Saturday, August 7, 2010

Karzai Targets Two U.S.-Backed Task Forces

Karzai Targets Two U.S.-Backed Task Forces - WSJ.com

[AFCRIME1]
Associated Press

Fraud allegations plagued the August 2009 Afghan presidential election; above, voting at a Kabul mosque.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai stepped up tensions with the U.S. on Wednesday by asserting control over two American-backed anticorruption task forces, ordering a handpicked committee to review all their investigations.
U.S. officials see Mr. Karzai's decision as a way for the Afghan president to limit the inquiries that may touch his inner circle.
A senior U.S. official described the move, which followed last week's arrest of a senior presidential aide on corruption charges, as "a huge blow" to U.S.-backed efforts to clean up corruption in Afghanistan.
"What they're trying to do, what they're saying to us is: 'We don't care what you think. We've had enough,' " the official said.
U.S. officials say they are worried that members of both units may be in grave danger and are moving to try to protect them as best they can.
The disclosure came as new details emerged about the evidence against the arrested aide, Mohammed Zia Saleh, who had headed the administration of Afghanistan's National Security Council.
Agence France-Presse/Getty Images
French President Sarkozy, right, with President Karzai in 2008.
According to several Western officials, U.S.-backed investigators taped a conversation in which Mr. Saleh was negotiating a bribe—in the form of a car—in return for squashing an inquiry into the New Ansari Exchange, a large and influential money-transfer outfit. New Ansari has deep connections with prominent members of the Afghan government and the Karzai family, and, according to investigators, it is also suspected of links to Taliban insurgents and narcotics smugglers. The car, valued at about $10,000, was allegedly a small part of a larger proposed payoff, the officials said.
Mr. Karzai's chief spokesman, Waheed Omar, said he wasn't aware of the details of the case or whether Mr. Saleh, who is unavailable to comment, has said he is not guilty. Other officials in the Karzai administration have cast doubt on the recording's authenticity.

Cleanup Effort

Afghanistan's mixed record in recent years
  • June 2008: The international community confronts the Afghan government at the Paris Conference, one of the first big public pushes to get Afghan officials to improve their governance.
  • July: President Hamid Karzai issues a decree to establish the High Office of Oversight and Anti- Corruption.
  • August 2009: Karzai wins the presidential election amid accusations of mass fraud.
  • November: Transparency International ranks Afghanistan 179th out of 180 countries in its Corruption Perceptions Index, ahead of only Somalia.
  • February 2010: FBI director Robert Mueller inaugurates a major facility for Afghanistan's Major Crimes Task Force, which will see the U.S. mentor Afghan officials in fighting crime.
  • April: Afghan officials ask Interpol to help arrest Sediq Chakari, the former acting minister of hajj, on corruption charges. Mr. Chakari, who is accused of siphoning cash from Afghans making the pilgrimage to Mecca, Saudi Arabia, remains at large.
One of the anticorruption task forces raided New Ansari's Kabul offices in January. U.S. and Afghan investigators say the company has been instrumental in the massive exodus of money through Kabul's airport. It is responsible for the majority of the $3.18 billion in cash shipments listed on official records from the start of 2007 through February reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.
A U.S. congressional panel froze some $4 billion in nonurgent aid to Afghanistan after the Journal reported on the flight of cash in June. New Ansari's manager, Haji Muhammad Khan, has denied any wrongdoing by the company.
The Obama administration has made rooting out corruption in the Afghan government a key goal. Coalition commanders have said Afghan citizens' anger at the predatory behavior of Afghan government officials is the main reason the Taliban insurgency has been able to spread throughout the country and why the militancy shows no sign of abating despite the influx of tens of thousands of additional U.S. forces.
Mr. Karzai has responded to coalition pressure by pledging to crack down on graft, while at the same time claiming that most corruption in Afghanistan is perpetrated by the international community.
Members of Mr. Karzai's administration, meanwhile, have repeatedly interfered to stop corruption probes, U.S. officials say.
Asked about Mr. Karzai's decision on Wednesday, a spokeswoman at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul said the U.S. looks forward to working with the Afghan government to assist in the implementation of Mr. Karzai's pledges, made at a Kabul conference last month, "to undertake all necessary measures to increase transparency, accountability and tackle corruption."
Mr. Karzai's move to limit the inquiries isn't surprising, said Stephen Biddle, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and a member of the Pentagon's Defense Policy Board. "We have to expect pushback from him as the anticorruption campaign moves forward," Mr. Biddle said. "Any effective effort is inevitably going to meet resistance at multiple levels."
Over the past several months, the U.S. helped to create secretive, semiautonomous law-enforcement bodies that could effectively tackle high-level financial crimes and target senior Afghan officials implicated in graft and the drug trade. One of these bodies, the Sensitive Investigative Unit, which focuses on high-value drug traffickers, is mentored by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency and staffed by Afghan agents trained at the U.S. facility in Quantico, Va. It is the SIU that raided New Ansari's offices in Kabul in January.
The second agency, the Major Crimes Task Force, deals with high-level government corruption and organized crime, and is mentored by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation, the DEA and Britain's Serious Organised Crime Agency. Mr. Saleh of the National Security Council was arrested in a joint MCTF and SIU raid on his home last week.
Mr. Karzai viewed the arrest of such a senior official as an affront to Afghanistan's sovereignty, Afghan officials said. He appointed a special commission of inquiry, headed by Attorney General Mohammad Ishaq Aloko and including representatives of the ministry of justice and the National Security Council, to examine the operations of MCTF and SIU.
At a meeting Wednesday headed up by Mr. Karzai, the commission reported that the two units have repeatedly violated human rights. He ordered the commission to review all completed and current investigations and to report to him with conclusions, a statement from the presidential palace said. The meeting also decreed that "all the activities" of the units will be monitored by this commission while legislation about the agencies' future is drafted at the ministry of justice.
Mr. Omar, the president's spokesman, said Mr. Saleh's arrest "was not the only reason why the government wants MCTF to be monitored closely."

6 Americans on Aid Team Killed in Afghanistan

Friday, August 6, 2010

Letters to home

Here is all the polling data for the Afghan War.  This is the Business Insider regarding regarding the cost of war. This is US News & World Report: Will Cost of Afghanistan War Become a 2010 Campaign Issue? This is Zogby in Forbes regarding the war.

Voice of America: Source Exposure in WikiLeaks Documents Raises Security Questions.

20 Republicans Against The War In Afghanistan (VIDEO)  including Anne Coulter

Can't get any more conservative than these. Yes We Can! I don't care about Obama. And if you think I can ruin a politician's reputation-they don't have one! My objective is to put the war on the public's minds. It's about money and it never was about democracy. By your account, we have failed with democracy in our own country. So does Glenn Beck, Rush and Hannity. I agree.

Here is article from the Salinas Californian on the Tea Party. Politoco on Harry Reid. It is a conservative blog. Mitch McConnel won't campaign for Sharron Angle (Business Week)! , The National Journal: The Tea Party Paradox. Fox News:Political Polarization and Demonization Must End.

I believe the US is in a failed policy. But what's new. You are afraid of putting the war on the table. So are the Dems. I don't care if the senate is Republican. They are part of the problem. The No Leadership Party.

It is our job to criticize. It's our right. I have my facts and my opportunity. Stop accusing me of trying to take my country down. I want to take it back-and get a refund! The world will not fall if the US fails. We are not that powerful anymore. Perhaps if the citizens of this country accepted the truth, we might start fixing things.

Never be to proud to think it can't happen. I don't need a gun. That's your militaristic thinking not mine. I am just exposing the liars for who they are. They don't speak for me and I am insulted for them to use the term "Americans are against this and that". I am against them! I am NOT one of their Americans.

To paraphrase Rush, I want THEM to fail. Rot in their own political graveyard. Anyone that does not have a plan a is lost in the political rhetoric, I want them to fail. Here's Glenn Beck saying he does not care a "flying crap about the boarder or illegals" Flip flop!! Sharon Angle outake on FOX. She's like dumb. Romney on mandates. This is why I would vote for him but he has a lot of baggage. He's about as conservative a Pelossi. Here Meg "the Hag" Whitman. Just another RHINO wacko. Jerry Brown is more conservative.

Christine O'Donnel running for Bidens seat in a special election. I still trying to source this but she looks like another tea party mistake:

O'Donnell fell into personal and political financial difficulties before, during, and after her 2008 campaign.[2]  She was unable to pay the mortgage for her Wilmington house and the mortgage company gained a judgment against her for $90,000; the house was due to be sold at a sheriff's auction in August 2008 when she sold it the month prior to her campaign's legal counsel.[2]  In 2009, she moved to a townhouse elsewhere in Delaware, where she pays half the rent with campaign contributions because it doubles as her campaign headquarters for her 2010 senate run.[2] Her 2008 campaign ended over $23,000 in debt, and between 2007 and 2009 the Federal Election Commission cited her eight times for failing to find contributions reports.[2] As of 2010 she owes payments to staffers, consultants, and volunteers from that campaign.[2][14] The Internal Revenue Service placed a lien on her in 2010 for over $11,000 in taxes owed for 2005.[2] O'Donnell noted that the IRS agent handling the matter claimed the agency's action has been inappropriate.[2] She listed herself as self-employed and said she was doing "odd jobs" to make ends meet.

Sounds like a loser to me.

Scott Brown-the brainless beefcake. John McCain-Captain Trade. And Palin can't win. Even you know that. If she can't stand up to Katy Couric, for God's sake, what makes you think she can stand up to Pelossi?

Anti War, Pro Health Care, Conservative Democrat. I don't care what either party thinks. They are all fair game for attack. You support the politicians and big business. They are going to need it. It's not just me, Mom. The American public is angry and Republicans share the blame. I will smear anyone I want. They spend MY money. By the way the tax rollback will be repealed not health-care reform.

Good luck to the Repubs. They will need it. I think the public is waking up to their political scams too.
I have more and I am enjoying getting it out. You should see the hard core Liberal Left Smear Campaign. At least, I let these hacks tell their own lies........no I don't like them and I am glad my country is changing. It couldn't go on like this any longer. I am not angry. I am happy. God Bless America! We are waking up to the truth of our corrupt system. And our corrupt war. Our corrupt politicians, taxation and blasphemy. God Bless America! Case we are really gonna need it.

As long as we fight for the establishments of Islamic Republics, we are emboldening our enemies. I want out. We failed. Rush wants the Commander in Chief to fail! A blowhard patriot. He is a culpable a Assange of WikiLeaks. If they want to silence WikiLeaks, they should silence him as well. Your my mother so I don't have a beef with you.

Sorry those soldiers lost their lives. I truly am. I have heard there are a half a million soldiers with traumatic brain injuries. Nice job America.

27And if ye will not for all this hearken unto me, but walk contrary unto me; 28Then I will walk contrary unto you also in fury; and I, even I, will chastise you seven times for your sins. 29And ye shall eat the flesh of your sons, and the flesh of your daughters shall ye eat. (Leviticus 26:27-29, King James Version)

God's Word doesn't flip flop.

Pentagon threatens to 'compel' WikiLeaks to hand over Afghan war data

Pentagon threatens to 'compel' WikiLeaks to hand over Afghan war data - CSMonitor.com

• A daily summary of global reports on security issues.


With WikiLeaks now threatening to publish thousands more classified documents on the US war in Afghanistan, the Pentagon is demanding that the whistleblower website erase its extensive classified records and hand over all documents in its possession.

"The only acceptable course is for WikiLeaks to take steps to immediately return all versions of all of those documents to the US government and permanently delete them from its website, computers, and records," Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said on Thursday, according to the Guardian.

He added: "If doing the right thing is not good enough for them, then we will figure out what alternatives we have to compel them to do the right thing."

The White House had condemned the leak immediately after it appeared July 25, with National Security Adviser Gen. James Jones issuing a statement at the time that it "could put the lives of Americans and our partners at risk, and threaten our national security."

But now, with WikiLeaks threatening to release more classified documents, the Pentagon is upping the pressure. The New York Times reports:

Mr. Morrell’s appeal is the Obama administration’s latest response to the disclosure, which has set off a criminal inquiry by the Army and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, prompted a sweeping Pentagon review of the documents to hunt for any information damaging to troop safety and national security, and increased pressure on President Obama to defend his war strategy.

Adding to the urgency is that Wikileaks recently posted to its website a massive, encrypted file labeled "Insurance," which is 20 times larger than its last leak. Some speculate this latest file could be the 15,000 intelligence reports that Wikileaks purports to have and says it's holding back for vetting. Other guess they could be 260,000 diplomatic cables accessed by the now-imprisoned Army intelligence analyst Bradley Manning, the Associated Press reports.

Manning has been quoted as saying that US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton would "have a heart attack" when these files go public, and that they show "almost criminal political back dealings."

Some further speculate that WikiLeaks may be using the threat to publish more files as "insurance" should the government go after their staff or shut down their website, Al Jazeera reports.

Pentagon spokesman Morrell further criticized WikiLeaks for encouraging US insiders to engage in espionage. He called the website a "brazen solicitation to US government officials, including our military, to break the law," Al Jazeera adds.

But legal experts say that, other than going after individuals responsible for the leaks, there is little that the Pentagon can do, according to CNN. The opportunities to leak material has multiplied in the Internet era, compounded by the fact that the US military and 16 intelligence agencies are classifying more information and that more than 854,000 Americans have top-secret clearances, according to a recent Washington Post investigation.

"The classifying of information has gone way up – it's doubled or tripled since these wars began – and then we have nearly nine years and counting of Afghanistan and Iraq and the controversial practices associated with them," Coleen Rowley, a former field-office legal counsel for the Federal Bureau of Investigation told The Christian Science Monitor.

WikiLeaks appears to be showing some restraint in what it publishes. Founder Julian Assange has said that the organization is redacting names of those who could be harmed in the 15,000 documents that could be leaked. Through The New York Times, the group has asked the Obama administration to guide it on what should be redacted, CNN reports.

Steven Aftergood, a senior research analyst with the Federation of American Scientists who directs their Project on Government Secrecy, told National Public Radio that WikiLeaks made a "very important concession" to redact certain names and details from documents. "It means that transparency is not the unique and overriding value but that it needs to be factored in along with others, such as security and privacy."

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Terrorism charges against 14 Somalis in US reflect 'disturbing trend'

Terrorism charges against 14 Somalis in US reflect 'disturbing trend' - CSMonitor.com

The Justice Department charged 14 people Thursday with funneling recruits and otherwise supporting an Al Qaeda ally in Somalia.


The indictments, involving mostly US citizens in Alabama, California, and Minnesota, were handed down just as the Obama administration was issuing an annual terrorism report citing home-grown Islamic militants as a growing terrorism threat.

The indictments involve what the government described as a “deadly pipeline” of money and militants to the organization Al Shabab, a Somali insurgent group whose leaders have pledged allegiance to Al Qaeda.

US Attorney General Eric Holder said at a news conference that the indictments suggest “a very disturbing trend” of support for radical ideologies among some small subgroups of the youth population. He said the country “must prevent this kind of captivation from taking hold.”

The indictments focused on the Somali-American community, but Mr. Holder was explicit in praising the community’s leadership for assistance to federal authorities in their investigation of activities cited in the indictments.

The indictments provided the latest evidence of radicalization within the Somali-American community, a phenomenon that has been on the radar of federal law-enforcement agencies for the past few years. Some experts cite difficulties in assimilating for some members of the community’s youth population as one reason for the “captivation” with extremism.

That same argument is cited in the State Department’s annual terrorism report as a reason Islamist radicalism is likely to continue rising in Western centers of large immigrant populations, particularly in Western Europe.

The State Department also highlights the rise in the US of what are sometimes called “home-grown jihadis” – generally young US residents and citizens who become radicalized in their support for extremist Islamist ideologies – in its congressionally mandated annual assessment of trends in international terrorism.

The State Department report notes recent cases in which young Americans traveled to Pakistan and Somalia, reportedly to join the Islamist resistance groups. It also takes up the rise of a few Americans to leadership positions in militant groups.

The most famous example is that of Anwar al-Awlaki, an American citizen who has become an influential leader within Al Qaeda on the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) in Yemen. Mr. Awlaki has become a prominent English-speaking voice of radical Islam on the Internet, and is now perhaps the only US citizen on the government’s “capture or kill” list.

“Not only have there been more cases of Americans becoming operatives for foreign terrorist organizations, we have also seen US citizens rise in prominence as proponents of violent extremism,” the report says.

Another such case is that of Omar Hammani, also known as Abu Mansour al-Amriki, an Al Shabab leader who pledged allegiance to Al Qaeda in a May 2009 video. Mr. Hammani, a former Alabama resident and Al Shabab propagandist, has become one of the most prominent online voices of radical Islam.

State Department coordinator for counterterrorism Daniel Benjamin said that as disturbing as the rise in cases of home-grown Islamist radicalization may be, it is also a trend that was to be expected.

“At one point it was bound to happen that we would find greater radicalization” at home as radical Islamist ideology spread, he said. He cited, for example, Ethiopia’s invasion of Somalia beginning in 2006 as the source of “a great deal of anger” and the kind of event that could foment radical support.

Mr. Benjamin said he did not mean to suggest that domestic radicalization was somehow preordained, only that “in any large group, there is a probability that some small fraction of people will be attracted to any particular ideology over time.”

Benjamin also defended the government’s placement of Awlaki, a US citizen, on its "hit list."

"It's important for people to understand that [Awlaki] is not just a rabble-rouser … but he is involved quite directly in terrorist activity," he said. "There is no question he is a particularly dangerous individual.”

Officials Say Terrorist Recruitment Effort in US On Rise

Officials Say Terrorist Recruitment Effort in US On Rise | USA | English

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder (file)
Photo: AP

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder (file)


Related Articles

A series of arrests in the United States this week sheds light on a growing concern of law enforcement officials. Foreign terrorist organizations like al-Shabab in Somalia are receiving assistance from U.S. citizens. In some cases, those citizens are traveling abroad for terrorist training and are joining armed insurgencies. Experts say many of these citizens are ideal targets for terror recruitment.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation arrested 26-year-old Shaker Masri in Chicago on Tuesday, only hours before he was scheduled to board a flight for Somalia. He had told an FBI informant that he planned to travel to Somalia or Afghanistan to join an armed insurgency.

One day after Masri's arrest, the FBI charged 14 naturalized U.S. citizens from Minnesota, California and Alabama with providing material support to al-Shabab, a group the U.S. government has designated as a terrorist organization.

The U.S. Justice Department says two of the people indicted are already fighting for al-Shabab in Somalia, and that they appear in online videos for the group.

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said these latest arrests signal a dangerous and growing trend in the United States.

"We are seeing an increasing number of individuals, including U.S. citizens, who have become captivated by extremist ideology and have taken steps to carry out terrorist objectives, either at home or abroad," he said.

Thomas Mockaitis, a terrorism expert at DePaul University, says that although it is a relatively recent development in the United States, other countries have been dealing with domestic terrorists for some time.

"It's not exactly as new as you might think," he said. "It's very similar to what happened in Britain in the 1980s and '90s."

Mockaitis says that during that time, many young men from Afghanistan and Pakistan living in Britain returned to fight the Soviet occupation in Afghanistan.

Now, he says, Somalia is the destination of choice for those seeking to carry out a holy war.

"Somalia has become what Afghanistan was in the 1980s," said Mockaitis. "It is a failed state and it's a hotbed for [not only] conflict, but also the training and export of extremist activity."

Through methods that include recruiting in U.S. Somali communities and creating Internet videos promoting their cause, Mockaitis says al-Shabab is able to reach young men who might never have traveled to Somalia.

"Many of these people are in fact the children of refugees. They were probably born in Somalia or born soon after they [i.e., their mothers] came to the United States," he said. "And they are not particularly in touch with their parents. And yet, neither are they particularly attracted to or accepted by mainstream American culture. So there is this kind of double alienation that makes them particularly prone to recruitment."

Although some analysts say this might provide some insight into the motivations of those recruited in the large Somali community in Minnesota, for example, they say it does not explain what might have motivated terrorism suspect Shaker Masri, who was born in Alabama, lived in Chicago, and who has family in Jordan.

Masri was arrested after several conversations with an FBI informant.

Although authorities say Masri acted alone, terrorism analyst Thomas Mockaitis says most terrorism recruits find solidarity in a community of like-minded individuals.

"I'm not persuaded, and actually there is some research to suggest that people are not prone to self-radicalization, as we imagine," he said. "They don't just log on the Internet and suddenly become a jihadist. They often are persuaded by somebody they know - a family member, a friend, whatever the case may be."

Speaking to reporters at the Justice Department, Attorney General Eric Holder said he wanted to send a message to those arrested this week and others who might be charting a similar course.

"While our investigations are ongoing around the country, these arrests and charges should serve as an unmistakable warning to others considering joining or supporting terrorist groups like al-Shabab," he said. "If you choose this route, you can expect to find yourself in a U.S. jail cell or a casualty on the battlefield in Somalia."

As many as six suspected militants from Minnesota have already died in the fighting in Somalia.

Al-Shabab 3 of 3