U.S. faces remote sabotage cyber danger: general

(Reuters) – The U.S. Defense Department must be able to operate freely in cyberspace amid dangers of “remote sabotage,” an Army general tapped to streamline offensive and defensive computer operations said on Thursday.

Technology

The potential for sabotage and destruction is “something we must treat very seriously,” General Keith Alexander said in his first public remarks since the new U.S. Cyber Command was activated on May 21.

“In short, we face a dangerous combination of known and unknown vulnerabilities, strong adversary capabilities and weak situational awareness,” he told an audience at the Center for Strategic & International Studies, a private research group in Washington.

“Our Department of Defense must be able to operate freely and defend its resources in cyberspace,” Alexander said.

U.S. foes will find the weakest link and exploit it, whether it is public or privately owned and operated, he said.

“America’s very wealth and strength make it a target in cyberspace,” Alexander said.

Senior aides to President Barack Obama are weighing such issues as how the laws of warfare apply to a digital attack routed through a neutral country, he said.

CYBER ATTACKS ON ESTONIA, GEORGIA

“What we don’t have is the precision in those standing rules of engagement, yet, that we need,” Alexander said.

He referred to “distributed denial-of-service attacks” that interfered with government functions in Estonia in 2007 and in Georgia in 2008.

Although information systems were able to resume functioning after the attacks stopped, they show that “the potential for sabotage and destruction is now possible,” he said.

Alexander also heads the Pentagon’s communications-intercepting National Security Agency, or NSA.

He said new rules for U.S. military operations in cyberspace were being prepared by the Defense Department’s policy office, subject to approval by the “deputies committee,” the highest level interagency body dealing with national security issues.

Defense Department systems are probed by unauthorized users roughly 250,000 times an hour, or more than 6 million times a day, Alexander said.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates began streamlining U.S. military cyber operations “as a result of serious intrusions into our classified networks” in late 2008, he said.

The new Cyber Command is aimed at synchronizing offensive and defensive cyber capabilities “as well as the need to leverage NSA’s intelligence capabilities to support our understanding of the threat and our ability to respond it,” he added.

Until recently, the military’s cyber efforts were run by a loose web of joint task forces “spread too far and too wide, geographically and institutionally, to be effective,” Deputy Defense Secretary William Lynn said in a guest piece in the Wall Street Journal on Thursday.

“Now cyber attacks can strike in less than the blink of an eye,” Lynn wrote. “In the face of this threat, the U.S. military must be ready to defend our country at network speed.”

More than 100 intelligence agencies and foreign militaries are actively trying to penetrate U.S. systems and weapons-system blueprints are among the documents that have been compromised, Lynn said.

(Editing by Eric Walsh)

Torture, rape was norm at illegal Iraq prison – report

Torture, beating and sodomising inmates with brooms or pistol barrels were the norm at an illegal prison run by a military unit under the command of the Iraqi prime minister’s office, Human Rights Watch said.

The rights group on Wednesday called for a thorough investigation over the detention centre, which was discovered and closed down this month by Iraq’s Human Rights Ministry, and urged Iraq to prosecute those responsible.

Shi’ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has denied any connection with the facility, which housed mainly Sunni Arab prisoners from the volatile northern city of Mosul where insurgent groups such as al Qaeda operate.

The revelation of the prison came at a sensitive time for Maliki as he tries to negotiate alliances with other factions that would allow him to be reappointed as prime minister following an inconclusive election in March.

Sunni outrage at the reports of their compatriots being mistreated by majority Shi’ite-led authorities could increase sectarian tensions just as violence is beginning to recede.

Human Rights Watch interviewed 42 of the 300 men who had been detained on a military base at Baghdad’s old Muthanna airfield after being arrested in Mosul and accused of terrorism.

“The men’s stories were credible and consistent. Most of the 300 displayed fresh scars and injuries they said were a result of routine and systematic torture they had experienced at the hands of interrogators at Muthanna,” Human Rights Watch said.

The detainees said many were handcuffed, blindfolded and hung upside down. Interrogators kicked, whipped and beat them.

Interrogators also placed dirty plastic bags over their heads to close off air supply. When the detainees passed out, interrogators awakened them with electric shocks to the genitals or other parts of the body, Human Rights Watch said.

One detainee, a former Iraqi army general who had been living in London but returned to Mosul after his son was detained, said his jailors refused to give him medicine for his diabetes and high blood pressure, and beat him severely.

“They applied electricity to my penis and sodomized me with a stick,” the man, who is in a wheelchair, told Human Rights Watch. “I was forced to sign a confession that they wouldn’t let me read.”

Another detainee, who was 21, said interrogators threatened to rape his mother and sisters if he did not confess. During one torture session, guards made another detainee rape him.

Another detainee said he was sodomised with a pistol.

The Human Rights Ministry says three Iraqi army officers have been arrested for questioning. The prison was illegal because it was not under the jurisdiction of the Justice Ministry and the Human Rights Ministry was not informed of it.

Conditions in legal Iraqi prisons are often not much better. The justice system relies on confessions for prosecutions, not evidence. That makes torture common though perhaps not as routine as under ousted dictator Saddam Hussein.

“What happened at Muthanna is an example of the horrendous abuse Iraqi leaders say they want to leave behind,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch.

“Everyone responsible, from the top on down, needs to be held accountable.”

(Editing by Giles Elgood)

General VK Singh takes over as new Army chief

New Delhi, Mar 31 (ANI): General Vijay Kumar Singh on Wednesday formally took charge as the 26th chief of the 1.13 million-strong Indian Army.

General Vijay Kumar Singh, 59, will hold the post for the next two years.

An honours graduate of the US Army Infantry School at Georgia in the US, General Vijay Kumar Singh is an alumnus of the Wellington-based Defence Services Staff College, the Mhow-based Army War College and the US Army War College, Carlisle.

A third generation army officer, General Vijay Kumar Singh was commissioned into the Rajput Regiment on June 14, 1970.

He had participated in the 1971 war against Pakistan and in the operations of the Indian Peace-Keeping Force in Sri Lanka in the mid-1980s.

He also commanded the Jalandhar-based 11 Corps and Ambala-based Strike Corps and was an instructor in the Indian Military Training Team (IMTRAT) headquarters in Bhutan.

He is a recipient of the Param Vishist Seva Medal, the Ati Vishist Seva Medal and Yudh Seva Medal. He is also one of the honorary ADCs to the President of India, who is the Supreme Commander of the armed forces.

The General has a illustrious record in the Army for standing first in the Young Officers Course of Infantry and again being awarded the Commando Dagger for standing first in the Commando Course. (ANI)

Obama sees progress on first Afghan trip as president

U.S. President Barack Obama made the first trip of his presidency to Afghanistan on Sunday, where he said the military campaign had made progress but President Hamid Karzai still had to tackle corruption.

Air Force One landed in darkness at Bagram airfield north of the Afghan capital, and Obama was whisked by helicopter to Karzai’s palace in Kabul, where he was greeted by the Afghan president and a band playing the U.S. national anthem.

“I want to send a strong message that the partnership between the United States and Afghanistan is going to continue. We have already seen progress with respect to the military campaign against extremism in the region,” Obama later told Karzai in front of reporters inside the palace.

“We also want to continue to make progress on … good governance, rule of law, anti-corruption efforts — all these things end up resulting in an Afghanistan that is more prosperous, more secure, independent,” he added.

Karzai said he hoped “the partnership will continue in the future towards a stable, strong, peaceful Afghanistan that can sustain itself, that can move forward into the future.”

U.S. officials said Obama would press Karzai to crack down on corruption and battle drug trafficking. He would later hear a briefing from the commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, Army General Stanley McChrystal, and give a speech to U.S. troops.

The president left Washington on Saturday night. White House spokesman Robert Gibbs, speaking before the trip, said Obama wanted to get an “on the ground update” about the war from McChrystal and Karl Eikenberry, the U.S. ambassador.

National security advisor General James Jones told reporters on Air Force One that Obama would tell Karzai “in this second term that there are certain things he has to do as the president of his country to battle the things that have not been paid attention to almost since day one”.

In December, Obama ordered the deployment of an extra 30,000 U.S. troops to Afghanistan and set a mid-2011 target to begin withdrawal. About a third have so far arrived, participating in a major offensive in the south of the country last month.

The Obama administration has had an uneasy relationship with Karzai throughout Obama’s 14 months in office, reaching a low point during a three-month Afghan election dispute last year.

Eikenberry wrote in a classified cable in November, later leaked, that Karzai was “not an adequate strategic partner”.

Obama speaks to Karzai infrequently, unlike his predecessor, former President George W. Bush, who launched the war after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United States.

TROOP INCREASE

The trip allows Obama to see any early results of his troop increase, show support for military personnel and counter critics who say his focus on passing healthcare legislation has diverted attention from foreign policy.

Since Obama took office, the eight-year war in Afghanistan has shifted from a second priority behind Iraq to the main effort of the U.S. military. By the end of this year, the number of U.S. troops in Afghanistan will have tripled under Obama’s watch to 100,000, along with about 40,000 from NATO allies.

Obama’s domestic victory on healthcare reform last week gives him political space to turn his attention to the Afghan war, which has mixed support from the American public amid rising casualties, costs, and corruption among Afghan leaders.

Obama travelled to Afghanistan during the 2008 U.S. presidential election campaign after being criticised by Republican challenger John McCain for failing to tour the war zone, but has not been back since his victory.

The White House official said weather and logistical reasons thwarted previous attempts at a presidential visit since Obama took office in January 2009.

Afghan policy has been transformed during Obama’s year in office. Top U.S. officials held two long reviews of the White House’s war policy, both times electing to send tens of thousands of extra troops.

The war has become far deadlier and far more costly, setting records last year for the numbers of troops and civilians killed.

Karzai, who remained in power after a fraud-marred election last August, has launched a high profile effort to reconcile with the Taliban, who have made a comeback more than eight years since U.S.-backed Afghan militias drove them from Kabul.

The Taliban have so far spurned his offer to talk, although another insurgent group, Hezb-i-Islami sent a delegation to Kabul this month to present a peace plan. The palace revealed this week that Karzai had received them.

U.S. Defence Secretary Robert Gates said last week the timing was still not right for reconciliation with senior Afghan Taliban leaders.

(Writing by Peter Graff; Editing by Paul Casciato)

Outcome of Musharraf’s ‘successful’ Saudi visit to be revealed soon: Qureshi

Lahore, Sep.4 (ANI): Former Pakistan Presidency spokesperson Rashid Qureshi has said former President General Pervez Musharraf’s meeting with Saudi King Abdullah has been ‘successful’, and the outcome of the talks between the two leaders will surface after some days.

Qureshi, who was Musharraf’s spokesman during his regime, rebutted reports that the former Army General had visited Riyadh to request the Saudi authorities to direct Islamabad to not to pursue high treason charges against him.

He said Musharraf visited Saudi Arabia on an invitation by the king.

Qureshi also rejected a reports carried by a leading Pakistani daily that Musharraf’s Saudi visit has turned out to be a fiasco since he failed in persuading the Saudi authorities to secure clemency from his detractors in Pakistan.

The report claimed that Saudi authorities have advised Musharraf to seek pardon and tender an unconditional apology for his unconstitutional acts directly from the people who had to suffer due to his actions during his regime.

Qureshi termed the report as ‘false and inappropriate’ and said truth regarding Musahrraf’s visit would be out soon. (ANI)

Musharraf’s ‘royal’ treatment in Saudi Arabia worries his opponents in Pak

Islamabad, Sep.2 (ANI): The ‘royal’ treatment being given to former Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf during his Saudi Arabia visit has his opponents worried.

The special treatment has sparked speculations that Riyadh is trying to use its influence to ask the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) to shun its demand for Musharraf’s trial under the Article Six of the Constitution.

Sources said King Abdullah sent his special airplane to London to fetch Musharraf.

Reports regarding Saudi Arabia cracking its whip on the PML-N and other anti-Musharraf parties has probably forced PML-N to come out with clarificatiobns.

A PML-N spokesman denied reports regarding Saudi putting pressure on PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif.

“There has been no official message from the Saudi family to Mian Nawaz Sharif in this regard,” The Dawn quoted a PML-N spokesperson, as saying.

One of Musharraf’s close aides, Barrister Mohammad Ali Saif, who claims to be the former Army General’s spokesman, said the PML-N should think once again before demanding Musharraf’s prosecution, and see what kind of treatment he is receiving in Riyadh.

“The PML-N should see and understand how the former president is being treated by the Saudi government and forget about his (Musharraf) trial for treason” Saif said.

When asked that whether the Saudi Government has actually given Musharraf a guarantee of not being tried, Saif said : “I don’t know anything about this, but there is little possibility of Gen Musharraf facing trial only because the PML-N is asking for that.”

“I am not aware of this, but the way the former president is being treated in the kingdom means he cannot be touched in Pakistan,” he added. (ANI)

US training more drone operators than fighter, bomber pilots

Lahore, Aug 24 (ANI): The US Air Force has said it is now training more drone operators than fighter and bomber pilots as part of an expanding programme battlefield automation, and signalled that the end of the era of the fighter pilot is in sight.

In a controversial shift in military thinking – one encouraged by the now-confirmed death of Tehreek-e-Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud in a drone-strike on August 5, the US air force is looking to hugely expand its fleet of unmanned aircraft by 2047, The Guardian reported.

Just three years ago, the service was able to fly just 12 drones at a time; now it can fly more than 50.

At a trade conference outside Washington last week, military contractors presented a future vision in which pilotless drones serve as fighters, bombers and transports, even automatic mini-drones programmed to attack in swarms.

Contractors also made presentations for “nano-size” drones the size of moths that can flit into buildings to gather intelligence; drone helicopters; large aircraft that could be used as strategic bombers and new mid-sized drones could act as jet fighters.

Some 5,000 robotic vehicles and drones are now deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan. By 2015, the Pentagon’s 230 billion dollars arms procurement programme, Future Combat Systems, expects to robotise around 15 percent of US armed forces.

In a recently published study, the Unmanned Aircraft System Flight Plan 2020-2047, air force generals predicted a boom in drone funding to 55 billion dollars by 2020, the Daily Times quoted the Guardian report, as saying.

Last month, US Defence Secretary Robert Gates had underscored the change in strategic thinking when he capped the production of the F-22 Raptor, the US Air Force’s most advanced interceptor, at just 187 planes.

In June, Army General Stanley McChrystal, the top US commander in Afghanistan, said he couldn’t envision a day when he had enough surveillance assets.

“The capability provided by the unmanned aircraft is game-changing. We can have eyes 24/7 on our adversaries,” said General Norton Schwartz, the US Air Force Chief. (ANI)

Sharif pushes for Musharraf’s trial for years of ‘misdeeds’

London, July 4 (ANI): The bitter feud between former Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and former President General Pervez Musharraf continues abated, with Sharif now calling for a trial of the former military General.

Talking to media persons here, Sharif regretted that Musharraf has not been tried even after years of misdeeds.

Referring to the United Nations (UN) inquiry into Benazir Bhutto’s assassination case, Sharif said the UN team should also interrogate Musharraf, because he is the prime suspect in the case.

Sharif, who is living close to Musharraf’s mansion here, said the former Army General must be asked to come to Pakistan to cooperate with the UN inquiry team.

He held the autocratic ruler responsible for the current turbulent situation of Pakistan, and blamed him for pushing the country into pandemonium.

“If Pakistan was not de-tracked again and again by military adventures, we would today not be staring in the face of total gloom. I absolutely have no doubt that all the problems that we face today, including extremism and militancy, would not have raised their head were it not for the military coups,” The News quoted Sharif, as saying.

Sharif lamented that the incumbent PPP-led government in Pakistan was still continuing Musharraf’s legacy and challenging the writ of the constitution.

“Pakistan has been pushed to the brink by military dictators, who never respected the supremacy of the Constitution and trampled over it whenever they desired, without taking into account the possible implications for the progress of the nation,” he added.

Commenting on India’s refusal to resume the stalled peace talks until Pakistan takes substantial action against the perpetrators of the Mumbai carnage, Sharif accused India of being ‘stubborn’.

“India should understand that the Pakistani civilian and military establishments were not behind the attacks in Mumbai. The problem of terrorism is a global and regional issue and India should cooperate with Pakistan to root out this menace,” he said.(ANI)

Sri Lanka shows proof of death Prabhakaran’s body

In life, LTTE chief V. Prabhakaran outmanoeuvered the Sri Lankan army several times. In death too, the rebel chief seemed to put Colombo in a tizzy.

After the Lankan military formally announced about Prabhakaran’s death on Tuesday, more than a day after he was reportedly shot dead, conflicting reports about his death had come from the military on Monday. One report said the body was charred, the other said a DNA test had to be done to confirm the identity.

To confound the situation, the LTTE released a statement that Prabhakaran was safe. President Mahinda Rajapaksa too avoided any mention of Prabhakaran when he addressed the nation from Parliament on Tuesday.

He instead focused on wiping out of the LTTE and promising the Tamil community that they would be protected. It was left to newly promoted army chief, General Sarath Fonseka, to make the formal announcement about Prabhakaran’s death.

“Commander of Sri Lanka Army General Sarath Fonseka has confirmed that the body of V. Prabhakaran, psychopathic leader of world’s most barbaric terrorist outfit LTTE..

,” the defence ministry said. Subsequently, the military released purported video footage of Prabhakaran’s body.

“The 4th Vijayabahu Regiment(4 VIR) troops led by Lt. Colonel Rohitha Aluvihare under the 53 Division commanded by Major General Kamal Goonarathne, have found the bullet ridden body of the terrorist on the bank of the Nanthikadal lagoon,” the defence ministry added.

A close scrutiny of still photographs seemed to reveal that his hands had turned white or pale, an indication of cyanide poisoning. Prabhakaran had once vowed that he would never be taken alive.

The formal announcement came hours after the pro-LTTE website, TamilNet, released a statement that the rebel leader was alive.

US commander: Pakistan must do more to fight Taliban

KABUL: Pakistan must do more to “erase” Taliban bases inside its territory which are destabilising the entire region, the US commander of Western
troops in neighbouring Afghanistan said on Sunday.

US President Barack Obama’s administration has pledged 21,000 more troops to join 39,000 American soldiers fighting Taliban guerrillas in Afghanistan.

It has also stepped up attacks by drones on suspected militant bases across the border in Pakistan.

US Army General David McKiernan, who commands more than 70,000 U.S. and NATO-led troops in Afghanistan, said he was confident the new troops would bring improvements in security to southern Afghanistan this year after years of rising violence.

But he described insecurity as a regional problem that could only be resolved by a stronger effort from Pakistan’s embattled government to tackle safe havens for militants.

“There must be an improved effort on the other side of the border against these safe havens that many of these insurgent groups operate from in Pakistan,” he told a news conference.

“There are sanctuary areas that have existed for many years across the border. They feed terrorism and insecurity on both sides of the border,” McKiernan said.

“I think it is safe to say there is an expectation that the government of Pakistan must erase these safe havens so that they are not a threat to their own country and the region. They will have the full support of the international community to do that.”
Pakistani authorities bristle at any suggestion that they have been lax in battling Taliban guerrillas on their side of the border. They say thousands of Pakistani troops have died fighting militants, and criticism of their effort only serves to increase anti-Americanism and boost support for the militants.

But international concern over Pakistan’s ability to fight the militants has grown in recent months as attacks by militants have increased both in Pakistan and Afghanistan. In the latest strike in Pakistan, a suicide car bomber killed 25 soldiers and police and two passers-by in on Saturday.

Afghanistan expressed worry last week about the impact on its own security of a decision by Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari to accept Taliban demands and impose Islamic law on the Swat valley, where militants have gained ground.

On the Afghan side of the border, Taliban attacks have increased to the highest levels seen since the militants were driven from Kabul in 2001.

“Challenges, generally, have increased in past years,” Afghan Defence Minister Abdul Rahim Wardak told the news conference in Kabul alongside the US commander.

“The level of enemy attacks have gone up, there are foreign combatants (in their ranks), the way they operate has become complex, they have access to better training and equipment.”

McKiernan said he would send most of the new US troops to southern provinces near Pakistan that have seen the greatest rise in instability, and he expected the influx to help.

But he said he had no power to intervene on the Pakistani side of the border. “Insecurity and instability is a regional problem and will require regional approaches,” he said.

B’desh House panel mulls action against key ACC officials

Anisur Rahman Dhaka, Apr 12 (PTI) A top Parliamentary committee in Bangladesh is mulling action against senior officials of the anti-graft commission, including the former chief of the panel, for defying its order to appear in the House. The Parliamentary standing committee today accused senior officials of the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) of contempt of the House after they refused to appear before the panel for a hearing.

“They will have to explain before the next meeting of the (parliamentary) committee under what law they defied the parliamentary summon,” Mohiuddin Khan Alamgir, Chairman of the standing committee on public undertaking, told reporters. Mainuddin Khan Badal, another member of the committee, said that under the British and Indian parliamentary practices the former ACC chairman, the two commissioners and the secretary of the anti-graft body could even be arrested for their refusal to appear before the committee today as they were ordered earlier.

On April 7, the parliamentary committee in a letter asked the former ACC chief, retired army general Hassan Mashhud Chowdhury and three other officials to appear before the panel along with the commission’s latest annual report, audit report and documents on its activities. However, they have refused to appear before the parliamentary body, saying the summons are “beyond jurisdiction of the committee” as they were accountable to the president of the country.

Thai PM’s car attacked, tension mounts before demo

Protesters attacked a car carrying Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva on Tuesday as a minister warned that opposition elements wanted to cause chaos at a big rally this week in a bid to topple the government.

Abhisit was unhurt, but a window in his car was smashed when a group of red-shirted demonstrators surrounded the vehicle in Pattaya, a resort town where the cabinet held its weekly cabinet meeting and which is the venue of an Asian summit this week.

“It’s okay. It did not scare me. I can still perform my work,” Abhisit told reporters later in Bangkok.

Supporters of the pro-Thaksin United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD) have besieged Thailand’s seat of government since March 26 in a bid to force him from office.

The UDD says up to 300,000 people are expected to join the rally at Government House on Wednesday. UDD leaders hope it will spread as far as the residence of former Prime Minister Prem Tinsulanonda, the chief adviser to King Bhumibol Adulyadej.

Thaksin has accused Prem of playing an active, behind-the-scenes role in the 2006 coup that ousted him, an allegation the former army general denies.

Satit Wongnongtaey, a minister at the prime minister’s office, told reporters security was being stepped up to control the demonstrators. “If unrest occurs, the government is not the responsible party,” he said.

Thai financial markets are worried about the confrontation and the stock market was down 0.48 percent on Tuesday.

“Domestic politics remains the key risk factor for our market, with investors likely to sell due to fears related to the big rally on April 8,” said Kosin Sripaiboon, head of research at UOB Kay Hian Securities.

TEMPERATURES RISING

Abhisit’s car was attacked when around 40-50 protesters caught up with his motorcade at a traffic light in Pattaya.

TV footage showed one protester smashing the station wagon’s rear window with a motorcycle helmet, while others hit it with sticks, shouting abuse at the prime minister.

Abhisit made a televised statement on Monday night warning that his government would use firm measures to prevent bloody confrontation between police and protesters.

The UDD said its rally would be peaceful, like the two-week siege of Government House.

“Our protest will be peaceful and we have measures to prevent anybody from inciting violence,” UDD leader Nattawut Saikeau told Reuters.

A former Thaksin ally who defected to Abhisit’s camp in December, ensuring his election as prime minister by parliament, warned the rally could easily descend into violence and called on Thaksin to call off actions that were dividing the country.

“I have to warn those wanting to join the rally tomorrow not to become tools or pawns,” said Newin Chidchob, banned from politics but de facto leader of the Bhumjaithai Party.

“I have reason from past experience working with some leaders of the ‘red shirts’ to believe there may be a plan to incite violence. If that happens, innocent demonstrators will be the ones who lose the most,” he told a news conference.

Abhisit has chosen to avoid confrontation between the police and UDD protesters, staying away from his office for the past two weeks, part of which he spent in London representing the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) at the G20 summit.

Thaksin lives in exile after being convicted on conflict of interest charges last year.

His absence has not ended long-running political unrest, with Bangkok’s royalist, military and business elite, who accused Thaksin and his allies of corruption and abuse of power, pitted against the rural and urban poor who loved his populist policies.

The 10 members of ASEAN and other Asian countries, including Japan and China, hold a summit in Pattaya from Friday.

Thai minister says protesters may aim for chaos

Supporters of ousted Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra may try to use a big anti-government rally this week to stir up chaos in order to bring down the government, a cabinet minister said on Tuesday.

“If unrest occurs, the government is not the responsible party,” Satit Wongnongtaey, a minister at the Prime Minister’s office, told reporters, adding that security was being stepped up to control the crowds expected in central Bangkok on Wednesday.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva made a televised statement on Monday night warning that his government would use firm measures to prevent bloody confrontation between police and protesters.

Supporters of the United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD) have surrounded Thailand’s seat of government since March 26 in a bid to force Abhisit out of office.

The UDD says up to 300,000 people are expected to join the rally, but UDD leader Nattawut Saikeau told Reuters it would be peaceful, like the Government House siege.

“Our protest will be peaceful and we have measures to prevent anybody from inciting violence,” he said.

The demonstration will focus on Government House but leaders say it could expand to nearby streets to disrupt traffic and they hope it will spread as far as the residence of former Prime Minister Prem Tinsulanonda, the chief adviser to King Bhumibol Adulyadej.

Thaksin has accused Prem of playing an active, behind-the-scenes role in the 2006 coup that ousted him, an allegation denied by the former army general.

Thai financial markets are worried about the looming political confrontation, and the stock market edged down on Tuesday.

“Domestic politics remains the key risk factor for our market, with investors likely to sell due to fears related to the big rally on April 8,” said Kosin Sripaiboon, head of research at UOB Kay Hian Securities.

Abhisit has chosen to avoid confrontation between the police and UDD protesters, staying away from his office for the past two weeks, part of which he spent in London representing the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) at the G20 summit.

The government held its weekly cabinet meeting on Tuesday in the resort town of Pattaya, where leaders of ASEAN and other Asian countries gather for a summit at the end of the week.

Thaksin, a former telecommunications billionaire, lives in exile after being convicted on conflict of interest charges last year.

His absence has not ended the long-running political impasse, with Bangkok’s royalist, military and business elite, who accused Thaksin and his allies of corruption and abuse of power, lining up against the rural and urban poor who loved his populist policies.

US can knock down a North Korean missile

Washington, Mar 20 (ANI): An American military commander for the Pacific region has said that there is a high probability that the US could knock down a North Korean missile aimed at the United States.

Navy Admiral Timothy J. Keating told the Senate Armed Services Committee that he does not regard a missile test planned by the North Koreans in April as a threat.

“It is a normal notification process, which they didn’t do in 2006, when they attempted a launch from the same facility,” the New York Times quoted Keating, as saying.

Admiral Keating added that US intelligence cannot yet say whether the launch will be of a communications satellite, as North Korea has asserted, or of a missile with intercontinental range.

But he and two other commanders said they think it will be a satellite launch because of the public announcements from Pyongyang, including coordinates of the ocean area where the booster rocket is likely to fall.

Air Force General Kevin P. Chilton, the head of Strategic Command, told the Senate panel “even if there is a satellite launch . . . it will help advance North Korea’s technology of long-range missiles.”

Army General Walter L. Sharp, commander of US forces in Korea, added that North Korea’s missile ability is indeed a threat.

Sharp added that the launch would violate a 2006 UN Security Council resolution barring such tests by North Korea after one exploded shortly after being fired, and he called on North Korea to call off the launch. (ANI)

Zardari’s closeness to US could take a beating over his action against Sharifs

Islamabad, Feb.28 (ANI): Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari’s reputation in Washington is likely to take a beating as a consequence of his moves against the Sharif brothers, a retired army general, who frequently meets with American officials when they come to Pakistan, has claimed.

The New York Times quoted Lt. Gen. (retired) Talatasood as saying: “He (Zardari) is deflecting the attention of the whole country to something that is so irrelevant.”

“He is banking on the United States, but America will only support him up to a point,” he added.

Lt. Gen. Masood was commenting on the Pakistan Supreme Court’s decision not to allow the Sharif brothers to contest elections, as also the alleged move by the present government to bribe the Sharifs into accepting the incumbent PCO-appointed judiciary.

He also claimed that the move against the Sharifs has left the Pakistan Army quite upset, as the bulk of the soldiers come from Nawaz Sharif’s Punjab province.

He said that notwithstanding the bloodless army coup of October 1999, the army “must be boiling inside.”

“How can they tolerate this state of affairs?” he asked.

The bulk of army soldiers would have a natural inclination towards Sharif’s party, theakistan Muslim League-N, he said.

Though the Chief of Army Staff, General Asfaq Parvez Kayani has vowed to keep the army out of politics, Pakistani officials said there could come a point where political instability became so great; that the army may feel to compelled to step in.

By ordering one of his main political allies, the Governor of Punjab, Salman Taseer, to take over governance of the province, Zardari was hitting directly at the Sharif brothers power centre, and,n effect, humiliating them, politicians said.

Some said Nawaz Sharif was now likely to work assiduously to bolster his popularity against Zardari.

The president’s pro-American stance is anathema to large segments of the population, and Sharif could seek Islamist religious parties that have opposed American policy in Pakistan to come to his side, some politicians warned.

It was also possible that religious forces could gravitate to Sharif without his openncouragement, said Ishaq Khan Khakwani, a member of the Pakistan Muslim League-Q, and a former minister in the Musharraf government.

Since Wednesday’s court ruling, Jamaat-e-Islami, an Islamist party that advocates Islamic law in Pakistan, has declared that its supporters will join the lawyers’ movement in a long march planned for March 12 to mark the dismissal two years ago of Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry.

Nawaz Sharif said he and his brother would spearhead the lawyers’ march, and join in a sit-in planned at the conclusion of the march inslamabad.

The size of the crowd during the lawyers’ protest from Lahore to Islamabad, and the composition of the march could be a defining moment in the contest between Zardari and the Sharif forces, the NYT quoted politicians, as saying. (ANI)

Obama to set Aug. 2010 date to end combat operations in Iraq

Washington, Feb 27 (ANI): President Barck Obama is all set to end combat operations in Iraq by August 31, 2010, when the US military presence in Iraq would be not less than 35,000 and not more than 50,000.

Obama told top leaders in Congress on Thursday that he will end combat operations in Iraq on August 31, 2010, putting a halt to all US-led counterinsurgency efforts and transitioning the mission in Iraq to training, advising and engaging in limited counter-terrorist operations, FOX News quoted congressional sources, as saying.

Obama is expected to deliver a speech on Friday at the Marine base in Camp Lejeune, N.C, in which he will order an immediate draw down of the 142,000 Marines and Army personnel in Iraq.

The president met at the White House with top Democratic and Republican congressional leaders, as well as the leaders of the National Security and Foreign Policy committees to explain his decision.

Obama told lawmakers that troops remaining in Iraq after August 31, 2010, will carry out new missions and will be trained and organized in a way that de-emphasizes combat-readiness and intensifies the focus on these three missions:

Train, equip and advise Iraqi security forces. Support civilian operations in Iraq aimed at reconstruction, redevelopment and political reconciliation and conduct targeted counter-terrorism missions.

The president told lawmakers the plan, which ends combat operations 19 months after he was sworn in as president, represented the consensus advice he received from Defense Secretary Robert Gates; the Joints Chiefs of Staff; Army General Ray Ordierno, the top military commander in Iraq, and General David Petaeus, head of U.S. Central Command.

The meeting comes after leaders of both parties raised concerns about Obama’s intention to leave up to 50,000 troops in Iraq after combat operations cease. (ANI)

General Kayani says Pak Army fully prepared for challenges

Islamabad, Jan 16 (ANI): Pakistan Army Chief General Ashfaq Kayani has said the army is ready to deal with any threats to the country’s security.

“Pakistan Army is fully prepared to meet the challenges,” the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) quoted General Kayani as saying while chairing the 62nd Formation Commanders’ Conference at the General Headquarters (GHQ).

General Kayani said such a threat could best be defeated through a comprehensive national effort.

All corps commanders, principal staff officers and formation commanders attended the conference, the Daily Times reported.

The ISPR said participants at the conference were briefed on the prevailing security environment.

“The spirit of sacrifice and high morale of troops are a guarantee for the defence of the country,” General Kayani said.

The commanders also reviewed the operational preparedness of the Pakistan Army.

General Kayani expressed satisfaction over the military commanders’ efforts in this regard. (ANI)