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Baghdad bombs target Shiite pilgrims, 32 killed
Today's Headlines
Headline Comments [Views]
Page 2: WoT Background
2 15:32 Odysseus [11136]
0 [11134]
2 20:10 JosephMendiola [11140]
Page 3: Non-WoT
5 20:03 JosephMendiola [11138]
Britain
BBC buries footage of new RAF Bomber Command memorial
They're not confused - they're just on the other side.
The BBC has come in for further criticism of its national events coverage after it refused to broadcast the unveiling of the RAF Bomber Command Memorial on its main channels.

Bomber Command veterans enlisted the help of Telegraph readers to raise the £5.5 million cost of the monument, which will be unveiled soon.

The RAF Bomber Command Association has been campaigning for a permanent memorial to the 55,573 crew who lost their lives during the war Instead of the showing the event attended by the Queen, eight members of the 7,000 veterans and families the BBC will be showing repeats or live tennis.
Instead, they buried short coverage of the unveilling on one of their channels with the fewest viewers.
The move has been condemned by campaigners who have worked tirelessly to raise the £6 million for a fitting tribute to the 55,000 airmen killed during the Second World War.

It also comes just a fortnight after the BBC was heavily criticised for its lacklustre coverage of the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Thames river pageant.
Why would the BBC care about the Queen?

Continued on Page 47
Posted by: || 06/17/2012 09:29 || Comments || Link || [11136 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I salute you, every man and woman, every pilot, every crew member and mechanic. ALL!


The crews of Bomber Command fought night after night under heavy fire and extreme conditions with grievous losses. For example, of any 100 airmen who flew, 55 were killed on operations or died as result of wounds: three were injured on operations or active service: 12 were taken prisoner of war: two were shot down and evaded capture, while 27 survived a tour of operations (approx. 30). Approximately 4,000 Australians died in Bomber Command in the Second World War. 10,000 Canadians, 1,700 New Zealanders and nearly 1,000 Poles also made the supreme sacrifice. Many other nationalities such as Americans (Hundreds of whom served in RAF Bomber Command), French, Belgians, Czechs and South Africans also died in the service of Bomber Command. It is also often forgotten that around 1,500 ground crew and over 90 WAAFs were also killed.

Over 55,000 Bomber Command aircrew were killed.

At long last a memorial to these crews has been built and is due to be opened by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II on 28th June 2012
Posted by: Besoeker || 06/17/2012 11:52 Comments || Top||

#2  Amen, Besoeker. And here's to their fighter escorts, as well.
Posted by: Odysseus || 06/17/2012 15:32 Comments || Top||


Baroness Warsi, her extremist business partner and the lunch with the Prime Minister
Her business partner, Abid Hussain, a former activist with a radical Islamic group who has a conviction for violence, secured an invitation to meet David Cameron at Downing Street, raising questions over the Prime Minister's security.
Lady Warsi's decision not to take part in the debate follows allegations that David Cameron banned her from attending a prominent Muslim conference in London last weekend.

She personally paid for potential customers, one of whom was in negotiations over a deal with her firm, to attend a Conservative Party lunch with the Prime Minister last month.

The Sunday Telegraph has also learnt that her business partner, Abid Hussain, a former activist with a radical Islamic group who has a conviction for violence, secured an invitation to meet David Cameron at Downing Street, raising questions over the Prime Minister's security.

The disclosures put Lady Warsi under fresh scrutiny.

Mr Cameron has already asked Sir Alex Allan, the independent adviser on ministerial conduct, to investigate after The Sunday Telegraph disclosed that she had not declared a majority stake in Rupert's Recipes, a restaurant supply firm whose other shareholder is Mr Hussain.

However the disclosure that she apparently used a political function to promote her business appears to breach clause one of the Ministerial Code, which states: "Ministers must ensure that no conflict arises, or appears to arise, between their public duties and their private interests."
Continued on Page 47
Posted by: lotp || 06/17/2012 00:00 || Comments || Link || [11134 views] Top|| File under:


Subsidies for onshore wind farms 'to be axed by 2020'
David Cameron and George Osborne are to come down firmly on the side of those who object to payments currently worth £400 million a year to companies who produce onshore wind, The Sunday Telegraph has learned.

Despite opposition from the Liberal Democrats, who strongly support more renewable energy, the subsidy regime for onshore wind and solar panels is now firmly expected to be phased out by the end of the decade.
Continued on Page 47
Posted by: lotp || 06/17/2012 00:00 || Comments || Link || [11138 views] Top|| File under:

#1  flies to Brazil on Tuesday for the United Nations Rio +20 Earth Summit, where 26,000 delegates,


Anyone care to guess the "Carbon footprint" of that little junket? That's the footprint of the Man-bear-pig boy howdy!
Posted by: AlanC || 06/17/2012 7:42 Comments || Top||

#2  in "only" 8 years?

Why not axe windmill rent-seeking tomorrow?
Posted by: Bright Pebbles || 06/17/2012 10:02 Comments || Top||

#3  You would be more familiar with the ins and outs of the British politics that I, Bright Pebbles, but from what I can discern this is one of several areas where the Tories and LibDems differ, leading to compromises with lots of behind the scenes maneuvering.
Posted by: lotp || 06/17/2012 10:13 Comments || Top||

#4  Neither the Tories or LDs will be in power much longer no less 8 years.

This is just more spin and propaganda to keep the swindle going.
Posted by: AlanC || 06/17/2012 11:03 Comments || Top||

#5  And OCEAN/SEA-BASED[tidal] ENERGY FARMS???

JET STREAM???
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 06/17/2012 20:03 Comments || Top||


£1billion deal paves the way for Trident nuclear deterrent replacement
Philip Hammond, the Defence Secretary, will reveal the scheme to build a new nuclear deterrent in a move which will cause tensions with the Liberal Democrats.

He will announce a deal ordering nuclear reactors for a new class of submarines to replace the current Vanguard fleet, which carries Britain's Trident nuclear arsenal.

The decision is the most public statement yet that the Government is committed to a full-scale replacement of Trident - something opposed by the Lib Dems, who want a cheaper way of maintaining nuclear weapons.

Mr Hammond will say that a Rolls-Royce plant at Raynesway, in Derby, will be given the order to build the reactors, and that the Ministry of Defence will fund an 11-year refit of the plant. The contract will create 300 jobs and many more in the factory's supply chain.

But it will create a rift with the Liberal Democrats. One senior Liberal Democrat source told The Sunday Telegraph this weekend that the replacement of Trident remains a "massive fault line" between the Coalition's two parties.

The Lib Dems pledged in their 2010 manifesto that they would oppose a "like-for-like" replacement of the submarines and the nuclear warhead-carrying missiles which they fire.

Nick Harvey, the Lib Dem defence minister, is leading a review into cheaper ways to maintain the nuclear deterrent and wants to abandon the so-called "Moscow criterion", which recommends Britain retains an arsenal capable of destroying the Russian capital.

The new contract, to be announced in the next few days, represents the Government's biggest commitment to replacing the ageing Trident fleet, at a total cost of up to £20 billion. Ministry of Defence sources said that it was possible to go ahead with the reactor contract now because defence cuts and reforms to procurement meant new investments could begin.

A senior MoD source said: "This is good news for the Royal Navy and a great boost for jobs. These cutting edge reactors will support the UK's submarines for decades and are a vital part of ordering long lead items for the new nuclear deterrent submarines.

"We have balanced the MoD's books and can now get on with ordering major pieces of equipment for the armed forces to protect us against future threats."

Conservatives are determined to replace "like for like" the Vanguard submarines, which are expected to be decommissioned in the late 2020s, Their Trident II D-5 missiles are expected to remain in service until 2042. It is undecided whether the Government will opt for three or four submarines.

Twenty years after the end of the Cold War, there are many new threats to international security, with growing fears surrounding Iran, China and Russia, Conservatives say. It is also claimed that failing to commission a new wave of submarines could cost up to 15,000 British jobs.

Although the Coalition Agreement between the Tories and Lib Dems said the parties would "maintain Britain's nuclear deterrent", it also said that "Liberal Democrats will continue to make the case for alternatives".

A £350 million contract to design the new submarines went to BAE Systems, Babcock and Rolls-Royce. But the symbolism of ordering reactors is far greater.

The new nuclear submarine contract with Rolls-Royce will be seen as one in a series of policies launched by the Tories which are designed to reconnect with the party's grassroots. In recent weeks, Conservative ministers have unveil a crackdown on illegal immigrants and foreign prisoners, pledged new action on anti-social families and given ground on the prospect of a referendum on Britain's membership of the EU.

The decision by Conservatives ministers to sign such a high-profile contract comes at a time of tense relations between the two parties. Many Tory MPs are seething with the Lib Dems for failing to support Jeremy Hunt in last week's Commons motion calling for an investigation into the Culture Secretary's handling of News Corporation's BSkyB bid.

And it was made despite Sir Menzies Campbell, the Lib Dem grandee, making an open public call for ministers to abandon the "Moscow criterion".

"Nuclear weapons have no intrinsic merit," the party's former leader said recently, adding that "it is unthinkable today that Britain would contemplate the destruction of the heavily populated capital of Russia -- or any other city."

However, opposition to a new generation of nuclear weapons will not be confined to Liberal Democrats. A poll two years ago found that 63% of the public said they supported scrapping Britain's nuclear deterrent to cut the deficit in the public finances.

Some senior military figures have also opposed Trident, arguing that it consumes too much of the defence budget and leaves less money for front-line forces.

General Lord Dannatt, the former chief of the army staff, previously said in an interview: "It is a very fine judgement as to whether we should continue to have a nuclear deterrent or not.

"I think if we are looking at the character and nature of future conflicts and if we think we will be dealing with hybrid warfare or asymmetric threats, then may be for the next few years it makes sense to keep that ultimate deterrent in case some government in five, ten, or 15 years would want to threaten the security of our country.

"At present we should keep it but not forever."

The push towards a new generation of nuclear submarines comes as the military is facing deep cuts, with the number of armed forces personnel set to be cut from 180,000 to 150,000 over the next five years.

A report published earlier this year by CentreForum, a liberal think tank, said: "Replacing Trident is nonsensical. There is no current or medium-term threat to the UK which justifies the huge costs involved.

"A critical assessment of the UK's strategic position and military requirements leads to a clear conclusion: Trident makes no effective contribution to our security.

"Cancelling it will provide a unique opportunity to re-balance and revitalise Britain's forces for the 21st century."
Continued on Page 47
Posted by: lotp || 06/17/2012 00:00 || Comments || Link || [11140 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Carry on.
Posted by: newc || 06/17/2012 1:42 Comments || Top||

#2  TRIDENT SLBMS ...

versus

FNS CV CHARLES DE GAULLE'S WILY PROPELLERS ...

"... No contribution to our Security" > D *** NG
IT, ITS A TUFF CALL ALL RIGHT!
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 06/17/2012 20:10 Comments || Top||



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Two weeks of WOT
Sun 2012-06-17
  Baghdad bombs target Shiite pilgrims, 32 killed
Sat 2012-06-16
  Yemen army seizes Shuqra after Qaeda pullout
Fri 2012-06-15
  Syria Violence Kills More Than 60
Thu 2012-06-14
  Army takes over in Egypt
Wed 2012-06-13
  At Least 73 Dead in Shelling and Clashes across Syria
Tue 2012-06-12
  Helicopter Gunships Deployed as More Than 100 Dead in Syria
Mon 2012-06-11
  Church Bombing Kills 15 in Nigeria
Sun 2012-06-10
  Syria Army Kills 70 Civilians in Protest Cities
Sat 2012-06-09
  Tuareg Rebels, Islamists, Clash in Northern Mali
Fri 2012-06-08
  UN monitors shot at trying to get to Syria massacre
Thu 2012-06-07
  47 Die in Hama Countryside 'Massacre' as Clashes Rock Damascus
Wed 2012-06-06
  Armed groups kill 15 Syrian soldiers in Latakia
Tue 2012-06-05
  U.S. Official: Al-Qaeda's No. 2 Killed In Drone Strike
Mon 2012-06-04
  US drone strike kills 10 in NW Pakistan
Sun 2012-06-03
  At least 12 dead in Nigerian church bombing


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