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Azam Tariq's alleged murderer caught in Greece
Today's Headlines
Headline Comments [Views]
20:58 12 00:00 JosephMendiola [6]
20:50 3 00:00 2b [5]
20:46 1 00:00 3dc [2]
19:18 2 00:00 Captain America [1]
17:56 5 00:00 gromgoru [8]
17:51 12 00:00 Captain America [7]
15:53 4 00:00 Captain America [3]
15:14 4 00:00 Vern Estes []
14:51 29 00:00 Eric Jablow [2] 
14:43 2 00:00 Perfesser [1]
14:23 2 00:00 Zenster []
13:50 10 00:00 Captain America [2]
13:50 1 00:00 Robert Crawford [3]
13:40 8 00:00 lotp [1]
13:31 4 00:00 DMFD [2]
13:12 5 00:00 tipper [5]
13:10 3 00:00 Visitor [3]
12:52 10 00:00 3dc [6]
12:09 1 00:00 Glert Thetch2165 [2]
11:33 6 00:00 Alaska Paul []
11:30 1 00:00 3dc [8]
11:01 23 00:00 Glert Thetch2165 [2] 
10:48 8 00:00 Eric Jablow [1]
10:31 4 00:00 Whineger Phaviting8058 [1]
10:30 12 00:00 Nimble Spemble []
10:21 4 00:00 Captain America [1]
10:19 9 00:00 RD [2]
10:01 16 00:00 JosephMendiola [3]
09:23 6 00:00 Captain America [6]
09:19 6 00:00 Zenster [2]
09:18 10 00:00 Laurence of the Rats [2]
09:17 8 00:00 Barbara Skolaut [2]
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07:52 5 00:00 USN, ret. []
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05:49 8 00:00 JosephMendiola [4]
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China-Japan-Koreas
China to create Aircraft Carrier fleet
The Chinese military is currently planning to build an aircraft carrier, a pro-Beijing daily in Hong Kong reported Friday.

"The Chinese army will conduct research and build an aircraft carrier and develop our own aircraft carrier fleet," People’s Liberation Army Lt. Gen. Wang Zhiyuan was quoted as saying in the Chinese-language Wen Wei Po.

"An aircraft carrier is a very important tool for big countries defending their interests in the sea. China is a big country with a long shoreline. An aircraft carrier is necessary to defend our interests in the sea," he said.

It would be China's first aircraft carrier and would likely be deployed to join other warships currently in the South China Sea, the newspaper said.

Wang said the carrier fleet will not be complete for another three to five years.

The newspaper said aircraft fit for the carrier and auxiliary warships and submarines are either being built or completed.

It also quoted sources as saying China may deploy its aircraft carrier fleet near the energy fuel supply route in South China Sea where warships are now being deployed.

The barriers for China to build its own aircraft carrier include technology advancement, hardware and software support, building and maintenance costs and political pressure from overseas over China's becoming a military threat in the region, the newspaper reported.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 03/15/2006 20:58 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "Wang said the carrier fleet will not be complete for another three to five years."

LOL. They must have a fleet of towed barges in mind.

I can't believe you didn't take the opportunity to fisk this one, Anonymoose. Juicy, LOL.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 21:08 Comments || Top||

#2  "Wang said the carrier fleet will not be complete for another three to five years."


Yay so the USN gets to wait for 3-5 years for more target practice. I'm sure they'll appreciate it.
Posted by: Valentine || 03/15/2006 21:27 Comments || Top||

#3  Will say again that both Russia and China Navies have given priority to boomer and attack sub construction as primary defense against America's CVBG's, with so-called "arsenal ships" as backup. The carriers are there for littoral/area defense, i.e. to escort and protect the subs and amphibs from US air- and LR tactical missle naval strikes, besides of course feel-good "showing the flag" Until such time that China succeeds in overtaking the USA as global hyper-power circa Year 2030 - 2050 but more likely closer to Year 2100, its doubtful the above missions will change for China's PLAN even iff China did decide to busting its budget and build one or a few NIMITZ-sized indigens flattop(s).
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 03/15/2006 21:51 Comments || Top||

#4  Glert: This one is way beyond me. I think they are going to offend Poseidon himself with this effort. And you know what a beatch he can be when angered.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 03/15/2006 22:14 Comments || Top||

#5  Yay so the USN gets to wait for 3-5 years for more target practice. I'm sure they'll appreciate it.

Don't be so sure. The US is busy outsourcing software development and computer hardware manufacturing to mainland China. At the same time, the US military is moving to off-the-shelf tech to lower costs. Of course, the Chinese government would NEVER interfere with commercial enterprises in order to achieve a strategic advantage.
Posted by: DMFD || 03/15/2006 22:22 Comments || Top||

#6  The claim that an aircraft carrier is necessary for coastal defense is absurd.


Russia and China have identical doctrine for naval power, especially naval air power. Defense of coastlines will be accomplished by land based naval aviation.

The aircraft carrier is first and foremost a first strike weapon system.

Posted by: badanov || 03/15/2006 22:49 Comments || Top||

#7  Lol, Anonymoose! Even if they've purloined 90% from us and/or others in the West, I'm sure you're right. Just having some specs does not make something as complex as a carrier into an efficient machine of war. Imagining them working out the wrinkles in their flight ops generate grizzly flaming death scenes - and trapped pilots going to the bottom - for me...
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 23:14 Comments || Top||

#8  LOL. They must have a fleet of towed barges in mind.

Actually, it's not that farfetched. And badanov isn't that far off.

It's quite likely that the Chinese CVs would be used more as mobile airfields for rearming and refueling, than as 'aircraft carriers' per se.
Posted by: Pappy || 03/15/2006 23:16 Comments || Top||

#9  I've seen some documentary stuff about Churchill and Roosevelt seeking a similar solution during WW-II to give air cover the range needed for the convoys. My favorite proffered idea used wood pulp / shavings frozen in ice to create a monstrous floating airfield. It would've been impervious to torpedoes. Heh.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 23:23 Comments || Top||

#10  Chinese SST's : spectacular torpedo targets
Posted by: Frank G || 03/15/2006 23:40 Comments || Top||

#11  or STT's ...crap.... PIMF
Posted by: Frank G || 03/15/2006 23:40 Comments || Top||

#12  A couple of posters on FREEREPUBLIC.com, on Russia's = Putin's new desire to build a group of "elite" new submarines, are asking how can Russia can do this with an economy the size of NORWAY, vs size of HOLLAND. Awhile back it was BELGIUM, the nation reported in the 'Burg's articles today about women and children begging alongst its streets. Despite their awesome America-challenging, America-devastating economies. remember its Russia-China whom both say that war against America, and only Amerikkka, is not only desired but preferred, circa 2015-2018, which is roughly consistent wid the US Left's desire to use any means necessary, violent or non-violent, legal or illegal, etc. to force Socialism, Anti-sovereignty, and OWG on America after 2015-2020!? Thanx to eight years of CLintonian Rightism-Capitalism-Free Trade - Republicanism, the Left doesn't have to prove neither the merits or superiority of Leftism-Socialism anymore, forever and eveeer!
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 03/15/2006 23:57 Comments || Top||


International-UN-NGOs
Pull the Plug: Human Rights Defeat for US
America's attempt to derail a new human rights body for the United Nations was foiled in a landslide vote yesterday, with nations as diverse as Britain and Cuba ignoring Washington's plea for rejection.

In an unusual display of near-unanimity, the world body voted 170-4 to create a Human Rights Council to replace its discredited predecessor, the Commission on Human Rights.

John Bolton said the new body was seriously flawed
The council's creation has been described as the centrepiece of attempts to reform the UN's archaic machinery and the American No vote is widely seen as a gloomy omen for the new body.

Delegates applauded after giant screens in the UN's general assembly showed only America, Israel and two tiny pro-American Pacific island states voting against.

Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 20:50 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Now here's the "red meat" that Hyde and Coleman need to end US financing of the "dysfunctional" UN. It's a mob living off Other People's Money - much of it ours. Enough, already.

As for the UK, Oz, et al., well, fuck them. This was obvious and they decided to tuck tails.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 21:06 Comments || Top||

#2  Condemnation of Israel in 5..4..3. Condemnation of USA in ?
Posted by: gromgoru || 03/15/2006 23:25 Comments || Top||

#3  pathetic.
Posted by: 2b || 03/15/2006 23:52 Comments || Top||


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Isolated Abbas furious at Britain over Jericho raid
Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian leader, lashed out at Britain yesterday as he denounced the Israeli raid on a Palestinian jail as an "unforgivable crime".

Humiliated and isolated, Mr Abbas made his comments at the ruins of Jericho jail, abandoned by three British monitors on Tuesday, prompting Israel's operation to capture six of its prisoners.

Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 20:46 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Tough shit!
Posted by: 3dc || 03/15/2006 23:43 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
Train Killed Deaf Beauty Queen As She Was Text-Messaging
AUSTIN, Texas -- Austin police now say the reigning Miss Deaf Texas was killed by a freight train apparently while text-messaging family and friends on her cell phone. Tara Rose McAvoy, 18, was killed Monday while walking along the Union Pacific tracks in South Austin. Police said she apparently was walking from her family's home to her mother's workplace when she was hit. McAvoy was to represent Texas at the Miss Deaf America pageant this summer in Palm Desert, Calif.

Police said the train's crew spotted her and sounded the locomotive's horn, but got no response. The lead locomotive's snowplow -- which extends 16 inches from either track -- clipped McAvoy, killing her. Police said her family said they'd never known her to walk along those tracks before. Gene Mirus is a deaf studies instructor at Gallaudet, which is the nation's leading university for the hearing-impaired. He told the Austin American Statesman that many deaf people who think they can detect approaching trains by their vibrations are mistaken.
Posted by: ryuge || 03/15/2006 19:18 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  What a waste--walking by or on the tracks with any hearing-impairment (or a Walkman/iPod on) is like playing Russian Roulette. Those trains don't make any noise until they pass you--and then it's too late.

The worst thing about this is what it does to the train crew. They have to live with it.
Posted by: Dar || 03/15/2006 20:30 Comments || Top||

#2  A truly sad tale.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 20:41 Comments || Top||


Down Under
Australian clerics to train at university
ISLAMIC clerics will be trained in Australian universities under a proposal by Muslim leaders to prevent students being radicalised by fundamentalist teaching in the Middle East.

Home-grown imams will be able to study in Melbourne and Sydney, using a curriculum that emphasises spiritual rather than political Islam, under the plans being drawn up by an arm of John Howard's Muslim Community Reference Group.

Joumanah El-Matrah, who co-chairs one of seven sub-groups in the Prime Minister's Muslim advisory body, said the clergy courses would offer a mainstream alternative for religious training outside the hothouse environment of training centres in Egypt and Saudi Arabia, where many aspiring imams travel.

"The course will offer a meaningful alternative within Australia for young Muslims who are interested in developing some training in Islam, or their interest in becoming imams," she said.

"In time we think the graduates of the course would create a vision of what it means to be a Muslim here, in a way that is conducive to this community."

It is understood preliminary approaches have been made through the federal Department of Education to established universities in NSW and Victoria with a view to starting courses as early as next year.

The plan comes after The Australian revealed in December that Muslim clerics would be subject to a strict code of behaviour under a proposal being devised by Islamic leaders to rein in inflammatory language. The Muslim community's image has suffered greatly in recent years because of the extremist ideology preached by some imams.

Firebrand Melbourne sheik Mohammed Omran was criticised by Mr Howard and moderate Muslim leaders for calling Osama bin Laden a "good man" and labelling as a US-government conspiracy the attacks of September 11. And in a lecture delivered to more than 1000 people last year, Faiz Mohammed, from the Global Islamic Youth Centre in Sydney, said rape victims had only themselves to blame.

Ms El-Matrah, who manages the Islamic Women's Welfare Council of Victoria, said the proposed clerical training would range from undergraduate to PhD levels and be carried out by local and visiting imams.

"What we're looking at is a standard course, one to operate out of Victoria and one to operate out of NSW," she said.

"(While) there are already Islamic courses in both states ... they are not courses that are designed for imams.

"You can have brilliant people from overseas, but the cultural context in which they've done their training is radically different from Australia.

"I think it's important to note that all other religions in Australia have similar sorts of degrees already."

Melbourne's most prominent Muslim cleric, Fehmi Naji El-Imam, who co-chairs the clergy training sub-group with Ms El-Matrah, said he would ensure only moderate theologians were hired to lecture students.

But Ms El-Matrah warned that the proposal should not be seen as a means of eradicating or undermining Islamic extremism.

"We don't want people to think this is going to fix all of the community's problems," she said.

"The course won't be set up to undermine these (extremist) people. But what I imagine is that the more people there are that are fluent in Islam, the less power people like, say, Benbrika, are going to have."

Muslim cleric Abdul Nacer Benbrika is among 19 Melbourne and Sydney men awaiting trial on terrorism-related charges following federal police raids in November. The Australian revealed last year that Mr Benbrika was self-taught and had no formal qualifications.
Posted by: Oztralian || 03/15/2006 17:56 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Not a bad idea. But I'd watch out for the third-year "study abroad" program.
Posted by: Thinemp Whimble2412 || 03/15/2006 18:30 Comments || Top||

#2  This is actually highly damaging to the Islamists. When there's a debate over some learned topic, the guy with the credentials can usually eat the lunch of the fundie. The latter ends up sounding like a country hick.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 03/15/2006 19:12 Comments || Top||

#3  you know, that might go down very well with the western "moderate" muslims. Yuppies along with the best of us. "Show us your creeedentials." may be compelling. Can't argue with a M(PBUH)BA.
Posted by: Thinemp Whimble2412 || 03/15/2006 19:18 Comments || Top||

#4  ISLAMIC clerics will be trained in Australian universities under a proposal by Muslim leaders to prevent students being radicalised by fundamentalist teaching in the Middle East.

Instead, they'll be radicalized by fundamentalist teaching in Australia.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 20:13 Comments || Top||

#5  This is actually highly damaging to the Islamists. When there's a debate over some learned topic, the guy with the credentials can usually eat the lunch of the fundie. The latter ends up sounding like a country hick.

That's not how theological arguments are conducted in Islam, Anonymoose. The principal method of disputation is sending the opponents to get the straight dope directly from Allah.
Posted by: gromgoru || 03/15/2006 23:32 Comments || Top||


Aust. & U.K Fighter purchase off if Stealth secrets not shared
AUSTRALIA is threatening to reconsider its $12 billion commitment to buy up to 100 joint strike fighters unless the US agrees to share the secrets of the planes' Stealth technology.

In a dramatic escalation of the stakes over the US-led JSF program, the head of the Australian Defence staff in Washington told the powerful US Senate Armed Services Committee that Australia needed access to the technology to support the new-generation war planes.

Rear Admiral Raydon Gates said that if Australia did not win that access to information such as software codes to be able to service the fighters, Canberra's involvement was in doubt.

"Guaranteed access to necessary JSF data and technology to allow Australia to operate and support the JSF will be required before we join the next phase of the project," Admiral Gates told the committee, which is conducting two days of hearings into the JSF. Admiral Gates said if the issue was not resolved it would also have ramifications for future joint combat operations with the US.

Canberra has already expressed concern about the technology-transfer issue.

But Admiral Gates's warning adds weight to a diplomatic row that is disappointing US allies who are partners in the JSF - particularly Britain, the US's biggest partner in the development, which also wants access to the technology.

Australia is slated to spend $12billion buying up to 100 of the F-35s, which are due for delivery about 2012 to 2014 to replace its ageing F-111 and F/A-18 fleet.

It would be the biggest military procurement in Australia's history and central to Australia's defence capability for the next 30 years.

But Admiral Gates said that "overly restrictive access to United States technology could have numerous negative consequences for both of us". He said this included "forcing Australia to acquire systems elsewhere" as well as threatening the inter-operability of the warplanes in allied assaults.

He added it would "limit operational capability of Australian forces alongside US forces, and reduce the level of co-operative technological development between our governments and industries".

Admiral Gates told the senators that Australia was still committed to the JSF program as a "key element of our future defence capability, both for the defence of Australia and to contribute to future coalition operations (but) let me stress our ongoing success in terms of operations and co-operative projects, such as the JSF, are subject to timely access to necessary technology and data".

He said this kind of access was "essential for successful coalition operations, including our ongoing co-operation in Afghanistan and Iraq".

Canberra says negotiations with the Pentagon are being conducted with goodwill, with sign-off on the next phase of the JSF program due in September. But the US Congress and aircraft-maker Lockheed Martin are resisting the transfer of technology. They fear handing over the keys to the closely guarded Stealth aircraft evasion systems, particularly to industrial competitors.

Without a transfer, Australia and other JSF partners would become beholden to Lockheed Martin specialists after every sortie of the warplanes in order to work through any technology issues. Australia expects there should be a domestic capability.

The senators were told that letters between US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and then defence minister Robert Hill in 2002, when Australia joined the project, spelt out an understanding over the technology-transfer issue.

Outside the hearing, Admiral Gates played down the threat of Australia withdrawing from the program but said the technology issue was a "major concern for us", saying it "was largely about our ability to support the aircraft". He remained "confident of a good outcome".

Britain's Defence Procurement Minister, Paul Drayson, who also attended yesterday's hearing chaired by Republican John Warner, told the committee: "We are approaching important decisions that will impact on both UK and US military capability for a generation."

Lord Drayson said the US needed to understand that a mutual commitment to the JSF was dependent on Britain having "the operational sovereignty that we require".

He also told reporters that Britain's ability to buy the next-generation fighter was at risk.

"We should be absolutely clear about what our bottom line is on this matter ... we will not be able to purchase the aircraft," he said.
Posted by: Oztralian || 03/15/2006 17:51 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  American taxpayers have spent hundreds of billions of dollars on stealth technology. This is before the first aircraft even rolled off the assembly line. There is no way we should be handing source code over to anyone. Even the Brits and the Australians. As far as I'm concerned, they're welcome to buy fighter aircraft from other countries. Maybe they'll get stealth technology from these suppliers.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 03/15/2006 18:30 Comments || Top||

#2  Australia, OK. UK, No way.

UK is no longer an independent country, it is an appendage of the EU and will do France's bidding. France is an enemy who would give stealth to China in a nanosecond. The UK needs to decide which side it wants to be on. And so far, it has chosen Europe.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 03/15/2006 18:51 Comments || Top||

#3  Let's remember where the Brits were last summer with selling military items to China, shall we?

They joined their PU comrades to propose lifting the ban.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 18:52 Comments || Top||

#4  software codes

Yet another article that says more about the ignorance of the writer than it does about the subject matter. If he is referring to codes in the sense of passwords, then Australia is absolutely correct in demanding them. If he is referring to the code, i.e. the source code, then that is an entirely different matter. As a general rule only one entity should own any particular source code and I'd question why the Australians want it. If, in fact, they do, because the difference between code and codes changes the meaning of most of the article.

And BTW, the headline and first sentence are highly misleading, since the issue appears to be about the aircraft's systems, not its stealth technology.
Posted by: phil_b || 03/15/2006 19:22 Comments || Top||

#5  NS: Australia, OK. UK, No way.

Australia has said it will not get involved if China invades Taiwan and the US intervenes. I don't know if this means that the US will not be able to use its bases in Australia. But it sure doesn't make me want to risk handing over stealth technology to Australia.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 03/15/2006 19:28 Comments || Top||

#6  link


For example, Britain is seeking full independent maintainability and control over its F-35 fighters - and one of the most critical and contested areas lies in the plane's massive software source code. Since software will run so many aspects of the F-35's operations, access to the source code is necessary in order to debug many flaws, and may be required to integrate new weapons.

At the same time, the plane's dependence on software makes protecting the securtity of that source code an absolute must. To have even parts of it fall into hostile hands could be a disaster of the first magnitude. On the American side, there is also the quasi-protectionist angle of not wishing to have others copy the software and develop spin-off products in future that are based on US work. Even attempting to scrutinize that would be a challenge, however, and creates intrusiveness, approval, and friction problems of its own.
Posted by: john || 03/15/2006 19:34 Comments || Top||

#7  Article: On the American side, there is also the quasi-protectionist angle of not wishing to have others copy the software and develop spin-off products in future that are based on US work.

Quasi-protectionist angle? There's nothing protectionistic about retaining sole access to proprietary intellectual property on which one has spent hundreds of billions of dollars. Levying high tariffs on imports - that's protectionistic. Not handing out your source code to your competitors - that's merely keeping a tight rein on your personal property.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 03/15/2006 20:12 Comments || Top||

#8  Zhang, its a common practice to give favoured customers access to the source for debugging purposes, even the arch-copyright protectionist Microsoft does it.
Posted by: phil_b || 03/15/2006 20:41 Comments || Top||

#9  On the subject of Aussies and source code: here's a gem of a story. One of those apocryphal stories that is just too good to fact-check.
Posted by: xbalanke || 03/15/2006 20:48 Comments || Top||

#10  Damn uppity anglos want dibs on our anti-grav technology!
Posted by: DanNY || 03/15/2006 21:29 Comments || Top||

#11  These are negotiating tactics, this has become common since European intervention in the industry a la Airbus, and will be par for the course for many programs to come (commercial and military).
Posted by: bombay || 03/15/2006 21:45 Comments || Top||

#12  Bombay, your absolutely right on this one. China set the standard for ripping off technology secrets from others. Now, it would appear, the Brits and Aussies are following suit.

I hope the US holds firm on this and similar.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 23:12 Comments || Top||


Iraq
Other Arabs Noting Iraq's March to Democracy, Abizaid Says
Posted by: BrerRabbit || 03/15/2006 15:53 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Gotta admire Abbzy, he has to listen to the bullshit on the Hill while planning the take down of the Iranian Moolahs and conducting two wars.

Other Arabs are taking notice, and the theocrats and tyrants are pissing all over themselves.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 16:52 Comments || Top||

#2  That's a misprint, it should read;

OTHER ARABS CARE NOTHING FOR IRAQ'S MARCH TO DEMOCRACY, ABIZAID SAYS
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 17:30 Comments || Top||

#3  As good as he is, Iran will not be his war. Modern US combat generals are under brutal pressure for a 1 in 100 chance for a "big job", and even if they win, they only get that one job, no more. Abizaid has his, and there are a dozen serious candidates, and alternates, to get the Iran job.

Norman Schwartzkopf was a taskmaster to his subordinate commanders, to show how this discrimination works, and he gave them a notorious test during the build-up of Gulf War I. He called each one into his office, then asked them how many enemy commanders faced them along the front lines?

"42", they each answered.

"And what are their names?", asked Schwartzkopf.

Only three of his subordinates had the foresight to memorize that list, which is critical tactical information. The rest had just lost their one shot at a big job.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 03/15/2006 19:24 Comments || Top||

#4  Moose, you're right. Someone else will get the point. But Abbzy will be involved in the planning phase.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 20:36 Comments || Top||


Bangladesh
Peace Corps suspends operations in Bangladesh
The American Peace Corps has suspended its operations in Bangladesh for fear of terror attacks, the US embassy said yesterday. The announcement came a day after US Charge-d'Affaires Judith Chammas commended Bangladesh for its recent capture of top Islamist militants, who headed two outlawed groups fighting for the introduction of sharia law in Bangladesh, a Muslim-majority democracy.

"The peace corps in Washington, DC has decided to suspend indefinitely its programme in Bangladesh due to the possibility that terrorist elements might attempt to attack peace corps volunteers in Bangladesh, perhaps in relation for the recent captures," the embassy said in a statement. "The peace corps made this decision following a careful assessment of Bangladesh's prevailing security environment, and did not base its conclusions on any single threat or incident," the statement added.

As many as 100 members of the US peace corps were engaged in providing English language training to school teachers in Bangladesh, according to a peace corps official. "We have welcomed the capture of (Shayek) Abdur Rahman and Bangla Bhai as significant steps forward in the campaign against terrorism and extremism" the statement said. "Ironically, one consequence of that success is concern over possible reprisal attacks against Americans or other Western nationals by activists still at large" it said.
Posted by: Dar || 03/15/2006 15:14 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  As many as 100 members of the US peace corps were engaged in providing English language training to school teachers in Bangladesh,

Bangladesh needs English language trainers?

Bengal was one of the first parts of India to be ruled by the British. They've had 200 years of rule where english was the official language.

In India, English is still an official langauge.
The courts for instance, operate in English.

What has happened since the partition in 1947 to create this situation?
Posted by: john || 03/15/2006 16:38 Comments || Top||

#2  Aw, shucks!
And they were so close to making it a garden of eden.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 17:33 Comments || Top||

#3  Man, this inside RantBurg stuff is hard.
Posted by: Vern Estes || 03/15/2006 17:53 Comments || Top||

#4  And yes, I missed the right thread by this much.
Posted by: Vern Estes || 03/15/2006 17:54 Comments || Top||


Fifth Column
Hollywood stars join campaign to close prison
The campaign to close Guantánamo Bay has secured high-profile support, with Nobel laureates and film stars signing a letter in today's Guardian demanding an end to torture.

We, the undersigned writers and artists, demand that the US immediately cease using the Guantánamo Bay base as an illegal detention centre and to close all of its arbitrary detention centres where the systematic abuse of human rights and dignity are still taking place. As we write, the 62nd session of the UN commission of human rights in Geneva is about to begin and new images of the US military torturing prisoners in Iraq are being published. Yet the US and its allies in the EU have thus far prevented the UN commission from condemning the massive and systematic violations of human rights that have taken place in the name of the so-called war on terror. EU countries have ignored the testimonies of even their own citizens who have been victims of torture in Guantanamo. Several have allowed the overflights of CIA aircraft carrying prisoners to detention centres and elsewhere. The UN commission on human rights (or the council proposed to replace it) must end this hypocrisy and demand the closure of Guantánamo Bay and all the detention centres created by the US, as well as the cessation of torture and the deliberate violations of human dignity.

Signed by the usual suspects:

José Saramago
Nadine Gordimer
Adolfo Pérez Esquivel
Rigoberta Menchú
Wole Soyinka
Harold Pinter
Dario Fo
Danielle Mitterrand
Harry Belafonte
Danny Glover
Gerard Depardieu
Alice Walker
Manu Chao
Eduardo Galeano
And 407 other writers and artists
Guess the real stars were washing their hair.
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 14:51 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Great graphic! SAG says it all.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 15:05 Comments || Top||

#2  I say we ship all these asshats to North Korea to visit their Gulags for first hand experience....
Posted by: CrazyFool || 03/15/2006 15:07 Comments || Top||

#3  Harry Belafonte
Danny Glover


Of course good bud Fidel's guest quarters for political dissidents isn't worthy of their attention.
Posted by: Gloluns Hupeagum6020 || 03/15/2006 15:19 Comments || Top||

#4  Fine, close Gitmo and sequester all of its current occupants under house arrest at the residences of the signatories. After the first decapitation they'll be squealing like Ned Beatty in "Deliverance."
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 15:21 Comments || Top||

#5  I *used* to enjoy going to the movies. Alas, no more.
Posted by: Seafarious || 03/15/2006 15:26 Comments || Top||

#6  The funniest part is that these drooling fools fell for it. Gitmo is a Potempkin village, a lightning rod designed to attract criticism by those who would criticize anything and everything. It is also ground zero for the legal sharks. That is why it is the only place that had concrete-hardened decisions supporting its use made *before* it was used.

Let them throw their liberal legions into the trenches to fight Gitmo. Let them shoot the hell out of the decoy. That is what it is there for.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 03/15/2006 15:33 Comments || Top||

#7  Danielle "the witch" Mitterrand, Gérard "my nose is a pair of buttcheeks" Depardieu... yeah, two real moral clarity examples, given their past achievements, yaaasss...

On Depardieu, in addition to being a fool, he's also an avid businessman alwais ready to lick *ss of dictators (Castro) or arab "middlemen" for the algerian junta, that gives him real credibility for human rights; as for "Tatie Danielle", she's an überleftist, she was an embarassemnt even for her late french socialist president François "corruption, decadence and genocide" Mitterrand, and she's an useful idiot to boot (she was played like a violin by the PKK kurds).

Manu chao, well, he's an antiglobo third worldist fool, but I really liked (and still like, actually, though I'm not a dumb teen anymore) his music, plus he striked me as being a "non marxist" leftist, I think, saying his music was non-political.

OT : if you want to check him, see (he sings in spanish and basic english, mostly, btw)
http://www.dailymotion.com/search/manu%20chao/video/54063

http://www.dailymotion.com/search/mano%20negra/video/49397

http://www.dailymotion.com/search/mano%20negra/video/50814

http://www.dailymotion.com/search/mano%20negra/video/48895
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 03/15/2006 15:41 Comments || Top||

#8  We, the undersigned writers and artists, demand that the US immediately cease using the Guantánamo Bay base as an illegal detention centre...

OK. Since there's nothing illegal about it, there wish is granted.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 16:09 Comments || Top||

#9  ...timeless stories of the little people, as told by rich Hollywood stars!
-- Firesign Theatre
Posted by: mojo || 03/15/2006 16:32 Comments || Top||

#10  The tragedy is that a character like Soyinka, who has attacked the Islamists in his own country of Nigeria, is toadying to the filthpigs here because of his misplaced delusions of U.N. legitimacy.
Posted by: Ernest Brown || 03/15/2006 16:46 Comments || Top||

#11  So typical, a group of rightwing extremist trolls, who have no life, involved in a petty
group jackoff and hissy-fit against people they
disagree with politically.
Posted by: Bystander || 03/15/2006 17:03 Comments || Top||

#12  Are you referring to the commenters or the the group in the original article?
Posted by: Trex || 03/15/2006 17:07 Comments || Top||

#13  Feeling a little bipolar today, JC?
Posted by: Seafarious || 03/15/2006 17:10 Comments || Top||

#14  Sea, what's going on? Methinks, you have been looking at IP addresses.
Posted by: phil_b || 03/15/2006 17:19 Comments || Top||

#15  I agree with the hollywood guys, line them all up and shoot them in the head. After being found guilty by a quick military tribunal of course. Then there would be no need for Gitmo.

Just for argument's sake, where do they suggest we send them? Or do they want them all to be set free?
Posted by: Gleter Whaigum8216 || 03/15/2006 17:26 Comments || Top||

#16  Feel better Bistander? Sometimes it just helps to vent.
Posted by: 6 || 03/15/2006 17:33 Comments || Top||

#17 
Posted by: doc || 03/15/2006 17:50 Comments || Top||

#18  thx for the rx doc, good medicine!
Posted by: RD || 03/15/2006 17:56 Comments || Top||

#19  #5 Seafarious: "I *used* to enjoy going to the movies. Alas, no more. "

Movies? I think I remember seeing some of those in the past. Are they still making them?

Who knew?
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 03/15/2006 18:21 Comments || Top||

#20  It's great that these people are finally interested in a Cuban prison. Now if we could just get them to focus on another Cuban prison (any other Cuban prison) we'd be getting somewhere.
Posted by: Steve White || 03/15/2006 18:27 Comments || Top||

#21  I know only 3 of the signatorie: Danielle Mitterrand (François's widow), Gérard Dupardieu (Obélix)and Harry Belafonte (Banana). The others are illustrious aliens to me.
Posted by: Swiss Tex || 03/15/2006 18:59 Comments || Top||

#22  I remember reading LAST WEEK that Gitmo was to be closed and all prisioners sent to other facilities.

This is typical screwball behaviour, to announce they want it closed after the public announcement that it was closing.

Now watch for claims that "Public Outcry" forced the government to cave.

I recall the old Circus Parades down main street in my younger days, there would always be a couple of young boys who would run out and jump in front of the parade, "Leading" the patade through town, and whenever the parade turned down some other street, those same boys would scramble to run around the sidewalk and jump in front of the parade again.

I thought with the end of Circus Parades I'd never see that childishness again, I was wrong.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 03/15/2006 19:05 Comments || Top||

#23  So typical, a group of rightwing extremist trolls, who have no life, involved in a petty
group jackoff and hissy-fit against people they
disagree with politically.


[Foghorn Leghorn]

'Bout as much content as a sackful of wet leather.

[/FH]
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 19:13 Comments || Top||

#24  --So typical, a group of rightwing extremist trolls, who have no life, involved in a petty
group jackoff and hissy-fit against people they
disagree with politically.---

Yet Bystander takes the time to read comments and respond....
Posted by: anonymous2u || 03/15/2006 19:32 Comments || Top||

#25  not like he/she/it's gainfully employed, so, why not?
Posted by: Frank G || 03/15/2006 20:19 Comments || Top||

#26  BTW - Menchu's been exposed as a complete fraud, liar, and leftist troll....makes sense, huh?
Posted by: Frank G || 03/15/2006 20:20 Comments || Top||

#27  Rigoberta Menchu? Oh yes. "My brother was tortured by the paramilitiaries (not - he's died of old age and in the ruling class), I was an uneducated peasant (not - went to Catholic schools), etc." The original gran mamasita of the 'fake but accurate' meme so beloved of the left these days.
Posted by: DeadRobertPreston || 03/15/2006 21:11 Comments || Top||

#28  Why don't we just dig a big trench around Hollywood and put the Gitmo prisioners there?
Posted by: FeralCat || 03/15/2006 21:15 Comments || Top||

#29  Barbara, you didn't like TA:WP?
Posted by: Eric Jablow || 03/15/2006 21:25 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
Mail renewal of US driver's licenses to end
U.S. security laws against illegal immigration and terrorism will sharply raise the cost of getting driver`s licenses and end mail renewal of those documents.

State officials responsible for enforcing these laws say the cost of a license could double. They say the mail facility will end by 2008, reports USA Today.

The new Real ID Act requires license applicants to prove they are in the United States legally. Residents of states that don`t comply will not be able to use their licenses for boarding a plane or entering a federal courthouse, the report said.

Matt Sundeen of the National Conference of State Legislatures told the newspaper the new act will have significant fiscal implications for the states. He said 10 states don`t require proof that an applicant is legally in the country to drive.


Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 14:43 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Uh oh redux.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 15:07 Comments || Top||

#2  Is that Baba Streidentstands address?
Posted by: Perfesser || 03/15/2006 15:46 Comments || Top||


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Pull the plug on the UNRWA Paleo Enabling Trough
From Jewish World Review online.
By Jonathan Tobin

Halting aid to the P.A. means nothing if funds shift to the ‘humanitarian’ front

The current debate over a cutoff of aid to the Palestinian Authority is a classic case of good news and bad news coming together in the same package.
Like a flaming paper bag of poo on your doorstep.
The good news is that the United States appears to be holding firm on its refusal to keep money flowing to the P.A. once the recently elected Hamas terrorists are in charge.
We will need vigilance on this one to keep State from blowing it or whimping out.
Though many thought Washington would quickly fold on this issue, the administration is sticking to its hard line against sending a cent to Hamas. And Congress is poised to enact aid restrictions that may act as a break on any State Department impulse to weaken on the issue.
Good. At least Congress is doing something right. Mark that on the calendar.
But along with this comes the bad news. The United States and the European Union (which is also considering an aid cutoff to the P.A.) will be diverting a lot of the money that supported the P.A. kleptocracy to humanitarian aid. That way, it is reasoned, innocent Palestinians won't be forced to suffer from the crimes of their new masters.
Innocent Paleos need to suffer from the crimes of their masters and the decisions that they make. It is Cause meet Effect 101. It is the ONLY WAY that they have a chance to learn. So far, there are NO consequences for their actions, other than some occasional hellfires taking out the moron leadership.
That rationale sounds compassionate and logical. The only problem is that the humanitarian group that will receive the lion's share of the aid is one of the most thoroughly politicized and terrorist-infiltrated organizations in the world: the United Nations Relief and Works Agency.
Maybe Congress needs to examine the purse strings to the UNRWA, like they are doing with State.
For 56 years, UNRWA has been the symbol of the world's double standard about the war on Israel by the Arab world.
While the United Nations deals with the rest of the world's refugees with a single agency — the U.N. High Commission for Refugees — the Palestinian refugees have their very own agency — UNRWA — with a particular mission.
Pretty good scam so far. Let the UN finance your war against Israel. PT Barnum would be proud
Unfortunately, unlike virtually every other refugee aid group (including those that dealt with the hundreds of thousands of Jews who fled Arab lands in the aftermath of Israel's independence), UNRWA's primary mission has never been to help the Palestinians deal with the reality of the post-1948 world. Resettling the Palestinians wasn't the point. UNRWA exists to keep the Palestinians alive exactly where they are, so they can serve as justification for continued conflict with Israel.

A TERROR STRONGHOLD
As detailed in a new Jewish Telegraphic Agency series of reports on the topic, UNRWA's record is one of complicity not only with the political ends of the Palestinian movement, but with its violent tactics as well.
Many of UNRWA's employees are members not only of mainstream Palestinian terror factions such as Fatah, but of the Islamist Hamas group as well. UNRWA suffered a major embarrassment when its former director, the Norwegian bureaucrat Peter Hansen, admitted as much two years ago, saying it was no big deal. Indeed, in the recent Palestinian election, a number of UNRWA workers were Hamas parliamentary candidates.
Good offices be damned! We will support losers, terrorists, and other ne'erdowells.
Of course, why should Hansen — who helped spread the lie that Israeli forces had committed a massacre of civilians in the Jenin refugee camp in 2002 — worry about terrorist infiltration?
The man lied not only about the casualties of Jenin, in which Hamas and Fatah gunmen fought pitched battles against Israelis who were seeking to destroy terror bases after Palestinian suicide bombings, but also told tales about the fact that this and other UNRWA camps were, in fact, longstanding U.N.-subsidized strongholds of Palestinian terror groups.
Hansen and UNRWA have used the prestige of their "humanitarian" perch to routinely bash Israel for its attacks on the camps, but almost never mention the fact that Israel is reacting to Palestinian terror. But again, this is because the U.N. has always turned a blind eye to the fact that the camps under its jurisdiction were the places where terrorist atrocities are planned and launched.
I can't see yuuuu...I can't hear yuuuu.....lalalalalalalala!
UNRWA employees have used its facilities to shield terrorists from Israel, and even used its ambulances to transport both the killers and the weapons. Hamas also operates its new television station from the relative safety of a mosque in the UNRWA Jabalya camp.
In dire need of and EMP burst to blow the electronics and transmitter of hate.
And if nothing else serves to alert the world to the reality of the UNRWA camps, the steady toll of Palestinian casualties from "work accidents" [As documented in detail on the Rantburg News Network.] — mishaps with explosives during the manufacture of terrorist bombs — at these places ought to pierce the illusions of even the most gullible foreign observers.
But not all, not even by a long shot!
COMPLETE OVERHAUL NEEDED
What should the United States do about this? Let's start with the fact that the plentiful cash that flows from the United States Treasury to UNRWA (30 percent of the agency's $400 million budget comes courtesy of American taxpayers) is actually a violation of U.S. law. The U.S. Foreign Assistance Act requires UNRWA to assure that American money does not go to terrorists. That is an assurance that UNRWA cannot credibly give.
Hell, requesting the info from UNRWA and reviewing it could be a process that could take geologic time, with all the back and forth action. A slow, deliberate bureaucracy is our friend in this fight. We do not say no, we just review it until all of our bureaucrats die of natural causes.
Superficial reforms of the group won't work. Given the almost complete infiltration of UNRWA's bureaucracy by terrorist supporters, nothing short of a complete overhaul will do.
Correction: nothing short of complete dismantling will do. There. That reads better. Jeeze, I'm cynical......
Can the plug be pulled on UNRWA? Given the current pressure on the Bush administration to mend fences with the Arab world, it's unlikely. But if this cause gets a bipartisan push from Congress, it might help the White House focus on the way the agency is spending our money on reinforcing terrorist strongholds. Congress must follow up its legislation on aid to the P.A. with further hearings and action to halt subsidies to UNRWA.
Now there is something useful to do for Congress.
Sadly, it may take another Palestinian terror offensive — in which UNRWA camps will again serve as bases for suicide bombings, shootings and rocket attacks on Israeli civilians — to remind the world of the "humanitarian" fraud it's been subsidizing. Even then, the Palestinian propaganda machine, of which UNRWA is an integral part, will do its utmost to prevent the truth from being heard.
The mainstream world will ignore it, and that is the sad, tragic truth. Much of the world thinks that Israel is the problem, and that the Israelis are expendable.
But Americans have no excuse for continuing to be complicit in this deception. We — the funders of this half-century-old U.N. fiasco — must face up to the fact that this monster must be decapitated, and then rebuilt as a genuine humanitarian group.
Decapitate the monster, then wait for the second task for some concrete sign of commitment from the Paleos.
That may seem like an impossible task. But if the pain and grief that UNRWA helps inflict on the region is to be stopped, both the White House and Congress must stop buying into the myth of UNRWA's lies.
Posted by: Alaska Paul back home again || 03/15/2006 14:23 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Amen. I hope Henry Hyde and other equally ballsy Pub House members see this.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 16:14 Comments || Top||

#2  Many of UNRWA's employees are members not only of mainstream Palestinian terror factions such as Fatah, but of the Islamist Hamas group as well.

So, what's the difference between them and the home office? Both are corrupt in the extreme and consistently abet anti-Semitism. Not one American cent should be released to either of these maggots.
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 19:25 Comments || Top||


Europe
Berlin bans demonstrations alleging no Armenian genocide
Political leaders and human rights groups on Tuesday welcomed a decision by Berlin police to ban demonstrations aimed at the Armenian genocide in World War I.

Police on Monday banned two protests due to have been held in the German capital this week which supported the official Turkish position that killings of Christian Armenians by Muslim Turks in 1915 did not amount to genocide.

Organizers of one of the protests warned Europe's cities would "go up in flames like Paris" unless Europeans stopped blaming Turkey for the Armenian genocide.

The ban was justified by police who said they feared violence and because they suspected demonstrators would try to both deny and glorify the events of 1915.

"It is unacceptable when planned demonstrations seek to deny the genocide of Armenians during the First World War and make veiled calls for violence in Germany," said Frank Henkel, the opposition Christian Democratic Union interior affairs spokesman in the city government.

A human rights group, the Society for Threatened Peoples, also welcomed the ban and called for legislation to prevent all public events denying or glorifying genocide or war crimes.

Most Western historians term the Armenian killings genocide and say that between 1 million and 1.5 million Armenians were killed or died during the massacres. Parliaments in at least seven European countries, including France and Sweden, have passed resolutions saying the killings were genocide.

Germany has about 1.8 million resident Turkish nationals out of a total population of 82 million. Mainstream Turkish-German groups had withdrawn support for the controversial demonstrations at the weekend.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 13:50 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Here's a question: rather than banning the speech, make denial of genocide a form of slander against the state. Some state attorney would have to sue, and the damages would be, oh, $1000 per person whose deaths you deny, using the average of the generally accepted figures.

No criminal penalties, no prior restraint, and, hey, the nutjobs get a chance to make their case in court -- and be refuted.

Oh, there'd still be grousing about it, but the response would be -- "Hey, if you can prove the claims wrong, go for it. You claim to have the truth on your side, right?"
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 14:48 Comments || Top||


German birth rate lowest since 1945
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 13:50 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Wont be happy until we have so many people on this miserable ball of dirt that we cant feed half of them.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 13:58 Comments || Top||

#2  What happened in 1945?
Posted by: Phavilet Grolurt9350 || 03/15/2006 14:04 Comments || Top||

#3  What happened in 1945?

That's when brutal American forces led by an unelected president first occupied the country...
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 14:20 Comments || Top||

#4  Evil bastards.

Lol, Steve - unelected president - awesome, lol!
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 14:21 Comments || Top||

#5  Reinstate the (hastily cancelled in May'45) Lebensborn movement?
Posted by: borgboy || 03/15/2006 14:39 Comments || Top||

#6  What happened in 1945? Well, in 1945 there were hardly any men left in the country. Whereas today...
Posted by: Grunter || 03/15/2006 14:57 Comments || Top||

#7  Time for the gals to start shaving their armpits and legs; thereby, giving men whisker burn.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 17:29 Comments || Top||

#8  ...and what is the Muslim birth rate in Germany?
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 17:31 Comments || Top||

#9  bigjim-ky.

Newest recruit to the dead meme club.
Posted by: no mo uro || 03/15/2006 18:50 Comments || Top||

#10  What's the abortion trend in Germany?
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 23:14 Comments || Top||


Belgium Plan to combat problem of mother, child beggars
Federal Social Integration Minister Christian Dupont has announced plans to combat the problem of mothers and children begging on Belgian city streets.

The announcement was welcomed by Socialist SP.A MP Dalila Douifi, who has raised concerns about the issue.

Distressing scenes of mothers seen begging with babies in their arms — particularly during the past few days of freezing cold — have sparked renewed concerns. Research indicates that these babies face enormous health risks and they are often given too much cough syrup. International law bans exposing children to extreme circumstances, such as cold weather.
Now THAT's policymaking as it ought to be done. Overuse of cough syrup is clearly a key issue here. It's a good thing there's an international law we can reference, too. Otherwise we'd have to use common sense and compassion.
After raising the matter with Interior Minister Patrick Dewael and Justice Minister Laurette Onkelinx, Douifi has since shared her concerns with Minister Dupont.

Dupont subsequently announced on Tuesday that he will deploy 12 intercultural mediators to approach the beggars.

"The intercultural aspect is not unimportant. For example, the Roma do not always want to be helped. That is part of their culture," Douifi said.
One wonders if the Gypsies are the main source of begging in Belgium, or if they are merely one of the groups Belgians feel comfortable looking down on publicly. As opposed to more ... vigorous ... immigrants.

The mediators will be deployed in Brussels, Antwerp, Ghent, Liège and Charleroi.

Douifi also said there have been positive developments in Antwerp, where city authorities demand that school age children actually attend school. When the children start attending school, their parents are then granted social security.

"The problem is very complex: often it is a combination of repressive, preventative and remedial approach that is necessary. The measures from Minister Dupont are the start of a solution," Douifi said.

The Socialist SP.A minister also stressed that using children for the purposes of begging is a criminally prosecutable offence.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 13:40 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The cough syrup would contain codeine and probably antihistamines for a powerful sedative effect- resulting in a dramatically floppy baby to wave around. In other words, serious and possibly fatal child abuse.
Posted by: Grunter || 03/15/2006 14:33 Comments || Top||

#2  So Grunter, does that mean that "overuse of cough syrup" is indeed a problem?
Posted by: Criger Crineck9210 || 03/15/2006 14:47 Comments || Top||

#3  If the story is accurate, yes, of course. Hypothermia + opiate overdose.
Posted by: Grunter || 03/15/2006 15:01 Comments || Top||

#4  I think the kids have a bigger problem than that if their parents are using them for begging in the middle of a Euro welfare state. The cough syrup (if it is indeed codeine based - are those easy to get in Belgium? they're prescription-only in the States) and the cold are only the visible indicators of a deeper problem here.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 15:05 Comments || Top||

#5  Dupont subsequently announced on Tuesday that he will deploy 12 intercultural mediators to approach the beggars.



1) They actually have such a job description and people who do this for a living?

2) If they are only deploying twelve, how big a problem can this be?

3) The beggars aren't native Belgiums?

4) What happened to their welfare checks?






Posted by: DoDo || 03/15/2006 15:11 Comments || Top||

#6  Don't forget the ONLY person to be convicted in Spain for the Madrid bombing is a 16 year old Gypsy kid who was basically just a mule for the True Believers(tm).
Posted by: Seafarious || 03/15/2006 15:31 Comments || Top||

#7  Please, please tell me this is Scrappleface or The Onion ...
Posted by: Steve White || 03/15/2006 18:29 Comments || Top||

#8  Wish it were, Steve.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 21:49 Comments || Top||


Economic migration 'to combat aging population'
Interior Minister Patrick Dewael came out in support again of economic migration at an international conference on immigration in Brussels Wednesday.

The Liberal VLD minister said the aging population will lead to a shortage of workers in Europe, a problem which could be solved by controlled migration.

Dewael said decisions must be made on which country needs which workers and economic migrants would have to undergo specific training and education prior to immigrating.

He said a controlled system of migration would have benefits for both Europe and developing nations over a given timeframe, news service VRT reported on Wednesday.

"I think that if you do it in an organised manner, you will also see people return to those lands. You are seeing that at the moment, for example, with India," Dewael said. "Secondly, there is a transfer of resources from those people to their countries of origin, which also benefits the economy."

Dewael was speaking at a two-day international conference on immigration in Brussels.

The conference is jointly sponsored by Belgium, the World Bank, the European Commission and the International Organisation for Migration (IOM). It seeks to "create synergies between migration and development".

It will also discuss the contribution of migrants to the development of their home countries, investments, trade opportunities and the transfer of competencies and knowledge.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 13:31 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Is your offer good for mexicans too?
wink, wink, nudge, nudge, say no more.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 14:05 Comments || Top||

#2  What if the migrants only want to segregate with their own kind and collect wlefare?
Posted by: DoDo || 03/15/2006 15:13 Comments || Top||

#3  bigjim - You may be joking, but I truly think that may well be Europe's answer to their "problem" (since they won't make their own babies and are beginning to wake up to the problem caused by their present "immigrants" and their children).

They could import lots of Mexican and South Americans AND their families - legally - pay their way over and give them, say, 2 months of support to get set up and get jobs.

The Mexicans would work hard and not burn cars.

Then cut off the welfare to the troublemakers and, when they go ape, ship them back where they came from.

Win-win for everyone.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 03/15/2006 18:31 Comments || Top||

#4  Nah, the Jihadis combat everyone - not just the old (though they do prefer the helpless).
Posted by: DMFD || 03/15/2006 19:17 Comments || Top||


Britain
Five arrested over London cartoons protest

Five men were arrested today over their alleged role in protests outside the Danish Embassy in London last month against cartoons satirising the Prophet Muhammad.

Four of the five were held on suspicion of incitement to murder and all five are suspected of "using threatening words or written material to stir up racial hatred".

During the demonstrations in Central London on February 3 and 4, protesters held placards threatening a repeat of the September 11 or July 7 terror attacks. Among the slogans were "Massacre those who insult Islam" and "Europe you will pay, your 9/11 will come".

The demonstration attracted widespread political condemnation and among those calling for prosecutions was the Muslim Council of Britain.

The Metropolitan Police said today: "A number of specialist evidence gathering officers were deployed who collected video, audio and stills of those within the crowd. A dedicated investigation team, Operation Laverda, was set up that day.

"After carefully reviewing all of the evidence and witness complaints a file was passed to the Crown Prosecution. Their advice was returned to us on 7/03/06."

Four of the men arrested today were held in London and one in the West Midlands. The four men in London have been taken to a Central London police station while the fifth is being questioned at a police station in the West Midlands.

Twelve cartoons caricaturing the Prophet Muhammad were first published in a Danish newspaper last September. Republication of the images in European newspapers provoked violent protests around the Islamic world.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 13:12 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I'll take, "British Clue Purchasing" for $800.00, Alex.
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 13:48 Comments || Top||

#2  A bit more on the miscreants.
"One of the men charged, Uman Javed, 26, is accused of soliciting murder and has been remanded in custody to appear at Bow Street Magistrates' Court on Thursday, Scotland Yard said.

Javed, of Washwood Heath Road, Birmingham, is also accused of using words likely to stir up racial hatred.

Abdul Rahman Saleem, 31, of Mellish Street, east London, has been charged with using words likely to stir up racial hatred. He has been bailed to appear at West London Magistrates' Court on March 31.

Omar Zaheer, 26, of Derwent Road, Southall, west London, has been charged with racially-aggravated disorderly behaviour and disorderly behaviour, and has been bailed to appear at Bow Street Magistrates' Court on March 31.

The police investigation followed protests outside the Danish Embassy in London on February 3 when placards threatening a repeat of the September 11 or July 7 terror attacks were waved.

Two other men, aged 39 and 23, have been bailed to return to a central London police station on April 19 "pending investigations into material recovered in searches", Scotland Yard said. A spokesman said police were not prepared to say any more about the search.

The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said the men were Anjem Choudary, the former UK head of Al-Muhajiroun, and Abdul Muhid."
Posted by: tipper || 03/15/2006 21:44 Comments || Top||

#3  Sorry, forgot to post this crucial link as well.
Posted by: tipper || 03/15/2006 22:15 Comments || Top||

#4  wow! those don't sound like lads you'd normally meet in a pub, having a pint after work. Do they have work?
Posted by: Frank G || 03/15/2006 23:34 Comments || Top||

#5  Well, it wouldn't appear so, this from the abuve link:

Nasser

Islam Uddin's brother Nasser, 'in his early twenties with a wispy henna-speckled beard', gives an insight into the lives of members. He believes unemployed avoids contributing to the kafir system. He justifies recieving jobseeker’s allowance because Muhammad lived off the state, yet attacked it at the same time. “All money belongs to Allah anyway...All the brothers drive without insurance”, he proudly proclaimed. Victims of the London bombings are “collateral damage” and they were kafir anyway.[5]
Posted by: tipper || 03/15/2006 23:52 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
Univ. Ill. editor fired over Mohammed cartoons
An editor who chose to publish caricatures of Prophet Mohammed in the University of Illinois' student-run newspaper last month has been fired, the paper's publisher announced Tuesday.

Acton H. Gorton was suspended, with pay, from The Daily Illini days after the Feb. 9 publication of the cartoons, which sparked Muslim protests around the world after they first appeared in a Danish newspaper.

At the time, Daily Illini publishers said the action was taken against Gorton not for publishing the cartoons, but for failing to discuss it with others in the newsroom first.

The Illini Media Co. board of directors, which comprises students and faculty, voted unanimously to fire the editor after a review "found that Gorton violated Daily Illini policies about thoughtful discussion of and preparation for the publication of inflammatory material," according to a statement.

Gorton has said he sought out advice from The Daily Illini's former editor-in-chief and others before deciding to run the cartoons. He has said that accusations he tried to hide his decision were wrong.

On Tuesday, he called his firing a blow against free speech on college campuses.

"If I can be fired, what will other students think who maybe want to challenge the status quo?" said Gorton, who had briefly addressed a board meeting the previous night. "This is a bad precedent."

Gorton said he intends to sue the publishers of The Daily Illini, citing, among other complaints, unlawful dismissal.

Board member Adam Jung said he is confident the company "has acted properly on this issue."

The paper's opinions page editor, Chuck Prochaska, also was suspended for his role in publishing the cartoons. He declined to be reinstated, the board said.

Prochaska said he and Gorton moved quickly to publish the cartoons because they were newsworthy.

"We had a news story on our hands, with violence erupting about imagery, but you can't show it because of a taboo, because of a taboo that's not a Western taboo but a Muslim taboo?" he said. "That's a blow to journalism."
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 13:10 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  wow. Let's see if our esteemed, enlightened, morally superior, brave, bold, daring, sixties liberals even manage to make a peep in the name of free speech. My money is on the sound of crickets.
Posted by: 2b || 03/15/2006 13:24 Comments || Top||

#2  "We had a news story on our hands, with violence erupting about imagery, but you can't show it because of a taboo, because of a taboo that's not a Western taboo but a Muslim taboo?" he said. "That's a blow to journalism."

Not a blow to journalism, a blow to civilization.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 13:37 Comments || Top||

#3  The Illini has a poll site. Appears the Illini Media Co. "leadership" is a bit out of touch with the student population. As of today the poll stands at:

Ok to Publish - 81%
No Way - 19%


Posted by: Visitor || 03/15/2006 14:28 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
CAIR Chairman Elected to Board of ACLU-Florida
Posted by: BrerRabbit || 03/15/2006 12:52 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  And if that doesn't work, he'll strap a bomb on himself and blow up the nearest synagogue Mc Donalds.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 13:55 Comments || Top||

#2  The far left and far right now finally unite? Count Dooku would be pleased.
Posted by: BA || 03/15/2006 13:56 Comments || Top||

#3  Damn....wish I could get my 'puter to work right....

Go to The People's Cube and page halfway down to the coffee mugs. Says it all better than I could!
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 03/15/2006 14:00 Comments || Top||

#4  Best natural pairing since the Stahlhelm threw in with the National Socialists...
Posted by: borgboy || 03/15/2006 14:42 Comments || Top||

#5  Anti-CAIR's take... don't miss the link to The Middle East Forum embedded there.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 14:55 Comments || Top||

#6  So a group that wants sharia imposed in the US is acceptable to the ACLU?
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 16:06 Comments || Top||

#7  Deport this M.F.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 16:52 Comments || Top||

#8  “American Muslims view the protection of civil liberties as one of the most important issues facing our nation today,” said Ahmed.

If American Muslims regard " the protection of civil liberties as one of the most important issues", why aren't they out in the street protesting how there is no freedom of religion in nearly all Islamic countries? Why aren't they showing the least concern for restrictions being placed upon freedom of speech over the Mohammed cartoons?

Oh ... their civil liberties. Not mine.
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 18:15 Comments || Top||

#9  Always remember Zen, "Free speech for me, but not for thee."

Now, go home and write this one hundred times and place on your bedside table. Love it, hug it and memorize it.
Posted by: BA || 03/15/2006 22:41 Comments || Top||

#10  Now the ACLU will be for Muslim Prayer in School?
Posted by: 3dc || 03/15/2006 23:42 Comments || Top||


Iraq
If you like tear-producing tributes to our military
then click above.... Gladiator American Style

h/t Officersclub

Posted by: Sherry || 03/15/2006 12:09 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Daily alotted bandwidth all used up for today. *sniff*
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 23:17 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
IT'S BUSH'S FAULT
Posted by: Almost Anonymous5839 || 03/15/2006 11:33 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Cool.
Posted by: .com || 03/15/2006 11:55 Comments || Top||

#2  Even Africa rejects the Horn.
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 12:11 Comments || Top||

#3  It's now the 313,498th most holy site in Islam.
Posted by: Steve White || 03/15/2006 13:12 Comments || Top||

#4  With respect to Steve: THEY are now the 313,498th AND 313, 499th most holy sites in Islam.
Posted by: USN, ret. || 03/15/2006 14:48 Comments || Top||

#5  Ditto, .com.

Too cool. ;-p
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 03/15/2006 18:43 Comments || Top||

#6  Djibouti is getting the boot....
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 03/15/2006 23:04 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
The fragile Euro-US 'alliance' on Iran
As the United States began making the case in the United Nations Security Council this week for what its Ambassador John Bolton calls "painful consequences" if Iran continues with its controversial nuclear program, Washington is facing a familiar dilemma: what to do if the rest of the world refuses to go along?

Unlike in the debate preceding the war in Iraq, the US and much of the world seem to agree that something must be done to restrain Tehran. However, there is no consensus on the question of just how "painful" the consequences should be. And while its allies across the Atlantic have recently joined the US in issuing strong statements about Iran's activities, Europe remains largely divided on how far it will follow Washington's line.

The five veto-holding UN Security Council powers are struggling this week to come up with text the council can issue aimed at curtailing Iran's nuclear program without threatening sanctions or other punitive measures. Russia and China oppose a proposal from the US, Britain and France for a presidential statement that would express "serious concern" and urge Tehran to abide by resolutions from the International Atomic Energy Agency. An alternative is to call on Iran to suspend uranium enrichment efforts, which the West believes are a cover for a program to make nuclear weapons.

In the US, the recent rapprochement between the US and Europe has been cited with we-told-you-so vindication. But according to observers in Europe, the Euro-US convergence on Iran is much thinner than it appears. Europe's willingness to present a united front with the US on Iran is driven by a number of factors, they say, including mounting concern for the US predicament in Iraq, the disappointing outcomes of its negotiations with Iran, and the fear that further destabilization in the Middle East will have serious consequences for European security.

None of these factors, however, means that Europe sees Iran as an "enemy that must be vanquished" - or that it views Washington's "war on terror" with anything less than skepticism. And solving the Iranian crisis, say these observers, will likely hinge more on how far Washington is willing to move toward a European position rather than vice-versa.

Tim Guldimann, a former Swiss ambassador to Iran and currently a professor at the University of Frankfurt who co-authored a recent report on the Iranian nuclear situation by the International Crisis Group (ICG), argues that the best way out of the impasse is to forge an agreement that recognizes an Iranian nuclear-fuel program as a fait accompli.

"For two and a half years now, Iran has been perfectly clear about its intentions to have an enrichment program. But the EU-3 [Germany, France and Britain] ignored this, arguing that offering incentives and threatening sanctions would eventually get Iran to stop its enrichment program," Guldimann said. "Not surprisingly, the Iranians rejected out of hand this approach when it was proposed by the Europeans last August."

Instead of insisting that Iran relinquish enrichment, says Guldimann, negotiators should propose a "delayed limited enrichment program" as a potential compromise.

According to the ICG report, under such a program, "The wider international community, and the West in particular, would explicitly accept that Iran cannot only produce peaceful nuclear energy but has the 'right to enrich' domestically; in return, Iran would agree to a several-year delay in the commencement of its enrichment program, major limitations on its initial size and scope, and a highly intrusive inspections regime."

The problem with this, says Guldimann, is that the US will never get on board as long it remains steadfastly opposed to any enrichment program. In Europe, on the other hand, the reaction to the ICG report has been at least cautiously curious.

Ultimately, says Guldimann, what Iran seems to be pushing for is not the bomb itself, but the capability to produce a bomb if the need should arise. "The goal, which has not been officially recognized, is to have the military option, but not a bomb," he said. "The Iranians were attacked by Iraq with weapons of mass destruction; 600,000 died. When that happened they stood alone, without the support from outside. That history is critical in Iranian considerations."

Mohammad-Reza Djalili, an Iranian-born professor of history at the Graduate Institute of International Studies in Geneva, agrees. Djalili, who compares Iran's ambitions to Israel's policy of nuclear "opacity" - neither confirming nor denying the existence of its arsenal - says that while Iran might seek a nuclear weapons capability, it is not in its interest actually to have the bomb.

"The theoretical possibility of having a nuclear arsenal goes a long way to giving Iran standing both globally and regionally. At the same time, by refraining from actually producing weapons, Iran wouldn't provide sufficient rationale for its neighbors [including Turkey and Saudi Arabia] to build their own arsenals."

The author of the 2005 book Geopolitique de l'Iran, Djalili argues that Europe and the US need to view the Iranian nuclear program within the larger context of Tehran's evolving grand strategies, which traditionally have included a "European strategy" aimed at building relations with Europe to counterbalance US antagonism and an "Eastern strategy" intended to develop economic relations with India, Russia and China.

Both strategies, says Djalili, have at their root Iran's preoccupation with the United States, which has been a core concern since the Islamic revolution.

In part because of the growing nuclear crisis, he said, "what we are now witnessing is the ultimate failure of the European strategy, as Europe adopts a harder stance and aligns itself closer to the United States".

How far Europe is willing to go to block an Iranian enrichment program, he said, is another matter altogether. While Europe and the United States might agree on sanctions, it is hard to imagine Europe supporting the use of force, "the option pushed by some in the United States".

"My biggest concern is that this impasse will drive some policymakers in the United States to adopt the view pushed by neo-conservatives - that is, to try to destabilize Iran by supporting internal rebellions among different ethnic, religious and political factions," he concluded. "This would be disastrous, leading to still further balkanization in the region, more conflict, and more bloodshed."

Other observers note that Europe should not be viewed as a monolithic block, even if there has been widespread consensus in support of the EU-3 negotiating efforts. Not only are there opposing political currents among states on the continent, there are competing agendas within individual countries.

According to Jean Brincmont, a Belgian theoretical physicist and author of Imperialisme Humanitaire (2005), "There is a struggle in Europe between pro and anti-US opinions."

Further, many countries, such as France, have shown a strong willingness to go it alone in their foreign policies, which was seen in President Jacques Chirac's recent declarations about changes in his country's nuclear posture. Citing the example of the pro-US and enormously influential French Interior Minister Nicolas Sarcozy, Brincmont argued that "France may sometimes be divided over issues like Iran, but it is by no means subservient to US positions".

The potential for fissures in the European position was exhibited early this month in the wake of allegations that Moscow had floated a proposal to allow Iran to enrich a small amount of uranium on its soil in exchange for delaying for several years larger-scale production.

According to the March 6 New York Times, European diplomats said the proposal was "driving a wedge into what had been a relatively united front on uranium enrichment in Iran". Germany is cautiously supportive of Russia, they said, while France and Britain are siding with the US.

Russia later disavowed the proposal. But the Russian case highlights another complication in any trans-Atlantic effort to resolve the crisis - that Western powers do not hold all the cards.

"The West hasn't yet fully realized that the world has changed," said Guldimann. "The economic development of Asia, rising oil prices, the emergence of Russia as a key negotiating partner - all these things work against the idea that we can impose an end to the enrichment program, which is the preferred solution."

In contrast to US Vice President Dick Cheney's statement that the "international community is prepared to impose meaningful consequences", Guldimann contended that while most countries may pay lip service to the idea that Iran should not have an enrichment program, "when you put sanctions on the table things will fall apart. China won't go along, nor will Russia or India, or presumably Japan."

Brincmont agreed, but said that ultimately, the nuclear-power states have themselves to blame. "As long as the great powers want to keep their bombs, smaller powers will emerge asking for the same."
Posted by: tipper || 03/15/2006 11:30 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  cut the Gordian Knot and deal with finese later.
Posted by: 3dc || 03/15/2006 15:53 Comments || Top||


Spam classic...
From today's spam. The linky points to a server in Thailand...

After the last annual calculations of your fiscal activity we have determined= that you are eligible to receive a tax refund of $63.80. Please submit the tax refund request and allow us 6-9 days in order to process it.

A refund can be delayed for a variety of reasons. For example submitting invalid records or applying after the deadline.

To access the form for your tax refund, please click here

Regards,
Internal Revenue Service

Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 11:01 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I don't get it. The IRS will enlarge my doinker? That's weird.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 03/15/2006 11:14 Comments || Top||

#2  I find it oddly fascinating comforting confusing that so many are concerned with doinker size and function. And whether or not I wear a fake Rolex. And my foolish disinterest in penny stocks. And where I buy my pharmaceuticals. And whether I've ever seen one squirt. And my e-Bay account status. And my PayPal account. And if I've met any Hot Moms...

So many people trying to help me round out my life. It's downright heartwarming.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 11:25 Comments || Top||

#3  With the deficit the way it is, this actually could be a phishing expedition by the IRS itself. Your tax dollars at work!
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 11:38 Comments || Top||

#4  I didn't know that Mrs. Abacha had been hired by the IRS...
Posted by: Seafarious || 03/15/2006 11:41 Comments || Top||

#5  LOL.
Posted by: .com || 03/15/2006 11:47 Comments || Top||

#6  6-9 days to process a government form? That should be proof to any but the extremely stupid that this is BS.

BTW, good to see ya, .com!
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 03/15/2006 11:51 Comments || Top||

#7  Hey, DB! ANd you're certainly right about the IRS, they're only "fast" about collecting... ;-)
Posted by: .com || 03/15/2006 11:57 Comments || Top||

#8  Welcome back .com, we missed ya ...
Posted by: Steve White || 03/15/2006 13:12 Comments || Top||

#9  Have to go a long way for the cluster spams I got.

The first for a young lady named "Christi", who 'whenever she gets excited, she soils her panties.'

Now, there is someone I want to get excited.

The best, by far, has to be the ads for "Penis Enarglement". I've received hundreds of these, and hope against hope that "enarglement" does not involve a mixmaster. Sounds painful.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 03/15/2006 13:16 Comments || Top||

#10  mebbe it's legit and the IRS has started outsourcing to thailand

*snicker*
Posted by: PlanetDan || 03/15/2006 13:25 Comments || Top||

#11  "Penis Enarglement", yeah, that's the ticket, that's what I gonna do.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 03/15/2006 13:32 Comments || Top||

#12  Pri·a·pus /prI-'A-p&s/, Greek mythological character. A god of gardens and fertility, Priapus was the son of Aphrodite, who disowned him because he had a grotesque little body with a huge penis. He was a member of the retinue of the god Dionysus and chased after nymphs.

It's good to have a goal in life. :)
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 13:40 Comments || Top||

#13  Hey, Doc... sorry, been looking back over the last few days - and cleaning my monitor, lol. I --owe-- NS one, lol.
Posted by: .com || 03/15/2006 13:45 Comments || Top||

#14  We missed you.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 03/15/2006 14:13 Comments || Top||

#15  NS - Using "we" advisedly, of course, lol.

2 dirty shirts? Lol. *snort* Otherwise, you were pretty close on what I was up to, heh. We're past the stealth mode, though - I can be grabby - s'okay, lol.

Gotta do more work on her lap...top - l8r. ;-)
Posted by: .com || 03/15/2006 14:28 Comments || Top||

#16  I've got to give it to the IRS this year...got my refund in one week! Filed electronically, but then again, my return is fairly straightforward (no red flags should've popped up) and easy to calculate. Got both Fed and State back in 7 days!

Now, about that outsourcing to Thailand....
Posted by: BA || 03/15/2006 14:38 Comments || Top||

#17  Got my refund in a week also....

Now if we can only get them before our wives spouses spend them...

But then again there are certain laws of physics involved in time travel....
Posted by: CrazyFool || 03/15/2006 14:50 Comments || Top||

#18  Gotta do more work on her lap...top - l8r. ;-)

Congrats, best wishes and have fun ... ;-)
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 14:55 Comments || Top||

#19  Mine's already the size of telephone pole. It's not that bad except when I responded to a few of those Viagra spammers -- anyone into pole vaulting?
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 16:30 Comments || Top||

#20  Hi, .com! Missed ya'.

Did you get my e-mail?
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 03/15/2006 18:23 Comments || Top||

#21  Surface, .com, surface ... :-)
Posted by: Steve White || 03/15/2006 18:34 Comments || Top||

#22  My husband got it, too.
Posted by: anonymous2u || 03/15/2006 19:36 Comments || Top||

#23  Not sure where I heard it, but isn't there a retort that goes: "Leggo my ears! I know what I'm doing!"
:P
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 19:42 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
No more "24" for you, kid
A 3-year-old boy shot his mother in the knee with a 9mm handgun he had found under a couch cushion over the weekend, police said. It was the second time the boy had handled the gun on Sunday.
"Jack Junior, I told you to leave that alone."
The mother had taken the gun away from the child and removed the bullets apparently overlooking one in the chamber and put the weapon back on the couch. When the boy picked the gun up a second time, it fired. "It appears to be accidental," said St. Paul police spokesman Pete Crum.
Or he was trying to get Mom to tell him where the canisters of nerve gas cookies are hidden....
The woman was taken to Regions Hospital, with non-life-threatening injuries. "It could have been much more tragic had the child shot himself or hit the woman in a more vital area," Crum said. The boy was put in the care of his father.
Two suggestions. (1) Keep the kid away from Mom's for now. (2) When he reaches the age of 7, make sure he takes the NRA safety course. Okay, (3) Start him with a .22. Shoot 'n See targets make a great stocking stuffer at XMAS, too.
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 10:48 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Idiots like this make it harder for the rest of us gun nuts. Come on, one is always in the chamber, that's why you visually check.
Posted by: rjschwarz || 03/15/2006 13:35 Comments || Top||

#2  "When the boy picked the gun up a second time, it fired."

Why do reporters always get the pronouns wrong? "It fired" should read, "He fired it." The handgun did not suddenly become sentient and decide to be malicious nor are handguns manufactured to randomly go off without outside influence. But then, that wouldn't fit the reporters agenda.
Posted by: psychohillbilly || 03/15/2006 13:38 Comments || Top||

#3  This family now has a baseline for discussion for the rest of his life. "Yes I crashed the car but at least I didn't shoot mom." Why Mom didn't put the weapon away is beyoond me.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 03/15/2006 13:39 Comments || Top||

#4  Damn, she was this close to a Darwin Award!
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 03/15/2006 13:39 Comments || Top||

#5  I'd like to wait till daddy gets home, BUT WE DON'T HAVE TIME. Tell me where the cookies are now!
Posted by: Ebbavising Phong8496 || 03/15/2006 14:24 Comments || Top||

#6  Quick, set up a perimeter before he hacks into the server.....
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 16:33 Comments || Top||

#7  In the 24 episode in question, Jack was careful to shot the woman in the leg below the knee. That way, the woman would continue to be fully ambulatory.

Typical 3-year-old, however, only observing part of what happened. I suggest having mom replay this episode until it is fully comprehended. Then give Jr. a cookie and send him to bed. Remember: this is Minnesota nice.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 17:26 Comments || Top||

#8  DB,

She isn't eligible for a Darwin Award. She's already reproduced.
Posted by: Eric Jablow || 03/15/2006 21:42 Comments || Top||


Europe
Danish Prosecutor Won't Charge Paper over Cartoons
Denmark's top prosecutor said Wednesday he will not press charges against the newspaper that first published the Prophet Muhammad drawings that triggered deadly protests by Muslims worldwide.

The Foreign Ministry said the decision could cause "negative reactions" against Danes and warned citizens to be cautious when traveling in Muslim countries.

Director of Public Prosecutions Henning Fode upheld the decision of a regional prosecutor, who said the drawings published in Jyllands-Posten Sept. 30 did not violate Danish law. Fode's decision cannot be appealed.

His ruling said the 12 cartoons, one of which shows the prophet wearing a turban shaped like a bomb, did not violate bans on racist and blasphemous speech.

"My decision is that there is no violation of the said rules of the Danish Criminal Code," Fode said in a statement.

A regional prosecutor said Jan. 7 that the drawings were protected by freedom of speech laws and did not violate bans on racism and blasphemy. A group of Danish Muslims said at the time they would appeal the ruling to the top prosecutor.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 10:31 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Three cheers for Denmark! This plucky little country has done the entire world a huge favor by ripping the mask off of Islam with its unilateral demands for preferential treatment and incredibly violent response to normal editorial humor. It is nearly impossible to overstate the importance of what these ostensibly negligible little cartoons have done in heightening world awareness of the danger that Islam poses. Buy Danish!!!
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 10:39 Comments || Top||

#2  Why don't we all stop traveling to muzzie countries until they clean up the splodydope sichyachun ?
Posted by: wxjames || 03/15/2006 10:56 Comments || Top||

#3  Bravo to the prosecutor! The only thing he should have done was sternly warn the plaintiffs that he WILL PRESS CHARGES against any and all who violently riot in Denmark in response to his ruling.
Posted by: Ptah || 03/15/2006 13:11 Comments || Top||

#4  Well now the Danish Mullahs will have to go traipsing back to Saudi Arabia and stir the pot all over again.

Should be lots of riots over this. What fun!
Posted by: Whineger Phaviting8058 || 03/15/2006 15:34 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Pelosi Floats Trial Balloon Donk Agenda
The Republican Party has wondered what's taking Democrats so long to unveil their election-year agenda. Amid press reports that it will happen any day now, House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi on Tuesday offered what amounts to a draft version. Americans who find it hard to make ends meet may like the promises they hear from the Democrats. But the companies that employ such Americans may not like the plan. In any case, the Republican Party says the Democrats' real agenda involves the censure and possible impeachment of President George W. Bush.

In a speech to the Communications Workers of America on Tuesday, Pelosi mentioned Democrats' opposition to outsourcing. She said Democrats will end tax subsidies for companies that send jobs overseas.

She also said Democrats support the "right of all Americans to organize," a sentiment that goes over well with labor unions such as the CWA. To protect workers who want to join unions, Pelosi said Democrats are "fighting" to pass the Employee Free Choice Act, sponsored by Rep. George Miller (D-Calif.) in the House and Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.) in the Senate. "The bill will guarantee that when a majority of workers in a company want a union, they will get a union," Pelosi said.

Democrats also support an increase in the minimum wage. Pelosi, describing the income of corporate American CEOs as "immoral," used Wal-Mart to make her point:
"I was told that an entry level person at Wal-Mart, who works his or her entire career at Wal-Mart, would make as much as the CEO makes in two weeks. A lifetime of work versus two weeks in the executive suite -- this is not America, this is not fairness, this is not the basis of a strong middle class that is essential for our democracy. We must change that in our country," she said.
"From each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs", eh Nancy?


Pelosi also mentioned the Democrats' "Innovation Agenda" to maintain America's leadership role in the global economy. America lags behind other countries that have universal broadband deployment, Pelosi said; but the Democrats' agenda "guarantees" that every American will have affordable access to broadband within five years.
...and a pony!
"We also believe that the nationwide deployment of high speed, always-on broadband and Internet and mobile communications will fuel the development of millions of new jobs in the United States," Pelosi said.

Democrats support "energy independence" within ten years;
Unless it means drilling for oil...
health care for all American within five years;
Hello HillaryCare
and "dignified retirement" (no privatization of Social Security) through an "AmeriSave" plan.

"In order to make any of these victories, we must have one important victory first -- we have to win in November," Pelosi told the CWA. "And win we will, because the American people want change," she added. (Pelosi then mentioned the Republican "culture of corruption, cronyism, and incompetence" in Washington.)

Pelosi attacked Republicans for writing a prescription drug bill that has seniors "paying higher prices on drugs at the pharmacy"; she mentioned an energy bill "that gives obscene subsidies to oil companies" that raise prices for consumers; and she mentioned "tax cuts for the wealthiest people in America" who "certainly don't need them." Pelosi also mentioned the high cost of college tuition and the cost of the Iraq war. "America's working families simply cannot afford George Bush and this Rubber Stamp Congress," Pelosi said.

"Democrats stand for "real security," Pelosi said, including port security. "We must have 100 percent screening of our containers that come into our ports," she said.
By union inspectors....
She also said real security means giving troops the equipment they need to keep them safe in a war zone.
But I thought you wanted to pull them out of these war zones?
Democrats have the issues and the strategy, Pelosi told the CWA -- and "we're going to have this unified message that we put out there, making a stance on the issues because there are so many of them." She did not say exactly when that will happen.

According to Pelosi, Democrats are "about the future" and making it "better for the next generation."

But the Republican Party says Democrats are about censure and impeachment. As Democrats keep promising to introduce their 2006 policy agenda and the date keeps slipping, look what's been happening, the Republican National Committee said on its website:

On Monday, Sen. Russ Feingold, a Wisconsin Democrat, introduced a resolution to censure a sitting president in a time of war - "over a program that is successfully stopping terrorists," the RNC said. And Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.), the ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, has introduced a resolution that would create a select committee "to make recommendations regarding grounds for possible impeachment" of President Bush. The Conyers resolution, introduced in December, now has 29 Democratic co-sponsors, the RNC said.
Democrat incumbents are in full defensive mode for the mid-terms. "Go! Team! Go! Minimize our losses! Let's keep down that over/under! Block that point spread!"
Posted by: Anonymoose || 03/15/2006 10:30 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1 
To protect workers who want to join unions, Pelosi said Democrats are "fighting" to pass the Employee Free Choice Act, sponsored by Rep. George Miller (D-Calif.) in the House and Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.) in the Senate. "The bill will guarantee that when a majority of workers in a company want a union, they will get a union," Pelosi said.


Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't that already the law?

And what about the folks who don't want to join a union? Are they free not to?
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 10:57 Comments || Top||

#2  Robert, in a few words, yes it is already law and no they are not free not to. Once a Union is organized at a particular place they then have the clout to demand a closed shop, which means either you join the Union or you don't work there. One reason I'm not a fan of Unions. I wonder where all the money to pay for all these programs will come from? Increased taxes? Increased tarrifs on imported goods? Tax the Rich to feed the Poor until there are no Rich no more.
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 03/15/2006 11:16 Comments || Top||

#3  Well, it kind of depends on the state if they have to belong to one, too. Arizona is a "right to work" state, and even if there was a union, there was generally no requirement to join it.

I wonder how their plan aims to change that, if at all.
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 03/15/2006 11:38 Comments || Top||

#4  There you have it - the crux of the issue.

"A lifetime of work versus two weeks in the executive suite -- this is not America, this is not fairness"

The Dems want equal outcome, not equal opportunity.

America is about fairnes of opportunity.

Nancy, LIFE isnt fair. Some people are born with the wrong genes ans die soon. Some die in wars. Some are killed in the womb before ever having a chance to draw a breath all for the "conveninece" of theer mother.

If all you can do is work in Walmart at the lowest end job they have for 40 year, then you are nto the sort that could ever *create* new wealth on the scale of a Walmart Executive.

In other words, In the Dem's world of class woarfare:

No matter how much you excel you cannot be allowed to make much more than the lowest.

Nancy, they had this once - its called Communism, and it doesn't work.
Posted by: Oldspook || 03/15/2006 11:42 Comments || Top||

#5  Another example of 'Slavery [to unions] is Freedom'....

Here is Washington State unions have a firm foothold - for Teachers you will pay union dues and contribute to the DNC [no matter what your politics] if you want to work in this state.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 03/15/2006 12:05 Comments || Top||

#6  Desert Blondie: It sounds like they want to make a National law requiring unions if the majority want it. That way, States won't have a say-so, I guess. One of the reasons (in my book) why Wal-Mart's doing so well is because it doesn't have a Union. Sounds like San Fran-Nan wants to take that determination from the States and give it to the Feds.
Posted by: BA || 03/15/2006 13:17 Comments || Top||

#7  Methinks Karl Rove would like her to take up this platform.
Posted by: rjschwarz || 03/15/2006 13:39 Comments || Top||

#8  By making the ‘Employee Free Choice Act’ one of their core tenants it’s clear the Democrats are already in public fellation mode with Big Labor. There are a couple of interesting proposals in this legislation. Through mandatory “neutrality agreements” it will allow union organizers unfettered access to all companies and to all employees even while on the clock. Most troubling is the “Card-check” proposal. If there is a majority of signatures through this process the union will be the exclusive bargainer for the employees. Through the union authorization card process it means that employees will never get to cast a secret ballot for or against the union. I guess the union bigwigs feel that confidential voting is somehow “un-democratic”.
Posted by: DepotGuy || 03/15/2006 14:12 Comments || Top||

#9  Well they're talking about communist ideals, arent they? And that raises an interesting point about the Democrats and their modern day roots.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 14:15 Comments || Top||

#10  Did someone say a broadband equipped pony? Why not, it's California isn't it? And a govenment tit for everyone?
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 17:33 Comments || Top||

#11  Dem Socialist Pie in the sky. 40 acres and a mule. Who is going to pay for it? Since the Donk agenda is a draft, say 35% submittal, they do not have to put the cost and the means to pay for it in right now. Watch the 65% and 95% submittals. They will not have the taxes required to feed this monster in their platform, either.

Of course, the republicrats have not been having any financial discipline either. I sure would like to see and independent movement happen, and boot both parasite parties out, but that is pie in the sky too. Ima so depressed.......
Posted by: Alaska Paul back home again || 03/15/2006 17:36 Comments || Top||

#12  Don't worry. Be happy.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 03/15/2006 18:01 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
NRO Bryon York: It (NSA) Is Legal
In early September 2002, just before the first anniversary of the September 11 terrorist attacks, a group of lawyers gathered in a heavily protected, windowless room in the Department of Justice building in Washington. There were three federal appeals-court judges, Laurence Silberman, Edward Leavy, and Ralph Guy. There was Theodore Olson, the U.S. solicitor general. There was Larry Thompson, the deputy attorney general. And there was John Yoo, the Justice official who had closely studied questions of war powers and presidential authority. Rounding out the group were a few other department staffers, one official from the FBI, and David Addington, Vice President Cheney's top lawyer.

The purpose of the meeting was to argue a case whose details remain so classified that they are known by only a few people, but whose outcome, a decision known as In re: Sealed Case, has become one of the key documents in the hottest argument in Washington today: the fight over what President Bush calls the "terrorist surveillance" of persons with known al-Qaeda connections, and what the president's opponents call "domestic spying."

The three judges made up what is known as the FISA Court of Review. It was created in 1978 by the now-famous Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. The act required that the president go to the so-called FISA Court to seek a warrant for surveillance in top-secret foreign-intelligence cases. For any disputed decisions that might arise, Congress also created the Court of Review, a sort of super-secret appeals court.

More at NRO link...
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 10:21 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Lost in the shuffle is the glaring fact that the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act is a power grab by Congress. It should be challenged in SCOTUS. Stricken down as infringing upon Presidential Powers, the issue goes *poof* and the entire effort by Donks to impeach Bush goes *poof*.

Then we can get back on-track and finish the really important issues, such as the "outing" of Valerie Plame and her CIA parking sticker, lol.

After that, Janet Jackson's wardrobe malfunction should be revisited. I blame Bush.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 11:11 Comments || Top||

#2  Real lawyers looking at it a good while ago. Here's Powerline's take on it.
Posted by: Gloluns Hupeagum6020 || 03/15/2006 15:28 Comments || Top||

#3  Indeed, GH. I've followed this on PL and elsewhere. I do wish, however, the FISA farce would be challenged. It's the cover and crutch of the Moonbats.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 15:33 Comments || Top||

#4  Bryon is a steady supply to the boys at Powerline. But the article is insightful because it delves into the legal rationale the Administration went through before this 12/16/2005 NY Slimes boondoggle began.

Moreover, the FISA Court of Review decision in 2002 gives the mindset behind the FISA judges and the abrupt resignation of one judge.

AG Gonzalez has not, to my knowledge, mentioned the 2002 FISA Court of Review decision during his recent Senate Judicial Committee testimony.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 16:59 Comments || Top||


Europe
Man jailed for beating daughter
A court in Kristiansand, southern Norway, has sentenced a man to 120 days in jail for beating his teenage daughter with straps and a metal rod. The beatings were sparked by her admission that she no longer was a virgin. The 49-year-old man, who emigrated to Norway from Iraq, claimed he'd done nothing wrong. He told the court that he was "much kinder" than many other fathers from his culture would have been. He claimed most other men would have killed the girl, instead of "just beating her."
They don't call it the "Religon of Peace" for nothing.
He also complained that his daughter had put his family in a difficult situation by reporting the beatings to police.
She put the family in a bad light by airing their dirty linen in public. Now she'll have to be killed
Kristiansand newspaper Fædrelandsvennen reported that he now fears he'll be deported. The court decision marks the second time he's been convicted of assaulting his daughter. He was sentenced to 45 days in prison last June after he beat his daughter for coming home late and having a boyfriend. The beatings continued after the daughter admitted she'd had sexual relations with two boyfriends. The father also allegedly threatened to decapitate her.
Another old family custom
He told the court that he regrets bringing his family to Norway, because he believes the country is much less conservative than he had thought it was.
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 10:19 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  He told the court that he regrets bringing his family to Norway, because he believes the country is much less conservative than he had thought it was.

No, Norway is conservative. Just not of the barbaric practices of your benighted people.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 10:58 Comments || Top||

#2  What's unusual is that she was even allowed outside. They must have mandatory public school in Norway.

I wonder how many muslim girls are "home schooled" in western countries? Then, after they have been successfully schooled, the family arranges for the girl to marry her cousin back in the old country so he can move away from that Islamic paradise.
Posted by: Angump Jinetle3039 || 03/15/2006 11:01 Comments || Top||

#3  He told the court that he regrets bringing his family to Norway, because he believes the country is much less conservative than he had thought it was.

Not as "regretful" as the Norwegians I'd wager.
Posted by: Visitor || 03/15/2006 11:03 Comments || Top||

#4  How the hell does Islam remove parental love ?
My understanding of discipline is that one uses a smack to shock and focus the underling while issuing orders. The act of brutal beating or whipping to inflict pain and lasting discomfort goes beyond constructive instruction. Surely the parent gets no pleasure from such acts. Maybe he gets an olive tree in paradise or something simplistic.
Phuckan Islamic voodoo.
Posted by: wxjames || 03/15/2006 11:45 Comments || Top||

#5  He told the court that he regrets bringing his family to Norway, because he believes the country is much less conservative than he had thought it was.

so he thought beating the crap out of his daughter was in alignment with the "Norwegian" way?

btw...how old is she?
Posted by: PlanetDan || 03/15/2006 13:35 Comments || Top||

#6  He also complained that his daughter had put his family in a difficult situation by reporting the beatings to police.

Yeah, nothing gives you a bad rep in the community like the truth coming out. Act like a cretin and, guess what? People will think you're a cretin.
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 13:57 Comments || Top||

#7  Wow, rock man looks like he's been doing the clean and the cream.
Posted by: Vern Estes || 03/15/2006 17:56 Comments || Top||

#8  clear, I mean. Sorry for the mistake, worse than the Mars Snooper.
Posted by: Vern Estes || 03/15/2006 17:58 Comments || Top||

#9  Did Frank return your shirts Vern? »:-)
Posted by: RD || 03/15/2006 18:06 Comments || Top||


International-UN-NGOs
'We are already well into a World War'
Long analysis - here's the first part. Worth reading.

[The following was delivered by Haim Harari, Chair of the Davidson Institute of Science Education and Past President of the Weizmann Institute of Science Talk, at a meeting of the International Advisory Board of a large multi-national corporation in April, 2004.]

As you know, I usually provide the scientific and technological "entertainment" in our meetings, but, on this occasion, our Chairman suggested that I present my own personal view on events in the part of the world from which I come.

I have never been and I will never be a Government official and I have no privileged information. My perspective is entirely based on what I see, on what I read and on the fact that my family has lived in this region for almost 200 years. You may regard my views as those of the proverbial taxi driver, which you are supposed to question, when you visit a country.

I could have shared with you some fascinating facts and some personal thoughts about the Israeli-Arab conflict. However, I will touch upon it only in passing. I prefer to devote most of my remarks to the broader picture of the region and its place in world events. I refer to the entire area between Pakistan and Morocco, which is predominantly Arab, predominantly Moslem, but includes many non-Arab and also significant non-Moslem minorities.

Why do I put aside Israel and its own immediate neighborhood? Because Israel and any problems related to it, in spite of what you might read or hear in the world media, is not the central issue, and has never been the central issue in the upheaval in the region.

Yes, there is a 100 year-old Israeli-Arab conflict, but it is not where the main show is.

The millions who died in the Iran-Iraq war had nothing to do with Israel.

The mass murder happening right now in Sudan, where the Arab Moslem regime is massacring its black Christian citizens, has nothing to do with Israel.

The frequent reports from Algeria about the murders of hundreds of civilian in one village or another by other Algerians have nothing to do with Israel.

Saddam Hussein did not invade Kuwait, endangered Saudi Arabia and butchered his own people because of Israel.

Egypt did not use poison gas against Yemen in the 60's because of Israel.

Assad the Father did not kill tens of thousands of his own citizens in one week in El Hamma in Syria because of Israel.

The Taliban control of Afghanistan and the civil war there had nothing to do with Israel.

The Libyan blowing up of the Pan-Am flight had nothing to do with Israel, and I could go on and on and on.

The root of the trouble is that this entire Moslem region is totally dysfunctional, by any standard of the word, and would have been so even if Israel had joined the Arab league and an independent Palestine had existed for 100 years.

The 22 member countries of the Arab league, from Mauritania to the Gulf States, have a total population of 300 millions, larger than the US and almost as large as the EU before its expansion.

They have a land area larger than either the US or all of Europe.

These 22 countries, with all their oil and natural resources, have a combined GDP smaller than that of Netherlands plus Belgium and equal to half of the GDP of California alone.

Within this meager GDP, the gaps between rich and poor are beyond belief and too many of the rich made their money not by succeeding in business, but by being corrupt rulers.

The social status of women is far below what it was in the Western World 150 years ago.

Human rights are below any reasonable standard, in spite of the grotesque fact that Libya was elected Chair of the UN Human Rights commission.

According to a report prepared by a committee of Arab intellectuals and published under the auspices of the U.N., the number of books translated by the entire Arab world is much smaller than what little Greece alone translates.

The total number of scientific publications of 300 million Arabs is less than that of 6 million Israelis.

Birth rates in the region are very high, increasing the poverty, the social gaps and the cultural decline.

And all of this is happening in a region, which only 30 years ago, was believed to be the next wealthy part of the world, and in a Moslem area, which developed, at some point in history, one of the most advanced cultures in the world.

It is fair to say that this creates an unprecedented breeding ground for cruel dictators, terror networks, fanaticism, incitement, suicide murders and general decline. It is also a fact that almost everybody in the region blames this situation on the United States, on Israel, on Western Civilization, on Judaism and Christianity, on anyone and anything, except themselves.

A word about the millions of decent, honest, good people who are either devout Moslems or are not very religious but grew up in Moslem families: They are double victims of an outside world, which now develops Islamophobia and of their own environment, which breaks their heart by being totally dysfunctional. The problem is that the vast silent majority of these Moslems are not part of the terror and of the incitement, but they also do not stand up against it. They become accomplices, by omission, and this applies to political leaders, intellectuals, business people and many others. Many of them can certainly tell right from wrong, but are afraid to express their views.

The events of the last few years have amplified four issues, which have always existed, but have never been as rampant as in the present upheaval in the region.

A few more years may pass before everybody acknowledges that it is a World War, but we are already well into it. ....
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 10:01 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Absolutely superb article. Required reading for anyone seeking talking points on how and why the war on terror needs to be fought.

What is behind the suicide murders? Money, power and cold-blooded murderous incitement, nothing else. It has nothing to do with true fanatic religious beliefs. No Moslem preacher has ever blown himself up.

No son of an Arab politician or religious leader has ever blown himself.

No relative of anyone influential has done it. Wouldn't you expect some of the religious leaders to do it themselves, or to talk their sons into doing it, if this is truly a supreme act of religious fervor?
Aren't they interested in the benefits of going to Heaven? Instead, they send outcast women, naive children, retarded people and young incited hotheads. They promise them the delights, mostly sexual, of the next world, and pay their families handsomely after the supreme act is performed and enough innocent people are dead.


A few other salient excerpts:

I refer to the entire area between Pakistan and Morocco, which is predominantly Arab, predominantly Moslem, but includes many non-Arab and also significant non-Moslem minorities.

Why do I put aside Israel and its own immediate neighborhood? Because Israel and any problems related to it, in spite of what you might read or hear in the world media, is not the central issue, and has never been the central issue in the upheaval in the region.

Yes, there is a 100 year-old Israeli-Arab conflict, but it is not where the main show is.

The millions who died in the Iran-Iraq war had nothing to do with Israel.

The mass murder happening right now in Sudan, where the Arab Moslem regime is massacring its black Christian citizens, has nothing to do with Israel.

The frequent reports from Algeria about the murders of hundreds of civilian in one village or another by other Algerians have nothing to do with Israel.

Saddam Hussein did not invade Kuwait, endangered Saudi Arabia and butchered his own people because of Israel.

Egypt did not use poison gas against Yemen in the 60's because of Israel.

Assad the Father did not kill tens of thousands of his own citizens in one week in El Hamma in Syria because of Israel.

The Taliban control of Afghanistan and the civil war there had nothing to do with Israel.

The Libyan blowing up of the Pan-Am flight had nothing to do with Israel, and I could go on and on and on.

The root of the trouble is that this entire Moslem region is totally dysfunctional, by any standard of the word, and would have been so even if Israel had joined the Arab league and an independent Palestine had existed for 100 years.

The 22 member countries of the Arab league, from Mauritania to the Gulf States, have a total population of 300 millions, larger than the US and almost as large as the EU before its expansion.

They have a land area larger than either the US or all of Europe.

These 22 countries, with all their oil and natural resources, have a combined GDP smaller than that of Netherlands plus Belgium and equal to half of the GDP of California alone.

Within this meager GDP, the gaps between rich and poor are beyond belief and too many of the rich made their money not by succeeding in business, but by being corrupt rulers.

The social status of women is far below what it was in the Western World 150 years ago.

Human rights are below any reasonable standard, in spite of the grotesque fact that Libya was elected Chair of the UN Human Rights commission.

According to a report prepared by a committee of Arab intellectuals and published under the auspices of the U.N., the number of books translated by the entire Arab world is much smaller than what little Greece alone translates.

The total number of scientific publications of 300 million Arabs is less than that of 6 million Israelis.

Birth rates in the region are very high, increasing the poverty, the social gaps and the cultural decline.

And all of this is happening in a region, which only 30 years ago, was believed to be the next wealthy part of the world, and in a Moslem area, which developed, at some point in history, one of the most advanced cultures in the world.

It is fair to say that this creates an unprecedented breeding ground for cruel dictators, terror networks, fanaticism, incitement, suicide murders and general decline. It is also a fact that almost everybody in the region blames this situation on the United States, on Israel, on Western Civilization, on Judaism and Christianity, on anyone and anything, except themselves.

A word about the millions of decent, honest, good people who are either devout Moslems or are not very religious but grew up in Moslem families: They are double victims of an outside world, which now develops Islamophobia and of their own environment, which breaks their heart by being totally dysfunctional. The problem is that the vast silent majority of these Moslems are not part of the terror and of the incitement, but they also do not stand up against it.
They become accomplices, by omission, and this applies to political leaders, intellectuals, business people and many others. Many of them can certainly tell right from wrong, but are afraid to express their views.

From examining the points made, it is apparent that this was probably published here, at Rantburg, on a previous occasion. For anyone who has not read this, it is critical that this content be carried out to liberal doubters and the ignorant (I know, what's the difference?), alike.

Recently, I used the important talking points I have gathered here, along with the cartoon jihad nonsense to finally begin swaying some devout liberals I know over to understanding that Islam is a political ideology masquerading as a religion. It has taken me years to do this, with much frustration, but the cracks in thinking that America deserved 9-11 have formed and will never mend. Now, if I could only cure that pesky self-loathing problem so many of these liberals have.
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 11:27 Comments || Top||

#2  I knew I had already read it on RB and elsewhere => http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=37372&D=2004-07-07

Good read, though; still, he has one thing wrong : suicide bombing has indeed come to western Europe, and they (we) still don't "get it", at least our Enlightened Elites, and that's because they actually are on the other side. It would (will?) take a large, large event to actually shift things.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 03/15/2006 12:15 Comments || Top||

#3  Um, Zenster, I love you like a son, but do you really need to use Fred's bandwidth quoting the quote at length?
Posted by: KBK || 03/15/2006 12:43 Comments || Top||

#4  KBK, if you look back on my history of personal posting patterns, you'll see that I rarely do such a thing. You'll also find that I am one of the very few posters here who scrupulously adheres to the moderators' requests that people submitting articles condense single sentence paragraphs to eliminate white space and edit for length. All you need to do is compare some of my original postings to the actual linked article and you will see.

In this particular case, I felt that the talking points given by the author were vital in terms of debunking Israel's overinflated role as a pivot point in so many of the Arab conflicts. Muslims are so busy slaughtering each other, they barely have time to address Israel, save as a stalking horse or red herring for political purposes. The author's use of single sentence paragraphs as bullet points was lamentable but of great importance in conveying the needed impact with respect to just how screwed up Arab politics are.
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 13:01 Comments || Top||

#5  A Fantastic article well worth the read. I have commented on this at my website to spare Fred's bandwidth. I think I started to read this, then forgot about it, but I'm glad to see it again.
Posted by: Ptah || 03/15/2006 13:08 Comments || Top||

#6  Zenster, it is a great article.
Posted by: KBK || 03/15/2006 13:55 Comments || Top||

#7  Trust me, I'm printing it out and bringing it to my liberal friends (as mentioned above). It is rock-solid exposés of this sort that turn the spotlight on Arab and Islamic perfidy. Thank you, KBK, for doublechecking the entire piece, it's a keeper.
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 14:03 Comments || Top||

#8  We are not in a World War. We are in the Phoney War that precedes a Wrold War.
Posted by: Wheting Glereting1773 || 03/15/2006 14:55 Comments || Top||

#9  Uh oh. This could go either way...
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 15:03 Comments || Top||

#10  Islam had better hope like he|| this is the actual World War. If this is just a Phoney War, the World War that's coming is going to be particularly nasty.
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 15:25 Comments || Top||

#11  the World War that's coming is going to be particularly nasty.

That's how you know it's a World War.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 03/15/2006 15:37 Comments || Top||

#12  Wait, WG said "Wrold War". All clear.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 15:45 Comments || Top||

#13  That's how you know it's a World War.

Pity how the Muslims just don't seem to have a clue. This will probably keep me laying awake during the long winter nights.
Posted by: Thinemble Snemble1456 || 03/15/2006 16:14 Comments || Top||

#14  Dratted cookie going Thinemble Snemble1456 berserk.
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 18:19 Comments || Top||

#15  Thanks for the great read. Zenster, nice comments.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 20:08 Comments || Top||

#16  The "Phony War" or SitzKrieg in Europe is still considered by most to be part of WW2, as is Japan's war against China and Manchuria. As for any "real" war, i.e. involving Russia-China or China, we'll know when the shit hits the fan vv IRAN, NORTH KOREA, and TAIWAN, andor any new 9-11's aimed at Dubya and Washington. I wasd watching the flick THE MAGNIFICIENT YANKEE last night about the life of Republican, Supreme COurt Judge, and Intellectual Oliver Wendell Holmes - his character near the end of the movie said he believed in the worth of Government, but he himself believed more in the people and ideals behind America's form of government, "Holmes" closes by saying "YOUNG MAN, WE ARE IN A WAR [WW2], DO YOUR BEST AT ALL TIMES AND NEVER, EVER GIVE UP", or words to that effect.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 03/15/2006 21:26 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Why "People Power" Will Fail in Iran
March 15, 2006: Since last year, the United States has been more energetically trying to build a trained democracy movement to overthrow the Iranian religious dictatorship. Using democracy as a weapon has gained a lot of believers since the late 1980s. Back then, the East European governments, all run by communist dictators (and backed up by the Soviet Union), collapsed when most of the people just stood up and said, "enough, we want change." By 1989, Eastern Europe was democratic, after over four decades of communist police states. Two years later, the Soviet Union itself collapsed the same way. This was scary stuff. Since then, there have been similar, and more deliberate, instances of this change in Serbia and Ukraine. And before that, you had a similar overthrow in the Philippines, where the term "People Power" was invented..

The moves necessary to make "People Power" work have now been turned into techniques that have been set down on check lists and presented in seminars. There's a drill that can make this happen if two conditions apply. First, most of the population must want democracy. Second, the security forces must be willing to stand down in the face of mass demonstrations. The first condition applies in Iran, the second doesn't. While the Islamic conservatives in Iran have the support of, at most, a third of the population, they do have over a hundred thousand armed men who are willing to kill to keep their religious leaders in power.

"People Power" is not a 1980s invention. Back in the 1930s, Indian democracy activists mobilized millions of people against the British colonial government. But it was admitted that, while such a movement worked against the British, it would not have worked if the colonial occupiers had been, say, German.
Or old Joe Stalin or Chinese leaders during the Tian'anmen Square Protests of 1989, or today's Zim-Bob-Way...
Not today's Politically Correct Germans, but the rather more savage, pre-World War II variety. Old school Germans, who massacred Africans protesting colonial rule, and killed millions of civilians during World War II, would not have been as accommodating to peaceful demonstrators as were the British (with a few bloody exceptions.) The old school defenders of the Islamic tyrants in Iran appear ready to carry out some sustained killings to keep their masters in power.
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 09:23 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  We may want to prepare the concept of people power, but we do not actually want a revolution immediately. The reason being that the typical Iranian on the street wants nuclear weapons, so most other forms of government will still present the same problem we see today.

First, Persia will need an attitude adjustment. To get it past both the notion that nuclear weapons make them something greater, and that of regional hegemony. The only way to do this is by partitioning the country.

A smaller Persia will be a more peaceful Persia, and then and only then can people power flourish.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 03/15/2006 10:40 Comments || Top||

#2  The reason being that the typical Iranian on the street wants nuclear weapons, so most other forms of government will still present the same problem we see today.

I disagree re: your solution (its sustainability), but my gosh Anonymoose, you've finally hit on what few here will (want to?) mention...
Posted by: Edward Yee || 03/15/2006 12:54 Comments || Top||

#3  That the average Omar-on-the-street in Iran might also wish his country to possess nuclear weapons is no mystery to me. This is why I have always recommended that we use the "rinse and repeat" method of regime change, so that the final (surviving) iteration is exceptionally cooperative.
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 14:29 Comments || Top||

#4  I'll disagree re: the sustainability thereof.
Posted by: Edward Yee || 03/15/2006 14:50 Comments || Top||

#5  It falls into the error of thnking Iran is a cohesive nation state. Its not. Its a mini-empire and the constituent peoples hate each other.
Posted by: phil_b || 03/15/2006 16:20 Comments || Top||

#6  This piece counters Michael Ledeen's theory on Iran.

I say violent regime change before people power with a bit of "either your with us or against us" thrown in.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 18:35 Comments || Top||


Iraq
Marines in Iraq Get 40mm Six-Shooter
March 15, 2006: Six shot, "revolver" type 40mm grenade launchers have been around for years. But the U.S. military has never adopted them, until now. The U.S. Marine Corps has, after several months of testing, issued these weapons to troops in Iraq.

The MGL-140 40mm, six shot, grenade launcher is now called the M32. This weapon is, literally, a shotgun size revolver that fires standard American 40mm grenades. Thus it has a minimum range of 30 meters, and a maximum range of 400 meters. The weapon is 32 inches long, and weighs 13.2 pounds empty, and 20.3 pounds loaded (40mm rounds weigh about 19 ounces each.) Like any 40mm grenade launcher, it can fire lethal and non-lethal (tear gas, Etc.) rounds, and fire all six of them in a few seconds. The M32 also has a rail for mounting various types of aiming devices (day and night scopes). M32s retail for $6,000 each, but the marines have gotten a volume discount.

Currently, each battalion has one M32, to be used to see how the weapon performs in combat. If user reports are positive, more will be issued. Marines and soldiers have used their single shot, 40mm grenade launchers, a lot in Iraq, and with much success. But the single shot 40mm launchers have been around since the 1960s, and the marines wanted to try something new. Weapons like the MGL-140 have been used by police and military organizations for years.
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 09:19 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Milkor of SA product. Photo and details on page 32 of the following link:


http://down.nmag.cn/other/Janes.Defence.Weekly.Magazine.January.11.2006.PDF
Posted by: Besoeker || 03/15/2006 10:36 Comments || Top||

#2  wow sounds like a neat peice of kit! bet its got good 'fear factor' stats if your looking at a modern day top trumps set.
Posted by: ShepUK || 03/15/2006 10:39 Comments || Top||

#3  Is this another part of the 'video game revolution' in military affairs? Somehow I can just see a marine specialist complaining that he has to reload everytime he fires, unlike Unreal Tournament or GTA3.
Posted by: Chinter Flarong9283 || 03/15/2006 12:33 Comments || Top||

#4  The one weapon that has never really made it is the infantry light cannon. Its almost singular function is to shoot *throught* parts of a building. For example, denying the use of a corner for cover.

It give the infantry the option to punch a neat hole in something, rather than level the building, which is time-consuming and expensive.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 03/15/2006 13:28 Comments || Top||

#5  the marines have gotten a volume discount.

Ain't that the best line in the story! Shoots more, better, faster, AND we've got extra loads back at the warehouse! What a great country.
Posted by: Phavilet Grolurt9350 || 03/15/2006 14:00 Comments || Top||

#6  I'd wager one of the major reasons this weapon has been brought into action is its ability to launch the new generation of compact thermobaric rounds.

Collapsing a single building upon a group of assembled terrorists, without damage to surrounding structures. What's not to like?
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 14:39 Comments || Top||


Caribbean-Latin America
Mexico announces major new oil find
President Vicente Fox climbed aboard a drilling platform in the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday to formally announce a new deep-water oil discovery he said could eventually yield 10 billion barrels of crude oil.

An exploratory well dubbed Noxal 1 was drilled at a depth of 3,070 feet below the water, and is seeking a depth of 13,125 feet.

"With Noxal we will begin a new era of oil exploration in our country," Fox said aboard the "Ocean Worker 6 Britania" platform.

Government estimates say the find could exceed reserves at the giant offshore field Cantarell, Mexico's largest oil field, which has seen its production decline but is still expected to yield 1.9 million barrels a day this year.

Luis Ramirez, chief executive of Mexico's government-run oil monopoly Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex, said Noxal is the fourth deep-water well explored by Pemex.

Ramirez said that while production tests will be conducted in coming weeks, "evidence found is sufficient to infer potential reserves to be discovered that could reach 10 billion barrels of crude oil equivalent."

"This number, compared with annual production of 1.6 billion barrels of crude, shows its strategic importance," Ramirez said, adding that crude oil production at Noxal likely won't begin for eight to 10 years.

Fox said his administration has invested more than $6.3 billion in exploration in the last five years. Pemex expects the new find to offset further production declines at Cantarell expected in coming years.

Pemex contracted a private company to drill the well. The fastest way to get the oil out would be by Pemex forming alliances with companies that have the deep-water technology. However, current laws forbid private companies from exploration and production activities in Mexico except under contract to Pemex.

The Fox administration has been attempting to ease foreign investment restrictions in the state-run energy sector. But those efforts have been blocked in Congress.

Pemex produced 3.33 million barrels a day of crude oil last year, of which it exported 1.82 million barrels. This year, the company expects to raise production to about 3.42 million barrels a day.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 09:18 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Was it in Fox's smile or his hair?
Posted by: Cheaderhead || 03/15/2006 10:26 Comments || Top||

#2  Given the oil business is nationalized, how much of the revenue will end up lining the pockets of all the corrupt government office holders, bureaucrats, and 'good o'amigos'? How much will be plowed into infrastructure, education, and health services for the people who in desperation seek 'El Norte'?
Posted by: Gloluns Hupeagum6020 || 03/15/2006 13:46 Comments || Top||

#3  So, just this week we have announcements of large new reserves in Kuwait, Afghanistan and Mexico. Interesting.
Posted by: Iblis || 03/15/2006 14:39 Comments || Top||

#4  Causing anxiety in some other parts of the world.

Yup.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 14:40 Comments || Top||

#5  Whoopee! Another new source of corruption!
Posted by: borgboy || 03/15/2006 14:49 Comments || Top||

#6  I'm no Texas Geologist, but if you hit a "Presidential fly me out to the platform immediately" crude oil formation at 3,070 feet (which is a pretty shallow well) with a wildcat hole, why take er on down to 13,125 feet? Something ain't just right here.
Posted by: Visitor || 03/15/2006 14:52 Comments || Top||

#7  that's how far Hugo's ass puckered.... Goodbye oil hegemony!
Posted by: Frank G || 03/15/2006 15:04 Comments || Top||

#8  It's a poorly written article, but my guess is the 3070 feet referred to is the water depth where the well is being drilled and 13,125' is the depth to the bottom of the well. This is consistent with where we have recently made some large discoveries in the US Gulf of Mexico (eg. BP Thunder Horse). This is also consistent with the long lead time (8-10 years) to production - it takes a long time to build stuff to produce oil in that depth of water (though we do it a good bit faster here). Furthermore, the 10 billion barrel number is probably 'optimistic' - ie. 'about the biggest we can imagine fitting into this place' - but the presence of El Presidente still indicates they think it is pretty darn big. My guess - 2 to 4 billion barrels maybe?
Posted by: Glenmore || 03/15/2006 18:12 Comments || Top||

#9  BTW, I'm in the business, but know nothing about this discovery specifically. If I did know anything I would not be able to say anything. At all.
Posted by: Glenmore || 03/15/2006 18:14 Comments || Top||

#10  Glenmore - So what are you trying to say? lol
Posted by: Laurence of the Rats || 03/15/2006 18:44 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Hoax tries to implicate college Republicans as racist anti-Semites
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 09:17 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Good choice, since Krusty is both Republican and Jewish.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 9:39 Comments || Top||

#2  All future campas "bake sales" and blatent attaks upon afirmative action will be met with simlar responces.
Posted by: Flunkwysi Spelin || 03/15/2006 10:52 Comments || Top||

#3  It seems like "free speech" in 2006 means only the ability to say approved, politically correct thoughts.

I'm actually dreading sending my future kid to college someday if this is a portent of academia's future. My sweetie didn't get out of Russia to have his kids indoctrinated here in America.
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 03/15/2006 11:49 Comments || Top||

#4  Democrats and Liberals are all for free speech, as long as you are saying what they want to hear. If not you are automatically a "racist", a "homophobe", an "islamophobe", some sort of "supremacist", a "Nazi", or oddly enough as it is for libs to use the word, a "Zionist". Free speech works both ways, you can't just restrict it to liberal agenda viewpoints.

So, you shouldn't be an islamophobe, but you should come out to block the UAE port deal while your husband receives money for consulting services to Dubai on the very same issue. That's Democrat, that's Liberal skullduggery, and that is the same kind of thinking that perpetuates the need of things like affirmative action.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 12:21 Comments || Top||

#5  This article is filled with so much doublethink it makes my head hurt.

Its 'inapproprate' to host a bake sale protesting affirmitive action.

But its ok to harass participants (by other studends and the faculty), threat them with physical injury (no referral to the anti-harassment policy needed since its being done by the left its ok....).

Claims that their policies are non-racist and then in the following paragraph: I find troubling is that the protest was intentionally located across from the university’s Cultural Center, a place where our students of color organize numerous enriching events for the campus community Isn't referring to them as 'students of color' racist in itself?

What has occurred has been another example of political correctness run amok at DePaul. A small group of students engaged in a relatively innocuous public protest of affirmative action and as a result they were investigated for a possible case of harassment, had their organization censured and penalized by the university, were tricked into being subjected to a two hour public bashing at the hands of several faculty members and in front of about a hundred jeering students, were publicly scolded [Transation: Harassed...] for the bake sale by the university president in an email to every member of the DePaul community, were the victims of a crude attempt to falsely brand them as the perpetrators of a nasty incident of racist graffiti and when it they were cleared of this charge the school administration, knowing that this was a hoax, suggested to the media that their bake sale had contributed to the atmosphere that led to the graffiti.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 03/15/2006 12:23 Comments || Top||

#6  I love using the word skullduggery.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 12:23 Comments || Top||

#7  Isn't referring to them as 'students of color' racist in itself?

It's not like the school sees them as anything else.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 14:54 Comments || Top||

#8  #3 DB - Hillsdale College.

They take NO government money. And they ain't indoctrinators.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 03/15/2006 20:22 Comments || Top||


Europe
1 killed in Paris 'car bomb'
PARIS, France -- One person was killed when a car exploded in northern Paris, according to reports. French police said the blast was apparently caused by a bomb, The Associated Press said. A judicial source said Paris's anti-terrorist unit had not been called in and for now ruled out the possibility of a terrorist attack. "It is a criminal act, apparently a booby-trapped car," a police spokesman told Reuters, adding that police had not discounted the incident being a settling of scores.

LCI television reported the car's owner was previously known to the police.

The car exploded on a main road near the suburb of La Courneuve. The French fire brigade said they were called shortly before 1000 GMT Wednesday to deal with a burning car. They did not give any further information.
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 08:53 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  What's with the scare quotes? Most cars do not simply explode without serious assistance.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 9:23 Comments || Top||

#2  Odd, normally they burn down a couple of nurseries too.
Posted by: Icerigger || 03/15/2006 10:01 Comments || Top||

#3  Most cars do not simply explode without serious assistance.

I guess you've never driven a Renault, have you?
Posted by: tu3031 || 03/15/2006 10:19 Comments || Top||

#4  *snort*

ROFL, indeed!
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 10:26 Comments || Top||

#5  LOL Tu!
Posted by: 6 || 03/15/2006 11:16 Comments || Top||


Fifth Column
Anti-War Movement Casualty of In-Fighting
(CNSNews.com) - With new polls showing that more than half of Americans believe the war in Iraq is going badly and that Iraq will never become a stable democracy, you might think that anti-war groups in the U.S. would be trumpeting their influence. Instead, the groups appear to be caught in their own brand of civil war, criticizing each other for management styles, sympathizing with Communist dictators and pandering to the media. They have bickered over alleged racism and even over issues like who would get more microphone time and pay for the portable toilets at anti-war rallies.

The feuding appears to have precluded any kind of nationally coordinated anti-war rallies from happening on March 19, the third-year anniversary of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. Small, local protests are planned by various anti-war groups around the country.

"The souring of the political atmosphere is largely due to ANSWER, which, in our experience, consistently substitutes labels ('racist,' 'anti-unity') and mischaracterization of others' views for substantive political debate or problem solving," reads the open letter issued last Dec. 12, by the group United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ). It marked the opening salvo in a war of words that has been fought on the groups' individual websites and all over the blogosphere. In announcing that it would no longer coordinate activities with International ANSWER, UFPJ criticized ANSWER's links to the Workers World Party (WWP), a group that allegedly had supported atrocities committed by Communist regimes around the world.
Gee, somebody finally noticed
ANSWER also "has a history of seeking to dominate coalitions and many embarrassing ultra-hard line positions," according to UFPJ supporter Bill Weinberg, whose column was published in the November/December issue of the magazine Nonviolent Activist.

International ANSWER's leader - former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark - was also singled out for criticism after providing legal help to some of the world's most notorious ousted leaders. "Ramsey Clark, the visible leader of the International Action Center, is a founder of the International Committee to Defend Slobodan Milosevic, and has also provided legal representation for some accused of participating in the 1994 Rwandan genocide. He has more recently volunteered for Saddam Hussein's legal team," Weinberg noted in his column late last fall.
Chortle
UFPJ's complaints about ANSWER also delved into areas not related to ideology. UFPJ claimed that ANSWER monopolized the microphones during the groups' joint Sept. 24, 2005, anti-war rally in Washington D.C. "ANSWER did not honor the agreed-upon time limits for its sections of the pre-march Rally, going more than an hour over in one section," the open letter from UFPJ's steering committee alleged last Dec. 12. The letter added that "ANSWER did not turn out many volunteers to provide for fundraising, security and media operations for the March and Rally."

In a Jan. 10, 2006 article entitled "The War within the Antiwar Movement," published on CounterPunch.org, anti-war activist Lenni Brenner defended International ANSWER against the attacks. Brenner, who is not a spokesman for International ANSWER, questioned why UFPJ had aligned itself with "demagogues" like Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton.

"Demagogues use prevailing fanaticisms. Jackson & Sharpton meet that dictionary definition. Their party's leaders would swim across oceans of snot, stark naked, chasing after Zionist money."
They're equal oportunity panderers. They'd do the same for any money
"They adapt to it. Black congressional Democratic panderers vote for US weapons to Israel," Brenner explained. "UFPJ's leaders certainly had no idea of Jackson & Sharpton's cons. But, after they read this, they must, as all great philosophers say, s*** or get off the pot."

International ANSWER's steering committee issued its own response in a Dec. 16, open letter, accusing UFPJ of repeatedly attempting to break up the anti-war movement and behaving in a "petty" manner. "The justifications cited in their December 12 split declaration are embarrassingly petty and astonishingly trivial for a U.S.-based antiwar movement, especially given the gravity of the war itself and the monumental human suffering in the Middle East," the Dec. 16 letter from ANSWER's steering committee alleged.

ANSWER also claimed that it was UFPJ that had dominated the stage at the anti-war rally. "UFPJ had the stage first at the joint rally. They went over their time. They advised A.N.S.W.E.R. to take an equal time. UFPJ then retook the stage and began telling the crowd to march, even though A.N.S.W.E.R. still had its second segment left," the letter from ANSWER charged.

ANSWER rejected criticism that it had failed to provide enough volunteers for the Sept. 24, 2005 rally. "UFPJ provided not one volunteer," ANSWER charged while noting that it paid "the full cost for the stage, sound, porta-Johns, back-stage set-up and other expenses for the joint rally." "UFPJ did not pay one cent," the open letter stated.

When contacted on Tuesday, Hany Khalil, the coordinator for United for Peace and Justice, declined to comment on the split between his group and ANSWER. Shawn Garcia, the national organizer for ANSWER said the feud between his group and UFPJ was "a bad thing." "Obviously it's a bad thing. We are not unified and stuff like that and they are breaking up the anti-war movement," Garcia told Cybercast News Service. "They refuse to work with us, and that is what they are putting out there. So we will see what develops in the next couple of months. We said we want to work with them. We think that is the best way to go about things," Garcia said.

A third anti-war group, Mobilization for Global Justice (MGJ), has now also entered the feud. Mobilization for Global Justice has accused UFPJ of "racism," for limiting the speech of Virginia Setshedi, a black South African woman who addressed the Sept. 24, 2005, rally in the nation's capital. Setshedi "was treated by UFPJ in a manner bordering racism," [sic] read an open letter from MGJ dated Dec. 1, 2005. "[Setshedi] is a truly visionary activist and a dynamic speaker, and yet was given only three minutes to speak after a long procession of well-known U.S. speakers who were given five minutes each - and often took longer than that," the letter claimed.

MGJ also accused UFPJ of being obsessed with press attention. "The grassroots has no role in determining the political vision of the coalition; the vision and message are driven by the needs of getting on CNN and the New York Times," the letter stated. MGJ acknowledged that the anti-war movement might be hurt by the growing bitterness among its most prominent groups. "We know that fracturing and factionalism weaken the movement - and that is not what we seek - but it is equally true that conformity, unwillingness to engage in real debate, and a refusal to air real differences when they exist can stifle and eventually kill a movement," MGJ stated.

UFPJ fired back at MGJ in a Feb. 10, 2006 open letter, claiming to have been "surprised" by the allegations regarding the September 2005 rally and blaming International ANSWER for the problem involving speaking time. "When ANSWER ran significantly over their allotted times it had a negative impact on our speakers," UFPJ explained.

UFPJ also found itself the target of the D.C. Anti-War Network (DAWN). Earlier this month, DAWN passed a resolution declaring that it would never pay any money to UFPJ for anti-war activities. The group cited dissatisfaction with UFPJ's management style and suppression of local anti-war voices. "The peace movement is falling apart," declared Raoul Deming, a member of the District of Columbia chapter of Free Republic, a conservative group that supports the Iraq War and frequently clashes with the anti-war activists.

"The major leaders of the anti-war movement are totalitarian, Stalinist or Marxist. They just mistreat the smaller groups that come to support them. They don't listen to them, they don't provide them funding. ANSWER and UFPJ, through their totalitarian management, have aliened a majority of the peace groups," Deming told.
Next: to publicize Teresa Heinz Kerry's support for ANSWER through the TIDES foundation.
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 08:42 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Well, this is worth putting on the record.
Posted by: Ptah || 03/15/2006 9:12 Comments || Top||

#2  Almost makes me wanna hit the PayPal button at Daily Kos, lol.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 9:13 Comments || Top||

#3  It's those durn Mensheviks, I tell ya!
Posted by: Slinesing Angomolet1065 || 03/15/2006 9:23 Comments || Top||

#4  The Monty Python colosseum scene.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 9:25 Comments || Top||

#5  What a bunch of assholes. There is no anti-war "movement", they couldn't scratch up enough people to make one. Most of those "rallies" look pretty empty to me. Just a bunch of hippies and communists trying to be a pain in the ass and they can't even manage that.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 10:08 Comments || Top||

#6  Oh-oh. Are the kiddos pissin in each others sandbox?
Posted by: tu3031 || 03/15/2006 10:24 Comments || Top||

#7  I remember my first anti-war march (as a spectator) in Brussels in 1962. It was a march organized by the Belgian Communist Party against the Vietnam War. I'm not sure most Americans even knew we were in a war in Vietnam at that stage. From that day to today's ANSWER Stalinist front organization, the prime movers have pretty much been the same people.
Posted by: HV || 03/15/2006 10:49 Comments || Top||

#8  The Cacophonous Pro Peace/Anti War Quartet

UFPJ (United For Peace and Justice)
A.N.S.W.E.R. (Act Now to Stop War and End Racism)
MGJ (Mobilization for Global Justice)
DAWN (D.C. Anti-War Network) or (Deeply Annoying Whinny Nuisance)
Posted by: Swiss Tex || 03/15/2006 11:16 Comments || Top||

#9  implode - to collapse inward violently.
Posted by: wxjames || 03/15/2006 11:30 Comments || Top||

#10  I am pleased to say that at the very beginning of the anti-war movement, I strongly advised leftists to have nothing to do with ANSWER, to shun them, and to disavow them. And certainly not to let them co-opt their movement and turn in to their own purposes.

They blew me off. There are no enemies on the left, the suckers said.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 03/15/2006 13:31 Comments || Top||

#11  ANSWER also "has a history of seeking to dominate coalitions and many embarrassing ultra-hard line positions,"

Ultra-hard line positions are embarrassing. Not quite how I would have phrased it... But I am glad they've all noticed one another's little deficiencies.
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/15/2006 14:26 Comments || Top||

#12  How nice to see the various and, often, utterly incompatible moral screeds of the left shatter segregate into immiscible strata where an adamantine amalgam was so hotly anticipated. It is about time that liberals fully understand the bloodsoaked nature of socialism and how outmoded any concept even faintly resembling Marxism is. Most refreshing of all will be when they begin purchasing a clue as to how Sharpton, Jackson and other such social parasites hucksters are more interested in con games that play upon whiteman's burden than demanding any sort of genuine sense of responsibility from their own followers. (Hat tip to Bill Cosby.)
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 15:10 Comments || Top||

#13  Zenster:

Is your post above an example of "intellectual firepower" you said exist in this site?
Posted by: Just Curious || 03/15/2006 15:28 Comments || Top||

#14  I'll leave that for others to judge. However, as usual, your own contribution arrives entirely uncontaminated by any content.
Posted by: Thinemble Snemble1456 || 03/15/2006 16:32 Comments || Top||

#15  *snort*
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 16:35 Comments || Top||

#16  Consider a new hobby young Mr. Curious. Model rockets are all the rage. Very safe, yet thrilling, and you might learn a trade.
Posted by: Vern Estes || 03/15/2006 18:01 Comments || Top||

#17  Here you go Mr. Curious - Big Bertha has always been a winner for young fellas seeking their way.

You can of course repaint to suit your politics of the moment. Red, Gold and Black is always a favorite.
Posted by: Vern Estes || 03/15/2006 18:07 Comments || Top||

#18  Hokay JC you git the honorary firepower 'choose

Posted by: RD || 03/15/2006 18:16 Comments || Top||

#19  It also does NOT help the Anti-War movement, etal. to be publicly demanding that only America unilat appease and make concessions, but the other side does not - you know, Universal Equalism. End result - Commies and Anti-American agendists/community now wants mainstream America and Americana to believe that American-specific holocaust is good and beneficial for everyone, even for those being exterminated. Americans have gone from demanding to be ruled by anyone except an American, to unilat and unconditionally
"volunteering" to report to our local death camps and mass suicide stations while happily singing KUBAYA and WE ARE THE WORLD, etc.!? Americans are selfish and malicious for wanting to stay alive.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 03/15/2006 21:36 Comments || Top||

#20  Just Curious, Joe M and twinkly red shoes from Kansas all in one thread? Man, did I stumble upon the jackpot or what, lol?
Posted by: BA || 03/15/2006 22:26 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Richard L. Armitage Called Likely Leak Source
WASHINGTON, March 14 — A former executive editor of The Washington Post was quoted in a magazine article published Tuesday as saying that Richard L. Armitage, a former deputy secretary of state, likely was the official who revealed the identity of the intelligence officer at the center of the C.I.A. leak case to Bob Woodward, an editor and reporter for The Post.

Benjamin C. Bradlee, the Post editor who guided Mr. Woodward's Watergate reporting, is quoted in the article about the leak investigation in the April issue of Vanity Fair as saying, "That Armitage is the likely source is a fair assumption." The assertion attributed to Mr. Bradlee added the weight of one of the country's best-known editors to months of speculation that Mr. Armitage could be Mr. Woodward's source. Mr. Armitage has not commented on the matter. On Tuesday, he did not return a reporter's phone call.

In an interview, Mr. Bradlee said that he had been told about Mr. Woodward's source although he did not recall saying the exact words attributed to him by the Vanity Fair reporter. Mr. Bradlee said his information about Mr. Armitage was imprecise, although he said Mr. Armitage's identification as Mr. Woodward's source was "an inference that could be drawn." A spokesman for Vanity Fair defended the accuracy of the quotes, saying that the author of the article, Marie Brenner, said that she had tape recorded Mr. Bradlee's comments.

Mr. Bradlee said Mr. Woodward had not told him the identity of the source. "Woodward is not my source for any knowledge I have about the case," Mr. Bradlee said. The question of who told Mr. Woodward about the intelligence officer, Valerie Plame Wilson, is one of the lingering mysteries of the C.I.A. leak inquiry.

In an article last November, Mr. Woodward said he would not name his source, but he has written that the person who told him about Ms. Wilson was a former or current government official and longtime source who told him about her in an offhand manner at the end of a lengthy interview.
That fits Armitage
In part, Mr. Woodward's disclosure was important because he said the interview with the source occurred in June 2003, which meant he may have been the first reporter to learn of Ms. Wilson's identity, weeks before she was named in a newspaper column by Robert D. Novak. Mr. Woodward never wrote about the case, but in the article in November he said he was disclosing the conversation because his source had decided to talk to the special prosecutor, Patrick J. Fitzgerald, about it.

Mr. Novak has also been silent about his source, although he has written that the person was a government official who was not a "partisan gunslinger." Mr. Novak named Ms. Wilson in a column on July 14, 2003, after Ms. Wilson's husband, former Ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV, publicly criticized the Bush administration as twisting intelligence about Iraq's weapons programs in months preceding the war.

The disclosure of Ms. Wilson's name led to a grand jury investigation by Mr. Fitzgerald, who in October brought obstruction and perjury charges against I. Lewis Libby Jr., Vice President Dick Cheney's former chief of staff. The indictment accused Mr. Libby of falsely testifying that he learned of Ms. Wilson's identity from reporters, when, the prosecutor charged, he had been given information about her from Mr. Cheney and others in the government.
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 08:32 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Has there ever been more puffed-up tomfoolery and disinformation written about nothing? I mean a specific nothing, a non-issue, a bit of navel fluff that was of absolutely no consequence, had no foundation in fact or law, a nothing that did not even happen, was obviously not a something, and did not even approach a something?
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 9:05 Comments || Top||

#2  Armitage is the equivalent of a US diplomatic-bureaucratic "James Bond". One of the elite few who use paper like weapons. His Internet bio changes on a yearly basis.

In past, he has been deeply involved in US govt. black ops in narcotraffic; moved to Reagan's office of POW/MIA; and was sent in to sabotage the US-Phillipine Subic Bay treaty talks (we wanted out, with no reparations paid). In between, he was shuttled between government agencies, usually with an investigation at his heels.

As with the few serious "James Bond" type operatives in the CIA, of which there are just a handful, the diplomatic-bureaucratic ones are always on the road, doing all the ugly work that needs to be done.

Yes, it's ugly. That's a fact of life.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 03/15/2006 9:08 Comments || Top||

#3  Since it's a Bush detractor, the Dems will probably be willing to let him off the hook. 6 months ago the whole world was going to end if they didn't get their hands on the guy who spilled the beans. Oh, but I forgot, that was when they thought Rove did it. Such a just and fair bunch of people, those Democrats.
Posted by: Jeresh Snump4916 || 03/15/2006 9:19 Comments || Top||

#4  Colin Powell sure has a gift for picking cronies: Armitage, Wilkinson, etc.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 10:18 Comments || Top||

#5  Probably explains why Wilkinson is so mad all the time.
Posted by: danking_70 || 03/15/2006 11:17 Comments || Top||

#6  In hockey, if and when the ref fails to take control of dirty play, soon the fists fly and the policing is handled by the ass kickers.
In politics, when the special prosecutor plays cream puff with the facts, soon the MSM has to dig up the 'truth'
excuse me, I have to vomit......
In conclusion, Fitzgerald should give back every cent we paid his sorry worthless ass.
Posted by: wxjames || 03/15/2006 11:51 Comments || Top||

#7  I would not wish to confront Dick Armitage face-to-face with such drivel, you might get your ass handed to you.
Posted by: Visitor || 03/15/2006 14:44 Comments || Top||

#8  Some Indians refer to him as "Armitraj", a term of deep respect, because of his toughness.

His periodic visits to Islamabad have caused much heartburn there.



Posted by: john || 03/15/2006 15:01 Comments || Top||

#9  john: Funny you should mention it, as Armitage was the personal representative of the President sent when India and Pakistan were on their nuclear hair trigger. In that case, whatever he did had a complete "wet blanket" effect on the hostilities, and yet both sides came out of it all smiles.

That was some maneuver. What exactly he did, we shall never know.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 03/15/2006 15:48 Comments || Top||

#10  betcha john might know Moose!
Posted by: RD || 03/15/2006 18:01 Comments || Top||

#11  Yeah, how about the full skinny, John?
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 03/15/2006 18:03 Comments || Top||

#12  He could tell us, but then he'd have to kill us...
Posted by: Phil || 03/15/2006 18:21 Comments || Top||

#13  Bradlee mentioned Armitage because Armitage tends to speak before think. BTW he did a splendid job warning the Syrians about crossing the Iraqi border.

Don't discount his warrior experience.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 18:39 Comments || Top||


Arabia
20 killed in Saudi Arabia after drinking cologne
As many as 20 people died after drinking poisoned cologne in the cities of Mecca, Taif, Medina and Riyadh, the Saudi newspaper Okaz reported on Wednesday. The paper said 40 other people were also admitted to hospital, some in critical condition. The authorities carried out inspections to find the poisoned cologne, as large quantities of it have already been sold. The poisoned cologne can inflict a wide range of damage, including migraines, nausea, vomiting, severe stomach and back pains and infection of the pancreas. It also causes malfunctions in the nervous and respiratory systems, the paper said.
But it leaves your breath minty fresh
Saudi Arabia, which applies a strict interpretation of Islamic law, bans alcohol. Some people drink cologne in the kingdom as a substitute for alcohol.
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 08:27 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Appears they need a little R&R in Manama. I'll be sticking with my Guinness or Castle in a pinch.
Posted by: Visitor || 03/15/2006 8:40 Comments || Top||

#2  Some people drink cologne in the kingdom as a substitute for alcohol.

Hey Abdul, pass me the antifreeze... this cologne's off.
Posted by: Howard UK || 03/15/2006 8:44 Comments || Top||

#3  Sounds like a lot of folks were accustomed to dringing cologne but the Religious Police caught on to the scheme and switched from ethyl to denatured alcohol in the cologne manufacture process. Sort of like was done in the US back during Prohibition, I think.
Posted by: Glenmore || 03/15/2006 8:56 Comments || Top||

#4  "Drinking a bottle of your wifes perfume makes it easier to explain to her why you would do such a thing in the first place"
Posted by: pihkalbadger || 03/15/2006 9:40 Comments || Top||

#5  Sad part is that some poor dude is going to get beheaded just because he didnt think to make his cologne drinkable.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 9:47 Comments || Top||

#6  "Drinking a bottle of your wifes perfume makes it easier to explain to her why you would do such a thing in the first place"
Now, THAT'S my kind of logic!
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 03/15/2006 11:16 Comments || Top||

#7  As many as 20 people died after drinking poisoned cologne in the cities of Mecca, Taif, Medina and Riyadh, the Saudi newspaper Okaz reported on Wednesday.

As opposed to just being "normal" in the Majik Kingdom and drinking NON-poisoned cologne. Jeez, just when I think my Karl Rove-Arabic decoder ring is dialed in, they go and do something logical (to them, at least) like that, lol!
Posted by: BA || 03/15/2006 11:24 Comments || Top||

#8  Maybe it's time to switch to Lysol like they did on the res way back when....
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 03/15/2006 11:40 Comments || Top||

#9  Mixes great with sterno, too! (hic)

I'll bet the bodies still stank anyway.
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 12:13 Comments || Top||

#10  Manama has, for the most part, been shut down. Bars closed all across the island when their new "King" rescinded the old Emir's exile of the fundies. They came back and immediately began the pressure to de-Westernize Bahrain. They've largely succeeded. This happened a couple of years ago. As I understand it, the big hotels still have bars - and you have to show a room key to get in. No big thang, just typical Muzzy power games. A couple of the better brothels, located in seedy hotels (which I can't recall the names of, damnit!) within sight of the Grand Moskkk in Manama, are still in operation, lol, and probably serve booze. What have they got to lose? Lol.
Posted by: .com || 03/15/2006 12:27 Comments || Top||

#11  Two other tidbits popped to mind:

1) The big hotels still have booze cuz it's a major money-maker and the Kingy Thingy, PM, and other power brokers are in on the "franchise rights".

2) The old Wednesday afternoon (from about 2:00-5:00 PM) mad dash across the causeway, that used to result in long wait lines and accidents, has disappeared. The reduction in business (estimated as high as 30% in Manama hotels and resaurants) has seriously hotel hurt occupancy, mall sales, etc. I guess they don't need the "Get in Lane. Stay in Lane." signs anymore, heh, since they were definitely directed at the Saudi drivers.
Posted by: .com || 03/15/2006 12:48 Comments || Top||

#12  Hmmm. Makes you wonder what would happen if we airdropped a hundred thousand cases of Wild Turkey into the country.
Posted by: Perfesser || 03/15/2006 13:33 Comments || Top||

#13  It is suggested that the culprits gave themselves away via their scented farts...
Posted by: borgboy || 03/15/2006 14:48 Comments || Top||

#14  Makes you wonder what would happen if we airdropped a hundred thousand cases of Wild Turkey into the country.

They'd shatter and spill the booze all over.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 14:51 Comments || Top||

#15  They'd shatter and spill the booze all over.

I can see the headlines now:

THOUSANDS DIE GORGING ON ALCOHOL TAINTED SAND
Posted by: Thinemble Snemble1456 || 03/15/2006 16:38 Comments || Top||

#16  LOL, TS. They'd have to consult with ARAMCO to prevent genocide...
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 16:42 Comments || Top||

#17  A couple of the better brothels, located in seedy hotels (which I can't recall the names of, damnit!) within sight of the Grand Moskkk in Manama, are still in operation, lol, and probably serve booze.

Great - now I'll spend the rest of the day trying to remember their names.
Posted by: Pappy || 03/15/2006 17:14 Comments || Top||

#18  Drat, one of my better punch lines and my cookie has to go Thinemble Snemble1456 berserk.
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 17:46 Comments || Top||


Home Front Economy
Umbrella Corp: How To Make Money From The Avian Flu
Posted by: Anonymoose || 03/15/2006 08:22 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  IMPORTANT: .PDF FILE
Posted by: Anonymoose || 03/15/2006 8:26 Comments || Top||

#2  Is this shit for real?
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 12:49 Comments || Top||

#3  Looks realistic to me. I'm not sure that the buy/sell strategy will do much good in the case of a real pandemic, though -- given their high stress jobs and crowded working conditions, the exchange floors traders are likely the first to succumb after the illegal aliens sleeping in shifts in sweatshop back rooms.

/crazy speculation
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/15/2006 13:12 Comments || Top||


Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
U.S. Using Bird Flu as Biological Weapon
The leader of the Russian Communist Party has said the outbreak of bird flu in a number of European countries including Russia is a plot by the United States. “It’s strange that not a single duck has yet died in America —- they are all dying in Russia and European countries. This makes one seriously wonder why,” Gennady Zyuganov was quoted by UPI as saying.
Gee, could it have anything to do with the Pacific and Atlantic oceans????
The Communist leader said that he learned all about biological warfare during his time in the army. “I tested all kinds of war gases at a range myself,” he said.
wink wink, nudge, nudge
Asked whether he believes the bird flu outbreak could be a deliberate attack by the United States, Zyuganov said: “I not only suggest this, I know very well how this can be arranged. There is nothing strange here.”
Da, we Soviet communist officials are just as savvy and powerful as those damnd imperialist running dog Americans.
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 08:13 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Well of course we are. Of course it is. No, indeed, there's nothing strange here at all. No need to thank us, it's just another service we provide the completely insane people of the world.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 8:24 Comments || Top||

#2  It’s strange that not a single duck has yet died in America

We value our baby ducks.
Posted by: 6 || 03/15/2006 8:49 Comments || Top||

#3  The Communist leader said that he learned all about biological warfare during his time in the army. “I tested all kinds of war gases at a range myself,” he said.

Commissary food was that bad?
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 8:52 Comments || Top||

#4  “I tested all kinds of war gases at a range myself,” he said.

"But I never enhaled"
Posted by: Visitor || 03/15/2006 10:57 Comments || Top||

#5  Nice, Visitor!

“I tested all kinds of war gases at a range myself,” he said.

"Dah, and see here, I have the latest version of tin foil hat(tm) you can buy here!"
Posted by: BA || 03/15/2006 11:21 Comments || Top||

#6  Oh no, they're on to us!
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 12:49 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
Schoolgirls hurt by Pakistan bomb
At least 14 people, mostly schoolgirls, have been injured after a bomb exploded in Quetta in the south-west Pakistani province of Balochistan. The bomb is said to have been planted in front of a grocery store. A girl's college is located nearby. The big explosion damaged several nearby shops. But none of the injuries are said to be serious, according to doctors at a local hospital.

"It was a homemade bomb but we don't know who had planted it and what was the motive," local police chief, Wazir Nasir, is quoted as saying by the Associated Press news agency. The bomb went off as the girls were on their way home from the college.
If the little hussies had stayed at home instead of going to school, this wouldn't of happened


Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 08:08 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The bomb is said to have been planted in front of a grocery store.

Shopkeeper gang war?
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/15/2006 13:17 Comments || Top||

#2  I'll bet the shop owner not only sold candies to the girls - he may even have accidently touched one while making change.

Shameless.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 13:59 Comments || Top||


Iraq
11 Killed in U.S. Raid South of Samarra

Ok... here is a dazzling display of balanced 'Journalism'..... And just so you know the writer is.....
By ZIAD KHALAF, Associated Press Writer
But first.. the tantilizing lead....

ISAHAQI, Iraq - Eleven people _ most women and children _ were killed when a house was bombed during a U.S. raid north of Baghdad early Wednesday, police and relatives said.

The U.S. military acknowledged four deaths _ a man, two women and a child _ in the raid that they said netted an insurgent suspect in the rural Isahaqi area, about 50 miles north of the capital.

The victims, some wrapped in blankets, were driven in the back of three pickup trucks to the Tikrit General Hospital, about 45 miles to the north, relatives said.

Associated Pres photographs showed the bodies of two men, five children and four other covered figures arriving at the hospital accompanied by grief-stricken relatives.

Riyadh Majid, who identified himself as the nephew of the killed head of the family _ Faez Khalaf _ told AP at the hospital that U.S. forces landed in helicopters and raided the home early Wednesday.
Now... just before most people would leave the story... Tbe puppies and baby ducks line....
Khalaf's brother, Ahmed, said nine of the victims were family members who lived at the house and two were unidentified visitors.

"The killed family was not part of the resistance; they were women and children," Ahmed Khalaf said. "The Americans have promised us a better life, but we get only death."
"We waz innocent!"
But wait.... wait for it....

The U.S. military said it was targeting and captured an individual suspected of supporting foreign fighters for al-Qaida in Iraq.
Now... buried deep... deep... in the darkest bowels of the story....
"Troops were engaged by enemy fire as they approached the building," said Tech. Sgt. Stacy Simon, a military spokeswoman.
Tada! I'm sure Ziad simply forgot that little factoid until now... no bias here...
"Coalition forces returned fire utilizing both air and ground assets. The targeted individual was detained during this raid."
Ok... lets see.. the person starts shooting at armed troops from an occupied house causing everyone in the houe to be killed yet he survived. Where was he hiding?
The building and a vehicle were destroyed, the military said.

Police Capt. Laith Mohammed, in nearby Samarra, said American warplanes and armor were used in the strike, which destroyed the house. The 11 people inside were killed, he said.

An AP reporter at the scene said the roof of the house collapsed, three cars were destroyed and two cows were killed.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 03/15/2006 08:07 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Typical,
Using his wife, kids and family as human sheilds. Then splitting when the Warthogs come in.
Posted by: Jeresh Snump4916 || 03/15/2006 8:48 Comments || Top||

#2  The guy didn't get away.
Posted by: Ptah || 03/15/2006 8:55 Comments || Top||

#3  I wonder if Ziad Khalaf the author is any relation to Faez Khalaf the 'head of the family' who was killed in this strike.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 8:59 Comments || Top||

#4  As my communist law professor used to say, "sometimes you gotta break a few eggs to make an omelette."
Posted by: Spomoper Creremp3523 || 03/15/2006 9:24 Comments || Top||

#5  Well, it definitely was a guess who's coming to dinner and you'll never guess who's watching lasing event, lol. Dunno if they served omelettes, though. The two "unidentified visitors" made this a must-miss dinner.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 9:28 Comments || Top||

#6  I see sitcom written all over this.
Posted by: Perfesser || 03/15/2006 9:39 Comments || Top||

#7  that's the Lions of Islam way: use women and children as shields except when you throw acid in their faces.
Posted by: anonymous || 03/15/2006 10:02 Comments || Top||

#8  This is Darwinism in practice.
Posted by: wxjames || 03/15/2006 11:00 Comments || Top||

#9  The lion way in Wikipedia:

When or if a male coalition takes over a pride and ousts the previous coalition, the conquerors often kill any cubs even if they did father them.
Posted by: Swiss Tex || 03/15/2006 11:38 Comments || Top||

#10  Nicely commented, CF. Hard to believe in a few short months I went from a left leaning lib dem to a rantburg toting warmonger. What have you done to my soul?
Posted by: Unique Battle || 03/15/2006 13:06 Comments || Top||

#11  "Luke! I am your fathah!"
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 13:14 Comments || Top||

#12  What have you done to my soul?

Freed it, as well as your mind.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 03/15/2006 13:40 Comments || Top||

#13  Freeing your soul and mind...not exactly words typically coming out of someone with the nym Redneck Jim, lol! When I hear the "be open minded" phrase, I always think of that bumper sticker I love, "I'm so open-minded my brain fell out!" lol!

And, CF, I can't believe there's no in-line commentary on the two mysterious/unnamed house guests, lol!
Posted by: BA || 03/15/2006 14:34 Comments || Top||

#14  Unique Battle, you are no different than any proud American. Given all the information, you feel like us that a group of people want to conquer our beloved country and lifestyle. The left are just attempting to capitalize on this by blaming Bush. To them, you are a useful fool. To them, the threat of terrorism is a useful distraction. To them, honor is a weakness.
Posted by: wxjames || 03/15/2006 15:17 Comments || Top||

#15  I'm sure the two unidentified visitors were simply members of the local girl scout troop trying to sell bomb belts and IEDs cookies...

As for freeing your mind - I also used to be a leftist until I started reading non-MSM controlled sites (such as Rantburg) and thinking for myself.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 03/15/2006 15:21 Comments || Top||

#16  Wait, the author of the article & the dead family have the same last name? What the hell's up with that? Is the AP hiring stringers right out of morgue lobbies now?
Posted by: Mitch H. || 03/15/2006 15:57 Comments || Top||

#17  Wait, the author of the article & the dead family have the same last name?

"Khalaf" is Pashtun for "smith".
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 16:08 Comments || Top||

#18  Little Bill Daggett: You just shot an unarmed man!

William Munny: Well ... he shoulda armed himself.

Posted by: doc || 03/15/2006 17:53 Comments || Top||

#19  Freeing your soul and mind...not exactly words typically coming out of someone with the nym Redneck Jim, lol!

It's a joke, since I'm from, and in the (Very) Deep South I figure I'll be called a "Redneck" anyway whatever the level of education, or I. Q. I really have. (4 College/141, You figure it out.)
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 03/15/2006 19:14 Comments || Top||

#20  Bumpersticker on my Jewish drafter's car:

Allah---Protect me from your followers
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 03/15/2006 22:09 Comments || Top||

#21  Wasn't crackin' on ya, RJ. Far from it. I'm from the (at least now) not so deep south too. I just love seeing someone who calls themselves a Redneck (term of endearment in my mind) use the term free your mind, lol!

And, CF, ain't life crazy like that? You start thinkin' on your own, and next thing you know, you're surfing the 'burg every night. I am continuously amazed at how much info passes through these hallowed halls each day. I, for one, nominate Fred and crew to be the next Director of Homeland Security. Heck, we don't need no fancy NSA computer/phone tap programs, most of the info we truly need pops up here everyday, with names to boot (especially in the Thugburg archives).
Posted by: BA || 03/15/2006 22:51 Comments || Top||

#22  BA, if Fred et al were in charge of Homeland security, we'd be secure, the bad guys would all be securely locked up on a desert island in the middle of the ocean -- far from all sea lanes -- and a large number of people would have to find new jobs. Efficiency can be carried too far (as I once found to my sorrow, when I was fired for exactly that fault... the company went under a year later, for some reason). ;-)
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/15/2006 23:47 Comments || Top||


Africa Horn
Chad's troops foil coup attempt
Chadian troops have foiled an attempt to oust President Idris Deby, Chad's communications minister has said. Hourmadji Moussa Doumgor said a plan to shoot down Mr Deby's plane on his return from abroad had been discovered. Several arrests have been made and the president returned home on Tuesday night after leaving a summit in Equatorial Guinea early, he confirmed.

The coup attempt has been blamed on the president's twin nephews and a general who defected to rebels in the east. A large group of army officers have deserted to join rebels of the United Front for Democratic Change (FUC), lead by Mahamat Nour from bases in Darfur on Sudan's border with Chad. Analyst Andrew Manley has told the BBC that in recent months President Deby has been looking increasingly vulnerable, faced with the growing rebellion in the east and a loss of support among neighbouring countries and traditional allies like France.

Mr Doumgor said forces marching towards the capital, N'Djamena, were intercepted on Tuesday afternoon, after the plan was discovered. The BBC's Stephanie Hancock says there is heavy presence of troops in the capital, which is calm. Our correspondent says people have been at work as usual, but had been wondering about what was going on as the mobile phones have been down for more than 12 hours. Landlines are still operational, she says. President Deby was attending a two-day summit of the Central African Economic and Monetary Union (Cemac), when he left after the first day's session.

The capital is calmer than it was in December after Chad declared a state of war with Sudan following a deadly attack launched from Darfur by Chadian rebels, our reporter says. Sudan repeatedly denied allegations made by Chad that it was backing the rebels and sending Arab militias in support. In February, Chad and Sudan signed an accord to resolve their differences over fighting along the border. Mr Deby seized power in 1990 after launching a rebellion from bases in Darfur.
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 08:03 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:


Southeast Asia
High Risk Of Attacks With Release Of Terrorists
The recent release from prison of dozens of terrorists in Indonesia, has sparked concern that this may be a prelude to a new wave of attacks. "They served their time according to the law and there is not much that can be done about it," Ken Conboy, a seasoned expert on terrorism in the region told Adnkronos International (AKI). "It is right that they are released but the danger of them falling back into terrorism is real," he said.

Dozens of terrorists arrested in Indonesia in the past few years were released in the past few months after they had served their short sentences in the prisons of Jakarta. Among them was Abu Rusdan, who experts believe is the one who took control of the regional terrorist group, Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) after the arrest of their spiritual leader Abu Bakar Bashir in 2002. According to the Indonesian police, Rusdan himself was succeeded by Abu Dujana as the leader of the group.

"Dujana has been known for a while but I am not too sure whether he is the new operative head of the group," said Conboy who is also the author of a book entitled “The Second Front: Inside Jemaah Islamiyah”, a book that traces the recent history of the Asian terrorist organisation, which has links to the al-Qaeda network.

Like Abu Rusdan, who was released on good behaviour in January after serving three and a half years in jail for having hidden one of the fugitives of the 2002 Bali Bombings, tens of other convicted terrorists are now at large. "There are lots of them who are being released. The Indonesian intelligence does not have the resources to follow them all," said Conboy, stressing yet againt that the "danger is high". In an attempt to ease public concern, the Indonesian police said that all those released are still being closely monitored.

Conboy is however not particularly concerned about the imminent release of Abu Bakar Bashir, the radical cleric and spiritual leader of JI and was condemned to 30 months in prison for having "instigated" that attacks in Bali in 2002 which killed more than 200 people. After a series of remissions of his jai sentence, Bashir will be freed later this year in June. "Bashir has never been directly involved in running the organization. If anything, he is the ideologist and whether in prison or out it does not make much difference," said Conboy.
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 07:59 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  No shit, Sherlock.
Posted by: Jeresh Snump4916 || 03/15/2006 9:21 Comments || Top||

#2  "falling back into terrorism"

In the time-space continuum, there are two entities which impact the fabric of the Universe. Gravity and That Terror Thing.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 9:21 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
Troops Destroy Madrassa In North Waziristan
Miran Shah, 15 March (AKI) - Pakistani security forces have blown up an Islamic seminary or madrassa in the tribal region of North Waziristan which lies on the Afghan-Pakistan border. The privately-run school, known as the Khalifa Islami Madrassa, is believed to be linked with the fugitive Taliban leader Jalaluddin Haqqani. No one was in the school building when it was destroyed, according to a report by the Associated Press agency which also said that the soldiers removed books from the school before blowing it up. The school was used mainly by Afghan students.

The demolition of the madrassa is part of the continuing military operation by Pakistani security forces against pro-Taliban militants in the tribal belt. On Monday, Pakistan had ordered all Afghan nationals to return to their country. The demolition followed a bomb blast at an army security post near Miran Shah, the main town in North Waziristan. No causlaties were reported from that blast.
Earlier this month, the Pakistan army said more than a 120 militants have been killed following three days of clashes which observors said were some the fiercest seen in the region.

A separate madrassa in North Waziristan, Darul Uloom Faredia Gulshan-i-Ilum which is run by wanted cleric Maulana Abdul Khaliq was also destroyed on 7 March by the Pakistan army. No one was in that building when it was destroyed. Maulvi Abdul Khaliq together with another cleric Maulvi Sadiq Noor are believed to be leading the pro-Taliban militants in the area. Reports earlier said that the two have gone undergound.
Six feet underground would be better
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 07:55 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Sounds to me like a good "African Style Genocide" is the only thing that will ever bring that area into the fold.
Posted by: Jeresh Snump4916 || 03/15/2006 8:50 Comments || Top||

#2  "No one was in the school building when it was destroyed,"

Um, guys? a little unclear on the concept here?
Posted by: Shaising Ululing1938 || 03/15/2006 16:28 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan
Trial Run For Border Breaking Bus Service
Peshawar, 15 March (AKI) - The first ever bus to run from Afghanistan to Pakistan carried out a trial run on Wednesday from Jalalabad in Afghanistan to Peshawar in northern Pakistan. The bus, carrying a dozen sweating expendable local government officials, crossed over the mountaineous Khyber Pass and into Pakistan in four hours. The bus stopped at the Torkham border for a brief ceremony in which school children danced and chanted slogans of friendship between the neighbouring countries, according to a report by Pakistani television channel GEO TV.

The return leg of the trial journey will be on Friday with the regular service expected to kick off in mid-April. The authorities have said they plan to run six buses daily between the two cities. The service has been launched amid rising tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan over the fight against terrorism.
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 07:52 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  My brain kept insisting that this reported that the bus broke down.

Broke down. Blown up. Same thing to the MSM.
Posted by: Ptah || 03/15/2006 8:52 Comments || Top||

#2  Official: [*panting from running*]"I had to dodge three terrorist attacks to catch this bus!"

Ticket Clippie: "You'll have to talk to the driver about it; he gives out the medals."
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 03/15/2006 10:22 Comments || Top||

#3  Of course, no mention if there will be baggage inspections for weapons or explosives. This could be the ISI's low-budget version of Air America.
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 10:31 Comments || Top||

#4  LOL, AP.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 10:36 Comments || Top||

#5  Now that the return date is known, what's the line on a happy ending?
Posted by: USN, ret. || 03/15/2006 14:19 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
UNC driver Taheri-azar Writes to Eyewitness News
The suspect in this month's attack on the UNC-CH campus has written a letter to ABC11 Eyewitness News. Eyewitness News received the letter Monday, in response to our request for an interview. It was sent from Central Prison in Raleigh and dated Friday, March 10. Addressed to ABC11 Eyewitness News anchor Amber Rupinta, the two-page letter includes Taheri-azar's explanation of what he was trying to accomplish in the attack.
"Allah gives permission in the Koran for the followers of Allah to attack those who have raged war against them, with the expectation of eternal paradise in case of martyrdom and/or living one's life in obedience of all of Allah's commandments found throughout the Koran's 114 chapters..."
"The U.S. government is responsible for the deaths of and the torture of countless followers of Allah, my brothers and sisters. My attack on Americans at UNC-CH on March 3rd was in retaliation for similar attacks orchestrated by the U.S. government on my fellow followers of Allah in Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, and other Islamic territories. I did not act out of hatred for Americans, but out of love for Allah instead. "
Taheri-azar is charged with nine counts of attempted murder in the March 3 attack. Police say the Iran native drove a rented SUV through the Pit, a common area on the Chapel Hill campus. Six people were hospitalized.
Taheri-azar surrendered to police shortly after the attack. Investigators swarmed his apartment, where they discovered a letter, CDs and a handgun permit.
Posted by: BrerRabbit || 03/15/2006 06:59 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  That'll help shape the jury pool. Does the right not to incriminate your self mean that if you do incriminate your self, there is a presumptive case for the insanity defence?
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 03/15/2006 7:44 Comments || Top||

#2  "I did not act out of hatred for Americans, but out of love for Allah instead."

I used to tell girlfriends I was dumping the same sort of thing - "It's not you, it's me."
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 7:48 Comments || Top||

#3  THIS guy can get a handgun permit? And thousands of sane, law-abiding, American citizens can't?
Posted by: Glenmore || 03/15/2006 8:13 Comments || Top||

#4  Does the right not to incriminate your self mean that if you do incriminate your self, there is a presumptive case for the insanity defence?

Nope. It means you can keep your mouth shut. Blabbing just creates evidence for the prosecution.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 8:24 Comments || Top||

#5  re: handgun permit, I rather expect it will be pulled once he is convicted. ;-)

I'm in favor of making permits easy to get -- and then coming down HARD on offenders. It took me over 6 months to get a permit here in my blue state .... sigh.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 8:29 Comments || Top||

#6  Go Amber! Get him talkin big stuff please!

"Amber is no stranger to the Carolinas, having spent several years growing up on the Cherokee Indian Reservation in the Western part of the state. She is one of 8 children and a "military brat" who spent her childhood living in interesting places all over the United States."

Posted by: Visitor || 03/15/2006 8:35 Comments || Top||

#7  --"I did not act out of hatred for Americans, but out of love for Allah instead."--

"I did not act out of hatred for Islam, but out of love for liberty/freedom instead."

I'm going to use that one.



Posted by: anonymous2u || 03/15/2006 11:12 Comments || Top||

#8  Cool, #7 anon2u. And I'm gonna steal it from you. ;-p

Back to the idiot, his letter is sure to have his court-appointed lawyer hitting the scotch. (and, if no one's watching, the client.)
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 03/15/2006 15:26 Comments || Top||

#9  I think the insanity defense is a default for all muzzies. They believe in the lunatic religion, therefore, they are nuts. I believe we should make a big exception. Islam is not a religion, but a conspiracy to injure, kill, enslave, and tax non members, while claiming victim status. This, because they are so totally and universally misled, and the spirit of life has been beaten from their persona.
Further, I want to point out that this is not an ignorant radical muzzie, but a friendly, moderate muzzie who snapped. Can all muzzies snap ? Is there any way we can trust moderate muzzies ? Would our women and children and baby ducks be safer if we eliminate ALL muzzies ?
Yes, yes, and yes.
Posted by: wxjames || 03/15/2006 15:37 Comments || Top||

#10  Ima thinkin were gonna see the "cultural timebomb" defense.
Posted by: DepotGuy || 03/15/2006 20:57 Comments || Top||


China-Japan-Koreas
North Korea....the Musical?
EFL...not likely to become a major Hollywood picture. It would harsh somebody's mellow...
As far as musicals go, seeing people break into song on subjects such as starvation and public executions in North Korea may be one of the most unlikely concepts for stage entertainment in several years. Producers held a preview in Seoul on Tuesday of the musical called "Yoduk Story" that features goose-stepping North Korean soldiers and deprived prisoners wondering if they can survive into the next day.

The musical is about a North Korean woman's fall from a dancing revolutionary hero to a tortured inmate along with her family at Yoduk prison camp, where she bears a guard's child, and learns to forgive her brutal captors. Songs in the musical include "You are just like germs" and "All I want is rice". The producers hope audiences can find beauty in the misery of life in the prison camps.

Some of South Korea's top movies have been spy thrillers where agents from the two Koreas overlook their political differences and begin to bond, or sentimental stories about families ripped apart by the political divide. But "Yoduk Story" writer, director and North Korean refugee Jung Sung-san says South Korean audiences have never really gotten a taste of the atrocities committed at the notorious political prisons in the North he was lucky enough to escape after three months. "This is not somebody else's business. This is happening just a few hours from here," Jung told reporters. "We want to convey the reality of what is happening."

Rights groups have criticized South Korea for not pressing North Korea hard enough on human rights, while Seoul said it prefers to ignore it and hope it goes away on its own quiet diplomacy with the North on the sensitive subject.

The show opens to the public on Wednesday for a 19-day run. Jung, who said he put one of his kidneys up for collateral to borrow money from a loan shark to stage the 700-million won ($714,000) production, believes he can make enough money to repay the debt and pay the cast and crew.
Hmm...Alan Rickman doesn't believe in "My Name is Rachel Corrie" that much....freakin' wuss.
Jung, 37, from a relatively privileged background, was arrested for listening to a South Korean broadcast on the radio, a minor infraction for people in his class, but discipline had been tightened after the unexpected death of the communist leader, Kim Il-sung, in 1994. Jung said the South Korean government did not try to hide its unease about the production, at one point sending out agents to try to coerce him into abandoning the project.
The guy put up a kidney as collateral to a loan shark....and they think "friendly persuasion" is going to make him change his mind?
South Korean officials have said Jung has the right to free speech and they do not censor theatrical productions. South Korea has seen its ties with the North improve rapidly since a unprecedented and unrepeated summit of the two Korea's leaders in 2000.
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 03/15/2006 05:49 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "Jung, who said he put one of his kidneys up for collateral to borrow money from a loan shark to stage the 700-million won ($714,000) production, believes he can make enough money to repay the debt and pay the cast and crew."

By God, that's commitment!
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 9:43 Comments || Top||

#2  I know you should suffer for your art, but damn!
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 12:52 Comments || Top||

#3  Hey Clooney!

This is what is called being comitted to your art.

I'm sure hollywood will make this into a movie -- just as soon as hell freezes over.....
Posted by: CrazyFool || 03/15/2006 13:40 Comments || Top||

#4  Musical in The Kimmian Republic of Norkland?

Sung to "Wichita Lineman"
By Glenn Campbell

I am a Commie for Korea.
And I live like a king.
Searchin' all Pyongyang for that hooker to bed down.
I know that there is one here somewhere.
I have the airline ticket stub.
And the Commie for Korea, is still looking fine.

I know I need a glass of Cognac.
But the French make me pay.
And if some folks starve that's OK cause
I will feel no pain.
And I need to make some more nukes
And the ballistic missiles too.
And the Commie for Korea, is still looking fine.

And I need to make some more nukes
And the ballistic missiles too.
And the Commie for Korea, is still looking fine.
still looking fine...
still looking fine...
Posted by: Ogeretla 2006 || 03/15/2006 13:55 Comments || Top||

#5  North Korea was having trouble, what a sad, sad story
Needed a new leader to restore its former glory
Where, Oh where was he? Where could that man be?
We looked around and then we found
The man for you and me.
And now it's..

Springtime for Kimmie and DPRK
Pyongyang is happy and gay
We're marching to a faster pace
Look out, here comes the master race

Springtime for Kimmie and DPRK
Means that soon we'll be going
We've got to be going
You know we'll be going to WAR!
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 14:16 Comments || Top||

#6  Article: Jung, who said he put one of his kidneys up for collateral to borrow money from a loan shark to stage the 700-million won ($714,000) production, believes he can make enough money to repay the debt and pay the cast and crew.

He needs to set up a website with a Paypal link. I'm sure enough *Americans* will help fund his dream. Whether see-no-evil South Koreans will get anything out of it is another matter.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 03/15/2006 20:23 Comments || Top||

#7  Did someone say musical?
Posted by: DMFD || 03/15/2006 22:15 Comments || Top||

#8  Rape/Brutality = love, prison = home/farm, control and wifully overworked = utopia, etc > Norkie Commie central State planning have produced engineers and bureaucrats whom don't know or don't remember how to raise food or sanitize water for the rest of starvation-happy North Korea. They can produce missles which induces CHina's PLAAF and PLAN to buzz Japan in the name of China being PC anti-North Korea/Kimmie.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 03/15/2006 23:28 Comments || Top||


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Gaza: Blow to Paleo hopes of gaining ISO 9002 certification
Three Palestinian terrorists identified as members of the Popular Resistance Committees were injured Wednesday morning during an attempt to fire Kassam rockets at Israel, Palestinian security forces reported. The rockets prematurely exploded before they were launched, the officials said.

The IDF, which has been shelling Kassam launch sites in the Gaza Strip in response to the barrage of rockets fired at Israel since Tuesday evening, denied involvement in Wednesday's incident. Palestinians launched five Kassams at Israel Wednesday morning. Four landed in Palestinian territory, and one landed in open Israeli territory in the western Negev. No one was wounded and no damage was reported as a result.
Posted by: phil_b || 03/15/2006 04:37 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  cerification = certification
Posted by: phil_b || 03/15/2006 4:41 Comments || Top||

#2  So what do you get from Allah if you can't manage to kill an infidel, and you get wounded in the process?
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 03/15/2006 5:49 Comments || Top||

#3  The gong?
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 7:31 Comments || Top||

#4  oh thats a fantastic headline - i looked at the story and was like uh then it clicked! Indeed i can picture the ISO inspector types now studying the remains of it all tutting and shaking thier heads in disgust :)
Posted by: ShepUK || 03/15/2006 7:42 Comments || Top||

#5  Phil, you must be involved in, or had been recently involved in, the certification process, eh?
Posted by: Ptah || 03/15/2006 9:02 Comments || Top||

#6  But did they document their procedures for launching rockets? That's really all that matters.
Posted by: Jonathan || 03/15/2006 9:43 Comments || Top||

#7 

A link telling more about this muslim terrorist rocket.
Posted by: Icerigger || 03/15/2006 9:59 Comments || Top||

#8  Darn, here it is. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kassam_rocket

Posted by: Snolulet Whiter6908 || 03/15/2006 9:59 Comments || Top||

#9  But what were the fall back plans if it didn't work? Can they recover from back-up?
Posted by: AlanC || 03/15/2006 10:11 Comments || Top||

#10  While there certainly seems to be significant quality issues with the Palestinian's rocket assembly procedures, long term durability really isn't a problem. Most of the Palestinian products usually end up in small pieces immediately after manufacture, often including some of the original design teams or transporters.

More importantly, in a society that essentially produces ZERO durable goods, the curse blessing of ISO certification is something that is better withheld.
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 10:48 Comments || Top||

#11  Looks like a problem complying with NFPA standards too. Their insurance company is going to be ticked.
Posted by: Darrell || 03/15/2006 11:25 Comments || Top||

#12  Someone needs a sick sigma black belt on the payroll....
Posted by: CrazyFool || 03/15/2006 11:38 Comments || Top||

#13  I guess Six Sigma is out of the question...
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 03/15/2006 11:41 Comments || Top||

#14  LOL phil_b and an awwwww to the poor paleo kitty kat rocketeers

/'O the humiliation hurtz!
Posted by: RD || 03/15/2006 11:47 Comments || Top||

#15  too bad we don't have a videotape of this event
Posted by: mhw || 03/15/2006 13:23 Comments || Top||

#16  Just glorified basement bombers.
Posted by: Vern Estes || 03/15/2006 17:43 Comments || Top||

#17  Kind of reminds me of the old Viking joke.
Off the coast of England early morning 910AD,
in a Viking rading ship. "OK men, we are going to land and kill all of the MEN in the village, then we are going to rape all of the WOMEN, the we will STEAL everything we can carry to the ship, and THEN we will BURN the VILLAGE....AND FOR ODEN's SAKE GET IT RIGHT THIS TIME1"
Posted by: toad || 03/15/2006 20:56 Comments || Top||


Iraq
The view from the inside of Saddam's regime
EDITOR'S NOTE: The fall of Baghdad in April 2003 opened one of the most secretive and brutal governments in history to outside scrutiny. For the first time since the end of World War II, American analysts did not have to guess what had happened on the other side of a conflict but could actually read the defeated enemy's documents and interrogate its leading figures. To make the most of this unique opportunity, the U.S. Joint Forces Command (USJFCOM) commissioned a comprehensive study of the inner workings and behavior of Saddam Hussein's regime based on previously inaccessible primary sources. Drawing on interviews with dozens of captured senior Iraqi military and political leaders and hundreds of thousands of official Iraqi documents (hundreds of them fully translated), this two-year project has changed our understanding of the war from the ground up. The study was partially declassified in late February; its key findings are presented here.

THROUGHOUT THE YEARS of relative external peace for Iraq after Operation Desert Storm, in 1991, Saddam Hussein continued to receive and give credence to optimistic assessments of his regime's prospects dished up by his top military officers. Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz described the dictator as having been "very confident" that the United States would not dare to attack Iraq, and that if it did, it would be defeated. What was the source of Saddam's confidence?

Judging from his private statements, the single most important element in Saddam's strategic calculus was his faith that France and Russia would prevent an invasion by the United States. According to Aziz, Saddam's confidence was firmly rooted in his belief in the nexus between the economic interests of France and Russia and his own strategic goals: "France and Russia each secured millions of dollars worth of trade and service contracts in Iraq, with the implied understanding that their political posture with regard to sanctions on Iraq would be pro-Iraqi. In addition, the French wanted sanctions lifted to safeguard their trade and service contracts in Iraq. Moreover, they wanted to prove their importance in the world as members of the Security Council -- that they could use their veto to show they still had power."

Ibrahim Ahmad Abd al-Sattar, the Iraqi army and armed forces chief of staff, claimed that Saddam believed that even if his international supporters failed him and the United States did launch a ground invasion, Washington would rapidly bow to international pressure to halt the war. According to his personal interpreter, Saddam also thought his "superior" forces would put up "a heroic resistance and . . . inflict such enormous losses on the Americans that they would stop their advance." Saddam remained convinced that, in his own words, "Iraq will not, in any way, be like Afghanistan. We will not let the war become a picnic for the American or the British soldiers. No way!"
Continued on Page 49
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 04:32 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I hesitate to use the word, but this is absolutely fascinating reading. Gotta back up, digest, and re-read it.

This bit certainly jumped right out:

"Any section commander will be executed, if his section is defeated; any platoon commander will be executed, if two of his sections are defeated; any company commander will be executed, if two of his platoons are defeated; any regiment commander will be executed, if two of his companies are defeated; any area commander will be executed, if his Governate is defeated; any Saddam Fedayeen fighter, including commanders, will be executed, if he hesitates in completing his duties, cooperates with the enemy, gives up his weapons, or hides any information concerning the security of the state."

Typical back-asswards Arab / Soviet / Third World thinking: motivate by fear.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 10:05 Comments || Top||

#2  The only possible (And sensible) way to follow those orders is to never engage the enemy.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 03/15/2006 14:15 Comments || Top||

#3  From Foreign Affairs. So this will be read by those who, up till now, did not believe the invasion was necessary, and was even counterproductive. Good.
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/15/2006 14:45 Comments || Top||

#4  Actually, trailing wife, it "only" gives a military-oriented look at the state of Iraq in the Gulf Wars, with what seems to be a command/control emphasis. This doesn't seem to make the case for war so much as report the juicy bits from the declassified portions of a USJFCOM study based on interviews with former-regime officials. I wouldn't use this as the case for war, or for it even being productive, but as a military study...

Here's wondering if more of the USJFCOM report will be declassified.

Gletch, I noticed the "rule" of twos as well. Incidentally, today I was reading about (post-Perry's-1853-Japan-expedition) Tokugawa Nariaki's belief in Japanese spirit as a victory factor in advocating war with the foreigners... why's that suddenly sound familiar? ;-)
Posted by: Edward Yee || 03/15/2006 15:08 Comments || Top||

#5  In reference to your Excellency's instructions regarding the large exercises at the Public Center, having strong faith in the only God of our hearts, and God's permanent support to the believers, the faithful, the steadfast, and with great love that we have for our great homeland and our Great Leader, our Great Leader has won God's favor and the love of his dear people in the day of the grand homage.

Your enthusiastic soldiers from our courageous armed forces have executed Golden Falcon Exercise number 11. In this exercise we have tested our readiness and confrontation plans against any who attempt to make impure the lands of civilization and the homeland of missions and prophets. This exercise is the widest and most successful in achieving the required results. Soldiers from the III and IV Corps have participated in this exercise.


Certainly a hell of a lot of god-bothering in that considering we're constantly told how secular Saddam was.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 15:21 Comments || Top||

#6  Which apparently started right before the Gulf War (to build "Arab solidarity").
Posted by: Whumble Whater5278 || 03/15/2006 21:42 Comments || Top||


US misread Iraqi orders
US intelligence analysts misunderstood intercepted Iraqi communications, believing the orders were meant to deceive UN weapons inspectors searching for chemical or biological agents, a new report says.

Instead, the conversation between two Iraqi Republican Guard Corps commanders that included the order to remove reference to "nerve agents" from "wireless" communications was intended to ensure the regime was in compliance with international demands to disarm, the Foreign Affairs magazine reported in its online edition this week.

That conversation was intercepted by the United States in 2002.

The article was based on a recently declassified US Joint Forces Command report assessing Iraqi internal developments prior to the war. The report said that US analysts had no way of knowing Saddam Hussein was trying to comply, since Iraq had spent a decade trying to hide evidence of weapons of mass destruction.

According to this report, Saddam was insisting that full access be given to weapons inspectors "in order not to give President Bush any excuses to start a war".

Allegations that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction was Mr Bush's chief reason for launching the March 2003 invasion. In the months leading up to the war, Iraq did give access to UN weapons inspectors.

The comments about "nerve agents" featured prominently in then US secretary of state Colin Powell's February 5 presentation at the UN security council that aimed to win support for a military conflict with Iraq.

After the invasion, the US military searched for unconventional weapons but were unable to find any, adding fuel for war critics who insisted the Bush administration purposely deceived the US public about the reasons for going to war.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:59 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Shocking. You lie for 10 years and then people don't believe you when you tell the truth.
Posted by: phil_b || 03/15/2006 5:02 Comments || Top||

#2  remove reference to "nerve agents" from "wireless" communications was intended to ensure the regime was in compliance with international demands to disarm, the Foreign Affairs magazine reported in its online edition this week.

If the Republican Guard Commander's had no command and control over organic "nerve agents" why would they be discussing it in voice traffic anyway? I doubt there were any intercepts which discussed lunar vehicles, submarines, or battleships. Duhhhh?

Posted by: Visitor || 03/15/2006 8:25 Comments || Top||

#3  Oops, our bad, sorry.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 10:11 Comments || Top||

#4  Saddam still definitely had WMDs in my opinion.. just in the opening days of the war, they were all shipped to Syria. Never would Saddam have allowed the U.S. to find the weapons...
Posted by: bgrebel || 03/15/2006 16:05 Comments || Top||

#5  Never would Saddam have allowed the U.S. to find the weapons...

Or Russia.
Posted by: Pappy || 03/15/2006 16:53 Comments || Top||

#6  HHHHHHHMMMMMMM, okay, so the news from earlier this week argued that Saddam's generals were angered and shocked at Saddam that Saddam had no WMDS but instead wanted to resist the Americans by relying on biowar and chemwar caches - GEE, MR. WILSON, NO WMDS THERE WID BIOWAR AND CHEMWAR.
Now the MSM > today Americans are to believe that Saddam's focii was on IRAN, not America or the UNO or UNIAEA, etc. Saddam had WMDS, the burden was on him to prove he got rid of his caches PERMANENTLY, NOT PARTIALLY, and this whole "NO WMDS IN IRAQ" is the basis for the Left wanting America to be perceived as arrogant, dishonest and unreliable so that America can be justified in being forced under OWG and Anti-Sovereign, Anti-American American and Global Socialism, which for the CLintons is SSSSSSSHHHHHHHH, Communism and Commie World Order by any other PC/PDeniable description(s). "NO WMDS IN IRAQ = IRAN = NORTH KOREA = SYRIA, etc" > basis for anti-America OWG and for the dev of OWG itself.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 03/15/2006 22:03 Comments || Top||


Bush sets target date for transition in Iraq
President Bush vowed for the first time yesterday to turn over most of Iraq to newly trained Iraqi troops by the end of this year, setting a specific benchmark as he kicked off a fresh drive to reassure Americans alarmed by the recent burst of sectarian violence.

Bush, who until now has resisted concrete timelines as the Iraq war dragged on longer than he expected, outlined the target in the first of a series of speeches intended to lay out his strategy for victory. While acknowledging grim developments on the ground, Bush declared "real progress" in standing up Iraqi forces capable of defending their nation.

"As more capable Iraqi police and soldiers come on line, they will assume responsibility for more territory with the goal of having the Iraqis control more territory than the coalition by the end of 2006," he said in a speech to the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. "And as Iraqis take over more territory, this frees American and coalition forces to concentrate on training and on hunting down high-value targets like the terrorist [Abu Musab al-] Zarqawi and his associates."

The president made no commitments about withdrawing U.S. troops, but he repeated his general formula that Americans could come home as Iraqis eventually take over the fight. He also used the speech to urge Iraqis to form a unity government three months after parliamentary elections, and he accused Iran of providing explosives to Shiite militias attacking U.S. forces in Iraq.

The beginning of a new campaign to rally Americans behind the war effort nearly three years after the U.S.-led invasion comes at a time of deepening public misgivings about the campaign in Iraq and Bush's leadership of it. In a Washington Post-ABC News poll this month, 34 percent of Americans surveyed said they think the president has a plan for victory in Iraq, six percentage points lower than in December and the lowest level recorded by that poll. By contrast, 65 percent said Bush has no Iraq plan.

How meaningful or achievable the president's new goal is seems uncertain. In the speech, Bush said Iraqi units today have "primary responsibility" over 30,000 square miles of Iraqi territory, an increase of 20,000 square miles since the beginning of the year. As a country of nearly 169,000 square miles, Iraqi forces would need to control about 85,000 square miles to fulfill Bush's target.

What constitutes control, however, depends on the definition, since no Iraqi unit is currently rated capable of operating without U.S. assistance. And vast swaths of Iraq have never been contested by insurgents, meaning they could ultimately be turned over to local forces without directly affecting the conflict.

Bush said 130 Iraqi battalions are participating in the battle with radical guerrillas, with 60 units taking the lead, an increase from 120 battalions and 40 in the lead when he last delivered major speeches on Iraq at the end of 2005. But Democrats pointed out that a Pentagon report last month showed that the number of Iraqi units rated "Level 1," or fully independent of U.S. help, has fallen from one to zero.

Democratic leaders hammered away at the president's latest effort to win public support for the war. "Instead of launching yet another public relations campaign, President Bush should use his speeches this week to provide a strategy to bring our brave men and women home safely and soon," House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (Calif.) said in a statement. Sen. Frank R. Lautenberg (N.J.) said: "It is time for President Bush to stop the spin and start telling the truth about the harsh realities we are confronting in Iraq."

Others praised Bush for committing to a specific target, if not a comprehensive timeline. "This was a step in the right direction," Rep. Dan Boren (Okla.), a centrist Democrat invited to the speech, said in an interview afterward. "Benchmarks set clear, defined goals, and if we see more and more Iraqis being trained and put on the ground, then that means we can bring more Americans home."

In his speech at George Washington University, Bush focused on the threat of improvised explosive devices, called IEDs by troops, and said his administration has increased funding to fight them from $150 million in 2004 to $3.3 billion this year. In stark language, he also accused Iran of helping the bomb makers. Just last week, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld also accused Iran of dispatching elements of its Revolutionary Guard to conduct unspecified operations.

"Some of the most powerful IEDs we're seeing in Iraq today include components that come from Iran," Bush said. Such actions, along with Iran's nuclear program, he said, "are increasingly isolating Iran, and America will continue to rally the world to confront these threats."

After a deadly spasm of sectarian conflict last month sparked by the bombing of a Shiite shrine, the president presented a dour forecast of continuing mayhem. "I wish I could tell you that the violence is waning and that the road ahead will be smooth," he said. "It will not. There will be more tough fighting and more days of struggle and we will see more images of chaos and carnage in the days and months to come."

But Bush said he saw hope in the fact that the country has not fallen into civil war, as some had forecast. "The Iraqi people made their choice," he said. "They looked into the abyss and did not like what they saw."

Bush vowed not to retreat in the face of violence, reading a letter from the mother of Sgt. William S. Kinzer Jr., who was killed last year. "Don't let my son have given his all for an unfinished job," she wrote, according to Bush. "I make this promise to Debbie and all the families of the fallen heroes," he said. "We will not let your loved ones' dying be in vain. We will finish what we started in Iraq. We will complete the mission."
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:57 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "President Bush vowed for the first time yesterday to turn over most of Iraq to newly trained Iraqi troops by the end of this year..."

Reading the very first sentence I thought oh jeez... here we go again, another WaPo spinner.
Spin the yarn with Poll data and democratic condemnations and eureeka...Bush is finally caving in. But wait, theres a correction. Minor point? Hardly!

Because of incorrect information from the White House, a March 14 article incorrectly said that the previous day President Bush had for the first time set a goal of turning over most of Iraq to Iraqi forces by the end of the year. Bush laid out that goal in a January speech, as well.
Posted by: DepotGuy || 03/15/2006 10:12 Comments || Top||

#2  And of course it's not the WaPos's lack of due dilligence...certainly not.

"Because of incorrect information from the White House,..."
Posted by: DepotGuy || 03/15/2006 10:15 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran's media machine
The authorities in Iran are highly conscious of the power of the media.

They use a two-pronged approach. At home, they enforce controls on the media that stifle freedom of expression, although there are still outlets on TV, radio, in the press and on the internet that provide alternative points of view and are available to ordinary Iranians.

Abroad, Iran harnesses satellite TV and radio to get its views across in a variety of languages - Arabic in particular - in an effort to influence opinion in neighbouring countries and the wider world.

In Iran, there is no escape from the control that the state exerts over the media.

Broadcasting is run by the authorities. It reflects the views of the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and his allies in the conservative clerical establishment.

There are no private, independent broadcasters allowed to operate inside the country.

The Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting controls TV and radio. It is dominated by conservatives, and has often been criticised by Iranian reformists for its conservative bias.

It often ignored the activities and statements of the former president - and reformist leader - Mohammed Khatami. In recent elections, reformists criticised state TV and radio for blatantly favouring conservative candidates.

But state TV and radio are not the only broadcasters available in Iran. Satellite ownership may be illegal, but the law is only intermittently enforced.

The result is that Iranians can see and hear non-state controlled media from outside the country.

A flood of Farsi satellite stations is broadcast from the Iranian diaspora, particularly in the US. Most of these stations are shoestring affairs - amateurish and ramshackle - but they do provide very different viewpoints from those on state media.

Some exist solely to attack the Iranian authorities and are run by exiles from the Iranian revolution. They have covered protests in Iran, showing images that Iranians would never see on state TV.

The Iranian authorities are reported to have tried to jam the signals of these stations at especially sensitive times. Other channels profess to be non-political and concentrate on entertainment.

Iranians can also listen to foreign broadcasters that run Persian language services.

They include the BBC, Voice of America, Radio France Internationale and Deutsche Welle. Recently, Iran was reported to have blocked the BBC Persian service on the internet, which receives millions of hits.

The internet has provided a big challenge for the Iranian authorities in their efforts to control information.

It is now the main forum for dissident voices in Iran. Millions of Iranians have access to the internet and there are thousands of Iranian blogs.

In response, the government has adopted one of the most sophisticated internet censorship systems in the world - comparable to that used in China.

Officially, internet filtering is to block what the Iranian government sees as pornographic or immoral material. In practice, it also clearly tries to block sites with political content.

One of the reasons why the internet has become such an important medium for opposition or reformist voices in Iran is due to the crackdown on the press that hardliners have carried out in the past few years.

Only a handful of newspapers remain that voice alternative views to the conservative establishment. All newspapers have to be licensed.

The press law bans articles that "violate Islamic principles" or "might damage the foundation of the Islamic Republic".

Most of the key reformist newspapers have been closed down under the law and a number of journalists and editors imprisoned.

To bypass press censorship, reformist and opposition journalists have increasingly moved onto the internet, opening news sites and blogs.

But thanks to Iran's internet filtering system, the most prominent of these have periodically been blocked, with reports that hundreds - possibly thousands - of sites have been blacklisted.

Despite the authorities' efforts, Iranians are able to receive information that challenges what state broadcasters say from a variety of sources - whether by satellite, radio, the press or online.

But all of these face constraints and come under sporadic attack from the hardline conservative establishment, which dismiss them in any case as part of a foreign conspiracy to bring the country down.

On the international stage, Iran tries to combat other media sources with its own relatively advanced satellite and radio stations. The most significant of these is Al Alam - The World - a 24-hour news channel in Arabic, which it launched as Saddam Hussein's regime was ousted in Iraq.

Iran stole a march on everyone else by launching Al Alam with a powerful transmitter near the border with Iraq as the dust was still settling over the second Iraq war.

Its influence was felt immediately. It filled a void, as many Iraqis did not have satellites or access to them in the wake of Saddam Hussein's defeat.

That meant that Al Alam - which could be received as a terrestrial channel across the country - was present in many Iraqi homes before Al Jazeera or other Arab satellite news channels could get a look in.

Its air of professionalism and the visceral impact of its images and reports won it a good proportion of Iraqi viewers. It undeniably helped spread Iran's influence in post-Saddam Iraq.

But it is not the only TV station broadcasting from Iran to the outside world.

Iran's rulers have invested heavily in such channels - one broadcasts specifically to the Iranian diaspora; another, Sahar TV, broadcasts in a variety of languages, including English, French, Kurdish and Urdu.

A state-run radio station also broadcasts in about 30 languages. And that's not to mention the Lebanese channel, Al Manar - known as Hezbollah TV - which has received Iranian support.

All of this shows just how seriously Iran takes the role of the media in trying to influence and stir up opinion in the Arab world and beyond - just as it tries to control the information available to its own people within the country.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:50 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "In Iran, there is no escape from the control that the state exerts over the media."

Sounds like the BBC licensing scheme in the UK.

Pet Peeve: Someone needs to teach the "reporters" at the BBC how to write coherently. Each sentence is not deserving of a paragraph break and using "But..." to start sentences would invariably receive a liberal dose of red ink from any self-respecting English teacher of yore. Today, well, I don't doubt it would pass muster by all accounts I've read of the state of education in the West. Regardless, by any learned measure, this is pathetic and amateurish work.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 10:22 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan
Taliban acquires Iraqi training video
Taliban fighters in Afghanistan have acquired a training video on urban guerilla warfare produced by an Iraqi militant group. A copy of this video, which is in a CD format, has been obtained by Adnkronos International (AKI). The Taliban has received training from the group known as the Islamic Army of Iraq and have brought the CD back to their bases both in Afghanistan and in the tribal areas between Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The video is not for propaganda purposes but strictly for training. Many of the leaders of the Islamic Army of Iraq are believed to be former officials of the Iraqi army under the regime of Saddam Hussein including those from Saddam's elite Republican Guards which may explain why the video shows sophisticated attacks. The Islamic Army in Iraq is a militant group notorious for carrying out abductions in Iraq and was responsible for the kidnapping and death of Italian journalist Enzo Baldoni in 2004.

There are ten separate film clips in the video manual. Each segment shows a particular aspect of the training required to carry out deadly attacks. The methods have been employed by Iraqi insurgents against the US-led forces in Iraq and the same strategies are being taught to the Taliban fighters in Afghanistan.

The video is divided according to the principles identified to successfully carry out such attacks; developing a complete structure of intelligence, a complete infiltration of the rank and file of the opposing forces, a comprehensive knowledge of the target, precise identification of the material used in carrying out the attacks on specific targets, as well as recruiting dedicated foot soldiers for this type of mission.

Based on such a structure, the video shows how the militants monitor the surroundings of an area where a US armoured vehicle is expected to pass. While one team monitors the operation near the target, a car laden with explosives rams into the vehicle and destroys it. The monitoring team, sitting in a small truck nearby, then flees the area.

In another clip, the fighters take their positions near an area where a helicopter carrying US soldiers is expected to begin a flight. As soon as the helicopter takes off, the militants hit it with a missile and it comes crashing down. The video then shows many of the passengers burnt alive while one US serviceman manages to escape. The militants on the ground then hunt him down and capture him. The video then shows the US soldier begging for his life, in English, before the militants silently riddle him with bullets.

In a third video clip, an explosive is planted at a US base in Talafar in northern Iraq. A blast occurs and the building then collapses. The video shows US soldiers pointing at the site of the blast and in a matter of seconds these soldiers themselves are blown up in a similar explosion. The video aims to show the capacity of insurgents to infiltrate areas where US and coalition forces are operating Iraq.

The entire video is accompanied by audio of Koranic verses are being recited and Jihadi songs whose lyrics include: "We will defend our land with full vigour".
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:49 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "...elite Republican Guards which may explain why the video shows sophisticated attacks...'
Given the stellar performance of these elite RG against Iran, against the GWI coalition, and against the current coalition, perhaps their techniques for 'sophisticated' attacks should be spread more widely.
Posted by: Glenmore || 03/15/2006 7:32 Comments || Top||

#2  Wouldn't they be far more dangerous and diabolical if they acquired razors and other personal hygeine products? *shudder* Our troops might invite them in for coffee or something.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 7:43 Comments || Top||

#3  WRT Abu Graib (pants on head etc yawn)

So why hasn't the press shown how these islamist vermin treat prisoners?

It's because they are on the other side.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles || 03/15/2006 13:21 Comments || Top||


Southeast Asia
Thai leader hints he may step down
Thailand's prime minister hinted on Wednesday that he would consider stepping down from the post temporarily, after weeks of raucous demonstrations accusing him of corruption and demanding his resignation.

Critics have suggested that Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra step aside before April 2 parliamentary elections and appoint a neutral replacement to oversee proposed reforms to the constitution, a move that would defuse growing protests. Asked about that proposal, Thaksin said: "It is a good proposal, and I am considering this."

"This does not mean that I would bow to mob rule. I have to take some time to consider and decide what to do, because I have a duty to complete my mission," he said, during a campaign tour in the northeastern province of Buriram, where both he and his party remain popular.

Thousands of protesters camped overnight near Thaksin's office in Bangkok, vowing to continue demonstrations daily until he resigns. They suspended their vigil early Wednesday with plans to reconvene in the evening.

The demonstrators, who accuse Thaksin of corruption and power abuse, said they will stay outside Government House despite the prime minister's earlier announcement that he's ready to declare an official state of emergency if protests turn violent.

"If Thaksin doesn't quit, we won't leave," shouted one protest leader, publisher Sondhi Limthongkul, from a mobile stage atop a truck parked by Thaksin's office.

The marathon protest was peaceful as it entered its second evening.

Tens of thousands of protesters have held regular weekend rallies demanding Thaksin resign, accusing the tycoon-turned-politician of corruption, mishandling a Muslim insurgency in the south, stifling the media and allowing cronies to gain from state policies.

"I will base my decision on what is good for the nation, and not make a decision based on pressure from various groups," he said Wednesday in Buriram. "I am not a man who clings to power, but since I still have duty to accomplish I will have to be very careful and consider all aspects."

It was not clear whether he had a timeframe in mind or a specific plan to step down.

Thaksin had warned that he will declare a state of emergency if protests turn violent, but later said that it was no longer necessary.

Asked earlier what the government will do if the protest is prolonged, he said, "It's all right. I will continue to do my work."

Estimates on the numbers of protesters Tuesday ranged from about 35,000 by police to 200,000 by organizers.

Thaksin has also been drawing big crowds at his campaign rallies, including what reporters estimated as tens of thousands of people Tuesday at a college campus in the northeastern province of Buriram.

"The protesters lay siege to the government — now they are blocking me from going back to my office," Thaksin told them in a speech. "Only you can help me back to Government House by voting for my party on April 2."

Thaksin still has overwhelming support among Thailand's rural poor — who have benefited from his populist policies.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:48 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:


JI member's capture foiled planned Valenzuela City bombing
The capture of a suspected Muslim militant may have averted planned bomb attacks in the capital as Philippine security forces were distracted by political tensions over a foiled coup plot, police officials said yesterday.

Ali Ambing, a suspected member of the Abu Sayyaf, a militant group with links to the regional terror network Jemaah Islamiyah, was caught last Friday at a hideout in Valenzuela City, north of Manila.

“We may have pre-empted what we believe was a wave of bomb attacks in Manila,” said a police spokesman after parading the suspected Muslim militant before journalists yesterday.
Police said Ambing could be part of a group planning bomb attacks on the capital while military and police units are focused on defending the government against an alleged conspiracy between rogue troops and Maoist rebels to seize power.

President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo said last month security officials had foiled a coup plot, prompting her to declare emergency rule for one week until March 3.

Superintendent James Brillantes, a police intelligence officer, said army and police uniforms, materials for crude bombs and several pictures of suspected Muslim militants were seized from Ambing. Brillantes said Ambing was responsible for making the bombs that were used in the attack on a domestic ferry in February 2004 that killed more than 100 people, the worst terror attack in the Philippines.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:45 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:


Abu Sayyaf member captured in the Philippines
Government soldiers captured a second Abu Sayyaf member in a continuing operation against the al Qaeda-linked terror group, blamed for the spate of bombings and kidnappings of foreigners in the southern Philippines, officials said Tuesday.

Major Gamal Hayudini, a spokesman for the Southern Command, said military intelligence agents nabbed Julkaram Hadjail on Monday in Jolo island. "Hadjail is believed to be an ammo and food courier of the Abu Sayyaf. He is now being interrogated," Hayudini said.

He did not say if the terror man was carrying weapons when security agents captured him in downtown Jolo town.

Fighting also erupted Monday between security and Abu Sayyaf forces in Jolo's Patikul, where Hadjail's group is operating, Hayudini said. "There were no reports of casualties, but troops are pursuing the group of senior Abu Sayyaf sub-leader Jul Asbi Jalmaani," he said.

It was unknown if Hadjail's arrest was connected with the clashes.

The military earlier announced the capture of senior Abu Sayyaf commander Burham Sali, also known as Commander Abu Sanny, linked to the killings in 2001 of kidnapped US citizens and Filipino hostages in the southern Philippines.

Major General Agustin Dema-ala, commander of the Army's 6th Infantry Division, said security forces raided an Abu Sayyaf hideout in Facoma village in Parang town in Maguindanao province and arrested Sali, who is facing a string of kidnapping and murder charges in Basilan island.

Dema-ala implicated Sali to the killing of Kansas missionary Martin Burnham and California man Guillermo Sobero and several Filipino hostages in Basilan island.

Sali escaped a massive military operation in Basilan in 2002 and hid in central Mindanao until security forces tracked him down Sunday.

Many of those kidnapped, including Catholic priest Roel Gallardo, were tortured and beheaded, and the women raped by their captors, a military dossier on Sali's group said.

Sobero, Burham and his wife Gracia, and 17 other Filipino holiday-goers were kidnapped by the Abu Sayyaf group on May 2001 and brought to Basilan island. Sobero was beheaded by the Abu Sayyaf and a year later Martin Burnham died in a US-led military rescue while his wife was wounded.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:42 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:


Bangladesh
Bangladesh bank given 10 days to explain hard boyz' accounts
Bangladesh Bank (BB) yesterday served a show-cause notice to the chief executive of Islami Bank Bangladesh Ltd concerning the alleged irregularities in maintaining 'militant-linked' accounts and asked him to reply within 10 days.

The central bank also sent the probe report of the BB inspection teams to the home ministry. The report was prepared after the teams examined a few cases of transactions in the bank suspecting they might have links to the militants.

Following the arrest of militant kingpin Abdur Rahman and seizure of some banking documents from his busted Sylhet hideout, five BB teams probed three branches of Islami Bank, and one each of Rupali and Janata Bank.

The probe teams found some lapses in banking norms and suspicious transactions with the Sylhet, Gazipur and Savar branches of Islami Bank, sources said.

The show-cause notice was served under section 19 of the Anti-Money Laundering Act on the basis of the probe teams' report, a BB source said.

The three branches of Islami Bank violated some of the regulations specified in the Anti-Money Laundering Act, specially the section called 'Know Your Customer (KYC)'.

Despite the fact that there were some "dubious" transactions in its Sylhet branch, the Islami Bank did not report it to the central bank as demanded by law, the sources added.

The BB is waiting for the Islami Bank chief executive's reply before taking action. If the allegation is proved, the bank may be fined Tk 10,000 to 1 lakh and the officials involved may be penalised, even suspended from their job, the source said.

Executive President of the bank Abdur Rakib when contacted by The Daily Star last night said there has been no irregularities in opening the account, but there were something "unusual" in the way the account was operated.

"We have already taken administrative actions against the offending staff," he said.

About not informing the central bank about the suspicious transactions, Rakib said it happened due to the negligence of the branches concerned. "We do mass banking and have got thousands of accounts all over the country. It is not possible to centrally monitor all the irregularities that may have taken place in some branches," he explained.

Besides, the law does not clearly explain which transaction is suspicious and which is not. As a result, the bankers are often in a dilemma regarding which transaction they should report and which they should not, Rakib observed.

Sources said the probe report sent to the home ministry does not have any recommendation -- it only shows the findings. The account holders, account numbers and others who had done transactions with those accounts have been mentioned in the report.

The BB source said the intelligence agencies will now investigate on the basis of the report. The BB has not yet found out any accounts and transactions that match the volume or kind of finance needed for countrywide militant activities.

"Either we have not yet traced the account(s) or the transactions have been done through non-banking channels which are not in our jurisdiction," the source said.

The BB had initiated the probe after police found some banking documents in the JMB chief's Sylhet hideout during his capture early this month. The seized documents are related to Rupali Bank's Pallabi Branch in Dhaka, Janata Bank's Brahmanbaria Branch and Islami Bank's Lal Dighirparh Branch in Sylhet.

One Sabbir Ahmed opened the account with the Lal Dighirparh Branch, but it was operated by Saidur Rahman, former Habiganj district ameer of Jamaat-e-Islami. The account with Rupali Bank's Pallabi Branch is in the name of Saidur.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:41 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Bangladesh bank given 10 days to explain hard boyz' accounts

Headline should read,

"Bangladesh Bank given 10 days to alter all records and vanish Hard Boy's accounts"
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 03/15/2006 8:01 Comments || Top||

#2  A positive outcome of the FBI's training program. Clearly the FBI has it's uses. And as I recall, the head of the training group is female. ;-) (Although I think the Bangladeshis are more relaxed about such things than their lighter-skinned Pakistani brothers -- not that I care, but the Pakistanis supposedly do.)
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/15/2006 8:05 Comments || Top||

#3  its No apostrophe for the possessive pronoun, darn it!
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/15/2006 8:06 Comments || Top||

#4  OK, I wasn't clear enough, I'm objecting to the ten days, you don't give perps a chance to cover their tracks, you send a batallion of accountants, cops, and troopies to sieze the records, without warning of any kind.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 03/15/2006 13:53 Comments || Top||

#5  REQUEST FOR URGENT BUSINESS RELATIONSHIP

FIRST, I MUST SOLICIT YOUR STRICTEST CONFIDENCE IN THIS TRANSACTION. THIS IS BY VIRTUE OF ITS NATURE AS BEING UTTERLY CONFIDENTIAL AND 'TOP SECRET'. I AM SURE AND HAVE CONFIDENCE OF YOUR ABILITY AND RELIABILITY TO PROSECUTE A TRANSACTION OF THIS GREAT MAGNITUDE INVOLVING A PENDING TRANSACTION REQUIRING MAXIIMUM CONFIDENCE.

WE ARE TOP OFFICIAL OF THE BANGLADESH BANK ACCOUNT REVIEW PANEL WHO ARE INTERESTED IN IMPORATION OF MONEY INTO OUR COUNTRY WITH FUNDS WHICH ARE PRESENTLY TRAPPED IN ISLAMI BANK. IN ORDER TO COMMENCE THIS BUSINESS WE SOLICIT YOUR ASSISTANCE TO ENABLE US TRANSFER INTO YOUR ACCOUNT THE SAID TRAPPED FUNDS.......
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 13:58 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
US terror database has 200,000 names
The Terrorist Screening Center marked its second anniversary as keeper of the government's terrorist watch list Tuesday by disclosing it had received about 6,000 "positive hits" of known or suspected terrorists.

But Director Donna Bucella stressed that only about 1 percent of the cases led to an arrest.

In a meeting with reporters at FBI headquarters, Bucella said in most of the encounters, law enforcement officials gathered additional information on the "appropriately suspected" person and released him or her.

Bucella said several of the 6,000 "matches" were repeat inquiries on the same person.

Bucella said the watch list, which is updated daily, contains about 350,000 "identities," which include partial names and identifying marks, but only about 200,000 names of "real people, known individuals."

Most are overseas and have never tried to enter the United States.

The TSC list, conceived after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, combines about a dozen databases from nine agencies that any government official -- from a Customs agent to a state trooper -- can use to check the name of someone who has been screened or stopped, The Associated Press reported.

When there is a possible match, the screening center verifies the information is accurate and advises what steps to take, the AP reported.

Bucella told reporters the screening center, which has ordered fights thought to be carrying terrorism suspects diverted, is improving its methods.

"We're doing a lot better," she said. "We haven't had a plane diverted in a long time."

Bucella said plans to deal with potential suspects on flights into the country are taking place before the flights take off, rather than up to 45 minutes after.

Bucella said one of several improvements the multiagency Terrorist Screening Center has made in recent months is the addition of representatives of the federal air marshals service, who need to be aware of terror suspects traveling within the country, and NORAD, which is responsible for scrambling military jets.

The center was formed in September 2003 to consolidate terrorist watch lists and provide support for flight screeners worldwide. Plans at the time were for the center to be operational by December 2003.

A separate federal program designed to use the center's database and take over screening airline passengers has run into repeated delays.

The Transportation Security Administration said last month that the Secure Flight program was heading back to the drawing board after four years and more than $130 million in development.

TSA Director Edmund "Kip" Hawley told a Senate committee he was "rebaselining" the planned Secure Flight program, and indicated he will drop plans to check passengers' names against commercial databases such as credit reports, one of the most contentious aspects of the program.

The announcement came amid protests from privacy advocates and a stinging evaluation from the Government Accountability Office, which must certify the program before it can take effect.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:40 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Sounds as though they've engaged some FBI consultants to "help".
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 9:33 Comments || Top||

#2  I hope our terror data base is better than our IRS data base. Maybe we should farm this out to VISA or Mastercard.
Posted by: Perfesser || 03/15/2006 9:43 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan
10 killed in Afghan violence
At least 10 people, half of them police, were killed in new attacks across troubled Afghanistan, officials said Tuesday. In the deadliest incident, militants believed loyal to the Taliban regime overthrown four years ago attacked a police post in the insurgency-hit southern province of Kandahar late Monday, the interior ministry said

The attack sparked a three-hour exchange of fire. “Five police were killed and six were wounded in the terrorists’ attack on a police post in Miansheen district lastnight,” Yousuf Stanizai, the ministry spokesman, said. “Two Taliban bodies are still at the site and bloodstains in the area indicate that there have been more casualties on the terrorists’ side,” he said.

The attackers were believed to have taken their dead with them, as the Taliban regularly do after an attack. Stanizai would not comment on a claim by a purported spokesman for the militants that they had killed four foreigners who were kidnapped in an area between Kandahar and Helmand provinces on Saturday.

Four Albanians were snatched with four Afghans, according to their employer Ecolog, a German cleaning company contracted to US-led forces based in Afghanistan who are helping track down Taliban insurgents and their Al-Qaeda allies.Yousuf Ahmadi, who claims to speak for the Taliban, said Monday the abductors had killed four foreigners but described them as three Albanians and a German. The Afghans were freed on Sunday.

Several foreigners working in security and reconstruction projects in war-ravaged Afghanistan have been kidnapped since the toppling of the Taliban government in a US-led operation in late 2001.

In another attack, the administrative chief of Zurmat district in the eastern province of Paktia, Mamor Zahir, was killed early Tuesday when several gunmen opened fire on him outside his home. Zahir’s bodyguards returned fire, killing one of the attackers and wounding several who managed to escape, provincial security director director Ghulam Nabi Salem said. The Taliban-led insurgency is focused on southern and eastern Afghanistan.

The main targets are Afghan and foreign security forces based in the country since the Taliban were removed. Ahmadi, the Taliban spokesman, said the insurgents were also responsible for planting a bomb in Kandahar’s border town of Spin Boldak which killed a civilian on a motorbike on Monday and wounded another.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:38 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [8 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: Politix
Roberts urges end to Phase 2 of SSIC investigation
The chairman of the Senate intelligence committee on Tuesday urged lawmakers to begin wrapping up the second phase of its investigation into U.S. intelligence on prewar Iraq, despite fresh demands from Democrats for further scrutiny.

Sen. Pat Roberts, the Kansas Republican, laid out a schedule for completing four of the investigation's five segments by the end of April and pledged to release much of the findings to the public.

The largest segment of the Phase 2 investigation, which has increasingly become a lightning rod for partisan squabbling, promises to examine whether Bush administration officials exaggerated intelligence on Iraq as they made their public case for war in 2002 and 2003.

"Over the next several weeks, the committee's members will work with staff to write the final products," Roberts said in a statement. "This schedule provides a reasonable time frame for member input as we complete the inquiry."

Aides to Roberts said the chairman released the work schedule in a public bid to counter behind-the-scenes efforts by Democrats to expand the Phase 2 probe.

"The Democrats are saying (the probe) is not developing the answers they want -- the answers they want amount to 'Bush lied' -- so they just want to keep looking," said one aide, who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly about committee affairs.

Republicans cited a January 13 letter to Roberts from Sen. John Rockefeller of West Virginia, the intelligence panel's ranking Democrat, as evidence that Democrats wanted a broader investigation.

Neither Roberts nor Rockefeller would release the two-page letter.

But a Democratic aide familiar with Phase 2 said the letter asked the committee to interview about 20 senior administration officials, including former Secretary of State Colin Powell, and sought access to President George W. Bush's daily intelligence briefings on Iraq.

"Nowhere is there any suggestion we need to go into areas of investigation that we haven't already started," he said.

The Rockefeller letter also called on the committee to press ahead with its probe of former U.S. defense policy chief Douglas Feith, whom Democrats accuse of manipulating intelligence to suggest links between Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, the Democratic aide said.

Roberts has put the committee's Feith investigation on hold until the Defense Department inspector general completes its own probe of the former defense official.

"Our goal should be to unite around a thorough, accurate and credible report that answers lingering questions about whether and how intelligence may have been misused," Rockefeller said in a statement.

The first phase of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence probe looked at the quality of intelligence on Iraq and concluded in a scathing 2004 report that grave errors led to prewar U.S. claims that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction.

WMD were a main justification for Bush's decision to invade Iraq. But no such weapons have been found.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:37 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Powell may not always see eye to eye with Bush, but that doesn't mean he is going to indulge the Democrats. I don't think he likes liberals any more than the KKK.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 10:20 Comments || Top||

#2  While I'm at it, what will happen to the democratic party when the SSIC investigation, the wiretap investigation, the Iraq documents and Plame case all come out to show that the Prez didn't do anything wrong or illegal? And in an election year no less.
Damn that Karl Rove! This is all some elaborate scheme of his!!!!!! (he, he)
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 10:23 Comments || Top||

#3  The Dhimicrats want to keep this going until they can fin a sliver of a connection between their conspiracies and reality. They just know if they hold a memo in the right light in a certain way the connection between Rove-Haliburton-Eron-Iraq-911 can be made. I wish the spent as much time getting rid of pork spending and government waste.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 03/15/2006 10:25 Comments || Top||

#4  Donks are simply trying to extend this bullshit exercise through to the election. The reason for pulling Powell in is obvious, it's because of the clay pottery barn analogy.

Roberts has his hands full with O. Snowe, Chucky Hagel, Rocky, Cueball Levin, Di-Fi, Feingold, etc.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 20:25 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan
UN envoy sez Taliban still a threat to Afghanistan
A revitalised Taliban is the main threat to Afghanistan, the head of the United Nations mission there said, as a wave of violence sweeps the country struggling to become a viable democracy.

Lack of security and weakness of Afghanistan's new government institutions, especially in outlying areas, are the major problems facing the country, the top UN envoy in Afghanistan, Tom Koenigs, told the UN Security Council.

"The major challenge at this moment is to prevent the Taliban reconfigurate and create an environment of insecurity and threat all over the country," Koenigs later told reporters.

"There is always the presence of suicide bombers who create an insecure environment."

A wave of suicide bombings and attacks on schools have rocked Afghanistan as insurgents step up their battle to oust foreign forces and overthrow the Western-backed government.

Four Afghan policemen and six Taliban insurgents were killed in the latest violence on Tuesday, as authorities searched for four Macedonians the Taliban said it kidnapped and killed.

The Taliban, which harboured al-Qaeda and was ousted by US-led forces in 2001 after the September 11 attacks on the United States, is regrouping in some areas, Koenigs said, but details were scarce.

"We only know that not all the Taliban leaders have been captured and there are incidents where the Taliban claimed responsibility," said Koenigs.

"So they are still there, and people fear - particularly in the southern region - that they hide either on this or the other side of the border.

"It will be vital for the Afghan government to extend its reach to under served areas of Afghanistan," Koenigs said in his briefing to the council.

Koenigs asked the Security Council to expand the mission he heads, the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), so it can support the government better in the field in outlying areas.

The Security Council is discussing a 12-month renewal of UNAMA's mandate, which expires March 24.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:35 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Thank goodness we have the UN to tell us these things. Otherwise, how would we have known?
Posted by: Chinter Flarong9283 || 03/15/2006 11:26 Comments || Top||

#2  That's why he gets the Big Bux and the Vulture Elite ID card.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 11:32 Comments || Top||

#3  Tom finally broke from meal long enough to pick up a newspaper.
Posted by: Thinemp Whimble2412 || 03/15/2006 19:24 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iranian business class turning against Ahmadinejad
Iran's clerical and business establishments, deeply concerned by what they see as reckless spending and needlessly aggressive foreign policies, are increasingly turning against President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Within this context, many see the president's long-running confrontation with the United States and Europe over Tehran's nuclear program as an attempt to demonize the West and distract the Iranian public from pressing domestic problems.

A relatively small group of extremists "at the top of the government around the president" are seeking to benefit from a crisis with the West, because "that way they will be able once again to blame the West for all of their problems," said Mousa Ghaninejad, the editor of Iran's best-selling economics daily newspaper, Dunya Al-Eqtisad.

Millions of low-income Iranians voted for the new president last year, motivated by his firm stand against corruption and pledges to give financial priority to their needs.

"His appeal was to those for whom class discrimination is important, and his simple lifestyle gave an air of credibility to his claims," said Nasser Hadian, a political analyst at Tehran University who attended high school with Mr. Ahmadinejad.

Mr. Hadian predicted that senior Iranian clerics would continue to support Mr. Ahmadinejad -- or at least not move against him -- for about a year because of that popular support. But privately, he said, they feel he is isolating Iran internationally and putting its economy at risk.

Also at the back of their minds is the fear that his anti-corruption drive ultimately threatens their own considerable privileges.

Mr. Ghaninejad was one of 13 experts in economics who warned, in two petitions to the government just before Mr. Ahmadinejad was elected, that his populist, short-term policies would spell disaster for Iran in the long term.

"Now he's throwing money at complex problems and just doesn't care about the long term. He thinks he should help the poor today and leave everything else to the Hidden Imam," the newspaper editor said, referring to a character whom Shi'ites believe will one day emerge to bring justice to the world.

The critics say Mr. Ahmadinejad's budget, which has just been approved by parliament after prolonged wrangling, flouts economic doctrines sanctioned by the powerful Expediency Council, which is under the supervision of the supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Iran's long-term planning calls for vigorous efforts to reduce the size of government and to curb subsidies to state-owned entities, which account for an estimated 75 percent of the economy. But the Ahmadinejad budget boosts spending by 25 percent and envisions a 31 percent increase in spending on state enterprises.

The 2006 budget also calls on the government to use up to $40 billion of its foreign cash reserves -- generated from oil sales -- to meet the fiscal year's spending needs, in spite of long-term plans calling for restraint.

The value of Tehran's stock market had fallen by $10 billion under Mr. Ahmadinejad as of February, the Los Angeles Times reported. Other recent Western news reports say that the nation's vibrant real-estate market has withered and that capital outflows are increasing.

Mr. Ahmadinejad's spending has pushed the inflation rate to an estimated 13.5 percent, and several estimates say it could go as high as 30 percent this year.

Economic analysts note that inflation will be felt most acutely by the poor, undermining the president's support among his most important constituency.

Parliament has challenged the president on other issues, most notably by rejecting three successive candidates for oil minister. Mr. Ahmadinejad declared angrily after the second rejection that "no other president has ever been subject to such negative propaganda and treatment."

Mr. Ahmadinejad's detractors say the broad coalition against him is attracting many of the regime's powerful personalities and may include even the supreme leader himself, despite his superficial statements in support of the president.

They point to a recent decree by Ayatollah Khamenei giving the Expediency Council, headed by former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, oversight of the presidency.

The clerical establishment has close ties with the capitalist class and is said to be appalled at the rapid slide of the economy since Mr. Ahmadinejad's inauguration. The clerics are also thought to be deeply apprehensive about the president's aggressive foreign policy.

Mr. Ghaninejad said that by confronting Iran over its nuclear program, the West was in fact throwing a lifeline to Mr. Ahmadinejad.

"If they keep piling on the pressure, Ahmadinejad will become a national hero," the newspaper editor said.

"Let the Iranians deal with him. If you leave him alone, he will become a bankrupt politician within a year. With greater pressure, only the extremists will benefit."
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:33 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  This is probably a good way to go from middle class to lower class in a big hurry. The mullahs are probably always on the prowl for another Toyota dealership or corner currency exchange. Thye might even become "criminal" class, come to think of it.

Of course, they will have no actual effect other than sacrificing themselves on the altar of wishful thinking. Iran is in the death grip of the "clerics" and this article's position seems to be oddly critical of any peaceful effort to intervene.

That it states Ahmadinejad is subordinate to them is obvious and has been from the beginning when he was "elected". The Mullahs "counted the votes".

That it implies they do not approve of his behavior in some fashion - there is precisely zero proof presented. He's still there, isn't he? The path he has taken is a, now, long-running straight line from the day he took office.

This is a bizarre piece, wishful thinking, with no substance to its apparent conclusion - the evidence points in the opposite direction. If the mullahs suddenly remove Ahmadinejad, then it won't be because good things will result, just the meandering foreign policy of some rather insane ideologues.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 12:16 Comments || Top||

#2  Glert, you insinuate the Mullah's counted the votes so they may have chosen the President. I think it works the other way. They refused to allow any candidates that they found unacceptable and then probably counted the votes accurately. If this is the case then dumping Ahmadinejad would be no loss to the Mullahs as there are other 'acceptable' candidates out there.
Posted by: rjschwarz || 03/15/2006 13:42 Comments || Top||

#3  I fail to register any substantive difference, rjschwarz. Limiting the candidates and counting the votes, certainly the Mullahs controlled them both, of course - they wouldn't leave anything to chance. As for Ahmadinejad, I said essentially the same thing - he's disposable, if it suits them.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 14:03 Comments || Top||

#4  Yeah! Right! Kinda like the alternate universe where Krupp turned on the Nazis...
Posted by: borgboy || 03/15/2006 14:45 Comments || Top||

#5  just another "hold off until they take care of him internally" fluff piece. Expect to see a lot more MSM rosy predictions and garbage to try and delay any US or Israeli action
Posted by: Frank G || 03/15/2006 15:11 Comments || Top||

#6  no, its saying that OUR actions will help take care of them internally. Not the same thing at all.

I mean thats admin policy now, despite what the "bomb them" chorus says.
Posted by: liberalhawk || 03/15/2006 15:20 Comments || Top||

#7  pardon wrong thread - this does look more like a leave em alone article. Too many iran articles at once.
Posted by: liberalhawk || 03/15/2006 15:21 Comments || Top||

#8  LOL. I was preparing a response and just happened to check before hitting the button.

It is more than clear that the administration is running multiple tracks simultaneously. The thrust of this article - "Stay out, let us handle it!" is tragicomedy. 1979. 2006. Nukes. No.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 15:27 Comments || Top||

#9  I feel the same suspicion about all the "Dems can't get it together" articles that are publishing right now.
Posted by: Seafarious || 03/15/2006 15:41 Comments || Top||

#10  This will be the new EU, Russia, China reason for holding off on sanctions or downright take-out. This will be the new beat of the drum: leave Iran alone, keep negiating, let them start their nuclear "power" program and Mad Mahmoud will eventually be gone.

Cheez, I can hear it starting about ..... now.
Posted by: Thinemp Whimble2412 || 03/15/2006 19:33 Comments || Top||

#11  This is a concerted disinformation piece embrassed by the usual tools.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 20:30 Comments || Top||


Iraq
Abizaid sez US may need bases in Iraq
The United States may want to keep a long-term military presence in Iraq to bolster moderates against extremists in the region and protect the flow of oil, the Army general overseeing U.S. military operations in Iraq said on Tuesday.

While the Bush administration has downplayed prospects for permanent U.S. bases in Iraq, Gen. John Abizaid told a House of Representatives subcommittee he could not rule that out.

Abizaid said that policy would be worked out with a unified, national Iraqi government if and when that is established, "and it would be premature for me to predict."

Many Democrats have pressed President George W. Bush to firmly state that the United States does not intend to seek permanent military bases in Iraq, a step they said would help stem the violence there.

Abizaid also told the Appropriations subcommittee on military quality of life that while an Iraqi civil war was possible, "I think it's a long way from where we are now to civil war."

Echoing Bush's statement on Monday on the outlook for reducing U.S. forces in Iraq, Abizaid said if Iraqis can form a unified government, "I think there's every reason to believe ... that we'll be able to bring the size of the force down much more so by December of '06."

Abizaid cited the need to fight al Qaeda and other extremists groups and "the need to be able to deter ambitions of an expansionistic Iran" as potential reasons to keep some level of troops in the region in the long term.

But he said it would be far less than the 200,000 currently deployed in the region, including 132,000 in Iraq.

"Clearly our long-term vision for a military presence in the region requires a robust counter-terrorist capability," Abizaid said. "No doubt there is a need for some presence in the region over time primarily to help people help themselves through this period of extremists versus moderates."

Abizaid also said the United States and its allies have a vital interest in the oil-rich region.

"Ultimately it comes down to the free flow of goods and resources on which the prosperity of our own nation and everybody else in the world depend," he said.

Rep. David Price, a North Carolina Democrat, questioned "what kind of signal that sends to the American people and to the Iraqis and the region ... if somehow there is ambiguity on our ultimate designs in terms of a military presence in Iraq."

Rep. Jane Harman of California, top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, in a letter to Bush last week said his "continuing failure to clarify U.S. intentions provides an excuse for certain Iraqis to avoid compromise and jeopardizes our ability to succeed in Iraq."
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:31 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:


Europe
Dutch getting tougher on terror
As events such as the Madrid and London bombings have abundantly proved, Europe has become one of the key battlegrounds of the global war on terror. Friday marked an important date in this struggle, as a court in Amsterdam issued a much-awaited verdict in the trial of the so-called "Hofstad group," the maxi terrorist cell that planned various attacks throughout the Netherlands between 2003 and 2005.

The court convicted nine of the 14 alleged terrorists, imposing sentences up to 15 years. A key member of the group, Mohammed Bouyeri, had previously been sentenced to life in a separate trial. Bouyeri reached worldwide notoriety in November 2004, when he ritualistically killed in broad daylight Theo van Gogh, the controversial Dutch filmmaker who had directed a movie highly critical of Islam's treatment of women. The verdict represents a major victory against what Dutch intelligence agencies consider the most severe threat to the country's security, and the first successful use of new antiterrorism legislation.

But the Amsterdam trial has an importance that goes well beyond the sphere of counterterrorism. This verdict is the culmination of a new trend that has been growing in Holland since the van Gogh assassination, as the country has gone through a severe self-examination. The Hofstad group is just the most dramatic and evident manifestation of a much larger problem. Most of the members of the group, in fact, were born in the Netherlands, sons or grandsons of North African immigrants who had grown up immersed in Dutch culture, yet had embraced radical Islam and decided to "wage a holy war against their own country," as Dutch prosecutors defined it.

Bouyeri, who had described Holland as a "democratic torture chamber," talked about overthrowing the Dutch parliament and replacing it with an Islamic court. While receiving generous benefits from its social security, the men planned to kill the country's leaders and start a civil war that would have pitted Muslims against Christians.

As exiguous as their number is, the members of the Hofstad group are living examples of the failed integration of large segments of the local Muslim population and, more broadly, of the end of Holland's multicultural dogma. While only a tiny minority of Holland's Muslims has joined the group or taken part in other violent anti-system activities, tensions with the Islamic community concerning everyday life have been boiling in the Netherlands for the last 15 years. The van Gogh assassination was widely perceived by the Dutch as a tipping point, a sign they could no longer turn a blind eye to a problem they had either ignored or downplayed for too long.

Even the most liberal voices in the Netherlands now acknowledge that disturbingly high percentages of the local Muslim population have segregated themselves, ignoring, if not shunning, basic Dutch values such as women's rights, separation of church and state and respect for different lifestyles.

And if the verdict signals a strong shift in the country's attitudes toward countering terrorism, Holland has been rethinking many of its internal policies since that tragic November day. Immigration has been drastically reduced, with the stated aim of focusing on integrating the large and widely unassimilated existing immigrant communities. New residents must now undergo 500 hours of Dutch language instruction and 50 hours of social orientation. And in January Immigration and Integration Minister Rita Verdonk talked about a "national code of conduct," a set of general rules to be applied to the public that emphasizes the equality of men and women, non-discrimination and the importance of the Dutch language.

Other measures directly target the Muslim community. Public funding for Islamic schools, often accused of perpetrating the self-segregation of the Muslim community, is under review. And parliament has already voted in favor of a proposal to ban the most extreme forms of veiling (such as the burqa and the niqab) in public.

More generally, there is a growing consensus on what it means to be Dutch. Voices throughout the political spectrum have found an unprecedented determination and pride in reaffirming basic Dutch values of tolerance and democracy. "We were tolerant to the intolerants and we only got intolerance back," said Geert Wilders, a Dutch politician often criticized for his harsh tones against the Muslim community, in the wake of the van Gogh assassination. This concept has now become mainstream in a country that has found the courage to talk about immigration and the need for newcomers to accept the basic values of their host countries while still retaining their identity.

The recognition of these problems, unspoken until a few months ago, is now the priority on the agenda of all Dutch political parties. The fact that, according to official government estimates, major cities such as Amsterdam and Rotterdam will be Muslim-majority within a decade only adds urgency to the issue. The verdict is another battle won by the Dutch in a long war they have finally decided to fight, without demagogic alarmism or excesses, but with the necessary firm determination.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:28 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "We were tolerant to the intolerants and we only got intolerance back," said Geert Wilders,

Unfortunately, that is generally the harvest.
Posted by: Visitor || 03/15/2006 8:15 Comments || Top||

#2  Bouyeri, who had described Holland as a "democratic torture chamber," talked about overthrowing the Dutch parliament and replacing it with an Islamic court.

Like "Just Curious", to whom democracy does not exist unless he or his compatriots are in charge, and for whom the rules do not apply...
Posted by: Ptah || 03/15/2006 9:10 Comments || Top||

#3  Ptah, are you sure they're that dense?

That's pretty mean. :)
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 9:15 Comments || Top||

#4  It's finally dawning on these ultra-tolerant leftists just what a cesspool they have created. There is no compromise or tloerance to be had from Muzzies. Europe will either end up with millions jailed at a tremendous cost, or get some reality and start massive deportations of anyone who does not conform with societal norms.
Posted by: SOP35/Rat || 03/15/2006 10:12 Comments || Top||

#5  The Dutch are to be congratulated on coming around to common sense and self-preservation. But this makes me just wonder whether we won't see a 10-year term of taqqiya:

"The fact that, according to official government estimates, major cities such as Amsterdam and Rotterdam will be Muslim-majority within a decade only adds urgency to the issue..."

They could create a body of laws for self-preservation, but then legislation can always be removed 10 years down the line, can't it?

Wonder what will happen to all those Dutch churches by 2017? Or those unveiled women?
Posted by: Jules || 03/15/2006 10:41 Comments || Top||

#6  BTW-What are the gun laws there? Can a civilian own a gun?
Posted by: Jules || 03/15/2006 11:07 Comments || Top||

#7  Dutch getting tougher on terror

the Black Robes of The Hague "cracking down"

A court in The Hague has handed down severe sentences to the ringleaders of the Hofstad group, which was suspected of planning terrorist attacks in the Netherlands. The judge ruled that nine of the 14 defendants belonged to the terrorist group and were guilty of sedition, incitement to hatred and intimidation.

Two of them, Jason Walters and Ismail Akhnikh were sentenced to 15 and 13 years in prison, respectively, for injuring five members of a SWAT team with hand grenades in The Hague in 2004. The court ruled that Mohammed Bouyeri was the leader of the group, but did not impose a sentence, as he is already serving life for the killing of filmmaker Theo van Gogh.

Three of those convicted were released immediately because they have already served their sentences in custody. The five other defendants were acquitted.


for..

murder
attempted murder with bodily harm
terrorism

/"rehabilitated and released" or sooner
Posted by: RD || 03/15/2006 12:07 Comments || Top||

#8  Other measures directly target the Muslim community. Public funding for Islamic schools, often accused of perpetrating the self-segregation of the Muslim community, is under review.

So much for that whole separation of church and state stated a few paragraphs above this, eh? Or does it not apply when its separation of mosque and state?
Posted by: BA || 03/15/2006 13:35 Comments || Top||

#9  BA you're making the mistake of applying American Laws to other non-american Nations.

The Dutch are under a different set of laws, I don't know if they practice separation of church and state or not.
But I'd bet not.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 03/15/2006 14:02 Comments || Top||

#10  Except that last election, Holland lurched left...

http://www.peaktalk.com/archives/002037.php
Posted by: Adriane || 03/15/2006 15:15 Comments || Top||

#11  ...basic Dutch values such as women's rights, separation of church and state and respect for different lifestyles.

Uh, RJ, this was in above my previous quotes 2 paragraphs above it. Methinks, the Dutch are far more liberal than even US standards, so that means even more separation than we have. Of course, funding of moskkks could've been in the name of multi-culti, ya know? Just sayin's all. I just find it ironic they (gov't officials) quote separation of church and state, and then, just 2 paragraphs later state they fund moskks. I guess multi-culti thought processes cause you to see that as logical until the boomers are on your own front porch.
Posted by: BA || 03/15/2006 15:48 Comments || Top||

#12  Beg pardon, sloppy reading on my part, you're absolutely right, I told off the wrong poster.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 03/15/2006 19:26 Comments || Top||

#13  Bravo. I'm pleased to see Holland taking this step.

Canada has been falling more and more leftward into this same trap. Which is a big mistake and I'm hoping the cacophony of Ontario LLL take heed.

The Canadian model of multi-cult has worked well in the past, when candidates were tested and screened and came here for the freedom and hope that was offered. The current influx of "refugees" and welfare seekers who suck the system and remain apart (or worse, demand special attention to their needsz), refusing to learn the language or accept that they are in a different country - by choice - are the problem.

The separate funding of ethnic schools - including the Catholic system - must go. As Hollland realises. The goal was multi-cult and noble in design, just not use.

I'm hoping Canada wakes up - like the Dutch.
Posted by: Thinemp Whimble2412 || 03/15/2006 19:49 Comments || Top||

#14  Heh...no skin off my back, RJ! I was more getting at the inherent idiotic hypocritical words of the writer than the Dutch themselves. At least some of old Europe is waking up and staring down all the liberal programs they've instituted over the last 40-50 years (like multiculturalism, the supreme nanny states, etc.). Any progress Europe makes in the right direction, I'll cheer. I just hope they do it faster, because I don't believe we need to save that continent a third time (sorry, JFM and others across the pond).
Posted by: BA || 03/15/2006 22:14 Comments || Top||

#15  Too late.
Posted by: gromgoru || 03/15/2006 23:57 Comments || Top||


Southeast Asia
Bali boomers say they're ready to die
Three militants awaiting trial for their alleged role in last year's Bali bombings said Wednesday they considered themselves martyrs and are ready to die.

Abdul Aziz, 30, Anif Solchahudin, 24, and Muhammad Cholily, 28, made the comments as they were transferred from a detention center to the prosecutor's office ahead of their trial.

They are accused of sheltering Noordin Top, an alleged leader of the al Qaeda-linked terror group Jemaah Islamiyah, ahead of the October 1, 2005 suicide bombings on the resort island of Bali that killed 20 people.

Noordin, a Malaysian national who remains on the run, allegedly planned the attack and several others in Indonesia in recent years.

"I am ready (to die) if my destiny says I have to die," Aziz, who has admitted to helping hide Noordin, told reporters.

"My life and my death are in the hands of God," Cholily said.

No date has been set for their trial, but the decision to move the three to the prosecutor's office means it will likely be soon. They will be charged under laws that carry a possible death penalty.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:25 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Well okaaaay then. Do it already.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 8:26 Comments || Top||

#2  What a coincidence -- we want to kill you. One more demonstration of the power of voluntary exchange.
Posted by: Perfesser || 03/15/2006 9:44 Comments || Top||


Iraq
86 bodies found in Baghdad
Asked for directions to one newly found pile of bodies in Baghdad, Haider Latif Ugaili, an 18-year-old black-market gasoline vendor, replied: That one's over there. But we found three bodies here this morning.

Daylight Tuesday brought the discovery of at least 86 shot or strangled men across the city, most of them with hands tied and many of them tortured, according to police. They included 27 corpses in one of the first mass graves to be found in the capital since the U.S. invasion three years ago.

The day's high toll - of execution-style killings involving large numbers of victims, not the bombing deaths that have characterized insurgent attacks and dominated violence in Iraq for more than two years - appeared linked to escalating cycles of sectarian slaughter since the Feb. 22 bombing of a Shiite shrine in the city of Samarra. The toll since the bombing is nearing 1,000, according to government figures; four Iraqi and international officials tracking the toll say it topped that figure in the first week after the Samarra bombing.

Tuesday's body count went largely unremarked upon in public statements by Iraqi leaders, including Shiite and other political figures who convened in a heavily guarded meeting in Baghdad meant to help kick off efforts to form a government, one day shy of three months after national elections. A Defense Ministry spokesman, Maj. Gen. Abdul Aziz Mohammed, said the day's victims included Shiites and Sunnis and called the killings "a premeditated attempt to incite civil war."

The mass grave was found in a former gypsy enclave bordering a heavily Shiite neighborhood on the eastern edge of Baghdad. A police spokesman, Col. Hadi Hasan, said the victims were men aged 25 to 40. All were found with their hands tied and wearing civilian clothes, Hasan said. They appeared to have been killed between two and 10 days ago, police said.

Children playing soccer discovered the grave by its smell, police separately told the Reuters news agency.

In the west Baghdad neighborhood of Khadra, near a school, police found a minibus containing the bodies of 10 men. "Some of them were shot and some were choked by ropes," Hasan said.

Another minibus in the western Sunni neighborhood of Amriya contained the corpses of eight men, and Hasan said all had been bound, blindfolded and shot.

In Rustamiya, a mixed Sunni-Shiite neighborhood in southern Baghdad, authorities found five men shot dead and covered by blankets, Hasan said.

Authorities picked up the bodies of 11 men in the mixed southern neighborhood of Madean. All wore the dishdasha, or traditional Arab dress, Hasan said.

In Kasrah Atash, in southern Baghdad, killers left the bodies of seven men by the side of the road. The men had been tortured and shot, Hasan said, adding that a piece of paper left with their bodies stated: "The fate of traitors."

Iraqi police also found more than 15 corpses Tuesday morning in Sadr City, according to Capt. Ahmed al-Ani, a spokesman for the Interior Ministry. Sadr City is a trash-strewn, dusty urban district that is home to 2 million Shiites, overwhelmingly loyal to Muqtada Al-Sadr, a young Shiite cleric and militia leader.

The timing and means of Tuesday's killings raised suspicions that some of the deaths were retaliatory attacks for bombings Sunday evening that killed 58 people in Sadr City. The concerted series of bomb attacks was one of the deadliest of the war in the Shiite enclave and suggested Sunni insurgents or their allies had made their first inroads into the district, which is policed by Sadr's Mahdi Army militia, whose members number in the thousands.

After the first wave of violence that followed the Feb. 22 mosque bombing, survivors accused black-clad Mahdi fighters of taking away men who were later found dead in Baghdad's morgue. Officials with Sadr's organization denied any role by his militia, and Sadr political leaders and spokesmen on Tuesday denied there had been any killings in Sadr City on Monday or Tuesday.

The number of execution-style deaths reported by police and news media usually are only a fraction of the total, according to morgue statistics that have shown such killings doubling since the middle of last year. International officials say the morgue has been increasingly reluctant to disclose the number of execution-style killings, which are often linked with Shiite militias or the security forces of the Shiite-controlled Interior Ministry.

On Tuesday, Health Ministry spokesman Qasim Yahya said he had no new figures for killings of any sort. The acting morgue director, Qais Hasan, declined to give any figures Tuesday without signed clearance from the Health Ministry. When that was obtained, he declined again to give any figures, saying he was away from his office and did not want to give an incorrect accounting.

A worker outside the morgue said the Health Ministry over the weekend increased from once a week to twice a week its shipments of unclaimed bodies to the southern city of Najaf for burial, sending roughly 150 Friday and about 70 Monday.

Mahdi Army fighters, who have adopted street clothes since people called attention to black-uniformed death squads after the mosque bombing, stood with AK-47 assault rifles and walkie-talkies outside the morgue and at a checkpoint in the neighborhood leading to the mass grave in east Baghdad.

On a main road a few blocks from the mass grave, Ugaili, the black-market vendor, pointed to the spot a few feet away where he said police in pickup trucks and sport-utility vehicles had come to collect three blanket-covered bodies. They also retrieved either two or three from the other side of the road, he said. A laborer at the site, Ali Hussein, 19, gave the same account separately.

"It's become normal to find bodies," Ugaili said. "It's every other day."

Also Tuesday, Interior Minister Bayan Jabr amplified in an interview with the Associated Press accounts of what he said was a foiled al-Qaida plot to overrun Baghdad's Green Zone. Defense Minister Sadoun al-Dulaimi gave a similar account Monday, saying the plot involved more than 400 al-Qaeda fighters allegedly recruited to infiltrate Iraq's army and had been discovered with the arrest of one suspect.

U.S. military and civilian spokesmen said they had no information on the alleged plot.

U.S. Army officials also disclosed Tuesday that two men carrying Iraqi police identification and two men carrying identification of Aal-Sadr's Mahdi Army were among nine men arrested Monday on suspicion of involvement in a plot to assassinate Iraqi Interior Ministry officials.

A U.S. Army patrol stopped the men in two vehicles for a random search on Monday night and found in each vehicle a "list of names and addresses of personnel to shoot on sight. Names on the list included" Interior Ministry officials, Maj. Steve Stover, a deputy public affairs officer with the 4th Infantry Division, said in an e-mail statement.

The nine men were taken to a U.S. detention center, Stover said.

The day's other reported dead included three bodies found in the northern city of Mosul, one Shiite pilgrim killed by a bomb near the southern city of Karbala, and the editor of an Iraqi weekly shot to death near his home in Baghdad, police told news agencies. The editor, Muhsin Khudhair, was the third Iraqi journalist killed in a week.

The U.S. military also reported Tuesday the deaths of two American soldiers in Anbar province on Monday, without giving details.

Tuesday's grisly finds unfolded as Iraqi politicians began what they said would be daily meetings between all of the main political parties to form a national unity government. The creation of a government has been delayed for three months - since parliamentary elections Dec. 15 - by political power struggles, sectarian bloodshed and opposition to the Shiites' nominee for prime minister, Ibrahim al-Jafari, who has been interim prime minister for about a year.

The meeting was hosted by Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, a prominent Shiite cleric and head of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, a key member of the Shiite coalition that won 130 seats in the December balloting, the largest block in the 275-member parliament.

Participants in the meeting said afterward that little headway had been made.

U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad said in an interview published Sunday in London's al-Hayat newspaper that the delay was "due to the fact that politicians are occupied with distribution of posts, and their discussions are about individuals. They have to understand that the interest of Iraq must come first, as we are in a crisis. The country is bleeding and headed for a civil war, and it's the responsibility of Iraqi politicians to feel people's pains and understand their needs."

That sentiment was echoed in the streets of the capital Tuesday, where roadblocks, street closures and other security measures put in place for the gathering of political leaders at Hakim's headquarters caused gridlock across central Baghdad.

"What kind of people are those politicians who did not even think of the people and how would they go to work and school?" said Ahmed Sabah, 23, a student at the Baghdad University. "How do they expect to build a developed country if an employee can't go to his job and a student and professor cannot go to their school?"

"I am sure that after this terrible day," he said, "they will not agree on anything."
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:23 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The nine men were taken to a U.S. detention center, Stover said.
Turn these guys over to the torturers Iraqi police for questioning.

Posted by: wxjames || 03/15/2006 11:10 Comments || Top||

#2  It was a dark and stormy night. In this trash strewn city, brought to the brink of civil war, it was normal to find bodies covered with paper wrappers and flies. Families awakening to find loved ones missing would walk the filthy streets of this anguished city, filled with sectarian strife and the sickly sweet stench of death, in the hopes of finding their loved ones. They trudged through the gutters of blood and listened for the happy shrieks of children playing soccer. Children, accustomed to war, had discovered that the plentiful piles of gruesome graves provided the only happiness they could find in this city of death. An endless supply of soccer balls.

I approached a woman in black at the edge of the soccer field. I asked her for directions and asked her,

Can you give me any real interesting facts about who did this? About who the people were that were killed here? Were they Sadar's militia men? Were they Sunnis? Were they Shia?

I don't know, she said.

Can you give me anything other than adjectives that I haven't already abused and tortured to death?

No, she said.

Can you tell me anything of about what happened here? I asked

No.

Hey no problem!!, I exclaimed, puffing out my chest. I can still string 700 adjectives together without saying really anything at all. I'm an AP writer!
Posted by: 2b || 03/15/2006 11:58 Comments || Top||

#3  Definitely an A in Creative Writing 101, 2b. Clever!
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/15/2006 13:33 Comments || Top||

#4  What's the name of the book, I want to buy it.
There's a part where a grieving widow drags you home because she can't live another minute without abuse, isn't there.
Posted by: wxjames || 03/15/2006 14:45 Comments || Top||

#5  :-) Thanks - I'm angling for an AP or Reuters job to report on Iraq. Nothing like sitting on a barstool in DC, making a few phone calls to get the death stats in Baghdad and getting paid to string together adjectives of sight, smell, and sounds.

Who? What? Why? Where? When? - pshaw. Too much trouble. One could get hurt!
Posted by: 2b || 03/15/2006 15:16 Comments || Top||

#6  Forget AP, straight to 60 Minutes 2b.
Posted by: 6 || 03/15/2006 17:38 Comments || Top||

#7  lol! If selected, I promise to strive hard for the highly coveted Fake But Accurate Dan Rather Memorial reward.
Posted by: 2b || 03/15/2006 19:29 Comments || Top||

#8  might I suggest Ms. Lucy Ramirez as your field producer?
Posted by: Frank G || 03/15/2006 21:07 Comments || Top||

#9  Not Mary Mapes? :)
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 21:09 Comments || Top||

#10  If I was a better man, I'd feel sorry for the victims and their families.
Posted by: gromgoru || 03/15/2006 23:22 Comments || Top||

#11  Ah grom, you make me feel bad. I in no way meant to mock the dead - to the contrary, I'm angry that reporter used the dead as props in their propaganda pieces. I meant only to mock the reporters goulish use of the sights, sounds and smells of the dead - for the purpose creating an atmosphere of doom and gloom in the hopes that Americans and their allies will go home and leave the Iraqi's to a true bloody civil war.

He failed to tell us the who what why and only engaged in the adjectives of creative writing to embellish the stats of the dead. it makes me mad. My heart goes to the victims and I'm truly sorry for overstating my point at their expense.
Posted by: 2b || 03/15/2006 23:48 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Phase 2 of SSIC investigation trucking along
The Senate Intelligence Committee has moved toward completing its long-awaited investigation of the Bush administration's prewar assertions about Iraq, with three of five sections nearly finished, the committee's chairman said Tuesday.

Seeking to quell controversy over the pace of the inquiry, Sen. Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) for the first time provided details and a partial timeline for completing the investigation, which has been underway for more than two years.

He acknowledged that drafts of the two most controversial sections were the ones that were not finished, and he provided no time frame for completing them.

The first of the two most controversial sections is an analysis of whether administration officials had adequate intelligence to back up their prewar public statements. The second is an evaluation of the Pentagon's Office of Special Plans, a defunct intelligence unit that challenged the CIA's conclusions.

The first stage of the Iraq investigation — a review of prewar intelligence — was released in July 2004, and found that nearly all of the conclusions of the CIA and other intelligence agencies were "either overstated or were not supported by the underlying intelligence reporting."

The more controversial second phase of the investigation was delayed until after the 2004 presidential election. However, little progress has been reported since then. Democrats have accused Roberts of whitewashing the inquiry, and orchestrated a shutdown of the Senate in November to protest the lack of progress. Republicans have accused Democrats of grandstanding for partisan gain.

Roberts said Tuesday that the Democrats' complaints were unfounded, adding that progress now was dependent on how fast committee members completed their individual reviews of the three drafts, due in early April.

"If people are serious about finishing Phase II, they don't need to shut down the Senate or hold press conferences decrying the process; they just need to come do the work," Roberts said.

Roberts did not, however, provide a date for public release of the completed sections, saying they would have to be vetted by intelligence agencies.

The three sections nearing completion, he said, include a comparison of prewar and postwar assessments of Iraq's weapons programs; the intelligence community's use of information from the Iraqi National Congress, the group headed by onetime Pentagon ally Ahmad Chalabi; and the nature of prewar intelligence assessments about postwar Iraq.

Democrats expressed muted optimism that the second phase was making progress.

"I welcome the chairman's sense of urgency in finally completing Phase II," said Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV (D-W.Va.), the panel's top Democrat. "Our goal should be to unite around a thorough, accurate and credible report that answers lingering questions about whether and how intelligence may have been misused."

Rockefeller noted, however, that "considerable work remains."

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), a senior member of the committee, also welcomed the timetable, but cautioned that the final report might not provide all of the answers the administration's critics seek.

"What we're trying to look at is how intelligence is used. Some of that will be answered in this, but not all of it," Feinstein said.

Roberts said he hoped to release each of the five sections as they were completed — a strategy that would get information to the public sooner, but could also minimize the impact of the investigation by releasing its findings piecemeal.

Roberts said the major impediment to completing the section on the Bush administration's statements was the sheer number of them — more than 300, from the president as well as his top staff. But Roberts said that investigators had found adequate intelligence to back up the administration's public assertions.

"You could make an intelligent justification for every statement," Roberts told reporters.

The Pentagon's Office of Special Plans, once run by former Undersecretary of Defense Douglas J. Feith, also is under investigation by the Defense Department's inspector general. The office was established as a separate analytic group within the Pentagon.

According to documents attached to the first-phase report by Democrats, an analyst from the Pentagon office told Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld in 2002 that the CIA's view that Iraq had no significant ties to Al Qaeda "should be ignored."

Roberts said the Senate Intelligence Committee inquiry into the office should await the outcome of the inspector general's review. Democrats have argued that the two inquiries could be conducted simultaneously. But Roberts said he was not eager to issue subpoenas or take other actions that would cause the administration to invoke executive privilege.

"To have that going on in the midst of a war on terror is not a good idea," Roberts said. "I want cooperation, not confrontation."
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:21 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: WoT
Experts doubt that Ayman was in Lodi
An FBI informant shocked a Sacramento federal courtroom this week when he testified that he had frequently seen Al Qaeda's No. 2 leader in a mosque here during 1998 and 1999.

But terrorism experts and even federal officials expressed serious doubts Tuesday about Naseem Khan's testimony, saying there is little aside from his statements to suggest that Egyptian terrorist Ayman Zawahiri spent time in the sleepy Central Valley farming community.

Defense attorneys said the statements raise serious credibility issues about Khan, the government's chief witness against a Lodi ice cream truck driver and his son.

If Khan's reliability becomes a factor in the case, the prosecution of Umer Hayat, 48, and his son, Hamid Hayat, 23, could become the latest in a long string of problems the federal government has faced in trying alleged terrorists. Earlier this week, a Virginia judge halted the sentencing trial of Al Qaeda conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui in order to investigate apparent witness tampering by a federal attorney in the case.

Elsewhere, prosecutorial missteps have prompted judges to toss out convictions, and several juries have sided with the accused. Jurors acquitted a Florida college professor whose support of a Palestinian group prompted a terrorism indictment, while a case flopped against an Idaho computer science student facing prison time for designing a website that included information on terrorists.

Khan, 32, testified that he first told the FBI about Zawahiri in late 2001. The bureau subsequently hired Khan and paid him more than $200,000 in salary and expenses to infiltrate Lodi's Muslim community and secretly record conversations there between 2002 and 2005.

The younger Hayat is charged with providing material support to terrorism by attending a Pakistani training camp in 2003. Both father and son are charged with lying to the FBI.

On Tuesday, the Pakistani community of farmworkers, welders and truck drivers, many of whom have lived in Lodi for generations, reacted to the reports that one of the world's most notorious terrorists may have lived and worshiped here with a mixture of outrage and disbelief that the government would take the testimony seriously.

"What would he be doing here? We are Pakistani," said shop owner Mohammed Shoaib. "If there were an Egyptian speaking Arabic somebody would have seen him." Most of the estimated 2,500 Muslims in Lodi speak Urdu or Pashto, two major Pakistani languages.

"The FBI should know better," Shoaib said. "We don't know what is coming next. Maybe he'll say he saw Osama [bin Laden] in Lodi or Stockton."

National terrorism experts and U.S. officials also expressed doubt that Zawahiri spent time in Lodi, particularly during 1998 and 1999, the years in which Khan said he frequently saw the Egyptian attending the modest brick-and-wood-frame mosque in Lodi.

"This is pretty far-fetched," said Rand Corp. terrorism specialist Brian Jenkins.

Security consultant Daniel Coleman, former FBI case agent for Osama bin Laden, said that "by 1998, Zawahiri was in Afghanistan and never returned to the United States. He was on TV in Afghanistan in 1998."

Several U.S. counter-terrorism officials in Washington, D.C., also dismissed Khan's assertion that he saw Zawahiri "coming or going" from the California mosque.

The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity and only if their government agencies were not identified, saying they were not authorized to speak about the issue, particularly during a criminal trial.

In the years immediately after the 1979-1989 Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, Zawahiri, who speaks fluent English, is known to have visited the United States on several occasions, including one trip to Northern California in 1991 under the assumed name Dr. Abdel Muez. Using the pseudonym, Zawahiri visited mosques in the Bay Area, Sacramento and Stockton and raised money that he said was for Afghan refugees.

But federal officials, including one who has long tracked Zawahiri, said they were virtually certain that the Egyptian had not entered the United States after 1995.

On Aug. 7, 1998, truck bombs blew up two U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania nearly simultaneously. Within hours, U.S. officials said Tuesday, both Bin Laden and Zawahiri were placed at the top of the FBI's most-wanted list — a designation that was likely to generate thousands of wanted posters with photos of the men for widespread circulation in and outside the United States.

"So I don't see him really flitting around California" after that, said one U.S. official.

Under questioning by Assistant U.S. Atty. Laura Ferris, Khan testified he was first approached by federal agents in late 2001 at his apartment in Bend, Ore., where he worked as a convenience store manager and McDonald's restaurant worker.

Khan testified Monday that as FBI agents questioned him, photographs of Bin Laden and Zawahiri coincidentally appeared on his television screen.

He told the agents that he had seen Zawahiri in the Lodi mosque.

Attorney Wazhma Mojaddidi, who represents Hamid Hayat, speculated Tuesday that Khan's statements about seeing Zawahiri in Lodi could have triggered the investigation that ultimately led to the case against his clients. "It's possible that he may have sparked this whole investigation with this ridiculous claim," she said. "The government in effect has impeached its own witness."

Even the federal agents who followed up on Khan's assertion appear to have quickly abandoned interest in documenting the Zawahiri connection. In hours of videotaped interrogation of Umer and Hamid Hayat filed in federal court, the two were never questioned about knowing or seeing Zawahiri.

Basim Elkarra, Sacramento director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said that none of the Lodi residents his group represents was asked by the FBI about Zawahiri's alleged attendance at the mosque.

Instead the investigation seemed to target the town's two imams, Mohammad Adil Khan and Shabbir Ahmed.

In the videotaped interrogations, FBI Agent Timothy Harrison describes the imams as "the big fish" in the case. However, both religious leaders were allowed to be voluntarily deported to their native Pakistan.

As a result, the case that began with allegations about super-terrorist Zawahiri, ended up as a lone federal prosecution of the Hayats. If convicted, Hamid Hayat faces up to 39 years in prison. His father faces a maximum sentence of 16 years.

"They came up short on their investigation and they had to find a way to justify all this expense so they came up with an ice cream truck driver and his son," said defense attorney Johnny L. Griffin, who represents Umer Hayat.

After midday prayers at the low-slung Lodi mosque, several worshipers vented their frustration over the federal investigation that has cast a shadow over their community. Parents complained that their children are taunted at school as "terrorists."

One man, who identified himself only as a 45-year-old welder who has lived in Lodi for 20 years, said that neighbors with whom he was friendly for years no longer speak to him. "In my neighborhood now, when they see me, they just go inside."

Mosque President Mohammed Shoaib, no relation to the shopkeeper of the same name, said Khan's testimony has "divided the community and harmed the Muslim community."

Shoaib said he has prayed at the mosque every day for many years and never encountered anyone resembling Zawahiri. "It's total nonsense," Shoaib said.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 03:19 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I was just passin' through
Must be seven months or more
Ran out of time and money
Looks like they took my friends
Oh, Lord, stuck in Lodi again
- Creedence Clearwater Revival
Posted by: Glenmore || 03/15/2006 8:35 Comments || Top||

#2  While that does sound wacky, the line of argument - "this witness here is talking about something goofy, therefore my clients are innocent of something completely different" has the strong stench of "Chewbacca defense" about it.
Posted by: Mitch H. || 03/15/2006 16:05 Comments || Top||

#3  Mosque President Mohammed Shoaib, no relation to the shopkeeper of the same name, said Khan's testimony has "divided the community and harmed the Muslim community."

Shoaib said he has prayed at the mosque every day for many years and never encountered anyone resembling Zawahiri. "It's total nonsense," Shoaib said.


Hands up everyone who trusts the president of a mosque? Especially this one -- as I recall, their imam was known in Muslim circles as a fundraiser for Pakistani madrassas of a particularly vehement sort.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 16:11 Comments || Top||


Europe
Germany: Khan's Nuclear Mafia On Trial
The world's first-ever court case against a presumed member of Khan's global nuclear weapons bazaar is beginning on Friday. The German defendant may have helped Libya acquire nuclear weapons technology. Iran is implicated too. Parts for a centrifuge were discovered on a container ship bound for Libya in 2003. It was the beginning of the end for A.Q. Khan's nuclear mafia. The building itself is modest. Dating from the 1960s, it's covered with rust-brown steel siding on the outside and nicotine-yellow ceiling tiles on the inside. But the building, a courthouse in the German city of Mannheim, has been charged with a vitally important mission -- case number 25 Kls 613 Js 17967/05. The mission is that of saving humanity, and it starts at 10:00 a.m. this Friday.
"Saving humanity?" I would be happy with seeing these Doctor Evils brought to justice.
There are two ways to describe the case against German engineer and businessman Gotthard Lerch coming before the Mannheim District Court. One involves the complex language of Germany's War Weapons Control Act and Foreign Trade Act -- the language of the indictment against Lerch. The other description is much easier to understand. Lerch stands accused of aiding and abetting the end of the world through nuclear Armageddon...
(two parts)
Posted by: Listen To Dogs || 03/15/2006 01:29 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
The phantom menace enemy and the West’s identity crisis
Tehran Times -By our staff writer
Who likely is a Yale student...
The identity crisis in international relations is closely interlinked with the issue of political enemies and rivals.
Brilliant! Such insight! Cuts right to the heart of the matter with a statment of the patently obvious!
Hostilities between nations date back to time immemorial.
Almost immemorial. The first wall of Jericho dates to about 8000 B.C. Presumably it was built to keep bad guyz out, rather than the local Natufians in.
In ancient times, we saw epic confrontations, such as the wars between the Persians and the Greeks and the Punic Wars between the Romans and the Carthaginians. Later, the Crusades became one of the most relentless symbols of hostility in history.
stuck in the Middle Ages, as always.
They're jealous. They missed out on the 100 Years War, the 30 Years War, and the 7 Years War. They didn't get to go to war over Jenkins' Ear. Having delusions of adequacy, they think that their war's more important than the other ones, just because they were involved...
Shortly afterwards, the Mongol invasions of Iran, Iraq, and Europe injected a great sense of horror and hostility into the history of humanity. The main question that arises is: Why have enmity and war always existed?
"Ogg not like Grook! Ogg conk Grook!"
Furthermore, why have some societies felt compelled to define their identity through their enemies?
because Allan told us to???
I think it's kind of the reverse the vampire phenomenon, where if they didn't have the reflection they'd lack any substance at all.
Do opposition of interests or lack of resources cause animosity?
"Ogg not have woman! Ogg conk Grook and take Oola!"
Is the existence of an enemy, or, if one does not exist, the creation of a phantom menace enemy, a vital necessity for all societies in the world? Although their enemies actually do take violent and hostile measures, in their quest for an identity, nations usually attribute negative characteristics like cowardice, violence, lust, and dishonesty to their enemies but regard themselves as free of such deficiencies.
Maybe because it's those enemies who seem hellbent on taking violent and hostile measures?
"Ogg not cowardly, violent, lustful and dishonest! Ogg merely sneak up on Grook, conk him, rape Oola, and then deny whole thing!"
Unfortunately, societies often do define their identity through their enemies, and a great number of societies experience an identity crisis when they have no enemy.
"We have no enemies!"
"We are nothing!"
"Help! Help! I'm declining!"
"I'm fallllllinnnnnggggg!"
In order to resolve their identity crises, nations actually use the concept of the enemy to define their policies and objectives.
Sounds like a good description for most Islamic countries these days
... whether it makes any sense or not.
For example, the existence of an enemy of any kind was a constructive necessity for the Romans.
"Aye, Crassus! I find those Gauls to be a constructive necessity!... By the way, would you like something to eat? You've got a lean and hungry look!"
The endurance and scope of the Roman Empire was in large part due to its constant conflicts with enemies.
"And inshallah our empire will last even longer!!!"
When the existence of an enemy becomes a constructive element for a society, real and illusory enemies arise.
Like Ostrogoths and Muslims...
Yet there are different kinds of hostility.
No! Reeeeeally?
The clash between Greece and Iran in ancient times was an authentic animosity, whereas the animosity between North Korea and South Korea is in some ways illusory, since the citizens of the two countries belong to the same ethnic group and have a common cultural background.
ah, yes .. if only those recalcitrant southern Koreans had realized this - what's a little tyranny among friends?
Meanwhile, the Cold War between the Soviet Union and the United States, although based on the ideological differences of the two sides, was also defined by certain cultural differences. They actually could have posed no threat to each other.
Damn. You mean my husband spent a career in the Air Force defending against a strategic nuclear threat for no good reason. Hell - his mother was right, he should have gone to medical school instead. Just think how much richer we'd be right now. Man am I pissed ....
However, when each side advocated the superiority of its political theories and challenged the other’s definitions of certain fundamental economic and social concepts, hostilities arose, triggering an identity crisis in each country. Later, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the United States could no longer justify its military presence in the Persian Gulf and other parts of the globe. Thus, the West felt obliged to create an enemy for itself. At first, differences between the Islamic and Western civilizations were exaggerated.
I mean, what's a little beheading among friends? Why all the fuss about stoning women to death for being raped? And really, those Americans are WAY too uptight about sermons calling for their destruction.
This facilitated U.S. efforts to fabricate an illusory enemy.
"Simkins! Conjure me an illusory enemy! Have him in my office by 10 o'clock!"
Then 9/11 provided a vague but new enemy for the United States.
"Mr. President! The twin towers have collapsed and 3000 people are dead! The Pentagon was attacked! Muslims are dancing in the streets in celebration!"
"Hmmm... Sounds like a vague but new enemy, Karl!"
Although terrorism is a great threat for the West, and particularly for the United States, it is at the same time the best kind of enemy, in that it helps the West define its identity.
"We may have our faults, but we don't lop people's heads off!"
"Kinda the definition of our side, isn't it, Karl?"
Terrorism is also the best pretext for U.S. intervention in any country.
It'll do for a start.
He's conflating "pretext" and "reason," a condition known as "conflatulence."
By magnifying the threat of terrorism and introducing it as not only the enemy of the United States but rather as the enemy of all humanity, the U.S. thus justifies its policy of aggression.
Since everybody's head comes off in pretty much the same manner, I don't see how it's not the enemy of all humanity.
This act has helped some nations and governments temporarily overcome their identity crises. The introduction of the phantom menace enemy has also created a seemingly endless global war with no clear goals, an astronomical rise in the U.S. defense budget, and windfall profits for the U.S. military-industrial complex, which may have been the original goal in the first place.
And that's just the opening moves, buddy.
Posted by: Pappy || 03/15/2006 01:05 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Written by a child, a moron, or a Democrat?

YOU BE THE JUDGE!
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 5:25 Comments || Top||

#2  Redundant?
Posted by: no mo uro || 03/15/2006 6:51 Comments || Top||

#3  It does read like something I might've written - back in the 6th Grade after completing the SRI series.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 7:29 Comments || Top||

#4  RC, I think you've almost got it.
Written FOR a child, a moron, or a Democrat?
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 03/15/2006 8:31 Comments || Top||

#5 
could have a picture of Senator Palpatine in the article
Posted by: mhw || 03/15/2006 9:09 Comments || Top||

#6  Just Curious works for the Teheran Times?
Posted by: tu3031 || 03/15/2006 10:38 Comments || Top||

#7  Strange indeed.... he never mentioned or lashed out at Jews once. He most certainly must be distracted to the absolute extreme.
Posted by: Visitor || 03/15/2006 11:15 Comments || Top||

#8  the Cold War between the Soviet Union and the United States, although based on the ideological differences of the two sides, was also defined by certain cultural differences. They actually could have posed no threat to each other.

Well, I'll admit that no soviet ever strapped a bomb on his person and blew up a nightclub in NY, but there was the matter of several thousand multi-megaton nuclear weapons we had pointed at each other for about 40 years.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 12:46 Comments || Top||

#9  Details. Mere details.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 13:22 Comments || Top||

#10  This treatise is just the preamble of a greater multi-volume rant. You will find, that in either installment 2 or 3 that it will go heavily into the Jooooos and why they poisoned the soup of the ME by their mere presence.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 03/15/2006 22:00 Comments || Top||


Iraq
Sadr blames Zarqawi for Sadr City violence
Radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, whose directives can send thousands of heavily armed militiamen spilling into the streets, called for calm Monday and blamed terror group ``al-Qaeda in Iraq" for the carnage in Baghdad's Sadr City slum that killed at least 48 people.

Speaking at a news conference in the Shiite holy city of Najaf, south of Baghdad, al-Sadr also sought to blunt rage against Iraq's minority Sunni Muslim community in a bid to prevent the country from slipping into full-blown civil war.

"We are not weak, but we don't want to be dragged to a civil war. So, I will keep calling for calm," the cleric said.

Al-Sadr has evolved from a minor Shiite figure dependent on his dead father's reputation as a dissident during Saddam Hussein's regime to become one of the country's most influential Shiite figures. Millions of Shiite faithful hang on his words and on Monday he used them for a bitter attack on Iraqi leaders.

"The politicians are busy, with one saying I want to be the prime minister and the other saying I want to be the president. They have forgotten the people and are looking out only for their narrow interests," he said.

By blaming Jordanian-born Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's al-Qaeda fighters for the attack, al-Sadr lifted the onus of blame from the mainstream Sunni community.

While Sunnis have been deeply involved in the insurgency that has raged in Iraq since shortly after the U.S.-led invasion toppled Saddam, their fighters have mainly fought separately from al-Qaeda forces which are mainly from outside Iraq.

Al-Sadr's reaction to the deadly bombings in Sadr City about nightfall Sunday was viewed as critical to how the country's majority Shiites would respond the attack. His declaration Monday had the potential to inspire all-out civil strife.

Sectarian feelings in the country were inflamed to the brink of civil war by the Feb. 22 bombing of a Shiite shrine and the subsequent revenge killings that targeted the Sunni community and damaged and destroyed dozens of its mosques.

There also has been a leadership void as bickering Iraqi politicians have held up a first session of parliament for three months after its election Dec. 15, unable to agree about the make up of a new government that must be approved within 60 days of the legislature's first sitting.

On Sunday, after meeting with U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, the country's major party leaders agreed to daily meetings beginning Tuesday in a bid to hammer out differences. Parliament is now scheduled to open for the first time on Thursday.

The United States is pressing Iraqi politicians to form a unity government as a precondition for Washington's hopes to begin pulling troops out of the country this summer.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 00:22 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Yesterday, this Mook included the United States in his diatribe . Whatta twerp.
Posted by: Ptah || 03/15/2006 8:51 Comments || Top||

#2  Needs a promotion - to "corpse."
Posted by: mojo || 03/15/2006 11:18 Comments || Top||

#3  "Yeah, we got trouble...
Right here in Sadr city...
With a capital 'Z',
And that rhymes with 'T',
And that stands for Terr."
Posted by: DeadRobertPreston || 03/15/2006 20:48 Comments || Top||


Terror Networks
Al-Qaeda abandoning Iraq to target the West?
ABU MUSAB AL-ZARQAWI has suddenly disappeared. As briskly as he has emerged, the Jordanian high school dropout who became the undisputed leader of the Iraqi insurgency has descended into obscurity. Where is the man who singlehandedly created from scratch a formidable guerrilla army in occupied Iraq and whom Osama bin Laden called the Emir of Al Qaeda in Iraq?

A year after it assumed the name Al Qaeda in the Land of the Two Rivers (Iraq), Zarqawi's group took a back seat. In an Internet message posted Jan. 15, Abu Maysara al-Iraqi, the group's spokesman, announced the establishment of the Mujahideen Shura Council in Iraq, an alliance of six Salafi jihadi groups created to lead the ''fight to face the infidels and their followers of the converters," unify the mujahideen as per Sharia [Islamic law], and ''clear the mist off people's eyes."

A few days after the council was established, Al Qaeda in Iraq ceased to post communiques. Abu Maysarah temporarily signed the new council's communiques, but then he, too, stopped. The baffled jihadi community initially believed that Zarqawi headed the new council. But on Jan. 20, the council posted a communique crowning its emir: Abdullah Rashid al-Baghdadi.

Why, then, did Zarqawi's group surrender its position and succumb to the integration? The answers may be found in a letter from Ayman al-Zawahri, Al Qaeda's second in command, to Zarqawi, from July 2005.

After congratulating Zarqawi for his jihad in Iraq, Zawahri described Al Qaeda's plans: ''The jihad in Iraq requires several incremental goals. The first stage: Expel the Americans from Iraq. The second stage: Establish an Islamic authority or emirate . . . a caliphate -- over as much territory as you can to spread its power in Iraq, i.e., in Sunni areas. The third: Extend the jihad wave. . ."

The first stage is a result of the US invasion of Iraq. The second stage, it appears, is beginning. The establishment of the council may well be its opening bell. Zawahri also describes how and by whom the plan will unfold: ''Americans will exit soon, Allah willing, and the establishment of a governing authority . . . does not depend on force alone. Indeed, it's imperative that, in addition to force, there be an appeasement of Muslims and a sharing with them in governance and in the Shura [consulting] council and in promulgating what is allowed and what is not allowed . . . This must be achieved through the people of the Shura and who possess authority to determine issues and make them binding, and who are endowed with the qualifications for working in Sharia."

Therefore, to advance the plan, Iraqis must be in leadership positions; so must be their emir.

''And it does not appear that the mujahideen, much less Al Qaeda in the Land of the Two Rivers, will lay claim to governance without the Iraqi people. Not to mention that that would be in contravention of the Shura methodology . . ."

Thus Zawahri explained why Zarqawi must give up his position. He then addressed the timing of the changes: ''Things may develop faster than we imagine . . . we must be ready to start now, before events overtake us, and before we are surprised by the conspiracies of the Americans and the United Nations and their plans to fill the void behind them. We must take the initiative. . . . This is the most vital part. This authority, or the Sharia emirate that is necessary, requires fieldwork starting now, alongside combat and war."

Following these instructions, Zarqawi abdicated his position. He had not intended to remain in Iraq forever anyway; he used Iraq only as a springboard for his long-term goal -- establishment of a global caliphate.

Zarqawi said in a January 2005 audio message: ''The caliphate is the entrustment [of Allah] on Earth, the guidance of people to the path of Allah, and the implementation of His world in life. . . . This group has no other choice but to be patient and endure [the hardship of] the path it has followed, and consider with Allah, the leaders and members it has lost, and must follow their path; for Allah has chosen this Ummah [Muslim nation], therefore it must not be impatient, as victory is inevitable."

Toward that goal, attacks by Zarqawi's group have expanded beyond Iraq's borders. His group participated in the rocket attack on US Navy ships at the Jordanian port of Aqaba on Aug. 19, 2005, the rocket attack on the Israeli city of Kiryat Shmona on Dec. 27, 2005, and the suicide attack on Western hotels in Amman on Nov. 9, 2005. Thus, Zarqawi and his Al Qaeda in Iraq are not gone; they have simply moved to the next stage of their jihad against the West.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 00:19 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "Things may develop faster than we imagine . . . we must be ready to start now, before events overtake us..." Zawahiri doesn't sound too optimistic, does he?
So where has Zarqawi gone? Iran?
Posted by: Glenmore || 03/15/2006 7:24 Comments || Top||

#2  According to my atlas, Jordan and Israel are west of Iraq, although I wouldn't go so far as to call them The West. Thus far, al-Zarqawi seems to be even less effective there against his goal of establishing his Caliphate than he was in Iraq. Nonetheless, the thought that al-Zarqawi has abandoned the effort in Iraq makes me all warm and happy.
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/15/2006 7:57 Comments || Top||

#3  Horace Greely or John Soule?
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 8:00 Comments || Top||

#4  If they can't succeed in Iraq, which is crawling with their supporters, my feeling is that they're really going to bomb (no pun intended) in the West.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 03/15/2006 12:13 Comments || Top||

#5  IOW, Rashid is just a figurehead, a proxy for the benefit of reporters and diplomats, or police. Sounds like the Burqua Boyz want to follow North Vietnam's example and create a Central Office for South Vietnam/ COSVN, an Islamic CentOfc for Global Jihad and new attacks inside America for 2006 and 2008 elex.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 03/15/2006 22:14 Comments || Top||

#6  "So where has Zarqawi gone? Iran?"

Anyone seen Mugniyeh lately? Last report had him sighted in Syria.
Posted by: doc || 03/15/2006 22:30 Comments || Top||


Iraq
Anbar insurgents claim al-Qaeda purged
Insurgent groups in one of Iraq's most violent provinces claim they have purged the region of three-quarters of al Qaeda's supporters after forming an alliance to force out the foreign fighters.

If true, it would mark a significant victory in the fight against Abu Musab Zarqawi, the head of al Qaeda in Iraq, and could partly explain the considerable drop in suicide bombings in Iraq recently.

"We have killed a number of the Arabs including Saudis, Egyptians, Syrians, Kuwaitis and Jordanians," London Daily Telegraph quoted an insurgent representative in the western province of Anbar as saying.

Iraq's Sunni Muslim insurgents had originally welcomed al Qaeda into the country, seeing it as a powerful ally in its fight against the American occupation. But relations became strained when insurgents supported calls for Sunnis to vote in the Dec. 15 election, a move they saw as essential to break the Shi'ite hold on government, but which al Qaeda viewed as a form of collaboration.

It became an outright split when a wave of bombings killed scores of people in Anbar resulting in a spate of tit-for-tat killings.

In reaction, the Sunni tribal leaders formed their own anti-al Qaeda militia, the Anbar Revolutionaries. The group has a core membership of about 100 people, all of whom had relatives killed by al Qaeda. It is led by Ahmed Ftaikhan, a former Saddam-era military intelligence officer, the Telegraph reported.

The group claims to have killed 20 foreign fighters and 33 Iraqi sympathizers. The United States has confirmed that six of Zarqawi's deputies were killed in the city of Ramadi in the province.

The Associated Press reported yesterday that an Anbar-based group has claimed it killed five top members of al Qaeda and associated groups in Ramadi.

The claim was posted on an Islamist Web site and attributed to the Anbar Revenge Brigade, the AP reported.

It listed the names of four suspected al Qaeda leaders. The fifth man, it said, was from Ansar al-Sunnah, a terrorist group affiliated with al Qaeda.

Iraq, which has suffered under a brutal insurgency for nearly three years, more recently has been racked by sectarian violence after the bombing of a Shi'ite shrine Feb. 22 in Samarra.

Afterward, Interior Ministry forces were accused of allowing Shi'ite militiamen loyal to radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr to conduct revenge attacks against Sunnis.

Yesterday, police found four hanged men dangling from electricity pylons in Baghdad's Shi'ite Sadr City slum, hours after car bombs and mortars shells ripped through teeming market streets, killing at least 58 persons.

Police said members of Sheik al-Sadr's Mahdi's Army militia had captured the four men on Sunday.

The operations of militias and death squads have drawn criticism from U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad.

Yesterday, the Iraqi Defense and Interior ministries said they have reached an agreement requiring them to conduct all raids jointly, in a bid to stop the operations of death squads masquerading as police commandos.

Interior Minister Bayan Jabr, who controls Iraqi police, is a Shi'ite. Defense Minister Saadoun al-Dulaimi is a Sunni Muslim.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 00:15 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Fits rather well with the Zarqi thing about leaving Iraq to "fight" the West. Homeless. *sniff* Mere waifs amidst the carnage. *choke*
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 7:46 Comments || Top||


Major Baghdad al-Qaeda plot thwarted
The interior minister said Tuesday authorities had foiled an Al Qaeda plot that would have put hundreds of its men at critical guard posts around Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone, home to the U.S. and other foreign embassies as well as the Iraqi government. A senior Defense Ministry official said the 421 Al Qaeda fighters were actually recruited to storm the U.S. and British embassies and take hostages. Several ranking Defense Ministry officials have been jailed in the plot, the official said on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the information.
They were trying for their very own "Tet Offensive", cuz Iraq is just like Vietnam. Would have played that way in the press.
Interior Minister Bayan Jabr, in an interview with The Associated Press, said the 421 Al Qaeda recruits were one bureaucrat's signature away from acceptance into an Iraqi army battalion whose job is to control the gates and main squares in the Green Zone. The plot was discovered three weeks ago.

"You can imagine what could happen to a minister or an ambassador while passing through these gates when those terrorists are there," Jabr said in the interview conducted at his office inside the Green Zone — a 2-square-mile hunk of prime real estate on the west bank of the Tigris River. The area is a maze of concrete blast walls, concertina wire and checkpoints.

The Defense Ministry official said the plot was uncovered by the military intelligence and the General Intelligence department that works under the government.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 03/15/2006 00:14 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  This is interesting - between the above article and this one we learn that the Shiite Interior Minister and the Sunni Defense Minister are now cooperating/collaborating to fight the 'death squads' and to fight AQ plots against the government (or at least appear to be do so.) Maybe it's just me, but that smells a little like 'progress'.
Posted by: Glenmore || 03/15/2006 7:17 Comments || Top||

#2  Indeed, Glenmore. One can hope, anyway.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 7:38 Comments || Top||

#3  Is this the "big bang" that al qaida was talking about last week?
Posted by: Jeresh Snump4916 || 03/15/2006 9:13 Comments || Top||

#4  As a supporter of the war I find the infiltration of an Iraqi ministry at a high enough level to enable hundreds of AQ in positions of securtiy for our top people nt a little scary.Arabs may well be the most treacherous and ungrateful bastards on earth.Very scary.
Posted by: jkh || 03/15/2006 9:31 Comments || Top||

#5  "Arabs may well be the most treacherous and ungrateful bastards on earth."

Says it all.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 9:34 Comments || Top||

#6  Scary but not completely unexpected.

If one shrinks his/her thinking to the level of these barbaric, pre-civilization era bastards, such a plot is downright inevitable.

Moreover, at the rate of Iraqi recruitment (can't be fast enough for McCain and the donks), you are bound to have a 10 to 15% rate of subversives.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 16:45 Comments || Top||


Europe
Eu: Meps Sign Up To Fight Racism In Football
The European Parliament are set to adopt on Tuesday a resolution - endorsed by a record number of MPs from across the political spectrum - to tackle racism in football.
Boy, it's a good thing they don't have anything more serious than that to worry about...
The declaration calls on football governing bodies, leagues, clubs, players and fans to do more to fight racism in football, ahead of the World Cup taking place in Germany in June. A total 423 out of 732 MEPs have now signed the declaration, a spokesman for Dutch Socialist MEP Emine Bozkurt, one of five MEPs who initiated the resolution, told Adnkronos International (AKI). It urges the European football association UEFA and other competition organisers to take a tougher sanctions against racist abuse on and off the pitch, and demands new powers for referees.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I don't think you can really legislate out, well, assholes being assholes under the influence of football. That's what you have stringent enforcement for.
Posted by: Whumble Whater5278 || 03/15/2006 0:46 Comments || Top||

#2  Wow. Just when I thought Europe was going to collapse they bounce back with grim determination.

The muz better hope the European parliament never notices them.

Curtians for sure!
Posted by: kelly || 03/15/2006 10:26 Comments || Top||

#3  I have an idea, just make all opposing viewpoints illegal. That way if someone says something you don't like, you just call them a(n) apostate criminal and have them deported to Belgium.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 12:55 Comments || Top||

#4  Why not simply have all 22 players kick the ball into the same undefended goal. This would remove the source of conflict, foster international cooperation, and create goodwill?

Everyone could then head down the pub waving EU flags for a non-alcoholic beverage. Don't wanna offend the Muzzies...
Posted by: JDB || 03/15/2006 15:19 Comments || Top||


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Abbas, Peres held secret talks
But don't tell nobody, okay? 'Cuz they're secret.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Two has beens.
Posted by: gromgoru || 03/15/2006 2:14 Comments || Top||

#2  I won't tell, I promise.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 03/15/2006 5:41 Comments || Top||

#3  Perez isn't part of the government, as I recall. His negotiations are worth about as much as the promises Mr. James Earl Carter, President Emeritus, made to his U.N. friends, about which he threw a hissy fit when the State Dept. refused to deliver not long ago. Invalid and highly inappropriate behaviour from, as gromgoru so succinctly says, two has-beens (even if one of them is still in office, however powerless Hamas intends to keep him).
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/15/2006 6:54 Comments || Top||

#4  Agreed - and to the same purpose, namely to disrupt the policies being taken by the leaders who've replaced them.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 8:37 Comments || Top||

#5  For what purpose? Peres never fails to disappoint.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 20:10 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
Clerics could help check AIDS spread
I guess it would help if they stopped buggering young boys...
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I see a great future for this effort. After all, the clerics have been oh so helpful in checking the spread of polio in Nigeria. /sneer
Posted by: SteveS || 03/15/2006 8:43 Comments || Top||


Taliban office in Miranshah
Local Taliban in South Waziristan have been allowed to establish an office in Wana to “help restore law and order” in the area.
Brilliant. Simply brilliant. Cigarettes, the cure for cancer...
According to the BBC, the decision was taken in a meeting held here in the Jamia-ul-Aloom madrassa run by former MNA Maulana Noor. The participants of the meeting noted that crime was rising in Wana, particularly murder, robbery and drug trafficking.
Coinciding, in fact, with the increase in local Taliban influence...
Local cleric Maulvi Abass said the Taliban office will work to restore peace in the area and not to impose Sharia law, according to sources privy to the meeting. Locals can take their grievances to the office and they will be heard by a qazi, or Islamic judge, he said. The government did not oppose the establishment of the Taliban office because it knows it will improve the situation in the area, he said.
The gummint did not oppose the move because it's impotent.
Maulvi Abass was wanted by the government until he signed an agreement last year not to participate in or encourage attacks on security forces.
... and now he's taking charge...
Police arrested 22 Afghan refugees in North Waziristan on Tuesday, a day after ordering them to leave the country amid accusations they were sheltering militants, AP reported. Clashes this month between militants and security forces in North Waziristan have killed more than 100 militants and eight soldiers. The Afghan refugees “give shelter to their own people from across the border who create problems for us,” regional security official Sikandar Qayyum told Geo television.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Yeah, but I bet their office isn't as nice as the branch in New Haven, CT.
Posted by: DMFD || 03/15/2006 18:33 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Some perpetrators of Hariri killing likely had experience in terrorism — UN report
A UN investigation is closer to understanding the circumstances surrounding former Lebanese prime minister Rafiq Hariri's assassination, and believes some of the perpetrators may have been involved in terrorism before, according to a report released Tuesday.
Do tell? That comes as such a... ummm... what's the antonym for "surprise"?
Chief investigator Serge Brammertz said his team would meet with Syria's President Bashar Assad and Vice President Farouq Sharaa in the coming month as part of its investigation into the February 14, 2005, explosion that killed Hariri and 22 other people. He said Syria had promised more cooperation but he would wait to see whether it delivered.
The phrase "over their dead bodies" springs to mind, but I don't want to get too hopeful...
Brammertz's team said the blast was so meticulously planned that it probably was not the work of an inexperienced group. One theory is that a truck bomb killed Hariri, though investigators are also examining whether the bomb was buried in the road and detonated as his car passed. "The individuals who perpetrated this crime appear to be very 'professional' in their approach," the report said.
Y'mean they probably did something similar in the past? Reeeeeeeaally? Wowzers. Who'da thunkit?
"It must be assumed that at least some of those involved were likely experienced in this type of terrorist activity." Brammertz did not disclose many details about the investigation in his first report since becoming chief of the commission investigating Hariri's death. The lack of information was a marked contrast to the details delivered by his predecessor, Detlev Mehlis, who publicly and exhaustively described his theories about the explosion. Brammertz did not repeat Mehlis' conclusions that the killing could not have happened without the knowledge of senior Syrian and Lebanese intelligence officials. It was not clear if he disagreed with Mehlis or just did not want to discuss those details because of the sensitivity of the probe.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  You can't find comedy of this calibre just anywhere. The "press" in the Middle East has the genre cornered.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 9:39 Comments || Top||


Southeast Asia
Tsunami Scare Hits Tourist Resorts South of Manila
A false tsunami warning allegedly sparked by a "fake prophet" sent thousands of villagers fleeing their homes and has affected resorts south of Manila yesterday, officials said. Local officials said most of the evacuees were from the coastal towns of Nasugbu and Lian, which the man reportedly claiming to be an occultist said would bear the brunt of the tsunami.

Nasugbu Mayor Antonio Barcelon told reporters that up to 40,000 of the evacuees were from the barangays of Balaytigue, Bukana, Calayo, Natipuhan, Papaya, and Wawa in his town. Mayor Osita Vergara of Lian said the tsunami scare also affected residents from the villages of Balibago, Buyubusan, Luyahan, Lumanyag and Matabungkay and San Diego in her municipality. "They started leaving their houses Monday midnight as rumors of an oncoming tsunami spread like wildfire," she said in Filipino.

Local reports said an unidentified old man who claimed to be a prophet had warned that a tsunami would hit the Batangas shoreline 13 days after a minor quake was felt in the area last March 1. They described the rumor-monger as a "male vagabond clad in a white gown and carrying a wooden stick."
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  That Gandolf is such a prankster.
Posted by: Ebbagum Hupoque5445 || 03/15/2006 4:27 Comments || Top||

#2  Stake him on the beach at low tide, watch to see if his prediction (Drowning) comes true.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 03/15/2006 8:26 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Defiant Iran resumes N-talks with Russia
Iran and Russia held more nuclear talks on Tuesday as the UN Security Council prepared to consider US-led demands that it send a "very strong message" to Tehran over its suspected weapons programme. The closed-door talks in Moscow were launched at Iran's request on Monday, the same day that Russia accused Tehran of obstructing efforts to find a diplomatic solution. Russia's Security Council reported no progress in Tuesday's session, but said that the talks would continue. It did not say if the two sides were discussing Moscow's proposal to enrich uranium on Iran's behalf as a way to ensure that Tehran can get fuel for nuclear reactors without being able to master technology that can also be used to build bombs.
Yeah, yeah, whoopdy-doo, Alt-F11...
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:


India-Pakistan
Azam Tariq’s alleged murderer caught in Greece
A Pakistani arrested last weekend at an Athens airport was identified by Pakistani authorities on Tuesday as a fugitive cleric wanted for the murder of Maulana Azam Tariq. Pakistani authorities said that Sayed Mohammed Sibtain Kazmi, a Shia cleric accused of involvement in the 2003 murder of the Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan head, was arrested at Athens International Airport on Saturday.
Holy man-on-holy man violence. I like it.
Greek police have not confirmed the suspect’s identity and said only that a Pakistani national wanted for murder in his country was arrested on Saturday after arriving from Britain. Police also said that the suspect previously had travelled to the Netherlands, Germany and France and was found carrying a fake passport.
It's an old Pakistani tradition. Wonder where he got his money?
Interior Minister Aftab Sherpao identified Kazmi, saying that he is accused of involvement in the killing of Tariq. Kazmi has been on the run since being declared fugitive in 2004, and Interpol has issued an international warrant for his arrest. Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Tasnim Aslam said that Pakistani authorities would likely seek Kazmi’s extradition but no formal application had yet been made. Greek judicial authorities said that a panel could consider extraditing him. But under Greek law, a suspect cannot be extradited if he faces the death penalty in his home country.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [15 views] Top|| File under:

#1  swimming turbin
Posted by: RD || 03/15/2006 0:50 Comments || Top||

#2  Looks like the tie I got my dad for Father's Day a couple years back.
Posted by: Seafarious || 03/15/2006 1:07 Comments || Top||

#3  Clearly a momentary aberration, Seafarious. Normally you have exquisite taste. ;-)
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/15/2006 6:58 Comments || Top||

#4  In my experience, it's exactly what daughters do to their fathers, consciously and knowingly and with full intent aforethought, lol.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 7:37 Comments || Top||

#5  Yes indeed, where did he get those globe trotting dollars? Nice designer spectacles as well. Those, along with that semi-praying mits and 1000 meter stare give him that mystical, satanic verses look. Is that a bloody Mont Blanc in his pocket?
Posted by: Besoeker || 03/15/2006 8:10 Comments || Top||

#6  UPDATE: ATHENS - A Shiite imam wanted by Pakistan for the murder of a politician has been granted bail on condition that he does not leave the country while Greek justice considers the case, officials said on Wednesday. Mohamed Sibden Kazmi, 50, was arrested at Athens’ international airport on Saturday on the basis of an international arrest warrant issued by Pakistan. The holder of a British passport as well as several forged passports, Kazmi has been resident in London for several years.

Initially held in police custody, he was freed by a prosecutor on Tuesday night on condition that he remain in Greece. His case will shortly be examined by appeal judges, who are waiting for legal documents from Pakistan before deciding on his eventual extradition.

According to police, Kazmi had come to Greece to give a series of addresses to the Pakistani community in Athens. Pakistan’s embassy in Athens refused to comment when telephoned by AFP.
Posted by: Steve || 03/15/2006 8:27 Comments || Top||

#7  You know, while I favor the death penalty I can understand countries that don't and that won't extradite on that basis -- but ONLY if they then take FULL responsibility for the sob they refuse to turn over.

Unfortunately, we're seeing a lot of European countries want it both ways: refuse to keep terror suspects in prison or to extradite them (Italy a while back), setting them free (Germany, any one?).

If they want to surrender their own countries and civilization that's their call, but it pisses me off that they expect us to do the same.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 8:32 Comments || Top||

#8  Initially held in police custody, he was freed by a prosecutor on Tuesday night on condition that he remain in Greece.

Any bets he's in Turkey in time for Friday prayers?
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 8:47 Comments || Top||

#9  Sons can do the same thing, but need to collaborate with their mother...
Posted by: Ptah || 03/15/2006 9:03 Comments || Top||

#10  European Rude Awakening coming soon to a theater near you.
Posted by: wxjames || 03/15/2006 11:23 Comments || Top||


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
EU's Poettering: aid to Palestinians after Hamas forms government not excluded
A senior European Parliament member said Tuesday he believes the EU may be able to continue with direct aid to the Palestinians even after Hamas forms a government.
cause, you know, we really, really WANT to and it seems so unfair that events are making it hard to do that. at least overtly ...
Hans-Gert Poettering, chairman of the conservative European People's Party, the biggest group in the EU assembly, said any longterm EU aid will be conditional on Hamas' changing its course and recognizing the right of Israel to exist. "We are not entirely pessimistic. ... Opinion polls show that of Hamas voters only a minority supports the (radical) position," Poettering said. "The majority voted for Hamas because they were disenchanted with corruption and the Fatah Party, defeated in this year's elections." "We'd like to give them a chance. It must be clear to them that, long term, this support is only possible if they recognize Israel."
how about substituting "right now" for "long term", okay?
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  In the meantime the victims of PanArabic-islamic nazism in Sudan will get zilch.

Posted by: JFM || 03/15/2006 9:51 Comments || Top||

#2  Right, the EU will only authorize 20 years worth of aid to the Palestinians unless Hamas renounces violence and recognizes Israel.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 13:16 Comments || Top||


Southeast Asia
Malacca Strait Much Safer Now, Sez Maritime Enforcement Chief
The Strait of Melaka, among the world's busiest shipping route, has been free of crime since last October and is the testimony that the waterway is now safe. The Director of the Maritime Enforcement Coordination Centre (MECC) Admiral Abdul Hadi A. Rashid said only 11 maritime crimes occurred up to September 2005 compared to 37 cases for the whole of 2004.

Abdul Hadi attributed the crime free scenario for the last five months at the 900 kilometer long strait as the outcome of concerted enforcement efforts taken by various maritime enforcement agencies. He admitted to the fact that up to last year MECC faced a major challenge in changing the perception on the Strait of Melaka's safety record. But the challenge prompted all relevant agencies to enhance surveillance and operations to boost security at the strait.

About 50,000 ships pass the narrow Strait of Melaka every year. Since early 2000 the strait was plagued by piracy and ship hijackings that prompted international attention.

Abdul Hadi said the International Maritime Bureau in its annual report recognised Malaysia's commitment in tackling crimes at the strait.
Posted by: Pappy || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Superb grafic. Nothing like a good old fashioned boarding party.
Posted by: Visitor || 03/15/2006 11:06 Comments || Top||

#2  Arrrr! Avast there!
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 12:59 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Democratic Senators Flee Feingold's Stink Bomb
Democratic senators, filing in for their weekly caucus lunch yesterday, looked as if they'd seen a ghost.

"I haven't read it," demurred Barack Obama (Ill.).

"I just don't have enough information," protested Ben Nelson (Neb.). "I really can't right now," John Kerry (Mass.) said as he hurried past a knot of reporters -- an excuse that fell apart when Kerry was forced into an awkward wait as Capitol Police stopped an aide at the magnetometer.

Hillary Rodham Clinton (N.Y.) brushed past the press pack, shaking her head and waving her hand over her shoulder. When an errant food cart blocked her entrance to the meeting room, she tried to hide from reporters behind the 4-foot-11 Barbara Mikulski (Md.).

"Ask her after lunch," offered Clinton's spokesman, Philippe Reines. But Clinton, with most of her colleagues, fled the lunch out a back door as if escaping a fire.

In a sense, they were. The cause of so much evasion was S. Res. 398, the resolution proposed Monday by Sen. Russell Feingold (D-Wis.) calling for the censure of President Bush for his warrantless wiretapping program. At a time when Democrats had Bush on the ropes over Iraq, the budget and port security, Feingold single-handedly turned the debate back to an issue where Bush has the advantage -- and drove another wedge through his party.

So nonplused were Democrats that even Sen. Charles Schumer (N.Y.), known for his near-daily news conferences, made history by declaring, "I'm not going to comment." Would he have a comment later? "I dunno," the suddenly shy senator said.

Republicans were grateful for the gift. The office of Sen. John Cornyn (Tex.) put a new "daily feature" on its Web site monitoring the censure resolution: "Democrat co-sponsors of Feingold Resolution: 0."

Many of Feingold's Democratic colleagues agree that Bush abused his authority with the NSA spying program. And they know liberal Democratic activists are eager to see Bush censured, or worse. But they also know Feingold's maneuver could cost them seats in GOP states.

Hence the elaborate efforts to avoid comment. Five Democratic senators called a news conference yesterday to talk about the Bush budget's "dangerously irresponsible priorities" -- but three of them fled the room before allowing questions. The other two were stuck.

"Was it a good idea for Senator Feingold to bring up this resolution?" came the first question, from CNN's Ed Henry.

"He brings up some very important issues," Debbie Stabenow (Mich.) ventured.

Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Can't believe Milbank wrote that. Who's his ghost writer?
Posted by: Danking70 || 03/15/2006 0:13 Comments || Top||

#2  "He brings up some very important issues," Debbie Stabenow (Mich.) ventured.

The standard CYA drivel for Moonbat Machinations.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 8:04 Comments || Top||

#3  I realise I'm not a political consultant, but it seems to me that being insane is not a viable strategy for attacking the evil G. W. McChimplerBurton, no matter how much fun it may be. I predict that Feingold will walk the plank alone on this one.
Posted by: SteveS || 03/15/2006 8:51 Comments || Top||

#4  But first the Dems will let him attack, trying to erode Bush's credibility a little more.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 9:00 Comments || Top||

#5  Article: At a time when Democrats had Bush on the ropes over Iraq, the budget and port security, Feingold single-handedly turned the debate back to an issue where Bush has the advantage -- and drove another wedge through his party.

You gotta love Milbank - always inserting his opinions when straight news would have done.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 03/15/2006 9:25 Comments || Top||

#6  LOL - check out this from Tim Chapman at townhall. :))
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 14:47 Comments || Top||

#7  I listened to Sen. Feingolds' speech yesterday I have to give him a A+ for "balls" and "chutzpah". He is known in the Democratic Party as sort of a maverick and independent thinker.

Even though he knows his resolution has little realistic chance of passing in a Republican controlled Congress, it was quite bold of him to actually go out and say the things he did, especially in the way he said them, knowing full well, that he may as well have put a target on his back for Bush backers to shoot at. I just wish I had been there watching the facial expressions of Republican Senators in attendance. It had to have been quite extraordinary.

Basically, Sen. Feigold was throwing a piece of red meat to the Democratic parties liberal anti-war base which had to be thrilled that someone finally came out and said and promote what they have been saying for quite some time now:

That President Bush is a criminal who should be censured and/or impeached.
Posted by: Just Curious || 03/15/2006 15:47 Comments || Top||

#8  The expressions on the faces of the Democrats as they tried to flee the media onslaught was even better.

Posted by: Seafarious || 03/15/2006 15:56 Comments || Top||

#9  touche!! Seafarious..lol

it's good to see you have a sense of humor..
Posted by: Just Curious || 03/15/2006 16:16 Comments || Top||

#10  Don't throw red meat to the Sheehan Fringe, they might become enboldened and threaten to hold their breathes until they get their way (one hopes).
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 17:05 Comments || Top||

#11  The one who (finally) showed balls was Frisk, who took up the Wisconsin loon on his offer and encouraged a Senate vote.

Feingold, immediately after he made a fool of himself, he left the floor rather than debate the matter with Specter. If he has balls, he wouldn't know it without a microscope and tweezers.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 17:12 Comments || Top||

#12  "Even though he knows his resolution has little realistic chance of passing in a Republican controlled Congress…"

Good God man! Even if the democrats were the majority in the Senate, a censure vote had absolutely no chance of passage. So what did Feingold’s obvious political grandstand accomplish? Other then exhibiting decorum not befitting an US Senator, a couple of things come to mind. First, he has removed all doubt from the minds of his Senate colleagues that he is anything other then completely agenda driven and therefore cannot be viewed as an honest broker. And judging by the orgasmic reaction from the progressive crowd ole Russ certainly got some name recognition should he fancy an ‘08 presidential bid. Quite “bold” indeed.
Posted by: DepotGuy || 03/15/2006 17:20 Comments || Top||

#13  I noticed Just Curious has that odor of an American "Gentle" - any others think so?
Posted by: Frank G || 03/15/2006 17:26 Comments || Top||

#14  It still clings Frank, how could we forgit! LOL
Posted by: RD || 03/15/2006 18:10 Comments || Top||

#15  It is so TOUCHING to see how Just Curious believes that Democratic politicians are as PURE as the DRIVEN SNOW. Oh the WONDER of it ALL.
Posted by: Ptah || 03/15/2006 20:15 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
Bra has LED message display
Gosh, I like understated good taste!
At RANTBURG??? lol
Posted by: Jackal || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  hmm could be some amusing in the distant future but just having 'Tits' written there seems a bit, well blindingly obvious. a brail version - now theres a thought.....
Posted by: ShepUK || 03/15/2006 7:46 Comments || Top||

#2  LOL, ShepUK!
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 7:49 Comments || Top||

#3  It'll certainly strike me blind for a few minutes.....
Posted by: CrazyFool || 03/15/2006 8:35 Comments || Top||

#4  I dunno. Could help clarify things for some of the less generously endowed women in the world.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 8:46 Comments || Top||

#5  Gives a whole new meaning (and excuse) to "What are you staring at?"

"Why, I'm just reading your message, darlin'"
Posted by: AlanC || 03/15/2006 10:38 Comments || Top||

#6  Will it do one of those moving text messages? Maybe they can run news and sports stories, and bank loan commercial messages. Or maybe a phone number to win a moderate cash prize. Just a thought.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 03/15/2006 10:55 Comments || Top||

#7  YES! This means I can become a bra programmer! I knew there was a reason I went into computers...
Posted by: Dar || 03/15/2006 12:44 Comments || Top||

#8  ROFL, Dar!

I got into it because of, um, well, graphics, myownself, lol.
Posted by: .com || 03/15/2006 12:50 Comments || Top||

#9  .com, been missin' ya lately. I was out before this past weekend, so I assumed the last few weeks' of sink-trapping made you run for greener pastures. Good to see ya back, lol!
Posted by: BA || 03/15/2006 12:57 Comments || Top||

#10  Lol, BA. I've avoided the singular honor of the Scarlet S thus far... dunno how, lol. Been staying at another crib alot, lately, where there are excellent distractions. ;-)
Posted by: .com || 03/15/2006 13:06 Comments || Top||

#11  All this fuss about looking. To quote the King in History of the world Part 1.

"You do it, you know you do it. We all do it. I do it, I love to do it. I just did it and I'm ready to do it again".
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 13:08 Comments || Top||

#12  Nice, .com ;-)
Posted by: BA || 03/15/2006 13:19 Comments || Top||

#13  This will be worn by women who will quickly get mad that everyone is staring at their chest.

It's hard enough to read some t-shirts without looking like a perv. Come on ladies, put the messages in the back where we can read them, that way you'll know when we're being pervs and can respond appropriately.
Posted by: rjschwarz || 03/15/2006 13:36 Comments || Top||

#14  While there is obviously an audience for this medium, I do not think they will replace the Goodyear blimp at sporting events.
Posted by: USN, ret. || 03/15/2006 14:52 Comments || Top||

#15  Shouldn't that be blimps, plural?

I'm just saying...
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 15:00 Comments || Top||

#16  I DEMAND EQUAL OPPORTUNITY FOR THE VISUALLY IMPAIRED!
I think they should include a Braille version.
Posted by: Almost Anonymous5839 || 03/15/2006 16:27 Comments || Top||

#17  Bra has LED message display

Well, that article certainly got my emitter all charged up.

Finally, a way for Cher to get men to stare at her chest.
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 17:50 Comments || Top||

#18  I think they should include a Braille version.

Silly, they've always provided a braille readout.
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 17:51 Comments || Top||

#19  A LED-lined bra, no less! Are these radioactive or too hot to handel?
Posted by: DeadRobertPreston || 03/15/2006 21:22 Comments || Top||


Africa North
Immigration: 500,000 Migrants Mass In Mauritania
Nearly half a million would-be illegal immigrants from central and west Africa have gathered in makeshift camps in Mauritania awaiting their chance of a passage to Europe, the Spanish daily El Pais reported on Tuesday, citing government and international organisation sources.
A half million people isn't immigration, it's an invasion...
Mauritania is one of the main transit countries from which criminal people smuggling gangs set sail on the longer, more dangerous but less patrolled route across the Mediterranean, via the Canary Islands, where 99 illegal immigrants landed on Tenerife on Tuesday. The Spanish coastguard identified another vessel with 40 people on board off the Canary Islands. The authorities on the Cape Verde Islands off the north African coast were meanwhile searching for a boat with 10 corpses on board, after a Turkish cargo vessel raised the alarm.

Mauritania has announced it will take "immediate" action to fight illegal immigration, including stepping up patrols along its borders and the construction of reception centres. Most of Mauritania - a sparsely populated country with just 3.2 million inhabitants - is desert, and its 2,400 kilometre long border is extremely difficult to patrol. A total 2,400 Africans have landed on the Canary Islands this year. Mauritania's Red Crescent Society estimates that at least 1,000 migrants have drowned in the past four months alone on doomed sea journeys to Europe.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Yikes.
Posted by: Seafarious || 03/15/2006 0:35 Comments || Top||

#2  And the percentage of Mauritanians who are Muslim: 99%.
Posted by: Listen To Dogs || 03/15/2006 1:19 Comments || Top||

#3  Mauritania has announced it will take "immediate" action to fight illegal immigration, including stepping up patrols along its borders and the construction of reception centres.

I've never considered welcome centers to be deterrents. Of course, maybe I've always completely misunderstood the purpose of those really big rest stops on I-75 just inside the Florida border.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 5:28 Comments || Top||

#4  Are they in need of letters of transit for passage to Lisbon?
Posted by: Richard Blaine || 03/15/2006 7:20 Comments || Top||

#5  Refugees equal to one SIXTH of their population is lined up at the exit door? What are they eating while waiting - a place as poor as Mauritania can't afford to feed them. Has the UN set up a 'food for slaves' program? (IIRC Mauritania is one of the few countries still practicing true slavery.)
At least 1000 drowned trying to leave just the past four months? Yet they keep coming.
It is a scary situation for the West, but there is something in me that kind of admires people who take action and take risk to improve their lot in life (rather than sit in camps waiting for food from charities.)
Posted by: Glenmore || 03/15/2006 7:41 Comments || Top||

#6  It is a scary situation for the West, but there is something in me that kind of admires people who take action and take risk to improve their lot in life (rather than sit in camps waiting for food from charities.)

Why can't they improve the place they live?
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 7:54 Comments || Top||

#7  RC - "Why can't they improve the place they live?"
Good question. In the West hard work and a positive attitude frequently equal personal improvement; in central Africa they are more likely to equal exhaustion and despair. What I'd like to do is make an even trade - one US prison Muslim for each of these refugees. Heck, I'll take TWO refugees per prison Muslim, or one per Farakhannoid not in prison.
Posted by: Glenmore || 03/15/2006 8:28 Comments || Top||

#8  most would be migrants arent interested in "improving a place" but in improving the situation of themselves and their families. They will weigh the costs and benefits of moving versus those of staying.

Thats true in west africa and El salvador and India today. It was true of Sicily, and Galicia, and County Cork, and Norway, in the 19th and early 20th c. It was true of Ulster, and the Scottish Highlands, and London, and the Rhineland, and Switzerland, in the years before 1775.
Posted by: liberalhawk || 03/15/2006 10:56 Comments || Top||

#9  #4 Are they in need of letters of transit for passage to Lisbon?
Posted by Richard Blaine


Heh.

I'll be in tomorrow night with a beautiful blonde, Rick, and it will make me very happy if she loses.
Posted by: mojo || 03/15/2006 11:08 Comments || Top||

#10  I doubt if you can really take the moor out of mauritania, but it seems their trying to find out.
Posted by: Phavilet Grolurt9350 || 03/15/2006 17:31 Comments || Top||

#11  I'm with you, LiberalHawk.

It shows initiative, risk, determination and desire. Reminds me of my family. A group you mentioned.
Posted by: Thinemp Whimble2412 || 03/15/2006 19:59 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
Viruses can taint radio frequency ID tags
THE NEW YORK TIMES

A group of European computer researchers has demonstrated that it is possible to insert a software virus into radio frequency identification tags, part of a microchip-based tracking technology in growing use in commercial and security applications.

In a paper to be presented today at an academic computing conference in Pisa, Italy, the researchers plan to demonstrate how it is possible to infect a tiny portion of memory in the chips that is frequently large enough to hold only 128 characters of information.

Until now, most computer security experts have discounted the possibility of using such tags, known as RFID chips, to spread a computer virus because of the tiny amount of memory on the chips.

WE'RE D....
Posted by: Carmine || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  RFID chips don't recieve transmissions (to my knowledege), hence cannot 'spread' a virus. Typical MSM ignorance.
Posted by: phil_b || 03/15/2006 6:07 Comments || Top||

#2  Who ever wrote this NYT stroy need s to return to their job as a dishwasher. The don't get RFID. at all. They don't understand how they work or even what RFID is intended to be used for. Mind numbing stupidity.
Posted by: SPoD || 03/15/2006 6:54 Comments || Top||

#3  The last three paragraphns contain actual information. It is amazing how often this is true in MSM scare stories:

"We have not found specific flaws" in the commercial RFID software, Tanenbaum said, but "experience shows that software written by large companies has errors in it."

The researchers have posted their paper and related materials on security issues related to RFID systems on the Internet at www.rfidvirus.org

The researchers acknowledged that inside information would be required in many cases to plant a hostile program. But they asserted that the commercial software developed for RFID applications had the same potential vulnerabilities that have been exploited by viruses and other malicious software, or "malware," in the rest of the computer industry.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 03/15/2006 7:19 Comments || Top||

#4  OK, so you can write a "virus" that takes up less than 128 bytes. Nice job, but so what?

How's it spread? What's it do? Won't it be obvious when the RFID doesn't give the right return during testing?
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 7:23 Comments || Top||

#5  "software written by large companies has errors in it"

*snicker*

That's one of the dumbest statements I've ever read.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 7:34 Comments || Top||

#6  experience shows that software written by large companies has errors in it."

Anyone who has worked in the software biz will, no doubt, find this a stunning revalation. I'm shocked.
Posted by: SteveS || 03/15/2006 8:58 Comments || Top||

#7  and Articles written by Large News organizations often have errors.

Another shocking truth.
Posted by: AlanC || 03/15/2006 10:36 Comments || Top||

#8  lol, AC. You beat me to it.
Posted by: BA || 03/15/2006 11:18 Comments || Top||

#9  How many errors can you fit into 128 bytes of glorified barcode?
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 12:05 Comments || Top||

#10  Depends on how big the company is, according to the article, lol.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 12:17 Comments || Top||

#11  Anyone who has worked in the software biz will, no doubt, find this a stunning revalation. I'm shocked.

Personally, I'm shocked when a piece of code Does the Right Thing. But I'm a jaded bastard.

How many errors can you fit into 128 bytes of glorified barcode?

1024
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 13:29 Comments || Top||

#12  How many errors can you fit into 128 bytes of glorified barcode?

1024



No. The right answer is (2**1024) - 1 ie a number with over 300 zeros behind.
Posted by: JFM || 03/15/2006 13:59 Comments || Top||

#13  How many errors can you fit into 128 bytes of glorified barcode?

1 ie a number with over 300 zeros behind

hey thatsa one big number..

Posted by: RD || 03/15/2006 14:54 Comments || Top||

#14  No. The right answer is (2**1024) - 1 ie a number with over 300 zeros behind.

I was looking at individual bits, not trying to interpret them.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 14:59 Comments || Top||

#15  Suddenly everyone is an RFID tech whizz? And launches into an 'indepth' analysis of the subject - "Mind numbing stupidity"

I never knew you were also such highly technical computer engineers.

Andrew Tanenbaum http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_S._Tanenbaum

Seems to know a thing or two about computers and I wager he has forgotten more about his field than you lot could ever muster. (Myself included)

More examples of your partisan hackery; ignorant of facts or any solid arguments in defence or otherwise.

"Mind numbing stupidity" - I'll say....



Posted by: Trex || 03/15/2006 16:11 Comments || Top||

#16  Trex, so what's got your nickers in a twist? And if you can point to an error of fact or interpretation, go ahead and do so. Otherwise, take you pointless blather elsewhere.
Posted by: phil_b || 03/15/2006 16:42 Comments || Top||

#17  JFM, isn't the number of potential bugs 128! (128 factorial) since a bug could result from any number of the bytes in combination.
Posted by: phil_b || 03/15/2006 17:11 Comments || Top||

#18  T Rex can cite Wiki as a knowledgable source? *snort* no wonder you're extinct
Posted by: Frank G || 03/15/2006 17:22 Comments || Top||

#19  What bugs me is that I enjoy a lot of the comments made here but get annoyed when the less eloquent post certain types of comment.

It actually worries me that so many here post with such lack of balanced perspective that they look as deranged, tainted and partisan as the extremists often discussed.

I'm not saying these views are not valid but they need to be balanced to be heard, understood and assimilated. Making comments like 'burn them all', 'kill all of them', 'nuke them' etc leaves me feeling the relevant posters are extremists themselves.

This devalues much of what is said and, indeed, Rantburg too.

This article prompted a similar 'gang' attack on a seemingly innocuous subject matter. Such that suddenly these computer scientists and the hack who wrote the story are dumb, stupid, etc. I mean what is the point of that?
Posted by: Trex || 03/15/2006 17:38 Comments || Top||

#20  Trex, the point is the self-styled newspaper of record, published an articled riddled with errors and ignorance of the subject.

Otherwise, 'burn them all', 'kill all of them', 'nuke them' comments will get you redacted and in some cases trolled.

And finally 'balance' is a myth. It doesn't exist. The notion of balance embeds a spurious single continium of views model. Whereas there are any number of views possible on a particular issue - not restricted to a right/left (or any other) continium.
Posted by: phil_b || 03/15/2006 17:51 Comments || Top||

#21  Trex,

are you talkin to me.


/oh gawd where do they spring forth from
Posted by: RD || 03/15/2006 18:25 Comments || Top||

#22  phil_b.

Nope. Each one of the 128 bit can take two states 0 ans 1. So 2***128. Then we substract one: the right solution.
Posted by: JFM || 03/15/2006 19:10 Comments || Top||

#23  JFM, you are confusing bits and bytes. A byte can hold either an instruction or data. A single instruction or item of data cannot itself be a bug. A bug is always results from two or more instructions/data in combination. Hence the number of possible bugs is 128! (or 127!).
Posted by: phil_b || 03/15/2006 19:30 Comments || Top||

#24  "Now we get to the scary part. Now consider a malicious traveler who attaches a tiny RFID tag, pre-initialized with a virus, to a random person's suitcase before he checks it in. When the baggage-handling system's RFID reader scans the suitcase at a Y-junction in the conveyor-belt system to determine where to route it, the tag responds with the RFID virus, which could infect the airport's baggage database. Then, all RFID tags produced as new passengers check in later in the day may also be infected. If any of these infected bags transit a hub, they will be rescanned there, thus infecting a different airport. Within a day, hundreds of airport databases all over the world could be infected. Merely infecting other tags is the most benign case. An RFID virus could also carry a payload that did other damage to the database, for example, helping drug smugglers or terrorists hide their baggage from airline and government officials, or intentionally sending baggage destined for Alaska to Argentina to create chaos.... "
Posted by: Trex || 03/15/2006 20:14 Comments || Top||

#25  Interesting that a search of the CERT site returns no hits on RFID.

I found some information here which was interesting - written from the system POV (primarily the data warehousing function which would be important in processing RFIDs):

How does the RFID function?
From a simplistic definition standpoint, an RFID tag consists of a transponder and an embedded silicon chip with encoded data. The tag is placed on an object, and when the object passes within range of an antenna broadcasting radio waves on a specific frequency, the transponder "wakes up" and sends the chips data to a transceiver, sometimes over distances up to 20 feet.

What does the transceiver do?
The transceiver collects the data from each RFID tag, decodes it and transmits it to a data store or central processing computer. From there, the data can be analyzed and used according to specific requirements.

What happens if a transponder receives bad data?
Bad data can be generated (theoretically) by a defective RFID tag or an RFID virus (let's hope not). Transponders must have change data capture logic programmed in, along with parallel authentication devices to ensure that the data from the RFID is indeed bad. We may want to capture this information and record the fact that the RFID is bad so it can be replaced. We may even want to know how to replace it and how to keep it from "infecting" other nearby RFIDs. We can take a lesson from the credit card processing companies here. In an active data warehouse, they have flags that signal possible fraudulent activities. A similar rating system might be employed to detect bad data from the RFIDs and to either re-program them remotely or shut them down. Either way, the transponders must be connected to an active data warehouse in order for these decisions to be made.


And a bit of practical info to flesh it out...
Two things that force changes to our architectures and designs are latency and volume. RFIDs are active on both fronts. Let's examine a hypothetical example to explore latency and volume.

Suppose we have a carton of candy bars, and each candy bar wrapper is tagged with an RFID tag. Now assume that the manufacturer has transponders at the plant, and the data from the transponders begins streaming into a centralized data warehouse the minute the candy bar is wrapped. Through the packaging process the candy bars are put in boxes (20 at a time). The boxes are then shrink-wrapped and put on a pallet for distribution. Let's say 500 boxes fit on a pallet. Now from one pallet alone, the transponders are receiving and transmitting data from 10,000 tags.


At this vendor's site the FAQ had some interesting bits:

If I use RFID in my processes, and the product is shipped to a customer containing some data I don’t want shared, is there anything to prevent access to that data?

Answer: Yes, permanent memory locks within the computer chip can secure data at the byte level to prevent access of data to unauthorized users. Bytes left unlocked, can be re-written to 100,000 times. Bytes can be locked in the factory or in the field to protect data as it is entered along the supply chain. Data can also be encrypted or password protected if the application requires data security.


I suggest no arguments with this, just following up to see what the issues are - and if the proposed danger exists, and if so, how difficult will it be to secure. RFID is a developing technology - and all newbies have early days grief. Rapid adoption, without standards resolving the issues, is the real danger.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 20:55 Comments || Top||

#26  One vulnerability exists if the receiving software is not correctly written. For instance, a common virus technique is to exploit software weaknesses in ways that cause a buffer overflow, i.e. write 'data' into unintended areas of the program in memory. That 'data' can either simply cripple the program or, more subtly, consist of other instructions to execute.

In this case, the most likely scenario suggested by this research is that information either gets spoofed or gets corrupted in a shared database.

This particular type of exploit can be prevented, if the receiving software is tightly written. The point of the research is that many people assume there is no vulnerability and therefore it's quite possible their programs are open to potential exploitation.

And BTW Trex, a few of the people commenting in this thread are computer scientists themselves, or seasoned software practitioners and/or electrical engineers. ;-)
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 21:13 Comments || Top||

#27  This is the study referred to.

Although note, it can only work with (radio)rewritable RFIDs. My knowledge of this technology is a few years out of date, but all RFIDs used to be read only.

Rewrittable RFIDs are IMHO a highly questionable technology. Open to all kinds of abuses.
Posted by: phil_b || 03/15/2006 22:03 Comments || Top||


Iraq
Iraq: Yemeni Terrorist Arrested Say Interior Ministry Sources
The Iraqi authorities on Tuesday arrested a suspected suicide bomber with Yemeni citizenship who was planning to blow up an elementary school in Baghdad, an interior ministry official announced. "A security guard at a school in Baghdad became suspicious of a person of strange appearance who was hanging around in the school exercise yard at the start of lessons," the chief of public security forces at the ministry, Mahdid Subayh told Adnkronos International (AKI). "The guard caught the man unawares and apprehended him before he had the chance to detonate the explosives belt he was wearing," Subayh said. "This terrorist wanted to blow himself amongst the children during their break from lesson," he added. He said he could not name the school guard or the school - for security reasons.
I hope that guard never wants for anything for the rest of his life.
Iraq's education minister Muhammad Hanun has praised the courage of the guard. "He saved the school's pupils from carnage and handed the terrorist over to the local security forces," a spokesman for the minister told AKI.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "I hope that guard never wants for anything for the rest of his life."

Amen. Instead of the current sectarian wrangling, it would be far more productive and to the good of Iraq to institute some forms of recognition for those in the Iraqi police and armed forces who perform heroically, who do their jobs without political or sectarian motives. Who do The Right Thing.

Make it splashy, with TV presentations of medals, monetary awards, maybe even rename the school after the hero, for instance. This would provide some alternative motives, positive and unifying motives which are sorely lacking now.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 9:53 Comments || Top||

#2  Not many of us get such an opportunity. If it comes, will we be as sharp and courageous as this guy?
He who risks his life for children has a pretty big account in the Karma bank.
He who plots to kill them, on the other hand....
Posted by: Richard Aubrey || 03/15/2006 11:22 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
Saad Rafique and Zaeem Qadri denied bail
LAHORE: An anti-terrorism court (ATC) on Tuesday denied bail to Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) MNA Khawaja Saad Rafique and PML-N Punjab Secretary General Zaeem Qadri. They were held under the Maintenance of Public Order Ordinance (MPO) in connection with February 14 rallies against Prophet Mohammed's (pbuh) caricatures. In their bail applications, both PML-N leaders pleaded not guilty and called their arrest political victimisation.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:


Death for PAF man upheld
Mushtaq Ahmed, a man convicted of plotting to assassinate President General Pervez Musharraf, on Tuesday filed an instant appeal in the Supreme Court after the Lahore High Court upheld his death sentence. Ahmed, who was in the Pakistan Air Force, was to be sent to gallows in the wee hours of Wednesday (today) after the dismissal of his appeal by the LHC's Rawalpindi bench on Tuesday. He moved the Supreme Court by filing an instant appeal which would be heard by the chief justice of Pakistan today (Wednesday). His execution has been stayed until the disposal of his appeal in the Supreme Court.
Is Omar Saeed Sheikh dead yet? I wonder why not?
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Since when does every joe blow get to appeal to the supreme court?
Posted by: Jeresh Snump4916 || 03/15/2006 9:15 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
Whores di combat: Prostitutes to hunt down serial killer
EFL
Women involved in prostitution in Daytona Beach, Fla., have reportedly armed themselves and are searching for a serial killer behind the slayings of three residents. "Rather than run from the man police labeled a serial killer, streetwalkers here in Daytona Beach along Ridgewood Avenue say they are seeking the serial killer out," Local 6 reported Tarik Minor said. "They believe the man responsible for murdering three women here is someone they have come in contact with."

"We will get him first," streetwalker Tonya Richardson said. "Yeah, we are going to get him first. When we find him, he is going to be sorry. It is as simple as that." Richardson said she and other women are carrying weapons on the streets after Laquetta Gunther, Julie Green and Iwana Patton were found dead in the city. "I carry a switch blade with me now," Richardson said. "Everyone else does now too."

"We will get him first," streetwalker Tonya Richardson said. "Yeah, we are going to get him first. When we find him, he is going to be sorry. It is as simple as that." The women are apparently teaming up and promising their own kind of justice.

Last week, a Florida Department of Law Enforcement criminal profiler said a serial killer committed the three unsolved murders. Special Agent Tom Davis said he believes the suspect is a male who targeted the three victims because of other stressors in his life, according to a police statement. No evidence so far indicates any of the women was taken against her will, according to the report.
But I'll bet being killed was against their wills.

In recent days, local ministers have also hit Daytona streets warning prostitutes about the killer. "We are asking them to buddy up," Street ministry spokeswoman Denise Horsman said. "To stay in lighted areas and get off the street if they can. If they can't, to do anything they can."
Posted by: Sninenter Chomock3996 || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  suspect is a male who targeted the three victims because of other stressors in his life

Boggle.
Posted by: Seafarious || 03/15/2006 0:40 Comments || Top||

#2  Shoulda kept their mouths shut and done the deed on the sly - business will nose-dive after blabbering to the local news.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 7:51 Comments || Top||

#3  now, now, Sea. It's important to have an open mind and show compassion and understanding for our fellow men.

I personally think that it would be an act of mercy for these women to relieve that poor person of the burden of a stressful life.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 8:46 Comments || Top||

#4  We are asking them to buddy up. . .

Ya know, I've asked them to do that myself.
Posted by: GORT || 03/15/2006 8:49 Comments || Top||

#5  Did they charge extra?
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 9:00 Comments || Top||

#6  Shoulda kept their mouths shut

Unlike Monika Lewinski.
Posted by: JFM || 03/15/2006 9:52 Comments || Top||

#7  Wow. Is this on Lifetime?
Posted by: tu3031 || 03/15/2006 10:10 Comments || Top||

#8  This needs a "Sin city" (comics version) graphic.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 03/15/2006 11:20 Comments || Top||

#9  So now anyone who tries to stiff a hooker and gets knifed will be a prime suspect for serial murder?
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 13:13 Comments || Top||


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Seven men accused of recruiting fighters receive reduced prison sentences
The State Security Court (SSC) on Tuesday sentenced seven men to various prison terms after convicting them of plotting activity aimed at undermining Jordan's relations with another country. The tribunal first handed Zeid S., 27, Khalid K., 33, a five-year prison term each, but decided to reduce the sentence to four years each to “give them a second chance in life.” Four other defendants Yeldar W., 25, Hassan S., 25, Murad M., 25, and Abdul Rahman Y., 23, were also sentenced to five-year prison terms, which were commuted to three years for the same reason. The last defendant in the case Ashraf M., 25, received a 20-month prison term for the same charges.

Defence attorney Hamad Emoush told The Jordan Times the defence team plans to appeal the verdicts. “The verdict was too harsh and our clients are simple people and do not have the capability to threaten the Kingdom's relations with any country,” he said.
Not too simple to get involved with recruiting krazed killers to go screw up somebody else's country, though...
In previous court sessions, the defence charged that their clients were subjected to torture and duress by the security forces and their interrogation and arrest procedures were illegal. The seven defendants recruited fighters in Jordan and sent them to Syria, where an individual identified as Abu Janna provided them with military training, according to the prosecution charge sheet. Abu Janna also helped the recruits to infiltrate Iraq “to fight American forces and Iraqi policemen,” the charge sheet added. Some of the defendants have confessed in front of the prosecution to raising funds for fighters in Iraq, according to the charge sheet. They were arrested in March and May of this year.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "Go forth, and plot no more."
Posted by: Seafarious || 03/15/2006 0:33 Comments || Top||


Iraq
SAS setting IEDs in Iraq?
I was web browsing and came across a reference to this Gary Hart post on Huffington. It is, of course, preposterous drivel, but when I was looking through the moonbat comments, I came across this:
To find who is responsible for the mayhem of secretarian violence, you have to look at the history and who actually will benefit from such violence.
Arab conspiracy theorists are fond of this line of argument, since it involves not looking at who's actually doing the violence...
The British when they were the greatest power in the world used 'divide and conquer' to subjugate its subject.
So'd the Romans and the Persians and most everybody who's ever conquered anybody else...
It divided the local population and made them wary of each other. In the case of Iraq, US is illegally occupying the country through its illegal war.
That particular cant describes the writer as a moonbat...
Coughing Anus Kofi Annan stated that the Iraq war was illegal.
Yeah, and if the World Leader says it is illegal, it is illegal.
Kofi also sez there's not much wrong with the UN, and none of it happened on his watch...
As Danial Pipes stated in his blog, the secretarian violence in Iraq was a good thing for US.
Does any Rantburger believe that Pipes said this?
Probably someone would have noticed...
The British SAS men with Arab clothing was arrested with a car full of explosives and remote detonators in Basra.
WTF?? Has anyone heard of this event?
Made up out of whole cloth, as far as I know...
They were on a bombing mission against Shiite civilians to place a blame on Sunni insurgents.
Do these people actually believe the SAS, that venerated and honored unit of SPECOPS warriors, is committing acts of pure terror? I mean, what kind of worldview do you need to actually believe that? Sheesh.
I am of the opinion that the current sectarian violence was a product of US/British/Israeli military operations to divide the Iraqis.
Gotta get the Joooos in there somewhere.
The writer's expressing his opinion. It's a stupid opinion, but I guess it's his.
The history and evidence seems to point to that direction.
history? evidence?? Amazing.
Who benefits the most in dividing Iraq so that the previous oil can be reapt for the benefit of occupying forces.?
'previous oil'? What the F*#K is that? And 'reapt'? Like Sowt? 'benefit'? Like when the US import fuel from Kuwait and Turkey and paying top dollar? He seems to be able to read, but where is the getting this from? Amazing. May God save our nation from citizens like him
We're back to "it's all about oil." The writer has a set of expectations about the same size and shape as Procrustes' bed. He's not real big on empirical observation because it takes too much effort, so he goes with what he wants to believe. His opinion can be discounted.
/rant
Posted by: Brett || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  If the US/West is so focused on "seizing" oil, then why is it the West put out some 1,300 oil well fires after Gulf War I - fires that no one else could have touched - then redrilled the wells - and then WENT HOME AND RESUMED BUYING THAT OIL AT TOP DOLLAR??????????

The "it's all about oil" crowd never seem to find any irony in that situation.
Posted by: Lone Ranger || 03/15/2006 0:27 Comments || Top||

#2  To find who is responsible for the mayhem of secretarian violence, you have to look at the history and who actually will benefit from such violence.

Der Juden?
Posted by: gromgoru || 03/15/2006 2:15 Comments || Top||

#3  Erm I think the SAS men did have 'stuff' on them... coulda been the fireworks display team for the garrison Lawrence of Arabia theme party? errrr.. I guess having Iran on the doorstep may lead to us using our own forms of subterfuge. The presence of explosives could also have been bullshit manufactured by the Iraqi Police...
Posted by: Howard UK || 03/15/2006 6:18 Comments || Top||

#4  Frankly, I'd be shocked if you didn't find explosives on an SAS team.

But Gary "Monkey Business" Hart is a freaking loon.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 7:20 Comments || Top||

#5  waiting for Al gaurdian to publish this claptrap - i give it a week at most.
Posted by: ShepUK || 03/15/2006 7:44 Comments || Top||

#6  Andy McNab at it again eh? Who Dares..., well you know.
Posted by: Visitor || 03/15/2006 8:31 Comments || Top||

#7  coulda been the fireworks display team for the garrison Lawrence of Arabia theme party?

LOL, Howard.

The presence of explosives could also have been bullshit manufactured by the Iraqi Police...

Yes, especially after the Brits finally began pressuring some of the local militia not to act on Iran's behalf.
Posted by: lotp || 03/15/2006 8:34 Comments || Top||

#8  Perhaps what is required is a demonstration of what we would do if we were really out for the oil? Then they might be able to tell the difference.
Posted by: Perfesser || 03/15/2006 9:48 Comments || Top||

#9  Nope, Perfesser. You've gotta have "students" who actually think logically to serve that up as proof. They'd only scream (if we actually were to do that) that it PROVES their point of it all being about the oil.
Posted by: BA || 03/15/2006 11:29 Comments || Top||

#10  The quoted text was NOT written by Gary Hart, but it's interesting that he attracts such fellow-travellers.
Posted by: Kalle (kafir forever) || 03/15/2006 11:33 Comments || Top||

#11  I'm sorry, wasn't it the British that saved your worthless asses from the Turks? Maybe they should have let you chafe under they yoke of the Ottoman empire for another hundred years.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 13:02 Comments || Top||

#12  Who benefits from that violence? Well Zarcowe's memo touched on that I think. Something about a tussle within Al Queda about stirring up this kind of crap.

Syria also benefits as confusion in Iraq delays the eventual time when Uncle Sam deals with them.

Iran also benefits as they want their boy Sadr to take over, unfortunately for them the people didn't rally around his attacks against Sunnis and calm returned.

The US had nothing to gain and potentially an enormous amount to lose if things got out of control. This is nonsense from top to bottom.
Posted by: rjschwarz || 03/15/2006 13:34 Comments || Top||

#13  I benefit from the sun coming up in the morning. Therefore, I make the sun come up in the morning.

You guys should be a lot more respectful to someone as powerful as me.
Posted by: Dreadnought || 03/15/2006 15:36 Comments || Top||

#14  "All hail Emperor Dreadnought! Don't shoot."
Posted by: Seafarious || 03/15/2006 15:38 Comments || Top||

#15  That's more like that. Fetch me a bourbon, my good and trusty liege man.
Posted by: Dreadnought || 03/15/2006 16:18 Comments || Top||

#16  That's more like IT.

PIMF
Posted by: Dreadnought || 03/15/2006 16:22 Comments || Top||


China-Japan-Koreas
South Korean president accepts PM's resignation
South Korean President Roh Moo-Hyun on Tuesday accepted the resignation of his prime minister over a round of golf that sparked allegations of influence-peddling. "President Roh expressed his intention to accept the ruling Uri Party's request" for the resignation of Prime Minister Lee Hae-Chan, said presidential spokesman Kim Man-Soo. "President Roh will not hurry to name the prime minister's successor," he said, adding that Deputy Prime Minister Han Duck-Soo would act as prime minister until then.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I nominate Tiger Woods.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 03/15/2006 8:20 Comments || Top||

#2  Lol, wait - you mean for Thai PM, right? Lol, you made me do a double-take, RJ!
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 8:22 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
Khair Bakhsh Marri 'arrested, released'
Baloch leader Nawab Khair Bakhsh Marri was arrested in Karachi on Tuesday, according to sources in Mengal House. Sources said that three mobile police units raided former senator Javed Mengal's house in the Defence Housing Authority at around 3:00 pm, and arrested Marri along with 22 members of the Marri and Mengal tribes. Marri and several others were released an hour later, they said.
If they kept those goobers in jug for a little longer than a few hours they might make some headway. But they don't, because they can't, so they won't.
When contacted, both the police stations located in the Defence area, at Darakhshan and Gizri, denied making any such arrest.
"Wudn't us."
Khair Bakhsh Marri is the father of Balach Marri, head of the group Balochistan Liberation Organisation. "The arrest was made only to scare the people of Balochistan. The attack on Nawab Bugti's residence and Nawab Marri's arrest is part of a conspiracy to eliminate such dignitaries and usurp Balochistan's resources, to construct cantonments and exploit Gwadar," Balochistan National Party (BNP) President Akthar Mengal told Daily Times.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Lebanese leaders reach accord
Lebanese political leaders meeting to quell bitter internal disputes reached an accord Tuesday on normalising fraught relations with Syria, parliamentary speaker, Nabih Berri, said. But Berri said two key issues remained unresolved — the political future of pro-Syrian President Emile Lahoud and disarmament of Shiite fundamentalist movement Hizbollah — and that negotiations would resume on March 22.
I thought Emile would be gone by the end of this month. Knobby must be putting up a hell of a fight...
Besides agreement on Syria, Berri said all 14 participants agreed on "not allowing any armed Palestinian presence outside (refugee) camps and on the "Lebanese" character of the Shebaa Farms, a hotly contested border area currently occupied by Israel.
If you don't let the Paleos have any arms inside the camps, they won't have any outside. Just a suggestion, mind you...
The anti-Syrian majority in parliament has repeatedly called for the embattled Lahoud to step down since the killing in February 2005 of his political rival and former premier Rafiq Hariri in a bomb blast blamed on Damascus. On Hizbollah, Berri said: "The resistance will keep its weapons until the liberation of every inch of Lebanese territory."
So get Syria to agree that's Shebaa's Lebanese, rather than Syrian. Then ask the Israelis to give it back.
Pro-and anti-Syrian politicians at the talks agreed on the necessity of developing relations with Syria and of "correcting the errors of the past," Berri said, without elaborating.
That's probably because all parties have differing interpretations of what those errors might have been...
"Participants don't want Syria to be a threat to Lebanon's security and vice-versa.
I can't recall that Leb, even in its Phoenician heyday, has ever been a threat to Syria.
"They... demand the application of the principle of mutual non-interference in internal affairs," he said. A participant who requested anonymity said the agreement was based on the 1989 Taef accords that ended Lebanon's 1975-90 civil war "which stipulates the establishment of normal and healthy relations" between the two neighbours. "Participants want relations between Lebanon and Syria to be as equals, based on the establishment of diplomatic relations and embassies and demarcating Lebanese-Syrian frontiers," Berri said.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Gaza fighters release hostages
Palestinian fighters have released two French aid workers kidnapped on Tuesday in response to an Israeli raid on a West Bank prison, as a day of protests and kidnappings in Gaza comes to end. It was the worst day of foreign abductions in the increasingly chaotic and hostage-prone Gaza Strip since Israel withdrew its troops and settlers from the territory last September. Two French journalists and a South Korean journalist remain hostages in the custody of Palestinian fighters in Gaza. A US teacher of English at the Arab American University in the northern West Bank town of Jenin, Douglas Johnson, 45, was also briefly kidnapped by Palestinian fighters. An armed group set free a Swiss employee of the International Committee of the Red Cross, Julien Grosclaude, whom they abducted in Gaza. Two Australians, taken from a school in northern Gaza, have also been released.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Fighters
Posted by: gromgoru || 03/15/2006 2:13 Comments || Top||

#2  Yeah, fighters, as in "prize fighters", I figure they're some kind of highly trained professional athletes when it comes to havoc and chaos. It makes complete sense to me.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 03/15/2006 5:40 Comments || Top||

#3  It is from Al Jazeera, that lovely BBC spin-off.
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/15/2006 13:36 Comments || Top||

#4  All these civilians seem to be making the Gaza Strip "increasingly hostage-prone".
Posted by: DepotGuy || 03/15/2006 14:28 Comments || Top||


Bangladesh
Bangla Court Orders Militants’ Detention for Interrogation
A Bangladesh court yesterday ordered detention for nine days of suspected militants for interrogation, sources said. The three suspects were arrested in two separate raids in an eastern town of Comilla, officials said. They are alleged members of Jamatul Mujahedeen Bangladesh, a banned group blamed for several deadly bombings across the country, Abu Sufian, a security official, said. The suspects were likely to be taken Dhaka for questioning by intelligence agents.

Two of the militants were arrested Monday from their hideout in Comilla town, and another was captured later in a separate raid on a house that killed four people. Another suspect who was injured in the raid was being treated at a military hospital in Dhaka, about 88 km west of Comilla.

On Monday, two bombs ripped through a hideout of suspected militants after security agents besieged a two-story building in Comilla, firing guns and tear gas shells to force a surrender. Agents later found the bullet-ridden body of a fugitive militant, who was an alleged bomb expert, on the ground floor of the house, said Lt. Col. Gulzar Uddin Ahmed, an intelligence official who led the operation. The mangled bodies of his wife and two children were found in a separate room. It wasn’t clear if the suspects detonated the bombs in a suicide attempt.

The outlawed group has been blamed for a string of bombings across the country that killed 26 people last year. The group’s leader, Sheikh Abdur Rahman, and his deputy, Siddiqul Islam, were captured earlier this month.

Also yesterday, security agents acting on a tip-off cordoned off a downtown area in southwestern Khulna city and searched door to door, attempting unsuccessfully to catch two top operatives of the militant group, said Lt. Col. Shamsul Huda, who led the operation.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:


Iraq
Australia won't follow Britain on troop pulldown
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The UK will need their troops at home to keep the public in line as Sharia Law comes to the more advanced areas.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 12:02 Comments || Top||

#2  premis of the article haywire, the Brits aren't "pulling out" but chainging out a regiment and the mission for the new unit.
Posted by: RD || 03/15/2006 12:21 Comments || Top||

#3  You know, when I read about Britain, I shake my head and wonder how they could have fallen so far. But then I think to myself - don't count them out just yet. For all of history, they have fared well against their conquerers. I suspect they will stand tall once again.
Posted by: 2b || 03/15/2006 19:32 Comments || Top||

#4  They lose every battle save the last. That's part of how they muddle through.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 03/15/2006 19:55 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
NYT plays for delay: Powerful Voices Within Tehran Criticize Iran's Nuclear Policy
Just weeks ago, the Iranian government's combative approach toward building a nuclear program produced rare public displays of unity here. Now, while the top leaders remain resolute in their course, cracks are opening both inside and outside the circles of power over the issue.
sure they are - and they call the NYTimes
Some people in powerful positions have begun to insist that the confrontational tactics of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad have been backfiring, making it harder instead of easier for Iran to develop a nuclear program.

This week, the United Nations Security Council is meeting to take up the Iranian nuclear program. That referral and, perhaps more important, Iran's inability so far to win Russia's unequivocal support for its plans have empowered critics of Mr. Ahmadinejad, according to political analysts with close ties to the government.

One senior Iranian official, who asked to remain anonymous because of the delicate nature of the issue, said: "I tell you, if what they were doing was working, we would say, 'Good.' " But, he added: "For 27 years after the revolution, America wanted to get Iran to the Security Council and America failed. In less than six months, Ahmadinejad did that."
"crap! The fool has brought this too far into the sunlight"
One month ago, the same official had said with a laugh that those who thought the hard-line approach was a bad choice were staying silent because it appeared to be succeeding.

As usual in Iran, there are mixed signals, and the government does not always speak with the same voice.

On Tuesday, both Mr. Ahmadinejad and the nation's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, insisted in public speeches that their country would never back down. At the same time, Iranian negotiators arrived in Moscow to resume talks — at Iran's request — just days after Iran had rejected a Russian proposal to resolve the standoff.

Average Iranians do not seem uniformly confident at the prospect of being hit with United Nations sanctions.

From the streets of Tehran to the ski slopes outside the city, some people have begun to joke about the catch phrase of the government — flippantly saying, "Nuclear energy is our irrefutable right."

Reformers, whose political clout as a movement vanished after the last election, have also begun to speak out. And people with close ties to the government said high-ranking clerics had begun to give criticism of Iran's position to Ayatollah Khamenei, which the political elite sees as a seismic jolt.

"There has been no sign that they will back down," said Ahmad Zeidabady, a political analyst and journalist. "At least Mr. Khamenei has said nothing that we can interpret that there will be change in the policies."

But, he said, "There is more criticism as it is becoming more clear that this policy is not working, especially by those who were in the previous negotiating team."

There are also signs that negotiators are starting to back away, however slightly, from a bare-knuckle strategy and that those who had initially opposed the president's style — but remained silent — are beginning to feel vindicated and are starting to speak up.

A former president, Mohammad Khatami, recently publicly criticized the aggressive approach and called a return to his government's strategy of confidence-building with the west.

"The previous team now feels they were vindicated," said Nasser Hadian, a political science professor at Tehran University who is close to many members of the government. "The new team feels they have to justify their actions."

Ayatollah Khamenei, who has the final say, issued a strong defense of Iran's position on Tuesday.

"The Islamic Republic of Iran considers retreat over the nuclear issue, which is the demand of the Iranian people, as breaking the country's independence that will impose huge costs on the Iranian nation," he said.

"Peaceful use of nuclear technology is a must and is necessary for scientific growth in all fields," Ayatollah Khamenei said. "Any kind of retreat will bring a series of pressures and retreats. So, this is an irreversible path and our foreign diplomacy should defend this right courageously."

In a speech in northern Iran, Mr. Ahmadinejad called on the people to "be angry" at the pressure being put on Iran.

"Listen well," the president said to a crowd chanting "die" as they punched the air with their fists. "A nuclear program is our irrefutable right."

When Mr. Ahmadinejad took office, he embraced a decision already made by the top leadership to move toward confrontation with the West about the nuclear program. From the sidelines, Mr. Ahmadinejad's opponents remained largely silent as his political capital grew.

Iran's ability to begin uranium enrichment, and to remove the seals in January at least three nuclear facilities without any immediate consequences, was initially seen as a validation of the get-tough approach.

But one political scientist who speaks regularly with members of the Foreign Ministry said that Iran had hinged much of its strategy on winning Russia's support. The political scientist asked not to be identified so as not to compromise his relationship with people in the government.

The political scientist said some negotiators believed that by being hostile to the West they would be able to entice Moscow into making Tehran its stronghold in the Middle East. "They thought the turn east was the way forward," the person said. "That was a belief and a vision."

The person added, "They thought, 99 percent, Russia would seize the opportunity and back the Iranian leaders."

The route forward remains unclear as Iran tries to regain a sense of momentum.

There is a consensus here that Iran has many cards to play — from its influence with the Shiites in Iraq to its closer ties to Hezbollah in Lebanon, to the prospect of using oil as a weapon. But the uncertainty of appearing before the Security Council, and the prospect of sanctions, has led some here to begin to rethink the wisdom of fighting the West head-on, analysts said.

Professor Hadian said he believed that for Iran to fundamentally change course the situation for Iran would have to first grow much worse.

"There are concerns to keep the situation calm," said Mr. Zeidabady, the journalist. "We have received orders not even to have headlines saying the case has been sent to the Security Council. Although the situation is very critical, they want to pretend that everything is normal. They do not want to show the country is coming under pressure and lose their supporters."
Posted by: Frank G || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  You have to admire Iran's ability to play the West against itself. Just when all seems lost and every avenue of discussion appears exhausted as if on cue (cue chorus of angelic voices) dissenters emerge to give hope that we might yet head off a confrontation.
Posted by: AzCat || 03/15/2006 0:24 Comments || Top||

#2  Lots of 'diplomacy push' stories in english-versions of the Iranian media (IRNA, Tehran Times, etc.)over the past 2-3 days. I won't comment as to why, but it's a concerted effort.
Posted by: Pappy || 03/15/2006 1:03 Comments || Top||

#3  Ah,yes. The fabled "moderates within the Iranian government" make another appearance. Maybe they want us to send them another cake.

If we just back off and give them a minute the mullahs will have this all worked out in no time. Really. Any time now. You'll see. They're on it. No problem, really. Go back to sleep. That's it; nighty-night. Shhhhh.
Posted by: Baba Tutu || 03/15/2006 2:55 Comments || Top||

#4  Ah, the NYT. The paper that covered up the Soviet famines.

And is proud of it.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 03/15/2006 7:19 Comments || Top||

#5  In the above two articles both the New York Times and Washington Times report some similar developments, and those two papers are just about as different in political outlook as it is possible to be.
Posted by: Glenmore || 03/15/2006 8:48 Comments || Top||

#6  I really dont understand y'all spin on this. This story is saying that the Admin policy of going to the UNSC and threatening sanctions is WORKING, and implies we should keep pushing. It denies the dovish story line that referral and sanctions only unite the Iranians behind the MMs and that we should "engage" the Iranians and give them a security guarantee so they play nice. The NYT is going AGAINST their standard POV, which is anti-admin.


I mean unless you think the admins policy of going to the UNSC and seeking sanctions is softline. I dont.
Posted by: liberalhawk || 03/15/2006 11:00 Comments || Top||

#7  From the streets of Tehran to the ski slopes outside the city, some people have begun to joke about the catch phrase of the government — flippantly saying, "Nuclear energy is our irrefutable right."

Too bad we have people here in the same boat. Ya know, "it's my Constitutional right to get ...." And, I've just recently come to learn that Iran had ski slopes. I assume only the MM's kids get to go there, though. Another reason I love the 'burg...get to learn somin' new every day, lol!
Posted by: BA || 03/15/2006 11:36 Comments || Top||

#8  As I mentioned the other week. If Iran had just STFU and mumbled in their beards, all the while going about their bomb building, they would be well on their way to having a nuclear device by now. But noooooooooooooo!!!

From the streets of Tehran to the ski slopes outside the city, some people have begun to joke about the catch phrase of the government — flippantly saying, "Nuclear energy is our irrefutable right."

Exactly what form of "nuclear energy" they receive is another matter entirely.
Posted by: Zenster || 03/15/2006 12:52 Comments || Top||

#9  This story is saying that the Admin policy of going to the UNSC and threatening sanctions is WORKING, and implies we should keep pushing.

More like the Iranians are engaging in a concerted PR blitz and the NYT is eager to help.
Posted by: Pappy || 03/15/2006 17:06 Comments || Top||

#10  Powerline has this one covered pretty well. And I agree with the conclusion that this is a ruse. A classic case of disinformation to throw off the gullible MSM and Euros.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 18:41 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
Indian cleric issues fatwa against attacks on religious sites
LUCKNOW: A prominent Muslim seminary has issued an edict declaring terrorist attacks on all religious sites and the killing of innocent people to be anti-Islamic, a cleric said Tuesday. The fatwa was issued after a series of bomb blasts rocked the Hindu holy town of Varanasi last week. It was announced Monday by the Darul-Ifta Firangi Mahal in Lucknow, a well-known Muslim seminary. No matter the faith, attacks on religious shrines are forbidden by Islam, according to the fatwa, which called such attacks "one of the biggest crimes against humanity."

"The Prophet Muhammad (PTUI PBUH) has given clear directions that proper protection should be given to the religious places of other communities," said the seminary's head cleric.
Good. Let's see if it makes any difference to those carrying out these attacks. I'm not holding my breath, but give the guy credit for issuing this one - even if his motive happened to be a desire to avoid being strung up by the local Hindus, who are getting really pissed.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  References please. In the Quran. Sura and verse.

One can spout all they want about what a religion says, but if its scriptures say otherwise, what they say is plain BS, if not Taquiyya.
Posted by: Ptah || 03/15/2006 11:42 Comments || Top||

#2  I think it's the British SAS, after all they stand to gain the most out of sectarian.....Oh, wait, wrong story.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 13:18 Comments || Top||

#3  This cleric needs to explain just which sites in India are ok to attack.

He has not really condemned the activities of the terrorists.. I presume they are allowed to attack the police and army.

Now muslims in India get to vote, they elect their MPs and ministers. They are full citizens.
Hell, the Indian president is a muslim.

But jihad against India seems to be ok. Just don't bomb the temple 'cause the hindoos will start lynching the nearest mullah.

So muslims are allowed to make war against the Indian state.

Some fatwas issued a few days ago prohibit naming militias after the prophet.

It seems that Jaish-e-mohhamed etc are giving a bad name to islam.

So the cleric says, if you are unable to shun violence, at least use another name so that muslims don't get a bad name.

The fatwa doens't ban the killing, just the name.

Sheer deceit.

Posted by: john || 03/15/2006 14:17 Comments || Top||


Quake jolts Muzaffarabad
MUZAFFARABAD: An earthquake measuring at 5.0 on the Richter scale jolted Muzaffarabad and surrounding areas at 8:30 pm on Tuesday. According to details, the tremor prompted the people to come out of their tents.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Calibrating...
Posted by: PBMcL || 03/15/2006 0:48 Comments || Top||

#2  No, No, Johnson.
The intensity should be set at 50, not 5.0.
Recalibrate and try again.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 03/15/2006 8:22 Comments || Top||

#3  Redneck Jim----No No!! We are talking earthquakes, not giant asteroid hits. Belay that last order to Johnson, fergawdsakes.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 03/15/2006 11:01 Comments || Top||

#4  50 would be kinda bad, maybe enough to annoy the strong force in this part of the galaxy.
Posted by: 6 || 03/15/2006 11:51 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Russian president hosts Syrian foreign minister in Kremlin
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Woodshed trip or strategery session?

Lavrov. Middle East stability. LOL.
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 9:36 Comments || Top||


UN must get tough on Iran, says Rice
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  God what a lousy job she has. She knows that sanctions won't accomplish anything, except probably harm the average Iranian. For the regime and its shopping list - no effect. But this is the dance that must be endured before the band takes 5 - and the real action begins.

BTW she manages to look good doing it and sound sincere. Lol, now that's talent!
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 8:20 Comments || Top||

#2  Not suprising that Indonesia wants the world to give Iran more time, is it?
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 03/15/2006 13:06 Comments || Top||

#3  We all know where this is heading, but she is the best SoS we've had in decades.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 20:13 Comments || Top||


Europe
United Nations closes book on Milosevic
The UN war crimes court closed the book Tuesday on the historic genocide trial of Slobodan Milosevic as the son of the former Yugoslav leader arrived in the Netherlands to pick up his father's remains. In Belgrade, a Serb court dropped an arrest warrant for the widow of Slobodan Milosevic, an official of Milosevic's party said, in a move that could allow her to attend his funeral if he is buried in Serbia.
Good bye, Slobo. Don't come back.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Sad. Carla Del Ponte will now have this embarrassing gap on her resume. Every time she applies for a Global Prosecutor job...
Posted by: Glert Thetch2165 || 03/15/2006 7:55 Comments || Top||

#2  It's a dead issue, after all.
Posted by: Captain America || 03/15/2006 10:15 Comments || Top||

#3  "Our work here is done."
Posted by: mojo || 03/15/2006 11:13 Comments || Top||

#4  It took...what?...7, 8 years? But they finally did it! As I predicted, they bored someone to death.
Posted by: psychohillbilly || 03/15/2006 13:50 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
MMA will boycott elections under Musharraf: Qazi
Y'gotta play to win, Qazi...
The Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA) will boycott the upcoming general elections if they are not held under the supervision of an interim civilian setup, MMA chief Qazi Hussain Ahmed said on Tuesday. Addressing a Jamaat-e-Islami training workshop at Mansoora, Qazi said the MMA would not only boycott the elections, but would also start a movement against Pakistan's present leaders. Any election under President Pervez Musharraf's supervision would be unfair and would further strengthen tyranny in the country, he added.

MMA legislators who did not vote for MMA candidates in the Senate elections would be thrown out from the six-party religious alliance, Qazi said, adding that all chiefs of MMA's component parties had been asked to trace the violators and throw them out.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Who cares? Qazi's Qlowns received barely 10% of the national vote last time.
Posted by: Listen To Dogs || 03/15/2006 1:22 Comments || Top||


Kashmiri held for selling 3 daughters
Police have arrested a quake refugee who allegedly sold his three daughters to two couples. Mohammad Shafique, a resident of Muzaffarabad, has been living at relief camp No 193 in Sector H-11 since November. His wife and eight children were killed in the October 8 earthquake. Sources told Daily Times that Shafique, with the connivance of camp manager Azmatullah, sold his three daughters — Sonia, 3, Ulfat, 5 and Riffat, 8 — to two couples for Rs 300,000.
3's a little young, but 5 and 8 are gettin' up there to Pashtun marryin' age...
Sources said that Shafique also gave a share of money to the camp manager and disappeared from the camp along with his two sons, Amir and Saqib.
"Let's go, boyz! We're off to gay Karachi!"
Fauzia, an official of the United Nations Fund for Children, learned of the incident. Sources said that police arrested the accused from Muzaffarabad. Acting SSP Asim Gulzar told Daily Times that DSP Jameel Hashmi was investigating the matter. However, he ruled out that the children were not sold.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:


Militants receiving funds from abroad: Ghani
The sheer volume of weapons available to militants in Dera Bugti proves external involvement, Balochistan Governor Owais Ahmed Ghani told private television channels on Tuesday.
Y'know, you could say the same thing about Afghanistan...
Ghani said that most of the weapons in Balochistan were brought from Afghanistan.
How do they get there?
The Afghan government has failed to stem arms trafficking because of its internal turmoil and anarchy, he added.
Another fine product of Waziristan...
The provision of financial assistance proves that foreign elements are trying to destabilise Pakistan, he said. "The majority of Baloch people are content with the government's development plans," he said, adding that no tribal leader would be allowed to hamper the province's progress. "There is no law and order situation in Balochistan - except in two or three districts where some sardars are instigating the people against the government," said the governor.
Maybe you should think about doing away with feudalism?
These men have tortured and starved poor people to death, including women and children, he said. Baloch people are aware of the motive behind such acts and will not be deceived further by such sardars, he added.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Prosecutor indicts 20 in Amman, Aqaba attacks
Jordan's tearing 'em up...
The State Security Court (SSC) prosecutor on Tuesday indicted 20 suspects in two cases, including Jordanian fugitive Abu Mussab Zarqawi, in connection with terrorist attacks in Amman and Aqaba last year.

The first case involved the Iraqi would-be suicide bomber Sajida Rishawi, who participated in the November 9 bombings of three hotels in the capital, which left 60 people dead and around 90 injured. Rishawi, 35, will be tried soon, while seven other defendants, including Zarqawi, will be tried in absentia, a judicial source told The Jordan Times.
Zark's been tried and sentenced in absentia so many times he probably doesn't even notice anymore.
The charge sheet identified the remaining defendants as Othman Ismail Dalimi, Hiam Hassan and her brother Walid Hassan, Nihad Rishawi and Karim Jassim Fahdawi, all Iraqi. The eighth defendant was identified as Mazen Mohammad Shehadeh, a Jordanian.
He'd be the local liaison, probably a runner for the local controller, who's, of course, unindicted...
The group was charged with possessing explosives with illicit intent and plotting subversive acts that led to death and destruction. The prosecutor said the group belonged to Al Qaeda and sought, under the instructions of Zarqawi, to launch a terrorist attack against Jordan and kill innocent people. Zarqawi provided Dalimi, Shehadeh, Hiam and Walid with explosive belts and asked them to travel to Jordan, the prosecution said. The four decided on the targets and rented an apartment for Rishawi and the three suicide bombers who later attacked the hotels, the charge sheet said.
Probably the local controller, rather than the four, was the guy who picked the targets. Unless Rishawi and Co. were regulars in Beautiful Downtown Amman, they probably didn't know where the prime targets were.
On November 5, Rishawi, her husband, Ali Hassan Shumari, and two other suicide bombers travelled to Jordan and met with the rest of the defendants who provided them with the explosive belts and information about their targets, according to court documents. Rishawi and her husband headed to Radisson SAS Hotel and entered a wedding party where Rishawi's husband blew himself up. Rishawi tried to blow herself up but the belt did not detonate and she left the premises, the charge sheet said. She was arrested in Salt on November 13.
Never having been to Amman, the Radisson SAS wouldn't pop to my mind as a prime target. Maybe after I saw it, all glittering and new and such...
The two other suicide bombers, Safa Ali and Ruwad Mohammad, headed separately to Days Inn and Grand Hyatt hotels where they detonated their explosive belts, killing and injuring scores of people. Four days after the November 9 bombings, Rishawi appeared on Jordan Television and confessed that she married her husband in order to be able to enter Jordan to launch the suicide attack.
It wasn't just for sex, y'see, even though with a face like that she'd never get any legitimately...
Zarqawi, who has a $25 million bounty on his head by the United States, has been sentenced to death by the SSC in absentia three times over the past two years.

The second case on Tuesday involved 12 defendants, including seven Syrians, four Iraqis and one Saudi, who were indicted on charges of launching a rocket attack in Aqaba that resulted in the death of a Jordanian soldier on August 19. Six of the 12 defendants are in custody. They were identified as Abdul Rahman Abdullah, 52, Mohammad Hassan Sahli, 53, his sons Yasser, 30, Bilal, 24, and Baraa, 24, all Syrian.
Bilal and Baraa are twins?
A sixth defendant, Sameh Nobani, 22, is a Saudi citizen residing in Jordan, according to the charge sheet.
My first guess would be that he's the money man...
The remaining six defendants at large are Amar Samerai, Abdul Halim Dalimi, Hamid Dalimi and Hussam Dalimi, all Iraqi, and Abdul Ruhman Sahli and his brother Abdullah, both Syrian. They were charged with possessing explosives with illicit intent and plotting subversive acts that led to the death of an individual. Eight of the 12 defendants were charged with plotting activities aimed at undermining Jordan's relations with another country.

Some of the suspects were instructed by an Iraqi named Abu Fahd to launch attacks against the US and Israeli embassies in Amman, as well as against the Israeli port city of Eilat, which is situated on the Red Sea across from Aqaba, according to the charge sheet. Sahli and his brother Abdullah smuggled seven rockets and timing devices in their car while travelling from Iraq to Jordan, the charge sheet said. The defendants fitted the rockets with the timing devices and placed them in a warehouse in Aqaba to be launched the following day against US warships in the port, according to court documents. Four rockets malfunctioned. The remaining three missed their targets, but killed a Jordanian soldier who was guarding a government hospital, the charge sheet said. In an Internet statement, Zarqawi's group claimed responsibility for the rocket attack in Aqaba, but Zarqawi's name was not listed in the 12-page charge sheet. The trial of the Aqaba attack defendants is expected to start in the next few weeks, according to a judicial source.
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Zark's been tried and sentenced in absentia so many times he probably doesn't even notice anymore.

Maybe he could go on a hunger strike while on the lam. It's what all the cool convicts are doing!
Posted by: Seafarious || 03/15/2006 0:34 Comments || Top||

#2  Instead of having the death sentence in 12 systems, Zarq has 12 death sentences in 1 system.
Posted by: Chinter Flarong9283 || 03/15/2006 11:22 Comments || Top||

#3  :>
Posted by: Vern Estes || 03/15/2006 17:52 Comments || Top||

#4  But the other eleven are preparing to file a motion or three.
Posted by: Seafarious || 03/15/2006 17:53 Comments || Top||


Sri Lanka
Colombo slams child recruitment by Tiger rebels
Posted by: Fred || 03/15/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Colombo for top UN job!!! .. Its the way he wears the mac and smokes acigar whilst askin probing questions , unlike our buddy Koffi ,who , not only pimps out children , but whole countries aswell
Posted by: Whineque Sleque3347 || 03/15/2006 1:39 Comments || Top||



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Two weeks of WOT
Wed 2006-03-15
  Azam Tariq's alleged murderer caught in Greece
Tue 2006-03-14
  Israel storms Jericho prison
Mon 2006-03-13
  Mujadadi survives suicide attack, blames Pakistan
Sun 2006-03-12
  Foley Killers Hanged
Sat 2006-03-11
  Clerics announce Sharia in S Waziristan
Fri 2006-03-10
  MILF coup underway?
Thu 2006-03-09
  Qaeda fugitive surrenders in Kuwait
Wed 2006-03-08
  N. Korea Launches Two Missiles
Tue 2006-03-07
  15 Dead, Dozens hurt in blasts in north Indian temple town
Mon 2006-03-06
  Bangla Bhai bangla nabbed
Sun 2006-03-05
  Ayman issues call for more attacks
Sat 2006-03-04
  EU3 Begin To Realize They Were Duped
Fri 2006-03-03
  Leb Army seals Syrian border
Thu 2006-03-02
  JMB chief Abdur Rahman nabbed
Wed 2006-03-01
  US journo trapped in Afghan prison riot

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