Small Wars Journal

Report Outlines Progress in Afghanistan

Tue, 05/03/2011 - 5:53pm
Report Outlines Progress in Afghanistan

By Lisa Daniel

American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, May 3, 2011 -- Last year's surge of U.S. and coalition forces into Afghanistan, with the simultaneous growth of Afghan forces, is leading to tangible progress for peace and prosperity in Afghanistan, according to a biannual Defense Department report released last week.

The final component of 30,000 U.S. surge forces reached Afghanistan last fall, complemented by an additional 10,000 coalition forces and more than 1,100 U.S. civilian personnel, allowing for significant improvements in security, governance and the economy of Afghanistan, according to the Report on Progress Toward Security and Stability in Afghanistan and the United States Plan for Sustaining the Afghanistan National Security Forces.

Known as the "1230 Report" for its citation in the 2008 National Defense Authorization Act, the report assesses the situation in Afghanistan from Oct. 1 through March 31.

Among its conclusions:

-- Additional forces have allowed the coalition to expand into 34 districts that now have Afghan local police, compared to just eight districts with local police presence in September.

-- Security has improved in each of International Security Assistance Force's six regional commands. Afghan forces have improved such that they are in the lead for most operations in the capital of Kabul. As expected, violence has increased in the southern provinces of Helmand and Kandahar, as coalition and Afghan forces took away long-held insurgent safe havens.

-- Surveys show Taliban influence decreasing in key areas across the country, with 75 percent of Afghans believing it would be bad for the country if the extremist group returned to power. That compares to 68 percent who felt that way at the end of the last reporting period in September.

-- Reports suggest increased friction between rank-and-file insurgents in Afghanistan and their leaders in Pakistan. The national government's Afghan Peace and Reintegration Program has allowed more than 700 former Taliban to reintegrate into Afghan society, and another 2,000 insurgents are in the process of reintegration since the office was created in July.

-- The Afghan national security forces are key to Afghan self-sufficiency, and the forces are growing in numbers and competency. The army has added 21,200 new recruits since the end of September, and the national police have 15,030 new recruits since then. Also, 30,000 members of the security forces have completed literacy training, and about 60,000 others are in literacy training on any given day.

-- The Afghan defense and interior ministries have freed up leadership billets for security forces, encouraged merit-based promotions, and recently opened armor and signals schools.

-- By the end of March, 74 percent of battalion-sized army units were rated "effective with advisors" or "effective with assistance," compared to 51 percent at the end of September. In the national police, 75 percent of units received that rating.

-- Effectiveness has improved to the point that 95 percent of all Afghan army units and 89 percent of national police are partnered with coalition units.

-- A shortage of coalition trainers and high Afghan attrition remain challenging. Incentive programs are being created to mitigate attrition.

-- Afghanistan is showing improvements in governance and development, with about half of the population living in areas of "emerging" governance, compared to 38 percent at the end of September. The national government's Afghan Civil Service Institute has graduated 16,000 civil servants since Oct. 1 and has placed 3,000 college graduates in its internship program.

-- Allegations of voter fraud from the September national elections continue to reverberate, but have not deterred local elections, such as one in March in which 75 percent of registered voters in Helmand's Marja district voted.

-- A lack of infrastructure remains a challenge, but improvements are happening with public projects such as a new railway link from the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif to Uzbekistan, a new power transmission line into the Afghan capital of Kabul, a runway extension at Herat Airport, and extensive road renovations.

-- Significant political challenges remain in Afghanistan, and corruption and criminal networks are a problem, but economic development, including from foreign investors, has potential for promising gains. The demand for energy far exceeds its current supply, and the U.S. Agency for International Development oversees several projects for improvement.

-- The national government continues to develop the mining industry, which has grown by 30 percent in two years since the U.S. Geological Survey estimated Afghanistan's untapped mineral resources to be valued at as much as $3 trillion.

The report also found significant progress in the distribution of telecommunications service, health care, and education.

"The 2010 surge of ISAF forces and civilian personnel, and the ongoing surge of [Afghan forces], has allowed ISAF to get the inputs right in Afghanistan for the first time," the report says.

The next report is due at the end of October.

Related Sites:

Report on Progress Toward Security and Stability in Afghanistan

NATO International Security Assistance Force

Related Article:

Report: Coalition, Afghans Making 'Tangible Progress'

3 May SWJ Roundup

Tue, 05/03/2011 - 6:23am
Keep the Roundup (the Journal, the Blog and the Council) Going AND Get a Nifty Coin to Boot

Al Qaeda

Bin Laden Operation Full Coverage - U.S. Department of Defense

Bin Laden Operation Full Coverage - Stars and Stripes

Bin Laden Operation Full Coverage - BBC News

Bin Laden Operation Full Coverage - Christian Science Monitor

Obama: bin Laden Death is 'Good Day for America' - Voice of America

Obama Calls World 'Safer' After Pakistan Raid - New York Times

'World is Safer,' President Says - Washington Post

Official: Bin Laden's Death is 'Defining Moment' - American Forces Press Service

Bin Laden Raid Yields Trove of Computer Data - Politico

U.S.: Bin Laden Would Have Been Taken Alive If Possible - Voice of America

Bin Laden Discovered 'Hiding in Plain Sight' - Washington Post

Pakistan Raid Ends in Long Gun Battle - New York Times

How Bin Laden Met His End - Los Angeles Times

Precision Mission, American Bullet in bin Laden's Head - Stars and Stripes

Detective Work on Courier Led to Breakthrough - New York Times

Al-Qaeda Couriers Provided Trail - Washington Post

Phone Call by Kuwaiti Courier Led to bin Laden - Associated Press

Intelligence Break Led to bin Laden's Hide-out - Washington Times

One Unwary Phone Call Led to bin Laden Doorstep - Associated Press

Intelligence, Secrecy Drove Operation - American Forces Press Service

Clues Gradually Led to the Location of Qaeda Chief - New York Times

Details Released on DNA Match - New York Times

DNA Test on Bin Laden Show 100 Percent Match to Family - Reuters

Bin Laden Buried at Sea, Official Says - American Forces Press Service

Islamic Scholars Criticize Bin Laden's Sea Burial - Associated Press

Clinton: U.S. Will Redouble Antiterrorism Efforts - American Forces Press Service

Bin Laden's Death Doesn't Mean End of Al Qaeda - New York Times

Threat From Splinter Groups Persists - Wall Street Journal

Terrorism Threat Remains, Experts Say - Washington Post

Al Qaeda on the Ropes? - Christian Science Monitor

Heir Viewed as Organizer, Not as Inspiring Figure - New York Times

No One Can Predict Which Deputy Will Take Charge - Washington Times

Bin Laden Death: Effect on al-Qaeda in Middle East? - BBC News

Bin Laden's Appeal had Waned in Arab World - Los Angeles Times

Nurtured in Ease, Destined for Infamy - Wall Street Journal

Bin Laden: A Confused Legacy - New York Times

Osama Bin Laden, Weak Horse - Wall Street Journal

The Status of al-Qaida Leaders - Voice of America

Al-Qaeda's Remaining Leaders - BBC News

Bin Laden Killing Draws Praise From Allies - New York Times

U.N. Chief Ban Hails Bin Laden Death as 'Watershed' - Reuters

Reaction to bin Laden Death Mixed in Pakistan, Afghanistan - VOA

Al-Qaida Ideologue Condemns Bin Laden Slaying - Associated Press

Sea Burial Fuels Conspiracy Theories - Los Angeles Times

A Lone Tweet Left the Media Trailing - Washington Post

Bin Laden Raid was Tweeted Live - BBC News

Twitter Record for 'Sustained Rate of Tweets - Los Angeles Times

Turning to Social Networks for News - New York Times

Hollywood Has Bin Laden Death in Its Sights - Reuters

The Long-Awaited News - New York Times editorial

The bin Laden Coup - Washington Post editorial

After Osama bin Laden - Los Angeles Times editorial

Justice for bin Laden - Washington Times editorial

A Moment of Unity - Boston Globe editorial

Justice - New York Post editorial

Finding and Finishing bin Laden - Washington Post opinion

The War on Terror After Osama Bin Laden - New York Times opinion

Bin Laden: The Day of Reckoning - Los Angeles Times opinion

Al-Qaeda's Existential Crisis - Washington Post opinion

Bin Laden's Dead. Al Qaeda's Not. - New York Times opinion

Fight Against Terrorism Continues - Washington Times opinion

Al Qaeda Without bin Laden - Los Angeles Times opinion

Slaughter That Muslims Could Not Ignore - Wall Street Journal opinion

Bin Laden's Views are Long Dead - Washington Post opinion

Bin Laden Assassinated Not Martyred - CNN opinion

Al-Qaeda to Splinter with Power Vacuum - Globe and Mail opinion

The End of the Jihadist Dream - New York Times opinion

After Osama bin Laden... - New York Times opinion

Counterstrikes with Nukes, Bioweapons? - Washington Times opinion

The Relentless Pursuit of bin Laden - Washington Post opinion

Victory Over Evil - Washington Post opinion

Proud of the United States - Washington Post opinion

Ten Thoughts on bin Laden - Line of Departure opinion

Pakistan

Clinton: Pakistan Cooperation Helped Find bin Laden - Voice of America

Pakistan Defends Bin Laden Role - BBC News

White House: Inconceivable Osama Had No Support in Pakistan - Reuters

Death Likely to Deepen Suspicions of Pakistan - New York Times

Pakistan's bin Laden Connection Is Probed - Wall Street Journal

Site of Hideout Raises New Suspicions - Washington Post

Hideout Raises Questions About What Pakistan Knew - Washington Times

Bin Laden's Luxury Hideout Raises Questions - Associated Press

Bin Laden Killing Was 'Joint U.S.-Pakistani Operation' - Reuters

Pakistan's Zardari Says Bin Laden Raid Was Not Joint Operation - Reuters

Pakistan's President Denies Harboring Bin Laden - Associated Press

U.K.'s Cameron Backs Pakistan Leadership - BBC News

Killing Confirms Pakistan is Sanctuary for Terrorists, Says India - VOA

Analysis: In Pakistan, Embarrassed Silence on Killing - Reuters

Hard Decisions Ahead for Pakistan After OBL Raid - USA Today

Pakistan Did Its Part - Washington Post opinion

What Did Pakistan Know? - Washington Post opinion

Afghanistan

Killing Adds to Debate About U.S. Strategy and Timetable - New York Times

Bin Laden Killing May Shift Afghan Strategy - Los Angeles Times

Afghans Fear U.S. Interest Will Flag - Washington Post

Afghan Violence Seen Dragging on Despite Bin Laden Death - Reuters

Karzai Urges Taliban to Learn 'Lesson' From Bin Laden's Killing - VOA

Clinton Urges Taliban to Reject Violence - BBC News

U.S.: Bin Laden's Death Does Not End Afghan War - Associated Press

Afghan, Coalition Forces Kill 'Numerous' Insurgents - Voice of America

Twenty-Five Fighters Killed, Wounded Near Border - Reuters

NATO: Service Member Killed in Eastern Afghanistan - Associated Press

Syria

Syrian Troops Kill 10 in Daraa, Arrest Hundreds - Voice of America

In Syria, Reports of Arrests Proliferate - New York Times

Army in Deraa Arrests 500 Men - BBC News

Leading Activist Seized in Syrian Roundup - Reuters

Hamas Refuses to Take Sides in Syria - New York Times

Libya / Operation Odyssey Dawn

Libyan Crowds Mourn Gadhafi's Son as Battles Continue - Voice of America

Mourners Demand Revenge in Libya After NATO Strike - Associated Press

U.K. Expels Libyan Ambassador After Embassy Attacked - Associated Press

Turkey Latest to Close Its Embassy in Libya - New York Times

Yemen

One Dead in Yemen; GCC Deal Unravels - Voice of America

Thousands Protest in Yemen as Deal Is Deadlocked - Associated Press

Israel / Palestinians

Hamas Condemns the Killing of Bin Laden - New York Times

Abbas Government Welcomes Bin Laden Death, Hamas Deplores - Reuters

Israel Says Bin Laden Killing Triumph for Democracies - Reuters

Differences Emerge Before Palestinian Unity Deal - Associated Press

Popular Palestinian Premier Could Be on Way Out - Reuters

Egypt in Palestine Appeal to U.S. - BBC News

Middle East / North Africa

Middle East Reacts to bin Laden's Death - CBS News

Reactions to bin Laden's Death Vary Across Mideast - USA Today

Arab Response to Death is Muted - Washington Post

Iran Disparages News of bin Laden's Death - Los Angeles Times

Jordan Hopes Bin Laden's Death Ends 'Terror Era' - Reuters

Latest Developments in Arab World's Unrest - Associated Press

Amid Arab Uprisings, Bin Laden No Longer the Model - Associated Press

Swiss Reveal Funds Stashed by Gaddafi, Mubarak, Ben Ali - Reuters

U.S. Department of Defense

SEALs Standing Taller After Secret Raid - Washington Times

Navy SEALs End Hunt, Told to Keep Quiet - Associated Press

DoD Urged To Rethink Acquisition Managers - Defense News

DoD Announces Reassignment of 'Critical' JFCOM Functions - ExecutiveGov

United States

The CIA Gets a Rare Public Victory - Times

U.S. Reacts to bin Laden's Death - Washington Post

NYC: A Mix of Emotion Stored for a Decade - New York Times

For New York, a Mix of Emotions - Washington Post

U.S. Muslims Express Relief After bin Laden's Death - Newsday

Bin Laden Kill May Reopen CIA Interrogation Debate - Reuters

Obama Honors Two Privates Killed in Korean War - Associated Press

Army Corps Blows Up Missouri Levee - New York Times

Canada

Conservatives in Canada Expand Party's Hold - New York Times

Harper's Conservatives Win Canadian Election - BBC News

Canada's Conservatives Win Coveted Majority - Associated Press

World

Watchdog: 102 Journalists Killed in 2010 - Associated Press

Report: Mexico, Egypt No Longer Have Free Press - Associated Press

Africa

Africans React to Death of Osama bin Laden - Voice of America

Africans Welcome Bin Laden Death - BBC News

Ethiopia Freezes Nile Water Treaty in Sign of Thaw With Egypt - VOA

Sudan Releases Jailed Islamist Opposition Leader - Associated Press

Ugandan President Defiant as Opposition Promises More Protests - VOA

Elders Group: Ivory Coast Strongman Accepts Defeat - Associated Press

Prosecutor to Move Ahead on Ivory Coast Probe - Associated Press

Rwanda Prosecutor Says He'll Charge U.S. Lawyer - Associated Press

Americas

Mexican Drug Cartel Leader Appears in U.S. Court - Voice of America

Honduras Drops All Charges Against Ex-President - Associated Press

Asia Pacific

China: Big Nuclear Question Is 'How Soon'? - Associated Press

China Calls Death of Bin Laden a Landmark Event - Associated Press

Philippines: Bin Laden's End Will Crush Extremists - Associated Press

Indonesian Muslims Express No Sympathy OBL's Death - VOA

N. Korea 'Behind South Bank Hack' - BBC News

Europe

Europe Welcomes bin Laden's Death - Voice of America

South Asia

Killing Confirms Pakistan is Sanctuary for Terrorists, Says India - VOA

India: Pakistan a 'Terror Refuge' - BBC News

The Status of al-Qaida Leaders

Mon, 05/02/2011 - 9:43pm
The Status of al-Qaida Leaders - Voice of America

Killed

Osama bin Laden, Saudi. Al-Qaida founder. Killed by U.S. forces in a raid on a compound in the Pakistani city of Abbottabad on May 2, 2011.

Abu Laith al-Libi, Libyan. Al-Qaida operative. Killed in a U.S. missile strike in northwest Pakistan on January 29, 2008.

Omar al-Farouq, Kuwaiti. Al-Qaida operations chief for Southeast Asia. Killed by British troops in Basra, Iraq on September 25, 2006 after he escaped from a maximum security prison in Afghanistan in 2005.

Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, Jordanian. Al-Qaida in Iraq leader. Killed in a U.S. air strike north of Baghdad on June 7, 2006.

Captured

Ramzi bin al-Shibh, Yemeni. 9/11 planner. Captured in Pakistan on September 11, 2002. Held at U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Abu Faraj al-Libbi, Libyan. Senior al-Qaida operative. Captured near the northwestern Pakistani city of Mardan on May 4, 2005. Suspected of involvement in assassination attempts on Pakistan's then-military president General Pervez Musharraf. Held at U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, Kuwaiti. Suspected 9/11 mastermind. Captured by Pakistani and U.S. operatives in the Pakistani city of Rawalpindi on March 1, 2003. Held at U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, Saudi. Al-Qaida operations chief in the Gulf region. Captured in the United Arab Emirates in October 2002. Suspected of planning the October 12, 2000 bombing of the USS Cole that killed 17 U.S. sailors off the coast of Yemen. Held at U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Abu Zubaydah, Palestinian. One of Osama bin Laden's top lieutenants. Captured in Pakistan on March 28, 2002. Held at U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

At Large

Ayman al-Zawahiri, Egyptian. Age - 59. Bin Laden's deputy. Suspected of playing a major role in the September 11th, 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States. Went into hiding with bin Laden when U.S.-led forces invaded Afghanistan weeks later, ousting the country's Taliban militant rulers, who had sheltered the terror network. Survived a U.S. air strike that targeted him in a Pakistani tribal region in January 2006 and remains at large. FBI has a $25 million reward for information leading to his arrest or conviction.

Abdullah Ahmed Abdullah, Egyptian. Age - late 40s. Wanted by the FBI for the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. U.S. investigators say he fled Nairobi, Kenya in August 1998 and went to Karachi, Pakistan. FBI has offered a $5 million reward for information leading to his arrest or conviction.

Saif al-Adel, Egyptian. Age about 50. Suspected high-ranking al-Qaida member wanted by the FBI in connection with 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. FBI has offered a $5 million reward for information leading to his arrest or conviction.

Anwar al-Awlaki, US/Yemeni citizen. 40 years old. Radical Islamic preacher. Suspected leader of al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula. Accused of inspiring a series of attacks on the United States in recent years. Identified by the U.S. Treasury Department as a "Specially Designated National" whose U.S. assets are blocked. Not on the FBI's most wanted terrorist list.

Adam Yahiye Gadahn. American convert to Islam. Age 32. Known as al-Qaida's "American spokesman." Charged in a U.S. court with treason and providing material support to al-Qaida. FBI has offered a $1 million reward for information leading to his arrest.

Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, Kuwaiti. Al-Qaida spokesman and radical preacher. Stripped of Kuwaiti citizenship in 2001 for alleged involvement in 9/11. Fled to Iran, where the government said it detained him in 2003. Kuwaiti media said Iran allowed him to leave the country in 2010.

Ali Saed Bin Ali El-Hoorie, Saudi. Age 45. Suspected member of Saudi Hizballah terrorist group. Charged in a U.S. court with involvement in the June 25, 1996 bombing of the Khobar Towers military housing complex in Saudi Arabia that killed 19 U.S. personnel.

Anas al-Liby (also known as Nazih Abdul-Hamed al-Raghie), Libyan. Age late 40s. Charged in a U.S. court with involvement in the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. FBI has offered a $5 million reward for information leading to his arrest or conviction.

Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, Comoros Islands national. Age late 30s. Al-Qaida leader in East Africa suspected of links to Somali Islamists. Wanted by the FBI in connection with the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. FBI has offered a $5 million reward for information leading to his arrest or conviction.

Fahd Mohammed Ahmed al-Quso, Yemeni. Age 36. Charged in a U.S. court with involvement in the October 12, 2000, bombing of the USS Cole that killed 17 U.S. sailors off the coast of Yemen. FBI has offered a $5 million reward for information leading to his arrest or conviction.

A really bad day for bin Laden -- and for Pakistan

Mon, 05/02/2011 - 9:58am
The killing of Osama bin Laden is a satisfying triumph for Americans and the U.S. government. It would have been even more satisfying had it occurred in the weeks and months after the September 2001 attacks. But the fact that it took a decade to finally kill bin Laden should be warning to any who doubt the long memories and persistence of the U.S. government's counterterrorism forces. They didn't forget and they never stopped working on the problem.

The Joint Special Operations Command, presumably the command responsible for the mission, should get credit for demonstrating its ability to successfully raid targets virtually anywhere in the world. The CIA also gets credit for patiently developing the required intelligence and for reminding everyone of the value of battlefield captures, interrogations, and human intelligence.

Finally, President Barack Obama deserves great credit for taking the risk of ordering this raid. He likely knew that the past record of such high-visibility raids was not good and that much more can go wrong with these operations than go right. He must also have known that another Desert One fiasco could have been disastrous on several levels.

Most notable was Obama's willingness to shatter America's relationship with Pakistan in order to take a gamble on getting bin Laden. For this raid is a black day for Pakistan and its relationship with the United States. As the White House background briefing on the raid makes clear, the United States kept the raid completely concealed from the Pakistani government. Combine this with the fact that bin Laden was found in a highly protected compound in a wealthy town near Pakistan's capital, and a stone's throw from a Pakistani military academy. Americans will be right to conclude that Pakistan was bin Laden's long-time friend and not America's. What little support Pakistan still enjoys in Washington will now likely melt away. Pakistan will have to look to China, its last friend, for the support it will need to survive.

Although the struggle against terrorism will go on, the death of bin Laden will bring a sense of finality for most in the American electorate. Combine that with more evidence of Pakistan's duplicity, the evident breakdown in relations between the United States and Pakistan, and what will likely be the most bloody year yet for U.S. soldiers fighting in Afghanistan. The result could be a final collapse of public support for the war in Afghanistan. That probably won't bother President Obama too much and will bolster his argument to accelerate the U.S. withdrawal from that war later this year.

Bin Laden News Roundup

Mon, 05/02/2011 - 7:33am
Al Qaeda

President's address on the death of Osama bin Laden.

Obama Announces Death of Osama bin Laden - Voice of America

Bin Laden is Dead - New York Times

Bin Laden Killed, 'Justice Has Been Done' - Washington Post

U.S. Kills bin Laden - Wall Street Journal

Bin Laden is Dead; 'Justice Has Been Done' - Washington Times

Osama bin Laden is Dead - Los Angeles Times

U.S. Kills bin Laden Decade After 9/11 Attacks - Associated Press

Osama bin Laden Dead in U.S. Raid - New York Post

'Justice Has Been Done' - New York Daily News

Bin Laden Killed by U.S. Forces - Christian Science Monitor

Osama bin Laden Dead - CNN News

U.S. Forces Kill Osama Bin Laden in Pakistan - BBC News

Bin Laden Killed, 'Buried at Sea' - The Australian

Osama bin Laden Shot in Head by U.S. Troops - Daily Telegraph (Au)

Bin Laden Killed in Chopper Raid on Pakistan Mansion - Toronto Star

Bin Laden Killed by U.S. Special Forces in Pakistan - Daily Telegraph

Bin Laden Dead - Boston Globe

Osama bin Laden is Dead, Obama Says - USA Today

Bin Laden Killed in Firefight - Fox News

Osama Bin Laden Killed in Shootout, Obama Says - Reuters

Officials Provide Details on bin Laden Operation - Voice of America

How the Deadly U.S. Raid Unfolded - Daily Telegraph

Body Buried at Sea After Raid in Pakistan - New York Times

Detective Work on Courier Led to Breakthrough - New York Times

Morning Raid in Pakistan Snared bin Laden - Los Angeles Times

Bin Laden Compound Close to Pakistani Military Academy - The Australian

Bin Laden Was Found at Luxury Pakistan Compound - Reuters

Getting bin Laden Top U.S. Goal Since 9/11 - Washington Times

Suspicions Over Whether Pakistan Aided bin Laden - Los Angeles Times

Some Embarrassing Questions for Pakistan - The Guardian

What Pakistan Knew About bin Laden - The New Yorker

Death May Shape U.S.-Pakistan Relations for Years - Christian Science Monitor

Pakistan: Musharraf Condemns 'Violation of Our Sovereignty' - Politico

Perhaps Largest Manhunt in U.S. History - Voice of America

The Death of a Terrorist - Wall Street Journal

Senior Official in Pakistan's ISI Confirms Bin Laden Killed - Reuters

The Most Wanted Face of Terrorism - New York Times

Death of Bin Laden Not Mean Demise of Al Qaeda - New York Times

Operation Is Blow to al Qaeda, Taliban - Wall Street Journal

Egypt's Al-Zawahri Likely to Succeed Bin Laden - Associated Press

Al Qaeda No.2 Zawahri Most Likely to Succeed Bin Laden - Reuters

Al-Qaeda Threat More Diffuse But Persistent - Washington Post

What's Next for al Qaeda? - CNN News

Will Killing Osama Kill the Movement he Inspired? - Associated Press

Islamists: Bin Laden Death Will Not Mute Jihad Call - Reuters

U.S. Anticipates al Qaeda 'Threats of Retaliation' - CNN News

U.S. Warns of Anti-American Violence - Associaed Press

Amid Cheers, a Message: 'They Will Be Caught' - New York Times

Afghans Fear West May See Death as the End - New York Times

Afghan Leader: Bin Laden Strike Is Blow to Terror - Associated Press

Afghan Leader Tells Taliban Not to Fight After Bin Laden's Death - Reuters

Jubilation Spreads Quickly in N.Y., D.C. - Los Angeles Times

Bin Laden's Death Sparks Celebrations in DC, NYC - Washington Times

Joy Erupts on U.S. Streets With Killing of Bin Laden - Reuters

'U-S-A' Chant Fills the Air Outside White House - Associated Press

Bin Laden's Death Draws Cheers, Relief, Dismay - Associated Press

U.S. Allies Offer Congratulations - Los Angeles Times

Israel: Bin Laden Killing Triumph for Democracies - Reuters

India Hails Bin Laden Death, More Needed to Fight Terrorism - Reuters

Vatican Says Bin Laden Will Have to Answer to God - Reuters

Muslim Brotherhood: U.S. Should Now Quit Iraq, Afghanistan - Reuters

Bin Laden's Death: Reaction in Quotes - BBC News

Story Developed on Social Media - Washington Post

Bin Laden Raid was Revealed on Twitter - BBC News

Obama's Remarks on Bin Laden's Killing - New York Times transcript

A Moment of Unity - Boston Globe editorial

Justice - New York Post editorial

After Osama bin Laden... - New York Times opinion

The Relentless Pursuit of bin Laden - Washington Post opinion

Victory Over Evil - Washington Post opinion

Proud of the United States - Washington Post opinion

Ten Thoughts on bin Laden - Line of Departure opinion

2 May SWJ Roundup

Mon, 05/02/2011 - 7:26am
Al Qaeda

Bin Laden Death News Roundup - Small Wars Journal

Afghanistan

Attacks in Afghanistan Kill 11 People on 1st Day of Taliban 'Offensive' - VOA

Two Bombings Rock Afghanistan - Los Angeles Times

Boy Set Off Afghan Blast Near Border - New York Times

Afghan 'Boy' Bomber Blasts Market - BBC News

Taliban Use Child Bomber at Start of Offensive - Associated Press

Taliban Renews Offensive in Afghanistan - Reuters

Costly Road Project Marred by Unsavory Alliances - New York Times

Pakistan

U.S. Aid Plan for Pakistan Is Foundering - New York Times

Syria

'Doomsday Scenario' if Syria Falls - Washington Post

Syrian Troops Storm Into Daraa Sunday - Voice of America

Syrian Army Conducts Widespread Raids, Arrests - Associated Press

'Tanks Firing' in Syria Protest City of Deraa - BBC News

Despite Siege, Syrians Vow to Keep Protesting - Associated Press

Libya / Operation Odyssey Dawn

NATO Strikes Draw Scrutiny After Qaddafi Family Deaths - New York Times

Strike Came After West Intercepted Communications -Los Angeles Times

British PM Says NATO Targeting Libyan Decision Makers - Voice of America

Gadhafi Strikes Port After Kin Killed - Wall Street Journal

NATO Doubts Claim Airstrike Killed Gadhafi's Son - McClatchy Newspapers

NATO on Defensive Over Strikes Close to Gadhafi - Associated Press

Pro-Gadhafi Crowds Vow Revenge for Deadly Strike - Voice of America

Death of Saif Al-Arab Gaddafi May Backfire for NATO - BBC News

Gadhafi's Son Had Survived U.S. Strike in 1986 - Associated Press

Embassies Attacked in Libyan Capital - Washington Post

British and Italian Embassies in Libya Attacked - Voice of America

Embassies in Libya Attacked after NATO Strike - Washington Post

Libya Says Regrets Attacks on Foreign Embassies - Reuters

Britain Expels Libyan Ambassador - BBC News

U.N. to Quit Tripoli Amid Attacks - BBC News

U.N. Says International Staff Leaves Tripoli - Reuters

Shell in Misurata Adds to a City's Grim Toll - New York Times

Libya Says Shelled Port to Stop Arms Delivery to Rebels - Reuters

Yemen

Deal to End Yemen Crisis Faltering as Talks Bog - New York Times

Yemen Peace Deal Signing Put Off - BBC News

Official Says Yemen Deal Is Postponed - Associated Press

Egypt

Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood Seeks Greater Influence - VOA

Thousands in Cairo's Tahrir Square Demand Work Rights - Reuters

Egypt in Palestine Appeal to U.S. - BBC News

Morocco

Protesters Seek Quicker Shift to Democracy, Decry Terror - New York Times

Iraq

Iraqi Violent Deaths, but Injuries Drop in April - Reuters

Iran

Iran's President Backs Down in Challenge to Leader - Associated Press

Ahmadinejad Attends Cabinet After Boycott Rumours - Reuters

Ahmadinejad Returns to Work After 'Boycott' - BBC News

Iranian Commander Warns Saudi of Domestic Unrest - Associated Press

Bahrain

Bahrain Chamber Urges Boycott of Iranian Goods - Voice of America

Bahrain Chamber Urges Boycott of Iranian Goods - Reuters

Israel / Palestinians

Israel Imposes Sanctions After Palestinian Unity Deal - Voice of America

Israel Holds Palestinian Funds As Deal Nears - New York Times

Israel Halts Palestinian Tax Transfers - Washington Post

Israel Suspends Cash to Palestinians After Hamas Deal - BBC News

Israel Halts Cash to Palestinians After Hamas Deal - Reuters

Hamas Leader Meshaal in Cairo to Sign Unity Deal - Reuters

Israel Mourns 6 Million Jewish Holocaust Victims - Associated Press

Israel Launches Bid to Reclaim Holocaust Assets - Reuters

Middle East / North Africa Unrest

Latest Developments in Arab World's Unrest - Associated Press

U.S. Department of Defense

Military Blogging Goes Mainstream - New York Times

'DADT': Obama Wants Rule to Remain Awhile - San Francisco Chronicle

United States

The Kings We Crown - New York Times opinion

Canada

Canada Prepares For National Election Monday - Voice of America

A Canadian Party Gains Strength - New York Times

Canadians Vote Monday as Harper Asks for Majority - Associated Press

World

Workers Demand Better Jobs, Pay on May Day - Associated Press

Researchers Find Drop in Anti-Semitic Incidents - Associated Press

Africa

U.N. Urges Uganda to Stop 'Excessive Force' Against Protests - VOA

Besigye Vows More Uganda Protests - BBC News

Ivory Coast to Investigate Former Strongman - Associated Press

Zimbabwe Labor Leaders: Workers Harassed, Arrested - Associated Press

Liberia's Main Opposition Names Presidential Pick - Associated Press

Americas

Mexican Police Discover Large Weapons Cache - Voice of America

3 Bodies Found in Mexico Mass Graves Identified - Associated Press

Venezuela: Chavez Says Allies Met With Colombian Rebels - Associated Press

Venezuela's Chavez Says Full Employment if Re-elected - Reuters

Cubans Mark May Day, Await Details of Change - Associated Press

Asia Pacific

Poverty and Desperation Supply Modern-day Slavery - Washington Times

Life in Limbo for Japanese Near Nuclear Plant - New York Times

China Says Beefing Up Patrols Over Maritime Claims - Associated Press

Europe

E.U. Executive Says Could Reinstate Border Controls - Reuters

Italy: Berlusconi Expected in Court for Fraud Hearing - Reuters

Spain Bars ETA-Linked Candidates From Elections - Reuters

South Asia

Thousands of Sri Lankans Protest UN Report on Wartime Abuses - VOA

Thousands Protest in Sri Lanka Against U.N. Report - BBC News

Sri Lankan Leader Spurns U.N. Call for War Crimes Probe - Reuters

Maldives Rocked by Protests Against President Nasheed - BBC News

Anti-Government Protests Resume in Maldives - Associated Press

Osama bin Laden Killed by U.S. Strike

Sun, 05/01/2011 - 11:55pm
THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary

Internal Transcript

May 2, 2011

PRESS BRIEFING BY SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIALS ON THE KILLING OF OSAMA BIN LADEN

Via Conference Call

12:03 A.M. EDT

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Thanks for joining us, everybody, at this late hour. It's much appreciated. From the outset of the administration, the President has placed the highest priority in protecting the nation from the threat of terrorism. In line with this, we have pursued an intensified, targeted, and global effort to degrade and defeat al Qaeda. Included in this effort has been a relentless set of steps that we've taken to locate and bring Osama bin Laden to justice. Indeed, in the earliest days of the administration, the President formally instructed the intelligence community and his counterterrorism advisors to make the pursuit of Osama bin Laden, as the leader of al Qaeda, as a top priority.

In the beginning of September of last year, the CIA began to work with the President on a set of assessments that led it to believe that in fact it was possible that Osama bin Laden may be located at a compound in Pakistan. By mid-February, through a series of intensive meetings at the White House and with the President, we had determined there was a sound intelligence basis for pursuing this in an aggressive way and developing courses of action to pursue Osama bin Laden at this location.

In the middle of March, the President began a series of National Security Council meetings that he chaired to pursue again the intelligence basis and to develop courses of action to bring justice to Osama bin Laden. Indeed, by my count, the President chaired no fewer than five National Security Council meetings on the topic from the middle of March -- March 14th, March 29th, April 12th, April 19th, and April 28th. And the President gave the final order to pursue the operation that he announced to the nation tonight on the morning -- Friday morning of April 29th.

The President mentioned tonight that the pursuit of Osama bin Laden and the defeat of al Qaeda has been a bipartisan exercise in this nation since September 11, 2001, and indeed, this evening before he spoke to the nation, President Obama did speak to President Bush 43 and President Clinton this evening to review with them the events of today and to preview his statement to the nation tonight.

And with that, I'll turn it over to my colleague to go through some of the details. Thank you.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: As you heard, the President ordered a raid earlier today against an al Qaeda compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan. Based on intelligence collection analysis, a small U.S. team found Osama bin Laden living in a large home on a secured compound in an affluent suburb of Islamabad. The raid occurred in the early morning hours in Pakistan and accomplished its objective. Osama bin Laden is now no longer a threat to America.

This remarkable achievement could not have happened without persistent effort and careful planning over many years. Our national security professionals did a superb job. They deserve tremendous credit for serving justice to Osama bin Laden.

Bin Laden was a sworn enemy of the United States and a danger to all humanity; a man who called for the murder of any American anywhere on Earth. His death is central to the President's goal of disrupting, dismantling, and ultimately defeating al Qaeda and its violent allies. He was responsible for killing thousands of innocent men and women not only on 9/11, but in the 1998 East Africa embassy bombing, the attack of the USS Cole, and many other acts of brutality.

He was the leader of a violent extremist movement with affiliates across the globe that had taken up arms against the United States and its allies. Bin Laden's most influential role has been to designate the United States as al Qaeda's primary target and to maintain organizational focus on that objective. This strategic objective, which was first made in a 1996 declaration of jihad against Americans, was the cornerstone of bin Laden's message.

Since 9/11, multiple agencies within our intelligence community have worked tirelessly to track down bin Laden, knowing that his removal from al Qaeda would strike a crippling blow to the organization and its militant allies. And last September the President was made aware of a compound in Abbottabad, where a key al Qaeda facilitator appeared to be harboring a high-value target. He received regular intelligence updates, as was just mentioned, on the compound in September, and he directed that action be taken as soon as he concluded that the intelligence case was sufficiently strong. A range of options for achieving the mission were developed, and on Friday he authorized the operation.

Now I'll turn it to my colleagues to go through the intelligence.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Thank you. First I want to point out that today's success was a team effort. It was a model of really seamless collaboration across our government. Since 9/11, this is what the American people have expected of us, and today, in this critical operation, we were able to finally deliver.

The operation itself was the culmination of years of careful and highly advanced intelligence work. Officers from the CIA, the NGA, the NSA all worked very hard as a team to analyze and pinpoint this compound. Together they applied their very unique expertise and capabilities to America's most vexing intelligence problem, where to find bin Laden.

When the case had been made that this was a critical target, we began to prepare this mission in conjunction with the U.S. military. In the end, it was the matchless skill and courage of these Americans that secured this triumph for our country and the world. I'm very proud of the entire team that worked on this operation, and am very thankful to the President for the courage that he displayed in making the decision to proceed with this operation.

With that, let me turn to my colleague to give you details on the intelligence background.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Thank you. The bottom line of our collection and our analysis was that we had high confidence that the compound harbored a high-value terrorist target. The experts who worked this issue for years assessed that there was a strong probability that the terrorist that was hiding there was Osama bin Laden.

What I'd like to do is walk you through the key points in that intelligence trail that led us to that conclusion. From the time that we first recognized bin Laden as a threat, the CIA gathered leads on individuals in bin Laden's inner circle, including his personal couriers. Detainees in the post-9/11 period flagged for us individuals who may have been providing direct support to bin Laden and his deputy, Zawahiri, after their escape from Afghanistan.

One courier in particular had our constant attention. Detainees gave us his nom de guerre or his nickname and identified him as both a protégé of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the mastermind of September 11th, and a trusted assistant of Abu Faraj al-Libbi, the former number three of al Qaeda who was captured in 2005.

Detainees also identified this man as one of the few al Qaeda couriers trusted by bin Laden. They indicated he might be living with and protecting bin Laden. But for years, we were unable to identify his true name or his location.

Four years ago, we uncovered his identity, and for operational reasons, I can't go into details about his name or how we identified him, but about two years ago, after months of persistent effort, we identified areas in Pakistan where the courier and his brother operated. Still we were unable to pinpoint exactly where they lived, due to extensive operational security on their part. The fact that they were being so careful reinforced our belief that we were on the right track.

Then in August 2010, we found their residence, a compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, a town about 35 miles north of Islamabad. The area is relatively affluent, with lots of retired military. It's also insolated from the natural disasters and terrorist attacks that have afflicted other parts of Pakistan. When we saw the compound where the brothers lived, we were shocked by what we saw -- an extraordinarily unique compound. The compound sits on a large plot of land in an area that was relatively secluded when it was built. It is roughly eight times larger than the other homes in the area.

When the compound was built in 2005, it was on the outskirts of the town center, at the end of a narrow dirt road. In the last six years, some residential homes have been built nearby. The physical security measures of the compound are extraordinary. It has 12- to 18-foot walls topped with barbed wire. Internal wall sections -- internal walls sectioned off different portions of the compound to provide extra privacy. Access to the compound is restricted by two security gates, and the residents of the compound burn their trash, unlike their neighbors, who put the trash out for collection.

The main structure, a three-story building, has few windows facing the outside of the compound. A terrace on the third floor has a seven-foot wall privacy -- has a seven-foot privacy wall.

It's also noteworthy that the property is valued at approximately $1 million but has no telephone or Internet service connected to it. The brothers had no explainable source of wealth.

Intelligence analysts concluded that this compound was custom built to hide someone of significance. We soon learned that more people were living at the compound than the two brothers and their families. A third family lived there -- one whose size and whose makeup matched the bin Laden family members that we believed most likely to be with Osama bin Laden. Our best assessment, based on a large body of reporting from multiple sources, was that bin Laden was living there with several family members, including his youngest wife.

Everything we saw -- the extremely elaborate operational security, the brothers' background and their behavior, and the location and the design of the compound itself was perfectly consistent with what our experts expected bin Laden's hideout to look like. Keep in mind that two of bin Laden's gatekeepers, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and Abu Faraj al-Libbi, were arrested in the settled areas of Pakistan.

Our analysts looked at this from every angle, considering carefully who other than bin Laden could be at the compound. We conducted red team exercises and other forms of alternative analysis to check our work. No other candidate fit the bill as well as bin Laden did.

So the final conclusion, from an intelligence standpoint, was twofold. We had high confidence that a high-value target was being harbored by the brothers on the compound, and we assessed that there was a strong probability that that person was Osama bin Laden.

Now let me turn it over to my colleague.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Thank you. Earlier this afternoon, a small U.S. team conducted a helicopter raid on the compound. Considerable planning helped prepare our operators for this very complex mission. Senior officials have been involved in the decision-making and planning for this operation for months, and briefed the President regularly. My colleague has already mentioned the unusual characteristics of this compound. Each of these, including the high walls, security features, suburban location, and proximity to Islamabad made this an especially dangerous operation.

The men who executed this mission accepted this risk, practiced to minimize those risks, and understood the importance of the target to the national security of the United States.

I know you understand that I can't and won't get into many details of this mission, but I'll share what I can. This operation was a surgical raid by a small team designed to minimize collateral damage and to pose as little risk as possible to non-combatants on the compound or to Pakistani civilians in the neighborhood.

Our team was on the compound for under 40 minutes and did not encounter any local authorities while performing the raid. In addition to Osama bin Laden, three adult males were killed in the raid. We believe two were the couriers and the third was bin Laden's adult son.

There were several women and children at the compound. One woman was killed when she was used as a shield by a male combatant. Two other women were injured.

During the raid, we lost one helicopter due to mechanical failure. The aircraft was destroyed by the crew and the assault force and crew members boarded the remaining aircraft to exit the compound. All non-combatants were moved safely away from the compound before the detonation.

That's all I have at this time. I'll turn it back to my colleague.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: We shared our intelligence on this bin Laden compound with no other country, including Pakistan. That was for one reason and one reason alone: We believed it was essential to the security of the operation and our personnel. In fact, only a very small group of people inside our own government knew of this operation in advance.

Shortly after the raid, U.S. officials contacted senior Pakistani leaders to brief them on the intent and the results of the raid. We have also contacted a number of our close allies and partners throughout the world.

Sine 9/11, the United States has made it clear to Pakistan that we would pursue bin Laden wherever he might be. Pakistan has long understood that we are at war with al Qaeda. The United States had a legal and moral obligation to act on the information it had.

And let me emphasize that great care was taken to ensure operational success, minimize the possibility of non-combatant casualties, and to adhere to American and international law in carrying out the mission.

I should note that in the wake of this operation, there may be a heightened threat to the homeland and to U.S. citizens and facilities abroad. Al Qaeda operatives and sympathizers may try to respond violently to avenge bin Laden's death, and other terrorist leaders may try to accelerate their efforts to strike the United States. But the United States is taking every possible precaution to protect Americans here at home and overseas. The State Department has sent guidance to embassies worldwide and a travel advisory has been issued for Pakistan.

And without a doubt, the United States will continue to face terrorist threats. The United States will continue to fight those threats. We have always understood that this fight would be a marathon and not a sprint.

There's also no doubt that the death of Osama bin Laden marks the single greatest victory in the U.S.-led campaign to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat al Qaeda. It is a major and essential step in bringing about al Qaeda's eventual destruction.

Bin Laden was al Qaeda's only (inaudible) commander in its 22-year history, and was largely responsible for the organization's mystique, its attraction among violent jihadists, and its focus on America as a terrorist target. As the only al Qaeda leader whose authority was universally respected, he also maintained his cohesion, and his likely successor, Ayman al-Zawahiri, is far less charismatic and not as well respected within the organization, according to comments from several captured al Qaeda leaders. He probably will have difficulty maintaining the loyalty of bin Laden's largely Gulf Arab followers.

Although al Qaeda may not fragment immediately, the loss of bin Laden puts the group on a path of decline that will be difficult to reverse.

And finally, it's important to note that it is most fitting that bin Laden's death comes at a time of great movement towards freedom and democracy that is sweeping the Arab world. He stood in direct opposition to what the greatest men and women throughout the Middle East and North Africa are risking their lives for: individual rights and human dignity.

1 May SWJ Roundup

Sun, 05/01/2011 - 2:52am
Afghanistan

Taliban Say Offensive Will Begin Sunday - New York Times

Taliban Declare Spring Offensive - BBC News

Afghan Taliban: Spring Offensive Starts Now - Associated Press

Afghan Taliban Declare Start to Spring Offensive - Reuters

Taliban Warns Civilians to Stay Clear of Targets - Los Angeles Times

U.N.: All Parties Must Protect Afghans in Spring Offensive - VOA

Pakistan

Islamic Banking a Fast-growing Trend in Pakistan - Washington Post

Pakistani Police Foil Attempt to Burn Church - Associated Press

Will Pakistan Erupt Like Egypt? - Washington Post opinion

Syria

Syrian Army Sends Reinforcements to Daraa - Voice of America

Forces Seize Mosque That Was Uprising's Symbol - New York Times

Syrian Military Overwhelms Town - Washington Post

'Six Killed' in Deraa as Troops Seize Key Mosque - BBC News

Syrian Troops Kill 4 at Mosque in Restive City - Associated Press

Syria Arrests Women, Opposition Figures-Rights Groups - Reuters

Businessman Becomes Magnet for Anger and Dissent - New York Times

Libya / Operation Odyssey Dawn

Libya: Gadhafi Survives NATO Airstirke - Voice of America

Attack Said to Kill Son but Not Qaddafi - New York Times

Gaddafi's Youngest Son, 3 Grandchildren Killed - Washington Post

NATO Strike Kills Kadafi Son - Los Angeles Times

NATO Strike 'Kills Gaddafi's Son' - BBC News

NATO Strike Kills Gadhafi's Son But Leader Escapes - Associated Press

NATO Says Air Strikes Not Targeting Gaddafi - Reuters

Frontline Turns Quiet as Rebels Regroup - Washington Post

NATO Dismisses Gaddafi's Offer of Truce and Talks - Reuters

Libyan Rebels Reject Gaddafi Ceasefire Offer - Reuters

New Predator Role Fits Diplomatic, Military Bill - Associated Press

My Libya, Your Libya, Our Libya - New York Times opinion

Yemen

Opposition Says President Refused to Sign Transition Agreement - VOA

Doubts Over Deal as Saleh Fails to Sign - BBC News

Ruler Backs Away From Agreement to Step Down - Associated Press

Egypt

Mubarak Could Face Death Penalty - Washington Post

Muslim Brotherhood Sets Up New Party - BBC News

Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood Eyes Big Political Role - Associated Press

Muslim Brotherhood Contests Half of Parliament Seats - Reuters

Gaza-Egypt Border Crossing to Open Permanently - BBC News

Iraq

Deadly Month for U.S. in Iraq - Washington Post

Suicide Bomber Kills 8 at Iraqi Market - New York Times

Suicide Bomber Kills 8 and Wounds 19 in Northern Iraq - Reuters

U.S. Military: American Soldier Dies in Iraq - Associated Press

Lawmakers Approve $400M Payment to Americans - Associated Press

Iran

Ahmadinejad Absence Prompts Debate - BBC News

Government Frozen by Simmering Feuds at Top - Associated Press

Bahrain

Bahrain Group Calls for Boycott of Iranian Goods - Associated Press

Israel / Palestinians

Israel Suspends Tax Transfer to Palestinians - Reuters

Middle East / North Africa Unrest

Latest Developments in Arab World's Unrest - Associated Press

U.S. Department of Defense

Pentagon Releases Money for Virginia Class Submarine - Daily Press

Exclusive Combat Award for Marjah Marine - Marine Corps Times

United States

Hometown Defends 'Three Cups of Tea' Author - Los Angeles Times

FBI Director Search: Seeking a Shared Philosophy - New York Times

1 Year After Times Square Scare, Concerns Endure - Associated Press

World

10 Nations Urge New Push for Non-Proliferation - Associated Press

Africa

Nigeria's Ruling Party Wins in Riot-Hit States - Reuters

Separating Free Speech From Hate in South Africa - New York Times

Call for Talks Over Uganda Arrest - BBC News

Uganda's Museveni Vows to Defeat Protests - Reuters

Protesters Demand President's Ouster in Burkina Faso - New York Times

U.S. Senator Makes Rare Visit to Somalia - Associated Press

Americas

Mexico: Police Discover Arsenal in Ciudad Juarez - Asociated Press

El Salvador Court Disbands 2 Political Parties - Associated Press

Asia Pacific

Japan's Prime Minister Defends Handling of Crisis - New York Times

Criticism Up on Japan PM's Handling of Nuke Crisis - Associated Press

U.S. 'Not Withholding Food Aid from North Korea' - BBC News

Thai Militants Kill 2 in Twin Bomb Attacks - Associated Press

Bombs Kill Two Rangers in Thailand's Restive South - Reuters

Europe

Germany Says Al-Qaida Suspects Were Planning Bombing - VOA

German Plot 'Ordered by Al-Qaeda' - BBC News

German Terrorism Arrests Disrupt Qaeda Inquiry - New York Times

Germany Says Al Qaeda Suspects Planned Bomb Attack - Reuters

South Asia

Chopper Carrying Top Indian State Official Missing - Associated Press

May, 2011

Vol. 7, No. 5