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Afghanistan
Osama's top aide Nasir al-Wahishi killed in drone strike
2011-01-03
Nasir al-Wahishi, a top al-Qaeda commander, who reportedly served as an aide of Osama bin Laden, was killed in a US drone attack in northwestern Pakistan on December 28.
Well done, O anonymous UAV pilots, and those who point them toward their targets!
Al-Wahishi, 32, a Yemeni national, who presided over the January 2009 merger of Saudi Arabian and Yemeni splinters of al-Qaeda, was killed in the year end.

Wahishi was killed when two missiles were fired on a militant camp at the Ghulam Khan sub-district of North Waziristan, Kyodo reported quoting Pakistani officials.

Al-Wahishi is among four top al-Qaeda commanders killed in American drone strikes which assumed unprecedented proportions in 2010. Those killed by US missiles include al-Qaeda number 3 Abu Mustafa al-Yazid, Sheikh Fateh al-Misri, al-Qaeda's operations head for Afghanistan and Pakistan, who replaced Yazid.

The two other commanders killed were Abdallah Umar al-Qurayshi, who co-ordinated Osama bin Laden's Arabs in Afghanistan, and explosives expert Abu Atta al-Kuwaiti.

The drones have also felled top Taliban commanders including its chief Baitullah Mehsud and the trainer of suicide bombers Qari Hussain Mehsud.

The officials claimed Wahishi had served as secretary of bin Laden until 2003. He was arrested in Iran and extradited to Yemen in 2003. The al-Qaeda commander was among 23 Yemeni captives who made a dramatic escape from maximum security prison in Sana'a, in 2006 and was at large since then.

The Yemeni figures in the Interpol's Orange Notice as well as US State Departments and UN Sanctions List.
Not a bad year, on this front. Congratulations all around!
Link


Afghanistan
War, and another peace plan
2010-09-30
[Asia Times] By Syed Saleem Shahazad
As peace overtures with the indigenous Afghan resistance move forward, the United States is stepping up efforts to eliminate al-Qaeda and other foreign bad turbans.
Local bad turbans, too, when connected to the foreign (pakistan and beyond) bad ones.
In what could be a severe blow to al-Qaeda, Sheikh Fateh al-Misri, its chief commander in Pakistain and Afghanistan, is reported to have been killed at the weekend in a drone strike in Pakistain. The Egyptian Misri, previously not a member of al-Qaeda, in May replaced Mustafa Abu al-Yazid, who was also killed in a dronezap in the North Wazoo tribal area.

The development coincides with Washington impressing on all key players in South and Central Asia to combine efforts to bring peace to Afghanistan. The groundwork has already been laid for the US to negotiate with the Taliban, with the Pak military and Saudi Arabia acting as go-betweens.
That's guaranteed to be effective, then.
However,
The infamous However...
Taliban sources in the southern regions of Pakistain confirmed to Asia Times Online that while different Taliban groups had been approached, the Americans would prefer to talk to one of the major anti-US forces in Afghanistan, the Hezb-e-Islami Afghanistan (HIA) led by former Afghan premier Gulbuddin Hekmatyar.
... who used to be known as The Most Evil Man in the World but who now seems merely run-of-the-mill evil...
The HIA is likely to strike a deal with the Americans before the Taliban, and notably HIA fighters showed no hostility during this month's parliamentary elections in the areas they control in Kunar, Nuristan, Baghlan, Qunduz and Kapisa provinces.

Talking to Asia Times Online from Los Angeles on phone, Hekmatyar's main negotiator with the Americans, Daoud Abedi, confirmed that in the ongoing backchannel negotiations, Washington is leaning towards the HIA, the reason being that the HIA's plans for Afghanistan are considered more practical than those of the Taliban. The Taliban are insistent on the revival of the Islamic Emirates of Afghanistan, which crumbled following the US-led invasion of late 2001. The Taliban do, however, agree to give representation in government to "clean" people of other groups.

"At the moment, the HIA's peace plan, which we presented to the Afghan government early this year, is now the central focus at all relevant forums," Abedi said.

Abedi was invited by the White House-appointed Afghanistan Study Group and the Center for International Strategic Studies to give a detailed presentation of the HIA's plan on September 17 in Washington. The plan, "Mesaq Milli Nejat" (Afghanistan Rescue National Agreement) covers internal and external issues.

The plan calls for the withdrawal of all foreign troops and a subsequent commitment to expel foreign bad turbans. The draft does not aim to immediately dissolve the government or the presidential parliamentary system. However,
Or maybe that should be a Whatever...
its aim is that once foreign forces leave, fresh elections will be held at all levels and power should be transferred accordingly.
But only after foreign forces are gone so there'd be no one to jog elbows in vote fixing or even in an outright Hekmatyar-style coup-de-main in Kabel.
"At the moment, the Americans don't want to make public their viewpoint on this proposed agreement as the [November] mid-term American elections are near. They want to form their opinion next year," Abedi said.
Link



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