Non-”Al-Qaeda” Ultra-Rightwing Fundamentalist White Boy Hitting Norwegian Liberals

23 07 2011

Arrested 32-year-old called himself nationalist

VG NETT

EXTREME RIGHT: Anders Behring Breivik (32) let the extreme right messages on websites.  Photo: Private“Everyone always holds a Norwegian passport is full of Norwegians’ … Which means that even Somali coach (with a Norwegian passport) who chew qat all day, banks wife and sends half the benefit of al-Shabaab should be viewed as a full Norwegian. If anyone in this country dared to look at the Somali shoulder as something other than a full Norwegians, they are racists and should burn marked public. And you say that everyone who disagrees with their extreme kulturmarxistiske world view – the utopian, global citizen definition are racists?. In that case, I think you have labeled 95% of the world’s population as just that but it does just a minor role for you?

Evacuated Apartment building: Armed police from the emergency squad was Friday night action at the apartment that the arrested 32-year-old put in Oslo.  All the neighbors were evacuated and the press were told to pull away.  Photo: Frode Hansen
Evacuated Apartment building: Armed police from the emergency squad was Friday night action at the apartment that the arrested 32-year-old put in Oslo.All the neighbors were evacuated and the press were told to pull away. Photo: Frode Hansen

Published 23.07.11 – 0:58, edited 23.07.11 – 11:20 (AP)

LONDON / Utøya (AP) Anders Behring Breivik (32) who has been arrested for the bomb in the city center, and mass killing of vermin, has lived in Oslo’s West End in his life, before he announced relocation of Hedmark for a month.

VG has received confirmation from several independent sources that it was Anders Behring Breivik, who was arrested by armed police after the mass killings of Utøya Friday.VG was also present when the emergency squad took action against the flat 32-year-old susceptible west of Oslo. Several foreign media have also named Breivik as the perpetrator. Unknown to the police

Arrested: Anders Behring Breivik (32). Photo: PRIVATE

From what VG has reported Breivik is unknown to the police before. He should have been convicted of minor traffic matters for over 10 years ago. He has no background in the military, apart from regular military service. He is registered with a Glock pistol, a rifle and a shotgun in the gun registry. Witnesses said the AP that the car the perpetrator used the stand by one of the jetties at Utstranda. The cars should be more weapons, including assault rifles. A childhood friend of Breivik says to VG Nett that he should have been right-wing in the late 20′s, and posted a series of controversial opinions on Facebook. The profile of his was deaktiviert after a while. He later created a new profile where it mainly is posted links to music videos. Do you know about the attacks or Breivik? Contact VG reporters here. Shortly before midnight police went into action against the apartment as a 32-year-old susceptible west of Oslo. Breivik must have lived there with his mother. - I was sitting in front of the TV at home and read newspapers. Suddenly the police came to the door and we were asked to leave the apartment immediately. I have not met in person, but saw him when he visits his mother, said neighbor Hemen Noaman (27), who lives on the same floor. Breivik established firm GeoFrame in 2009, and stated that the company should engage in the cultivation of vegetables, roots and tubers.The company in this industry you can get access to large amounts of fertilizer.The end of June / July, he moved well out of the apartment in Oslo west and rural Rena in Hedmark. Critical to Islam in your debates marks Anders Behring Breivik as well read, and a with strong opinions about Norwegian politics. He promotes a very conservative opinions, which he also called nationalist. He expresses himself strongly opposed to multiculturalism – that cultural differences can live together in a community. Breivik has had many posts on the site Document.no, an Islam-critical site that publishes news and commentary. In one of the posts he states that the policy in day no longer revolves around socialism against capitalism, but that the fight is between nationalism and internationalism. He expressed clear support for the nationalist mindset. Anders Behring Breivik has also commented on the Swedish news articles, where he makes it clear that he believes the media have failed by not being “NOK” Islam-critical. Created Twitter Account For six days ago he put out his first and only message on the social networking site Twitter, where he laid out a famous quote by British philosopher and sosialliberalisten John Stuart Mill. ”One person with a belief is equal to the force of 100 000 WHO garden only interests.” On Facebook provide Breivik to be the director of his own company Geofarm. He claims he has an education in finance and religion, but does not disclose what universities he should have studied at. The only school he gives are Oslo Handel. All the pictures on your Facebook profile is now available that were published as late as 17 July this year. All posts on the wall was published on 17 and 18 July. Let the image of pistolløp 32-year-old is among other things, registered as a member of Oslo gun club and the Masonic Lodge. Among other interests expresses his admiration for Winston Churcill, classical music and Max Manus. The 32-year-old man has been active in computer games and has been engaged in the online game World of Warcraft. In connection with this game, he posted a picture of a pistolløp.





91 people killed–The first thing he did was shoot the cutest girl he saw–Eyewitness to VG

23 07 2011

Police confirms: 91 people killed

DRAMATIC: There were dramatic scenes played out before rescue crews when they arrived Utøya Saturday.  Photo: Svein Wilhelmsen Gustav

DRAMATIC: There were dramatic scenes played out before rescue crews when they arrived Utøya Saturday. Photo: Svein Wilhelmsen Gustav

Eyewitness to VG: – The first thing he did was shoot the cutest girl he saw

Hid: Marius Helander Roset (left), Matt Moen Kristiansen and Jostein Helsingeng. The teenagers’ parents have given permission for them talking to VG.Photo: MATTIS SAND SHEET

UTSTRANDA / LONDON (AP) The three boys from Hedmark hid, while the mass killing the man walked around with a machine gun and tried to lure them out from their hiding place.

Marius Helander Roset, Matt Moen Kristiansen and Jostein Helsingeng are among those who escaped death by terrorist attack on Labour Youth League summer camp at Utøya. Roset ran into the woods along with three others when the desperadoes weapon began to shoot. The group of four split up, and Roset hiding under a rock. - The first crazy no one did was to shoot the first cute girl he saw, says Marius Helander Roset to VG Nett. - Could not swim There were several others to the area where Roset was to hide. After 45 minutes there was someone who gave permission to swim. - But I could not. The clothes were so heavy and wet. I swam back to the island and found a two-cave where I was hiding along with others, says Roset to VG. - The shooter was standing right near us and threw rocks into the water to lure us back, he explains further.

(AP) Adrian Pracon survived by playing dead, when he heard the perpetrator to go around him and shouting that he would kill anyone who was Utøya.

“I’ll kill everyone! Everyone must die! “

PLAYED DEATH: Adrian Pracon survived the shooting tragedy at Utøya by playing dead. Here you can see more survivors are taken care of by paramedics. Photo: Svein Wilhelmsen Gustav

- I and two others lay on the ground, and the lead because of the bodies that lay around us, we acted like we were dead, said County Secretary Telemark AUF, Adrian Pracon toCNN by telephone from the hospital. Read also: Police confirms: 91 people killed Pracon was in Labour Youth League summer camp at Utøya, when Anders Behring Breivik (32) began to fire at the camp participants on Friday afternoon. - I was perhaps seven feet away from him when he shouted that he would kill everyone, and everyone would die. He charged at me with a gun, but did not shoot, explains Pracon. Further, said county Registrar that he saw the perpetrator chase panic-stricken youth. - I could feel his breath. I could hear his shoes, he said. The man from Skien can also tell that he was among the last who came away from the carnage on Utøya. - It felt like I could not breathe. I had swallowed a lot of water, after I jumped in the water. I had no time to take off my clothes, and felt that I was heavy my clothes went down while I was swimming, he said. VGTV: Stoltenberg on Saturday morning: – A national tragedy before he had arrived in safety, he began to doubt whether he would survive. - I did not know if I should do it, I was already exhausted.Along with party colleague Bjorn Jarle Roberg-Larsen, he tells of the time after Behring Breivik came to Utøya. - He pulled out a gun, and started shooting at people after a few minutes. People panicked and tried to hide.Some jumped into the water, and tried to swim ashore, said Roberg-Larsen told CNN . Read also: mass murder Suspected called Gro “killer country” - He went, but came back maybe an hour later. He shot nearly everyone, explains Pracon.





Norway rocked by deadly attacks

23 07 2011





Looking for Trouble In the Data Mine–Suspicious Spending

23 07 2011

What Is a Threat Finance Analyst?

Since the bombing of the World Trade Center on September 11, the Department of Defense has added many positions to their arsenal as a way to protect the United States from another disaster of its proportions. Analyzing and identifying these threats is one way to ensure the events of September 11th do not happen again. It is also a way of protecting our borders from other threats such as drugs and illegal immigration. One of the positions that has been added is the threat finance analyst.

Tasks of a Threat Finance Analyst

A threat finance analyst works with the Department of Defense and other government agencies to protect the borders of the United States. They do so by working closely with organizations such as ICE, DoC, NCTC, CBP, NDIC, NMIC, CGIS, and the DIA just to name a few.

Someone in this position has a great deal of responsibility and understanding these responsibilities is a big part of understanding the roll of a threat finance analyst.

Some of the common tasks of a threat finance analyst are listed below to help you to determine what a threat finance analyst does.

  • A threat finance analyst must work diligently with the organizations mentioned above and other state and local agencies as a part of Task Force Quiet Storm in order to identify any type of terrorism. This includes identifying any terroristic threats in the form of terrorism, counter-drug, narco-terrorism, counterintelligence, insurgency, or any type of other operation that threatens the integrity or the systems associated with the Department of Defense.
  • The threat finance analyst should posses a working knowledge of the agencies he or she is working both with and against. They will have to know the inner workings of all systems used by the agencies they are working with and for.
  • The threat finance analyst must be prepared to analyze and figure out the meaning of large amounts of communications traffic that can be garnished from raw sources such as text, transactions, and other forms of formal data exchange. They must also piece together things by working cooperatively with other finance analysts.
  • The threat finance analyst must be able to identify the financial rings surrounding and funding any and all terrorist networks of opposition. They must also be able to strategically gather this information and analyze it as a whole to develop a plan of attack against these networks of opposition by devising a plan to attempt to cut off funding for such terrorist attacks.
  • A threat finance analyst must be able to act as a guide or mentor to less experienced analysts so that they can learn the profession and perform well on the job. This requires the review of less experienced analysts work and providing recommendations on how these rookie analysts might improve their performance.

A threat finance analyst, therefore, is an individual with an important role in national security who helps to keep the United States safe from those terrorists who want to cause harm to the country and its infrastructure.

Threat Finance Analyst ~ Washington DC, Charlottesville, VA, Afghanistan and Iraq

HOT JOB HOT JOB HOT JOB

NEK Advanced Securities Group, Inc.

Threat Finance Analyst

Work Location: Washington DC, Charlottesville, VA, Afghanistan and Iraq

APPLY/LEARN MORE AT http://www.intelligencecareers.com/jobs/11-001/jobview.cfm?jobid=3526950&domain=financ

Roles and Responsibilities: Serve as a team member with DOD and other inter-Agency analysts to provide targeting and analysis in support of coordinated inter-Agency operations against Intermittent Explosive Device (IED) proliferation networks and related threat finance and facilitation activities; build upon proven National Ground Intelligence Center (NGIC) methods as established and integrated with Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) Defense Human Intelligence (HUMINT) and other inter-Agency partners under Task Force Quiet Storm to conduct structured, all-source analysis of global supply chain networks associated with terrorism, counterdrug, narco-terrorism, counterintelligence, insurgency, or operations which threaten the security of DOD personnel and systems; analyze specific target threat countries or events and non-state actors and insurgent/terrorist individuals or groups; knowledgeable of data and work products provided by Department of Commerce (DOC), Immigration Control and Enforcement (ICE), Customs and Border Protection (CBP), National Counter Terrorism Center (NCTC), National Maritime Intelligence Center (NMIC), National Drug Intelligence Center (NDIC), Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), Coast Guard Investigative Services (CGIS), and various federal, state, regional, and tribal enforcement and intelligence agencies; analyze, synthesize, and interpret large amounts of textual, transactional, and technical data (IIRs, FINTEL, filtered real-time data feeds, directed-searches results, and task-specific data sources); perform pattern, trend, and link analysis based on analysis of message traffic, other raw data sources, and collaboration with other analysts; employ advanced computer tools, applications, and techniques to fuse financial and other transactional data, understand relationships, interdependencies, and conceptual scenarios which yield draft and finished intelligence findings and task-specific products such as targeting packages, pattern-of-life assessments, and intelligence gaps; review all-source information and conduct research and analysis of insurgent networks and complex terrain especially as it relates to the financial support of insurgent groups; guide and provide technical expertise on comprehensive research regarding all aspects of insurgent financial networks, serve as a subject matter expert for insurgent financing; maintain data bases and compare and contrast information from different sources and of varying reliability using current analytical tools and sound judgment; modify and create necessary data files and manipulate data to develop responses to long term production requirements and ad hoc requests; coordinate with Collection Management, regional analytic teams, and Science and Technology analysts to identify information gaps and develop collection requirements; prepare, produce, present and disseminate scheduled and unscheduled intelligence products in all formats to include formal assessments, briefings, and papers; attend and participate in professional development workshops, seminars and courses that relate to financial analysis and specific financial intelligence topics, as they are offered / available; represent NGIC as required with other DOD or national intelligence agencies /organizations; plan work to be accomplished, set priorities and prepare schedules for completion of work, mentor and guide less experienced analysts; review other analyst’s efforts and recommend improvements; serve as (primary) point of contact and targeting team lead; lead the team in identifying, distributing and balancing workload and tasks; articulate and communicate assignments and projects among employees and contractors; make adjustments to ensure timely accomplishment of tasks; develop new or modified work methods, and innovative approaches /alternative uses of new or available data sources.





DARPA Looking for Facebook Warriors

23 07 2011

Social Media in Strategic Communication (SMISC)

Solicitation Number: DARPA-BAA-11-64
Agency: Other Defense Agencies
Office: Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
Location: Contracts Management Office
Solicitation Number:
DARPA-BAA-11-64
Notice Type:
Presolicitation
Synopsis:
Added: Jul 14, 2011 2:48 pm

DARPA is soliciting innovative research proposals in the area of social media in strategic communication. Proposed research should investigate innovative approaches that enable revolutionary advances in science, devices, or systems. Specifically excluded is research that primarily results in evolutionary improvements to the existing state of practice. See the full DARPA-BAA-11-64 document attached.
Important Dates
Posting Date: see announcement at www.fbo.gov
Proposal Due Date
Initial Closing: August 30, 2011, 12:00 noon (ET)
Final Closing: October 11, 2011, 12:00 noon (ET)
Industry Day: Tuesday, August 2, 2011





U.S. Defense Department to do battle with social media

23 07 2011

[The Internet is officially the new battlefield.]

U.S. Defense Department to do battle with social media

Calcutta News.Net

The Pentagon is asking experts to help figure out how to detect and counter propaganda on social media networks in the aftermath of theArab uprising.

The US military’s high-tech research wing, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), has sent a request for experts to look at ‘a new science of social networks’ that would attempt to get ahead of the curve of events unfolding on new media.

The program aims to track ‘purposeful or deceptive messaging and misinformation” in social networks and to pursue’. According to DARPA’s request for proposals issued on July 14, the program will also help ‘counter messaging of detected adversary influence operations’, The Telegraph reports.

Some senior US officials have spoken of the need to better track unrest revealed in social networks and to look for ways to shape outcomes in the Arab world through Twitter, Facebook or YouTube.

“Events of strategic as well as tactical importance to our Armed Forces are increasingly taking place in social media space. We must, therefore, be aware of these events as they are happening and be in a position to defend ourselves within that space against adverse outcomes,” an announcement by DARPA said.

“Changes to the nature of conflict resulting from the use of social media are likely to be as profound as those resulting from previous communications revolutions,” it added.

DARPA has planned to spend 42 million dollars on the Social Media in Strategic Communication (SMISC) program, with prospective contractors asked to test algorithms through experiments with social media. (ANI)





Ukraine and the South Stream bogeyman

23 07 2011

[When did trans-national pipeline building become the equivalent of waging economic war?]

New Europe: Ukraine and the South Stream bogeyman“South Stream is more of an alternative to the Russian gas pipeline transiting Ukraine,” Pavel Sorokin, an oil and gas analyst at Moscow’s Alfa Bank, said.

Ukraine and the South Stream bogeyman

Author: Kostis Geropoulos
Energy Insider: A New Europe Column by Kostis Geropoulos

The thing that keeps Ukrainian officials awake at night in Kiev is Russia’s South Stream gas pipeline – the fear that the project will finally be constructed and remove gas volumes crossing the former Soviet republic on the way to Europe and thus lucrative transit fees.

“South Stream is more of an alternative to the Russian gas pipeline transiting Ukraine,” Pavel Sorokin, an oil & gas analyst at Moscow’s Alfa Bank, told New Europe on 20 July. “It was one of the bargaining points with Ukraine and one of the factors which should have made Ukraine more cooperative in the gas questions because, of course, if South Stream was built it would take most of the volumes away from Ukraine which would have significantly worsened the economic situation in the country, as that would take the transit fees for gas away from Ukraine and that could have a disastrous effect for Ukraine’s economy.”

South Stream, a pricey joint-project of Russia’s Gazprom and Italy’s ENI, is strongly backed by Russia, which has a strong interest in the ambitious project since it would enable larger gas sales to Europe, reinforce its position on the European market, limit access for its competitors namely the EU-backed Nabucco and thus strengthen Russia economically and politically, European analysts say. It will also strengthen its influence on the countries in Southeast Europe. Russia has signed cooperation agreements with Bulgaria, Serbia, Hungary, Greece, Slovenia, Croatia, and Austria. Romania and FYROM are also to be included.

On 19 July, Ukraine independently launched in a symbolic ceremony the modernization of the country’s Gas Transportation System (GTS). The EU predicts that European financial institutions will take positive decisions on allocation of credit means to Ukraine for modernisation of the GTS will be made in late 2011, the EU Delegation in Ukraine said in a statement. Nevertheless, Ukrainian officials also hope in Russian participation.

South Stream spokesman Sebastian Sass told New Europe on 22 July that their investors – including majors ENI, French EDF and German Wintershall as well as smaller companies from the Balkans – are committed to the Gazprom-led South Stream project. But in terms of security of supply, the advantage of South Stream is that it is providing diversification of routes, Sass said. “If you extend existing routes, if you increase the capacity of existing routes, then you will not achieve any diversification… We believe that the advantage of South Stream vis-a-vis upgrading the Ukrainian network is that we provide an additional route option.”

Sorokin added that upgrading Ukraine’s transit pipelines and Russia’s South Stream project are linked: “I think in a way these two projects are interconnected at least politically and of course Ukraine did oppose South Stream significantly. So Ukraine is indeed engaging or once again considering refurbishment of its gas transit system with the help of Gazprom so that may indicate some agreement being reached between the two sides. We have to wait and see who takes part in the refurbishment, in what form and proportion,” Sorokin said.
Russia has also being pushing for a merger of Ukraine’s state-owned oil and gas firm Naftogaz with Gazprom. Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych has said Kiev is not planning such a merger. He added that Naftogaz was interested in cooperation with Gazprom in such joint projects as modernisation of Ukraine’s GTS. Russia has said it is open to discuss modernising Ukraine’s pipelines but added that it will not abandon South Stream. “Gazprom is definitely interested in securing a major shareholding in the Ukrainian transit and distribution entities but it is hard to say where exactly the talks stand now,” Sorokin said.

For now, Ukrainians will keep tossing and turning during these warm summer nights, worrying that South Stream will be built and, as one source privately said, “We will lose everything.”





Moscow Laser Attacker Apprehended

23 07 2011

Laser attacker on aircrews detained in Moscow

Laser attacker on aircrews detained in MoscowSpecial services have detained a laser attacker in Moscow, who pointed laser beams at aircrews near the Vnukovo Airport.

Interfax-Ukraine

Moscow, July 22 (Interfax) – Special services have detained a laser attacker in Moscow, who pointed laser beams at aircrews near the Vnukovo Airport.

“The Federal Security Service has carried out a combined search operation jointly with police, tracking down Alexander Kuleznyov, born in 1987, who had used a laser to blind aircrews repeatedly from near the Vnukovo Airport,” the FSB’s Public Relations Center informed Interfax on Friday.

Two laser pointers were discovered at Kuleznyov’s apartment on July 21. One of them produces a beam with a range of up to 40 kilometers, the FSB said.





Labour Camp Death Count Climbing, Now Estimated at 30

23 07 2011

LABOUR’S CAMP TURNS DEADLY

July 22, 2011

Unconfirmed reports were streaming in Friday evening that as many as 30 young members of the Norwegian Labour Party were gunned down and feared dead, victims of a suspected terrorist dressed as a police officer. The shootings began at the party’s annual summer camp on an island in the Tyri Fjord, just a few hours after the Norwegian capital was also struck by a massive and deadly explosion.

The drama began after the gunman reportedly arrived on the island known as Utøya in a high-speed rubber raft. He was dressed as a police officer and witnesses said he started gunning down campers, many of them teenagers, who were gathered along the water.

Bodies in the water
Norwegian Broadcasting (NRK) aired video taken from a helicopter of bodies floating in the water, and others desperately trying to swim from the island back to the mainland in an effort to escape the gunman. One man who tried to help rescue campers off the island in a small boat told NRK he saw as many as 25 to 30 dead, but police could not confirm any number of fatalities.

There were more than 600 members of Labour’s youth organization AUF on the island at the time. They were being evacuated Friday night and taken to nearby Sundvollen, where police set up an emergency center for victims and their families. The main E16 highway through the area, which runs between Oslo and Bergen, was closed. A long line of ambulances carried the wounded and dead to nearby hospitals.

The annual summer camp is viewed as a breeding grounds of sorts for future Labour Party leaders, attracting young and often ambitious future politicians. It also attracts current leaders of the party, known as Arbeiderpartiet (Ap) in Norwegian, and Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg was scheduled to visit the camp on Saturday. Former Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland had been scheduled to visit the camp on Friday, but her status was unclear. Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Støre was at the camp on Wednesday.

Prime Minister deeply shaken
Stoltenberg, who escaped Friday’s bombing of ministries including his office in downtown Oslo, was clearly shaken by the reports of shootings at this party’s summer camp. He has taken part in the camp himself every summer since the early 1970s.

“It’s supposed to be a place for discussions, play, summer experiences,” he told NRK Friday evening, while being interviewed from a location undisclosed for security purposes.

“This is dramatic, it’s frightening, but we must not allow ourselves to be scared,” Stoltenberg said. “We stand for an open society, and open democracy in Norway, and violence like this can’t scare us.”

He said that Friday’s apparently parallel attacks, both in downtown Oslo and on Utøya, “puts our system to the test,” but he remained confident the country’s emergency response would meet the challenge.

Asked whether he thought the attacks were an attack on Labour, he declined to give a straight answer, saying instead that “it’s very worrisome.” Stoltenberg was meeting in emergency session with his fellow government ministers, many of whom were on Norway’s traditional July summer holidays when the attacks began.  Stoltenberg said he also had received many condolences from other heads of state, including a message of support and sympathy from the US.

Views and News from Norway/Nina Berglund





Oslo Bomb Blast Followed By Fatal Shooting At Labour Party Youth Meeting

22 07 2011

Oslo: Bomb blast near Norway prime minister’s office

Eyewitness Ingunn Anderson says she saw injured people lying on the ground

A massive bomb blast has hit government buildings in the Norwegian capital Oslo, killing at least seven people and injuring several others.

PM Jens Stoltenberg described the situation as “very serious”.

The bomb was followed by a fatal shooting incident near Oslo at a youth meeting of the Labour Party, which Mr Stoltenberg leads.

Norwegian media said at least four people were killed when a man opened fire indiscriminately.

Police said the suspected gunman had been arrested, TV2 reported.

No group has said they carried out the attacks but police say they believe them to be linked.

Hours after the bomb struck Oslo, officials said some people were still inside the damaged buildings, some of which were on fire.

Television footage from the government quarter showed rubble and glass from shattered windows in the streets and smoke from the fires drifting across the city. The wreckage of at least one car could be seen.

All roads into the city centre have been closed, said national broadcaster NRK, and security officials evacuated people from the area, fearing another blast.

Mr Stoltenberg, in a telephone call to Norwegian television, said all government ministers were safe.

He said he had been advised by police not to reveal his current location, but is not thought to have been in central Oslo on Friday.

“Even if one is well prepared, it is always rather dramatic when something like this happens,” he said.

Egil Vrekke, Assistant Chief Constable of Oslo police told the BBC the rescue operation was ongoing.

“We are issuing warnings just [to] make sure people are not in the area in case there are further explosions,” he told the BBC.

“We have cordoned off large areas. There are bomb experts at the scene investigating whether there are other devices in the area.”

A spokesman for Oslo University hospital said 10 people had been taken there for treatment, some with serious injuries.

A few hours after the explosion, reports emerged of the shooting at a Labour Party youth camp in Utoeya, an island outside the capital.

TV2 said at least four people had been killed and several injured – there were reports a gunman was wearing a police uniform.

“This created a panic situation where people started to swim from the island” said Labour Party spokesman Per Gunnar Dahl.

Mr Stoltenberg, who had been due to visit the camp on Saturday, told TV2 the situation in Utoeya was critical.

‘Focus on rescue’

State Secretary Kristian Amundsen said Friday was a public holiday in Norway so the government offices were not as busy as they might usually have been.

Assistant Chief Constable Egil Vrekke: “There are a lot of casualties”

“But there are many hundreds of people in these buildings every day,” he told the BBC.

“We have to focus on the rescue operation – there are still people in the building, there are still people in the hospital.”

Reuters said the oil ministry was among the other government buildings hit, while NRK journalist Ingunn Andersen said the headquarters of tabloid newspaper VG were also damaged.

“It’s complete chaos here. The windows are blown out in all the buildings close by,” she told AP.

Oistein Mjarum, head of communications for the Norwegian Red Cross, which has offices nearby, said the blast could be heard across Oslo.

“This is a very busy area on Friday afternoon and there were a lot of people in the streets, and many people working in these buildings that are now burning,” he said.

Local resident Silvio told the BBC the blast shook everything in his apartment and that he saw several unconscious people in the street.

“If they were dead or not I wouldn’t be able to tell you but they were receiving assistance at the time.”

Mr Mjarum said people across Oslo and Norway were in shock.

“We have never had a terrorist attack like this in Norway – if that’s what it is – but of course this has been a great fear for all Norwegians when they have seen what has been happening around the world.”

The United States has condemned the “despicable acts of violence” in Oslo, while the President of the European Council, Herman Van Rompuy, said he was “deeply shocked” by “these acts of cowardice for which there is no justification”.

Map

 





NORWAY HIT

22 07 2011

NORWAY HIT

aangirfan

Oslo

1. Norway is ending its involvement in Libya.

As of 1 August 2011, its air force will no longer be involved.

(Norway leaving Libya)

2. March 2011 -”the junior partner in the Norwegian government, the Socialist Left Party of Kristin Halvorsen, (Sosialistisk Venstreparti), plans to vote on a measure calling for military action against Israel if it decides to act against Hamas in Gaza.”

(Norwegian Socialists to Vote on Bombing Israel The Gateway Pundit)

3. In January 2011, Jonas Gahr Stoere, Norway’s Minister of Foreign Affairs said Norway will be a leading country in recognising the Palestinian state once the Palestinian institutions are set up.

(Norway to Be First European Nation to Recognise Palestine)

4. On 22 July 2011 a large bomb ripped through Norwegian government buildings in central Oslo.

(Bomb In Oslo Causes ‘Deaths And Injuries’)

~~

The Daily Mail reports: “Fortunately, it is a public holiday in Norway and the offices are less busy than a normal weekday.”

“Why would ‘terrorists,’ who presumably want to kill as many people as possible, choose to bomb the building on a day when they know it will be almost empty?” (Prison Planet.com.)

~~

On 22 July 2011, several people were killed in a shooting at a Labour youth camp outside Oslo.

(Bomb blast, shooting at youth camp horrify Norway)

Operation Gladio was the CIA-NATO organisation which carried out acts of terrorism in Europe.

The Norwegian branch of the GLADIO network was exposed in 1978, “when a policeman stumbled upon one of its arms caches, containing at least 60 weapons and 12,000 rounds of ammunition.

“The owner of the property where the cache was found, Hans Otto Meyer, an intelligence agent, was arrested but claimed that Norwegian intelligence had provided some of the weapons for use by a resistance cell. This was confirmed.” (Richard Norton-Taylor, Guardian, 15/11/90)

~~

Norway activist ‘was Mossad spy’





UN unveils new scheme to boost Central Asia’s fight against terrorism

22 07 2011

UN unveils new scheme to boost Central Asia’s fight against terrorism

Miroslav Jenca

7 September 2010 –

The United Nations today launched a new initiative aimed at strengthening efforts to assist Central Asian countries in their efforts to combat terrorism.“Central Asia is one of the most interdependent regions of the world, with a large population, a potential common market and a crossroad of energy routes,” Miroslav Jenca, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s Special Representative and head of the UN Regional Centre for Preventive Diplomacy for Central Asia (UNRCCA), said at an event in New York.

To date, the region’s five countries have “been spared large-scale terrorist attacks,” he noted.

“Yet it cannot be denied that there is a growing concern about the possibly of intensifying activities of various extremist, terrorist, and criminal groups and networks operating in Central Asia, fuelled by instability in the wider region and porous borders through which extremism and criminal networks penetrate the region.”

The project unveiled today brings together the UNRCCA, the UN Counter-Terrorism Implementation Task Force (CTITF), Central Asian governments, civil society and others.

“Prevention of terrorism in Central Asia is key not only to protecting the well-being of populations and ensuring national and regional stability,” Mr. Jenca emphasized. “It is also a matter of global concern, given that the wider region is fast becoming the main front on the global war against terror.”

The new scheme aims to help Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan establish a regional counter-terrorism plan in line with the UN Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy.

That strategy, unanimously adopted by the General Assembly in 2006, focuses on four key pillars of action: tackling the conditions conducive to the spread of terrorism; preventing and combating terrorism; building State capacity and bolstering the role of the UN; and ensuring respect for human rights and the rule of law against the backdrop of the fight against terrorism.

Today’s launch of the project “is very timely,” given the proximity of Afghanistan to the region as well as recent events in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, Mr. Jenca told reporters in New York this afternoon.

Most Central Asian nations, he said, have acceded to all 13 universal anti-terrorism instruments.

The new initiative “seeks to build on existing efforts,” Mr. Jenca said, also underscoring the importance of ensuring the protection and promotion of human rights while fighting terrorism.

Sponsored by the European Commission (EC) and Norway, it will bring together regional experts, with the first meeting set to take place in December.

The gatherings seek to pave the way for a ministerial-level conference next year to lead to the adoption of a joint action plan for the implementation of the UN Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy by Central Asian nations.

The new project also aims to boost cooperation against the threat posed by terrorism and build consensus on common solutions to fight the scourge.





Understanding SYNTHETIC TERRORISM MADE IN USA–Tarpley

22 07 2011
9/11 SYNTHETIC TERRORISM MADE IN USA

© 2004 by Webster Griffin Tarpley

To my wife Leah and my daughter Chloe, for their love and support during
the wilderness years.
E s’io al vero son timido amico,
Temo di perder vita tra coloro
Che questo tempo chiameranno antico.
Paradiso XVII, 117-120

“Bush’s fraudulent “war on terrorism” is of course a war of civilizations directed against the 1 billion Arab and Moslem people in the world; it is more hypocritical than Hitlerism because it assiduously denies its own real content. In reality, the “war on terrorism” is a racist war against Arabs and Moslems today, with China and perhaps Russia as candidates for all-out attack at some later time. From time to time the real essence explodes to the surface, as in Bush’s call for a crusade, or in General Boykin’s comments on satanic Islam. Neocon radio talk show hosts like Michael Savage are more explicit every day, and it is they who service the belief structure of Bush’s hard-core followers.” 

PDF here
2nd Edition Update PDF here

TABLE OF CONTENTS:





Countering Synthetic Terrorism in Central Asia

22 07 2011
Asia-Plus

DUSHANBE, July 22, 2011, Asia-Plus – The Third two-day meeting of the project “Implementing the United Nations Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy in Central Asia” is concluding in Almaty, Kazakhstan today. According to the United Nations Regional Center for Preventive Diplomacy for Central Asia (UNRCCA), building and strengthening state capacities and promoting regional and sub-regional cooperation among counter-terrorism authorities are the focus of United Nations sponsored meeting in Almaty.

Experts from the Central Asian region and beyond are reviewing Pillar III of the UN Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy on “Measures to build States’ capacity to prevent and combat terrorism and to strengthen the role of the United Nations system in this regard.”

The Almaty meeting is the last in a series of three counter-terrorism expert meetings at regional level. (The first meeting was held in Bratislava, Slovakia, on December 15-16, 2010; the second in Dushanbe, Tajikistan on March 29-30, 2011).

The series of meetings is a joint initiative of the United Nations Counter-Terrorism Implementation Task-Force (CTITF) and the European External Action Service of the European Union (EU) working with the United Nations Regional Centre for Preventive Diplomacy for Central Asia (UNRCCA).  The initiative is funded by the European Union with financial contribution by Norway.

The aim is to assist Central Asian countries to strengthen their efforts to address the threat of terrorism and enhance cooperation at a regional level through the elaboration of a joint Plan of Action on implementing the UN Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy in Central Asia which is to be adopted at ministerial level meeting by the end of 2011.

There is growing concern about the possibility of intensifying activities of various extremist, terrorist and criminal groups operating in Central Asia, fuelled by instability in the wider region and porous borders.  Furthermore, terrorism is at the core of multiple security threats that spread across borders: it feeds into criminal networks, stimulates illegal trafficking of all kinds and corrupts state structures.

The Central Asia initiative, which was launched in September 2010 in New York, shows how the participating states work together to implement the UN Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy, which was adopted by consensus of the General Assembly in September 2006, and demonstrates a shared commitment from Central Asian countries, regional organizations, the UN system and the European Union towards enhanced coordination to address the threat of terrorism.

The European Union has been one of the strongest proponents of the UN Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy.  Through this initiative, the EU intends to work with the Governments of Central Asia to prevent terrorism and to reinforce the security and stability of the region by means of the comprehensive implementation of the UN Strategy.

Speakers at the opening session include the Acting Head of the representative office of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Kazakhstan in Almaty, Mr. Dudar Zhakenov,  the Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General and Head of the United Nations Regional Centre for Preventive Diplomacy for Central Asia (UNRCCA) Mr. Miroslav Jenca, the EU Ambassador to Kazakhstan Mr. Norbert Jousten, and the UN Special Political Advisor of the Office of the Counter-Terrorism Implementation Task Force, Ms. Anne Wu. Meeting participants also include representatives from Central Asian states, UN agencies, regional organizations such as the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), Conference on Interaction and Confidence-Building Measures in Asia (CICA), Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO),  Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), Regional Anti-Terrorism Structure of the SCO, Central Asia Regional Information and Coordination Centre (CARICC), representatives from neighboring countries, regional and international experts.

Among the issues discussed at the Almaty meeting are state capacities to prevent and combat terrorism; the role of regional organizations in addressing state capacity; strengthening the role of the UN system in building state capacity to prevent and combat terrorism; enhancing information sharing on counter-terrorism technical assistance and public awareness; and public-private partnerships to prevent and combat terrorism.





Fed Rehearsing the Coming Default

22 07 2011

Exclusive: Fed planning for potential default

Chairman of the Federal Reserve Ben Bernanke reacts while testifying before the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee about ''The Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress'' on Capitol Hill in Washington, July 14, 2011. REUTERS/Larry Downing

By Kristina Cooke and Tim Ahmann

PHILADELPHIA

(Reuters) – The Federal Reserve is actively preparing for the possibility that the United States could default as a deadline for raising the government’s $14.3 trillion borrowing limit looms, a top Fed policymaker said on Wednesday.

Charles Plosser, president of the Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank, said the U.S. central bank has for the past few months been working closely with Treasury, ironing out what to do if the world’s biggest economy runs out of cash on August 2.

“We are in contingency planning mode,” Plosser told Reuters in an interview at the regional central bank’s headquarters in Philadelphia. “We are all engaged. … It’s a very active process.”

Plosser said his “gut feeling” was that President Barack Obama and Congress will come to an agreement to increase the Treasury’s borrowing authority in time to avert a default on government obligations.

Obama was due to meet with top Republicans in Congress on Wednesday to discuss the latest attempts to end the dispute over raising the country’s debt ceiling, a row which has raised the prospect of the Treasury Department running out of money to pay its bills next month.

The Treasury has repeatedly said default was unthinkable and that there was no alternative to raising the debt ceiling. Plosser’s remarks marked the most extensive public comments yet on preparations for a default from a U.S. official.

A Treasury spokesperson could not be immediately reached for comment.

One aspect of the Fed’s contingency planning is purely operational: the Fed is developing procedures about how the Treasury would notify it on which checks would get cleared and which wouldn’t, Plosser said.

The Fed effectively acts as the Treasury’s bank — it clears the government’s checks to everyone from social security recipients to government workers.

“We are developing processes and procedures by which the Treasury communicates to us what we are going to do,” Plosser said, adding that the task was manageable. “How the Fed is going to go about clearing government checks. Which ones are going to be good? Which ones are not going to be good?”

“There are a lot of people working on what we would do and how we would do it,” he said.

Plosser added that there are difficult questions that the Fed itself had to grapple with.

The Fed lends to banks at the discount window against good collateral. But what happens if U.S. Treasuries no longer fit that bill?

“Do we treat them as if they didn’t default, in which case we would be saying we are pretending it never happened? Or do we treat them as if they defaulted and don’t lend against them?” Plosser said. “Those are more policy questions.”

Plosser, who was a vocal critic of some of the Fed’s extraordinary lending during the financial crisis — which he said veered into fiscal policy and risked the central bank’s independence — warned it would be crucial for the Fed not to do the Treasury’s work for it.

“We have to be very careful that we don’t become, that we don’t conduct fiscal policy in this context,” he said. “That we don’t substitute for the inability of the Treasury to borrow in some circumstances.”

INCLINED TO TIGHTEN

Plosser, a noted policy hawk on inflation, argued the Fed might need to raise interest rates before the end of the year, despite recent evidence of renewed economic weakness.

He said he expects the economy to grow at a 3-3.5 percent annual rate over the second half of 2011 with the jobless rate declining to around 8.5 percent by year’s end.

“The more my forecast comes to fruition the more I’m going to feel like we may have to act,” said Plosser, who is a voting member of the Fed’s monetary policy-setting committee this year. “I’d like to have a little more confidence in that forecast.”

Plosser pinned the slowdown in economic growth over the first half of the year to “easily identifiable” factors, such as weather, a spike in oil prices and supply disruptions from Japan’s earthquake. He also cited uncertainty stemming from Europe’s fiscal morass and the wrangling over U.S. debt in Washington.

“I don’t see the fundamentals of the economy as changed that much,” he said. “Yeah, there’s been some shocks and disruptions, but the underlying forces that are going to cause us to continue a slow, moderate recovery are still in place.”

That said, the Fed, which is charged with ensuring financial stability, would clearly feel the responsibility to step in as a lender of last resort if markets seized up after a U.S. default, he added.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke last week warned that a default could have “catastrophic” effects on financial markets.

Plosser, a former dean of the Simon School of Business at Rochester University, was more circumspect.

“It could be very bad. At some level we don’t really know what the consequences could be. It could be very serious. It could be less serious. Do we really want to run that experiment?”

(Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Leslie Adler)





Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News ran ‘black ops’ department, former executive claims

22 07 2011

[Fox News, Murdoch's "black ops" central.]

Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News ran ‘black ops’ department, former executive claims


Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News television channel had a “black ops” department that may have illegally hacked private telephone records, a former executive for the station has alleged.

Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News television channel had a black ops department that may have illegally hacked private telephone records, a former executive for the station has alleged.

Roger Ailes talks to Fox correspondents Jenna Lee and Nicole Petallides  Photo: REUTERS

By , New York

 

Dan Cooper, who helped launch Fox News as managing editor in 1996, said that a “brain room” carried out “counter intelligence” on the channel’s enemies from its New York headquarters.

He was threatened after it found out he spoke to a reporter, he claimed.

Another former senior executive said the channel ran a spying network on staff, reading their emails and making them “feel they were being watched”.

The channel, which has come under pressure amid allegations that outlets owned by Mr Murdoch might have attempted to hack the voicemail messages of September 11 victims, firmly denies all the allegations.

Mr Cooper, who left Fox News soon after its launch, provided a quote for a 1997 article about Roger Ailes, Fox News’s president, by the journalist David Brock in New York magazine.

The quote was not going to be attributed to him, but he alleges that before the article was published, Mr Cooper’s agent received a telephone call from Mr Ailes threatening to withdraw Fox’s business from all his clients.

“There are only two possible ways Ailes found out,” Mr Cooper said. “Either Brock told him or they got hold of Brock’s phone records and saw I spoke to him.”

He first alleged that the records were obtained by researchers in the “brain room” in 2005 in an article on his website about the launch of the channel.

“Most people thought it was simply the research department of Fox News,” he wrote. “I knew it also housed a counter intelligence and black ops office. So accessing phone records was easy pie.”

Mr Cooper said yesterday that he helped to design the high-security unit. “It was staffed by 15 researchers and had a guard at the door. No one working there would engage in conversation.”

Mr Cooper said he was “willing to consider the possibility” that Mr Brock named him, but added: “I assume he operates under journalistic ethics and protected a confidential source. Brock told me at the time that Ailes told him he would never work again if he wrote the article.”

Mr Brock now runs Media Matters, a Left-leaning American media watchdog. A spokesman for the group said: “He declines to comment.”

Another former Fox News senior executive, who did not wish to be named, said staff were forced to operate under conditions reminiscent of “Russia at the height of the Soviet era”.

“There is a paranoid atmosphere and they feel they are being watched,” said the former executive. “I have no doubt they are spying on emails to ensure no one is leaking to outside media.

“There is a unit of spies that reports up to the boss about who was talking to whom. A lot of people are scared that they’re going to get sidelined or even that they’re going to get killed.”

A Fox News spokesman said: “Each of these allegations is completely false. Dan Cooper was terminated six weeks after the launch of the Fox News Channel in 1996 and has peddled these lies for the past 15 years.”

The FBI is investigating allegations that journalists on a British newspaper may have tried to have September 11 victims’ phones hacked. Both former Fox News executives said they thought Mr Ailes would never have let his reporters do likewise.





Explosion at Govt buildings in Oslo, PM safe

22 07 2011

Explosion at Govt buildings in Oslo, PM safe

Explosion at Prime Minister's office in OsloExplosion at Prime Minister’s office in Oslo

Several people have been injured in an explosion that rocked Government buildings in Oslo this afternoon.

According to witnesses speaking to Reuters most of the windows of the 17-storey building, which houses the prime minister’s office, have been blown out.

NTB, the official Norwegian news agency has said that Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg is safe after the blast.

The Associated Press writes that offices in the downtown area of the city are being evacuated at the moment.

It is not yet clear what happened or how many people are injured. Police are yet to comment on the cause of the explosion but reports suggest that there is a wrecked car parked outside the site.

Civilians have started posting images of the explosion and the aftermath across the Internet. Here’s a brief selection:

pic

Image from Ingvill Dybfest Dahl

pic

Image from Drachen Herz (Twitpic)

PIC

Image- Bruise Pristine (Twitpic)

PIC

Image and main image courtesy of @chaglen on Twitpic.





Explosion rocks central Oslo, Norway PM’s office

22 07 2011

Explosion rocks central Oslo, Norway PM’s office

OSLO

(Reuters) – A huge explosion damaged government buildings in central Oslo on Friday including Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg’s office, injuring several people, a Reuters witness said.

The blast blew out most windows on the 17-storey building housing Stoltenberg’s office, as well as nearby ministries including the oil ministry, which was on fire.

Reuters correspondent Walter Gibbs said he counted at least eight injured people. The cause of the blast was unknown but the tangled wreckage of a car was outside one building. Police and fire officials declined comment on the cause.





China Tells U.S. to Respect its Territorial Claims Over Tension on South China Sea

22 07 2011

China Tells U.S. to Respect its Territorial Claims Over Tension on South China Sea

by Naharnet Newsdesk


W460

China told the United States on Friday to respect Chinese “territorial integrity,” amid simmering tensions focused on the South China Sea.

Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi made the comments to U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton during a bilateral meeting on the Indonesian resort island of Bali, according to a spokesman from China’s delegation.

“The Chinese side raised its own concerns, which is that it is important to respect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of China,” spokesman Liu Weiming said.

“And to respect China’s major concerns in the issues of Tibet and some other sensitive issues. I sense that the U.S. side understands the sensitivity of these issues and they agreed to further promote dialogue and mutual understanding.”

Liu said Yang and Clinton specifically discussed the South China Sea, which China claims as its own.

The Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan also have overlapping claims to parts of the South China Sea, believed to be rich in oil and gas deposits and home to shipping lanes vital to global trade.

Tensions in the decades-long dispute flared in recent months amid accusations by the Philippines and Vietnam that China was being increasingly aggressive in staking its claim to the sea.

China and the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) announced on Wednesday in Bali a “breakthrough” in the dispute, endorsing a set of guidelines designed to reduce tensions in the waters.

In brief comments ahead of her meeting with Yang on Friday, Clinton praised China and ASEAN for working to defuse the tensions.

But, in a move likely to irk China, Clinton was set to make a speech on Saturday to her Asian counterparts in which she would emphasize that the United States had a “strategic stake” in the South China Sea.

A U.S. official traveling with Clinton said she would make a “very detailed statement” at the ASEAN Regional Forum about the importance of the South China Sea to American and global commerce.

“We have a strategic stake in how issues there are managed,” the official said, citing comments Clinton was preparing to make in her speech to the forum.

China has long insisted the United States has no role to play in solving the South China Sea dispute with its neighbors.





Reckoning with Taliban irreconcilables

22 07 2011

Reckoning with Taliban irreconcilables

By Derek Henry Flood

Though the concept of Afghan and Western reconciliation with the Mullah Omar-led Taliban has gained much momentum, the consequences of some kind of ad hoc settlement between the Islamists and the government of President Hamid Karzai have not been clearly defined.

Opposition is growing within some quarters in Afghanistan to a settlement that would give the Taliban access to power. Much of this opposition is being led by heirs to the late anti-Taliban leader Ahmad Shah Massoud, particularly former foreign minister Dr Abdullah Abdullah and the former head of the Afghan National Directorate of Security, Amrullah Saleh.

As Saleh recently told a rally in Kabul: “We have not forgotten the burning of our homeland and the humiliation of the men and women of Afghanistan … But you [Karzai] are still calling these people [the Taliban] ‘brother’.”

A bitter legacy
Since the Taliban were ejected from central Kabul in November 2001 in the face of the United States-led invasion, the movement has transformed itself from a mostly unrecognized government to a Pashtun ethno-nationalist insurgency with its roots in the anti-Soviet jihad that consumed the country throughout the 1980s.

In Abdullah’s recent open letter to Karzai, he states emphatically, “In the reconciliation process, one of the clear red lines for any negotiated settlement has been that the reconcilable Taliban must accept the constitution.” [1] Abdullah, by drawing such a red line, has been interpreted by many as rejecting the very notion of reconciling with a movement whose raison d’etre is the implementation of a brutal interpretation of Islamic law at any cost.

Abdullah’s colleague, Amrullah Saleh, is one of the most ardent anti-Taliban figures in Afghanistan and is outraged by Karzai’s overtures to senior Taliban leaders, making no effort to hide his disdain after serving alongside the president for years.

Saleh, now in opposition to Karzai after an abrupt departure from his post in June 2010, has formed a nascent movement based on his Panjshiri Tajik power base calling itself the Basij-e-Melli (BeM). Saleh is keen to insist that his movement is not solely a Tajik one as it also contains a number of Shi’ite Hazaras and anti-Taliban Pashtuns from eastern Afghanistan.

The bedrock belief of BeM, according to Saleh, is that the Taliban are not simply misguided Afghan “brothers” (as Karzai has been known to term them), but a nefarious group directly controlled by the Pakistani state, with which it seeks to control Afghanistan by proxy when foreign forces finally depart.

Together, Adbullah and Saleh represent a sector of the Afghan population that does not want to see a decline in the gains made by women and ethnic and religious minorities since the Taliban’s ouster.

While much has been made of the idea of bringing Taliban leaders in from the cold, Afghans directly affected by the former regime’s vengeful ethnic cleansing of Tajiks in the Shomali plain and Hazaras in Mazar-e-Sharif have no desire to see these men brought back to power in even the most modest fashion.

In a June 2011 op-ed, Amrullah Saleh countered Karzai’s dubious overtures to the Taliban’s Quetta shura (consultative council), stating that Karzai risked creating a “Hezbollah-type entity” out of the Taliban if they were not entirely disarmed in southern Afghanistan.

Skeptics of American and British intentions for the future of Afghanistan suggest that the delayed drawdown of a large-scale foreign troop presence coupled with the co-opting of certain amenable Taliban elements is part of a convoluted ruse to establish permanent military installations in Afghanistan.

With the killing of Osama bin Laden and the decoupling of the United Nations’ al-Qaeda and Taliban sanctions list, some in Afghanistan believe the Western powers want to get out of the business of war-fighting and into the business of energy, using a rump occupation force as a hammer-like guarantor of their interests.

The role of energy in reconciliation 
The Taliban have once again become an important player in the seemingly unending regional competition between two large-scale natural gas pipeline proposals.

The competing projects, known as the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India pipeline (TAPI) and the Iran-Pakistan-India pipeline (IPI), have been the topic of much speculation in this fitfully integrating mega-region for years.

Both proposals are fraught with inherent security dilemmas. TAPI has been affected by a resurgent Taliban throughout much of its planned route in Afghanistan while IPI is plagued by the unending Balochi nationalist rebellion in the Pakistan section of its route.

The transit countries that would be involved are experiencing constant energy shortages in their major urban centers and both TAPI and IPI have promised to relieve these fuel gaps.

Recently, a rapprochement of sorts has taken place between Kabul and Islamabad with the signing of the Afghanistan-Pakistan Transit Trade Agreement, which one commentary described as holding “great promise for the prosperity of the whole region”.

Though enthusiasm for TAPI has appeared to be outpacing that for IPI concurrently with the talk of Taliban reconciliation, Tehran is far from leaving the playing field. Iranian officials told their Indian counterparts that their plan only ran into one insurgency; that of Pakistan’s restive Balochis, and that TAPI, beginning in Turkmenistan’s Dauletabad gas fields and terminating in the Indian state of Punjab, is much more vulnerable to attacks by non-state actors.

Iranian government officials have tried to sell IPI as the less dangerous of the two projects, stating that Balochistan will, over time, reap the benefits of transit fees that will eventually calm the insurrection there as the local inhabitants see improvements in their quality of life.

The role of Pakistan as the swing state between the two proposals is both critical and complex. The government of President Asif Ali Zardari is viewed domestically as being under immense pressure to implement TAPI and abandon IPI, thereby further isolating their neighbors on the Iranian plateau. Taut bilateral relations already exist between Pakistan and Iran from years of sectarian Sunni-Shi’ite proxy conflict and the anti-Shi’ite pogroms conducted by the Sunni-chauvinist Taliban during their five years in power in Afghanistan.

A retired Pakistani army brigadier suggested that for TAPI to leave the drawing board and become a ground reality, the project’s planners would require the “cooperation and support of the Afghan Taliban” to secure a route through the volatile provinces of Helmand and Kandahar.

Though Islamabad is officially supportive of TAPI, it has not entirely abandoned IPI as an option should the former project collapse. At times, Islamabad’s precise position can appear ambiguous; Prime Minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gillani said that both TAPI and “joint gas and electricity projects with Iran were in [the] pipeline”.

The elusive notion of Afghanistan becoming an energy corridor began in the mid-1990s, as interest in Turkmenistan’s natural gas reserves set off a largely unrealistic competition among Western companies to court the Taliban led by the reclusive Mullah Omar in Kandahar. Today, the natural gas dream has been set alight once again by a host of indigenous political actors across the region.

Deep divisions over the US military presence
In a joint March press conference with former interior minister Mohammed Hanif Atmar, Amrullah Saleh stated that the Taliban were an unrepentant organization that, if given the chance, would renew a scorched earth policy without hesitation.

Saleh said that if the West were to pull out of Afghanistan entirely following some kind of settlement with the Taliban, Afghanistan would once again suffer in the throes of a proxy war. Saleh’s rhetoric is seen as increasingly divisive by the pro-talks camp in Kabul that views his opposition to all things Taliban as a stumbling block on the road to a cessation of hostilities.

Those allies of Karzai who are pushing for increased contacts with the Taliban leadership believe that former Afghan government officials now embittered with the president are purposefully sabotaging the very concept of peace talks because they are unfavorable to their personal agendas.

Saleh and Atmar stressed the need for a continued US military mission in Afghanistan beyond the scope of Operation Enduring Freedom, likely as a means of keeping meddling neighbors at bay. Atmar believes that Kabul would do better to keep the US military in the country guiding it towards an Afghans-first policy rather than have them abandon the country altogether, thereby turning it into a regional battleground.

There has been intense debate in recent months in the Afghan media over the future role of the United States inside Afghanistan contrasted against what some see as the overwhelming leverage of the Pakistani state among both the Afghan polity and the Afghan Taliban.

The Saleh-Atmar narrative paints the continued US presence, if carried out with increasing sensitivity to local desires, as a means of emancipating Afghanistan from the influence of neighboring states that seek to dominate it while delicately avoiding being subsumed by an American agenda.

If Afghans can get Washington to commit to certain obligations that will guarantee a balance between sovereignty and security in their country, then many believe that the benefits of an entrenched US presence there would far outweigh its potential negative impact domestically.

Conclusion
As the ill-defined concept of Taliban reconciliation moves forward in fits and starts, those who were once part of a comparatively hopeful, if ineffective, unity government in Kabul are now disaffected with one another in a vastly unproductive fashion. All the elements of the web of interlocking and competing interests at work in Afghanistan today will be impossible to satisfy simultaneously.

Domestic political and economic pressures within the US are making a never-ending military commitment in Afghanistan unsustainable while a host of coalition allies are looking for the exit, such as Canada, which formally declared an end to its combat mission on July 7.

Pakistan seeks to hold a tether on the Afghan Taliban even as the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (Pakistan Taliban – TTP) and other domestic insurgent groups are shredding the social fabric of Pakistani society with each suicide attack.

Iran is loath to see the re-emergence of the Deobandi Sunni Taliban in any form that may threaten its Shi’ite and Persian-speaking Afghan clients even though it has been asserted Tehran provides military assistance to some Taliban elements along its border in southwestern Afghanistan to act as an irritant to foreign troops there.

The Taliban continue to vigorously deny claims that they have entered into direct talks with either the US or the United Kingdom as doing so would contravene their oft-stated condition that negotiations may only take place once all foreign troops have departed.

As a Taliban spokesman said, “It is clear as the broad daylight that we consider negotiation in [the] presence of foreign forces as a war stratagem of the Americans and their futile efforts.”.

Karzai has created a series of initiatives aimed at courting or co-opting the “reconcilable” Afghan Taliban. Karzai, along with former Afghan president Burhanuddin Rabbani, has established a Joint Peace Commission with the Pakistani government. Premier Gilani stated, “I fully endorse that statement [in which Zardari] said that a war in Afghanistan can destabilize Pakistan and it is vice versa so the war on terrorism is directly affecting Pakistan not only in [the] form of casualties but in [the] form of economy as well.”

Karzai has also formed the High Council of Peace as a multi-ethnic mechanism to facilitate talks with his adversaries. The council has become a controversial effort for including several notorious Taliban figures, including Maulvi Mohammed Qalamuddin, the former head of the Islamic Emirates religious police.

Other reviled officials in the Taliban regime have been included in the peace-building body by Karzai to lend credibility to those still following Mullah Omar and the original shura leaders.

Over the course of the past several years, talks between the Karzai government and the Afghan Taliban have been reported in various locales, including Saudi Arabia, Qatar and somewhat incongruously a stunning holiday resort in the Maldives.

In each instance, Taliban spokesmen consistently deny they have made such contacts, perhaps for fear of losing the confidence of active guerillas engaging in contact with Afghan security forces and foreign troops. When former finance minister Ashraf Ghani confirmed that talks were indeed taking place with certain Taliban factions, Taliban commander Doran Safi shot back, “I confirm that none of us will lay down arms even if he is paid mountains of money; none of us would abandon the right path.”

The earlier strategy of a hammer-and-anvil approach of defeating the Taliban – with the US military and the Afghan National Army as the hammer and the Pakistani army on the other side of the Durand Line as the anvil – was a failure.

Pakistani village-flattening military incursions in the tribal regions led to the further Talibanization of large swathes of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas and Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa province, resulting in a series of suicide attacks in many of Pakistan’s major urban centers.

The current strategy of assassinating mid-level Taliban field commanders while reaching out to those willing to talk to Kabul and Washington was promulgated by now former defense secretary Robert Gates as the only means of ending the war.

However, defining the “end of the war” as the withdrawal of Western troops ignores the fact several very prominent Karzai opponents do not appear ready to accept the return of the Taliban in any form.

This may take the war in a new direction, one in which ethnic and religious factions are reconstituted along barely dormant fault lines, leaving no end in sight to this decades-long power struggle in the heart of Asia.

Note
1. Dr Abdullah Abdullah, “Upholding Constitutional Principles and Rule of Law in Afghanistan,” Open Letter to President Hamid Karzai, July 5, 2011.

(This article first appeared in The Jamestown Foundation. Used with permission.)

(Copyright 2011 The Jamestown Foundation.)








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