Eighteen hours since Barack Obama laid out the strategy by which the United States will defeat Al Qa’eda and “terrorists” in Afghanistan, 24 hours after we projected both the Administration’s approach and the problems with it, I have to say….
1:35 p.m. After a long and busy week, we’re taking the night off. We’ll be back in the morning with all the overnight developments fit to notice.
12:50 p.m. According to the German magazine Der Spiegel, France has drafted a plan for European countries to take 60 detainees from the Guantanamo Bay facility. The French Government has refused to comment on the report.
A US military spokesman claimed the incident occurred in a joint operation with Iraqi forces, but an Iraqi police general said no Iraqi troops were present.
11:15 a.m. India Snubs Barack and Hillary. Here’s one we missed. All week we were identifying Richard Holbrooke as President Obama’s special envoy for Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India. In fact, when the appointment was announced on Thursday, India had fallen off the title.
It wasn’t an omission. According to a US official, “When the Indian government learned Holbrooke was going to do [Pakistan]-India, they swung into action and lobbied to have India excluded from his purview. And they succeeded. Holbrooke’s account officially does not include India.”
Daniel Markey of the Council on Foreign Relations offers an explanation for Delhi’s resistance: “They [India] are the big fish [in the region]. They don’t want to be grouped with the ‘problem children’ in the region, on Kashmir, on nuclear issues.” Moreover, another US official added, “The Indians do not like Holbrooke because he has been very good on Pakistan… and has a very good feel for the place.”