FPI Overnight Brief -- November 6
FPI Overnight Brief
November 6, 2009
Honduras
Honduran de facto leader Roberto Micheletti said on
Thursday night he would install a national unity government
without the participation of ousted President Manuel Zelaya.
The rival leaders had agreed last week to end a four-month
political crisis and form a so-called unity and
reconciliation cabinet by Thursday, but they then disagreed
who would lead the cabinet. Zelaya declined to name any
members to the cabinet, but Micheletti said he was going
ahead without them. .Reuters
Afghanistan/Pakistan
An escalating quarrel
between Afghan President Hamid Karzai and a powerful
governor is stoking fears of bloodshed in one of the
country's more peaceful and prosperous provinces. During
this year's presidential election, Balkh Gov. Atta Mohammad
Noor was alone among Afghanistan's 34 governors -- all of
whom were appointed by Mr. Karzai -- to openly back
challenger Abdullah Abdullah. Mr. Karzai's victory last
week, declared by an election commission after months of
controversy, has Mr. Atta steaming, and tensions rising over
the prospect that Kabul will try to reassert central
authority in this province of two million people. "Karzai is
a thief of people 's votes. Democracy has been buried in
Afghanistan. He's not a lawful president," Mr. Atta said in
an interview in his vast rococo-styled office, as turbaned
supplicants lined up to petition for his help in resolving
court cases and disputes with local authorities. Wall Street Journal
Taliban fighters are fleeing into the mountains of South Waziristan to escape a military offensive and resistance is dwindling, Pakistan's army said. Terrorist supply lines have been cut and their ability to "strike as a cohesive force" reduced significantly, Major General Athar Abbas, the military spokesman, told local television yesterday, the official Associated Press of Pakistan reported. While most escape routes have been closed, guerrillas are fleeing across rugged terrain in the tribal region bordering Afghanistan, Abbas said. Intelligence reports indicate militant leaders remain in Waziristan and are in hiding, he added. Bloomberg
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown is to defend his government's commitment to Afghanistan in a major speech Friday, saying the war is essential to his country's security, according to excerpts released in advance by his office. The speech comes after the deaths of seven British soldiers in the past week, including five who were shot and killed by an Afghan police officer they were training. Despite increasing doubt over the country's involvement in the war in Afghanistan, Brown links military action there to safety on Britain's streets. The AP
Officials say two gunmen attacked an army officer and soldier in the Pakistani capital, wounding both. It's the third such attack in less than three weeks and comes as the military wages an offensive against the Taliban along the Afghan border. No group has claimed responsibility for the attacks, which also killed another army officer. But they could signal that Islamist militants are increasingly turning to assassination tactics. The AP
Detainees
Michael Mukasey writes: Ali Saleh
Kahlah al-Marri, who by his own account came to this country
most recently in 2001 to help organize a second wave of
attacks after the Sept. 11 atrocities, received a jail
sentence on Oct. 29 that could free him within six years.
This again prompts the question of whether it is wise for
the administration to cancel the military trials of those
held at Guantanamo Bay and charged with planning the Sept.
11 attacks and, instead, to bring them to the United States
to be charged anew and tried in civilian courts. At the
least, those moving this process forward should consider
whether the main purpose here is to protect the citizens of
this country or to showcase the country's criminal justice
system, which has been done before and which failed to
impress Khalid Sheik Mohammed, Marri or any of their
associates. We should not wish for any future sentencing
judge to deal with the specter of recidivism by telling us
that that "remains to be seen," or for any future
defendant's lawyer to describe, as did Marri's, his client's
reaction to the process with what sounds like a wicked
parody of the pronouncements that accompanied Marri's
indictment, plea and sentence: "His faith in the American
justice system and the Constitution were fulfilled." Washington Post
North
Korea
The Obama administration reiterated Thursday that
it was willing to hold bilateral discussions with North
Korea only if it leads to the resumption of six-party talks
to achieve the goal of denuclearization of the Korean
Peninsula. "We are willing to have bilateral talks with the
North Koreans if these talks are conducted in the context of
the six-party talks and if they lead to the resumption of
these talks," State Department spokesman, Ian Kelly, told
reporters at his daily news conference. RTT News
Levant
Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas said he won't run for re-election in January
because of American "bias" toward Israel and disappointment
over the lack of progress in the peace process. "I have told
our brethren in the PLO [Palestine Liberation Organization]
... that I have no desire to run in the forthcoming
election," the 74-year-old Palestinian leader said in a
televised speech from his headquarters in the West Bank city
of Ramallah. If Mr. Abbas steps aside it could leave a
leadership vacuum in the Palestinian Authority. His
announcement deals a further setback to President Barack
Obama's stuttering bid to revive peace talks. Mr. Abbas's
political career has been built on the principle of peaceful
negotiations with Israel to end the conflict. Wall Street Journal
Europe
Russia's foreign minister said Thursday he was surprised
by Poland's call for more U.S. troops on Polish soil in
response to Moscow's assertiveness, a news agency reported.
RIA Novosti quoted minister Sergei Lavrov as saying that the
request by his Polish counterpart, Radek Sikorski,
contradicted Moscow's and Warsaw's understanding of security
issues in Europe. "If he did say that, it makes me deeply
astonished, " Lavrov said. Sikorski said Wednesday at the
Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington
that "we need some strategic reassurance," and that the U.S.
could provide it by sending more than the six American
troops it now has based in Poland. The minister said that
need became clear when Russia and Belarus conducted a
military exercise with hundreds of tanks near Poland's
border last month. The AP
Georgia/Russia
Russian military intelligence
believes Georgia might again attack South Ossetia, the
pro-Moscow region over which the two countries fought a war
last year, a powerful spy chief said. Aleksandr
Shlyakhturov, who in April took over command of the
military's Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU), said the
situation was strained and accused NATO countries of
continuing to supply arms to Georgia. "The situation with
Georgia remains tense because the current Georgian
authorities do not just refuse to recognize the sovereignty
of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, but are trying in every way
to return these countries...to their jurisdiction," he said
in a rare interview with state news agency ITAR-TASS. Reuters
Trade
China's Ministry
of Commerce said it would protect its industry's interests
and accused Washington of double-standards in denouncing new
U.S. anti-dumping duties imposed shortly before a visit by
President Barack Obama. It also called for Washington's
swift recognition of China as a market economy. The United
States on Thursday slapped preliminary anti-dumping duties
ranging up to 99 percent on $2.63 billion in Chinese-made
pipes used in the oil and gas industry, in the biggest U.S.
trade action against China. That comes on top of
counter-vailing duties on the same product, announced in
September. Forbes
The German foreign minister used his visit to Washington to demand that US auto giant General Motors take measures to protect German jobs at its troubled European subsidiary Opel. Following a meeting with Hillary Clinton, Foreign Minister Westerwelle said he was satisfied that the US government was not involved in General Motors' sudden decision this week to keep its European subsidiary Opel. Clinton had stressed that GM alone chose to abandon a deal to sell Opel to Canadian-Austrian parts-maker Magna, Westerwelle said after the meeting. Clinton had "strongly underlined the fact that the decision taken by General Motors was a decision taken without any political influence, " Westerwelle said. "It's very good news to receive." Deutsche Welle
Iran
An Iranian reporter for
Agence France-Presse was detained by the Iranian authorities
during coverage of events observing the 30th anniversary of
the takeover of the United States Embassy, the news agency
said Thursday The AP
Postscript
For years, the world has mocked Germany for its love
affair with David Hasselhoff. And, for years, Germans have
been hoping that the world would forgive and forget. But now
that MTV has invited "the Hoff" to perform in Berlin, just
like he did 20 years ago when the Berlin Wall came down,
their hopes have been dashed. Spiegel
Events
Leading the Charge or Charging the Leader?
China’s Engagement on Global Challenges
Center
for American Progress
November 6
How
Spiritual Renewal Helped Topple the Berlin
Wall
American Enterprise Institute
November 9
The Surge: the
Untold Story
Institute for the Study of War
November 9
The APEC Summit: A Future for
Transpacific Regionalism?
American Enterprise
Institute
November 10
15 Years and Counting: Inside
Lukashenka's Belarus
Radio Free Europe/Radio
Liberty
November 12
Feed the Donkey First: Freedom of Religion and the
Geopolitics of Human Rights
Hudson Institute
November 12
Security Policy
Forum: Pakistan: Military and Political Challenges
Ahead
The Elliott School, George Washington
University
November 17
Is it Time to Lift the Ban
on Travel to Cuba?
House Foreign Affairs Committee
November 18
International Iran Conference: Time to
Act
Mideast Freedom Forum Berlin
November
28-29
The Changing Strategic Gravity of
Al-Qaeda
Jamestown Foundation
December
9
ENDS