Haitians Mop Up As Tomas Moves On

Hurricane Tomas pushed northward from Haiti yesterday, leaving villagers to mop up, evacuees to return to their tents, and most everyone relieved that the country did not suffer what could have been its first big disaster since the January earthquake.

The storm’s western track caused widespread floods and wind damage along the far edge of Haiti’s coast and is blamed for the deaths of at least eight people. It was a serious blow, but far better than had been feared in a nation where storms have been known to kill thousands, and more than 1 million quake survivors are living under tarpaulins and in tents.

“It really didn’t dump a lot of rain on us, so we got very lucky,’’ said Steve McAndrew, Haiti earthquake relief coordinator for the American Red Cross. [Read more...]

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Afghan Fallout On Pakistan

afghan fallout on pakistan_There is a line in Lewis Caroll’s, Alice in Wonderland which is relevant to the situation in which the US-led coalition finds itself in Afghanistan: “If you don’t know where you are going, any road will take you there”.

The core strategic objective that the US seeks to achieve has been defined by President Obama as, “disrupt, dismantle and defeat Al-Qaeda.” The question is if pursuing other goals are also necessary: fighting the Taleban and “nation building” in Afghanistan.  The choice for the West cannot be between cut and run from Afghanistan and an open-ended military engagement. Both are unfeasible and can be disastrous for the region.

An effort to pull out precipitously from Afghanistan would repeat the epic strategic error of the 1990s when the US abandoned that country to the chaos that in turn nurtured Al-Qaeda. But open ended military escalation risks trapping the West, in a Vietnam style quagmire: a war without end and no guarantee of success.

Pakistan’s stability has been gravely undermined by three decades of   strife in Afghanistan. The twin blowback from the Soviet invasion 30 years ago and the unintended consequences of the 2001 US military intervention has created unprecedented security, economic and social challenges for Pakistan.

Pakistan’s involvement in the long war to roll back the Russian occupation  bequeathed a witches brew of problems including militancy and a huge number of refugees, 2 million of whom remain in Pakistan. The 2001 intervention fuelled more militancy and ferment in the tribal areas.

Installing a government in Kabul dominated by an ethnic minority had similarly deleterious effects. As the Afghan war was increasingly pushed across the border into Pakistan and Islamabad took action in its frontier regions, militants turned their guns on the Pakistani security forces.

It is easy to understand in this backdrop how militancy on both sides of the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan is interconnected. But it is also distinct in origin, goals and magnitude.

The conflict is connected first by common bonds of tribe and ethnicity; second, by the broad appeal of ideology; third, by links to Al-Qaeda and four, by the two-way cross border movement of insurgents who provide each other a degree of mutual support.

It is also distinct because; one, the Afghan Taleban is an older and  more entrenched phenomenon with an organized   command and control structure. Two, the Taleban have geographically a much broader presence in Afghanistan compared to the Pakistani Taleban whose support base is confined to only part of the tribal areas, which constitute   just 3% of the country’s territory and represent 2% of the population. Three, they have greater confidence that they will prevail over a foreign force.

In contrast, the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) is a loose conglomeration of a dozen groups that primarily have local origins, motives, and ambitions. It lacks central command and control. Its core group led by Baitullah Mehsud has suffered a serious reversal by his death and the Pakistan military’s aggressive actions to blockade and contain his followers in South Waziristan.

Most importantly public sentiment in Pakistan has turned decisively against the TTP, leaving the organization in a position to launch periodic suicide missions, but not expand its influence. Without public backing the Pakistani Taleban are in no position to extend their sway.

But the continuing conflict in Afghanistan provides the TTP with its main motivation and legitimacy among its tribal support base.

Pakistan is in a better position than the coalition forces in Afghanistan to disrupt, contain and ultimately defeat its “Taleban” by building on the success of the recent operation in Swat and the tribal area of Bajaur. Within four months of the military being launched, the Taleban have been driven out of Malakand and the writ of the government has been re-established.

This shows that Pakistan has the capacity to deal with militancy, but without the compounding complications engendered by the fighting across its border. It underscores the most important lesson of counter insurgency: indigenous forces are better able to undertake successful missions.

On the Afghan side, the US and coalition forces will face greater difficulties against the insurgency especially if the present strategy remain unchanged and when a fraud-stricken Presidential election in Afghanistan has denuded the country of a legitimate government. One response being proposed in the US to this dire situation is a substantial surge of military forces. But to what end, at what cost and with what chances of success?  History shows that the Soviet Union deployed 140,000 troops at the peak of its occupation but failed to defeat the resistance.

Al Qaeda can only be neutralized in Afghanistan and in the border region with Pakistan if it is rejected by and ejected from the Taleban “sea” in which it survives. This urges a strategy to separate the two movements by military, political and other means.

Military escalation will push the two closer and strengthen rather than erode their links.

There are three possible scenarios for what could happen in Afghanistan:

1) Military escalation: This will inevitably be directed at the Taleban and will   evoke even more hostility from the country’s Pashtun dominated areas and closer cooperation between Al-Qaeda and the Taleban thereby further impeding the core objective of eliminating ?Al Qaeda.

Although the Taleban do not represent all Pashtuns, they do exploit Pashtun grievances and use the foreign presence as a recruitment tool.

If history is a guide in this graveyard of empires, a military solution is also unlikely to succeed for several reasons:

i) The enhanced military forces will still be insufficient to ‘hold’ the countryside: independent estimates suggest that the Taleban now have a permanent presence in over 70% of Afghanistan. If Moscow with 140,000 troops supported by a more professional Afghan army of 100,000 could not succeed against the Mujahideen, why should it be any different now?

ii)  Escalation will inevitably lead to mounting European/American casualties, which will erode further public support in the West. The insurgents can absorb higher losses and fight on. Pakistan has incurred 7,500 casualties among its security personnel (dead and injured). Can western forces envision such heavy losses and sustain ?public support?

iii)  The economic cost of the war will also escalate. Will Western Parliaments pre-occupied with economic recovery agree indefinitely to defray the growing costs of an unending Afghan war?

iv)      Escalation will likely intensify rivalries among the neighboring powers in a region where a subterranean competition is already in play. Pakistan’s concerns about India’s role in Afghanistan are well known.

As for the impact on Pakistan, further military escalation on its border is fraught with great risk. The threat of instability will grow not diminish, for many reasons.

i)  It will likely lead to an influx of militants and Al-Qaeda fighters into Pakistan and an arms flow from across the border.

ii)  Enhance the vulnerability of US-NATO ground supply routes through the country as supply needs will likely double. This will create what military strategists call the “battle of reverse front.” Protecting these supply lines will also over stretch Pakistani troops.

iii) It could lead to an influx of more Afghan refugees, especially destabilizing in Balochistan.

iv) A surge in Afghanistan can produce a spike in violent reprisals in mainland Pakistan.

v) Intensified fighting and its fallout could erode and unravel the fragile political consensus in Pakistan to fight militancy.

Maleeha Lodhi served as Pakistan’s ?ambassador to the United States and the United Kingdom. By Dr Maleeha Lodhi, Khaleej Times.

Afghanistan Bombing Kills 10

afghanistan bombing kills 10_A remote-controlled bomb exploded Monday in western Afghanistan’s main city, killing 10 people and critically wounding a district police chief – the main target of the attack. The bomb went off on a crowded street near a fruit market in Herat. It injured 30 people, said Raouf Ahmedi, the top police spokesman in western Afghanistan. The target was Mohammad Issa, the police chief for nearby Injil district, who was driving into town. He was transferred to a NATO-run hospital in critical condition, Ahmedi said.
Local police officials initially reported 12 dead. But the head of the regional health department, Dr. Ghulam Said Rashid, confirmed 10 were killed: a woman, a young girl, six men and two police officers. Ahmedi said the blast blew out windows in a 100-yard (meter) radius and several casualties were fruit vendors. Witnesses said the bomb left a one-yard wide crater in the street and damaged two police vehicles. A Taliban spokesman, Qari Yousuf Ahmadi, said the group targeted the police chief.
The Interior Ministry, meanwhile, said insurgents attacked a police checkpoint in the old city of Baghlan to the north of the country on Sunday. Eight militants and two police died in the ensuing gun battle, the ministry said in a statement Monday. The violence in the comparatively calm cities of Herat and Baghlan highlighted the volatile situation across the country as Afghanistan braces for presidential and local elections later this month.
President Hamid Karzai, considered the front-runner, condemned Monday’s bombing and urged police to track down its perpetrators. “This is another attempt by the terrorists to disrupt democracy and development in Afghanistan,” Karzai said in a statement issued by his office. Some 101,000 NATO and U.S. forces are deployed to secure the country. This includes a record 62,000 U.S. troops, more than double the number a year ago but still half their strength in Iraq.
Nine troops have been killed in fighting or bombings this month in Afghanistan, including three Americans on Sunday and three on Saturday, along with two Canadians and one French. July was the deadliest month for international troops since the 2001 U.S.-led invasion to oust the Taliban government for sheltering al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, with 74 foreign troops – including 43 Americans – killed.
Roadside bombs have become the militants’ weapon of choice in Afghanistan, and the number of such attacks has spiked this year. U.S. troops say militants are now using bombs with little or no metal, making them even harder to detect. The Taliban are also planting multiple bombs on top of one another and burying several bombs in one small area. U.S. commanders have long predicted a rise in violence in Afghanistan this summer, the country’s traditional fighting season, and Taliban militants have vowed to disrupt the country’s Aug. 20 presidential vote.

Georgias Little Grand Canyon

grand-canyon_Douglas Bauknight – I remember the first time I saw the Grand Canyon when I was a kid. It was far bigger than I had even imagined. Out west there are several canyons that I remember seeing such as Zion, Bryce, and Canyon de Chelly, but the Grand Canyon was the one I really wanted to see, and it certainly didn’t disappoint.

Words can’t accurately describe the magnificent color and beauty of the great canyons of the wild west.

But what if I told you that type of magnificent color can be found right her in Georgia? Georgia’s Providence Canyon was formed in less than 200 years, due largely to poor farming practices in the early 1800s. Poor conservation techniques back then, combined with the unique nature of the soil allowed plow furrows to turn into something colorful and magnificent.

In 1971, Providence Canyon became a State Conservation Park and is located on State Road 39C, just west of the hamlet of Lumpkin and 45 minutes south of the city of Columbus. It is open daily 7 a.m.-9 p.m. There is no entrance fee, but parking costs $5 per automobile (more for groups arriving in vans and buses). The park’s Interpretive Center (8 a.m.-5 p.m.) offers a 13-minute video and exhibitions on the origin of the canyon.

This 1,103-acre state conservation park, called the Little Grand Canyon, is a haven for hikers, backpackers, campers, picnickers and even passing motorists. It’s ranked as one of the Seven Wonders of Georgia. The maximum depth of Providence Canyon is 150 feet. As wind and rain deepened them, the gullies became ravines and in just a few decades the ravines became canyons. Today, Providence Canyon is certainly a site to see flooding your eyes with color and beauty.

From the Visitor Center, the Canyon Loop hiking trail leads down the steep slow to the bottom of the canyon where hikers can explore the dramatic ravines close up. The trail provides access to the bottoms of all nine canyons. The total loop is 2.45 miles, but hikers can shorten the distance by retracing their way back to the Visitor Center. For those less interested in a long hike, views of the canyon can be seen from the picnic area and overlooks located along its northern rim. The overlooks and views from the fence in the picnic area provide spectacular views of the canyon and gorgeous photo opportunities.

Because Providence is a short drive to Columbus, GA, it makes for a perfect day trip. Camping and cottages are available however at nearby Florence Marina State Park, the only lodging in the immediate area, set on 45,000-acre Lake Eufaula, 10 miles west of the canyon. Eight “dog friendly” efficiencies and six cottages are offered, plus a $3 parking fee if you care to stay overnight.

Enjoy Exceptional Activities

vacatiion_destinationsWhile many locales in the south are plenty warm and have experienced their fare share of summer weather, most destinations to north have remained cool and have only been teased with short-lived warm-ups. Are you treating your family to a luxury vacation this year? Summer vacation is coming and so are you looking for a luxury vacation destination designed to entertain kids and adults?

Nevertheless, it can sometimes be hard to find a luxury vacation suitable for the whole family. But at Westgate, we are certain that you’ll have vacation destinations to consider either with your group of friends or for your family’s next luxury vacation. Choose your destination now – be it in Florida, Missouri, Nevada, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah or in Virginia. Hurry, visit the above mentioned and enjoy their exceptional activities.

A Place Of Your Choice

going-on-a-vacation_How amazing and exciting really is spending vacation with your family in a place of your choice. In the current economy, not everyone wants to spend a fortune traveling. A road trip is a cost effective way to get out and see the world and because of this patchy economy, travel has become a lot cheaper.

Be that as it may, however, better yet prepare and plan ahead any future trips so that you can make your plans and adjust your time frames accordingly. Look and see what is available in the destination you choose, in Orlando vacations – simple things like miniature golf, or going to the movies, finding a safe hiking trail, fishing or a camping spot for a day can often be the best of things on a trip, being affordable and giving anyone and everyone with you something fun to do together. So hurry now and just visits the above mentioned for additional information’s.