilities formerly used by U.S. Joint Forces Command in Hampton Roads, Virginia, to be renamed U.S. Atlantic Command. Then, Central Command should be divided between Atlantic Command and Pacific Command by the end of fiscal 2012.
This approach would eliminate the four-star combatant command headquarters outside the United States and negate the flow-down justification of three-star and four-star single-service component commands aligned within, an action that is long overdue along with the deflation of the services' general officer/admiral rank structure. As Deputy Defense Secretary William Lynn notes, each of these commands have become beset by "requirements creep" without regard to the cost of capability, a pernicious effect of having so many people "in charge," demanding staff, resources, and authorities commensurate with their rank, instead of what the country needs. [will Lynn stay and be Panetta’s deputy?] [if so, for how long?] [*]
In response to these actions, Congress should reduce all flag ranks in the bureaucracy by one star effective immediately. Exceptions to this mandate would be limited to the chiefs of service, regional unified commanders, and commanders of functional commands. Combined with the reduction in command overhead, this will assist in eliminating redundant single-service bureaucratic overhead and administration (uniform and civilian), especially in the setting of requirements and management of acquisitions. Again, U.S. Code Title 10 must be modified through new legislation to prevent continued duplication and inefficiency created by competitive bureaucracies. Simplified command structures that emphasize responsibility and accountability are always the keys to success in crisis or conflict.
Estimated annualized savings from eliminating the Department of Homeland Security and restructuring national intelligence and the Army National Guard: $7 billion
Inside the United States, it's time to consider legislation eliminating the inefficient experiment that is the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The agencies combined under DHS at the time of its inception should return to their former departments, and its former national security responsibilities should shift to the Defense Department. Some may argue that this is not the role of the Pentagon. But the defense of the country includes land and sea borders -- and employing the armed forces to secure those borders from threats originating in the nexus between transnational criminal and violent extremist organizations is explicitly stated in the preamble and Article I of the U.S. Constitution's language of the "common defence." Defense of the country's borders should not be hampered by a misapplication of posse comitatus, the prohibition on armed forces conducting law enforcement.
It also makes sense to begin disestablishing most of the armed forces' duplications in separate intelligence services, transferring these capabilities to national intelligence agencies -- retaining only operationally unique and tactical intelligence within the branches of the armed forces. Intelligence and related "black" programs have exploded in costs post-9/11 with dubious returns on these investments.
In addition, new federal legislation should be considered that prohibits the Army and Air National Guard from mobilizing for deployment beyond the borders of the United States -- except in the event of a formal declaration of war. Once this legislation is on the books, the Army National Guard should discard most of its war-fighting equipment and convert its formations to a light, wheeled constabulary force designed for border security and domestic emergency/disaster relief inside the United States.
Estimated annualized savings from reducing political appointees and changing acquisition and military education: $2 billion
Other sources of potential savings in national defense exist and should be pursued. Given the current fiscal pressure, the Defense Department should consider affordable alternatives to meet threat requirements in the Air and Missile Defense portfolio. One option is to cancel the Medium Extended Air Defense System (MEADS). The Affordable Near-Term Patriot solution is less than 10 percent of the projected $18 billion MEADS cost.
Congress should explore a one-third reduction in the number of political appointees to the Defense Department. In most cases, these appointees simply build larger bureaucratic empires underneath them to justify their activities. It would also help to disestablish service component acquisition executives, the individual service bureaucrats who buy equipment and services for the use of their respective services (Army, Navy, Air Force, or Marine Corps), and combine these staffs under the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics and legislatively abolish service-centric acquisition autonomy. It is disappointing how many times competing "service equities" are raised in arguments that end up trumping national strategic interests within the Pentagon. Fragmented acquisition authorities, granting a degree of autonomy to each service, are the principle enabler of this bad, inefficient behavior.
Finally, it is high time the armed forces consolidated the single-service war colleges into one integrated national defense college. At the same time, Congress should implement a merit-based selection system that requires examinations for entry, as well as graduation. Military education is expensive -- and officers should be held accountable for their performance in it. This action would also set the tone for a much-needed reform movement to hold officers accountable across a range of military activities. Joint professional military education should not be a "check the box" exercise or an opportunity to lower one's golf handicap. It should prepare future senior military leaders and weed out those who are intellectually and professionally incapable of meeting the challenge to perform.
Col. Douglas Macgregor (ret.), a decorated combat veteran, writes for the Committee for the Republic in Washington, D.C. His most recent book is Warrior's Rage.

Peres: Palestinian unity deal could be barrier to statehood

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/peres-palestinian-unity-deal-could-be-barrier-to-statehood-1.358609
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/28/11 9:45:43 AM] [*]
Published 13:34 28.04.11
Peres: Palestinian unity deal could be barrier to statehood
President calls burgeoning Fatah-Hamas reconciliation agreement a 'fatal mistake,' saying he expected a future Palestinian vote to result in Hamas' rule of the West Bank.
By Haaretz Service Tags: Israel news Shimon Peres Middle East peace Hamas Gaza West Bank [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [last night I saw a stunner come across the Times world desk] [namely, the PA and Hamas had agreed to put aside their differences and work together] [see elsewhere it today’s external for details and questions] [here, President Peres comments on the newly-created compact] [he’s no hardline hawk] [and he’s saying that Israel cannot talk to PA so long as Hamas is part of it and insists that Israel has no right to exist where it is] [if Peres is adamant, PA better have something up its collective sleeve with Hamas willing to renounce years of fantasy about Israel?!?!] [*]
President Shimon Peres commented on the burgeoning Palestinian reconciliation agreement on Thursday, saying he felt the deal was a mistake that could prevent the formation of an independent Palestinian state. [*]
The rival Palestinian movements Fatah and Hamas came to a historic agreement on

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/peres-palestinian-unity-deal-could-be-barrier-to-statehood-1.358609
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/28/11 9:45:43 AM] [*]
Published 13:34 28.04.11
Peres: Palestinian unity deal could be barrier to statehood
President calls burgeoning Fatah-Hamas reconciliation agreement a 'fatal mistake,' saying he expected a future Palestinian vote to result in Hamas' rule of the West Bank.
By Haaretz Service Tags: Israel news Shimon Peres Middle East peace Hamas Gaza West Bank [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [last night I saw a stunner come across the Times world desk] [namely, the PA and Hamas had agreed to put aside their differences and work together] [see elsewhere it today’s external for details and questions] [here, President Peres comments on the newly-created compact] [he’s no hardline hawk] [and he’s saying that Israel cannot talk to PA so long as Hamas is part of it and insists that Israel has no right to exist where it is] [if Peres is adamant, PA better have something up its collective sleeve with Hamas willing to renounce years of fantasy about Israel?!?!] [*]
President Shimon Peres commented on the burgeoning Palestinian reconciliation agreement on Thursday, saying he felt the deal was a mistake that could prevent the formation of an independent Palestinian state. [*]
The rival Palestinian movements Fatah and Hamas came to a historic agreement on Wednesday, when they announced a decision to reconcile and form an interim government ahead of elections, after a four-year feud. Both sides hailed the agreement as a chance to start a fresh page in their national history.
Referring to the expected Fatah-Hamas unity deal, President Shimon Peres said on Thursday that the world could not support the foundation of a country, when part of the regime of which is a "bona fide terrorist organization." [with state goal of destruction of Israel] [why would anyone expect Israel to deal with such a group?] [*]
"The move, as it stands, is a fatal mistake," Peres said, adding that a future Palestinian election could lead to a "terror organization ruling both Gaza and Judea and Samaria and the triumph of Hamas' policies." [*]
Referring to the possible consequences of “walking hand in hand with a terror organization,” the president said the reported unity deal “would lead to a regression and prevent the formation of a Palestinian state.”
Peres added that the meaning of such a shift would be “continued rocket fire, the continued killing of innocent people, and the continuation of Iran’s intervention, which supports and funds regional terror.”
“We would have liked to see the Palestinian people unite, but for peace,” Peres said, adding that, instead, the expected unity deal was “leading to a clear rift: meaning two Palestinian camps, one that calls for peace and the other that calls for Israel’s destruction.” [it seems by definition to be that?] [*]
Peres called out to the Palestinian leadership to "unite for peace instead of creating a façade of unity that would prevent you from moving in any direction. The choice is in all our hands and we mustn't miss the opportunity created to make peace in favor of incessant clashes."
Several top Israeli officials commented on the reported unity deal earlier Thursday, with Defense Minister Ehud Barak telling Israel Radio that Israel would agree to negotiate with a planned new Fatah-Hamas Palestinian government only if it renounces terror activities and recognizes Israel. [this isn’t even news] [this has long been Israel’s position and it’s understandable] [*]
Barak admitted that he had believed there was a low probability of the rival Palestinian factions reconciling their long-standing differences, adding that he felt Palestinian officials were also skeptical about the reconciliation effort's chance of success. [I’ve said the same] [I don’t buy it] [but who knows?] [*]
Earlier Thursday, hardline Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman warned that a reconciliation deal could result in a Hamas takeover of the currently PA-ruled West Bank.
Lieberman told Army Radio of his fears that Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip, would eventually take over the Palestinian Authority-ruled West Bank as well, making use of Hamas activists freed by Fatah as part of the new agreement.
"One of the clauses of the agreement is the release of hundreds of Hamas prisoners from Palestinian jails, which would flood the West Bank with armed terrorists, and the IDF must prepare accordingly," Lieberman said. [*]

Abbas: Fatah will continue to handle Mideast peace talks

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/abbas-fatah-will-continue-to-handle-mideast-peace-talks-1.358620
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/28/11 9:44:49 AM] [*]
Published 14:26 28.04.11
Abbas: Fatah will continue to handle Mideast peace talks
Speaking with reporters in Ramallah, Palestinian Authority President says he will have final authority on the makeup of the future Hamas-Fatah cabinet.
By Avi Issacharoff and Haaretz Service Tags: Israel news Mahmoud Abbas Middle East peace Hamas [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [last night I saw a stunner come across the Times world desk] [namely, the PA and Hamas had agreed to put aside their differences and work together] [this had been in the works for few weeks, at least, so it wasn’t stunner as in wow, I couldn’t see that coming] [here we learn that PA will continue to lead the talks with Israel!?!] [multiple responses: 1) ya think? 2) what talks? 3) what talks if Hamas is part of Palestine, absent a critical change in Hamas] [*]
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas signaled on Thursday that peace talks with Israel would still be possible during the term of a new interim government formed as part of a unity deal with Hamas. [it won’t be possible for Israel] [that’s just a bit of an oversight potentially?] [*]
Abbas said the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) which he heads and to which

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/abbas-fatah-will-continue-to-handle-mideast-peace-talks-1.358620
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/28/11 9:44:49 AM] [*]
Published 14:26 28.04.11
Abbas: Fatah will continue to handle Mideast peace talks
Speaking with reporters in Ramallah, Palestinian Authority President says he will have final authority on the makeup of the future Hamas-Fatah cabinet.
By Avi Issacharoff and Haaretz Service Tags: Israel news Mahmoud Abbas Middle East peace Hamas [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [last night I saw a stunner come across the Times world desk] [namely, the PA and Hamas had agreed to put aside their differences and work together] [this had been in the works for few weeks, at least, so it wasn’t stunner as in wow, I couldn’t see that coming] [here we learn that PA will continue to lead the talks with Israel!?!] [multiple responses: 1) ya think? 2) what talks? 3) what talks if Hamas is part of Palestine, absent a critical change in Hamas] [*]
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas signaled on Thursday that peace talks with Israel would still be possible during the term of a new interim government formed as part of a unity deal with Hamas. [it won’t be possible for Israel] [that’s just a bit of an oversight potentially?] [*]
Abbas said the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) which he heads and to which Hamas does not belong, would still be responsible for "handling politics, negotiations".
He was speaking for the first time since the unity deal was unveiled in Cairo on Wednesday.[*]
A senior Hamas leader said negotiations would not be part of the program of the new government to be formed as part of the agreement. Israel rejects any talks with Hamas, whose charter calls for its destruction.
Abbas also told reporters on Thursday that he would soon announce the unity cabinet's makeup, one which he would have to approve, adding that that government would work according to guidelines set by him. [*]
The Palestinian Authority President sidestepped a Haaretz question on whether or not he intended to free Hamas prisoners jailed by the Palestinian Authority, saying that the PA's jails housed only those who broke the law and not political prisoners. [that’s a little laughable?] [perhaps they’ve moved certain prisoners to different facilities?] [*]
An official unity agreement signing ceremony is scheduled to take place in Cairo next Wednesday.
Abbas' comments came after earlier Wednesday, Mahmoud Zahar, a senior Hamas leader who participated in the reconciliation talks between Fatah and Hamas, said on that the interim Palestinian government would not be able to work on peace negotiations with Israel. [so Hamas has said, “what talks?”] [*]
Zahar said the newly formed deal covered five points, including combining security forces and forming a government made up of “nationalist figures”.
“Our program does not include negotiations with Israel or recognizing it,” Zahhar said in Cairo. “It will not be possible for the interim national government to participate or bet on or work on the peace process with Israel.” [that’s pretty clear] [nothing coy or abstract about it] [*]
Israel has said that the accord, which was brokered in secrecy by Egypt, would not secure peace in the Middle East and urged Abbas to carry on shunning the Islamist movement, which has governed the Gaza Strip since 2007 after ousting Fatah in a civil war.
Forging Palestinian unity is regarded as crucial to reviving any prospect for an independent Palestinian state, but Western powers have always refused to deal with Hamas because of its refusal to recognize Israel and renounce violence. [*]
"We have agreed to form a government composed of independent figures that would start preparing for presidential and parliamentary elections," said Azzam al-Ahmad, the head of Fatah's negotiating team in Cairo.
"Elections would be held in about eight months from now," he said, adding the Arab League would oversee the implementation of the agreement.

Egypt sending team to Gaza to help implement Palestinian deal

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/egypt-sending-team-to-gaza-to-help-implement-palestinian-deal-1.358655
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/28/11 9:42:25 AM] [*]
Published 17:39 28.04.11
Egypt sending team to Gaza to help implement Palestinian deal
Egyptian security source says team will help 'settle and organize the internal security situation there,' after Hamas and Fatah reach historic agreement.
By Reuters [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [last night I saw a stunner come across the Times world desk] [Namely, the PA and Hamas had agreed to put aside their differences and work together] [this had been in the works for few weeks, at least, so it wasn’t stunner as in wow, I couldn’t see that coming] [the stunner is they agreed] [they have tortured, maimed, and killed each other for years] [it’s somewhat perplexing that they could put all that aside an unify?] [and we’ve thus far heard nothing as to whether Hamas will change its potition on Israel—requisite, I would think, to Israeli negotiating with PA in future so long as Hamas is part of it?] [I’m not sure how anyone could expect Israel to do so?] [so, lots to see and discover about what all this really means] [including, does PA think it can continue to negotiate with Israel (if Hamas is part of team)?] [and importantly, what happens to initiative for Palestinian statehood in UN (September 2011)?] [didn’t PA just throw it out the window?] [here Egypt is sending team to facilitate the kiss-and-makeup routine?] [*]
Egypt will send a security team to the Gaza Strip to help implement a reconciliation agreement reached by rival Palestinian groups Fatah and Hamas, an Egyptian security

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/egypt-sending-team-to-gaza-to-help-implement-palestinian-deal-1.358655
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/28/11 9:42:25 AM] [*]
Published 17:39 28.04.11
Egypt sending team to Gaza to help implement Palestinian deal
Egyptian security source says team will help 'settle and organize the internal security situation there,' after Hamas and Fatah reach historic agreement.
By Reuters [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [last night I saw a stunner come across the Times world desk] [Namely, the PA and Hamas had agreed to put aside their differences and work together] [this had been in the works for few weeks, at least, so it wasn’t stunner as in wow, I couldn’t see that coming] [the stunner is they agreed] [they have tortured, maimed, and killed each other for years] [it’s somewhat perplexing that they could put all that aside an unify?] [and we’ve thus far heard nothing as to whether Hamas will change its potition on Israel—requisite, I would think, to Israeli negotiating with PA in future so long as Hamas is part of it?] [I’m not sure how anyone could expect Israel to do so?] [so, lots to see and discover about what all this really means] [including, does PA think it can continue to negotiate with Israel (if Hamas is part of team)?] [and importantly, what happens to initiative for Palestinian statehood in UN (September 2011)?] [didn’t PA just throw it out the window?] [here Egypt is sending team to facilitate the kiss-and-makeup routine?] [*]
Egypt will send a security team to the Gaza Strip to help implement a reconciliation agreement reached by rival Palestinian groups Fatah and Hamas, an Egyptian security source told Reuters on Thursday.
Restructuring and unifying security forces in Hamas-run Gaza is a key condition for the success of the accord, brokered by Egypt on Wednesday to overcome a rift that had stifled a Palestinian drive for independence.
"An Egyptian security delegation will head to Gaza to help settle and organize the internal security situation there, now that the reconciliation agreement is finally in place," said the security source, who declined to be identified. [?] [*]
He said the security team would seek to meld the disparate security forces belonging to Palestinian factions in Gaza, but declined to explain how.
The deal provides for the creation of a non-factional professional security force which would be subject to scrutiny by the Palestinian legislature. [you know, if Hamas was prepared to recognize Israel’s right to exist, this would all be expected for a negotiation to work?] [is there something in the works with Hamas?] [*]
Another security source said the team would consist of specialists from various branches of the Egyptian army. Like in a previous mission that ended in 2007, Egypt's intelligence service will oversee the team's work in Gaza.
Hamas has ruled Gaza since it routed Fatah-led security forces in 2007, a year after it won a Palestinian general election. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah prevails in the much larger West Bank, where Israel remains in overall control in the territory it captured in a 1967 war.
The reconciliation pact calls for setting up an interim unity government to replace the factional administrations that currently run West Bank and Gaza, and prepare for presidential and legislative elections within a year.
A new ballot is long overdue. Israel is worried such a vote could hand Hamas control of the occupied West Bank.
Abbas, who is also the head of the secular Fatah movement, and Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal, who is based in Syria's capital Damascus, will sign the deal in Cairo next week. [it’s hard to know how much influence Meshaal continued to have?] [he’s been AWOL so long] [*]
Forging Palestinian unity is regarded as crucial to reviving any prospect for an independent Palestinian state. Western powers demand that any unity government honor peace deals with Israel, renounce violence and recognize Israel.
Egypt had been trying to broker a reconciliation deal for years. Analysts say a popular uprising that had swept President Hosni Mubarak, Abbas main ally, from power in February and protests rocking Syria, Hamas's main patron, has helped bring the two sides together.
An Egyptian security mission, led by Major-General Burhan Hammad, quit the Gaza Strip after Hamas seized control of the Strip following fierce clashes with Fatah in 2007. Then-spy chief Omar Suleiman oversaw the mission.
Egypt drafted a reconciliation agreement in 2009 calling for setting up a professional police force from the Hamas-led police currently in control of the Gaza Strip and forces loyal to Abbas's Fatah faction who ruled the area before 2007. [absolute true] [they couldn’t put things aside then] [so why would we think they could now?] [for the sake of unity vis-à-vis Israel?] [this gives Israel a justification not to negotiate] [unless, Hamas is ready to state a change in policy???] [is that what’s up?] [**]
Hamas refused to sign that accord, demanding amendments be made to the text before endorsing it.
Abbas met with the head of Egypt's ruling military council, Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, earlier this month to discuss reconciliation efforts. "This was a very important meeting and it laid out Egypt's role in the coming period as the agreement is carried out," the first security source said. [*]

How Washington changed Obama

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0411/53836.html
Politico
[Accessed 4/28/11 9:52:56 AM] [*]
How Washington changed Obama
By: Justin Logan
April 27, 2011 05:23 PM EDT [unclear whether author knows it exactly] [but this is excellent piece on role inputs to USFP] [the president came in new, bright-eyed, and bushy-tailed] [the presidency (and even Washington more generally), has a way of imposing itself on the individual rather than the individual imposing himself on the presidency] [consider as role inputs in helping students to understand really how potent role can be in USFP] [as I’ve said time and again, occasionally the individual comes through, absent a crisis, typically in maringal ways] [instead, role expectations of the presidency (Obama’s and others’s of Obama’s) really constrain what presidents can do] [the author is CATO, a libertarian thinktank so that explains the author’s apparent frustration with Obama] [nevertheless, he manages to demonstrate how critical role is!] [*]
President Barack Obama’s nominations of Leon Panetta as defense secretary and Gen. David Petraeus as director of central intelligence demonstrate that the president has abandoned his pledge to change U.S. foreign policy. In fact, these nominations show that Washington has changed Obama far more than he has changed Washington. [it’s called continuity folks] [better

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0411/53836.html
Politico
[Accessed 4/28/11 9:52:56 AM] [*]
How Washington changed Obama
By: Justin Logan
April 27, 2011 05:23 PM EDT [unclear whether author knows it exactly] [but this is excellent piece on role inputs to USFP] [the president came in new, bright-eyed, and bushy-tailed] [the presidency (and even Washington more generally), has a way of imposing itself on the individual rather than the individual imposing himself on the presidency] [consider as role inputs in helping students to understand really how potent role can be in USFP] [as I’ve said time and again, occasionally the individual comes through, absent a crisis, typically in maringal ways] [instead, role expectations of the presidency (Obama’s and others’s of Obama’s) really constrain what presidents can do] [the author is CATO, a libertarian thinktank so that explains the author’s apparent frustration with Obama] [nevertheless, he manages to demonstrate how critical role is!] [*]
President Barack Obama’s nominations of Leon Panetta as defense secretary and Gen. David Petraeus as director of central intelligence demonstrate that the president has abandoned his pledge to change U.S. foreign policy. In fact, these nominations show that Washington has changed Obama far more than he has changed Washington. [it’s called continuity folks] [better get familiar with it as it’s what makes USFP function, perhaps more than anything] [**]
Obama long insisted that he wants to reorient America’s focus — moving it away from nation-building projects in the Islamic world and toward Asia. He also insists he wants to trim military spending. But if Petraeus heads CIA and Panetta becomes defense secretary, it’s unlikely either will happen.
In fact, these nominations, combined with other evidence, strongly suggest that Obama views foreign policy primarily as an instrument of domestic politics — an opportunity to give soaring speeches about the grand sweep of history and his view of America’s role in it. [*]As Zbigniew Brzezinski recently lamented to Ryan Lizza of The New Yorker, Obama “doesn’t strategize. He sermonizes.” Obama has shown little willingness to shake up the established order in Washington and inject new ideas. [the Zbig comment is glib] [what he does is react] [and it’s what every president does] [*]
Before Obama named Panetta as CIA director, the former congressman from California had little experience on national security issues. This was part of a larger trend: Many of the president’s important foreign policy aides have scant training in foreign policy.
For example, the president’s national security adviser, Tom Donilon, had been a Beltway lawyer, lobbyist and executive at Fannie Mae. The lead author of the president’s National Security Strategy, Ben Rhodes, [yes, he wrote much of it, as we know] [*] has a background in fiction and poetry, putting aside work on his first novel (“The Oasis of Love”) to join the administration’s speech-writing team, from which he moved over to the National Security Council.
To be fair to the foreign policy neophytes, the bona fide experts haven’t been much better. Former State Department Director of Policy Planning Anne-Marie Slaughter lamented in her departure speech that in U.S. foreign policy, men generally do the “high politics” of diplomacy and war, while women work on “low politics” like economic development and human rights. [and neither are doing particularly well] [*] Slaughter also noted that female foreign policymakers often feel the need to “out-tough the tough guys.” Once out of government, Slaughter was at the forefront of the crowd urging the president to bomb Libya.
Beyond his relative inexperience in national security issues, Panetta is a dubious choice to fulfill Obama’s recent pledge to trim military spending. Any secretary charged with realizing that pledge would need extraordinary credibility with Capitol Hill Republicans, many of whom are determined to continue raining money on the Pentagon regardless of the nation's parlous fiscal position. Despite having once been a Republican, Panetta ran for Congress as Democrat and has served prominently in Democratic administrations. He is unlikely to craft the pragmatic consensus needed to give the Pentagon a haircut. [absolutely correct] [though he is fundamentally a deficit hawk and has been his entire life] [so he’ll push the Pentagon at its margines but only the president himself can continue the Gates (and it was at margines too) efforts to trim Pentagon spending] [*]
Petraeus’s nomination poses a different problem. He has spent the past decade focused on what we used to call — at the behest of his commanders in chief — the “global war on terrorism.” But is U.S. nation-building in the Muslim world the most important national security and intelligence problem we face today? [notice how role-defined positions are for journalists?] [it’s difficult for them to conceived of these people fitted into the role as envisaged by author] [but author is wrong] [they will get fitted into it like a Procrustian bed] [*]
Wouldn’t we be better served by having someone at the CIA with a background in East Asia? Or thinking about potential future problems — issues such as cyberwar? Doesn’t sending the world’s leading GWOT veteran to run the CIA signal that Obama is reneging on his pledge to refocus American policy? [the author doesn’t realize it’s the relationship with the president that is crucial] [and both Petraeus and Panetta have forged close personal relations] [and that in itself is quite interesting] [both are moderate Republicans (or can be seen as such)] [shows yet again how pragmatic Obama is fundamentally] [and as such the office was always going to shape him more than he shaped the office] [**]
The U.S. desperately needs to change its focus. We account for roughly half the world’s military spending, yet we feel terribly insecure. We infantilize our allies so that they won’t pay to defend themselves and instead allow us to do it for them. We stumble into small- and medium-sized foreign quagmires the way many people eat breakfast — frequently and without much thought.
Since the end of the Cold War, both Republicans and Democrats have made U.S. foreign policy into a slapdash, pinch-of-this, handful-of-that stew — comprising crusading ideology, protests of being above ideology, national narcissism, bureaucratic infighting, domestic politics and groupthink. [he’s throwing around terms that are important but that he apparently understands only nominally?] [*] With these forces powerfully influencing foreign policy, it’s a miracle things haven’t gone worse.
For his part, Obama, who seems to think that every choice is false, believes his foreign policy approach is “anti-ideological” and that it defies “traditional categories and ideologies.” Unnamed aides recently told The New Yorker that the president is “an anti-ideological politician interested only in what actually works.”
The trouble is that there is no way to be “non-ideological” in foreign policy, and few presidents would admit they are more interested in ideology than in what actually works. [?] [*] Leaders have to determine which things are important and which are unimportant; why the important ones are important; and what to do about the important ones. There’s no way to answer those questions without theory. If the president is lying about his belief that he is “anti-ideological” for political reasons, that’s fine. If he actually believes it, that’s scary. [this author is mad?] [America has long had pragmatic presidents in foreign policy: Geroge HW Bush, Clinton, even Reagan’s troika was ultimately pragmatic] [*]
In a better world, presidents would enter office having clearly explained their foreign policy worldviews and surrounding themselves with a group of people holding impressive résumés in international politics. But of course, we don’t live in that better world. The U.S. is so secure that foreign policymakers can do lots of dumb things without even getting voters to care. In the words of the great folk singer Roger Alan Wade: “If you’re gonna be dumb, you gotta be tough.”
Thank goodness we’re tough.
Justin Logan is associate director of foreign policy studies at the Cato Institute.

Panetta Comes Armed With Background in Budget Fights

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/us/28panetta.html
April 27, 2011
Panetta Comes Armed With Background in Budget Fights
By ELISABETH BUMILLER [biography on Panetta] [not specific individual or role but information that permits the analysts to begin to think about same] [cross in govt] [use psci 355-455] [*]
WASHINGTON — Leon E. Panetta is set to take over leadership of the Defense Department while the United States is fighting on three fronts, but he was selected for the job in no small part because his war at home will be with Congress over the Pentagon budget. And in that battle, defense budget analysts said Wednesday, he comes unusually well armed.
Mr. Panetta, 72, the C.I.A. director, previously served as director of the White House budget office and the House budget committee, and was once a moderate Republican. (He was forced out as head of the office of civil rights because the White House under President Richard M. Nixon thought he enforced discrimination laws too enthusiastically; [*]he then went to work for Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York.) A Democrat since the early 1970s, Mr. Panetta has ties on both sides of Capitol Hill, where he served in Congress from California for eight

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/us/28panetta.html
April 27, 2011
Panetta Comes Armed With Background in Budget Fights
By ELISABETH BUMILLER [biography on Panetta] [not specific individual or role but information that permits the analysts to begin to think about same] [cross in govt] [use psci 355-455] [*]
WASHINGTON — Leon E. Panetta is set to take over leadership of the Defense Department while the United States is fighting on three fronts, but he was selected for the job in no small part because his war at home will be with Congress over the Pentagon budget. And in that battle, defense budget analysts said Wednesday, he comes unusually well armed.
Mr. Panetta, 72, the C.I.A. director, previously served as director of the White House budget office and the House budget committee, and was once a moderate Republican. (He was forced out as head of the office of civil rights because the White House under President Richard M. Nixon thought he enforced discrimination laws too enthusiastically; [*]he then went to work for Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York.) A Democrat since the early 1970s, Mr. Panetta has ties on both sides of Capitol Hill, where he served in Congress from California for eight terms, until he became President Bill Clinton’s first budget director in 1993.
His expertise will serve him well as he faces $400 billion in national security cuts ordered by President Obama through the 2023 fiscal year, a bracing new reality after a decade of ever bigger Pentagon budgets since the Sept. 11 attacks. Mr. Panetta’s personality — approachable and jocular — is also expected to help in negotiations with Congress. [don’t let it fool you—he can be as ruthless as necessary] [*]
“I’ve sat in sessions with him at 2 o’clock in the morning with Newt Gingrich and the appropriations leadership cutting omnibus deals on the budget,” recalled Gordon Adams, a professor at American University who oversaw military spending when he worked for Mr. Panetta in the Clinton budget office. Dr. Adams, who was referring to the time when Mr. Gingrich was speaker of the House, said Mr. Panetta “knows how to draw a line, he knows how to hang tough, he knows when to concede and he knows when to close a deal.”
Although Mr. Panetta is not a classic military strategist who can readily evaluate weapons systems and understand the inner workings of the Pentagon, he has a reputation as a solid manager who brought order to the chaotic Clinton White House. [his deputy secdef will be critical] [*]
His C.I.A. job will also help him negotiate the military’s critical and frustrating relationship with Pakistan’s spy agency, the Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence, which American officials say continues to play a double game and support both the United States and the Taliban in Afghanistan. As C.I.A. director, Mr. Panetta has met regularly with Lt. Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha, the head of the agency, a relationship he is certain to continue.
Mr. Panetta, the son of Italian immigrants who served as a first lieutenant in the Army in the 1960s, has a family walnut farm in Carmel Valley, Calif.

Reconciliation Deal by Rival Factions Forces U.S. to Reconsider Aid to Palestinians

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/world/middleeast/28policy.html
April 27, 2011
Reconciliation Deal by Rival Factions Forces U.S. to Reconsider Aid to Palestinians
By STEVEN LEE MYERS [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [the second-year shuffle] [NSC principals and others] [yesterday’s word—I posted it last night in external—is that Hamas and PA are putting aside differences?] [first, I will believe it only when I see it?] [followup] [use psci 355-455] [but depending on the deal it could complicate Israeli-Palestinian conflict or perhaps make it simpler] [for latter, Hamas would have to change its tune on Israel!] [*]
WASHINGTON — The announced reconciliation on Wednesday between Fatah and Hamas, the estranged Palestinian movements, puts the Obama administration in the uncomfortable position of having to reconsider its financial support for the Palestinian Authority, including millions of dollars the United States has spent to train and equip Palestinian security forces, officials and members of Congress said.
The agreement, reached after secret talks brokered by Egypt, caught the Obama administration, like many others, by surprise. At a minimum it complicates the

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/world/middleeast/28policy.html
April 27, 2011
Reconciliation Deal by Rival Factions Forces U.S. to Reconsider Aid to Palestinians
By STEVEN LEE MYERS [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [the second-year shuffle] [NSC principals and others] [yesterday’s word—I posted it last night in external—is that Hamas and PA are putting aside differences?] [first, I will believe it only when I see it?] [followup] [use psci 355-455] [but depending on the deal it could complicate Israeli-Palestinian conflict or perhaps make it simpler] [for latter, Hamas would have to change its tune on Israel!] [*]
WASHINGTON — The announced reconciliation on Wednesday between Fatah and Hamas, the estranged Palestinian movements, puts the Obama administration in the uncomfortable position of having to reconsider its financial support for the Palestinian Authority, including millions of dollars the United States has spent to train and equip Palestinian security forces, officials and members of Congress said.
The agreement, reached after secret talks brokered by Egypt, caught the Obama administration, like many others, by surprise. At a minimum it complicates the administration’s faltering hopes to revive Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. It also casts doubt on American efforts in recent years to build up the Palestinian Authority on the West Bank, led by Fatah, as the legitimate leader of the Palestinians. [I wouldn’t quite bet the farm on it working] [afterall, these guys have killed, tortured, and maimed each other for years] [*]
The White House, which has been debating how best to revive peace talks ahead of an address to Congress next month by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, all but dismissed the proposed reconciliation by reiterating the longstanding American designation of Hamas as a terrorist organization that has never expressed a willingness to recognize Israel, let alone negotiate with it. [I don’t think that is dismissing it] [it could be reminding Hamas that unless and until Hamas makes a formal declaration of acceptance of Israel, the US is not going to back the Palestinian causes] [in that sense, it could undermind PA’s long-fought efforst for recognition in UN?] [I find it hard to believe PA would risk that for little in return so I have to think there’s more to it than we’ve heard???] [*]
“As we have said before, the United States supports Palestinian reconciliation on terms which promote the cause of peace,” Tommy Vietor, a spokesman for the National Security Council, said in the administration’s only public response. “Hamas, however, is a terrorist organization which targets civilians.”
He added that any Palestinian government had to accept certain principles announced by international negotiators known as the Quartet: the United Nations, the European Union, the United States and Russia. They include renouncing violence, abiding by past agreements with the Israelis and recognizing Israel’s right to exist. Hamas has never agreed to those conditions.
Administration officials declined to discuss publicly the impact the reconciliation might have on American policy, saying they were still trying to learn more about how exactly the two rival organizations would be able to reunite years after violently splitting.
There were, however, immediate calls by pro-Israeli members of Congress to withhold American aid to the Palestinians if their leadership included Hamas. “It calls into question everything we have done,” Representative Gary L. Ackerman, Democrat of New York, said in a telephone interview. He later issued a statement saying the United States would be compelled by “both law and decency” to cut off all aid. [let’s face it] [absent a change in Hamas vis-à-vis Israel, it would be very difficult for US to continue status quo with PA!] [*]
“I don’t think there is any will on the part of the administration or the Congress to provide funds to a government that is dominated by a dedicated terrorist organization,” he said.
The administration is already on record warning of that. Shortly after taking office, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton flatly ruled out cooperating with a Palestinian Authority that included Hamas as a partner.
“We will not deal with, nor in any way fund, a Palestinian government that includes Hamas unless and until Hamas has renounced violence, recognized Israel and agreed to follow the previous obligations of the Palestinian Authority,” she told Congress then.
Since 2005, under President George W. Bush, the United States has spent $542 million to train the Palestinian Authority’s National Security Force, provide it nonlethal equipment and refurbish its camps and buildings. That included $150 million in the current fiscal year. That training, while viewed with suspicion by some of Israel’s supporters, has been credited with improving the professionalism of the forces and security more broadly. [that was one of the points] [*]
Similar military aid given to Lebanon since 2006 was blocked by Congress after suspicions that parts of the Lebanese Army had allied with members of Hezbollah, also designated a terrorist group.

Obama’s Pentagon and C.I.A. Picks Show Shift in How U.S. Fights

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/us/28military.html
April 28, 2011
Obama’s Pentagon and C.I.A. Picks Show Shift in How U.S. Fights
By MARK MAZZETTI and ERIC SCHMITT [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [the second-year shuffle] [NSC principals and others] [SecDef Gates was already scheduled to leave this year] [now, with Mullen’s second term up, the possibility for a musical chairs in the NSC] [it’s now official: Panetta to head DoD and Petraeus to lead CIA] [also, Ryan Crocker to replace Eikenberry in Afghanistan] [followup] [use psci 355-455] [it would appear the administration is preparing for what was called the CT plus concept in 2009 NSC principal deliberations!?] [that’s certainly one way to read this] [*]
WASHINGTON — President Obama’s decision to send an intelligence chief to the Pentagon and a four-star general to the Central Intelligence Agency is the latest evidence of a significant shift over the past decade in how the United States fights its battles — the blurring of lines between soldiers and spies in secret American missions abroad. [I don’t know about that] [it shows that the surge window is closing and the US is going to withdraw slowly while increasing the tempo of CT plus] [and that requires good relations between CIA and DoD and latter’s undersecretary for intelligence] [**]
On Thursday, Mr. Obama is expected to announce that Leon E. Panetta, the C.I.A. director,

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/us/28military.html
April 28, 2011
Obama’s Pentagon and C.I.A. Picks Show Shift in How U.S. Fights
By MARK MAZZETTI and ERIC SCHMITT [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [the second-year shuffle] [NSC principals and others] [SecDef Gates was already scheduled to leave this year] [now, with Mullen’s second term up, the possibility for a musical chairs in the NSC] [it’s now official: Panetta to head DoD and Petraeus to lead CIA] [also, Ryan Crocker to replace Eikenberry in Afghanistan] [followup] [use psci 355-455] [it would appear the administration is preparing for what was called the CT plus concept in 2009 NSC principal deliberations!?] [that’s certainly one way to read this] [*]
WASHINGTON — President Obama’s decision to send an intelligence chief to the Pentagon and a four-star general to the Central Intelligence Agency is the latest evidence of a significant shift over the past decade in how the United States fights its battles — the blurring of lines between soldiers and spies in secret American missions abroad. [I don’t know about that] [it shows that the surge window is closing and the US is going to withdraw slowly while increasing the tempo of CT plus] [and that requires good relations between CIA and DoD and latter’s undersecretary for intelligence] [**]
On Thursday, Mr. Obama is expected to announce that Leon E. Panetta, the C.I.A. director, will become secretary of defense, replacing Robert M. Gates, and that Gen. David H. Petraeus will return from Afghanistan to take Mr. Panetta’s job at the C.I.A., a move that is likely to continue this trend.
As C.I.A. director, Mr. Panetta hastened the transformation of the spy agency into a paramilitary organization, overseeing a sharp escalation of the C.I.A.’s bombing campaign in Pakistan using armed drone aircraft, and an increase in the number of secret bases and covert operatives in remote parts of Afghanistan. [yes] [*]
General Petraeus, meanwhile, has aggressively pushed the military deeper into the C.I.A.’s turf, using Special Operations troops and private security contractors to conduct secret intelligence missions. As commander of the United States Central Command in September 2009, he also signed a classified order authorizing American Special Operations troops to collect intelligence in Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Iran and other places outside of traditional war zones. [*]
The result is that American military and intelligence operatives are at times virtually indistinguishable from each other as they carry out classified operations in the Middle East and Central Asia. Some members of Congress have complained that this new way of war allows for scant debate about the scope and scale of military operations. In fact, the American spy and military agencies operate in such secrecy now that it is often hard to come by specific information about the American role in major missions in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and now Libya and Yemen.
The operations have also created tension with important allies like Pakistan, while raising fresh questions about whether spies and soldiers deserve the same legal protections.
Officials acknowledge that the lines between soldiering and spying have blurred. “It’s really irrelevant whether you call it a covert action or a military special operation,” said Dennis C. Blair, a retired four-star admiral and a former director of national intelligence. “I don’t really think there is any distinction.” [?] [well, I can see why he’d say that but I don’t necessarily agree] [*]
The phenomenon of the C.I.A. becoming more like the Pentagon, and vice versa, has critics inside both organizations. Some inside the C.I.A.’s clandestine service believe that its bombing campaign in Pakistan, which has become a cornerstone of the Obama administration’s counterterrorism strategy, has distorted the agency’s historic mission as a civilian espionage agency and turned it into an arm of the Defense Department.
Henry A. Crumpton, a career C.I.A. officer and formerly the State Department’s top counterterrorism official, praised General Petraeus as “one of the most sophisticated consumers of intelligence.” But Mr. Crumpton warned more broadly of the “militarization of intelligence” as current or former uniformed officers assume senior jobs in the sprawling American intelligence apparatus.
For example, James R. Clapper Jr., a retired Air Force general, is director of national intelligence, Mr. Obama’s top intelligence adviser. Maj. Gen. Michael Flynn, formerly the senior intelligence officer in Afghanistan, is soon expected to become one of Mr. Clapper’s top deputies.
“If the intelligence community is populated by military officers, they understandably are going to reflect their experiences,” Mr. Crumpton said.
At the Pentagon, the new roles raise legal concerns. The more that soldiers are used for espionage operations overseas, the more they are at risk of being thrown in jail and denied Geneva Convention protections if they are captured by hostile governments.
And yet few believe that the trend is likely to be reversed. A succession of wars has strained the ranks of both the Pentagon and the C.I.A., and the United States has come to believe that many of its current enemies are best fought with timely intelligence rather than overwhelming military firepower.
These factors have pushed military and intelligence operatives more closely together in the years since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
“In the field, there is a blurring of the mission,” said Senator Jack Reed, a senior Rhode Island Democrat on the Armed Services Committee who served as an officer in the 82nd Airborne Division. “Military operations can buy time to build up local security forces, but intelligence is the key to operations and for anticipating your adversary.” [interesting comment as Reed almost certainly considered before Panetta decision] [*]
American officials said that, for the most part, the tensions and resentments were greatly reduced from the days when Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld expanded Pentagon intelligence-gathering operations to become less dependent on the C.I.A.
The secret “Execute Order” signed by General Petraeus in September 2009 authorized American Special Operations troops to carry out reconnaissance missions and build up intelligence networks throughout the Middle East and Central Asia in order to “penetrate, disrupt, defeat and destroy” militant groups and “prepare the environment” for future American military attacks. But that order greatly expanding the role of the military in spying was drafted in consultation with the C.I.A., administration officials said. [that is inarguably true] [*]
General Petraeus has worked closely with the C.I.A. since the Bosnia mission in the 1990s, a relationship that grew during his command tours in Iraq and Afghanistan. In fact, some of the missions he has overseen seem to have been more like clandestine operations than traditional military missions.
Even before General Petraeus took over as the leader of the military’s Central Command overseeing Middle East operations nearly three years ago, he ordered a study of the threat posed by militants in a country few American policy makers had focused on — Yemen. Al Qaeda’s branch in Yemen is now considered the most immediate threat to the United States.
The general’s relationship with Yemen’s mercurial president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, was well documented in the diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks last year. And the military’s operations there, beginning with airstrikes in December 2009, are shrouded in even more secrecy than the C.I.A.’s drone attacks in Pakistan.
Mr. Saleh, however, drew the line at General Petraeus’s request to send American advisers to accompany Yemeni troops on counterterrorism operations.
Now, with Mr. Saleh’s government teetering on the verge of collapse, General Petraeus is taking over at the C.I.A. — and will once again be part of America’s secret war in Yemen.

Saving lives in Libya

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/saving-lives-in-libya/2011/04/27/AF3im90E_story.html
Saving lives in Libya
By Editorial, Wednesday, April 27, 6:24 PM [editorial] [Post demanding, yet again, that Obama get America directly involved in the mess that is Libya] [I understand their point: once the president said Qaddafi was unacceptable, the US must make Qaddafi unacceptable] [but I disagree] [I actually wish Obama hadn’t said it because it then became an issue] [but I don’t see vital interests for America in Libya] [*]
SETTING THE TERMS for an intervention in Libya, President Obama said on March 18 that “all attacks against civilians must stop.” Moammar Gaddafi, he said, “must stop his troops from advancing on Benghazi, pull them back from Ajdabiya, Misurata and Zawiya, and establish water, electricity, and gas supplies in all areas. Humanitarian assistance must be allowed to reach the people of Libya.”
Nearly six weeks later, NATO airstrikes have driven the Gaddafi forces away from Benghazi and Ajdabiya. But Zawiya is occupied by government units, and Misurata — the country’s third-largest city — is besieged. This week shells and rockets have been raining down on the port, where thousands of refugees have gathered in the hope of being evacuated. The toll of the dead and wounded rises every day.[*]
On Wednesday the Associated Press quoted the European Union’s commissioner for

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/saving-lives-in-libya/2011/04/27/AF3im90E_story.html
Saving lives in Libya
By Editorial, Wednesday, April 27, 6:24 PM [editorial] [Post demanding, yet again, that Obama get America directly involved in the mess that is Libya] [I understand their point: once the president said Qaddafi was unacceptable, the US must make Qaddafi unacceptable] [but I disagree] [I actually wish Obama hadn’t said it because it then became an issue] [but I don’t see vital interests for America in Libya] [*]
SETTING THE TERMS for an intervention in Libya, President Obama said on March 18 that “all attacks against civilians must stop.” Moammar Gaddafi, he said, “must stop his troops from advancing on Benghazi, pull them back from Ajdabiya, Misurata and Zawiya, and establish water, electricity, and gas supplies in all areas. Humanitarian assistance must be allowed to reach the people of Libya.”
Nearly six weeks later, NATO airstrikes have driven the Gaddafi forces away from Benghazi and Ajdabiya. But Zawiya is occupied by government units, and Misurata — the country’s third-largest city — is besieged. This week shells and rockets have been raining down on the port, where thousands of refugees have gathered in the hope of being evacuated. The toll of the dead and wounded rises every day.[*]
On Wednesday the Associated Press quoted the European Union’s commissioner for humanitarian aid as saying the attacks have interrupted the delivery of supplies and “it is close to impossible for our humanitarian partners to evacuate the wounded and civilians by sea.” Drinking water is running short.
It would seem pretty clear that the United States and its allies are failing in the basic mission of civilian protection that Mr. Obama laid out. But this failure — and the human suffering it is causing — has not seemed to elevate the administration’s sense of urgency. [*]“We will continue to pursue the policy the president has set forth,” a senior State Department official told reporters Tuesday. “We’ve been at this now for just over a month . . . and there has to be some degree of patience in terms of executing the terms of this mission.” [Post wants America to topple another Arab regime, while some of us think that would be disastrous in this case] [*]
An appeal for patience would be logical if the United States and NATO were doing everything possible to stop the killing of civilians under the terms of U.N. Resolution 1973. But they are not. Mr. Obama continues to withhold U.S. A-10 and AC-130 warplanes from the operation, even though they are considerably more effective at attacking ground targets than are the aircraft of NATO allies. Though Mr. Obama has said that the U.N. resolution would allow the supply of arms to rebels fighting the regime, he has not authorized deliveries — and he did not approve a $25 million shipment of non-lethal supplies until Tuesday, 11 days after the State Department first notified Congress of the aid.
U.S. Ambassador to Libya Gene Cretz said Wednesday that the State Department’s envoy to the rebel interim government had deemed it “worthy of our support.” But unlike Britain, France and Italy, the administration has yet to recognize the Transitional National Council as Libya’s legitimate government.
The allies are stepping up their campaign — but in tiny increments. Last week the Pentagon responded to appeals from Britain and France by authorizing two drones already deployed in Libya to carry out strikes as well as surveillance. On Monday Mr. Obama spoke by telephone with Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who agreed to allow Italian planes to join the attacks.
If sustained long enough, the current operation might be enough to turn the tide against the regime. But time means lives. Libyans are dying in large numbers: The U.S. ambassador suggested that between 10,000 and 30,000 already may have been killed. If more steps can be taken to save Libyans — the redeployment of U.S. planes, weapons for the opposition, ground spotters to call in airstrikes — Mr. Obama should authorize them. © 2011 The Washington Post Co

Bahrain Sentences 4 Shiite Protesters to Death

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2011/04/28/world/middleeast/AP-ML-Bahrain.html
April 28, 2011
Bahrain Sentences 4 Shiite Protesters to Death
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Bahrain] [Persian Gulf] [regimes continues slow, plodding, political-eco liberalization] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [now called the Arab Awakening?] [however, in Bahrain turning into proxy war between Sunni Arab regimes and backers and Persian Iran and backers?] [followup] [here we see the Bahraini regime has finally got to the bottom of the unrest: it was some Iranian-influenced instigators all along—who knew?] [use psci 355-455] [sadly, this sham was predictable] [*]
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — A military court in Bahrain on Thursday convicted four Shiite protesters and sentenced them to death for the killing of two policemen during anti-government demonstrations last month in the Gulf kingdom, [*]state media said.
Three other Shiite activists, who were also on trial, were sentenced to life in prison for their role in the policemen's deaths.
The verdicts — which can be appealed — were the first related to Bahrain's uprising, which was inspired by revolts in the Arab world. The kingdom's Shiite majority has long

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2011/04/28/world/middleeast/AP-ML-Bahrain.html
April 28, 2011
Bahrain Sentences 4 Shiite Protesters to Death
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Bahrain] [Persian Gulf] [regimes continues slow, plodding, political-eco liberalization] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [now called the Arab Awakening?] [however, in Bahrain turning into proxy war between Sunni Arab regimes and backers and Persian Iran and backers?] [followup] [here we see the Bahraini regime has finally got to the bottom of the unrest: it was some Iranian-influenced instigators all along—who knew?] [use psci 355-455] [sadly, this sham was predictable] [*]
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — A military court in Bahrain on Thursday convicted four Shiite protesters and sentenced them to death for the killing of two policemen during anti-government demonstrations last month in the Gulf kingdom, [*]state media said.
Three other Shiite activists, who were also on trial, were sentenced to life in prison for their role in the policemen's deaths.
The verdicts — which can be appealed — were the first related to Bahrain's uprising, which was inspired by revolts in the Arab world. The kingdom's Shiite majority has long complained of discrimination and is campaigning for greater freedoms and equal rights in the tiny Sunni-ruled island nation, which is home to the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet.
Bahrain's human rights groups blasted the verdict and said the trial, conducted in secrecy, had no legal credibility and was politically motivated. [it was a scapegoat move] [*]
"This verdict is a message from the government, determined to stop the democracy movement," said Nabeel Rajab, head of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights. "It's a warning, saying this is how we will treat you if you continue to demand your rights."
Faced with an unprecedented political unrest, Bahrain's king declared martial law and invited troops from Saudi Arabia and other Sunni-ruled Gulf countries to help quell Shiite dissent after weeks of street marches and bloody clashes in the kingdom's capital, Manama.
A report by the Bahrain News Agency said the defendants had "all their legal rights" during the trial for what it called "one of the most gruesome murders in Bahrain."
For the Sunni Arabs rulers around the Gulf, Bahrain also is seen as a critical showdown with Shiite powerhouse Iran. Arab leaders fear that any serious political gains by Bahrain's Shiites — about 70 percent of the population — could open the door for greater influence by the Islamic Republic even though there is no history of close bonds between Iran and Bahraini Shiites.
Earlier this month, the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council issued a strongly worded warning to Iran to stop "meddling" in their affairs. Bahrain this week expelled an Iranian diplomat. [*]
Iran, in turn, has called the Saudi-led force an "occupation" and said it reserves the right to take further diplomatic action against Bahrain. [in other words, the Saudis] [the GCC is the Saudis and 5 tiny nation-states including Bahrain] [*]
The seven opposition supporters sentenced Thursday were tried behind closed doors on charges of premeditated murder of government employees. In an earlier hearing this week, Bahrain state media said the military prosecutor presented evidence that showed the defendants killed the policemen "on purpose" by running them over with a car.
Their lawyers denied the charges.
Foreign media was barred from the courtroom, but selected representatives from state-aligned media were allowed. Family members of the defendants also attended the trial.
A relative of one of the defendants sentenced to death, said there were no emotional outbursts in the courtroom when the verdicts were read.
"He was smiling when they said it, because he did not want us to cry," the relative said, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of harassment by the authorities and of jeopardizing the appeal.
In its report on Thursday's verdicts, state-run BNA carried links to government-produced videos posted on YouTube, including clips of purported confessions of alleged accomplices describing the policemen's killings. They also included testimonials from alleged relatives of one of the slain policemen and a taxi driver killed in the unrest. The footage refers to demonstrators as "gangs of outlaws" and "beasts without mercy."
Hundreds of protesters, opposition leaders and human rights activists have been detained since emergency rule was declared March 15. Earlier this month, the authorities banned media from covering legal proceedings in the country's military courts.
Among those detained are also dozens of Shiite professionals, such as doctors and lawyers, including a lawyer who was to defend some of the seven opposition supporters in the military court.
The attorney, Mohammed al-Tajer, is one of Bahrain's most prominent human rights lawyers. He has represented hundreds of clients against the state, including Shiite activists accused of plotting against the Sunni monarchy that has ruled Bahrain for more than 200 years.
At least 30 people have died since Feb. 15, when anti-government protests erupted in Bahrain. Four opposition supporters have also died in police custody.
Bahrain rarely uses capital punishment, and when it does it is usually applied to foreigners.
The country effectively had a decade-long moratorium on the death penalty until 2006, when three Bangladeshi citizens were put to death, according to Amnesty International.
Another Bangladeshi man, Jassim Abdulmanan, was executed last July after being convicted of premeditated murder.
Executions are typically by firing squad, according to the rights group.

Push in U.N. for Criticism of Syria Is Rejected

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/world/middleeast/28nations.html
April 27, 2011
Push in U.N. for Criticism of Syria Is Rejected
By NEIL MacFARQUHAR [Syria] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [Syria pretends to be a modern secular republic, but is far from it] [no monarchy but long run by a minority sect (al Assads) and the Baath Party] [Bashir has seemingly lost control but cannot seem to suss out how to resolve things?] [followup] [hard to know as Syria keeps most western media out] [but appears al Assad has decided to crush the rebellion?] [the pretty anemic, craven acts inside the UN so far on Syria] [*]
UNITED NATIONS — An attempt by the United States and its European allies to condemn Syria in the United Nations Security Council was rebuffed on Wednesday, as the willingness to intervene in the region — strong enough to lead to military action against Libya under similar circumstances just weeks ago — appeared to evaporate.
Western nations failed to secure the simplest of Security Council measures: a press statement calling on Syria’s leaders to stop the violence against their own people. [*]
Envoys for several wary Council members that had agreed to at least abstain in the vote

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/world/middleeast/28nations.html
April 27, 2011
Push in U.N. for Criticism of Syria Is Rejected
By NEIL MacFARQUHAR [Syria] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [Syria pretends to be a modern secular republic, but is far from it] [no monarchy but long run by a minority sect (al Assads) and the Baath Party] [Bashir has seemingly lost control but cannot seem to suss out how to resolve things?] [followup] [hard to know as Syria keeps most western media out] [but appears al Assad has decided to crush the rebellion?] [the pretty anemic, craven acts inside the UN so far on Syria] [*]
UNITED NATIONS — An attempt by the United States and its European allies to condemn Syria in the United Nations Security Council was rebuffed on Wednesday, as the willingness to intervene in the region — strong enough to lead to military action against Libya under similar circumstances just weeks ago — appeared to evaporate.
Western nations failed to secure the simplest of Security Council measures: a press statement calling on Syria’s leaders to stop the violence against their own people. [*]
Envoys for several wary Council members that had agreed to at least abstain in the vote against Libya, particularly Russia, spoke out against any international intervention on Wednesday, while Lebanon would have found it impossible to support criticism given the influence Syria holds over it. The required unanimity among the 15 members for a press statement was impossible.
“The current situation in Syria, despite the increase in tension, does not represent a threat to international peace and security,” said Alexander Pankin, the Russian deputy permanent representative to the United Nations. Intervening would be “an invitation to civil war,” he said. All council members addressed the body after it became clear that no consensus would emerge. [genocide doesn’t represent a threat to stability?] [*]
Russian leaders have been particularly scathing in recent days about events in Libya, accusing the countries taking part in military action against Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi’s forces of greatly exceeding the mandate that the Security Council gave them. Russian officials thought the United Nations intervention in Ivory Coast that followed, also carried out in the name of protecting civilians, went too far as well.
Diplomats and other analysts noted important differences in the circumstances surrounding the antigovernment uprisings in Libya and Syria. First, the March decision to take military action against Libya was preceded by appeals for such a step from the Arab League. “Their voices can be important for the Council, at least in taking the first step,” [that’s absolutely right and it’s absolutely the reason no one is going to say “Boo” in this case] [*] said Joanna Weschler of the Security Council Report, a group that analyzes the Council’s actions.
The Arab League has been more generic on Syria, urging all states in the region to avoid answering protests with bullets.
In addition, Libya’s United Nations ambassador himself appealed for action in announcing his own defection. Finally, Libya is an important oil-producing state, but it is marginal in terms of the dynamics of the region.
Syria, on the other hand, is a former close ally of the Soviet Union and a linchpin for efforts to end the Arab-Israeli dispute. Also, member states do not want it to descend into the kind of bloody stalemate that has evolved in Libya. The stability of Syria, said the Brazilian ambassador, Maria Luiza Ribeiro Viotti, is “central to regional stability.” [*]
China, which also abstained in the Libya vote, called for Syria to address the concerns of the demonstrators and, like many countries, supported an impartial investigation into the hundreds of deaths there. But it said that the threat to regional stability and the impact on the global economic recovery had to be considered. [nice leadership China!] [not] [*]
Many states suggested that Syria had to be given more time to carry out the reforms promised by President Bashar al-Assad. Western states noted that Mr. Assad had repeatedly promised reforms after succeeding his father 11 years ago, while simultaneously jailing critics.
Various ambassadors said their efforts would now shift to other avenues. European Union members are threatening to impose their own sanctions within days, and a meeting of another United Nations body, the Human Rights Council, will convene in Geneva on Friday to discuss Syria, though the Arab League has reiterated its support for having Syria join the Council in May.
Syrian ambassadors were summoned in London, Paris, Berlin, Rome and Madrid to be told that Mr. Assad must refrain from further violence. If not, senior European officials said, measures that include an arms embargo, asset freezes and travel restrictions are inevitable.
Syria’s ambassador to the United Nations, Bashar Jaafari, accused the United States of being quick to try to force United Nations action against Syria, while fighting efforts to stop Israeli violence against Palestinians living under occupation. [yes, this is entirely about Israel] [what an arse] [*]

A Syrian Beacon Pays Price for Its Dissent

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/world/middleeast/28daraa.html
April 27, 2011
A Syrian Beacon Pays Price for Its Dissent
By ANTHONY SHADID [Syria] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [Syria pretends to be a modern secular republic, but is far from it] [no monarchy but long run by a minority sect (al Assads) and the Baath Party] [Bashir has seemingly lost control but cannot seem to suss out how to resolve things?] [followup] [hard to know as Syria keeps most western media out] [but appears al Assad has decided to crush the rebellion?] [while few contemplate how to respond?] [*]
BEIRUT, Lebanon — In the besieged city of Dara’a, which has become a symbol of Syria’s uprising, residents on Wednesday told of shortages of bread and even baby formula. Some stick a pole wrapped in a scarf out the door to see whether snipers are lurking. Doctors in a mosque have resorted to using sewing needles to stitch wounds, amid shortages of bandages and disinfectant.
Some spoke of moments of camaraderie in the three-day blockade, as Palestinians from nearby refugee camps ferried canned food and bread by foot to Dara’a, a poor border town

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/world/middleeast/28daraa.html
April 27, 2011
A Syrian Beacon Pays Price for Its Dissent
By ANTHONY SHADID [Syria] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [Syria pretends to be a modern secular republic, but is far from it] [no monarchy but long run by a minority sect (al Assads) and the Baath Party] [Bashir has seemingly lost control but cannot seem to suss out how to resolve things?] [followup] [hard to know as Syria keeps most western media out] [but appears al Assad has decided to crush the rebellion?] [while few contemplate how to respond?] [*]
BEIRUT, Lebanon — In the besieged city of Dara’a, which has become a symbol of Syria’s uprising, residents on Wednesday told of shortages of bread and even baby formula. Some stick a pole wrapped in a scarf out the door to see whether snipers are lurking. Doctors in a mosque have resorted to using sewing needles to stitch wounds, amid shortages of bandages and disinfectant.
Some spoke of moments of camaraderie in the three-day blockade, as Palestinians from nearby refugee camps ferried canned food and bread by foot to Dara’a, a poor border town in a drought-stricken region where protests last month galvanized nationwide demonstrations. Others spoke of a deepening fear of snipers by day, raids by night and people so scared they would not open their doors, even to neighbors. [*]
“Dara’a and its hinterland are a ghost town,” one resident of the area said as he fled across the border to Jordan on Wednesday. “You can’t go in and you can’t go out.”
As the crackdown in Dara’a entered its fourth day on Thursday, opposition activists reported a growing number of resignations from the Baath Party, which has ruled Syria in some fashion since 1963. Though the figures did not occupy senior positions, activists said the resignations were symbolically important, signaling the willingness of people to defy the inevitable repercussions and forego the privileges that membership secured. [*]
Wissam Tarif, executive director of Insan, a human rights group, said 203 people had resigned from the party in the region around Dara’a, 64 in restive towns on the outskirts of the capital Damascus and 30 in Baniyas, a town on the Mediterranean coast.
“They’re not necessarily big-shot politicians, but they are loyal to the regime and they had influence within the party,” he said. “It’s a sign. It’s a kind of response.” [*]
Dara’a has become the center stage of an uprising that has posed the greatest challenge to the Assad family’s four decades of rule. While other towns reel from a cycle of protests and funerals for the fallen that turn into more protests, Dara’a is the town the government has sought, through force of arms since Monday, to pummel back into loyalty. For weeks a symbol of people’s anger at arbitrary power, it has now become a test of whether the protests will weather a crackdown in full swing.
In the end, this town may determine whether the government — staggering but still entrenched, playing on fears of chaos in a county still deeply divided by its sects and ethnicities — can reinstill the fear that the protests broke. [*]
“The regime may be able to stop the uprising in two or three weeks with a crackdown,” said Alaa Hourani, a Dara’a resident, “but they cannot finish it forever.”
Almost no foreign journalists are allowed in Syria, much less Dara’a, and an authoritative account of conditions in the town of 75,000 is impossible. [*]
In past days, it has become a caldron of rumors and conflicting sentiments. Over the phone on Wednesday, a man shouted that 150 soldiers had defected to the opposition, but even some human rights activists remained skeptical of decisive splits in the military. Some residents denounced President Bashar al-Assad, while those fleeing across the border said that he still enjoyed their support and that anger was more pronounced against his family — his brother Maher, who leads the Fourth Armored Division, deployed in Dara’a,[*] and his brother-in-law, Assef Shawkat, an intelligence chief and deputy chief of staff.
“These are Maher’s people,” said the resident fleeing to Jordan. “They’re barbaric. Nobody can control them except Maher, and Bashar cannot control Maher.” [*]
Across Syria, the siege of Dara’a has become a rallying cry, demonstrating its resonance to an uprising still in search of leadership and coherence.
“ ‘The people of Dara’a are free!’ ” an activist abroad quoted dissidents shouting during protests in towns on the outskirts of the capital, Damascus. “ ‘Bashar, get out of Dara’a!’ ” others cried, the activist said.
The protests erupted in Dara’a in March after 15 students were arrested for writing antigovernment graffiti on school walls. “The people want to topple the regime,” the slogans said, in an echo of the revolutions in Egypt and Tunisia. Security in the town was run by Atef Najib, a relative of Mr. Assad, and, by most accounts, the youths were tortured.
In the protests that ensued, government buildings were burned, and for weeks, protesters spoke of Dara’a as liberated, or at least no longer under the government’s full control. That ended Monday when eight tanks, soldiers and 30 buses of security officers stormed the town, in what was the military’s most aggressive move against the dissent that has been reported in virtually every province.
The Syrian Army said Wednesday that its troops had deployed to Dara’a and nearby regions to root out “extremist terrorist groups” and that three of its officers had been killed in attacks near the Golan Heights. [*]Syrian television showed images of what it said were machine guns, shotguns, grenades and ammunition confiscated in the town.
But residents described the onslaught as collective punishment, and activists cited witness accounts of more tanks and armor being sent south from Damascus. Reached by satellite phone, they said electricity and phone lines had been cut and had still not been restored. Soldiers fired at water tanks atop houses and apartment buildings, emptying them. Snipers took up positions across the town, and checkpoints were set up on many streets.
“No one’s allowed to walk more than 100 meters,” said another resident who fled across the border with his children.
The town’s sole hospital is closed, and residents said they were afraid to take the wounded there anyway because they would probably be arrested. Abdullah Abazid, one of the few residents to give his name, said that 39 people had been killed in the past two days, and that bodies were still strewn in the street. [so wounded suffer at underground, makeshift infirmeries?] [*]
Others spoke of shortages of bandages and disinfectant. Wissam Tarif, the executive director of Insan, a human rights group, said residents he spoke with told him that doctors were using clothes as bandages and sewing needles to suture wounds.
It was unclear what kind of resistance if any was being offered. On the first day, residents said protesters had tried to block the roads with concrete barricades and cars. Mr. Abazid said Wednesday that protesters had destroyed the stairs to two mosques to prevent snipers from taking positions in the minarets and that people were thrusting wrapped sticks out their front doors to determine whether others snipers were near.
Though he said soldiers had withdrawn from the Omari Mosque, a landmark in the town that has served as a headquarters for demonstrators, they still feared an attack. “People are protecting the mosque with their bare chests,” he said.
In some ways, the isolation of the town was replayed in the isolation of each neighborhood. Residents often knew nothing beyond what was happening on their street, offering accounts over the phone of what they could see from their windows.
“There is a huge element of fear inside the city,” Mr. Tarif said. “People are afraid for their lives, for their families. People are afraid of the night, when houses are raided.” [*]
Reporting was contributed by Ranya Kadri from the Jordanian-Syrian border, Hwaida Saad from Beirut and employees of The New York Times from Beirut and Damascus, Syria.

UN nuclear agency says for first time that Syria tried to build nuclear reactor

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/un-nuclear-agency-says-for-first-time-that-syria-tried-to-build-nuclear-reactor/2011/04/28/AFxgzW5E_story.html
UN nuclear agency says for first time that Syria tried to build nuclear reactor
By Associated Press, Thursday, April 28, 11:31 AM [Syria] [UN] [UN’s IAEA] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [meanwhile, the unfinished business of what Syria attempted to do covertly in WMD] [in September 2007, the Israelis when into Syria a blewup a facility rumored to be nuclear production of enriched uranium or similar] [confirmation, more or less] [*]
PARIS — The U.N. nuclear agency on Thursday said for the first time that a target destroyed by Israeli warplanes in the Syrian desert in 2007 was a covertly built nuclear reactor, countering assertions by Syria that it had no atomic secrets to hide. [and Syrians bulldozed it immediate so satellites couldn’t see what was there] [*]
Previous reports by the International Atomic Energy Agency have suggested that the structure hit could have been a nuclear reactor. Thursday’s comments by IAEA chief Yukiya Amano were the first time the agency has said so unequivocally. [*]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/un-nuclear-agency-says-for-first-time-that-syria-tried-to-build-nuclear-reactor/2011/04/28/AFxgzW5E_story.html
UN nuclear agency says for first time that Syria tried to build nuclear reactor
By Associated Press, Thursday, April 28, 11:31 AM [Syria] [UN] [UN’s IAEA] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [meanwhile, the unfinished business of what Syria attempted to do covertly in WMD] [in September 2007, the Israelis when into Syria a blewup a facility rumored to be nuclear production of enriched uranium or similar] [confirmation, more or less] [*]
PARIS — The U.N. nuclear agency on Thursday said for the first time that a target destroyed by Israeli warplanes in the Syrian desert in 2007 was a covertly built nuclear reactor, countering assertions by Syria that it had no atomic secrets to hide. [and Syrians bulldozed it immediate so satellites couldn’t see what was there] [*]
Previous reports by the International Atomic Energy Agency have suggested that the structure hit could have been a nuclear reactor. Thursday’s comments by IAEA chief Yukiya Amano were the first time the agency has said so unequivocally. [*]
By aligning the IAEA with the U.S., which first asserted three years ago that the bombed target was a nuclear reactor, the comments will increase pressure on Syria to stop stonewalling agency requests for more information on its nuclear activities. [*]
Amano spoke during a news conference meant to focus on the Fukushima nuclear disaster after a visit to the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development to discuss clean-up efforts at Japan’s tsunami-ravaged nuclear plant.
“The facility that was … destroyed by Israel was a nuclear reactor under construction,” he asked in response to a question from The Associated Press, repeating to the AP afterward: “It was a reactor under construction.” [there it is: smoking gun] [*]
Previous IAEA language has been more circumspect. In a February report, Amano had said only that features of the bombed structure were “similar to what may be found at nuclear reactor sites.”
Israel has never publicly commented on the strike or even acknowledged carrying it out. The U.S. has shared intelligence with the agency that identifies the structure as a nearly completed nuclear reactor that, if finished, would have been able to produce plutonium for the fissile core of nuclear warheads. [*]
Syria denies allegations of any covert nuclear activity or interest in developing nuclear arms. Its refusal to allow IAEA inspectors new access to the bombed Al Kibar desert site past a visit three years ago has heightened suspicions that it had something to hide, along with its decision to level the destroyed structure and later build over it.
Drawing on the 2008 visit by its inspectors, the IAEA determined that the destroyed building’s size and structure fit specifications that a reactor would have had. The site also contained graphite and natural uranium particles that could be linked to nuclear activities. [*]
The IAEA is also trying to probe several other sites for possible undeclared nuclear activities linked to the bombed target but Damascus has been uncooperative on most counts, saying that most of the sites are restricted because of their military nature. [*]
Jahn reported from Vienna
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. © 2011 The Washington Post Co

Blast in Moroccan Cafe Kills at Least 14

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/29/world/africa/29morocco.html
April 28, 2011
Blast in Moroccan Cafe Kills at Least 14
By SOUAD MEKHENNET and J. DAVID GOODMAN [Morocco] [Maghreb] [northern Africa] [jihadis] [hydra] [Islamists too] [Islamic culture in its northern Africa iteration] [al Qaeda affiliate, at least] [probably associated with Algeria’s Salfist movement (now known as al Qaeda of the Maghreb or Islamic Maghreb] [constraining what king and state will do by way of reform] [use psci469b] [followup, December 27, 2010] [too early to know if jihadis but the mo looks familiar?] [*]
An explosion tore through a busy cafe frequented by foreigners in the Moroccan city of Marrakesh on Thursday, killing at least 14 people and wounding more than a dozen others, Moroccan officials said. [*]
The blast, which occurred around lunchtime in the central Djemaa el Fna Square, appeared to be a deliberate attack on a popular destination in the tourist-filled city, according to a

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/29/world/africa/29morocco.html
April 28, 2011
Blast in Moroccan Cafe Kills at Least 14
By SOUAD MEKHENNET and J. DAVID GOODMAN [Morocco] [Maghreb] [northern Africa] [jihadis] [hydra] [Islamists too] [Islamic culture in its northern Africa iteration] [al Qaeda affiliate, at least] [probably associated with Algeria’s Salfist movement (now known as al Qaeda of the Maghreb or Islamic Maghreb] [constraining what king and state will do by way of reform] [use psci469b] [followup, December 27, 2010] [too early to know if jihadis but the mo looks familiar?] [*]
An explosion tore through a busy cafe frequented by foreigners in the Moroccan city of Marrakesh on Thursday, killing at least 14 people and wounding more than a dozen others, Moroccan officials said. [*]
The blast, which occurred around lunchtime in the central Djemaa el Fna Square, appeared to be a deliberate attack on a popular destination in the tourist-filled city, according to a senior Moroccan intelligence official. [*]
Police and security officials were investigating the nature and cause of the blast. The Moroccan government characterized it as a criminal act but stopped short of describing it as terrorism.
Le Figaro, a French daily newspaper, reported that two French citizens and an Englishman were among the dead in the cafe, the Argana; Al Arabiya television reported at least 11 foreigners were killed in the blast. Djemaa el Fna is the main square in Marrakesh and has been called the cultural crossroads for all of Morocco. [*]
“There was a huge bang,” one tourist in the square, Andy Birnie of London, told The Associated Press. “There was debris raining down from the sky. Hundreds of people were running in panic, some towards the cafe, some away from the square. The whole front of the cafe is blown away."
Video posted online showed heavy damage to the cafe and people in the square crowding to observe the destruction.
In 2003, 12 suicide bombers attacked five targets in Casablanca, killing 31 people. [*]
Maïa de la Baume contributed reporting from Paris.

April 27, 2011

Pakistan Urged Afghanistan to Distance Itself From the West, Officials Say

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/world/asia/28kabul.html
April 27, 2011
Pakistan Urged Afghanistan to Distance Itself From the West, Officials Say
By ALISSA J. RUBIN [Pakistan] [Afghanistan] [Afghani-Pakistani relations?] [hub of the al Qaeda and Taliban activity in AfPak] [and of al Qaeda globally] [if accurate, the Pakistanis have openly crossed the US] [the US has pressured Pakistan—in my view, absolutely necessarily—and Pakistan is pushing back only way it knows how] [namely, exercises its influence in Afghanistan] [it’s told Karzai, look the Americans are preparing to leave and Afghanis have a choice: either Pakistan and China (and Pakistan is trying to make that option attractive) or India with Pakistan openly meddling in Afghanistan in perpetuity?] [use psci 355-455] [Karzai is crazy but he isn’t stupid: he knows Pakistan will meddle in perpetuity in any case and India provides Afghanistan leverage] [Pakistan saying, now that US is leaving you better prepare to be friendly with China rather than India for your future needs] [India will not accept it] [this is not the first time this has happened!] [why are the media acting as if?] [*]
KABUL, Afghanistan — With Afghan discussions under way about the future involvement of the United States in the country and the prospect of long-term military bases, the Pakistani government has urged Afghanistan to distance itself from the West and tie its future more tightly to that of China and Pakistan, according to Afghans and Americans who are knowledgeable about a meeting between the leaders

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/world/asia/28kabul.html
April 27, 2011
Pakistan Urged Afghanistan to Distance Itself From the West, Officials Say
By ALISSA J. RUBIN [Pakistan] [Afghanistan] [Afghani-Pakistani relations?] [hub of the al Qaeda and Taliban activity in AfPak] [and of al Qaeda globally] [if accurate, the Pakistanis have openly crossed the US] [the US has pressured Pakistan—in my view, absolutely necessarily—and Pakistan is pushing back only way it knows how] [namely, exercises its influence in Afghanistan] [it’s told Karzai, look the Americans are preparing to leave and Afghanis have a choice: either Pakistan and China (and Pakistan is trying to make that option attractive) or India with Pakistan openly meddling in Afghanistan in perpetuity?] [use psci 355-455] [Karzai is crazy but he isn’t stupid: he knows Pakistan will meddle in perpetuity in any case and India provides Afghanistan leverage] [Pakistan saying, now that US is leaving you better prepare to be friendly with China rather than India for your future needs] [India will not accept it] [this is not the first time this has happened!] [why are the media acting as if?] [*]
KABUL, Afghanistan — With Afghan discussions under way about the future involvement of the United States in the country and the prospect of long-term military bases, the Pakistani government has urged Afghanistan to distance itself from the West and tie its future more tightly to that of China and Pakistan, according to Afghans and Americans who are knowledgeable about a meeting between the leaders of Afghanistan and Pakistan. [*]
During a landmark April 16 meeting here in Kabul, for which the most powerful figures in the Pakistani government flew to Afghanistan, Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani of Pakistan suggested that Afghanistan needed to look to China, a power in the ascendance, rather than hewing closely to the United States. [in the short term, that could look attractive to a central-south Asia nation-state like Afghanistan] [but China is no picnic and Afghanistan knows it] [further, it knows that Pakistan will never stop using Afghanistan for strategic depth] [smart money: give Pakistan enough reason to hope to keep the courtship going] [but otherwise, I don’t see Afghan doing it] [what’s the one thing Pashtuns hate worse than capitalist westerners? Communist China who plays the capitalist game] [consider China’s treatment of Uighurs!] [*]
“There was a mention of China in the meeting, China as a country, as an emerging economic power, and that maybe we should reach out to a new global economic power,” said an Afghan official knowledgeable about the meeting. “And there was the suggestion that Afghanistan and Pakistan should strengthen relations.”
“You couldn’t tell exactly what they meant, whether China could possibly be an alternative to the United States, but they were saying it could help both countries,” the official said, referring to Pakistan and Afghanistan. The official asked not to be named because of the delicacy of the subject, which he was not authorized to speak about publicly.
The focus on China makes sense because it is a great power that would be acceptable to Afghanistan as an ally in ways that Russia never could be because of its history as a hated occupier of Afghanistan during the 1980s. And, from Pakistan’s point of view, China provides a counterbalance to India, its archenemy.
The effort to draw Afghanistan away from the United States and toward China was first reported in The Wall Street Journal, and it was one of several proposals floated by Pakistan at the meeting, according to the Afghan news media. In Afghanistan, a number of Pakistan’s other supposed proposals have gotten far more notice — although it is not clear that they were portrayed accurately or proposed at all. [I cannot understand why the media are presenting this as if it’s a new thing?] [Pakistan has been trying this same thing for decades] [it’s true that China and India are on the rise—perhaps that makes strategic decisions more timely?] [*]
All the leaks, however, reflect the fears of different Afghan factions about the direction of Afghanistan’s policy. One supposedly leaked list of Pakistan’s proposals stated that the Pakistanis had asked that members of the Haqqani network, a Taliban ally based in Pakistan, be given a share of government power. People close to the Afghan government emphatically denied that Pakistan requested anything like that. “It’s ridiculous,” said a government official.
Another proposal apparently brought up again was an offer from Pakistan to train the Afghan National Army, said an American official knowledgeable about the talks, but who also did not wish to quoted by name because of the delicacy of the subject. [that’s laughable] [also, what about the non-Pashtun Afghanis?] [can you imagine Tajiks and Uzbeks rushing to embrace China?] [*]
On Tuesday the Pakistani government released a statement saying that it rejected the “baseless assertions” made in the Wall Street Journal article and that “it fully supports an Afghan-led, Afghan-owned process for peace and reconciliation,” as well as “the key role of the United States in promoting stability, peace and harmony in Afghanistan.”
The statement noted that a trilateral meeting of Afghanistan, Pakistan and the United States was scheduled to be held in Islamabad, Pakistan’s capital, early next month, with the purpose of having “strategic coherence and clarity.”
Stepping back, the jockeying seems reminiscent of the 19th-century Great Game days when larger powers sought to claim and influence Afghanistan. Then, Russia and England were vying for power. Today there are many more geopolitical actors: the United States, China, Iran, Russia, India and above all Pakistan, with which Afghanistan has close ties and deep enmities.
Pakistan, more than any other country, has leverage over Afghanistan’s future because so much support for the insurgency in Afghanistan emanates from Pakistan’s tribal areas and because Afghanistan is landlocked and will always be reliant on Pakistan for supplies. If the Pakistani government moved decisively to halt the insurgent activity, the war in Afghanistan would be greatly diminished.
For now the Afghan government is weighing the Pakistani requests, according to people close to the government and to its opponents. Dr. Abdullah Abdullah, a onetime presidential opponent of President Hamid Karzai, [*]who served as Afghanistan’s foreign minister and has been allied with the United States, said he saw this as a moment when Afghanistan was faced with a choice about which way to go. He said that he had some knowledge of what was discussed at the meeting and that the Pakistanis had brought a document with them that outlined their thinking.
“They said that the goals of the United States are confusing and uncertain, the American force is not reliable, and their power is not a reliable power,” Dr. Abdullah said. [we now see why Ryan Crocker is on his way to relieve Eikenberry] [not to cast aspersions Eikenberrry, but a hardnose plotter is urgently needed] [*]
That perspective is influenced heavily by Pakistan’s increasingly negative view of the United States, said Mr. Abdullah — a point echoed by other officials knowledgeable about the meeting.
“One of the schools of thought in the Pakistani establishment is that the U.S. presence in Afghanistan is not for the stabilization of Afghanistan, but is for seizing Pakistan’s nuclear assets in due time,” Mr. Abdullah said.
However, the critical question for Afghanistan is what would it get out of closer ties with Pakistan and more distance from the United States, he said. “They have failed to recognize Afghanistan as a sovereign country,” he said, referring to Pakistani government officials. “They still consider it as their back yard.”
“There isn’t anything in it for Afghanistan,” he added. “It doesn’t talk about the Taliban sanctuaries in Pakistan, so it’s like giving Pakistan a protectorate role vis-à-vis Afghanistan,” he said. [have since Pakistan created after WWII] [they treat their fellow Pashtun horribly overall] [treat Afghanis like toys to be moved around game board] [*]
People close to the talks said Mr. Karzai was considering Pakistan’s points carefully, but had not yet committed to most of them and viewed them with caution because of Pakistan’s long history of destabilizing Afghanistan through its support for the Taliban. [that’s called leading them on, and it’s what you’d expect of Karzai] [*]
“The discussions were a good start; there are many issues to be discussed,” said an official close to the talks. “Of course it’s a long way to go because in terms of our past experience with Pakistan, we would need to see some serious, pragmatic steps.”

Fatah and Hamas Announce Outline of Deal

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/world/middleeast/28mideast.html
April 27, 2011
Fatah and Hamas Announce Outline of Deal
By ETHAN BRONNERand ISABEL KERSHNER [Palestine] [domestic intersects with foreign policy] [a deal between Hamas and PA?] [WTF?] [a blow to Israel, who counts on PA not being able to get its house in oder] [will this create movement between Israel and Palestine?] [I don’t see how PA could expect Israel ot negotiate with Hamas absent Hamas making some kind of statement that could possibly be considered recognition of Israel’s right to exist??] [really interesting and surprising, though it’s been clear for couple weeks big things were in the works] [*]
JERUSALEM — The two main Palestinian factions, Fatah and Hamas, announced Wednesday that they were putting aside years of bitter rivalry to create an interim unity government and hold elections within a year, a surprise move that promised to reshape the diplomatic landscape of the Middle East. [saying it and doing are two different things?] [*]
The deal, brokered in secret talks by the caretaker Egyptian government, was announced at a news conference in Cairo where the two negotiators referred to each side as brothers and declared a new chapter in the Palestinian struggle for independence, hobbled in recent years by the split between the Fatah-run West Bank and Hamas-run Gaza.
It was the first tangible sign that the upheaval across the Arab world, especially the Egyptian revolution, was having an impact on the Palestinians, who have been losing faith in American-sponsored peace negotiations with Israel and seem now to be

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/world/middleeast/28mideast.html
April 27, 2011
Fatah and Hamas Announce Outline of Deal
By ETHAN BRONNERand ISABEL KERSHNER [Palestine] [domestic intersects with foreign policy] [a deal between Hamas and PA?] [WTF?] [a blow to Israel, who counts on PA not being able to get its house in oder] [will this create movement between Israel and Palestine?] [I don’t see how PA could expect Israel ot negotiate with Hamas absent Hamas making some kind of statement that could possibly be considered recognition of Israel’s right to exist??] [really interesting and surprising, though it’s been clear for couple weeks big things were in the works] [*]
JERUSALEM — The two main Palestinian factions, Fatah and Hamas, announced Wednesday that they were putting aside years of bitter rivalry to create an interim unity government and hold elections within a year, a surprise move that promised to reshape the diplomatic landscape of the Middle East. [saying it and doing are two different things?] [*]
The deal, brokered in secret talks by the caretaker Egyptian government, was announced at a news conference in Cairo where the two negotiators referred to each side as brothers and declared a new chapter in the Palestinian struggle for independence, hobbled in recent years by the split between the Fatah-run West Bank and Hamas-run Gaza.
It was the first tangible sign that the upheaval across the Arab world, especially the Egyptian revolution, was having an impact on the Palestinians, who have been losing faith in American-sponsored peace negotiations with Israel and seem now to be turning more to fellow Arabs. But the years of bitterness will not be easily overcome, and both sides warned of potential obstacles ahead. [from the standpoint of movement in Israeli-Palestinian conflict, it could prove propitious?] [again, I don’t see how anyone could expect the Israelis to deal with Hamas without something big in return like Hamas dropping destruction of Israel from Hamas’ charter] [but could that possibly be in the works?] [if so, movement could happen relatively quickly?] [*]
Israel, feeling increasingly surrounded by unfriendly forces, denounced the unity deal as dooming future peace talks since Hamas seeks its destruction. [*]“The Palestinian Authority has to choose between peace with Israel and peace with Hamas,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared in a televised statement. The Obama administration warned that Hamas was a terrorist organization unfit for peacemaking. [I can’t imagine Israel saying anything positive unless and until Hamas said something about Israel’s right to exist and peace] [but if Hamas did so, Israel would have little excuse not to deal with Palestinians] [*] The deal brings with it the risk of alienating the Western support that the Palestinian Authority has enjoyed. Azzam al-Ahmad, the Fatah negotiator, said that Salam Fayyad, the prime minister in the West Bank who is despised by Hamas, would not be part of the interim government. It is partly because of Mr. Fayyad, and the trust he inspires in Washington, that hundreds of millions of dollars are provided annually to the Palestinian Authority by Congress. Without that aid, the Palestinian Authority would face great difficulties.
The announcement was sure to fuel a debate on whether Mr. Netanyahu had done enough in his two years in power to forge a deal with the Palestinian Authority led by President Mahmoud Abbas and Mr. Fayyad, widely considered the most moderate leaders the Palestinians have ever had. [let’s face it: whether you like Bibi or not, Israel has been dragging its collective feet since Oslo] [that’s not Bibi’s fault particularly] [Israeli politics have migrated right—and away from 2-state solution, with or without Bibi] [*]
The deal also highlighted Egypt’s evolving foreign policy, its increasing regional influence and the challenges that posed for Israel. The new Egyptian government pursued Palestinian negotiations aggressively and has recognized the Muslim Brotherhood, which has deep ties to Hamas, and is reconsidering a natural gas deal with Israel.
Relations between Fatah, the mainstream secularist movement led by Mr. Abbas, and Hamas, the Islamic militant group, have deteriorated since Hamas won parliamentary elections in 2006. They ruptured a year later when Hamas seized full control of Gaza, the coastal enclave, after a brief factional war, routing Fatah forces there and limiting the influence of Mr. Abbas and his Palestinian Authority to the West Bank. [*]
A desire for unity has been one goal that ordinary Palestinians in both areas have consistently said they sought. Until now it has proved elusive and leaders of the two factions have spoken of each other in vicious terms and jailed each other’s activists.
But with the Palestinians seeking international recognition of statehood at the United Nations by September, Mr. Abbas has repeatedly said that unity must be restored for a credible case to be made. Other recent developments also played a role. [*]
As Mr. Ahmad said after the news conference in Cairo: “The changes in the Arab region and the political upheaval contributed to reducing the pressure on the Palestinian factions, and by pressure I mean the negative kind of pressure.” He said that he was referring to “the changing rules of the game in the region.”
Mkhaimar Abusada, a professor of political science at Al-Azhar University in Gaza, said that the Palestinian Authority’s failure to reach an agreement with Israel and the anger following an American veto of a United Nations Security Council resolution against Israeli settlement construction in February encouraged Fatah to come to an agreement with Hamas. [*]The Islamic group, he said, was motivated to get closer to Fatah by regional changes, especially the protests in Syria, where Hamas’s politburo is based. If President Bashar al-Assad of Syria were to fall, Hamas might no longer be able to use Syria as a base or enjoy the protection, money and arms the country has extended. [I don’t care with it’s Lebanon, Syria, or Palestine] [either they have got to accept that Israel is there to stay or they cannot possibly move forward embracing modernity] [but if they did so, they would put pressure back on Israel] [*]
“We have ended a painful period in the history of the Palestinian people where Palestinian division had prevailed,” Moussa Abu Marzouk, a representative of Hamas who negotiated the deal, said at the Cairo news conference. “We gave the occupation a great opportunity to expand the settlements because of this division. Today we turn this page and open a new page.”
When he spoke at the news conference, Mr. Ahmad of Fatah recalled the chants of young Palestinian demonstrators mimicking the Tunisian and Egyptian chants: “The people want to bring down the regime.”
“To all the Palestinian youth who went out saying, ‘The people want to end the division’ and ‘The people want to end the occupation,’ we say what you demanded was achieved today,” he said, adding that the period of division had taught both sides “a hard lesson in confronting the occupation.”
He said that Israeli officials had warned Mr. Abbas not to collaborate with Hamas but that “he did not heed the warning, and he responded, ‘Yes, we want Hamas.’ ” [*]
The Fatah-led Palestinian Authority has negotiated for a two-state solution with Israel, whereas Hamas says Israel has no right to exist and continues to fire rockets at Israeli towns.
The Palestinian negotiators offered few details of the proposed transitional unity government, saying that it would be composed of neutral professionals and that the leaders of each side would work out details. All the Palestinian factions are to meet next week to sign the agreement.
Mahmoud al-Zahar, a Hamas leader, told Al Jazeera Television from Cairo that the sides had agreed to changes in the interim leadership of the Palestine Liberation Organization, a tribunal for elections and a date for the elections. The P.L.O. excludes Hamas, which has long sought entry.
Hamas and Fatah will together nominate members of the technocratic government and a 12-judge election tribunal. He also said that an agreement was reached to set up an oversight committee to regulate security.
In November, officials from the two movements met in Damascus but failed to reach an agreement because of differences on security. It seemed likely that Fatah security forces, which work closely with the Israeli Army, would continue to rule in the West Bank, and that Hamas security would continue in Gaza with a tacit agreement not to arrest each other’s activists.
The last round of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks broke down soon after they started last September when an Israeli moratorium on construction in West Bank settlements expired. The international powers have been working to get the sides to resume negotiations, and Mr. Netanyahu has recently been considering making an offer to the Palestinian Authority to try to pre-empt a United Nations vote. He is due to address a joint session of Congress in a month.
But with this latest shift in Palestinian politics, Mr. Netanyahu may also shift tactics. “I think the very idea of the reconciliation shows the weakness of the Palestinian Authority, and leads one to wonder whether Hamas will take control over Judea and Samaria, as it did over Gaza,” Mr. Netanyahu said in his statement, using the biblical name for the West Bank.
Earlier Wednesday, Mr. Netanyahu instructed the Israeli security establishment to take all necessary measures to ensure the enforcement of Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza amid reports of plans for another international flotilla. Mr. Netanyahu met with his senior ministers and security officials and said that diplomatic efforts should continue to prevent the flotilla from setting out.
Last May, Israeli naval commandos raided a flotilla trying to breach the blockade of Gaza and killed nine pro-Palestinian activists on a Turkish vessel after violence broke out. The episode stirred international outrage and caused a crisis in relations between Israel and Turkey. [I just don’t know whether I buy it or not?] [so long as PA and Hamas have Israel to blame, they can live together] [but that means stasis: it means not moving Palestine into modern nation-state that is part of global economy] [what’s the point of a compact with Hamas with that future?] [it doesn’t seem very convincing to me] [these two have killed each other, tortured each other, terrorized each other more than Israel] [how do they just set all that aside?] [I’’ll believe it when I see it] [Abass is the opposite of charismatic—standing next to Hamas he’ll look even worse; he’ll appear uncharismatic, boring, and impotent at the same time] [what does that buy him?] [*]
David D. Kirkpatrick and Mona El-Naggar contributed reporting from Cairo, and Fares Akram from Gaza.

Diplomat Is Expected to Receive Afghan Post

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/asia/27crocker.html
April 26, 2011
Diplomat Is Expected to Receive Afghan Post
By HELENE COOPER [Obama white house] [Ryan Crocker, to Afghanistan?] [Bush’s surge ambassador to Iraq?] [*]
WASHINGTON — President Obama will most likely soon nominate the veteran diplomat Ryan C. Crocker to be the next United States ambassador to Afghanistan, an administration official said Tuesday.
The move would pair Mr. Crocker, a former United States ambassador to Iraq, with Gen. David H. Petraeus, the Afghanistan war commander he worked with closely while the two men were in Iraq during the Bush administration. It would also begin what is expected to be a year of changes in Mr. Obama’s war command. Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, are both expected to leave their

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/asia/27crocker.html
April 26, 2011
Diplomat Is Expected to Receive Afghan Post
By HELENE COOPER [Obama white house] [Ryan Crocker, to Afghanistan?] [Bush’s surge ambassador to Iraq?] [*]
WASHINGTON — President Obama will most likely soon nominate the veteran diplomat Ryan C. Crocker to be the next United States ambassador to Afghanistan, an administration official said Tuesday.
The move would pair Mr. Crocker, a former United States ambassador to Iraq, with Gen. David H. Petraeus, the Afghanistan war commander he worked with closely while the two men were in Iraq during the Bush administration. It would also begin what is expected to be a year of changes in Mr. Obama’s war command. Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, are both expected to leave their posts soon.
Mr. Crocker would succeed Karl W. Eikenberry, a retired Army lieutenant general and the current ambassador, who also plans to leave soon, the administration official said. General Eikenberry has had a distant relationship with President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan ever since a leaked diplomatic cable surfaced in which General Eikenberry criticized Mr. Karzai as an inadequate strategic partner for the United States.
Mr. Crocker would be taking over the embassy in Afghanistan just as the Obama administration is expected to begin withdrawing American troops from the country, a process that is expected to take several years.
The pending appointment of Mr. Crocker was first reported by The Associated Press. The administration official said a final decision had not yet been made.
Mr. Crocker has also held senior diplomatic posts in Pakistan, Lebanon, Syria and Egypt. He took over as the American ambassador to Iraq in 2007, just as President George W. Bush’s troop increase was getting under way, and he worked closely with General Petraeus in the ensuing years.
Mr. Crocker is the dean of the George Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M University.

Detainees’ Lawyers Can’t Click on Leaked Documents

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/guantanamo-files-detainees-lawyers-restricted-leaked-documents.html
April 26, 2011
Detainees’ Lawyers Can’t Click on Leaked Documents
By SCOTT SHANE
WASHINGTON — Anyone surfing the Internet this week is free to read leaked documents about the prisoners held by the American military at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, to print them out or e-mail them to friends.
Except, that is, for the lawyers who represent the prisoners.
On Monday, hours after WikiLeaks, The New York Times and other news organizations began publishing the documents online, the Justice Department informed Guantánamo defense lawyers that the documents remained legally classified even after they were made public.
Because the lawyers have security clearances, they are obligated to treat the readily available files “in accordance with all relevant security precautions and safeguards” — handling them, for example, only in secure government facilities, said the notice from the department’s Court Security Office.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/guantanamo-files-detainees-lawyers-restricted-leaked-documents.html
April 26, 2011
Detainees’ Lawyers Can’t Click on Leaked Documents
By SCOTT SHANE
WASHINGTON — Anyone surfing the Internet this week is free to read leaked documents about the prisoners held by the American military at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, to print them out or e-mail them to friends.
Except, that is, for the lawyers who represent the prisoners.
On Monday, hours after WikiLeaks, The New York Times and other news organizations began publishing the documents online, the Justice Department informed Guantánamo defense lawyers that the documents remained legally classified even after they were made public.
Because the lawyers have security clearances, they are obligated to treat the readily available files “in accordance with all relevant security precautions and safeguards” — handling them, for example, only in secure government facilities, said the notice from the department’s Court Security Office.
It is only the latest absurdist challenge posed by the flood of classified material obtained by WikiLeaks over the past year: field reports from the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq; State Department cables; and now the military’s risk assessments of 700 past or present Guantánamo prisoners.
Joseph Margulies, a Northwestern law professor who represents Abu Zubaydah, the detainee accused of being a terrorist facilitator who was waterboarded by the Central Intelligence Agency, said he could not comment on the newly disclosed assessment of his client, which is posted on The Times Web site.
“Everyone else can talk about it,” Mr. Margulies said. “I can’t talk about it.”
The ballooning category of public-but-classified documents has befuddled officials and led to a series of unusual pronouncements from government agencies and those who work with them.
In December, Columbia University warned international relations students that commenting on the documents disclosed by WikiLeaks online or linking to them might endanger their chances of getting a government job. The same month, the United States Agency for International Development told workers that viewing the documents on an unclassified computer at work or home could violate security rules that govern their employment. In February, an Air Force unit cautioned that employees and even their family members could be prosecuted under the Espionage Act for looking at the WikiLeaks documents at home.
Some of those warnings were quickly modified or withdrawn after attracting public ridicule. But the general principle that the leaked files remain classified remains in effect, with varying consequences.
Some foreigners applying for asylum in the United States have attached diplomatic cables printed from the Internet that describe repression in their native countries — requiring the Department of Homeland Security to store their applications in special safes and to apply cumbersome security rules.
State Department employees have confided that they read leaked cables on newspaper Web sites at home rather than risk trouble by viewing them at work. A Times reporter who appeared with a State Department official on a recent panel was advised not to show leaked cables as slides — the official was prohibited from looking at them.
But the prohibition for Guantánamo lawyers has serious implications, said Mr. Margulies, who wrote a book on Guantánamo and has represented five prisoners there. Decisions about who gets released have been influenced by politics and public pressure as much as by legal standards, he said.
“It’s important to be able to use these documents to shape and inform the discussion in the public square,” he said. If a leaked risk assessment contains clearly disproved accusations about a prisoner, a lawyer should be able to publicly refute it, he said.
On Tuesday, Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. told reporters that he considered the dissemination of the classified Guantánamo documents, prepared under the Bush administration, to be “deplorable.” And he said the Obama administration would not make public, even with redactions, its own assessments of the 240 prisoners who were still at Guantánamo when it took office in 2009.
The new files, Mr. Holder said, “involve a whole variety of information gleaned from a wide assortment of sources, some of which are classified.”
“That being the case,” he continued, “I would be concerned about putting out information that was incomplete.”
Meanwhile, Dean Boyd, a Justice Department spokesman, said the department was trying to answer questions posed by lawyers for Guantánamo prisoners about the restrictions on using the leaked documents.
“We’re working through these issues right now,” Mr. Boyd said. “We simply want to ensure that any information released by WikiLeaks is handled properly.”
At the Congressional Research Service, the branch of the Library of Congress that advises senators and representatives, employees were advised in December that they could not quote the classified documents obtained by WikiLeaks in their reports. Some analysts with the service grumbled privately that members of Congress were asking about diplomatic cables, but they were not permitted to quote the cables in reply.
Janine D’Addario, a spokeswoman for the research service, said she could not say whether the restrictions had hampered its work because its research was supposed to be confidential. But Steven Aftergood, director of the Project on Government Secrecy at the Federation of American Scientists, said there was no question that the researchers were handicapped as they reported on the wars, foreign relations or Guantánamo.
“It’s the definition of self-defeating,” Mr. Aftergood said. “It doesn’t serve the interest of Congress or the public.”
Mr. Aftergood said the problems had resulted from the unprecedented scale of the WikiLeaks disclosures, which the rules did not anticipate. Tens of thousands of military documents have been disclosed, and about 8,000, so far, of a cache of 250,000 diplomatic cables.
“The surge of classified documents into the public domain has tied the system up in knots,” he said. The rush to impose patently pointless restrictions “does demonstrate a disappointing lack of agility in the security system,” Mr. Aftergood said.
But Peter J. Spiro, who teaches international law at Temple University, said the government’s dilemma was real. The law is clear: only a document that is properly declassified loses its protections. And if the government ruled that classified documents disclosed to the public were automatically declassified, that would simply create a more powerful incentive for disgruntled government employees to leak.
“The trouble is, it makes the government look totally ham-handed,” Mr. Spiro said. “There are documents on the front page that everyone’s talking about, and it looks ridiculous to pretend they’re not there.”

Panetta and Petraeus in Line for Top Security Posts

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/us/28team.html
April 27, 2011
Panetta and Petraeus in Line for Top Security Posts
By ELISABETH BUMILLER and MARK MAZZETTI [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [the second-year shuffle] [NSC principals and others] [SecDef Gates was already scheduled to leave this year] [now, with Mullen’s second term up, the possibility for a musical chairs in the NSC] [if Panettat to SecDef, might Petraeus go to CIA?] [and so on] [followup] [use psci 355-455] [*]
WASHINGTON — President Obama is expected this week to name Leon E. Panetta, the director of central intelligence, as defense secretary and Gen. David H. Petraeus, the top American commander in Afghanistan, as director of the C.I.A., administration officials said Wednesday. [wow] [that was quick] [*]
The appointments, set in motion by the impending retirement of Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, are part of a significant rearrangement of Mr. Obama’s national security team that will include several new assignments within the closest circle of his diplomatic, military

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/us/28team.html
April 27, 2011
Panetta and Petraeus in Line for Top Security Posts
By ELISABETH BUMILLER and MARK MAZZETTI [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [the second-year shuffle] [NSC principals and others] [SecDef Gates was already scheduled to leave this year] [now, with Mullen’s second term up, the possibility for a musical chairs in the NSC] [if Panettat to SecDef, might Petraeus go to CIA?] [and so on] [followup] [use psci 355-455] [*]
WASHINGTON — President Obama is expected this week to name Leon E. Panetta, the director of central intelligence, as defense secretary and Gen. David H. Petraeus, the top American commander in Afghanistan, as director of the C.I.A., administration officials said Wednesday. [wow] [that was quick] [*]
The appointments, set in motion by the impending retirement of Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, are part of a significant rearrangement of Mr. Obama’s national security team that will include several new assignments within the closest circle of his diplomatic, military and intelligence advisers.
Mr. Gates is expected to step down this summer.
The changes at the top of Mr. Obama’s national security team have long been expected.
Not long after Mr. Gates leaves, the term will expire for the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen, who, like the defense secretary, was appointed by President George W. Bush. And Deputy Secretary of State James B. Steinberg has announced that he is leaving for an academic job — removing one of the crucial players in Mr. Obama’s efforts to manage China’s rise. [*]
But Mr. Gates’s role is the most critical. He often allied with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton — who has said that she intends to leave the administration when this term ends — including persuading Mr. Obama to start the military buildup in Afghanistan in 2009. Together they won many other battles, but they visibly split last month on the military intervention in Libya.
In naming Mr. Panetta to the Pentagon, Mr. Obama is selecting an already confirmed cabinet official with strong ties to both the White House and Capitol Hill. In selecting General Petraeus, who at least initially did not have a strong relationship with the Obama White House, the president is retaining a high-profile military official who has extensive knowledge of intelligence gathering in both Afghanistan and Iraq in recent years.
The president is also likely soon to nominate the veteran diplomat Ryan C. Crocker as the next United States ambassador to Afghanistan. That move would, at least for a while, reunite Mr. Crocker, a former ambassador to Iraq, with General Petraeus, with whom he worked closely in Iraq during the Bush administration. [wow] [see elsewhere in today’s govt] [*]

French and Italian Leaders Seek Tighter Controls on Migration

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/europe/27rome.html
April 26, 2011
French and Italian Leaders Seek Tighter Controls on Migration
By RACHEL DONADIO and ALAN COWELL [Italy] [Rome] [proximity to Libya, Italy gets a lot of migration from Northern Africa] [but this is about immigration in Euope more generally] [democratization] [Arab Awakening inevitably creates lots of refugees] [followup] [Italy is the frontline of war refugee immigration flow as the closest] [*]
ROME — Facing a surge in undocumented migrants from North Africa, the leaders of France and Italy on Tuesday called for changes in the Schengen Agreement, which grants free passage across national frontiers in most of Western Europe.
The appeal, in a joint letter to the president of the European Commission, represented a remarkable request to change a pact that has become one of the European Union’s hallmark agreements. Under the treaty, which dates from 1985, 25 European Union member nations dismantled border controls for their own citizens and citizens of other countries.
Analysts said it was highly unlikely that the European Union would revise the agreement,

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/europe/27rome.html
April 26, 2011
French and Italian Leaders Seek Tighter Controls on Migration
By RACHEL DONADIO and ALAN COWELL [Italy] [Rome] [proximity to Libya, Italy gets a lot of migration from Northern Africa] [but this is about immigration in Euope more generally] [democratization] [Arab Awakening inevitably creates lots of refugees] [followup] [Italy is the frontline of war refugee immigration flow as the closest] [*]
ROME — Facing a surge in undocumented migrants from North Africa, the leaders of France and Italy on Tuesday called for changes in the Schengen Agreement, which grants free passage across national frontiers in most of Western Europe.
The appeal, in a joint letter to the president of the European Commission, represented a remarkable request to change a pact that has become one of the European Union’s hallmark agreements. Under the treaty, which dates from 1985, 25 European Union member nations dismantled border controls for their own citizens and citizens of other countries.
Analysts said it was highly unlikely that the European Union would revise the agreement, and many said the joint request appeared to be aimed more at reducing political tensions between and within the two countries. [*]
The looser borders have begun to pose problems of illegal immigration, as immigrants who arrive in one European Union member state can travel freely to others. The joint request reflected the severity of the migration crisis — in practical terms as well as for Italy and France’s domestic politics, in which anti-immigrant parties have substantial influence.
“Neither of us wants to deny Schengen, but in exceptional circumstances, we think there should be variations to the Schengen treaty,” Italy’s prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi, said at a joint news conference here with President Nicolas Sarkozy of France, after weeks of tensions.
“We want Schengen to work, and to make sure that it works, it has to be reformed,” Mr. Sarkozy added.
In a joint letter to José Manuel Barroso, the president of the European Commission, the two leaders called on the European Union to “examine the possibility of temporarily establishing internal border controls in the case of exceptional difficulties in handling common external borders, on the basis of conditions to be defined in the future.”
France and Italy also called on the European Union to broaden the role of its border agency, Frontex, to allow it to repatriate illegal immigrants, and to “redefine” Europe’s regulations for immigrants from third countries. Under current regulations, the European country where immigrants first arrive is responsible for determining their status.
Faced with the likelihood of a wave of immigrants arriving in Europe from Libya, they also called for a common European Union policy on those seeking political asylum. Each country currently has its own standards.
In recent weeks, Italy has been reluctant to become involved in the intervention championed by France to oust Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi from Libya, a former Italian colony. France has been reluctant to admit third-country immigrants from Italy — most of them from Tunisia, which historically has had close ties to France.
Italy infuriated France by issuing some Tunisians travel papers allowing them to leave Italy for France, which has tried to block them at its borders with Italy.
Rachel Donadio reported from Rome, and Alan Cowell from London.

Sinai Explosion Cuts Israel Gas Supply

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/world/middleeast/28sinai.html
April 27, 2011
Sinai Explosion Cuts Israel Gas Supply
By ISABEL KERSHNER [Israel] [domestic politics often intersects with foreign policy] [protests in Tel Aviv show not all Israelis have gone nuts?] [another gas disruption in Sinai for Israelis?] [as I recall there was one of these not long after Mubarak stepped down?] [[it could be any number of things—wait for more info!] [*]
JERUSALEM — An explosion early Wednesday on a gas pipeline in the northern Sinai Peninsula cut supplies of Egyptian natural gas to Israel for the second time this year, according to Israeli and Egyptian officials, in what many here suspected was an act of sabotage by local Bedouin or possibly Palestinians. [*]
The blast came as the authorities in Cairo began to investigate public suspicions of corruption and mismanagement by the former Mubarak government in its gas export deal with Israel. It also prompted renewed calls in Israel for the country to reduce its dependency on outside sources and speed up development of its own newly found gas fields.
“Regional instability is likely to continue in the near term, and we must attain energy

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/world/middleeast/28sinai.html
April 27, 2011
Sinai Explosion Cuts Israel Gas Supply
By ISABEL KERSHNER [Israel] [domestic politics often intersects with foreign policy] [protests in Tel Aviv show not all Israelis have gone nuts?] [another gas disruption in Sinai for Israelis?] [as I recall there was one of these not long after Mubarak stepped down?] [[it could be any number of things—wait for more info!] [*]
JERUSALEM — An explosion early Wednesday on a gas pipeline in the northern Sinai Peninsula cut supplies of Egyptian natural gas to Israel for the second time this year, according to Israeli and Egyptian officials, in what many here suspected was an act of sabotage by local Bedouin or possibly Palestinians. [*]
The blast came as the authorities in Cairo began to investigate public suspicions of corruption and mismanagement by the former Mubarak government in its gas export deal with Israel. It also prompted renewed calls in Israel for the country to reduce its dependency on outside sources and speed up development of its own newly found gas fields.
“Regional instability is likely to continue in the near term, and we must attain energy independence,” Danny Ayalon, the deputy foreign minister of Israel, said in a statement.
Details of who carried out the attack remained unclear. Egyptian security officials said a package containing TNT caused the blast. There were no immediate reports of casualties and it was not known how long repairs would take.
The flow of gas from the main terminal in Port Said, on the Mediterranean coast, was shut down to stifle flames that shot as high as 65 feet, The Associated Press reported.
While inspecting the site, Abdul-Wahab Mabrouk, the governor of North Sinai, said that the explosion had also damaged a local power plant and that gas leaks had forced people to evacuate their homes, according to The A.P. [*]
Egyptian gas makes up about 40 percent of Israel’s gas needs. Uzi Landau, Israel’s minister of national infrastructure, told Army Radio on Wednesday that there was enough gas in the pipeline for the next few days, after which the Israel Electricity Corporation, which is almost entirely state-owned, would have to come up with a solution.
Israeli officials said that the shortfall could be made up by the use of alternative fuels like coal and diesel, as well as the natural gas that Israel already produces.
“We always have that option,” said Maya Etzioni, spokeswoman for the Ministry of National Infrastructure. “We will not be left without electricity.”
Mr. Landau also told Army Radio that Israel had permitted additional Egyptian security forces to enter the Sinai in order to repair the pipeline, beyond the number of forces normally allowed in the area under the terms of the 1979 peace treaty between the two countries.
Egyptian officials said that supplies of Egyptian gas to Jordan were also interrupted by Wednesday’s blast.
Gas exports to Israel have been at the heart of public scrutiny in Egypt since the pipeline opened in 2008. The price at which Egypt sells gas to Israel has never been officially announced, but it is widely believed to be sold at a preferential rate and there has been widespread speculations of corruption and graft surrounding the secretive deal. Last week Egypt’s public prosecutor began questioning former President Hosni Mubarak, along with six other former officials, over the gas exports.
The gas supply from Egypt to Israel shut down for more than a month after four armed men stormed a north Sinai gas terminal on Feb. 5 and set off explosives there.
Bedouin tribes in the Sinai have long complained of discrimination by the Egyptian authorities and clashed with Egyptian security services as mass protests spread earlier this year, toppling Mr. Mubarak .
Mona El-Naggar contributed reporting from Cairo.

From a Qaddafi Daughter, a Glimpse Inside the Bunker

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/africa/27aisha.html
April 26, 2011
From a Qaddafi Daughter, a Glimpse Inside the Bunker
By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK [Libya] [Middle East proper, including the Gulf] [regimes continues slow, plodding, political-eco liberalization] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [NATO alliance providing air cover] [followup] [as many, many predicted, it has stalemated] [Aisha el Qaddafi showing the world what bunker sheik is these days?] [*]
TRIPOLI, Libya — Aisha el-Qaddafi, the daughter of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi of Libya, likes to tell her three young children bedtime stories about the afterlife. Now, she says, they are especially appropriate.
“To make them ready,” she said, “because in a time of war you never know when a rocket or a bomb might hit you, and that will be the end.”
In a rare interview at her charitable foundation here, Ms. Qaddafi, 36, a Libyan-trained lawyer who once worked on Saddam Hussein’s legal defense team, offered a glimpse into the fatalistic mind-set of the increasingly isolated family at the core of the battle for Libya, the bloodiest arena in the democratic uprising that is sweeping the region. [*]
She dismissed the rebels as “terrorists” but suggested that some former Qaddafi officials

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/africa/27aisha.html
April 26, 2011
From a Qaddafi Daughter, a Glimpse Inside the Bunker
By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK [Libya] [Middle East proper, including the Gulf] [regimes continues slow, plodding, political-eco liberalization] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [NATO alliance providing air cover] [followup] [as many, many predicted, it has stalemated] [Aisha el Qaddafi showing the world what bunker sheik is these days?] [*]
TRIPOLI, Libya — Aisha el-Qaddafi, the daughter of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi of Libya, likes to tell her three young children bedtime stories about the afterlife. Now, she says, they are especially appropriate.
“To make them ready,” she said, “because in a time of war you never know when a rocket or a bomb might hit you, and that will be the end.”
In a rare interview at her charitable foundation here, Ms. Qaddafi, 36, a Libyan-trained lawyer who once worked on Saddam Hussein’s legal defense team, offered a glimpse into the fatalistic mind-set of the increasingly isolated family at the core of the battle for Libya, the bloodiest arena in the democratic uprising that is sweeping the region. [*]
She dismissed the rebels as “terrorists” but suggested that some former Qaddafi officials who are now in the opposition’s governing council still “keep in touch with us.” She pleaded for dialogue and talked about democratic reforms. But she dismissed the rebels as unfit for such talks because of their use of violence, hurled personal barbs at President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and, at one point, appeared to disparage the basic idea of electoral democracy.
After arranging the interview last week, Ms. Qaddafi spoke for more than an hour late Sunday afternoon, just hours before NATO escalated its airstrikes with an attack that disrupted state television and another on the Libyan leader’s compound in Tripoli. Ms. Qaddafi, one of the many unofficial and sometimes rivalrous Qaddafi family power brokers who dominate Libya’s economic and political life, said the crisis had pulled the family together “like one hand.” [*]
Ms. Qaddafi said that she and her seven brothers “have a dialogue between us and exchange points of view” before anyone takes a major step in their common defense. She acknowledged that she had seen news reports that her siblings had proposed easing their father from power in a transition under the direction of her brother Seif al-Islam, but she declined to comment on the details.
She also pointedly declined to answer when asked if Abdel Fattah Younes, a top rebel military official who was a longtime interior minister, was among the leaders who had kept in touch with the Qaddafi family.
“They say to us that they have their own families, daughters, sons, spouses, and they fear for them, and that is why they have taken those positions,” she said of those rebel leaders. “There are many members of the council who have worked with my father for 42 years and been loyal to him. Do you think they would just go like that?”
Instead of the angry defiance and vows of retribution issued by her father and her brother Seif, Ms. Qaddafi focused on how the West would rue the chaos she predicted would engulf a post-Qaddafi Libya. When pressed repeatedly on how her family could stay in power, she said more than once, “We have a great hope in God.”
Ms. Qaddafi has appeared in public twice since the bombings began, before cheering crowds at the colonel’s compound, but she seldom speaks in public. During the interview, she wore close-fitting jeans, Gucci shoes and a pale scarf that did not cover her long blond hair. At times, she laughed at her fate, recalling how the United Nations, after “begging” her to be an envoy for peace in the past, has now referred her to the International Criminal Court. Her staff presented an illustrated biography entitled “Princess of Peace.”
She said her experience as a volunteer on Saddam Hussein’s defense team offered relevant parallels. [I hate marketing people everywhere] [*]
“The opposition in Iraq told the West that when you come to Iraq they will greet you with roses,” she said. “Almost 10 years later they are receiving the Americans with bullets, and, believe me, the situation in Libya will be much worse.”
She taunted both President Obama and Mrs. Clinton, saying that Mr. Obama had “achieved nothing so far” and laughing as she posed a question to Mrs. Clinton: “Why didn’t you leave the White House when you found out about the cheating of your husband?”
Even as she deprecated the American leaders, she repeatedly called for talks. “The world should come together at a round table,” she said, “under the auspices of international organizations.”
At the same time, she ruled out any dialogue with the Libyan rebels who now control the eastern half of the country; its commercial center, Misurata; and the western mountain towns of Zintan and Nalut, dismissing them as “terrorists” who “are just fighting for the sake of fighting.”
Under her brother Seif’s unofficial leadership, she said, the Libyan government had been on the verge of unveiling a constitution as a step toward democratic reform when “this tragedy happened and spoiled things.”
At the same time, she also derided, and possibly misunderstood, the basic ideas of checks and balances and public accountability in an electoral democracy. “Let me say something about the Western elections that they say are a democratic system of ruling,” she volunteered, referring to handwritten notes she had prepared for the interview. In an election where one candidate won with 50 percent of the vote and another lost with 48 percent, she asked, “Do you call this democracy? Just this one vote? What happened to the 48 percent who said ‘no’?”
She complained of the “betrayal” of Arabs whose causes her father had supported and the Western allies to whom he had turned over his weapons of mass destruction. “Is this the reward that we get?” she asked. “This would lead every country that has weapons of mass destruction to keep them or make more so they will not meet the same fate as Libya.”
Without Colonel Qaddafi, she predicted, illegal immigrants from Africa would pour into Europe, Islamic radicals would establish a base on the Mediterranean’s shores, and Libyan tribes would turn their guns on one another.
Citing unconfirmed Libyan intelligence reports, she asserted that the weapons-starved rebels had actually sold arms to the Islamist groups Hamas and Hezbollah. “When my father was there, see how safe Europe was and how safe Libya was?” she asked. [bogeymen words for Western consumption?] [*]
Ms. Qaddafi initially dismissed reports of the handful of nights two months ago when protesters took over the streets of Tripoli and almost every other big city, pulling down Qaddafi posters and burning police stations. Then, told that journalists had seen the evidence, she argued the destruction proved they were not civilian protesters but “saboteurs.”
She also appeared to dismiss witnesses’ accounts of Colonel Qaddafi’s forces shooting unarmed demonstrators. “I am not sure that happened,” she said. “But let’s say it did: it was limited in scope.”
As for her father’s state of mind, she said with a laugh that he was not worried at all. “He is as strong as the world knows him,” she said. “He is quite sure that the Libyan people are loyal to him.”
Her family still hoped, she said, to go back to its previous position, what she called “a return to normal.” But, she added, “of course we can expedite that if NATO will stop bombing us.”

Syria Tries to Defend Its Record to United Nations

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/middleeast/27nations.html
April 26, 2011
Syria Tries to Defend Its Record to United Nations
By NEIL MacFARQUHAR [Syria] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [Syria pretends to be a modern secular republic, but is far from it] [no monarchy but long run by a minority sect (al Assads) and the Baath Party] [Bashir has seemingly lost control but cannot seem to suss out how to resolve things?] [followup] [hard to know as Syria keeps most western media out] [but appears al Assad has decided to crush the rebellion?] [and rumors trickling to West now have UN calling Syria before the bar?] [*]
UNITED NATIONS — Syria, facing mounting global pressure over its decisions to move tanks into cities against its own citizens and to shoot unarmed demonstrators, tried to defend its record against blunt denunciations from the United States and others on Tuesday at the United Nations, where the Security Council is struggling to forge a collective response.
Ambassador Bashar Jaafari, the Syrian envoy, repeated the government’s claim that the unrest at home was the work of as yet unidentified foreign agitators trying to undermine

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/middleeast/27nations.html
April 26, 2011
Syria Tries to Defend Its Record to United Nations
By NEIL MacFARQUHAR [Syria] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [Syria pretends to be a modern secular republic, but is far from it] [no monarchy but long run by a minority sect (al Assads) and the Baath Party] [Bashir has seemingly lost control but cannot seem to suss out how to resolve things?] [followup] [hard to know as Syria keeps most western media out] [but appears al Assad has decided to crush the rebellion?] [and rumors trickling to West now have UN calling Syria before the bar?] [*]
UNITED NATIONS — Syria, facing mounting global pressure over its decisions to move tanks into cities against its own citizens and to shoot unarmed demonstrators, tried to defend its record against blunt denunciations from the United States and others on Tuesday at the United Nations, where the Security Council is struggling to forge a collective response.
Ambassador Bashar Jaafari, the Syrian envoy, repeated the government’s claim that the unrest at home was the work of as yet unidentified foreign agitators trying to undermine Syria’s stability and that armed infiltrators were responsible for the shooting of protesters. [*]
“This unrest and riots in some of their aspects have hidden agendas,” Mr. Jaafari told reporters. “Some armed groups take advantage of the demonstrations; they get within the demonstrators and start shooting on the military men and the security forces. This is why there are many casualties.”
Mr. Jaafari also defended President Bashar Assad’s record, saying that more political reforms were coming on the heels of Mr. Assad’s decision to lift the emergency law.
“President Assad is a reformer himself, and he should be given the chance to fulfill his mission in reforming the political life in the country,” he said. [*]
Government opponents openly mock both assertions. Syrians, not foreign agitators, are demanding basic freedoms that have been denied them for the 40 years in which the Assad family has run the country, they say. Although Mr. Assad, 45, promised reform when he inherited the presidency from his father 11 years ago, he has put none in place — instead, they say, the government has strangled any nascent reform movement by jailing its leaders for years.
But efforts by the Security Council to issue the mildest of statements criticizing Syria was postponed until at least Wednesday afternoon. Several member states — Russia, China and Lebanon — seemed firmly opposed, diplomats said, although the ambassadors of China and Lebanon would only note that further discussion was scheduled. [the usual suspects covering up for Syria?] [*]
Russia has been adamant that the use of force in Libya far exceeds the Security Council resolution that authorized efforts to protect Libyan civilians; statements by its senior leaders indicate that Russia will not contemplate anything similar elsewhere in the restive region. Diplomats from other countries also noted certain differences over military actions in Libya.
While the Libyan leader, Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, threatened to search from alley to alley to root out opposition, Mr. Assad has spoken of reform in Syria and blamed outsiders for the unrest. That stance is influencing some members, diplomats said, although not all.
“The outrageous use of violence to quell protests must come to an end — and now,” the United States Ambassador, Susan E. Rice, told reporters. “The Syrian government’s actions to repeal the decade’s old emergency law and allow for peaceful demonstrations were clearly not serious, given the continued violent repression against protesters.”
Ms. Rice repeated the Obama administration’s contention that Iran was helping Syria to suppress the demonstrations. [*]
Ban Ki-moon, the United Nations secretary general, reiterated his demand for an international investigation into the hundreds of deaths in Syria.
“I condemn, utterly, the continuing violence against peaceful demonstrators, most particularly the use of tanks and live fire that have killed and injured hundreds of people,” Mr. Ban said.
Mr. Jaafari belittled the idea of any investigation other than one already initiated by the Syrian government. [*]
Other world leaders also weighed in on Tuesday.
In Britain, the foreign minister, William Hague, said the European Union was considering sanctions against Syria. “Its government can still choose to bring about the radical reform which alone can bring about peace and stability,” he told the House of Commons. “Or it can choose ever more violent repression.”

Text Messages Proliferate as Threats in Iraq

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/middleeast/27iraq.html
April 26, 2011
Text Messages Proliferate as Threats in Iraq
By TIM ARANGO [-ir] [maliki govt trying to arrange things so US may withdraw later this year] [recall the SOFA that President Bush signed in 2008 provided for U.S. to leave by December 31, 2011] [Obama hopes to keep it on track] [and things are such that it will almost certainly be a big ceremonial withdrawal] [meanwhile, additional signs that civil society may be emerging?] [AQI and other insurgents trying to force the US to stay past Dec 31 date?] [for fodder?] [*]
BAGHDAD — When he returned to his native Kurdistan in February to join the flickering of a protest movement, Dr. Pishtewan Abdellah, a hematologist who lives in Australia but also carries an Iraqi passport, suspected that the demonstrators might face harsh treatment from the Kurdish authorities. At several protests during the last two months security forces have opened fire, and an estimated 10 people have been killed and dozens wounded, according to human rights activists.
What Dr. Abdellah did not anticipate, though, was a barrage of one of this country’s more peculiar menaces: death threats by text message.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/middleeast/27iraq.html
April 26, 2011
Text Messages Proliferate as Threats in Iraq
By TIM ARANGO [-ir] [maliki govt trying to arrange things so US may withdraw later this year] [recall the SOFA that President Bush signed in 2008 provided for U.S. to leave by December 31, 2011] [Obama hopes to keep it on track] [and things are such that it will almost certainly be a big ceremonial withdrawal] [meanwhile, additional signs that civil society may be emerging?] [AQI and other insurgents trying to force the US to stay past Dec 31 date?] [for fodder?] [*]
BAGHDAD — When he returned to his native Kurdistan in February to join the flickering of a protest movement, Dr. Pishtewan Abdellah, a hematologist who lives in Australia but also carries an Iraqi passport, suspected that the demonstrators might face harsh treatment from the Kurdish authorities. At several protests during the last two months security forces have opened fire, and an estimated 10 people have been killed and dozens wounded, according to human rights activists.
What Dr. Abdellah did not anticipate, though, was a barrage of one of this country’s more peculiar menaces: death threats by text message.
“I’ve been getting heaps of them,” he said recently in an interview in Baghdad, where he had fled to from the north after several kidnapping attempts. “Every single day.”
He estimated that he had received nearly 300 such threats since late February. They usually read, he said, “We are going to kill that, or we are going to burn that. Very rude language.”
One of the few that can be printed read, “If you come back to Erbil you will not see the blue sky again.”
Digital media have amplified the young voices of democracy ringing around the Middle East, but the flip side here is that the authorities and insurgents alike are also adept at using technology, particularly cellphones, largely unavailable here before the 2003 American invasion, as part of their arsenals of intimidation.
Actual violence may have declined substantially since the worst days of the war, but a culture of fear and intimidation still prevails. It has been on display during the intermittent protests that have rippled across Iraq in the wake of the regional uprisings. Death threats delivered by text message have become such a common experience across the spectrum of Iraq’s public-minded professions — lawyers, journalists, activists and government officials — that the two mobile phone companies, Zain and Asia Cell, have arrangements with the police and courts to investigate them.
“There is a great deal of cooperation between the security forces, the Iraqi judiciary and Zain with exchanging information,” said Mazin al-Asadi, a representative for Zain.
Yet most of the threats are untraceable, having been sent from throw-away phones and SIM cards bought on the black market.
“It’s impossible to count them,” said Abed al-Sattar al-Bairaqdar, the spokesman for Iraq’s Supreme Court.
Interviews with Iraqis suggest that the phenomenon cuts across all strata of society, but journalists in particular have been subject to such tactics, especially during the protests. And recent reports from Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International about abuses by security forces have mentioned text-messaged death threats.
“It’s something we’ve noticed for a while now, and it’s pervasive throughout Iraq,” said Samer Muscati, a Middle East researcher for Human Rights Watch who has recently visited Iraq. “But it seems it’s getting worse. Just about every protest organizer we’ve spoken with, and journalists, too, are getting these threats by phone and text.”
Mr. Muscati said it was common for journalists in Iraq to appear on television speaking about a controversial subject like corruption, and then, after the show, “they are barraged by these messages.”
Amnesty International, for example, reported that numerous journalists in the Kurdish region had received such messages, which the organization believes came from security officials who have taken part in attacks on news organizations. One, a correspondent for the satellite television channel KNN, affiliated with the Kurdish opposition party Goran, received a text message after reporting on work that Amnesty International has been doing in Iraq. The message told the reporter to stop his work. “Otherwise, the outcome will be disastrous,” the message read.
In the case of Dr. Abdellah, Kair al-Dain, the deputy police chief in Erbil, said he was aware of the doctor’s claims, but he would not comment more beyond saying that he had “no idea” whether Dr. Abdellah had indeed received intimidating messages.
The messages come in three basic varieties. Some are meant to intimidate, as in the case of Dr. Abdellah, who suspects that they came from the security officials who confiscated his cellphone when he was briefly imprisoned.
“They are very advanced in technology,” Dr. Abdellah said. “When you try to call the numbers, they are just disconnected.”
Yassir al-Jubori, 28, a journalist in Diyala, received a text message in February that read, “Your tongue has become too big, and it is time to cut it off.” He was told to quit his job.
“I remained for a few days in my house to be away from the insurgents,” Mr. Jubori said. “Day by day I got used to it and resumed my job, because I believe in fate.”
Other messages are mechanisms of blackmail and part of the kidnapping-for-ransom business that thrives here. Several of those interviewed said they received messages demanding payments to stay alive. One businessman in Kirkuk, who said he was kidnapped two years ago by the Sunni insurgent group Ansar al-Sunna because he had worked with the American military, recently received a text threat by the same group demanding $50,000.
“I didn’t pay them because the security situation has gotten better,” said the businessman, Faisal Hassan Khalaf. But he said he did not disregard the threat entirely. “I had to move away and change my vehicles because they can kill me whenever they want to. But at the same time, I can’t keep paying ransoms.”
At other times, the messages are tools of sectarian aggression.
Muhammed Abdul Naser, a 25-year-old student in Adhamiya, a Sunni neighborhood of Baghdad, once received a text that read: “We are the killers from the Mahdi Army. We know that you live close to the fish market. We will get you. We will get you.”
In one of the few instances in which the interviewees said the message was successfully traced, Mr. Naser said the cellphone company was able to locate the sender, who he said was indeed a member of the Mahdi Army, the now-disbanded Shiite militia loyal to the radical cleric Moktada al-Sadr.
“I knew some people that were with the Mahdi Army,” Mr. Naser said, “and they went to him and asked him to leave me alone.”
In recent days, Dr. Abdellah said the Kurdish authorities demanded three things of him: that he stay off Facebook, refrain from news media interviews and leave Erbil.
He agreed only to the final demand — to protect his family members who live in Erbil — and spoke recently at a cafe in Baghdad on the evening before he left the country. He had just gotten a new cellphone, and was enjoying a respite from the steady flow of menacing words.
Dr. Abdellah said he was leaving the country for only a few weeks. “I’m not going to give up,” he said.
Omar al-Jawoshy contributed reporting from Baghdad, and employees of The New York Times from Baghdad, Kirkuk and Diyala, Iraq.

Gunman Kills NATO Troops at Kabul Airport

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/world/asia/28afghanistan.html
April 27, 2011
Gunman Kills NATO Troops at Kabul Airport
By ALISSA J. RUBIN and SANGAR RAHIMI [Afghanistan] [AfPak] [even as US commits much money and support to Pakistan’s govt] [Obama’s “surge” continues] [after “surge” has success around Kandahar, insurgency strikes back?] [psci 355-455, 469] [spring offensive is back on?] [reconciliation fits and starts] [another Afghani officer opens up on NATO troops?] [*]
KABUL — Eight NATO service members and a contractor were shot and killed by an Afghan military officer on Wednesday while attending a meeting of foreign and Afghan officers on the military side of Kabul International Airport, according to statements from Afghan and NATO spokesmen.
The shooting occurred during a meeting between American and Afghan officers, said Colonel Bahader, a spokesman for the Afghan Army Air Corps. NATO did not confirm the nationality of the soldiers. None of the dead were Afghan troops, said Gen. Mohammed Zahir Azimi, a spokesman for the Afghan Ministry of Defense.
In a similar incident in mid-April five Americans were killed when a suicide bomber

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/world/asia/28afghanistan.html
April 27, 2011
Gunman Kills NATO Troops at Kabul Airport
By ALISSA J. RUBIN and SANGAR RAHIMI [Afghanistan] [AfPak] [even as US commits much money and support to Pakistan’s govt] [Obama’s “surge” continues] [after “surge” has success around Kandahar, insurgency strikes back?] [psci 355-455, 469] [spring offensive is back on?] [reconciliation fits and starts] [another Afghani officer opens up on NATO troops?] [*]
KABUL — Eight NATO service members and a contractor were shot and killed by an Afghan military officer on Wednesday while attending a meeting of foreign and Afghan officers on the military side of Kabul International Airport, according to statements from Afghan and NATO spokesmen.
The shooting occurred during a meeting between American and Afghan officers, said Colonel Bahader, a spokesman for the Afghan Army Air Corps. NATO did not confirm the nationality of the soldiers. None of the dead were Afghan troops, said Gen. Mohammed Zahir Azimi, a spokesman for the Afghan Ministry of Defense.
In a similar incident in mid-April five Americans were killed when a suicide bomber detonated his charge at a joint Afghan-NATO meeting at an Afghan Army base in Laghman Province. Last November, six border police officers were killed by a rogue Afghan Army officer.
Although the Taliban claimed responsibility for Wednesday’s attack, the Afghan Army was more cautious. “The shooter was an Afghan Army Air Corps officer, but you cannot read someone’s mind,” said Colonel Bahader, who, like many Afghans, uses only one name.
The gunman, according to senior Afghan Army aides, was an older officer named Hamid Gul, who had been trained 30 years ago when the Soviet Union occupied the country. This makes it unlikely that the Taliban’s claim is true that he was their operative.
But a Taliban spokesman, Zabiullah Mujahid, said the assailant was a Taliban militant from a district of Kabul Province named Azizullah who gained access to the military installation by wearing a pilot’s uniform.
“He was living in Kabul and he got dressed in an Afghan military uniform, and when he ran out of ammunition he was killed by foreigners and Afghan soldiers,” Mr. Mujahid said in a telephone interview.
Colonel Bahader described a chaotic scene in which some soldiers and officers fled the barrage of bullets, jumping out of second- and third-floor windows.
“They had minor injuries, and some were wounded with broken glass,” he said.
It was the fourth incident in the past two weeks in which a person wearing an Afghan security force uniform attacked from within a government compound.

April 26, 2011

The Consequentialist How the Arab Spring remade Obama’s foreign policy.

http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/05/02/110502fa_fact_lizza
The New Yorker
[Accessed 4/26/11 9:44:45 AM] [*]
The Political Scene
The Consequentialist
How the Arab Spring remade Obama’s foreign policy.
by Ryan Lizza May 2, 2011 [cross in societal—this is punditry plain and simple] [however, it is also an attempt to understand Obama] [as such it is one of the few bits and pieces we have of Obama, the person and the president] [there’s role and indivdual in here, as so often the case] [it’s often difficult to tell one from the other] [but it’s biography and therefore archived here in individual-role] [*]
Barack Obama came to Washington just six years ago, having spent his professional life as a part-time lawyer, part-time law professor, and part-time state legislator in Illinois. As an undergraduate, he took courses in history and international relations, but neither his academic life nor his work in Springfield gave him an especially profound grasp of foreign affairs. [little socialization in arcane and estoteric world of foreign policy] [*] As he coasted toward winning a seat in the U.S. Senate, in 2004, he began to reach out to a broad range of

http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/05/02/110502fa_fact_lizza
The New Yorker
[Accessed 4/26/11 9:44:45 AM] [*]
The Political Scene
The Consequentialist
How the Arab Spring remade Obama’s foreign policy.
by Ryan Lizza May 2, 2011 [cross in societal—this is punditry plain and simple] [however, it is also an attempt to understand Obama] [as such it is one of the few bits and pieces we have of Obama, the person and the president] [there’s role and indivdual in here, as so often the case] [it’s often difficult to tell one from the other] [but it’s biography and therefore archived here in individual-role] [*]
Barack Obama came to Washington just six years ago, having spent his professional life as a part-time lawyer, part-time law professor, and part-time state legislator in Illinois. As an undergraduate, he took courses in history and international relations, but neither his academic life nor his work in Springfield gave him an especially profound grasp of foreign affairs. [little socialization in arcane and estoteric world of foreign policy] [*] As he coasted toward winning a seat in the U.S. Senate, in 2004, he began to reach out to a broad range of foreign-policy experts––politicians, diplomats, academics, and journalists.
As a student during the Reagan years, Obama gravitated toward conventionally left-leaning positions. At Occidental, he demonstrated in favor of divesting from apartheid South Africa. [that’s called being at college?] [*] At Columbia, he wrote a forgettable essay in Sundial, a campus publication, in favor of the nuclear-freeze movement. As a professor at the University of Chicago, he focussed on civil-rights law and race. And, as a candidate who emphasized his “story,” Obama argued that what he lacked in experience with foreign affairs he made up for with foreign travel: [*]four years in Indonesia as a boy, and trips to Pakistan, India, Kenya, and Europe during and after college. But there was no mistaking the lightness of his résumé. Just a year before coming to Washington, State Senator Obama was not immersed in the dangers of nuclear Pakistan or an ascendant China; as a provincial legislator, he was investigating the dangers of a toy known as the Yo-Yo Water Ball. (He tried, unsuccessfully, to have it banned.)
Obama had always read widely, and now he was determined to get a deeper education. He read popular books on foreign affairs by Fareed Zakaria and Thomas Friedman. He met with Anthony Lake, who had left the Nixon Administration over Vietnam and went on to work in Democratic Administrations, and with Susan Rice, who had served in the Clinton Administration and carried with her the guilt of having failed to act to prevent the Rwandan genocide. [*]He also contacted Samantha Power, a thirty-four-year-old journalist and Harvard professor specializing in human rights. In her twenties, Power had reported from the Balkans and witnessed the campaigns of ethnic cleansing there. In 2002, after graduating from Harvard Law School, she wrote “A Problem from Hell,” [*]which surveyed the grim history of six genocides committed in the twentieth century. Propounding a liberal-interventionist view, Power argued that “mass killing” on the scale of Rwanda or Bosnia must be prevented by other nations, including the United States. She wrote that America and its allies rarely have perfect information about when a regime is about to commit genocide; a President, therefore, must have “a bias toward belief” that massacres are imminent. [*]Stopping the execution of thousands of foreigners, she wrote, was, in some cases, worth the cost in dollars, troops, and strained alliances. The book, which was extremely influential, especially on the left, won a Pulitzer Prize, in 2003. Critics considered her views radical and dangerously impractical.
After reading “A Problem from Hell,” Obama invited Power to dinner. He said he wanted to talk about foreign policy. The meal lasted four hours. As a fledgling member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and an ambitious politician with his sights set on higher office, Obama agreed to have Power spend a year in his office as a foreign-policy fellow.[*]
In his first news conference after winning election to the Senate, the press asked whether he intended to run for President, but he assured reporters, as well as his aides, that he would not even consider it until 2012 or 2016. He knew that he could not have a serious impact on issues like Iraq or the Sudan as a junior committee member, but he was determined to learn the institution and to acquire, as Hillary Clinton had, a reputation not for celebrity but for substance. In foreign affairs, as in so much else, he was determined to break free of the old ideologies and categories. But he would take it step by step.
Obama entered the Senate in 2005, at a moment of passionate foreign-policy debate within the Democratic Party. The invasion of Iraq was seen as interventionism executed under false pretenses and with catastrophic consequences. Many on the left argued that liberal interventionists, particularly in Congress and in the press, had given crucial cover to the Bush Administration during the run-up to the war. Hillary Clinton, who often sided with the humanitarian hawks in her husband’s White House, and who went on to vote for the Iraq war, in 2002, seemed to some to be the embodiment of all that had gone wrong. [*]
One reaction among liberals to the Bush years and to Iraq was to retreat from “idealism” toward “realism,” in which the United States would act cautiously and, above all, according to national interests rather than moral imperatives. The debate is rooted in the country’s early history. America, John Quincy Adams argued, “does not go abroad in search of monsters to destroy. She is the well-wisher to freedom and independence of all,” but the “champion and vindicator only of her own.” [I always use it in 350 for America’s ethos and isolationism America’s firt 140 years] [*]
In 1966, Adams’s words were repeated by George Kennan, perhaps the most articulate realist of the twentieth century, in opposing the Vietnam War. To Kennan and his intellectual followers, foreign-policy problems are always more complicated than Americans, in their native idealism, usually allow. The use of force to stop human-rights abuses or to promote democracy, they argue, usually ends poorly. In the fall of 2002, six months before the invasion of Iraq, Kennan said, “Today, if we went into Iraq, as the President would like us to do, you know where you begin. You never know where you are going to end.”
As Obama sorted through the arguments, other foreign-policy liberals were determined to prevent Iraq from besmirching the whole program of liberal internationalism. [*]Humanitarian intervention—which Power helped advance, though she vigorously opposed the Iraq War—should not be abandoned because of the failures in Baghdad. Nor should American diplomacy turn away from emphasizing the virtues of bringing the world democracy. Anne-Marie Slaughter, a professor of international affairs at Princeton and a Democrat, wrote in the liberal journal Democracy that an overreaction to the Bush years might mean that “realists could again rule the day, embracing order and stability over ideology and values.”
After little more than a year in the Senate, Obama was bored, and began to take seriously the frequent calls to run for President. To be a candidate, he needed to distinguish himself from his foremost potential opponent, Hillary Clinton, as well as from President Bush. One of the clearest paths to distinction, especially in the primaries, was to emphasize his early opposition, as a state senator, to the Iraq war. He started to move away from the ideas of people like Power and Slaughter. He pointedly noted that George H. W. Bush’s management of the end of the Cold War was masterly. The President had sometimes kept quiet about the aspirations of pro-democracy activists in Russia, Ukraine, and elsewhere, in order to maintain the confidence of Mikhail Gorbachev in the Kremlin. It was just the sort of political performance to which Obama aspired.
In making the case against Hillary Clinton, Obama slyly argued that the George W. Bush years were in some ways a continuation of the Bill Clinton years, and that the United States needed to return to the philosophy of an earlier era. The proselytizing about democracy and the haste to bomb other countries in the name of humanitarian aid had “stretched our military to the breaking point and distracted us from the growing threats of a dangerous world,” Obama said in a speech in 2006, a few weeks before he announced his Presidential candidacy. He spoke of “a strategy no longer driven by ideology and politics but one that is based on a realistic assessment of the sobering facts on the ground and our interests in the region. This kind of realism has been missing since the very conception of this war, and it is what led me to publicly oppose it in 2002.”
In 2007, Obama called Zbigniew Brzezinski, President Carter’s national-security adviser and the reigning realist of the Democratic foreign-policy establishment. Obama told him that he had read his recent book, “Second Chance,” in which Brzezinski criticized Presidents Clinton and George W. Bush and their handling of the post-Cold War world. They began to speak and exchange e-mails about policy, and Brzezinski travelled with Obama during a stretch of the campaign. [*]In September, 2007, Brzezinski introduced Obama at an event in Clinton, Iowa, where the candidate discussed the failures in Iraq. “I thought he had a really incisive grasp of what the twenty-first century is all about and how America has to relate to it,” Brzezinski told me. “He was reacting in a way that I very much shared, and we had a meeting of the minds—namely, that George Bush put the United States on a suicidal course.” [*]
As he campaigned in New Hampshire, in 2007, Obama said that he would not leave troops in Iraq even to stop genocide. “Well, look, if that’s the criteria by which we are making decisions on the deployment of U.S. forces, then by that argument you would have three hundred thousand troops in the Congo right now, where millions have been slaughtered as a consequence of ethnic strife, which we haven’t done,” he said. “We would be deploying unilaterally and occupying the Sudan, which we haven’t done.”
At a campaign event in Pennsylvania, Obama said, “The truth is that my foreign policy is actually a return to the traditional bipartisan realistic policy of George Bush’s father, of John F. Kennedy, of, in some ways, Ronald Reagan.” [in a fundamental way, it has signaled a return to the Cold War consensus basis of foreign policy] [perhaps no longer possible but that was the attempt?] [**]
In the end, Barack Obama overcame Hillary Clinton’s campaign warnings that he was too callow, too naïve about dealing with rogue regimes, too untested to respond to the “3 A.M.” emergencies from all corners of the globe. Obama entered the White House at a moment of radical transition in global politics, and one of his most significant appointments was Clinton as his Secretary of State. Although he had made plain in the campaign that he disagreed with some of her foreign-policy views, he admired her discipline and believed that, as a member of the Cabinet, she wouldn’t publicly break with the President. And he would need her. Obama faced economic catastrophe at home and American wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; serious regional threats from Pakistan and Iran; global terrorism; the ascendance of China and India; and a situation that was almost impossible to discuss—a vivid sense of American decline.
American values and interests are woven together, and no President is always either an idealist or a realist. Officials who identify with the same label often disagree with one another. Humanitarian interventionists were divided over the Iraq war; Cold War realists had split over détente with the Soviet Union. The categories describe only broad ideological directions and tendencies. But, as Richard Haass, the president of the Council on Foreign Relations, observed, “the battle between realists and idealists is the fundamental fault line of the American foreign-policy debate.” [*]
After the Inauguration, the realists began to win that debate within the Administration. The two most influential foreign-policy advisers in the White House are Thomas Donilon, the national-security adviser, and Denis McDonough, a deputy national-security adviser. [**]Donilon, who is fifty-five, is a longtime Washington lawyer, lobbyist, and Democratic Party strategist. McDonough started out as a congressional staffer and campaign adviser to Obama, a role that has given him a reputation as a non-ideological political fixer.
The National Security Council is a bureaucracy that helps the President streamline decision-making, and Donilon seems to have thought extensively about how that system works. Like the President, he values staff discretion. His rule for hiring at the N.S.C. is to find people who are, in his words, “high value, low maintenance.” Obama’s N.S.C. adopted the model of the first Bush Administration. “It’s essentially based on the process that was put in place by General Brent Scowcroft and Bob Gates in the late nineteen-eighties,” Donilon told me, speaking of Bush’s national-security adviser and his deputy, the current Secretary of Defense. [*]The most important feature, Donilon said, is that the N.S.C., based at the White House, controls “the sole process through which policy would be developed.”
One of Donilon’s overriding beliefs, which Obama adopted as his own, was that America needed to rebuild its reputation, extricate itself from the Middle East and Afghanistan, and turn its attention toward Asia and China’s unchecked influence in the region. [*]America was “overweighted” in the former and “underweighted” in the latter, Donilon told me. “We’ve been on a little bit of a Middle East detour over the course of the last ten years,” Kurt Campbell, the Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, said. “And our future will be dominated utterly and fundamentally by developments in Asia and the Pacific region.”
In December, 2009, Obama announced that he would draw down U.S. troops from Iraq and Afghanistan by the end of his first term. He also promised, in a speech to the United Nations General Assembly last year, that he was “moving toward a more targeted approach” that “dismantles terrorist networks without deploying large American armies.”
“The project of the first two years has been to effectively deal with the legacy issues that we inherited, particularly the Iraq war, the Afghan war, and the war against Al Qaeda, while rebalancing our resources and our posture in the world,” Benjamin Rhodes, one of Obama’s deputy national-security advisers, said. “If you were to boil it all down to a bumper sticker, it’s ‘Wind down these two wars, reëstablish American standing and leadership in the world, and focus on a broader set of priorities, from Asia and the global economy to a nuclear-nonproliferation regime.’ ” [*]
Obama’s lengthy bumper-sticker credo did not include a call to promote democracy or protect human rights. Obama aides who focussed on these issues were awarded lesser White House positions. Samantha Power became senior director of multilateral affairs at the N.S.C. Michael McFaul, a Stanford professor who believes that the U.S. should make democracy promotion the heart of its foreign policy, landed a mid-level position at the White House.
Most of the foreign-policy issues that Obama emphasized in his first two years involved stepping away from idealism. [*]In the hope of persuading Iran’s regime to abandon its nuclear ambitions, Obama pointedly rejected Bush’s “axis of evil” terminology. In a video message to Iranians on March 20, 2009, he respectfully addressed “the people and leaders of the Islamic Republic of Iran.” In order to engage China on economic issues, Obama didn’t press very hard on human rights. And, because any effort to push the Israelis and Palestinians toward a final settlement would benefit from help from Egypt, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia, Obama was not especially outspoken about the sins of Middle Eastern autocrats and kings.
Despite the realist tilt, Obama has argued from the start that he was anti-ideological, that he defied traditional categories and ideologies. In Oslo, in December of 2009, accepting the Nobel Peace Prize, Obama said, “Within America, there has long been a tension between those who describe themselves as realists or idealists—a tension that suggests a stark choice between the narrow pursuit of interests or an endless campaign to impose our values around the world.” [*]The speech echoed Obama’s 2002 address to an antiwar demonstration in Chicago’s Federal Plaza. In Chicago, he had confounded his leftist audience by emphasizing the need to fight some wars, but not “dumb” ones, like the one in Iraq. In Oslo, he surprised a largely left-leaning audience by talking about the martial imperatives of a Commander-in-Chief overseeing two wars. Obama’s aides often insist that he is an anti-ideological politician interested only in what actually works. He is, one says, a “consequentialist.”
Meanwhile, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton turned her department into something of a haven for the ideas that flourished late in the Clinton Administration. She picked Anne-Marie Slaughter as her director of policy planning—a job first held by George Kennan, in the Truman Administration. She also brought in Harold Koh, the State Department’s legal adviser and a scholar on issues concerning human rights and democracy. Walking around the mazelike building in Foggy Bottom, you get the sense that if you duck into any office you will find earnest young women and men discussing globalization, the possibility that Facebook can topple tyrannies, and what is called “soft power,” the ability to bend the world toward your view through attraction, not coercion.
Not long ago, I met with Kris Balderston, the State Department’s representative for global partnerships. He started working with Clinton ten years ago, when he guided her through the politics of upstate New York during her Senate race. Now he works on an array of entrepreneurial projects that complement traditional diplomacy. He talked excitedly about working with Vietnamese-Americans to build stronger ties to Vietnam and about distributing vaccines in partnership with Coca-Cola. He pointed to a bookcase stocked with devices that looked like a cross between a lantern and a paint bucket. These were advanced cookstoves. “This is a problem that the Secretary saw when she was First Lady,” Balderston said, explaining how lethal cooking smoke can be. “One half of the world cooks in open fires. Two million people die a year from it—that’s more than malaria and tuberculosis combined, and nearly as much as H.I.V.” On a trip to Congo in 2009, Clinton met a woman in a refugee camp who had been raped in the jungle on the outskirts of the camp while gathering wood for her stove. Telling the story at the State Department, Clinton was angrier than Balderston had ever seen her. “We have got to do something about this,” she said. Balderston spends much of his time trying to build a market for inexpensive, clean-burning cookstoves in the developing world.
But Clinton’s involvement in soft-power initiatives was matched by the kind of hardheadedness about foreign policy she had displayed during her Presidential campaign. She has repeatedly aligned herself with the most consistent realist in the Obama Administration: Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, who was deputy national-security adviser in the first Bush Administration and Secretary of Defense under George W. Bush. Clinton’s advisers told me that, during her first two years in Foggy Bottom, Clinton agreed with Gates on every major issue. [*]
“Secretary Clinton can push the agenda she pushes because she is tough and people know she is tough,” Slaughter said. “It’s very interesting—you’ve had three women Secretaries of State, and she’s the first one who can stand up and say publicly, ‘We are going to empower women and girls around the world. We are going to make development a priority of foreign policy. We are going to engage people as well as governments.’ [*]
“Madeleine Albright believed in the importance of those issues, but she could never have made it the core of her public agenda. She was the first woman Secretary of State, which meant that she had to out-tough the tough guys. She did that on the Balkans. Condi Rice helped double foreign aid, but she was first and foremost a Cold Warrior, and she could throw around ‘I.C.B.M.’s and ‘S.L.B.M.’s and ‘MIRV’s with the best of them. That was the only way she could make it, not only as a woman in the nineteen-eighties but as an African-American woman. You had to be way tougher and way more knowledgeable about weapons than any man.” A former Administration official said, “Hillary has to guard her flank. And one of the ways she guards her flank is she rarely deviates from Gates. If she and Gates both weigh in, they are much more likely to get their way.” [someone’s assessment of Clinton’s mo] [sounds like one of the waterbugs?] [*]
Obama’s first test at managing the clashing ideologies within his Administration came during the review of Afghanistan policy in 2009. During the campaign, Obama said that he would add troops in Afghanistan, a war, he argued, that Bush had neglected. But Obama’s campaign promise bumped hard against the judgment of several new advisers, including Richard Holbrooke, who tried to convince the President that sending forty thousand more troops to Afghanistan, as the military urged, was counterproductive. It would prevent Obama from rebalancing American foreign policy toward the Pacific, and it would have little impact on Al Qaeda, which is based largely in Pakistan. Obama had appointed Holbrooke his Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, and Holbrooke, a brash and influential diplomat, found himself in the unusual circumstance of being ignored. He wanted to send far fewer troops and reënergize regional diplomacy, including reconciliation talks with the Taliban. He believed that the lesson of Vietnam was that the diplomats, rather than the generals, needed to be in charge, but he could rarely penetrate the insular world of Obama’s White House to make that case to the President. [a pragmatic position, in essence] [*]
Holbrooke had been a devoted supporter of Hillary Clinton during the Presidential campaign, and she protected him from Obama aides who viewed with suspicion his sizable ego and stream of positive press clippings. When a top official at the White House tried to push Holbrooke out, in early 2010, Clinton intervened on his behalf. But Holbrooke still could not get a one-on-one meeting with the President. And at the crucial national-security meetings on Afghanistan Clinton did not adopt Holbrooke’s views. She sided with Gates and the generals in calling for the maximum number of soldiers to surge into Afghanistan. Obama agreed to send thirty thousand more troops, although he insisted that they would start coming home in July, 2011. Holbrooke’s widow, the writer Kati Marton, who has been reviewing her husband’s memos and archives, told me that they “tell a dramatic story of a fractured relationship between the State Department and White House.”
On December 11, 2010, while meeting with Clinton at the State Department, Holbrooke suffered a split aorta, and he died forty-eight hours later. Bill Clinton spoke at Holbrooke’s memorial service, held on January 14th at the Kennedy Center. “I loved the guy—because he could do,” Clinton said. “Doing in diplomacy saves lives.” He went on, “And I never did understand how people would let a little rough edges, which to me was so obvious what he was doing, it was so obvious why he felt the way he did—I could never understand people who didn’t appreciate him.” Several people told Marton they thought that Bill Clinton was sending a message to Obama.[*]
In the end, Obama made a decision about Afghanistan that was at odds with his own goal of rebalancing toward Asia and the Pacific. “The U.S. has been on a greater Middle East detour largely of its own choosing through a war of choice in Iraq and what became a war of choice in 2009 in Afghanistan,” Haass said. “Afghanistan is entirely inconsistent with the focus of time and resources on Asia. If your goal is to reorient or refocus or rebalance U.S. policy, the Administration’s commitment to so doing is at the moment more rhetorical than actual.” [that’s because he’s a pragmatist] [it’s hard for him not to split the difference even when painful to him personally] [**]
Obama came into office emphasizing bureaucratic efficiency, which he believed would lead to wise rulings. But the Afghanistan decision, like all government work, was driven by politics and ideology. Obama’s eagerness to keep his campaign promise, the military’s view that reducing troops meant a loss of face, Clinton’s decision to align with Gates, and Holbrooke’s inability to influence the White House staff all ultimately conspired to push Obama toward the surge.
Obama’s other key campaign promise—to engage with the leaders of countries hostile to the U.S.—sometimes meant deëmphasizing democracy and human rights, which had been tainted by Bush’s “freedom agenda” in the Middle East. Tyrannical regimes are less likely to make deals with you if you talk persistently about overthrowing them. Obama’s speech in Cairo, delivered on June 4, 2009, and devoted to improving America’s relationship with the Muslim world, was organized as a list of regional priorities. He discussed the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Arab-Israeli peace, and Iran’s nuclear ambitions. He then gave a hesitant endorsement of America’s commitment to democracy in the region. He began, “I know there has been controversy about the promotion of democracy in recent years, and much of this controversy is connected to the war in Iraq. So let me be clear: no system of government can or should be imposed upon one nation by any other.”
A week later, however, a disputed Presidential election in Iran triggered large demonstrations there, which were soon labelled the Green Revolution. For the first five months after his Inauguration, Obama had tried to engage with the regime of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in an effort to persuade Iran to abandon its nuclear ambitions. Now he faced the choice between keeping his distance and coming to the aid of the nascent pro-democracy movement, which was rallying behind Mir-Hossein Mousavi, who had finished second behind Ahmadinejad. Obama chose to keep his distance, providing only mild rhetorical support. In an interview with CNBC after the protests began, he said that “the difference between Ahmadinejad and Mousavi in terms of their actual policies may not be as great as has been advertised.”
During the peak of the protests in Iran, Jared Cohen, a young staffer at the State Department who worked for Slaughter, contacted officials at Twitter and asked the company not to perform a planned upgrade that would have shut down the service temporarily in Iran, where protesters were using it to get information to the international media. The move violated Obama’s rule of non-interference.
White House officials “were so mad that somebody had actually ‘interfered’ in Iranian politics, because they were doing their damnedest to not interfere,” the former Administration official said. “Now, to be fair to them, it was also the understanding that if we interfered it could look like the Green movement was Western-backed, but that really wasn’t the core of it. The core of it was we were still trying to engage the Iranian government and we did not want to do anything that made us side with the protesters. To the Secretary’s credit, she realized, I think, before other people, that this is ridiculous, that we had to change our line.” The official said that Cohen “almost lost his job over it. If it had been up to the White House, they would have fired him.”
Clinton did not betray any disagreement with the President over Iran policy, but in an interview with me she cited Cohen’s action with pride. “When it came to the elections, we had a lot of messages from people inside Iran and their supporters outside of Iran saying, ‘For heaven’s sakes, don’t claim this as part of the democracy agenda. This is indigenous to us. We are struggling against this tyrannical regime. If you are too outspoken in our support, we will lose legitimacy!’ Now, that’s a tough balancing act. It’s easy to stand up if you don’t worry about the consequences. Now, we were very clear in saying, ‘We are supporting those who are protesting peacefully,’ and we put our social-media gurus at work in trying to keep connections going, so that we helped to provide that base for communicating that was necessary for the demonstrations.” [?] [*]
One suggestion that came up in interviews with Obama’s current and former foreign-policy advisers was that the Administration’s policy debates sometimes broke down along gender lines. The realists who view foreign policy as a great chess game—and who want to focus on China and India—are usually men. The idealists, who talk about democracy and human rights, are often women. (White House officials told me that this critique is outlandish.)
Slaughter, who admired Clinton but felt alienated by people at the White House, resigned in February, and in her farewell speech at the State Department she described a gender divide at the heart of Obama’s foreign-policy team. She argued that in the twenty-first century America needed to focus on societies as well as on states. “Unfortunately, the people who focus on those two worlds here in Washington are still often very different groups. The world of states is still the world of high politics, hard power, realpolitik, and, largely, men,” she said. “The world of societies is still too often the world of low politics, soft power, human rights, democracy, and development, and, largely, women. One of the best parts of my two years here has been the opportunity to work with so many amazing and talented women—truly extraordinary people. But Washington still has a ways to go before their voices are fully heard and respected.”
On August 12, 2010, Obama sent a five-page memorandum called “Political Reform in the Middle East and North Africa” to Vice-President Joseph Biden, Clinton, Gates, Donilon, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the other senior members of his foreign-policy team. [interesting] [so they did anticipate this some?] [*] Though the Iranian regime had effectively crushed the Green Revolution, the country was still experiencing sporadic protests. Egypt would face crucial parliamentary elections in November. The memo began with a stark conclusion about trends in the region.
“Progress toward political reform and openness in the Middle East and North Africa lags behind other regions and has, in some cases, stalled,” the President wrote. He noted that even the more liberal countries were cracking down on public gatherings, the press, and political opposition groups. But something was stirring. There was “evidence of growing citizen discontent with the region’s regimes,” he wrote. It was likely that “if present trends continue,” allies there would “opt for repression rather than reform to manage domestic dissent.”
Obama’s analysis showed a desire to balance interests and ideals. [which is what policy should attempt to do] [see oped weeks ago by Kissinger and Shultz?] [*] The goals of reform and democracy were couched in the language of U.S. interests rather than the sharp moral language that statesmen often use in public. “Increased repression could threaten the political and economic stability of some of our allies, leave us with fewer capable, credible partners who can support our regional priorities, and further alienate citizens in the region,” Obama wrote. “Moreover, our regional and international credibility will be undermined if we are seen or perceived to be backing repressive regimes and ignoring the rights and aspirations of citizens.”
Obama instructed his staff to come up with “tailored,” “country by country” strategies on political reform. He told his advisers to challenge the traditional idea that stability in the Middle East always served U.S. interests. Obama wanted to weigh the risks of both “continued support for increasingly unpopular and repressive regimes” and a “strong push by the United States for reform.”
He also wrote that “the advent of political succession in a number of countries offers a potential opening for political reform in the region.” If the United States managed the coming transitions “poorly,” it “could have negative implications for U.S. interests, including for our standing among Arab publics.”
The review was led by three N.S.C. staffers: Samantha Power, Gayle Smith, who works on development issues, and Dennis Ross, a Middle East expert with a broad portfolio in the White House. Soon, they and officials from other agencies were sitting in the White House, debating the costs and benefits of supporting autocrats. A White House official involved said the group studied “the taboos, all the questions you’re not supposed to ask.” For example, they tested the assumption that the President could not publicly criticize President Hosni Mubarak because it would jeopardize Egypt’s coöperation on issues related to Israel or its assistance in tracking terrorists. Not true, they concluded: the Egyptians pursued peace with Israel and crushed terrorists because it was in their interest to do so, not because the U.S. asked them to.
They tested the idea that countries with impoverished populations needed to develop economically before they were prepared for open political systems—a common argument that democracy promoters often run up against. Again, they concluded that the conventional wisdom was wrong. “All roads led to political reform,” the White House official said.
The group was just finishing its work, on December 17th, when Mohamed Bouazizi, a vegetable vender in Tunisia, set himself on fire outside a municipal building to protest the corruption of the country’s political system––an act that inspired protests in Tunisia and, eventually, the entire region. [*]Democracy in the Middle East, one of the most fraught issues of the Bush years, was suddenly the signature conflict of Obama’s foreign policy.
On January 25th, the first, crucial day of the protests in Egypt, and eleven days after the removal of President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, in Tunisia, Secretary Clinton declared her support for free assembly, but added, “Our assessment is that the Egyptian government is stable and is looking for ways to respond to the legitimate needs and interests of the Egyptian people.” That evening, Obama delivered his State of the Union address, in which he praised the demonstrators in Tunisia, “where the will of the people proved more powerful than the writ of a dictator,” and expressed support for the “democratic aspirations of all people.” But he did not mention Egypt. Shady el-Ghazaly Harb, one of the leaders of the coalition that started the Egyptian revolution, told me that the message the protesters got from the Obama Administration on the first day of the revolution was “Go home. We need this regime.”
A number of familiar ex-diplomats and politicians, led by Dick Cheney, Henry Kissinger, and Zbigniew Brzezinski, criticized the treatment of Mubarak, and Israel and Saudi Arabia called on the Administration to stick with him. But, as the protests strengthened, it became clear that Mubarak was doomed. According to a senior Administration official, “The question in our mind was ‘How do you manage that?’ ” [*]
Obama’s instinct was to try to have it both ways. [of course] [whose wouldn’t be?] [*] He wanted to position the United States on the side of the protesters: it’s always a good idea, politically, to support brave young men and women risking their lives for freedom, especially when their opponent is an eighty-two-year-old dictator with Swiss bank accounts. Some of Obama’s White House aides regretted having stood idly by while the Iranian regime brutally suppressed the Green Revolution; Egypt offered a second chance. Nonetheless, Obama wanted to assure other autocratic allies that the U.S. did not hastily abandon its friends, and he feared that the uprising could spin out of control. “Look at all the revolutions in history, especially the ones that are driven from the ground up, and they tend to be very chaotic and hard to find an equilibrium,” one senior official said. The French Revolution, for instance, he said, “ended up in chaos, and they ended up with Bonaparte.” Obama’s ultimate position, it seemed, was to talk like an idealist while acting like a realist.
This wasn’t an easy balance to maintain, and the first major problem arose when State Department officials learned that if Mubarak stepped down immediately, the Egyptian constitution would require a Presidential election in sixty days, long before any of the moderate parties could get organized. Egyptian officials warned the Administration that it could lead to the Muslim Brotherhood’s taking over power. “My daughter gets to go out at night,” Ahmed Aboul Gheit, Egypt’s then foreign minister, told Secretary Clinton during one conversation. “And, God damn it, I’m not going to turn this country over to people who will turn back the clock on her rights.”
Obama decided not to call for Mubarak to step down. Instead, the U.S. would encourage a transition led by Mubarak’s newly installed Vice-President, Omar Suleiman. The strategy was to avoid the constitutional process that the State Department feared would lead to chaos. The senior official told me in the midst of the crisis, “I don’t think that because a group of young people get on the street that we are obliged to be for them.”
On January 29th, the White House made two major decisions: the U.S. would announce that it supported a transition in Egypt, and Obama would send an emissary to Mubarak to explain that, in the judgment of the United States, he could not survive the protests. The emissary would tell Mubarak that his best option was to try to leave a positive legacy by steering the country toward a real democratic transformation. Frank G. Wisner, the former U.S. Ambassador to Egypt, who has long known Mubarak well, would deliver the message. The next day, Clinton appeared on five Sunday-morning talk shows to announce that Obama supported an “orderly transition” in Egypt. That afternoon, Wisner boarded a U.S. government plane for Cairo.
On January 31st, Wisner met with Mubarak in Cairo. The next day, word leaked out that Mubarak would address the country. That afternoon, Obama’s national-security advisers met in the Situation Room to discuss two issues: whether Obama should call Mubarak and whether Obama should make a public statement. Obama joined the meeting unexpectedly. As the discussion continued, Mubarak’s speech appeared on television, and the President and his aides paused to watch. “I am now careful to conclude my work for Egypt by presenting Egypt to the next government in a constitutional way which will protect Egypt,” Mubarak said. “I want to say, in clear terms, that in the next few months that are remaining of my current reign I will work very hard to carry out all the necessary measures to transfer power.”
In Tahrir Square, the protesters erupted in rage at the meandering and confusing speech. Obama now seemed to be uncomfortable taking an attitude of cool detachment from the people in the street. He called Mubarak, and tried to find a graceful way for the Egyptian President to exit that would also take care of the constitutional concerns Egyptian officials kept raising. He asked Mubarak if there was a way to alter the constitution to allow for a stable transition. He asked if there was a way to set up a caretaker government. A White House official summarized Mubarak’s response as: “Muslim Brotherhood, Muslim Brotherhood, Muslim Brotherhood.”
Obama then made a public statement that was more confrontational: “An orderly transition must be meaningful, it must be peaceful, and it must begin now.” The urgent message alienated Israel and Saudi Arabia, among other allies. It also startled some people in the State Department. Clinton “walked a very narrow line and managed to do it without making the Egyptians too angry on either side,” a senior State Department official said. “After the President gave his statement, the people surrounding Mubarak began to get quite angry.”
The inherent contradictions of an Administration trying to simultaneously encourage and contain the forces of revolution in Egypt broke into the open on February 5th, when Wisner, who was then in New York, participated via videoconference in an international-affairs conference in Munich. After outlining the constitutional argument for keeping Mubarak in power, he said, “I therefore believe that President Mubarak’s continued leadership is critical; it’s his opportunity to write his own legacy. He’s given sixty years of his life to the service of his country.” According to friends, Wisner, who had talked with Obama before he went to Cairo, believed that his statement was consistent with the policy he was told to follow.
Clinton was at the conference in Munich, and, shortly after Wisner made his remarks, a senior Administration official gathered the press corps travelling with her in a small dining room at the Charles Hotel to brief us on the Secretary’s meetings. The official hadn’t heard Wisner’s comments, but when a reporter read a long excerpt off his BlackBerry the official blanched, his mouth agape.
“Wisner,” the official said, “was not speaking for the U.S. government or the Obama Administration. He was speaking as a private citizen.”
The public and private components of the Administration’s Egypt policy were at odds, and Wisner had risked blowing everything up. His tenure as an envoy was over. “They threw me under the bus,” a close friend remembers him saying.
Wisner referred dismissively to the “reëlection committee” at the White House, according to the friend. But in this case Obama’s political interests—needing to be seen as on the side of the protesters—aligned with the policy views of the idealists. An Obama adviser declared, “Obama didn’t give the Tahrir Square crowds every last thing they sought from him at the precise moment they sought it. But he went well beyond what many of America’s allies in the region wished to see.”
In March, I travelled to Cairo with Secretary Clinton. One evening, she was scheduled to meet with Egyptians who had been prominent in the protests that brought down Mubarak. However, one group, called the Coalition of Youth Revolution, which includes leaders from the activist movements and opposition parties in Egypt, boycotted the meeting. As Clinton talked with other civil-society members upstairs at the Four Seasons Hotel, four members of the abstaining coalition agreed to talk with me and three other journalists in the lobby.
I asked why they weren’t upstairs with the Secretary of State. “Hillary was against the revolution from the beginning to the last day, O.K.?” Mohammed Abbas, of the Muslim Brotherhood, said. “Obama supported this revolution. She was against.”
Abbas and Shady el-Ghazaly Harb, a member of the liberal Democratic Front Party, said that if Obama was upstairs they would meet with him. Abbas lit up at the idea. “We respect Obama’s attitude toward our revolution, and when we were in Tahrir Square we were following all of the leaders all over the world and what were their views,” Abbas said.
“His speeches were more understanding and more appreciative of what we were doing, especially his second one,” el-Ghazaly Harb said, referring to Obama’s demand that the transition “begin now.” He added, “We were in Tahrir Square and people were cheering for Obama’s speech, because they felt he was saying that we”—America—“were inspired by the Egyptian people and we understand what the teen-agers were saying. Maybe he’s using us, but that’s what I see.”
Later, when I relayed these comments to Clinton, she told me she didn’t take the snub personally. She said, “Many years ago, I was active against the Vietnam War, and I was involved in all kinds of student politics, and so I understand there’s always a full range of people in movements like this. And I remember refusing to meet with people.” She was unmoved by the fact that these protesters had been integral to starting the revolution. “The people who start revolutions may or may not be the people who actually end up governing countries.”
The activists she did meet with were not as organized as she had hoped. “As incredibly emotional and moving and inspiring as it was,” she said, speaking of the demonstrations, “I looked at these twenty young people around the table, and they were complaining about how the elections are going to be held, and the Muslim Brotherhood and the Islamists are so well organized, and the remnants of the old National Democratic Party are so well organized. I said, ‘So, well, are you organizing? Do you have an umbrella group that is going to represent the youth of Egypt? Do you have a political agenda?’ And they all looked up and said no. It made my heart sink.”
On March 16th, Clinton flew from Cairo to Tunis to continue her tour of revolutionary North Africa. The route took us over the Mediterranean just off the coast of Libya. The G.P.S. maps in the cabin of Clinton’s Air Force plane lit up with the name “Benghazi,” reminding everyone that, on the ground, Muammar Qaddafi’s men were marching on that city. Earlier in the day, Qaddafi had gone on the radio to warn the citizens of Benghazi. “It’s over. We are coming tonight,” he said. “We will find you in your closets.”
Protesters had started to gather in Benghazi on February 15th. Qaddafi’s security forces reacted with violence four days later, firing on a crowd of some twenty thousand demonstrators in Benghazi and killing at least a hundred of them. On February 26th, the United Nations passed a resolution that placed an arms embargo and economic sanctions on the Libyan regime and referred Qaddafi to the International Criminal Court. Two days later, the U.S., through lobbying led by Clinton and Power, helped remove Libya from its seat on the U.N. Human Rights Council. By tightening an economic noose around Qaddafi and isolating him diplomatically, Obama and the international community were beginning to use the tools that Power had outlined in “A Problem from Hell.”
The debate then narrowed to whether the United States and others should intervene militarily. The principal option was to set up a no-fly zone to prevent Libyan planes from attacking the protest movement, which had quickly turned into a full-scale rebellion based in the eastern half of the country. The decision about intervention in Libya was an unusually clear choice between interests and values. “Of all the countries in the region there, our real interests in Libya are minimal,” Brent Scowcroft told me. For a President whose long-term goal was to extricate the U.S. from Middle East conflicts, it was an especially vexing debate.
Within the Administration, Robert Gates, the Defense Secretary, was the most strenuous opponent of establishing a no-fly zone, or any other form of military intervention. Like Scowcroft, Gates objected to intervention because he did not think it was in the United States’ vital interest. He also pointed out a fact that many people didn’t seem to understand: the first step in creating a no-fly zone would be to bomb the Libyan air defenses. Clinton disagreed with him and argued the case for intervention with Obama. It was the first major issue on which she and Gates had different views.
The days leading up to Obama’s decision were perplexing to outsiders. American Presidents usually lead the response to world crises, but Obama seemed to stay hidden that week. From the outside, it looked as though the French were dragging him into the conflict. On March 14th, Clinton arrived in Paris, but she had no firm decision to convey. According to a French official, when Clinton met with President Nicolas Sarkozy she declined to endorse the no-fly zone, which Sarkozy interpreted as American reluctance to do anything. “We started to wonder where, exactly, the Administration was going,” the official said.
Late that evening, at her suite at the Westin hotel in Paris, Clinton met for forty-five minutes with Mahmoud Jebril, a representative from the Libyan opposition. I waited in the lobby with a number of reporters, hoping to talk to Jebril after the meeting. But all we got was Bernard-Henri Lévy, the French philosopher, who had taken up the cause of the Libyan opposition and was shepherding Jebril to his meetings with diplomats. We later learned that Jebril was dejected by Clinton’s unwillingness to commit to the no-fly zone and, not wanting to face the press, left the hotel by another exit.
The next evening, Obama held a meeting in the Situation Room. By then, it had become clear that the rebels, who had once seemed on the verge of sweeping Qaddafi out of power, were weak, and poorly armed; they had lost almost all the gains of the previous days. In New York, the Lebanese, the French, and the United Kingdom had prepared a U.N. resolution to implement a no-fly zone, and the world was waiting to see if Obama would join the effort. The White House meeting opened with an assessment of the situation on the ground in Libya. Qaddafi’s forces were on the outskirts of Ajdabiyah, which supplies water and fuel to Benghazi. “The President was told Qaddafi is going to retake Ajdabiyah in twenty-four hours,” a White House official who was in the meeting said. “And then the last stop on the train is Benghazi. If he got there, he would complete the military offensive, and that could be the place where he goes house to house and where a massacre could occur.”
Obama asked if a no-fly zone would prevent that grim scenario. His intelligence and military advisers said no. Qaddafi was using tanks, not war planes, to crush the rebellion. Obama asked his aides to come up with some more robust military options, and left for dinner. At a second meeting that night, he was presented with the option of pushing for a broader resolution that would allow for the U.S. to protect the Libyan rebels by bombing government forces. He instructed Susan Rice, the U.S. Ambassador to the U.N., to pursue that option.
On March 17th, I interviewed Clinton in Tunis. She was sitting under a canopy by the hotel pool, eating breakfast. Although she had been noncommittal with the diplomats in France two days earlier, she now made it clear that the Obama Administration had made a decision. It was well known that she favored intervention, but she was frank about the difficulty in making such decisions. “I get up every morning and I look around the world,” she said. “People are being killed in Côte d’Ivoire, they’re being killed in the Eastern Congo, they’re being oppressed and abused all over the world by dictators and really unsavory characters. So we could be intervening all over the place. But that is not a—what is the standard? Is the standard, you know, a leader who won’t leave office in Ivory Coast and is killing his own people? Gee, that sounds familiar. So part of it is having to make tough choices and wanting to help the international community accept responsibility.”
Clinton insisted that the U.S. had to have regional support before it took action, and emphasized that it was crucial that U.N. action had been supported by the Arab League. “So now we’re going to see whether the Security Council will support the Arab League. Not support the United States—support the Arab League. That is a significant difference. And for those who want to see the United States always acting unilaterally, it’s not satisfying. But, for the world we’re trying to build, where we have a lot of responsible actors who are willing to step up and lead, it is exactly what we should be doing.”
The French and the British were shocked by the quick turn of events. Instead of the President announcing the Administration’s position from the East Room of the White House, the U.N. envoy quietly proposed transforming a tepid resolution for a no-fly zone into a permission for full-scale military intervention in Libya. Some officials thought it was a trick. Was it possible that the Americans were trying to make the military options appear so bleak that China and Russia would be sure to block action?
Gradually, it became clear that the U.S. was serious. Clinton spoke with her Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov, who had previously told her that Russia would “never never” support even a no-fly zone. The Russians agreed to abstain. Without the cover of the Russians, the Chinese almost never veto Security Council resolutions. The vote, on March 17th, was 10–0, with five abstentions. It was the first time in its sixty-six years that the United Nations authorized military action to preëmpt an “imminent massacre.” Tom Malinowski, the Washington director of Human Rights Watch, wrote, “It was, by any objective standard, the most rapid multinational military response to an impending human rights crisis in history.”
As the bombs dropped on Libyan tanks, President Obama made a point of continuing his long-scheduled trip to South America. He wanted to show that America has interests in the rest of the world, even as it was drawn into yet another crisis in the Middle East.
This spring, Obama officials often expressed impatience with questions about theory or about the elusive quest for an Obama doctrine. One senior Administration official reminded me what the former British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan said when asked what was likely to set the course of his government: “Events, dear boy, events.”
Obama has emphasized bureaucratic efficiency over ideology, and approached foreign policy as if it were case law, deciding his response to every threat or crisis on its own merits. “When you start applying blanket policies on the complexities of the current world situation, you’re going to get yourself into trouble,” he said in a recent interview with NBC News.
Obama’s reluctance to articulate a grand synthesis has alienated both realists and idealists. “On issues like whether to intervene in Libya there’s really not a compromise and consensus,” Slaughter said. “You can’t be a little bit realist and a little bit democratic when deciding whether or not to stop a massacre.”
Brzezinski, too, has become disillusioned with the President. “I greatly admire his insights and understanding. I don’t think he really has a policy that’s implementing those insights and understandings. The rhetoric is always terribly imperative and categorical: ‘You must do this,’ ‘He must do that,’ ‘This is unacceptable.’ ” Brzezinski added, “He doesn’t strategize. He sermonizes.”
The one consistent thread running through most of Obama’s decisions has been that America must act humbly in the world. Unlike his immediate predecessors, Obama came of age politically during the post-Cold War era, a time when America’s unmatched power created widespread resentment. Obama believes that highly visible American leadership can taint a foreign-policy goal just as easily as it can bolster it. In 2007, Obama said, “America must show—through deeds as well as words—that we stand with those who seek a better life. That child looking up at the helicopter must see America and feel hope.”
In 2009 and early 2010, Obama was sometimes criticized for not acting at all. He was cautious during Iran’s Green Revolution and deferential to his generals during the review of Afghanistan strategy. But his response to the Arab Spring has been bolder. He broke with Mubarak at a point when some of the older establishment advised against it. In Libya, he overruled Gates and his military advisers and pushed our allies to adopt a broad and risky intervention. It is too early to know the consequences of these decisions. Libya appears to be entering a protracted civil war; American policy toward Mubarak frightened—and irritated—Saudi Arabia, where instability could send oil prices soaring. The U.S. keeps getting stuck in the Middle East.
Nonetheless, Obama may be moving toward something resembling a doctrine. One of his advisers described the President’s actions in Libya as “leading from behind.” That’s not a slogan designed for signs at the 2012 Democratic Convention, but it does accurately describe the balance that Obama now seems to be finding. It’s a different definition of leadership than America is known for, and it comes from two unspoken beliefs: that the relative power of the U.S. is declining, as rivals like China rise, and that the U.S. is reviled in many parts of the world. Pursuing our interests and spreading our ideals thus requires stealth and modesty as well as military strength. “It’s so at odds with the John Wayne expectation for what America is in the world,” the adviser said. “But it’s necessary for shepherding us through this phase.”

The LWOT: Massive cache of Gitmo docs released

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/26/the_lwot_massive_cache_of_gitmo_docs_released
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/26/11 9:40:05 AM] [*]
The LWOT: Massive cache of Gitmo docs released
Foreign Policy and the New America Foundation bring you a twice weekly brief on the legal war on terror. You can read it on foreignpolicy.com or get it delivered directly to your inbox -- just sign up here.
BY ANDREW LEBOVICH | APRIL 26, 2011 [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [federal judiciary] [continuity in USFP] [GSAVE] [the Wikileaks stuff that broke in past couple days] [followup] [America’s initial response to 9/11, unsurprisingly, was based on over dramatized fear] [the bureaucracy, in particular, doesn’t improvise well and the results were not pretty] [use psci 355-455, 363, formerly 469] [*]
Massive cache of Gitmo docs released
Several American and European newspapers on Sunday night released an enormous cache of documents - some obtained by the anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks and others from third

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/26/the_lwot_massive_cache_of_gitmo_docs_released
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/26/11 9:40:05 AM] [*]
The LWOT: Massive cache of Gitmo docs released
Foreign Policy and the New America Foundation bring you a twice weekly brief on the legal war on terror. You can read it on foreignpolicy.com or get it delivered directly to your inbox -- just sign up here.
BY ANDREW LEBOVICH | APRIL 26, 2011 [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [federal judiciary] [continuity in USFP] [GSAVE] [the Wikileaks stuff that broke in past couple days] [followup] [America’s initial response to 9/11, unsurprisingly, was based on over dramatized fear] [the bureaucracy, in particular, doesn’t improvise well and the results were not pretty] [use psci 355-455, 363, formerly 469] [*]
Massive cache of Gitmo docs released
Several American and European newspapers on Sunday night released an enormous cache of documents - some obtained by the anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks and others from third sources - providing a wealth of information from the files of many of the 779 former and current detainees at Guantánamo Bay, stretching from 2002 until the beginning of 2009, when the Obama administration instituted its own review of the then-241 remaining detainees (NYT, NPR, Washington Post, McClatchy, Guardian, Telegraph, Le Monde, El Pais, Der Spiegel - for a round-up of coverage, see FP). The documents, primarily composed of Detainee Assessment Briefs (DAB) of over 700 detainees but also containing interrogators' memos on threat rankings, judging al Qaeda cover stories, and guidelines for judging terror links (available here), provide never-before released information on over 150 prisoners, as well as further information on all but about 75 detainees (NYT).
While the broad contours of much of the information in the documents has been previously reported, the new documents provide a more detailed look at the often contentious and subjective internal deliberations surrounding detainee evaluations (NYT, Guardian, Guardian, Miami Herald, AP, Guardian). The documents also reveal the complications surrounding detainee transfers, whereby diplomatic pressure and assurances led to the transfer of many detainees deemed "high risk" while detainees deemed innocent (150 from Afghanistan and Pakistan, for instance) sometimes took years to be cleared and repatriated (WSJ, BBC, Guardian, CNN, NPR). Around 220 detainees were deemed "dangerous" while another 380 were considered more low-level fighters (Telegraph). Additionally, around 100 detainees were deemed to have "psychiatric illnesses," and the Times reports that detainees regularly discussed suicide (Guardian, NYT).
Initial reporting on the documents does contain new data on a number of fronts:
The Washington Post and others trace the travel patterns of Osama bin Laden and other key al Qaeda figures before, during and after the 9/11 attacks, which includes the journey to and escape from Tora Bora, planning for future attacks (some allegedly including nuclear or chemical weapons), and the presence of several al Qaeda leaders in Karachi on the morning of 9/11 (Washington Post, Guardian, NYT, AP). Reported plots allegedly included a plan to attack London's Heathrow Airport (Der Spiegel);
Interrogators were told to consider links to Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) to be equivalent to links with al Qaeda, the Taliban, Hamas or Hezbollah (Guardian, Reuters, AFP, AP);
At least 10 foreign governments, including China, Tunisia, Morocco, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Tajikistan, Jordan, Algeria, Yemen and Kuwait were allowed to send agents to interrogate detainees (Guardian);
A Libyan former detainee now believed to be training rebels fighting dictator Muammar Qaddafi, Abu Sufian Ibrahim Ahmed Hamuda Bin Qumu, was alleged to have trained in two al Qaeda camps in Afghanistan and engendered close links with the organization (NPR, NYT);
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed reportedly told interrogators in 2004 a nuclear bomb hidden in Europe would detonate if Osama bin Laden were killed or captured, while other detainees told their interrogators about plans, some wildly implausible and others less-so, to acquire, transport and use radiological or chemical materials (Telegraph); [?] [*]
At least three al Qaeda leaders provided information, likely coerced, about alleged plans for Dr. Aafia-Siddiqui, a U.S.-educated neuroscientist to smuggle explosives into the U.S. and possibly manufacture bioweapons (Guardian); [*]
U.S. interrogators believed an al Qaeda "assassin" had also worked as an informant for British intelligence while planning and conducting attacks in Pakistan after 9/11 (Guardian, BBC);
Involvement with one of nine mosques around the world could be regarded as an indicator of terrorist links, including a mosque in Montreal, Canada (Globe and Mail).
And having a certain type of Casio wristwatch was reportedly considered "an indicator of [al Qaeda] training in the manufacture of improvised explosive devices (IEDs)" (Der Spiegel).
British papers showed particular concern for British detainees in their coverage of the documents, and the Telegraph reports that at least 35 Guantánamo detainees were radicalized in part in Britain (Guardian, Guardian, Guardian, Telegraph). The Times and NPR have created interactive graphics showing detailed data on the detainees, including recidivism by country of origin and the repatriation of detainees of different threat levels (NYT, NYT, NPR, Guardian). And the Washington Post has a timeline of major events at Guantánamo (Washington Post). For additional commentary on what the documents do - and don't - mean, see Foreign Policy, "The Prisoner's Dilemma" (FP).
Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell and Amb. Dan Fried, the U.S. envoy charged with closing Guantánamo, condemned the document release, saying (NYT):
Both the previous and the current Administrations have made every effort to act with the utmost care and diligence in transferring detainees from Guantanamo. ... [continuity in spades] [*] Both Administrations have made the protection of American citizens the top priority and we are concerned that the disclosure of these documents could be damaging to those efforts.
The Washington Post's Anne Kornblut notes this morning that various organizations and politicians from across the political spectrum have used the new documents to bolster long-held positions about Guantánamo (Washington Post). 172 prisoners remain at Gitmo, and this weekend's Washington Post also has a must-read detailing the chronology and reasons behind President Obama's failure to close the prison (Washington Post, Guardian). And a defiant U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder in a speech on Apr. 25 laid out the four "essential" priorities for the Justice Department, including "protecting Americans from terrorism at home and abroad" (Washington Post, CNN).
Trials and Tribulations
Federal prosecutors filed a superseding indictment (available here) on Apr. 25 charging four men with involvement in the 2008 Mumbai attacks; purported Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) figure and attack coordinator Sajid Mir, Abu Qahafa, Mazhar Iqbal, and a man known only as "Major Iqbal" (AP).
International forces in Afghanistan reportedly killed a senior al Qaeda figure in the country, a Saudi named Abdul Ghani or Abu Hafs al-Najdi, two weeks ago in the country's east (BBC, AP, Reuters). Coalition forces also arrested a purported leader of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) in the northern Kunduz province last Friday (NYT).
Indonesian authorities arrested a 20th man in connection with recent bomb plots targeting moderate Muslims and Christians in the country, as authorities grow concerned about the involvement of older militant groups in the new wave of attacks and plots (AP, Jakarta Post, VOA).
Three suspected Northern Irish dissidents appeared in court yesterday after they were allegedly caught with weapons last Friday, one of three weapons seizures in Northern Ireland in the past several days (BBC, Guardian, AP).
Iran and Iraq signed an extradition agreement on Apr. 24 that may lead to members of the banned Mujahideen-e-Khalq organization being sent to Iran to face charges there (Reuters).
Investigators have named a suspect in the attempted bombing of a Colorado shopping mall last week, Earl Albert Moore, but said the incident was likely not related to the 12th anniversary of the Columbine High School shootings, which took place nearby (AP).
Andrew Lebovich is a program associate in the National Security Studies Program at the New America Foundation.

WikiLeaks Exposes Terror Master’s Nincompoop Nephew

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/04/wikileaks-exposes-terror-masters-nincompoop-nephew/
Wired
Danger Room Blog
[Accessed 4/26/11 9:37:21 AM] [*]
WikiLeaks Exposes Terror Master’s Nincompoop Nephew
By Spencer Ackerman
April 25, 2011 [one of my favorite national-security blogs] [on the Wikileaks documents on detainees at gitmo] [see the big piece in today’s govt on the relatives to KSM] [in particular, an old man living in US—seemed fairly pathetic?] [here danger room goes through the same Detainee Assessment Briefs (DABs) to piece together wha the US knew and did in aftermath of 9/11] [as could be predicted, some of it not America’s finest?] [but much of it simply unnecessary] [cross in societal] [mostly straight reporting] [*]
For years, Guantanamo Bay detainee Ammar al-Baluchi, a nephew of 9/11 architect Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, has been known as one of al-Qaida’s most important moneymen. And maybe he really did know how to funnel cash. But new material contained in WikiLeaks’s “Gitmo Files” indicate everything else Baluchi did, he did with extreme incompetence. Turns out nepotism doesn’t work any better in the terrorism game than it does in business or in

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/04/wikileaks-exposes-terror-masters-nincompoop-nephew/
Wired
Danger Room Blog
[Accessed 4/26/11 9:37:21 AM] [*]
WikiLeaks Exposes Terror Master’s Nincompoop Nephew
By Spencer Ackerman
April 25, 2011 [one of my favorite national-security blogs] [on the Wikileaks documents on detainees at gitmo] [see the big piece in today’s govt on the relatives to KSM] [in particular, an old man living in US—seemed fairly pathetic?] [here danger room goes through the same Detainee Assessment Briefs (DABs) to piece together wha the US knew and did in aftermath of 9/11] [as could be predicted, some of it not America’s finest?] [but much of it simply unnecessary] [cross in societal] [mostly straight reporting] [*]
For years, Guantanamo Bay detainee Ammar al-Baluchi, a nephew of 9/11 architect Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, has been known as one of al-Qaida’s most important moneymen. And maybe he really did know how to funnel cash. But new material contained in WikiLeaks’s “Gitmo Files” indicate everything else Baluchi did, he did with extreme incompetence. Turns out nepotism doesn’t work any better in the terrorism game than it does in business or in politics. [*]
As the 9/11 Commission documented years ago, Baluchi very ably got money from al-Qaida’s central authorities into the pockets of the 9/11 hijackers. Before his 2003 capture in Pakistan, he even helped his uncle get cash to Hambali, a premiere Indonesian terrorist.
But when Baluchi tried to step up his game, he embarrassed himself and jeopardized al-Qaida.[*]
Khalid Shaikh Mohammed got taken into custody in March 2003. He had big plans in the works: attempts to blow up Heathrow Airport, the U.S. consulate in Karachi and a variety of U.S. targets (including gas stations or, possibly, oil refineries). Baluchi sought to carry his uncle’s banner once KSM got popped. [only, thank god, he didn’t have his uncle’s nack for planning] [**]
Big mistake. Baluchi didn’t make it two months before getting taken into custody. That’s because the story told in Baluchi’s Gitmo File shows him oblivious to some very obvious surveillance. In October 2002, just weeks after one of the first big arrests of al-Qaida operatives in Pakistan, he meets with a terrorist named Asif Zahir, who wants to give Baluchi 10 tons of ammonium nitrate for the explosives used in the Karachi plot. [*]“Zahir was arrested after meeting with detainee,” the Gitmo File notes. But his supplier’s bust doesn’t cause Baluchi to change any of his patterns.
A few months later, Baluchi gets approached by someone named Jabir, who claims he can hook Baluchi up with more explosives. Baluchi tells him to lay low for a few months and then give him the stash while assigning agents to case out their targets. But when Baluchi reestablishes contact in April 2003, it’s his downfall. “On the day detainee and [associate] Walid bin Attash were supposed to receive the explosives,” the File reads, “they were both arrested.” [they were being watched!] [*]
The Karachi plot was foiled. Authorities took 330 pounds of explosives and detonators. Baluchi’s Gitmo File notes that he was arrested with “potassium cyanide poison” hidden on his person. If he meant to kill himself rather than be caught, he failed at that, too.
It’s unclear whether Zahir and Jabir were targets of surveillance or snitches. But Baluchi’s choice of associates shows how little he picked up from his uncle about facilitating terrorism. A businessman named Saifullah Paracha [the old man in America in today’s Times] [*]— later a detainee at Guantanamo himself — advised Baluchi on “methods to smuggle chemicals” into the United States. He needed to teach Baluchi the basics: “detainee told [Baluchi] that radiological sensors at ports or places of entry into the US would make it difficult to smuggle radioactive materials into the country.”
The signs of Baluchi’s unfitness for being more than a terrorist moneychanger were on display years before his 2003 flameout. Way back in 1996, when he was a student, Baluchi heard about al-Qaida training camps in Afghanistan and expressed interest in attending, “but could not fit the training around his studies.” Taking a closer look, he felt he “would not be very successful with the training.” But instead of concluding the terrorist life wasn’t for him, he asked his uncle to pull some strings, and Khalid Shaikh Mohammed put Baluchi to work moving money around. [*]
By all accounts, Baluchi succeeded at that. But Khalid Shaikh Mohammed might have reflected on his nephew’s lack of discipline and discouraged him from attempting anything more sophisticated. The two of them have had nearly seven years in detention to reflect on that mistake.

Iraq, Iran and the Next Move

http://www.realclearworld.com/articles/2011/04/26/iraq_iran_and_the_next_move_99494.html
Real Clear Politics
[Accessed 4/26/11 9:43:03 AM] [*]
April 26, 2011
Iraq, Iran and the Next Move
By George Friedman [commentary] [Realpolitik analysis of Iraq-Iran in mid 2011 with the US due to withdraw at year’s end] [Strafor is pretty solidly in the Realpolitik part of analysis of events] [and Friedman in particular] [*]
The United States told the Iraqi government last week that if it wants U.S. troops to remain in Iraq beyond the deadline of Dec. 31, 2011, as stipulated by the current Status of Forces Agreement between Washington and Baghdad, it would have to inform the United States quickly. Unless a new agreement is reached soon, the United States will be unable to remain. The implication in the U.S. position is that a complex planning process must be initiated to leave troops there and delays will not allow that process to take place. [I thought it so important, it was a quiz question] [I also thought it somewhat odd that Mullen was the one saying it—did he have White House permission?] [*]
What is actually going on is that the United States is urging the Iraqi government to change

http://www.realclearworld.com/articles/2011/04/26/iraq_iran_and_the_next_move_99494.html
Real Clear Politics
[Accessed 4/26/11 9:43:03 AM] [*]
April 26, 2011
Iraq, Iran and the Next Move
By George Friedman [commentary] [Realpolitik analysis of Iraq-Iran in mid 2011 with the US due to withdraw at year’s end] [Strafor is pretty solidly in the Realpolitik part of analysis of events] [and Friedman in particular] [*]
The United States told the Iraqi government last week that if it wants U.S. troops to remain in Iraq beyond the deadline of Dec. 31, 2011, as stipulated by the current Status of Forces Agreement between Washington and Baghdad, it would have to inform the United States quickly. Unless a new agreement is reached soon, the United States will be unable to remain. The implication in the U.S. position is that a complex planning process must be initiated to leave troops there and delays will not allow that process to take place. [I thought it so important, it was a quiz question] [I also thought it somewhat odd that Mullen was the one saying it—did he have White House permission?] [*]
What is actually going on is that the United States is urging the Iraqi government to change its mind on U.S. withdrawal, and it would like Iraq to change its mind right now in order to influence some of the events taking place in the Persian Gulf. The Shiite uprising in Bahrain and the Saudi intervention, along with events in Yemen, have created an extremely unstable situation in the region, and the United States is afraid that completing the withdrawal would increase the instability. [I agree] [*]
The Iranian Rise
The American concern, of course, has to do with Iran. The United States has been unable to block Iranian influence in Iraq's post-Baathist government. Indeed, the degree to which the Iraqi government is a coherent entity is questionable, and its military and security forces have limited logistical and planning ability and are not capable of territorial defense. [*]The issue is not the intent of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who himself is enigmatic. The problem is that the coalition that governs Iraq is fragmented and still not yet finalized, dominated by Iranian proxies such Muqtada al-Sadr - and it only intermittently controls the operations of the ministries under it, or the military and security forces. [I’d have to say I largely agree with that too] [*]
As such, Iraq is vulnerable to the influence of any substantial power, and the most important substantial power following the withdrawal of the United States will be Iran. There has been much discussion of the historic tension between Iraqi Shia and Iranian Shia, all of which is true. But Iran has been systematically building its influence in Iraq among all factions using money, blackmail and ideology delivered by a sophisticated intelligence service. More important, as the United States withdraws, Iraqis, regardless of their feelings toward Iran (those Iraqis who haven't always felt this way), are clearly sensing that resisting Iran is dangerous and accommodation with Iran is the only solution. They see Iran as the rising power in the region, and that perception is neither unreasonable nor something to which the United States or Saudi Arabia has an easy counter. [the one thing I think analysts tend to underemphsize: with the US mostly gone, the old Iran-Iraq enmities are almost certain to resurface in substantial ways] [*]
The Iraqi government's response to the American offer has been predictable. While some quietly want the United States to remain, the general response has ranged from dismissal to threats if the United States did not leave. Given that the United States has reportedly offered to leave as many as 20,000 troops in a country that 170,000 American troops could not impose order on, the Iraqi perception is that this is merely a symbolic presence and that endorsing it would get Iraq into trouble with Iran, which has far more than 20,000 troops and ever-present intelligence services. It is not clear that the Iraqis were ever prepared to allow U.S. troops to remain, but 20,000 is enough to enrage Iran and not enough to deal with the consequences.
The American assumption in deciding to leave Iraq - and this goes back to George W. Bush as well as Barack Obama - was that over the course of four years, the United States would be able to leave because it would have created a coherent government and military. The United States underestimated the degree to which fragmentation in Iraq would prevent that outcome and the degree to which Iranian influence would undermine the effort. [*]The United States made a pledge to the American public and a treaty with the Iraqi government to withdraw forces, but the conditions that were expected to develop simply did not. [agreed] [*]
Not coincidentally, the withdrawal of American forces has coincided with tremendous instability in the region, particularly on the Arabian Peninsula. All around the periphery of Saudi Arabia an arc of instability has emerged. It is not that the Iranians engineered it, but they have certainly taken advantage of it. As a result, Saudi Arabia is in a position where it has had to commit forces in Bahrain, is standing by in Yemen, and is even concerned about internal instability given the rise of both reform-minded and Shiite elements at a time of unprecedented transition given the geriatric state of the country's top four leaders. Iran has certainly done whatever it could to exacerbate this instability, which fits neatly into the Iraqi situation.
As the United States leaves Iraq, Iran expects to increase its influence there. Iran normally acts cautiously even while engaged in extreme rhetoric. Therefore, it is unlikely to send conventional forces into Iraq. Indeed, it might not be necessary to do so in order to gain a dominant political position. Nor is it inconceivable that the Iranians could decide to act more aggressively. With the United States gone, the risks decline.
Saudi Arabia's Problem
The country that could possibly counter Iran in Iraq is Saudi Arabia, which has been known to funnel money to Sunni groups there. Its military is no match for Iran's in a battle for Iraq, [*] and its influence there has been less than Iran's among most groups. More important, as the Saudis face the crisis on their periphery they are diverted and preoccupied by events to the east and south. The unrest in the region, therefore, increases the sense of isolation of some Iraqis and increases their vulnerability to Iran. Thus, given that Iraq is Iran's primary national security concern, the events in the Persian Gulf work to Iran's advantage.
The United States previously had an Iraq question. That question is being answered, and not to the American advantage. Instead, what is emerging is a Saudi Arabian question. Saudi Arabia currently is clearly able to handle unrest within its borders. It has also been able to suppress the Shia in Bahrain - for now, at least. However, its ability to manage its southern periphery with Yemen is being tested, given that the regime in Sanaa was already weakened by multiple insurgencies and is now being forced from office after more than 30 years in power. If the combined pressure of internal unrest, turmoil throughout the region and Iranian manipulation continues, the stress on the Saudis could become substantial.
The basic problem the Saudis face is that they don't know the limits of their ability (which is not much beyond their financial muscle) to manage the situation. If they miscalculate and overextend, they could find themselves in an untenable position. Therefore, the Saudis must be conservative. They cannot afford miscalculation. From the Saudi point of view, the critical element is a clear sign of long-term American commitment to the regime. American support for the Saudis in Bahrain has been limited, and the United States has not been aggressively trying to manage the situation in Yemen, given its limited ability to shape an outcome there. Coupled with the American position on Iraq, which is that it will remain only if asked - and then only with limited forces - the Saudis are clearly not getting the signals they want from the United States. In fact, what further worsens the Saudi position is that they cannot overtly align with the United States for their security needs. Nevertheless, they also have no other option. Exploiting this Saudi dilemma is a key part of the Iranian strategy.
The smaller countries of the Arabian Peninsula, grouped with Saudi Arabia in the Gulf Cooperation Council, have played the role of mediator in Yemen, but ultimately they lack the force needed by a credible mediator - a potential military option to concentrate the minds of the negotiating parties. For that, they need the United States.
It is in this context that the crown prince of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan, will be visiting Washington on April 26. The UAE is one of the few countries on the Arabian Peninsula that has not experienced significant unrest. As such, it has emerged as one of the politically powerful entities in the region. We obviously cannot know what the UAE is going to ask the United States for, but we would be surprised if it wasn't for a definitive sign that the United States was prepared to challenge the Iranian rise in the region.
The Saudis will be watching the American response very carefully. Their national strategy has been to uncomfortably rely on the United States. If the United States is seen as unreliable, the Saudis have only two options. [*]One is to hold their position and hope for the best. The other is to reach out and see if some accommodation can be made with Iran. The tensions between Iran and Saudi Arabia - religious, cultural, economic and political - are profound. But in the end, the Iranians want to be the dominant power in the Persian Gulf, defining economic, political and military patterns. [I agree mostly] [however, just because America is redeploying troops, that’s not the same as America atrophy—I think the US will remain actively engaged] [*]
On April 18, Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's adviser for military affairs, Maj. Gen. Yahya Rahim Safavi, warned Saudi Arabia that it, too, could be invaded on the same pretext that the kingdom sent forces into Bahrain to suppress a largely Shiite rising there. Then, on April 23, the commander of Iran's elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Maj. Gen. Mohammad Ali Jaafari, remarked that Iran's military might was stronger than that of Saudi Arabia and reminded the United States that its forces in the region were within range of Tehran's weapons. Again, the Iranians are not about to make any aggressive moves, and such statements are intended to shape perception and force the Saudis to capitulate on the negotiating table.
The Saudis want regime survival above all else. Deciding between facing Iran alone or reaching an unpleasant accommodation, the Saudis have little choice. We would guess that one of the reasons the UAE is reaching out to Obama is to try to convince him of the dire consequences of inaction and to move the United States into a more active role.
A Strategy of Neglect
The Obama administration appears to have adopted an increasingly obvious foreign policy. Rather than simply attempt to control events around the world, the administration appears to have selected a policy of careful neglect. This is not, in itself, a bad strategy. Neglect means that allies and regional powers directly affected by the problem will take responsibility for the problem. [I more or less agree] [I think Obama has been forced into said posture by economic realities] [*] Most problems resolve themselves without the need of American intervention. If they don't, the United States can consider its posture later. Given that the world has become accustomed to the United States as first responder, other countries have simply waited for the American response. We have seen this in Libya, where the United States has tried to play a marginal role. Conceptually, this is not unsound.
The problem is that this will work only when regional powers have the weight to deal with the problem and where the outcome is not crucial to American interests. Again, Libya is an almost perfect example of this. However, the Persian Gulf is an area of enormous interest to the United States because of oil. Absent the United States, the regional forces will not be able to contain Iran. Therefore, applying this strategy to the Persian Gulf creates a situation of extreme risk for the United States. [that’s one possible scenario, perhaps even probable] [underplays Iraq’s rebirth and ignores Iran’s worries with Syria flying apart?] [*]
Re-engagement in Iraq on a level that would deter Iran is not a likely option, not only because of the Iraqi position but also because the United States lacks the force needed to create a substantial deterrence that would not be attacked and worn down by guerrillas. Intruding in the Arabian Peninsula itself is dangerous for a number reasons, ranging from the military challenge to the hostility an American presence could generate. A pure naval and air solution lacks the ability to threaten Iran's center of gravity, its large ground force.
Therefore, the United States is in a difficult position. It cannot simply decline engagement nor does it have the ability to engage at this moment - and it is this moment that matters. Nor does it have allies outside the region with the resources and appetite for involvement. That leaves the United States with the Saudi option - negotiate with Iran, a subject I've written on before. This is not an easy course, nor a recommended one, but when all other options are gone, you go with what you have.
The pressure from Iran is becoming palpable. All of the Arab countries feel it, and whatever their feelings about the Persians, the realities of power are what they are. The UAE has been sent to ask the United States for a solution. It is not clear the United States has one. When we ask why the price of oil is surging, the idea of geopolitical risk does come to mind. It is not a foolish speculation. [but overall, pretty solid analysis using Realpolitik] [it’s too static, for my liking, as Realpolitik so often is] [but most of it seems pretty close to the mark] [*]
Iraq, Iran and the Next Move is republished with the permission of STRATFOR.

Whiff of Desperation

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/25/whiff_of_desperation
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/26/11 9:41:01 AM] [*]
Whiff of Desperation
Michael Oren's unconvincing argument for the U.S.-Israel special relationship.
BY STEPHEN M. WALT | APRIL 25, 2011 [commentary] [Ambassador Michael Oren just penned an op-ed piece on how critical an ally Israel is to US] [it’s the usual stuff and I didn’t even bother to post] [nothing particularly new] [it was the same hackneyed stuff one always hears] [I presumed it was Passover public diplomacy?] [however, Steve Walt, who has had an ogoing battle with AIPAC and a few other friends of Israel since his co-athored book on Israel’s “penetration” of U.S. policymaking has a less benign take] [hardly surprising given they way they’ve gone at each other] [Walt at least evinces humor now and then?] [a little too bombastic but he also makes some good points] [I discuss where I agree and disagree with his argument] [*]
It is an ambassador's job to burnish his government's image; fidelity to the usual canons of logic and evidence are neither required nor expected. It is therefore unsurprising that Michael Oren's portrait of Israel as America's "ultimate ally" is a one-sided distortion of reality. [well, yes, that’s what these fluff things are?] [*]
The main targets of Oren's hasbara -- Hebrew for public diplomacy -- are some unnamed

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/25/whiff_of_desperation
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/26/11 9:41:01 AM] [*]
Whiff of Desperation
Michael Oren's unconvincing argument for the U.S.-Israel special relationship.
BY STEPHEN M. WALT | APRIL 25, 2011 [commentary] [Ambassador Michael Oren just penned an op-ed piece on how critical an ally Israel is to US] [it’s the usual stuff and I didn’t even bother to post] [nothing particularly new] [it was the same hackneyed stuff one always hears] [I presumed it was Passover public diplomacy?] [however, Steve Walt, who has had an ogoing battle with AIPAC and a few other friends of Israel since his co-athored book on Israel’s “penetration” of U.S. policymaking has a less benign take] [hardly surprising given they way they’ve gone at each other] [Walt at least evinces humor now and then?] [a little too bombastic but he also makes some good points] [I discuss where I agree and disagree with his argument] [*]
It is an ambassador's job to burnish his government's image; fidelity to the usual canons of logic and evidence are neither required nor expected. It is therefore unsurprising that Michael Oren's portrait of Israel as America's "ultimate ally" is a one-sided distortion of reality. [well, yes, that’s what these fluff things are?] [*]
The main targets of Oren's hasbara -- Hebrew for public diplomacy -- are some unnamed "realists," meaning anyone who questions the net benefits of America's so-called "special relationship" with Israel. All of the realists I know support Israel's existence and do not deny that the United States derives some modest benefits from its ties with the Jewish state. [that’s more or less accurate] [*] However, they point out that many of these benefits (e.g., trade, scientific exchange, etc.) do not require a "special relationship" -- one in which Israel gets extensive and unconditional economic, military, and diplomatic support -- and they maintain that the costs of the current "special relationship" outweigh the benefits. [this is obviously subjective] [whether the benefits are outweighed by the costs is fundamentally a function of perspective] [I think it’s more complex than a simple tabulation, for example] [but where I agree, ever so slightly, with Walt, is this: some pro-Israel Americans (includes policymakers and analysts) have simply stopped distinguishing America’s foreign-policy interests from Israel’s foreign-policy interests!] [that strikes me as truly simple minded] [you can be certain, that Israel distinguishes its interests from America’s and ther reverse should be true, without question] [but some have become so accustomed to think the two are one in the same, it’s become a problem] [I think certain neoconservatives-Vulcans, in particular, make this mistake] [they routinely speak of Israeli interests as perforce American interests!?!?] [*] Unconditional U.S. support has also facilitated policies -- most notably settlement building -- that have undermined Israel's global standing and placed its long-term future in jeopardy. Accordingly, realists believe that a more normal relationship would be better for the United States and Israel alike.
Not surprisingly, Oren would prefer that the United States continue backing Israel to the hilt no matter what it does. His first line of argument is the odd suggestion that Americans have been Zionists ever since the Founding Fathers (i.e., even before modern Zionism existed). Some early U.S. leaders did have biblically inspired notions about "returning Jews to the Holy Land," but that fact tells us nothing about the proper relationship between the United States and Israel today. [and it’s terribly silly] [some of them believed in free masonry and bleeding!] [that was a long time ago] [*] America's Founding Fathers also opposed colonialism, for example, so one might just as easily argue that they would oppose Israel's occupation of the West Bank and support the Palestinians' efforts to secure their own independence. George Washington also warned Americans to avoid "passionate attachments" to any foreign nations, in good part because he believed it would distort U.S. domestic politics and provide avenues for foreign influence. Thus, Oren's highly selective reading of past U.S. history offers little grounds for unconditional support today.
Oren's second line of argument is the familiar claim that the United States and Israel share identical "democratic values." [I’m not sure he thinks that] [he thinks they are quite close and it’s in Oren’s interest—as Israel’s ambassador to US—to foster that sort of thinkoing] [but I wouldn’t make too big a deal of it] [*] Yet this argument cannot explain why the United States gives Israel so much support, and gives it unconditionally. After all, there are many democracies in the world, but none has a special relationship with the United States like Israel does.
It is true that both states are formally democratic, but there are also fundamental differences between the two countries. The United States is a liberal democracy, where people of any race, religion, or ethnicity are supposed to enjoy equal rights. Israel, by contrast, was explicitly founded as a Jewish state, and non-Jews in Israel are second-class citizens both de jure and de facto. [I tend to leave this one along] [I have strong feelings about religion and politics mixing] [I believe in strict separation] [however, coming from a Mormon family, I simply understand that many pro-democratic governance people have a strangely anti-democratic attachment to their eschatology] [no democracy when Jesus-god- . . . returns] [consequently, I leave it along] [*] To take but one example, Palestinians who marry Israeli Jews are not permitted to become citizens of Israel themselves. This may make sense given Israel's self-definition, but it is wholly at odds with deep-rooted American values.
Just as importantly, Israel's democratic status is undermined by its imposition of a legal, administrative, and military regime in the occupied territories that denies the Palestinians there basic human rights, as well as by its prolonged, government-backed effort to colonize these conquered lands with Jewish settlers. Like all colonial enterprises, maintaining Israeli control of the occupied territories depends on heavy-handed coercion. Such behavior is at odds with core American values -- as U.S. administrations of both parties have said repeatedly, if not forcefully enough. [well, it’s not like the US doesn’t back many others who make short shrift of human rights (even rule of law) for selected minorities among them?] [Saudi, Jordan, Pakistan, Afghanistan, . . . come to mind] [*]
Oren's third line of argument is that Israel is a unique strategic asset, implying that unconditional support for Israel makes Americans safer at home. [that’s pretty standard stuff for AIPAC and even J Street?] [*] For example, he claims that Israel maintains stability in the eastern Mediterranean. But that is not true. Israel's invasion of Lebanon in 1982 made the region less stable and led directly to the creation of Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite militia. The United States eventually had to send troops into Lebanon because Israel had created such a mess, and that decision led to a suicide attack on the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut in which 241 American servicemen died. Similarly, Israel's assault on Lebanon in 2006 killed more than a thousand Lebanese (many of them civilians), inflicted billions of dollars of property damage, undermined the U.S.-backed "Cedar Revolution," and enhanced Hezbollah's political influence within Lebanon. Finally, Israeli control of the occupied territories led directly to the first and second intifadas and the brutal 2008-2009 war on Gaza -- all of which created enormous popular blowback in the region. None of these events were in America's strategic interest, and they belie the claim that Israel is somehow bringing "stability" to the region. [Israel does things that are contrary to America’s interests and even contrary to Israel’s interests, from time to time] [Israel is not unique that way and America is still better off with Israel in tact and secure than without same?] [*]
Israel's limited strategic value is further underscored by its inability to contribute to a more crucial U.S. interest: access to oil in the Persian Gulf. Israel could not help preserve American access to oil after the Shah of Iran fell in 1979, so the United States had to create its own Rapid Deployment Force, which could not operate out of Israel. When the U.S. Navy was busy escorting oil tankers during the Iran-Iraq War, Israel did nothing to help, and it remained on the sidelines in the 1991 Gulf War as well. In fact, after Saddam Hussein fired Scud missiles at Israel in a failed attempt to provoke it into joining the war and disrupting the Gulf War coalition, the United States had to divert military assets from that fight in order to protect Israel. As historian Bernard Lewis (a strong supporter of Israel) remarked afterward, "The change [in Israel's strategic value] was clearly manifested in the Gulf War.... Israel was not an asset, but an irrelevance -- some even said a nuisance."
Israel was also no help during the more recent war in Iraq. Although prominent Israeli politicians such as Ehud Barak, Benjamin Netanyahu, and Shimon Peres all endorsed toppling Saddam (and Barak and Netanyahu published op-eds in U.S. newspapers to help convince Americans to back the war), Israel was not an active member of the "coalition of the willing" and has remained on the sidelines for the past eight years while U.S. troops have been fighting and dying on the streets of Baghdad and Fallujah.
In addition to overstating the benefits of the special relationship, Oren also ignores or denies its obvious costs. He is silent about Israel's extensive efforts to spy on the United States, which the U.S. Government Accountability Office has described as "the most aggressive espionage operation against the United States of any U.S. ally." And he says nothing about Israel's arms sales to Iran in the 1980s, its transfer of sensitive U.S. defense technology to potential adversaries such as China, or its refusal to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. He makes much of the supposedly valuable intelligence information that Israel provides to the United States, but says nothing about Israel's tendency to manipulate Washington by hyping external threats. Since the early 1990s, for example, Israeli officials have repeatedly warned that Iran was on the brink of getting a nuclear bomb, a series of false forecasts that were mostly intended to elicit greater support from the United States. [the US spies on friends as well as enemies too] [*]
Oren also maintains that the special relationship between the United States and Israel has nothing to do with anti-Americanism in the Arab world or the motivations of terrorist groups like al Qaeda. In his view, there is no linkage whatsoever between U.S. support for Israel, Israel's treatment of the Palestinians, and the widespread hostility that the United States faces in the Arab and Islamic world. Not only does this claim fail the common-sense test, but making it also requires Oren to ignore a mountain of evidence to the contrary and leads him to make up stories that are simply untrue.
For example, Oren claims that "[Osama] bin Laden initially justified his attacks on America's profligacy and only later, after his setbacks in Afghanistan, linked them to Israel." This assertion is false. Bin Laden's first public statement intended for a wide audience -- released in December 1994 -- directly addressed the Palestinian issue. According to terrorism experts Daniel Benjamin and Steven Simon, the "most prominent grievance" in bin Laden's 1996 fatwa against the West was what he termed the "Zionist-Crusader alliance." [I agree that’s re writing history] [read teh1996 fatwa and the 1998 fatwa] [both are explicit] [*] In 1997, bin Laden told CNN's Peter Arnett, "We declared jihad against the U.S. government because ... it has committed acts that are extremely unjust, hideous, and criminal, whether directly or through its support of the Israeli occupation of [Palestine]." Needless to say, these and many similar statements predate 9/11 or the "setbacks" in Afghanistan to which Oren refers.
And bin Laden is hardly the only example. The 9/11 Commission reported that 9/11 plotter Khalid Sheikh Mohammed's "animus toward the United States stemmed not from his experiences there as a student, but rather from his violent disagreement with U.S. foreign policy favoring Israel." Other anti-American terrorists -- such as Ramzi Yousef, who led the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center -- have offered similar explanations for their anger toward the United States. [yes, but this is common] [people around the world often like America and hate America’s foreign policy concomitantly] [*]
Despite Oren's denials, therefore, it is clear that one major cost of the special relationship is a heightened risk of anti-American terrorism. U.S. support for Israel is not the only source of anti-American extremism, of course, but it is an important one and it makes no sense to try to deny it.
There is also abundant survey evidence confirming that the special relationship is a powerful source of anti-American feeling throughout the Arab and Islamic world. In 2003, the State Department's Advisory Group on Public Diplomacy found that "Citizens in [Arab] countries are genuinely distressed at the plight of Palestinians and at the role they perceive the United States to be playing." In 2004, the Defense Science Board, an advisory group to the Pentagon, concluded that "Muslims do not 'hate our freedom,' but rather, they hate our policies. The overwhelming majority voice their objections to what they see as one-sided support in favor of Israel and against Palestinian rights, and the longstanding, even increasing support for what Muslims collectively see as tyrannies, most notably Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Pakistan, and the Gulf states." As the 9/11 Commission acknowledged that same year, "it is simply a fact that American policy regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and American actions in Iraq are dominant staples of popular commentary across the Arab and Muslim world."
More recent surveys of Arab opinion confirm strong Arab disapproval of U.S. support for Israel and of U.S. handling of the Palestinian issue. According to the 2010 Brookings Institution/University of Maryland survey of public opinion in six Arab countries, the most frequently cited source of disappointment was the Obama administration's "Arab/Palestinian-Israeli policy." And when respondents were asked to name two countries they regarded as threatening, the top two answers were Israel (88 percent) and the United States (77 percent). It is perhaps worth noting that only 10 percent of respondents mentioned Iran. [so?] [that’s been the case for ever] [it was the case in 1980s, 1990s, 2000s?] [*]
Oren tries to explain this away by saying that Arab leaders are far more worried about Iran, and he quotes Saudi King Abdullah's request (as revealed by WikiLeaks) that the United States "cut off the head of the snake" (Iran). There is no question that some Arab leaders are concerned about Iran, but it does not follow that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is of little importance to them or to their subjects. [they are plenty worried about both, from my experience] [*] As the Center for American Progress's Matthew Duss documented in a previous Foreign Policy article, the WikiLeaks cables contain abundant statements by Arab leaders highlighting the importance of the Palestinian issue to them, and U.S. officials are repeatedly told that ending the occupation is critical to improving America's position in the region.
Moreover, even if Iran is a growing concern, the combination of the special relationship and Israel's continued colonization of the West Bank makes that problem harder, not easier, to address. Iran exploits the Palestinian issue to put its Arab rivals on the defensive because Tehran knows that it resonates with Arab publics. By championing the Palestinian cause, Iran makes it more difficult for Arab governments to form a united front against Tehran or collaborate openly with the United States. [yes, I think that is largely true] [*] That is one reason why both former Centcom commander David Petraeus and his successor, Gen. James Mattis, have told Congress that the continuation of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is a serious liability when trying to address major problems elsewhere in the region.
Oddly enough, Oren seems to be partially aware of this fact, though he fails to draw the right conclusions. [Walt seems unable to look at Israel without incredible emotion and animus] [and if I’d been attacked nonstop, perhaps I would too?] [but here, Walt began by talking about Israeli embassy propaganda, then seems stunned that Israel’s ambassodor to the U.S. penned a propaganda piece???] [*] He correctly notes that protests about Israel have been "[c]onspicuously absent" in the upheavals that have been convulsing Arab states over the past few months. He then warns "emerging Arab governments might in the future ... seek to gain legitimacy by harnessing anti-Israeli sentiment." But if the Palestinian issue did not resonate strongly with Arab publics, how could Arab rulers "gain legitimacy" by highlighting it?
The bottom line is that the special relationship with Israel makes it much more difficult to achieve America's main strategic aims in the Middle East. This is not to say that the challenges Washington faces would disappear if the Israeli-Palestinian conflict were resolved or if the United States had a more normal relationship with Israel. That's a straw man to which few serious analysts subscribe. But there is little question that a just peace would make it much easier for Washington to pursue its other interests in the region. [I agree with this sentence—at least, it would likely make life easier] [there’s no way to know for certain that people wouldn’t simply find a new bête noir but?] [*]
Finally, Oren denies that the "so-called Israel Lobby" has anything to do with the current special relationship and claims it has no impact on U.S. support for the Jewish state or American policy more generally. To support this fantastic claim, he quotes longtime Mideast advisor Dennis Ross saying that the United States has never based its actions on what the "lobby" wanted or refrained from doing something because it thought groups in the lobby might be upset. To put it politely, this is fatuous. For one thing, Ross is hardly an objective source on this matter, having previously worked as counselor to the Washington Institute for Near East Policy (a spinoff of AIPAC, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee) and as chairman of the Jewish People Policy Institute, a Jerusalem-based think tank. Ross is just about the last person on the planet who is going to admit that the lobby exerts a powerful influence on U.S. Middle East policy, and the fact that Oren relies on his testimony tells you just how weak his argument is. [?] [*]
Furthermore, Ross's claim is belied by testimony from other equally experienced observers. For example, Ross's former deputy, Aaron David Miller, has described how the United States acted as "Israel's lawyer" during the Oslo peace process, a role that contributed significantly to Oslo's failure. Miller's subsequent book, The Much Too Promised Land, acknowledged the power of the lobby but said it was not all-powerful (another straw-man view that few serious analysts hold); yet he also admitted "those of us advising the secretary of state and the president were very sensitive to what the pro-Israel community was thinking and, when it came to considering ideas that Israel didn't like, too often engaged in a kind of preemptive self-censorship." [does anyone deny that?] [I mean, is Walt not making a strawman argument too?] [*]
And that is why former U.S. President Bill Clinton referred to AIPAC as "better than anyone else lobbying in this town" and why former Rep. Lee Hamilton said, "There's no lobby group that matches it.... They're in a class by themselves." Barry Goldwater, the late Arizona senator, said he was "never put under greater pressure than by the Israeli lobby," and former Sen. Fritz Hollings once said, "You can't have an Israeli policy other than what AIPAC gives you around here [i.e., on Capitol Hill]."
Even a staunch defender of Israel like Alan Dershowitz admits, "My generation of Jews ... became part of what is perhaps the most effective lobbying and fund-raising effort in the history of democracy." I can understand why Oren wants to deny all of this; what I don't understand is why he thinks anyone will believe him.
Moreover, as John Mearsheimer and I documented in our book, "pro-Israel" groups in the United States use a variety of methods to encourage public support for Israel and make sure that the special relationship remains firmly in place. These tactics include making sure that individuals deemed insufficiently sympathetic to Israel do not get important government positions; attempting to silence, smear, or marginalize anyone who questions U.S. support for Israel or criticizes the policies of the Israeli government; and trying to shape discourse so that the pro-Israel arguments that Oren touts in his article are treated as received truths. Just ask Chas Freeman. [look, it happens] [but this is across the board: that is political speech has become incredibly circumscribed on both the left and the right] [*]
In the end, it is hard not to see Oren's article as a sign of desperation. A more open discourse about Israel is beginning to emerge in the United States, and that will gradually make it harder for American politicians to continue their craven subservience to the lobby. Furthermore, younger American Jews are less enchanted with an Israel that is drifting steadily rightward and whose political system is increasingly dysfunctional and ridden with scandal. Autocracies like Hosni Mubarak's regime in Egypt actively colluded with Israel, but future Arab leaders are likely to be more responsive to popular sentiment and less tolerant of Israel's brutal suppression of Palestinian rights. If the United States wants these countries' policies to be congenial to its core interests, it will have to make its own policies more congenial to Arab peoples, not just their rulers. [ad hominem?] [*]
Given these trends, Israel ought to be doing everything in its power to help create a viable Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza before it is too late. Obama was right when he said that a two-state solution was in "Israel's interest, Palestine's interest, America's interest, and the world's interest." Unfortunately, the government that Oren serves is more interested in expanding settlements, and its vision of a Palestinian "state" is a set of disconnected and impoverished bantustans under full Israeli control. This is called apartheid, and it is contrary to the position of the past three U.S. presidents, not only because it is not in America's strategic interest, but also because it contradicts core American values.
As then Prime Minister Ehud Olmert warned in 2007, "If the day comes when the two-state solution collapses and we face a South African-style struggle for equal voting rights," then "the state of Israel is finished." If this regrettable event were to occur, future historians will render a harsh verdict on anyone who helped derail or delay those peace efforts, including official propagandists like Ambassador Oren. Stephen M. Walt, the Robert and Renée Belfer professor of international affairs at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government and a contributing editor at Foreign Policy, is the author of Taming American Power: The Global Response to U.S. Primacy and, with co-author John J. Mearsheimer, The Israel Lobby. He blogs at walt.foreignpolicy.com.

Libya opposition: Over 300 Gadhafi troops killed in Misrata

http://www.haaretz.com/news/mideast-in-turmoil/libya-opposition-over-300-gadhafi-troops-killed-in-misrata-1.358231
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/26/11 9:34:53 AM] [*]
Published 18:08 26.04.11
Libya opposition: Over 300 Gadhafi troops killed in Misrata
State media says NATO has launched fresh air strikes to weaken Gadhafi forces, as many Libyans fear fighting between rebels and government forces will go on for months.
By DPA [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [in particular, the odious Qaddafhi regime] [hard to tell exactly what but a huge battle has raged over Misrata past few days] [there’s some indication that Qaddafi’s forces took a beating and retreated with heavy casualties?] [*]
Libyan rebels have killed more than 300 troops loyal to leader Muammar Gadhafi in the western city of Misrata in the past two days, opposition website Libya al-Youm reported on Tuesday. [?] [*]

http://www.haaretz.com/news/mideast-in-turmoil/libya-opposition-over-300-gadhafi-troops-killed-in-misrata-1.358231
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/26/11 9:34:53 AM] [*]
Published 18:08 26.04.11
Libya opposition: Over 300 Gadhafi troops killed in Misrata
State media says NATO has launched fresh air strikes to weaken Gadhafi forces, as many Libyans fear fighting between rebels and government forces will go on for months.
By DPA [Israeli media] [Arab Awakening all around Israel] [in particular, the odious Qaddafhi regime] [hard to tell exactly what but a huge battle has raged over Misrata past few days] [there’s some indication that Qaddafi’s forces took a beating and retreated with heavy casualties?] [*]
Libyan rebels have killed more than 300 troops loyal to leader Muammar Gadhafi in the western city of Misrata in the past two days, opposition website Libya al-Youm reported on Tuesday. [?] [*]
NATO launched fresh airstrikes to weaken Gadhafi's forces, state media said, as many Libyans have begun to fear that the fighting between rebels and government forces will go on for months.
An estimated 20 Gadhafi loyalists have been captured, among them two army majors - including the second in command of the elite Khamis Gadhafi brigade, Libya al-Youm reported. [probably good for intelligence] [but the opposition better treat prisoners well else they make West’s support problematic] [*]
There were also civilian casualties, with 12 people killed in Misrata on Monday, and 57 wounded, according to broadcaster Al Jazeera.
On Tuesday, the United Nations said it helped deliver more than 500 tons of food to Misrata, which is the country's third-largest city and a key gateway to the capital city of Tripoli.
Rebel spokesman Abdul Hafiz Ghoga told the German Press Agency dpa by telephone that Gadhafi's forces have not respected the ceasefire that they promised in Misrata.
"The rebels have made good gains in the center of the city but Gadhafi's forces are still on the outskirts. The statement they made regarding a ceasefire there has no truth to it," said Ghoga.
Despite gains made by the rebels in the last few days of fighting, frustrations and fears were coming to the surface among residents in the coastal city of Derna, located between the rebel stronghold of Benghazi and Tobruk town. [*]
"If we don't see progress soon, people will get very frustrated," said Iman El Kuf, who used to work in the tourism industry in Derna.
"There are already pockets of resistance against the rebel movement. After dark, they come out. Perhaps if the rebels do not advance soon, others might join them," she said. [that’s interesting] [but who can blame them?] [they are doing without food, medicine, basic daily life, without anything of normality to ground them] [*]
Another resident, Mohamed Founi, complained that many people can't find jobs and that schools were still closed. He said one liter of oil, which was sold for 1.5 Libyan dinars before the revolution now costs up to 3.5 dinars.
NATO said Tuesday that its forces launched attacks a day earlier that struck at a training facility near Misrata, as well as vehicles and tanks in Tripoli. Three ammunition depots were also destroyed in the area around Gadhafi's hometown of Sirte, according to the NATO statement.
Government officials said an attack on the buildings in Gadhafi's Bab Al Aziziya compound was an assassination attempt, something which NATO forces have denied. [*]

Jordan king: Mideast turmoil shouldn't thwart Israeli-Palestinian peace efforts

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/jordan-king-mideast-turmoil-shouldn-t-thwart-israeli-palestinian-peace-efforts-1.358064
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/26/11 9:35:56 AM] [*]
Published 22:31 25.04.11
Jordan king: Mideast turmoil shouldn't thwart Israeli-Palestinian peace efforts
Jordan's King Abdullah spoke to a delegation of U.S. congressional aides about America's 'leading role' in resuming talks that he said should lead to the establishment of an independent Palestinian state.
By DPA [Israeli media] [reporting on Israeli-Palestinian conflict] [Jordan’s King Abdullah (as opposed to Saudi’s King Abdullah)] [Jordan has as good a relationship with Israel as any Arab state] [now the Hashemite Kindgom applies a little pressure of its own] [I can’t remember a time when more pressure existed on the principals—both PA and Israeli’s Netanyahu govt] [*]
The recent turmoil in the Middle East shouldn't prevent the United States from pushing ahead with its efforts to bring Israel and the Palestinians back to the negotiating table, Jordan's King Abdullah II said on Monday. [he’s heard the same thing, obviously] [that is,

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/jordan-king-mideast-turmoil-shouldn-t-thwart-israeli-palestinian-peace-efforts-1.358064
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/26/11 9:35:56 AM] [*]
Published 22:31 25.04.11
Jordan king: Mideast turmoil shouldn't thwart Israeli-Palestinian peace efforts
Jordan's King Abdullah spoke to a delegation of U.S. congressional aides about America's 'leading role' in resuming talks that he said should lead to the establishment of an independent Palestinian state.
By DPA [Israeli media] [reporting on Israeli-Palestinian conflict] [Jordan’s King Abdullah (as opposed to Saudi’s King Abdullah)] [Jordan has as good a relationship with Israel as any Arab state] [now the Hashemite Kindgom applies a little pressure of its own] [I can’t remember a time when more pressure existed on the principals—both PA and Israeli’s Netanyahu govt] [*]
The recent turmoil in the Middle East shouldn't prevent the United States from pushing ahead with its efforts to bring Israel and the Palestinians back to the negotiating table, Jordan's King Abdullah II said on Monday. [he’s heard the same thing, obviously] [that is, that Obama is considering giving a big speech and push] [I hope not, given the times and the pressures but I fear that may be coming] [*]
"The current changes in the Middle East should not hinder our determination to reactivate the peace process," the monarch told a visiting delegation of U.S. congressional aides.
"The monarch underscored the importance of the U.S.' leading role" in resuming the direct talks that should lead to the establishment of an independent Palestinian state, a royal court statement said.
Abdullah's sentiment was reiterated by U.S. President Barack Obama earlier in the month, when he said that the winds of change sweeping the Middle East made it "more urgent than ever" to find a peaceful solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. [*]
Peace talks between the two sides broke down in September, after an Israeli building freeze on construction on West Bank settlements expired. Palestinians refuse to return to the negotiating table unless another settlement freeze is reinstated, while Israel has said it wants negotiations with no preconditions.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will speak to the U.S. congress in May, where he is expected to address the issue of Mideast peace. [I actually hope Bibi changes his mind] [I see no good that would come from his speaking before congress—only divisiveness] [Israel should not be used as a wedge in domestic US politics!] [*]

Turkey: Israel shouldn't repeat its Gaza flotilla mistake

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/turkey-israel-shouldn-t-repeat-its-gaza-flotilla-mistake-1.358162
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/26/11 9:30:55 AM] [*]
Published 11:14 26.04.11
Turkey: Israel shouldn't repeat its Gaza flotilla mistake
Speaking with the Sydney Morning Herald earlier this week, Turkish FM says it is Israel's responsibility to lift its blockade on the Strip, saying no one nation owned the Mediterranean.
By Haaretz Service Tags: Israel news Turkey Gaza Gaza flotilla [Israeli media] [reporting on Israeli-Palestinian conflict] [in particular, Turkey’s rather complex role as one of multiple leaders of Islamic world] [in Turkey’s case, formerly one of more progressive Muslim states vis-v-vis Israel] [over past year or two, that has changed] [followup on the pending flotilla attempt near the 1-year anniversary of a spectacle that was disastrous for Israel (public opinion disaster)] [the thing is, there’s so much pressure now on both Netanyahu and Abu Masen, almost nothing will surprise me] [dangerous time] [*]
Israel mustn't attempt to stop a planned aid flotilla bound for the blockaded Gaza Strip,

http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/turkey-israel-shouldn-t-repeat-its-gaza-flotilla-mistake-1.358162
Haaretz
[Accessed 4/26/11 9:30:55 AM] [*]
Published 11:14 26.04.11
Turkey: Israel shouldn't repeat its Gaza flotilla mistake
Speaking with the Sydney Morning Herald earlier this week, Turkish FM says it is Israel's responsibility to lift its blockade on the Strip, saying no one nation owned the Mediterranean.
By Haaretz Service Tags: Israel news Turkey Gaza Gaza flotilla [Israeli media] [reporting on Israeli-Palestinian conflict] [in particular, Turkey’s rather complex role as one of multiple leaders of Islamic world] [in Turkey’s case, formerly one of more progressive Muslim states vis-v-vis Israel] [over past year or two, that has changed] [followup on the pending flotilla attempt near the 1-year anniversary of a spectacle that was disastrous for Israel (public opinion disaster)] [the thing is, there’s so much pressure now on both Netanyahu and Abu Masen, almost nothing will surprise me] [dangerous time] [*]
Israel mustn't attempt to stop a planned aid flotilla bound for the blockaded Gaza Strip, Turkey's Foreign Minister told in an interview on Monday, adding that Turkey could do nothing to stop organizers from launching the flotilla. [*]
Turkey said on Thursday it had received a request from Israel to help stop activists sailing to Gaza on the first anniversary of an Israeli raid on a Turkish ship, but it said the flotilla plan was not Ankara's concern.
The comment comes after Ankara had already made it clear earlier this month that it would and could not stop the 15-ship aid flotilla, planned to set sail next month, a year after nine Turks were shot dead after Israeli marines stormed a flotilla [*]organized by a Turkish Islamist charity.
Speaking to the Sydney Morning Herald on Monday, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu urged Israel not to "repeat the same mistake," adding that it was "Israel's responsibility not to implement [a blockade] against Gaza." [if they were actually trying to warn Israel, the appropriate way would have been diplomatic channels—this is clearly something else] [*]
"A fact-finding mission of the UN declared that [the blockade] is illegal," Davutoglu said, adding that in last year's flotilla people were killed 72 miles [116 kilometers] from the coast, so this was in international waters. The Mediterranean does not belong to any nation."
Referring to Turkey's professed inability to stop flotilla organizers from going ahead with their plans, saying: "We can advise, we can say something, but we cannot stop the flotilla."
Turkey, a secular Muslim nation, has been an important regional ally of Israel for more than a decade. [of course they could] [they won’t and that’s different] [*]
Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan's AK Party government, which has roots in banned Islamist movements, froze relations with Israel after the deadly raid.
Ankara has demanded an apology as a condition for mending ties, regardless of a UN probe's findings into the incident.

Dossier Shows Push for More Terror Attacks After 9/11

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/world/guantanamo-files-portrait-of-push-for-post-september-11-attacks.html
April 25, 2011
Dossier Shows Push for More Terror Attacks After 9/11
By SCOTT SHANE and BENJAMIN WEISER [Obama administration] [112th congress, 1st session] [the things Ms. Clinton has said about Syria?] [representing state department and US diplomacy] [bureaucracy] [more on the formerly classified files of Gitmo] [much of it has been stunningly unspectacular] [but some is of historic interest: it helps remind everyone how scared we all were] [when the govt is gripped by fear, we usually make relatively worse decisioins and that was the case here] [use psci 355-455. 363, formerly 469] [*]
WASHINGTON — He peers out from the photo in the classified file through heavy-framed spectacles, an owlish face with a graying beard and a half-smile. Saifullah Paracha, a successful businessman and for years a New York travel agent, appears to be the oldest of the 172 prisoners still held at the Guantánamo Bay prison. His dossier is among the most chilling.
In the months after the Sept. 11 attacks, Mr. Paracha, 63, was one of a small circle of Al Qaeda operatives who explored ways to follow up on the hijackings with new attacks,

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/world/guantanamo-files-portrait-of-push-for-post-september-11-attacks.html
April 25, 2011
Dossier Shows Push for More Terror Attacks After 9/11
By SCOTT SHANE and BENJAMIN WEISER [Obama administration] [112th congress, 1st session] [the things Ms. Clinton has said about Syria?] [representing state department and US diplomacy] [bureaucracy] [more on the formerly classified files of Gitmo] [much of it has been stunningly unspectacular] [but some is of historic interest: it helps remind everyone how scared we all were] [when the govt is gripped by fear, we usually make relatively worse decisioins and that was the case here] [use psci 355-455. 363, formerly 469] [*]
WASHINGTON — He peers out from the photo in the classified file through heavy-framed spectacles, an owlish face with a graying beard and a half-smile. Saifullah Paracha, a successful businessman and for years a New York travel agent, appears to be the oldest of the 172 prisoners still held at the Guantánamo Bay prison. His dossier is among the most chilling.
In the months after the Sept. 11 attacks, Mr. Paracha, 63, was one of a small circle of Al Qaeda operatives who explored ways to follow up on the hijackings with new attacks, according to the classified Guantánamo files made available to The New York Times.
Working with Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the 9/11 planner who in early 2002 gave him $500,000 to $600,000 “for safekeeping,” Mr. Paracha offered his long experience in the shipping business for a scheme to move plastic explosives into the United States inside containers of women’s and children’s clothing, the files assert. [does tend to show that there was some reason to be concerned of “fifth column” in US?] [*]
“Detainee desired to help Al Qaeda ‘do something big against the U.S.,’ ” one of his co-conspirators, Ammar al-Baluchi, told Guantánamo interrogators, the files say. Mr. Paracha discussed obtaining biological or nuclear weapons as well, though he was concerned that detectors at ports “would make it difficult to smuggle radioactive materials into the country,” the file says. [*]
Mr. Paracha’s assessment is among more than 700 classified documents that fill in new details of Al Qaeda’s efforts to make 9/11 just the first in a series of attacks to cripple the United States, intentions thwarted as the Central Intelligence Agency captured Mr. Mohammed and other leaders of the terrorist network. [*]
The plots reportedly discussed by Mr. Mohammed and various operatives, none of them acted upon, included plans for a new wave of aircraft attacks on the West Coast, filling an apartment with leaked natural gas and detonating it, blowing up gas stations and even cutting the cables holding up the Brooklyn Bridge. [I remember truly believe another wave was coming and specifically thinking through California potential targets: Dinseyland, Long Beach harbor, even Coronado bridge] [*]
For the small circle of Qaeda operatives described in the December 2008 assessment of Mr. Paracha, terrorism appears to have been a family affair. There was Mr. Mohammed, the terrorist network’s top plotter, and his nephew, Mr. Baluchi, who was married to another militant, an American-trained neuroscientist, Aafia Siddiqui. And there was Mr. Paracha and his son, Uzair. [*]
The newly revealed assessments, obtained last year by the group WikiLeaks and provided by another source to The Times, have revived the dispute, nearly as old as the prison, over whether mistreatment of some prisoners there and the prison’s operation outside the criminal justice system invalidate the government’s conclusions about the detainees. [let’s be clear: the mistreatment happened in a remarkably short time window: late 2001 though all of 2002] [thereafter, almost all stopped] [I personally think that shows that even thought America’s system can run off the tracks, it self corrects] [it’s happened before: in WWII with Japanese Americans, early in Cold War with blacklists and McCarthyism] [*]
Hina Shamsi, director of the national security project at the American Civil Liberties Union, said the assessments “are rife with uncorroborated evidence, information obtained through torture, speculation, errors and allegations that have been proven false.”
Likewise, David H. Remes, a lawyer who represents the elder Mr. Paracha, said in an interview on Monday that while he had not seen the assessment, its conclusion that Mr. Paracha posed a “high risk” to American interests was without foundation.
“The notion that he ever did anything that justified his detention, or ever was or is any kind of threat to the United States, is preposterous,” Mr. Remes said. “He is a 63-year-old man with a serious heart condition and severe diabetes, and he has been nothing but cooperative with the authorities.”
What Mr. Paracha wants, Mr. Remes added, is either a transfer back to his native country, Pakistan, or “a definitive adjudication of his case.” [and I understand] [America really needs to do something with most of these people] [170-plus and only handful of whom are really thought to be threats] [but the problems of repatriation are huge] [*]
Jay Carney, the White House spokesman, condemned on Monday the publication of what he called “documents obtained illegally” and noted the military’s findings about some detainees had been changed by a new review under President Obama. The detailed results of that review, however, remain secret.
Mr. Carney said the president remained committed to closing the Guantánamo prison someday. But Mr. Obama’s review identified about 50 detainees his advisers said could not be tried and were too dangerous to release, and Congress has imposed restrictions on bringing prisoners to the United States.
The portrait of Mr. Paracha is one of the striking ones to emerge from the files. The documents say he attended the New York Institute of Technology in the early 1970s and worked as a travel agent in New York for 13 years.
He was arrested in Bangkok in July 2003 after Uzair, who was already in F.B.I. custody in New York, “acknowledged” his father was a militant, the assessment says. Uzair Paracha was convicted in a 2005 trial on charges including material support for terrorism and is serving a 30-year sentence in federal prison.
According to his Guantánamo assessment, Saifullah Paracha had “provided useful information concerning senior Al Qaeda members” but “attempted to deceive and misinform intelligence and law enforcement personnel about his own activities.” As a result, the assessment draws heavily on statements by others, notably Mr. Mohammed, who was subjected to waterboarding and other brutal treatment during his interrogation by the C.I.A.
But Mr. Paracha’s assessment suggests that he did not deny militant connections at the highest level. “Detainee claimed he met UBL on a trip to Afghanistan in December 1999 or January 2000,” the documents say, using the government’s initials for Osama bin Laden. It says he offered to let Mr. bin Laden use his broadcasting business in Pakistan to generate propaganda films for Al Qaeda. [*]
Later, Mr. bin Laden dispatched Mr. Mohammed to talk further about the idea, and Mr. Paracha explained “his vision of dedicating a program on his broadcasting network depicting UBL quoting Koranic verses.”
After 9/11, Mr. Paracha’s discussions focused on new plots, the files say. A Casio digital diary he was carrying when he was arrested “contained references to military chemical warfare agents, and their effects on humans,” according to the classified assessment. [*]The document says Mr. Paracha told interrogators he had worked with Abdul Qadeer Khan, considered to be the father of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons program and a major proliferator of nuclear technology. [bizaare more than anything] [sounds like he wanted desperately to be important cog?] [*]
Edward D. Wilford, a lawyer who represented the son at his 2005 trial, said his client had played no “witting” role in his father’s arrest.
“He was not a part of it in any way,” he said. “He didn’t make any calls. He didn’t make any contact. In fact, he was being held incommunicado. He didn’t have any way of knowing what was going on.” The son had been jailed in Manhattan on a material-witness warrant after his questioning by the F.B.I. in March 2003. He was charged criminally in August 2003, after his father’s arrest.
The relationship between father and son is only hinted at in the assessment report. It says that analysts concluded that Saifullah Paracha was “hiding aspects of his son’s extremist activities.” The son, though, talked about his father and his father’s relationship with Mr. bin Laden while testifying in his own defense.
A prosecutor asked whether Uzair Paracha had told F.B.I. agents that his father admired Mr. bin Laden. “I don’t remember if my father actually said that he admired bin Laden,” the son testified. “He said that bin Laden was a humble person and he had a simple way of life.”

U.S. Faces a Challenge in Trying to Punish Syria

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/world/middleeast/26diplo.html
April 25, 2011
U.S. Faces a Challenge in Trying to Punish Syria
By DAVID E. SANGER [Obama administration] [112th congress, 1st session] [the things Ms. Clinton has said about Syria?] [representing state department and US diplomacy] [bureaucracy] [inconsistent, though diplomacy usually is] [how and why the Obama administration struggles on what to do with Syria?] [Syria is linchpin for entire region where multiple contradictory interests converge] [*]
WASHINGTON — The White House said on Monday that it was exploring new sanctions against Syria — mostly involving the assets of top officials around President Bashar al-Assad — but officials acknowledged that the country was already under so many sanctions that the United States held little leverage.
“We’re talking about a country whose economy is about the size of Pittsburgh’s,” said one administration official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the continuing debate within the administration about the next steps. “There are things you can do to amp up the volume” of sanctions, the official said, “but the financial impact is slim.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/world/middleeast/26diplo.html
April 25, 2011
U.S. Faces a Challenge in Trying to Punish Syria
By DAVID E. SANGER [Obama administration] [112th congress, 1st session] [the things Ms. Clinton has said about Syria?] [representing state department and US diplomacy] [bureaucracy] [inconsistent, though diplomacy usually is] [how and why the Obama administration struggles on what to do with Syria?] [Syria is linchpin for entire region where multiple contradictory interests converge] [*]
WASHINGTON — The White House said on Monday that it was exploring new sanctions against Syria — mostly involving the assets of top officials around President Bashar al-Assad — but officials acknowledged that the country was already under so many sanctions that the United States held little leverage.
“We’re talking about a country whose economy is about the size of Pittsburgh’s,” said one administration official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the continuing debate within the administration about the next steps. “There are things you can do to amp up the volume” of sanctions, the official said, “but the financial impact is slim.”
The problem the Obama administration faces with Syria is similar to those involving North Korea and Myanmar, which have long been under sanctions. In Syria’s case, the United States already, in 2006, banned transactions with the Commercial Bank of Syria. In early 2007, it accused four government-related research organizations of working on the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and banned transactions with them. [*]
But later that year, when Israel found a nuclear reactor under construction in the Syrian desert and destroyed it in an airstrike, the United States took no further action, in part because the Bush administration could not think of any truly effective sanctions. Now the Obama administration is looking for specific sanctions against individual leaders, though most of their money is probably in Europe or Lebanon. [*]
So far, President Obama has stopped well short of calling on Mr. Assad to step down, or of declaring, as he did of Libya’s leader, Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, that Mr. Assad had lost the moral authority to lead his country. Nor, apparently, has the administration been working behind the scenes to ease Mr. Assad out of office, as in the case of Yemen’s president, Ali Abdullah Saleh.
Asked how the administration justified treating Mr. Assad so differently, Jay Carney, the president’s press secretary, said Monday that it was “up to the people of Syria to decide who its leaders should be.” He tried to differentiate Syria in other ways as well. [they have to do better than that?] [that’s lame and they know it] [how about huddling together and figuring an alternative] [*]
“Libya was, again, a unique situation,” Mr. Carney said. “We had large portions of the country that were out of the control of Muammar Qaddafi. We had a Qaddafi regime that was moving against its own people in a coordinated military fashion and was about to assault a very large city on the promise that it would show” what Colonel Qaddafi himself called “no mercy.” And, Mr. Carney continued, “we had the support of the Arab League.”
Administration officials say that while they lack many effective economic tools, they believe Mr. Assad is sensitive to portrayals of his regime as brutal and backward. “He sees himself as a Westernized leader,” one senior administration official said, “and we think he’ll react if he believes he is being lumped in with brutal dictators.”
Recently, the White House stepped up its denunciations of the Syrian government, and of Mr. Assad himself. “Over the course of two months since protests in Syria began,” Mr. Obama said in a statement on Friday, “the United States has repeatedly encouraged President Assad and the Syrian government to implement meaningful reforms, but they refuse to respect the rights of the Syrian people or be responsive to their aspirations.”
He accused Mr. Assad of putting “personal interests ahead of the interests of the Syrian people, and resorting to the use of force and outrageous human rights abuses.”

Judging Detainees’ Risk, Often With Flawed Evidence

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/world/guantanamo-files-flawed-evidence-for-assessing-risk.html
April 24, 2011
Judging Detainees’ Risk, Often With Flawed Evidence
By SCOTT SHANE and BENJAMIN WEISER [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [NSC some but mostly bureaucracy] [Detainee Asssesment Briefs (DABs) from 2002 through 2009] [leaked by Wikileaks and picked up by Guardian and others now Times] [I saw same in Post today] [we see how little of the evidence gathered through these means is used (allowed) in court?] [not much] [*]
WASHINGTON — Said Mohammed Alam Shah, a 24-year-old Afghan who had lost a leg as a teenager, told interrogators at the prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, that he had been conscripted by the Taliban as a driver before being detained in 2001. He had been caught, he said, as he tried to “rescue his younger brother from the Taliban.”
Military analysts believed him. Mr. Shah, who had been outfitted with a prosthetic leg by prison doctors, was “cooperative” and “has not expressed thoughts of violence or made threats toward the U.S. or its allies,” according to a sympathetic 2003 assessment. Its

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/world/guantanamo-files-flawed-evidence-for-assessing-risk.html
April 24, 2011
Judging Detainees’ Risk, Often With Flawed Evidence
By SCOTT SHANE and BENJAMIN WEISER [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [NSC some but mostly bureaucracy] [Detainee Asssesment Briefs (DABs) from 2002 through 2009] [leaked by Wikileaks and picked up by Guardian and others now Times] [I saw same in Post today] [we see how little of the evidence gathered through these means is used (allowed) in court?] [not much] [*]
WASHINGTON — Said Mohammed Alam Shah, a 24-year-old Afghan who had lost a leg as a teenager, told interrogators at the prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, that he had been conscripted by the Taliban as a driver before being detained in 2001. He had been caught, he said, as he tried to “rescue his younger brother from the Taliban.”
Military analysts believed him. Mr. Shah, who had been outfitted with a prosthetic leg by prison doctors, was “cooperative” and “has not expressed thoughts of violence or made threats toward the U.S. or its allies,” according to a sympathetic 2003 assessment. Its conclusion: “Detainee does not pose a future threat to the U.S. or U.S. interests.”
So in 2004 Mr. Shah was sent back to Afghanistan — where he promptly revealed himself to be Abdullah Mehsud, a Pakistan-born militant, and began plotting mayhem. He recorded jihadist videos, organized a Taliban force to fight American troops, planned an attack on Pakistan’s interior minister that killed 31 people, oversaw the kidnapping of two Chinese engineers, and finally detonated a suicide bomb in 2007 as the Pakistani Army closed in. His martyrdom was hailed in an audio message by none other than Osama bin Laden.
The Guantánamo analysts’ complete misreading of Abdullah Mehsud was included among hundreds of classified assessments of detainees at the prison in Cuba that were obtained by The New York Times. The unredacted assessments give the fullest public picture to date of the prisoners held at Guantánamo over the past nine years. They show that the United States has imprisoned hundreds of men for years without trial based on a difficult and strikingly subjective evaluation of who they were, what they had done in the past and what they might do in the future. The 704 assessment documents use the word “possibly” 387 times, “unknown” 188 times and “deceptive” 85 times.
Viewed with judges’ rulings on legal challenges by detainees, the documents reveal that the analysts sometimes ignored serious flaws in the evidence — for example, that the information came from other detainees whose mental illness made them unreliable. Some assessments quote witnesses who say they saw a detainee at a camp run by Al Qaeda but omit the witnesses’ record of falsehood or misidentification. They include detainees’ admissions without acknowledging other government documents that show the statements were later withdrawn, often attributed to abusive treatment or torture.
A Growing Wariness
Written between 2002 and 2009, the assessments reflect a growing wariness on the part of Guantánamo analysts. Early on, the reports are just a page or two and often sanguine in tone. By 2008, after scorching publicity about released detainees who joined Al Qaeda and the dwindling of the prison population to hard-core detainees, the assessments are decidedly more cautious.
For every case of an Abdullah Mehsud — someone wrongly judged a minimal threat — there are several instances in which prisoners rated “high risk” were released and have not engaged in wrongdoing. [*]Murat Kurnaz, a German resident of Turkish ancestry, was judged in a 2006 assessment to be a member of Al Qaeda who fell into the most dangerous category: “high risk” and “likely to pose a threat to the U.S., its interests and allies.”
Nonetheless, American authorities, under pressure from both Germany and Turkey, overruled the analysts and sent Mr. Kurnaz home to Germany three months later. He did not join the global jihad but instead became a prominent critic of Guantánamo, writing a book and making countless media appearances to denounce the American prison.
Among the most revealing of the leaked documents is a 17-page guide for analysts, evidently prepared by military intelligence trainers, on how to gauge the danger posed by a detainee. It lists major clusters of detainees, including the so-called Dirty 30, who were the bodyguards of Mr. bin Laden, as well as the large group of accused Qaeda operatives captured with Abu Zubaydah, an important terrorist facilitator, at two guesthouses in Faisalabad, Pakistan, in 2002. It lists nine mosques associated with Al Qaeda, in Quebec, Milan, London, Yemen and Pakistan. [*]
The guide shows how analysts seized upon the tiniest details as a potential litmus test for risk. If a prisoner had a Casio F91W watch, it might be an indication he had attended a Qaeda bomb-making course where such watches were handed out — though that model is sold around the world to this day. (Likewise, the assessment of a Yemeni prisoner suggests a dire use for his pocket calculator: “Calculators may be used for indirect fire calculations such as those required for artillery fire.”)
A prisoner caught without travel documents? It might mean he had been trained to discard them to make identification harder, the guide explains. A detainee who claimed to be a simple farmer or a cook, or in the honey business or searching for a wife? Those were common Taliban and Qaeda cover stories, the analysts were told.
And a classic Catch-22: “Refusal to cooperate,” the guide says, is a Qaeda resistance technique.
Yet the guide appears to be the product of years of experience at trying to turn bits of evidence of varying reliability into a conclusion. Notably, it cites as a cautionary tale the early misjudgment about Abdullah Mehsud, the Pakistani suicide bomber, who had claimed he was forced to join the Taliban. He was “an example,” the guide says, “of a detainee who successfully applied the conscription cover story as a means to secure his release from U.S. custody.”
Guantánamo emerges from the documents as a nest of informants, a closed world where detainees were the main source of allegations against one another and sudden recollections of having spotted a fellow prisoner at a Qaeda training camp could curry favor with interrogators. The assessments of many detainees amount to long lists of fellow prisoners’ claims about them. [*]
Among the prison’s many informants, few outdid Yasim Basardah, a Yemeni whose statements are cited in the assessments of 30 detainees — even though at least three federal judges have questioned his credibility, citing his serious psychiatric problems. (In a curious twist, a judge ordered Mr. Basardah released last year, in part because she concluded that his ties to Al Qaeda had been effectively severed by his record of cooperation with American authorities. He was transferred to Spain.)
Or there is Abu Zubaydah, the Qaeda facilitator who was waterboarded while in the custody of the Central Intelligence Agency and whose interrogations are cited in the risk assessments of more than 100 prisoners. His lawyers have noted that his accusations against others have been systematically removed from government filings in court cases, an indication that officials no longer are certain of his reliability.
A few assessments acknowledge the hazards of rewarding detainees for information. “Detainee admitted that he provided information in a deliberately misleading manner in order to receive incentives from his debriefers,” said a report on Abdul Bukhary, a Saudi militant with a jihadist résumé stretching back to the Soviet-Afghan war. Mr. Bukhary told interrogators that “his memory was very bad,” to which the analysts added a skeptical note: “Feigning memory problems is a common counter-interrogation technique.”
Yet Mr. Bukhary’s observations are cited in the assessments of a dozen other prisoners without any caveat about his admitted deceptions or his claim of a poor memory. And though in July 2007 Mr. Bukhary was rated “high risk” and “likely” to pose a threat to American interests, he was sent home to Saudi Arabia and its rehabilitation program for militants just two months later.
The Release Lottery
The documents, originally obtained by the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks but provided to The Times by another source, portray Guantánamo as a lottery with the highest stakes for both the prisoners and their American captors. A critical factor was a detainee’s country of origin. Most European inmates were sent home, despite grave qualms on the analysts’ part. Saudis went home, even some of the most militant, to enter the rehabilitation program; some would graduate and then join Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. Yemenis have generally stayed put, even those cleared for release, because of the chaos in their country. Even in clearly mistaken arrests, release could be slow.
One Afghan, Mohammed Nasim, was sent to Guantánamo in May 2003 under the belief that he was a notorious Taliban military commander of the same last name. By March 2004, analysts had realized their error: “It is assessed that the detainee is a poor farmer and his arrest was due to mistaken identity.” Yet, a review tribunal considered his case later that year as if he were the Taliban commander, and he was not sent home until April 2005 — two years after he arrived at the prison.
In some cases, the analysts showed a willingness to reconsider their judgments in light of new facts. An Afghan prisoner, Shawali Khan, was caught with what appeared to be deeply incriminating documents: a Qaeda training manual on assassination, surveillance and counterfeiting that even contained a plan to kidnap the American president, as well as a notebook from a Qaeda camp on the maintenance and use of the AK-47 and other weapons.
The problem was that the documents were all in Arabic, and six years after his capture, Mr. Khan had finally convinced interrogators that he could not read Arabic. That conclusion, analysts wrote, “lends more credence to detainee’s claim” that he had looted the material from possessions abandoned by Arab fighters who had fled Kandahar in southern Afghanistan.
A single footnote can call into question the entire case against a detainee: Abdul Haddi bin Hadiddi, a Tunisian who had spent time in Italy and was once arrested there for counterfeiting, was rated “high risk” and was believed to have received training from Al Qaeda. His assessment describes phone calls by the detainee, intercepted by Italian intelligence, with gunfire in the background. [*]
But if the Italian dates are right, the reported calls were made after Mr. Hadiddi’s arrest. A footnote tries to sort it out: “If this was the detainee,” it says, then the reported dates of the calls must be wrong. “If this is not the detainee, it may indicate detainee’s claimed name is not his” — an astonishing acknowledgment about a man imprisoned since August 2002.
Judges Weigh In
Such frustrating case studies seem to beg for an independent evaluation of the evidence, some way of shedding light on the quality of the Guantánamo analysts’ work. As it happens, federal judges have heard nearly 60 cases brought by detainees challenging their imprisonment, and they have ruled in many of them that the government’s evidence was too thin or contradictory to justify holding the prisoner.
The 2008 assessment of Alla Ali bin Ali Ahmed, for instance, a Yemeni who denied that he had fought in Afghanistan, concluded that he was a “committed member of Al Qaeda” who posed a “high risk” to the United States.
But a federal judge who saw all the classified evidence in the case found that all four witnesses who claimed to have seen him in Afghanistan were unreliable. (The judge, Gladys Kessler, ordered Mr. Ahmed released, and he went home to Yemen in 2009.)
One witness, Judge Kessler wrote, was said by American military doctors to be suffering from “psychosis.” The assessment of that witness, a Yemeni named Musab al-Madoonee, described him as “in overall good health” and made no mention of his mental illness.
But in another case this month, another judge offered far more support for the Guantánamo analysts. Writing about another Yemeni detainee, Yasin Ismail, Judge Laurence H. Silberman of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit said he found the detainee’s account “phonier than a $4 bill” and rejected his challenge.
Judge Silberman showed sympathy for counterterrorism analysts who erred on the side of caution. In an ordinary criminal case, a judge may vote to overturn a conviction on evidentiary grounds even if he is virtually certain the defendant is guilty, Judge Silberman wrote. With a potential terrorist, he said, the stakes are different.
“When we are dealing with detainees,” Judge Silberman said, “candor obliges me to admit that one can not help but be conscious of the infinitely greater downside risk to our country, and its people, of an order releasing a detainee who is likely to return to terrorism.”
By the Pentagon’s count, as of Oct. 1, 2010, of the 598 detainees transferred from Guantánamo, 81 were “confirmed” and 69 “suspected” of engaging in terrorist or insurgent activities after their release. Accepting the highest Defense Department total, even the 25 percent rate would be lower than most estimates of recidivism rates for federal and state ex-convicts.
An Elusive Subject
But those numbers may be one reason Guantánamo officials have been loath to take a chance in the befuddling case of Detainee 257, known as Omar Hamzayavich Abdulayev, a 32-year-old Tajik. He arrived at Guantánamo when he was just 23, a month after the prison opened. Interrogators have questioned Mr. Abdulayev for nine years, intelligence officers from both Russia and Tajikistan have visited to talk to him and countless other prisoners have been asked what they know about him.
The most serious allegations came from a Kuwaiti prisoner who claimed that Mr. Abdulayev told him he was trained by Al Qaeda in poisons and explosives and had met top Qaeda operatives. But the Kuwaiti’s own assessment questioned his credibility, saying details of his account were “conflicting and vague.”
Then there is the documentary evidence: Mr. Abdulayev was caught with notebooks containing notes on explosives and lists of mujahedeen fighters. And an undated Qaeda training roster found in Afghanistan listed “Abdallah al-Uzbeki” among the trainees. An analyst, grasping for data on his elusive subject, wrote that “Abdallah” might be a variant of Abdallahyiv, a Tajik version of Abdulayev, and that al-Uzbeki “is an alias which can also be adopted by Tajiks and Afghans due to similar facial features and shared cultural beliefs and customs.”
Mr. Abdulayev appears to be an example of the most controversial category of Guantánamo detainees: the 47 whom the Obama administration has judged too dangerous for release but for whom it lacks the evidence necessary to hold a military tribunal.
Hence the haunting conclusion of his 2008 assessment: “Detainee’s identity remains uncertain.”
Scott Shane reported from Washington, and Benjamin Weiser from New York. Reporting was contributed by Charlie Savage from Washington, and William Glaberson, Andrew W. Lehren and Andrei Scheinkman from New York.

Classified Files Offer New Insights Into Detainees

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/world/guantanamo-files-lives-in-an-american-limbo.html
April 24, 2011
Classified Files Offer New Insights Into Detainees
By CHARLIE SAVAGE, WILLIAM GLABERSON and ANDREW W. LEHREN [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [NSC some but mostly bureaucracy] [Detainee Asssesment Briefs (DABs) from 2002 through 2009] [leaked by Wikileaks and picked up by Guardian and others now Times] [I saw same in Post today] [*]
WASHINGTON — A trove of more than 700 classified military documents provides new and detailed accounts of the men who have done time at the Guantánamo Bay prison in Cuba, and offers new insight into the evidence against the 172 men still locked up there.
Military intelligence officials, in assessments of detainees written between February 2002 and January 2009, evaluated their histories and provided glimpses of the tensions between captors and captives. What began as a jury-rigged experiment after the 2001 terrorist attacks now seems like an enduring American institution, [*]and the leaked files show why, by laying bare the patchwork and contradictory evidence that in many cases would never have stood up in criminal court or a military tribunal. [I imagine one of the reason is to give military tribunals black eye?] [*]

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/world/guantanamo-files-lives-in-an-american-limbo.html
April 24, 2011
Classified Files Offer New Insights Into Detainees
By CHARLIE SAVAGE, WILLIAM GLABERSON and ANDREW W. LEHREN [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [NSC some but mostly bureaucracy] [Detainee Asssesment Briefs (DABs) from 2002 through 2009] [leaked by Wikileaks and picked up by Guardian and others now Times] [I saw same in Post today] [*]
WASHINGTON — A trove of more than 700 classified military documents provides new and detailed accounts of the men who have done time at the Guantánamo Bay prison in Cuba, and offers new insight into the evidence against the 172 men still locked up there.
Military intelligence officials, in assessments of detainees written between February 2002 and January 2009, evaluated their histories and provided glimpses of the tensions between captors and captives. What began as a jury-rigged experiment after the 2001 terrorist attacks now seems like an enduring American institution, [*]and the leaked files show why, by laying bare the patchwork and contradictory evidence that in many cases would never have stood up in criminal court or a military tribunal. [I imagine one of the reason is to give military tribunals black eye?] [*]
The documents meticulously record the detainees’ “pocket litter” when they were captured: a bus ticket to Kabul, a fake passport and forged student ID, a restaurant receipt, even a poem. They list the prisoners’ illnesses — hepatitis, gout, tuberculosis, depression. They note their serial interrogations, enumerating — even after six or more years of relentless questioning — remaining “areas of potential exploitation.” They describe inmates’ infractions — punching guards, tearing apart shower shoes, shouting across cellblocks. And, as analysts try to bolster the case for continued incarceration, they record years of detainees’ comments about one another. [*]
The secret documents, made available to The New York Times and several other news organizations, reveal that most of the 172 remaining prisoners have been rated as a “high risk” of posing a threat to the United States and its allies if released without adequate rehabilitation and supervision. [*]But they also show that an even larger number of the prisoners who have left Cuba — about a third of the 600 already transferred to other countries — were also designated “high risk” before they were freed or passed to the custody of other governments. [one is helping NATO in Libya, for example?] [*]
The documents are largely silent about the use of the harsh interrogation tactics at Guantánamo — including sleep deprivation, shackling in stress positions and prolonged exposure to cold temperatures — that drew global condemnation. Several prisoners, though, are portrayed as making up false stories about being subjected to abuse.
The government’s basic allegations against many detainees have long been public, and have often been challenged by prisoners and their lawyers. But the dossiers, prepared under the Bush administration, provide a deeper look at the frightening, if flawed, intelligence that has persuaded the Obama administration, too, that the prison cannot readily be closed.
Prisoners who especially worried counterterrorism officials included some accused of being assassins for Al Qaeda, operatives for a canceled suicide mission and detainees who vowed to their interrogators that they would wreak revenge against America. [as would be expected] [*]
The military analysts’ files provide new details about the most infamous of their prisoners, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the planner of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Sometime around March 2002, he ordered a former Baltimore resident to don a suicide bomb vest and carry out a “martyrdom” attack against Pervez Musharraf, then Pakistan’s president, according to the documents. But when the man, Majid Khan, got to the Pakistani mosque that he had been told Mr. Musharraf would visit, the assignment turned out to be just a test of his “willingness to die for the cause.”
The dossiers also show the seat-of-the-pants intelligence gathering in war zones that led to the incarcerations of innocent men for years in cases of mistaken identity or simple misfortune. [*]In May 2003, for example, Afghan forces captured Prisoner 1051, an Afghan named Sharbat, near the scene of a roadside bomb explosion, the documents show. He denied any involvement, saying he was a shepherd. Guantánamo debriefers and analysts agreed, citing his consistent story, his knowledge of herding animals and his ignorance of “simple military and political concepts,” according to his assessment. Yet a military tribunal declared him an “enemy combatant” anyway, and he was not sent home until 2006.
Obama administration officials condemned the publication of the classified documents, which were obtained by the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks last year but provided to The Times by another source. The officials pointed out that an administration task force set up in January 2009 reviewed the information in the prisoner assessments, and in some cases came to different conclusions. Thus, they said, the documents published by The Times may not represent the government’s current view of detainees at Guantánamo.
Among the findings in the files:
¶The 20th hijacker: The best-documented case of an abusive interrogation at Guantánamo was the coercive questioning, in late 2002 and early 2003, of Mohammed Qahtani. A Saudi believed to have been an intended participant in the Sept. 11 attacks, [*]Mr. Qahtani was leashed like a dog, sexually humiliated and forced to urinate on himself. His file says, “Although publicly released records allege detainee was subject to harsh interrogation techniques in the early stages of detention,” his confessions “appear to be true and are corroborated in reporting from other sources.” But claims that he is said to have made about at least 16 other prisoners — mostly in April and May 2003 — are cited in their files without any caveat.
¶Threats against captors: While some detainees are described in the documents as “mostly compliant and rarely hostile to guard force and staff,” others spoke of violence. One detainee said “he would like to tell his friends in Iraq to find the interrogator, slice him up, and make a shwarma (a type of sandwich) out of him, with the interrogator’s head sticking out of the end of the shwarma.” Another “threatened to kill a U.S. service member by chopping off his head and hands when he gets out,” and informed a guard that “he will murder him and drink his blood for lunch. Detainee also stated he would fly planes into houses and prayed that President Bush would die.” [*]
¶The role of foreign officials: The leaked documents show how many foreign countries sent intelligence officers to question Guantánamo detainees — among them China, Russia, Tajikistan, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Kuwait, Algeria and Tunisia. One such visit changed a detainee’s account: a Saudi prisoner initially told American interrogators he had traveled to Afghanistan to train at a Libyan-run terrorist training camp. But an analyst added: “Detainee changed his story to a less incriminating one after the Saudi Delegation came and spoke to the detainees.”
¶A Qaeda leader’s reputation: The file for Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, who was charged before a military commission last week for plotting the bombing of the American destroyer Cole in 2000, says he was “more senior” in Al Qaeda than Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, and describes him as “so dedicated to jihad that he reportedly received injections to promote impotence and recommended the injections to others so more time could be spent on the jihad (rather than being distracted by women).” [*]
¶The Yemenis’ hard luck: The files for dozens of the remaining prisoners portray them as low-level foot-soldiers who traveled from Yemen to Afghanistan before the Sept. 11 attacks to receive basic military training and fight in the civil war there, not as global terrorists. Otherwise identical detainees from other countries were sent home many years ago, the files show, but the Yemenis remain at Guantánamo because of concerns over the stability of their country and its ability to monitor them.
¶Dubious information: Some assessments revealed the risk of relying on information supplied by people whose motives were murky. Hajji Jalil, then a 33-year-old Afghan, was captured in July 2003, after the Afghan chief of intelligence in Helmand Province said Mr. Jalil had taken an “active part” in an ambush that killed two American soldiers. But American officials, citing “fraudulent circumstances,” said later that the intelligence chief and others had participated in the ambush, and they had “targeted” Mr. Jalil “to provide cover for their own involvement.” He was sent home in March 2005.
¶A British agent: One report reveals that American officials discovered a detainee had been recruited by British and Canadian intelligence to work as an agent because of his “connections to members of various Al-Qaeda-linked terrorist groups.” But the report suggests that he had never shifted his militant loyalties. It says that the Central Intelligence Agency, after repeated interrogations of the detainee, concluded that he had “withheld important information” from the British and Canadians, and assessed him “to be a threat” to American and allied personnel in Afghanistan and Pakistan. He has since been sent back to his country.
¶A journalist’s interrogation: The documents show that a major reason a Sudanese cameraman for Al Jazeera, Sami al-Hajj, was held at Guantánamo for six years was for questioning about the television network’s “training program, telecommunications equipment, and newsgathering operations in Chechnya, Kosovo, and Afghanistan,” including contacts with terrorist groups. While Mr. Hajj insisted he was just a journalist, his file says he helped Islamic extremist groups courier money and obtain Stinger missiles and cites the United Arab Emirates’ claim that he was a Qaeda member. He was released in 2008 and returned to work for Al Jazeera. [*]
¶The first to leave: The documents offer the first public look at the military’s views of 158 detainees who did not receive a formal hearing under a system instituted in 2004. Many were assessed to be “of little intelligence value” with no ties to or significant knowledge about Al Qaeda or the Taliban, as was the case of a detainee who was an Afghan used car salesman. But also among those freed early was a Pakistani who would become a suicide attacker three years later.
Many of the dossiers include official close-up photographs of the detainees, providing images of hundreds of the prisoners, many of whom have not been seen publicly in years.
The files — classified “secret” and marked “noforn,” meaning they should not be shared with foreign governments — represent the fourth major collection of secret American documents that have become public over the past year; earlier releases included military incident reports from the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and portions of an archive of some 250,000 diplomatic cables. Military prosecutors have accused an Army intelligence analyst, Pfc. Bradley Manning, of leaking the materials.
The Guantánamo assessments seem unlikely to end the long-running debate about America’s most controversial prison. The documents can be mined for evidence supporting beliefs across the political spectrum about the relative perils posed by the detainees and whether the government’s system of holding most without trials is justified.
Much of the information in the documents is impossible to verify. The documents were prepared by intelligence and military officials operating at first in the haze of war, then, as the years passed, in a prison under international criticism. In some cases, judges have rejected the government’s allegations, because confessions were made during coercive interrogation or other sources were not credible.
In 2009, a task force of officials from the government’s national security agencies re-evaluated all 240 detainees then remaining at the prison. They vetted the military’s assessments against information held by other agencies, and dropped the “high/medium/low” risk ratings in favor of a more nuanced look at how each detainee might fare if released, in light of his specific family and national environment. But those newer assessments are still secret and not available for comparison.
Moreover, the leaked archive is not complete; it contains no assessments for about 75 of the detainees.
Yet for all the limitations of the files, they still offer an extraordinary look inside a prison that has long been known for its secrecy and for a struggle between the military that runs it — using constant surveillance, forced removal from cells and other tools to exert control — and detainees who often fought back with the limited tools available to them: hunger strikes, threats of retribution and hoarded contraband ranging from a metal screw to leftover food. [*]
Scores of detainees were given disciplinary citations for “inappropriate use of bodily fluids,” as some files delicately say; other files make clear that detainees on a fairly regular basis were accused by guards of throwing urine and feces. [*]
No new prisoners have been transferred to Guantánamo since 2007. Some Republicans are urging the Obama administration to send newly captured terrorism suspects to the prison, but so far officials have refused to increase the inmate population.
As a result, Guantánamo seems increasingly frozen in time, with detainees locked into their roles at the receding moment of their capture.
For example, an assessment of a former top Taliban official said he “appears to be resentful of being apprehended while he claimed he was working for the US and Coalition forces to find Mullah Omar,” a reference to Mullah Muhammad Omar, the Taliban chief who is in hiding.
But whatever the truth about the detainee’s role before his capture in 2002, it is receding into the past. So, presumably, is the value of whatever information he possesses. Still, his jailers have continued to press him for answers. His assessment of January 2008 — six years after he arrived in Cuba — contended that it was worthwhile to continue to interrogate him, in part because he might know about Mullah Omar’s “possible whereabouts.”
Charlie Savage reported from Washington, and William Glaberson and Andrew W. Lehren from New York. Scott Shane contributed reporting from Washington, and Benjamin Weiser and Andrei Scheinkman from New York.

A Note to Readers: The Background

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/world/guantanamo-files-a-note-to-readers.html
April 24, 2011
A Note to Readers: The Background
[Times] [here is their justification and setup on detainee assessment briefs (DABs) leaked by Wikileaks] [so while this is societal fundamentally, I’m including in governmental to provide context for the reporting on governmental and the federal government’s response to Wikileaks again—what they do is illegal, so on] [*]
The articles published today are based on more than 700 classified files on past and present detainees at the Guantánamo Bay prison, including the government’s assessment of the dangers the individuals represent. The files are from February 2002 to January 2009, and some of the information may have been superseded by later, still undisclosed assessments made by the Obama administration or by more highly classified documents.
The Guantánamo files were part of a huge trove of secret documents leaked last year to the anti-secrecy organization WikiLeaks. They were made available to The New York Times by another source on the condition of anonymity. National Public Radio and the British

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/world/guantanamo-files-a-note-to-readers.html
April 24, 2011
A Note to Readers: The Background
[Times] [here is their justification and setup on detainee assessment briefs (DABs) leaked by Wikileaks] [so while this is societal fundamentally, I’m including in governmental to provide context for the reporting on governmental and the federal government’s response to Wikileaks again—what they do is illegal, so on] [*]
The articles published today are based on more than 700 classified files on past and present detainees at the Guantánamo Bay prison, including the government’s assessment of the dangers the individuals represent. The files are from February 2002 to January 2009, and some of the information may have been superseded by later, still undisclosed assessments made by the Obama administration or by more highly classified documents.
The Guantánamo files were part of a huge trove of secret documents leaked last year to the anti-secrecy organization WikiLeaks. They were made available to The New York Times by another source on the condition of anonymity. National Public Radio and the British newspaper The Guardian are also producing reports based on the documents.
The files include allegations that cannot be independently verified and have in many cases been contested by detainees or their lawyers. As with earlier documents from this cache — the battlefield logs from Afghanistan and Iraq and the secret State Department cables — The Times has redacted or withheld information that would put lives at risk, including the identities of some informants. An exception was made for certain high-profile inmates who have already been publicly identified as sources of information. [*]
The Times has prepared an extensive digital repository of information about the Guantánamo detainees, compiled from a variety of public sources and now supplemented by these secret files. It can be found at nytimes.com/guantanamo-files, along with this report.

A Statement by the United States Government

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/world/guantanamo-files-us-government-statement.html
April 24, 2011
A Statement by the United States Government
[Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [NSC through bureaucracy] [on America’s guests still at gitmo] [now Wikileaks has leaked some documents on how they are treated, classified, what sorts of evidence, and the like] [not flattering, to say the least] [continuity from Bush to Obama] [*]
“It is unfortunate that The New York Times and other news organizations have made the decision to publish numerous documents obtained illegally by Wikileaks concerning the Guantanamo detention facility. These documents contain classified information about current and former GTMO detainees, and we strongly condemn the leaking of this sensitive information.
“The Wikileaks releases include Detainee Assessment Briefs (DABs) written by the Department of Defense between 2002 and early 2009. These DABs were written based on a

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/world/guantanamo-files-us-government-statement.html
April 24, 2011
A Statement by the United States Government
[Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [NSC through bureaucracy] [on America’s guests still at gitmo] [now Wikileaks has leaked some documents on how they are treated, classified, what sorts of evidence, and the like] [not flattering, to say the least] [continuity from Bush to Obama] [*]
“It is unfortunate that The New York Times and other news organizations have made the decision to publish numerous documents obtained illegally by Wikileaks concerning the Guantanamo detention facility. These documents contain classified information about current and former GTMO detainees, and we strongly condemn the leaking of this sensitive information.
“The Wikileaks releases include Detainee Assessment Briefs (DABs) written by the Department of Defense between 2002 and early 2009. These DABs were written based on a range of information available then. [*]
“The Guantanamo Review Task Force, established in January 2009, considered the DABs during its review of detainee information. In some cases, the Task Force came to the same conclusions as the DABs. In other instances the Review Task Force came to different conclusions, based on updated or other available information. The assessments of the Guantanamo Review Task Force have not been compromised to Wikileaks. Thus, any given DAB illegally obtained and released by Wikileaks may or may not represent the current view of a given detainee.
“Both the previous and the current Administrations have made every effort to act with the utmost care and diligence in transferring detainees from Guantanamo. The previous Administration transferred 537 detainees; to date, the current Administration has transferred 67. [*]Both Administrations have made the protection of American citizens the top priority and we are concerned that the disclosure of these documents could be damaging to those efforts. That said, we will continue to work with allies and partners around the world to mitigate threats to the U.S. and other countries and to work toward the ultimate closure of the Guantanamo detention facility, consistent with good security practices and our values as a nation.”
Geoff Morrell
Pentagon Press Secretary
Ambassador Dan Fried
Special Envoy for Closure of the Guantanamo Detention Facility

Letting Others Lead in Libya

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/24/weekinreview/24intervention.html
April 23, 2011
Letting Others Lead in Libya
By DAVID E. SANGER [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [NSC some but mostly bureaucracy] [Libya and Arab Awakening] [the Obama administration’s attempts to push NATO into the leadership role] [mixed results] [but the good news is America is not the single party responsible for outcome] [rather European members of NATO—particularly, France, UK, Italy—have been forced to defend their direct interests in Libya] [if Obama wouldn’t have initially said Qaddafi needed to go, the US would be in even better position] [*]
WASHINGTON — When the battle for Libya seemed to be slipping into stalemate last week, the British, French and Italians sent “military advisers,” a phrase that to much of the world suggests the first step on the slippery slope to ground forces. [*]
President Obama offered up his administration’s favorite weapon: armed Predator drones.
The difference said much about the Obama way when it comes to intervening in armed insurgencies — and his comfort in letting someone else lead the intervention. [*]Caught

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/24/weekinreview/24intervention.html
April 23, 2011
Letting Others Lead in Libya
By DAVID E. SANGER [Obama white house] [112th congress, 1st session] [NSC some but mostly bureaucracy] [Libya and Arab Awakening] [the Obama administration’s attempts to push NATO into the leadership role] [mixed results] [but the good news is America is not the single party responsible for outcome] [rather European members of NATO—particularly, France, UK, Italy—have been forced to defend their direct interests in Libya] [if Obama wouldn’t have initially said Qaddafi needed to go, the US would be in even better position] [*]
WASHINGTON — When the battle for Libya seemed to be slipping into stalemate last week, the British, French and Italians sent “military advisers,” a phrase that to much of the world suggests the first step on the slippery slope to ground forces. [*]
President Obama offered up his administration’s favorite weapon: armed Predator drones.
The difference said much about the Obama way when it comes to intervening in armed insurgencies — and his comfort in letting someone else lead the intervention. [*]Caught between two searing experiences in the past two decades — America’s failure to do anything in Rwanda and its insistence, over the objection of key allies, on going into Iraq eight years ago — Mr. Obama has spent much of the past month experimenting with a third way.
In Libya, he has committed the United States, but only from the air and only from afar. The Europeans, and some of Mr. Obama’s political opponents at home, sense a lack of commitment. [*]Inside the White House, the opposite argument is made — that after a bruising decade of misadventures, the United States is preserving American power for the moments when truly vital interests need to be protected, while teaching the rest of the world that it will have to police its own backyards. [both are message management] [*]
But is this any way to fight a war?
That depends in large part on what one considers to be the objective: protecting the population, ousting Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi — whom President Obama has said must go — or making a broader point, around the world, that the United States has once again entered a deeply nonideological, measure-the-cost phase in its foreign policy. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, soon to leave Washington, has observed more than once that the question the Bush administration asked far too infrequently before its military interventions was, “And then what?” It is a lesson Mr. Obama has clearly internalized — and, some of his critics say, overlearned.
European officials, when promised anonymity, wring their hands that this is the first NATO operation since the creation of the alliance a half-century ago in which the United States has declined to take the lead. Some former Clinton administration officials have uttered similar concerns, along with Republican critics like Senator John McCain, [*]who made his point last week by flying into Benghazi, Libya, and visiting with the rebels, whom he immediately declared his “heroes.” (His enthusiasm is apparently not broadly shared in the Republican Party: At the same moment Mr. McCain was cheering on Colonel Qaddafi’s opponents, Representative Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, the Tea Party favorite weighing a run for the presidency, declared that the president was foolish to support rebels who include “elements of Al Qaeda in North Africa and Hezbollah.”) [McCain joined the neoconservative movement so of course he grossing] [*]
Yet the question may be not whether the United States leads, but whether it puts its credibility on the line by seeming to enter the conflict half-heartedly. “The problem is the gap between U.S. objectives and what we are willing to do to accomplish them,” Richard N. Haass, the president of the Council on Foreign Relations, who left the Bush administration in part because of his objections to the drive to invade Iraq, said on Friday. “We either have to do a lot more — and the Predators were a step in that direction — or go for a cease-fire and live with the fact that Qaddafi could be in place for some time.”
In short, Mr. Haass is making the case that President Obama is violating the Powell Doctrine: If you elect to use the United States military, you must do so with such overwhelming force that there is no doubt of the outcome. The term dates back two decades, to Gen. Colin L. Powell’s strategy for the 1990-91 gulf war. In reality, the rule has been violated often since, but this White House seems intent on creating an Obama Corollary: The Powell Doctrine does not apply when the United States joins a coalition with countries that have a larger stake in the outcome than Washington does.
“We did lead — we cleared the way for the allies,” Antony Blinken, Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s national security adviser and a key player in the Libya debate, said last week. “But real leadership is successfully encouraging others to step up to their responsibilities. We’ve talked for years about burden-sharing, and either we would not let other countries act, or they wouldn’t or couldn’t do it. This time we did, and they did.”
Mr. Blinken and other administration officials insist that Colonel Qaddafi is bleeding money and running out of ammunition and allies, and that what’s needed is patience until he is eventually forced out. They make no bones about the fact that American power is limited by commitments elsewhere. “This is about the president marrying strength and wisdom and applying power in a smart way — at a time that we still have 100,000 troops in Afghanistan, and 47,000 in Iraq,” Mr. Blinken said. In other words, the message to Europe is: Thanks for the invitation, but it’s your neighborhood, your worry about refugees, and primarily your problem.
Inside the Obama White House, however, there is more than just a ranking of national interests at play. The caution surrounding Libya grows from a central lesson of America’s decade at war: When the United States is the driving force of a revolution, it owns the outcome, good or bad. No matter how rapidly American troops start withdrawing from Afghanistan this summer, the United States will be there for years; some say decades. In part, the aim is to keep it from becoming a terrorist training ground, but it is also because the country has become so dependent on American support that any full withdrawal would probably lead to the collapse of the Afghan state. Consider this: The cost of training and equipping the Afghan military, borne largely by Washington, is billions of dollars more than Afghanistan’s entire national budget. For everything.
In Libya, the problem is accentuated by the fact that it’s anybody’s guess who will be running the country after Colonel Qaddafi is gone. Thus the huge resistance in the Pentagon to giving any kind of lethal weaponry to the rebels, at least until someone can figure out who they are and teach them how to shoot straight. So far, the United States is providing uniforms and canteens to the rebels, Mr. Gates said last week, adding with a knowing smile, “I’m not worried about our canteen technology falling into the wrong hands.”
The case for caution was endorsed last week by the aging grandmaster of American diplomacy, Henry Kissinger, who stopped by the State Department for a public rumination with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton about the changing nature of diplomacy and conflict.
“You cannot judge the outcome of a revolution by the proclamations of those who make it,” Dr. Kissinger warned. “Secondly, those who make it rarely survive the process of the revolution,” meaning that there is usually a “second wave” that can veer off in a different direction — exactly what happened in Iran. And, he concluded, “the greater the upheaval that the revolution causes,” the more likely it is that “a lot of force gets used.” That seemed to be the lesson on display in Misurata last week.
Mrs. Clinton made a similar point when the Egyptian revolution was evoking enormous enthusiasm here and abroad in February, and at the time she was taken to task for sounding too pessimistic. But hearing Dr. Kissinger, she noted, “It’s like playing multidimensional chess of an unprecedented scope.
“You’re trying to hold the board,” she said. “You’re trying to figure out how to make the moves, and people are yelling at you from a 360-degree angle.”

The Guantánamo Papers

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/opinion/26tue1.html
April 25, 2011
The Guantánamo Papers
[editorial] [what we learned from the Wikileaks of gitmo data] [some could be harmful but mostly we learned that much of it wasn’t useful] [in early days after 9/11 law enforcement and military were so exercise, they did everything ad hoc] [for bureaucracy, this is dangerous territory and it was no less dangersous after 9/11 for america’s national-security bureaucracy] [*]
The internal documents from the prison in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, published in The Times on Monday were a chilling reminder of the legal and moral disaster that President George W. Bush created there. They describe the chaos, lawlessness and incompetence in his administration’s system for deciding detainees’ guilt or innocence and assessing whether they would be a threat if released. [that’s not how I see them] [a little bit of that] [mostly, however, how badly the bureaucracy improvises] [*]
Innocent men were picked up on the basis of scant or nonexistent evidence and subjected

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/opinion/26tue1.html
April 25, 2011
The Guantánamo Papers
[editorial] [what we learned from the Wikileaks of gitmo data] [some could be harmful but mostly we learned that much of it wasn’t useful] [in early days after 9/11 law enforcement and military were so exercise, they did everything ad hoc] [for bureaucracy, this is dangerous territory and it was no less dangersous after 9/11 for america’s national-security bureaucracy] [*]
The internal documents from the prison in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, published in The Times on Monday were a chilling reminder of the legal and moral disaster that President George W. Bush created there. They describe the chaos, lawlessness and incompetence in his administration’s system for deciding detainees’ guilt or innocence and assessing whether they would be a threat if released. [that’s not how I see them] [a little bit of that] [mostly, however, how badly the bureaucracy improvises] [*]
Innocent men were picked up on the basis of scant or nonexistent evidence and subjected to lengthy detention and often to abuse and torture. Some people were released who later acted against the United States. Inmates who committed suicide were regarded only as a public relations problem. There are seriously dangerous prisoners at Guantánamo who cannot be released but may never get a real trial because the evidence is so tainted.
The torture has stopped. The inmates’ cases have been reviewed. But the detention camp in Cuba remains a festering sore on this country’s global reputation. Hampered by ideologues and cowards in Congress, President Obama has made scant progress in healing it.
Evidence obtained from torture and the uncorroborated whispers of fellow prisoners fill the more than 700 classified documents obtained by The Times and other news organizations. Mohammed al-Qahtani, a Saudi believed to have been an intended participant in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, was leashed like a dog, sexually humiliated and forced to urinate on himself. Yet claims Mr. Qahtani is said to have made about at least 16 prisoners are cited in their files with no mention of the coercion.
Some assessments relied on innuendo, gossip or information supplied by individuals whose motives were untrustworthy and whose information later proved false. Haji Jalil was captured in 2003 after an Afghan intelligence official said he had taken an “active part” in an ambush that killed American soldiers. He was sent home two years later, an inexcusable delay, after American officials determined that Mr. Jalil had been used to provide cover for the involvement of the intelligence official and others in the attack.
The Obama administration objected to release of the classified documents. The administration notes that the assessments were written between 2002 and early 2009 and that the task force established by Mr. Obama in January 2009 came to different conclusions about some of the remaining 172 prisoners. We accept that caution. But the administration is wrong to insist on secrecy. Inordinate resort to secrecy and resistance to testing evidence in fair and credible legal proceedings put the nation in this fix. [that’s hardly surprising when an attack of 9/11’s scale happens?] [and it was mostly short lived] [*]
The administration should make its assessments of the remaining Guantánamo detainees public to the extent possible and free lawyers for detainees to fully communicate their clients’ side of the story.
The military commission trial of Khalid Shaikh Mohammed and five other alleged Sept. 11 plotters should be pursued by the Defense Department using only evidence that would pass muster in federal court, and with maximum transparency.
The disaster at Guantánamo Bay is now Mr. Obama’s problem. He should not compound Mr. Bush’s mistakes in his efforts to correct them.

Mauritania: Police Break Up Antigovernment Protest

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/world/africa/26briefs-Mauritania.html
April 25, 2011
Mauritania: Police Break Up Antigovernment Protest
By ADAM NOSSITER [Mauritania] [north-west Africa] [Africa] [jihadis attacked French embassy while back] [border shared with Western Sahara, western buldge] [use psci 363, formerly 469] [followup] [effects of Arab Awakening?] [followup July 2010?] [*]
Using tear gas and batons, the police broke up an antigovernment demonstration of several hundred youths in the capital, Nouakchott, on Monday. Echoing protests elsewhere in the region, young people have been rallying against President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz since the end of February. Mr. Aziz, left, a former general, was elected in 2009 after seizing power in a coup the year before. A rallying cry of the protesters has been that Mr. Aziz used the election merely to legalize his coup, and on Monday the protesters demanded he relinquish power. “At about noon they were savagely attacked by the police with batons and tear gas grenades,” said an opposition member of Parliament, Mohamed El Moustapha Ould Bedreddine.

[full piece may be found above the jump] [*]

Chinese State Media, in a Show of Openness, Print Jet Photos

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/world/asia/26fighter.html
April 25, 2011
Chinese State Media, in a Show of Openness, Print Jet Photos
By MICHAEL WINES [China] [PRC] [China’s domestic intersects with its foreign policy] [China’s growing pains in terms of America’s military dominance] [use psci 350] [slow democratization] [as China’s economy races to surpass America’s, China is gudginly become more open] [open display of China’s newfound military might!] [*]
BEIJING — The J-15 Flying Shark is China’s newest attack jet, a sinuous fighter with the folding wings, shortened tail cone and bulked-up landing gear it needs to serve on China’s first aircraft carrier, which is expected to start sea trials soon. It is indisputable evidence of China’s growing mastery of military technology. [*]
Also military technology of Russia and Ukraine, albeit not entirely with their consent.
Barely two weeks after splashing photographs of the aircraft carrier on the Internet, China’s state media on Monday published the first close-up pictures of the J-15. The day

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/world/asia/26fighter.html
April 25, 2011
Chinese State Media, in a Show of Openness, Print Jet Photos
By MICHAEL WINES [China] [PRC] [China’s domestic intersects with its foreign policy] [China’s growing pains in terms of America’s military dominance] [use psci 350] [slow democratization] [as China’s economy races to surpass America’s, China is gudginly become more open] [open display of China’s newfound military might!] [*]
BEIJING — The J-15 Flying Shark is China’s newest attack jet, a sinuous fighter with the folding wings, shortened tail cone and bulked-up landing gear it needs to serve on China’s first aircraft carrier, which is expected to start sea trials soon. It is indisputable evidence of China’s growing mastery of military technology. [*]
Also military technology of Russia and Ukraine, albeit not entirely with their consent.
Barely two weeks after splashing photographs of the aircraft carrier on the Internet, China’s state media on Monday published the first close-up pictures of the J-15. The day before, Web sites that focus on China’s military had run the same photograph, snapped outside the Shenyang plant in northeast China where the plane is being developed.
Like the aircraft carrier it will call home, the jet faces years of tests and refinement before it will formally enter service, military analysts say. The photographs nevertheless suggest that the People’s Liberation Army, long notoriously secretive, is lifting some veils. [*]
“The recent spate of releases of photographs of airplanes under development is a sign of relaxed control of military information in China,” Lan Yun, an editor at the Beijing-based Modern Ships magazine, said in an interview. “It could be seen as a sign of more transparency of the Chinese military.”
Mr. Lan and Andrei Chang, the Hong Kong-based editor of Kanwa Asian Defense Review, said that the photograph indicated that the aircraft had passed factory tests and was now bound for flight testing.
Internet posts by analysts and Chinese aviation enthusiasts point to a fighter crammed with the best technology China can produce: holographic “heads-up” instrument displays, advanced anti-ship radar and, Mr. Lan said, self-guiding missiles, in contrast to the gravity-controlled bombs and sight-guided missiles that largely populate China’s existing 3,200-aircraft fleet.
When it is deployed — probably sometime after 2015 — the J-15 will signal the dawn of a new ability by China to assert authority along its coastline. [*]
The carrier and its jet are said to employ the best Chinese technology, but both are also direct descendants of weaponry devised in the dying days of the old Soviet Union. [*]
China’s new carrier, expected to be christened the Shi Lang, is a retrofitted version of a 1988 Soviet aircraft carrier that Chinese interests bought from Ukraine after the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, supposedly for conversion into a floating casino in Macao. But the Macao gambling license never materialized, and as many had suspected, the ship wound up elsewhere — in Dalian, a city in northeastern China where workers began a decade-long retrofit.
The J-15 has followed an even more tortuous route.
At the century’s turn, many news reports say, the Chinese beseeched Moscow to sell them a Sukhoi-33, a 1980s Soviet fighter capable of landing on carriers. Moscow refused. But in 2001, the Chinese bought an Su-33 prototype from Ukraine, a former Soviet republic, and began a teardown to learn its secrets. [*]
The Russians were incensed.
Yet the J-15 unofficially unveiled this week, which externally seems a clone of the Su-33, in fact has been remade inside with Chinese improvements. Mr. Lan said that advances in the plane’s outdated avionics and missile-guidance systems had made it a far more sophisticated version of the Russian jet.
The J-15 is being compared in some quarters to the American F-18, a workhorse on Navy carriers. But Mr. Lan said it had a shorter range, in large part because its takeoff method — flying off a ski-jump-style runway — dictated that it could carry less fuel than a comparable American jet, which is propelled off a flat carrier runway. [*]
Flying a ski-jump is not duck soup. And in February, a Ukrainian court convicted a Russian man of conspiring to give the Chinese details of a Crimean air base that had been used to train Su-33 pilots to take off from a carrier’s ski-jump ramp.
In Huludao, a navy installation on China’s northeast coast, workers are said to have built a rough clone of the Crimea test center, complete with a ski ramp for ascending jets.
None of this is exceptional. Russian, Chinese and American espionage agents wage unacknowledged wars to steal the others’ technology.
But the Chinese, some experts say, are notably adept.
“They take what they can get, and improve what they can,” Abraham M. Denmark, an independent expert on China’s military in Washington, said in an interview. “It’s a strategy that permeates many of their innovations.” [*]

Syria Crackdown Could Signal Brutal New Phase

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/middleeast/27syria.html
April 26, 2011
Syria Crackdown Could Signal Brutal New Phase
By ANTHONY SHADID [Syria] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [Syria pretends to be a modern secular republic, but is far from it] [no monarchy but long run by a minority sect (al Assads) and the Baath Party] [Bashir has seemingly lost control but cannot seem to suss out how to resolve things?] [followup] [hard to know as Syria keeps most western media out] [but appears al Assad has decided to crush the rebellion?] [*]
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Syria’s bloody crackdown on protesters — which seemed to signal a new, harrowing chapter in a conflict that has already killed nearly 400 people — provoked growing international concern on Tuesday with calls for the violence to stop and talk of possible sanctions. [see today’s govt for Washington’s difficulties dealing with same] [*]
The Syrian Army stormed the restive city of Dara’a with tanks and soldiers and helped detain dozens nationwide Monday in an escalation of the counteroffensive against Syria’s five-week-old uprising, according to residents and human rights activists. They said at least 25 people had been killed in Dara’a, with reports of bodies strewn in the streets.
Such was the alarm in the West about developments in Syria, a critical regional player

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/middleeast/27syria.html
April 26, 2011
Syria Crackdown Could Signal Brutal New Phase
By ANTHONY SHADID [Syria] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [Syria pretends to be a modern secular republic, but is far from it] [no monarchy but long run by a minority sect (al Assads) and the Baath Party] [Bashir has seemingly lost control but cannot seem to suss out how to resolve things?] [followup] [hard to know as Syria keeps most western media out] [but appears al Assad has decided to crush the rebellion?] [*]
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Syria’s bloody crackdown on protesters — which seemed to signal a new, harrowing chapter in a conflict that has already killed nearly 400 people — provoked growing international concern on Tuesday with calls for the violence to stop and talk of possible sanctions. [see today’s govt for Washington’s difficulties dealing with same] [*]
The Syrian Army stormed the restive city of Dara’a with tanks and soldiers and helped detain dozens nationwide Monday in an escalation of the counteroffensive against Syria’s five-week-old uprising, according to residents and human rights activists. They said at least 25 people had been killed in Dara’a, with reports of bodies strewn in the streets.
Such was the alarm in the West about developments in Syria, a critical regional player adjacent to Israel and a close ally of Iran, that the United States State Department urged American citizens not to visit the country and said Americans already there should leave immediately.
An official travel advisory late Monday said the State Department had ordered the evacuation of diplomats’ families and some personnel not essential to the functioning of the American Embassy in Damascus — measures similar to those taken in Egypt as the uprising there unfolded earlier this year. Britain also urged its citizens with “no pressing need” to remain in Syria to leave. [*]
The British foreign secretary, William Hague, said on Tuesday that moves were under way at the United Nations Security Council. the European Union and among some Arab countries to send a “strong signal” to the Damascus authorities. “This violent repression must stop,” he said in a statement. But he did not specify what measures might be taken to restrain the Syrian military and security services.
At a news conference in Rome, President Nicolas Sarkozy of France and Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi of Italy used similar language to condemn the crackdown in Syria.
Earlier, the United States called the violence “completely deplorable.” Tommy Vietor, a National Security Council spokesman, said the Obama administration was considering sanctions against Syrian officials to “make clear that this behavior is unacceptable.” [*]
At the United Nations, European and American officials circulated a draft Security Council statement condemning the crackdown and calling on the government to respect human rights and freedom of expression. The draft endorses a call by Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, released last Friday, urging an independent investigation into the mounting death toll.
Until Monday, the Syrian government had been hewing to a mix of concessions and brute force, but its latest actions indicate that it has chosen the latter, seeking to crush a wave of dissent in virtually every province that has shaken the once uncontested rule of President Bashar al-Assad, 45. [*]
“The government has decided to choose the path of violence and repression,” said a Syrian analyst in Beirut, who asked to remain anonymous for his safety. “How far can they go in this repression? That is the question.” [that’s certainly what appears to have happened?] [but hard to say for sure?] [*]
As in 1982, when it crushed an Islamist revolt and killed at least 10,000 people in Hama, the military again showed its willingness to use force to repress its own people. Though there were rumors of discord among soldiers, the leadership is still dominated by Mr. Assad’s minority sect, and its deployment to Dara’a illustrated that a crucial bastion of government support remained loyal — in stark contrast with Egypt, where the military’s refusal to fire on protesters proved decisive in President Hosni Mubarak’s fall.
The official Syrian news agency said Monday night that the military had entered the town at the request of citizens to hunt what it called “extremist terrorist groups.”
Dara’a, a town of low-slung buildings with 75,000 inhabitants, has become almost synonymous with the popular revolt that has posed the greatest challenge to four decades of rule by the Assad family. Protests erupted there in March after security forces arrested high school students accused of scrawling antigovernment graffiti on a wall, galvanizing demonstrations that have spread from the Mediterranean coast and eastern regions dominated by Kurds to the steppe of southern Syria, where Dara’a is located.
Residents said at least eight tanks drove into the town before dawn, with 4,000 to 6,000 troops, though some estimates put the numbers far lower, in the hundreds. Water, electricity and phone lines were cut, making firsthand accounts difficult and the numbers impossible to verify, and nearby border crossings with Jordan were reported sealed. Snipers took positions on the roofs of mosques, residents said, and a mix of soldiers and armed irregular forces went house to house to search for protesters.
“There are bodies in the streets we can’t reach; anyone who walks outside is getting shot at,” said a resident of Dara’a who gave his name as Abdullah, reached by satellite phone. “They want to teach Syria a lesson by teaching Dara’a a lesson.” [probably true] [*]
A handful of videos posted on the Internet, along with residents’ accounts, gave a picture of a city under broad military assault, in what appeared to mark a new phase in the government crackdown. Tanks had not previously been used against protesters, and the force of the assault suggested that the military planned some sort of occupation of the town.
“It’s an attempt to occupy Dara’a,” Abdullah said.
He said soldiers had taken three mosques, but had yet to capture the Omari Mosque, where he said thousands had sought refuge. Since the beginning of the uprising last month, it has served as a headquarters of sorts for demonstrators. He quoted people there as shouting, “We swear you will not enter but over our dead bodies.” [much of army officer corps is Allawite as al Assad family] [to them, this likely looks like Sunni fanatics] [perspective is critical] [*]
He said residents had also tried to block roads with cement blocks and cars. “We didn’t pay such a high price to quit now,” he said.
For weeks, organizers have managed to circumvent the government’s attempt to black out news from Dara’a and cities like Homs. But it appeared to have more success Monday.
Organizers themselves had trouble reaching contacts, and only occasional videos emerged from the tumult. One showed heavily armed soldiers taking up positions behind walls, a few feet from a tank parked on a leafy avenue. In another, a young boy threw a chunk of concrete at a passing tank. Other videos showed a cloud of black smoke rising and volleys of heavy gunfire echoing in the distance.
“These are the reforms of Bashar al-Assad,” one resident said, as he filmed tanks entering the city. “He is reforming Dara’a with the tanks of Bashar al-Assad.”
Wissam Tarif, executive director of Insan, a human rights group, said his organization had a list of 25 people killed Monday in Dara’a.
Across the country of more than 22 million, the government continued a campaign of mass arrests, protesters said. Security forces searched house to house in Azra, another restive town near Dara’a. Activists said security forces had also entered two towns on the capital’s outskirts — Douma and Maadamiah — detaining dozens of people.
Clashes have been especially pronounced in the poor towns that encircle the capital, Damascus, and activists said there were reports of shooting during the raids.
In Jabla, a coastal city inhabited by Syria’s Sunni Muslim majority and members of the minority Alawite sect, from which the government draws much of its support, security forces killed at least 12 people in a crackdown that began Sunday and persisted into the night. [*]One resident said protesters had burned an army car and taken a soldier hostage.
“The army is deployed all over the area,” said another resident, who gave his name as Abu Ahmed. “I can’t describe how bad the situation was all night. It’s a street war.”
He said the shootings had exacerbated tension between Sunnis and Alawites, a potentially dangerous manifestation in a country with a mosaic of religious and ethnic minorities, many of whom fear the government’s collapse may endanger them.
“The plate has shattered,” he said, using an Arabic expression. “There’s strife between us now, it’s been planted, and the problem is going to exist forever in Jabla.” [*]
Hwaida Saad contributed reporting from Beirut, employees of The New York Times from Beirut and Damascus, Syria, and Alan Cowell from London.

Americans Held in Tehran Get Court Date

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/middleeast/27iran.html
April 26, 2011
Americans Held in Tehran Get Court Date
By WILLIAM YONG [Iran] [Iran’s incredible factionalism] [Iran’s thugocracy versus the Green Movement that emerged after 2009 elections] [thugocaracy sets next year, 2012, for legislative elections] [followup] [the poor American hikers from summer 2009] [followup] [finally a court date?] [*]
TEHRAN — Two American citizens who have spent 19 months in detention in Iran, accused of espionage and illegal entry, will appear in court for a third time in May, according to their lawyer.
Joshua F. Fattal and Shane M. Bauer, both 28, will attend a court session on May 11, their lawyer, Masoud Shafiee, said on Tuesday. On two previous occasions, judges have delayed a verdict in the case, citing the absence of a third American, Sarah E. Shourd, 32, who was released on bail last September for medical reasons and returned to the United States. The three were arrested near the border with Iraqi Kurdistan in June 2009.
While Ms. Shourd has been summoned in a letter from Iran’s Foreign Ministry, it is unlikely that she will return to face trial in May. “When there are several accused persons, a judge cannot postpone the case just because one of them is not present. The judge must issue separate verdicts for Shane and Josh,” Mr. Shafiee said in a telephone interview. “Sarah’s

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/middleeast/27iran.html
April 26, 2011
Americans Held in Tehran Get Court Date
By WILLIAM YONG [Iran] [Iran’s incredible factionalism] [Iran’s thugocracy versus the Green Movement that emerged after 2009 elections] [thugocaracy sets next year, 2012, for legislative elections] [followup] [the poor American hikers from summer 2009] [followup] [finally a court date?] [*]
TEHRAN — Two American citizens who have spent 19 months in detention in Iran, accused of espionage and illegal entry, will appear in court for a third time in May, according to their lawyer.
Joshua F. Fattal and Shane M. Bauer, both 28, will attend a court session on May 11, their lawyer, Masoud Shafiee, said on Tuesday. On two previous occasions, judges have delayed a verdict in the case, citing the absence of a third American, Sarah E. Shourd, 32, who was released on bail last September for medical reasons and returned to the United States. The three were arrested near the border with Iraqi Kurdistan in June 2009.
While Ms. Shourd has been summoned in a letter from Iran’s Foreign Ministry, it is unlikely that she will return to face trial in May. “When there are several accused persons, a judge cannot postpone the case just because one of them is not present. The judge must issue separate verdicts for Shane and Josh,” Mr. Shafiee said in a telephone interview. “Sarah’s verdict can be issued in absentia, or her case alone can be delayed.”
Mr. Fattal and Mr. Bauer have been held in Tehran’s notorious Evin prison for the past 19 months — a period significantly longer than the one-year minimum sentence for the crimes they are accused of committing. Mr. Shafiee said that he had not been allowed to meet with his clients before their previous court appearances, despite assurances from the presiding judge that he would be able to.
All three Americans have denied that they knowingly entered Iranian territory or that they were involved in espionage.
The two previous hearings, in November 2010 and in February, were held behind closed doors. While Iranian law states that court sessions in such cases should be held publicly, judges are able to make exceptions in sensitive cases. [*]
Ms. Shourd, in an interview in November, said that she, Mr. Bauer, her fiancé, and their friend Mr. Fattal were hiking on an unmarked dirt road and inadvertently crossed into Iran when a guard gestured to them.
“He pointed to the ground and said ‘Iran’ and pointed to the trail we had been on before he waved to us, then said ‘Iraq,’ ” said Ms. Shourd, who lives in Oakland, Calif. “We did not actually enter Iran until he gestured to us. We were confused and worried and wanted to go back.”
Iranian officials have in the past acknowledged that the border region with Iraqi Kurdistan lacks adequate markings.
An earlier version of this article misspelled the given name of Sarah E. Shourd as Sara.

Iran Discovers New Cyberattack

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/world/middleeast/26iran.html
April 25, 2011
Iran Discovers New Cyberattack
By WILLIAM YONG [Iran] [Iran’s incredible factionalism] [Iran’s thugocracy versus the Green Movement that emerged after 2009 elections] [thugocaracy sets next year, 2012, for legislative elections] [followup] [with Arab Awakening all around, and thugocracy reeling from possiblities, now word of another attack on WMD computers?] [followup] [*]
TEHRAN — Iran has discovered a new hostile computer virus designed to damage government systems, [*]an Iranian official who heads a cyberdefense agency said in comments reported Monday.
In comments published by Iran’s semiofficial Mehr News Agency, the official, Gholam-Reza Jalali, said the Stars virus had infiltrated government systems but was being decoded. “Fortunately, our scientists have successfully identified the Stars virus, [*]which has now been sent to laboratories,” [*]said Mr. Jalali, a senior Revolutionary Guards commander.
He said no final conclusions had yet been reached about the virus’s aim. In its initial state, it mimics a regular executable file.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/world/middleeast/26iran.html
April 25, 2011
Iran Discovers New Cyberattack
By WILLIAM YONG [Iran] [Iran’s incredible factionalism] [Iran’s thugocracy versus the Green Movement that emerged after 2009 elections] [thugocaracy sets next year, 2012, for legislative elections] [followup] [with Arab Awakening all around, and thugocracy reeling from possiblities, now word of another attack on WMD computers?] [followup] [*]
TEHRAN — Iran has discovered a new hostile computer virus designed to damage government systems, [*]an Iranian official who heads a cyberdefense agency said in comments reported Monday.
In comments published by Iran’s semiofficial Mehr News Agency, the official, Gholam-Reza Jalali, said the Stars virus had infiltrated government systems but was being decoded. “Fortunately, our scientists have successfully identified the Stars virus, [*]which has now been sent to laboratories,” [*]said Mr. Jalali, a senior Revolutionary Guards commander.
He said no final conclusions had yet been reached about the virus’s aim. In its initial state, it mimics a regular executable file.
In recent days, Mr. Jalali admitted that the powerful Stuxnet virus discovered last year did indeed infect computer systems related to the country’s nuclear program, but said that it was discovered before causing serious damage. [that’s not the rumor?] [*]Mr. Jalali said that the threat from Stuxnet had not yet been completely dispelled, and cautioned that further attacks were anticipated.
“The nation should ready itself for the next virus since it is possible that new viruses will be considerably more dangerous than the first,” he said.
Many computer security experts believe the Stuxnet virus was created by a government or governments trying to sabotage Iran’s nuclear program, which Western countries believe is aimed at creating a nuclear weapon, but which Iran maintains is for peaceful purposes. After that virus was discovered last year, Iran reported delays in parts of its nuclear program.

Taliban Breach Afghan Prison; Hundreds Free

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/world/asia/26afghanistan.html
April 25, 2011
Taliban Breach Afghan Prison; Hundreds Free
By TAIMOOR SHAH and ALISSA J. RUBIN [Afghanistan] [AfPak] [even as US commits much money and support to Pakistan’s govt] [Obama’s “surge” continues] [after “surge” has success around Kandahar, insurgency strikes back?] [psci 355-455, 469] [spring offensive is back on?] [reconciliation fits and starts] [more on yesterday’s prison break] [followup] [as I noted yesterday, inside job was written all over it!] [*]
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — Taliban leaders carried out an audacious plot on Monday to free nearly 500 fighters from southern Afghanistan’s largest prison, leading them through a tunnel dug over more than five months and equipped with electricity and air pipes, which suggested that the insurgents remained formidable and wily opponents despite recent setbacks.
The plan was so closely held that one young Taliban fighter who got out said he knew nothing of it until a fellow inmate tugged his sleeve to wake him in the night and led him to the three-foot-wide tunnel, which ran more than half a mile from a hole in a cell’s floor,

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/world/asia/26afghanistan.html
April 25, 2011
Taliban Breach Afghan Prison; Hundreds Free
By TAIMOOR SHAH and ALISSA J. RUBIN [Afghanistan] [AfPak] [even as US commits much money and support to Pakistan’s govt] [Obama’s “surge” continues] [after “surge” has success around Kandahar, insurgency strikes back?] [psci 355-455, 469] [spring offensive is back on?] [reconciliation fits and starts] [more on yesterday’s prison break] [followup] [as I noted yesterday, inside job was written all over it!] [*]
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — Taliban leaders carried out an audacious plot on Monday to free nearly 500 fighters from southern Afghanistan’s largest prison, leading them through a tunnel dug over more than five months and equipped with electricity and air pipes, which suggested that the insurgents remained formidable and wily opponents despite recent setbacks.
The plan was so closely held that one young Taliban fighter who got out said he knew nothing of it until a fellow inmate tugged his sleeve to wake him in the night and led him to the three-foot-wide tunnel, which ran more than half a mile from a hole in a cell’s floor, under security posts, tall concrete walls and a highway, and came up in a nearby house. From there, a waiting car took the fighter a few miles away, where he hailed a taxi to safety.
“I was just praying to God that he would free me,” said the fighter, Allah Mohammed Agha, 22, recounting his escape from Sarposa Prison, where he had been held for 28 days. “Last night was the night that my dream was made true.” He spoke by phone from Spinbaldak, near the Pakistani border. [*]
The Afghan government called the breach a disaster. The prison break called into question the extent of the gains made against the Taliban in 18 months of hard fighting in Kandahar Province, and whether any progress would be sustainable once NATO troops began to reduce their numbers as planned this summer, members of Parliament, tribal leaders and Western officials said in interviews. [actually it called into question the West’s partner, the Karzai govt] [*]
Some worried that the jailbreak might strengthen the Taliban in the coming weeks as the spring fighting season began. Having so many fighters back in circulation — possibly including hard-core commanders — also threatened to undermine efforts to bring Taliban fighters over to the government side, Afghan officials and former Taliban said.
There is no doubt that the incident demonstrated the ability of the Taliban to organize such an elaborate operation, even after they were driven largely underground in Kandahar and Helmand Provinces, and despite police and prison guards, prison visits by NATO mentors, and sophisticated NATO surveillance in Kandahar. [*]
The prison break comes after four recent attacks by the Taliban, in which they used suicide bombers, often disguised as police officers or soldiers, to penetrate secure buildings, including an Afghan army corps’ headquarters in Laghman Province and the Ministry of Defense headquarters in the capital, Kabul.
Members of Parliament and others were scathing about the lapses. Some questioned whether the prison guards or police officers were bribed not to notice the tunnel’s construction.
“It’s a big achievement for the Taliban and shows a big failure and weakness in the government,” said Muhammad Naiem Lalay Hamidzai, a Parliament member from Kandahar and chairman of the internal security committee.
“The Taliban gain two things from this jailbreak,” he said. “First, coming after the incidents in Kunduz, Laghman, Kandahar and at the Ministry of Defense headquarters, it sends a message that they can do whatever they want, even at the heart of the most secure and important jail, and it allows them to strengthen their ranks with more manpower.”
The Afghan government was reeling Monday as details of the escape emerged. “This is bad news for the government and the people of Afghanistan,” the spokesman for President Hamid Karzai, Waheed Omar, said at a news conference. “This shows a vulnerability on the part of the government.” He called the prison break a disaster. [ya think?] [*]
One unexplained question was why the cells where prisoners were supposed to sleep were left open so that they could make their way to the cell with the tunnel. It also seemed that none of the guards checked on the prisoners during the night, even though Afghan intelligence officials and Western military officials said that there had been intelligence about the possibility of a security breach. [only one reason I can think of: the facility’s leaders were in on it!] [*]
“This is absolutely the fault of the ignorance of the security forces,” said the Kandahar provincial governor, Tooryalai Wesa. “This was not the work of a day, a week or a month of activities. This was actually months of work they spent to dig and free their men.”
Clearly embarrassed, Afghan officials had little else to say, other than to acknowledge that the prison break showed unexpected weaknesses in security. Since the Taliban engineered a major break at the same prison in 2008 — freeing 1,200 prisoners — Canadian forces have mentored the Afghans who run the prison and NATO countries have spent several million dollars upgrading and training the prison administration, according to a Western official in Kabul.
“There are a lot of people asking questions today,” said a NATO officer at the coalition’s headquarters in Kabul.
There was no official comment from the NATO command. Two Western officials described the break as “at least partially an inside job,” but both said they could not be named because of the delicacy of the situation.
Of the 488 men who escaped, fewer than 20 were from the criminal section of the prison; the rest were security detainees believed to be Taliban fighters and commanders.
An escapee, who asked not to be identified, said that among those freed were two shadow governors and 14 shadow district governors. The Taliban have a shadow government that has varying influence in different provinces.
However, Muhammad Qasim Hashimzai, a deputy justice minister, said that the government did not yet know who had escaped. “The detainees included all kinds of people,” he said, and he promised to have more information on Tuesday.
Mr. Wesa, the Kandahar provincial governor, said a manhunt was on and that 26 escapees had been captured by late afternoon.
The security section of the prison was eerily empty on Monday when reporters were shown around. Prisoners’ belongings were strewn about, but appeared heaped in the cell with the tunnel in an effort to obscure the entrance. A second tunnel branched off to the criminal side of the prison, according to the warden, Gen. Ghulam Dastagir Mayar, and Mr. Wesa.
Now, with so many Taliban back in the fight, it will be even harder to convince Taliban fighters that they will be safe if they defect to the government, a former Taliban commander said.
“The prison break will slow down the peace process,” said Mullah Noorul Aziz Agha, a Taliban member who recently decided to lay down his arms and work with the government. “I was talking to Taliban on the phone to try to persuade them to come over, but now with this, how can we promise them that we can offer them security and protection?”
Taimoor Shah reported from Kandahar, and Alissa J. Rubin from Kabul, Afghanistan. Sangar Rahimi contributed reporting from Kabul.

Qaeda Figure Killed in Afghanistan

http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2011/04/26/world/asia/international-us-afghanistan-insurgent.html
April 26, 2011
Qaeda Figure Killed in Afghanistan
By REUTERS [Afghanistan] [AfPak] [even as US commits much money and support to Pakistan’s govt] [Obama’s “surge” continues] [after “surge” has success around Kandahar, insurgency strikes back?] [psci 355-455, 469] [spring offensive is back on?] [ISAF might have got an al Qaeda leader?] [with only 100 or so, such “gets” are rare] [followup] [*]
KABUL (Reuters) - NATO-led forces in Afghanistan said on Tuesday they had killed a senior al Qaeda leader and the second most wanted insurgent in the country in an airstrike in eastern Kunar province, bordering Pakistan, ending a near four-year manhunt. [*]
Abu Hafs al-Najdi, [operational planner] [*] also known as Abdul Ghani, a Saudi Arabian, was killed 12 days ago in Dangam district, on April 13, as he met other senior insurgents and al Qaeda members, an International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) statement said.
"Abdul Ghani was responsible for the coordination of numerous high-profile attacks. On the morning of his death, he reportedly directed the suicide attack that killed tribal elder Malik Zarin and nine other Afghan civilians," ISAF said. [it’s actually a bad job to have as US and

http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2011/04/26/world/asia/international-us-afghanistan-insurgent.html
April 26, 2011
Qaeda Figure Killed in Afghanistan
By REUTERS [Afghanistan] [AfPak] [even as US commits much money and support to Pakistan’s govt] [Obama’s “surge” continues] [after “surge” has success around Kandahar, insurgency strikes back?] [psci 355-455, 469] [spring offensive is back on?] [ISAF might have got an al Qaeda leader?] [with only 100 or so, such “gets” are rare] [followup] [*]
KABUL (Reuters) - NATO-led forces in Afghanistan said on Tuesday they had killed a senior al Qaeda leader and the second most wanted insurgent in the country in an airstrike in eastern Kunar province, bordering Pakistan, ending a near four-year manhunt. [*]
Abu Hafs al-Najdi, [operational planner] [*] also known as Abdul Ghani, a Saudi Arabian, was killed 12 days ago in Dangam district, on April 13, as he met other senior insurgents and al Qaeda members, an International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) statement said.
"Abdul Ghani was responsible for the coordination of numerous high-profile attacks. On the morning of his death, he reportedly directed the suicide attack that killed tribal elder Malik Zarin and nine other Afghan civilians," ISAF said. [it’s actually a bad job to have as US and NATO always after you] [*]
Abu Hafs al-Najdi was al Qaeda's operations chief for Kunar and was responsible for establishing insurgent camps and training sites throughout the volatile mountain province.
ISAF said he was one of more than 25 al Qaeda operatives killed in Afghanistan during operations over the past month in the leadup to Afghanistan's summer fighting months. [?] [*]
News of his death came a day after hundreds of insurgents tunnelled their way out of a high-security jail in southern Kandahar, triggering an extensive manhunt and tightening of security along the Pakistan border.
Najdi, whose real name was Saleh Naiv Almakhlvi Day, controlled and armed a network of insurgents that targeted Afghan and ISAF security force outposts throughout Kunar, including two in February, ISAF said. [*]
He was also No.23 on Saudi Arabia's list of 85 most wanted militants issued in 2009, which said he was active in either Afghanistan, Pakistan or Iran. ISAF began hunting him in Afghanistan in 2007.
ISAF said Najdi was with a Pakistani Qaeda operative named Waqas when the airstrike took place, killing both, as well as an unspecified number of other insurgents. [*]
"Abdul Ghani commonly instructed subordinate leaders to conduct kidnapping operations against foreigners ... and he was responsible for directing suicide bomb attacks targeting U.S. government officials," ISAF said.
Insurgents in the country are under stepped up pressure from NATO-led troops and a growing Afghan army ahead of the start this summer of a transfer of security responsibilities from foreign to Afghan forces.
An ISAF spokesman would not name the coalition's top insurgent target for fear of hampering their search, but alliance commanders have previously claimed there are only 50 to 100 Qaeda fighters still active in Afghanistan. [*]
The withdrawal of U.S. forces from the Korengal and Pech river valleys in Kunar in late 2009 has created more space for al Qaeda and the Taliban to expand their operations in the region, security website The Long War Journal said.
(Editing by Andrew Marshall)

4 Killed in Bus Bombings in Pakistan

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/asia/27pakistan.html
April 26, 2011
4 Killed in Bus Bombings in Pakistan
By SALMAN MASOOD [Pakistan] [AfPak] [hub of the al Qaeda and Taliban activity in AfPak] [and of al Qaeda globally] [use psci 355-455, 469] [under Obama administration, Bush’s policy of drones (sticks) and carrots( $) has increased to Zardari] [Pakistan is really where U.S. interests converge: nukes, India-Pakistan, and GSAVE] [use psci 355-455] [violence continues] [followup] [*]
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Two bombs exploded on Tuesday next to two buses transporting employees of the Pakistani Navy in the southern port city of Karachi, [*]killing at least four people, a senior naval official said. At least 56 other people were wounded.
A junior naval officer, one civilian doctor and two other low-ranking naval employees were killed in the early morning rush-hour attacks on the buses, said Commodore Irfan ul Haq. He said it was too early to say why the naval buses were targets.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/asia/27pakistan.html
April 26, 2011
4 Killed in Bus Bombings in Pakistan
By SALMAN MASOOD [Pakistan] [AfPak] [hub of the al Qaeda and Taliban activity in AfPak] [and of al Qaeda globally] [use psci 355-455, 469] [under Obama administration, Bush’s policy of drones (sticks) and carrots( $) has increased to Zardari] [Pakistan is really where U.S. interests converge: nukes, India-Pakistan, and GSAVE] [use psci 355-455] [violence continues] [followup] [*]
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Two bombs exploded on Tuesday next to two buses transporting employees of the Pakistani Navy in the southern port city of Karachi, [*]killing at least four people, a senior naval official said. At least 56 other people were wounded.
A junior naval officer, one civilian doctor and two other low-ranking naval employees were killed in the early morning rush-hour attacks on the buses, said Commodore Irfan ul Haq. He said it was too early to say why the naval buses were targets.
No one claimed responsibility immediately, but Taliban insurgents and militant groups affiliated with the organization have repeatedly attacked civilians and military installations across the country. Karachi is the country’s largest city and considered the financial and commercial capital. [*]
The first blast occurred in an upscale neighborhood, DHA Phase II, at 7:20 a.m. on Tuesday, police officials said.
The bomb was planted on a motorcycle that was idling by a main road and exploded as the naval bus passed, the police said. The blast killed the junior naval officer and the doctor, wounded 37 other passengers, destroyed the bus and shattered the windows of nearby houses.
Minutes later, a second blast went off in Baldia Town, a relatively impoverished neighborhood in Karachi. The remote-controlled bomb was hidden in rubble alongside a road, the police said. This second blast killed the two other naval employees and injured 19 others.
The blasts came just days after Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, the army chief, claimed to have broken the back of militants in the country. The army chief had made the claim on Saturday while addressing a ceremony of cadets at the Kakul military academy in the country’s north. [I’d hate to see their effectiveness when they’re healthy?] [*]
“It is a powerful message by the militants,” said Omar R. Quraishi, opinion pages editor of The Express Tribune, an English-language daily newspaper based in Karachi. “The message is that we may be on the run, but we can strike at will and choose targets of our choosing.”
Analysts said that the commuter buses used by officers and staff of the navy were a relatively easy target as they travel on main thoroughfares with little or no security. Military installations, on the other hand, have become relatively difficult to attack because of stringent security measures.

April 25, 2011

President Obama and the Peace Process

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/opinion/25mon1.html
April 24, 2011
President Obama and the Peace Process
[editorial] [recently we began hearing the Obama administration was going to offer up a template for settlement between Israel and Palestine] [mind you, no idea is that’s trye] [but the rumor has sure started a lot of motion] [including today’s editorial] [see Aaron David Miller’s piece yesterday] [*]
President Obama began his presidency vowing to negotiate an Israeli-Palestinian peace. He backed off in the face of both sides’ obstinacy and after a series of diplomatic missteps. Since then, the stalemate, and the mistrust, have only deepened, and it is clear that nothing good will happen until the United States fully engages.
It is time for Mr. Obama — alone or, better yet, in concert with Europe, Russia and the United Nations — to put a map and a deal on the table. [*]
The outlines of a deal are no secret. They were first proposed by President Bill Clinton in 2000. But neither side has been willing to make the necessary concessions — on land

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/opinion/25mon1.html
April 24, 2011
President Obama and the Peace Process
[editorial] [recently we began hearing the Obama administration was going to offer up a template for settlement between Israel and Palestine] [mind you, no idea is that’s trye] [but the rumor has sure started a lot of motion] [including today’s editorial] [see Aaron David Miller’s piece yesterday] [*]
President Obama began his presidency vowing to negotiate an Israeli-Palestinian peace. He backed off in the face of both sides’ obstinacy and after a series of diplomatic missteps. Since then, the stalemate, and the mistrust, have only deepened, and it is clear that nothing good will happen until the United States fully engages.
It is time for Mr. Obama — alone or, better yet, in concert with Europe, Russia and the United Nations — to put a map and a deal on the table. [*]
The outlines of a deal are no secret. They were first proposed by President Bill Clinton in 2000. But neither side has been willing to make the necessary concessions — on land swaps, how Jerusalem can be shared and how many displaced Palestinians can go home, or not. The Israelis need to know that their closest ally won’t enable more inaction. The Palestinians need to know they will have American support so long as their demands are realistic. Mr. Obama needs to speak up before Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel pre-empts the debate with what is certain to be an inferior proposal when he addresses a joint meeting of Congress next month. [I’m not at all sure that’s a smart idea] [but of course neither is the GOP plan to have Bibi speak!] [*]
Mr. Netanyahu has made some concessions, most notably giving Palestinians more control over their own security in the West Bank. But he has long insisted that the Palestinians aren’t serious about negotiating a final deal, and he is now hinting that he will unilaterally offer them an interim, step-by-step arrangement that will put off statehood to some undefined future.
He also has used the upheavals in the Middle East as one more excuse not to act, rather than a reason to reinforce Israel’s security with a durable peace deal. [so have others] [*]
Mr. Netanyahu — who is coming to speak at the invitation of Representative John Boehner, the House speaker — seems to think that the Republicans’ new power means he has carte blanche in Washington. So long as Mr. Obama sits on the sidelines, he will surely continue to believe that. [*]
The address to Congress isn’t the only deadline Mr. Obama has to worry about. The Palestinians are threatening to ask the United Nations General Assembly — which admitted the state of Israel in 1949 — to declare a Palestinian state when it meets in September. Israel and the United States dismiss this as theater. But it is certain to pass, further isolating Israel. If Washington votes against it, as it inevitably will, it would further isolate this country. [*]
President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority and his aides have been building their capacity to govern in the West Bank. But Mr. Abbas isn’t helping his cause by refusing to return to the negotiating table. He suspended talks last fall after Israel refused to extend a moratorium on settlement construction. Holding to his position only gives Mr. Netanyahu an excuse not to seriously engage.
The status quo is not sustainable, as a recent surge of violence should make clear. And the options on the ground for creating a territorially coherent Palestinian state keep narrowing as Israel steps up settlement construction in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Israel could oust the settlers — and will have to in certain areas. But the more settlers they let in, the harder it will be politically for any Israeli leader to cut a deal.
Last month, Robert Gates made the first visit to the West Bank by an American defense secretary to reinforce Washington’s commitment to a Palestinian state. But President Obama’s peace envoy, George Mitchell, who is supposed to move the process forward, hasn’t been to the region since December.
Mr. Gates was absolutely correct when he declared in Israel that despite the uncertainty caused by the upheaval in the Arab world, “there is a need and an opportunity for bold action to move toward a two-state solution.” He was talking to the Israelis and the Palestinians. We hope President Obama was listening closely, too. [*]

Hard Power

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/22/hard_power
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/23/11 6:28:06 PM] [*]
Hard Power
Why Pakistan is so difficult to work with.
BY ANATOL LIEVEN | APRIL 22, 2011 [commentary] [as usual, there’s some reporting too] [but mostly an analysis of what a cluster f*** Paksitan is] [the slowly souring relations between Pakistan and the U.S.] [can anything be done?] [answer: not much] [from September 12, 2001 forward, this was bound to happen] [*]
Last week, the Pakistani government demanded that Washington end drone strikes against Taliban and al Qaeda targets in Pakistan's tribal areas and drastically scale back CIA operations. This followed a drone attack in North Waziristan that killed more than 40 civilians on the very day that Pakistan released contracted CIA operative Raymond Davis, who had been arrested for killing two Pakistanis in Lahore. The Davis affair caused intense anger among ordinary Pakistanis. Americans, meanwhile, are furious at Pakistan for sheltering the leadership of the Afghan Taliban, who are fighting U.S. forces and the Kabul government in Afghanistan. Given this explosive situation, is it really possible for the United States and Pakistan to go on working together against terrorism? [sure: Pakistan is still scared to death of India, so there’s reason enough] [but the longer answer is so long as India and the US are on the road to improved, actually good relations (comparatively

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/22/hard_power
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/23/11 6:28:06 PM] [*]
Hard Power
Why Pakistan is so difficult to work with.
BY ANATOL LIEVEN | APRIL 22, 2011 [commentary] [as usual, there’s some reporting too] [but mostly an analysis of what a cluster f*** Paksitan is] [the slowly souring relations between Pakistan and the U.S.] [can anything be done?] [answer: not much] [from September 12, 2001 forward, this was bound to happen] [*]
Last week, the Pakistani government demanded that Washington end drone strikes against Taliban and al Qaeda targets in Pakistan's tribal areas and drastically scale back CIA operations. This followed a drone attack in North Waziristan that killed more than 40 civilians on the very day that Pakistan released contracted CIA operative Raymond Davis, who had been arrested for killing two Pakistanis in Lahore. The Davis affair caused intense anger among ordinary Pakistanis. Americans, meanwhile, are furious at Pakistan for sheltering the leadership of the Afghan Taliban, who are fighting U.S. forces and the Kabul government in Afghanistan. Given this explosive situation, is it really possible for the United States and Pakistan to go on working together against terrorism? [sure: Pakistan is still scared to death of India, so there’s reason enough] [but the longer answer is so long as India and the US are on the road to improved, actually good relations (comparatively speaking) it’s over between the US and Paksitan?] [*]
The answer is complicated, but basically it is yes. The Davis affair has damaged the relationship between Washington and the Pakistani Army and military intelligence, but it is very unlikely to end it. Hard as it may be to swallow, the United States must go on cooperating with the Pakistani state, military, and intelligence services against terrorism directed against the West and not allow this relationship to be destroyed by Pakistan's sheltering of the Afghan Taliban. [*]In fact, the United States should accept and even welcome continued Pakistani military links to Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), the terrorist group alleged to be behind the 2008 Mumbai attacks, while holding to the absolute condition that the Pakistani military uses these connections successfully to prevent further LeT attacks on India and, above all, the United States. [I think that nuts] [I also think the US should continue to push back on ISI-army’s connections with LeT and Taliban and others] [pretending it’s tolerable is not what’s needed] [I’m not suggesting the US give an ultimatum but neither can the US ever pretend LeT is tolerable or anything approaching tolerable!] [*]
Although Pakistan's protection of the Afghan Taliban has certainly been unacceptable, on other questions the Pakistanis do have a point. Some U.S. officials -- especially in the State Department -- themselves recognize that what happened to Davis is strong evidence that it is not, in fact, a good idea to have hundreds of Special Forces types, wired to the max but inadequately trained for intelligence work, [I couldn’t agree more] [this notion of contracting such activities out is unacceptable from a U.S. tradecraft perspective] [it should not be tolerated in the US much less by the Pakistanis] [if Panetta and company did not learn a huge lesson from Davis, then I’m genuinely frightened!] [*] wandering around Pakistan. The Davis case was bad enough; future incidents could be much, much worse. Equally, there is considerable private disagreement in Washington as to whether the killing of Taliban commanders by drone strikes is really worth the Pakistani anger caused by the killing of civilians. [I fear it’s become so simple and out-of-sight-out-of-mind mechanism for the WH that it’s incredibly dangerous] [what happens when the Talib or others start taking Americans hostage to get back and this sort of thing?] [how smart is it going to look then???] [*]
Above all, though the Pakistani establishment and the United States differ greatly on Afghanistan, they are basically at one when it comes to preventing international terrorism against the West. This is in part because the Pakistani elites shop in the West, send their children to study in the West, and to a large extent actually live in the West. On any given day, a bomb in Harrods in London would be very likely to claim a Pakistani elite family among its victims. [*]
More importantly, the Pakistani government and military know that a successful terrorist attack on the United States by a Pakistan-based group would inevitably lead to a U.S. response that would be extremely damaging to Pakistan. [they know more than that] [they know there exist some 150 targets, some of them of questionable and that the US will do it almost on automatic] [that’s what contingency plans are] [it’ whyd despite the duplicity from both sides that that Paksstanis work like hell to prevent another attack in US] [*] If the attack were carried out by members of one of the groups linked to the Pakistani military, such a response could be on a scale that would lead to the collapse of the Pakistani state.
There is therefore no reason to doubt the basic goodwill of the Pakistani state and military on this issue; indeed, British and U.S. intelligence officials have attested to the very important help that Pakistan has given against al Qaeda and other terrorist groups. Where this has been limited, it has been because of Pakistani incompetence and bitter divisions among Pakistan's different intelligence and police agencies, not because of support for terrorists. [but both sides need to quite down this uproar and I see little evidence other either doing so or showing any cleverness, whatever] [*]
Pakistani authorities, however, have also given shelter to the top leadership of the Afghan Taliban and have allowed free passage to volunteers fighting the war against Western forces in Afghanistan. The Pakistani security establishment continues to calculate (in a somewhat paranoid fashion) that the festering Afghan civil war will continue to develop as the United States withdraws, pulling in India on the side of anti-Pakistani forces -- basically the former Northern Alliance. Therefore Pakistan must keep strengthening its links to the Afghan Taliban, its only potential allies against India in the imminent proxy war. [yea, yea, yeah—I’m sick to death of hearing about the poor Pakistanis phobias] [it’s time they stopped playing that card and it’s time the US start pushing back on it] [India is a fact—it’s not going away and it’s going to get stronger and stronger] [and all the WMD in the world is not going to stop it so we ought to stop encouraging Pakistan to play that card so dramatically] [*]
This official policy takes place against a background of overwhelming sympathy for the Afghan Taliban among ordinary Pakistanis, at least to judge by my hundreds of interviews on the street in all four provinces over the past four years, including this March in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Pakistanis do not necessarily support the Taliban's ideological and revolutionary program. Rather, they see the Taliban's fight against the United States and Afghan President Hamid Karzai's administration as a legitimate national resistance struggle, [against what exactly?] [what are they resisting?] [Hamid Karzai’s brutal walse toward the 18th century or what passes as modernity in AfPak?] [if it’s nothing else this this ruse must end] [*] just like the war of the Afghan mujahideen against the Soviets and their Afghan communist allies in the 1980s. [it’s not at all like the muj and the Soviets] [*]
Most don't, however, wish to be led by the Taliban. Militant rebels within Pakistan once garnered considerable sympathy from the perception that they were only acting as allies of this "defensive jihad" in Afghanistan against America's stooges in the Pakistani establishment and were not aiming at revolution in Pakistan. This perception still exists, but fortunately it has been greatly diminished, both because of the Pakistani Taliban's savagery against other Pakistanis and because it has become apparent to everyone who is paying attention that they are in fact aiming at power in Pakistan itself. [this idea that Muslims must stick togther I think is indidous] [I think it prevents Islam from embracing modernity because they have some slow learners] [it dumbs down Islam’s internal struggle to fit into the modern world and keeps parts of Islam enslaved] [*]
The Pakistani military and intelligence services are now waging a determined struggle against the Pakistani Taliban and its allies. In the district of Swat, formerly controlled in large part by the Pakistani Taliban, the struggle has been very successful, as attested to by the fact that there have been no terrorist attacks for more than six months. It has also been ruthless. To judge by my own interviews, a recent Human Rights Watch report on extrajudicial executions in the district was accurate, and these are still continuing, albeit at a diminished rate. [yes, let’s give three cheers because Pakistan has nominally begun to control Paksitan?] [talk about the bigotry of low expectations] [*]
Casualties among the Pakistani security forces have also been high. According to official figures -- which seem plausible, given the intensity of the fighting and the scale of terrorist attacks -- more than 3,200 have been killed fighting the militants, including 85 officers of the Inter-Services Intelligence directorate (ISI). [absolutely—I’ll given them that] [but again, if you insist on allowing ancient tribal superstitions to govern modern nation-states, this will not ease] [*] One of these was the famous "Colonel Imam" (Colonel Sultan Amir Tarar), a leading Pakistani ally of the Afghan Taliban. In a case that highlights the distance between the two Talibans, Colonel Imam was kidnapped by the Pakistani Taliban during a mission to Waziristan last year and then killed this January, despite appeals from the Afghan Taliban to spare his life. Another casualty was a senior police officer whom I interviewed in 2009 and greatly admired: Sifwat Ghayur, who led the police in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa against the Pakistani Taliban and in consequence was killed by the militants last summer. [I have no doubt there are many Pakistanis risting the tide—it’s their country, their future, if not them who?] ] [*]
So there is no ambiguity in the Pakistani military's struggle against militants who are fighting against Pakistan or the West. The deep and potentially fatal ambiguity comes in the military's approach to militant groups that are not yet in revolt against their own country and have not yet conducted foreign terrorism outside of Afghanistan. The most important of these groups are the ones that were actually trained and equipped by the ISI to attack India in Indian Kashmir and elsewhere during the 1990s. Some of them, like Jaish-e-Mohammed, have split, with many of their members joining the Pakistani Taliban in rebellion.
But the most formidable of them remains loyal to the Pakistani state and is still closely linked to the ISI. This is LeT, whose public wing, Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD), runs an extensive network of schools, hospitals, and welfare organizations in Punjab and beyond. LeT is regarded by many Western counterterrorism experts as the most effective terrorist group in South Asia and even beyond. [but as a terrorist group] [*] Its potential for international terrorism is greatly increased by the fact that much of the Pakistani diaspora in Britain comes from Pakistani Kashmir and -- judging from my interviews -- has deep sympathy with the anti-Indian jihadists. Because these people have British passports, they are a direct potential threat to the West. [all of which argues for settlement of Kashmir, not the continued sympathy for LeT] [and the latter is all we see] [*]
So far, however, LeT has not planned or carried out any attacks against the West, even as its activists have gone to help the Taliban in Afghanistan and killed Westerners as part of the group's 2008 attack on Mumbai. According to counterterrorism expert Stephen Tankel, some members of LeT/JuD did press the organization to revolt against the Pakistani government when then President Pervez Musharraf sided with America after 9/11, but their demands were rejected by the leadership and they left the organization to fight with the Pakistani Taliban against the Pakistani state. [*]
The strategy of the Pakistani military seems largely responsible for LeT's restraint. [I would hope so since the military and ISI helped create LeT] [*] According to well-informed sources in Pakistan, the military has told LeT leaders that if they do not revolt against Pakistan and do not carry out terrorist attacks against India (for the moment at least) and above all the United States and Europe, then they are safe from arrest or extrajudicial execution. Incidentally, a leading JuD member told me in 2009 that despite its Islamist revolutionary ideology, the group would do nothing to destroy the Pakistani state "because then the Hindus would march in to rule over us." [which is it?] [*]
On the other hand, so I have been told, the Pakistani military has told LeT/JuD leaders that they can go on sending their foot soldiers to fight in Afghanistan, both because it is in line with the military's own Afghan strategy and because, in the words of one retired officer, "these boys joined up to fight, not to sit around in Lahore doing nothing. We cannot stop them [from] going to Afghanistan. After all, that is where the group first started fighting in the 1980s."
The military's sympathy for LeT/JuD is reflected by Pakistani (or at least Punjabi) society as a whole. [*]It was Pakistani courts, after all, that overturned both the government's ban on JuD after the Mumbai terrorist attacks and the terrorism charges against its leader, Hafiz Saeed. This and many other such judgments have taken the shine off the notion that the Pakistani "lawyers movement," which helped bring down Musharraf, is a force for liberal progress. [if this doesn’t demand an internal debates inside Islam I cannot think of what does] [2011 and a faction inside one of the world’s great monotheistic religions thinks it’s okay to identify infidels, apostates, and kill them!] [I’m not saying it’s time for Christiandom or others to create the debate—inside Islam] [*]
As a military strategy meant to prevent terrorism against the West, Pakistan's official approach to its homegrown jihadists is so far accomplishing its goals. Although it has not always been possible to prevent attempted attacks like Faisal Shahzad's in New York from taking place, the strategy has disrupted terrorist networks enough to make them infrequent and poorly carried out. Yet Pakistan's strategy carries with it not just ethical issues, but strategic ones as well. It depends on not taking harsh action against LeT/JuD for the Mumbai attacks or for its help to the Afghan Taliban. It also requires the continuation of close links between these groups and the ISI. This could prove very bad for Pakistan if LeT decides to disobey the injunction and resume terrorist attacks on India -- possibly with the help of low-level ISI operatives who have developed close personal and ideological ties to the group. [by all indications precisely what happened with Mumbai] [*]
In a far more disastrous scenario, if LeT members broke away to aid a successful terrorist attack against the United States, it is extremely unlikely that the U.S. response would distinguish between the breakaway members and LeT as a whole, or even between LeT and the ISI. The results could be catastrophic for Pakistan, but also for the United States. U.S. ground raids in the border areas or airstrikes on Pakistani cities could vastly increase support for terrorism in the Pakistani military as well as society in general. [if Pakistan cannot see where this is headed then the world is doomed] [let’s say it happens; what U.S. president wouldn’t begin planning—presuming it hasn’t yet happened—the scenario Pakistanis fear: seizure of its nukes, containing Pakistan as much as possible, then pulling the plug?] [*]
Pakistan is not an easy country to do business with. It poses some tough dilemmas for U.S. policy, and Americans are justifiably angry about many things that Pakistan has done. Nonetheless, American policymakers need to remain focused on the most important U.S. goal -- and the official reason that the United States is fighting in Afghanistan -- which is to prevent terrorism in the West. As long as Pakistan cooperates sincerely and effectively in pursuit of this goal, the United States should continue to work with Pakistan and support the relevant parts of Pakistan's counterterrorism strategy. If Pakistan fails to do so, however, then all bets are off. Anatol Lieven is a professor in the War Studies Department of King's College London. This essay is based on his book Pakistan: A Hard Country.

When in Doubt, Give a Middle East Speech

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/21/when_in_doubt_give_a_middle_east_speech
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/23/11 6:26:21 PM] [*]
When in Doubt, Give a Middle East Speech
In the cruel world of Israeli, Palestinian, and U.S. politics, talk is cheap.
BY AARON DAVID MILLER | APRIL 21, 2011 [commentary] [as despressing as he has been the last couple years, I usually think his analyses are spot on] [and again, he has penned another depressing one] [a glimmer of hope perhaps, a modicum of optimism?] [the pressure cooker that the Israeli-Palestinian mess has become] [*]
The looming U.S.-Israeli tensions over who says what first about Israeli-Palestinian peace obscures the broader question on which any successful American initiative depends: Are Israelis and Palestinians ready for a conflict-ending agreement? And if not, is there anything Washington can do about it? [the first answer is no] [the second is to wait] [but the possibly optimism is, something is about ready to happen on its own] [that could be a disaster, of course, the smart money in the region; on the other hand, you never know—it may just be a new beginning] [*]
The wise former secretary of state, George Shultz, used to say that when you don't have a policy, the pressure builds to give a speech. [still wise] [*]These days, that appears to be the focal point of the current efforts on all three sides. In short, if you can't or won't do, then at least talk. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is going to pre-empt the United States with his own plan; President Barack Obama is considering pre-empting the prime minister with his

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/21/when_in_doubt_give_a_middle_east_speech
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/23/11 6:26:21 PM] [*]
When in Doubt, Give a Middle East Speech
In the cruel world of Israeli, Palestinian, and U.S. politics, talk is cheap.
BY AARON DAVID MILLER | APRIL 21, 2011 [commentary] [as despressing as he has been the last couple years, I usually think his analyses are spot on] [and again, he has penned another depressing one] [a glimmer of hope perhaps, a modicum of optimism?] [the pressure cooker that the Israeli-Palestinian mess has become] [*]
The looming U.S.-Israeli tensions over who says what first about Israeli-Palestinian peace obscures the broader question on which any successful American initiative depends: Are Israelis and Palestinians ready for a conflict-ending agreement? And if not, is there anything Washington can do about it? [the first answer is no] [the second is to wait] [but the possibly optimism is, something is about ready to happen on its own] [that could be a disaster, of course, the smart money in the region; on the other hand, you never know—it may just be a new beginning] [*]
The wise former secretary of state, George Shultz, used to say that when you don't have a policy, the pressure builds to give a speech. [still wise] [*]These days, that appears to be the focal point of the current efforts on all three sides. In short, if you can't or won't do, then at least talk. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is going to pre-empt the United States with his own plan; President Barack Obama is considering pre-empting the prime minister with his own; and the Palestinians, well, they're planning to counter with their own U.N. gambit on statehood. [yes, something is due to break one way or the other] [*]
The problem with all these initiatives is that none have a strategy to move from words to deeds. The Palestinians actually come closest with their U.N. initiative, but this is, under the best of circumstances, a dangerous leap in the dark unlikely to produce real statehood -- and more likely to generate trouble. [I agree] [I fully understand why they might be willing to take the huge gamble but I don’t have a good feeling about it] [*] All these budding initiatives have the feel of a game of "gotcha" or musical chairs designed to deflect or pre-empt pressure and put it on someone else -- to see, in effect, who's the odd man out when the music stops. [*]
Negotiations remain the only realistic path forward, but the gaps on the core issues are too large to bridge at present. Or to put it more explicitly, Israeli and Palestinian leaders are too constrained to bridge them; the Arab world is too distracted to bring much focus to the problem; and the United States is too unsure about how or what to do about any of the above. As Shultz noted, it's the perfect time to give a speech.
That the Obama administration is thinking about laying out its own views on borders, Jerusalem, security, and refugees when there's no chance of actual negotiations tells you how virtual the peace process has become. The sad reality is that right now the default position is the declaratory one. Unless Netanyahu comes up with something really credible on borders upon which Obama can build, like a chain of falling dominoes we will be drawn inexorably toward more (and unhelpful) Palestinian declarations in New York, pteh pressure builds and builds] [tehn suddenly and predictably, something moves] [trouble is you can’t predict which way] [*] and likely more unilateralism and violence.
The only conceivable logic in the president laying out detailed positions on borders, Jerusalem, security, and refugees would be to first improve American credibility in the Middle East, though how a speech that Israelis and Palestinians reject or accept with reservations helps the United States isn't altogether clear. In fact, it could undermine America's influence, becoming the foreign-policy equivalent of BP's Deepwater Horizon disaster: day 80 and nobody's plugged the leak or accepted the Obama plan. [somebody talk him out of it] [Times, take it back] [for god sake, somebody stop this looming tragedy] [*] The only other possible utility of such a speech would be to attempt to pre-wire it so that the Palestinians accept the parameters for negotiations and are willing to come back to the table on that basis.
Netanyahu would then be forced to choose, or face the consequences in Israeli domestic politics (should ties with the United States fray) and internationally. Washington has never played this hand particularly well, and if the perception is that Obama is trying to set the Israelis up, it certainly won't help the president as he heads into a reelection campaign. [that alone is reason to stop it] [wait until reelection!] [*] But this gambit isn't about getting the two sides to the table soon; it's about regime change in Israel -- never declared of course, but like U.S. Libya policy, an unstated goal.
This unhappy state of affairs is a result of what happens when you face a truly tough problem that nobody has the will or determination to take on. And when unilateral solutions (Gaza disengagement) and bilateral ones (a decade of negotiations on permanent status) backfire; when interim solutions (along the lines of the Oslo Accords) no longer pass muster; and when violence (the 2006 Israel-Hamas war) can't seem to change the calculations of the parties, you arrive at a nasty impasse. [truer words were never uttered] [*]
The short answer to whether the Israelis and Palestinians are ready for a conflict-ending agreement is no. And can Washington do anything about it? Not much. [told you] [*] Obama could travel to Israel and Palestine to lay out his ideas, appearing with Arab leaders (if there are any left) in both the Knesset and the Palestinian Legislative Council; he could commit millions of international dollars in the service of Palestinian statehood. But the chances that he would actually risk this, or that such a gambit could work under the current circumstances, are slim to none. [*]
Or in the less-than-bold category, Obama could simply give his speech laying out the core positions on the key issues with no real expectation that talks would begin, try to work with Israelis and Palestinians on economic and security matters, and wait for reelection to try something more dramatic. But the simple fact is that Washington needs the locals to buy into something for there to be a real breakthrough; and that's unlikely to happen.
So let the speeches begin. Who knows? Maybe in some turn of phrase or dangling participle lurks the key to Middle East peace. Certainly, talking is a lot better than shooting.
But tragically, history has shown that when the speeches are over, there will be plenty of time for that. [*]
Aaron David Miller is a public policy scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. His book, Can America Have Another Great President?, will be published later this year.

Syriana

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/21/syriana
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/23/11 6:22:43 PM] [*]
Syriana
After Bashar al-Assad, the deluge.
BY ROBERT D. KAPLAN | APRIL 21, 2011 [commentary] [on Syria and what might happen with al Assads?] [interesting] [*]
The late Princeton scholar Philip K. Hitti called Greater Syria -- the historical antecedent of the modern republic -- "the largest small country on the map, microscopic in size but cosmic in influence," encompassing in its geography, at the confluence of Europe, Asia, and Africa, "the history of the civilized world in a miniature form." This is not an exaggeration, and because it is not, the current unrest in Syria is far more important than unrest we have seen anywhere in the Middle East. [I’m not sure about the cosmic significance but I will agree that Syria is the domino that matters] [it matters to Iran, so much so that I think Iran has already begun to intervene and I would not be surprised of much more intervention] [it matters to Egypt, once Syria’s other part] [it matters to Lebanon, the Christian enclave the Syrians have controlled for years] [it matters to Israel because Arabia could not go to war with Israel absent Syria; and because with Syria out of the Persian tent, it’s as good as back

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/21/syriana
Foreign Policy
[Accessed 4/23/11 6:22:43 PM] [*]
Syriana
After Bashar al-Assad, the deluge.
BY ROBERT D. KAPLAN | APRIL 21, 2011 [commentary] [on Syria and what might happen with al Assads?] [interesting] [*]
The late Princeton scholar Philip K. Hitti called Greater Syria -- the historical antecedent of the modern republic -- "the largest small country on the map, microscopic in size but cosmic in influence," encompassing in its geography, at the confluence of Europe, Asia, and Africa, "the history of the civilized world in a miniature form." This is not an exaggeration, and because it is not, the current unrest in Syria is far more important than unrest we have seen anywhere in the Middle East. [I’m not sure about the cosmic significance but I will agree that Syria is the domino that matters] [it matters to Iran, so much so that I think Iran has already begun to intervene and I would not be surprised of much more intervention] [it matters to Egypt, once Syria’s other part] [it matters to Lebanon, the Christian enclave the Syrians have controlled for years] [it matters to Israel because Arabia could not go to war with Israel absent Syria; and because with Syria out of the Persian tent, it’s as good as back in the Arab tent, so on] [*]
"Syria" was the 19th-century Ottoman-era term for a region that stretched from the Taurus Mountains of Turkey in the north to the Arabian Desert in the south, and from the Mediterranean Sea in the west to Mesopotamia in the east. Present-day Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Israel, western Iraq, and southern Turkey were all included in this vast area. In other words, the concept of "Syria" was not linked to any specific national sentiment. [*]The collapse of the Ottoman Empire [*]at the end of World War I led to Greater Syria being carved into a half-dozen states. Although territory had been cut away on all sides, the rump French mandate of "Syria" that came into existence, nevertheless, contained not only every warring sect and regional and tribal interest, but also the spiritual headquarters in the capital Damascus of the pan-Arab movement, whose aim was to erase all the state borders that the Europeans had just created. [**]
Pan-Arabism -- of which the post-World War II independent state of Syria claimed to constitute the "throbbing-heart" -- became a substitute for Syria's very weak national identity. Indeed, Syria's self-styled "steadfast" hatred of Israel was a way for Syrians to escape their own internal contradictions. [agreed; Syria has always been the outlier of Arab hatred of Israel eclipsing others] [the one state with something approaching jihadis fear and loathing of Israel!][*]Those contradictions were born of the parochial interests of regionally based ethnic and sectarian groups: Sunni Arabs in the Damascus-Homs-Hama central corridor; heretical, Shiite-trending Alawites in the mountains of the northwest; Druze in the south, with their close tribal links to Jordan; and Kurds, Christian Arabs, Armenians, and Circassians in Aleppo. [*]
Between 1947 and 1954, Syria held three national elections that all broke down more or less according to these regional and sectarian lines. After 21 changes of government in 24 years and a failed attempt to unify with Egypt, the Alawite air force officer Hafez al-Assad took power in a 1970 coup. By ruling with utter ruthlessness, he kept the peace in Syria for three decades. [*]To wit, when the Sunni Muslim Brotherhood rose up in Hama in 1982, he killed more than 20,000 Sunni Muslim civilians there in response, according to some estimates. Assad's son, Bashar, who succeeded his father as Syria's president a decade ago, has yet to make his bones in such a way. It is unclear whether the son is visionary enough to satisfy today's protesters, or cruel enough like his father to stay in power. His regime's survival may require stores of both attributes. [*]A complicating factor is that to a much greater degree than his father, the son is trapped within a web of interest groups that include a corrupt business establishment and military and intelligence leaders averse to reform. So the political crisis in Syria will likely continue to build. [*]
Syria at this moment in history constitutes a riddle. Is it, indeed, prone to civil conflict as the election results of the 1940s and 1950s indicate; or has the population quietly forged a national identity in the intervening decades, if only because of the common experience of living under an austere dictatorship? No Middle East expert can say for sure.
Were central authority in Syria to substantially weaken or even break down, the regional impact would be greater than in the case of Iraq. Iraq is bordered by the strong states of Turkey and Iran in the north and east, and is separated from Saudi Arabia in the south and Syria and Jordan to the west by immense tracts of desert. Yes, the Iraq war propelled millions of refugees to those two latter countries, but the impact of Syria becoming a Levantine Yugoslavia might be even greater. That is because of the proximity of Syria's major population zones to Lebanon and Jordan, both of which are unstable already. [*]
Remember that Lebanon, Jordan, and Israel are all geographically and historically part of Greater Syria, a reason that successive regimes in Damascus since 1946 never really accepted their legitimacy. The French drew Lebanon's borders so as to bring a large population of mainly Sunni Muslims under the domination of Maronite Christians, who were allied with France, spoke French, and had a concordat with the Vatican. Were an Alawite regime in Damascus to crumble, the Syria-Lebanon border could be effectively erased as Sunnis from both sides of the border united and Lebanon's Shiites and Syria's Alawites formed pockets of resistance. [*]The post-colonial era in the Middle East would truly be closed, and we would be back to the vague borders of the Ottoman Empire.
What seems fanciful today may seem inevitable in the months and years ahead. Rather than face a "steadfast" and rejectionist, albeit predictable, state as the focal point of Arab resistance, Israel would henceforth face a Sunni Arab statelet from Damascus to Hama -- one likely influenced by the Muslim Brotherhood -- amid congeries of other fiefdoms. The unrest in Syria brings the Middle East perhaps to a precipice. Peaceful or not, the future of the region will be one of weakened central authority. Mesopotamia at least has a historic structure, with its three north-south oriented ethnic and sectarian entities. But Greater Syria is more of a hodgepodge. [the caprice of modern nation-states and how they came to exist] [*]
For most of history, prior to the colonial era, Middle Eastern borders mattered far less than they do now, as cities like Aleppo in northern Syria and Mosul in northern Iraq had more contact with each other than with the respective capitals of Damascus and Baghdad. The ruins of Hatra, southwest of Mosul in Iraq, a Silk Road nexus of trade and ideas that reached its peak in the second and third centuries A.D., attest to a past and possible future of more decentralized states that could succeed the tyrannical perversions of the modern nation-state system. Hatra's remains reflect the eclectic mix of Assyrian, Hellenistic, Parthian, and Roman styles that set the stage for early Islamic architecture. Then there are the ruins of Dura-Europos, a Parthian caravan center founded in 300 B.C., halfway between Syria and Mesopotamia and known as the "Pompeii of the East." Frescoes from the synagogue at Dura-Europos grace the halls of the National Museum in Damascus. [*]Both these sets of ruins have a vital political significance for the present, for they indicate a region without hardened borders that benefited from the free flow of trade and information.
But the transition away from absolutist rule in the Middle East to a world of commercially oriented, 21st-century caravan states will be longer, costlier, and messier than the post-1989 transitions in the Balkans -- a more developed part of the Ottoman Empire than Greater Syria and Mesopotamia. [*]The natural state of Mesopotamia was mirrored in the three Ottoman vilayets of Kurdish Mosul, Sunni Baghdad, and Shiite Basra. The natural state of Greater Syria beyond the constellation of city-states like Phoenicia, Aleppo, Damascus, and Jerusalem is more indistinct still.
European leaders in the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th were engrossed by the so-called Eastern Question: that is, the eruptions of instability and nationalist yearnings in the Balkans and the Middle East caused by the seemingly interminable, rotting-away death of the Ottoman Empire. The Eastern Question was eventually settled by the cataclysm of World War I, from which the modern Arab state system emerged. But a hundred years on, the durability of that post-Ottoman state system should not be taken for granted.
Robert D. Kaplan is a senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security, correspondent for the Atlantic, and author of Eastward to Tartary: Travels in the Balkans, the Middle East, and the Caucasus.

Mass graves in Mexico reveal new levels of savagery

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/mass-graves-in-mexico-reveal-new-levels-of-savagery/2011/04/23/AFPoasbE_story.html
Mass graves in Mexico reveal new levels of savagery
By Nick Miroff and William Booth, Sunday, April 24, 8:57 PM [Mexico] [US-Mexico relations] [the Americas] [Latin America] [American-fueled drug wars] [consider this: Mexico is losing the equivalent of an –ir war of KIA each year in the drug war] [adjustment of data on same: more than 28,000 since 2006!!!] [use psci 350] [use ir text] [followup] [yet another mass grave] [over past few years mass graves have become standard!] [this seems wanton cruelty even by the usual standards] [*]
SAN FERNANDO, Mexico — At the largest mass grave site ever found in Mexico, where 177 bodies have been pulled from deep pits, authorities say they have recovered few bullet casings and little evidence that the dead were killed with a gun.
Instead, most died of blunt force trauma to the head, and a sledgehammer found at the crime scene this month is believed to have been used in the executions, according to Mexican investigators and state officials. The search continued Sunday, with state officials warning they expect the count to rise.
They say as many as 122 of the victims were passengers dragged off buses at drug cartel

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/mass-graves-in-mexico-reveal-new-levels-of-savagery/2011/04/23/AFPoasbE_story.html
Mass graves in Mexico reveal new levels of savagery
By Nick Miroff and William Booth, Sunday, April 24, 8:57 PM [Mexico] [US-Mexico relations] [the Americas] [Latin America] [American-fueled drug wars] [consider this: Mexico is losing the equivalent of an –ir war of KIA each year in the drug war] [adjustment of data on same: more than 28,000 since 2006!!!] [use psci 350] [use ir text] [followup] [yet another mass grave] [over past few years mass graves have become standard!] [this seems wanton cruelty even by the usual standards] [*]
SAN FERNANDO, Mexico — At the largest mass grave site ever found in Mexico, where 177 bodies have been pulled from deep pits, authorities say they have recovered few bullet casings and little evidence that the dead were killed with a gun.
Instead, most died of blunt force trauma to the head, and a sledgehammer found at the crime scene this month is believed to have been used in the executions, according to Mexican investigators and state officials. The search continued Sunday, with state officials warning they expect the count to rise.
They say as many as 122 of the victims were passengers dragged off buses at drug cartel roadblocks on the major highway to the United States. [*]
The mass killings of civilians at isolated ranches 90 minutes south of the Texas border mark a new level of barbarity in Mexico’s four-year U.S.-backed drug war. [*]
As forensic teams and Mexican marines dig through deeper and darker layers here, the buried secrets in San Fernando are challenging President Felipe Calderon’s assertions that his government is winning the war and is in control of Mexico’s cities and roads.
In the past four years, more than 35,000 people have been killed and thousands more have simply disappeared, since Calderon sent the military to battle Mexican organized crime with $1.6 billion in U.S. support. U.S. officials in Mexico worry that criminal gangs are taking over sections of the vital border region not by overwhelming firepower but sheer terror.
On Thursday, cartel gunmen sacked the city of Miguel Aleman, across the river from Roma, Texas, tossing grenades and burning down three car dealerships, an auto parts outlet, a furniture store and a gas station. Three buses were strafed with gunfire Saturday in separate attacks, wounding three people.
The U.S. State Department issued new warnings Friday advising Americans to defer nonessential travel to the entire border state of Tamaulipas and large swaths of Mexico because of the threat of armed robbery, carjacking, kidnapping and murder by organized crime. [*]
In the red dirt tombs of San Fernando, almost all the bodies were stripped of identification, meaning no licenses, bus ticket stubs or photographs of loved ones, according to interviews with local and state officials, making the job of notifying next of kin especially difficult.
Forensic photographs shown to The Washington Post depict mummified bodies caked in dirt and badly decomposed, with signs of extreme cranial trauma. In the largest two graves, holding 43 and 45 bodies, the corpses were piled atop one another in a 10-foot-deep pit dug by a backhoe, that criminals filled over in the past four months.
The red nail polish on a young victim’s toe stands out in one photograph, along with her XS-size undergarments.
Officials in Tamaulipas say they have found 34 grave sites scattered in a wide arc around this farming town of 60,000, where Mexican marines last week established a military camp for ground and helicopter patrols.
Evidence suggests that the dead include Mexicans and Central American migrants traveling to the United States to work. Only a few of the exhumed bodies have been identified, including those of a local car salesman, a federal social worker and a Guatemalan immigrant.
Authorities have arrested 76 suspects, including alleged local Zeta boss Martin “El Kilo” Estrada, a husky, menacing figure covered in tattoos who authorities paraded before television cameras and charged as the mastermind of the homicides.
Motives for the mass killings remain a matter of speculation. “Perhaps we are seeing in the graves the results of several different confrontations and crimes committed over many months,” said Morelos Canseco Gomez, the lieutenant governor of Tamaulipas.
Canseco said authorities are still looking for an entire bus loaded with passengers that vanished on the border in March.
Savage discoveries
At least nine graves scattered around San Fernando contained only a single corpse, and some of the burial sites might hold not kidnap victims but fallen cartel comrades killed in shootouts with rivals, Canseco said.
The families of passengers taken off buses here did not receive ransom demands, investigators say, and so the victims appear not to have been killed for large sums of money, only what they might have had in their wallets and purses. The savage method of execution is also unexplained, with shuddering investigators left guessing at the mental state of the killers.
Officials say some victims may have been snatched to serve as forced recruits for the Zetas crime organization, according to five bus passengers abducted but later rescued. [*]
San Fernando is the same place where 72 migrants from Central and South America were kidnapped and fatally shot last August, bringing condemnation from the United Nations and new focus on the perils faced by travelers crossing Mexico en route to the U.S. border.
After the massacre, Calderon sent the Mexican military to retake the town, vowing to “protect migrants and Mexican families.” But as attention on San Fernando faded, federal forces withdrew and locals say the crime gangs quickly muscled their way back in.
“People began to disappear,” said Ramon Ruiz, an apprentice priest in San Fernando. “First it was people with money, then it was anyone. They kidnapped a local farmer’s son and demanded $10,000, and when he gave them $5,000 — everything he had — they sent him half of his son.”
The criminals commandeered nearby ranches, killing the owners or driving them off, then converted barns and sheds into holding pens and execution chambers.
Silence choked the town until late last month, when state authorities received calls that large groups of bus travelers were kidnapped along the Highway 101 on March 24 and 29. Soldiers followed a tip down a maze of dirt roads out to a ranch miles off the main highway, where they freed five kidnapping victims and captured nine Zeta cell members, after killing four gunmen who were standing guard.
The suspects talked. Mexican authorities began to dig.
Hunting for loved ones
Most of the bodies recovered from San Fernando were taken to the morgue in Matamoros, across the Rio Grande from Brownsville, Texas. Families of the missing there have taped photocopied fliers about their loved ones to the walls of state forensic offices there, and more than 400 people have arrived to provide DNA samples.
“MISSING,” the fliers read: Eli Octavio Juarez, 17, last seen March 20 in a 1995 Ford Explorer with tinted windows. And Emmanuel Alejandro Zuniga, missing March 9, en route to Ciudad Victoria — “call his mama.”
Raul Lopez Zunun, a 70-year-old farmer, traveled 1,100 miles by bus from his home in southern Mexico to the forensic lab in Matamoros, clutching a photocopied picture of his son Israel Lopez. He went missing in the area in late March while en route to a job in Ohio.
“We’re looking for him in all the hospitals here,” said Lopez, who grows corn and coffee on a small farm in Chiapas. “I told him not to go.”
On Thursday, Mexican authorities arrested the police chief in San Fernando, and 16 of the department’s 25 officers are now in custody, suspected of working for the Zetas to help the gang kidnap, kill and bury their victims.
Marines patrol the streets of San Fernando, brandishing grenade launchers and heavy machine guns, but local authorities will not venture out to surrounding villages without a military escort.
In an interview, San Fernando Mayor Tomas Gloria Requena said it wasn’t true that his town was especially corrupt, or evil.
“San Fernando is Mexico,” he said. “It’s just like anywhere else.” © 2011 The Washington Post Co

Libyan, Once a Detainee, Is Now a U.S. Ally of Sorts

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/world/guantanamo-files-libyan-detainee-now-us-ally-of-sorts.html
April 24, 2011
Libyan, Once a Detainee, Is Now a U.S. Ally of Sorts
By ROD NORDLAND and SCOTT SHANE [Libya] [Middle East proper, including the Gulf] [regimes continues slow, plodding, political-eco liberalization] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [NATO alliance providing air cover] [followup] [as many, many predicted, it has stalemated] [the odd case of former Gitmo jihadis now US liaison???] [*]
DARNAH, Libya — For more than five years, Abu Sufian Ibrahim Ahmed Hamuda bin Qumu was a prisoner at the Guantánamo Bay prison, judged “a probable member of Al Qaeda” by the analysts there. They concluded in a newly disclosed 2005 assessment that his release would represent a “medium to high risk, as he is likely to pose a threat to the U.S., its interests and allies.” [*]
Today, Mr. Qumu, 51, is a notable figure in the Libyan rebels’ fight to oust Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, reportedly a leader of a ragtag band of fighters known as the Darnah Brigade for his birthplace, this shabby port town of 100,000 people in northeast Libya. The former

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/world/guantanamo-files-libyan-detainee-now-us-ally-of-sorts.html
April 24, 2011
Libyan, Once a Detainee, Is Now a U.S. Ally of Sorts
By ROD NORDLAND and SCOTT SHANE [Libya] [Middle East proper, including the Gulf] [regimes continues slow, plodding, political-eco liberalization] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [NATO alliance providing air cover] [followup] [as many, many predicted, it has stalemated] [the odd case of former Gitmo jihadis now US liaison???] [*]
DARNAH, Libya — For more than five years, Abu Sufian Ibrahim Ahmed Hamuda bin Qumu was a prisoner at the Guantánamo Bay prison, judged “a probable member of Al Qaeda” by the analysts there. They concluded in a newly disclosed 2005 assessment that his release would represent a “medium to high risk, as he is likely to pose a threat to the U.S., its interests and allies.” [*]
Today, Mr. Qumu, 51, is a notable figure in the Libyan rebels’ fight to oust Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, reportedly a leader of a ragtag band of fighters known as the Darnah Brigade for his birthplace, this shabby port town of 100,000 people in northeast Libya. The former enemy and prisoner of the United States is now an ally of sorts, a remarkable turnabout resulting from shifting American policies rather than any obvious change in Mr. Qumu.
He was a tank driver in the Libyan Army in the 1980s, when the Central Intelligence Agency was spending billions to support religious militants trying to drive Soviet troops out of Afghanistan. [*]Mr. Qumu moved to Afghanistan in the early 1990s, just as Osama bin Laden and other former mujahedeen were violently turning against their former benefactor, the United States.
He was captured in Pakistan after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, accused of being a member of the militant Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, and sent to Guantánamo — in part because of information provided by Colonel Qaddafi’s government. [*]
“The Libyan Government considers detainee a ‘dangerous man with no qualms about committing terrorist acts,’ ” says the classified 2005 assessment, evidently quoting Libyan intelligence findings, which was obtained by The New York Times. “ ‘He was known as one of the extremist commanders of the Afghan Arabs,’ ” the Libyan information continues, referring to Arab fighters who remained in Afghanistan after the anti-Soviet jihad. [*]
When that Guantánamo assessment was written, the United States was working closely with Colonel Qaddafi’s intelligence service against terrorism. Now, the United States is a leader of the international coalition trying to oust Colonel Qaddafi — and is backing with air power the rebels, including Mr. Qumu. [see today’s govt for other Gitmo guests and proccesses around their incaceration?] [*]
The classified Guantánamo assessment of Mr. Qumu claims that he suffered from “a non-specific personality disorder” and recounted — again citing the Libyan government as its source — a history of drug addiction and drug dealing and accusations of murder and armed assault.
In 1993, the document asserts, Mr. Qumu escaped from a Libyan prison, fled to Egypt and went on to Afghanistan, training at a camp run by Mr. bin Laden. At Guantánamo, Mr. Qumu denied knowledge of terrorist activities. He said he feared being returned to Libya, where he faced criminal charges, and asked to go to some other country where “You (the United States) can watch me,” according to a hearing summary.
Nonetheless, in 2007, he was sent from Guantánamo to Libya and released the next year in an amnesty for militants. [*]
Colonel Qaddafi has cited claims about Mr. Qumu’s past in statements blaming Al Qaeda for the entire Libyan uprising. American officials have nervously noted the presence of at least a few former militants in the rebels’ ranks.
The walls of buildings along the road into Darnah are decorated with the usual anti-Qaddafi and pro-Western slogans, in English and Arabic, found all over eastern Libya. But there are notable additions: “No Qaeda” and “No to Extremism.”
Darnah has reason to be touchy. The town has a long history of Islamic militancy, including a revolt against Colonel Qaddafi’s rule led by Islamists in the mid-1990s that resulted in a vicious crackdown. Activists from here are credited with starting the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, which later announced that it was affiliating with Al Qaeda, and which sent militants like Mr. Qumu to fight in Afghanistan.[*]
Most famously, though, Darnah has a claim to being the world’s most productive recruiting ground for suicide bombers. An analysis of 600 suicide bombers in Iraq by the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point found that of 440 who listed their hometowns in a recruiting roster, 52 were from Darnah, the most of any city, with Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, 40 times as populous, as the next biggest source, sending 51.
In addition to Mr. Qumu, local residents say the Darnah Brigade is led by Abdul-Hakim al-Hasadi, another Libyan thought to be a militant who was in Afghanistan during the Taliban’s rule, when Al Qaeda had training camps there.
Mr. Qumu did not turn up for a promised interview last week, but Mr. Hasadi did, in crumpled fatigues with a light beard and a lazy left eye, perpetually half-closed. He denied that Mr. Qumu was in his group, recently renamed the Martyrs of Abu Salim Brigade, after a prison in Tripoli where 1,200 inmates were slaughtered in 1996. Two of Mr. Qumu’s sons are in his brigade, he said.
“I don’t know how to convince everyone that we are not Al Qaeda here,” Mr. Hasadi said. “Our aim is to topple Qaddafi,” he added. “I know that you will never believe me, but it is true.”
For now, Western observers in Benghazi, the temporary rebel capital 180 miles from here, seem content to accept those assurances. “We’re more worried about Al Qaeda infiltration from outside than the indigenous ones” one said. “Most of them have a local agenda so they don’t present as much as a threat to the West.”
Rod Nordland reported from Darnah, and Scott Shane from Washington. Kareem Fahim contributed reporting from Benghazi, Libya.
This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:
Correction: April 25, 2011
An earlier version of the picture caption with this article erroneously identified Abdul-Hakim al-Hasadi as Abu Sufian Ibrahim Ahmed Hamuda bin Qumu.

NATO Warplanes Strike Qaddafi Compound

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/world/africa/26libya.html
April 25, 2011
NATO Warplanes Strike Qaddafi Compound
By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK [Libya] [Middle East proper, including the Gulf] [regimes continues slow, plodding, political-eco liberalization] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [NATO alliance providing air cover] [followup] [as many, many predicted, it has stalemated] [NATO has begun going against Qaddafi compounds and assets?] [unclear why this didn’t happen earlier—they must not have thought decapitation would work or be useful?] [*]
TRIPOLI, Libya — NATO war planes early Monday morning struck Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi’s compound here for the third time, destroying a complex of offices and meeting facilities in an evident escalation of the air campaign to aid the rebellion against his four decades in power.
At least two large bomb blasts thundered over the capital just after midnight, and journalists escorted to the compound by government officials saw firefighters hosing down the smoldering remains. The explosions sent cement and debris flying more than fifty yards. There were no signs of armaments and according to Libyan officials no one was hurt.
Tall cement arches still stood over part of the complex that Colonel Qaddafi recently used to receive visiting leaders from the African Union. But a tangle of cables and antennae protruded from another wing of the building that journalists were not allowed to access. What facilities it might have housed was unclear.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/world/africa/26libya.html
April 25, 2011
NATO Warplanes Strike Qaddafi Compound
By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK [Libya] [Middle East proper, including the Gulf] [regimes continues slow, plodding, political-eco liberalization] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [NATO alliance providing air cover] [followup] [as many, many predicted, it has stalemated] [NATO has begun going against Qaddafi compounds and assets?] [unclear why this didn’t happen earlier—they must not have thought decapitation would work or be useful?] [*]
TRIPOLI, Libya — NATO war planes early Monday morning struck Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi’s compound here for the third time, destroying a complex of offices and meeting facilities in an evident escalation of the air campaign to aid the rebellion against his four decades in power.
At least two large bomb blasts thundered over the capital just after midnight, and journalists escorted to the compound by government officials saw firefighters hosing down the smoldering remains. The explosions sent cement and debris flying more than fifty yards. There were no signs of armaments and according to Libyan officials no one was hurt.
Tall cement arches still stood over part of the complex that Colonel Qaddafi recently used to receive visiting leaders from the African Union. But a tangle of cables and antennae protruded from another wing of the building that journalists were not allowed to access. What facilities it might have housed was unclear.
A small crowd of young Qaddafi supporters, gathered a few hundred yards away on the grounds of the compound as so-called voluntary human shields, chanted and rallied before state television and the visiting journalists. But elsewhere loyalist government officials appeared more anxious than usual about the stepped up pace of the bombing attacks, accusing the NATO allies of seeking to terrorize the Libyan people. [*]
One official, speaking on condition of anonymity moments after the attack, said in exasperation that the strikes had gone too far and would justify terrorist counterattacks by Libyan forces in the cities of NATO countries. Other officials were already worrying aloud about the safety of their families in places like Surt, a center of support for Colonel Qaddafi that has also come under attack by NATO planes. [*]
Several nights ago, two NATO missiles slammed into some kind of concrete bunker underground just outside the walls of Colonel Qaddafi’s compound. And an attack shortly after airstrikes began in mid-March mangled another building described by NATO officials as a command and control center.
In the besieged city of Misurata, pro-Qaddafi officials said in recent days, loyalist forces have pulled back to permit a group of neighboring tribes to broker a ceasefire or continue the fight.
But rebels speaking over Internet connections said on Monday that neither a military pullback nor tribal intervention had materialized.
Indeed, rebels fighting in the city said they had not heard from any tribes in the area while pro-Qaddafi forces had continued shelling from the periphery.
Speaking over an Internet connection, Mohamed, a rebel spokesman whose full name was withheld for the protection of his family, said his 92-year-old father and a cousin were killed along with 32 others in shelling Saturday night and eight more died Sunday night.
“It has been a bloody two days,” he said. “There was no pull back. There was defeat and then revenge,” he added, referring to the rebels’ recent success at driving some pro-Qaddafi gunmen out of certain buildings they had controlled inside Misurata. [*]
“We think the ‘pull back’ was actually a signal to escalate,” he said.

Berber Rebels in Libya’s West Face Long Odds Against Qaddafi

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/world/africa/25western.html
April 24, 2011
Berber Rebels in Libya’s West Face Long Odds Against Qaddafi
By SCOTT SAYARE [Libya] [Middle East proper, including the Gulf] [regimes continues slow, plodding, political-eco liberalization] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [NATO alliance providing air cover] [followup] [as many, many predicted, it has stalemated] [Northern Africa’s Berbers] [*]
DHIBA BORDER CROSSING, Tunisia — For decades, the remote mountains of western Libya have simmered with resentment. An enclave of the Berber minority, mistrusted and neglected by Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi’s Arab nationalist government, the region’s isolated hamlets were among the first to join the uprising, raising the rebel flag on the first day of the revolt.
But the Nafusah Mountain range, which rises out of the desert at the Tunisian border as a sudden, hazy shadow and runs several hundred miles east in a narrow chain, is hardly a rebel

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/world/africa/25western.html
April 24, 2011
Berber Rebels in Libya’s West Face Long Odds Against Qaddafi
By SCOTT SAYARE [Libya] [Middle East proper, including the Gulf] [regimes continues slow, plodding, political-eco liberalization] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [NATO alliance providing air cover] [followup] [as many, many predicted, it has stalemated] [Northern Africa’s Berbers] [*]
DHIBA BORDER CROSSING, Tunisia — For decades, the remote mountains of western Libya have simmered with resentment. An enclave of the Berber minority, mistrusted and neglected by Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi’s Arab nationalist government, the region’s isolated hamlets were among the first to join the uprising, raising the rebel flag on the first day of the revolt.
But the Nafusah Mountain range, which rises out of the desert at the Tunisian border as a sudden, hazy shadow and runs several hundred miles east in a narrow chain, is hardly a rebel stronghold. Rebel fighters in the region estimate their ranks at just a few hundred ill-equipped and untrained young men. [*]
It came as a shock, then, when they captured a border crossing near Wazen last week, a strategic victory for the beleaguered rebel forces that thrust the desert region under the world’s gaze. Colonel Qaddafi has also turned his attention to the region, escalating a low-grade war of attrition into what may prove an important battlefront. [*]
Having put down more serious challenges to his rule in Zawiyah and Zawarah, on the northern coast between Tripoli and Tunisia, and pulled troops out of Misurata, the second largest western city, on Saturday, Colonel Qaddafi has massed troops along the mountains and launched missiles on its towns, according to residents and rebel fighters.
The fighting has driven about 30,000 Libyans into Tunisia, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. [*]Libyans there said they had been under siege weeks before the recent escalation. Government troops have held the desert plains below the mountains since mid-March, they said, cutting off supplies of food, gasoline and medicine, and, several witnesses said, poisoning the wells of at least one town.
“He has been trying to starve us,” said Jamal Maharouk, 47, a gaunt, weathered former soldier of Colonel Qaddafi’s army, now a rebel fighter. He had driven to a Tunisian hospital in Tataouine, about 50 miles northwest of the Libyan border, to visit a young cousin wounded in battle outside the town of Zintan and secreted across the border for treatment. [*]
Like other fighters, Mr. Maharouk insisted that rebel actions in the area were purely defensive. “By my god, these are peaceful people fighting against an evil regime,” he said.
The government denies that it has cut off food and utilities, poisoned wells or even that the refugees in Tunisia are really refugees.
Moussa Ibrahim, a spokesman for the Qaddafi government, said the refugees were lying in order to win support from NATO. He said the government had intercepted and recorded phone calls among rebels planning to stage a bogus refugee crisis by forcing members of their families to cross the border into Tunisia and report atrocities. [*]
“They are fake refugee camps,” he said. “Qatar is paying for them.”
Before the rebels captured the border crossing at Wazen, the region seemed to hold little strategic value, raising questions about why the government would divert resources from more pressing battles elsewhere. The border crossing, which now gives the rebels a supply route in the west, may be part of the explanation.
But Colonel Qaddafi has long harbored antagonism toward the Berbers, a non-Arab ethnic group of mostly Ibadi Muslims in a country that is majority Sunni. He has accused them of being Zionists and agents of the C.I.A., said Mansouria Mokhefi, the director of the Middle East and Maghreb program at the French Institute of International Relations in Paris. [*]
Berbers and the region in general have been largely excluded from the distribution of oil revenues, she said, and residents complain of little government investment in schools or infrastructure. “Development never came all the way to them,” she said. “They have truly lived in a sort of exclusion.”
Beyond neglect, Colonel Qaddafi has forbidden citizens from giving their children Berber names, disallowed the teaching of the Berber language in schools and banned Berber festivals and holidays. Protests in the 1990s demanding the right to practice their culture openly were put down forcibly by the police and followed by a series of public hangings, instilling a profound animosity toward the government.
Shortly after the uprising began in mid-February, Colonel Qaddafi offered the families of Zintan and other towns across the Nafusah range a bribe, residents said, a onetime payment of about $1,200 in exchange for their allegiance. Most declined.
The missile strikes began soon after.
Salim Issa, 50, an electrician, fled the town of Nalut on Friday after what he called heavy missile strikes the night before. He arrived in Medenine, Tunisia, with his wife, sister and nine of his children. Fearing for the two sons he left behind, he declined to give his full name.
He said there were rumors that loyalist forces had orders to kill everyone in the city, and that soldiers had been given Viagra and explicit orders to rape. [frankly, that sounds like the sort of rumor that often spreads across the region?] [hard to know if any basis in fact?] [*]
The town of Yafren, about 100 miles east of Nalut, was reported to have been captured by government forces over the weekend. But by then the town was all but deserted. Just a handful of rebel fighters and elderly residents, too weak to flee, were thought to remain, hiding in basements.
Salim, 32, a nurse’s assistant, said Yafren had been surrounded by Qaddafi forces and under fire for about a month, leaving it with no water, food or electricity. “No nothing,” he said, adding that the only food had been smuggled in across the desert.
Perhaps even more than on the eastern front, the rebels in the Nafusah Mountains are outmatched.
Mounir Ramdan, 25, a youthful fighter from Nalut who was visiting his family in Tataouine, said about 40 government pickup trucks mounted with heavy machine guns and rocket launchers were stationed near the road between Nalut and Zintan, to the east. Mr. Ramdan, who has no gun, has been acting as a scout.
For each rebel fighter with a weapon, “you find 50 without guns,” said Fathi, a rebel being treated at the hospital in Tataouine.
He had been operating a machine gun mounted in the back of pickup when he was tossed from the vehicle during a skirmish near Zintan, breaking his left femur and dislocating his right hip. At the time of his injury, the rebels in Zintan had four or five 14.5-millimeter machine guns, stolen from government troops, he said, but most were armed with antique Italian rifles, knives or home-forged iron swords.
The government forces have been ordered to “clean” Zintan, he said, and he had little doubt about their ability to do so. Without heavier NATO airstrikes against Colonel Qaddafi’s armor and more weapons, he said, it will be “90 percent impossible” for the rebels to hold their ground in the western mountains.
Colonel Qaddafi, he warned, “will kill us all.”
Other fighters were less bleak. Puffing on the stub of a cigarette at the Tunisian border, a tall, bearded fighter named Toufik guessed that the rebels in the region were outnumbered by loyalist troops five to one.
Asked how they had succeeded in capturing the border post last week, he grinned and pointed an index finger to the sky.
“God gave us a victory,” he said.
David D. Kirkpatrick contributed reporting from Tripoli, Libya.

Syrian Army Storms Town Where Uprising Began

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/world/middleeast/26syria.html
April 25, 2011
Syrian Army Storms Town Where Uprising Began
By ANTHONY SHADID [Syria] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [Syria pretends to be a modern secular republic, but is far from it] [no monarchy but long run by a minority sect (al Assads) and the Baath Party] [Bashir has seemingly lost control but cannot seem to suss out how to resolve things?] [followup] [how expats from various world cities are affecting things] [*]
BEIRUT, Lebanon — The Syrian army sent tanks rolling into the restive southern city of Dara’a and carried out arrests in poor towns on the capital’s outskirts Monday in a sharp escalation of a crackdown on Syria’s five-week-old uprising, according to human rights activists and accounts posted on social networking sites. They said at least five people were killed in Dara’a and bodies were in the streets.
The move into Dara’a seemed to signal a new chapter in a crackdown that has already killed more than 350 people, with the single highest toll on Friday. So far hewing to a mix of

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/world/middleeast/26syria.html
April 25, 2011
Syrian Army Storms Town Where Uprising Began
By ANTHONY SHADID [Syria] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [Syria pretends to be a modern secular republic, but is far from it] [no monarchy but long run by a minority sect (al Assads) and the Baath Party] [Bashir has seemingly lost control but cannot seem to suss out how to resolve things?] [followup] [how expats from various world cities are affecting things] [*]
BEIRUT, Lebanon — The Syrian army sent tanks rolling into the restive southern city of Dara’a and carried out arrests in poor towns on the capital’s outskirts Monday in a sharp escalation of a crackdown on Syria’s five-week-old uprising, according to human rights activists and accounts posted on social networking sites. They said at least five people were killed in Dara’a and bodies were in the streets.
The move into Dara’a seemed to signal a new chapter in a crackdown that has already killed more than 350 people, with the single highest toll on Friday. So far hewing to a mix of promised concessions and blunt force, the government indicated Monday that it had chosen the latter, seeking to crush a wave of dissent in virtually every Syrian province that has shaken the once-uncontested rule of President Bashar al-Assad. [*]
Residents said at least eight tanks entered Dara’a at dawn from four directions, and there were reports of artillery and mortars being used. Phone lines were cut to the area, making first-hand accounts difficult, and nearby border crossings with Jordan were sealed from the Syrian side, Jordanian officials said. But video smuggled out of the town depicted a cloud of black smoke rising on the horizon with volleys of heavy gunfire echoing in the distance.
Protesters said the toll was almost sure to rise. Bodies were in the streets, but snipers on rooftops prevented residents and medical personnel from retrieving them.
“The army forces have invaded the city of Dara’a,” [*]one resident said breathlessly as he filmed footage Monday morning. “They are heading toward the center of the city.”
Other smuggled footage showed heavily armed soldiers taking up positions behind walls, a few feet away from a tank parked in what appeared to be a leafy, main street. Witnesses quoted by organizers said some tanks were moving toward the Omari Mosque, a landmark there that has served as a headquarters of sorts for demonstrators.
“God is great, Bashar,” one protester cried on video posted on the Internet, addressing President Bashar al-Assad by his first name. “Why are you attacking us?” [*]
The town of low-slung buildings and about 75,000 inhabitants has become almost synonymous with the revolt, which has posed the greatest challenge to four decades of rule by the Assad family. Protests erupted there in March after security forces arrested a group of high school students accused of scrawling anti-government graffiti on a wall, galvanizing demonstrations that have spread to virtually every province in Syria.
Other activists said Syrian security forces also entered two towns on the capital’s outskirts — Douma and Maadamiah — carrying out dozens of arrests. Clashes have been especially pronounced in the poor, restive towns that encircle Damascus, and activists said there were reports of shooting during the raids that began Monday morning there. [*]
Residents reported that security forces had surrounded the towns on Sunday. Anyone leaving or entering, they said, was searched, in an apparent attempt to stop protesters from marching on the capital, a bulwark of the Assad family’s rule.
In Jabla, a coastal city inhabited by Syria’s Sunni Muslim majority and members of the minority Alawites — a heterodox Muslim sect from which the government draws much of its support — security forces killed at least 12 people in a crackdown that began Sunday and persisted into the night. One resident said protesters burned an army car and took a soldier hostage.
“The army is deployed all over the area,” said another resident who gave his name as Abu Ahmed. “I can’t describe how bad the situation was all night. It’s a street war.” [*]
He said the shootings had exacerbated tension between Sunnis and Alawites in the city, a potentially dangerous manifestation in a country with a mosaic of religious and ethnic minorities, many of whom fear the government’s collapse may endanger them. [*]
“The plate has shattered,” he said, using an Arabic expression. “There’s strife between us now, it’s been planted, and the problem is going to exist forever in Jabla.”
The widening crackdown comes amid reports that scores of residents have gone missing in Syria since Friday, many of them from the restive city of Homs and those towns near Damascus, activists say. In Saqba, one of the capital’s suburbs, an organizer said that 100 people had disappeared Friday, with no record of their arrest.
“There is going to be much more bloodshed,” said Wissam Tarif, head of Insan, a Syrian human rights group, “All the signals from my perspective indicate that.”
Mr. Tarif said his organization had compiled the names of 217 people, in all, who had disappeared since early Friday. At least 70 of them were from the towns near the capital’s outskirts and 68 others were from Homs, Syria’s third-largest city and the site of especially vigorous protests the past week. Taken together, he said the group had documented names of missing from 17 cities and villages.
“It just doesn’t stop,” he said. “Names keep pouring in.”
The crackdown is yet another indication that the government’s decision to lift draconian emergency rule, in place since 1963, may prove more rhetoric than reform. Though the government has touted its repeal Thursday as a sweeping step, the past few days have proven some of the bloodiest and most repressive since the uprising began. On Friday alone, more than 100 people were killed in 14 towns and cities. [*]
“We don’t trust this regime anymore,” another protester said in Jabla.
Human Rights Watch called on the United Nations to set up an international inquiry into their deaths and urged the United States and Europe to impose sanctions on officials responsible for the shootings and detentions of hundreds of protesters.
“After Friday’s carnage, it is no longer enough to condemn the violence,” said Joe Stork, the deputy Middle East director at the organization, which is based in New York.
Employees of the New York Times contributed to this report from Beirut and Damascus, Syria. Ranya Kadri contributed reporting from Aqaba, Jordan.

Protesters Distrust Deal for Yemen Leader to Quit

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/world/middleeast/25yemen.html
April 24, 2011
Protesters Distrust Deal for Yemen Leader to Quit
By LAURA KASINOF [Yemen] [Middle East] [Tunisia’s Jasmine revlution spread to Egypt to Libya to Yemen and Syria as Arab Awakening] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [use psci 469] [have the opposition or parts thereof realized there’s no good alternative to Saleh?] [yesterday the GCC reportedly struck a deal that provided for Saleh out in 30 days] [followup] [but this is yemen where no deal until done deal?] [*]
Street demonstrators and youth leaders voiced skepticism on Sunday over an offer by President Ali Abdullah Saleh to leave office in 30 days after agreeing to a plan that would grant him and his sons immunity from prosecution for any crimes, saying they did not trust his intention to step down and would continue their protests.
Mr. Saleh’s offer, which was mediated by his Arab neighbors, has accentuated the divisions within his opposition. The opposition coalition, known as the J.M.P., said Sunday that it welcomed the initiative, but only if a national unity government was formed after Mr. Saleh stepped down, not immediately as the current proposal put together by the Gulf Cooperation Council calls for. The coalition parties do not want to be part of a government with Mr. Saleh. [*]
The protesters are taking a harder line, and say that the J.M.P. is out of touch with the demands of what are known as the “independent” youth not affiliated with standing

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/world/middleeast/25yemen.html
April 24, 2011
Protesters Distrust Deal for Yemen Leader to Quit
By LAURA KASINOF [Yemen] [Middle East] [Tunisia’s Jasmine revlution spread to Egypt to Libya to Yemen and Syria as Arab Awakening] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [use psci 469] [have the opposition or parts thereof realized there’s no good alternative to Saleh?] [yesterday the GCC reportedly struck a deal that provided for Saleh out in 30 days] [followup] [but this is yemen where no deal until done deal?] [*]
Street demonstrators and youth leaders voiced skepticism on Sunday over an offer by President Ali Abdullah Saleh to leave office in 30 days after agreeing to a plan that would grant him and his sons immunity from prosecution for any crimes, saying they did not trust his intention to step down and would continue their protests.
Mr. Saleh’s offer, which was mediated by his Arab neighbors, has accentuated the divisions within his opposition. The opposition coalition, known as the J.M.P., said Sunday that it welcomed the initiative, but only if a national unity government was formed after Mr. Saleh stepped down, not immediately as the current proposal put together by the Gulf Cooperation Council calls for. The coalition parties do not want to be part of a government with Mr. Saleh. [*]
The protesters are taking a harder line, and say that the J.M.P. is out of touch with the demands of what are known as the “independent” youth not affiliated with standing political parties. Leaders of some of the tens of thousands of street protesters — originally young people but now Yemenis from all segments of society who have set up permanent protests camps in cities throughout the country — said they suspected that Mr. Saleh could wiggle out of the deal at a later date, and try to extend his 33-year rule. [*]
Many said they were inspired by the youthful protests in Tunisia and Egypt, which forced autocrats in those countries out relatively quickly and without conditions. They said they wanted a similar outcome here.
Some protesters rejected the offer outright. Others, like Atiaf Alwazir, a youth organizer in Sana, said that her feelings were mixed, at best. “It’s just another game,” she said. “Let the J.M.P. do what they have to do politically, negotiate, and the youth will do what they have to do and stay in the streets.”
Ms. Alwazir said the idea of immunity for Mr. Saleh and his sons had divided many as well.
Protesters have repeatedly voiced their rejection of the offer of immunity for the president, though on Sunday there was some chatter via social networking Web sites arguing for a more pragmatic approach if it meant ushering Mr. Saleh to exit.
Other protesters feel that Mr. Saleh’s acceptance of the Gulf Cooperation Council’s proposal was typical of his political cunning and a move to put the opposition in a bad light and make it seem as if he were the one working to stop the country from falling into chaos. [*]
“This initiative is for the sake of the regime,” said Tawfiq al-Shaoubi, a protest leader in the central city of Taiz, home to Yemen’s largest demonstration. “We will keep protesting,” he said. “This is regime must go so we can a build a new modern society in Yemen.”
In Sana, protesters who have camped out for weeks appeared to have no intention of moving and continued with their demonstrations on Sunday, chanting, “No negotiation, no dialogue — resign or flee,” according to Reuters.
In an interview with BBC Arabic television on Sunday, Mr. Saleh said he would not hand over power to what he termed “insurrectionists.”
“Who shall I hand it over to?” he told the BBC. “Those who are trying to make a coup? No. We will do it through ballot boxes and referendums. We’ll invite international observers to monitor. Any coup is rejected because we are committed to the constitutional legitimacy and don’t accept chaos.”
Mr. Saleh also said that Al Qaeda, which is known to have a presence in the country, had infiltrated protest camps. “Al Qaeda are moving inside the camps, and this is very dangerous,” he said. “Why is the West not looking at this destructive work and its dangerous implications for the future?” [he always says that?] [*]
His call to use the ballot box added to the distrust among his opponents. “The G.C.C. announced that he agrees to leave after 30 days, and he says he’s only leaving through the ballot box,” said Ms. Alwazir, the youth leader. “There’s not trust,” she said. “Especially since he’s contradicting himself right now.”
An independent Yemeni diplomat, who did not want to be identified, said that Mr. Saleh seemed confused and reluctant to step aside, but that he had drawn his own lessons from the experience of Egypt and knew he should take advantage of this offer of immunity.
He said that some in the opposition understood Yemen’s delicate state, with violence in outlying provinces increasing and the economy floundering, which is why they were willing to compromise slightly.
“Some J.M.P. leaders understand the current state of the Yemeni scene,” the diplomat said. “They realize that Yemen is on the brink of total collapse and might face a civil war.” But others, he said, chiefly Islamists from the Islah Party, want to keep pushing until they seize power, signaling a split not just between protesters and the formal political parties but also within the coalition itself.

Taliban Help Hundreds Tunnel Out of Prison’s Political Wing

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/world/asia/26afghanistan.html
April 25, 2011
Taliban Help Hundreds Tunnel Out of Prison’s Political Wing
By TAIMOOR SHAH and ALISSA J. RUBIN [Afghanistan] [AfPak] [even as US commits much money and support to Pakistan’s govt] [Obama’s “surge” continues] [after “surge” has success around Kandahar, insurgency strikes back?] [psci 355-455, 469] [spring offensive is back on?] [reconciliation fits and starts] [insurgents can counts too: clearly the leaders are creating incidents to affect the closing window this summer?] [followup] [*]
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — The Taliban staged an audacious prison break here early Monday, freeing at least 476 political prisoners through a long tunnel, according to the warden, Gen. Ghulam Dastagir Mayar.
He said that security authorities had discovered in the morning that the prisoners from the political wing of the building were gone, and that the authorities had just found the tunnel. [*]
National security officials said the tunnel was dug from the outside and went under the Kabul-Kandahar highway and then into the prison. There are conflicting reports on its length, ranging from roughly 360 meters stated by the Taliban to police who said to journalists that it was more than 1,000 meters. Officials said there would be more definitive information later in the day. [I don’t see how they conclude other than inside job?] [*]

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/26/world/asia/26afghanistan.html
April 25, 2011
Taliban Help Hundreds Tunnel Out of Prison’s Political Wing
By TAIMOOR SHAH and ALISSA J. RUBIN [Afghanistan] [AfPak] [even as US commits much money and support to Pakistan’s govt] [Obama’s “surge” continues] [after “surge” has success around Kandahar, insurgency strikes back?] [psci 355-455, 469] [spring offensive is back on?] [reconciliation fits and starts] [insurgents can counts too: clearly the leaders are creating incidents to affect the closing window this summer?] [followup] [*]
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — The Taliban staged an audacious prison break here early Monday, freeing at least 476 political prisoners through a long tunnel, according to the warden, Gen. Ghulam Dastagir Mayar.
He said that security authorities had discovered in the morning that the prisoners from the political wing of the building were gone, and that the authorities had just found the tunnel. [*]
National security officials said the tunnel was dug from the outside and went under the Kabul-Kandahar highway and then into the prison. There are conflicting reports on its length, ranging from roughly 360 meters stated by the Taliban to police who said to journalists that it was more than 1,000 meters. Officials said there would be more definitive information later in the day. [I don’t see how they conclude other than inside job?] [*]
The governor of Kandahar, Wesa Toorylai, sharply criticized the security forces. “This is absolutely the fault of the ignorance of the security forces,” Mr. Toorylai said. “This was not the work of a day, a week or a month of activities, this was actually months of work they spent to dig and free their men.” [*]
Mr. Toorylai appealed to the public to provide information to security authorities if they saw any Taliban in their area.
It was the second time there has been a major prison break at the Sarposa prison, the largest and most substantial prison in southern Afghanistan. The prison houses Taliban who were captured in Zabul, Oruzgan and Kandahar, including some senior Taliban figures as well as many lower level Taliban, according to security officers working with the prison. [*]On June 13, 2008, the Taliban orchestrated the freeing of 1,200 prisoners, of whom 350 were Taliban members, in an attack that killed 15 guards.
This escape comes at a critical moment in the Taliban’s fight in southern Afghanistan. Pushed out of their strongholds in the rural areas outside the city and under pressure from a large number of NATO troops who have fanned out into the villages, they have been able to maintain a presence, but nothing close to the dominant role they had even a year ago. [that’s no coincidence] [*]
Bringing back a large cadre of experienced fighters, many of whom will have been able to refine their skills in prison, could give the Taliban leadership the flexibility and human resources to send fighters into new districts where there are fewer NATO troops and bolster their numbers closer to Kandahar.
“This will have a negative effect on Kandahar’s security situation,” said Abdul Wahab Salihi, [NSSherlock] [*] the deputy intelligence chief in Kandahar. “I don’t know how many among them were leaders or prominent people, but we are working on this and checking their background, but if there is a fire and you put more wood on it, there wil be more flames, so these escaped people will add fuel to the fire.”
A Taliban spokesman for the south and west of the country, Qari Yusuf Ahmadi, said that a total of 541 prisoners had escaped and that among them were 106 Taliban commanders. “Now they are all in safe havens,” he said.
In a deft propaganda ploy, the Taliban gave a gripping description of the prison break in a statement they sent out to the news media ahead of any comment from the security authorities who were just in the process of discovering the tunnel. [*]
Zabiullah Mujahid, a Taliban spokesman, said in the statement: “We have planned and worked on this for five months, and the tunnel is 360 meters long,” he said. “This was very important for us; we were trying to not leave anyone behind, not even one sick or old political prisoner.”
“Our mujahedeen worked in a very careful way” so as not to be discovered, Mr. Mujahid said. The tunnel wound under security check posts outside the prison and under a main highway. [their mujahedeen had inside help] [**]
At 11 p.m. Sunday, three Taliban prisoners, who he said were the only ones who knew, “Went from cell to cell waking people and guiding each of them to the tunnel. More Taliban were on hand as the prisoners emerged from the dirt and dust of the tunnel to guide the dazed prisoners to waiting vehicles. Also on hand were Taliban fighters and suicide bombers in case the security forces woke up and there was a fight.
“Luckily we did not have to use them,” Mr. Mujahid said. “The security forces did not know until sunrise.”
Taimoor Shah reported from Kandahar, and Alissa J. Rubin from Kabul, Afghanistan.

US interrogation guidelines from Guantanamo list Pakistan’s spy agency as terror organization

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/us-interrogation-guidelines-from-guantanamo-list-pakistans-spy-agency-as-terror-organization/2011/04/25/AFKhiWhE_story.html
US interrogation guidelines from Guantanamo list Pakistan’s spy agency as terror organization
By Associated Press, Monday, April 25, 8:23 AM [Pakistan] [AfPak] [hub of the al Qaeda and Taliban activity in AfPak] [and of al Qaeda globally] [use psci 355-455, 469] [under Obama administration, Bush’s policy of drones (sticks) and carrots( $) has increased to Zardari] [Pakistan is really where U.S. interests converge: nukes, India-Pakistan, and GSAVE] [use psci 355-455] [Wikileaks has leaked documents that show U.S. govt considers ISI terrorist group] [followup] [that may prove a little more than embarrassing?] [*]
ISLAMABAD — Secret documents show that American authorities listed Pakistan’s main intelligence agency as a terrorist organization in guidelines handed out to interrogators at Guantanamo Bay.
In files leaked the international media, the Inter-Services Intelligence agency is named alongside

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/us-interrogation-guidelines-from-guantanamo-list-pakistans-spy-agency-as-terror-organization/2011/04/25/AFKhiWhE_story.html
US interrogation guidelines from Guantanamo list Pakistan’s spy agency as terror organization
By Associated Press, Monday, April 25, 8:23 AM [Pakistan] [AfPak] [hub of the al Qaeda and Taliban activity in AfPak] [and of al Qaeda globally] [use psci 355-455, 469] [under Obama administration, Bush’s policy of drones (sticks) and carrots( $) has increased to Zardari] [Pakistan is really where U.S. interests converge: nukes, India-Pakistan, and GSAVE] [use psci 355-455] [Wikileaks has leaked documents that show U.S. govt considers ISI terrorist group] [followup] [that may prove a little more than embarrassing?] [*]
ISLAMABAD — Secret documents show that American authorities listed Pakistan’s main intelligence agency as a terrorist organization in guidelines handed out to interrogators at Guantanamo Bay.
In files leaked the international media, the Inter-Services Intelligence agency is named alongside international Islamist militant networks like Hamas and Hezbollah as well as Iran’s spy agency. [*]
The guidelines advise interrogators that detainees associated with these groups may have provided support to Taliban and al-Qaida or insurgents fighting in Afghanistan.
The revelations will likely further strain ties between the CIA and the ISI, which by many accounts are at their lowest point since they began working together in 2001. [ya think?] [*]
ISI and Pakistani Army spokesmen were not immediately available for comment Monday.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. © 2011 The Washington Post Co

India Finds Corruption in Fast-Growing Aviation Industry

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/24/world/asia/24india.html
April 23, 2011
India Finds Corruption in Fast-Growing Aviation Industry
By HEATHER TIMMONS [India] [SAsia] [as India turns into an Asia regional power, its long years of corruption are exposed time and again] [this time the airline, commercial pilot industry] [*]
NEW DELHI — More than a dozen commercial pilots in India have been stripped of their licenses and a top airline safety official has been suspended after a government investigation uncovered widespread fraud and corruption in the booming aviation industry.
Several of India’s private carriers, as well as its state-run airline, Air India, have fired active pilots as a result of the inquiry, which uncovered pilots falsifying flying records, cheating on flight exams and paying bribes to testing officials. [*]
India’s government and its private sector are already convulsing with corruption scandals, which have tainted mobile phone companies as well as last year’s Commonwealth Games. The pilot investigation, though, carries particular shock value. [*]
“You really are messing with people’s lives if you are messing with a pilot’s license,” said

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/24/world/asia/24india.html
April 23, 2011
India Finds Corruption in Fast-Growing Aviation Industry
By HEATHER TIMMONS [India] [SAsia] [as India turns into an Asia regional power, its long years of corruption are exposed time and again] [this time the airline, commercial pilot industry] [*]
NEW DELHI — More than a dozen commercial pilots in India have been stripped of their licenses and a top airline safety official has been suspended after a government investigation uncovered widespread fraud and corruption in the booming aviation industry.
Several of India’s private carriers, as well as its state-run airline, Air India, have fired active pilots as a result of the inquiry, which uncovered pilots falsifying flying records, cheating on flight exams and paying bribes to testing officials. [*]
India’s government and its private sector are already convulsing with corruption scandals, which have tainted mobile phone companies as well as last year’s Commonwealth Games. The pilot investigation, though, carries particular shock value. [*]
“You really are messing with people’s lives if you are messing with a pilot’s license,” said Neil Mills, chief executive of SpiceJet, a low-cost carrier here that has fired three pilots for violations. “The penalties for corruption and not sticking to the rules should be much stricter and better enforced.”
The review of India’s active commercial pilot licenses is about half-finished, said an official with the Directorate General of Civil Aviation, India’s main airline regulatory body. So far, government officials have revoked 6 commanders’ licenses, which certify experienced pilots to be in charge in the cockpit, and 13 other commercial pilots’ licenses, those often held by first officers. [*]
The agency is also investigating dozens of flight schools that have cropped up in recent years as demand has grown for new pilots. Pilot schools here are attracting new students, from engineers to housewives, and can charge more than $65,000 for a course that lasts less than a year.
India’s airline industry began expanding 20 years ago amid broad economic liberalizations, but it has grown phenomenally as the economy has blossomed in recent years, attracting billions of dollars in investment and giving rise to a number of new airlines to handle tens of millions of new passengers. Government oversight of the boom, analysts and airline professionals here say, lags perilously behind.
The Directorate General of Civil Aviation, D.G.C.A., is responsible for monitoring everything from airport safety to fleet maintenance and pilot training and certification. This week, R. S. Passi, its director of air safety, was removed from the job amid accusations that his daughter, Garima Passi, had been given preferential treatment in getting her pilot’s license. She was suspended from SpiceJet last month over irregularities.
But the agency’s most serious problem is not corruption within, but crippling understaffing, critics say, adding that it has little real chance of policing an industry prone to corruption and rife with nepotism.
“It is not the question of just one case, or one D.G.C.A. director or one airline, and then we can fix it and get over it,” said Kapil Kaul, South Asia chief executive for the Center for Asia Pacific Aviation, a research group. “It is a failure of the entire system.”
Just over 63 million people flew on Indian airlines in 2010, more than double the number of passengers five years ago. India has added more than 300 commercial planes and more than 500 private jets and helicopters in the past 10 years, Mr. Kaul estimates. [*]
While growth in air travel has slowed in Asia in recent months, in India it is still expanding rapidly. Domestic airlines carried 9.6 million passengers in January of this year, up 19.6 percent from a year before.
Accident rates have remained fairly low. Last May’s crash of an Air India Express flight in Mangalore, which killed 158 people, was the first major accident by an Indian carrier in a decade.
The director general of the aviation agency acknowledged that it had not grown apace with the industry. “If you look at the F.A.A. in the United States, they have five or six thousand employees,” said the official, E.K. Bharat Bhushan. “I have 140 people, with 82 airports.”
About two years ago, the Federal Aviation Administration found enough problems with Indian carriers that it threatened to downgrade them to Category 2 status, which would have limited their ability to expand routes to the United States. But that threat was lifted when the Indian aviation agency promised to add 550 positions and make other major changes.
Most of those jobs have not been filled, Mr. Bhushan said. “Because it is a government department, recruitment has been difficult,” he said. Even if a fast-track hiring plan he has proposed to India’s top ministers succeeds, he said, finding skilled airline experts in the country will be difficult. “We just don’t have enough people,” he said.
Pilot groups say the testing system itself needs modernization.
“Our system is just prehistoric,” said Rishabh Kapur, the general secretary of the Indian Commercial Pilots Association, a domestic pilots union. Written tests are given only four times a year and are not computerized, and results take two months, he said. Often, the tests have more to do with reading comprehension and grammar skills than flying know-how, he added.
“We need to pull up our socks and get to global standards,” Mr. Kapur said.

Exiles Shaping World’s Image of Syria Revolt

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/24/world/middleeast/24beirut.html
April 23, 2011
Exiles Shaping World’s Image of Syria Revolt
By ANTHONY SHADID [Syria] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [Syria pretends to be a modern secular republic, but is far from it] [no monarchy but long run by a minority sect (al Assads) and the Baath Party] [Bashir has seemingly lost control but cannot seem to suss out how to resolve things?] [followup] [how expats from various world cities are affecting things] [*]
BEIRUT, Lebanon — On the bloodiest day of Syria’s uprising, Rami Nakhle’s fingers drifted over the keyboard in a room silent but for the news bulletins of Al Jazeera, yet filled with the commotion on his computer screen.
As the events unfolded Friday, user names flashed and faded. Twitter flickered with agitprop and trash talk. And Facebook glided past Gmail and Skype as Mr. Nakhle joined a coterie of exiled Syrians fomenting, reporting and, most remarkably, shaping the greatest challenge to four decades of the Assad family’s rule in Syria.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/24/world/middleeast/24beirut.html
April 23, 2011
Exiles Shaping World’s Image of Syria Revolt
By ANTHONY SHADID [Syria] [so-called Arab Awakening] [Middle East proper] [Arabia] [democratization] [Syria pretends to be a modern secular republic, but is far from it] [no monarchy but long run by a minority sect (al Assads) and the Baath Party] [Bashir has seemingly lost control but cannot seem to suss out how to resolve things?] [followup] [how expats from various world cities are affecting things] [*]
BEIRUT, Lebanon — On the bloodiest day of Syria’s uprising, Rami Nakhle’s fingers drifted over the keyboard in a room silent but for the news bulletins of Al Jazeera, yet filled with the commotion on his computer screen.
As the events unfolded Friday, user names flashed and faded. Twitter flickered with agitprop and trash talk. And Facebook glided past Gmail and Skype as Mr. Nakhle joined a coterie of exiled Syrians fomenting, reporting and, most remarkably, shaping the greatest challenge to four decades of the Assad family’s rule in Syria.
“Can you hear it?” Mr. Nakhle cried, showing a video of chants for the government’s fall. “This is Syria, man! Unbelievable.”
Unlike the revolts in Egypt, Tunisia and even Libya, which were televised to the world, Syria’s revolt is distinguished by the power of a self-styled vanguard abroad to ferry out images and news that are anarchic and illuminating, if incomplete. [also, al Jazeera has not covered it with same zeal] [opening al Jazeera to charges] [*]
For weeks now, the small number of activists, spanning the Middle East, Europe and the United States, have coordinated across almost every time zone and managed to smuggle hundreds of satellite and mobile phones, modems, laptops and cameras into Syria. There, compatriots elude surveillance with e-mailed software and upload videos on dial-up connections.
Their work has ensured what was once impossible.
In 1982, Syria’s government managed to hide, for a time, its massacre of at least 10,000 people in Hama in a brutal crackdown of an Islamist revolt. But Saturday, the world could witness, in almost real time, the chants of anger and cries for the fallen as security forces fired on the funerals for Friday’s dead.
The activists have staggered the government of President Bashar al-Assad, forcing it to face the reality that it has almost entirely ceded the narrative of the revolt to its opponents at home and abroad.
“The government’s paranoid style has become obvious,” said Joshua Landis, a professor of Middle East studies at the University of Oklahoma. “These activists have completely flipped the balance of power on the regime, and that’s all due to social media.” [*]
Still, though few question the breadth of the uprising, there are differences on its depth in towns and cities. Cyberactivists outside of Syria fashion slogans of unity for a revolt that the government insists is inspired by militant Islamists. The voices of protesters smuggled abroad have drowned out the sentiments of the president’s supporters, who include the prosperous elite and frightened minorities of Christians and heterodox Muslim sects.
Mr. Nakhle, 28, finds himself in an unlikely locale to wage that contest. Imbued with youthful idealism, he left his hometown in 2006 for Damascus, where he discovered the Internet.
“A completely new world for me,” he called it, and he soon broadened his activism with Internet campaigns to free political prisoners and, more dramatically, end Syria’s equivalent of martial law. He came up with a pseudonym, Malath Aumran — an inside joke based on family nicknames — and came up with a portrait for Twitter and Facebook that was a composite photograph of 32 men.
By last December, the secret police were pursuing him. “That’s all they need — suspicions,” he said.
In a harrowing journey the next month, smugglers on motorcycles carried him to the border, where he narrowly escaped the police and spent the night in a rocky valley before making his way to a working-class neighborhood here. Frills are few; in a sparse apartment, cigarettes, tea, Nescafé, sugar and a drink from boiled leaves of yerba maté crowd his coffee table. [*]
“I’m a cyberactivist,” he said. “As long as I have the Internet, that’s it.”
Gaunt and with bloodshot blue-green eyes, Mr. Nakhle navigated a cascade of information Friday — a frenetic conversation on Skype with 15 people in Syria, a snippet of video from Tartus, a phone call from a friend in Damascus, and queries from journalists for contacts in remote towns. Someone he believed to be a secret police officer flashed him a taunting message: “There is news that a member of your family has been taken by security services.” Mr. Nakhle changed the sim card on his phone and called home, without taking his eyes off his computer screen. The news proved false.
A message came in via Skype that a protest was dispersed in Aleppo.
“I won’t publish this one,” he said knowingly.
Mr. Nakhle is part of a network that literally spans the globe, whose members include a Syrian-American woman in Chicago who said she grew tired of simply watching Al Jazeera and Ausama Monajed, a Damascus-born activist in London who drives with his Internet-enabled laptop open in the passenger seat, running speech-to-text software. [*]
Mr. Monajed estimates that 18 to 20 people are engaged in helping coordinate and cover the protests full time, though he boasts that he can find someone in his broader community to translate English to French at 4 a.m. He has a contact in every Syrian province, who in turn have their networks of 10 people.
“And the regime can’t do anything about it,” he said.
Several say they relied on Syrian businessmen — abroad or in Syria — to finance one of their most impressive feats. After witnessing the Egyptian government’s success in shutting down the Internet and mobile phone networks in January, they made a concerted attempt to circumvent a similar move by delivering satellite phones and modems across Syria. Ammar Abdulhamid, an activist in Maryland, estimated that they delivered 100 satellite phones, along with hundreds of cameras and laptops. [*]
The impromptu network has been allowed to guide events against a government that hews to the Soviet-era notion of Information Ministries and communiqués. [*]
A Facebook page called Syria Revolution, administered from abroad, has become the pulpit for the revolt — its statements de facto policy of the uprising.
Mr. Nakhle said he had urged people to use slogans that are free of the sectarian or religious bent popular with Islamic activists. “We have to worry about these people,” he admitted. [*]
The unprecedented power of the long-distance activists to shape the message troubled Camille Otrakji, a Damascus-born political blogger who lives in Montreal. Where others see coordination, he sees manipulation, arguing that the activists’ mastery of image belies a revolt more sectarian than national, and deaf to the fears of minorities. [*]
“I call it deception,” said Mr. Otrakji, a somewhat lonely voice in the Internet tumult. “It’s like putting something on the wrapping of a product which has nothing to do with what’s inside. This is all being manipulated.”
Katherine Zoepf contributed reporting from New York, and an employee of The New York Times from Damascus, Syria.

President of Yemen Offers to Leave, With Conditions

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/24/world/middleeast/24yemen.html
April 23, 2011
President of Yemen Offers to Leave, With Conditions
By ROBERT F. WORTH [Yemen] [Middle East] [Tunisia’s Jasmine revlution spread to Egypt to Libya to Yemen and Syria as Arab Awakening] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [use psci 469] [have the opposition or parts thereof realized there’s no good alternative to Saleh?] [has a deal finally been struck?] [followup] [*]
CAIRO — Yemen’s embattled president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, said Saturday that he accepted a proposal by Arab mediators that would shift power to his deputy 30 days from the signing of a formal agreement and grant him and his family, who occupy key positions in Yemen’s security apparatus, immunity from prosecution. [*]
Mr. Saleh is a wily political survivor, and it was unclear whether his offer to step down was a real attempt to calm the political turmoil and growing demonstrations that have rocked his

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/24/world/middleeast/24yemen.html
April 23, 2011
President of Yemen Offers to Leave, With Conditions
By ROBERT F. WORTH [Yemen] [Middle East] [Tunisia’s Jasmine revlution spread to Egypt to Libya to Yemen and Syria as Arab Awakening] [broader middle east] [northern Africa or Islamic Maghreb; and Horn of Africa] [democratization] [use psci 469] [have the opposition or parts thereof realized there’s no good alternative to Saleh?] [has a deal finally been struck?] [followup] [*]
CAIRO — Yemen’s embattled president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, said Saturday that he accepted a proposal by Arab mediators that would shift power to his deputy 30 days from the signing of a formal agreement and grant him and his family, who occupy key positions in Yemen’s security apparatus, immunity from prosecution. [*]
Mr. Saleh is a wily political survivor, and it was unclear whether his offer to step down was a real attempt to calm the political turmoil and growing demonstrations that have rocked his country for months or a way to shift blame for a stalemate to the opposition. His offer follows days of unrelenting pressure to step aside from Saudi Arabia [the irony is rich] [Saudi was angry at US for “throwing Mubarak under the buss”] [now Saudis throw Saleh under same buss!] [**] and other neighboring states fearful of more instability in the region.
The president’s announcement set off a flurry of political maneuvering and meetings, but by the end of the night, it was far from clear that it would end the deadlock and ease him from power after 32 years of autocratic rule.
The agreement would require the opposition to halt the street protests and to take part in a coalition with Mr. Saleh’s ruling party. The opposition’s leader, Yassin Saeed Noman, said his coalition accepted the agreement in principle, but rejected those conditions, preferring to allow Mr. Saleh’s party to govern until he resigns and then join a power-sharing government. Mr. Noman also said the opposition lacked the power to force protesters from the streets.[*]
The opposition continued to meet into the night, past a midnight deadline that had been set for an agreement.
Government officials derided the opposition’s counterproposal, saying that the deal was crafted by the Saudi-led Gulf Cooperation Council and had the backing of the United States and the European Union. [*]“This will be good for the president, because now it’s clear that the opposition has refused everything,” said one presidential adviser, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “The opposition has shown that they fear going into a coalition, and they are not ready to deal with international initiatives. They are divided and weak.”
A standoff leaves open the possibility of more clashes in Yemen, where tens of thousands of street protesters — who have occupied central areas in Yemen’s largest cities and clashed repeatedly with government forces — made clear that they were deeply unhappy with the terms of the deal.
Still, it is not clear how long Mr. Saleh can hold on, and Saturday’s announcement marked the first time that he has suggested he was open to leaving office relatively quickly. He had earlier agreed to step down in 2013, when his current terms ends. When that failed to mollify protesters, he said he would leave at the end of this year, but after demonstrators rejected that plan, he quickly backtracked.
Popular anger at Mr. Saleh, who is widely perceived as corrupt, has only grown in recent weeks. United States officials have become increasingly alarmed about the breakdown of order in Yemen, which is host to one of the most active and deadly branches of Al Qaeda. Yemeni counterterrorism units, financed and trained by the United States, have been largely grounded during the recent unrest, and jihadists appear to be moving more freely in some areas. [*]
The State Department reacted somewhat cautiously to Mr. Saleh’s announcement Saturday. Its acting deputy spokesman, Mark Toner, said officials had seen news reports about his acceptance of an agreement with the opposition, which he said would be welcome. But, Mr. Toner added, “The participation of all sides in this dialogue is urgently needed to reach a solution supported by the Yemeni people.” He specified that the nation’s youth, who have formed the core of the protests, should be brought into the process. [they don’t know if it’s a done deal or not?] [*]
Although United States officials have long held up Mr. Saleh as a crucial partner on counterterrorism, they signaled earlier this month that they would like to see him go. Saudi Arabia and other Arab states have quietly made similar gestures. The foreign minister of the United Arab Emirates, Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al Nahyan, met with his Yemeni counterpart on Saturday and urged him to accept the Gulf Cooperation Council’s proposal for Mr. Saleh’s departure.
The protest movement has drawn strength from high-level defections, including diplomats, ministers and the country’s top military officer. As in other protests across the Arab world, bloody clashes with street protesters have fueled popular anger. In Yemen, at least 130 people have been killed in confrontations with the police, soldiers and irregular forces.
Leaders of the street protest movement issued a statement on Saturday making clear that they would hold fast to their demands, including Mr. Saleh’s unconditional and immediate resignation. There is a gulf between the grass-roots protest movement and Yemen’s formal political opposition, an unwieldy coalition of Islamists, Socialists and other smaller groups who are widely viewed as compromised because of earlier deals many of them have made with Mr. Saleh.
“This is a show,” said Khaled Alansi, a member of the 20-member organizing committee of the street protests in Sana, the capital. “Everyone believes that Saleh is just buying time for more attacks against the protesters. No one trusts him.” [*]
Other opposition figures said they believed Mr. Saleh might defer formalizing the proposal, which calls for him to step down 30 days after it is signed. He might then use terrorist attacks or other pretexts for staying on, the opposition members say.
One advantage of the proposed deal for Mr. Saleh is the immunity clause. He has insisted on such protection from prosecution for him and his relatives, apparently fearing the anger generated by recent shootings in Yemen and the precedent set in Egypt, where former president Hosni Mubarak and his two sons have been detained.
Mr. Saleh has outlasted numerous crises in Yemen’s treacherous political landscape, where the central government has long struggled to assert its authority against powerful tribes and insurgent movements. In recent years, the challenges to his government have grown. Yemen, on the arid southern corner of the Arabian peninsula, is the Arab world’s poorest country, rapidly running out of oil and water. The government has faced an intermittent uprising by rebels in the north, who have taken advantage of the political crisis in recent months and now appear to control large swaths of the country. In the south, a secessionist movement has fostered chaos, allowing jihadists to find sanctuary.
Yemen’s branch of Al Qaeda has become an increasingly global concern, especially after it launched two terrorist attacks at the United States: a plot against a Detroit-bound jetliner in late 2009 and a plot to explode parcels bound for Chicago last year. Anwar al Awlaki, an American-born jihadist who has been linked to several recent attacks, has become a concern for American counterterrorism authorities and is hiding with his powerful tribe in southern Yemen. [*]
Mr. Saleh’s skill at duping and dividing his enemies may account for the opposition’s deep concern about the terms of any deal to remove him from power. On Saturday, even as he agreed to the proposal for his exit, he delivered a speech at a military academy in which he accused the Yemeni opposition of “dragging the country into civil war.” That added to the impression among his critics that Mr. Saleh never expected or intended for the transition offer to be accepted.
Reporting was contributed by Michael Slackman from Krakow, Poland; Nasser Arrabyee from Sana, Yemen; Thom Shanker from Washington; and Mona El-Naggar from Cairo.

Iranian Leader Asserts Power Over President

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/24/world/middleeast/24iran.html
April 23, 2011
Iranian Leader Asserts Power Over President
By WILLIAM YONG [Iran] [Iran’s incredible factionalism] [Iran’s thugocracy versus the Green Movement that emerged after 2009 elections] [thugocaracy sets next year, 2012, for legislative elections] [followup] [even within the ruling coalition (faction really) there are tensions on occasion with Surpreme Leader (Supreme Thug) Ayatollah Khamenei calling out Ahmadinejad?] [followup, yesterday] [*]
TEHRAN — Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said Saturday that he remained ready to intervene in the country’s political affairs if the nation’s interests were being “neglected,” [*]continuing a rare public flexing of his power days after a disagreement with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad flared into the open.[*]
In a speech to supporters in Fars Province that was broadcast live on state television, he praised Mr. Ahmadinejad’s administration. But he said that the country’s religious leadership would remain the ultimate authority. “While the leadership is alive, it will never allow deviation in the movement of the Iranian nation toward its goals,” [*]he said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/24/world/middleeast/24iran.html
April 23, 2011
Iranian Leader Asserts Power Over President
By WILLIAM YONG [Iran] [Iran’s incredible factionalism] [Iran’s thugocracy versus the Green Movement that emerged after 2009 elections] [thugocaracy sets next year, 2012, for legislative elections] [followup] [even within the ruling coalition (faction really) there are tensions on occasion with Surpreme Leader (Supreme Thug) Ayatollah Khamenei calling out Ahmadinejad?] [followup, yesterday] [*]
TEHRAN — Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said Saturday that he remained ready to intervene in the country’s political affairs if the nation’s interests were being “neglected,” [*]continuing a rare public flexing of his power days after a disagreement with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad flared into the open.[*]
In a speech to supporters in Fars Province that was broadcast live on state television, he praised Mr. Ahmadinejad’s administration. But he said that the country’s religious leadership would remain the ultimate authority. “While the leadership is alive, it will never allow deviation in the movement of the Iranian nation toward its goals,” [*]he said.
The statement came after a week of public tension between the president and Mr. Khamenei over what was seen as an effort by Mr. Ahmadinejad to extend control over the politically sensitive Intelligence Ministry.
On Wednesday, Mr. Khamenei refused to accept the resignation of the intelligence minister, Heydar Moslehi, a hard-line cleric, proclaiming his support for Mr. Moslehi through semiofficial news agencies. [*]IRNA, Iran’s state-run news agency, had reported the minister’s resignation last Sunday.
According to domestic news reports, Iran’s Parliament on Wednesday endorsed Mr. Moslehi as minister, effectively seconding the supreme leader’s authority. [*]
There was speculation that Mr. Moslehi resigned after efforts were made to block his dismissal of a senior intelligence official supported by Esfandiar Rahim-Mashaei, Mr. Ahmadinejad’s former chief of staff. Mr. Rahim-Mashaei is known to have significant influence with the president but is unpopular among the old right. [that is, dead weight who Ahmadinejad insists on carrying?] [*]
Mr. Khamenei’s public statement asserting his authority was rare for a leader who has long projected the image of an impartial arbiter — an image he seemed to sacrifice during the 2009 presidential election, when he came out in favor of the re-election of Mr. Ahmadinejad.
Still, since the election the relationship between the two men has been strained by several attempts to test the limits of presidential power. [*]

Afghan Police Seek to Stop Illicit Trade in Uniforms

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/24/world/asia/24afghanistan.html
April 23, 2011
Afghan Police Seek to Stop Illicit Trade in Uniforms
By RAY RIVERA [Afghanistan] [AfPak] [even as US commits much money and support to Pakistan’s govt] [Obama’s “surge” continues] [after “surge” has success around Kandahar, insurgency strikes back?] [psci 355-455, 469] [spring offensive is back on?] [reconciliation fits and starts] [Afghanis beginning to worry about the spate of recent attacks with jihadis in uniforms!?] [followup] [*]
KABUL, Afghanistan — The police on Saturday ratcheted up enforcement on stores and tailor shops that illegally make and sell military and police uniforms after a string of attacks by insurgents dressed as Afghan service members that have cast suspicion on the country’s security forces.
In the Kohan Froshi market, a sprawling open-air bazaar in downtown Kabul, teams of police officers made morning raids through the stalls, confiscating hundreds of uniforms, boots, badges, insignia and other military and police items, said Gen. Mohammad Ayoub Salangi, the police chief of Kabul Province.
In addition to confiscating uniforms and equipment, the police issued stern warnings to shop

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/24/world/asia/24afghanistan.html
April 23, 2011
Afghan Police Seek to Stop Illicit Trade in Uniforms
By RAY RIVERA [Afghanistan] [AfPak] [even as US commits much money and support to Pakistan’s govt] [Obama’s “surge” continues] [after “surge” has success around Kandahar, insurgency strikes back?] [psci 355-455, 469] [spring offensive is back on?] [reconciliation fits and starts] [Afghanis beginning to worry about the spate of recent attacks with jihadis in uniforms!?] [followup] [*]
KABUL, Afghanistan — The police on Saturday ratcheted up enforcement on stores and tailor shops that illegally make and sell military and police uniforms after a string of attacks by insurgents dressed as Afghan service members that have cast suspicion on the country’s security forces.
In the Kohan Froshi market, a sprawling open-air bazaar in downtown Kabul, teams of police officers made morning raids through the stalls, confiscating hundreds of uniforms, boots, badges, insignia and other military and police items, said Gen. Mohammad Ayoub Salangi, the police chief of Ka