Monday, February 29, 2016

US coalition mulling ground invasion in Syria

US coalition mulling ground invasion in Syria
Al-Bab Report



Saudi Arabia has acknowledged that the US-led anti-ISIS coalition has held a “political” discussion about a potential ground troop deployment in Syria. 
In an interview with Reuters, an aide to Saudi Arabia's defense minister, Brigadier General Ahmed Asseri, confirmed that defense ministers from the anti-Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) coalition debated placing ground troops on the ground in Syria during a ministerial meeting in Brussels last month.
The general stressed that if the decision is made, Saudis would be more than willing to contribute troops – a move that Syria strongly warned against on a number of occasions. Asseri also acknowledged that Riyadh has been working on the military implementation of a possible Syria invasion.
Washington also confirmed Saudi Arabia’s’ willingness to strike targets in Syria, with State Department spokesman John Kirby saying that the US would welcome the Kingdom's participation.
Meanwhile, a US defense official stated that Washington would continue to support forces on the ground in Syria that fight against Islamic State terrorists.
Therefore, there is a marked contradiction in the US policy towards Syria. To pursue peace or to go for invasion, that is the question. 

Pakistan was created to protect human rights

Pakistan was created to protect human rights
Dr. Jassim Taqui

“Let me reiterate before starting my lecture on Hum
an Rights that Pakistan  was created to promote the ideals of Human Rights and not otherwise. I appeal to His Eminence the Pop to personally interfere to protect the Human Rights in Kashmir. Pakistan fully supports the legitimate Human Rights of the Palestinian people. I support the role of the Pak Army in North Waziristan since its mission is to save the innocent people of FATA from the remnants of Al-Qaeda, TTP and other militant outfits. Building State’s institutions is the only viable way to defeat rogue elements. Fatima Jinnah contested the Governor of Pakistan’s elections. Had she defeated Gen. Ayub Khan, the 1965 war with India might not had happened ,”  were the highlights of a lecture by former Chief Justice of Pakistan Ali Nawaz Chowhan who was the Oxbridge speaker at Serena Hotel, Islamabad. The topic was Human Rights.

Chowhan said that  protecting Human Rights is a fundamental principle of Holy Quran, quoting extensively from the Holy Book and the Tradition of Prophet Muhammad(PBUH).

He traced protecting Human Rights to the Founding Father of Pakistan Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, quoting his speech in February, 1948 in which he stated . “ Make no mistake that Pakistan was not created to be a theocracy.”
 He also quoted Jinnah’s address to the Constituent Assembly on 11th August, 1947 in which he said, “ You are free: you are free to go to your temples, you are free to go to your mosques or to any other place of worship in this State of Pakistan. You may belong to any religion or caste or creed- that has nothing to do with the business of the State.”

Turning to Pakistan Thinker Allama Muhammad Iqbal, Chowhan quoted his speeches, books and poetry in which he called for the unity, equality and freedom of the people. He also highlighted Iqbal’s call for exercising ijtihad (independent judgment)in his book titled “The reconstruction of Religious Thoughts in Islam.”

The concluding remarks were delivered by the renowned scholar and poet Dr.Irshad Ullah Khan, Secretary General Rhodes Scholar. He stated that Chowhan delivered a lecture full of wisdom. He described him as a man of deep insight and acumen. Khan disclosed that he was the only civilian who was allowed to visit North Waziristan and testified that “ the Army there was fighting for the human rights of the Waziris, which were usurped by Al-Qaeda and the militants.” He also called for protecting the human rights of the poor and the middle class of the society.

The ever green and renowned journalist Anjum Niaz surprised the elite gathering by demanding full human rights of women who constitute over 50 percent of the population of Pakistan. Everyone agreed.

Chief Justice Ali Nawaz Chowhan was elected International Judge of the United Nations by the General Assembly and worked as such for the UN at The Hague, the Netherland 2006-2009 with the diplomatic status of Under Secretary General of the UN. He was the Chief Justice of the Republic of Gambia for over two years. Presently, he is the first Chairman of the National Commission for Human Rights, Government of Pakistan. He was appointed by the President on the unanimous recommendation of the parliamentary  committee of both houses of Pakistan.


Note: Due to the importance of the topic and the fact that the lecture was not off record, our self-imposed brevity is regrettably sacrificed. 

Saturday, February 27, 2016

Iran, Azerbaijan Ink Oil Swap Deal

Iran, Azerbaijan Ink Oil Swap Deal



TEHRAN (Tasnim) – Iran and the Republic of Azerbaijan recently signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to boost mutual cooperation in swapping oil from Iran’s territory, the managing director of the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) announced.
“In the MoU that has recently been signed between the NIOC and the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan Republic (SOCAR), the two countries agreed on the oil swap from Iranian soil,” Rokneddin Javadi said.
Mutual cooperation in other areas, including tapping the capacities of the Caspian Sea, was also agreed upon in the deal, he noted.
Azerbaijan is seeking to utilize Iran’s research capacities in oil and gas sectors, Javadi, who is also the deputy oil minister, added.  
The MoU was among the 11 agreements signed during a visit by Azeri President Ilham Aliyev to Tehran earlier this week.
Cabinet ministers and senior officials from the two neighboring countries signed the agreements in a range of fields.
It was Aliyev’s second visit to Iran during President Rouhani’s tenure. The first was in spring 2014.
Iran and Azerbaijan have accelerated efforts in recent years to forge closer partnership in various fields, from fighting against terrorism to the exchange of electricity or gas deals.
Source: Tasnim News Agency. 

Iran twin elections held in calm climate

Iran twin elections held in calm climate




Iran's Interior Minister Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli says the country’s vital parliamentary and Assembly of Experts elections were held in a calm and secure climate.The elections were held in a peaceful political and security atmosphere, Rahmani Fazli told reporters on Saturday.

He added that no ballot box in any constituency across Iran has so far been declared null and void because of irregularities.
The Iranian minister said some 33 million voters or more than 60 percent of eligible voters turned out in the twin crucial elections on Friday.
As vote counting is still underway in some constituencies, including Tehran, the voter turnout will be certainly higher, he noted.
Rahmani Fazli said vote counting in 48 constituencies has ended, adding that the run-off parliamentary elections will be held for 13 constituencies.
The run-off for some seats will be held in late (Iranian month of) Farvardin or early Ordibehesht (late April), he said.
The Iranian minister further said votes of more than 3,000 ballot boxes have so far been counted in Tehran.
The results in Tehran will be announced tonight but it will take longer to declare the final result, he added.
He put the number of registered voters in Tehran Province at 3.9 million people, which amounts to nearly 48 percent of the eligible voters in the capital.
Initial results of Experts Assembly elections in Tehran
According to the initial results of the Assembly of Experts elections in Tehran Province released by the Interior Ministry, 1,506,803 votes have been counted so far and former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and President Hassan Rouhani are leading with 692,248 and 652,792 votes respectively.
Current member of the Assembly Mohsen Qomi and Friday Prayers leaders Mohammad Aqa Emami and Mohammad Ali Movahedi are in third to fifth slots. Secretary of the Guardian Council Ahmad Jannati, Intelligence Minister Mahmoud Alavi and current head of the Assembly Mohammad Yazdi are 10th to 12th while Mohammad Taqi Mesbah, who is also a member of the Assembly, is 16th with 336,843 ballots.
At least 33 million out of 55 million eligible voters took part in the two key elections.
As many as 4,844 candidates, including about 500 women, were competing for a place in the 290-seat Parliament. A total of 159 others were running for the 88-member Assembly of Experts. Members of the Assembly serve eight-year terms while MPs are elected every four years.
Source: Press TV, Iran. 

The spread of Erotic Poetry

The spread of Erotic Poetry
Dr. Jassim Taqui




The Arab world is witnessing a new phenomenon that spreads evil, moral corruption, false and secret rumor and slander. This phenomenon is called “ Secret Acts” or “ Erotic Poetry”, which is practiced by feminine who blow on knots to produce “ black magic” with the objective of corrupting men through seductive charm.

The erotic poetry is not new. It was practiced in Arabia even before Islam. The Holy Quran referred to it in (113-4).
However, the inability of the Arabs to control the internet and Social Media, is viewed as the main reason behind the erotic poetry. A group of people started the use of nafath (reading holy Quran on a small quantity of water and blowing air on it) as a mean of curing the “seduced” and expelling evil from him simply by drinking that water.

Nafth creates a “barrier” between the seduced and the intense feeling of desire that makes him believe that sex is not sordid or ugly but the ultimate salvation. Many influential Arab personalities insist that it is the erotic poetry that is making a large number of youth join ISIS as a volunteers in a bid to escape the black magic.



US Embassy improves school management in Sindh

UNITED STATES PARTNERS WITH SINDH GOVERNMENT TO IMPROVE SCHOOL MANAGEMENT IN SINDH




Karachi – The Sindh Education and Literacy Department signed agreements with two organizations to manage the first group of schools constructed under the U.S. Agency for International Development’s (USAID) Sindh Basic Education Program.  The management agreements — with the Institute of Business Administration Sukkur and Charter for Compassion Pakistan — apply to four schools in Khairpur and Sukkur districts.

American Ambassador David Hale, Sindh Chief Minister Syed Qaim Ali Shah, Pakistan People’s Party Chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, U.S. Consul General in Karachi Brian Heath, and USAID Provincial Director Craig Buck attended the signing ceremony.

“Our hope is that working with teachers, staff, and local communities, these new partnerships will introduce innovations, help modernize the education system, and strengthen human resources,” Ambassador Hale said.  He added that true and lasting development starts with education.  “Support for education is one of America’s top priorities in Pakistan.  USAID is cooperating with Pakistan to carry out Pakistan’s comprehensive education programs to help millions of children and young adults rise as far in life as their hard work and initiative will take them.”

The Sindh government is forming partnerships with private sector organizations to manage and improve public schools under the Sindh Public Private Partnership Act 2010.  As part of its $155 million contribution to the Sindh Basic Education Program, USAID is funding the construction and management of a total of 106 schools in Khairpur, Sukkur, Dadu, Qamber-Shahdadkot, Kashmore-Kandhkot, Jacobabad, and Larkana as well as in five towns of Karachi.   For more inf

US and Journalism

AMERICAN AMBASSADOR INAUGURATE
CENTER FOR EXCELLENCE IN JOURNALISM



Karachi – American Ambassador David Hale and IBA Director Ishrat Hussain launched the Center for Excellence in Journalism (CEJ) at Karachi’s Institute of Business Administration (IBA) on February 27, 2016. The U.S. State Department provided $4 million in funding to construct the center and establish a curriculum and training programs.

“A free and professional press is a cornerstone of democracy and played a crucial role in America’s history,” said Ambassador Hale. “This center Center for Excellence in Journalism aims to help journalists gain and improve their skills so they can play their indispensable role in the public discourse of their country.”  The CEJ will become the nexus of U.S. government and partner organization efforts to provide training and exchanges for Pakistani journalists to advance a free, dynamic press.

Consul General Brian Heath, CEJ Board Chairperson Kamal Siddiqui, CEJ Acting Director Christie-Marie Lauder, International Center for Journalists Vice President Patrick Butler, Northwestern University Medill School of Journalism Professor Craig Duff and State Department consultant Larry Pintak also attended.

“The Institute of Business Administration has long been at the forefront of innovation in education and I am very pleased to add yet another component to that prestigious portfolio with the launch of the Center for Excellence in Journalism,” said Dr. Ishrat. “Today, we bring that excellence to journalism and multimedia studies. We expect the Center for Excellence in Journalism to attract the best and brightest journalism and multimedia professionals,” he said.


Source: US Information Center, Islamabad. 

Khojaly Genocide

Khojaly Genocide

Dr. Jassim Taqui





A Seminar on the 24th anniversary of Khojaly Genocide: perspective of “Nagorno-Karabakh and Kashmir Disputes” was organized by the department of International Relations, National Defense Universityalong with the Embassy of Azerbaijan at the National Security Hall in the premises of the National Defence University. The session was chaired by Ms. Amb. Fauzia Nasreen who is affiliated with the
Department of Centre for Policy Studies at COMSATS and the Institute of Information and Technology Islamabad.

The panelists included Dr. Nazir Hussain, professor of Quaid-e-Azam University Islamabad, Mr. Irfan ullah Khan, Director ECO and CARs, Foreign Office of Pakistan, Dr. Muhammad Khan, the Headof department of International Relations at the National Defense University, Ms. Asiya Mahar, a Research Scholar in IPRI and lastly, Mr. Chingiz Garibli, the acting ambassador of Azerbaijan in Pakistan.

The session commenced with the recitation of the holy Quran followed by the welcoming remarks by Dr. Muhammad Khan who briefly introduced the brotherly relationship between Pakistan and Azerbaijanand strongly condemned the Khojaly Genocide which was carried out at the hands of the Armenian Army. His remarks were followed by the screening of a video that portrayed the atrocities carried out by the Armenian army in Nagorno-Karabagh of Azerbaijan which left the audience speechless.

Amb. Fauzia Nasreen, the chair of the session formally opened the discussion on the aforementioned topic by stating that it is important to look at the massive human rights violations that were carried out on the night of 25th February and that she looked forward to an extremely useful presentation and aninteractive session. She also commented on the video, saying that the pin drop silence, observed during
the screening of the video, portrayed the pain that each member of the audience felt while watching the horrendous episode of human brutality.

The first speaker of the session, Dr. Nazir Hussain highlighted the importance of the bilateral relationship between Pakistan and Azerbaijan. He condemned the occurrence of such events in the 21stcentury with all the technological advancements and added responsibility for human life. He thanked Mr. Muhammad Khan for selecting a topic that was aside from the traditional topics discussed in such
forums.
Dr. Nazir stressed on the fact that in order to have good relations with other countries it is necessary to have a commonality of interests. He then talked about Pakistan’s entry into Central Asiawhich he deemed as one of the success of Pakistan’s foreign office and was based upon the solidarity of the Muslim Ummah connected through a similarity of culture, religion, tradition and the famous Silk
Route that linked Minor Asia with the Indian subcontinent along with the potential benefits for the region. He further described Azerbaijan’s support for Pakistan’s case on Kashmir and Pakistan’s stance ofnot developing any relations with Armenia and the recognition of the genocide. He also delineated Azerbaijan’s relief efforts with the support that it rendered to Pakistan in the event of 2005 earthquake and the floods of 2011 and also the establishment of a school in Muzaffarabad. Lastly, the speakerstressed upon the need for the development of direct flights between the countries to establish individual to individual contact and to work beyond the paradigms of military and politics.

The next speaker, Mr. Irfan Ullah Khan talked about the importance of energy based projects like TAPI gas pipeline project which was inaugurated on 12th December 2015 and which might point towards thepossibility of the availability of LNG in Baluchistan and the importance of CASA-1000. He then shared a number of facts with the audience regarding the area, population, current officials, the importance ofthe geographical location and a number of visits by the Pakistani high officials to Azerbaijan and vice versa. He further explained the motives of Pakistan’s support for Azerbaijan on the Nagorno-Karabakhconflict and Azerbaijan’s support for Pakistan on Kashmir dispute, and the cooperation between the two countries on the economic, military and political fronts concluding with the importance of Pakistan-
Azerbaijan Joint Ministerial Commission that run under the department of finance in collaboration with the foreign office.

The next speaker was Dr. Muhammad Khan who spoke about the Khojaly genocide and the human rights violations that took place during the massacres. He recounted the horrible tails of humansuffering, with particular reference to the mutilation of corpses and other scenes that were witnessed during the event. He specifically talked about the number of people who were murdered (613) withfurther reference to the number of children, elderly and the people who were displaced. He then juxtaposed the figures with the acts of shoot to kill, torture, custodial killings, arson and looting and incidences of rape and molestation. From 1990-2015 the total deaths in Kashmir amassed to 113,000.

Lastly he drew parallels between the tragedy of Kashmir and Khojaly broadly referring to the violations of human rights and international law, the insensitivity of the international community, the silence of the global media and the major powers, the non-implementation of the UN resolution and thecontinuation of violence and massacre of the effected areas.

The second last speaker of the event Ms Asiya Mahar commented on the insignificant percentage of trade that goes on between the states of Pakistan and Azerbaijan and forecasted that through the activedevelopment of economic relations, both countries hope to achieve over ten years trade turnover of
US $10 billion per year. She also emphasized upon new measures of cooperation between the two with president Aliyev’’s orders to build a station to generate 1000MW of electricity in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa(KPK), the commencement of direct flights by the Turkish airlines between the two capitals and the introduction of a new procedure of tourist e-visa system by the Azerbaijani government in 2013.

Furthermore, She commented on the efforts of the first lady of Azerbaijan, Mehriban Aliyeva, president of Heydar Aliyev Foundation” in Pakistan and is known for its work there. She further delineated thestrategic importance of the two countries focusing upon the challenges to cooperation and further suggestions that could remove such impediments.

Lastly, Mr Chingiz Garibli thanked the department for highlighting the importance of commemorating Khojaly Genocide and for arranging a meaningful seminar. He traced the political and diplomaticrelations and external challenges faced by both Pakistan and Azerbaijan and ended his address in a lot of optimism, hoping that in the near future more chances of collaboration would emerge.

Once the Panelists were done, the floor was opened for a question answer session where the energetic audience asked a number of pertinent questions like the future prospects of cooperation and thesimilarities between the aggressors in the case of both Kashmir and Nagorno Karabakh.


Towards the end of the session, the chair summed up the important aspects of the meaningful discussion that took place earlier and hoped for an optimistic future.


Friday, February 26, 2016

China and the Great Depression

China and the Great Depression

Released at the height of the Great Depression, The Shanghai Express was a welcome departure from the economic ravages that had so scarred America. The 1932 runaway hit eclipsed even Grand Hotel at the box office and proved to be the pinnacle of Marlene Dietrich’s and director Josef von Sternberg’s collaborative efforts. The fourth of seven movies this pair produced is a decadently delectable affair chronicling a group of passengers journeying from Beijing to Shanghai during a Chinese civil war.
As the New York Times said at the time, Dietrich portrayed courtesan Shanghai Lily in flawless form: “She glides through her scenes with heavy eyelids and puffing on her cigarettes.” The film would go in to be awarded the Oscar for Best Cinematography.
If only this weekend’s G-20 meeting in Shanghai held the prospect of such glamour, intrigue and theatre. “Marginalized” better describes the position commanded by the Group of 20 against the current global economic backdrop.
In alphabetical order, the international policy forum consists of 19 individual countries including Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United States as well as the European Union.
Given the high stakes dramas playing out in uniquely distinct and yet interconnected fashion in every single participant’s respective economy, one could be forgiven for concluding that much would be afoot over the next several days at the Shanghai summit.
Alas, as a Financial Times editorial opined, “In the seven years since it was elevated to the level of supposed guardian of global stability, the G-20 grouping of large economies has struggled to make a noticeable impact.”
This weekend is not expected to elevate the group’s depressed status despite the fanfare that should have accompanied China’s rotating into the position of the G-20’s presidency this year. Such is the reality of the repudiated yet raging currency war that can never amount to anything but a zero sum game.
In a different world, the gathering could have opened a dialogue to conceive a 21st Century answer to yesteryear’s Bretton Woods and Plaza Accord. The monetary authority powers that be could have deigned to implement a coordinated adjustment to exchange rates for the greater good of a world economy flashing increasing recessionary signals.
But we’re not there yet. Deny, deny, deny rules the day. The U.S. Treasury Secretary did just that in a Bloomberg interview earlier this week: “This is not a moment of crisis. This is a moment where you’ve got real economies doing better than markets think.”
And so we’re told to turn a blind eye to aggregate global debt being appreciably higher than it was when the global economy careened into the financial crisis. And we acquiesce to those massaging the data to keep the propaganda machine up and running.
The latest case in point: global trade. Count the volume of trade; discount its value. Then you can resolutely reject the news that 2015 marked a 13.8-percent decline in the dollar value of goods traded globally, the first contraction since 2009.
Even the G-20 participants are asked to leave their common sense at the door. The gathered group of finance ministers and central-bank governors will quiescently defer to the other Group, the Group of 30, whose current driving philosophy dictates that more is more, at least if you’re referring to negative interest rates dropping further into the abyss and engulfing more and more countries as they spread across the globe like a monetary plague.
The hope is that the convening countries can convince the nervous onlookers that they can manage to at least retain the veneer of economic diplomacy. U.S. officials emphasized that they expect all of their compatriots to reiterate their commitment to play fair and, “honor their commitments to avoid persistent exchange-rate misalignments and not target exchange rates for competitive purposes.” Isn’t that nice?
As for the foreign reserves outflow scare, Miller’s take is that most fly by night authorities on the subject haven’t the foggiest idea what they’re talking about. Markets have swung wildly based mostly on conjecture fed by high profile hedge fund managers ‘talking their book.’ The truth is, very little can be gleaned given so little data are released in January and February due to distortions introduced by the Chinese New Year.
While desperate times call for desperate measures, desperation itself can be damaging. So countries continue to fire their weapons hoping the silencer is screwed tightly onto the barrel, all the better to not engage their neighbor next door whose currency has just strengthened. The problem is it doesn’t take long for the neighbor to look down and see their opening wound. And so the injured neighbor retaliates as quietly as it can. And so on.
Source: Money Strong. 


Pakistan Army is the best

Pakistan Army is the best





Pakistan Army chief Gen. Raheel Sharif on Friday that Pakistan Army is the best army in the world. “With our current achievements in the ongoing war on terror and standard of conventional war, ours is the best army,” General Raheel said, according to ISPR. 
The army chief said Pakistan should remain ready for a full spectrum of threat. “We have to remain ready for full spectrum of threat-morale of troops sky high, combat fitness commended.
The army chief’s statements came as he monitored an exercise of the Pakistan Army’s Bahawalpur & Multan Corps which ended Friday morning in Cholistan desert.
Earlier, the army chief had an Ariel view of the offensive manoeuvres during the military drills onbaord a combat attack helicopter.
Source: ISPR.

Al Qaeda Makes a Comeback

Al Qaeda Makes a Comeback



Intelligence analysts paid close attention last month when al Qaeda's master bombmaker, Ibrahim al Asiri — whose name tops U.S. kill lists — issued an audiotape from his hiding place.

The content was the usual anti-Saudi Arabian screed, sprinkled with threats against America — but the news was Asiri's sudden willingness to join the terror group's PR campaign. For years, the man who tried to take down planes with underwear and parcel bombs had laid low, as Al Qaeda's Yemen affiliate tried to protect him from U.S. drone strikes. In 2016, however, a resurgent Al Qaeda is emerging from the shadows. While ISIS has been soaking up headlines, its older sibling has been launching attacks and grabbing territory too, and U.S. intelligence officials tell NBC News they are increasingly concerned the older terror group is poised to build on its achievements.

"Al Qaeda affiliates are positioned to make gains in 2016," James Clapper, the director of national intelligence, warned the House Intelligence Committee Thursday.

Because of those far-flung affiliates, Al Qaeda "remains a serious threat to U.S. interests worldwide," Lt. Gen. Vincent Stewart, the director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, told Congress recently.

After seizing a large segment of Iraq and Syria, beheading Western hostages on camera and slaughtering civilians in the heart of Paris, ISIS has eclipsed its extremist rival as the biggest brand in global jihad.

But U.S. officials tell NBC News that Al Qaeda — though its core in Pakistan has been degraded by years of CIA drone strikes — is now experiencing renewed strength through its affiliates, led by Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) in Yemen and the Nusra Front in Syria. Clapper called the two groups Al Qaeda's "most capable" affiliates in his House testimony Thursday.

Both branches have expanded their territorial holdings over the last year amid civil wars. Russian air strikes against the Nusra Front, and CIA drone attacks on AQAP leaders, have set them back, but have not come close to destroying them.

Al Qaeda has not managed to attack a Western target recently, but it continues to inspire plots. There is no evidence December's mass shooting in San Bernardino, California was directed by Al Qaeda, but Syed Rizwan Farook, who carried out the attack with his wife Tashfeen Malik, appears to have been radicalized by Al Qaeda long before the rise of ISIS. He was a consumer of videos by Al Qaeda's Somalia affiliate and the AQAP preacher Anwar al Awlaki, court records show.

Al Qaeda attacks on hotels in Burkina Faso in January and Mali in November, which together killed dozens of people, appeared to affirm the threat posed by the terror group's Saharan branch, Al Qaeda in the Islamic Magreb, or AQIM.

Stewart added that intelligence officials are also "concerned Al Qaeda could reestablish a significant presence in Afghanistan and Pakistan, if regional counter terrorism pressure deceases."

In Yemen, AQAP has benefited from the power vacuum created by the Houthi rebels' uprising, and the air war on the Houthis by Saudi Arabia.

AQAP last April seized the city of Mukalla, the capital of Hadramout province and a port city with a population of some 300,000. It looted a bank of more than $1 million in cash, U.S. officials said, and released 300 inmates from jail.

Since then, the group has expanded its territory in the provinces of Abyan and Shabwa, its traditional strongholds.

"AQAP's expansion is unchecked because there is no one on the ground to put any pressure on the organization," noted Geoffrey Johnsen, a Yemen expert. "What is left of Yemen's military is too busy fighting other enemies to engage AQAP, and the Saudis are focused on rolling back the Houthis. In the midst of Yemen's civil war, AQAP is able to pursue more territory and to plot, plan, and launch attacks."

The CIA is watching closely. Jalal Bala'idi, a prominent AQAP field commander, was killed in an agency drone strike in February.

AQAP's seizures of territory have "allowed them to operate more openly, have access to a port, and have access to other kinds of infrastructure that has certainly benefited them," a U.S. intelligence official told NBC News. At the same time, he said, the U.S. has "managed to remove many significant figures from the battlefield and keep AQAP somewhat at bay."

Al Qaeda's Syrian affiliate gets less public attention than others. Western media reporting sometimes refers to the Nusra front as a Syrian rebel group, without mentioning that it's part of the global terrorism organization.

But Nusra is as well-organized and disciplined as any Al Qaeda affiliate, U.S. intelligence officials say. Although it is now focused on defeating Assad, its battle tested fighters could pose a risk to the West in the years ahead.

"Jabhat al Nusra is a core component of the al Qaeda network and probably poses the most dangerous threat to the U.S. from Al Qaeda in the coming years," the Institute for the Study of War, a Washington think tank, said in a recent report. "Al Qaeda is pursuing phased, gradual, and sophisticated strategies that favor letting ISIS attract the attention — and attacks — of the West while it builds the human infrastructure to support and sustain major gains in the future and for the long term."

U.S. air strikes have set back a group of Al Qaeda operatives in Syria known as the Khorasan Group, which embedded with Nusra while plotting attacks against the West, intelligence officials say.

But Nusra has trained a core of elite fighters, the ISW says. Georgetown terrorism expert Bruce Hoffman says Nusra has achieved Osama bin Laden's goal of re- branding Al Qaeda and moving away from a name that had lost its luster.

The group's leader, Abu Mohammad al Julani, is hardly a household name in the West, but he is respected by his adversaries in American intelligence. He is believed to have been detained by the U.S. military in Iraq and released in 2008.

Hoffman, who served as the CIA's Scholar-in-Residence for Counter-terrorism, calls Nusra "even more dangerous and capable than ISIS."

Al Qaeda is watching ISIS "take all the heat and absorb all the blows while Al Qaeda quietly re-builds its military strength," he said. 

Source: NBC News. 


Oscar-Nominated Sharmeen Obaid

Oscar-Nominated Sharmeen Obaid





The first Oscar-winner in Pakistan's history is back in the Hollywood limelight this weekend as Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy's unflinching new documentary about 'honor killings,' A Girl In The River: The Price Of Forgiveness, competes for an Academy Award.
The 37-year-old Chinoy's previous film about acid-attack victims, Saving Face, won the top prize for a documentary short in 2012.
Chinoy spoke via e-mail with RFE/RL's Radio Mashaal correspondent Bashir Ahmad Gwakh about her shortlisted film, which revolves around Saba Qaisar, a 19-year-old girl from Pubjan Province whose father shot her in the head after she married without the family's permission. She also talked about the tribal pressure that eventually forced Qaisar to withdraw charges, the 1,000 or so honor killings a year that plague Pakistani society, and the Oscars.

Source: Radio Free Europe. 

U.S. Ambassador Blome’s Meeting with Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar

U.S. Ambassador Blome’s Meeting with Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar The below is attributable to U.S. Mission Spokes...