Archive for May, 2017

EU Leader Says (in English) That English Is Waning – New York Times


New York Times
EU Leader Says (in English) That English Is Waning
New York Times
All that doesn't stop many French speakers from resenting English's primacy, though, nor from hoping that the language might recede a bit after Britain leaves the European Union, the process known as Brexit. That is the sentiment that Mr. Juncker mined ...
Speech by Michel Barnier at the 7th State of the Union Conference, European University Institute, FlorenceEU News
Influence of English is fading, says EU chief JunckerReuters
UK Prime Minister Theresa May Hits Out at EU officials on BrexitWall Street Journal (subscription)
The Sun -Telegraph.co.uk -CNBC
all 1,848 news articles »

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EU Leader Says (in English) That English Is Waning - New York Times

In Afghanistan, an elite female police officer battles …

Sgt. Monesa Kashefi was once afraid of gunfire. Now the 25-year-old has taken part in more than 1,000 combat operations in six years.

Kashefi is one of several dozen women serving in an elite Afghan police force, the Crisis Response Unit, that increasingly finds itself at the center of the countrys long war with Taliban militants. But Kashefi doesnt just battle the Taliban. She is also up against Afghan traditions, which relegate women to domestic roles and near-invisibility in the body-length garment known as the burqa.

The U.S.-led military coalition in Afghanistan has long tried to increase the recruitment of women in Afghan security forces, but they have never made up more than 1% of forces. In 2016 alone, the United States budgeted $93.5 million to bolster the ranks of female soldiers and police in Afghanistan, according to the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, a watchdog agency.

But the office said in a report last year that female recruits leave the security forces because of opposition from male relatives, problems with male colleagues, low pay, family obligations, lack of promotion or meaningful assignment opportunities, and a lack of training and security.

The Crisis Response Unit is often the first to respond to major attacks, as it did last month when Taliban militants raided a northern base and killed more than 100 soldiers. The unit has come under pressure as Afghanistans conventional soldiers and police face increasing casualties from the Taliban and allied insurgents.

Officials would not disclose the total number of commandos in the Crisis Response Unit, but they are believed to number about 5,000, spread across all 34 Afghan provinces. The unit has filled only 83 of the 254 positions set aside for women.

Kashefi eschews the burqa while on duty, instead wearing fatigues and a black head scarf under her helmet, while carrying 33 pounds of equipment including an antiballistic vest, AK-47 assault weapon, radio and canteen. She marches through mud, water and forests the same as men do, she said during a recent interview in Kabul, on a break between missions.

While she misses her family deployments keep her away from her three children for months at a time she said she loves her job.

Id love to spend my entire life in my unit, she said.

Commanders say Kashefi and other women fill a crucial role by conducting body searches of women during raids on suspected insurgent houses. Under the strict Islamic laws observed in Afghanistan, male officers cannot search women.

Kashefi described a recent operation in Logar, the rugged eastern province where she is based along with about 450 commandos. At a house where two Taliban militants were believed to be hiding, a woman came to the door and it fell to Kashefi to speak with her.

When Kashefi asked to search her, the woman fell to the ground and feigned a stomachache, she said. Kashefi searched her anyway and found a pistol and two hand grenades on her body.

She and the two men were quickly arrested, Kashefi said. The woman started crying and said that Taliban fighters were forcing her to host and cook for them.

It is not common for Afghan women to spend weeks at a time away from home or work alongside men, although Kashefi said she enjoys the respect of the men in her unit, calling them brothers.

A senior Crisis Response Unit commander, Maj. Gen. Sayed Mohammad Roshandil, praised Kashefis courage. He said she once helped carry a male officer who was wounded in a combat operation an unusual thing for an Afghan woman to do, but a sign of her dedication.

The women in our units are really brave, Roshandil said.

But officials acknowledged that women in the security forces are not frequently promoted, and not all enjoy such support.

One female Afghan Interior Ministry official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive issue, said women in the Afghan special forces often struggled to maintain their Islamic modesty and also faced sexual harassment from senior officers.

Some senior officials invite their female colleagues for night parties, the official said. If the ladies say no, they never get promoted. Unfortunately, some women surrender to their seniors demands.

Kashefi is the sole breadwinner in her family. Her monthly salary of about $640, along with a small bonus for each combat operation, supports her mother, brothers and three young children, who live with family members in Kabul. (She wont publicly discuss her marital status.)

She never thought of taking any other job, having joined the special forces after leaving school in ninth grade.

I chose to join the military because I want to fight, she said. I fight for peace.

ALSO

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In Afghanistan, women face entrenched harassment

U.N. says Afghanistan's court system fails women

Faizy is a special correspondent. Times staff writer Shashank Bengali contributed to this report from Mumbai, India.

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In Afghanistan, an elite female police officer battles ...

Analysts downplay effectiveness of MOAB strike in Afghanistan – Fox News

The mother of all bombs dropped on Islamic State militants in Afghanistan last month may not have been as effective as U.S. military officials have led on, analysts studying the airstrike said.

Alcis, an institute for geographical analysis, surveyed the targeted area in the Nangarhar province where the largest non-nuclear bomb ever used in combat was used, The Guardian reported Friday. The group determined that 38 buildings and 69 trees were destroyed in a near 500-foot radius, which contradicts statements made by residents who told local media the bomb damages houses up to two miles away.

The group added that the imagery shows no 1,000-foot crater and that much of the damage done appeared to be caused by ground fighting. The group said the number of militants the U.S. said it had killed in the airstrike may not be accurate. Officials said 94 ISIS militants were killed in the blast.

Im staggered by that, Richard Brittan, the institutes managing director, told The Guardian. I simply dont understand where they can get that number from.

Brittan also questioned whether it was true no civilians had been killed. He said the strike happened less than a month before the harvest season and that most farms would have been near their crops.

Its the only place to be if you want to tend to those fields, he said. It is entirely possible that working-age male farmers could be counted as militants.

Multiple Afghanistan military and government officials told Fox News last week that there simply was no other solution but to opt for the MOAB, as the vast array of planted landmines was making it next to impossible to effectively clear ISIS from the area without enduring severe soldier casualties.

"This bomb was a good thing. It destroyed everything. ISIS can't use that area anymore, so that is the success," said Maj. Abadullah Karimi, spokesperson for the 202nd Shamshad Police Corps, which is operating in those ISIS-infiltrated areas of Nangahar Province.

Capt. William Salvin, a U.S. military spokesman in Kabul, defended the use of the MOAB saying it was used for a specific tactical purpose on the battlefield.

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Analysts downplay effectiveness of MOAB strike in Afghanistan - Fox News

At Afghanistan-Pakistan Border, Forces Clash and at Least 11 Die – New York Times


New York Times
At Afghanistan-Pakistan Border, Forces Clash and at Least 11 Die
New York Times
A man who was wounded in a border clash was recovering at a hospital in Quetta, Pakistan, on Friday. Credit Arshad Butt/Associated Press. KANDAHAR, Afghanistan At least 11 people were killed and dozens were wounded on Friday in clashes between ...
Pakistan-Afghanistan crossing closed after border clashAljazeera.com
Pakistan-Afghanistan Border Clashes Leave Many DeadVoice of America
Pakistan, Afghanistan tensions rise as fatal shots firedNewshub
Geo News, Pakistan -The Nation
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At Afghanistan-Pakistan Border, Forces Clash and at Least 11 Die - New York Times

Trump mulls additional troops as Afghan stalemate grinds on – Fox News

President Trump could be asked next week to send more troops to Afghanistan as the 16-year war grinds on in a bloody stalemate.

The U.S. commander in Afghanistan wants 3,000 more troops and Pentagon officials told Congress this week that the war plan recommendations being sent to Trump are aimed at moving beyond the stalemate with the ISIS-affiliated Taliban insurgency.

Afghan soldiers are suffering what Pentagon auditors call "shockingly high" battlefield casualties, and prospects are narrowing for a negotiated peace settlement with the Taliban. The insurgents may have failed to capture and hold a major city, but they are controlling or influencing ever more territory.

"The situation is deteriorating," said Stephen Biddle, a George Washington University professor and close Afghan war observer.

HOW TERRORISTS FREELY ENTER AFGHANISTAN AND MOVE AROUND UNHINDERED

This grim picture forms the backdrop for administration deliberations on a way ahead in Afghanistan, where U.S. troops are supporting beleaguered Afghans against the Taliban insurgency and stepping up attacks on an extremist group considered an Islamic State affiliate. The three most recent U.S. deaths in Afghanistan were in combat last month against the IS affiliate, which also was the target of a much-publicized U.S. airstrike April 13 using the "mother of all bombs."

Army Gen. John Nicholson, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, has asked the Pentagon for 3,000 more U.S. and allied troops to bolster support for the Afghan army.

But his request took a back seat to a broader administration review of Afghan policy and a push for NATO to contribute more troops. Both of those matters will be discussed at a NATO summit May 25.

The U.S. says it has 8,400 troops in Afghanistan, one-quarter of which are for the counterterrorism mission.

Biddle told the AP the Taliban have little incentive to negotiate a peace deal and "the battlefield trend is against it."

Anthony Cordesman, a defense analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said Afghan forces aren't capable of securing the country. Unless Trump adopts "a far more decisive approach," security could collapse "either slowly and painfully over years or as a result of some shattering military defeat or critical political power struggle at the top that divides the security forces and the country," he said.

Gen. Raymond Thomas, commander of U.S. Special Operations Command, told senators Thursday that beyond more troops, there could be changes in what the military calls "rules of engagement," laying out when force can be used. The U.S. combat role officially ended in December 2014. Thomas' troops operate separately, targeting al-Qaida and ISIS fighters. He says he has enough troops.

Referring to the stalemate, Senate Armed Services Committee chairman John McCain (R-Ariz.) told Thomas, If the present status quo prevails, then there's no end to it.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Trump mulls additional troops as Afghan stalemate grinds on - Fox News