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Commentary: Playing with fire

Cardinal Theodore McCarrick (C), speaks while flanked by Dr. Ingrid Mattson (R), President, Islamic Society of North America, and other religious leaders during a news conference denouncing the growing intolerance against the Islamic faith on September 7, 2010 in Washington, DC. Various religious leaders attended the news conference to lend their support to the Muslim community in the wake of the controversy surrounding the planned Park 51, a New York City Muslim community center and Mosque near Ground Zero in lower Manhattan. Conversely a small Florida church named the Dove World Outreach Center has announced it's plan to hold a burning of the holy book of Islam, the Quran on September 11. Photo courtesy AFP.

Despite floods, Pakistan keeps up fight on militants: US
Washington (AFP) Sept 8, 2010 - The Pakistan military has kept up pressure on Islamist militants in the northwest despite devastating floods that have required major relief efforts, a top US officer said on Wednesday. Vice Admiral Michael LeFever, who oversees US military assistance in Pakistan, said Islamabad has not pulled troops out of the fight against insurgents but has had to divert some aircraft needed for rescue efforts due to the massive flooding. "We have not seen any of the Pakistan military forces move out of the areas that they were involved in the west and the northwest," LeFever told a news conference. Some "aviation resources" that would usually support counter-insurgency operations had to be deployed "to rescue people and to help" with relief efforts, he said.

"But as far as the number of troops and the focus of the Pakistan military...it's not wavered in the west or in the northwest." The admiral cited a recent air strike in the Tirah Valley against insurgents as an example that Pakistan was "taking the fight" to the militants, even amid the crisis caused by the flooding. "So it shows me they are still very much concerned with extremists and the operations, and they continue to do that while doing their relief operations," he said. Amid fears extremists might try to exploit the flooding to wage violence, militants up and down the country's western areas have launched a series of assaults over the past week as Muslims mark the final days of the holy fasting month of Ramadan. On Monday, at least 19 people were killed in a suicide attack against a police station in Pakistan, where the Taliban allies of Al-Qaeda have stepped up their campaign which has claimed more than 3,700 lives in three years.

The extensive flooding -- the country's worst disaster in living memory -- has affected both the Islamist insurgents and Pakistani government forces, and it remains unclear how the disaster might alter Islamabad's military campaign plan, LeFever added. "As far as their campaign line, as in anything, I think there's adjustments that are made based on resources that are available and troops that are available." The United Nations said Tuesday the floods have left 10 million people without shelter, as authorities rushed to bolster river defenses to save two towns from catastrophe. LeFever called the floods an "urgent crisis" and said the US military was committed to helping with relief work, deploying helicopters and transport planes to rescue victims and deliver aid. Since August 5, the US military has helped rescue 12,871 people and delivered more than four million pounds of relief supplies, he said.
by Arnaud De Borchgrave
Washington (UPI) Sep 8, 2010
A southern U.S. preacher with a flock of 50 in Gainesville, Fla., decided to mark the ninth anniversary of 9/11 by lighting a fire that quickly circled the globe -- with a public burning of the Koran, much the way Hitler ordered public bonfires fueled with books written by Jews.

The Rev. Terry Jones dubbed it "International Burn a Koran Day." The sign outside his Dove World Outreach Center reads, "ISLAM IS OF THE DEVIL," next to which this instant celebrity posed for national and international media.

For Muslims, the Koran is the word of God as dictated to the Prophet Mohammed.

Within hours, angry crowds had gathered in Kabul, Afghanistan, and Jakarta, Indonesia, and other Muslim capitals threatening retaliation if Jones goes through with his plan. Christians in Muslim countries suddenly felt threatened and Afghan army recruits demanded explanations of their U.S. advisers.

Unless Jones canceled his Koran book burning, scheduled for Saturday, Christians throughout the world's 1.2 billion-strong Muslim nations and Muslim communities would suddenly feel threatened. Those who converted from Islam to Christianity would be prime targets.

For many Muslims, 9/11 was a pretext former U.S. President George W. Bush used to launch a "crusade" against Islam. This, in turn, convinced countless Pakistanis, even Western-educated ones, to swallow the canard that the FBI and Mossad had plotted 9/11. The objective was a pretext to attack Afghanistan as a backdoor into Pakistan -- and its nuclear arsenal.

For Muslims everywhere, the burning of the Koran could only mean that Christians hate Muslims. In 2005, a Danish cartoon satirizing the Prophet Muhammad triggered bloody riots from Indonesia to Afghanistan to Pakistan to Libya to Nigeria; in all, scores were killed.

One Nigerian group threw a tire around one man, poured gasoline on him and set him ablaze. Ambassadors were recalled and embassies attacked. And the Danish cartoonist pressed his attack by telling interviewers his drawings were inspired by "terrorism -- which gets its spiritual ammunition from Islam."

Even if a superannuated preacher canceled the public burning of the Koran, the damage had already been done. Other men of the cloth in the South have leveled similar accusations against Islam.

The Rev. James Collins is described by his friends as "one of the most respected Christian ministers in the South." Muslims, says this verbal bomb-thrower, "continue the agenda of world conquest with lies, deception, terrorism, poverty, child molestation, enslavement of women, honor killings and ultimate death to all infidels who do not submit to Islam and the non-existent moon god they call Allah." His perorations are downhill from there.

These are the counterparts of what is taught in Koranic madrassas in Pakistan where young boys are brainwashed with horror stories about Christian and Jewish infidels out to destroy Islam. After 10 years in a madrassa, many youngsters embrace suicide missions.

U.S. Army Gen. David Petraeus, the supreme commander in Afghanistan, warned that the irreverent reverend in Florida could derail the U.S./NATO campaign against Taliban's Muslim extremist insurgents -- and endanger Americans worldwide.

Jones conceded Petraeus had a point but not sufficiently persuasive to cancel his Koranic book burning.

Most threatened was the gigantic effort to stand up an Afghan army with a view to replacing more than 100,000 U.S. and 47,000 in NATO units. There are 148,000 trained Afghan troops. They are 86 percent illiterate. And it's a safe bet there are Taliban agents in their ranks, just as there were Vietcong agents in South Vietnamese units whose mission was to spread disinformation about U.S. intentions. In Afghan ranks, they can see on their uncensored TV news programs what is happening among preachers in Florida.

Al-Jazeera's global newscast in English showed a group of heavily armed Taliban insurgents on motorcycles warning local villagers not to vote in national elections Sept. 18. Voters have to dip a finger in indelible ink to make sure they only vote once. Taliban guerrillas warned them ink-stained fingers would be cut off.

NATO members pledged 2,796 trainers but only 500 showed up. The NATO bureaucracy in Brussels couldn't make it happen, according to one U.S. officer involved in the program. Most NATO countries are steadily reducing their defense budgets.

The target is for 200,000 Afghan troops over the next 15 months at a cost of $21 billion. The Pentagon hopes to sustain and "regenerate" -- to replace those who disappeared after the first paycheck or two -- an additional 105,000, for a total of 305,000 by Fiscal Year 2015.

At the present rate of recruiting and training, the United States needs $8 billion a month. But this is scheduled to be drastically reduced with Fiscal Year 2012 at $6.7 billion a year; 2013 at $6.4 billion; then 2014 at $5.9 billion and 2015 at $5.8 billion.

Clearly, a number of U.S. contractors are milking -- and jeopardizing -- the entire Afghan army effort. A recent investigation showed these "entrepreneurs" charging copying paper at 20 U.S. cents a sheet and little altar bells for U.S. trainers attending Catholic mass at $500 per bell. This was the kind of ripoff that persuaded Congress in 1975 to cut off military assistance to the South Vietnamese army.

A few hours later, the South Vietnamese army, which had fought well without U.S. advisers for two years, decided the United States had betrayed them -- and resistance quickly collapsed.



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THE STANS
Outside View: Snakes on a plane
Washington (UPI) Sep 8, 2010
In Pakistan, following the catastrophic flooding that literally is drowning an entire nation, could things get much worse? Unfortunately, last week, things did. While trivial by comparison with the human suffering, several snapshots portray the level of poisons within the U.S.-Pakistani relationships as well as with other friends and would-be Pakistani benefactors that could be toxic. / ... read more







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