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Keeping watch on the Obama administration

Obama Considers Reaching Out to Taliban

AFP

WASHINGTON (AFP) – US President Barack Obama said the United States is not winning the war in Afghanistan and hinted at possible talks with moderate elements of the Taliban.

Highlighting the success of the US strategy of bringing some Sunni Iraqi insurgents to the negotiating table and away from Al-Qaeda, Obama told The New York Times that “there may be some comparable opportunities in Afghanistan and the Pakistani region.”

The strategy in Iraq had been developed by General David Petraeus, then commander of US forces in the country.

“If you talk to General Petraeus, I think he would argue that part of the success in Iraq involved reaching out to people that we would consider to be Islamic fundamentalists, but who were willing to work with us because they had been completely alienated by the tactics of Al-Qaeda in Iraq,” Obama said in the interview published in the online edition of the Times.

But Obama warned that Afghanistan was not Iraq, and that reconciliation efforts could face difficulties …

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March 8, 2009 Posted by | Afghanistan, Al-Qaeda, Barack Obama, Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, Iraq, Military, Obama, Obama Administration, Pakistan, People, Petraeus, Taliban | , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment

Biden Forges Old-School Vice Presidency, More Mondale than Cheney

By Margaret Talev | McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama’s been laying on the praise so thick for his vice president that even a guy as self-deprecating as Joe Biden might wonder if Obama’s messing with him.

“We call him ‘The Sheriff,’” Obama said recently, talking about how he’s asked Biden to oversee implementation of the $787 billion economic stimulus. “Nobody messes with Joe,” the president said in his first formal address to Congress.

After less than two months in office, Obama also has called on Biden, 66, to act as a foreign-policy emissary, run a middle-class task force, stand in on national network morning shows and round up support for the administration by tapping allies in organized labor and friends from both political parties on Capitol Hill.

Entrusted with far more than funerals and ribbon cuttings, Biden’s responded with deference and gratitude, but hasn’t quite curbed his penchant for stream-of-consciousness monologues and wisecracks that makes Obama uneasy …

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March 6, 2009 Posted by | Afghanistan, Barack Obama, Congress, Economy, Foreign Affairs, Joe Biden, Obama, Obama Administration, Pakistan, People, Stimulus | Leave a Comment

Kyrgyzstan Issues Eviction Notice to Key US Base

US Airbase in Kyrgyzstan

By LEILA SARALAYEVA | Associated Press

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan – Kyrgyzstan ordered U.S. forces on Friday to depart within six months from an air base key to military operations in Afghanistan, complicating plans to send more troops to battle rising Taliban and al-Qaida violence.

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said, however, that he believed the base was not a “closed issue.” The U.S. has said it would consider paying more rent to keep the base open.

Pakistani militants have stepped up attacks on convoys traveling the primary supply route to Afghanistan in recent months pushing U.S. officials to secure alternative, northern routes through Central Asia.

The U.S. announced a small victory in that hunt Friday — saying neighboring Uzbekistan had granted permission for the transit of non-lethal cargo to Afghanistan …

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February 20, 2009 Posted by | Afghanistan, Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, Kyrgyzstan, Obama, Obama Administration, Pakistan, Uzbekistan | , , , , | Leave a Comment

Where’s Bin Laden? Science May Hold the Answer

By Dan Vergano, USA TODAY

Fugitive terrorist Osama bin Laden is most likely hiding out in a walled compound in a Pakistani border town, according to a satellite-aided geographic analysis released today.

A research team led by geographer Thomas Gillespie of the University of California-Los Angeles used geographic analytical tools that have been successful in locating urban criminals and endangered species.

Basing their conclusion on nighttime satellite images and other techniques, the scientists suggest bin Laden may well be in one of three compounds in Parachinar, a town 12 miles from the Pakistan border. The research incorporates public reports of bin Laden’s habits and whereabouts since his flight from the Tora Bora region of Afghanistan in 2001.

The results, reported in the MIT International Review, are being greeted with polite but skeptical interest among people involved in the hunt for bin Laden, the al-Qaeda leader behind 9/11. Bin Laden’s whereabouts are considered “one of the most important political questions of our time,” the study notes.

“I’ve never really believed the sitting-in-a-cave theory. That’s the last place you would want to be bottled up,” Gillespie says. The study’s real value, he says, is in combining satellite records of geographic locations, patterns of nighttime electricity use and population-detection methods to produce a technique for locating fugitives …

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February 17, 2009 Posted by | Bin Laden, Pakistan | , | Leave a Comment

   

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