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The LA Times reports Afghanistan ‘enemy combatants’ can make their case in U.S. court. U.S. District Judge John Bates “ruled today that prisoners in ‘the war on terror’ can use courts in the United States to challenge their detention at” the Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan.
Meanwhile, the U.S. military wants more troops deployed in Afghanistan. “Gen. David H. Petraeus disclosed yesterday that American commanders have requested the deployment of an additional 10,000 U.S. troops to Afghanistan next year”… He said the Pentagon has not yet forwarded the troop request to the White House.” I wonder is this part of Petraeus 2012 presidential strategy?
The NY Times adds Friday’s NATO meeting will highlight strains on Afghanistan. When they meet for the 60th anniversary of NATO, leaders “must face the harsh reality that NATO’s first military mission outside Europe is failing in a way that risks fracturing the alliance.”
Nearly all of the additional troops being sent by European NATO-members to AFganistan this summer are there to provide security for the elections this summer and “not be permanently deployed.” Certainly implies U.S. deployment are permanent.
While across the border in Pakistan, The Guardian reports of a Video of a girl’s flogging as Taliban hand out justice. A two-minute video showing a burka-clad “teenage girl being flogged by Taliban fighters has emerged from the Swat Valley in Pakistan, offering a shocking glimpse of militant brutality in the once-peaceful district, and a sign of Taliban influence spreading deeper into the country.”
“Please stop it,” she begs, alternately whimpering or screaming in pain with each blow to the backside. “Either kill me or stop it now.”
A crowd of men stands by, watching silently. Off camera a voice issues instructions. “Hold her legs tightly,” he says as she squirms and yelps.
After 34 lashes the punishment stops and the wailing woman is led into a stone building, trailed by a Kalashnikov-carrying militant.
Four at Four continues with lax oversight of State Department mercenaries, monkey-wrenching student faces two-count federal felony, and Russia re-proposes replacing the U.S. dollar as the world’s reserve currency.