4 Jan 2017

Yadav family feud: Akhilesh meets Mulayam, but no sign of truce yet



Lucknow, Jan 04, 2017: Another patch-up bid between the warring factions of the Samajwadi Party fell flat on Tuesday as even after a three-hour meeting, CM Akhilesh Yadav and party patriarch Mulayam Singh Yadav failed to make peace.

Both the factions, said sources, had submitted letters to the poll panel, staking claim to the party name and the election symbol – a bicycle, the clearest indication yet that a reconciliation was unlikely in the Uttar Pradesh’s ruling party.

Uttar Pradesh and four other states are due for elections, the announcement could be coming any day now.

Battered by the power struggle between Akhilesh and his uncle Shivpal, the party saw a ray of hope when the 43-year-old chief minister drove down to his father’s residence in the afternoon.

Suddenly there was talk of a peace formula though there was no word from either faction. But after three hours, sources said, the talks had failed.

Mulayam, sources said, refused to revoke expulsion of cousin Ramgopal, who has backed Akhilesh in the battle for control of the party.

Akhilesh, who took control of the party on Sunday after ousting Mulayam at an “emergency national convention”, was not ready to give back the state unit to Shivpal. The CM also didn’t want parliamentarian Amar Singh in the party.

Decisions to expel Singh and sack Shivpal as the state party chief were also taken at the convention, which was called by Ramgopal.

Mulayam spoke to Singh before he met Akhilesh, sources said. The CM has on more than one occasion expressed reservations about his father’s close aide.

Singh and Shivpal were with Mulayam when he met the election commission officials in Delhi a day earlier to stake claim to the party symbol.

Akhilesh called on Mulayam within an hour of SP patriarch’s return to Lucknow. Shivpal, who joined them later, didn’t know about the meeting between the father and the son. “I don’t have any information about the meeting. If Netaji (Mulayam) calls me I will go,” he told media.

Earlier in the day, Ramgopal met chief election commissioner Nasim Zaidi to stake claim to the ‘bicycle’.

“We told the election commission that most party MPs, MLAs and MLCs are with Akhilesh. So the party led by him is the true Samajwadi Party and should get the party symbol,” Ramgopal told mediapersons in Delhi.

In the event of a split, the poll panel could freeze the symbol, as it doesn’t have the time to verify the claimants’ legislative majority, required to retain the symbol. Both the factions would then go into the election with new symbols and new party names.

Tuesday’s peace bid, too, was initiated by senior minister Azam Khan who flew to Delhi on Monday night to meet Mulayam but could not as the patriarch was with Singh, sources said.

Khan’s first attempt – on December 31 -- at reconciliation barely lasted a day. He managed to convince Mulayam to revoke Akhilesh’s and Ramgopal’s expulsions which were ordered a day earlier. But on Sunday, Akhilesh staged the coup.

15 May 2013

US Forces Sexual Assault Crisis Reaches New Heights


 Ahead of possible major actions from the Pentagon and Congress on sexual assault in the military, the U.S. Army is forced to confront yet another instance of a member of the armed forces involved in a shocking sexual assault scandal.

In the latest incident, the Department of Defense revealed on Tuesday a sergeant first class in the U.S. Army stationed at the Ft. Hood, TX military base is under investigation for sexual assault. Along with allegedly sexually assaulting two of his peers, the the sergeant is being investigated for possibly forcing a subordinate into prostitution. Making matters even worse, the soldier under investigation was assigned as the Sexual Harassment/Assault Response and Prevention (SHARP) program coordinator for an eight-hundred person battalion stationed at the base.

The investigation draws a parallel to a case just last week in which the head of the entire Air Force’s sexual assault response program was himself charged with sexual battery in Arlington, VA. No charges have yet been filed against the individual at Ft. 
Hood, but Pentagon spokesman George Little issued a statement about DOD’s response to yet another alleged instance of rape culture in the military:

I cannot convey strongly enough [Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel's] frustration, anger, and disappointment over these troubling allegations and the breakdown in discipline and standards they imply.

Secretary Hagel met with Army Secretary McHugh this morning and directed him to fully investigate this matter rapidly, to discover the extent of these allegations, and to ensure that all of those who might be involved are dealt with appropriately.
To address the broader concerns that have arisen out of these allegations and other recent events, Secretary Hagel is directing all the services to re-train, re-credential, and re-screen all sexual assault prevention and response personnel and military recruiters.

Lawmakers quickly lined up to add their voices to the long list of those condemning the latest outrage and sexual assault in the military writ large. “These allegations only add to the mounting evidence of the need to change our military justice system to better hold perpetrators accountable and protect survivors of sexual assault,” Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-MO) said in a statement. Rep. Howard “Buck” McKeon (R-CA) head of the House Armed Services Committee, said in a statement he was “outraged and disgusted” by the latest reports from Ft. Hood, pointing to his own granddaughter in the Army and the “feelings of worry and doubt” many feel when family members join the service.

Much as last week’s case came just days ahead of the Pentagon releasing its annual report on sexual assault in the armed services, Tuesday’s story broke with major implications for the military on the horizon. Wednesday is the deadline for branches of the armed services to provide their plans for how to integrate women into combat units to the Pentagon. Last year, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Martin Dempsey told reporters that the move could help reduce the number of sexual assaults in the military in the long-run as “the more we treat people equally, the more likely they are to treat each other equally.”

The Senate Veteran Affairs Committee is also holding hearings Wednesday morning on the Ruth Moore Act of 2013, which passed the House Veteran Affairs Committee last week. The Act is named for a former Navy enlistee who was raped twice during her service and later developed post-traumatic stress disorder from the experience. According to the ACLU’s statement to the Senate, the bill “would remove current barriers that far too often prove insurmountable for sexual assault survivors who apply for disability compensation for post traumatic stress disorder and other mental health conditions.”

According to the most recent report, an estimated 26,000 instances of sexual assault took place in the military last year. President Obama at a press conference last week called the epidemic “an outrage” and said soldiers who rape are “betraying the uniform that they’re wearing.” “When you engage in this kind of behavior that’s not patriotic — it’s a crime,” Obama went on to say. “And we have to do everything we can to root this out.”

Pak should take serious notice of Altaf’s remarks: Adam Thomson

LONDON: British High Commissioner (HC), Adam Thomson has said that UK police have received countless complaints against Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) chief Altaf Hussain for his remarks about detaching Karachi from Pakistan, Geo News reported.

In a statement, the British HC said Pakistan should take serious notice of Altaf Hussain’s statement.

Thomson further said that strict laws are followed in Britain against hate speech and spreading violence, adding the UK police is currently investigating Altaf’s speech.

He, however, said that no extradition treaty exists between Pakistan and Britain but added that taking action against Altaf Hussain was not out of the question.

He added that if anyone is found guilty, the accused can face imprisonment.

Metropolitan Police say they are aware of complaints made against Altaf Hussain’s remarks from London but currently no investigation is being started. A spokesperson says complaints are still being made and 'we are looking into it, but no investigation yet.'

However, the MQM Chief Altaf Hussain has already denied demanding separation of Karachi from Pakistan.

Adam Thomson termed the recent elections in Pakistan as historic, saying the people subjected the governments to accountability through ballot.

However, he said that there should be a proper investigation into the allegations of rigging in the polls.

Pakistan election rigging: ECP mulls verifying thumb prints




ISLAMABAD: Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) is mulling a proposal to verify thumb prints on ballot papers in the rigging-hit constituencies. 

Sources said, ECP has summoned chairman NADRA to consult on the matter and finalize the strategy.

Rigging confirmed in PAK, Polls exceeds the numbers of registered voters




According to the data from FAFEN, the stats registered in at least 5 polling stations show rigging trends since the number of votes exceeds the registered voters.

Karachi: An elections observer group in Pakistan has confirmed reports of rigging at some polling stations in Pakistan's biggest city of Karachi. The Free and Fair Election Network (FAFEN) has provided statistics supporting reports of rigging at several Karachi polling stations where voter turnout was abnormally high. Since the elections were held on Saturday, the media and many political parties, including Imran Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf and Jamaat-e-Islaami, have alleged rigging at many polling stations in Karachi to secure big wins for the Mutthaida-e-Qaumi Movement candidates.

According to a report in Dawn newspaper, the statistics registered in at least five polling stations show rigging trends since the number of votes polled far exceeds the registered voters, according to the data from FAFEN. Polling stations with over 100 per cent votes polled include Orangi Town, Model Colony, Malir Colony and Shah Faisal Colony. The National Assembly constituencies affected by the apparent malpractice include NA-242, NA-256 and NA-257. According to the statistics, 2,508 and 1,484 votes were polled at NA-242 Orangi Town's polling station (PS) 80 and 2, while the respective number of registered voters was 1,349 and 1,230.

At station 151 of Model Colony and stations 63 of Shah Faisal Colony (NA-256), 3,233 and 2,495 votes were polled against a total of 2,114 and 2,405 registered voters. At least four other polling stations (PS-37, 38, 39 and 40) in Landhi area falling under NA-255, also appeared to have been affected by irregularities, with the number of votes polled falling between 93 to 98 per cent of registered voters. In total, data provided by FAFEN shows at least 32 polling stations with over 80 per cent votes polled, which it says are abnormally high numbers.

FAFEN had over 900 trained election observers monitoring polling in Karachi, and more than 41,000 observers across the country.

The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) has taken notice of widespread reports of rigging in Karachi, and has ordered re-polling at 43 stations in Karachi's NA-250 constituency in 10 day's time. "We will conduct re-polling where we receive substantial evidence of rigging or irregularities," Secretary ECP Ishtiaq Ahmed told reporters in Islamabad. 

Jail receives anonymous letter about threat to actor sanjay dutt's life

MUMBAI: arthur road jail receives anonymous letter about threat to actor sanjay dutt's life, Jail authorities say they will provide adequate security to Sanjay Dutt. 

PAKISTAN: Murder Petitioner forgives Rangers ‘for the sake of God’


KARACHI: Salik Shah, who registered the case of his brother Sarfraz’s extra-judicial murder, forgave Rangers personnel on Wednesday.


Salik said that he had forgiven the men convicted of his brother’s murder “for the sake of God” and did not accept any blood money in return. He also submitted an application in the Sindh High Court for settlement in the case.

Nineteen-year-old Sarfraz Shah was shot by Rangers in the Benazir Bhutto Shaheed Park in Karachi on June 8, 2011. The incident was caught on videotape and broadcast on television channels nationwide.

A suo motu notice of the incident was taken by the Supreme Court of Pakistan which had ordered the removal of the Sindh chief secretary and director general of the Rangers and had also ordered a speedy trial of the case.


In August 2011, an anti-terrorism court had sentenced Rangers’ Shahid Zafar to death and condemned the remaining six men to life in prison.

Astronaut returns to Earth with the earth you've never seen it before



ASTRONAUGHT Chris Hadfield, who became the first Canadian to walk in space, has been using social networking site Twitter to send back pictures of Earth as we’ve never seen it before.


Using a mixture of state of the art software and hi-tech satellite images, the pictures Chris has been relaying since March are more akin to something you’d find in the Museum of Modern Art with some of the world’s most famous landmarks apeearing completely unrecognisable.


Chris, 53, has been commander of Expedition 35 aboard the International Space Station since January.

Not content with being a pioneering astronaut and budding photographer, Hadfield used his spare time to put together the first ever album to be recorded in space using a variety of special instruments.

His cover version of David Bowie's Space Oddity has become an international web hit.

Here, we take a look back at some of the beathtaking images from Chris' trip ...


Scotland from space
WOW ... Scotland from Space

SPARKLING ... London from spcae
SPARKLING ... London from spcae @Cmdr_Hadfield
Dublin
STUNNING ... Dublin @Cmdr_Hadfield
SCENIC ... Paris
SCENIC ... Paris @Cmdr_Hadfield
CITY OF LOVE ... Venice
CITY OF LOVE ... Venice @Cmdr_Hadfield
New York
THE BIG APPLE ... New York lit up @Cmdr_Hadfield
BARE ... Ethiopia
BARE ... Ethiopia @Cmdr_Hadfield
ODD ... parts of Iran
ODD ... parts of Iran @Cmdr_Hadfield
JIGSAW ... Miami
JIGSAW ... Miami @Cmdr_Hadfield
HYPNOTIC ... The Australian Outback
HYPNOTIC ... The Australian Outback @Cmdr_Hadfield
THIRSTY ... lake in Hungary
THIRSTY ... lake in Hungary @Cmdr_Hadfield
DOTS ... Cape Town
DOTS ... Cape Town @Cmdr_Hadfield
BRIDGE ... Venezuela
BRIDGE ... Venezuela @Cmdr_Hadfield
AWE ... A Volcano in Chad
AWE ... A Volcano in Chad @Cmdr_Hadfield
ELECTRICITY ... Las Vegas
ELECTRICITY ... Las Vegas @Cmdr_Hadfield
COLD ... A frozen lake in Canada
COLD ... A frozen lake in Canada @Cmdr_Hadfield
BORDER ... The India/Pakistan border
BORDER ... The India/Pakistan border @Cmdr_Hadfield
GREEN ... Bolivia
GREEN ... Bolivia @Cmdr_Hadfield
THROWING SHAPES ... Farms in Southern Africa
THROWING SHAPES ... Farms in Southern Africa @Cmdr_Hadfield
UNRECOGNISABLE ... The Sahara desert looks more like a pie crust from space
UNRECOGNISABLE ... The Sahara desert looks more like a pie crust from space @Cmdr_Hadfield
C'EST PARIS ... Paris at night
C'EST PARIS ... Paris at night @Cmdr_Hadfield
BUNNY ... A lake in Australia's outback
BUNNY ... A lake in Australia's outback @Cmdr_Hadfield


Angelina Jolie had breasts removed to reduce cancer risk



I lost my mum to cancer at 56... my kids won’t...
Angelina has double mastectomy op

ANGELINA Jolie told yesterday how she had both her breasts removed to reduce her chances of dying of cancer like her tragic mum.

The Tomb Raider star, 37, lost 56-year-old Marcheline Bertrand — also an actress — to ovarian cancer in 2007.

She opted for her double mastectomy after doctors told her she carried the “faulty” BRCA1 gene and had an 87 per cent chance of contracting breast cancer plus a 50 per cent risk of ovarian cancer.

Mum-of-six Angelina began three months of medical procedures in Beverly Hills, California, in February with her movie hunk fiancé Brad Pitt at her side.

And yesterday she explained her decision — which was previously kept secret — in a bid to raise awareness and help other women.

Writing in a US newspaper, she said: “My mother fought cancer for almost a decade and died at 56.

“She held out long enough to meet the first of her grandchildren. But my other children will never have the chance to know her and experience how gracious she was.

“We often speak of ‘Mommy’s mommy’ and I try to explain the illness that took her away from us.

“They have asked if the same could happen to me — I have always told them not to worry.

“But the truth is I carry a ‘faulty’ gene which sharply increases my risk of developing breast cancer and ovarian cancer.

“Once I knew that this was my reality, I decided to be proactive and to minimise the risk as much I could. I made a decision to have a preventative double mastectomy.”

Angelina, who may also have her ovaries removed, added: “My chances of breast cancer have dropped to under five per cent. I can tell my children they don’t need to fear they will lose me to breast cancer.

“Brad and I knew this was the right thing to do for our family and would bring us closer. And it has.
“For women reading this, I hope it helps to know you have options.

“I want to encourage every woman, especially if you have a family history of breast or ovarian cancer, to seek out the information and medical experts who can help you make informed choices.”


Breast cancer kills more than 458,000 people a year worldwide.
Brad, 49. said their family were delighted with Angelina, whose breasts were reconstructed with implants following her ops.

He said: “I find Angie’s choice absolutely heroic. This is a happy day for our family.”

X Factor judge Sharon Osbourne, 60, told last year how she too had a double mastectomy after learning that she also carried the gene.

Last night she praised Angelina — who insisted her op had “in no way” diminished her femininity.

Sharon said: “She is an amazing woman. She will have empowered millions all over the world. I think it makes her sexier than ever.”

Man Says He Found Top-Secret Recipe for Coca-Cola



A Georgia man believes he has found a copy of the recipe for Coca-Cola and is trying to sell the top-secret document on eBay for at least $5 million.


Cliff Kluge, a pilot, and his wife Arlene of Ringgold, Ga., said they purchased several old boxes of papers and letters at an estate sale around four years ago for about $100. In the box of letters, the couple stumbled upon a 1943 recipe with references to one of the most popular soft drinks in the world today.


“When I saw this I just thought it was interesting, so I folded it up, stuck it in my purse and carried it around for a couple of weeks showing my friends,” Arlene Kluge, a small business owner, told ABC News.

Taking no chances, the couple eventually put the recipe in a safety deposit box. After thinking about it for a while, they thought they were sitting on the recipe for Coca-Cola.

“Whoever had typed this letter had seen the original recipe,” Cliff Kluge said. “The letter always references Coke and products and stuff.

“We believe it is definitely related to Coca-Cola,” he added.

Kluge has put the formula on eBay with a starting bid of $5 million. If you’re not one to play the bidding game, you can simply use the “buy it now” option and the recipe is yours for $15 million. No one has attempted to put a bid down and the auction ends later today.

Kluge showed ABC News a copy of the document with the important ingredients blocked out. He reached out to Coca-Cola when he put the recipe on eBay.

“They told me they would call me back in seven to 10 days and they never called me back,” Kluge said.
For more than 100 years, the company has guarded the super-secret formula for Coke. Company officials say finding their trade secret is no different than discovering the Loch Ness Monster or Bigfoot: It’s just not going to happen.

Coca-Cola did acknowledge the real recipe is located in Georgia, but not in Kluge’s home. The original recipe, made in the late 19th century, is locked away in a safe at the company’s headquarters in Atlanta.

“At least once a year, somebody shows up and says, ‘I have the original formula for Coca-Cola. How much do you want to pay me for it?’ Well, I don’t need to pay them anything for it because we have the only real one,” Ted Ryan, chief archivist at Coca-Cola, told ABC News.

“We know he doesn’t have the formula. There is only one copy. He has what one of the many imitator copies floating around out there,” he said. “So I’m going to go to sleep peacefully knowing that we still have our copy of the formula.”

The real recipe for Coca-Cola is considered the Holy Grail of soda pop and Coke fanatics have been searching for the formula for years. NPR’s website crashed in 2011 when it posted what it said was the secret formula.

Kluge says while he can’t guarantee it’s an exact replica of the original formula, he feels “pretty good” about what he found.

“There’s just too many references to Coca-Cola throughout the entire recipe,” he said.

PAKISTAN: YouTube ban challenged in PHC




PESHAWAR, May 14: A local lawyer has challenged in Peshawar High Court the ban placed on social media website YouTube, pleading that the site should be unblocked.

The petitioner, advocate Mian Mohibullah Kakakhel, on Tuesday requested the PHC to direct the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority and ministry of interior to open the website (www.YouTube.com) for the benefit of public at large. The PTA through its chairman and ministry of interior through secretary interior, have been made respondents in the petition. The petitioner has also requested the court to grant interim relief by unblocking the website till final disposal of the petition.

Advocate Kakakhel stated that the interior ministry had banned YouTube last year on the direction of then minister of interior after blasphemous movie “Innocence of Islam” was uploaded.

He stated that banning the whole website was not a solution for stopping the blasphemous videos. He said that the two respondents had promised on several occasions to ban the links of blasphemous videos, but failed to depute a team of expert software engineers to make some effort in this regard.

The petitioner stated that the YouTube contained some valuable videos which were not available in the local market. The videos include those of historical, cultural and religious importance besides music, sports, movies, news, animal planets, cartoons for kids and sermons of Islamic scholars.

He claimed that YouTube was the only website containing education contents, which encouraged students and citizens to learn technical things like making new software, robots, mechanical engineering, software engineering, how to install a hardware, advance cell phone usage and installation of software. He said that most of the software might not be provided here, or if available, a hefty amount of fee was demanded.

The petitioner claimed that the respondents (when in government) banned the YouTube for ulterior motives to stop free election campaigns by their rivals through social media.

He contended that majority of people in the country had access to internet now and YouTube ban was in violation of their right to information. He said that banning such a website for youth was illegal, without lawful authority and jurisdiction.

Latest: US Special Operations step up in Afghanistan!

 Afghan Commandos Step Up Their Combat Role.

AT A CLASSIFIED COMMANDO BASE, Afghanistan — One day this month, a pair of Russian Mi-17 assault helicopters delivered two teams of Afghan commandos, their faces obscured by black masks, in a touch-and-go landing at this camp in a lush valley encircled by frosty peaks about 50 miles from Kabul.

A training squadron drawn from the most secretive counterterrorism units fielded by the United States and its NATO allies watched as the Afghan commandos stormed and cleared a three-story office building that was left conspicuously unfinished — the kind of structure favored by insurgents.

This is the combination of Afghan and allied troops that the Obama administration and the government in Kabul say will assume an increasing share of the combat burden in Afghanistan as the NATO alliance gradually hands over responsibility for security operations to Afghan troops.

As other troops are withdrawn, Special Operations forces are expected to make up almost one-third of the American military presence in Afghanistan by next February. Their specialty — advising local military units on the front lines and hunting down top insurgent or terrorist leaders — will become the major focus of the alliance’s effort here either until American troops are withdrawn by the target date of December 2014 or the Afghan government asks them to stay past then.  

On any day in Afghanistan, about 60 Special Operations teams are working with Afghan local police forces to provide security in villages; 50 more are assigned to Afghan strike forces, including 9 commando battalions and special police units and 19 provincial response companies.

The most elite units are housed at secret bases like this one, where assault helicopters stand by to carry them on their missions. Other commando battalions and provincial response companies are scattered among population centers and along the ring road linking Afghanistan’s major cities.

For American commanders, the transition to Afghan leadership on security has been a challenge, requiring a sharp increase in the intensity of training.

It has also required a significant reorganization of planning — and a change in the culture of American Special Operations forces, which, for the first time since the war began, answer to a single commander responsible for coordinating what had been separate, even conflicting, efforts.

“The dirty little secret among S.O.F. is that we were competing among ourselves,” said Maj. Gen. Tony Thomas, the senior commander overseeing all American and allied Special Operations forces, or S.O.F., in Afghanistan.

“We didn’t necessarily share information to the greatest extent possible,” said General Thomas, an Army Ranger with a long career in Special Operations. “It wasn’t about who got the credit or glory — but we were all so focused on our individual mission that we didn’t always synchronize the effort in the most efficient way for a common goal.”

There have been times when one strike team was targeting a suspected insurgent without knowing that a training team was courting his close kinsman to raise a local police force from their home village.

That began to change just under a year ago when General Thomas took charge of a new military organization here — the Special Operations Joint Task Force-Afghanistan, making him, in essence, the first to lead a division-sized deployment of Special Operations forces. Under his command are all the various “tribes” of American Special Operations forces: Army Green Berets, Navy SEALs and Marine Corps Special Operations units, as well as the top-tier strike teams that hunt down or kill high-value terrorist and insurgent leaders.

Senior officials say the new level of coordination has paid dividends in the form of initiatives like a centralized system for allocating drones, helicopters and airplanes that has allowed the 200 Special Operations aircraft to increase their sortie rate to 6,000 missions a month from 4,000.

Even as the number of American troops will be cut in half from 68,000 by next February under President Obama’s withdrawal orders, the number of Special Operations forces will remain the same through the Afghan presidential election, which is scheduled for next spring, but could be delayed until closer to December 2014.

While the bulk of the American and allied conventional forces remaining in Afghanistan will make the transition to a support role — and will be increasingly based at large military headquarters — the 10,000 American Special Operations troops will continue to be deployed alongside Afghan units. (Including NATO and coalition troops, the total Special Operations deployment here numbers 13,700.)

“That partnering is rock solid, and we hope over time to come up off the tactical level,” General Thomas said. But he noted that Afghan and NATO leaders all understand the critical importance of assuring that next year’s elections are credible and secure. “So we’re probably going to stay a while longer at the tactical level than we were considering a year ago,” he added.

Alliance commanders acknowledge that one of their greatest fears is an insurgent offensive on Kabul that, even if it failed, would so humiliate Afghanistan’s security forces that — like the Tet Offensive in the Vietnam War — it would undermine support for the mission here and in nations that contribute troops to the effort.

Insurgents have mounted exactly that type of raid in the past. And while Afghan and NATO officials said at the time that local security forces reacted with speed and lethal professionalism to subdue the militants, the reality is different. Special Operations commanders now acknowledge that the responses were slow and clumsy and that Afghan troops needed to be strongly urged to move in.

“The Afghan Army hadn’t performed that well in two previous tasks,” said one NATO Special Operations commander here. “Both counterattacks had to be heavily mentored. It came out O.K. in the end — but only after a lot of prompting from our side.”

The effort to sharpen the skills of Afghan Special Forces is focused at this base, which was opened to a New York Times reporter and photographer under the ground rules that its location and the Special Operations units operating here would not be disclosed. Here, the Afghan national commando strike force practices on a training range that includes a full-scale mock-up of a heroin laboratory, a fake village marketplace and that three-story, half-built office building.

The effort, according to allied and Afghan Special Operations commanders, is paying off: Twice in recent weeks, their units have prevented the use of truck bombs, each holding a charge several times larger than the explosives that leveled a federal building in Oklahoma City in 1995.

“The most important thing that this unit offers is security for Kabul, and as we move into this fighting season and into the upcoming elections in ’14, the population will view the security of the capital as a symbol of the credibility of their government,” said Brig. Gen. James E. Kraft Jr., a deputy commander of the Special Operations Joint Task Force.

The commandos, he said, “have been making significant advances in securing the ‘rat lines’ leading toward Kabul and interdicting I.E.D. materials.”

Shortcomings remain. One NATO Special Operations adviser said the training squadron was trying to “wean the Afghans off the ‘crack pipe’ of our aviation” — in particular troop transport and medical evacuation, which the Afghan forces cannot yet sustain on their own.

Although the unit based here is considered the most proficient in the country, allied officials said that it conducted 85 percent of its missions unilaterally, but still required coalition support for the other 15 percent.

Courtesy NY Times  

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