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Opp vows to resist emergency
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Africa North
Hosni Mubarak reelected head of Egypt's ruling party
(Xinhua) -- Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was reelected chairman of the ruling National Democratic Party (NDP) Saturday at a special session in advance of the inaugural meeting of the party's Ninth General Conference. Mubarak, who ran as the only candidate for the party chief post, was reelected the NDP chairman for a new term during the meeting of the party held at Cairo Stadium Saturday morning. According to unofficial counting, Mubarak won 5,248 votes out of 5,310 party representatives who cast ballots in the election, the first direct vote via secret ballots for the party leadership. The 79-year-old veteran statesman of the Arab country has been in the top post of the NDP since he came to power as president of the country following the assassination of President Anwar Sadat in 1981.
Posted by: Fred || 11/04/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Squeeker.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 11/04/2007 1:39 Comments || Top||

#2  After a closely run elections.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 11/04/2007 2:16 Comments || Top||

#3  I can breathe again.
Posted by: Thomas Woof || 11/04/2007 8:41 Comments || Top||

#4  Jimmuah Cahter approves.
Posted by: Steve White || 11/04/2007 9:17 Comments || Top||

#5  On pins and needles, was I.
Posted by: Seafarious || 11/04/2007 10:54 Comments || Top||

#6  Kept me on the edge o' my seat, that election did. Did Carter certify it?
Posted by: Zenster || 11/04/2007 16:05 Comments || Top||

#7  That surprise meter has to be recalibrated to allow negative numbers!
Posted by: twobyfour || 11/04/2007 23:08 Comments || Top||


Bangladesh
Bangla: Parties urge govt to sue war criminals
Ekattorer Ghatak Dalal Nirmul Committee and different political parties yesterday urged the government to file cases against the war criminals to bring them to trial.

At a meeting they also called for a list of the war criminals and collaborators. "We have decided not to file any case at individual level. Rather, we think, the government should take the initiative in trying the war criminals," Prof Kabir Chowdhury, president of the Nirmul Committee( Forum for Secular Bangladesh) advisory body, told The Daily Star last night. "The war criminals must apologise to the nation," he said talking about decisions of the meeting organised as part of the Nirmul Committee's ongoing dialogue with different socio-political and cultural organisations.

Abdur Razzaq and Matia Chowdhury of Awami League, Hasanul Haq Inu of Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal, Rashed Khan Menon of Workers Party, Dilip Barua of Samyabadi Dal, Manjurul Ahsan Bulbul of Communist Party of Bangladesh, and Shahriar Kabir of Nirmul Committee, among others, attended the meeting held at the residence of Kabir Chowdhury. "We have discussed how the war criminals could be brought to book," said Prof Chowdhury. "We urge the Election Commission (EC) not to allow the religion-based political parties to register with it," added the national professor.
Posted by: Fred || 11/04/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [8 views] Top|| File under:


Hafiz to oppose first any move to oust Khaleda
Major (retd) Hafiz Uddin Ahmed, acting secretary general of Saifur Rahman-led BNP, yesterday said he would be the first one to oppose any proposal that seeks to depose Khaleda Zia from party leadership.

He, however, said a council of the party can decide if anyone needs to be expelled from the party and if Khaleda's expulsion is proposed at the council, he would oppose the attempt. "There is no reason to oust Khaleda Zia from the party as she made lots of sacrifices for the party," Hafiz said at a press briefing at his Banani residence adding that he hoped that the chairperson would be freed through legal process.

Hinting at pro-Khaleda leaders, Hafiz said a few leaders are trying to cling on to politics by using the name of Khaleda Zia. "Some lower level leaders are issuing misleading statements to destroy the unity and image of the party."

Brushing off the reports of Khaleda conveying through her daughter-in-law that she did not recognise Saifur Rahman as acting chairperson and himself as acting secretary general, Hafiz said, "She is in jail. So she is not in the capacity to comment on political affairs in the presence of jail authorities."

Nevertheless, Khaleda Zia can rest assured that leaders and workers of the party are united under her leadership, he said adding that the standing committee of the party has appointed him as acting secretary general to organise and lead the party to power.

Osman Farruk, Ashraf Hossain, ZA Khan, Mofazzal Karim, Zahiruddin Swapan were present among others.
Posted by: Fred || 11/04/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:


Britain
Rise of the machines?? - Pilotless Plane Can Launch Own Attacks
It sounds like something straight out of a Terminator film script. Future air battles may be fought by robots with minimum human input.

The Ministry of Defence is spending £124m developing a prototype of Britain's first unmanned fighter-bomber. Named Taranis after the Celtic god of thunder, the sinister bat-wing shape will be the size of one of the Red Arrows' Hawk display jets. Its range will be intercontinental. It can carry bombs, missiles and canon. And, for the first time, it will be capable of shooting down other aircraft.

"This is a machine able to think for itself," said Chris Allam, project director at BAE Systems' top secret works at Salmesbury, near Preston in Lancashire. "It's a new generation of UAV (unmanned air vehicles). It won't need a pilot on the ground with a joystick. It will be assigned an area to operate in and then will acquire and track targets autonomously."

The prospect raises obvious fears. What if the deadly machine turned on its creators?
Plunging headlong towards Skynet, we are ...
That's science fiction say the designers. "At no time will the machine be able to take the decision to release a weapon. That will always require human authorisation."
For now. Just you wait til it gets a target in its sites and asks for permission, and doesn't get an answer it likes.
Although that may reassure flesh and blood pilots, there is strong lobbying for unmanned aviation. A conventional fast jet costs £40,000 an hour to operate. Drones can be cheaper and - because no life is at stake - more expendable.

"They're valuable for operations that are dull - such as protracted surveillance - dirty, operating in a contaminated environment or dangerous, where there's heavy anti-aircraft fire," explained aviation writer Jon Lake. "But their sensors are far inferior to a human being's whose eye can take in detail in an instant."

I was the first TV journalist to be allowed inside the factory to see the first metal being cut on the prototype. The builders are justly proud of a project which restores Britain to the premiership of aerospace innovation. It should fly within two years and could be operational in ten.

The French are developing a similar weapon, whilst America is building a solar-powered plane to stay aloft for a year.

This really could be the rise of the machines.
Posted by: Delphi || 11/04/2007 22:42 || Comments || Link || [15 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Hat tip to BAE. The money saved on flight pay and golf courses alone should make these units affordable at nearly any price.
Posted by: Besoeker || 11/04/2007 1:50 Comments || Top||

#2  At least they did not name it the M-5
Posted by: Agar, Conquistador of the Voles007 || 11/04/2007 2:27 Comments || Top||

#3  Now we know why the Brits have been delaying paying for IFF technology. They probably figure the rest of the civilized world will probably be glad to give it to them as a "gift" once they start using it! :-)
Posted by: gorb || 11/04/2007 2:57 Comments || Top||

#4  Will it be running Vista ?

Posted by: john frum || 11/04/2007 6:37 Comments || Top||

#5  I, for one, welcome the rule of our new autonomous flying overlords.
Posted by: Mike || 11/04/2007 7:09 Comments || Top||

#6  "Return to base, HAL."
"I'm sorry, Dave. I can't do that."
Posted by: SteveS || 11/04/2007 8:27 Comments || Top||

#7  "Return to base, HAL."
"I'm sorry, Dave. I can't do that."

"Tee time at 13:00 HAL"
"Inbound, ETA 12:32 Requesting permission to land"
Posted by: Thomas Woof || 11/04/2007 8:44 Comments || Top||

#8  Hell, I'm waiting for them to contract it all out, to kids on their XBoxes and PS3 who can sit at home and do it remotely.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 11/04/2007 9:04 Comments || Top||

#9  "...to kids on their XBoxes and PS3 who can sit at home and do it remotely."

The US Airforce should ask the gaming conventions to be scheduled during Ramadan, part of the contests would be kills in Iraq and Afghanistan, level 1 winners can hunt down screetch and Osama Bin Hiding in Paky Land using stealth stuff.

War over.
Posted by: Crereper Bucket4485 || 11/04/2007 10:30 Comments || Top||

#10  Air war is getting a lot more interesting. Future manned ops will be stealth penetration and 2nd echelon high performance, and long range rear area logistics transport.

The drones will be recce of all varieties, high tech fighter aircraft, and armadas of low tech, inexpensive aircraft to vie with each other and the high tech fighters.

An attack would commence with stealth bombers hitting critical enemy C&C points, then a low tech air armada would be launched, along with cruise missiles, against major targets. This would be defended against with low tech drone fighters, while the high tech drones tried to get and keep air supremacy in the higher altitudes and take out manned enemy fighters.

While faster and more maneuverable, the high tech drones couldn't descend into the low tech space without becoming prime targets; but low tech drones couldn't venture up that high against the superior aircraft.

In case of a breakthrough in either direction, the manned aircraft in the 2nd echelon would police up any drones that penetrated.

All told, one hell of a dogfight, while trying to take out major ground targets at the same time.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 11/04/2007 13:07 Comments || Top||

#11  The British next will come up with robotic infanty. The perk is they will be programmed not to surrender unlike some of thier regular forces.
Posted by: Leah Ashley || 11/04/2007 14:50 Comments || Top||

#12  Paging Dr. Forbin.
Posted by: Eric Jablow || 11/04/2007 15:13 Comments || Top||

#13  Headed towards Ender's Game.
Posted by: OldSpook || 11/04/2007 16:33 Comments || Top||

#14  The furball is shedding.
Posted by: Zenster || 11/04/2007 19:52 Comments || Top||

#15  Anonymoose, you assume that other countries are going to choose to afford these things. Look at Iran, our next opponent: their pilots get hardly any plain vanilla flight time, and that only when the technicians cannibalize one airplane to get replacement parts for the next one. Or Russia, which finally has enough oil profits to feed, clothe and maybe even pay the human forces. In Britain the only way they get to do the development work is by positioning the things as environmentally better than actual airplanes, according to lotp. The EU isn't going to spend money for such things, so who are you thinking of? Chavez's Venezuela?

Separately, let the Wii kiddies play with the things and it will all be over in hours.
Posted by: trailing wife || 11/04/2007 21:06 Comments || Top||

#16  China, tw. At least they will give it a serious try, and so long as they have enough government control and unmarriable young men to push resources into military R&D, after their grad students come home from our computer science and engineering and physics schools.
Posted by: lotp || 11/04/2007 21:16 Comments || Top||

#17  Bleh, that was badly worded. Time to go to bed.

China will make a try for this I think. Or possibly Japan if the nationalists gain control again.
Posted by: lotp || 11/04/2007 21:17 Comments || Top||

#18  I didn't think of them, lotp -- thanks. My apologies, Anonymoose.
Posted by: trailing wife || 11/04/2007 21:18 Comments || Top||


Fifth Column
Professor offers students extra credit for burning U.S. flag or Constitution...
ORONO, Maine - A University of Maine student alleges her former professor offered extra credit to class members if they burned the American flag or the U.S. Constitution or were arrested defending free speech.

On the first day of class, associate professor Paul Grosswiler offered the credit to members of his History of Mass Communications class, according to sophomore Rebekah McDade. Disturbed by the comment, McDade dropped the class and intends to take the course again next semester with a different professor. "I was offended," McDade said Friday. "I come from a family of military men and women, and the flag and Constitution are really important symbols to me because of my family background."

In an e-mail responding to a request for comment from the Bangor Daily News on Friday, Grosswiler said he thought McDade misunderstood the class discussion, which was intended to elicit thought about the First Amendment. He said he has held this same discussion for years without incident.
Burn Burn Burn, someone finally listened?
"I don’t intend for students to burn either the Constitution or the flag, and over the years hundreds of students have understood that," Grosswiler wrote.
No "I didn't say that" comment
Hey, he's trying to weasel out best he can. Next is the non-apology apology ...
The incident was made public recently when The Leadership Institute, a Virginia-based nonprofit organization, distributed a press release detailing the classroom discussion. The Leadership Institute was founded in 1979 by Morton Blackwell and has a mission to identify, recruit, train and place conservatives in politics, government and the media, according to the organization’s Web site.

A field representative for the institute met McDade on Oct. 1 at UM, when she shared her experience and expressed an interest in spearheading a group "Students for Academic Freedom," Blackwell said Friday. The group’s initial goal would be to convince UM to enact a "Student Bill of Rights," as other colleges have, which would protect students from professors who treat and grade students differently based on religious or political beliefs, McDade said. The institute has assisted McDade in the startup process, she said.
Bout time
When Grosswiler listed the extra-credit opportunities, McDade said the class of approximately 50 students grew very quiet, and some questioned whether he was serious.
Tar and feathers?
"I applaud the student’s exercise of free expression. If she had stayed in the class, I would have given her extra credit for publicizing her opinions."
Right
Posted by: Icerigger || 11/04/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  ...I would have given her extra negative credit for publicizing her incorrect opinions, and recommend reeducation program/camp.

Posted by: twobyfour || 11/04/2007 1:08 Comments || Top||

#2  Paul Grosswiler, author of the book "The Method is the Message," a study on the re-thinking of McLuhan. Sounds to me like he gets it.
Posted by: Besoeker || 11/04/2007 1:04 Comments || Top||

#3  How much credit can a student get for torching or corrupting the faculty personnel and pay records/database as a 'free expression' exercise?
Posted by: Procopius2k || 11/04/2007 9:02 Comments || Top||

#4  how about the free expression of hanging a noose on his door to express discontent with his teaching practices? Does that bring extra credit too?
Posted by: Unutle McGurque8861 || 11/04/2007 16:53 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
India to fork out $1b to US for 6 Hercules planes
NEW DELHI: In what will be the biggest defence deal with US till now, India is now firmly moving ahead to seal the contract for acquiring six C-130J 'Super Hercules' military transport planes for "special operations" at a cost of around $1 billion.

Defence ministry sources said the FMS (foreign military sale) contract — a government-to-government arrangement — for the C-130Js will be concluded "soon" since it had been catered for in the ongoing defence budget. "We are closely studying the offer after the US Defence Security Cooperation Agency notified the American Congress in May. The contract will be signed within this fiscal," said a source.

While the Left has managed to stymie the civilian nuclear deal, the UPA government has signalled that the Indo-US defence cooperation will continue unhindered despite opposition from CPM and CPI.

As earlier reported by TOI, the Indian and American armed forces have held as many as 50 joint military exercises in the last six-seven years to build "interoperability". In sharp contrast, India has held just a handful of exercises with Russia, the largest defence supplier to Indian armed forces by far.

And now, the US is aggressively trying to grab a huge chunk of the lucrative defence market in India. Talking about the impending C-130J sale to India, US said it will strengthen the bilateral "strategic relationship", which continues to be "an important force for political stability, peace, and economic progress" in South Asia.

On their part, IAF officers say the C-130Js, the latest version of Hercules with four powerful engines and greater payload-carrying capacity, will enhance India's rapid reaction capabilities.

The aircraft, which can even land on makeshift airstrips due to its rugged nature, will be used primarily for covert airlift missions for special forces. India has requested four Rolls Royce AE-2100D3 spare engines, eight AAR-47 missile warning systems, eight AN/ALR-56M advanced radar warning receivers among other equipment.
Posted by: john frum || 11/04/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  What's good for Marietta, GA is good for America.
Posted by: Besoeker || 11/04/2007 1:52 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran police arrest 32 in party raid
TEHERAN - Iranian police said on Saturday they had arrested 32 university students at a party in Karaj outside Teheran for drinking alcohol and “being half-naked,” the ISNA news agency reported. “Police forces arrested 11 girls and 21 boys on Thursday night for drinking alcoholic drinks and being half-naked,” the commander of Teheran province’s security police Nader Sarkari was quoted as saying.

He said the raid came after a tip-off and that the students were celebrating after one of them had won a medal in an international competition.
Posted by: Steve White || 11/04/2007 00:00 || Comments || Link || [10 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I thought it said Panty Raid
Posted by: Frank G || 11/04/2007 7:27 Comments || Top||

#2  Dang! Commodore Frank beat me to the punch again! That's what I get for not being an early riser....
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 11/04/2007 13:11 Comments || Top||

#3  :-)
Posted by: Frank G || 11/04/2007 13:21 Comments || Top||



Who's in the News
57[untagged]
8Govt of Pakistan
4Govt of Syria
2Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal
2Taliban
2TNSM
1Govt of Iran
1al-Aqsa Martyrs
1Abu Sayyaf
1al-Qaeda in North Africa
1Hezbollah
1Islamic Courts
1Palestinian Authority
1Hamas
1Chechen Republic of Ichkeria
1Fatah al-Islam

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Meet the Mods
In no particular order...
Steve White
Seafarious
tu3031
badanov
sherry
ryuge
GolfBravoUSMC
Bright Pebbles
trailing wife
Gloria
Fred
Besoeker
Glenmore
Frank G
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Two weeks of WOT
Sun 2007-11-04
  Opp vows to resist emergency
Sat 2007-11-03
  Musharraf imposes state of emergency
Fri 2007-11-02
  Anbar leaders visit US, stress partnership
Thu 2007-11-01
  Bus bomb kills eight, injures 56 in Russia
Wed 2007-10-31
  Iraqi Special Forces Detains AQI Commander in Khadra
Tue 2007-10-30
  Crew of North Korean Pirated Vessel Regains Control
Mon 2007-10-29
  Baghdad: Gunmen kidnap 10 anti-al-Qaida tribal leaders
Sun 2007-10-28
  80 Talibs escorted from gene pool at Musa Qala
Sat 2007-10-27
  Pakistani forces launch offensive against militants in Swat valley
Fri 2007-10-26
  Mehsuds formally ask army to leave Tank compound
Thu 2007-10-25
  India jails 31 for life over 1998 blasts
Wed 2007-10-24
  Binny demands reinforcements for Iraq
Tue 2007-10-23
  PKK offers conditional ceasefire
Mon 2007-10-22
  Bobby Jindal governor of Louisiana
Sun 2007-10-21
  Four dozen Talibs banged in Musa Qala area


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