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U.S. military carries out airstrikes on Kunduz after Taliban attack
Today's Headlines
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Page 4: Opinion
9 22:00 JohnQC [6] 
2 14:53 Pappy [3] 
3 11:15 trailing wife [9] 
8 21:59 rammer [14] 
Page 1: WoT Operations
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Page 2: WoT Background
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Page 3: Non-WoT
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Page 6: Politix
8 16:21 Sven the pelter [5]
Afghanistan
Afghan Taliban's victory
[DAWN] THE fall of Kunduz may have been near inevitable, but the effect has nevertheless been dramatic. First, there is the symbolism: the fall of a northern city, far removed from the sanctuaries Pakistain is accused of providing and even further from the Afghan Taliban strongholds in the south of the country; its occurrence on the eve of the unity government's first year in charge; a significant Taliban victory as the annual fighting season approaches its end; a bustling provincial capital falling back into the hands of the Taliban some 14 years after they were swept from power by a US-led coalition. Then, there are the grim realities of the war itself. This fighting season has been unprecedented in terms of losses suffered by the Afghan National Security Forces and gains made by the Afghan Taliban. Kunduz was under Taliban assault last September and again this April, and each time the same pattern revealed itself: poor coordination among the Afghan army, police and local police and an abject lack of leadership. While the Taliban assault does seem sophisticated and well-coordinated, a great deal of the problem appears to have resulted from the failure of the ANSF.

There is even speculation that Kunduz was allowed to fall because rushing in forces from neighbouring provinces could have worsened the security situation in other regions. That theory will be tested now that the Afghan government has declared retaking Kunduz a priority. It will not be easy, however. With Taliban forces now inside the city and mixing with the local population, fighting will likely cause civilian causalities and damage to the city's infrastructure. Victory, if the Afghan state does succeed in retaking Kunduz, may well be a Pyrrhic one. The problems for the Ashraf Ghani
...former chancellor of Kabul University, now president of Afghanistan. Before returning to Afghanistan in 2002 he was a scholar of political science and anthropology. He worked at the World Bank working on international development assistance. As Finance Minister of Afghanistan between July 2002 and December 2004, he led Afghanistan's attempted economic recovery until the Karzais stole all the money. ..
-led government though go far beyond Kunduz. A year on, the unity government appears to be going nowhere. If anything, it appears to have been a strategic error by the US to force Mr Ghani and his rival for the presidency, Abdullah Abdullah
... the former foreign minister of the Northern Alliance government, advisor to Masood, and candidate for president against Karzai. Dr. Abdullah was born in Kabul and is half Tadjik and half Pashtun...
, into an arrangement that neither really wanted. The Afghan government was never a service-oriented, people-centric entity under president Hamid Maybe I'll join the Taliban Karzai
... A former Baltimore restaurateur, now 12th and current President of Afghanistan, displacing the legitimate president Rabbani in December 2004. He was installed as the dominant political figure after the removal of the Taliban regime in late 2001 in a vain attempt to put a Pashtun face on the successor state to the Taliban. After the 2004 presidential election, he was declared president regardless of what the actual vote count was. He won a second, even more dubious, five-year-term after the 2009 presidential election. His grip on reality has been slipping steadily since around 2007, probably from heavy drug use...
, but that was precisely what Mr Ghani had vowed to change. Instead, he has been bogged down in the endless politics of maintaining an unnatural coalition.

Worrying too are the prospects for the resumption of talks between the Afghan Taliban and the Afghan government. Even as Mullah Mansour's negotiating position appears to have hardened, the Afghan government seems unsure about engaging the Taliban in talks at all. Perhaps, following the collapse of the second round of the Murree talks, elements inside the Afghan state had hoped that the Taliban would splinter so that they would be easier to deal with on the battlefield. But that has not come to pass -- leaving the Afghan government seemingly at a loss about how to proceed.
Posted by: Fred || 09/30/2015 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under: Govt of Pakistan

#1  So will we see Taliban & ISIS go at each other in Pashtunate?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 09/30/2015 5:34 Comments || Top||

#2  Shame they can't both lose.
Posted by: Pappy || 09/30/2015 14:53 Comments || Top||


Arabia
How fatalism serves the rulers
[Hurriyet Daily News] You must have heard about the latest disaster in Mecca, Islam's holiest city, on Sept. 24. More than 700 pilgrims died in a stampede on the way to the ritual of "stoning the devil." And this was only a repetition of similar disasters that happened again in Mecca, and again during the Hajj, the annual pilgrimage that millions of Moslems come from all around the world to do.

Besides the painful human tragedy, there are many theological implications of this disaster. One wonders, for example, whether we Moslems would defy the devil better by throwing less stones at him, and also by causing fewer deaths among ourselves. In other words, perhaps we should think better about the meaning of Islam's centuries-old rituals, rather than trampling on each other to observe them literally and blindly.

Another key aspect of the disaster is the way it was interpreted by Soddy Arabia
...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. When the oil runs out the rest of the world is going to kick sand in the Soddy national face...
's top religious leader, Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul Aziz al-Sheikh. Two days after the incident, the 74-year-old holy man visited Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Nayef, who is both the interior minister and head of the Saudi Hajj committee. "You are not responsible for what happened," the sheikh said to the prince. He added:

"As for the things that humans cannot control, you are not blamed for them. Fate and destiny are inevitable."

When I read this, I said, "Wow." For this was a perfect example of the deep trouble in the Moslem world that I have been writing about: Fatalism used as an excuse for ridding humans of responsibility -- especially humans in power. For when you declare something as "God's will," it becomes impossible to ask further questions. All you are left with is the duty to accept and obey; and not just God, but also the ruler.

In fact, this political benefit was the very reason fatalism was initially established in Islam, decades after the Qur'an and the Prophet, by the Umayyad dynasty. Most Umayyad sultans, who also claimed to be "caliphs," were corrupt despots who faced both political and religious opposition. In return, they promoted "Jabriyyah," the fatalist school that argued every human action is predetermined by God. The political implication was that the Umayyad rule was predetermined by God as well -- and questioning it would be tantamount to blasphemy!

Meanwhile,
...back at the the conspirators' cleverly concealed hideout Montefiore's foot was still stuck and the hound had completely soaked his uniform with slobber...
the Umayyads also made sure to suppress the dangerous idea of free will. Scholars who defended this view, arguing that humans who have the freedom to make decisions are thus responsible for their actions, were persecuted. One of them, Ghaylan al-Dimashqi, who proclaimed that rulers cannot regard their power as "a gift from God," was executed.

It is possible to see the echoes of that Umayyad-serving-fatalism in the Saudi sheikh's blessing of the Saudi crown prince. Some ideas persist, as the purposes that they serve.

However,
corruption finds a dozen alibis for its evil deeds...
it is good to see that this is not the only line of thought among the Saudi ruling elite today. In fact, the crown prince himself was not sufficed with the "fate and destiny" argument and ordered an investigation.

Moreover, King Salman
...either the largest species of Pacific salmon or the current Sheikh of the Burnin' Sands, Cutodian of the Two Holy Mosquesand Lord of Most of the Arabians....
also stepped in, ordered a "revision" of the pilgrimage organization and dismissed three bigwigs: the minister of the Hajj, the mayor of Mecca, and the city's police chief.

These are positive steps. Apparently in Saudi Arabia, as elsewhere, there is both an archaic notion of religion that serves nothing but nurturing blind obedience, but also a more rational, responsible approach that also has its grounds in the very core texts of Islam. The latter is the only way forward.
Posted by: Fred || 09/30/2015 00:00 || Comments || Link || [9 views] Top|| File under: Govt of Saudi Arabia

#1  "As for the things that humans cannot control, you are not blamed for them. Fate and destiny are inevitable."

Unless it's being done to you. Then it's the 'slings and arrows of outrageous fortune' to whence take arms against and by doing so, end them.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 09/30/2015 9:16 Comments || Top||

#2  "Jabriyyah,", or al-Jabariyah, the fatalist school.founded by Jahm Ibn Sufwan which holds that man acts as he does by "God's eternal and immutable decree."
Posted by: Beldar Sloque3832 || 09/30/2015 10:19 Comments || Top||

#3  In that case why all the fuss against Israel, which is clearly an instrument of Allah's will?
Posted by: trailing wife || 09/30/2015 11:15 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Will Putin be able to carry al-Assad forever?
[Hurriyet Daily News] The bottom line of the Syria talks between the U.S. President Barack Obama
They get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren't like them...
and Russian President Vladimir Putin
...Second and fourth President and sixth of the Russian Federation and the first to remain sober. Putin is credited with bringing political stability and re-establishing something like the rule of law, which occasionally results in somebody dropping dead from polonium poisoning. Under Putin, a new group of business magnates controlling significant swathes of Russia's economy has emerged, all of whom have close personal ties to Putin. The old bunch, without close personal ties to Putin, are in jail or in exile or dead...
is that they agree that Syria today under Bashir al-Assad is no longer sustainable, but they disagree on the future of al-Assad himself.
Continued on Page 49
Posted by: Fred || 09/30/2015 00:00 || Comments || Link || [14 views] Top|| File under: Govt of Syria

#1  Only as long as he Assad proves successful in fighting-n-destroying the Hard Boyz.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 09/30/2015 3:06 Comments || Top||

#2  Repeating the same mistake as Afghanistan and Iraq. This isn't about individual x or y. It's about which ethno-religious group is in power.

Thinking that getting fid off a particular individual make everything all brotherly love is delusional.
Posted by: phil_b || 09/30/2015 4:46 Comments || Top||

#3  but Putin's outright support for a terrible anti-hero like al-Assad is not something I can understand or accept

Because it's not a Hollywood movie?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 09/30/2015 5:32 Comments || Top||

#4  What does Putin get out of cozying up to Assad? Influence, intelligence a warm water port in the Mediterranean and some commerce. He is jockeying to get the prestige in the M.E. that Obean has so easily given up.
Posted by: JohnQC || 09/30/2015 8:33 Comments || Top||

#5  but Putin's outright support for a terrible anti-hero like al-Assad is not something I can understand or accept

two words, Joseph Stalin. Seemed acceptable '41-'45.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 09/30/2015 9:20 Comments || Top||

#6  OK, Assad is a bad guy. What is your alternative? More war and chaos, right? Refugees streaming into Europe? US, Russian, Chinese, Turkish and Iranian troops all united to defeat ISIS and install a democratic government in Damascus? WWIII?

How about if we all back off and let the Arabs figure it out for themselves?
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305 || 09/30/2015 12:12 Comments || Top||

#7  > think al-Assad can have no place in the future of Syria

A cunning diplomatic play on words... No more Syria, no more problems.

All Hail Assad president of Alawiteistan..
Posted by: Bright Pebbles || 09/30/2015 13:13 Comments || Top||

#8  This really is a positive development.

Assad fought the Syrian rebels and lost.

Then the Iranians and Hasbullah joined him in fighting the Syrian rebels and lost.

Now the Russians have joined him, and will lose.

Letting our enemies waste their resources on losses is not a bad strategy.

Posted by: rammer || 09/30/2015 21:59 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
Trapped in a Nightmare
[PJMedia] Brett Stephens in his article, "An Unteachable President [1]" in the Wall Street Journal, makes a serious attempt to construct a rational theory to explain why the president doubles down when he's losing -- and why the public can't get him to change.

...Why does he keep doing that? Stephens thinks it's because Obama is the kind of man who believes the Cold War was won by "peaceful protest", convinced that "a strategy of retreat and accommodation, a bias against intervention, a preference for minimal responses" is enlightened foreign policy, and most of all believes he is unalterably correct -- "on the right side of history" -- therefore could never be wrong.

Based on these assumptions naturally the president never learns for how can one improve upon perfection?

...Stephens fails to take his reasoning to the logical conclusion. The president is unteachable because the political system itself is incapable of learning. The paralysis of Barack Obama but a reflection of the political stroke which has frozen Washington. The Capital itself is in a dream. In that deadly reverie truth is indistinguishable from fiction [10]. Everything in that topsy-turvy world is a storyline.
Behavior that is rewarded is reinforced.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 09/30/2015 06:52 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "Unteachable?" Or abysmally naive and stupid?
Posted by: JohnQC || 09/30/2015 8:36 Comments || Top||

#2  You want to reconsider "naive", JQC.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 09/30/2015 8:58 Comments || Top||

#3  Or just plain closed minded wrapped around the Leftest indoctrination that Western Civ and America are evil simply because they've been more successful in history than others. It's like a flat worm trying to comprehend a three dimensional world. It's what happens when you destroy real history and substitute the 'narrative'.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 09/30/2015 9:08 Comments || Top||

#4  Or just plain closed minded wrapped around the Leftest indoctrination

In short thribesmen
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 09/30/2015 10:24 Comments || Top||

#5  ...and why the public can't get him to change.

That's cute - like O'Bama would give a rat's about someone else's opinion.
Posted by: Raj || 09/30/2015 10:55 Comments || Top||

#6  My sense is that any serious work of the presidency at this point is totally the province of ValJar and the disciples. Champ enjoys those acts that allow him to bloviate, act impressive and brilliantly insightful, or play with fawning partners (golf).
One wonders just how much choom in various forms is a part of his week.
Posted by: NoMoreBS || 09/30/2015 13:09 Comments || Top||

#7  Do they make choom chewing gum? I mean, are we being too charitable by assuming that the gum we see him chewing is nicorette? I googled it and this was the best I could find...

Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305 || 09/30/2015 16:15 Comments || Top||

#8  the more worrying conclusion is that we cannot intervene because the country is broke, the iraq and afghan wars cost too much money and the US is forced not to interfere.

there does come a point where looking after the roads hospitals and schools of ones own taxpayers is more important than foreign affairs

having said that - look at isis.

and look at the complete failure of government to declare Islamist theocratic fascism the enemy, to ban sharia and to tell the muslim *community* that YES they are going to be targeted until the war is over and that NO this is not unfair.
Posted by: anon1 || 09/30/2015 18:07 Comments || Top||

#9  The front-runner for the Democratic presidential nomination was urged to seek help by her husband Bill Clinton – and he told her: ‘Let’s ask Steven [Spielberg] for help,’ according to the book, which is called Unlikeable. She is downright unlikeable. IMO there is little anyone can do to make her more so.

Whenever the Donks get in power, we all get a little more trapped in their nightmare.
Posted by: JohnQC || 09/30/2015 22:00 Comments || Top||



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Two weeks of WOT
Wed 2015-09-30
  U.S. military carries out airstrikes on Kunduz after Taliban attack
Tue 2015-09-29
  Kunduz Falls To The Taliban
Mon 2015-09-28
  85 Pakistani IS turbans killed in Nangarhar province of Afghanistan
Sun 2015-09-27
  Iraqi security reports slow advance into Ramadi
Sat 2015-09-26
  Fighting in city of Taiz kill 3 children, 10 fighters
Fri 2015-09-25
  ISIS hits famous mosque in Yeman - dozens dead
Thu 2015-09-24
  Insurgent group pledges allegiance to al Qaeda's Syria wing
Wed 2015-09-23
  Death toll hits 117 after NE Nigeria bombings
Tue 2015-09-22
  Child migrants entering U.S. rises in August
Mon 2015-09-21
  Al Qaeda-linked suicide bomber blows himself up during Karachi raid
Sun 2015-09-20
  Former bin Laden lieutenant killed in Syria: monitor
Sat 2015-09-19
  Army captain among 29 killed in TTP-claimed attack on PAF camp in Peshawar
Fri 2015-09-18
  Suicide bombers kill dozens in Baghdad, ISIS claims they dunnit
Thu 2015-09-17
  Musa Qala district cleared of Taliban militants, MoD says
Wed 2015-09-16
  Kuwait Sentences Seven to Death over Imam Sadeq (AS) Mosque Suicide Attack


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