Author Topic: "Never get involved in a land war in Asia" or "History repeats itself"  (Read 210 times)

Offline NGO

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Vizzini, a character from The Princess Bride, said the following:
"Never get involved in a land war in Asia."



http://www.kansascity.com/451/story/1016230.html

Posted on Tue, Feb. 03, 2009
Russia influences Kyrgyzstan to close key U.S. airbase
By TOM LASSETER AND JONATHAN S. LANDAY
McClatchy Newspapers

The U.S.-led campaign against the Taliban suffered two logistical blows Tuesday as the president of Kyrgyzstan announced that he'd shut a U.S. airbase in his country and insurgents in Pakistan blew up a bridge, disrupting the main U.S. supply route into Afghanistan.

The developments were the latest reminders of the vulnerability of the long and complex transportation system on which the 60,000 U.S.-led forces in Afghanistan depend for fuel, ammunition, construction materials and a great deal more.

The announcement by Kyrgyzstan President Kurmanbek Bakiyev that he will close the Manas Air Base also gave President Barack Obama a first taste of the challenge he faces from Russia, which is trying to restore its clout in countries that were part of the former Soviet Union.

Bakiyev made his announcement in Moscow, not in his own capital, shortly after the Russian government reportedly agreed to lend Kyrgyzstan $2 billion, write off $180 million in debt and add another $150 million in aid. The timing and place of the announcement indicated the Kremlin's involvement.

"It's a direct challenge to the new American administration. Russia is going out of its way to close an American base," said Pavel Felgenhauer, a Moscow-based military analyst.

Manas is the main transit point through which U.S. troops fly into and out of Afghanistan. As such, it is vital to plans to send 30,000 more American troops to stabilize Afghanistan. A U.S. Air Force Web site calls it "the premier air-mobility hub" for U.S. and allied operations in Afghanistan, with about 1,000 military personnel from America, Spain and France stationed there.

A senior U.S. military official said the U.S. military hopes Bakiyev's decision is not final but is the latest gambit in what has been a lengthy effort to squeeze more money out of Washington.

"There is a long list of things that he wants, some of which we can't do, like debt relief, relieving the debt he owes other governments," said the U.S. military official. "The bottom line, we hope, is that this is simply a card being played as part of the negotiating process. Obviously, we don't want to lose Manas."

Another U.S. official, who also spoke on condition of anonymity, said Bakiyev had been trying to play the U.S. off against Russia for months in order to secure more funds. The official could not be identified by name because he was unauthorized to speak to reporters.

The U.S. has been paying Kyrgyzstan about $63 million a year to use Manas. The money is part of some $150 million in annual direct and indirect U.S. aid.

Gen. David Petraeus, the head of the U.S. Central Command, which oversees U.S. military operations in the Middle East and South Asia, said senior Kyrgyz officials had assured him that there were no discussions between the country and Russia about closing the base in exchange for aid.

The senior U.S. military official said the base is also used to "bed down" U.S. tanker aircraft used for midair refueling operations over Afghanistan.

Bakiyev explained in Moscow that the decision had been made because "we have repeatedly raised with the U.S. the matter of economic compensation for the existence of the base in Kyrgyzstan, but we have not been understood," Russian media reported.

Bakiyev said that after the base opened in 2001 the understanding was that "it was one or two years that were being talked about. Eight years have passed."

The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 touched off 30 years of war, and Moscow is again turning into a player in Afghan politics. Two days before Obama's inauguration, the Afghan government said that Russia had accepted a request from President Hamid Karzai for military aid.

And last month, the Kremlin said it would open transportation lines through Russia to Afghanistan to help U.S. forces circumvent the violence-plagued route across the Pakistani border.

Although he didn't cite the base closing, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev made a point of saying in Moscow that Kyrgyzstan and Russia "are open to coordinated action" with the U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan.

Analyst Felgenhauer said the message from the two actions was clear: The Kremlin is willing to help the American military in Afghanistan, but only on the condition that the U.S. recognizes its authority in central Asia.

Or, more simply put, "we will not allow their bases in our sphere of influence," said Felgenhauer, a critic of Kremlin policy.

In Pakistan, meanwhile, Islamic insurgents allied with the Taliban blew up a bridge in the Khyber Pass, disrupting one of two truck routes from the port of Karachi by which U.S.-led NATO forces in Afghanistan receive about 80 percent of their supplies.


Offline NGO

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Re: "Never get involved in a land war in Asia" or "History repeats itself"
« Reply #1 on: February 03, 2009, 09:42:46 PM »

Pakistan bridge blast cuts supply
Page last updated at 16:44 GMT, Tuesday, 3 February 2009

The aftermath of the bridge bombing video;

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/7867975.stm

Suspected militants in north-western Pakistan have blown up a bridge, cutting a crucial supply link to Nato forces in neighbouring Afghanistan. Most supplies for the international forces in Afghanistan come through the Khyber Pass in Pakistan. The US army has been setting up other supply routes to counter the increasing attacks on the road between Peshawar in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Meanwhile, fierce fighting is said to be continuing in the Swat valley. The army says in the past two days it has killed at least 35 militants behind a campaign to enforce Taleban-style Islam. Local residents say the number of civilians killed in the valley since the weekend has risen to 40.


Taleban stranglehold
The bridge in the Khyber district was blown up at 0600 local time (0100 GMT) and all traffic on the road had been suspended, news agency AFP quoted key official, Tariq Hayat, as saying. "We are sending teams to repair the bridge and restore the traffic flow," he said. The 30-metre (100-foot) iron bridge is 23km (15 miles) west of Peshawar. Convoys on the winding mountain road between Peshawar and Afghanistan have been increasingly targeted.In December, many truck drivers in Pakistan refused to continue delivering supplies following a series of hijackings by suspected Taleban militants in the area. The attacks led the US to announce it had agreed with Russia and other states an alternative supply route through Central Asia. In Swat, local residents say there is intense fighting in the Matta and Kabal areas.




On Monday, Pakistan's army said it had retaken high ground from the militants in the Charbagh area near Mingora, the main town in the Swat valley. The area has been the scene of a major battle since Saturday. The clash is the latest in an operation against an increasingly powerful Taleban insurgency in the valley. The military launched its offensive last week in response to a public outcry over the Taleban's growing strength in Swat. The militants have tightened their hold on the valley, banning girls' education, setting up their own courts and killing those they oppose, sometimes beheading their victims. As many as 80 civilians have been killed in the area over the past nine days, BBC Urdu service reports, quoting local sources.

The army says it has killed 35 militants in two days of fighting in the Charbagh, Ali Grama and Manglawar areas, but there is no independent confirmation of the claim. Witnesses say most of the people killed are civilians. The army does not deny civilian casualties, but says it often has no way of identifying the militants from the civilian population. Most areas in the upper Swat region remain under curfew and, as a result, bodies are lying unattended in several houses hit by artillery shells or bombs dropped from helicopter gunships, residents say. They say a large number of people have become homeless but they cannot get out of the area due to the curfew and fighting.