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War Porn for the Forlorn About to Be Unborn by the Reborn
It was pure war porn. Three American soldiers standing proudly, half-smiles playing on their faces, rifles cradled in their arms.
The picture screams, “We are young, good looking and we are your heroes. Don’t you admire us? Look at us.”
In its 2003 award for Person Of The Year, Time magazine used the US’s fighting men and women to bestow something noble onto the American mission in Iraq.
“ They are the face of America, its might and goodwill, in a region unused to democracy,” blares the caption inside. Of course, it doesn’t mention the millions of dollars in compensation given out by the US military administration for wrongful killing of Iraqi civilians by its soldiers, stressed, scared, jumping at shadows, dealing with a mess foreseen by everyone but their political masters. Nor does it question whether this was the right thing to do. The heroism of the soldier drowns out that question.
Slapped with four coats of whitewash and a topcoat of hogwash, the cover story declares: “In a year when it felt at times as if we had nothing in common anymore, we were united in this hope: that our men and women at arms might soon come safely home, because their job was done.” Who could argue with that? It’s almost as if Time suspended judgment and reviewed a video game or film.
“You had a pretty remarkable ground war: 21 days covering 350 miles, around 200,000 troops. Probably the fastest advance of its kind in military history,” said Ramesh Ratnesar, Time writer, on a CNN special on the award. The rot goes all the way to the top. Who said: “They’re cops in a bad neighborhood; [that] is what the occupation of Iraq is about.” James Kelly, Time’s managing editor.
From the March/April 2004 issue of Adbusters magazine.
http://www.adbusters.org/magazine/52/articles/warporn.html
Soldier charged with attempting to aid al-Qaida operatives
EVERETT, Wash. (AP) — A National Guardsman suspected of trying to share military information with al-Qaida is a Muslim convert who complained bitterly in a letter to a newspaper about "bigotry, hatred and mindless rage" in the United States.
Spc. Ryan G. Anderson, 26, was arrested Thursday and was being held at Fort Lewis. The tank crew member from the Guard's 81st Armor Brigade was taken into custody just days before he was to leave for duty in Iraq.
Long before his arrest, he had made some of his beliefs known in strongly worded letters to the editor.
"In my three years as an observant Muslim, I've encountered nothing but kindness, patience, courtesy and understanding from them," he wrote in a November 2002 letter to the Herald of Everett. "On the other hand, I have experienced bigotry, hatred and mindless rage from so-called `educated thinkers' here in the U.S."
Anderson also suggested that his allegiance to the United States was conditional.
In a 1998 letter published by The Spokesman-Review newspaper in Spokane, he warned: "Today I am a young soldier, sworn to protect and defend this country. But if tomorrow I find that this nation is no longer the one based upon the freedom I was taught to love, I'll have little choice but to go where I can live in freedom."
And in a 2001 letter to the Spokane newspaper, Anderson said he feared war in Afghanistan, because "elements in our own society who would rob us of our individual liberties and freedoms can use the auspices of national security to steal them."
Speaking on condition of anonymity, defense officials said Anderson signed on to extremist Internet chat rooms and tried to get in touch with al-Qaida operatives. It is unclear how the U.S. government got wind of his alleged offer to supply military information to the terrorists. It does not appear he transmitted any information to al-Qaida, authorities said.
Anderson grew up in this city 30 miles north of Seattle, graduating from Cascade High School in 1995. He then attended Washington State University, where he earned a degree in history in 2002. He began studying Islam in 1999, according to his most recent letter to the Hearld in 2002.
The arrest is "shocking, but it's not too shocking, knowing how Ryan is," said Nathan Knopp, a high school friend.
"He was always a paramilitary type of guy, really into military weaponry," Knopp told The Herald on Thursday. "Ryan's kind of a weird type of guy who made up a lot of stories that seemed really far-fetched."
No one answered a knock at Anderson's apartment door in Lynnwood, a Seattle suburb, on Friday. A newspaper with its front-page report on his arrest lay unopened on the doorstep.
Neighbor Jack Roberts said he talked to Anderson's wife, Erin, after federal agents left the couple's apartment on Thursday.
"She was pretty damned shocked, as I was," Roberts told the Herald of Everett.
TV satellite trucks lined the street outside his parents' home Friday, but no one made an appearance. His father, Bruce Anderson, issued a statement saying the family was stunned by the arrest but is confident the code of military justice will afford the younger Anderson a fair trial.
It was not immediately clear if he had a lawyer.
Anderson is the second Muslim soldier with Fort Lewis connections to be accused of wrongdoing related to the war on terror. Capt. James Yee, 35, a former Fort Lewis chaplain, is accused of mishandling classified information from the U.S. prison for suspected terrorists at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Yee ministered to Muslim prisoners there.
http://www.courttv.com/news/2004/0213/soldier_ap.html
KABOOM!
AL FATHAH AIR FIELD, Iraq -- Explosions rock the ground here as Army engineers and Air Force explosive ordnance disposal workers detonate a weapons cache Feb. 5. An estimated 2 million net pounds of explosives were left at the air field by the old regime, making it the largest single weapons cache uncovered by the coalition to date. Workers are destroying an average of 100,000 pounds of weapons per day. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jeffrey A. Wolfe
wow! amazing ...
UK's Daily Mirror
No matter what your views on President Bush's statement of upcoming war,
this, from an English journalist, is very interesting. Just a word of
background for those of you who aren't familiar with the UK's Daily Mirror.
This is a notoriously left-wing daily that is normally not supportive of the
Colonials across the Atlantic.
SHAME ON YOU AMERICAN-HATING LIBERALS
Tony Parsons ... Daily Mirror ... September 11, 2002
One year ago, the world witnessed a unique kind of broadcasting -- the mass
murder of thousands, live on television. As a lesson in the pitiless cruelty
of the human race, September 11 was up there with Pol Pot's Mountain of
Skulls in Cambodia, or the skeletal bodies stacked like garbage in the Nazi
concentration camps.
An unspeakable act so cruel, so calculated and so utterly merciless that
surely the world could agree on one thing - nobody deserves this fate.
Surely there could be consensus: The victims were truly innocent, the
perpetrators truly evil.
But to the world's eternal shame, 9/11 is increasingly seen as America's
comeuppance. Incredibly, anti-Americanism has increased over the last year.
There has always been a simmering resentment to the USA in this country; too
loud, too rich, too full of themselves, and so much happier than Europeans
-- but it has become an epidemic. And it seems incredible to me. More than
that, it turns my stomach.
America is this country's greatest friend and our staunchest ally. We are
bonded to the US by culture, language and blood. A little over half a
century ago, around half a million Americans died for our freedoms, as well
as their own. Have we forgotten so soon? And exactly a year ago, thousands
of ordinary men, women and children -- not just Americans, but from dozens
of countries -- were butchered by a small group of religious fanatics. Are
we so quick to betray them?
What touched the heart about those who died in the Twin Towers and on the
planes, was that we recognized them. Young fathers and mothers, somebody's
son and somebody's daughter, husbands, wives, and children, some unborn.
And these people brought it on themselves? Their nation is to blame for
their meticulously planned slaughter?
These days you don't have to be some dust-encrusted nut job in Kabul or
Karachi or Finsbury Park to see America as the Great Satan. The
anti-American alliance is made up of self-loathing liberals who blame the
Americans for every ill in the Third World, and conservatives suffering from
power-envy, bitter that the world's only superpower can do what it likes
without having to ask permission.
The truth is that America has behaved with enormous restraint since
September 11.
Remember ... remember ... remember ... the gut-wrenching tapes of weeping
men phoning their wives to say, "I love you," before they were burned alive.
Remember those people leaping to their deaths from the top of burning
skyscrapers. Remember the hundreds of firemen buried alive.
Remember the smiling face of that beautiful little girl who was on one of
the planes with her mum.
Remember ... remember ...
And realize that America has never retaliated for 9/11 in anything like the
way it could have.
So a few al-Qaeda tourists got locked up without a trial in Camp X-ray? Pass
the Kleenex ...
So some Afghan wedding receptions were shot up after they merrily fired
their semi-automatics in a sky full of American planes? A shame, but maybe
next time they should stick to confetti.
AMERICA could have turned a large chunk of the world into a parking lot.
That it didn't is a sign of strength. American voices are already being
raised against attacking Iraq -- that's what a democracy is for. How many in
the Islamic world will have a minute's silence for the slaughtered innocents
of 9/11? How many Islamic leaders will have the guts to say that the mass
murder of 9/11 was an abomination?
When the news of 9/11 broke on the West Bank, those freedom-loving
Palestinians were dancing in the street. America watched all of that -- and
didn't push the button. We should thank the stars that America is the most
powerful nation in the world. I still find it incredible that 9/11 did not
provoke all-out war. Not a "war on terrorism." A real war.
The fundamentalist dudes are talking about "opening the gates of hell" if
America attacks Iraq. Well, America could have opened the gates of hell like
you wouldn't believe.
The US is the most militarily powerful nation that ever strode the face of
the earth. The campaign in Afghanistan may have been less than perfect and
the planned war on Iraq may be misconceived.
But don't blame America for not bringing peace and light to these wretched
countries. How many democracies are there in the Middle East, or in the
Muslim world? You can count them on the fingers of one hand -- assuming you
haven't had any chopped off for minor shoplifting.
I love America, yet America is hated. I guess that makes me Bush's poodle.
But I would rather be a dog in New York City than a Prince in Riyadh. Above
all, America is hated because it is what every country wants to be -- rich,
free, strong, open, optimistic. Not ground down by the past, or religion, or
some caste system. America is the best friend this country ever had and we
should start remembering that.
Or do you really think the USA is the root of all evil? Tell it to the loved
ones of the men and women who leaped to their death from the burning towers.
Tell it to the nursing mothers whose husbands died on one of the hijacked
planes, or were ripped apart in a collapsing skyscraper. And tell it to the
hundreds of young widows whose husbands worked for the New York Fire
Department.
To our shame, George Bush gets a worse press than Saddam Hussein. Once we
were told that Saddam gassed the Kurds, tortured his own people and set up
rape-camps in Kuwait. Now we are told he likes Quality Street. Save me the
orange center, Oh Mighty One!
Remember ... remember ... September 11. One of the greatest atrocities in
human history was committed against America.
No, do more than remember. Never forget.
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/allnews/page.cfm?objectid=12188969&method=full&siteid=50143
Guess everyone has forgotten this board...
... too bad.
In any case -- one year later -- God Bless those who lost so much and those who gave so much
British and U.S. planes strike Iraqi targets
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain confirmed Thursday that U.S. and British fighter aircraft had struck targets in southern Iraq earlier this week but said it was not aware of any casualties.
"Coalition aircraft were in operation in the southern no-fly zones over Iraq late Tuesday. Self-defense action was taken against a mobile tracking radar unit which had locked onto our aircraft," a spokesman for the Ministry of Defense said.
Iraqi Air Force Command said earlier Thursday the planes had bombed civilian and service targets shortly before midnight Wednesday in the provinces of Missan and al-Wassit, wounding four civilians. It also said its air defenses had fired at the attacking aircraft.
But the British spokesman said he knew of no casualties: "We are not aware of any casualties and we take absolute care in all our operations to limit any casualties."
The raid was the first in 10 days and the 26th strike of the year by U.S. and British attack jets in northern and southern "no-fly zones" of Iraq, established after the 1991 Gulf War to protect the Kurds of the north and the Shi'ite Muslims in the south from attack by Baghdad forces.
The tit-for-tat exchanges have increased in recent months amid mounting threats from President Bush to oust Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. Washington accuses Baghdad of developing chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
Iraq denies the charge and Saddam has said any U.S. invasion on his country is doomed to fail.
08/15/02 14:31 ET
Copyright 2002 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
Firehouse Bell to Toll End of Ground Zero Cleanup
Thu May 30, 1:31 AM ET
By Nick Olivari
NEW YORK (Reuters) - With the tolling of a firehouse bell, an empty stretcher carrying an American flag and the mournful skirl of bagpipes, New Yorkers will mark the end of the World Trade Center recovery effort on Thursday and a new beginning for the site where thousands died on Sept. 11.
"When we first got down to the job, there was not even water," said Leo Di Rubbo, 55, a 35-year construction veteran who helped oversee the cleanup as a superintendent from day one. "Everyone's face was dirty and black from the dust, and the only places that weren't" were from tears.
Di Rubbo and others have mixed emotions about the end of the recovery phase at the site, which will be observed with the ringing of a firehouse bell at 10:29 a.m. EDT, the minute when the second of the 110-story buildings collapsed in a pile of mangled and broken steel, concrete and glass.
"It's been a rough nine months, and taxing emotionally and physically," said Di Rubbo, who will return to his more usual construction duties with AMEC Corp. one of the last two cleanup contractors at the site. "It was cutting, burning and lifting -- and something I will never forget."
The tolling of the bell in four sets of five chimes each, the traditional firehouse code for a fallen firefighter, will be followed by an honor guard of city, state and federal personnel flanking a procession carrying a stretcher with a folded American flag symbolizing those killed but not found.
Almost 1,800 of the 2,823 victims have yet to be identified.
Police and fire department pipers and drummers will march behind the stretcher up the ramp from the pit bottom. At the tail of the procession, a truck draped with a black cloth will drive up the ramp, carrying the last steel girder to be removed from the site.
The procession will pause at the top of the ramp, near where Di Rubbo will stand with eight colleagues, while a lone bugler plays "Taps" and a helicopter flyover occurs. The procession will then travel 15 blocks north along the West Side Highway.
There will be no speeches by public officials.
Although Thursday's rites mark the official end of recovery efforts, the observance is the second of three ceremonies that officially shuts down the search for victim remains at the site.
On Tuesday night, the last steel girder standing -- known as the Stars and Stripes beam -- was cut down, ready to be removed in Thursday's ceremony. The girder had stood at what was the lowest level of the south tower's sub-basement.
A third ceremony will be held for families of the victims on Sunday at a church close to the site. The service was a city compromise for families unable to attend the weekday ceremony.
The New York Stock Exchange (news - web sites) will halt trading and observe two minutes of silence at 10:29 a.m. on Thursday.
'CHAOS, CONFUSION AND PANIC'
The dust was still settling at "ground zero," site of the collapsed World Trade Center twin towers, on Sept. 11 when the first emergency and recovery workers began to move 1.6 million tonnes of debris -- the equivalent of 20 Golden Gate Bridges.
Within hours, the site was filled with thousands of fire, police and medical officials, more than 1,000 sanitation workers and an undetermined number of construction workers and other volunteers.
"If you weren't working (on shift), you were there," New York firefighter Paul Iannizzotto told Reuters of those first few days at the scene.
It was "chaos, confusion and panic," Iannizzotto said, and "disbelief as you looked around and saw the ... devastation."
In the months between Sept. 11 and the closing ceremony, a mini-city sprang up around the site to feed the thousands who labored to find survivors and, as hope faded, to find the dead and clear the way for new construction.
At the peak of its commitment on Oct. 11, the American Red Cross (news - web sites) had almost 2,500 volunteers and staff feeding workers at the site and those displaced by the attack. It and the Salvation Army served almost 17 million meals and snacks in the past eight months. The Red Cross also provided beds, clothes and even massages for workers at the site.
Bush Team Defends U.S. Nuke Plans
By SCOTT LINDLAW
.c The Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush's top foreign-affairs advisers say the United States must be prepared to use nuclear weapons to deter attacks involving weapons of mass destruction. But in an effort to ease alarm overseas, they said there were no plans to do so.
``We all want to make the use of weapons of mass destruction less likely,'' national security adviser Condoleezza Rice said Sunday. ``The way that you do that is to send a very strong signal to anyone who might try to use weapons of mass destruction against the United States that they'd be met with a devastating response.''
Secretary of State Colin Powell said the United States has never ruled out using nuclear weapons against a nuclear-armed enemy, a policy he said should deter any would-be attacker.
``We think it is best for any potential adversary out there to have uncertainty in his calculus,'' Powell said.
Rice, Powell and military and congressional leaders were responding to weekend reports that the Pentagon has told Congress it is studying the possible use of nuclear weapons against countries that threaten the United States.
The classified ``nuclear posture review'' sent to Congress says the Pentagon is developing contingency plans for using nuclear weapons against countries that are developing weapons of mass destruction.
The report identified seven nations: China, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Russia and Syria.
On TV talk shows Sunday, administration officials sought to walk a line between asserting America's willingness to use nuclear weapons, and calming the public and allies troubled by suggestions the United States might be moving closer to employing them.
The issue was especially sensitive on a day when Vice President Dick Cheney was leaving on a 12-country tour that includes stops in a number of Arab states certain to be upset about the targeting of Iraq, Libya and Syria.
Powell said on CBS' ``Face the Nation'' that the report emerged from ``prudent'' planning that must ``give some consideration as to the range of options the president should have available to him to deal with those kinds of threats.''
``Right now, today, not a single nation on the face of the earth is being targeted by an American nuclear weapon on a day-to-day basis,'' Powell said.
``We should not get all carried away with some sense that the United States is planning to use nuclear weapons in some contingency that is coming up in the near future,'' he said. ``It is not the case.''
Powell acknowledged the military was considering whether to ``modify or update or change'' current nuclear weapons to meet new threats.
Rice said on NBC's ``Meet the Press'' that the report emphasizes efforts to make the use of nuclear arms less likely through improved intelligence and conventional weapons.
Air Force Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, stressed that the report is ``not a plan.''
``This preserves for the president all the options that a president would want to have in case this country or our friends and allies were attacked with weapons of mass destruction, be they nuclear, biological, chemical or, for that matter, high explosives,'' Myers said on CNN's ``Late Edition.''
Sen. John Warner, R-Va., top Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said he would ask the administration Monday to clarify its position. He and Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., a fellow committee member, painted the document as an outline of options for the president.
``Frankly, I don't mind some of these renegade nations (thinking) twice about the willingness of the United States to take action to defend our people and our values and our allies,'' Lieberman said.
But, he added on CNN: ``It's very important for the American people or people around the world not to overreact to the news stories.''
News of the report did trigger consternation and disbelief overseas.
Libya's African affairs minister, Ali Abd al-Salam al-Turiki, told reporters in Cairo he found the report hard to believe.
``I don't think this is true,'' he said. ``I don't think America is going to destroy the world.''
Dmitry Rogozin, a leading Russian lawmaker with close ties to the Kremlin, accused Washington of deliberately leaking word of the report to intimidate Russia.
``They've brought out a big stick - a nuclear stick that is supposed to scare us and put us in our place,'' Rogozin said on NTV television.
Commentary
Secret Plan Outlines the Unthinkable
A secret policy review of the nation’s nuclear policy puts forth chilling new contingencies for nuclear war.
By WILLIAM M. ARKIN
WASHINGTON -- The Bush administration, in a secret policy review completed early this year, has ordered the Pentagon to draft contingency plans for the use of nuclear weapons against at least seven countries, naming not only Russia and the "axis of evil"--Iraq, Iran, and North Korea--but also China, Libya and Syria.
In addition, the U.S. Defense Department has been told to prepare for the possibility that nuclear weapons may be required in some future Arab-Israeli crisis. And, it is to develop plans for using nuclear weapons to retaliate against chemical or biological attacks, as well as "surprising military developments" of an unspecified nature.
These and a host of other directives, including calls for developing bunker-busting mini-nukes and nuclear weapons that reduce collateral damage, are contained in a still-classified document called the Nuclear Posture Review (NPR), which was delivered to Congress on Jan. 8.
Like all such documents since the dawning of the Atomic Age more than a half-century ago, this NPR offers a chilling glimpse into the world of nuclear-war planners: With a Strangelovian genius, they cover every conceivable circumstance in which a president might wish to use nuclear weapons--planning in great detail for a war they hope never to wage.
In this top-secret domain, there has always been an inconsistency between America's diplomatic objectives of reducing nuclear arsenals and preventing the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, on the one hand, and the military imperative to prepare for the unthinkable, on the other.
Nevertheless, the Bush administration plan reverses an almost two-decade-long trend of relegating nuclear weapons to the category of weapons of last resort. It also redefines nuclear requirements in hurried post-Sept. 11 terms.
In these and other ways, the still-secret document offers insights into the evolving views of nuclear strategists in Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld's Defense Department.
While downgrading the threat from Russia and publicly emphasizing their commitment to reducing the number of long-range nuclear weapons, Defense Department strategists promote tactical and so-called "adaptive" nuclear capabilities to deal with contingencies where large nuclear arsenals are not demanded.
They seek a host of new weapons and support systems, including conventional military and cyber warfare capabilities integrated with nuclear warfare. The end product is a now-familiar post-Afghanistan model--with nuclear capability added. It combines precision weapons, long-range strikes, and special and covert operations.
But the NPR's call for development of new nuclear weapons that reduce "collateral damage" myopically ignores the political, moral and military implications--short-term and long--of crossing the nuclear threshold.
Under what circumstances might nuclear weapons be used under the new posture? The NPR says they "could be employed against targets able to withstand nonnuclear attack," or in retaliation for the use of nuclear, biological, or chemical weapons, or "in the event of surprising military developments."
Planning nuclear-strike capabilities, it says, involves the recognition of "immediate, potential or unexpected" contingencies. North Korea, Iraq, Iran, Syria and Libya are named as "countries that could be involved" in all three kinds of threat. "All have long-standing hostility towards the United States and its security partners. All sponsor or harbor terrorists, and have active WMD [weapons of mass destruction] and missile programs."
China, because of its nuclear forces and "developing strategic objectives," is listed as "a country that could be involved in an immediate or potential contingency." Specifically, the NPR lists a military confrontation over the status of Taiwan as one of the scenarios that could lead Washington to use nuclear weapons.
Other listed scenarios for nuclear conflict are a North Korean attack on South Korea and an Iraqi assault on Israel or its neighbors.
The second important insight the NPR offers into Pentagon thinking about nuclear policy is the extent to which the Bush administration's strategic planners were shaken by last September's terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Though Congress directed the new administration "to conduct a comprehensive review of U.S. nuclear forces" before the events of Sept. 11, the final study is striking for its single-minded reaction to those tragedies.
Heretofore, nuclear strategy tended to exist as something apart from the ordinary challenges of foreign policy and military affairs. Nuclear weapons were not just the option of last resort, they were the option reserved for times when national survival hung in the balance--a doomsday confrontation with the Soviet Union, for instance.
Now, nuclear strategy seems to be viewed through the prism of Sept. 11. For one thing, the Bush administration's faith in old-fashioned deterrence is gone. It no longer takes a superpower to pose a dire threat to Americans.
"The terrorists who struck us on Sept. 11th were clearly not deterred by doing so from the massive U.S. nuclear arsenal," Rumsfeld told an audience at the National Defense University in late January.
Similarly, U.S. Undersecretary of State John R. Bolton said in a recent interview, "We would do whatever is necessary to defend America's innocent civilian population .... The idea that fine theories of deterrence work against everybody ... has just been disproven by Sept. 11."
Moreover, while insisting they would go nuclear only if other options seemed inadequate, officials are looking for nuclear weapons that could play a role in the kinds of challenges the United States faces with Al Qaeda.
Accordingly, the NPR calls for new emphasis on developing such things as nuclear bunker-busters and surgical "warheads that reduce collateral damage," as well as weapons that could be used against smaller, more circumscribed targets--"possible modifications to existing weapons to provide additional yield flexibility," in the jargon-rich language of the review.
It also proposes to train U.S. Special Forces operators to play the same intelligence gathering and targeting roles for nuclear weapons that they now play for conventional weapons strikes in Afghanistan. And cyber-warfare and other nonnuclear military capabilities would be integrated into nuclear-strike forces to make them more all-encompassing.
As for Russia, once the primary reason for having a U.S. nuclear strategy, the review says that while Moscow's nuclear programs remain cause for concern, "ideological sources of conflict" have been eliminated, rendering a nuclear contingency involving Russia "plausible" but "not expected."
"In the event that U.S. relations with Russia significantly worsen in the future," the review says, "the U.S. may need to revise its nuclear force levels and posture."
When completion of the NPR was publicly announced in January, Pentagon briefers deflected questions about most of the specifics, saying the information was classified. Officials did stress that, consistent with a Bush campaign pledge, the plan called for reducing the current 6,000 long-range nuclear weapons to one-third that number over the next decade. Rumsfeld, who approved the review late last year, said the administration was seeking "a new approach to strategic deterrence," to include missile defenses and improvements in nonnuclear capabilities.
Also, Russia would no longer be officially defined as "an enemy."
Beyond that, almost no details were revealed.
The classified text, however, is shot through with a worldview transformed by Sept. 11. The NPR coins the phrase "New Triad," which it describes as comprising the "offensive strike leg," (our nuclear and conventional forces) plus "active and passive defenses,"(our anti-missile systems and other defenses) and "a responsive defense infrastructure" (our ability to develop and produce nuclear weapons and resume nuclear testing). Previously, the nuclear "triad" was the bombers, long-range land-based missiles and submarine-launched missiles that formed the three legs of America's strategic arsenal.
The review emphasizes the integration of "new nonnuclear strategic capabilities" into nuclear-war plans. "New capabilities must be developed to defeat emerging threats such as hard and deeply-buried targets (HDBT), to find and attack mobile and re-locatable targets, to defeat chemical and biological agents, and to improve accuracy and limit collateral damage," the review says.
It calls for "a new strike system" using four converted Trident submarines, an unmanned combat air vehicle and a new air-launched cruise missile as potential new weapons.
Beyond new nuclear weapons, the review proposes establishing what it calls an "agent defeat" program, which defense officials say includes a "boutique" approach to finding new ways of destroying deadly chemical or biological warfare agents, as well as penetrating enemy facilities that are otherwise difficult to attack. This includes, according to the document, "thermal, chemical or radiological neutralization of chemical/biological materials in production or storage facilities."
Bush administration officials stress that the development and integration of nonnuclear capabilities into the nuclear force is what permits reductions in traditional long-range weaponry. But the blueprint laid down in the review would expand the breadth and flexibility of U.S. nuclear capabilities.
In addition to the new weapons systems, the review calls for incorporation of "nuclear capability" into many of the conventional systems now under development. An extended-range conventional cruise missile in the works for the U.S. Air Force "would have to be modified to carry nuclear warheads if necessary." Similarly, the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter should be modified to carry nuclear weapons "at an affordable price."
The review calls for research to begin next month on fitting an existing nuclear warhead into a new 5,000-pound "earth penetrating" munition.
Given the advances in electronics and information technologies in the past decade, it is not surprising that the NPR also stresses improved satellites and intelligence, communications, and more robust high-bandwidth decision-making systems.
Particularly noticeable is the directive to improve U.S. capabilities in the field of "information operations," or cyber-warfare. The intelligence community "lacks adequate data on most adversary computer local area networks and other command and control systems," the review observes. It calls for improvements in the ability to "exploit" enemy computer networks, and the integration of cyber-warfare into the overall nuclear war database "to enable more effective targeting, weaponeering, and combat assessment essential to the New Triad."
In recent months, when Bush administration officials talked about the implications of Sept. 11 for long-term military policy, they have often focused on "homeland defense" and the need for an anti-missile shield. In truth, what has evolved since last year's terror attacks is an integrated, significantly expanded planning doctrine for nuclear wars.
_ _ _
William M. Arkin is a senior fellow at the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies in Washington and an adjunct professor at the U.S. Air Force School of Advanced Airpower Studies. He is also a consultant to a number of nongovernmental organizations and a regular contributor to the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. Officials are looking for nuclear weapons that could help against a foe like Al Qaeda.
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-op-arkinmar10.story
U.S. Works Up Plan for Using Nuclear Arms
Military: Administration, in a secret report, calls for a strategy against at least seven nations: China, Russia, Iraq, Iran, North Korea, Libya and Syria.
By PAUL RICHTER, Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- The Bush administration has directed the military to prepare contingency plans to use nuclear weapons against at least seven countries and to build smaller nuclear weapons for use in certain battlefield situations, according to a classified Pentagon report obtained by the Los Angeles Times.
The secret report, which was provided to Congress on Jan. 8, says the Pentagon needs to be prepared to use nuclear weapons against China, Russia, Iraq, North Korea, Iran, Libya and Syria. It says the weapons could be used in three types of situations: against targets able to withstand nonnuclear attack; in retaliation for attack with nuclear, biological or chemical weapons; or "in the event of surprising military developments."
A copy of the report was obtained by defense analyst and Times contributor William Arkin. His column on the contents appears in Sunday's editions.
Officials have long acknowledged that they had detailed nuclear plans for an attack on Russia. However, this "Nuclear Posture Review" apparently marks the first time that an official list of potential target countries has come to light, analysts said. Some predicted the disclosure would set off strong reactions from governments of the target countries.
"This is dynamite," said Joseph Cirincione, a nuclear arms expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington. "I can imagine what these countries are going to be saying at the U.N." Arms control advocates said the report's directives on development of smaller nuclear weapons could signal that the Bush administration is more willing to overlook a long-standing taboo against the use of nuclear weapons except as a last resort. They warned that such moves could dangerously destabilize the world by encouraging other countries to believe that they, too, should develop weapons.
"They're trying desperately to find new uses for nuclear weapons, when their uses should be limited to deterrence," said John Isaacs, president of the Council for a Livable World. "This is very, very dangerous talk . . . Dr. Strangelove is clearly still alive in the Pentagon."
But some conservative analysts insisted that the Pentagon must prepare for all possible contingencies, especially now, when dozens of countries, and some terrorist groups, are engaged in secret weapon development programs.
They argued that smaller weapons have an important deterrent role because many aggressors might not believe that the U.S. forces would use multi-kiloton weapons that would wreak devastation on surrounding territory and friendly populations.
"We need to have a credible deterrence against regimes involved in international terrorism and development of weapons of mass destruction," said Jack Spencer, a defense analyst at the conservative Heritage Foundation in Washington. He said the contents of the report did not surprise him and represent "the right way to develop a nuclear posture for a post-Cold War world."
A spokesman for the Pentagon, Richard McGraw, declined to comment because the document is classified.
Congress requested the reassessment of the U.S. nuclear posture in September 2000. The last such review was conducted in 1994 by the Clinton administration. The new report, signed by Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld, is now being used by the U.S. Strategic Command to prepare a nuclear war plan.
Bush administration officials have publicly provided only sketchy details of the nuclear review. They have publicly emphasized the parts of the policy suggesting that the administration wants to reduce reliance on nuclear weapons.
Since the Clinton administration's review is also classified, no specific contrast can be drawn. However, analysts portrayed this report as representing a break with earlier policy.
U.S. policymakers have generally indicated that the United States would not use nuclear weapons against nonnuclear states unless they were allied with nuclear powers. They have left some ambiguity about whether the United States would use nuclear weapons in retaliation after strikes with chemical or nuclear weapons.
The report says the Pentagon should be prepared to use nuclear weapons in an Arab-Israeli conflict, in a war between China and Taiwan, or in an attack from North Korea on the south. They might also become necessary in an attack by Iraq on Israel or another neighbor, it said.
The report says Russia is no longer officially an "enemy." Yet it acknowledges that the huge Russian arsenal, which includes about 6,000 deployed warheads and perhaps 10,000 smaller "theater" nuclear weapons, remains of concern.
Pentagon officials have said publicly that they were studying the need to develop theater nuclear weapons, designed for use against specific targets on a battlefield, but had not committed themselves to that course.
Officials have often spoken of the advantages of using nuclear weapons to destroy the deep tunnel and cave complexes that many regimes have been building, especially since the Persian Gulf War of 1991. Nuclear weapons give off powerful shock waves that can crush structures deep in the Earth, they point out.
Officials argue that large nuclear arms have so many destructive side effects, from blast to heat and radiation, that they become "self-deterring." They contend the Pentagon needs "full spectrum deterrence"--that is, a full range of weapons that potential enemies believe might be used against them.
The Pentagon was actively involved in planning for use of tactical nuclear weapons as recently as the 1970s. But it has moved away from them in the last two decades.
Analysts said the report's reference to "surprising military developments" referred to the Pentagon's fears that a rogue regime or terrorist group might suddenly unleash a wholly unknown weapon that was difficult to counter with the conventional U.S. arsenal.
The administration has proposed cutting the offensive nuclear arsenal by about two-thirds, to between 1,700 and 2,200 missiles, within 10 years. Officials have also said they want to use precision guided conventional munitions in some missions that might have previously been accomplished with nuclear arms.
But critics said the report contradicts suggestions the Bush administration wants to cut the nuclear role.
"This clearly makes nuclear weapons a tool for fighting a war, rather than deterring them," said Cirincione.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-030902bombs.story
Where Were You (When The World Stopped Turning)
Where were you when the world stop turning on that September day?
Out in the yard with your wife and children
Or working on some stage in L.A.?
Did you stand there in shock at the sight of that black smoke
Rising against that blue sky?
Did you shout out in anger, in fear for your neighbor
Or did you just sit down and cry?
Did you weep for the children who lost their dear loved ones
And pray for the ones who don't know?
Did you rejoice for the people who walked from the rubble
And sob for the ones left below?
Did you burst out in pride for the red, white and blue
And the heroes who died just doin' what they do?
Did you look up to heaven for some kind of answer
And look at yourself and what really matters?
Chorus:
I'm just a singer of simple songs
I'm not a real political man
I watch CNN but I'm not sure I could
Tell you the difference in Iraq and Iran
But I know Jesus and I talk to God
And I remember this from when I was young
Faith, hope and love are some good things He gave us
And the greatest is love
Verse:
Where were you when the world stop turning on that September day?
Teaching a class full of innocent children
Or driving down some cold interstate?
Did you feel guilty 'cause you're a survivor
In a crowded room did you feel alone?
Did you call up your mother and tell her you loved her?
Did you dust off that bible at home?
Did you open your eyes, hope it never happened
And you close your eyes and not go to sleep?
Did you notice the sunset the first time in ages
Or speak to some stranger on the street?
Did you lay down at night and think of tomorrow
Go out and buy you a gun?
Did you turn off that violent old movie you're watchin'
And turn on "I Love Lucy" reruns?
Did you go to a church and hold hands with some strangers
Stand in line and give your own blood?
Did you just stay home and cling tight to your family
Thank God you had somebody to love?
Repeat Chorus
Album: Where Were You
Artist/Band: Jackson Alan
Some stuff just catches you off guard...
Thanks for the info Greg, wasn't sure about my memory there!
muell <g>
Hi muell,
The AC 130 is the same "Puff" that was used in 'Nam. They may have added some computer enhancement, but it's the same weapon.
I remember when I was in survival training at Eglin AFB in Fla. One night my team was orienteering near the active fire zone where Puffs were letting go with everything they had in a training exercise. It was really almost enough to make you soil your fatigues!
greg
LOL, feet don't fail me now!
muell <g>
A couple of F15's for air to air tactical support and
"Man on the run,Man on the run!"
Paule "The Walnut" lives!
That was an excellent movie and I shared your emotions when the GI was killed.
I think this new gun puts out quite a bit more ammo per second and a bigger caliber too! If my memory serves, Puff was a 50mm weapon, this one is a 105.
muell <g>
Reminds me of the movie with John Wayne.The Green Beret?
As A child I stayed up late watched that movie cried when that little boy lost his GI friend to pungispikes, and then cheered when Puff wiped out the entire complex of enemy soldiers within seconds.
And to think we've gotten more advanced.
I want one for Christmas.
Paule "The Walnut" lives!
That is a totally awesome/terrifying weapon system, if you're in it's path, you're dead!
muell <g>
Talk about a street sweeper.
"No where to run to, no where to hide"
Paule "The Walnut" lives!
Video Captures Sept. 11 Horror in Raw Replay
By ALAN FEUER
The videotape is raw.
It shows the black wedge of an airplane slamming into the north tower of the World Trade Center. It shows commanders in the building's lobby scrambling to figure out how to send scores of firefighters into the burning building.
It captures the radio transmissions ordering everyone down to the lobby after the second plane hits. It shows the gout of dust and rubble as the buildings suddenly collapse. It shows the booted foot of a Fire Department chaplain who is being carried through smoke and the din of screaming. It shows the faces of anxious men only minutes before they die.
A brief clip of the first plane slicing through the north tower was seen by millions in the days after Sept. 11, but what has never been publicly shown is the rest of the 90-minute videotape. It was made by a French filmmaker who happened to be taping a group of firefighters in Lower Manhattan. It is a document of disaster from the inside: the impact, the rush to the emergency, the frenzied effort to establish a command post, the grays and whites and flaming oranges as both towers collapse.
Copies have made the rounds of city firehouses, and fire officials say they plan to use it as an investigative tool. The filmmaker says he wants to turn the tape into a documentary and give it to the families of the dead. It is anyone's guess whether it will one day be seen by the public.
While there are other tapes of ground zero on that day, none come close to capturing the catastrophe at such close range. It is an extraordinary view of history at the moment that it happens. It is so immediate, so vivid, so graphic, so raw that viewers can almost taste the bitter smoke in their throats and feel the grit of concrete on their teeth.
It begins at the corner of Lispenard and Church Streets, where Jules Naudet, the filmmaker making a documentary about the training of a probationary firefighter, is taping Battalion Chief Joe Pfeifer responding to a report of a gas leak under the street. After a meter reading is taken, the roar of a plane is heard.
The camera pans up to follow the path of the plane as it rams the north tower. There are expletives and flames and smoke.
It cuts to Chief Pfeifer in his squad truck, cruising toward the flames. He is on the phone and smoke is dribbling down the facade like water. The sirens have started already. "It's a big one," the driver says.
The next 20 minutes or so are given over to confusion, as Mr. Naudet and his camera rush into the north tower and capture Chief Pfeifer and his superior, Deputy Chief Pete Hayden, setting up a command post. They issue orders to their men and desperately work the telephones. An eerie calm has filled the lobby as firefighters muster and wait to be deployed. Their faces are filled with fear, with the damp anxiety that comes before a job.
The suspense of watching the tape is excruciating because the viewer knows exactly what is coming: a loud crash, like a bus running into a bridge abutment ? the second plane. "Tommy!" someone yells. "Tommy! Another plane! Another plane!"
There is so much grit on the camera lens by now that Mr. Naudet has to scrub it with a rag.
There is a call to evacuate: "Everybody down to the lobby! All units down to the lobby!"
Smash. The firefighters jump. Another smash. Smash. Smash. Falling bodies or debris?
The men stare at the ceiling, wary, shaking their heads. Their eyes seem moist and bright. The camera pans to the mezzanine where employees, calmly bunched together, have started to evacuate in a long, tight line.
Back to Chief Pfeifer on the phone. A scrap of a nearby conversation: Now they're saying the Pentagon's been hit. Chief Pfeifer shouts to someone off-screen, "Do you have to dial nine to get out on this thing?"
Then it happens. The south tower starts falling.
It sounds like a gunshot. Then a wave crashing on shore. The camera goes up the escalator. The lens fades slowly to darkness, dust leaching away light. The tape is so hard to make out that there are only voices.
"Everybody all right? How's the way out of here?" The images seem as if they are underwater or seen through a wet shower door. Snow, infrared light.
"We've got to get everybody out! Let's go! We need some light!" Radio chatter. Screaming. "Where are we going?" "Sarge." "Hey Pete. Pete." "Chief Hayden" "We're lost." "Hey Joe, where are you?" "There's the escalator, right there." Top of the escalator. "Mike! Where's the escalator? We only got four guys. Mike, I need you. Mike!"
Daylight. Or the ashen gray of that day's light.
It is during this scene that a searing image appears: the booted foot of a dead man who is being carried by his brothers. The men carrying him later said the body was that of the Rev. Mychal Judge, the Fire Department chaplain, who perished.
Mr. Naudet had been with the firefighters on the street that day as he had been nearly every day for about three months, chronicling the life of a probationary firefighter at the downtown firehouse for Engine Company 7 and Ladder Company 1.
"We just happened to be there," he said in a telephone interview last night. "The true heroes are the incredible men who ran into those buildings and lost their lives."
Francis X. Gribbon, a spokesman for the department, said that both fire officials and the F.B.I. have a copy of the tape. For the Fire Department, it will be part investigative tool and part historical artifact.
"For some it has captured the last brave actions of a number of firefighters who went to save others," he said. "For others in the department, it will become what we use to try to definitively know who was where, and we think it has been helpful. It is very helpful. As evidence, it will help us to understand or piece together the activities that occurred in tower one, such as those companies reporting in." Mr. Gribbon added, "There's nothing else like it."
Mr. Naudet nearly lost his life himself when the north tower collapsed. In the tape, his camera lens goes blank in the storm of dust and wind, like a real eye clogged with grit.
"Chuff! Chuff! Chuff!" He tries to clear his throat. "Mayday! Mayday!" someone shouts. "You with me? It's hard to breathe."
It is dark again on screen and there are far-off yells, voices as if coming over water. The camera points straight down and captures a pile of ash-covered paper. It looks like the remnants of a blizzard, like a clip from a Buffalo weather report.
"Chuff, chuff. Chuff, chuff."
Chief Pfeifer lived, as did his superior, Chief Hayden. Capt. Terence Hatton, pictured at one point in the tape, is dead. Father Judge is dead as well. Lt. Kevin Pfeifer, Chief Pfeifer's brother, is also dead. Dozens of the faces in the tape are dead. Among those passing through its frames are Port Authority officials crucial in the evacuation and other civilians who bravely lent a hand.
The tape ends as suddenly as it starts. Mr. Naudet is almost choking, trying just to breathe. Someone shouts out, "Chief?" The camera stumbles through a doorway.
And then the screen goes blank.
Twas the night before Payback
and all through the Land,
They're running like rabbits in Afghanistan,
Osama's been praying, he's down on his Knees,
He's hoping that Allah will hear all his Pleas.
He thought if he killed us that we'd fall and Shatter,
But all that he's done is just make us Madder.
We ain't yet forgotten our Marines in Beirut,
And we'll kick your butt, with one heavy Boot.
And yes we remember the USS Cole,
And the lives of our sailors that you bastards Stole.
You think you can rule us and cause us to Fear,
You'll soon get the answer if you live to Hear.
And we ain't forgotten your buddy Saddam,
And he ain't forgotten the sound of our Bombs.
You think that those mountains are somewhere to Hide.
They'll go down in history as the place where you Died.
Remember Khadhafi and his Line of Death?
He came very close, to his final Breath.
So come out and prove it, that you are a Man,
Cause our boys are coming and they have a Plan.
They are our fathers and they are our Sons,
And they sure do carry some mighty big Guns.
They would have stayed home with children and Wives,
Till you bastards came here and took all these Lives.
Osama I wrote this especially for You,
For air mail delivery by B-52.
You soon will be hearing a thud and a whistle,
Old Glory is coming, attached to a Missle.
I will not be sorry to see your ass Go.
It's Red, White, and Blue that is running this Show
Quote of the Times
"It is God's job to forgive Osama bin Laden. It is our job to arrange a face to face meeting."
- Author unknown
The Old Man and the Flag
It is the soldier, not the reporter, who has given us freedom of the press.
It is the soldier, not the poet, who has given us freedom of speech.
It is the soldier, not the campus organizer, who has given us the freedom to demonstrate.
It is the soldier, not the lawyer, who has given us the right to a fair trial.
It is the soldier, who salutes the flag, who serves under the flag, and whose coffin is draped by the flag, who allows the protester to burn the flag ...
That being said, please read on:
A protest raged on a courthouse lawn,
Round a makeshift stage they charged on,
Fifteen hundred or more they say,
Had come to burn a Flag that day.
A boy held up the folded Flag,
Cursed it, and called it a dirty rag.
An OLD MAN pushed through the angry crowd,
With a rusty shotgun shouldered proud.
His uniform jacket was old and tight,
He had polished each button, shiny and bright.
He crossed that stage with a soldier's grace,
Until he and the boy stood face to face.
"FREEDOM OF SPEECH," the OLD MAN said,
"is worth dying for, good men are dead,"
So you can stand on this courthouse lawn,
And talk us down from dusk to dawn,
But before any Flag gets burned today,
This OLD MAN IS GOING TO HAVE HIS SAY!
My father died on a foreign shore,
In a war they said would end all war.
But Tommy and I wasn't even full grown,
Before we fought in a war of our own.
And Tommy died on Iwo Jima's beach,
In the shadow of a hill he couldn't quite reach Where five good men raised this Flag so high,
That the WHOLE DAMN WORLD COULD SEE IT FLY.
I got this bum leg that I still drag,
Fighting for this same old Flag.
Now there's but one shot in this old gun,
So now it's time to decide which one,
Which one of you will follow our lead,
To stand and die for what you believe?
For as sure as there is a rising sun,
You'll burn in Hell 'fore this Flag burns, son.
Now this riot never came to pass
The crowd got quiet and that can of gas,
Got set aside as they walked away
To talk about what they had heard this day.
And the boy who had called it a "dirty rag,"
Handed the OLD SOLDIER the folded Flag.
So the battle of the Flag this day was won
By a tired OLD SOLDIER with a rusty gun,
Who for one last time, had to show to some,
THIS FLAG MAY FADE, BUT THESE COLORS DON'T RUN.
After a half century, lessons from war
the following commentary appeared in the Portland Oregonian, it states, inter alia;
11/25/01
David Reinhard
Violence never solves a thing.
Violence only begets violence.
We first must understand what causes others to lash out against the United States.
We must address the conflict's root causes and win the hearts and minds of our enemies.
You didn't hear much of this kind of talk during World War II. Nobody then seemed particularly interested in "understanding" Hitler. Nobody today argues that Franklin Roosevelt needed to address the "root causes" of Nazism and Hitler's "Final Solution."
But, even after terrorists murdered thousands of American innocents on Sept. 11, many in the peace community still cling to their calcified give-peace-a-chance orthodoxies
Violence never solves a thing? It defeated Hitler and the Nazis, along with the Empire of Japan.
Violence only begets violence? Actually, violence begat peace and, ultimately, freedom across Europe.
We must first understand what causes others to lash out against the United States? No, first came the utter defeat of those who waged war against the United States.
We must first address the conflict's root causes and win the hearts and minds of our enemies?
No, we identified evil and won the war on the land, air and sea. Hearts and minds came later.
Think about it: Little more than 50 years after V-E Day, a German Navy destroyer flies the American flag before a U.S. battleship named after Winston Churchill.
The Germans -- now allies -- express their solidarity with the United States after we're attacked by forces that are implacable anti-Semites. Go figure.
Maybe we ought to give war a chance.
to read the entire column:
http://www.oregonlive.com/commentary/oregonian/index.ssf?/xml/story.ssf/html_standard.xsl?/base/edit...
Maybe it was just I,
but I felt a great part of myself almost die as I sat and watched the most horrific event of my time take place as I awoke for my morning routine.
I sat there watching, unable to restrain the tears that were coming from my eyes. I could but only imagine the pain our great nation must have suffered as it watched one of its most beloved Presidents gunned down in the streets. Now here America was again suffering as a nation. Only this time it was not one dead, but thousands and thousands. Yes this had to be as close as I would ever come to that awful feeling. Hopefully this was as close, as I would ever come again.
No personal tragedy experienced in my life had, or even could have prepared me for what I was about to witness. To see human beings jumping out of 100 story skyscrapers rather than be consumed in heat, smoke, and flames. To watch as fire fighters rushed into the tower and then see the tower collapse upon them. My stomach churned as this devastating loss of life was not ending, but growing in numbers as the time passed by. Every second stretching out for what seemed to be an eternity, every second ripping at my heart and soul.
I sat for hours and hours watching the replays. The people running for their lives down streets filled with smoke dust and debris. People laying in the streets bleeding and crying whule screaming in agony. I held my head and cried, as the visions of blood and horror haunted my every thought. “Why” I asked; “Why?”
http://www.calpilot.com/worldtrade.swf
Paule Walnuts
Paule "The Walnut" lives!
Dang it... I wasn't even tryin' to talk about drugs...
I was just tryin' to say that the Coast Guard had a lot of training
about people trying to sneak things in or out
and that they would be a good group to be helping at the airports....
If congress wants to have those people through the government
then lets expand the Coast Guard....
George
The was on drugs hasn't worked well, so it may take an emphasis on treatment to solve the problem. Similarly, a "war" on terrorism may create as many terrorists as are killed. It may be necessary to try to determine the root cause, poverty, fundamentalism, or whatnot, and solve that.
TP
Drugs should be an afterthought. I'd rather drugs get through than a briefcase containing a nuke. Sides we all know the ‘war on drugs’ is just another way to fleece the populace out of their money. You want to stop drugs you have to stop the desire for them. Death is a deterrent jail is not. Can’t do drugs if dead and in jail can get the highest quality available to compound the problem. Basically the same applies to terrorism.
all of course imho
Paule "The Walnut" lives!
people with drugs or weapons.
Security is expensive. It may be necessary to decide between drugs and weapons throughout the system. Now may be a time when treating drugs as a medical event may make sense and leave more resources to treat terrorism as a criminal event.
TP
Indictment expected in hijackings
Suspect is called would-be pilot; anthrax tie seen to conspiracy
By Kevin Cullen, Globe Staff, 11/7/2001
NEW YORK - A French citizen of Moroccan descent who has been held as a material witness since shortly after the Sept. 11 suicide hijackings will probably become the first person to be indicted on charges that he took part in the conspiracy that led to the attacks on the Pentagon and World Trade Center, according to law enforcement officials involved in the investigation.
Zacarias Moussaoui, 33, avoided the fate of the 19 hijackers only because he had been arrested Aug. 17 on immigration charges in Minnesota, the officials alleged. The officials describe Moussaoui as the least able and discreet of the hijackers who trained as pilots.
He performed badly in training before he aroused suspicion in Minnesota by telling a flight instructor he wanted to learn how to fly a commercial airliner but was not interested in landing or taking off, according to officials close to the FBI task force here that is heading the investigation into the Sept. 11 attacks.
Those officials said it was unclear when the grand jury sitting in New York would be asked to indict Moussaoui, whom some US officials, including Vice President Dick Cheney, have described as ''the 20th hijacker.'' Moussaoui has refused to cooperate with authorities, the officials added.
Contrary to earlier reports, meanwhile, the FBI is leaning toward the theory that the anthrax that has killed four people and infected 13 others in Florida, Washington, D.C., and New York is connected to the Sept. 11 attacks.
In an interview at FBI headquarters here, Assistant FBI Director Barry W. Mawn said laboratory analysis has shown that the anthrax used in the deadly letters was produced in the United States. US officials had previously said the kind of anthrax found in the tainted letters could have been produced in either the United States, Russia, or Iraq.
''It was made here,'' said Mawn, declining to elaborate.
That finding is significant because if Iraq were implicated in aiding and abetting the Sept. 11 attacks or the Qaeda terror network that stands accused of mounting them, the United States could expand its war against Afghanistan's Taliban regime to include attacks on Iraq.
Some officials, including Richard Butler, the former head of the UN weapons inspection program in Iraq, have publicly suggested that Mohamed Atta, who authorities believe was the leader of the hijackers on Sept. 11, could have obtained anthrax from an Iraqi intelligence agent he met in Prague last year.
But Mawn, who is overseeing the investigation, said there is no evidence to support theories that Iraq supplied the anthrax found in the letters tied to the 13 infections and four deaths.
Mawn said the FBI suspects an individual rather than a group is behind the anthrax letters sent to the office of Senator Thomas Daschle and various media outlets.
Mawn said investigators get closer to that individual with every new confirmed report.
''If he continues'' sending letters, Mawn said, ''we will be successful.''
Sitting in his 28th-floor Lower Manhattan office with a view of where the World Trade Towers once stood, Mawn seemed considerably more upbeat than two senior FBI and Justice Department officials who yesterday gave a Senate subcommittee a gloomy assessment of how little the FBI knows about the sender of the anthrax letters.
James Caruso, one of the FBI's senior counterterrorism experts, and James Reynolds, chief of the Justice Department's terrorism and violent crime section, said the 7,000 investigators assigned to the anthrax case nationwide have been hampered by hoaxes and false leads. Both men called for Congress to strengthen laws against hoaxes.
''They are presently out of control,'' Reynolds told a Senate Judiciary subcommittee. ''We very much need a hoax statute to assist in these cases.''
Caruso said the FBI had responded to more than 7,000 suspicious letters, 950 bomb threats, and more than 29,000 telephone calls about suspicious packages.
In an interview with the Globe, Mawn disputed a report two weeks ago in the Washington Post that top FBI and CIA officials had concluded the anthrax letters were probably not connected to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. But Mawn would not say whether the investigation so far was pointing toward the letters being the work of a domestic terrorist or someone in the United States linked to Al Qaeda.
However, two senior law enforcement officials familiar with the work of the antiterrorism task force said the FBI is leaning toward the theory that the anthrax was obtained in the United States, but was sent by someone who was sympathetic with the Sept. 11 attackers or was a ''sleeper'' connected to Al Qaeda awaiting a signal to begin sending the letters.
An FBI profiler who analyzed three letters - sent to Daschle's office, NBC News, and the New York Post - concluded that whoever wrote the letters had learned English as a second language, law enforcement officials said.
''It's 60-40 [percent] that it's connected to Sept. 11,'' said one federal official.
One theory officials hold is that the Sept. 11 attacks were a signal to begin sending anthrax in the mail.
''It's not [Osama bin Laden] picking up the phone and telling the guy to do it,'' said one official. ''The potential is for a longtime sleeper here, or someone sympathetic to the cause, someone who may have been told to sit tight with his anthrax, that somebody told him, `You'll know when the right time is.' That is very much in keeping with the cell structure'' of Al Qaeda, in which terrorists in the same conspiracy don't know what other conspirators are doing. The cell structure is aimed at guarding against infiltration and informers.
But even the federal officials who said it was more likely the anthrax letters are connected to Sept. 11 than to American right-wing extremists acknowledge that the FBI has not yet identified an individual suspect behind the letters.
Mawn said he could not discuss assertions by some federal officials that a federal grand jury sitting in New York will soon be asked to return charges against Moussaoui.
The officials said that German authorities have told the FBI that Moussaoui received $15,000 in two Western Union transfers from Germany in August, when he had signed up for an $8,000 course at a flight school in Minnesota.
German authorities also told the FBI that they know that Moussaoui had at least one conversation, and possibly more, with the man who rented an apartment in Hamburg to Atta. German police say that apartment became a gathering spot for Islamic extremists in Hamburg.
The FBI believes Moussaoui was supposed to be part of the hijacking team that commandeered United Air Lines Flight 93 out of Newark Airport. That plane crashed in rural Pennsylvania after passengers apparently attacked the hijackers.
http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/311/nation/Indictment_expected_in_hijackings+.shtml
The More Things Change...
By Nat Parry
October 29, 2001
George W. Bush has said the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks
changed everything, especially how the United States
defined who was a friend and who was a foe, either a
country aided the U.S. war on terrorism or it was with
the terrorists.
The post-Sept. 11 world indeed has seen many changes, but the historic tendency to build alliances of convenience, rather than principle, is one reality that hasn’t changed. It's only been reinforced. A case in point is Uzbekistan, one of Washington's new best allies.
Uzbekistan, a landlocked Central Asian nation of about 23 million people north of Afghanistan, has offered the United States use of Uzbek airspace and an airfield. About 1,500 American troops have set up shop in the former Soviet republic. Little known to Americans seven weeks ago, Uzbekistan suddenly has become a key partner in the U.S. war against the Taliban regime and its al-Qaeda terrorist allies in Afghanistan.
In an Oct. 12 joint statement, the United States and Uzbekistan expressed their common “commitment to the elimination of international terrorism and its infrastructure.” The statement cited a classified agreement between the two countries that established a “strong basis for bilateral cooperation” and a “qualitatively new relationship based on long-term commitment to advance security and regional stability.” [Financial Times, Oct. 15, 2001, or
http://secretary.state.gov/www/briefings/statements/2000/ps000915b.html]
The cooperation against terrorism included the need to consult on an urgent basis about appropriate steps to address "a direct threat to the security or territorial integrity of the Republic of Uzbekistan,” according to
the Oct. 12 statement.
The new U.S. policy is not an explicit promise to guarantee the security of the Uzbek government and its authoritarian leader Islam Karimov. But it is clear that there is a new status in the relationship between the two governments and a strong signal that Washington is prepared to protect
Karimov much like the United States has backed other authoritarian pro-U.S. leaders in the region.
Even before the agreement's announcement, the new relationship was apparent with the arrival of U.S. troops in Uzbekistan in late September. Bush also identified the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan – a chief threat to the Karimov government – as one of the targets of the U.S. anti-terrorist campaign.
A Concession
Bush may have singled out the IMU specifically as a concession to Karimov's government. Bush's declaration against the IMU also suggests that Washington is ready to make Karimov's enemies U.S. enemies, by portraying the Uzbek Islamic fundamentalist group as part of Osama bin
Laden’s international network of terrorist organizations.
Yet, this assertion may exaggerate the IMU's role. The Muslim fundamentalist group mainly has conducted small-scale armed attacks, including car-bombings, in Uzbekistan. While the group also is active in neighboring Kyrgystan and Tajikistan, there is no public evidence of the organization engaging in terrorism on a global scale. Its membership is estimated in the hundreds and its activities mostly have been limited to remote mountain terrain and border areas.
Still, Bush's declaration that the IMU was one of the targets in the U.S. worldwide anti-terror campaign was certainly welcomed by Karimov, who has ruled in the capital, Tashkent, for 11 years. For many of those years,
he has been trying to defeat the IMU, which has as its stated goal the overthrow of Karimov's government. Government authorities have responded with increased repression, banning opposition parties since 1993 and forcing many members of political groups to go underground.
As part of the campaign against the IMU and other militant Islamists, the Karimov government has gone after anyone deemed a threat to its authoritarian powers. Some of the perceived threats have been peaceful political dissidents as well as practicing Muslims, human rights activists and
journalists who have criticized government policies.
One of the latest victims of Uzbek repression was Shobriq Rusimorodov, a former parliamentarian and activist with the Human Rights Society of Uzbekistan. Rusimorodov had criticized the government for convicting Uzbeks for allegedly collaborating with armed insurgents. He was arrested on June 15 and held incommunicado for three weeks. His body was delivered to his family on July 7. He is believed to have been tortured to death.
His case was not unique. Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and other human rights organizations have criticized the Uzbek government for persecuting Muslims as well as using “anti-terrorism” as a cover for crushing legitimate democratic opposition.
'Anti-State Activity'
There are thousands of political prisoners in Uzbekistan, serving sentences up to 20 years for “anti-state activity,” human rights groups say. In the prisons, torture is used routinely and death in police custody is commonplace. The government even organizes “hate rallies” to intimidate
the families of political prisoners.
Practicing Islam is enough to get individuals thrown in jail. While George Bush denounced the Taliban for imprisoning men for not wearing Muslim-style beards, the Karimov government imprisons men for wearing them – and women for wearing Muslim scarves.
The Human Rights Society of Uzbekistan claims that anyone accused of a crime who attempts to prove his or her innocence may be subjected to torture to extract a confession. Torture techniques include systematic beatings, hanging, electric shocks, suffocation, rape, cauterization – the use of hot irons – and pain inflicted through dentistry. The Human Rights Society has documented cases of prisoners who died as a result of torture and other people who have disappeared without a trace.
During the 1990s, the Clinton administration kept the Karimov government at arms length, even as U.S. businesses expanded their investments in the energy-rich region. Washington pressed for improvement in democratic standards and human rights. Last year, the State Department criticized Uzbekistan as an “authoritarian state with limited civil rights.”
Nevertheless, the Clinton administration supported Uzbekistan’s efforts to fight terrorism. The State Department classified the IMU as a "foreign terrorist organization" in September 2000, but stressed that anti-terrorism should not be an excuse for human rights abuses.
The Clinton administration's policy maintained that combating terrorism and building democratic institutions were both necessary for establishing security and stability. That principle was seen as part of a broader regional strategy to advance U.S. long-term economic interests, which are extensive in Central Asia. U.S. private investment in Central Asia, with its massive natural gas reserves and geo-strategic importance, has greatly exceeded that of other Newly Independent States or Russia.
Prior to the October classified agreement between Uzbekistan and the U.S., the Bush administration policy had continued the Clinton policy according to Ambassador Elizabeth Jones, senior adviser on Caspian Basin Energy Diplomacy. Jones said the U.S. would continue to support
energy development in the region, but advised Central Asian leaders that the U.S. would not intervene militarily to help fight Islamic insurgents.
[Eurasianet, July 25, 2001,
http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/qanda/articles/eav072501.shtml]
New Commitment
Formulated in the wake of the Sept. 11 terror attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, the new agreement between the U.S. and Uzbekistan is almost certainly a departure from that stance.
Under the new relationship, the U.S. will likely back off its human rights pressure. “Our government will get full support from the West to fight those our government declares terrorists,” an Uzbek official said.
But the U.S. actions may have undesirable long-term consequences for Uzbekistan and the region. On Oct. 11, one month after the terrorist attacks in New York and Washington, Amnesty International said the new alliance and the renewed campaign against Uzbek terrorist organizations
could lead to worsening human rights in Uzbekistan. The region’s leaders might use anti-terrorism as a pretext to further criminalize legitimate opposition to authoritarian rule, the human rights group said.
There's already concern that Karimov has begun exploiting the crisis, by branding his political opponents “followers of bin Laden.” Members of the Khizb-ut-Takhrir party were charged with having connections to bin Laden and put on trial in Tashkent. Human rights activists said insufficient evidence was provided to justify this action. It's unlikely now that any overreaching by Karimov's government will draw much criticism from Washington.
Besides a deteriorating human rights situation, repression can have adverse political consequences. The clampdown has driven more individuals underground and further radicalized the opposition, a problem similar to what helped bin Laden recruit militants from other U.S.-backed authoritarian regimes in Egypt and Saudi Arabia.
In the past year, IMU and other militant anti-government groups have grown in numbers. These groups can be expected to expand their popularity among the disenfranchised Muslims of Uzbekistan if government repression intensifies. Indeed, experts on the region argue that the repression is doing more to fuel armed opposition than to crush it.
Muslim Fears
Another concern is that the new U.S. alliance with an explicitly anti-Muslim government could feed deepening suspicions of Muslims that the U.S. war against Afghanistan is a modern anti-Muslim crusade. This is especially true if the U.S. does nothing to prevent the arbitrary persecution of Muslims in Uzbekistan.
The new alliance also could add uncertainty to regional stability. Russia has always considered the former Soviet Central Asian states part of its backyard and could react negatively to expanded U.S. influence in the region.
Uzbekistan apparently has rebuffed the Shanghai Organization for Cooperation, where Russia, China and the Central Asian states are members. Uzbekistan failed to show up for an emergency meeting held on Oct. 10-11 to discuss the U.S. attacks on Afghanistan. Some members of the organization believe that Uzbekistan is preparing to ditch the SOC in favor of a bilateral partnership with Washington.
National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice assured Moscow that Washington is not attempting to co-opt the nations that Russia views as part of its sphere of influence. But the feeling in the region is that there is a restructuring of alliances underway and that Tashkent has re-oriented its
political priorities since American troops landed in Uzbekistan.
As Kyrgyz parliamentarian deputy Ishenbai Kadyrbekov told the Institute for War and Peace Reporting, “The immediate and strategic goals of the U.S. and Uzbekistan are currently the same.” However, Kadyrbekov added that the new alliance with the U.S. might embolden Uzbekistan to assert itself more aggressively and thus drive weaker nations in the region – particularly Kyrgystan – to seek protection from Russia or another powerful country.
Some observers also worry that a higher U.S. profile in the region could lead Russia to act in a destabilizing manner to reassert its dominance.
It is difficult to say how all of this will play out, or whether the American policymakers have considered all these potential ramifications of the new war on terrorism. What is clear is that the American campaign is changing the political landscape in Uzbekistan and Central Asia, with the possibility of unleashing a whole new round of dangers.
Paule "The Walnut" lives!
a note for the President...
Dear Mr. President
If the Congress wants to attach airport protection to the government
then I would like to suggest making it part of the Coast Guard.
There are similarities between air and water
and also between people with drugs or weapons.
Please give it some thought.
You have been doing a great job.... keep it up.
You had my vote and you'll have it again.
Thank you for your time
A husband and wife were watching the news on television:
> The devastation at the World Trade Center; the videos of different
> countries around the world crying with Americans over the events
> of the past few weeks; reporters updating and attempting to analyze
> political strategy; President Bush making speeches.
>
> The wife turns to the husband and says, "I'm so thankful that Bush
> is our President. He is doing such a wonderful job."
>
>
> The husband turns to the wife and says, "Shut up, Tipper!"
>
>
Excel
http://ourworld.cs.com/EXCELGREG/index.html
G.W. Bush and Bill Clinton somehow ended up at the same barber shop. As they sat there, each being worked on by a different barber, not a word was spoken.
The barbers were both afraid to start a conversation, for fear it would turn to politics. As the barbers finished their shaves, the one who had Clinton in his chair reached for the aftershave.
Clinton was quick to stop him saying, " No thanks, my wife Hillary will smell that and think I've been in a whorehouse".
The second barber turned to Bush and said "how about you?" Bush replied "Go ahead, my wife Laura doesn't know what the inside of a whorehouse smells like."
Excel
http://ourworld.cs.com/EXCELGREG/index.html
Takes one, to lead many! LOL have a good day!
Paule "The Walnut" lives!
No, Paule
Not to take away from the guy, but he is just the leader of many heros...
Thank God for that.
'Credible' threat to California bridges
The Golden Gate Bridge was one of four mentioned
California Governor Gray Davis says he has received "credible" information that major bridges in the state - including the Golden Gate Bridge - could be targeted for attack.
The best preparation is to let the terrorists know we know what you're up to, we're ready, it's not going to succeed
Governor Gray Davis
He said that information "from several different sources" spoke of a possible attempt to blow up the bridges during the rush hour between 2 and 7 November.
He said that there were no plans to close the bridges, and it was up to commuters to decide whether to drive over them in the coming days.
The bridges at risk, according to Governor Davies. include the Golden Gate and Bay Bridges in San Francisco, the Vincent Thomas Bridge in Los Angeles and the Coronado Bridge in San Diego.
The Golden Gate Bridge has seen tighter security measures since 11 September, with pedestrian and bicycle traffic barred from the bridges for several weeks after the attacks on the World Trade Center.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/americas/newsid_1633000/1633387.stm
The Saudi Ambassador to the U.N. has just finished giving a speech, and
walks out into the lobby where he meets his American counterpart. They
shake hands and as they walk the Saudi says, "You know, I have just one question about what I have seen in America" The American says "Well your Excellency, anything I can do to help you I will do."
The Saudi whispers "My son watches this show 'Star Trek' and in it there are Russians and Blacks and Asians, but never any Arabs. He is very upset. He doesn't understand why there are never any Arabs in Star Trek." The American laughs,leans over and says,
"That's because it takes place in the future."
A real Hero
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/baseball/mlb/2001/worldseries/news/2001/10/30/bush_ap/lg_arbusto_ap...
Paule "The Walnut" lives!
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