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Editorial: Israeli "Retaliation" and BBC Double Standards

By JONATHAN COOK
June 26, 2006

The killing by Palestinian militants of two Israeli soldiers and the capture of a third from an army post close to the Gaza Strip set the scene for Israeli "reprisals" and "retaliation", according to the reports of BBC correspondents in Israel and Gaza yesterday.

The attack by the Palestinians, who sneaked through tunnels under the electronic fence surrounding Gaza, marked a "major escalation in cross-border tension" (Alan Johnston) that threatened to overturn "a week of progress on two fronts" (John Lyon): namely, the recent talks between Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas in Jordan, and between rival Palestinian groups Fatah and Hamas.

Thus, according to the BBC's analysis, this attack ends the immediate chances for "peace" negotiations and provides the context for the next round of the conflict between the Israeli army and the Palestinians of Gaza. We are left to infer that all the suffering the army inflicts in the coming days and weeks should be attributed to this moment of "escalation" by the Palestinians.

We can ignore the weeks of shelling by the Israeli army of Gaza, the firing of hundreds of missiles into the crowded Strip that have destroyed Palestinian lives and property, while spreading terror among the civilian population and deepening the psychological trauma suffered by a generation of children.

We can ignore the deaths of more than 30 civilians, and dozens of horrific injuries, in the past few weeks at the hands of the Israeli military, including three children hit in a botched air strike last week, and a heavily pregnant woman and her doctor brother killed a day later as a missile slammed into the room where they were eating dinner.

We can ignore the blockade of Gaza's "borders" by the Israeli army for months on end, which has prevented Palestinians in the Strip from trading goods at crossing points with Israel and from receiving vital supplies of food and medicines. As a captive population besieged by Israeli soldiers, Gazans are facing a humanitarian catastrophe sanctioned by Israeli government policy and implemented by the Israeli army.

We can ignore Israel's bullying of the international community to connive in the starving of the Hamas-led government of funds and diplomatic room for manoeuvre, thereby preventing the elected Palestinian leadership from running Gaza. So desperate is the situation there that Hamas officials are being forced to smuggle in millions of dollars of cash stuffed in suitcases to pay salaries.

And finally we can ignore the violation of Palestinian territory by Israeli commandos who infiltrated Gaza a day before the Palestinian attack to kidnap two Palestinians Israel claims are terrorists. They have been "disappeared", doubtless to be be held in administrative detention, where they can denied access to lawyers, the courts and, of course, justice.

None of this provides the context for the Palestinian attack on the army post -- any more than, in the BBC's worldview, do the previous four decades of occupation. None is apparently relevant to understanding the Palestinian attack, or for judging the legitimacy of Israel's imminent military "reprisals".

In short, according to the BBC, we can ignore Israel's long-standing policy of unilateralism -- a refusal to negotiate meaningfully with the Palestinians, either the old guard of Fatah or the new one of Hamas -- with its resort to a strategy of collective punishment of Gaza's population to make it submit to the continuing occupation.

In the skewed moral and news priorities of the BBC, the killing of two Israeli soldiers by Palestinian militants -- the "escalation" -- provides a justification for "fierce retaliation" against Gaza, with the inevitable toll on Palestinian civilians and militants alike. The earlier killing of tens of Palestinian civilians by the Israeli military, however, is not presented as justification for yesterday's Palestinian retaliation against the army.

In other words, on the scale of moral outrage the BBC ranks the deaths of Israeli soldiers enforcing an illegal occupation far above those of Palestinian civilians enduring the illegal occupation.

There is another notable asymmetry in the BBC's assessment of the "escalation". Participation by the military wing of Hamas in the attack is evidence, suggest the reporters, of the role of the Palestinian leadership in "escalating tension". But the killing by the Israeli army of a Palestinian family of seven on a Gaza beach on June 9, and many more civilians since, was apparently not an "escalation", even though it provoked Hamas to renounce a ceasefire it had maintained for 16 months in the face of continuous Israeli military assaults.

So how is the ordinary viewer to make sense of these events -- the endless "cycle of violence" -- with the BBC as guide. (And the BBC is no worse, and possibly better, than most of other Western broadcasters. At least its reporter Alan Johnston is based in Gaza.)

Not only do its reporters exhibit the biases associated with its institutional racism -- as an organisation, the BBC chooses to identify with Israeli concerns before Palestinian ones -- but they then compound this distortion by repeating uncritically Israel's own misrepresentation of events.

The reporters, like so many of their colleagues, fall into the trap of presenting the conflict through the eyes of the Israeli government, the same government whose prime minister, Ehud Olmert, last week proudly displayed his ethnic chauvinism by setting the suffering of the Jewish residents of Sderot, who face a mostly non-lethal smattering of Palestinian home-made Qassam rockets, far above the rising death toll of Gaza's civilians from the army's constant aerial and artillery bombardment. "I am sorry with all my heart for the residents of Gaza," Olmert said, "but the lives and well-being of Sderot's residents are more important than those of Gaza residents." In other words, a potential threat to a single Jew is more important than the deaths of dozens of Palestinian innocents.

Thus we learn without comment from the BBC that Olmert has denounced the killing of the two soldiers as "terrorism", even though the word cannot describe an attack by an occupied people on an occupying army. How is it possible for a few men with light arms to terrorise one of the most powerful armies in the world? What next: are we to listen sympathetically to claims by the US that its soldiers are being "terrorised" by Iraqi insurgents?

The defence that the BBC is simply reporting Israel's position does not stand up to scrutiny. Is it even conceivable that we might hear a BBC reporter neutrally repeat a Hamas statement that the Israeli army is terrorising Palestinians by reckless shelling civilians in Gaza, even though the word's usage in this case would better satisfy the dictionary definition? The shells most certainly do spread terror among Gaza's civilian population.

We hear too without comment that Olmert is holding both Hamas and the Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas responsible for the attack. The BBC dutily repeats Israeli claims that Abbas has the resources to fight "terror" even as the money to pay Palestinian security forces is held by foreign banks unwilling, at Israeli and American behest, to hand it over, and as Hamas and Abbas are locked in battle for control of the Palestinians' shrinking government.

Does common sense not recoil from the suggestion that both Hamas and Abbas can be equally blamed for the attack when the two are bitter rivals for power? Or that either can be held accountable when Israel has refused to negotiate with them or treat them as the genuine representatives of the Palestinian people?

Again, would the BBC report with due solemnity claims by the Palestinians that they hold Olmert and Peretz personally guilty for the civilian deaths in Gaza over the past fortnight, even though in an enlightened world both should be standing trial for war crimes?

Instead, however implausible the Israeli version of reality, the BBC happily sows confusion on behalf of the Israeli army. Like other broadcasters, it credulously reports preposterous arguments seeking to exonerate the Israeli army of responsibility for the shelling of the beach in Gaza that killed a Palestinian family of seven. It treats as equally credible the army's belated version in which Palestinian militants are said to have laid a single mine at a favourite seaside picnic spot in the futile hope of preventing the Israeli navy landing along the Strip's miles of coastline. (In consequence, the BBC excludes the seven dead and dozens of Palestinian injured in that Israeli attack from its list of recent civilian casualties in Gaza).

And both BBC reporters note gravely Israel's concerns that this is the first time Palestinian militants have broken out of the fenced-off Strip since Israel withdrew from Gaza nearly a year ago. Somehow the fact that the Palestinians have briefly escaped from their cage appears to make the attack all the more shocking not only for Israel but for the two reporters.

This attack in Israel, they tell us, is the most serious to date, with the implication that it is therefore illegitimate and part of the same "escalation". Even ignoring the fact that this attack was against Israeli soldiers besieging, imprisoning and shelling the Palestinians of Gaza, does the BBC not to pause to consider the double standard it is applying?

Was the Israeli army's incursion into Gaza a day earlier to capture two alleged Palestinian militants not an equal escalation? Was it not an equal violation of Palestinian sovereignty? Of course not. The BBC knows, as do the rest of us, that the army never really left Gaza and the occupation never really ended. But you won't hear that from any of its reporters.

Jonathan Cook is a writer and journalist based in Nazareth, Israel. He is the author of the forthcoming "Blood and Religion: The Unmasking of the Jewish and Democratic State" published by Pluto Press, and available in the United States from the University of Michigan Press. His website is www.jkcook.net

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Editorial: The Ideology of Occupation Revisited

Ran HaCohen
The Electronic Intifada
26 June 2006


Palestinians holding empty buckets to be filled with water in Rafah southern Gaza Strip June 4, 2006 (MaanImages/Hatem Omar)


The history of occupation is not just that of Palestinian suffering and Israeli aggression; it is also the history of its ideology, the history of the fictions the Israeli society fabricates in order to justify its major colonial project which has just entered its 40th year. These fictions do have a history: one can trace their career from birth to maturity, their shifts from the margin to the center and vice versa, their rise and fall among definite segments of the Israeli society or media, sometimes their (reversible) death.

A few years ago, I dedicated two columns to the ideology of occupation, following a nice synopsis of it given by an Israeli settler. Most of those arguments are still on the market today. You can still hear Israelis explain away the occupation by resorting to the Palestinian rejection of the partition plan, 60 years ago. Also the notion that "they want to throw us all into the sea" can boast a continuous career from the Passover Hagadah ("in every generation they rise against us to destroy us") up to the current political use of the Hamas Charter. But some things have changed. If you nowadays ask an Israeli about the occupation, what answers will you get?

The orthodox and hard-line right wingers (Likud and rightward) would probably come up with more traditional arguments ("it's all our land," etc.); but if you come across a mainstreamer - one of those who consider themselves "moderate right-wingers," "centrists," or "leftists" (the terms are near-synonyms in present Israeli discourse), voters of Kadima, Labor, or Meretz - I think this is what you are going to hear.

"The Occupation Has Ended"

Almost all the Israelis really believe the occupation of Gaza is over. The Palestinians there are now free to run their lives as they like, and Israel has nothing to do with it. They envisage a similar scenario being realized, or perhaps realized already, for the West Bank behind the Wall.

This fiction has become popular since the Israeli withdrawal from the Gaza Strip last summer; but its roots go back to the Oslo years, when especially the Zionist Left (Yossi Sarid, et al.) cultivated the myth that a Palestinian state in fact already existed, or was about to emerge within a fortnight (not later than 1998, as the Oslo Accords indeed stated; remember also Bush's broken deadline). In fact, this fiction represents a deep Israeli desire to deny: since the liberal Israeli knows the occupation cannot go together with democracy and justice, the occupation should disappear - but in a virtual way, by being denied. On a deeper level, many Israeli liberals believe Arabs cannot go together with culture and modernity, so denying their existence, both virtually and actually, by locking the undesired neighbors behind a big Wall and forgetting all about them, sounds like a pretty good solution.

"We're Here, They're There," Said the Jailer

"We're here, they're there" was Ehud Barak's sophisticated "peace slogan." The actual power relations between "here" and "there" have to be denied; in fact, the only thing that reminds the Israelis of these power relations is the Palestinian violent resistance. Were it not for "terrorism" (a term used indiscriminately for both legitimate and illegitimate Palestinian violence), the Israelis would have happily forgotten all about their locked-up neighbors by now. Accordingly, the persistent homemade Qassam missiles that terrorize the Israeli town of Sderot are conceptualized by Israelis as typical Arab ingratitude, as shameless ungratefulness for the great gift that Israel has presented the Palestinians by withdrawing from Gaza, allegedly restoring their freedom, honor, and well-being.

The reality is different. Having pulled its settlers out of Gaza, Israel is now imposing a total siege on the tiny Strip: the 1.5 million Palestinians locked up there have no access to the sea (Israel never let the Gaza seaport be built), no access to the air (Israel destroyed the Gaza airport), and all the crossings are under Israeli control (i.e., practically closed most of the time). Since the Hamas victory in the elections, Israel and the international community have also been imposing an economic siege on the Strip, severing the financial ties with the Palestinian authority; to pay their Authority's employees, the Palestinians have to smuggle cash through the crossings. Israel's "security system" - the Occupation incarnated - is the one who decides whether Gazans will have flour, medicines, and any other goods, how much, and when.

While this economic and physical siege is being imposed by air, sea, and land, and while Gaza is daily bombarded by missiles, artillery, and naval fire, "center-left" Israelis can say things like "Israel has left Gaza. The Palestinians could use this fact to finally rebuild Gaza, to build houses for refugees, to encourage investments, and to create jobs. Gazans could finally live like humans" (quoted from a letter to the excellent Hebrew Web site Ha'okets).

The situation in the West Bank is not so very different. The Palestinians there are locked in smaller cages than in Gaza, but the siege is less hermetic. While the Palestinians are locked behind huge walls, with a satanic system of roadblocks and permits, and sliced by roads-for-Jews-only and by settlements, harassed day and night by army incursions into their villages, houses, and bedrooms, many Israelis believe the occupation is now retreating, and its end is just a matter of time, or rather of semantics.

Alas, colonialism does not disappear by being denied; in fact, the Israeli occupation is at its peak, worse than ever before. There is no better evidence for that than the discussion about whether or not there is a humanitarian crisis in Palestine, once a rich Land of Milk and Honey.

A Propos

Ha'aretz reported Tuesday that the Knesset would debate a new bill, harshly criticized by leading jurists, that would make it possible to extend a suspect's remand without him being present in court, and to prevent him from seeing a lawyer for 30 consecutive days. The bill was submitted by the Justice Ministry and is supported by the Shin Bet security service.

If you wonder why such a bill is suddenly needed, or who these "suspects" might be, you'll first have to learn Hebrew; Ha'aretz's version in this language explains: "Till the ending of the military regime in the Gaza Strip, the investigation authorities had wider powers than those granted by the Detention Law. Now that the military regime in Gaza has ended, a special law is needed to give the security services wider enforcement powers." A few days after this debate, as if to make a point, the Israeli army entered the Gaza Strip and, for the first time since the withdrawal, abducted - "arrested" - two Palestinians. The occupation is over, long live the occupation.
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Editorial: Dismembering the body politic in Iraq

By Ahmed Janabi
Thursday 22 June 2006, 8:31 Makka Time, 5:31 GMT

The US and British leaders may be getting domestic flak for their perceived mistakes in Iraq, but some observers in the Arab world see them as being quite successful - in carrying out a well-calculated plan to divide the country.

The debate dates back to July 13, 2003, when the Iraqi Governing Council was formed under Paul Bremer, the US administrator.

Sectarianism and ethnic extremism were strengthened in that council and various laws have since encouraged an aggressive sectarianism leading to a fierce militia war.

Anis Mansour, an Egyptian editor and author, believes the US is following the historical British policy of divide and rule.

He says: "What we are seeing now is just the beginning of a scheme to split the country up into regions.

"It is not true that the US has failed. It did what it wanted to do and this will last for a long time.

"It will stay the same whether a Democratic or a Republican president is to follow [George] Bush."

Continued chaos

US and other foreign soldiers continue to be killed in Iraq, while Iranian-backed militias take revenge on Iraqi officers who participated in the Iran-Iraq war.

Drive-by shootings are a daily occurrence, and mainly Sunni fighters are maintaining the battle against US-led forces as well as the Iraqi army and security forces backed and trained by the US.

The new government of Nuri al-Maliki is unlikely to succeed in curbing the violence.

More than three years since the US-led invasion, the foreign forces and the new Iraqi forces are both incapable of maintaining law and order.

Meanwhile, ordinary Iraqis are losing their sense of co-existence, in itself a dangerous characteristic of post-war Iraq.

US instigation

According to the Iraqi minister of expatriates and displaced people, sectarian violence has caused 14,000 Iraqi families to move.

Sunni families who lived in Shia majority areas have gone to Sunni majority neighbourhoods and vice versa.

The ongoing creation of ethnic and sectarian cantons worries Iraqi nationalists who fear a break up of their country.

The US is seen as the main instigator of sectarian sentiments, creating the right environment for the division of Iraq into sectarian and ethnic states unable to function without US protection.

Hasan Nasr Allah, the leader of Hezbollah in Lebanon, says: "The US has driven the situation in Iraq to a state where they offer themselves to Shia as a guarantee [of protection] against Sunni, and offer themselves to Sunni as a guarantee against Shia.

"They present themselves to Arabs as a guarantee against Kurds, and present themselves to Kurds as a guarantee against Arabs.

"Their plot is doing just fine. Look at the situation in Iraq nowadays: What could possibly happen that is more appropriate for separatists to say that they have to split from Iraq to protect their community?"

Constitutional provision

Certain Iraqi politicians are also signalling that they favour a split. Masoud Barzani, the Kurdish leader who became president of Iraqi Kurdistan last year, cancelled his visit to China last May after Beijing refused to treat him as a head of state.

Barzani's move was seen as a renewed attempt to confirm the will of Kurdish politicians to secede from Iraq and form their long-desired independent Kurdish state.

Maintaining the integrity of Iraq was the main issue that delayed approval of the new Iraqi constitution last year.

Iraqi nationalists were alarmed by an article in the constitution that allowed any governorate, alone or with other governorates, to form a "region".

The constitution gives regions the right to form local security forces and freedom in managing the natural resources.

Kurds were the first to use that right when they announced their Kurdistan region and elected their government and president earlier this year.

Some Iraqi politicians say such entities will not be large enough to survive without foreign support.

Foreign aid

Haroun Muhammad, a London-based Iraqi political activist, says: "In addition to the seeds of separation in the new Iraqi constitution, separatists are getting foreign support, like Kuwait which has been backing both Kurdish and Shia leaders to separate from Iraq.

"It cannot be a coincidence that Ammar al-Hakim, the son of the senior Shia leader Abd al-Aziz al-Hakim, makes periodic visits to Kuwait."

The senior al-Hakim had demanded on several occasions that Iraqi Shia be given a federal state in southern Iraq, his last call being made on August 11, 2005, in Najaf as he was delivering a speech to a Shia gathering.

Muhammad says: "The reason for that is that Kuwait fears another future invasion from big Iraq. It is to their benefit to break it up into smaller parts unable to move troops south."

Saddam Hussein was not the first Iraqi leader to claim Kuwait, but he was the only one who sent troops across the border.

Abd al-Karim Qasim, the then Iraqi president, claimed Kuwait as a historical part of Iraq and moved troops to the Iraqi-Kuwaiti border, but British and Arab diplomatic efforts ended that crisis peacefully.

Shia demands

Barzani and the al-Hakim clan share the view that separate federal states for Shia and Kurds would protect them from the "suppression of the central government".

Iraqi and Shia political parties believe if Iraq were a federated state, Shia and Kurds would have avoided much of the suppression they suffered at the hands of Baghdad's central government in the past.

Khalid al-Atiya, a Shia member of parliament and leading member of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq (Sciri), said in a recent interview that his sect's leaders would not give up its demands to establish a Shia federal state in central and southern Iraq.

"Shia insist on federalism because history has learned the lesson. They have suffered enough from dictatorship and central government.

"The central government will always be a reason to enrage sectarian violence. Federalism is the only way to secure Shia's rights," al-Atiya said.

Dhafir al-Ani, a Sunni member of parliament and spokesman for the Iraqi Accordance Front, told Aljazeera.net: "I regret to say that it is unlikely we will be able to prevent the partition of Iraq. I think it is going to be the way they want."
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Editorial: Canada: From one Empire to Another?

By Rodrigue Tremblay
June 25, 2006

Canada was a French colony for over two centuries, from 1534 to 1759. It then became a British colony for about two centuries, i.e. from 1760 until the signing of the Treaty of Westminster, on December 11, 1931. However, it was only after World War II that Canada exercised fully its international independence.  Canada was an active original member of the United Nations, in 1945, and has provided the U. N. with peacemaking forces on numerous occasions. It is a legitimate question to ask if Canada's independence is threatened by the new minority conservative government's willingness to acquiesce to almost everything the Bush administration wants from it. Indeed, Stephen Harper's Conservatives seem to embrace wholeheartedly the puppet role the Bush administration wants it to play in the New American empire's adventures around the  globe.

Let us review the moves made by Harper's Conservatives to please George W. Bush, since they replaced the Liberals to form the government of Canada, on February 6, 2006. Harper's Conservatives started on the right foot when they disclosed their plans to assert Canada's sovereignty over the Arctic waters with armed forces, despite the open criticism of U. S. ambassador David Wilkins.

Then, after a meeting with President Bush Jr. at the end of March 2006, everything seemed to go downhill. First, Bush slapped Canada in the face by approving a U.S. law that will require Canadian citizens to show their passport when crossing the border into the United States. Second, the Harper government renewed the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) agreement with the United States, making it permanent, and adding maritime defense to the agreement, which previously covered only air defense. Some have argued that this arrangement will reduce Canadian sovereignty over the country's internal waters. Third, the Harper government signed a preliminary Softwood deal with the Bush administration, designed to manage softwood trade between the two countries. A close analysis of the proposed agreement indicates that it is, at best, a mediocre deal for Canada. Fourth, in a move that profoundly pleased the Bush administration, Harper announced that his conservative government would scrap the Kyoto protocol on climate change. Fifth, to make sure that it is in the good graces of G. W. Bush, Harper let it be known that he is 100 percent behind him in his gambit with Iran.

But, sixth and foremost, and just as the U.K., Italy and Japan were announcing that their countries will be withdrawing troops from Iraq, the Harper government announced that it will increase the contingent of Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan and extend their stay until 2009. This move, combined with the taking over of the Afghan mission by the 27-member NATO, is designed to please the Bush administration. It will allow some U. S. troop withdrawal from Afghanistan and their redeployment in Iraq.

Mind you, the Bush administration never cherished the idea of having American soldiers bogged down in Afghanistan in the first place. The Bush people had fresh in memory the fate suffered by the Soviets after spending twelve frustrating years in Afghanistan, their occupation even leading to the break-up of the entire Soviet empire. For instance, Paul Wolfowitz, Rumsfeld's deputy-secretary, was of the view, in 2001, that "attacking Afghanistan would be uncertain," and he feared that American troops would be "bogged down in mountain fighting." He much preferred a war against Iraq, even though that country had nothing to do with the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, because "Iraq was a brittle, oppressive regime that might break easily. It was doable." (See, Bob Woodward's Bush at War, p. 83). Now, it seems that it will be countries like Canada which will be bogged down in Afghanistan for years to come, in the intensifying conflict with Taliban militants. There is a clear danger that Canada could be engulfed by the anti-American sentiment now prevalent in Afghanistan and become a target of hatred for Muslims around the world.

The Harper conservative government copies the Bush administration so closely that it even refused to allow the media to cover the return of Canadian soldiers killed in Afghanistan. After general condemnation, it had to recant. As one commentator put it, "how many Canadian soldiers have to be killed in Afghanistan in order for Canada to export one additional ton of lumberwood to the US? Harper and his Minister Of Public Safety Stockwell Day also borrow from Bush's rhetoric ("They hate our freedoms - our freedom of religion, our freedom of speech, our freedom to vote and assemble") and  repeat the nonsense that Muslims do not like Canada "because it is a democracy." -In fact, some don't like us because we have soldiers in their lands who are killing them, and because we support countries that are killing their families. -Period. It is not because of what we are, it is because of what some governments do to them. How low will the Harper government stoop to please George W. Bush?

By jumping so readily into George W. Bush's bed, the Harper conservative government risks destroying Canada's reputation of independence and generosity around the world that previous governments took half a century to develop. Moreover, by giving the impression that Canada is a puppet of the unpopular United States, the Harper government is putting Canada at risk of becoming a target of Islamist terrorism.

Canada had an international reputation as an independent, peace-loving nation and a staunch supporter of the United Nations and of international law. However, by siding so openly with the  Bush-Cheney administration, possibly the worst American administration ever, Harper is severely tarnishing Canada's reputation. It is said that Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan look and act just like American soldiers, shooting first and asking questions later. The maple leaf symbol is tarnished.

What has changed is the perception that Harper is content placing Canada in a junior partnership role within George W. Bush's grand plans for imperialistic adventures around the globe.

Even though Canada and Mexico are part of a continental trade agreement with the United States (NAFTA), neither Canada nor Mexico accepted to follow the militaristic Bush administration when it decided to ignore the United Nations, in March 2003, by launching an illegal war of aggression against Iraq. In this case, the liberal Chrétien government saved Canada's honor, and the Canadian people were strongly behind the decision. All indications are that a Harper government would have acted differently and would have been subservient to the Bush administration. This would have made Canada, in the eyes of the world, a colony of the United States. For Canada, to align its diplomacy with Bush's, is like lashing itself to a sinking ship.

The Canadian people are very ambivalent regarding the U. N.-backed mission in Afghanistan. The war in Afghanistan is somewhat different from the American-led war in Iraq. It was recognized that Afghanistan, under the Taliban, was a training ground for international Islamist terrorism. It is the country in which the 9/11 terrorists received their training. As a consequence, the U. N. Security Council adopted Resolution 1373, on September 28, 2001, under section 41 of the Charter of the United Nations, which allows UN member states "to adopt specific measures to combat terrorism" and "to combat by all means threats to international peace and security caused by terrorist acts." U. N. Security Council Resolution 1390, of January 16, 2002 made it even clearer that the activities of Osama bin Laden and the Al-Qaida network in supporting international terrorism had to be stopped.

Therefore, it is clear that contrary to the war in Iraq, the war against the Taliban in Afghanistan is legal, having been sanctioned by the United Nations in order to prevent the spread of international terrorism. Nevertheless, the Canadian people do not accept the proposition that foreign troops, especially Canadian troops, should remain in Afghanistan indefinitely, in a colonial-like posture, as the Harper government seems to think. This is amply demonstrated by polls that indicate a clear majority of Canadians (54 %) opposed extending the Canadian mission in Afghanistan. Moreover, the vote in Parliament to extend Canada's mission in Afghanistan by two years was very close, 149-145, with the help of 30 Liberal MPs who were anxious not to have an election at this time.

Nevertheless, the extremist Muslim Taliban are not very popular in Canada, as in most Western countries. Therefore, Stephen Harper could probably get away with the extension of the Canadian mission in Afghanistan. But he should not push his luck too far. If he is perceived as morphing into a junior 'Bush of the North', his political fortune may take a turn for the worse, even if his principal opponents are presently in dissaray.

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Lack of Intelligence


Bush joins in condemning N.Y. Times

Last Updated Mon, 26 Jun 2006 12:17:56 EDT
CBC News

U.S. President George W. Bush has joined the chairman of the House homeland security committee in denouncing the New York Times for publishing a story last week about a secret financial-monitoring program used to trace alleged terrorists.

"For people to leak that program and for a newspaper to publish it does great harm to the United States of America," Bush said.
Bush added that the disclosure of the program "makes it harder to win this war on terror."

The comments were slightly less accusatory than those Sunday from chairman Peter King, a Republican congressman from New York.

"We're at war, and for the Times to release information about secret operations and methods is treasonous," King told the Associated Press.

King said he would write U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales urging him to begin a prosecution.

While the Wall Street Journal and Los Angeles Times also ran stories about the program, King said he is targeting the New York Times because the paper in December also disclosed a secret domestic wiretapping program.

New York Times executive editor Bill Keller wrote in a letter on the newspaper's website Sunday that the decision to publish came after weeks of discussion with administration officials and that the paper didn't feel the program would be jeopardized.

The Times' editors, Keller wrote, "remain convinced that the administration's extraordinary access to this vast repository of international financial data, however carefully targeted use of it may be, is a matter of public interest."

Earlier this month, King seized on the anti-terrorism arrests of 17 men in an alleged bomb threat in the Toronto area to raise concern of the possibility of an attack in the U.S. spawned in Canada.

"Americans should be very concerned," King said at the time. "Canada is our northern neighbour and there is a large al-Qaeda presence in Canada.

"I think there is a disproportionate number of al-Qaeda in Canada because of their very liberal immigration laws, because of how political asylum is granted so easily."

King is one of several politicians to seize on the revelations reported last week.

It was revealed that since late 2001 the CIA and the U.S. Treasury Department examined financial records from an international banking co-operative known as Swift (The Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication).

Swift captures information on millions of wire transfers and other methods of moving money in and out of the country each day.

The service generally does not detect private, individual transactions in the United States, such as withdrawals from an ABM or bank deposits.

"Congress was briefed and what we did was fully authorized under the law," Bush said on Monday.

Democrats and civil libertarians have questioned whether the program violated privacy rights.





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Bush Calls Surveillance Disclosure 'Disgraceful'

Washington Post
June 27, 2006

President Bush offered an impassioned defense of his secret international banking surveillance program yesterday, calling it a legal and effective tool for hunting down terrorists and denouncing the media's disclosure of it as a "disgraceful" act that does "great harm" to the nation.

The president used a White House appearance with supporters of troops in Iraq to lash out at newspapers that revealed the program, which has examined hundreds of thousands of private banking records from around the world. His remarks led off a broader White House assault later amplified by Vice President Cheney and Treasury Secretary John W. Snow.

"What we did was fully authorized under the law," Bush said in an angry tone as he leaned forward in his chair and wagged his finger. "And the disclosure of this program is disgraceful. We're at war with a bunch of people who want to hurt the United States of America, and for people to leak that program, and for a newspaper to publish it, does great harm to the United States of America."
Bush denied overstepping his bounds by not seeking court or congressional approval for the program in the nearly five years since it was established following the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. "What we were doing was the right thing," he said. "Congress was aware of it, and we were within the law to do so."

Critics said Bush was trying to divert attention from his own actions. Bush, Cheney and other Republicans "have adopted a shoot-the-messenger strategy by attacking the newspaper that revealed the existence of the secret bank surveillance program rather than answering the disturbing questions that those reports raise about possible violations of the U.S. Constitution and U.S. privacy laws," said Rep. Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.).

Under the program, U.S. officials tapped records of the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunications, or SWIFT, an international banking cooperative owned by nearly 8,000 banks in more than 20 countries. The Treasury Department used administrative subpoenas that do not involve a judge to search for terrorist transactions and hired Booz Allen Hamilton Inc. to verify that the data were properly handled.

The New York Times, Los Angeles Times and Wall Street Journal first reported the program on their Web sites Thursday night. The Washington Post confirmed the story and reported it in its Friday editions. But the New York Times was the focus of White House ire because it led the way in investigating and because it disclosed the National Security Agency telephone surveillance program last year.

"Some of the press, in particular the New York Times, have made the job of defending against further terrorist attacks more difficult by insisting on publishing detailed information about vital national security programs," Cheney said at a Republican fundraiser in Nebraska.

Referring to the NSA program, he added: "What is doubly disturbing for me is that not only have they gone forward with these stories, but they've been rewarded for it, for example, in the case of the terrorist surveillance program, by being awarded the Pulitzer Prize for outstanding journalism. I think that is a disgrace."

Neither Bush nor Cheney raised the prospect of investigating journalists, as proposed by Rep. Peter T. King (R-N.Y.), who called on the Justice Department to prosecute the New York Times for "treasonous" action.

An investigation into how the information was revealed would normally follow such a disclosure. But officials denied that the rhetoric was an attempt to intimidate the media.

"It's not designed to have a chilling effect," White House press secretary Tony Snow said. "If the New York Times wants a spirited debate about it, it's got it. But certainly nobody is going to deny First Amendment rights. But the New York Times and other news organizations ought to think long and hard about whether a public's right to know, in some cases, might overwrite somebody's right to live."

A spokeswoman for the Times had no comment yesterday, pointing instead to an open letter by Executive Editor Bill Keller on Sunday. Keller noted that the Framers intended an independent press as a check on government abuse of power, and "rejected the idea that it is wise, or patriotic, to always take the President at his word, or to surrender to the government important decisions about what to publish."

Keller said he took seriously the government's private entreaties not to publish but decided that printing the story was in the public's interest. He argued that terrorist financiers knew the international banking system is being monitored and said administration officials seemed more worried that bankers would back out of the system. The argument that disclosure would change terrorist tactics, he wrote, "was made in a half-hearted way."

John Snow fired back yesterday in a letter to Keller, accusing him of "breathtaking arrogance" for presuming to know what terrorists know or do. "Your charge that our efforts to convince The New York Times not to publish were 'half-hearted' is incorrect and offensive," the Treasury secretary wrote.

Unlike the NSA program, the banking surveillance has not triggered broad outrage among congressional Democrats. Jim Manley, a spokesman for Senate Minority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.), said that "it doesn't seem to be based on the same shaky legal analysis" as the NSA program. But he added that Reid, who was briefed on it for the first time a few weeks ago, is concerned that "the administration has continued to ignore its duty to keep Congress informed."

Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), a Bush critic, issued a tempered statement yesterday: "Allowing law enforcement to examine bank records in order to stop the flow of money to terrorists makes a lot of sense, and this program appears to allow for just that. The real question here, as with so many other programs run by this Administration, is whether they are obeying the laws we have on the books to protect Americans from unnecessary invasions of their privacy."

Comment: Notice how it is "disgraceful" for anyone to leak that the Bush administration has been spying on the banking records of American citizens, yet it is fine for Dick Cheney to leak to the media bogus "evidence" about Iraq's non-existent WMDs...

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Former Admin. Official Needs Only Three Words to Explain Manipulation of Intel: 'The Vice President'

Think Progress
26/06/2006

The Democratic Policy Committee held a hearing this afternoon to examine the manipulation of pre-war Iraq intelligence. Rep. Walter Jones (R-NC), who previously disavowed his vote for the war, attended the hearing and asked the panelists why a small number of individuals in the administration 'had more influence...than the professionals.' Lawrence Wilkerson, former chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell, said he only needed three words...
Full transcript:

JONES: My question is this to all four of you who would like to answer, maybe it's a very simple question. I apologize if it's been asked before. But what perplexes me is how in the world could professionals - I'm not criticizing anybody here at this table - but how could the professionals see what was happening and nobody speak out?

I'm not saying you did not do your duty, please understand. My point is as a congressman who trusted what I was being told - I'm was not on the Intelligence Committee, Senator Dorgan, but I am on the Armed Services Committee - and I was being told this information. And I wish I'd the wisdom then that I might have now. I would have known what to ask. But I think many of my colleagues - they did not have the experience on the Intelligence Committee - we just pretty much accepted.

So where along the way - how did these people so early on get so much power that they had more influence in those in the administration to make decisions than you the professionals.

WILKERSON: Let me try to answer you first. Let me say right off the bat I'm glad to see you here.

JONES: Thank you sir.

WILKERSON: As a Republican, I'm somewhat embarrassed by the fact that you're the only member of my party here.

JONES: I agree.

WILKERSON: But I understand it. I'd answer you with two words. Let me put the article in there and make it three. The Vice President.



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Bush ignores laws he inks, vexing Congress

By LAURIE KELLMAN
Associated Press
June 27, 2006

WASHINGTON - A bill becomes the rule of the land when Congress passes it and the president signs it into law, right?

Not necessarily, according to the White House. A law is not binding when a president issues a separate statement saying he reserves the right to revise, interpret or disregard it on national security and constitutional grounds.

That's the argument a Bush administration official is expected to make Tuesday before the Senate Judiciary Committee, chaired by Arlen Specter, R-Pa., who has demanded a hearing on a practice he considers an example of the administration's abuse of power.
"It's a challenge to the plain language of the Constitution," Specter said in an interview with The Associated Press. "I'm interested to hear from the administration just what research they've done to lead them to the conclusion that they can cherry-pick."

Apparently, enough to challenge many more statutes passed by Congress than any other president, Specter's committee says. The White House does not dispute that, but notes that Bush is hardly the first chief executive to issue them.

"Signing statements have long been issued by presidents, dating back to Andrew Jackson all the way through
President Clinton," White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said Monday.

Specter's hearing is about more than the statements. He's been compiling a list of White House practices he bluntly says could amount to abuse of executive power - from warrantless domestic wiretapping program to sending officials to hearings who refuse to answer lawmakers' questions.

But the session also concerns countering any influence Bush's signing statements may have on court decisions regarding the new laws. Courts can be expected to look to the legislature for intent, not the executive, said Sen. John Cornyn (news, bio, voting record), R-Texas., a former state judge.

"There's less here than meets the eye," Cornyn said. "The president is entitled to express his opinion. It's the courts that determine what the law is."

But Specter and his allies maintain that Bush is doing an end-run around the veto process. In his presidency's sixth year, Bush has yet to issue a single veto that could be overridden with a two-thirds majority in each house.

Instead, he has issued hundreds of signing statements invoking his right to interpret or ignore laws on everything from whistleblower protections to how Congress oversees the Patriot Act.

"It means that the administration does not feel bound to enforce many new laws which Congress has passed," said David Golove, a New York University law professor who specializes in executive power issues. "This raises profound rule of law concerns. Do we have a functioning code of federal laws?"

Signing statements don't carry the force of law, and other presidents have issued them for administrative reasons, such as instructing an agency how to put a certain law into effect. They usually are inserted quietly into the federal record.

Bush's signing statement in March on Congress's renewal of the Patriot Act riled Specter and others who labored for months to craft a compromise between Senate and House versions, and what the White House wanted. Reluctantly, the administration relented on its objections to new congressional oversight of the way the
FBI searches for terrorists.

Bush signed the bill with much flag-waving fanfare. Then he issued a signing statement asserting his right to bypass the oversight provisions in certain circumstances.

Specter isn't sure how much Congress can do to check the practice. "We may figure out a way to tie it to the confirmation process or budgetary matters," he said.



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Watchdog hears CIA flights report

Tuesday, 27 June 2006, 08:54 GMT 09:54 UK

Europe's human rights body is to debate a report accusing 14 European states of colluding with the CIA on secret flights transferring terror suspects.

The report said some countries had provided staging posts for unlawful CIA flights, while others had let the US abduct suspects from their soil.

The Council of Europe is due to view video testimony supporting the charges.
Under the CIA policy of rendition, prisoners are moved to third countries for interrogation.

The US admits to picking up terrorism suspects but denies sending them overseas to face torture.

The report by Swiss Senator Dick Marty follows a seven-month inquiry that began in November following media allegations about CIA detention centres in eastern Europe.

'Discrediting' claims

The Council of Europe will watch a video, put together by human rights group Witness, that includes testimony from men who say they were tortured after being detained by the CIA.

Khalid El-Masri, a German citizen, recalls waking up in a prison in Kabul where he was told by an interrogator: "You are in a country with no laws... We can lock you up here for 20 years or bury you, no one would know."

Benyam Mohammed al-Habashi, an Ethiopian citizen after arrested in Pakistan for travelling on a false passport, is still being at Guantanamo Bay.

The council will hear the detainee's brother read from a diary entry which talks about Benyam Mohammed being systematically wounded with a scalpel.

Speaking before Tuesday's session, Mr Marty said he believed some countries were going to great lengths to discredit his report.

'Spiders' web'

Correspondents say a resolution based on the report is likely to be approved, along with recommendations that intelligence services are regulated more closely.

But critics charge that Mr Marty's report contains nothing new and does not contain evidence compelling enough to secure a conviction in a court.

Mr Marty's report concluded there was strong circumstantial evidence that secret CIA detention centres had been established in Poland and Romania. Both countries have rejected the claims.

The report was based on an examination air traffic logs, satellite images and the accounts of those who said they had been abducted.

Mr Marty identified a "spider's web" of US rendition flights and landing points around the world.

The resolution to be voted on avoids mentioning any European country by name, but says some Council of Europe member states have "knowingly colluded with the United States to carry out these unlawful operations".

It also condemns members that have denied their participation "in many cases without actually having carried out any inquiries or serious investigations".

The accompanying recommendation to member states calls on them to adopt common measures to guarantee the rights of terror suspects captured in or transported through their territories.

It also urges them to include "human rights protection clauses" in deals allowing third countries to set up military bases Europe.

If the resolution and recommendations are approved, the member states - most of which deny any involvement in abuses of human rights by the CIA - are obliged to respond.



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Belgium probes US spy program on bank transactions

www.chinaview.cn 2006-06-27 06:32:20

BRUSSELS, June 26 (Xinhua) -- Belgium's Justice Ministry said Monday it had launched an inquiry into revelations that the U.S. government has been monitoring international financial transactions since 2001 as part of its so-called war on terror.

Belgian Justice Minister Laurette Onkelinx had requested the country's security service VS-SE and the federal police money laundering unit CFI to produce complete reports about the matter, Belgian media reported Monday.
The federal police unit was also asked to draw up a legal analysis of the situation.

"She wants to know if these actions taken by the U.S. and SWIFT are okay under Belgian law," a ministry spokeswoman was quoted as saying.

It emerged on Friday that the U.S. government has had access to international bank transactions since the September 11 terrorist attacks in 2001. These private bank records were supplied by the Society for Worldwide Inter-bank Financial Telecommunications (SWIFT), an international association of financial institutes basedin Brussels.

The Belgian Justice Ministry denied on Monday that the minister was aware of the U.S. practices.

"The minister was, just as the prime minister, completely unaware. She only heard it on Friday, via the media," Onkelinx' spokeswoman said.

SWIFT handles international transactions for nearly 8,000 financial institutions in more than 200 countries.

The latest revelations, following claims last year of secret U.S. abductions and transfers of terrorist suspects in Europe, have drawn fire from the European Parliament. The European Union's lawmakers said the reports suggested once again that Washington was fighting its war at the cost of civil rights.

Financial institutes in Belgium are obligated by law to report suspicious transactions to the CFI in an effort to prevent money laundering and the financing of terrorism.

The National Bank of Belgium (NBB) confirmed on Saturday it was aware of the fact that U.S. authorities could examine transactions via SWIFT. The NBB released an official statement after media reports broke on Friday.

But an NBB spokesman refused to confirm when the reserve bank was informed about SWIFT's actions, revealing only that it was informed in an informal manner via its contacts with the firm.

The NBB said it saw no ethical problems in SWIFT's actions, adding that ethical monitoring was not part of its responsibilities.

Despite the fact SWIFT had to comply with various standards to ensure a smooth working of the financial sector, the NBB also said America's espionage tactics did not place the sector's operations at threat.



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U.S. Official: Tough to Shut Guantanamo

By STEVENSON JACOBS
Monday, 26 June 2006, 21:00 CDT

GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba - The United States wants to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay but needs assurances that detainees won't pose a security risk or face torture when they're sent to other countries, a senior U.S. State Department official said Monday.

"It really shows the conundrum that we're in," said John B. Bellinger III, the State Department's legal adviser. "We want to get out of the Guantanamo business while continuing to protect ourselves and protect others."

Bellinger said the U.S. wants to return many detainees but has been blocked by countries who don't want the men or who don't recognize them as nationals. Another obstacle has been getting assurances that detainees won't face human rights abuses upon their return or pose a threat to the United States.
"Many of these countries do not want their nationals back," Bellinger said. "It's difficult to even get to square one in terms of discussion with different countries if individuals can go back there."

President Bush has said he would like to close the prison, where some 450 men are held on suspicion of links to al-Qaida and the Taliban.

Only 10 detainees have been charged with crimes and face military tribunals ordered by Bush, the first such trials since World War II. The Supreme Court could rule this week on the legality of the tribunals.

Senior European Union leaders pressed Bush during a recent EU-U.S. summit in Vienna to shut down Guantanamo and redouble efforts to make sure that human rights are not sacrificed in the war on terror.

Bellinger said he discussed the issue of closing Guantanamo with European officials at the Vienna summit. He said EU officials long opposed to the prison were beginning to see that closing it "is easier said than done."

Bellinger said the U.S. has begun talks with Britain about returning a group of British residents who have been held at the remote base on Cuba's southeastern tip.

A big headache for the U.S. has been what to do with a group of Uighurs, an ethnic group that lives mainly in western China. About two dozen Uighurs were captured by U.S. forces in Afghanistan.

China has demanded their return, but the United States feared they might face persecution there. China blames Uighur separatists for sporadic bombings and other violence in the Xinjiang region.

Five Uighurs were sent to Albania last month, but no other countries have offered to take in the rest.

Other nations "were concerned that the Chinese government would be very unhappy with them if they were to take the Uighurs," said Sam Whitten, head of the State Department's war crimes office.



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Feds drop request for library records

By JOHN CHRISTOFFERSEN
Associated Press
Mon Jun 26, 2006

STAMFORD, Conn. - Federal authorities have dropped their demand for records from a library computer, but not without warning the librarians who refused to release them that under other circumstances their failure to cooperate "could have increased the danger of terrorists succeeding."

The FBI said Monday that it has discounted a potential terrorism threat that prompted it to seek records last year from a computer at one of 26 Connecticut libraries that are part of a consortium called the Library Connection.

Four librarians on the consortium's board who received the demand resisted, which the FBI said slowed its work.

"In this case, because the threat ultimately was without merit, that delay came at no cost other than slowing the pace of the investigation," John Miller, the FBI's assistant director, said in a statement. "In another case, where the threat may be real, the delays incurred in this investigation could have increased the danger of terrorists succeeding."
The American Civil Liberties Union, which represented the librarians who received the demand for records, said the librarians might have been willing to comply with a similar demand had it been approved by a judge.

"I'm glad that we're vindicated in resisting the request for the records," said George Christian, of Windsor, Conn., one of the librarians who received a national security letter demanding the records. "We're just protecting our patrons to the extent we can."

The letter sought subscriber and billing information related to a computer used within a 45-minute time period Feb. 15, 2005, when the potential threat was transmitted from a library computer. Authorities have declined to say where exactly that computer was located, but said the request did not involve reading lists of library patrons.

"We concluded that based on the passage of time as well as other information we've been able to develop that this threat is probably not viable," said Connecticut U.S. Attorney Kevin O'Connor, who added that the potential threat had been in an e-mail.

O'Connor said that authorities are trying to prevent attacks and that not every case involves enough information to get a warrant.

The librarians had been under a gag order for months. Last year a federal judge said it unfairly prevented them from participating in a debate over how the Patriot Act should be rewritten, but by the time the FBI dropped its appeal in April, Congress had already voted to reauthorize the law.

"While the government's real motives in this case have been questionable from the beginning, their decision to back down is a victory not just for librarians, but for all Americans who value their privacy," said Ann Beeson, associate legal director of the ACLU.

O'Connor said that the national security letter was appropriately issued and that the ACLU should not question the motives of federal agents trying to investigate a threat.

Prosecutors argued that secrecy in demands for records is necessary to avoid jeopardizing investigations, and that the gag order prevented only the release of librarians' identities, not their ability to speak about the Patriot Act.

The law, initially passed shortly after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, allows expanded surveillance of terror suspects, increased use of material witness warrants to hold suspects incommunicado and secret proceedings in immigration cases. It also removed a requirement that any records sought in a terrorism investigation be those of someone under suspicion. Now anyone's records can be obtained if the FBI considers them relevant to a terrorism or spying investigation.



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The Real Face of Terrorism


Miami plot suspects entrapped: lawyers

Tue Jun 27, 2006 06:22 AM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Seven men charged with conspiring to bomb the Sears Tower in Chicago and the FBI building in Miami were entrapped by a federal informant, lawyers for two of the suspects said on Monday.

An indictment issued last week accused the men of pledging loyalty to Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda and seeking the group's support to "wage war" against the U.S. government.

The person they thought was an al Qaeda representative was actually an FBI informant, U.S. Justice Department officials said.
Albert Levin, the court-appointed attorney for suspect Patrick Abraham, said he believes his client was ensnared by the informant.

There was "a lot of talking going on by the informant and more listening by the defendant and or the defendants," Levin told Fox News Channel host Bill O'Reilly.

Nathan Clarke, a lawyer for another suspect Rotschild Augustine, agreed.

"With respect to my client, from what I can read in the indictment, there's going to be a question of whether there's even sufficient evidence to sustain the burden of proof on conviction," Clarke said.

"If by any chance there's a scintilla of that then, of course, there's going to be the entrapment issue," he said.

"This thing took place over eight months, according to the indictment and at the end of the indictment, it says that this thing became disorganized and nobody had ever done anything or did anything," Clarke said.

Abraham, Augustine and three other men arrested on Thursday in Miami appeared briefly in a magistrate's court on Friday.

Another suspect arrested in Atlanta made his initial court appearance there on Friday. The seventh suspect, arrested in the Miami area earlier last week on a probation violation, was scheduled to appear in court on Wednesday.



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Terrorists in Miami, Oh My!

By Robert Parry
06/24/06

The Bush administration finally took action against alleged terrorists living in plain sight in Miami, but they weren't the right-wing Cuban terrorists implicated in actual acts of terror, such as blowing a civilian Cuban airliner out of the sky. They were seven young black men whose crime was more "aspirational than operational," the FBI said.

As media fanfare over the arrests made the seven young men, many sporting dreadlocks, the new face of the terrorist enemy in America, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales conceded that the men had no weapons or explosives and represented "no immediate threat."

But Gonzales warned that these kinds of homegrown terrorists "may prove to be as dangerous as groups like al-Qaeda." [NYT, June 24, 2006]

For longtime observers of political terrorism in South Florida, the aggressive reaction to what may have been the Miami group's loose talk about violence, possibly spurred by an FBI informant posing as an al-Qaeda operative, stands in marked contrast to the U.S. government's see-no-evil approach to notorious Cuban terrorists who have lived openly in Miami for decades.
For instance, the Bush administration took no action in early April 2006, when a Spanish-language Miami television station interviewed Cuban terrorist Orlando Bosch, who offered a detailed justification for the 1976 mid-air bombing of a Cubana Airlines flight that killed 73 people, including the young members of the Cuban national fencing team.

Bosch refused to admit guilt, but his chilling defense of the bombing - and the strong evidence that has swirled around his role - left little doubt of his complicity, even as he lives in Miami as a free man, protected both in the past and present by the Bush family.

The Bush administration also has acted at a glacial pace in dealing with another Cuban exile implicated in the bombing, Luis Posada Carriles, whose illegal presence in Miami was an open secret for weeks in early 2005 before U.S. authorities took him into custody, only after he had held a press conference.

But even then, the administration has balked at sending Posada back to Venezuela where the government of Hugo Chavez - unlike some of its predecessors - was eager to prosecute Posada for the Cubana Airlines murders.

Summing up George W. Bush's dilemma in 2005, the New York Times wrote, "A grant of asylum could invite charges that the Bush administration is compromising its principle that no nation should harbor suspected terrorists. But to turn Mr. Posada away could provoke political wrath in the conservative Cuban-American communities of South Florida, deep sources of support and campaign money for President Bush and his brother, Jeb." [NYT, May 9, 2005]

Bush Family Ties

But there's really nothing new about these two terrorists - and other violent right-wing extremists - getting protection from the Bush family.

For three decades, both Bosch and Posada have been under the Bush family's protective wing, starting with former President George H.W. Bush (who was CIA director when the airline bombing occurred in 1976) and extending to Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and President George W. Bush.

The evidence points to one obvious conclusion: the Bushes regard terrorism - defined as killing civilians to make a political point - as justified in cases when their interests match those of the terrorists. In other words, their moral outrage is selective, depending on the identity of the victims.

That hypocrisy was dramatized by the TV interview with Bosch on Miami's Channel 41, which was cited in articles on the Internet by Venezuela's lawyer José Pertierra, but was otherwise widely ignored by the U.S. news media. [For Pertierra's story, see Counterpunch, April 11, 2006]

"Did you down that plane in 1976?" asked reporter Juan Manuel Cao.

"If I tell you that I was involved, I will be inculpating myself," Bosch answered, "and if I tell you that I did not participate in that action, you would say that I am lying. I am therefore not going to answer one thing or the other."

But when Cao asked Bosch to comment on the civilians who died when the plane crashed off the coast of Barbados in 1976, Bosch responded, "In a war such as us Cubans who love liberty wage against the tyrant [Fidel Castro], you have to down planes, you have to sink ships, you have to be prepared to attack anything that is within your reach."

"But don't you feel a little bit for those who were killed there, for their families?" Cao asked.

"Who was on board that plane?" Bosch responded. "Four members of the Communist Party, five North Koreans, five Guyanese." [Officials tallies actually put the Guyanese dead at 11.]

Bosch added, "Four members of the Communist Party, chico! Who was there? Our enemies..."

"And the fencers?" Cao asked about Cuba's amateur fencing team that had just won gold, silver and bronze medals at a youth fencing competition in Caracas. "The young people on board?"

Bosch replied, "I was in Caracas. I saw the young girls on television. There were six of them. After the end of the competition, the leader of the six dedicated their triumph to the tyrant. ... She gave a speech filled with praise for the tyrant.

"We had already agreed in Santo Domingo, that everyone who comes from Cuba to glorify the tyrant had to run the same risks as those men and women that fight alongside the tyranny." [The comment about Santo Domingo was an apparent reference to a strategy meeting by a right-wing terrorist organization, CORU, which took place in the Dominican Republic in 1976.]

"If you ran into the family members who were killed in that plane, wouldn't you think it difficult?" Cao asked.

"No, because in the end those who were there had to know that they were cooperating with the tyranny in Cuba," Bosch answered.

In an article about Bosch's remarks, lawyer Pertierra said the answers "give us a glimpse into the mind of the kind of terrorist that the United States government harbors and protects in Miami."

The Posada Case

Bosch was arrested for illegally entering the United States during the first Bush administration, but he was paroled in 1990 by President George H.W. Bush at the behest of the President's eldest son Jeb, then an aspiring Florida politician.

Not only did the first Bush administration free Bosch from jail a decade and a half ago, the second Bush administration has now pushed Venezuela's extradition request for his alleged co-conspirator, Posada, onto the back burner.

The downed Cubana Airlines flight originated in Caracas where Venezuelan authorities allege the terrorist plot was hatched. However, U.S. officials have resisted returning Posada to Venezuela because Hugo Chavez is seen as friendly to Castro's communist government in Cuba.

At a U.S. immigration hearing in 2005, Posada's defense attorney put on a Posada friend as a witness who alleged that Venezuela's government practices torture. Bush administration lawyers didn't challenge the claim, leading the immigration judge to bar Posada's deportation to Venezuela.

In September 2005, Venezuela's Ambassador Bernardo Alvarez called the 77-year-old Posada "the Osama Bin Laden of Latin America" and accused the Bush administration of applying "a cynical double standard" in its War on Terror.

Alvarez also denied that Venezuela practices torture. "There isn't a shred of evidence that Posada would be tortured in Venezuela," Alvarez said, adding that the claim is particularly ironic given widespread press accounts that the Bush administration has abused prisoners at the U.S. military base in Guatanamo Bay, Cuba.

Theoretically, the Bush administration could still extradite Posada to Venezuela to face the 73 murder counts, but it is essentially ignoring Venezuela's extradition request while holding Posada on minor immigration charges of entering the United States illegally.

Meanwhile, Posada has begun maneuvering to gain his freedom. Citing his service in the U.S. military from 1963-65 in Vietnam, Posada has applied for U.S. citizenship, and his lawyer Eduardo Soto has threatened to call U.S. government witnesses, including former White House aide Oliver North, to vouch for Posada's past service to Washington.

Posada became a figure in the Iran-Contra scandal because of his work on a clandestine program to aid Nicaraguan contra rebels fighting Nicaragua's leftist Sandinista government. The operation was run secretly out of the White House by North with the help of the office of then-Vice President George H.W. Bush.

Posada reached Central America in 1985 after escaping from a Venezuelan prison where he had been facing charges from the 1976 Cubana Airlines bombing. Posada, using the name Ramon Medina, teamed up with another Cuban exile, former CIA officer Felix Rodriguez, who reported regularly to Bush's office.

Posada oversaw logistics and served as paymaster for pilots in the contra-supply operation. When one of the contra-supply planes was shot down inside Nicaragua in October 1986, Posada was responsible for alerting U.S. officials to the crisis and then shutting down the operation's safe houses in El Salvador.

Even after the exposure of Posada's role in the contra-supply operation, the U.S. government made no effort to bring the accused terrorist to justice.

Secret History

As for the Cubana Airlines bombing, declassified U.S. documents show that after the plane was blown out of the sky on Oct. 6, 1976, the CIA, then under the direction of George H.W. Bush, quickly identified Posada and Bosch as the masterminds of the Cubana Airlines bombing.

But in fall 1976, Bush's boss, President Gerald Ford, was in a tight election battle with Democrat Jimmy Carter and the Ford administration wanted to keep intelligence scandals out of the newspapers. So Bush and other officials kept the lid on the investigations. [For details, see Robert Parry's Secrecy & Privilege.]

Still, inside the U.S. government, the facts were known. According to a secret CIA cable dated Oct. 14, 1976, intelligence sources in Venezuela relayed information about the Cubana Airlines bombing that tied in anti-communist Cuban extremists Bosch, who had been visiting Venezuela, and Posada, who then served as a senior officer in Venezuela's intelligence agency, DISIP.

The Oct. 14 cable said Bosch arrived in Venezuela in late September 1976 under the protection of Venezuelan President Carlos Andres Perez, a close Washington ally who assigned his intelligence adviser Orlando Garcia "to protect and assist Bosch during his stay in Venezuela."

On his arrival, Bosch was met by Garcia and Posada, according to the report. Later, a fundraising dinner was held in Bosch's honor during which Bosch requested cash from the Venezuelan government in exchange for assurances that Cuban exiles wouldn't demonstrate during Andres Perez's planned trip to the United Nations.

"A few days following the fund-raising dinner, Posada was overheard to say that, 'we are going to hit a Cuban airplane,' and that 'Orlando has the details,'" the CIA report said.

"Following the 6 October Cubana Airline crash off the coast of Barbados, Bosch, Garcia and Posada agreed that it would be best for Bosch to leave Venezuela. Therefore, on 9 October, Posada and Garcia escorted Bosch to the Colombian border, where he crossed into Colombian territory."

The CIA report was sent to CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, as well as to the FBI and other U.S. intelligence agencies, according to markings on the cable.

A Round-up

In South America, investigators began rounding up suspects in the bombing.

Two Cuban exiles, Hernan Ricardo and Freddy Lugo, who had left the Cubana plane in Barbados, confessed that they had planted the bomb. They named Bosch and Posada as the architects of the attack.

A search of Posada's apartment in Venezuela turned up Cubana Airlines timetables and other incriminating documents.

Posada and Bosch were arrested and charged in Venezuela for the Cubana Airlines bombing, but the men denied the accusations. The case soon became a political tug-of-war, since the suspects were in possession of sensitive Venezuelan government secrets that could embarrass President Andres Perez. The case lingered for almost a decade.

After the Reagan-Bush administration took power in Washington in 1981, the momentum for fully unraveling the mysteries of anti-communist terrorist plots dissipated. The Cold War trumped any concern about right-wing terrorism.

By the late 1980s, Orlando Bosch also was out of Venezuela's jails and back in Miami. But Bosch, who had been implicated in about 30 violent attacks, was facing possible deportation by U.S. officials who warned that Washington couldn't credibly lecture other countries about terrorism while protecting a terrorist like Bosch.

But Bosch got lucky. Jeb Bush, then an aspiring Florida politician, led a lobbying drive to prevent the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service from expelling Bosch. In 1990, the lobbying paid dividends when Jeb's dad, President George H.W. Bush, blocked proceedings against Bosch, letting the unapologetic terrorist stay in the United States.

In 1992, also during George H.W. Bush's presidency, the FBI interviewed Posada about the Iran-Contra scandal for 6 ˝ hours at the U.S. Embassy in Honduras.

Posada filled in some blanks about the role of Bush's vice presidential office in the secret contra operation. According to a 31-page summary of the FBI interview, Posada said Bush's national security adviser, Donald Gregg, was in frequent contact with Felix Rodriguez.

"Posada ... recalls that Rodriguez was always calling Gregg," the FBI summary said. "Posada knows this because he's the one who paid Rodriguez' phone bill." After the interview, the FBI agents let Posada walk out of the embassy to freedom. [For details, see Parry's Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press & Project Truth.]

More Attacks

Posada soon returned to his anti-Castro plotting.

In 1994, Posada set out to kill Castro during a trip to Cartagena, Colombia. Posada and five cohorts reached Cartagena, but the plan flopped when security cordons prevented the would-be assassins from getting a clean shot at Castro, according to a Miami Herald account. [Miami Herald, June 7, 1998]

The Herald also described Posada's role in a lethal 1997 bombing campaign against popular hotels and restaurants inside Cuba that killed an Italian tourist. The story cited documentary evidence that Posada arranged payments to conspirators from accounts in the United States.

Posada landed back in jail in 2000 after Cuban intelligence uncovered a plot to assassinate Castro by planting a bomb at a meeting the Cuban leader planned with university students in Panama.

Panamanian authorities arrested Posada and other alleged co-conspirators in November 2000. In April 2004, they were sentenced to eight or nine years in prison for endangering public safety.

Four months after the sentencing, however, lame-duck Panamanian President Mireya Moscoso - who lives in Key Biscayne, Florida, and has close ties to the Cuban-American community and to George W. Bush's administration - pardoned the convicts.

Despite press reports saying Moscoso had been in contact with U.S. officials about the pardons, the State Department denied that it pressured Moscoso to release the Cuban exiles. After the pardons and just two months before Election 2004, three of Posada's co-conspirators - Guillermo Novo Sampol, Pedro Remon and Gaspar Jimenez - arrived in Miami to a hero's welcome, flashing victory signs at their supporters.

While the terrorists celebrated, U.S. authorities watched the men - also implicated in bombings in New York, New Jersey and Florida - alight on U.S. soil. As Washington Post writer Marcela Sanchez noted in a September 2004 article about the Panamanian pardons, "there is something terribly wrong when the United States, after Sept. 11 (2001), fails to condemn the pardoning of terrorists and instead allows them to walk free on U.S. streets." [Washington Post, Sept. 3, 2004]

But a whole different set of standards is now being applied to the seven black terrorism suspects in Miami. Even though they had no clear-cut plans or even the tools to carry out terrorist attacks, they have been rounded up amid great media hoopla.

The American people have been reassured that the terrorists in Miami have been located and are being brought to justice.

Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, Secrecy & Privilege: Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq, can be ordered at secrecyandprivilege.com. It's also available at Amazon.com, as is his 1999 book, Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press & 'Project Truth.'



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Tall story of terror a chilling warning

Monday June 26, 2006
New Zealand Herald

WASHINGTON - The alarming news flashed across television screens in the United States on Friday: Government agents had thwarted an al Qaeda plot, using home-grown American terrorists, to blow up the Sears Tower in Chicago in a ghastly repeat of September 11.

When the dust had settled barely 24 hours later, a rather more modest version of events had emerged. The seven young black men arrested in Miami and Atlanta had never been in touch with al Qaeda, and had no explosives.
Their "plan" to destroy the tallest building in the US was little more than wishful thinking, expressed by one of them to an FBI informant posing as a member of Osama bin Laden's group.

Even the FBI admitted as much. Deputy director John Pistole described the plan on Friday as "aspirational rather than operational" and admitted that none of the five US citizens and two Haitian immigrants arrested had ever featured on a terrorist watch list.

In essence, the entire case rests on conversations between Narseal Batiste, the apparent ringleader, with the informant, who posed as a member of al Qaeda but in fact belonged to the South Florida Terrorist Task Force.

At a meeting "on or about December 16", according to the indictment made public as the men made their first court appearance in Miami, Batiste asked his contact to supply equipment including uniforms, machineguns, explosives, cars and US$50,000 in cash for an "Islamic Army" that would carry out a mission "just as good or greater than 9/11".

In fact, the conspiracy seems to have extended little further than those words. By last month, it had all but fizzled out amid internal squabbling.

Even their religious leanings are in dispute. Neighbours say they were part of a group, Seas of David, that mixes Christian and Islamic elements.

That did not deter the US Attorney-General, Alberto Gonzales, from summoning a press conference in which he denounced an attempt to "wage war against America". But the threat, even he admitted, was not immediate - and those who posed it were in fact merely a few semi-unemployed men, most of them petty criminals, from Liberty City, a poor, black Miami district.

If the case has any significance in the "war on terror", it is not as a present danger, but as a harbinger of possible future risks.

Despite countless scare stories in the media, colour-coded alerts from the Department of Homeland Security and grim official warnings of al Qaeda sleeper cells waiting to do their worst, the US has not suffered a single terrorist attack since September 11, 2001.

Nor have the authorities unearthed much of a threat. The Justice Department claims 401 people have been charged with "terrorism-related offences" since the 2001 attacks, and 212 have been convicted. In fact only a tiny number were real terrorists.

The tendency - duly followed last week by Gonzales - has been to hype. The precedent was famously set by his predecessor, John Ashcroft, who called a press conference during a visit to Moscow in 2002 to announce the arrest of Jose Padilla, the "dirty bomber" said to be preparing to attack Washington with a radioactive device.

Padilla languished incommunicado in a Navy brig without charge for over three years. He has been transferred to a civilian prison, and faces trial in Miami this year on different, much vaguer, terrorist charges.

An alleged sleeper cell was unearthed in Detroit, but those convictions were quashed in 2004 when it emerged that prosecutors had manipulated evidence.

In December 2005, the trial of Sami al-Arian, accused of links with Islamic Jihad terrorists, ended in embarrassment when the Florida university professor was acquitted.

The biggest successes have had little to do with US law enforcement. Richard Reid, who tried to blow up an American Airlines plane with a shoe bomb in December 2001, was stopped by alert flight attendants, while Ahmed Omar Abu Ali, the Virginia student serving a 30-year sentence for threatening to kill President Bush, was caught by police in Saudi Arabia.

But US experts say the dismantling of the Miami plot could be a pointer to things to come, when home-grown terrorists, not foreign-born Islamic radicals, pose the threat. The July 2005 attacks in London are frequently cited as a model, and the arrest in Canada this month of 17 people allegedly planning major attacks also came as a shock south of the border.

What the US said

A group of home-grown al Qaeda sympathisers wanted to "wage war against America" and "kill all the devils we can" in an attack "as good or greater than 9/11".

The group targeted Sears Tower and FBI buildings in Miami.

The alleged ringleader Narseal Batiste asked a supposed al Qaeda contact for machine guns, US$50,000, cars and explosives.

The evidence

The indictment against the group is mainly based on one conversation between Narseal Batiste and an informant he thought was from Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda.

The group had no explosives, and had never met anyone from the terrorist organisation.

Neighbours say their group, called the Seas of David, mixes Christian and Islamic elements.



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FBI Exploits Mentally Ill in "Homegrown" Terrorism Effort

Kurt Nimmo
Sunday June 25th 2006

It is now an established pattern: the government seeks out mental cases and disturbed individuals and turns them into "al-Qaeda" terrorists, or wannabe al-Qaedaites.

Narseal Batiste, "the accused ringleader of a wacky terrorist cell" in Miami, as the New York Daily News puts it, "needs psychiatric help," according to his father, Narcisse Batiste. "He was distraught after his beloved mother, Audrey, died in 2000, relatives told The News, and the next year he left Chicago and dropped out of sight."


From all accounts, Narseal Batiste is not an over-the-top mental case like Zacarias Moussaoui, but it appears he is vulnerable enough to be exploited by the government, determined to fabricate "homegrown" terrorists.

In fact, the government more or less admits it does not have a case against Batiste and his young adult and teenage charges.

"Even as Justice Department officials trumpeted the arrests of seven Florida men accused of planning to wage a 'full ground war against the United States,' they acknowledged the group did not have the means to carry out the plan," reports Knight Ridder. "The Justice Department unveiled the arrests with an orchestrated series of news conferences in two cities, but the severity of the charges compared with the seemingly amateurish nature of the group raised concerns among civil libertarians," who noted that the group had "no weapons, no explosives" and yet the government considers the arrests and case a "major announcement."

If not for the "confidential government informant" inserted in their midst, who convinced them to pledge allegiance to the cartoonish "al-Qaeda," there would be no case.

After "sweeps of various locations in Miami, government agents found no explosives or weapons. Investigators also did not document any direct links to al-Qaeda." But this complete lack of evidence did not stop the FBI. "This group was more aspirational than operational," said John Pistole, the FBI's deputy director. In other words, merely thinking about "al-Qaeda," even if such a thought is planted by an agent provocateur, is illegal, a crime against the state.

George Orwell called this "thoughtcrime," and wrote: "Thoughtcrime is the only crime that matters."

It does not matter if the hapless victims of FBI entrapment in Miami were actually a threat, the point here is they were thinking about "al-Qaeda," never mind this thought was planted in the mind of Narseal Batiste by the FBI.

"U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales held up the case as a good example of the Justice Department's strategy of taking out domestic terrorists before they strike. He said the group is representative of 'homegrown' terrorist cells that operate without ties to a larger group such as al-Qaeda."

Thus we have realized the world envisioned by Philip K. Dick in his 1956 short story, Minority Report, made famous by Steven Spielberg's film by the same name. In the short story and film, it is illegal to think about crime. In the story and film, the government employs "precogs," or "previsions," to detect illegal thoughts. However, in Miami, no such talents were required, as the FBI simply located a man with mental problems and had an agent provocateur insert thoughts in his mind, and then the boom was lowered.

In addition to planting thoughts in the mind of Batiste, the government has characterized the group as Muslim, even though there is no evidence of this, not that evidence matters.

"Despite early reports to the contrary, the men didn't appear to be members of mainstream Muslim communities. A close friend of one of the defendants said Batiste's teachings came from the Moorish Science Temple of America, an early 19th-century religion that blends Christianity, Judaism and Islam with a heavy influence on self-discipline through martial arts."

Even though Knight Ridder makes mention of the fact Batiste and his pathetic crew of impoverished kids have nothing to do with Islam, and include this fact in the second to last paragraph of a follow-up news article, no doubt many Americans, carefully indoctrinated over the last few years, believe "al-Qaeda" is alive and well in Florida, as initial news stories certainly give this impression.

In fact, convincing Americans that "al-Qaeda" sleeper cells-not necessarily Arabs, but in this instance seemingly innocuous African-American kids-may live next door, or reside in the ghetto across town, is what the Justice Department's absurd case is all about.

"The Justice Department made it clear that it is determined to stop people from following the model of al-Qaida," reports the Sun-Sentinel. "There is cause for concern that this ideology of hatred has the reach and tentacles that it appears to have," Jack Riley, a "terrorism expert" at the Rand Corporation, told the newspaper.

Finally, it should not be surprising the corporate media, fully onboard with the insane neocon plan for generational war and its necessary pretexts, including manufacturing pathetic patsies, would run to the Rand Corporation for meaty quotes.

"Covert foreign policy became the standard mode of operation after World War II, which was also when Ford Foundation became a major player for the first time. The institute most involved in classified research was Rand Corporation, set up by the Air Force in 1948. The interlocks between the trustees at Rand, and the Ford, Rockefeller, and Carnegie foundations were so numerous that the Reece Committee listed them in its report (two each for Carnegie and Rockefeller, and three for Ford). Ford gave one million dollars to Rand in 1952 alone, at a time when the chairman of Rand was simultaneously the president of Ford Foundation," writes Daniel Brandt (Philanthropists at War).





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Limbaugh detained at Palm Beach airport

AP
June 27, 2006

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. - Rush Limbaugh was detained for more than three hours Monday at Palm Beach International Airport after authorities said they found a bottle of Viagra in his possession without a prescription.

Customs officials found a prescription bottle labeled as Viagra in his luggage that didn't have Limbaugh's name on it, but that of two doctors, said Paul Miller, spokesman for the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office.

A doctor had prescribed the drug, but it was "labeled as being issued to the physician rather than Mr. Limbaugh for privacy purposes," Roy Black, Limbaugh's attorney, said in a statement.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection examined the 55-year-old radio commentator's luggage after his private plane landed at the airport from the Dominican Republic, said Miller.

The matter was referred to the sheriff's office, whose investigators interviewed Limbaugh. According to Miller, Limbaugh said that the Viagra was for his use, and that he obtained it from his doctors.

Investigators confiscated the drugs, which treats erectile dysfunction, and Limbaugh was released without being charged.

The sheriff's office plans to file a report with the state attorney's office. Miller said it could be a second-degree misdemeanor violation.

Limbaugh reached a deal last month with prosecutors who had accused the conservative talk-show host of illegally deceiving multiple doctors to receive overlapping painkiller prescriptions. Under the deal, the charge, commonly referred to as "doctor shopping," would be dismissed after 18 months if he continues to submit to random drug tests and treatment for his acknowledged addiction to painkillers.



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Scrawled Bush threat sparks California port scare

By Dan Whitcomb
Reuters
Mon Jun 26, 2006

LOS ANGELES - A bomb threat against President George W. Bush and his "Jewish gang" scrawled in a cargo ship prompted authorities to shut down part of a major California port on Monday until investigators determined that no explosives were on the vessel.

Officials shut down a terminal at Port Hueneme, about 60 miles north of Los Angeles, after a dock worker discovered the message inside the refrigerated cargo ship, arriving from Guatemala with a load of bananas.

Laura Eimiller, a spokeswoman for the FBI, said the threat, which was written on a metal pillar in the hold of the ship, the Mild Lotus, read: "nitro + glycerin, a gift for gw bush and his jewish gang."
Nitroglycerine is an explosive liquid that can be used to manufacture explosives like dynamite and for construction and demolition purposes.

Authorities initially said that the entire port was shut down as a precaution but later said that only the terminal and surrounding area were closed to civilian traffic while bomb squads searched for explosives.

Bomb-sniffing dogs were used to search the ship, several surrounding vessels, cargo and buildings. Divers inspected the hull of the ship.

A U.S. Coast Guard spokesman said ship had Panamanian registry but had last docked in Guatemala. An investigation was underway.

State officials who assess possible threats discounted a link to terrorism, but said they would monitor the situation.

"We don't see any apparent connection to terrorism," said Chris Bertelli, a spokesman for the California Office of Homeland Security.

The port of Hueneme, 60 miles north of Los Angeles, is the only commercial deep water port between Los Angeles and San Francisco and serves as a point of import and export for automobiles, produce and forest products.

It is also the only military deep water port between San Diego and Puget Sound in Washington state.

With about half of all U.S. imports arriving at the country's 361 ports each year, a militant attack on the maritime sector could cause hundreds of billions of dollars in damage, in addition to the human toll.

But despite a series of security improvements since September 11, 2001 -- including physical security, ship tracking and identification procedures -- officials say large gaps remain in the long supply chain between the origin of goods and their final destination.

About 10,000 different ships make roughly 72,000 port calls in the United States each year. Only 5 percent of the roughly 9 million containers that come to the United States are examined upon arrival. Officials check them based largely on risk assessments.



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In the Senate, Waving the Flag Amendment

By Charles Babington and Jonathan Weisman
Tuesday, June 27, 2006; Page A19

Just in time for the election season, the Senate is plunging into a volatile (and some say cynical) issue for the first time in six years: whether to amend the Constitution so that Congress can ban desecration of the American flag.

Even though many voters may be hard-pressed to remember the last time they saw Old Glory being torched, the Senate will devote a good chunk of the week to the proposed amendment, which appears to be within a vote or two of passage. Adoption will require a two-thirds majority, or 67 votes if all 100 senators are present. In 2000, the amendment fell four votes short.
The House embraced the bill last year, 286 to 130. Should the Senate follow suit, three-fourths of the states would have to ratify it to make it the 28th Amendment.

Debate began yesterday, with senators recalling that the Supreme Court in 1989 ruled that flag-burning is a form of speech protected by the First Amendment. The ruling did not sit well with Sen. Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah), who told an empty Senate chamber yesterday: "Government exists because of the people. . . . Yet for too long, some unelected judges have mistakenly concluded that it is the courts that have exclusive dominion over the Constitution."

Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.) differed. "The danger of this amendment is that it would strike at the values the flag represents and the rights that have made this nation a vibrant democratic republic in which we have enjoyed freedom of religion, freedom of the press, freedom of expression and freedom to think as individuals," he said.

Sen. Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.) said the GOP is pushing the amendment to fire up its base this fall. "The real issue isn't the protection of the American flag," he said. "It's the protection of the Republican majority."

Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) cast the debate in loftier terms. "Many Americans have come to see the flag as a sacred symbol of our nation and its values," he said. "Those who dislike American values have the right to express their opinions even when they are offensive. But I do not believe that the right to desecrate a symbol like our flag belongs in the same category."

Frist Tests Waters for Estate Tax Cut

The flag debate will dominate floor action today, but Frist may also take up House-passed legislation deeply cutting -- but not eliminating -- the estate tax. That would set up a vote Thursday on whether to proceed to the bill, and another showdown on what Republicans call "the death tax."

The legislation, which passed the House last Thursday, would exempt estates worth as much as $5 million -- $10 million for couples -- from taxation indefinitely. The tax rate on estates worth more than the exemption level up to $25 million would be set at the same rates that apply to capital gains -- now 15 percent but scheduled to rise to 20 percent in 2011. The tax for estates worth more than $25 million would be twice the capital gains rate. The bipartisan Joint Committee on Taxation estimated that the estate tax cut would cost the government $279 billion in revenue over the next 10 years.

House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Bill Thomas (R-Calif.) added a $940 million tax break for the timber industry to pressure Washington state's two Democratic senators, Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell, to go along.

Frist aides have made clear they will move forward only if they have 60 votes sewed up to overcome a filibuster. "When we go for it, we want the best chance to succeed, not another takeoff that flies into the side of a mountain," said Eric Ueland, Frist's chief of staff, referring to a vote this month on full repeal that fell three votes short of the 60 needed to cut off debate.

At this point, they don't have the votes. Democrats are balking, saying the bill may be better than full repeal but still represents an enormous gift to the super-wealthy. Some Republicans, such as Sens. Olympia J. Snowe (Maine) and George V. Voinovich (Ohio), continue to fret over the price tag. And Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.), who championed the search for a permanent estate tax compromise that would fall short of full repeal, is questioning whether he can support legislation that would keep the top tax rate on inheritances as high as 40 percent.

Both sides say Frist and his allies are working extremely hard to get to 60 votes. "We're making a list, checking it twice, trying to figure out who's naughty and nice," Ueland said.

House to Vote on Offshore Drilling Ban

In the House, Republicans will once again focus on energy, this time offshore oil and gas exploration. Legislation scheduled for a vote Thursday would lift a 25-year ban on energy exploration as close as 100 miles from the coastline while permanently banning exploration nearer to shore.

As voters rev their engines for the Fourth of July weekend, Republicans hope to portray Democrats as obstructing legislation to lessen dependence on foreign oil and lower energy prices. But Florida and California lawmakers from both parties have staunchly opposed offshore drilling, which Democrats portray as hardly worth the environmental price.

Comment: While Rome burns, the representatives are fiddling around.

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Raging Planet


Huge Asteroid to Fly Past Earth July 3

Joe Rao
SPACE.com
Mon Jun 26, 2006

An asteroid possibly as large as a half-mile or more in diameter is rapidly approaching the Earth. There is no need for concern, for no collision is in the offing, but the space rock will make an exceptionally close approach to our planet early on Monday, July 3, passing just beyond the Moon's average distance from Earth.

Astronomers will attempt to get a more accurate assessment of the asteroid's size by "pinging" it with radar.

And skywatchers with good telescopes and some experience just might be able to get a glimpse of this cosmic rock as it streaks rapidly past our planet in the wee hours Monday. The closest approach occurs late Sunday for U.S. West Coast skywatchers.
The asteroid, designated 2004 XP14, was discovered on Dec. 10, 2004 by the Lincoln Laboratory Near Earth Asteroid Research (LINEAR), a continuing camera survey to keep watch for asteroids that may pass uncomfortably close to Earth.

Although initially there were concerns that this asteroid might possibly impact Earth later this century and thus merit special monitoring, further analysis of its orbit has since ruled out any such collision, at least in the foreseeable future.

Size not known

Asteroid 2004 XP14 is a member of a class of asteroids known as Apollo, which have Earth-crossing orbits. The name comes from 1862 Apollo, the first asteroid of this group to be discovered. There are now 1,989 known Apollos.

The size of 2004 XP 14 is not precisely known. But based on its brightness, the diameter is believed to be somewhere in the range of 1,345 to 3,018-feet (410 to 920 meters). That's between a quarter mile and just over a half-mile wide.

Due to the proximity of its orbit to Earth [Map] and its estimated size, this object has been classified as a "Potentially Hazardous Asteroid" (PNA) by the Minor Planet Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts. There are currently 783 PNAs.

The latest calculations show that 2004 XP14 will pass closest to Earth at 04:25 UT on July 3 (12:25 a.m. EDT or 9:25 p.m. PDT on July 2). The asteroid's distance from Earth at that moment will be 268,624-miles (432,308 km), or just 1.1 times the Moon's average distance from Earth.

Spotting 2004 XP14 will be a challenge, best accomplished by seasoned observers with moderate-sized telescopes.

On April 13, 2029, observers in Asia and North Africa will have a chance to see another asteroid, but without needing a telescope. Asteroid 99942 Apophis, about 1,000 feet (300 meters) wide, is expected to be visible to the naked eye as it passes within 20,000 miles (32,000 km). Astronomers say an asteroid that large comes that close about once every 1,500 years.

Observing plans

As 2004 XP14 makes its closest approach to Earth, astronomers will attempt to gauge its size and shape by analysis of very high frequency radio waves reflected from its surface.

Such radar measurements of the exact distance and velocity of the asteroid will allow for precise information on its orbit. From this scientists can also discern details of the asteroid's mass, as well as a measurement of its density, which is a very important indicator of its overall composition and internal structure.

Astronomers plan to utilize NASA's 70-meter (230-foot) diameter Goldstone radar, the largest and most sensitive antenna in its Deep Space Network. Located in California's Mojave Desert, the Goldstone antenna has been used to bounce radio signals off other Near-Earth asteroids many times before, and it is now being readied to "ping" 2004 XP14 on July 3, 4 and 5.

Augmenting the Goldstone observations will be radar observations scheduled at Evpatoria in the Ukraine, commencing several hours prior to the July 3 observations at Goldstone.

Editor's Note: A SPACE.com viewer's guide for 2004 XP14 will be presented in Joe Rao's weekly Night Sky column on Friday, June 30.



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President Bush Says Climate Change Is A Serious Problem

AFP
Jun 26, 2006

Washington - US President George W. Bush on Monday said it was time to move past a debate over whether human activity is a significant factor behind global warming and into a discussion of possible remedies. "I have said consistently that global warming is a serious problem. There's a debate over whether it's manmade or naturally caused," Bush told reporters.

"We ought to get beyond that debate and start implementing the technologies necessary to enable us to achieve a couple of big objectives: One, be good stewards of the environment; two, become less dependent on foreign sources of oil, for economic reasons as for national security reasons," he said.

Bush cited "clean-coal technology," efforts to develop automobiles powered by hydrogen or ethanol, and his push for the United States to develop significant new nuclear energy capabilities.

"The truth of the matter is, if this country wants to get rid of its greenhouse gases, we've got to have the nuclear power industry be vibrant and viable," he said.




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Top U.S. court to hear global warming case

Last Updated Mon, 26 Jun 2006 14:44:40 EDT
CBC News

The U.S. Supreme Court agreed Monday to hear a case on whether the Bush administration should be forced to regulate carbon dioxide to fight global warming.

The decision comes after a federal appeals court ruled against the plaintiffs, which consist of states, cities and environmental groups.

At issue is the responsibilities of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
The group argues that under the U.S. Clean Air Act, the EPA must enforce tighter standards on motor vehicles to limit carbon dioxide emissions. Many scientists say there is growing evidence that carbon dioxide is trapping the earth's heat and contributing to global warming.

In their appeal of the federal court ruling, the group argued that the case "goes to the heart of the EPA's statutory responsibilities to deal with the most pressing environmental problem of our time."

But Washington says the EPA has discretion over whether to regulate carbon dioxide emissions. The administration also argues that carbon dioxide is not a pollutant under the federal clean air law.

It says the EPA should not be required to "embark on the extraordinarily complex and scientifically uncertain task of addressing the global issue of greenhouse gas emissions."

Instead, the administration argues there are voluntary ways to address climate change.

The lawsuit was prompted after the EPA's top lawyer concluded in 2003 that the agency did not have the authority to regulate carbon dioxide under the Clean Air Act. This reversed a legal opinion issued by the Clinton administration.

The plaintiffs include the states of California, Connecticut, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington.

A number of cities and environmental groups are also part of the lawsuit. They include Baltimore, New York City and Washington D.C., the Pacific island of America Samoa, the Union of Concerned Scientists, Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth.



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Death toll in India rains, floods tops 200

AFP
Tue Jun 27, 2006

LUCKNOW, India - Another 11 people have died from lightning strikes and heavy rains in India, officials have said, taking the death toll since the monsoon began lashing the country last month to 215.

"At least 11 people died of rain-related incidents in the past 24 hours. Two died due to house collapse while the rest died of lightning," government official Manish Awasthi told AFP in Lucknow, capital of northern Uttar Pradesh state.

At least 80 people have died in the state as annual summer monsoon rains tore through India earlier than usual.
Western Maharashtra state has also been badly hit with 74 deaths reported so far, mainly from lightning, while a few people drowned at sea.

In July 2005, hundreds of people perished when the state capital Mumbai was hit by record rainfalls.

In the northeastern state of Assam, some 600,000 people were displaced by floods earlier this month but the waters have begun to recede and many people are returning to their homes, officials said.

The monsoon hit India's Andaman archipelago on May 18 and then swirled up the west coast states of Kerala, Maharashtra and Gujarat. It is expected to reach northern states this week.



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Heavy Rains Flood Highways Around D.C.

By DAVID DISHNEAU
AP
Jun 26, 2006

WASHINGTON - More than a foot of rain washed out highways around the nation's capital Monday, toppled a 100-year-old elm tree on the White House lawn and caused flooding that closed major government departments and the National Archives, where the Declaration of Independence is kept under glass.

Motorists were stranded during the morning rush hour, commuter trains were halted and emergency crews used boats to rescue dozens of people marooned by high water.

Many government employees were told to stay home, and tourists found that some of the major landmarks that had drawn them to Washington were closed.
"I just wanted to hear about stuff about America that I haven't heard in my history books," 10-year-old Loria Hawn of Laurinburg, N.C., said with disappointment outside the locked National Museum of American History.

The National Archives - where the Declaration of Independence and Constitution are safe under glass - was shut down because the moat surrounding the building on Pennsylvania Avenue had flooded, spokeswoman Susan Cooper said. All records and national treasures were "safe and dry," she said.

The archives will remain closed Tuesday, just days before the Fourth of July weekend.

Flooding also closed IRS headquarters, the Commerce Department and the Justice Department, but the federal government as a whole remained in business.

The National Gallery of Art shut down because of a weather-related steam outage. The gallery uses steam to maintain the proper environment to preserve its priceless collections, a museum spokeswoman said. But the artworks were reported to be in no danger.

The National Zoo was closed to cars because of flooding in the parking lot but was open to pedestrians. Then it shut down entirely in the afternoon.

The tree that fell on the White House front lawn blocked a road, but visitors were not affected since no tours had been scheduled Monday, the National Park Service said.

More than 7 inches of rain fell in 24 hours in the city at the National Arboretum on Sunday and Monday, with up to 14 inches in parts of Delaware and 12 inches at Federalsburg, Md., on the Eastern Shore.

Just outside the city, more than 10 inches fell at Hyattsville, Md., where authorities evacuated 15 homes and used boats to rescue 69 people who were trapped inside, said Mark Brady, a Prince George's County fire and rescue spokesman. Boats also were also used to rescue 30 people marooned in Chevy Chase, Md., and some motorists had to be rescued from flooded underpasses in Washington during the night.

A mudslide piled debris as much as 5 feet deep on the Capital Beltway, which carries Interstate 95 around Washington. Motorists were urged to avoid downtown Washington and other areas because of mudslides, fallen trees and street flooding.

"The fewer people on the road, the better," Harford County, Md., spokeswoman Susan Collins said.

The Potomac River's Northwest Branch flooded U.S. 29, a major commuter route through Silver Spring, Md., with 5 feet of water and left a layer of mud that closed it for nearly a mile. "I've never seen anything like it," said Wayne A. Mowdy of the State Highway administration, who has worked in the area for 28 years.

In Elkton, Md., a 6-foot wide, 2-foot deep hole opened on I-95, blocking traffic in two northbound lanes, state police said.

Amtrak and commuter rail service also were disrupted. Metro subway service in Washington was interrupted during the morning commute by water on the electrified rails, but the trains were running again by noon.

Thousands of homes and businesses inside the city and in the Virginia and Maryland suburbs lost power.

Rain is forecast in the Washington area and other parts of the East Coast every day this week because of a low-pressure system stalled off the coast, the National Weather Service said.

"It's going to be a challenging week," said Maryland State Highway Administration spokesman David Buck.

A single-car crash that killed one person near Bowie, Md., was probably related to the weather, authorities said.



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Lightning Sparks New Wildfires in Nevada

Tuesday June 27, 2006 11:01 AM
By SCOTT SONNER
Associated Press Writer

RENO, Nev. (AP) - Lightning bolts sparked another half dozen new wildfires that were burning around Reno and Carson City early Tuesday, worsening the damage from blazes that already have consumed about 50,000 acres of northern Nevada.

More than two dozen fires remained active, many out of control, reaching from the heavily timbered western front of the Sierra Nevada near Reno to the sage- and grass-filled rangeland near Elko, 300 miles east.
In Arizona, a 58,300-acre wildfire north of Grand Canyon National Park jumped the only highway leading to the remote North Rim, closing the road and marooning hundreds of tourists and workers. The fire was burning about 30 miles from the park, but officials said no one was in any danger.

"The canyon is covered in smoke,'' Amber Boeldt of Globe said in a telephone interview from the Grand Canyon Lodge, where she and her family were staying. "That's all you can smell.''

An estimated 200 of the 950 stranded people drove for two hours on a forest to Fredonia, said park spokeswoman Maureen Oltrogge. Crews planned to evaluate conditions Tuesday morning to determine whether it was safe to escort out the remaining people.

As many as 300 homes and businesses east of Carson City in the Mound House area were threatened by a pair of brush fires covering an estimated 1,500 acres that forced the temporary closure of part of U.S. Highway 50.

Nevada officials earlier ordered evacuations in two rural communities near Elko and flames burned within a quarter mile of homes 15 miles northwest of Reno, but no injuries were reported and no homes faced immediate threat. Some residents also voluntarily evacuated from the rural valleys on the northern outskirts of Reno, where some of the new lightning fires that began Monday were burning an estimated 2,000 acres.

Nevada's biggest fire has grown to 40,000 acres about 20 miles west of Elko near Carlin, where the University of Nevada Fire Science Academy is located along I-80.

"We do a lot of real-life fire training, but we never expected this,'' said Denise Baclawski, the academy's executive director. "All night long we had staff members work to protect the facility.''

Northwest of Reno, a 1,500-acre wildfire in the Sierra just across the Nevada-California line was estimated to be 50 percent contained early Tuesday and some of those 250 firefighters were being transferred elsewhere.

About 90 miles north along U.S. Highway 395 near Susanville, Calif., an 100-acre fire forced evacuations of as many as 100 homes before residents began returning Monday night.

Near Sedona, Ariz., fire officials predicted that a 4,200-acre fire that forced hundreds to evacuate would be contained Wednesday. Owners of the roughly 400 homes and scattered businesses still evacuated were expected be allowed to return Tuesday night.

Elsewhere, a 3,200-acre blaze a mile west of the northern New Mexico town of Gallina calmed. Crews were still fighting the fire, though evacuees from 120 homes in three subdivisions were allowed to return Monday.

As of Monday, wildfires around the United States had blackened 3.3 million acres this year, compared with 1.2 million acres on average at this point in the fire season, the National Interagency Fire Center reported. However, much of this year's acreage resulted from huge grass fires in Texas and Oklahoma this spring, not from forest fires.



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Aggressive Peacocks Ruffle Texas Feathers

Monday, 26 June 2006, 12:00 CDT

ARLINGTON, Texas - With attacks reported on people and cars, residents of an Arlington neighborhood say a flock of peacocks has become uncharacteristically aggressive as four males seek the attention of one hen.

Dorothy Nelson, a longtime resident, said the behavior is a classic symptom of having "too many men."

The city's Community Service Department called a neighborhood meeting last week to discuss what to do about the flock.

"What happens sometimes is the peacock male will see its reflection in the car's paint and think it's another male peacock, then move to protect his territory," said Mike Bass, the department's assistant director.
Residents of the Fannin Farm neighborhood, which is bisected by a 106-acre greenbelt, said the peacocks have been there for at least seven years.

One woman said her daughter was scratched on the stomach by one of the peacocks. Other neighbors complained about the birds' feeding on gardens.

"There are neighbors who will not visit my home any more because of the peacocks," resident Elfreda Makil said. "Not everyone's going to love them."

Sandy Vaughn, a flock defender, has placed mirrors in her yard to attract the attention of the alpha male, which some neighbors call "Big Daddy."

"He pecks at the mirrors, but he's not broken one yet," Vaughn said.

Neighborhood residents decided at the Thursday meeting to place more mirrors in the neighborhood to try to hold the peacocks' attention and keep them away from people and vehicles.

They also agreed to reassess the situation after mating season, with thinning the flock remaining an option.

Several residents opposed the idea of trapping and relocating the flock's alpha male. Resident Charlotte Shaw said people have come to associate the neighborhood with peacocks.

"It isn't just us that enjoys these birds, it's all of Arlington that enjoys these birds," Shaw said. "These birds belong to everyone."





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Money Talks


'Breathtaking' Waste and Fraud in Hurricane Aid

By ERIC LIPTON
The New York Times
June 27, 2006

WASHINGTON - Among the many superlatives associated with Hurricane Katrina can now be added this one: it produced one of the most extraordinary displays of scams, schemes and stupefying bureaucratic bungles in modern history, costing taxpayers up to $2 billion.

Gregory D. Kutz, a G.A.O. official, testified before a House panel about fraud and held up one of the $2,000 debit cards given out by FEMA.

A hotel owner in Sugar Land, Tex., has been charged with submitting $232,000 in bills for phantom victims. And roughly 1,100 prison inmates across the Gulf Coast apparently collected more than $10 million in rental and disaster-relief assistance.

There are the bureaucrats who ordered nearly half a billion dollars worth of mobile homes that are still empty, and renovations for a shelter at a former Alabama Army base that cost about $416,000 per evacuee.
And there is the Illinois woman who tried to collect federal benefits by claiming she watched her two daughters drown in the rising New Orleans waters. In fact, prosecutors say, the children did not exist.

The tally of ignoble acts linked to Hurricane Katrina, pulled together by The New York Times from government audits, criminal prosecutions and Congressional investigations, could rise because the inquiries are under way. Even in Washington, a city accustomed to government bloat, the numbers are generating amazement.

"The blatant fraud, the audacity of the schemes, the scale of the waste - it is just breathtaking," said Senator Susan Collins, Republican of Maine, and chairwoman of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.

Such an outcome was feared soon after Congress passed the initial hurricane relief package, as officials at the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the American Red Cross acknowledged that their systems were overwhelmed and tried to create new ones on the fly.

"We did, in fact, put into place never-before-used and untested processes," Donna M. Dannels, acting deputy director of recovery at FEMA, told a House panel this month. "Clearly, because they were untested, they were more subject to error and fraud."

Officials in Washington say they recognized that a certain amount of fraud or improper payments is inevitable in any major disaster, as the government's mission is to rapidly distribute emergency aid. They typically send out excessive payments that represent 1 percent to 3 percent of the relief distributed, money they then ask people to give back.

What was not understood until now was just how large these numbers could become.

The estimate of up to $2 billion in fraud and waste represents nearly 11 percent of the $19 billion spent by FEMA on Hurricanes Katrina and Rita as of mid-June, or about 6 percent of total money that has been obligated.

"This started off as a disaster-relief program, but it turned into a cash cow," said Representative Michael McCaul, Republican of Texas, a former federal prosecutor and now chairman of a House panel investigating storm waste and fraud.

The waste ranged from excessive loads of ice to higher-than-necessary costs on the multibillion-dollar debris removal effort. Some examples are particularly stark.

The $7.9 million spent to renovate the former Fort McClellan Army base in Anniston, Ala., included fixing up a welcome center, clinic and gymnasium, scrubbing away mold and installing a protective fence between the site and a nearby firing range. But when the doors finally opened, only about 10 people showed up each night, leading FEMA to shut down the shelter within one month.

The mobile homes, costing $34,500 each, were supposed to provide temporary housing to hurricane victims. But after Louisiana officials balked at installing them inland, FEMA had no use for them. Nearly half, or about 10,000, of the $860 million worth of units now sit at an airfield in Arkansas, where FEMA is paying $250,000 a month to store them.

The most recent audit came from the Government Accountability Office, which this month estimated that perhaps as much as 21 percent of the $6.3 billion given directly to victims might have been improperly distributed.

"There are tools that are available to get money quickly to individuals and to get disaster relief programs running quickly without seeing so much fraud and waste," said Gregory D. Kutz, managing director of the forensic audits unit at the G.A.O. "But it wasn't really something that FEMA put a high priority on. So it was easy to commit fraud without being detected."

The most disturbing cases, said David R. Dugas, the United States attorney in Louisiana, who is leading a storm antifraud task force for the Justice Department, are those involving government officials accused of orchestrating elaborate scams.

One Louisiana Department of Labor clerk, Wayne P. Lawless, has been charged with issuing about 80 fraudulent disaster unemployment benefit cards in exchange for bribes of up to $300 per application. Mr. Lawless, a state contract worker, announced to one man he helped apply for hurricane benefits that he wanted to "get something out of it," the affidavit said. His lawyer did not respond to several messages left at his office and home for comment.

"The American people are the most generous in the world in responding to a disaster," Mr. Dugas said. "We won't tolerate people in a position of public trust taking advantage of the situation."

Two other men, Mitchell Kendrix of Memphis and Paul Nelson of Lisbon, Me., have pleaded guilty in connection with a scheme in Mississippi in which Mr. Kendrix, a representative for the Army Corps of Engineers, took $100 bribes in exchange for approving phantom loads of hurricane debris from Mr. Nelson.

In New Orleans, two FEMA officials, Andrew Rose and Loyd Holliman, both of Colorado, have pleaded guilty to taking $20,000 in bribes in exchange for inflating the count on the number of meals a contractor was serving disaster workers. And a councilman in St. Tammany Parish, La., Joseph Impastato, has also been charged with trying to extort $100,000 from a debris removal contractor. Mr. Impastato's lawyer, Karl J. Koch, said he was confident his client would be cleared.

A program set up by the American Red Cross and financed by FEMA that provided free hotel rooms to Hurricane Katrina victims also resulted in extraordinary abuse and waste, investigators have found.

First, because the Red Cross did not keep track of the hundreds of thousands of recipients - they were only required to provide a ZIP code from the hurricane zone to check in - FEMA frequently sent rental assistance checks to people getting free hotel rooms, the G.A.O. found.

In turn, some hotel managers or owners, like Daniel Yeh, of Sugar Land, exploited the lack of oversight, investigators have charged, and submitted bills for empty rooms or those occupied by paying guests or employees. Mr. Yeh submitted $232,000 in false claims, his arrest affidavit said. His lawyer, Robert Bennett, said that Mr. Yeh was mentally incompetent and that the charges should be dismissed.

And Tina M. Winston of Belleville, Ill., was charged this month with claiming that her two daughters had died in the flooding in New Orleans. But prosecutors said that the children never existed and that Ms. Winston was living in Illinois at the time of the storm. The public defender representing Ms. Winston did not respond to a request for comment.

Charities also were vulnerable to profiteers. In Burbank, Calif., a couple has been charged with collecting donations outside a store by posing as Red Cross workers. In Bakersfield, Calif., 75 workers at a Red Cross call center, their friends and relatives have been charged in a scheme to steal hundreds of thousands of dollars in relief.

To date, Mr. Dugas said, federal prosecutors have filed hurricane-related criminal charges against 335 individuals. That represents a record number of indictments from a single hurricane season, Justice Department officials said. Separately, Red Cross officials say they are investigating 7,100 cases of possible fraud.

Congressional investigators, meanwhile, have referred another 7,000 cases of possible fraud to prosecutors, including more than 1,000 prison inmates who collected more than $12 million in federal aid, much of it in the form of rental assistance.

Investigators also turned up one individual who had received 26 federal disaster relief payments totaling $139,000, using 13 Social Security numbers, all based on claims of damages for bogus addresses.

Thousands more people may be charged before the five-year statute of limitations on most of these crimes expires, investigators said.

There are bigger cases of government waste or fraud in United States history. The Treasury Department, for example, estimated in 2005 that Americans in a single year had improperly been granted perhaps $9 billion in unjustified claims under the Earned-Income Tax Credit. The Department of Health and Human Services in 2001 estimated that nearly $12 billion in Medicare benefit payments in the previous year had been based on improper or fraudulent complaints.

Auditors examining spending in Iraq also have documented hundreds of millions in questionable spending or abuse. But Mr. Kutz of the accountability office said that in all of his investigative work, he had never encountered the range of abuses he has seen with Hurricane Katrina.

R. David Paulison, the new FEMA director, said in an interview on Friday that much work had already been done to prevent such widespread fraud, including automated checks to confirm applicants' identities.

"We will be able to tell who you are, if you live where you said you do," Mr. Paulison said.

But Senator Collins said she had heard such promises before, including after Hurricane Frances in 2004 in which FEMA gave out millions of dollars in aid to Miami-Dade County residents, even though there was little damage.

Mr. Kutz said he too was not convinced that the agency was ready.

"I still don't think they fully understand the depth of the problem," he said.



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War is Still a Racket

By Charles Sullivan
06/26/06 "Information Clearing House"

"Our whole history shows we have never fought a defensive war." : --USMC General Smedley Butler, 1933

It is well documented that all governments lie. It is also well known that they lie more when it comes to war. A government that proposes to carry out war that will not end in our lifetimes lies incessantly and we must stop giving it our allegiance. We must refuse to give it our children. Let us evict the military recruiters from our schools and the nation's shopping malls. Without fodder the cannons of militarism and empire cannot function.
Our soldiers have nothing to gain by going to war and everything to lose. War is a rich man's device that, if the truth were known, ignores the will of the people who have no say in it. Modern wars have no heroes but they inevitably produce atrocities and countless innocent victims. There can be no moral justification for civilized people of any nationality taking up arms against one another, unless one nation is directly assaulted by another. War is the tool of barbarians and tyrants and they are provoked by cowards hiding in safe places.

The underlying reasons for war are always cloaked in darkness and secrecy; otherwise, no sane person would fight them and we would be forced to live in relative accord. Our Plutocratic rulers, however, believe that war is more profitable than peace. Defense contractors cannot make billions by waging peace. Besides, what U.S. president would boast of being the "peace time" president? There is no bravado in peace. Armed to the teeth, the American hero, as exemplified by and glorified in Hollywood, are invariably men of extreme violence.

While those who initiate war invariably cloak their intentions in the language of patriotism, wars always have economic and ideological causes. In America the causes of war have their origins in corporate Plutocracy. Here, war is initiated at the behest of a corporation or a group of corporations doing business in a foreign country. The usual cause is that a foreign government has imposed some kind of restriction upon one these corporations. In the most virulent cases these countries will not allow their natural capital to be plundered by corporate marauders or privatized and exported. Some countries even insist upon public ownership of their raw materials which makes them the greatest menace to peace.

Nations that have not adopted capitalism as their religion traditionally refuse to allow their resources or their people to be exploited for profit. These nations nationalize their assets and rather than invading and occupying other nations, they provide free health care, unlimited education and other programs of social and spiritual uplift to their citizens. These are the dangers of socialism and communism that we were indoctrinated against since birth; the greatest scourge of evil the world has ever known. This is what they teach us in school and it is ingrained in our psyche to the grave.

Using the tax base for the public good, to create a prosperous peace time economy for all, of course, is positively un-American and anti-capitalist. It is a dangerous ideology that must not be allowed to spread, lest it result in eruptions of democracy, prolonged outbursts of peace and the equitable distribution of goods and wealth. If allowed to flourish, socialism would mean the abolition of Plutocracy and the end of socioeconomic class divisions. It would mean the emancipation of the working class from their Plutocratic rulers.

The Plutocrats know in their hearts of stone that the people lack the intelligence and wisdom to self govern. They know that we require leaders who are our moral and intellectual superiors who can teach us the value of free markets, fair trade, conquest, private ownership and insatiable greed. Thank God, we have them to look after us and to grind us into hamburger for consumption by the global elite.

In a nutshell, that is what war is about as it pertains to the American experiment. There are no noble causes to fight and die for. War is about private ownership of everything and everyone; the commodification of nature and people, subjugated to rule by a corrupt global economic elite. War is the result of humankind's oldest and worst nemesis-greed and lust for power over the lives of others.

War is comprised of roughly equal parts racism, fervent nationalism, propaganda and lies, herd mentality, religion, and the private ownership of materials and labor. War is the sum of humankind's worst attributes, bought and paid for in blood.

As terrible as war is, perhaps it exacts its greatest toll on the combatants themselves-the soldiers. Acting in the belief that they are spreading light into the darkness of the world they are, in fact, doing exactly the opposite. They are stamping out the light of understanding, rationality, and hope. The soldier thus becomes the horrible thing they are vainly trying to destroy. All of this is possible because they have blindly followed men without hearts and conscience, men devoid of souls, who have misled them into the burning depths of hell from which there is no way out.

This is the sad reality we are witnessing in Iraq and the 135 nations where our armed forces are stationed, carrying out the sociopathic agenda of global domination and empire. Those whose minds are not truly their own are susceptible to control by the psychopaths who would use them for evil, just as soldiers have traditionally been the pawns of kings and emperors through the ages.

The lies espoused by our so called leaders do not matter on the battlefield. They do not matter when the bodies come home in oversized cardboard boxes, hauled by fork lifts to airport curbs and deposited at the feet of grief-stricken families like a commodity. In a sense, that is what they are. This is war's assembly line, where the bodies are packaged and sent home like a parcel, with the flag as a corporate logo printed on a box with the stamp "Made in America"; where lives are converted into cash for the global elite, a gift from the Plutocracy.

General Smedley Butler was right when he said in 1933 that war is a racket. It still is and always will be. War is the ultimate contempt for life; the ultimate betrayal of human potential.

Charles Sullivan is a photographer, free lance writer and social activist residing somewhere in the hinterland of West Virginia. He welcomes your comments at earthdog@highstream.net



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Wars force Army equipment costs to triple

By LOLITA C. BALDOR
Associated Press
June 27, 2006

WASHINGTON - The annual cost of replacing, repairing and upgrading Army equipment in Iraq and Afghanistan is expected to more than triple next year to more than $17 billion, according to Army documents obtained by the Associated Press.

From 2002 to 2006, the Army spent an average of $4 billion a year in annual equipment costs. But as the war takes a harder toll on the military, that number is projected to balloon to more than $12 billion for the federal budget year that starts next Oct. 1, the documents show.

The $17 billion also includes an additional $5 billion in equipment expenses that the Army requested in previous years but has not yet been provided.
The latest costs include the transfer of more than 1,200 2 1/2-ton trucks, nearly 1,100 Humvees and $8.8 million in other equipment from the U.S. Army to the Iraqi security forces.

Army and Marine Corps leaders are expected to testify before Congress Tuesday and outline the growing costs of the war - with estimates that it will cost between $12 billion and $13 billion a year for equipment repairs, upgrades and replacements from now on.

The Marine Corps has said in recent testimony before Congress that it would need nearly $12 billion to replace and repair all the equipment worn out or lost to combat in the past four years. So far, the Marines have received $1.6 billion toward those costs to replace and repair the equipment.

According to the Army, the $17 billion includes:

-$2.1 billion in equipment that must be replaced because of battle losses.

-About $6.5 billion for repairs.

-About $8.4 billion to rebuild or upgrade equipment.

One of the growing costs is the replacement of Humvees, which are wearing out more quickly because of the added armor they are carrying to protect soldiers from roadside bombs. The added weight is causing them to wear out faster, decreasing the life of the vehicles.

Congress has provided about $21 billion for equipment costs in emergency supplemental budget bills from 2002-06. All the war equipment expenses have been funded through those emergency bills, and not in the regular fiscal-year budgets.

Pentagon officials have estimated that such emergency bills would have to continue two years beyond the time the U.S. pulls out of Iraq in order to fully replace, repair and rebuild all of the needed equipment.

The push for additional equipment funding comes after the House last week passed a $427 billion defense spending bill for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1, which includes $50 billion for military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. A separate $66 billion emergency funding bill for the two wars was approved earlier in the month.

War-related costs since 2001 are approaching half a trillion dollars.



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Congress weighs estate-tax break for wealthy

By Mark Trumbull and Gail Russell Chaddock | Staff writers of The Christian Science Monitor

BOSTON AND WASHINGTON - More than $40 trillion in personal wealth is expected to change hands in America during the next five decades, as baby boomers and their children transfer wealth to heirs. Congress has to decide how big Uncle Sam's share will be.

Republican lawmakers hope to permanently reduce the estate tax this summer. The move could allow more of that $40 trillion to escape the tax.
Those who stand to reap the big gains are billionaires, millionaires, and their heirs. But every taxpayer has a stake in the outcome. An estate-tax overhaul could affect the nation's social structure and the tax burden on ordinary Americans for years to come.

"The revenue involved is not trivial," says Joel Slemrod, a University of Michigan economist. "What makes it more important, though, is this is by far the most progressive tax we have. [A large reduction] would certainly change in a substantial way who is bearing the tax burden."

The estate tax has stirred controversy ever since its 1916 launch, but as more Americans grow wealthier - and as the gap between rich and poor grows wider - this once-in-a-generation tax has moved to the political foreground.

Last week, the House - including all but two Republicans and 43 Democrats - voted for a major permanent cut in the tax. The Senate is now considering its own rollback legislation. To those who want to abolish the tax altogether, these moves represent an opportunity to bring their goal one step closer.

Other lawmakers see the new legislation as a welcome middle ground in a contentious debate that has simmered ever since President Bush took office in 2001. It would permanently boost the estate value exempt from taxation above the $1 million level. And a new law could remove what many see as morbid incentives in current law, which make deaths in 2010 financially advantageous.

Under Mr. Bush's 2001 tax cuts, the estate tax rate is being reduced, and the exemption amount raised every year until 2010, when the tax disappears altogether. But after that, current law allows the tax to return in full force: The first $1 million of estate value is exempt, with the rest facing as much as a 55 percent tax.

"Compromise in Congress is the answer," says attorney Sandy Kraemer of Colorado Springs, Colo., author of "60-Minute Estate Planner." "It's critically important that we provide a flow of inheritance from generation to generation. On the other hand, we do not want to see huge amounts of wealth pooled in families that can buy and sell elections."

At the extremes on this issue, he says, are socialism and feudalism. A total confiscation of estates would undercut America's traditional capitalistic incentives, hurting the economy. By contrast, absent any tax on wealth or estates, a financial aristocracy is likely to gain increasing clout. The tax also provides substantial revenue to the US government - though its $24 billion in 2004 revenues were dwarfed by the $990 billion brought in by the income tax. It also provides an incentive for charitable giving and for people to plan for the transfer of their estates, proponents of an estate tax add.

Between the extremes lie a wide range of options. The Republican-led Congress hopes to lower the tax significantly. The move would primarily affect the very wealthiest Americans. Just 62,718 estates filed taxes in 2004, the most recent year for which IRS records are available. The cumulative value of those estates was $193 billion.

A year ago, the House voted to permanently repeal the estate tax, but it fell three votes short in the Senate. The new House bill is designed to break the deadlock. Instead of eliminating the tax as of 2010, the House bill would boost the exemption to $5 million for an individual's estate or $10 million for couples. After 2010, the exemption would be adjusted yearly for inflation.

Above those amounts, estates up to $25 million in value would be taxed at a rate equal to the tax on capital gains (now 15 percent). Estates above $25 million would be taxed at twice the capital gains rate.

In effect, all wealthy estates would be big winners under the House bill - especially the vast majority of estates that would be completely sheltered by the new exemption of $5 million or $10 million.

Even with the House backing away from full repeal, not all Senate Republicans support rollback legislation. Sens. Lincoln Chafee (R) of Rhode Island and George Voinovich (R) of Ohio are concerned about the growth of the federal deficit and the burden of national debt on future generations. Where estate-tax foes dub it the "death tax," Senator Voinovich points to the "birth tax" facing newborn citizens as a result of soaring federal deficits.

"Every child born in this country has $28,000 of debt on his back," says Chris Paulitz, a spokesman for the Ohio lawmaker. "Until we're in the black and not the red, [Voinovich] thinks we should not be doing this type of tax cuts."

At the same time, some Senate Democrats campaigned on a promise to end the estate tax, and will support cuts like those passed in the House.

"It's very reasonable and gets to the heart of what I want to do, which is to provide some certainty to small business[es], which are engines of growth in our economy. These are the jobs that are going overseas," says Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D) of Arkansas. She is one of four Democrats - along with Sens. Max Baucus of Montana, Ben Nelson of Nebraska, and Bill Nelson of Florida - who voted June 8 to end a filibuster on permanent repeal of the estate tax. She says she would support the House compromise.

Aides to Senate majority leader Bill Frist say he will not bring a bill to the floor without the 60 votes needed to avoid a filibuster.

The House bill would cost the federal government $279 billion in lost estate-tax revenues between 2006 and 2016, according to Congress's Joint Committee on Taxation. Under current law, the tax is projected to bring in about $400 billion during that time.

In terms of estates that actually pay the tax, "this is only affecting a very small slice - very, very wealthy Americans," says Dr. Slemrod at the University of Michigan. Still, "There are certainly more and more people in the category of having a couple of million dollars to $4 [million] or $5 million of wealth."

Any drop in estate-tax revenues has some effect on virtually all Americans, he adds. "Either they're going to have to cough up more taxes or see a decline in what the government provides."



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Oil rises to $72 on strong summer demand

By Neil Chatterjee
Reuters
Monday, June 26, 2006; 11:44 PM

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Oil rose to $72 on Tuesday as demand from the world's top consumers, the United States and China, remained strong despite high energy costs.

U.S. crude was up 22 cents at $72.02 a barrel by 0255 GMT, after rising 93 cents on Monday. London Brent crude rose 17 cents to $70.90.
Traders are worried about disruptions to U.S. fuel supplies during peak summer demand in the northern hemisphere that could deflate the inventory cushion needed in case of supply outages from major exporters such as Nigeria and Iran.

"A spate of refinery outages should be reflected in this week's (U.S. government stock) report," said JPMorgan. "We are assuming deliveries will fall back rather sharply reflecting delivery disruptions along the Calcasieu Ship Channel."

The shipping channel, connecting the refining hub of Lake Charles, Louisiana with the Gulf of Mexico, is expected to be shut two to four more days while the clean-up of an oil spill last week continues, the U.S. Coast Guard said on Monday.

Three oil refineries and a liquefied natural gas terminal in Lake Charles remain cut off to shipping traffic, forcing the refineries to slow fuel production.

Analysts expect the channel closure to reduce crude imports, leading to an 800,000-barrel fall in U.S. crude stocks last week in government data due on Wednesday.

Gasoline supplies could also have fallen for the first time in nine weeks, with strong demand continuing at above 9 million barrels per day (bpd), analysts said in a Reuters survey

.

Government figures last week showed U.S. drivers are buying more motor fuel than last year, despite paying almost $3 a gallon at the pump, while gasoline stocks rose less than expected.

"The shock waves from last week's drop in US gasoline inventories are causing many to re-assess their views on US supply and demand," said Tobin Gorey of the Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

CHINA BOOM

Implied oil demand in China accelerated 13.5 percent in May from a year ago, nearing the explosive rate of 2004 as refiners boosted output and curbed exports to meet summer demand, according to Reuters calculations based on official data.

The signs of strong demand are easing worries that high oil prices are feeding inflation that could hit economic growth and dampen consumer thirst for oil.

U.S. Federal Reserve policy-makers gathering on June 28-29 are widely expected to raise interest rates and signal further increases may be needed to keep inflation in check.

Adjusted for inflation, oil is at its most expensive since 1980, the year after the Iranian revolution, and is holding near its record $75.35 hit in April after a rally that has taken prices up from $20 at the start of 2002.

The rally has come on fund buying amid fears over real and potential disruptions. OPEC's number-two producer, Iran, repeated on Sunday it stood ready to use its 2.5 million bpd of exports in self-defense if threatened by a dispute over its atomic program.

Qatar's Oil Minister, Abdullah al-Attiyah, said on Monday that despite the soaring market, OPEC was having trouble selling some of its heavier crudes. He added OPEC would likely keep production rates steady when the group next meets in September.

Production in OPEC Nigeria has been cut by a quarter after a series of militant attacks, though Iraq's oil minister sketched a positive outlook Sunday, saying its output had recovered to 2.5 million bpd -- the highest since the fall of Saddam Hussein.



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Rates on US Treasury bills hit peak since early 2001

www.chinaview.cn 2006-06-27 08:10:43

WASHINGTON, June 26 (Xinhua) -- Interest rates on short-term U.S. Treasury bills increased to highest level since early 2001 in auctions held on Monday.

The U.S. Treasury Department auctioned 15 billion dollars in three-month bills at a discount rate of 4.905 percent, up from 4.830 percent last week. The rate was the highest since 4.92 percent on February 5, 2001.
Another 14 billion dollars in six-month bills were auctioned at a discount rate of 5.11 percent, up from 5.06 percent last week. The rate was the highest since 5.36 percent on January 2, 2001.

Separately, the U.S. Federal Reserve said Monday that the average yield for one-year Treasury bills, a popular index for making changes in adjustable rate mortgages, rose to 5.24 percent last week from 5.13 percent the previous week.



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Peruvian lawmakers urged to ratify US free trade deal

www.chinaview.cn 2006-06-27 11:28:42

LIMA, June 26 (Xinhua) -- Peruvian President Alejandro Toledo on Monday urged the lawmakers to ratify a free trade agreement with the United States this week to help lower trade barriers.

Toledo made the remarks during a ceremony at the government palace, saying "I invoke Congress to think about our children and jobs, and ratify it as soon as possible."
He urged legislators to approve the deal before a newly elected Congress, with a strong anti-free-trade element, was to be sworn in on July 28.

Ollanta Humala, the presidential runner-up, commented that the free trade deal would reduce the competitive ability of local producers, when subsidized U.S. agricultural goods came on to the Peruvian market.

Toledo signed a bilateral trade agreement with Washington in April, but the deal still has to be approved by the legislatures of both nations.

Marcial Ayaipoma, the legislature's president, said Peru's full Congress was expected to begin considering the free trade agreement on Tuesday.



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Iracket


Three Iraq Myths That Won't Quit

By Scott Ritter
06/26/06 "AlterNet"

It is hard sometimes to know what is real and what is fiction when it comes to the news out of Iraq. America is in its "silly season," the summer months leading up to a national election, and the media is going full speed ahead in exploiting its primacy in the news arena by substituting responsible reporting with headline-grabbing entertainment.

So, as America closes in on the end of June and the celebration of the 230th year of our nation's birth, I thought I would pen a short primer on three myths on Iraq to keep an eye out for as we "debate" the various issues pertaining to our third year of war in that country.
The myth of sovereignty Imagine the president of the United States flying to Russia, China, England, France or just about any other nation on the planet, landing at an airport on supposedly sovereign territory, being driven under heavy U.S. military protection to the U.S. Embassy, and then with some five minutes notification, summoning the highest elected official of that nation to the U.S. Embassy for a meeting. It would never happen, unless of course the nation in question is Iraq, where Iraqi sovereignty continues to be hyped as a reality when in fact it is as fictitious as any fairy tale ever penned by the Brothers Grimm. For all of the talk of a free Iraq, the fact is Iraq remains very much an occupied nation where the United States (and its ever decreasing "coalition of the willing") gets to call all the shots.

Iraqi military policy is made by the United States. Its borders are controlled by the United States. Its economy is controlled largely by the United States. In fact, there simply isn't a single major indicator of actual sovereignty in Iraq today that can be said to be free of overwhelming American control. Iraqi ministers continue to be shot at by coalition forces, and Iraqi police are powerless to investigate criminal activities carried out by American troops (or their mercenary counterparts, the so-called "Private Military Contractors"). The reality of this myth is that the timeline for the departure of American troops from Iraq is being debated (and decided) in Washington, D.C., not Baghdad. Of course, as with everything in Iraq, the final vote will be made by the people of Iraq. But these votes will be cast in bullets, not ballots, and will bring with them not only the departure of American troops from Iraq, but also the demise of any Iraqi government foolish enough to align itself with a nation that violates international law by planning and waging an illegal war of aggression, and continues to conduct an increasingly brutal (and equally illegitimate) occupation.

The myth of Zarqawi I have said all along that the poll figures showing Americans to be overwhelmingly against the war in Iraq were illusory. Only 28 percent of Americans were against the war when we invaded Iraq. The ranks have swelled to over 60 percent not because there has been an awakening of social conscience and responsibility, but rather because things aren't going well in Iraq, and there is increasing angst in the American heartland because we seem to be losing the war in Iraq, and no one likes a loser. So when the word came that the notorious terrorist, Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi, was killed by American military action, the president suddenly had a "good week," and poll numbers adjusted slightly in his favor. However, the facts cannot be re-written, even by a slavish American mainstream media. Zarqawi was never anything more than a minor player in Iraq, a third-rate Jordanian criminal whose exploits were hyped up by a Bush administration anxious to prove that the insurgency that was getting the best of America in Iraq was foreign-grown and linked to the perpetrators of the 9/11 terror attacks nonetheless. The reality of just how wrong such an assessment is (and was) has been pounded home in blood. Since Zarqawi's death, the violence has continued to spiral out of control in Iraq, with Americans continuing to die, Iraqis still being slaughtered, and Zarqawi and his organization, successor and all, still as irrelevant to reality as ever. The war against the American occupation in Iraq is being fought overwhelmingly by Iraqis. The insurgency is growing and becoming stronger and more organized by the day. This, of course, is a reality that the Bush administration cannot afford to have the American people know about in an election year, as a compliant media, having sold its soul to the devil in hyping of the virtues of an invasion of Iraq back in 2002-2003, continues to dance with the party that brought them by supporting the Republican position, by and large, that the conflict in Iraq is a winnable one for America. Good ratings, more dead Americans (and Iraqis, but who is counting?) and a war that will never end until the United States finally slinks out, defeated, its tail tucked firmly between its legs.

The myth of WMD Regardless of what Sen. Rick Santorum and the lunatic neoconservative fringe want to think, no weapons of mass destruction have been found in Iraq. Citing a classified Department of Defense report that claims some 500 artillery shells have been found in Iraq by U.S. forces since the invasion and subsequent occupation of Iraq in March 2003, Santorum and his cronies in the right-wing media have been spouting nonsense about how Bush got it right all along, that there were WMD in Iraq after all. He conveniently fails to report that there is nothing "secret" about this data, it has all been reported before (by the Bush administration, nonetheless), and that the shells in question constitute old artillery munitions manufactured well prior to 1991 (the year of the first Gulf War, and a time after which the government of Saddam Hussein stated -- correctly, it turned out -- that no WMD were produced in Iraq). The degraded sarin nerve agent and mustard blister agent contained in the discovered munitions had long since lost their viability, and as such represented no threat whatsoever. Furthermore, the haphazard way in which they were "discovered" (lying about the ground, as opposed to carefully stored away) only reinforces the Iraqi government's past claims that many chemical munitions were scattered about the desert countryside in remote areas following U.S. bombing attacks on the ammunition storage depots during the first Gulf War. Having personally inspected scores of these bombed-out depots, I can vouch for the veracity of the past Iraqi claims, as well as the absurdity of the claims made today by Santorum and others, who continue to hold personal political gain as being worth more than the blood of over 2,500 dead Americans.

These three myths -- WMD, Zarqawi and Iraqi sovereignty -- are what members of Congress should be debating in their halls of power, the American media should be discussing either in print or across the airwaves, and that discussion should constitute the foundation of a movement towards accountability, where the citizens of the United States finally point an accusatory finger at those whom they elected to represent them in higher office, and who have failed in almost every regard when it comes to Iraq. But then again, silly me for thinking this way, believing that there was an engaged constituency within America that knows and understands the Constitution of the United States and seeks to live each day as a true citizen empowered by the ideal and values set forth by that document. I had overlooked the Fourth Myth -- that American citizens are engaged in our national debate.

Scott Ritter served as chief U.N. weapons inspector in Iraq from 1991 until his resignation in 1998. He is the author of, most recently, "Iraq Confidential: The Untold Story of the Intelligence Conspiracy to Undermine the U.N. and Overthrow Saddam Hussein" (Nation Books, 2005).



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'Marlboro Man' Marine with PTSD files for divorce 17 days after marriage

By SAMIRA JAFARI
Associated Press
Mon Jun 26, 2006

PIKEVILLE, Ky. - A Marine who was dubbed the "Marlboro Man" after appearing in an iconic photograph from the
Iraq War has filed for divorce less than a month after dozens of Americans contributed to a dream wedding for him and his bride.

Millions became intrigued with James Blake Miller, 21, after seeing a 2004 Los Angeles Times photo in which the grubby, exhausted Marine lance corporal is pictured taking a break from combat in Fallujah with a cigarette dangling from his lips.
Miller and his wife, Jessica Holbrook, were initially married at a county building in June 2005, but Miller had said in a Jan. 29 story in the San Francisco Chronicle that he wished he could give his wife the wedding she had always wanted. Readers responded by contributing toward a $15,000 wedding June 3 at a golf course clubhouse near his hometown of Pikeville.

But by June 12, Miller and his bride were living apart, according to court papers. Miller filed for divorce on June 20, saying the marriage was "irretrievably broken."

Miller was discharged from the Marines in 2005 and has spoken in newspaper interviews about suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, which is often characterized by flashbacks, nervousness and nightmares.

"I'm just sad for them," said Eunice Davis of Pleasanton, Calif., who spearheaded the contributions, which included a pair of wedding rings from a jeweler. "It must be a very difficult time and a very difficult decision."

Miller and his wife have unlisted numbers and could not be reached for comment by The Associated Press on Monday. Miller's attorney, Michael de Bourbon, declined to comment.

In Sunday's Appalachian News-Express of Pikeville, Miller said he had filed for divorce, "but I'm still trying to resolve my problems with my wife."

"I would like to start by saying I'm trying to take things one day at a time," he continued. "I can't stress enough what it's like to deal with PTSD and every other day problems."

Pikeville wedding planner Missy McCoy, who helped with the arrangements, said she was saddened by the news.

"They've been through a lot," McCoy said. "They're a sweet couple I hope they can work it out."



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450 detainees released in Iraq under amnesty

AFP
June 27, 2006

ABU GHRAIB, Iraq - About 450 detainees held in US and Iraqi prisons have been freed under an amnesty as part of a national reconciliation plan aimed at ending the bloodshed.

The move brings the number of those released so far this month to more than 2,500.

The sixth batch of detainees held at Abu Ghraib and other facilities run by the US military and Iraqis were assembled at the notorious US-run prison west of Baghdad before their release.
"Your release today is part of the prime minister's national reconciliation plan," Iraq's national security advisor Muwaffaq al-Rubaie told them. "This is not a political game, it is a sincere attempt of reconciliation and to unite Iraq."

A US military spokesman in charge of detainee operations said all those released since Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki first spoke of a national reconciliation initiative on June 6 are suspected of being involved in the insurgency but have committed no violent crimes like bombing, killing, torture and kidnapping.

One of the items in Maliki's 24-point reconciliation programme presented to parliament Sunday promises amnesty to detainees who have committed no crimes.



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US furious at pardon plan for insurgents

Michael Gawenda Herald Correspondent in Washington
June 27, 2006

THE reconciliation plan announced by the Iraqi Prime Minister, Nouri al-Maliki, has outraged many Americans including senior congressional Democrats, who believe the plan involves offering an amnesty to insurgents responsible for killing US troops.

But it is far from clear whether Mr Maliki's plan, announced at a special session of the Iraqi parliament on Sunday, would offer such an amnesty to insurgents or, as some have claimed, distinguish between those who had killed US "occupying forces" and those who had killed Iraqi troops and police.
Senator Carl Levin, the senior Democrat on the armed services committee, said Americans would be outraged by any suggestion that those involved in killing US soldiers would be forgiven.

"This would just be unconscionable," he said. "For heaven's sake! We liberated the country. We got rid of a horrific dictator. We've paid a tremendous price."

Following Mr Maliki's announcement, US news bulletins ran interviews with families of some of the soldiers killed in Iraq (at least 2500 since the start of the war in 2003), all of whom expressed outrage that these killers might be pardoned.

The White House cautiously welcomed the reconciliation plan, which urges insurgents to lay down their arms and join the political process. It promises amnesty to those opponents who have not targeted civilians and have not committed war crimes.

Mr Maliki's plan does not spell out what constitutes a terrorist, nor does it spell out which groups would be eligible for a pardon, but merely says that "to those who want to rebuild our country, we offer an olive branch".

A White House spokesman, Ken Lisaius, said he could not comment on which insurgents would be "forgiven" because those plans were still being developed. "Reconciliation must be an Iraqi process, led by Iraqis," he said. "We stand ready to assist this effort if the Iraqis request our help."

But Democrats made it clear that they were united in their opposition to any amnesty for insurgents who had killed US soldiers, with even the most anti-war and liberal among them, such as Senator Russ Feingold, condemning any reconciliation with "killers of Americans".

While the White House remained silent, Bush Administration officials told reporters that it had been made clear to the Iraqi Government that any reconciliation process that pardoned insurgents who had targeted US soldiers but not those who killed Iraqi forces would be unacceptable.

On the one hand, given the pressure the Administration is under to hand over carriage of the war against the insurgency to the Iraqi Government and security forces, it is keen to support Mr Maliki's plan and not be seen to be interfering with the elected government of Iraq.

On the other hand, it knows that Americans will be outraged if the lives of US soldiers are seen to be worth less than the lives of Iraqi soldiers and police.

Meanwhile, military officials confirmed a report in The New York Times that General George Casey, the US commander in Iraq, had presented the Defence Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, and President George Bush with a plan that could see the US force of 127,000 in Iraq cut by more than half by the end of next year.

But they made it clear that implementation of the plan, which could start with the withdrawal of 8000 soldiers in September and another 28,000 by the end of the year, was contingent on "events on the ground".



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Iraq violence displaces 150,000: UN

By Michael Georgy
Reuters
Tue Jun 27, 2006

BAGHDAD - The number of displaced people in Iraq has swelled by 150,000 since the bombing of a Shiite shrine in February pushed the country to the brink of civil war, a United Nations agency said on Tuesday.

The U.N. Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) put the number of displaced higher than the 130,386 estimate of registered internal refugees given by the Ministry of Displacement and Migration on Monday.

"It is estimated that 1.3 million individuals are displaced inside Iraq, nearly 5 percent of the country's total population," said a UNAMI statement.

"While many were displaced as long ago as the early 1980s, the last four months of increasing violence and relentless sectarian tensions have resulted in the displacement of a further 150,000 individuals."
The grim assessment came two days after Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki unveiled a reconciliation plan aimed at tackling the Sunni Arab insurgency and easing sectarian bloodshed.

In fresh violence, a car bomb exploded at a petrol station in the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk, killing at least three people and wounding 21, police said.

Police said the death toll climbed to 18 from a blast on Monday near a market in the Shiite village of Khairnabat, near Baquba, 65 km (40 miles) northeast of Baghdad.

Three policemen were killed and three wounded when a roadside bomb exploded near their patrol in southeastern Baghdad, Interior Ministry sources said.

SYSTEMATIC BLOODSHED

While bombings claim lives nearly every day, systematic sectarian killings force Iraqis to flee their homes, causing demographic upheaval in a country where many districts are a mix of Shiites and Sunnis and other communities.

The figure of 150,000 displaced does not include those who have sought refuge with relatives or fled abroad.

Already a problem due to the post-war anarchy, the refugee crisis worsened after the February 22 bombing of a Shiite shrine in the town of Samarra. That set off reprisals and pushed Iraq close to a full-blown communal conflict.

"Displacement since the February 22 bombing of the Samarra shrine has equally affected all of Iraq's diverse communities on a nationwide basis," said UNAMI.

The problem has been likened to the "ethnic cleansing" of the Balkans in the 1990s.

Sectarian violence, which kills 30-50 people a day in Baghdad alone, has forced Sunnis to flee north and Shiites to head south, finding safety in numbers in areas heavily populated by their own sectarian groups.

Some fear the Tigris River, between mainly Shiite east and Sunni west Baghdad, could become a frontline like Beirut's 1980s "Green Line" if Maliki fails to stop the killings.

U.S. and Iraqi military operations in the western Sunni insurgent stronghold of Ramadi also forced families to flee.

"In the last fortnight alone, 3,200 families have fled Ramadi to neighboring towns as a result of the military operations there," said UNAMI.



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Car bomb explodes in Iraq's Kirkuk

Reuters
June 27, 2006

KIRKUK, Iraq - A car bomb exploded in the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk on Tuesday, killing at least three people, police said.

Police Brigadier Adel Zein al-Aabeddine also said 21 people were wounded.

Police said they were looking into reports that the attack was carried out by a suicide bomber.

The attack in the ethnically divided oil center of Kirkuk came two days after Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki unveiled a national reconciliation plan aimed at tackling the Sunni Arab insurgency and easing sectarian tensions.




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Dozens killed in Iraq market blasts: officials

Last Updated Mon, 26 Jun 2006 16:55:24 EDT
CBC News

Dozens of people have been killed and wounded in two separate bomb blasts in two Iraqi cities on Monday, police say.

In the most recent attack, at least 20 people were killed and 30 wounded in a bombing involving a bicycle in Baqouba, located 56 kilometres northeast of Baghdad, according to police.
That bombing followed a blast in a marketplace in the city of Hillah, south of Baghdad, government officials said. The market, near the site of ancient Babylon, was full of shoppers at the time of the blast.

The bomb was reportedly left in a bag.

Several people who survived the blast threw stones at police to express their anger over the lack of security in the predominately Shia city.

Hillah has been targeted before. On Feb. 28, 2005, a suicide car bomb targeting police and national guard recruits killed 125 people.

It is still unclear how many people were killed in this blast.

Interior Ministry sources in Baghdad, citing Hilla police, told Reuters that 17 people had been killed and 25 were wounded by the bomb. But a Hilla police spokesman said only six were dead, and hospital sources said 56 were wounded.

Police officers at the scene said at least 30 people were killed, Reuters reported.



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Science and Health


Fewer FDA warnings to companies, Democrats say

Reuters
Mon Jun 26, 2006

WASHINGTON - The Food and Drug Administration last year sent half as many letters warning about violations of federal rules as it did in 2000, according to a report from U.S. Democratic lawmakers released on Monday.

The FDA sent 535 warning letters to drug and medical device makers, food companies and others in 2005, a 15-year low, the Democratic staff of the House of Representatives Government Reform Committee said. In 2000, the FDA sent 1,154 warning letters.

Warning letters are sent for a wide range of violations, from failing to report potential drug side effects to lacking proper records or having manufacturing problems.
"In many cases, FDA field inspectors have identified serious violations of the law and recommended enforcement action, but FDA has rejected their recommendations," said the report, based in part on a review of more than 4,000 pages of FDA documents.

For example, FDA inspectors in Colorado recommended the agency send a warning letter to the maker of a purported hangover remedy with "a toxic level of caffeine" that sent several people to hospital emergency rooms, the report said. FDA headquarters took no action, according to the report.

The FDA said it had focused on cases posing the greatest public health threat and its efforts had deterred violations.

David Elder, director of the FDA's Office of Enforcement, pointed to a $500 million civil fine in 2002 and the seizure of nearly $1 billion worth of goods in 2005 - both record actions.

"The agency has taken prompt, targeted and aggressive action against firms that are in violation of law," he said.

The Democratic staff report said there was no evidence companies had improved their compliance with FDA regulations, as the number of violations documented by FDA inspectors had remained relatively constant.

The FDA's Elder said there had been a "small but steady decline" in serious violations since fiscal year 2000.

Rep. Henry Waxman, the California Democrat who requested the report, said it provided further evidence that the FDA's enforcement efforts had dropped during the George W. Bush administration.

"FDA can't do its job when its enforcement arm is tied behind its back," Waxman said.



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Whooping Cough death toll hit 77 in PNG

www.chinaview.cn 2006-06-27 17:27:56

WELLINGTON, June 27 (Xinhua) -- A whooping cough outbreak in Papua New Guinea (PNG) has so far claimed the lives of 77 people in two provinces.

The outbreak first recorded in the East Sepik Province last month and the epidemic is set to increase the death toll following revelations by Health Minister Peter Barter that more children have succumbed to the epidemic in neighboring Madang Province, said the National, a local daily newspaper.
It said the epidemic has been confirmed in three districts of Madang with nine people reported dead. The three districts are Sumkar, Usino-Bundi and Middle Ramu.

Initial reports have put the number of confirmed cases at 400. Sumkar has the worst number of cases with 300 confirmed with the cough and eight deaths. Usino-Bundi has 45 confirmed sick with the cough and one dead, and Middle Ramu has reported 50 sick.

Cases of whooping cough were treated following standard treatment earlier in May. Areas with low immunization recorded one or two cases with the number increasing in June.

The symptoms of whooping cough are running nose, occasionally non-specific cough, sneezing, low grade fever, high outburst of cough with increasing severity and often ending with a "whoop". There is difficulty of removal of thick mucus and the child sometimes vomits after coughing.

Health advisor Markus Kachau has declared the two provinces disaster areas. He said the outbreak is still in its early stages and has not reached other districts.

Kachau said response actions have begun locally and a provincial response committee is in place to coordinate all activities.

He had requested for additional funds outside of budgeted appropriations to cater for the emergency.

So far a total of 120,000 kina (35,000 U.S. dollars) have been provided to fight the spread of whooping cough in Madang province.

The Madang provincial government has committed 50,000 kina (14,000 U.S. dollars) towards the exercise while the national Department of Health has set aside 70,000 kina (21,000 U.S. dollars) through the Health Sector Improvement program (HSIP).

Kachau said Monday that medical supplies had been delivered to some affected areas, and medical supplies for other districts would be delivered this week.

He said health workers were patrolling the affected areas and administering necessary immunization treatment in a bid to control the spread of the disease.

"The general public had been advised to report to the nearest health facility and update immunization status of children less than five years and also to be treated for developing symptoms of whooping cough," said Kachau.

Health authority has appealed to people to seek urgent medical care if they are experiencing any form of cough.

In a statement, the government urged all parents, especially those with infants, to seek medical care at the nearest health facility if they show signs of coughing or sneezing.



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Cell phone signals excite brain: study

Reuters
Mon Jun 26, 2006

WASHINGTON - Cell phone emissions excite the part of the brain cortex nearest to the phone, but it is not clear if these effects are harmful, Italian researchers reported on Monday.

Their study, published in the Annals of Neurology, adds to a growing body of research about mobile phones, their possible effects on the brain, and whether there is any link to cancer.
About 730 million cell phones are expected to be sold this year, according to industry estimates, and nearly 2 billion people around the world already use them.

Of these, more than 500 million use a type that emits electromagnetic fields known as Global System for Mobile communications or GSM radio phones. Their possible effects on the brain are controversial and not well understood.

Dr. Paolo Rossini of Fatebenefratelli hospital in Milan and colleagues used Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation or TMS to check brain function while people used these phones.

They had 15 young male volunteers use a GSM 900 cell phone for 45 minutes. In 12 of the 15, the cells in the motor cortex adjacent to the cell phone showed excitability during phone use but returned to normal within an hour.

The cortex is the outside layer of the brain and the motor cortex is known as the "excitable area" because magnetic stimulation has been shown to cause a muscle twitch.

The researchers stressed that they had not shown that using a cell phone is bad for the brain in any way, but people with conditions such as epilepsy, linked with brain cell excitability, could potentially be affected.

"It should be argued that long-lasting and repeated exposure to EMFs (electromagnetic frequencies) linked with intense use of cellular phones in daily life might be harmful or beneficial in brain-diseased subjects," they wrote.

"Further studies are needed to better circumstantiate these conditions and to provide safe rules for the use of this increasingly more widespread device."

Medical studies on cell phone use have provided mixed results. Swedish researchers found last year that using cell phones over time can raise the risk of brain tumors. But a study by Japan's four mobile telephone operators found no evidence that radio waves from the phones harmed cells or DNA.

The Dutch Health Council analyzed several studies and found no evidence that radiation from mobile phones was harmful.



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X-rays linked to breast cancer risk

Scotsman
27/06/2006

TENS of thousands of women have a dramatically increased risk of breast cancer if they have a chest X-ray, according to research.

A study found that women genetically susceptible to breast cancer were 54 per cent more likely to get the disease if they had been given a chest X-ray. If they were younger than 20 when X-rayed, the risk of contracting the disease before the age of 40 increased two and a half times.

The researchers said their results raised questions over the use of mammograms in diagnosing women from families known to have the BRCA 1 and 2 genetic mutations. They said MRI scans - which do not use X-rays - might be a better option.

The BRCA 1 and 2 genes make proteins involved in repairing damage to DNA in breast cells. Mutations to these genes, which affect more than one in 500, leave women with a 40 to 80 per cent chance of developing breast cancer at some point in their lives.

According to the findings, a chest X-ray would see the likelihood of some of these women contracting the disease increase from a "high" chance to "extremely high".

Some experts said that, if confirmed, the study could have "significant practice implications" and "could potentially eliminate" mammographic screening of young women. However, cancer charities warned against spreading alarm among women about having mammograms, saying the study was not "conclusive" as it had been based on people's memories of having had X-rays in the past.

Dr David Goldgar, who led the research at the Genetic Epidemiology Group at the International Agency for Research on Cancer in Lyons, France, said his study was one of the first to demonstrate "that women genetically predisposed to breast cancer may be more susceptible to low-dose ionising radiation than other women".

However, he stressed the need for further study to confirm the work, as it was based on people's recollections of having X-rays.

More than 1,600 women completed questionnaires asking if they had ever had chest X-rays. The researchers excluded mammograms, saying this would prejudice a study based on recollections "because of its obvious relationship to diagnosis". But they said the results "raise the issue of the potential risks of mammographic screening", which uses X-rays.

The research appeared in yesterday's edition of the Journal of Clinical Oncology, and in an accompanying article, Dr Angela Bradbury and Professor Olufunmilayo Olopade wrote: "If confirmed, this study could have significant practice implications for the BRCA mutation carriers and could potentially eliminate mammographic screening as a surveillance method for early detection of breast cancer in young women."

Professor John Toy, the medical director of Cancer Research UK, urged women not to panic. He pointed to a Lancet Oncology study, published earlier this year, which found no association between mammograms and breast cancer among those with the BRCA mutations.

On balance, he said, it was worthwhile to have the screening to allow early detection of cancer - and therefore more effective treatment - despite the risk the mammogram could kick-start the disease. "We must interpret these results with caution. This type of study has inherent limitations because it relies on participants recalling the X-rays they have received ... [and it] looked at chest X-rays and not mammograms," he said.

However, Prof Toy said that if the study was found to be correct, it could lead to more use of MRI scans. He gave as an example an 18-year-old woman with BRCA mutations attending hospital with a broken rib. "The doctor might say, 'I think you've cracked your rib. Normally, we'd perhaps take an X-ray and confirm this, but I don't think you have punctured your lung and you've told me you are a BRCA mutation carrier, so perhaps we'll agree that we will forgo the X-ray'," he said.

Dr Sarah Rawlings, of the charity Breakthrough Breast Cancer, said: "This study does not yet offer conclusive evidence. It's still important for women to attend their breast screening appointments as mammography can detect breast cancer early, when it is more likely to be successfully treated."

Comment: Yaaay modern medicine!

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New colour-changing snake found in Borneo

Reuters
Tue Jun 27, 2006

GENEVA - Biologists working in the forests of Borneo have found a previously unknown type of snake which can change its color spontaneously like a chameleon, the environmental body WWF said on Tuesday.

The poisonous snake, about half a meter (half a yard) long, was discovered in the wetlands and swamp forests of Betung National Park in the Indonesian part of the island, which is also shared by Malaysia and Brunei.
When picked up and put in a bucket, it was reddish-brown but later changed its color to white, apparently in an automatic reaction to blend in with surroundings, according to the WWF.

The biologists named the serpent, two specimens of which were recovered, the Kapuas Mud Snake after the river that flows through the region.

The WWF said although some reptiles with legs, like the chameleon lizard, had the ability to change color, it was rare for snakes.



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Coming soon -- mind-reading computers

By Patricia Reaney
Reuters
Mon Jun 26, 2006

LONDON - A raised eyebrow, quizzical look or a nod of the head are just a few of the facial expressions computers could soon be using to read people's minds.

An "emotionally aware" computer being developed by British and American scientists will be able to read an individual's thoughts by analyzing a combination of facial movements that represent underlying feelings.

"The system we have developed allows a wide range of mental states to be identified just by pointing a video camera at someone," said Professor Peter Robinson of Cambridge University in England.
He and his collaborators believe the mind-reading computer's applications could range from improving people's driving skills to helping companies tailor advertising to people's moods.

"Imagine a computer that could pick the right emotional moment to try to sell you something, a future where mobile phones, cars and Web sites could read our mind and react to our moods," he added.

The technology is already programmed to recognize 24 facial expressions generated by actors. Robinson hopes to get more data from the public to determine whether someone is bored, interested, confused, or agrees or disagrees when it is unveiled at a science exhibition in London on Monday, July 3.

People visiting the four-day exhibition organized by the Royal Society, Britain's academy of leading scientists, will be invited to take part in a study to hone the program's abilities.

The scientists, who are developing the technology in collaboration with researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the United States, also hope to get it to accept other inputs such as posture and gesture.

"Our research could enable Web sites to tailor advertising or products to your mood," Robinson told Reuters. "For example, a webcam linked with our software could process your image, encode the correct emotional state and transmit information to a Web site."

It could also be useful in online teaching to show whether someone understands what is being explained and in improving road safety by determining whether a driver is confused, bored or tired.

"We are working with a big car company and they envision this being employed in cars within five years," Robinson said, adding that a camera could be built into the dashboard.

Anyone who does not want to give away too much information about what they are feeling, he said, can just cover up the camera.



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Device Burns Fuel With Almost Zero Emissions

SPX
June 27, 2006

Atlanta, GA - Georgia Tech researchers have created a new combustor (combustion chamber where fuel is burned to power an engine or gas turbine) designed to burn fuel in a wide range of devices - with next to no emission of nitrogen oxide (NOx) and carbon monoxide (CO), two of the primary causes of air pollution.

The device has a simpler design than existing state-of-the-art combustors and could be manufactured and maintained at a much lower cost, making it more affordable in everything from jet engines and power plants to home water heaters.
"We must burn fuel to power aircrafts and generate electricity for our homes. The combustion community is working very hard to find ways to burn the fuel completely and derive all of its energy while minimizing emissions," said Dr. Ben Zinn, Regents' professor, the David S. Lewis Jr. Chair in Georgia Tech's Guggenheim School of Aerospace Engineering and a key collaborator on the project.

"Our combustor has an unbelievably simple design, and it would be inexpensive to make and inexpensive to maintain."

Attaining ultra low emissions has become a top priority for combustion researchers as federal and state restrictions on pollution continuously reduce the allowable levels of NOx and CO produced by engines, power plants and industrial processes.

Called the Stagnation Point Reverse Flow Combustor, the Georgia Tech device, originally developed for NASA, significantly reduces NOx and CO emissions in a variety of aircraft engines and gas turbines that burn gaseous or liquid fuels. It burns fuel with NOx emissions below 1 parts per million (ppm) and CO emissions lower than 10 ppm, significantly lower than emissions produced by other combustors.

The project's initial goal was to develop a low emissions combustor for aircraft engines and power-generating gas turbines that must stably burn large amounts of fuel in a small volume over a wide range of power settings (or fuel flow rates). But the design can be adapted for use in a variety of applications, including something as large as a power generating gas turbine or as small as a water heater in a home.

"We wanted to have all the clean-burning advantages of a low temperature combustion process while burning a large amount of fuel in a small volume," Zinn said.

The combustor burns fuel in low temperature reactions that occur over a large portion of the combustor. By eliminating all high temperature pockets through better control of the flow of the reactants and combustion products within the combustor, the device produces far lower levels of NOx and CO and avoids acoustic instabilities that are problematic in current low emissions combustors.

To reduce emissions in existing combustors, fuel is premixed with a large amount of swirling air flow prior to injection into the combustor. This requires complex and expensive designs, and the combustion process often excites instabilities that damage the system.

But Georgia Tech's design eliminates the complexity associated with premixing the fuel and air by injecting the fuel and air separately into the combustor while its shape forces them to mix with one another and with combustion products before ignition occurs.

The project was funded by the NASA University Research Engineering Technology Institute (URETI) Center on Aeropropulsion and Power and Georgia Tech. The primary investigators on the project were Professors Ben T. Zinn, Yedidia Neumeier, Jerry Seitzman and Jeff Jagoda from the School of Aerospace Engineering, and Visiting Research Engineers Yoav Weksler and Ben Ami Hashmonay.



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Stealth Radar System Sees Through Trees And Walls Undetected

by Pam Frost Gorder
SPX
June 27, 2006

Columbus, OH - Ohio State engineers have invented a radar system that is virtually undetectable because its signal resembles random noise. The radar could have applications in law enforcement, the military and disaster rescue.

Eric Walton, senior research scientist in Ohio State's ElectroScience Laboratory, said that with further development the technology could even be used for medical imaging. He explained why using random noise makes the radar system invisible.

"Almost all radio receivers in the world are designed to eliminate random noise so that they can clearly receive the signal they're looking for," Walton said. "Radio receivers could search for this radar signal and they wouldn't find it. It also won't interfere with TV, radio or other communication signals."
The radar scatters a very low-intensity signal across a wide range of frequencies, so a TV or radio tuned to any one frequency would interpret the radar signal as a very weak form of static.

"It doesn't interfere because it has a bandwidth that is thousands of times broader than the signals it might otherwise interfere with," Walton said.

Like traditional radar, the "noise" radar detects objects by bouncing a radio signal off them and detecting the rebound. The hardware isn't expensive, either; altogether, the components cost less than $100.

The difference is that the noise radar generates a signal that resembles random noise, and a computer calculates very small differences in the return signal. The calculations happen billions of times every second and the pattern of the signal changes constantly. A receiver couldn't detect the signal unless it knew exactly what random pattern was being used.

The radar can be tuned to penetrate solid walls - just like the waves that transmit radio and TV signals - so the military could spot enemy soldiers inside a building without the radar signal being detected, Walton said. Traffic police could measure vehicle speed without setting off drivers' radar detectors. Autonomous vehicles could tell whether a bush conceals a more dangerous obstacle, like a tree stump or a gulley.

The radar is inherently able to distinguish between many types of targets because of its ultra-wide-band characteristics. "Unfortunately, there are thousands of everyday objects that look like humans on radar - even chairs and filing cabinets," he said. So the shape of a radar image alone can't be used to identify a human. "What tends to give a human away is that he moves. He breathes, his heart beats, his body makes unintended motions."

These tiny motions could be used to locate disaster survivors who were pinned under rubble. Other radar systems can't do that because they are too far-sighted - they can't see people who are buried only a few yards away. Walton said that the noise radar is inherently able to see objects that are nearby.

"It can see things that are only a couple of inches away with as much clarity as it can see things on the surface of Mars," he added.

That means that with further development, the radar might image tumors, blood clots and foreign objects in the body. It could even measure bone density. As with all forms of medical imaging, studies would first have to determine the radar's effect on the body. The university is expected to license the patented radar system.



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Is it a bird? Is it a spaceship? No, it's a secret US spy plane

Saturday June 24, 2006
The Guardian

- Sightings of flying object over Britain worried MoD
- Questions threatened to strain relations with US

It is the stuff of internet conspiracy theorists' dreams. A top secret, hypersonic, cold war spy plane that was allegedly flown by the Americans in UK airspace without the government's permission.

Publicly, the UK government played down newspaper stories about people who reported seeing UFO-like phenomena. But documents released under the Freedom of Information Act suggest the Ministry of Defence took the rumours much more seriously. Its investigations even threatened to strain the special relationship. "It does show that they were concerned that this thing did exist and the Americans were flying it around willy-nilly over the UK," said David Clarke, a social scientist at Sheffield Hallam University, who obtained the documents. "It certainly suggests that the British government suspected that they were being kept in the dark."

The United States has never confirmed the existence of the mysterious aircraft, called Aurora, which was supposedly designed to sneak at very high speed over the Soviet Union and take covert snaps of what the enemy was up to. It was rumoured to be capable of flying at up to mach 8 and so could reach anywhere on the planet in less than three hours. In the early 1990s there were a string of supposed sightings and strange sounds over Scotland which some bewildered locals attributed to UFOs. Rumours in the press that Aurora was operating secretly out of RAF Machrihanish on the tip of Kintyre prompted Scottish MPs to ask questions in parliament.


Briefing notes given to the then defence secretary Tom King on March 4 1992 show that civil servants did give the idea credence. "There is no knowledge in the MoD of a 'black' programme of this nature, although it would not surprise the relevant desk officers in the Air Staff and [Defence Intelligence Staff] if it did exist."

The response suggested to an MP's question was rather less revealing: "The existence of any such project (or operation) would be a matter for the US authorities." The Americans denied everything, but the reports kept coming.

The most credible witness was Chris Gibson, who had 12 years' experience with the Royal Observer Corps and was an expert on recognising aircraft. He saw a triangular plane flanked by two US fighters being refuelled in flight by tanker while he was working on the Galveston Key oilrig in 1989. The plane was unlike anything he had ever seen. "There was no precedent for this," he said. "I kind of sussed out that it was something I shouldn't have seen." He reported the sighting to Jane's Defence Weekly in 1992.

On December 22 1992, the air attache to the British embassy in Washington wrote to the assistant chief of the Air Staff in London explaining US reaction to renewed MoD questions prompted by Mr Gibson's sighting. "Secretary of the Air Force, the Honorable Donald B Rice, was to say the least incensed by the renewed speculation, and the implied suggestion that he had lied to Congress by stating that Aurora did not exist.

"As you will have gathered, the whole affair is causing considerable irritation within HQ [US Air Force], and any helpful comments we can make to defuse the situation would be appreciated."

"The sort of prickly reaction to people not believing their denials is pretty unusual," said Bill Sweetman, an expert on top secret US black projects with Jane's Defence Review. "They generally don't deny things actually because it generally doesn't hurt them too much if somebody thinks they have a capability they don't."

A further batch of sightings on March 31 1993 over Devon, Cornwall, South Wales and Shropshire prompted another investigation by the MoD. These turned out later to be a Russian rocket re-entering the atmosphere, but the MoD investigators at the time suspected Aurora. "There would seem to be some evidence on this occasion that an unidentified object (or objects) of unknown origin was operating over the UK ... If there has been some activity of US origins which is known to a limited circle in MoD and is not being acknowledged it is difficult to investigate further." Mr Sweetman suspects that by the end of the decade the MoD knew about Aurora. Another document from 2000 on the MoD's investigations into UFO sightings -or unidentified aerial phenomena as they prefer to call them - states that "some UAP reports can be attributed to covert aircraft programmes".

The section, which discusses other covert US aircraft such as the SR-71 Blackbird, contains two paragraphs and two illustrations which were censored before its freedom of information release last month. Codes next to the removed material indicate that it was excised in the interests of international relations. "Certain viewing angles of these vehicles may be described as saucer-like," the document says.



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On the Edge


The perils of underestimating Ahmadinejad

Simon Tisdall
Monday June 26, 2006
The Guardian

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is the latest in a long line of American bogeymen: Libya's Colonel Gadafy, Panama's Manuel Noriega, Serbia's Slobodan Milosevic, Iraq's Saddam Hussein and al-Qaida's Osama bin Laden, to name a few.

But by casting Iran's president in the prime target role of maverick evildoer, the Bush administration ignores the complex forces that brought him to power last year and his previously unsuspected political skills, both supporters and critics say. As domestic opponents have already discovered, underestimating Mr Ahmadinejad is tempting - and foolish.
The president's rising popularity owes as much to his common touch as US enmity. Many ordinary Iranians, while complaining about wages, inflation and restricted personal freedoms, approve of the Blair-like "national conversation" that Mr Ahmadinejad has launched through fortnightly provincial tours and rallies.

"He is a good man. He tries to do his best," said Saeideh, a student in Shiraz. "My family supported [Mohammad] Khatami [the former reformist president]. But it is good the way Ahmadinejad stands up to the Americans."

Mohammad Atrianfar, founder of the main opposition newspaper, Shargh, admitted that Mr Ahmadinejad had succeeded in cultivating a popular image, but questioned his authority. "My impression is that he is just a mouthpiece, an amplifier for various interests elsewhere," Mr Atrianfar said.

Anti-government intellectuals and secularists also attribute Mr Ahmadinejad's ascendancy to the backing of clerical hardliners, as well as the Revolutionary Guards and basij militia. They said the president owed his job to the supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, who was primarily concerned with establishing Iran's leadership in the Muslim world over the rival claims of Arab states such as Egypt.

Mr Khamenei is said to be gratified by Mr Ahmadinejad's hero status in the Arab world as a scourge of the Bush administration and champion of Palestinian rights. At the same time, western diplomats said there was evidence the president was "learning on the job". He had toned down his rhetoric and qualified last autumn's inflammatory remarks on the Holocaust and Israel, they said. He now says Iran simply wants justice (a key Ahmadinejad theme) for Palestinians and does not see why Muslims should pay for past European persecution of Jews.

Yet Mr Ahmadinejad is far from being a puppet of Iran's mullahs or clerics. A strong current of anti-clericalism permeates the Islamic republic 27 years after the revolution, largely the product of perceived corruption and abuse of power. His advancement came in part because, ironically, he was able to assume Mr Khatami's mantle as the "anti-status quo candidate", a source said.

The secret of Mr Ahmadinejad's success was that he had distanced himself from both the Islamic establishment and the discredited, mostly middle-class reformers of the Khatami era, building a third constituency among the working classes, younger voters and the less well-off.

Siamak Namazi, an independent Tehran political analyst, said: "Ahmadinejad represents the second generation of revolutionaries, the foot soldiers of 1979. They are the ones who fought the war against Iraq, they are the ones who suffered when Saddam used chemical weapons (whose components were supplied by the west). They are the ones who now get lectured by the west about WMD. They feel very suspicious about the west. They also feel the older generation sold them out." Mr Ahmadinejad was "politically right but economically ultra-left", he added.

Some see Mr Ahmadinejad as a product of the pre-revolutionary period in which Marxist ideas mingled with Sufi mysticism and Islamic spiritual values. His support for a centrally directed economy, continued state subsidies and more equal rights for women can thus be reconciled with his opposition to reform of Iran's inherently conservative, Islamic-based power structure.

All the same, economic mismanagement and inefficiency may yet be his undoing. "This is a sick economy dependent on the price of oil," said Vahid Karimi of the Institute for Political and International Studies. Structural weaknesses including lack of investment, a tiny private sector, and capital flight were not being addressed, a report by 50 prominent economists concluded. A fast-growing population was increasingly demanding more than the government was delivering, a western diplomat said. "They are squandering the oil windfall."

Mr Ahmadinejad's fall, if and when it comes, is unlikely to be the result of political insurrection, outside intervention, or his demonisation as America's new bogeyman. Its likely cause will be more mundane. In Iran, as elsewhere, it's the economy, stupid.



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U.S. presses for restraint in Middle East

Last Updated Tue, 27 Jun 2006 05:51:09 EDT
CBC News

The United States called on both sides to remain calm while Israeli troops, tanks and helicopter gunships were poised on Tuesday for an assault across the Gaza Strip border as diplomatic efforts languished in the attempt to secure the release of an Israeli soldier abducted by Palestinian militants.

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice urged Israel to "give diplomacy a chance" in dealing with the crisis.
"There really needs to be an effort now to try and calm the situation," Rice told reporters en route to Pakistan, where she is holding security talks.

Palestinian troops have blocked roads in northern Gaza in preparation for possible invasion by the Israelis.

Cpl. Gilad Shalit, 19, was abducted Sunday after Palestinian gunmen travelled through a 600 metre tunnel under the Gaza border and attacked a remote guard post. Two Israeli soldiers were killed in the attack.

In a statement released on Monday, the abductors demanded the release of about 500 Palestinian women and children detained in Israel.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert refused.

"This is not a matter of negotiations. This is not a matter of bargaining," Olmert told Jewish business leaders in Jerusalem. "Release of prisoners is absolutely not on the agenda of the Israeli government."

Meanwhile, Palestinian news agency Ma'an reported on Tuesday it had conducted a poll in which 82 per cent of Palestinians believed Shalit should only be released in exchange for Palestinian soldiers.



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Israel rules out prisoner release

BBC
Tuesday, 27 June 2006

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has refused to release any Palestinian prisoners in exchange for information about an abducted Israeli soldier.

He was responding to a demand from three militant groups that women and youths be freed from Israeli jails in return for news on Gilad Shalit.

Those making the demand included the armed wing of governing party Hamas.

Mr Olmert also threatened military action to free the soldier seized in clashes on the Gaza border on Sunday.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has urged Israel to give diplomacy a chance to win the release of the tank gunner.

She said a concerted international effort was under way to secure his freedom and appealed for calm rather than an escalation of the situation.

'Time running out'

Mr Olmert has put the army on standby for an extensive military operation against Palestinian militants to free Cpl Shalit and Israeli tanks and armoured vehicles have been assembling on the Gaza border.

"The question of freeing [Palestinian] prisoners is in no way on the Israeli government agenda," Mr Olmert said during a speech in Jerusalem.

"There will be no negotiations, no bargaining, no agreements."

Mr Olmert said that Israel would not allow itself to become the victim of "Hamas-terrorist blackmail", warning that "a large-scale military operation is approaching".

"The time is approaching for a comprehensive, sharp and severe Israeli operation. We will not wait forever," Mr Olmert said.

Cpl Shalit is believed to have been taken captive by militants who tunnelled out of Gaza to attack the army post at Kerem Shalom.

Two Israeli troops and two militants were killed during the raid.

Diplomatic efforts

Hamas political leaders have denied any knowledge of the tank gunner's whereabouts - but they have called for him to be well treated.

The faxed statement calling for the prisoners' release was signed by the Popular Resistance Committees umbrella group, Hamas's Izzedine al-Qassam Brigades, and the previously unknown Army of Islam.

It said: "The Occupation [Israel] will not get any information about its missing soldier until it commits to the following:

"First, the immediate release of all women in prison. Second, the immediate release of all children in prison younger than 18."

Israel is believed to have incarcerated about 100 women and 300 under-18s among the 9,000 Palestinian prisoners it is holding in its jails.

Intense diplomatic efforts have been under way since the soldier's disappearance, including mediation by an Egyptian delegation in the Gaza Strip.

This was noted by the kidnappers themselves, who said their demands were "in response to various mediation efforts and other intervention".

The statement did not confirm whether the three groups were holding Cpl Shalit captive themselves.

Israeli officials say they hold Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Ismail Haniya, of Hamas, responsible for the 19-year-old Israeli's safety.

Correspondents say the crisis could spoil efforts to bind Hamas into a plan implicitly recognising Israel, and may expose divisions between hardline and more pragmatic Hamas elements.



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MK Lieberman calls for Israel to kidnap Palestinian PM Haniyeh

By Haaretz Service
23:17 26/06/2006

Yisrael Beiteinu Chairman MK Avigdor Lieberman called Monday for a massive military retaliation for the previous day's Kerem Shalom attack and said Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas should be kidnapped by the army and hustled across the border into Israel.

Speaking to Army Radio, the far right-wing MK also called for the dismissal of Defense Minister Amir Peretz whom, he said, is managing a "spineless" course of action.

"We need to tell Haniyeh and the Hamas leaders that after a Qassam rocket barrage on Sderot, we will turn their homes into soccer fields. We won't harm innocent people but will give them half an hour to leave [their homes]," Lieberman said. Security cabinet member Minister Meir Sheetrit called Lieberman's comments irresponsible.

"He thinks he lives on a different planet. The soldier's life is now hanging in the balance. Does he think that if we bring Haniyeh, the soldier will be freed tomorrow? And if they kill him?" Sheetrit said.

Opposition members on Sunday called on the government to take harsh measures in response to the cross-border Palestinian attack at Kerem Shalom.

National Union-National Religious Party MK Effi Eitam said, "This was a land-based incursion across an international border into the sovereign territory of the State of Israel. This happens after there is no longer an occupation and no Israel presence [in Gaza], when there is an elected Palestinian government --that has chosen war. This is a declaration of war against Israel."



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Nukuler News


Russia Not to Join Ultimatums in Tackling Nonproliferation - Putin

Created: 27.06.2006 14:32 MSK (GMT +3), Updated: 14:33 MSK
MosNews

Russian President Vladimir Putin said Russia would not endorse ultimatums in tackling nonproliferation problems, the Interfax news agency reported Tuesday.

"I repeat again: we do not intend to join all sorts of ultimatums, which only drive the situation into an impasse and deal a blow to the UN Security Council's authority," Putin told a meeting of Russian ambassadors in Moscow.

The Russian leader went on to say that he was sure that any crisis should be solved by starting dialogues between opponents and not by isolation of any state. Putin said that such an approach not only gave hope but already provided for some positive shift as it had been proved by the course of events.

In the field of nonproliferation we consider effective the work in the diplomatic and political field and also the search for compromises based on the international law. If there are some blank pages in the law, it must be perfected in cooperation with our partners, Putin said.



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Belarus to Respond to Threat From West by Russian Nuclear Weapons

Created: 26.06.2006 17:38 MSK (GMT +3), Updated: 17:44 MSK
MosNews

Belarussian President Alexander Lukashenko on Saturday vowed a military buildup in response to what he said was a threat from the West, and said the deployment of Russian nuclear weapons could not be ruled out, Associated Press news agency reports.
Lukashenko said in comments broadcast on state television that, in his view, Belarus did not need strategic weapons on its territory.

"I don't think there will be a situation that would require the deployment of tactical nuclear weapons," he said during military exercises between Russian and Belarussian forces - the largest ever for the two countries.

However, he qualified his remarks by saying: "If a threat to security existed, there is no need to rule anything out."

Russia's Defense Ministry declined comment on Lukashenko's comments.

In an apparent desire to downplay relations with Belarus, President Vladimir Putin declined an invitation to attend exercises Saturday involving warplanes, combat helicopters and tanks.



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Indonesia may have nuclear power plant in next 5 years

www.chinaview.cn 2006-06-27 17:47:21

JAKARTA, June 27 (Xinhua) -- Indonesia will likely have a nuclear power plant for electricity within the next five years if the country begins the building of the plant this year, Indonesian Minister of Research and Technology Kusmayanto Kadiman said here on Tuesday.
According to the minister, Vice President Jusuf Kalla had instructed to accelerate the supply of electricity to meet the country's strong demand and nuclear energy was thought to be one of the main solutions.

The minister said that currently state-owned electricity company PT. PLN had already signed an agreement with South Korea's Hydro and Nuclear Power Company for establishment of nuclear power plant.

"If we begin the building now, so the fastest, within the next five years we will have it (nuclear power plant)," he said.

The minister said that Indonesia saw South Korea and Japan as partners in these projects.



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Last but not Least


Non-aligned news aims to fight bias

Tuesday 27 June 2006, 12:27 Makka Time, 9:27 GMT

Developing countries have introduced an internet-based news service intended to provide an alternative to the Western media that they say is biased.

The NAM News Network, a joint effort of the 116 member countries of the Non-Aligned Movement, was formally inaugurated on Tuesday by Zainuddin Maidin, the Malaysian information minister, although it has been live online since April 17.
Zainuddin urged members to develop their media and use technology to forge better communication links among them.

"Unless we do this, we shall continue to bemoan the fact that the so-called international media has not and will never give the fair coverage that is due to us," he said in a speech.

The Non-Aligned Movement is a group of nations that sought to avoid alignments with so-called superpowers during the Cold War.

It includes mostly poor countries but also thriving economies such as Singapore, Malaysia and India.

Trust lost

The minister said the West was cynical about the creation of NNN, but people had lost trust in Western media outlets after their reports on the Iraq war.

"Before, people had a strong confidence, (they) wholeheartedly believed in BBC, believed in CNN, but now the situation has changed," he told reporters after introducing the news service.

In contrast, said the minister, the NNN aimed to be an independent and balanced source of news that was not biased.

"We are giving the news fairly, we are not using the deceiving approach, just like the Western media are doing," he said, insisting that NAM countries practised press freedom.

"We don't want to practice that, we are trying to project ourselves as free, independent news."

Different languages

The web-based news service will carry about 60 news items daily, as well as photographs, contributed by 35 news agencies and news organisations of NAM member countries in Asia, West Asia, Africa, Latin America and Europe.

Other countries including China, whose news agency Xinhua has a wide global presence, are contributing.

French, Spanish and Arabic news services are also being planned.

Zainuddin said NNN must be supported, nurtured and developed to become an important window on NAM countries for the world.

"Admittedly, it already has its fair of detractors but we must not be discouraged. With commitment and determination, we can make NNN a successful news organisation of the South and prove the doomsayers wrong," he said.

Malaysia's national news agency Bernama will maintain the site.



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Italy resoundingly rejects reform

Monday, 26 June 2006, 18:27 GMT 19:27 UK

Voters in Italy have roundly rejected radical plans to boost the powers of the prime minister and regions in a nationwide referendum.

According to final results, 61.7% of voters opposed the reforms, while 38.3% approved them.
The reforms were promoted by the previous centre-right government led by Silvio Berlusconi. He argued that Italian politics needed more stability.

The current centre-left government of Romano Prodi campaigned against them.

The BBC's David Willey in Rome says legislators are now likely to go back to the drawing board to decide how to ensure more stability in a country which has had 61 governments since 1945.

Just over half the 47 million registered voters turned out to cast their ballots in the two-day referendum.

Mr Prodi was deeply opposed to the reform bill, which was sponsored by the populist Northern League party.

The Northern League leader, Umberto Bossi, had made the progression of the bill a prerequisite for his continued support of Mr Berlusconi.

He has raised the prospect that the Northern League will split from the centre-right coalition - a move that would undermine Mr Berlusconi's leadership of the opposition.

Sweeping changes

Under the reforms, the prime minister would be granted powers to dissolve parliament, appoint and dismiss ministers and determine the general direction of government policy.

These were all powers that were deliberately kept out of the hands of the prime minister in the 1948 constitution, as a way of preventing the emergence of another figure like fascist dictator Benito Mussolini.

The bill would also redefine the role of Italy's two parliamentary chambers.

The lower house - the Chamber of Deputies - would take the dominant role in matters of national interest like foreign policy, defence and immigration.

The upper house - the Senate - would become responsible for federal law.

But most significantly this bill would give greater autonomy to Italy's 20 regions. They would gain control over education, healthcare and law and order, and would win special representation in the nation's supreme court.

Some estimates say regional government would take control of around 40% of public expenditure.

'No' camp

Vannino Chiti, Mr Prodi's minister for institutional reforms, called the proposals "an awful mess".

"We would end up with 20 regional health systems, 20 regional school systems, and all sorts of divisions among Italians," he said.

The poorer regions in the south are hugely dependent on tax money that comes from the north, the BBC's Christian Fraser reports from Rome.

Two 2005 studies by groups looking at child health in Italy found that if the south were independent it would be the poorest of the 25 EU members in terms of per capita national income.

There were fears the constitutional changes could lead to disparities in the quality of public services, with teachers and health professionals deserting the south, preferring better wages and prospects in the north.

Another key argument against the reforms was the cost.

Italy urgently needs to cut its budget deficit. The proposals might add expensive layers of bureaucracy to a system of public administration where there is already plenty of waste, Christian Fraser reports.



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Chirac expresses confidence in PM, rules out govt reshuffle

www.chinaview.cn 2006-06-27 10:37:49

PARIS, June 27 (Xinhua) -- French President Jacques Chirac has once again expressed his confidence in Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin and ruled out a government reshuffle.
In an interview on state television on Monday, Chirac said, "The government has assumed its tasks with success, and I see no reason to stop it (from) continuing its action with determination."

Villepin's approval rating has nose-dived since the nationwide protests in April over a controversial youth labor law.

Chirac said he wanted Villepin's government "to see its action through to its conclusion."

"What I look at are the results in terms of employment, security etc. That is what interests me, and that is what interests the French people. The French are not fascinated by pseudo-intellectual debates of so-called commentators."

In the interview, the French president also refused to rule outrunning for a third term, saying he would announce his decision early in 2007.



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Vatican officials in Beijing for secret talks: report

AFP
June 27, 2006

HONG KONG - A high-level Vatican delegation is in Beijing for secret negotiations on the possible reopening of diplomatic relations, a report said.

It would be the first time senior Vatican officials have visited China on a formal diplomatic mission since 2000, when talks halted following Beijing's protest about the Vatican's canonisation of 120 Chinese martyrs.

The South China Morning Post said the delegation, which arrived in the capital on Sunday, was led by a senior Holy See negotiator and a senior official of the Vatican Secretariat of State.
It quoted Cardinal Joseph Zen, head of the Hong Kong Catholic diocese, as decribing the visit as a "great development".

"Since both sides have long indicated their wish to talk, it is a very good thing that Vatican officials are now talking with their Chinese counterparts in China. I think it is a friendly gesture (by Beijing)," he was quoted as saying.

China cut diplomatic ties with the Vatican in 1951 -- prompting Rome to switch its recognition to Taiwan, which Beijing views as part of its territory.

Zen cautioned that differences must be settled before formal ties could be restored.

"I don't know about the details of the discussions, but I do not expect the talks will progress very quickly," he said. "Anyway, it is a good start. Beijing knows the two illicit ordinations of bishops were blunders and will not do it again."

China last month ordained two bishops without papal approval.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said she had no knowledge of the talks.

"I haven't heard any news but the Chinese government has a clear position and is sincere to improve relations with the Vatican," she said. "We are ready to have constructive dialogue with the Vatican based on the two principles."

Liu Bainian, spokesman of the state-run China Catholic Patriotic Association, also said he had no knowledge of the negotiations.

Beijing says the Vatican must sever relations with Taiwan -- which Zen said it was ready to do -- and not interfere in China's internal affairs including in religious matters.

China's state-sanctioned church, which does not answer to the pope, has about four million worshippers, official figures show. The Vatican estimates the illegal, or underground, church has around 10 million.

The Vatican delegation was also expected to visit several mainland cultural sites and scheduled to depart on July 1, the newspaper said.



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6 of 10 rescued in Mo. building collapse

By MARIA SUDEKUM FISHER
Associated Press
June 27, 2006

CLINTON, Mo. - A three-story Elks Club building partially collapsed as its members gathered for a dinner, trapping 10 people inside. Six of the 10 were pulled out early Tuesday.

All six of the victims walked out, some with the assistance of rescuers, and most were immediately put onto gurneys for transportation to an area hospital - one of them taken by helicopter.

A seventh victim, who didn't have much strength because of previous medical problems, was expected to be taken from the building, said Kansas City Fire Chief Smokey Dyer, who was coordinating the rescue effort.
Dyer said the eighth and ninth people who remained trapped would be rescued as soon as the front of the building - which officials feared could still collapse - was shored up.

Attempts to locate a 10th person, who was believed to have been on the third floor when the building collapsed, would begin as soon as the other victims were out, Dyer said.

"No fatalities that we know of," Clinton Police Lt. Sonny Lynch said. "If we can peel this thing back and take it apart and not have any more collapse, we should be fine. I really think we can do this."

About 50 people were in the building Monday night - most having dinner on the second floor - when the third floor collapsed around 7:30 p.m., officials said. An Elks Club meeting was scheduled to start at 8 p.m. on the third floor, where new members were to be initiated.

All but 10 found a way out, with several suffering minor injuries.

Nine of those trapped inside were confined in the same 10-by-12-foot area on the second floor. The first walked out around 12:35 a.m., and others followed in 10- to 15-minute intervals.

Henry County Presiding Commissioner Greg Lowe, who was eating dinner in the building when it started to collapse, said he wasn't sure he was going to make it out alive.

"It started caving in," he said. "I went into the next building. The ceiling was falling in. I got to the front and we were going to jump, and then we found a staircase.

"It happened so fast," said Lowe, who had a cut on his head and knots and bruises on his legs from falling brick. "I don't know what in the hell would make the thing come down so fast. I figured I was history."

About 200 emergency personnel were on the scene early Tuesday, including a specialized rescue team from Whiteman Air Force Base, crane operators and an urban search-and-rescue team. Rescuers were using camera and sound devices and canine rescue dogs in their efforts to get to those trapped inside.

Clinton Mayor Gus Wetzel said the collapse came at a time when the Elks Club was marking a milestone in the city.

"It's a sad time for us, a time of irony," Wetzel said. "This Elks Club was celebrating their 100th anniversary in our community."

The collapse occurred in the aging downtown of this community of about 9,500 people, upstairs from a men's clothing store, sandwiched between a law firm and a pharmacy.



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