Tuesday, June 3, 2014

CANADA MILITARY NEWS:JULY15-USA TRAITOR- SGT. BOWE BERGDAHL- OBAMA AND NATO BETRAY OUR TROOPS AND AFGHANS AND SHAME THE WORLD- just 2 participate in a white mans war that they have created with Canada and EU. Shame on the lot of u.... u disgrace our troops of our nations and slap the faces of Afghan women and children/Adfghan news updates/troop love/Dr. Abdullah Abdullah - Good Morning Freedom /UKRAINE BEING HIJACKED BY NATO AND USA, CANADA AND EU/Afghanistan and our Nations troops betrayed by American President/Ukraine betrayed by West dogma- $$$ 2 Ukraine NOT Home Nations troop healing and education??? /BERGDAHL CHARGED DESERTION...not... TREASON- March 25-2015 with 6 American troops killed on his blood

 SONOFABITCH-   6 American troops butchered-  5 TALIBAN COMMANDERS FREED 4 THIS PIECE OF SHEEEET-     A U.S. official says the Army sergeant who abandoned his post in Afghanistan and was held by the Taliban for five years will be court martialed on charges of desertion and avoiding military service.  Bergdahl the Lance Armstrong of American troops- but our Nato troops died....









Ex-Taliban prisoner Bergdahl to be charged with desertion: official

By Lolita C. Baldor    The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — A U.S. official says the Army sergeant who abandoned his post in Afghanistan and was held by the Taliban for five years will be court martialed on charges of desertion and avoiding military service.
Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl will also be charged with misbehavior before the enemy, said the official, who was not authorized to discuss the announcement publicly on the record and spoke on condition of anonymity.




---------------




BOWE BERGDALI IS NOT A HERO-   FACEBOOK

https://www.facebook.com/groups/288812731285526/?ref=br_tf

----------------

JULY 2014- SWEET JESUS, MOTHER MARY AND JOSEPH..

Bergdahl resuming active duty as regular soldier
Afghanistan News.Net - Monday 14th July, 2014

WASHINGTON - Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl, who was released from five years of Taliban captivity six weeks ago, is set to resume his duties as a regular army soldier, an army statement said .





QUOTE:  “The future is too good to waste on lies. And life is way too short to care for the damnation of others,” he wrote.
“I have seen their ideas and I am ashamed to even be Amer­ican.”

 View image on Twitter

Bergdahl smiles in ‘captivity’ pic

By Joe Tacopino

July 10, 2014 | 3:21am

This POW looks more like a BFF
Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, who was held captive by the Taliban for nearly five years, is seen in a new image mugging for a picture with a jolly jihadi who ­has his arm resting casually on Bergdahl’s shoulder.
The bro-hug was posted Wednesday to the Twitter ­account of someone associated with the Islamic Emirate of ­Afghanistan, according to Fox News.
The supposed captor was identified by The Middle East Research Institute as a since-slain Taliban commander, Badruddin Haqqani.
Bergdahl, who was taken prisoner when he mysteriously drifted away from his unit while on patrol in Paktika province, sports a grin in the photo.
The tweet accompanying the image gives a shout-out to the Army sergeant, who was freed in exchange for five Taliban soldiers released from captivity at Guantanamo Bay by the Obama administration.
Haqqani was killed in a US drone strike in August 2012.
It was not clear when the picture was taken.
Later, another Twitter account posted that Bergdahl was never tortured by the Taliban and was treated only with kindness during his captivity, according to the Daily Mail.
Bergdahl, a native of Idaho, was captured in 2009.
He is currently receiving care at a military base in San ­Antonio, Texas.
The release of possible Taliban terrorists was controversial because some former members of Bergdahl’s unit claim that he left of his own accord.
Some have even claimed that Bergdahl left his post several times prior to his being captured.
Bergdahl had privately complained in letters to his parents that he was frustrated with the American mission in Afghanistan.
“The future is too good to waste on lies. And life is way too short to care for the damnation of others,” he wrote.
“I have seen their ideas and I am ashamed to even be Amer­ican.”
A new investigation has been launched into whether the soldier had indeed been captured or whether he willingly ­deserted his mission.



 -------------



JUNE 9 2014-  f**k....    OBAMA HAS BETRAYED OUR DEAD AND WOUNDED NATO SONS AND DAUGHTERS FIGHTING 4 BASIC FREEDOMS4 AFGHANS- and has betrayed our world- 5 taliban leaders of Guantanamo Bay??? We will remember-  OBAMA- u broke our hearts....and betrayed men and women in uniform all over the world!!!!!  Sweet Jesus, Mother Mary and Joseph. All the blood lost dancing around the innocents 2 get the taliban muslim cowards hiding under the dresses of Afghan women ... and politican betrays our world... AGAIN!!!!



With Taliban swap, Afghans wonder: Is the West abandoning us?

OMAR SAMAD

Special to The Globe and Mail



Last updated Monday, Jun. 09 2014, 6:00 AM EDT

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/with-taliban-swap-afghans-wonder-is-the-west-abandoning-us/article19062710/

------------------


the reality.... JUNE 9-   Afghanistan will be free- and Afghans military and cops are doing brilliantly... and they love the everyday Afghan people- and the Nations (NATO) troops who truly loved and believed in Afghan people and their basic freedom and dignity and basic rights of their BEAUTIFUL CULTURES ...imho.... and  THE TROOPS N COPS are loyal... which on this day... is a hell of a lot more than President Obama and his UN cronies don't cha think?


the truth



The ISI’s Great Game in Afghanistan

Irrespective of the election outcome, Pakistan will remain deeply involved in Afghanistan.
By Omer Aziz
June 08, 2014

On the evening of March 20, two teenagers entered the buffet area of the luxurious Serena Hotel in Kabul. The well-guarded establishment was a popular meeting place for politicians, diplomats, and journalists; a kind of refuge away from the danger constantly present in Kabul. Like the many guests assembled at the Serena this night, the two young men told security officials that they were visiting the hotel for dinner to celebrate the Afghan New Year. As guests filled their plates and live music echoed throughout the hall, the men entered the dining area and began wildly shooting, killing nine people before being killed by security. Among the dead were the noted Afghan journalist Sardar Ahmad, who was killed with this wife and two daughters, and Luis Maria Darte, a longtime Paraguyan diplomat and election observer.

Two days later, Afghan President Hamid Karzai released a statement saying the terrorist attack had been conducted “by an intelligence service outside this country.” Which entity did he have in mind? If there was any doubt, Karzai quickly put it to rest the following week in an interview he gave with an Indian television channel, when he said that terrorism was “nurtured” and “supported” in Pakistan, where the militants had their “ideological roots.”

For four decades, Pakistan’s spy-generals have played Afghanistan like a powerful chip in a consequential game of poker. They know the important local militants, have open channels to their favorite groups, and regularly play various groups against the Western coalition. The twin justifications for the aggressive intervention in Afghan affairs are India and American withdrawal. Since Pakistan’s humiliating dissection at Indian and nascent Bangladeshi hands in 1971, Islamabad’s doctrine vis-à-vis Afghanistan has been known as strategic depth. For the ISI, Afghanistan is to be a safety net should the delusional prediction that India will invade a weaker Pakistan actually come true.

A widespread view in Pakistan’s elite circles is that the U.S. will soon withdraw and leave the Afghan problem at Pakistan’s doorstep. I have been hearing a variant of this view for five years now. With U.S. President Barack Obama’s decision to leave 9,800 troops in Afghanistan through the end of 2014 and potentially leave zero troops after two years, it is apparent now that this view has not been unfounded. But Pakistan has wanted a vacuum in Afghanistan all along. A despoiled, anarchic vestige of a state to its east means that Pakistan can virtually control the territory, as it did through its various puppets in the 1980s and 1990s.

During the Soviet-Afghan War – during which American arms were shipped into Afghanistan through the ISI – Pakistani spymasters channeled funds and arms into the hands of their favorite militant groups, often the most retrogressive and extremist of the Mujahedeen. Leaders of some of these groups studied in Pakistani madrassas, a wellspring of indoctrination and militant thinking. By one estimate, the number of madrassas in Pakistan feeding the jihadists surged from 900 in 1971 to 32,000 in 1988. The ISI’s strategy at the time – and which remains its strategy today – can be summed up by what Pakistani dictator Zia ul-Haq told one of his generals: “Afghanistan must be made to boil at the right temperature.”

In the intervening period, Afghanistan has done more than boil. It has been flayed and seared by selfish American short-termism and poisonous, neocolonial Pakistani long-termism. As is well known, the Afghan Taliban were themselves a creation of the ISI, and a de facto proxy by the time they took over Kabul in 1996. In 1999, Benazir Bhutto’s minister of interior, Nasrullah Babar admitted it quite explicitly, pronouncing, “We created the Taliban.”

Today, the “Talban” are a hodgepodge of militant outfits, though the central leadership of the Afghan Taliban is thought to be in Quetta, Pakistan. For the ISI, there may be a chickens coming home to roost moment, as Pakistan faces a brutal insurgency within its own borders that has adopted the Taliban name but is in many ways far more rejectionist and hostile to the governing authorities. To give just one example, the Afghan Taliban support polio vaccination while the Pakistani Taliban vow to kill anyone offering such treatments. The ISI’s game of prolonging the post-9/11 insurgency in Afghanistan long enough for the tired American leviathan to pack up and go home – and for Pakistan to move in more forcefully – is the direct cause of this terrorist surge, which has taken over 50,000 lives. There are now three separate but interrelated insurgencies eating at the Pakistani state like overfed parasites: the sectarian Sunni jihad against Pakistan’s Shia population, the Balochi insurgency, and the gangsterism and religious extremism destroying Karachi. When exporting militancy is a state’s central foreign policy tool, it does not take long for the pawns to turn their guns on their masters.

According to a number of reports, the ISI – sometimes called a state within a state – operates a highly secretive, off-the-record “S Wing” that is used to support the various militant groups that have been central to Pakistani foreign policy. A report leaked in 2006 by the British Defense Ministry stated, “Indirectly Pakistan (through the ISI) has been supporting terrorism and extremism.” The report went so far as to link the ISI to the 2005 London bombings, in addition to the various insurgencies in Iraq and Afghanistan. A 2012 NATO study based on 27,000 interrogations of 4,000 captured Taliban and al-Qaeda fighters concluded that the ISI provided safe havens to the Taliban, monitored their movements, manipulated their fighters, and arrested those thought uncooperative.

Behind all this lies India, which had been an ardent supporter of the Northern Alliance and today has an active presence in Afghanistan. The threat of Indian encirclement of Pakistan via Afghanistan seems widely overblown. There are fewer than 3,600 Indians in Afghanistan – most of them businessmen – and just 10 Indian diplomatic officers. While there is considerable evidence of Indian support of Balochi separatists, the paranoid ISI view of India in Afghanistan ignores New Delhi’s vested interest in a stable and prosperous Afghanistan. It also ignores the centuries-old history between India and Afghanistan, and the erstwhile Indo-Afghan frontier. Afghanistan has received more than a billion dollars of Indian aid and, in 2009, celebrated the completion of the Zaranj-Delaram road, giving it better access to Iran. There is also the much-discussed animosity towards Pakistan by Karzai and by Pashtuns in general, who consider Islamabad an aggressive, prevaricating, double-dealing regime.

The unfortunate but crystalline reality of Afghanistan’s future is that it hinges on the decisions made by Pakistani generals and whether their actions will be checked by a Coalition response. This is not to suggest that Afghanistan’s future is lost. To recapitulate some recent victories: 7 million Afghans turned out to vote on April 5, thirty-five percent of them women. The Afghan election went forward despite threats from the Taliban and accusations of fraud. Voters jubilantly participated in the electoral process, thwarting attempts by militant groups who have violently opposed elections.

Regardless of who wins, however, Pakistan will be deeply involved in the internal workings of Afghanistan. It will be up to neighboring states and whatever remnant of the international community that is still engaged to ensure that over a decade of conflict and reconstruction does not conclude with a de facto takeover of Afghanistan by its neighbor across the Durand Line.

Omer Aziz is a writer and journalist from Toronto. In 2012-2013, he was a Commonwealth and Pitt Scholar of International Relations at Cambridge University. He has written for The New York Times, The Globe and Mail, Salon, the Woodrow Wilson Center, and other outlets. He tweets @omeraziz12.
http://thediplomat.com/2014/06/the-isis-great-game-in-afghanistan/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+the-diplomat+%28The+Diplomat+RSS%29



--------------------
JUNE 14- ELECTION AFGHANISTAN- we love u Dr. Abdullah Abdullah- the nelson mandela of Afghanistan- students, youth, women and elders adore Dr. Abdullah who took 45% of 1st run.





AFGHANISTAN- GOOD MORNING FREEDOM

Attack on Abdullah: Kabul hints at Pakistan link

Published in The Express Tribune, June 9th, 2014.

KABUL: Afghanistan on Sunday accused ‘foreign intelligence services’ of being behind an attack targeting presidential front-runner Abdullah Abdullah that killed 12 people, in a veiled reference to Pakistan.

Abdullah survived the assassination attempt on Friday when two blasts hit his campaign motorcade in Kabul.

“Initial investigations indicate foreign intelligence services were involved in this incident through Lashkar-e-Taiba in an organised manner, and the terrorists were aiming to disrupt the election in Afghanistan,” Afghanistan’s National Security Council, which is chaired by President Hamid Karzai, said in a statement.

The attempt to assassinate Abdullah triggered strong international condemnation, including from the United States and the UN Security Council.

Afghanistan is in the middle of elections to choose a successor to Karzai. Abdullah fell short of the 50 per cent threshold needed for an outright victory in the April first round and will face former World Bank economist Ashraf Ghani in the run-off.

The NSC statement said Friday’s attack on Abdullah was ‘the worst incident during election campaign’.


http://tribune.com.pk/story/719306/attack-on-abdullah-kabul-hints-at-pakistan-link/



comment;From many days i was thinking that why karzai is not linking this attack to pakistan and finally it happened.

comment:
any doubts?





KABUL DREAMS (Afghan Youth Band)   GOOD MORNING FREEDOM


--------------------


Hundreds of civil society and human rights activists on Monday staged an anti-Pakistan demonstration in Kabul












Dr. Abdullah Abdullah - we pray the next President of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan- youth, women and seniors of Afghanistan love him dearly




GOOD MORNING FREEDOM-  KABUL DREAMS- we love our Afghans... just love u





CANADA MILITARY NEWS: June 3- OBAMA AND NATO BETRAY OUR TROOPS AND AFGHANS AND SHAME THE WORLD- just 2 participate in a white mans war that they have created with Canada and EU.  Shame on the lot of u.... u disgrace our troops of our nations and slap the faces of Afghan women and children/Adfghan news updates/troop love/Dr. Abdullah Abdullah - Good Morning Freedom 






Bowe Bergdahl told colleagues at Afghan base he had gone to start a 'new life'
·         Jun 03, 2014 20:09
·         By Christopher Bucktin
The 28-year-old is alleged to have left the message in a note before he wandered off his base in Afghanistan
·      














U.S. Army Private Bowe Bergdahl watches as one of his captors display his identity tag to the camera at an unknown location in Afghanistan

The American soldier freed in exchange for five Taliban prisoners said he had gone to start a 'new life' before wandering off his base in Afghanistan, it has been claimed.
Bowe Bergdahl, 28, left the message in a note to his colleagues, according to reports in the New York Times.
The soldier said he did not want to fight for America any more, did not believe in the war and was leaving to start a new life before wandering away in June 2009.
The news came as it emerged the Army may still pursue charges against Sgt Bergdahl for desertion.
General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said military leaders have been accused of "looking away from misconduct, and it's premature" to think they will not investigate if there was a case to be answered.
His statement came just days after Susan Rice, Obama's national security adviser said he served with "honour and distinction".
It emerged that President Obama could face possible impeachment over the deal to free Bergdahl after he was accused of breaking federal law over brokering a deal with the Taliban.
Opposition Republicans claim the President ignored a law requiring him to notify Congress 30 days before releasing anyone from Guantanamo Bay prison.
Soldiers who served alongside private Bergdahl have called for him to be court martialed for “deserting his post” - while the pictures of six colleagues who died looking for him were posted on Facebook.
His release on Saturday, brokered with the Taliban in exchange for five Guantanamo Bay detainees, has ignited fury in some quarters of the military.
Sergeant Matt Vierkant, a member of Bergdahl’s platoon when he went missing on June 30, 2009, said: “I was pissed off then and I am even more so now with everything going on.
"Bowe Bergdahl deserted during a time of war and his fellow Americans lost their lives searching for him."
Vierkant said Bergdahl needs to not only acknowledge his actions publicly but face a military trial for desertion under the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
His former squad leader Greg Leatherman said he hopes the military investigates Bergdahl and questions whether he did, indeed, desert his post in Afghanistan.
A Facebook page called “Bowe Bergdahl is NOT a hero!” has already gained almost 6,000 members and shows the pictures of the six soldiers who lost their lives while looking for him.
They were Staff Sergeant Clayton Bowen, 29, and Private Morris Walker, 23, who were killed in an IED explosion on August 18, 2009.
















A week later father-of-two Staff Sergeant Kurt Curtiss, 27, died in a gun battle.
Second Lieutenant Darryn Andrews, 34, and Private Matthew Martinek, 20, died after a rocket-propelled grenade ambush on September 4, 2009.
















The next day Staff Sergeant Michael Murphrey, 25, was killed in an IED blast.
















A White House petition to court martial Bergdahl for being absent without leave has nearly 2,000 online signatures.
It came amid reports Bergdahl is said to have sent e-mails to his parents that suggest he had become disillusioned with America’s mission in Afghanistan and was considering desertion.
The soldier’s friends said he enlisted in the army to help the Afghan people and provide philanthropic support to the war effort.
But the emergence of a series of emails suggest he had lost faith in the US Army’s mission shortly before he was captured five years ago.


http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/bowe-bergdahl-told-colleagues-afghan-3641992#ixzz33c8FAqJ8
Follow us: @DailyMirror on Twitter | DailyMirror on Facebook

------------







Bowe Bergdahl is NOT a hero!- facebook...




--------------


Heaven Was Needing a Hero


Canada Portraits of Honour- 158 remembered




We Are Canadian Soldiers






NATO NATIONS DUMP THEIR WOUNDED TROOPS WHO FOUGHT AND DIED IN THEIR WAR...


Wounded Warrior Project- USA


Canada's Sgt. Elton Adams Battle of the Mind


UK troops remembered- Bed of Roses-   wounded and broken soul warriors dumped like broken toys....  


----------------


AFGHANISTAN






The three other Americans being held in Afghanistan
American Warren Weinstein was kidnapped in August 2011 while doing work in Pakistan.
By: Gordon Lubold John Hudson Foreign Policy, Published on Tue Jun 03 2014
WASHINGTON—The controversial decision to swap five senior Taliban figures for the military’s lone prisoner of war, Bowe Bergdahl, is putting new pressure on the White House to do more to free the three other American citizens who have been missing in Afghanistan or Pakistan for years.
The American civilians thought to be in captivity include Caitlin Coleman, who, along with her Canadian-born husband Josh, disappeared in Afghanistan in October 2012. Coleman was pregnant and would have had a child by the following January; if the infant survived, he or she would be considered an American citizen. The third missing citizen is Warren Weinstein, 72, a government contractor who was doing work in Pakistan when he was kidnapped in August 2011.
It was unclear from government officials this week what the status of these Americans was or if active discussions were taking place to secure their release.
In a letter to President Barack Obama on Monday, Republican Rep. Duncan Hunter of California demanded to know why they weren’t part of the deal in which Washington agreed to send five detainees from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to Qatar in return for Bergdahl’s release. Bergdahl, 28, had been held by militants since wandering off his tiny outpost in eastern Afghanistan in 2009.
“My understanding is that three other Americans remain in the custody of militants aligned with the Taliban,” Hunter wrote. “Should this still be the case, I would like to know why these individuals were not included in the negotiation that resulted in the release of five detainees from Guantanamo Bay.”
Hunter also urged the president to “expedite and exhaust ongoing lines of effort” to ensure the return of the three Americans, but was careful to stipulate that it should not be done by releasing additional detainees from Guantanamo Bay.
There was no immediate response to the letter from the White House.

White House now facing pressure to free the three other American citizens who have been missing in Afghanistan or Pakistan for years.

---------------




--------------

                  



Jun 3, 3:24 PM EDT


US military deaths in Afghanistan at 2,182


As of Tuesday, June 3, 2014, at least 2,182 members of the U.S. military had died in Afghanistan as a result of the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001, according to an Associated Press count.

The AP count is two less than the Defense Department's tally, last updated Tuesday at 10 a.m. EDT.

At least 1,806 military service members have died in Afghanistan as a result of hostile action, according to the military's numbers.

Outside of Afghanistan, the department reports at least 133 more members of the U.S. military died in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. Of those, 11 were the result of hostile action.

The AP count of total OEF casualties outside of Afghanistan is five more than the department's tally.

The Defense Department also counts three military civilian deaths.

Since the start of U.S. military operations in Afghanistan, 19,784 U.S. service members have been wounded in hostile action, according to the Defense Department.


The latest identification reported by the military:

-Pfc. Jacob H. Wykstra, 21, of Thornton, Colorado, died May 28, in Kandahar Province, Afghanistan, of injuries sustained as a result of an aircraft accident; assigned 1st Battalion, 12th Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, Fort Carson, Colorado.





---------



Updated: June 4, 2014 00:56 IST


Au revoir, Afghanistan


Leaving aside the political ramifications of the deal within the U.S., the prisoner swap blows dark clouds over the Afghanistan-Pakistan-India region

It had all the trappings of a soon-to-be-iconic photograph — a tall American Commander-in-Chief dressed in a smart black suit, his arms reassuringly around the shoulders of the mother on his left and the father on his right, all three walking away from the camera down a flowery White House pathway.

However the announcement that Barack Obama made a few minutes before that photograph was taken on May 31, flanked by the parents of U.S. soldier Bowe Bergdahl, has since sent ripples of consternation across both a bitterly partisan Washington and a South Asia that is jittery from watching Washington’s rush for the exit in Afghanistan.

The unprecedented decision by the White House to hand over five senior Taliban commanders held in Guantanamo Bay to the Amir of Qatar in exchange for the release from captivity of Sergeant Bergdahl, is being seen by many, including Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill, as one of the strongest plays by the American President to consolidate his second-term legacy.

According to the deal, the five men have been banned from leaving Qatar for at least a year and Mr. Obama said that he had received security guarantees from Qatar “that it will put in place measures to protect our national security.”
Controversial move
However, with Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar saying the exchange was a “big victory,” there is real reason to fear the consequences of the release of the men described as the “Taliban Dream Team,” and comprising the outfit’s intelligence chiefs, chief of army staff, interior minister, provincial governor, and one prisoner linked to a joint Taliban-al Qaida cell.

Unsurprisingly, within days of the prisoner swap being announced, the move was condemned by Mr. Obama’s political opposition as a case of “negotiating with terrorists.”

House Armed Services Committee Chairman Howard McKeon and the ranking Republican on the Senate committee, James Inhofe, said in a joint statement that in executing this transfer, Mr. Obama had “violated laws which require him to notify Congress 30 days before any transfer of terrorists from Guantanamo Bay and to explain how the threat posed by such terrorists has been substantially mitigated.”

Although the White House said in response to such criticism that it had to act despite the legal requirement for the transfer due to the “unique and exigent circumstances” of the case, Mr. Obama’s position has been further weakened by the fact that at least six U.S. soldiers, some from Sgt. Bergdahl’s 1st Battalion, 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment were said to have been killed while looking for the missing man.

Further undermining the administration’s justification for this high-stakes exchange is the uncanny resemblance of Sgt. Bergdahl’s Afghan adventures to the plot of the TV series “Homeland” – in which a U.S. soldier captured by a terror group gradually becomes a double agent and turns on his motherland with terrifying effect.

Although no such drama has yet unfolded in Sgt. Bergdahl’s case, after Mr. Obama’s plan was announced, evidence has surfaced suggesting that the soldier may have been an Army deserter, that the U.S. intelligence community had compiled “a major classified file” after investigating him, and Pentagon sources have noted that he “may have been an active collaborator with the enemy.”

Some of Sgt. Bergdahl’s fellow soldiers also mentioned his “stated desire to walk from Afghanistan to India.”

The White House’s embarrassment deepened into a borderline PR crisis when it was then revealed that the soldier’s father, Robert Bergdahl, had apparently been tweeting supportive messages to a Taliban spokesman.

Via his account @bobbergdahl, he said in a tweet that has since been deleted — but was captured in numerous screen grabs — “I am still working to free all Guantanamo prisoners… God will repay for the death of every Afghan child, ameen.”

When asked about this conversation, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney declined to comment on those reports but defended the administration’s handling of the release.

Leaving aside the political ramifications of the deal within the U.S., the prisoner swap blows dark clouds over the Afghanistan-Pakistan-India region in the form of heightened uncertainty regarding America’s designs for a troop-free Afghanistan in 2016.
New transactions
One precedent that has been set with this prisoner swap is that all manner of new transactions may emerge in the space for “reconciliation” with the Taliban after Western forces scale down.

For New Delhi this may mean that its diplomats may have to get accustomed to engaging with the Taliban as a neighbourhood political force to reckon with and drop any former notions of abhorrence.

In the light of Mr. Obama’s demonstrated mono-vision in his approach to the Bergdahl affair, India’s new government led by Narendra Modi may be best served by a new paradigm that goes beyond the trilateral mentality with Washington, perhaps bringing in Pakistan instead.

narayan@thehindu.co.in








----------

World


Many Afghans oppose release of Taliban officials

byAFP    |    June 02, 2014 , 6 : 37 pm GST    

 
Bob Bergdahl, father of U.S. Army Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl, speaks during a news conference as his wife Jani looks on at the Idaho National Guard headquarters in Boise, Idaho June 1, 2014. Photo: Reuters 



Many ordinary Afghans said Monday the five senior Taliban figures who were freed in exchange for a US soldier had blood on their hands and their release would strengthen the insurgents.

The men are all former officials of the Taliban regime that ruled Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001.

The insurgents have been battling the Western-backed Afghan government since they were ousted from power in a US-led invasion.

The Taliban had long demanded the release of the five, who are considered still influential within the movement.

They were freed from Guantanamo Bay and transferred to the Gulf state of Qatar, in exchange for army sergeant Bowe Bergdahl who had been captured by the Taliban five years ago.

Of the five, Norullah Noori, the ex-governor of the northern province of Balkh, was seen as the most controversial among the people AFP spoke to in the area, where he is accused of taking part in the 1998 massacre of thousands of people.

The others include Khairullah Khairkhwa, the Taliban interior minister who is considered a relative moderate; Mohammad Fazl, a leading commander with a strong battlefield reputation; Abdul Haq Wasiq, deputy head of the Taliban intelligence service; and Mohammad Nabi.

Nabi, the least known, may have been held on suspicion of ties to the Al-Qaeda-linked Haqqani militant network.

All the men are now in Qatar, which helped broker the deal, and are under a one-year travel ban under the conditions of their release.

Hussain Ali, a taxi driver in Balkh provincial capital of Mazar-i-Sharif, said: "Our close relatives and loved ones and neighbours were killed during Noori's term as governor.

"We are very disappointed to hear about the release of these prisoners," he added.

Amir Mohammad Ziaye, a prominent leader, added: "These prisoners should not have been handed over to Qatar, they should have been handed over to the Afghan government and Noori should have been tried for war crimes."

The allegations around Noori centre on an August 1998 massacre of up to 8,000 people at the hands of the Taliban, who were bent on avenging the killing of 2,000 of their own men a year earlier.

Noori's Guantanamo Bay detention file notes he is "wanted by the United Nations for possible war crimes including the murder of thousands of people". But the respected Afghanistan Analysts Network said no clear evidence has been presented to back up the allegation.

Bahara Bahar, a female activist in the western city of Herat, said the release had dealt a psychological blow to people after years of fighting the Taliban.

"It is almost election time and the release of these five senior members of the Taliban... will scare and dishearten people," she said.

In Pashtun-dominated areas of the country, however, many welcomed the release.

Khalid Zia, a lecturer at Nangarhar University in the east, said: "We consider the release a positive move that will help pave the way for peace negotiations and strengthen morale."










---------------
U.S. closes down Afghan transit base in Kyrgyzstan
-
The Washington Times
Tuesday, June 3, 2014
Bottom of Form 1
The U.S. airbase that has been the main transit point for military personnel and cargo headed to Afghanistan for more than a decade is officially closed for businessHYPERLINK  \l "".
Officials in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, expect all military personnel to be gone by the end of the week.

--------------------

Staging Base for Afghan War Is Handed to Kyrgyzstan


By DOUGLAS SCHORZMANJUNE 3, 2014

In another symbolic step toward the exit from Afghanistan, the United States on Tuesday formally handed Kyrgyzstan control of Manas Air Base, once a major waypoint for personnel and cargo bound for the Afghan war.

For hundreds of thousands of American and NATO service members, military processing at the base, formally known as the Transit Center at Manas, was the last stop before entering the war zone and the first stop after leaving. It was also the home of a United States Air Force logistics and refueling operation involved in daily operations in Afghanistan. Col. John Millard, the American commander at the base, told reporters at the handover ceremony that the Air Wing there loaded more than a billion liters of fuel for coalition aircraft over the years of the war.

Manas was one of two American bases hurriedly set up in Central Asia to support the invasion of Afghanistan in the weeks after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. The other, in Uzbekistan, closed in 2005.

Years later, the American pullout from Kyrgyzstan stands as a sign not only of the dwindling war effort in Afghanistan but also of worsening relations with Russia and its closer allies among the former Soviet republics.

The Kyrgyz government first moved to evict the United States from Manas in 2009, acting under a mix of pressure and incentives from a Russian government that was growing increasingly hostile to the United States’ presence in the region. American officials headed off that attempt by agreeing to pay more rent: raising it to $60 million a year, plus substantial spending on facilities improvement, from the original $17.4 million, according to American and Kyrgyz officials.

More recently, when it became clear that the Kyrgyz government was adamant that the American lease ending next month would be the last, NATO officials began planning ways to route around Manas as they began the extensive troop and cargo withdrawal effort in Afghanistan. The American military started using a base in Romania as its main transit center for the Afghan war this year.

On Tuesday, the American ambassador to Kyrgyzstan, Pamela Spratlen, told a news conference at Manas that the last of the 300 or so American personnel at the base would be gone within a week. The specialized equipment at the base, including airport vehicles and firefighting equipment, will stay for use by Kyrgyz forces.


-----------


Bowe Bergdahl told colleagues at Afghan base he had gone to start a 'new life'


 


  Jun 03, 2014 20:09 
By Christopher Bucktin

The 28-year-old is alleged to have left the message in a note before he wandered off his base in Afghanistan


U.S. Army Private Bowe Bergdahl watches as one of his captors display his identity tag to the camera at an unknown location in Afghanistan
The American soldier freed in exchange for five Taliban prisoners said he had gone to start a 'new life' before wandering off his base in Afghanistan, it has been claimed.
Bowe Bergdahl, 28, left the message in a note to his colleagues, according to reports in the New York Times.
The soldier said he did not want to fight for America any more, did not believe in the war and was leaving to start a new life before wandering away in June 2009.
The news came as it emerged the Army may still pursue charges against Sgt Bergdahl for desertion.
General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said military leaders have been accused of "looking away from misconduct, and it's premature" to think they will not investigate if there was a case to be answered.
His statement came just days after Susan Rice, Obama's national security adviser said he served with "honour and distinction".
It emerged that President Obama could face possible impeachment over the deal to free Bergdahl after he was accused of breaking federal law over brokering a deal with the Taliban.
Opposition Republicans claim the President ignored a law requiring him to notify Congress 30 days before releasing anyone from Guantanamo Bay prison.
Soldiers who served alongside private Bergdahl have called for him to be court martialed for “deserting his post” - while the pictures of six colleagues who died looking for him were posted on Facebook.
His release on Saturday, brokered with the Taliban in exchange for five Guantanamo Bay detainees, has ignited fury in some quarters of the military.
Sergeant Matt Vierkant, a member of Bergdahl’s platoon when he went missing on June 30, 2009, said: “I was pissed off then and I am even more so now with everything going on.
"Bowe Bergdahl deserted during a time of war and his fellow Americans lost their lives searching for him."
Vierkant said Bergdahl needs to not only acknowledge his actions publicly but face a military trial for desertion under the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
His former squad leader Greg Leatherman said he hopes the military investigates Bergdahl and questions whether he did, indeed, desert his post in Afghanistan.
A Facebook page called “Bowe Bergdahl is NOT a hero!” has already gained almost 6,000 members and shows the pictures of the six soldiers who lost their lives while looking for him.
They were Staff Sergeant Clayton Bowen, 29, and Private Morris Walker, 23, who were killed in an IED explosion on August 18, 2009.







------------





Former Pashtun warlord endorses Abdullah Abdullah ahead of Afghan presidential runoff election



By Amir Shah, The Associated Press



Supporters of Afghanistan's presidential candidate Abdullah Abdullah cheer during a campaign rally in Ghazni, Afghanistan, Tuesday, June 3, 2014. The second round of Afghanistan's presidential election will take place on June 14, 2014. (AP Photo/Massoud Hossaini)


KABUL - Representatives of a powerful former Pashtun warlord said Tuesday that he endorsed the front runner in Afghanistan's coming presidential runoff election.

The announcement by those representing Abdul Rasoul Sayyaf came during a campaign rally for front runner and former Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah at a wedding hall in the Afghan capital, Kabul. In a speech, Abdullah thanked Sayyaf, who didn't attend, for his support and promised to make up for time lost after the 2001 U.S.-led invasion that ousted the Taliban.

"People expect us to honestly serve the nation," Abdullah said.

Abdullah is the front runner for the June 14 runoff, facing former Finance Minister Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai. In the first round of elections April 5, Abdullah garnered 45 per cent of votes while Ahmadzai came in second with 31.6 per cent.

Sayyaf was a warlord during the country's 1990s civil war and there have been allegations of him having past links to radical jihadists including Osama bin Laden. As a Pashtun and charismatic speaker, he may appeal to Afghanistan's large number of religious conservatives.

His support also helps Abdullah, 53, as he has both Pashtun and Tajik parentage, something that made some Pashtuns nervous about voting for him in a country where ethnic ties remain incredibly important to many. Pashtuns are the country's largest ethnic group.

Sayyaf ran in the first round and got 7.1 per cent of the vote.

During the Soviet occupation in the 1980s, Abdullah served as adviser to and spokesman for Tajik warlord Ahmad Shah Massoud, who was assassinated by al-Qaida two days before the Sept. 11, 2001 attack.

In the early days after the U.S.-led alliance toppled the Taliban regime, Abdullah became the face of Afghanistan's anti-Taliban movement, giving frequent press conferences to international media. He served as foreign minister and then was the runner-up in President Hamid Karzai's disputed re-election in 2009.

Whoever wins the June 14 vote will replace Karzai, who is constitutionally barred from seeking a third term. They'll also face the withdrawal of foreign troops at the end of the year and attacks from the Taliban.

In a statement Tuesday, Karzai said the first vote represented a victory for Afghanistan and urged citizens to vote in the coming runoff.

"I believe Afghans are moving toward a bright future," he said.

------------





Afghan Presidential Front-Runner Gets More Backing
June 14 Runoff Pits Former a Foreign Minister Against Former Finance Minister
By
Maria Abi-Habib And
Habib Khan Totakhil
June 3, 2014 12:18 p.m. ET
KABUL—Former warlord Ismail Khan, Afghan parliamentary leaders and other rivals announced their support for the presidential campaign of Abdullah Abdullah on Tuesday, giving the front-runner another boost ahead of next week's runoff election.
The June 14 runoff is pitting Mr. Abdullah, a former foreign minister, against former finance minister Ashraf Ghani. Mr. Abdullah secured 45% of some 6.5 million votes cast in the first round of...

--------------------






Transfer of Taliban detainees to Qatar against Afghan-U.S. agreement’

By Farhad Naibkhel
KABUL: Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Monday turned the heat up on the handover of five Taliban detainees from Guantanamo Prison to Qatar government, saying the transfer was at odds with the previous agreement between Kabul and Washington.
Spokesperson of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Ahmad Shekib Mostaghni said that “shifting and handover of five Taliban members to Qatar from U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba in exchange for U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl was against recent telephonic conversation of President Hamid Karzai and the U.S. Secretary of State, John Kerry, and previous agreement between Kabul and Washington”.
Speaking at a press conference here he said that based on agreement the five members of Taliban must be submitted to the government of Afghanistan after releasing and latter they respectively and safely with full freedom should be sent to Qatar or any other country to join their families.
He stated that “If the five released Afghans have been sent to Qatar with their satisfaction, Afghan government welcomes the released of them, if they faced limitation of liberty the government of Afghanistan demand from Qatar government to take serious and urgent mission to release them”.
Facing of five members of Taliban released from Guantanamo Bay to any freedom limitation will spark serious concern for the Afghan government, obeying constitution of Afghanistan it is a responsibility to the Afghan government tonsure rights and safety of Afghan citizens, he added.
He insisted that “Afghan government expect to the five released Afghan Taliban have access to all rights as other Afghan in Qatar”.
Pointing to US President Barack Obama’ speech, who said “ Qatar government committed with US government that after hand over of five Taliban members this country will consider US national security”, Spokesperson of foreign Affairs termed this comment unclear for Afghan government.
He said that such comments can be a kind of library limitation ahead of released Afghans in Qatar, adding that “we want from US government more explanation in this regard”.
Meanwhile Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Afghanistan sent statement officially to US Embassy based in Kabul and Qatar government.
In statement to US Embassy the ministry said that as Afghan government is against limitation of freedom of Afghans in Guantanamo Bay and other detention centers, recently five Afghans released from Guantanamo Bay in exchange with the US soldier inverse to previous agreement with the government of Afghanistan shifted to Qatar.
In the statement Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Afghanistan said that if the five released Afghan shifted with full freedom and their satisfaction, will be welcomed, if they have been shifted and submitted inverse to earlier agreement at the objective of limitation of liberty to Qatar government it is against International Rights Law, which mentioned that no government has the right to submit another governments citizens to the third country as prison or limited with liberty, otherwise Afghan government with express of concern and will demand freedom without any condition for its citizen.
And also the government will ask US and Qatar governments to obey international law of Human Rights behave with them as a liberty and grant them with all rights.


----------

News - Election 2014
Sunday, 01 June 2014 19:15 Last Updated on Monday, 02 June 2014 15:13 Written by Aazam Arash

The Ministry of Defense announced on Sunday that 3,000 new National Army soldiers have been trained and assigned to providing security for the upcoming presidential runoff election on June 14.
General Baz Muhammad Jawaheri, the Deputy of Training and Personnel at the Ministry, said that the new soldiers would be primarily deployed to the most restive areas of the country in hopes that they might prevent a major disturbance to the election process.
"During the second round of the election new soldiers have been trained," Jawaheri said. " f the enemy has trained new soldiers, we are sending our newly trained soldiers to fight them."
The Afghan security forces were praised back in April for their performance during the first round of the elections. Despite a wave of Taliban ahead of Election Day, police and military personnel were able to keep millions of voters safe when the time came.
"Our soliders are committed, god willing, we will ensure the security of the second round of the election," Jawaheri said.
A week ago, operations were started around the country in order to put insurgents on their heels right before the election and during the traditionally volatile spring fighting season.
A number of soldiers who graduated from academy on Sunday, likely to be included in the 3,000 assigned to election security, told TOLOnews they were determined to put their training to use.
"We were trained really well, and now I can defend my country and my countrymen" National Army soldier Ahmad Jawed said.
Many have voiced concerns about security during the runoff round, predicting a tougher challenge than the first round. However, with one election already under their belt and fresh reinforcements announced, security officials appear confident about their ability to protect the process.


-----------


Programmes - Miscellaneous
Tuesday, 03 June 2014 17:18 Written by TOLOnews.com

In this episode of Entekhabat, host Mujahid Kakar discusses Afghanistan's regional challenges with the following guests:
• Dr. Mohammad Akram Arifi, University Lecturer
• Dr. Miriwais Balkhi, University Lecturer
• Ghafoor Lewal, Head of the Center for Regional Studies of Afghanistan
• Abdul Ali Mohammadi, Dr. Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai's electoral campaign member
• Ali Amiri, Abdullah Abdullah's electoral campaign member
To watch the whole program, click here:



-------

“I feel happy, I cannot express how happy I am,” exclaimed deported Afghan interpreter Faizullah Muradi on national radio in Norway Tuesday morning. Muradi, on the phone from Italy, wasn’t ....
READ MORE


------------------


KABUL: The Turkish government on Tuesday condemned attack on Turkish engineers in eastern Nangarhar province of Afghanistan, wherein three Turkish engineers were killed the other day. The Turkish....
READ MORE
---------




KABUL: Hundreds of civil society and human rights activists on Monday staged an anti-Pakistan demonstration in Kabul and warned that the Afghan nation would respond Pakistan’s cross-border atta....
READ MORE


---------

KABUL: Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Sunday said it has sent a plea to the U.S. Embassy based in Kabul seeking the U.S. support to put an end to Pakistan’s indiscriminate rocket shelling on ea....
READ MORE

-----------



KABUL: As many as 74 Taliban have been killed following military operations carried out by the Afghan national security forces in various provinces of the country. The Interior Ministry said in ....
READ MORE
--------------

KABUL: A NATO service member has died following rebels attack in eastern Afghanistan on Monday, the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said in a statement. The exact location....
READ MORE
--------------



KABUL: Minister of Women Affairs (MoWA) urged women voters for full participation in the second round of presidential election, scheduled on June 14. Huson Bano Ghazanfar said that in the first ....
READ MORE




----------------

KABUL: Qatari officials had decided to let the recently released five key Taliban prisoners, in exchange for a US soldier, to move free in the country, a senior official said A senior Gulf offici....
READ MORE
---------



Editorial: America’s soft stance on aggression

Afghanistan has been in a whirl of fettered political animosity and frenzy of Pakistan. We have found ourselves on a sticky wicket as our detested neighbor is devouring us with vile tactics, a derivative of its chaotic ‘strategic depth’ policy which is steered towards destabilizing Afghanistan. The wicked policy has long been detested and caused Afghanistan collateral damage. We condemn them. We warn them. But, condemnation emboldens their spirit and the intensity of their vice. They are trying to attenuate the bond between the society and the nascent democracy in Afghanistan. Pakistan wants us to suffer in these high-pressure and time-constrained situations, and to fail in the democratic transfer of power in the impending elections. Pakistan harbors, feeds and sponsors feted terrorists sprawling along the tribal belt, spearheading the fight against our territory with the use of shenanigans and tomfooleries of the Taliban.
The size and scope of militant operations are increasing as the Taliban are recruiting fighters from religious schools to ramp up their campaign of violence against Afghanistan’s run-off elections. Dozens of madrasas and Taliban training camps inside Quetta have been closed, according to intelligence reports, and many of the brainwashed men have been sent to Kandahar, Helmand and Zabul provinces in the restive south to disrupt the elections. We don’t fear them at all. They tried to disrupt the April 5 elections as well, but failed. The momentous turnout of millions in the polls was a punch to their hooliganism. Afghans don’t fear terrorists’ threat. They just have had enough of it and they can’t bear it any more. Terrorists are a malice, but the fact that the Obama administration is turning a blind eye to it is an agony.
Over the past few years, Pakistani military have been firing rockets onto eastern Afghanistan with a dramatic increase in cross-line attacks since a month. The steep rise in cross-line rocket barrages from the other side of the Durand Line is happening as Afghanistan is drawing closer to the runoff presidential elections. The government believes the incursions are Pakistan’s attempt to disrupt the election process. Alas! The attacks have taken toll on Afghans, with many killed and displaced over the past months. During its post-9/11 invasion of Afghanistan, the U.S. forces bombed many of the country’s military bases including Shindand airbase in western Herat, with the bulk of military planes and artilleries destroyed as a result. Now, we have no artillery or the necessary weaponry to strike back at Pakistan for its indiscriminate attacks. American war on terror has faltered too. Now the U.S. is refusing to make up for that.
Kabul’s relations with the Obama Administration plunged downtrend after President Karzai boldly refused to cave to the U.S. demand to sign a Status of Forces Agreement last year. Ever since, the U.S. has been balking at the outburst of terrorists from FATA and Pakistan’s unprovoked attacks on Afghanistan. Foreign Ministry on Sunday sent a plea to the U.S. Embassy in Kabul to inquire Washington’s stance vis--vis Pakistan’s rocket barrages and to seek an end to the indiscriminate shelling on eastern Afghanistan. Article nine of the Afghan-U.S. Strategic Partnership Agreement clearly states that the stability in Afghanistan would contribute to the development and stability of South-Central Asia, the United States affirms that it shall regard with grave concern any external aggression against Afghanistan and would develop and implement mutually-terminated political, diplomatic, economic or military measures. The U.S. Ambassador to Kabul James Cunningham on Tuesday said the U.S. has a neutral standpoint to Pakistan’s rocket attacks and wants the issue be resolved through diplomatic means. In spite of the explicit statement in the two-pronged pact, Americans are baulking at our treacherous neighbor’s rage and killing spree. If the U.S. leadership abstains from its soft stance and actually supports the Afghan security forces, the day will not be far that extremism and bloodshed in our land will cease.

--------------





Afghan elections: candidates told to stop stirring ethnic tensions before poll

Teams for presidential rivals Abdulllah Abdullah and Ashraf Ghani warned against inflaming prejudices and sowing disunity

Emma Graham-Harrison in Kabul

 
theguardian.com, Tuesday 3 June 2014 15.52 BST

A policeman in Ghazni tries to control crowds at a rally on Tuesday of presidential candidate Abdullah Abdullah. Photograph: Massoud Hossaini/AP


Afghan election authorities have accused two would-be presidents of stirring up ethnic tensions before the June polls, and warned the media against broadcasting divisive programmes or libellous attacks.

The first round of Afghanistan's high-stakes presidential vote has been civil. The main candidates, Ashraf Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah, assembled multi-ethnic slates, avoided attacks on particular groups, and steered clear of focusing on the private life of the rival.

But with the race narrowed to a run-off, and both men searching for a gain in a poll that is likely to be very close, there is a harder edge.

In rallies, news conferences and advertisements the two teams have "stirred up … discriminatory issues, defamation and irreverence against each other", the Independent Election Commission said in a statement from its media commission this week.

The commisssion warned the candidates and their teams to "strictly avoid applying discriminatory languages and tribal, racial, linguistic, regional, and religious prejudices which cause … disunity among the Afghan people".

The media was not to broadcast programmes fomenting ethnic and other tensions, or ones that defamed or insulted the candidates running for office, the statement said.

Diplomats are watching closely for inflammatory language before the presidential election's second round, happening on 14 June.

The US ambassador, James Cunningham, said he had already warned each candidate against manipulating ethnic tensions.

"We're worried about the potential for that, and we are advising both the campaigns that they should not run a campaign that is either ethnically based or using ethnic elements to try and damage or undercut the other one," Cunningham told journalists at a briefing in Kabul. "The candidates themselves are both sensitive to this, and I hope we can do a good job of convincing people in the campaigns that this isn't a good thing for the future of the country."

Ghani, in second place behind Abdullah in the first round of the election, is from the Pashtun ethnic group that has ruled Afghanistan for most of the last three centuries. Abdullah has a Pashtun father but a Tajik mother and he is identified with non-Pashtun northerns he fought beside during the civil war.

Many moderate Afghans are already fretting over the rise of partisan attacks. "Discouraging to see Facebook now a battle ground between young Afghans about elections. So many ethnic hijackers leading this divisive battle," Bilal Sarwary, a journalist, said on Twitter.

Saad Mohseni, whose influential Moby Media controls a string of popular TV and radio channels, said campaigning had got more hostile. "We are now reviewing every ad, every guest, weeding out anything provocative … we have a huge responsibility. Of course when you are doing live TV there is always a small risk, but by and large we have not allowed these debates to take control of the programmes."

He said he thought many Afghans were more interested now in forging a strong national identity, after the years of fighting. "There are a few individuals trying to stir things up but the Afghan people are not going to fall for this all over again, given the mistakes we have made over the last 30 years," he said.

Both campaigns denied using ethnic language in their campaigning, or making personal attacks.

"We fully agree with the statement," said Mujib Rahimi Rahimi, a spokesman for Abdullah. "As a team that represents national unity, we have people from all over the country and all ethnic groups."

An adviser to Ghani said their team would not stir up tension because their fundamental message was that "all Afghans should be treated equally".


Reporting contributer Mokhtar Amiri



--------------
AFGHANISTAN

Afghan fury over detainees transfer
   Monday, June 02, 2014


KABUL: Kabul last night called for the immediate release of former Guantanamo Bay detainees sent to Qatar in exchange for the freedom of American soldier Bowe Bergdahl, branding their transfer to a third country illegal.

The transfer of the five Taliban, who a Qatari source said must stay in the country for a year, "goes against the laws", a statement from the ministry of foreign affairs said.

Under international laws, "no government can hand over a country's citizens to a third country as a prisoner," it said, adding that Kabul is "strongly protesting" the move.

"The government of Afghanistan ... calls for the release of its citizens so that they can, in accordance with international laws, enjoy their freedom," it added.

The detainees were transferred in an exchange securing the freedom of Bergdahl, who was captured by insurgents in June 2009, and who was the only American soldier being held in Afghanistan.

Meanwhile, US President Barack Obama's administration came under fire from leglistors over the swap, which they say sets a bad precedent.

However, US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel said he hoped the exchange might lead to breakthroughs in reconciliation with the militants.

He denied accusations from some Republicans the swap resulted from US negotiations with terrorists, saying it had been worked out by the government of Qatar.

President Obama hailed the release in an appearance with Bergdahl's parents, Bob and Jani, in the White House Rose Garden.

Moreover, Taliban supreme leader Mullah Mohammad Omar hailed the release of the insurgents as a "big victory".

"I extend my heartfelt congratulations to the entire Afghan Muslim nation, all the mujahideen and to the families and relatives of the prisoners for this big victory regarding the release of five Taliban leaders from Guantanamo prison," he said in a rare statement.

The detainees arrived in Qatar yesterday and their families have been flown there.

The 28-year-old US soldier was receiving treatment at the US military medical centre in Landstuhl, Germany as part of the "reintegration process," the army said. It was unclear how long he would remain there. His parent early this morning said: "We love you."






--------------



BLOGGED

CANADA MILITARY NEWS APRIL 10, 2014-Afghanistan-1960s remember- HEADS UP -Pakistani Rebels and Suicide Attackers slither in2 our Afghanistan -Hey Canada n USA etc. Wld u die 2 vote 4 ur countries like r Afghans? - AFGHANS BRING PRIDE 2 NATO TROOPS AND AFGHAN TROOPS AND POLICING APRIL 5, 2014- they are rising up and defiant and proud showing the world how 2 be free at last- no taliban gonna take their world no more... no way- Whilst UN, EU,USA, Canada politicians hijack our world and turn humanity in2 ashes-Ukraine4oil.... Afghanistan rises us up/DAILY UPDATES AFGHANISTAN- Kabul Dreams -Good Morning Freedom



----------



Russia has stepped up 4 USA and Canada and EU nations so often... SHAME ON USA, CANADA, EU.... AND NATO (u were going 2 be disbanded after Afghanistan now u have ur white on white war... whilst Ukraines kill each other  with their phony elections created by USA..... just like Arab spring.... ewwwwww)-   and now....
Obama slaps us all by letting 5 taliban killing machines of innocent muslims and girls and women...... in the hundreds of thousands... free... 4 a traitor that caused the death of 6 American troops...


EVIL NATO... EVIL USA....


OBAMA BETRAYS ALL TROOPS BY DUMPING AFGHANISTAN 2 SAVE A TRAITOR 2 MOVE ON 2 A WHITE MANS WAR IN EUROPE... THAT HE STARTED/NATO BETRAYS TROOPS.....

6/2/14 Background of the 5 detainees we traded for Bergdahl, a de

Published on 2 Jun 2014
http://time.com/2809352/bowe-bergdahl... - "The 6 U.S. Soldiers Who Died Searching For Bowe Bergdahl ... Troops suggest that Bergdahl's desertion makes him more traitor than hero"

http://www.breitbart.com/InstaBlog/20... - "The element that I think blindsided Obama was the negative feedback from military people, who have the credibility to make the public think about both sides of this trade in a skeptical way ... They assumed the troops would zip it while Obama took his victory lap for rescuing the last POW in Afghanistan ... It's also not surprising that the White House overplayed its hand, sending Benghazi fabulist Susan Rice - who snotty Beltway insiders don't realize is one of the least credible people in America to informed members of the public - to falsely claim Bergdahl was captured in battlefield action ... Can anyone possibly view that Rose Garden ceremony with Obama and Bob Bergdahl that you mentioned, complete with phrases from the Koran, in concert with the threat level of the prisoners who were released, and dispute Mullah Omar's contention that this was a big victory for the Taliban?"

The three other Americans being held in Afghanistan

White House now facing pressure to free the three other American citizens who have been missing in Afghanistan or Pakistan for years.

--------------



EDITORIAL

US meddling in Afghanistan






“Woe to the statesman whose arguments for entering a war are not as convincing at its end as they were at the beginning,” said Otto von Bismarck, the politician who dominated German and European affairs from the 1860s until 1890.

 Unfortunately, the arguments for invading Afghanistan were not convincing even at the beginning. Of course, it was not President Barack Obama who launched the war. But he considered this a “good war.” So we should assume that Obama was convinced of the arguments his predecessor George Bush advanced in justification of the invasion.

 What were Bush's justifications? The US went to Afghanistan in 2001 in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks which Washington thought, on inconclusive evidence, were planned by terrorists based in that country. The aim was to topple the Taliban regime harboring the terrorists.

 As was only to be expected, the defeat of the Taliban was swift and decisive. They vanished without a fight. But American troops are still there making it the longest war in US history, costing the lives of more than 2,300 US soldiers and countless numbers of Afghan civilians.

 If Bush's policy of exploiting sectarian and tribal differences destroyed Afghanistan's social fabric, Obama’s drone attacks have traumatized the Afghan countryside. Afghanistan remains a country with a weak central government which can provide neither stability nor security. As in Iraq, the invasion has led to a never-ending cycle of violence providing invaluable opportunities for all sorts of terrorist outfits to thrive. Worse still, the war has destabilized the border areas of Pakistan.

 The US justified its continued presence in Afghanistan in the name of nation-building and spreading democracy including human rights. But there is nothing to show on these counts. Despite foreign aid on a massive scale, Afghanistan remains one of the poorest countries in the world. About half the population still lacks proper housing and electricity, and the unemployment rate at around 25 percent is among the world's highest. After touching 14.4 percent in 2012, growth fell to just 3.1 percent last year.

 As for human rights, Franz-Michael Mellbin, the new EU ambassador to Kabul, draws a grim picture of the situation. Despite huge practical improvements in areas from maternal mortality to the number of girls in schools, Afghanistan is still one of the worst places to be a woman, says Mellbin.

 Last year, a landmark law to prevent violence against women was pushed out of Parliament and the quota of seats for women on provincial councils was cut. Earlier this year, Parliament passed a law that gagged victims of domestic violence by preventing relatives from testifying against each other, although the law was later modified.

 Obama said last Tuesday, announcing the withdrawal of US troops, that he intends to retain a residual force beyond 2014. According to this plan, 9,800 troops would remain in Afghanistan after 2014.This is for consolidating the gains already achieved, whatever they may be.

 Obama cannot be unaware of a new American intelligence assessment on Afghanistan that predicts that the gains the US and its allies made during the past 13 years are likely to be significantly eroded by 2017. So the only conclusion is that a low-key war will continue with thousands of armed contractors (as in Iraq) and drones playing an important role.
 This means two things. First, Obama is unwilling to admit that the three decades of US meddling in Afghanistan have been an unmitigated disaster. Secondly, as Tallyrand said of the Bourbons, the US has learned nothing and forgotten nothing.

--------------------



The mystery surrounding American PoW Bowe Bergdahl

Release of last American prisoner of war in Afghanistan reopens mystery of how Bowe Bergdahl was captured — and whether he’s a patriot or a deserter.





Soldiers, veterans and others have lit up social media with postings denouncing Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl for allegedly abandoning his unit.
View 2 photos
zoom

U.S. Army / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

Soldiers, veterans and others have lit up social media with postings denouncing Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl for allegedly abandoning his unit.

By: David Lerman Bloomberg,  Published on Tue Jun 03 2014


A sign showing support for Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl is displayed on June 2 in Hailey, Idaho. Bergdahl was released from captivity on May 31 after being captured by Taliban forces in Afghanistan in 2009.




WASHINGTON—The release of the last American prisoner of war in Afghanistan has reopened the mystery of how he was captured — and whether he’s a patriot or a deserter.


Even before U.S. army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl arrives home after almost five years in captivity, scores of soldiers, veterans and others have lit up social media with postings denouncing the former prisoner for allegedly abandoning his unit.


The U.S. army has never described the circumstances of Bergdahl’s disappearance from a remote outpost in eastern Afghanistan or his capture by terrorists. An online petition drive that has more than 5,600 digital signatures calls on the Obama administration to punish Bergdahl for going AWOL, or absent without leave.


“He’s at best a deserter and at worst a traitor,” Josh Korder, who said he served with Bergdahl in Afghanistan, told CNN on Monday. “Any of us would have died for him. For him to just leave us like that, it was a very big betrayal.”


President Barack Obama said during a visit to Warsaw on Tuesday that Bergdahl would have been returned home “regardless of the circumstances” of his capture.


“Whatever those circumstances may turn out to be, we still get an American soldier back if he’s held in captivity. Period,” Obama told reporters during a news conference. “That’s what every mom and dad who sees a son or daughter sent over into war theatre should expect, not just from their commander in chief but from the United States of America.”


Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in a statement on Tuesday that “the questions about this particular soldier’s conduct are separate from our effort to recover ANY U.S. service member in enemy captivity. This was likely the last, best opportunity to free him.”


Dempsey said “our army’s leaders will not look away from misconduct if it occurred” and that “we’ll learn the facts” when Bergdahl is able to provide them.


The army previously produced a report on the circumstances of Bergdahl’s disappearance, which remains classified, Col. Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman, told reporters on Tuesday. Warren corrected his comment from Monday that only a preliminary investigation had been done.


Bergdahl, 28, an Idaho man who was captured in 2009 and released on May 31, is in stable condition at the army medical centre in Landstuhl, Germany, Warren said.


“He has nutrition issues,” Warren said, without elaborating. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel had said Bergdahl’s health was deteriorating in captivity, adding urgency to efforts to reach a deal for his freedom.


Questions about Bergdahl’s loyalty were raised two years ago, when Rolling Stone magazine obtained email messages it said were sent by the soldier to his parents describing his disillusionment with the U.S. effort in Afghanistan.


“I am sorry for everything,” he wrote, according to the magazine. “The horror that is America is disgusting.”



Since Bergdahl’s release on May 31, Republican lawmakers have stepped up their attacks on the Obama administration, saying it negotiated with terrorists and failed to give Congress the legally required 30-day notification of the deal that freed the American soldier in return for the release of five Taliban prisoners held at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.


“I fear President Obama’s decision will inevitably lead to more Americans being kidnapped and held hostage throughout the world,” Senator Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican, said in a letter Monday asking the Senate Armed Services Committee to hold a hearing on the prisoner swap. The panel scheduled a closed-door briefing for June 10.


The prisoner exchange, brokered by Qatar, requires the five men to remain in that country for a year. Susan Rice, Obama’s national security adviser, said in the interview June 1 on ABC that the agreement places “restrictions on their movement and behaviour” in Qatar, while she declined to discuss details.

---------------





Afghanistan: Dogs of War
Jun 3, 2014 | 0
Throughout the course of the long war in Afghanistan, Coalition troops have relied on thousands of military working dogs to help keep them safe, and make their jobs easier. The dogs are trained to detect explosives, to find illegal drugs, to search for missing comrades, or target enemy combatants. Not only are they active on the front lines, but behind the lines they serve as therapy dogs, service dogs, and loyal companions. They also share the same risks as the ground troops, suffering injuries and sometimes death on the battlefields. Gathered here are images of these dogs and their handlers in Afghanistan and back home, from over the past several years, part of the ongoing series here on Afghanistan. [40 photos]



----------------


KABUL: In order to gather suggestions of the businessmen and to identify existed challenges in the business sector, Afghanistan Chamber of Commerce and Industries (ACCI) on Tuesday signed a coope....
READ MORE


---------


AFGHANISTAN IS NOT INDIA... RAPING INNOCENT CHILDREN AND HANGING THEM.... EWWWWW



Ministry of Labor, Social Affairs, Martyred and Disabled said on Sunday that 6.5 million children in Afghanistan are prone to various types of abuses including physical and sexual assaults. As pe....
READ MORE

------------

KABUL: President Hamid Karzai in a decree asked government officials to remain impartial in runoff round of the presidential election. The decree said that government officials should avoid intro....
READ MORE


----------------------




CRIMEA-  AND  UKRAINE





USA- CANADA-EU AND DUMBED DOWN NATO- CAUSE A WHITE MANS WAR WITH RUSSIA AND INNOCENT UKRAINES ARE DYING AND SCARED... SHAME ON THE LOT OF U..



 HOW CAN WE CELBRATE D-DAY WWII WITHOUT HUGE THANKS 2 RUSSIA. And Ukraine... is 67% Russian and Russian speaking.... innocents are dying in the East... it's just not right anymore... imho...

 Ukraine Femens now supporting Alexei Navalny- a lot of innocent people of Ukraine are and will die because USA interferred so horribly.... yet again.... SEE..SPINNING OUT OF CONTROL...


Ukrainian police arrested topless Femen activist Oksana Shachko when she staged a protest in support of convicted Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny in central Kiev on Thursday.



-----------

SNOWDEN:  "It was amazing because she was the first president who took the leadership to say 'We have the right to speak, to communicate without being spied'. And these are not rights of a country. These are human rights..."
Snowden said Rousseff's speech in the UN, criticising the American espionage, was inspiring.
--------------
Interferring Global Nations are destroying beautiful Ukraine... NATO WAS 2 BE DISBANDED AFTER AFGHANISTAN... SHAME ON YA!  Let the 67% Russian blood of Ukraine decide their own future..... Ukraine hijacked an elected President.... in a democracy... with help from USA, Canada, EU and  troop betraying NATO....  imho


Uncle Harold said without Russia... we would NEVA have won the war of WWII.... and USA came on so late.... over 15 million died..... 6 million were jews   2 million catholics, gays, gypsies and people of colour.... hard ole world.  AND UKRAINE FOLKS ARE 70% RUSSIAN... come on folks... we should not be interferring... seriously... Let the Ukraine people decide.... even the orange revolution.... a larger majority were russian.... it's insulting ... and cruel 4 the east Ukraine...imho
BRITAIN PM And Putin To Meet Over Ukraine Violence

The pair will sit down after attending commemorations on the 70th anniversary of the D-Day landings in Normandy.


-------------
Innocent people of Eastern Ukraine are dying because of USA and Canada interference with EU (thinking they are better than beautiful Russia... shame on the lot o ya) ... and worst of all... NATO (which) was 2 be disbanded after Afghanistan... raging up again... more innocent people dying 4 WHITE MAN'S WAR- Eastern Ukraine (ukraine is 67% Russian speaking).... AT LEAST WE ARE STEPPING OUT OF THE MUSLIM ON MUSLIM HATE... imho... God bless Ukraine... all people of Ukraine...

There was no 'reset' and the Cold War never ended

by Wajiha Suboor
Recent events in Ukraine have analysts and pundits foretelling a second Cold War. To believe these outcries would be to believe in amicable relations between Russia and the US since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. One would also have to believe in general good-will and alliances between the two states. You don’t even need to follow the news to know that is not the case. Just looking at pop culture reveals Russians (among other former Soviet-state) are still an easy and believable threat to “the American way” - bested only by the Middle East in recent years. Despite all appearances and the official “reset” of relations between the two countries in 2009, political discourse between the two nations is just as defensive and distrustful as it was during the Cold War. It has merely morphed its form to reflect the changes within the two nations still immersed in it.

Let’s look at the famous reset between Russia and the US in 2009. The event was triggered by the severe deterioration of US-Russian relations following Russia’s invasion of Georgia in 2008. In February of 2009, Vice President Joe Biden first hinted at Washington’s intent to reset relations between the two countries. Two months later, Obama and then-Russian President met in London to reaffirm the notion and begin cooperative talks. Just a couple months after that, Biden told the Wall Street Journal that the Russians “have a shrinking population base, have a withering economy, have a banking sector and structure that is not likely to be able to withstand the next 15 years.” He went on to state these weaknesses would force Russia to concede to the West on key issues – revealing the true intent of the reset: to bully each other around in the name of cooperation and alliance.

Many instances reveal how this has played out since. In Obama’s 2013 State of the Union address he wanted to see “reductions in our nuclear arsenals”. The ‘our’ indicates both sides would reduce the number of nuclear warheads – until Russia introduced the caveat for legally binding limits on missile defense programs and the US declined. Putin has matched Biden’s insulting rhetoric in full force, most recently in his New York Times op-ed when he asked Obama to desist from acting on the situation in Syria because motives would be rooted in American ‘exceptionalism’ and national interests.

The events leading up to and after the reset of 2009 show that the Cold War never truly ended – the only thing that changed was how each side saw the other. Before 1991, the two countries viewed each other as powerful threats not only due to the arsenal of nuclear warheads each accumulated, but also because of the geo-political and economic influence exerted by each in their respective hemispheres. The biggest threat was not mutually assured destruction, but rather political and economic power. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union and more recently the Great Recession of 2008, the emerging nations are weaker and much more unstable than those that started the Cold War in 1945. As a result, the two sides feel that they can better bully the other under the guise of friends and allies than as outright foes. That was the real reset of 2009.


-------------

African Development Bank refuses to quit coal funding
 Last updated on 2 June 2014, 9:38 am US and World Bank ‘don’t understand’ impact of coal funding withdrawal on poor countries, says senior official
-------------------


Home / Politics /


Snowden’s First U.S. Interview Reveals 5 Surprises
-----------------

“Canada today is probably, not probably — certainly, absolutely, inarguably — one of the most successful countries in the world.”


Gwyn says Canada became one of the top 10 countries in the world against all odds. “(The public) didn’t think that Canada had the stuff to be a nation,” Gwyn told the more than 150 people who attended Saturday's event.

What distinguished Macdonald was he believed there was only one way for Canada to become a nation and that was for it to stretch out all the way from sea to sea, Gwyn said.


Canada formed against all odds

Maureen CoulterPublished on June 01, 2014
------------

BLOGSPOT


















-----------------


ENVIRONMENT


.... SO USA DESTROYS MOST OF THEIR STATES WITH COAL, AND FRACKING AND OIL AND GAS.. ETC... AND AFRICAS ARCHBISHOP TUTU COMES 2 CANADA 2 BITCH ABOUT 1 OILSANDS... 1....... AND THEY ARE STILL KILLING THOUSANDS OF AFRICANS IN THEIR MINES...


African Development Bank refuses to quit coal funding
 Last updated on 2 June 2014, 9:38 am US and World Bank ‘don’t understand’ impact of coal funding withdrawal on poor countries, says senior official

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.