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Mullah Omar: 'Americans don't have the courage to come here'
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Afghanistan
White House proposing food drops
  • Karen DeYoung Washington Post Staff Writer October 4, 2001; Page A01
    As it assembles a massive diplomatic, financial and military arsenal against terrorist kingpin Osama bin Laden and his Taliban hosts in Afghanistan, the White House is weighing a proposal to deploy a much more basic weapon, targeted at the long-suffering Afghan people. Under a plan drawn up by U.S. Agency for International Development Administrator Andrew Natsios, bags of American wheat would be air-dropped into the Afghan snow. Local merchants would be supplied with tons of U.S. commodities to take into the country by road from Pakistan, Iran and Central Asia to flood markets and drive down food prices in every major town and city.
    This article starring:
    Andrew Natsios
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Mullah Omar: "Americans don't have the courage to come here"
  • Christian Science Monitor
    On our shortwave radios, we heard Mullah Mohammad Omar, the leader of the radical Islamic Taliban militia, throwing down the gauntlet on Monday during an interview on Taliban-run Radio Kabul: "Americans don't have the courage to come here," he said. The reclusive Taliban chief, whose troops control 90 percent of the country and consider Osama bin Laden one of their "guests," urged Americans to "think again and again" about attacking Afghanistan.
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    ICRC doubles aid estimate
  • ABC News
    The International Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies have been forced to double their estimates of what is needed to cope with the humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan, with up to 500,000 Afghan refugees being targeted. Red Cross officials in Pakistan say the focus will be on getting tents, blankets and health care equipment into Afghanistan as soon as possible ahead of the start of winter next month. As well, aid workers say there will be an effort to provide water and sanitation facilities in some of the dozens of new refugee camps being built in western Pakistan in readiness for the estimated one million people expected to cross the border in the event of a war in Afghanistan.
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:


    Dust storms halt advance
  • ABC News
    Severe dust storms in northern Afghanistan have halted the advance of the Afghan Opposition, and allowed the Taliban time to muster troops for a counter-offensive. A Taliban attack is expected in the north of the country in the next day or two. The Taliban continues to have superior numbers and fire power, and the Opposition's forces believe they are unlikely to prevail without foreign intervention.
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:


    Afghan women trapped under the burqa
  • JAN GOODWIN NY DAILY NEWS
    One Friday afternoon, 30,000 men and boys poured into a dilapidated Olympic sports stadium in Kabul, capital of Afghanistan. Hawkers peddled nuts, biscuits and tea to the crowd. The scheduled entertainment? A young woman named Sohaila was going to be flogged. Her crime? She was walking with a man who wasn't a relative. Under Taliban law, she was guilty of sex out of wedlock. She was sentenced to 100 lashes, a punishment that has killed grown men. But Sohaila was considered lucky, her sentence "light," because she was single. Had she been married, she would have been stoned to death.

    These circuses are weekly outings for the entertainment-starved males of Kabul. For women, however, life under the Taliban is like being "buried alive," says Spoghmai, a 27-year-old resident of Kabul. This former elementary schoolteacher lost her right arm and leg in a shelling attack in 1996. Since then, Spoghmai has not been able to leave her home: She cannot walk with crutches while wearing a burqa, and the Taliban forbid women to be uncovered in public. The despised burqa is like wearing a tent, it envelopes women from head to toe and so impedes vision that some have been hit by cars; one woman was run over by a tank.
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Talibs running press gangs
  • FoxNews.com
    Desperate Taliban troops are taking thousands of boys and men from their families and forcing them into the military in an attempt to bolster their thinning ranks, according to recently arriving refugees in Pakistan. "Eight members of my family have disappeared and been taken away to fight," said Said Anwar, a 40-year-old Kabul resident who staggered into a refugee shanty town here just three days ago. "They were young people, 12 or 13. The older ones, the teenaged boys, are being taken away, too." Anwar and dozens of other refugees have arrived here in the last week telling disturbingly similar stories of how Taliban forces, faced with hundreds of defections, have abandoned the towns, looted the markets and are turning on their own people.
    This article starring:
    Said Anwar
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:


    Talibs won't hand over Binny even with evidence
  • Dawn
    An envoy of Taliban said in remarks published today, the movement would not hand over Osama bin Laden even if there was evidence to implicate him in attacks on the United States. Taliban's ambassador to Pakistan, Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef, told the United Arab Emirates' Al-Khaleej newspaper the movement would thoroughly check U.S. documents linking Osama bin Laden to the devastating attacks on New York and Washington before putting him on trial in an Islamic sharia court.
    This article starring:
    MULLAH ABDUL SALAM ZAIFTaliban
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Talibs close UN offices in Jalalabad
  • Dawn
    The United Nations revealed today that the Taliban had closed off several of its offices in Jalalabad. "Some UN offices in Jalalabad are being guarded by the Taliban and are not available to UN staff," UN spokesman Stephanie Bunker told reporters.
    This article starring:
    Stephanie Bunker
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Talibs wouldn't be excluded from Loya Jirga
  • Frontier Post
    ROME (Online): Taliban would be part of the proposed transitional set up to be put in place in Afghanistan, according to General Abdul Wali, brother-in-law of Afghanistan's exiled former ruler Zahir Shah. Spelling out details of an agreement reached between Shah and a delegation of the Northern Alliance in an interview with The Hindu, he told the agreement proposes ways to establish a broad-based, popular government in Afghanistan by convening a Loya Jirga - council of ethnic and tribal chiefs - to set up a new transitional government.
    This article starring:
    General Abdul Wali
    Zahir Shah
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Ismail Khan: Ghor and Bagdhis will fall within a week
  • AFP
    The Taliban's hold on power in Afghanistan appeared to be slipping Thursday, amid growing signs of internal rebellion and stepped-up external military and diplomatic pressure. Top opposition commander Ismail Khan told AFP that Afghans in the western provinces of Ghor and Bagdhis were rising up against their hardline Taliban rulers and predicted both provinces would fall within a week. "The most important fact is that civilians in these two provinces are rising against the Taliban. They do not want to be under Taliban rule," said Khan, one of the most powerful commanders fighting the Taliban. Any opposition advances in Ghor and Badghis threaten the western city and province of Herat, close to the Iranian border.

    Khan said residents in Herat were ready to rise up, and had begun writing "Death to the Taliban" on walls around the town in a major show of defiance. Khan estimated that as many as 10,000 civilians in Ghor and Herat had access to weapons left over from the 1979-89 Afghan war against Soviet occupation,and said men were enlisting in his militia army in unprecedented numbers, swelling his force from 3,000 to just 5,000. Since capturing Herat in 1995, the ethnic Pashtun dominated Taliban have never been at ease in the mainly ethnic Tajik and traditionally moderate city.
    This article starring:
    Ismail Khan
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Russia will supply Northern Alliance
  • Reuters
    Russia is planning to supply Afghan anti-Taliban forces with tanks, armoured vehicles and other arms worth up to $45 million in the coming weeks, a leading Russian newspaper reported on Thursday. But Russia's ambassador to ex-Soviet Tajikistan, through which the paper said Moscow would funnel weapons to Northern Alliance forces, said no Russian arms had arrived so far. "Up to now there has been only humanitarian aid," the envoy, Maxim Peshkov, told a news conference in the Tajik capital Dushanbe, referring to planeloads of food, blankets and medical supplies which Moscow has begun sending to northern Afghanistan. "There have been no guns or machineguns," he added.

    Nezavisimaya Gazeta newspaper, giving the first such comprehensive list of Russian hardware likely to be channelled to the U.N.-recognised Northern Alliance government, quoted defence sources as saying supplies would include 40-50 tanks, 60-80 armoured personnel carriers and ammunition for them. Russia would also supply Grad missile systems, artillery, mortars, anti-tank weapons and sniper rifles as well as Mi-24 attack helicopters and Mi-8 troop-carriers. "The total volume of military-technical assistance to the Northern Alliance up to the end of 2001 will be of the order of $30-45 million," the newspaper said.

    President Vladimir Putin has set increased arms supplies to the Northern Alliance as one of the main ways in which Moscow will support Washington's planned operations against "terrorist" bases in Afghanistan.
    This article starring:
    Maxim Peshkov
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Anthrax
    Thompson: Anthrax is isolated case, not terrorism
  • MANNY GARCIA and DAVID KIDWELL Miami Herald
    ''It is an isolated case and it is not contagious,'' U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy Thompson said at a White House briefing. ''There is no terrorism.''
    Robert Stevens, a 63-year-old Palm Beach County man has been hospitalized in critical condition in Lantana with anthrax, state health officials confirmed. State of Florida and federal investigators from the Centers for Disease Control are at the Columbia JFK Medical Center are investigating, federal sources said. ''It is an isolated case and it is not contagious,'' U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy Thompson said at a White House briefing. ''There is no terrorism.'' Thompson said he was aware of two reported cases of anthrax -- one in Florida in 1974, the other within the last year in Texas -- in the United States, but admitted it was ''entirely possible'' there have been undocumented cases.
    This article starring:
    Robert Stevens
    Tommy Thompson
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Fifth Column
    More multiculturalism, please!
  • The Weekly Standard
    Meanwhile, in the category of moral obtuseness, an honorable mention goes to Judith Rizzo, a deputy chancellor of New York's school system, who told the Washington Post: "Those people who said we don't need multiculturalism, that it's too touchy-feely, . . . I think they've learned their lesson. We have to do more to teach habits of tolerance, knowledge, and awareness of other cultures."
    This article starring:
    Judith Rizzo
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Stockhausen: 9--11 was "Greatest work of art imaginable"
  • The Weekly Standard
    Susan Sontag set a standard difficult to match. Still, for sheer outrageousness, the German composer Karlheinz Stockhausen topped her, calling the destruction of the World Trade Center "the greatest work of art imaginable. . . . Minds achieving something in an act that we couldn't even dream of in music, people rehearsing like mad for ten years, preparing fanatically for a concert, and then dying, just imagine what happened there. You have people who are that focused on a performance and then 5,000 people are dispatched into the afterlife, in a single moment. I couldn't do that. By comparison, we composers are nothing." When the uproar in Germany caused the cancellation of a major program of his music, Stockhausen apologized, saying he meant that the terrorists had created a work of "the devil's art."

    This article starring:
    Karlheinz Stockhausen
    Susan Sontag
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:


    International Action Center to Washington for "World Peace"
  • WSJ Kim Strassel
    But perhaps the groups that have done themselves the most harm are the antiglobalization protestors. After the International Monetary Fund and World Bank called off meetings planned to be held in Washington in late September--an event the protestors spent months gearing up for--the antiglobal groups decided they would change their message. A much-smaller group of protestors, led by the virulently anti-American International Action Center, showed up in Washington, this time to promote "world peace." Talk about irony. Here was a group that hates anything global--except, it seems, world peace. Moreover, here were people who have a track record of violent "protest," now lecturing our government on the need for pacifism.

    This article starring:
    International Action Center
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    The Left splits
  • Andrew Sullivan, WSJ Editorial
    Of course the initial response of left-wing intellectuals to Sept. 11 was one jerking of the collective knee. This was America's fault. From Susan Sontag to Michael Moore, from Noam Chomsky to Edward Said, there was no question that, however awful the attack on the World Trade Center, it was vital to keep attention fixed on the real culprit: the United States. Of the massacre, a Rutgers professor summed up the consensus by informing her students that "we should be aware that, whatever its proximate cause, its ultimate cause is the fascism of U.S. foreign policy over the past many decades." Or as a poster at the demonstrations in Washington last weekend put it, "Amerika, Get a Clue."

    Less noticed was the reasoned stance of liberal groups like the National Organization for Women. President Kim Candy stated that "The Taliban government of Afghanistan, believed to be harboring suspect Osama bin Laden, subjugates women and girls, and deprives them of the most basic human rights--including education, medicine and jobs. The smoldering remains of the World Trade Center are a stark reminder that when such extremism is allowed to flourish anywhere in the world, none of us is safe." The NAACP issued an equally forceful "message of resolve," declaring, "These tragedies and these acts of evil must not go unpunished. Justice must be served."

    "To excuse such an atrocity by blaming U.S. government policies is to deny the basic idea of all morality: that individuals are responsible for their actions."
    Left-wing dissident Christopher Hitchens, meanwhile, assailed his comrades as "soft on crime and soft on fascism." After an initial spasm of equivocation, The American Prospect magazine ran a column this week accusing the pre-emptive peace movement of "a truly vile form of moral equivalency" in equating President Bush with terrorists. Not a hard call, but daring for a magazine that rarely has even a civil word for the right.

    Most moving was Salman Rushdie's early call in the New York Times to "be clear about why this bien-pensant anti-American onslaught is such appalling rubbish. Terrorism is the murder of the innocent; this time, it was mass murder. To excuse such an atrocity by blaming U.S. government policies is to deny the basic idea of all morality: that individuals are responsible for their actions."

    Whatever else is going on, the liberal-left alliance has taken as big a hit as the conservative-fundamentalist alliance after the blame-America remarks of Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson.
    This article starring:
    Christopher Hitchens
    Edward Said
    Jerry Falwell
    Kim Candy
    Michael Moore
    National Organization for Women
    Noam Chomsky
    Pat Robertson
    Salman Rushdie
    Susan Sontag
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Lileks on ANSWER
  • James Lileks
    The International Action Center coordinated the rally -- and who are they, you ask? According to their Web site, they're dedicated to "resistance to U.S. militarism, war and corporate greed." Former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark is one of their luminaries, and the site reflects his U.S.-Out-of-North-America worldview.
    These people would take Lex Luthor's side against Superman.
    Judging from the position papers and articles on the site, they live in that Bizarro world of American politics where Fidel Castro is a champion of freedom, Saddam Hussein is a victim, and North Korea is an innocent victim of American imperialism. These people would take Lex Luthor's side against Superman.

    True to the belief that evil can best be combated with ponderous acronyms, they've assembled a new antiwar group, the International ANSWER. (Act Now to Stop War & End Racism). The list of signatories condemning Bush had all the usual suspects -- labor organizers from AFSCME, a Mumia Abu-Jamal advocate, Greens, dovish Jews, and other sorts who'd be shot on day one should the terrorists win.
    This article starring:
    Act Now to Stop War
    Fidel Castro
    International Action Center
    Mumia Abu-Jamal
    Ramsey Clark
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Lileks on e-mailing the Taliban
  • James Lileks Newhouse News Service
    It takes a special breed of moral imbecile to believe their hearts will be softened by the entreaties of pacifistic spam.
    A progressive group called ActForChange has announced that it will send your disapproving e-mail to the Taliban. Direct from your warm, comfy dorm to diplomats in Pakistan. We can stop the Bush Death Juggernaut, friends -- just start typing for peace! One small problem: the Taliban itself. This is a government that beats people to death for playing cards. It takes a special breed of moral imbecile to believe their hearts will be softened by the entreaties of pacifistic spam.

    But in the protesters' world, the actual effect of one's actions is immaterial. What counts is holding forth a standard that ensures your civilization dies in a state of moral purity. Every response to aggression should have the same effect as the Polish cavalry's assault on Nazi tanks -- gallant, doomed, and above all symbolic. Hence the march on D.C. last Saturday.
    This article starring:
    ActForChange
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Village Voice complains about firefighters' skin color
  • NR Kumbaya Watch
    The Village Voice stays true to form, serving up a cornucopia of anti-American inanities. Here, for instance, is Richard Goldstein, complaining about what we've lost in our "rush to unity": "Suddenly it seems like an act of impiety to point out that, in the phalanx of police and firefighters surrounding Giuliani on Saturday Night Live, there was hardly a black face to be seen. Or that, in the spectrum of opinion following this awful event, women were barely heard from, and so we were deprived of their perspective on the crisis ... If women were fully included in the national dialogue, it wouldn't be such a monologue. We might be able to process our feelings without sedating the culture."
    Guess his house isn't on fire if he's got the time to look.
    This article starring:
    Richard Goldstein
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

    #1  why is it anti american for someone to wonder if black people or women were not included enough? i dont see the connection - please explain. It was a great thing for american people to come together following the tragedy, but surely that doesnt mean that dissenting voices should shut up?
    Posted by: Phitle Glaviter4997 || 01/18/2005 11:00 Comments || Top||


    Mark Steyn on breeding...
  • Mark Steyn National Post
    What have we learned since September 11th? We've learned that poverty breeds despair, despair breeds instability, instability breeds resentment and resentment breeds extremism.

    Yes, folks, these are what we in the trade call "root causes." Which cause do you root for? "Poverty breeds instability" (The Detroit News)? Or "poverty breeds fanaticism" (Carolyn Lochhead in The San Francisco Chronicle)? Bear in mind that "instability breeds zealots" (John Ibbitson in The Globe And Mail), but that "fanaticism breeds hatred" (Mauve MacCormack of New South Wales) and "hatred breeds extremism" (Mircea Geoana, Romanian Foreign Minister)...

    Faced with the enormity of September 11th the pacifist left has done what it always does -- smother the issues in generalities and abstractions.
    And so faced with the enormity of September 11th the pacifist left has done what it always does -- smother the issues in generalities and abstractions -- though never on such an epic scale. On that sunny Tuesday morning, at least 7,000 people died -- real, living men and women and children with families and street addresses and telephone numbers. But the language of the pacifists -- for all its ostensible compassion -- dehumanizes these individuals. They're no longer flight attendants and firemen and waitresses and bond dealers, but only an abstract blur in some theoretical equation -- if not mere "collateral damage," certainly collateral. Of course, real live folks die in the Middle East, too, and their stories are worth telling. But in between the bonehead refrains of this breeding that and that breeding the other you'll search in vain for a name or a face, a street or a city or sometimes even a country. Just the confident assertion that one abstract noun breeds another.
    This article starring:
    Carolyn Lochhead
    John Ibbitson
    Mauve MacCormack
    Mircea Geoana
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Home Front
    Cockpit recording confirms flight 93 passengers attacked their captors
  • Kevin Johnson and Alan Levin, USA TODAY
    WASHINGTON Cockpit voice recordings from United Airlines Flight 93 indicate that the hijacked jet's passengers attacked their captors and fought their way into the cockpit before the jet went down, according to data obtained Wednesday. The account is based on an ongoing analysis of the cockpit voice recorder. It provides confirmation of the passengers' heroic efforts as they fought against four terrorists who had commandeered the jet on an apparent suicide mission toward a target in Washington.
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Tower Boy
  • WSJ Best of the Web Today
    Remember that hoax photo of the guy supposedly standing atop one of the World Trade Center towers seconds before the airplane hit? Someone's been having fun with Photoshop. A gallery of photos of the same guy shows him near the Hindenburg, in a Titanic lifeboat and in the front seat of the car carrying JFK on Nov. 22, 1963.
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    CUNY trustees condemn faculty hate speech. Really.
  • NY Post
    City University trustees are horrified by a forum in which professors blamed America for the attack on the World Trade Center - and they're drafting a resolution condemning faculty hate speech. "These people should be ashamed of themselves," CUNY trustee Jeffrey Wiesenfeld told me yesterday.
    "While recognizing the professors' right to be stupid, their opinions render ill repute to the university."
    "While recognizing [the professors'] right to be stupid, their opinions render ill repute to the university. They're fortunate it's not up to me. I would consider that behavior seditious at this time."

    As you read here yesterday, City College's radical professors union - the Professional Staff Congress Forum - sponsored an event on Tuesday titled "Threats of War, Challenges to Peace." It was a two-hour, hard-core America-bashing festival. The terrorist attack on the trade center was referred to by faculty as "the incident." Terrorists were described as freedom fighters. One anthropology professor, M.A. Samad-Matias, framed the atrocity as an understandable Islamic response to Western imperialism.

    Wiesenfeld said he will introduce a resolution condemning the event at a meeting of CUNY trustees this month. "We would expect the board will vote unanimously in favor" of the resolution, said trustee John Calandra. Such resolutions - the last one condemned the anti-Semitic ravings of Prof. Leonard Jeffries - allow trustees to send a message to taxpayers who pay the ranting professors' salaries.
    This article starring:
    Jeffrey Wiesenfeld
    John Calandra
    Leonard Jeffries
    M.A. Samad-Matias
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Lileks on "Violence never solves anything"
  • James Lileks
    One hates to bring up something as inconvenient as history, but war was a jack-dandy solution to that nation's Final Solution. By the protesters' logic, D-Day was just a big karmic disaster -- if we'd just waited, the Nazis would have collapsed of their weight, just like the U.S.S.R. Granted, it wouldn't have happened until 1977, and by then Europe would have been blond and blue-eyed from Gibraltar to the Urals. But at least we wouldn't have stooped to their level.
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Logan security head canned
  • NY Daily News
    The man in charge of security at Logan Airport when terrorists hijacked two planes was fired yesterday but put in charge of security at Boston's harbor instead. Acting Gov. Jane Swift unveiled new security for Logan Airport yesterday, including replacing Chief of Security John Lawless with State Superintendent Col. John DiFava. "That two of those planes took off from Logan Airport is particularly painful for us," Swift said.

    Lawless is a former police officer who was appointed to the $130,000 a year job by then-Gov. William Weld. He had been Weld's chauffeur.
    Lawless, who was appointed in 1993 as the Massachusetts Port Authority's head of public safety, came under increasing scrutiny after the hijackings of American Flight 11 and United Flight 175. The two planes smashed into the World Trade Center.Lawless defended his credentials in the days after the attack. He said preliminary findings suggested the hijackers had boarded the flights without violating security measures. "We are being blamed for things over which we have no control," he said then.

    Lawless is a former police officer who was appointed to the $130,000 a year job by then-Gov. William Weld. He had been Weld's chauffeur.
    This article starring:
    Jane Swift
    John DiFava
    John Lawless
    William Weld
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Relativism is dead?
  • Andrew Coyne National Post
    But the rediscovery of truth -- the daunting awareness, not merely that I might be wrong, but that I might be right -- is more than the final death blow to relativism. It is implicitly universalist.
    To smash an airliner into a building is not wrong in some cultures, but not in others; it is not wrong for you, but not for me; it is simply wrong.
    To smash an airliner into a building is not wrong in some cultures, but not in others; it is not wrong for you, but not for me; it is simply wrong. Who's to say? All of us. Humanity. Civilization. And if it is wrong to kill, if every person has the right to life, if each one's life is the equal of every other's, then all else follows: freedom, equality, democracy, and the rest of the apparatus of humanism. Or as they are not afraid to say in some parts of the world, of "universal human values."

    To say that this is a revolution would hardly do it justice. The moral code that was slowly working its way through our societies stressed not right and wrong, but authenticity: To thine own self be true. An action was to be judged, not by appeal to universal values, but by whether it was consistent with the actor's (self-chosen) identity. Hence the undergraduate's obsession with what to him seems the worst, if not the only crime: hypocrisy. Actions are not, indeed, to be judged at all, but rather persons, and by extension nations, are to be scored against their previous record. To the point that his only reaction, on hearing of the murder of 6,000 Americans, is to bring up other crimes other Americans are alleged to have committed.
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Bush visits New York again
  • BBC
    On his second visit to New York since the 11 September attacks, President Bush found his strong line on terrorism is winning him support in a city once hostile to his views, writes BBC News Online's Ryan Dilley in New York. George Bush may feel more at home in Midland, Texas, than on the streets of the Big Apple - perhaps concluding that his Southern charm plays better to those in what he calls "America's heartland" than to the urban sophisticates of New York.

    However, the 11 September terror attack has changed New York's political landscape, just as it wrought such horrible change on the city's skyline. In his second visit here since the World Trade Center tragedy, President Bush is being heartily welcomed by some New Yorkers once inclined to despair of their leader.
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Passenger arrested with disassembled shotgun
  • FoxNews.com
    A passenger was arrested when an airport security guard searched his bag and found a disassembled shotgun -- but only after it had gone through X-ray screening unnoticed. Bradley Cooper, 20, told investigators the gun and duffel bag belonged to his roommate and he had forgotten the gun was inside. Investigators said an X-ray machine operator didn't recognize the shapes of the shotgun and ammunition on Cooper's first trip through security Tuesday at Colorado Springs Airport.
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    McCaffrey on what's going to happen
  • (CNN)
    Retired Army Gen. Barry McCaffrey, who was drug czar during President Clinton's second term, said in an online exchange last month that those against the United States in its war on terrorism would "be killed suddenly, in significant numbers and without warning." McCaffrey, who commanded the 24th Mechanized Infantry Division in the Persian Gulf War, offered his blunt assessment on the mission and the strategy confronting the United States and its allies in an e-mail exchange with a cadet at West Point, where McCaffrey teaches.

    The exchange took place September 19 -- a little more than a week after the deadliest terror attacks on U.S. soil. McCaffrey and others have since distributed the e-mail widely to friends and associates in the national security community. McCaffrey told CNN he is not displeased the exchange became public, because he is eager to articulate the likely multi-faceted course of action. McCaffrey identified multiple objectives -- to increase domestic security, build a strong coalition and finally "take the gloves off and use integrated military power to find, fix and destroy" terrorist organizations.
    This article starring:
    Barry McCaffrey
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Ohio Jews forgive ranting Muslim cleric
  • John Caniglia
    Plain Dealer Reporter
    Hundreds of worshippers at Northeast Ohio's largest mosque yesterday forgave Imam Fawaz Damra for demeaning statements toward Jews, but its leaders are undecided about whether he should continue as their leader. Officials of the Islamic Center of Cleveland were to discuss comments Damra made 10 years ago that referred to Jews as animals. The comments, which surfaced last week, troubled Christians, Jews and Muslims in Greater Cleveland. Damra apologized in a written statement. But the gathering of leaders never began because more than 400 people turned it into a town meeting to support him.

    "All people make mistakes," said Dr. Azzam Ahmed, an elder and the man who helped hire Damra. "When they realize their mistakes, they apologize. He did, and that's as far as he can go. If other faiths don't accept it, then the ball is in their court."
    This article starring:
    Azzam Ahmed
    Fawaz Damra
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Assyrian Christians sue for being kicked off airliner
  • STEVE WARMBIR STAFF REPORTER Chicago Sun Times
    Three men are suing United Airlines for allegedly being kicked off a Phoenix-to-Chicago flight, four days after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, because a passenger erroneously believed they were Arabs and posed a danger--even after the men were cleared by the FBI and security. Younadam Youkhana, 52, and his son, Ninos, 20, who are in the parking lot business in Chicago and who are American citizens, were on the flight along with two Iraqi friends, one of whom is also a plaintiff in the suit.

    The men are not Muslims but Assyrian Christians who are involved in fund-raising for a group in Iraq that opposes Saddam Hussein, said their attorney Terence J. Moran. All four men were asked to leave the 2:40 p.m. United Flight 722 on Sept. 25 after a female passenger apparently became worried, solely based on her wrong perception that they were Arabs, Moran said.
    This article starring:
    Terence J. Moran
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Terror Networks
    Six killed in attack on Karachi mosque
  • Dawn
    At least six people were killed and eight injured today when unidentified gunmen opened fire on a Shiite mosque in Karachi, police said. Five people died on the spot and another critically injured in the firing died later in hospital, police said. "It was sectarian violence," local police chief Majid Dasti told AFP.
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    The Alliance
    Press can't find the Americans in Uzbekistan...
  • Washington Post
    In a region braced for an American war in Afghanistan, all that's missing are visible signs of the Americans. Thousands of U.S. troops and warplanes are reportedly on their way here, to staging areas in former Soviet republics along Afghanistan's northern border. But from dusty airfields in southern Uzbekistan to a strategically located base near the Afghan border in Tajikistan, there is no evidence of a significant U.S. military presence. And inside Afghanistan, the opposition forces that hope to join U.S. troops to oust the ruling Taliban militia say they have not seen a single U.S. soldier. More than three weeks after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in New York and Washington prompted the expectation of U.S. retaliatory strikes against Osama bin Laden and his hosts in Afghanistan, it has become clear that this is a different kind of war. Instead of organizing massive troop buildups and very public preparations such as those undertaken a decade ago during the Persian Gulf War, the Pentagon has mobilized more than 30,000 soldiers to the region without saying where they're going.
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Paks plan to sever ties with Taliban
  • Dawn
    A Japanese newspaper said today that Pervez Musharraf had said Islamabad plans to sever ties with Taliban. The Mainichi Shimbun newspaper said Musharraf had told National Security Council that Pakistan would reverse its policy on Kabul and cut ties. The report was not specific about what ties would be cut.
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    US to ensure security of Pak nukes?
  • Dawn
    Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N) on Wednesday expressed deep concern over the reports that the military regime has been discussing with the United States possible American assistance for the security of Pakistan's nuclear installations. In a statement issued here, the PML spokesman said that the move amounted to compromising Pakistan's most vital security interests. The spokesman said it was expected that the reports, emanating from Washington, would be contradicted or at least a plausible clarification would be issued from Islamabad. "However, continued silence of the official spokesman has strengthened the suspicion that the military rulers have completely surrendered the national interests before the global hegemonic interests of the US," he alleged.

    The spokesman said that the reports, carried by the national press, clearly stated that the top-level US military team visiting Islamabad last week "discussed possible US help to Pakistan to provide equipment and other assistance for improving security and installing new safeguards on Pakistan's nuclear weapons and at its nuclear power plants."
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Rumsfeld and Blair tour "coalition"
  • Julian Borger, Richard Norton-Taylor and Patrick Wintour The Guardian
    The US defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, and Tony Blair embarked yesterday on emergency missions to repair holes in a shaky anti-terrorist coalition, after nervousness among key regional allies pushed back the launch of air strikes on Afghanistan. American officials yesterday confirmed that the governments of Saudi Arabia, Oman and Uzbekistan had had last-minute doubts about allowing their territory to serve as a base for military operations aimed at Osama bin Laden, his al-Qaida terrorist group and the Taliban in Afghanistan.

    The three governments, together with Pakistan, have "serious problems" about allowing the US to establish bases for special forces and military hardware on their territory, according to American officials. The apparent deadlock in negotiations about the bases has prompted a flurry of diplomatic activity. Mr Rumsfeld arrived in Saudi Arabia yesterday for talks with King Fahd, Crown Prince Abdullah and the defence minister, Prince Sultan. Earlier this year, the US completed a state-of-the-art command centre at the Prince Sultan air base near Riyadh, which could be vital in a sustained aerial campaign.
    This article starring:
    Crown Prince Abdullah
    Donald Rumsfeld
    King Fahd
    Prince Sultan
    Tony Blair
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Egypt won't take part in war on terror
  • Agence Press France
    Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak said Thursday that his country will not take part in any US-led military action against international terrorism. Egypt "supports the fight against terrorism but will not take part with troops," he said. The president said US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who was due in Egypt later the same day, was not seeking Egypt's military participation in the war on terrorism. "He is not coming to ask for troops. He is coming for an exchange of points of view on events in the region," Mubarak said in a meeting with Egyptian army officers, in comments broadcast on television.
    This article starring:
    Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
    Hosni Mubarak
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Pakland closes airspace
  • Frontier Post
    Pakistan Thursday immediately closed its airspace except one approach. Incoming flights from abroad are being diverted to the route from Karachi to Islamabad via Nawabshah, Rahimyar Khan and Lahore. Any other plane which reaches Pakistans airspace has been ordered to shot down.
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Armitage in Russia
  • Washington Post Staff Writer Thursday, October 4, 2001; Page A01
    Richard L. Armitage flew through the night from Washington, landing in Moscow just after sunrise. Secretary of State Colin L. Powell's deputy and dearest friend headed for a government mansion, where he was closeted with his Russian counterpart, Vyacheslav Trubnikov, a senior deputy foreign minister and former head of the Kremlin's Foreign Intelligence Service. Just a week after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Armitage had been dispatched on a hastily arranged mission to ask for Russia's help in tracking down Saudi exile Osama bin Laden and his militant cadres and in mounting a military reprisal against them.

    But beyond the specific requests made during a full day of discussions that included midday talks over a buffet of traditional Russian meats and potato dishes, Armitage was posing a far more fundamental question: Were the two former Cold War adversaries prepared -- 12 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall -- to transform their still antagonistic relations? What the two men discussed that day, according to accounts by U.S. and Russian officials, led to one of the most intensive series of meetings, telephone conversations and back-channel communications between the two governments in many years. Emboldened by their united front against terrorism, the Bush and Putin administrations embarked on a course that could fundamentally recast U.S.-Russia relations.
    This article starring:
    Richard L. Armitage
    Secretary of State Colin L. Powell
    Vyacheslav Trubnikov
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    The Investigation
    Global Relief Foundation under the scope
  • David Jackson and Laurie Cohen Chicago Tribune staff reporters
    Outside the Bridgeview charity, a bright sign reads: "Compassion in Action Throughout the World." But federal investigators are examining whether the $5 million-a-year Global Relief Foundation belongs on a list of charities suspected of supporting global terrorism. About 18 months ago, FBI and Jordanian intelligence agents tried to question the charity's co-founder and former treasurer about his fundraising and associates, but he refused to answer questions and soon left the U.S., according to his attorney.

    Earlier this week, Treasury Department officials said they are considering whether to freeze Global Relief's assets as part of the U.S. effort to choke off the finances of Osama bin Laden, who is suspected of orchestrating the Sept. 11 attacks on New York and Washington. Global Relief attorney Ashraf Nubani said the group has no ties to terrorism or bin Laden. The investigation into Global Relief and other Islamic charities is part of a "smear campaign" to discourage Muslims from donating to legitimate groups, Nubani said.

    In a Bridgeview industrial park, Global Relief continues to operate from a low-slung brick building with a U.S. flag on the front lawn. Inside, a small staff raises money through mosque appeals and direct mail campaigns. One fundraising video depicts maimed and bloody corpses as it describes atrocities by Indian soldiers against Muslims in Kashmir, and it features a young refugee boy who declares he will "become a freedom fighter and fight for Kashmir's independence."
    This article starring:
    Ashraf Nubani
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


    Using phone records to show Binny's involvement...
  • MSNBC
    Among the evidence U.S. officials have been showing other countries to bolster their conclusion that Osama bin Laden was involved in planning Septembers terrorist attacks are records showing that individuals linked to the suspected hijackers called phone numbers that also were used by participants in the 1998 bombings of two American embassies in Africa, NBC News has learned.

    INVESTIGATORS SAY that in the weeks before the Sept. 11 attacks, overseas associates of the hijackers placed calls to phone numbers in Yemen that also appear in the phone records of bin Laden recruits who were involved in bombing the U.S. embassies in Africa in 1998, sources familiar with the investigation told NBC News.
  • Posted by: Fred Pruitt || 10/04/2001 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:



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    Meet the Mods
    In no particular order...
    Steve White
    Seafarious
    tu3031
    badanov
    sherry
    ryuge
    GolfBravoUSMC
    Bright Pebbles
    trailing wife
    Gloria
    Fred
    Besoeker
    Glenmore
    Frank G
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    Two weeks of WOT
    Thu 2001-10-04
      Mullah Omar: 'Americans don't have the courage to come here'
    Wed 2001-10-03
      Mullah Omar calls for Holy War
    Tue 2001-10-02
      Blair: Surrender Binny or surrender power
    Mon 2001-10-01
      Osama is under protection of Taliban: Mullah Zaeef
    Sun 2001-09-30
      Pakistan will allow U.S. ground troops
    Sat 2001-09-29
      Demonstrators Converge in D.C. for Anti-War Protests
    Fri 2001-09-28
      Talibs request Binny to leave...
    Thu 2001-09-27
      Pakistani delegation leaves for Afghanistan on Friday
    Wed 2001-09-26
      400 Taliban militia defect to Northern Alliance
    Tue 2001-09-25
      Northern Alliance says it has assurance of support
    Mon 2001-09-24
      Fighting escalates in northern Afghanistan
    Sun 2001-09-23
      US continues transferring planes to Gulf
    Sat 2001-09-22
      B52s rolled out, more reserves called up
    Fri 2001-09-21
      Two Central Asian states will allow US aircraft
    Thu 2001-09-20
      Bush to address Congress


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