Home
Pentagon withdraws controversial 'Guantánamo Bay' Gen Hood from Pak posting
United States News.Net Friday 9th May, 2008 (ANI)
Washington, May 9 : The Bush administration is learnt to have withdrawn the appointment of Maj. Gen. Jay W. Hood as a senior American officer based in Pakistan to fight Al Qaeda and the Taliban in tribal areas, reflecting the widening shadow that the military prison at Guant
ánamo Bay was still casting over American foreign policy.
Maj Gen Hood was the commander of the US prison at Guant
ánamo Bay, Cuba, between 2004 and 2006, when it was alleged that US military authorities had desecrated the Quran and force-fed the detainees with tubes who were engaging in hunger strikes at the prison. For the ugly incidents, Hood was severally criticised in the Pakistani media, besides receiving
a backlash from the Islamic world.
There were around 65 Pakistanis lodges inside the Guant
ánamo Bay prison during the time when those horrendous incidents took place inside the four walls of the prison, and after their release and return to home country, their accounts have only added to anti-American sentiment in the country.
Over the recent weeks, several leading Pakistani military and foreign affairs commentators denounced General Hood's selection, calling on their new government to block his appointment. But, it remains unclear whether Pakistan's new government requested that the appointment be canceled.
In an article in a Pakistani daily, Shireen M. Mazari, director general of the Institute of Strategic Studies, wrote: "Guant
ánamo Bay itself has become a symbol of injustice, torture and abuse of Islam, and sending a commanding officer from there to Islamabad begs the question: What is the message coming out of the Pentagon for Pakistanis by this insensitive act?"
He added, "Equally important, given that host governments always have a choice of refusing a nominee - and many Western countries have exercised that right in the diplomatic nominees of the Pakistan government - why has the Pakistan government chosen to silently accept what the U.S. military dishes out, with no thought to the sensitivities of its own people?"
A Pakistani Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammed Sadiq reportedly said that the government was "fully cognizant of the public sentiments and sensitivities regarding the reported transfer of General Hood to Islamabad," and he added, "We hope to address this matter of public interest in the best possible manner."
On the other hand, American military officials also said that General Hood's effectiveness could be seriously hindered, and that his personal safety might even be at risk if he were to take up the post. Commenting Gen Hood's withdrawal, an American military spokesman said that "General Hood is being
considered for a different, equally important job in the Centcom headquarters."
Email this story to a friend
Have your say on this story
|
 |
 |
- Scientist develop microwave zapping system to fend off 'invasive species'
Washington, May 13 : Scientists in Louisiana have announced the development of a new cost-effective microwave zapping system that would kill unwanted plants and animals that hitch a ride to the United States in the ballast water of merchant ships. [read story]
- Asthma associated with higher suicidal thoughts with attempts
Washington, May 13 : Suicid al behaviour is a grim personality trait that reflects self-destructive mental condition. According to a report published this month in Annals of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology, the scientific journal of the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (ACAAI), asthma is a respiratory disease that provokes suicidal thoughts to the level where a person breaks free from the thoughts to actually attempt suicide. [read story]
- Jay-Z breaks his silence over Glastonbury furore
London, May 13 : American rapper Jay-Z has finally opened up about the controversy surrounding his Glastonbury Festival headline slot. [read story]
- US State Dept says Pak itself has to address its political issues
Washington, May 13 : The US State Department has once again said that Washington was not meddling into Pakistan's internal political affairs and that issues like judges restoration and who should be a part of the federal coalition or not, are to be addressed by Pakistanis themselves. [read story]
- Low-vision therapy may improve visual function in macular disease
Washington, May 13 : Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine have shown that a low-vision therapy program that includes a home visit, counselling, assistive devices such as magnifiers and assignments to practice using them appears to significantly improve vision in veterans with diseases of the macula - the area of the retina with the sharpest vision. [read story]
|
|
 |
 |
|
|