- 23 Dead in Afghanistan Bombings; Most Bagram Detainees Mercenaries
- 2 Bombings Rock Peshawar: Karzai Inaugurated
- Cloughley: Defeating the Taliban in Pakistan's Tribal Areas
- Al-Hashimi Vetoes Voter Bill; US military Suicides Spke
- India decries joint US-China statement on Indo-Pak Relations
- BBC: Africa population tops a billion
- Pakistani Military Takes Taliban Strongholds; Maulana Fazlullah Surfaces in Afghanistan
- Palin and the Muslim Fundamentalists (Reprint Edn.)
- 20-Year-Old Letterhead points to Israeli Forgery in Francop Affair
- Bombings, Corruption Plague Afghanistan; French Commander Targeted
- Neocons, Islamist Marxists attack Iranian-Americans as way of Getting at Obama
- Palestinians Consider Going to the UNO for a State; Israeli Right threatens to Recognize its own Colonies in Retaliation
- Peshawar Bombing Kills 12; Tablighi Turn against Taliban
- The Only Anchor
- Taliban Bomb ISI HQ in Peshawar
- Tripathi: Afghanistan and Presidential Dilemmas
- Obama Demands an End-Game before Committing Troops to Afghanistan
- Veterans Day
- Bombing in Charsadda Kills 34
- Hikmatyar: Bin Laden Alive; Suggests Taliban/al-Qaeda Split
- Iraqi Parliament Passes Electoral Law; Obama hails move toward Indpendence; Kurdistan wins on Kirkuk
- Ibish: "Against a One-State Solution"
- Baradei says Inspectors found 'Nothing;' But Israeli Attack Plans not Tabled
- Mahmoud Abbas Threatens to Step Down in Light of Ongoing Israeli Colonization of West Bank
- Right Wing & Settler Press in Israel Denounce Peace Process, Goldstone
US Forces Launch Helmand Campaign; Pakistani Public turns Against Taliban but Still Rejects US Intervention
Thursday, July 2, 2009Some 4,000 US military personnel and 650 Afghan troops are launching an assault on Taliban positions in Helmand Province, with an aim to 'take, clear and hold' in emulation of the counter-insurgency tactics deployed successfully in some parts of Iraq. Helmand has been a
particularly violent province in recent years, and is also the major poppy-producing area of Afghanistan. Past US/Afghan government forcible poppy eradication campaigns angered local farmers and probably contributed to the increased guerrilla activity. This policy of forcible eradication has now been abandoned, though drug interdiction efforts continue. I am not sure the people the US forces in
Helmand will be fighting are actually 'Taliban' in the sense of being seminarians loyal to Mulla Omar of Quetta.
Presumably this campaign has been launched now in anticipation of the August 20 presidential elections, which President Hamid Karzai is widely anticipated to win. The elections will require more law and order in some southern, Pushtun provinces than has recently been the case.
A new poll by worldpublicopinion.org has found that the Pakistani public has turned against the Taliban in a big way, with 81% now seeing the Taliban in the Northwest of Pakistan as a critical threat to the country. This is up from 34% in September, 2007. And some
two-thirds of Pakistanis view all religious militant groups in the country as a whole as a critical threat to it. This proportion is up from 38% in September of 2007, and it is a significant shift, since a lot of Pakistanis had view the religious militants as freedom fighters for the cause of Kashmir or the liberation of Afghanistan from Western occupation.
The bad news for President Obama is that the Pakistani public's souring on the Taliban has not resulted in higher favorability ratings for the United States. A majority does not trust Obama to do the right thing. Overwhelming majorities believe the US wants to divide and weaken the Muslim world, and 82% reject Obama's predator drone strikes on Pakistani soil. Some 79% want the war in Afghanistan
ended now.
In other words, as religious nationalism appears to have declined in Pakistan (something visible in the parliamentary elections of 2008), other forms of secular nationalism have taken its place, no less anti-imperialist in character. Pakistan was born in a struggle to throw off two centuries of British rule in South Asia, and once you go through a thing like that, having Western troops actively
intervening in a Muslim neighbor is just not welcome.
End/ (Not Continued)
Original article from http://www.juancole.com/2009/07/us-forces-launch-helmand-campaign.html