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Jordanian's abductors want failed hotel bomber freed
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Afghanistan
6 Taliban killed in "work accident"
Six suspected Taliban militants were killed when a landmine they were planting on a road exploded in the insurgency-hit southern province of Kandahar, Afghan officials said Sunday. The incident occurred on Saturday night in Maywand district, Kandahar police chief Abdul Malik Wahidi told AFP. Maywand administration chief Mohammad Nabi Idari said the men were planting the landmine on a road used by Afghan and US forces on patrol.

Separately police said they had arrested three militants in neighbouring Dand district and charged them with planning suicide attacks. "Police arrested a man who was carrying a large amount of explosives on a motorcycle. He tipped the police about two others who were detained later," Wahidi said. He said police recovered four motorcycles, all fitted with explosives, from the suspects. The detainees are all Afghan nationals. "The suspects have confessed they were planning suicide attacks in the city," the police chief said.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 12/25/2005 08:34 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Must have left 'Don't bunch up!' off their training video. Oh well, not bunched up anymore.
Posted by: Glenmore || 12/25/2005 10:10 Comments || Top||

#2  They're all bunched up now, looking for their 756 virgins.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 12/25/2005 12:55 Comments || Top||

#3  I hope the A-rabs like Chinese virgin wymyns. I figure they've prolly used up everybody else, by now.
Posted by: .com || 12/25/2005 15:41 Comments || Top||


Zawahri praises Taliban
Al Qaeda's deputy leader Ayman al-Zawahri praised the Taliban, saying the Islamic movement still controlled large parts of Afghanistan, according to an audio tape aired by Al Arabiya television.
"Control" is a word which can be interpreted in varying ways...
Al Arabiya said the date of the tape, which it said it had just obtained, could not be determined and made no mention of recent events. The speaker on the tape, who sounded like earlier recordings attributed to Zawahri, said: "Muslims ... still control large parts of Eastern and Southern Afghanistan and are carrying out a consistent guerrilla warfare against the crusaders and the apostates."
By "Muslims" I think he means Pakistanis, itinerant Arabs, and a few native turbans to lend some legitimacy...
The satellite television aired only a brief portion of the tape, which appeared to be of a poorer audio quality than other recordings attributed to Zawahri, Osama bin Laden's second-in-command. Bin Laden and Zawahri are believed to be hiding in the border regions of Afghanistan and Pakistan. In an audio tape posted on the Internet earlier this month, Zawahri praised Islamic militants in Iraq, saying they were forcing US troops to look for a way out of the Arab country.
Posted by: Fred || 12/25/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  See article above for how "control" is to be interpreted heheheeh.
Posted by: Mahou Sensei Negi-bozu || 12/25/2005 19:37 Comments || Top||


Africa Horn
Chadian president denounces Bashir as an enemy
The tense situation between Sudan and Chad has witnessed grave escalation on the background of Chad's accusations against Sudan of arming rebels who launched attacks against the border Chad city of Adri at the beginning of the week at a time when the African Union is making efforts in Sudan with the aim to contain the crisis between the two countries.

In a statement on Friday, the Chad government said it is in a state of war with Sudan, and described the Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir as Chad's enemy." The statement appealed the people of Chad to mobilize its lines in confrontation of the "Sudanese enemy."

Chad's foreign minister Ahmad Alam Me said that the Sudanese ambassador to Chad was summoned to the foreign ministry and he was handed over a memorandum including "Sudan's aggressions against Chad." The spokesman for the Chad's government in a press conference called on Chad's friends "to support it by all means in this crisis."

During his visit to Adri, the president of Chad Idris Deibi accused his Sudanese peer Hassan al-Bashir of wanting to "destabilizing his country." Deibi added that the attack against Adri was made by the rebels, but it was a direct aggression by the Sudanese government against Chad. An aggression that was led by the Sudanese defense minister Abdul Rahim Muhammad Hussein who is close to Bashir." Chad's president stressed that the attacks aimed at creating what he called a state of chaos and exporting the Darfur war to his country, expressing opposition simultaneously to Bashir being handed over the Presidency of the African Union by the beginning of January 2006.

Sudan denied Chad's accusations. The Sudanese foreign ministry circulated a statement on foreign diplomatic missions in Khartoum saying that "Sudan is innocent from what is accused by Chad of supporting groups opposing Chad."

The statement described Chad's accusations as "false and a policy that does not serve the march of bilateral relations and fraternity ties, and does not serve the realization of stability in the region and the positive interaction among community groups which are closely intermingled on the two countries borders. "The Sudanese foreign ministry summoned Chad ambassador to its Saqr Youssef and expressed to him Sudan's regret over Chad's filing a complaint to the UN Security Council accusing Sudan of interfering in its internal affairs.

The spokesman for the Sudanese foreign ministry Jamal Muhammad Ibrahim said that his country still considers that dialogue is the only means to solve this crisis and welcomes the initiative of the African Union which calls for containing this crisis.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 12/25/2005 09:10 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  It would appear that China supports Sudan, and France supports Chad. It will be interesting to see if the two countries' foreign backers play any part in this confrontation, whether it plays out diplomatically or on the battlefield.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 12/25/2005 11:26 Comments || Top||

#2  A return to the old Cold War situation of "war in Africa by proxy"!
Posted by: gromky || 12/25/2005 16:10 Comments || Top||


African Union trying to defuse Chad-Sudan situation
The African Union said it had sent a delegation to Chad and Sudan in a bid to defuse rapidly escalating tensions between the neighbors marked by Ndjamena's accusation that Khartoum was trying to destabilise its government. The team travelled to Ndjamena on Friday -- as Chad declared it was in a "state of belligerance" with Sudan -- and was expected in Khartoum later Saturday, said Assane Ba, a spokesman for the pan-African body's Peace and Security Council on Saturday. "We have sent a delegation to Chad and Sudan," he told AFP at AU headquarters in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa. "They went to talk to officials on both sides in order to try to normalize relations between the two countries. They were in Chad and they are now flying to Sudan."

He said the delegation was led by Baba Gana Kingibe, the AU special representative in Sudan, but could not provide further details as the team had not yet reported back. Ba declined to comment on any message that Kingibe was bringing to the two countries but allowed that the AU, which has thousands of peacekeepers in Sudan's troubled western Darfur region along the Chadian-Sudanese border, had a vested interest in preventing a war that would put its mission at risk. The team was sent as already strained ties between the two nations plummeted on Friday with Chad's "state of belligerance" announcement after recent volleys of increasingly bitter accusations being lobbed back and forth by the two capitals.

Ndjamena charges that Khartoum is trying to destabilise Chad by hosting rebels and a growing number of Chadian army deserters in western Sudan, from where an attack was launched on Chad's eastern frontier town of Adre last Sunday. Several new rebel groups have sprung up recently in eastern Chad, a region inundated by some 200,000 refugees from the civil war in Darfur and Khartoum had accused Ndamena of deploying planes and troops on its territory before the latest incident. After that assault, in which Chad claims some 100 insurgents were killed, Ndjamena said its forces had pursued the rebels five kilometers (three miles) into Sudanese territory before withdrawing.

At a Thursday ceremony in Adre to decorate Chadian troops who turned back the rebels, Deby accused Sudanese President Omar el-Beshir of plotting to "destabilize our country, to drive our people into misery, to create disorder and export the war from Darfur to Chad." Deby, an ex-rebel leader who seized power in 1990 and was later elected in multi-party polls, also issued an ultimatum to a group of dissident army officers who said earlier this month they were forming an army to topple him, saying they had one week to return to Chad or they would be treated as mercenaries.

On Friday, when Chad announced it was in a "state of belligerance" with Sudan, it also accused el-Beshir of being "the enemy" and called on Chadians to mobilise themselves against Sudanese aggression. In addition, Chad's foreign ministry said it had summoned the Sudanese ambassador to Chad to demand that Sudan "cease all agression against Chad." Sudan, meanwhile, has denied any support for the Chadian rebels and on Friday sought to downplay the situation. "We are not for any escalation with Chad," Sudanese foreign ministry spokesman Jamal Mohammed Ibrahim told AFP in Khartoum.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 12/25/2005 09:06 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Send Kofi & Xavier
Posted by: gromgoru || 12/25/2005 10:59 Comments || Top||

#2 
Kofi & Xavier v. Jackson & Farrakhan

Fantasy league diplomacy.
Posted by: Master of Obvious || 12/25/2005 11:14 Comments || Top||

#3  #2: Kofi & Xavier v. Jackson & Farrakhan

Yep, put all your rotten eggs in one basket,
Then drop the basket off a cliff.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 12/25/2005 12:00 Comments || Top||

#4  send condi
Posted by: mom || 12/25/2005 19:05 Comments || Top||

#5  You forgot Carter and Sheehan.

This whole thing is sickening.
Posted by: newc || 12/25/2005 23:27 Comments || Top||


Africa North
Ayman Nour imprisoned for 5 years
Note that the head of the Muslim Brotherhood just denied the Holocaust, so Mubarak wants to eliminate the sane opposition. As long as the Muslim Brotherhood's all he's got going against him, he doesn't have to worry about Western pressure to give up power.
In a verdict that came as a slap to democracy advocates, one of Egypt's most prominent and unflinching opposition politicians was sentenced Saturday to five years in prison on charges of forgery.

The imprisonment of Ayman Nour, an outspoken former legislator who recently ran an intense election campaign against longtime President Hosni Mubarak, is widely seen as a means to silence a potential threat to the ruling regime. The verdict drew a swift and forceful rebuke from Washington.

Nour's conviction "calls into question Egypt's commitment to democracy, freedom and the rule of law," the White House said in a statement.

Nour's lawyer, Amin Salim, told reporters, "This is a political trial to destroy Ayman Nour." The verdict will be appealed, his wife and lawyers said.

Saturday's verdict was the latest blow to the foundering dream of creating a third way in Arab politics — a progressive, democratic political movement that is neither Islamist nor a repressive autocracy. For many Egyptians, the imprisonment of the ailing Nour was a disheartening epilogue to parliamentary elections this year that placed nearly 20% of the legislative seats under the control of the Muslim Brotherhood.

"This is a very dangerous signal from the government — that the secular opposition doesn't have the same opportunity to exist or grow as the Islamist movements," said Hafez abu Saeda, president of the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights. "In spite of the government talking about reform, secular leaders are in a very bad situation."

After a quarter-century in power, Mubarak opened the presidential election this year to competition from opposition candidates, including Nour. But critics have complained that the election law was tailored to ensure that nobody but Mubarak stood a chance of winning.

Still, some analysts believe that Nour, 41, posed a more serious threat to Mubarak than the more popular Islamists — despite his comparative lack of followers. Unlike the Muslim Brotherhood, Nour tapped into the same constituency that forms the backbone of Mubarak's ruling National Democratic Party: secular, educated, Western-friendly, middle class. And unlike the Islamist opposition, a candidate like Nour could be taken seriously by the U.S. administration and Europe.

Nour has said that the regime views him as a threat to the political aspirations of Gamal Mubarak, the president's son and a rising star within the ruling party. As long as Hosni Mubarak can keep secular opposition tamped down, Nour reasoned, he'll be able to convince the West — particularly the United States — that his regime is the only viable government, and that democracy must not be rushed.

"They'll put an end to the dreams of all liberals," said Gamila Ismael, Nour's wife, standing in the courtroom a few minutes before the verdict was announced. "They will prove to the West it's either [Mubarak] or the Muslim Brotherhood."

The wooden benches of the courtroom were packed with spectators before the hearing opened — all of them men, most of them burly and dressed in worn suits. They wouldn't say who they were or why they'd come. Nour's supporters were convinced that they were plainclothes police, and that their presence signaled that the backers' party leader would be hauled off to prison.

Looking out at the courtroom, Ismael was frantic.

"Until yesterday, he still said, 'Pray for me, don't lose patience, don't lose hope,' " she said. "I want to reach him now and tell him, 'Don't have hope, you're going to be put down heavily.' Have a look and see this reform they're talking about."

When Nour, dressed in prison whites and looking weary, filed into the defendant's cell, Ismael began to shout to her husband.

"It's not good, it's not good," she said, over and over. "Be strong."

A diabetic who needs insulin, Nour had been hospitalized in recent days after going on a hunger strike to protest his treatment in jail. He looked puffy and pale as he stood in the courtroom cage to hear the punishment read.

The White House, in its statement Saturday, said it is "disturbed by reports that Mr. Nour's health has seriously declined due to the hunger strike on which he has embarked in protest of the conditions of his trial and detention."

The United States "calls upon the Egyptian government to act under the laws of Egypt in the spirit of its professed desire for increased political openness and dialogue within Egyptian society, and out of humanitarian concern, to release Mr. Nour from detention," the statement continued.

The judge, who was flanked by security officers, has presided over other controversial cases, including the 2002 conviction of Saad Eddin Ibrahim, another secular critic of the government. That verdict was later tossed out by an appeals court.

The hearing was over in less than five minutes. Ismael leapt to her feet. "God is great!" she cried. "Down with Mubarak!"

"God is great!" Nour echoed from his cell as security officers hauled him away, out of sight.

Nour's conviction gives him a criminal record — thereby putting him permanently out of the running for president. The Tomorrow Party has already appointed a replacement, former Egyptian diplomat Nagui Ghatrifi, to lead while Nour serves out his prison term.

"We'll stick to our program, of course," Ghatrifi said. "We don't believe in any gradual reforms. These are all lies and maneuvers. We have to address the head of the despotic regime."

In the street outside, where dozens of supporters had spent a bone-chilling night on wool blankets, a wail rose from the crowd at news of Nour's conviction. Demonstrators hurled rocks and sticks at riot police who blocked the entry to the courthouse.

"Why all these soldiers?" the crowd chanted. "Are you scared of us? Are you in a war or what?"

The crowd thickened to several hundred, and moved in an impromptu march through the streets of Cairo.

"They're a heap of rubbish, Hosni Mubarak and his regime," said Mohammed Ahmed, a 23-year-old engineering student who traveled from his home in Alexandria to show his solidarity with Nour. "As you can see, we feel burned."

Nour's case had been wending its way through the courts for nearly a year. He was abruptly stripped of parliamentary immunity in January, jailed and charged with forging signatures when he founded his party.

Nour's arrest drew the ire of the U.S. administration; he was soon freed and allowed to run against Mubarak in Egypt's first multiple-candidate presidential election. He collected half a million votes, outpacing other opposition figures.

But he has never managed to shake off his legal woes. And when it came time to run for parliament this fall, Nour lost his seat. His supporters accuse the government of rigging the vote.

"Mubarak is not sincere," said Hisham Kassem, publisher of the opposition newspaper Al Masry al Youm and a member of the Tomorrow Party. "He's happy to have a charade democracy, but if anybody challenges his power, he's terrified."
Posted by: Dan Darling || 12/25/2005 08:23 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Bangladesh
Bangala boomer bungles bomb blast
Dec 24: An alleged terrorist who was carrying bomb was killed as it suddenly went off in Chuadanga while a bomb attack on a house missed the target in neighbouring Meherpur district on Friday night. Ohidul Islam alias Chhoto Mia, 38, died instantly when the bomb, strapped with his body, exploded with big bang at Sharishadanga village in Sadar upazila of Chuadanga frontier district on Friday night. Sadar thana Officer-in-Charge Nazrul Islam Mollah visited the stain on the sidewalk spot. The OC said Chhoto Mia, an inhabitant of the village, was riding bicycle at about 9:30pm when the bomb, being carried by him, blasted following jerking of the two- wheeler.
"Get a spatula and a baggie, men, and mark it 'evidence'."
Police said Chhoto Mia was a "terrorist". Police arrested three people-- Khoaz, Jahangir and Amirul--in connection with the incident. A case was filed.
Posted by: Steve White || 12/25/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


JMB threat to blow up Khan Jahan Ali Institute
JMB militants yesterday threatened to blow up Khan Jahan Ali Science and Technology Institute. Principal of the institute Abul Kalam Azad filed a general diary (No. 1360) with Khulna thana at 11 am yesterday seeking security on the campus. According to the GD, Principal Azad received a hand written letter on the afternoon of December 22, sent by post by Moulana Ataur Rahman, who identified himself as the 'second-in-command' of outlawed JMB in Khulna division. The letter said JMB suicide bombers will blow up the institute anytime between December 25 and December 30 for not recasting education in Islamic style.
Posted by: Fred || 12/25/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


JMB 'commander' Asad on 5-day remand
Ten persons out of 12 arrested earlier in connections with the December 17 recovery of bombs, explosives and bomb-making materials from two JMB dens at Akua in the town were produced before a First Class Magistrate court here yesterday. They are JMB 'area commander' Asaduzzaman; Hafez Saidur Rahman; Sayeeda Noor, her daughter Shamima Akhtar and son Shafiqur Rahman; Zeson Khan, Hamman Khan, Rubel Alam, Delwar Hossain and Abu Sayeed before the court today. Police sought ten days' remand for Asaduzzaman and Hafez Saidur Rahman but the court granted eight days' remand. The other arrestees were sent to jail hajat. Another arrestee, Khorshed Uddin Ahmed, could not be produced before court as he is undergoing treatment at Mymensingh Medical College Hospital (MMCH). He will be produced before the court after his recovery, court sources said.
Posted by: Fred || 12/25/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Caucasus Corpse Count
Two soldiers have been killed in Chechnya over the past 24 hours.

"A private of the 70th motorized infantry regiment of the 42nd motorized infantry division was found dead by sentries at a checkpoint outside the village of Khatuni in Chechnya's Vedeno district, a source in the headquarters of the Combined Federal Forces in the North Caucasus told Interfax.

The serviceman, presumably dispatched from Omsk Region, was shot in the head by a sniper.

"Weapons and ammunition were in place and there were no traces of a fight," the source said.

An interior troops serviceman, born in Lipetsk, was accidentally killed in the village of Kurchaloi, when guards patrolling an ammunition depot were practicing shooting skills.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 12/25/2005 08:38 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Europe
Dutch struggling to balance fighting terror with human rights
Samir Azzouz is only 19, but for almost three years Dutch authorities have struggled without success to punish him for what they see as plotting terrorism.

Police records show that he was first placed under surveillance in early 2003, when he was in high school, after he was stopped at the Ukrainian border while trying to join Islamic militants in Chechnya.

He was arrested months later in Amsterdam but released in days for lack of evidence. Arrested again in June 2004 on terrorist-related charges, he was convicted only of weapons possession. The police had found an array of materials that could be used to make bombs at his home in Amsterdam, including detonators and a yellow plastic lemon juice bottle, with bits of fertilizer inside, attached to a Christmas tree bulb.

They had also discovered crude hand-drawn sketches of some of the Netherlands' most important symbols of power, including the Parliament, the Amsterdam airport, the Ministry of Defense and the Dutch nuclear reactor, as well as CD's, videos and Internet sites showing how to make explosive devices.

In October, prosecutors arrested him for a third time, with new evidence, and will put him and six others on trial.

The prosecution says it is confident that its case is strong this time. But since no terrorist act was committed, it faces a tough challenge: proving that Mr. Azzouz's seeming intentions constituted crimes.

The problem resonates throughout Europe, as investigators and prosecutors grapple with how to stop what appear to be terrorist plots that are still being planned. Preventive detention in the face of a perceived threat is a useful but limited tool.

The difficulty also has echoes in civil liberties disputes roiling the United States, but it is particularly acute in the Netherlands, with its tradition, extending for decades, of protecting the rights of the individual against the intrusion of the state.

"People with intentions cannot be convicted if there is no link with transforming their intentions into action," the Dutch justice minister, Jan Piet Hein Donner, said in an interview. "Otherwise, I'd be convicting people for their ideas."

Dutch authorities say the learning curve has been steep in their prosecution of terrorist cases since the daylight murder of the filmmaker Theo van Gogh last year, for which Muhammad Bouyeri, a Dutch-born 27-year-old of Moroccan descent, was convicted.

The government was severely criticized for not having put Mr. Bouyeri under tighter surveillance despite signs that he was dangerous. Theo Bot, the deputy director of the national intelligence service, the country's intelligence and main antiterrorism service, said on television in May that it was "gut-wrenching" to have to admit that "someone was incorrectly evaluated from the beginning."

The murder shattered the image of the Netherlands as a tolerant haven immune to terrorism by Islamic radicals and prompted the passage of a law that makes it a crime to be a member of a "terrorist" organization.

The case of Mr. Azzouz has been particularly frustrating for prosecutors. In the case against him in 2004, prosecutors had records of chat-room conversations on the Internet in which Mr. Azzouz vowed to kill non-Muslims in the Netherlands and proclaimed his support for the violent overthrow of the Dutch government and its replacement with a government of Islamic law.

Besides the sketches of what appeared to be targets, the police raid of his home turned up homemade detonators, a pellet gun, a silencer, night-vision goggles, a bulletproof vest, ammunition clips, fertilizer, chemicals and handwritten lists of where to buy fertilizer.

The police also found a signed, handwritten letter from Mr. Azzouz to his expected child, expressing the hope that if the child was a boy, he would pursue jihad and go to a training camp when he turned 15.

Prosecutors and much of the public were stunned in April when a panel of judges acquitted Mr. Azzouz of plotting attacks. Adding to the frustration was Mr. Azzouz's smiling, triumphant appearance before his friends and reporters on the day of his release, before he suddenly turned angry and punched a photographer.

Prosecutors appealed, but an appeals court upheld the acquittal in November. It ruled that although Mr. Azzouz had "terrorist intentions," his preparations were "in such an early stage and so clumsy and primitive that there was no concrete threat."

Now the authorities have charged Mr. Azzouz and six others with conspiring to attack the Parliament and the intelligence service headquarters and to assassinate several politicians, including leading members of Parliament.

This time, the case rests largely on evidence gathered via wiretaps and telephone taps and monitoring of Mr. Azzouz's computer. Police agents also followed him so closely that he could see who was tailing him.

One secret intelligence report prepared by the Dutch intelligence service in October cited evidence that Mr. Azzouz was looking for money, explosives and weapons to commit a suicide bombing, according to the Dutch national television channel, NOVA, an account verified by Dutch authorities.

Another report by the service asserted that there was "reliable information" that he had a "central role in planning and preparing" an attack on a public building.

The authorities also have a video made by Mr. Azzouz that the authorities say is similar to those often made by suicide bombers. Dressed in black and wearing a black headband, Mr. Azzouz tells his family that his was "the right path." He tells the Dutch people that they are responsible for crimes by the United States, adding that there will be "revenge," since "you are considered soldiers because you elected this government."

Victor Koppe, his lawyer, said he planned to challenge the use of intelligence reports in court. He will also argue that while Mr. Azzouz's views may be extreme, they are not criminal. "Intentions," he said, "are not crimes."

The challenge of prosecuting intentions is playing out in a landmark terror case that went to trial in the Netherlands on Dec. 5, the first case under a new antiterrorism law making it a crime to belong to a terrorist organization.

That case involves 13 young men, including Mr. Bouyeri and some friends of Mr. Azzouz. The intelligence service code named them the "Hofstad group." Hofstad means royal seat. And prosecutors hope to convict them on charges of conspiring to commit acts of terrorism against the Dutch state. Their case relies on electronically monitored conversations, Internet exchanges and the testimony of others.

[Mr. Azzouz testified on Dec. 21, The Associated Press reported, telling the judges: "We reject you. We reject your system. We hate you. I guess that about sums it up."]

Prosecutors say they have the strongest case against Jason Walters, a 20-year-old Dutch-American who is also being charged with attempted murder, accused of throwing a hand grenade from his apartment at a special police team that had come to arrest him and his roommate, another defendant.

Mr. Walters has sworn in court he was only trying to act cool when he bragged about weapons training in Pakistan and rattled off names of politicians who should be killed.

"You create a myth and you keep building on it," he said of his Internet chats monitored by Dutch intelligence.

"People have a romantic idea about jihad fighters," he added. "I didn't have a job at the time. So I looked for things to make life a little more exciting."

But the cases against the others, all of whom are 20 to 28 years old, may be weaker. Ten of the defendants are being prosecuted only because they are accused of having an "association" with a terrorist group. Defense lawyers argue that a number of the suspects did nothing more than attend meetings where radical ideas were expressed.

Much of the prosecution's case rests on information gathered from the Dutch intelligence service which bugged the apartment of Mr. Walters and his roommate. Defense lawyers and the Dutch media have accused the service of a cover-up because it introduced only a small part of the intercepted conversations into the trial. Robert Maanicus, Mr. Walters's lawyer, said mysterious beeps were in the tapes in evidence, which he said signaled additional gaps.

"The intelligence services tell us that nothing else is relevant," Mr. Maanicus said. "That's rubbish."

Some terrorism specialists see the Hofstad members as radical misfits, braggarts and petty criminals, but not necessarily terrorist plotters. Some of the young men apparently did not know one another.

"They were dangerous because they had this romantic feeling to use violence to create a new Islamic state," said Ruud Peters, a professor of Islamic law at the University of Amsterdam who has testified as an expert witness at their trial. "They were amateurs because they were not part of a well-organized group of terrorists and their skills in military things were mainly collected through the Internet."

Even before the opening of the trial in early December, prosecutors had to scale back their goals, dropping charges that the group was trying to kill several Dutch politicians because the evidence did "not clearly prove" a planned attack, the prosecution said. Now they are trying to prove that the suspects formed a conspiratorial cell that took its inspiration from Mr. Bouyeri, who is serving a life sentence for killing Mr. van Gogh. In a court appearance on Dec. 7, he insisted, as he had earlier, that he had acted alone.

When asked whether he had met in his home with the other suspects, Mr. Bouyeri replied, "It's none of your business!" He added, "I am not going to tell you who came to my house, and I am not asking you who visits you."

Meanwhile, the justice minister is struggling to push through legislation to give new powers to investigators and the police and to allow intelligence reports to be more easily used in trials.

Under investigative procedures recently put in place, investigators and the police have begun to do what they call "disturbing" people to deter them from joining radical groups. It is a kind of harassment that involves following people at close range, calling them by telephone, parking police cars in front of their homes and approaching them on the street to inform them that they are being watched.

But civil liberties can still trump security in the Netherlands. Early in December, a young Muslim mother of three from Amsterdam identified only as Jolanda W. won a ruling against police officers she had accused of stalking her.

"One cannot rule out that these measures put important psychological pressure upon the person harassed," Judge A. J. Beukenhorst said in his ruling. "Islamic belief," he added, "cannot by itself be the reason for harassment."
Posted by: Dan Darling || 12/25/2005 08:45 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "Dutch struggling to balance fighting terror with human rights"

What's to struggle about? Human rights are for humans, not terrorists (or their wanna-be's).

Keep on like this, Nederland, and you'll lose that "struggle." Permanently.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 12/25/2005 9:50 Comments || Top||

#2  Well, nice try, cops. But your system is SO broken, that I rather doubt that any of this will work. Their heart is in the right place, but Dutch culture rejects the idea of prosecuting people unless they're standing above a corpse with a bloody knife.
Posted by: gromky || 12/25/2005 10:07 Comments || Top||

#3  Whatever happened to the notion that one person's rights does not includes trampling on others'?
Posted by: gromgoru || 12/25/2005 11:34 Comments || Top||

#4  Lol, amazing...

Barbara inspires me, lol...

Perhaps rephrasing the headline will clarify things for the Dutch...

"...balance inhuman rights with human rights"

"...balance fighting terror with facilitating terror"

Any help for ya, DikeBoyz?
Posted by: .com || 12/25/2005 15:30 Comments || Top||

#5  The problem appears not to be Dutch law but Dutch Judges application of the law. Remove those Judges and put those who understand the human right not to be blown up or killed by a terrorist comes before the rights of social missfits and that planning is just as important as the act. Plotting to carry out an act is criminal no matter how amaturish or bungling it is. These rulings just enbolden those who would desire to do terrorist acts.

It's broken fix it or die.
Posted by: Mahou Sensei Negi-bozu || 12/25/2005 17:49 Comments || Top||

#6  "DikeBoyz"

ROFL, .com!

As usual.... :-D
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 12/25/2005 17:59 Comments || Top||

#7  In the 30's and 40's, when the east coast mafia decided LA looked pretty rip for domination, they sent their feelers out. See Mulholland Falls. Often times the mugs were taken out to dig their own graves before being snuffed...by the cops. There comes a point where law enforcement is so hindered by the protections joe citizen treasures that they are overwhelmed and unable to protect Joe and his family from his enemies (domestic and foreign). In a time of war - and we are - I treasure the safety of my family and friends more than I do the sensitivities of the Donks and Arlen Specter
Posted by: Frank G || 12/25/2005 20:19 Comments || Top||


Turks bust 14 Islamists
Police in Turkey announced the arrest of 14 people on suspicion of membership in a banned Muslim group.

The suspects have been brought before a judge and will remain in custody.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 12/25/2005 08:42 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:


Spain jails 6 accused of aiding Islamic militancy
A Spanish judge has jailed six people on suspicion of recruiting Islamic radicals to send as suicide bombers or insurgents to Iraq, Chechnya or Kashmir, a court official said on Saturday. The six were among 16 people arrested on Monday in raids around Spain. Another two people surrendered after learning police were looking for them. After Monday's arrests, the Interior Ministry said the suspects recruited and indoctrinated people who were then sent to wage "holy war" in Iraq as members of al Qaeda.

It said the group -- whose members were born in Iraq, Belarus, Ghana, Spain, Morocco, Egypt, France, Algeria and Saudi Arabia -- had two fighters ready to send to Iraq when they were arrested. After questioning the suspects, High Court Judge Fernando Andreu issued an order late on Friday night accusing three of the men of belonging to a terrorist organisation and another three of cooperation with an armed group. He remanded all six in custody pending further investigation. He released the other 12 suspects but said they must report regularly to courts near their homes.

The detainees are alleged to have recruited people who "would later be sent to places of 'Islamic' conflict, either to be martyrs, through suicide attacks, or as members of insurgent terrorist groups in Iraq, Chechnya (or) Kashmir ...," Andreu said in the order, quoted by Spain's Europa Press news agency.

The six remanded in custody included the alleged leader of the group, a 25-year-old Iraqi known as Abu Sufian, and a Belarus-born man who, according to the Interior Ministry, trained in Chechnya and is an expert in chemical weapons. Andreu said Abu Sufian had met al Qaeda's leader in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, and recruited people for his organisation. He said the investigation focused on a mosque in the southern Spanish city of Malaga frequented by people with radical Islamist beliefs.
Posted by: Fred || 12/25/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


India-Pakistan
Pak Al Badr commander killed in J&K
A top commander of Pakistan-based Al-Badr outfit was killed by security forces in Srinagar on Sunday.

Wasim, a Pakistani national and self-styled district commander of Al-badr outfit, was killed in a gun-battle with security forces at Bemina locality, Senior Superintendent of Police Muneer Khan said.

Acting on specific information about the presence of the top terrorist in a house at Bemina area, police assisted by army and CRPF troops cordoned off the area on Sunday morning, he said.

The terrorist was asked to surrender but he opened fire on security forces, Khan said adding he was killed in retaliatory action.
Posted by: john || 12/25/2005 11:11 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  another present under the tree!
Posted by: Frank G || 12/25/2005 19:00 Comments || Top||


Pakistani army convoy ambushed
Miscreants detonated a bomb outside a police station, blew up a railway track and ambushed a military convoy with rockets in Balochistan while the main transmission line supplying power to the province was damaged after another bomb planted at a pylon exploded in Dera Ghazi Khan’s tribal area.

According to AP, In a pre-dawn raid, miscreants exploded a bomb outside the police station at Mastoi, 50 kilometres west of Quetta, said police chief Tahir Kasi.

Hours earlier, a bomb destroyed a section of a rail track linking Quetta. The attack happened five minutes after a special train carrying officials had passed over it, said Ghulam Rasool, a Railways official. He said engineers had started repair work.

Also Saturday, several rockets landed near a post of the Frontier Corps in Kohlu, where the military using helicopter gunships this week dismantled five miscreants training camps.

Miscreants also ambushed a military convoy with rockets at Baker, a town about 350 kilometres east of Quetta, injuring several soldiers, said a security official in the region on condition of anonymity. "Yes, security forces suffered casualties, but I don’t have numbers," he said.

Lt-Col Hassan Jamil, spokesman for the Frontier Corps, confirmed the attack but said he was not in a position to give details.

Our correspondent from DG Khan Adds: The main transmission line supplying power to Balochistan was damaged after a bomb planted at a pylon exploded in Dera Ghazi Khan’s tribal area adjacent to the province. It was the sixth sabotage activity in the district during the last 10 months. Wapda officials said the repair work had been initiated.

According to officials, the locally-made powerful bomb blew up in the wee hours of Saturday at tower No 121. About one foot of the tower was completely damaged, however power supply remained uninterrupted, said the officials.

The power from the line hit is supplied to Barkhan, Kohlu and other adjoining areas of Balochistan. An official of Mepco circle office told The News that security could not be maintained at each and every tower and transmission line.

The officials of Civil Defence Bomb Disposal Squad said the device was locally made, which was wrapped in a polythene bag and planted at one leg of the tower.

Political Assistant Tariq Bukhari said an FIR would soon be lodged and the efforts to arrest the accused were on.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 12/25/2005 08:49 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Lots of miscreants in Pakistan; ruffians, hooligans and rabblerousers really need to start picking up the slack...
Posted by: Raj || 12/25/2005 11:20 Comments || Top||


Fierce fighting in Bekar
Up to 18 people were killed on Saturday when security forces swept into the Kharcha area of Bekar, which is on the border of Dera Bugti, Kohlu and Barkhan, Senator Sana Baloch of the Balochistan National Party said. Baloch said that security forces were backed by nine helicopters. Frontier Corps troops moved into Baekar after rebel tribesmen ambushed a convoy with rockets, a Frontier Corp spokesman told Daily Times. A security official in the region told AP. “Yes, security forces suffered casualties, but I don’t have numbers,” he said.

The FC spokesman said security forces had captured a camp at Chhabar, and now occupied six of 13 “militant camps” in the Kohlu area. MPA Balach Marri said that security forces had stepped up their campaign in Kohlu over the last three days and claimed that around 80 people had been killed in “aerial bombing” and because of the harsh weather, exacerbated by a shortage of electricity and water. However, Mohabat Khan Marri, a former provincial minister and opponent of Balach Marri, said from Kohlu that the situation was normal in the Maewand area of Kohlu.

Kohlu resident Anwar told Daily Times that security forces were “attacking” the villages of Nisao, Tritani, Chhabar, and Kahan. Despite the widespread reports of civilian casualties, hospitals in the area have not reported receiving injured people or dead bodies. Locals said this was because security forces had besieged the area from all sides and people feared being arrested if they took the injured to hospital. They said that it was “common practice” for security forces to arrest the injured, regardless of who they were.
Posted by: Fred || 12/25/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


100 dead in Kohlu military operation
At least 100 people had been killed by Thursday and another three were killed on Saturday in the “military operation” in Kohlu, representatives of the Marri tribe said at a press conference here on Saturday. Tribesmen’s cottages are being set on fire and there is no water and electricity in the area, they said. “Gunship helicopters and jets came into action in the afternoon and made a number of sorties, mercilessly bombing the unarmed Marri Baloch population,” they said. There are no ‘farrari (fugitive) camps’ in Kohlu and innocent civilians are being killed in the operation, they said. The entire Baloch community is being victimised for the crime of one or two people who fired rockets at President General Pervez Musharraf, they said.
Posted by: Fred || 12/25/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Just curious, but wouldn't they be like feasting and dancing in the streets 'n stuff if Pervy had been aced by one of those pesky little rocket thingys?

I'm just saying...
Posted by: .com || 12/25/2005 15:47 Comments || Top||


Iraq
Working Holiday in Iraq: Summary
Two Task Force Baghdad soldiers were killed when their vehicle struck an improvised explosive device in Baghdad today, military officials reported.

The names of the soldiers are being withheld pending notification of their families.

In other news from Iraq, soldiers of the 3rd Squadron, 7th Cavalry, discovered a rocket factory and captured three suspected terrorists in two separate operations.

A local citizen identified an eastern Baghdad home being used to make improvised rocket launchers. Soldiers raided the home Dec. 22 and discovered 15 rocket launchers were in the process of being built. One 57 mm rocket was completed and ready to fire. No one was in the home when it was raided.

"It is encouraging that the Iraqi citizens are continuing to choose the side of the new government over the terrorists," said Army Col. Joseph DiSalvo, commander of coalition forces in eastern Baghdad. "The Iraqi citizens know that providing information against the terrorists to coalition or Iraqi security forces will help to improve the security situation in their neighborhoods."

All equipment in the home was seized and Iraqi security forces continue searching for the homeowners, officials said.

On Dec. 21, a patrol from the same unit captured three terrorists as they were emplacing a fake roadside bomb in eastern Baghdad.

At about 6 p.m., the patrol observed a civilian vehicle dropping cement blocks in the median of a major thoroughfare. The patrol intercepted the suspicious vehicle and detained three suspected terrorists.

Additional elements of 3rd Squadron, 7th Cavalry, secured the site surrounding the suspicious items and an explosive ordnance disposal team investigated the objects and found them to be hoax roadside bombs.

"These suspected terrorists were not placing cement blocks in the road for any other reason then to terrorize and intimidate the population," said Maj. Paul Reese, operations officer for 2nd Brigade, 3rd Infantry Division. Anyone found guilty of emplacing a hoax roadside bomb is a terrorist - make no mistake about it. The good people of Iraq are disgusted by these types of games."

Hoax roadside bombs are commonly used by terrorists to check how Iraqi security and coalition forces will react, officials explained. Coalition military officials today announced the capture of media emir and an administrator, both members of the radical Islamist group Ansar al-Sunna, during raids on suspected terrorist safe houses near Mosul.

Muhammad al-Sufi, also known as Abu Naba, an Ansar al-Sunna media emir in Mosul was captured Nov. 23, and Adnan al-Badrani, known as Abu Hudayfah, an Ansar al-Sunna administrator, was captured Dec. 5, officials said.

Abu Naba produced propaganda fliers and compact discs focusing on military operations, anti-voting messages, Jihad messages and prayers, officials said. He also facilitated videos of attacks on Iraqi and coalition forces to be posted to the Internet. He purchased cameras used to film violent acts including bombings, kidnappings and executions.

He also helped produce the final video products and delivered the videos to other Ansar al-Sunna leaders for posting on the Internet, officials said.

Based on information Abu Naba and other detained terrorists provided to coalition forces, Abu Hudayfah was identified and captured. He allegedly was in charge of logistics and support for Ansar al-Sunna in Mosul. In the skies over Iraq, coalition aircraft flew 34 close-air-support missions Dec. 22 in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. U.S. Air Force F-15s provided close-air support to coalition troops in contact with insurgents near Samarra. The F-15s used a precision-guided munition to destroy an insurgent bunker.

Near Balad, U.S. Air Force F-16s provided close-air support to coalition troops in contact with insurgents. The F-16s struck two enemy positions with precision-guided munitions. Other U.S. Air Force F-16s also provided close-air support to coalition troops in contact with insurgents near Bayji, Kirkuk and Tikrit. Eleven U.S. Air Force and U.S. Navy intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft flew missions in support of operations in Iraq. Also, British Royal Air Force fighter aircraft performed in a nontraditional ISR role with their electro-optical and infrared sensors.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 12/25/2005 16:42 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Abu Naba produced propaganda fliers and compact discs focusing on military operations, anti-voting messages, Jihad messages and prayers, officials said. He also facilitated videos of attacks on Iraqi and coalition forces to be posted to the Internet. He purchased cameras used to film violent acts including bombings, kidnappings and executions

Outrage in MSM that the enemy is using propaganda technics with the media .... in 10, 9, 8....
Oh wait, you mean the MSM which is the unquestioning conduit for the enemy. Never mind.
Posted by: Glailing Ulusing4418 || 12/25/2005 21:16 Comments || Top||

#2  it's actually the end result they desire: W and America loses and humiliated, withdraws in defeat - good for the MSM and Dems; America succeeds in freeing millions and allowing free votes - Dems and MSM loses


which side do you choose?
Posted by: Frank G || 12/25/2005 21:54 Comments || Top||

#3  This marks the beginning of the end of Islam for history. Just a footnote.
Posted by: newc || 12/25/2005 23:24 Comments || Top||


Shi'ites reject call for new ballot, & more
Hundreds of Shiites spilled into Baghdad streets on Sunday to support their governing coalition, which took a large lead in the Dec. 15 elections and has been the target of opposition vote-rigging accusations. Sunni Arab groups staged smaller demonstrations in the western Anbar city of Fallujah and in eastern Baqouba to support demands for a rerun of the parliamentary elections, which they claim were tainted by fraud.

In the sprawling Shiite slum of Sadr City, about 1,000 demonstrators held a rally to support preliminary results showing the governing United Iraqi Alliance, a religious Shiite coalition, leading in the elections. They also chanted slogans denouncing former Prime Minister Ayad Allawi, a secular Shiite whose party seems to have fared badly. His party has joined Sunni Arab groups complaining about the results.

The Alliance has called on Iraqis to accept the results and has been moving ahead with efforts to form a "national unity" government. But the Shiite religious bloc also deepened the post-election turmoil by claiming that Islamic extremists and Saddam Hussein loyalists were at the forefront of those questioning the results.

In Fallujah, hundreds of demonstrators took part in a demonstration organized by the local government to protest the elections. All public offices were closed in the former insurgent stronghold. "We decided to have a sit-in today and stop work in government offices to convey our demands for a rerun of elections," Fallujah Mayor Dhari al-Arsan said.

The Alliance, headed by the cleric Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, said preliminary results showing them with a clear lead in the elections were not the result of fraud or intimidation. They charged that many violations took place in Sunni Arab areas, and claimed that many of its opponents conspired with insurgents to alter results.

"There will be no going back and no new elections," Jawad al-Maliki, a senior Alliance official, said at a news conference. "The results must be accepted and the will of the people must be respected." He added that the Alliance had been expecting to win more seats. "The opponents have made it clear through their statements and warnings that they stand alongside the terrorists," he said.

He was referring to statements by senior Sunni Arab politicians, including Adnan al-Dulaimi, the head of the main Sunni Arab coalition known as the Iraqi Accordance Front, who openly thanked some insurgent groups for not attacking polling stations. It was also a reference to reports that masked militants were guarding some of them.

The acrimony demonstrated the difficulty that Iraqi parties will face in forming a government after final election results are released in early January.

Though Alliance officials said they were discussing a possible national unity government, they insist a Shiite member of their religious bloc become the new prime minister.

Sunni Arab and secular Shiite factions are demanding that an international body review the fraud complaints, warning that they may boycott the new legislature. The United Nations has rejected an outside review. About 1,500 complaints have been lodged about the elections, including at least 35 the Iraqi election commission said could be serious enough to change the results in certain areas.

But Adel al-Lami, general director of the Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq, said an initial review of the complaints showed "they don't significantly affect the results of the vote."

In violence around Iraq on Sunday:

• A car bomb targeting a police patrol in northern Kirkuk killed an Iraqi civilian, and injured eight others — including three police officers.

• A gunbattle between police and a group in Kirkuk left one attacker dead, the city's police director said.

• Unidentified gunmen killed Salman Jadr, a bank employee in eastern Baghdad, Police Lt. Col. Hafiz Maan said, adding that the man had once reportedly been a member of Saddam's now outlawed Baath party.

• Unidentified gunmen killed a man near his house in Jbala, 40 miles south of Baghdad, police said.

_The head of the Iraqi student union in northern Mosul, Qusai Salahuldin, was found dead two days after he was kidnapped, a hospital official said.

• Three men were killed in Samarra, 60 miles north of Baghdad, when a mortar they were trying to fire exploded, police said.

• Unidentified gunmen killed a man in Baghdad's southern Dora neighborhood as he was driving his children to school, a hospital official said.

• Police Lt. Col. Fawzi Ali Uklaa was killed when a roadside bomb exploded as he was getting out of his car in eastern Mosul, Police Brig. Saied Ahmed Al-Jubori said.

• Unidentified gunmen killed a police officer in civilian clothes in southern Baghdad, a hospital official said.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 12/25/2005 09:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Zark's followers demand Amman bombers be sprung in video
Militants in Iraq released a video of a Jordanian hostage on Saturday, giving Jordan three days to cut ties with the Baghdad government and free a female would-be suicide bomber involved in November attacks in Amman.

The Jordanian government immediately rejected the demand.

The video showed Mahmoud Suleiman Saidat, a driver for the Jordanian Embassy in Baghdad who was snatched by gunmen Tuesday.

In a segment of video aired on the Al-Arabiya satellite channel, Saidat identified himself and read a statement as he sat surrounded by three masked men holding automatic weapons and a rocket-propelled grenade launcher. A sign superimposed on the footage identified the kidnappers as a previously unknown group, the Hawk Brigades.

"I ask the Jordanian government to withdraw its diplomatic mission from Iraq and not to deal with this illegitimate government (in Baghdad)," Saidat said.

He also called for Jordan to release Sajida al-Rishawi, a would-be suicide bomber whose explosives belt failed to go off in Nov. 9 attacks on Amman hotels that killed 60 people.

Al-Arabiya said the statement in the video gave the Jordanian government three days to meet the demands. It did not specify whether the militants threatened to kill Saidat if the deadline was not met.

A government spokesman in Amman said Jordan would not give in to the kidnappers.

"Jordan will not succumb to any blackmail or pressure whatever the source is," spokesman Nasser Judeh told The Associated Press.

Saidat was kidnapped by more than a dozen masked men as he drove to work at the embassy in Baghdad. Afterward, Jordan said it was considering moving its embassy to the Green Zone, the heavily fortified Baghdad neighborhood where the U.S. and British missions are located.

Insurgents in Iraq have been trying to prevent Arab governments from sending ambassadors to Baghdad.

In July, al-Qaida in Iraq kidnapped and killed the top Egyptian diplomat in Baghdad and two Algerian diplomats. Since then, Jordan, Egypt and other countries have backed off from sending promised ambassadors, citing security worries.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 12/25/2005 08:43 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Al-Qaida seems to be a very progressive group of murderers. Breaking the longstanding taboo of killing other muslims, and more interestingly, other arabs. Have they given up on killing Americans altogether? Maybe we are beginning to reach a modus vivendi. We kill them all we want , they only kill other muslims, preferably arab muslims. Yeah, that will work.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 12/25/2005 9:20 Comments || Top||


IRAQ: LARGE CACHE DESTROYED NEAR BAYJI
TIKRIT, Iraq – Soldiers from the 101st Airborne Division’s 3rd Brigade Combat Team thought they had discovered a single cache of weapons near Bayji Dec. 20 after a tip from a local resident. On Dec. 23, the Soldiers finished unearthing the last of the weapons from the eleventh cache at the site.

“This place is basically an ammo supply point for the enemy,” said Capt. Matt Bartlett, commander of Company B, 1st Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment. “Any attack they wanted to do, whether an IED or small-arms, they could get what they needed here.”

The Rakkasan Soldiers slammed the door to the supply point Dec. 23 with three immense detonations conducted by an explosive ordnance disposal team. More than 1,600 rockets and missiles, 283 large artillery shells, 27 anti-tank mines and 80 assault weapons were pulled from the ground along with nearly a ton of bulk explosives.

It was unclear if the cache was in use by terrorists prior to its excavation. Fresh tire tracks and the lack of wear on some of the weapons and packaging indicated that the deposits were new. In other caches, the weapons were corroded and had documentation with entries ending in 1984, dating them back to before the first Gulf War. Whether the cache was active or not, its contents will never be used to harm anyone thanks to the three labor-intensive days the Soldiers spent excavating the site. In most cases the sites were dug up with shovels then loaded and consolidated by hand.

The resident who tipped off the Soldiers about the cache not only ensured the safety of the local residents from AIF attacks, but also collected a reward of $2,500 for the tip. The U.S. and its allies offer rewards for any information that lead to the capture of certain high profile terrorists and the tools utilized in their trade. This cache find will certainly hamper the enemy’s ability to carry out future attacks against the civilians, security forces of Iraq and all of the Coalition Forces trying to ensure the democratic process will find a peaceful home here in Iraq.
Posted by: Glenmore || 12/25/2005 02:56 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The 101st has been busy this month. Spreading their holiday cheer as they trod our enemies under foot.

Merry Christmas Boys!
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 12/25/2005 8:55 Comments || Top||

#2  Reminds me of the Terminator when he walks into the gun shop:

Arnold: "The 1 2-gauge auto-loader."

Gun guy: "That's Italian. You can go pump or auto."

"The 45 long slide with laser sighting."

"These are new. We just got them in. That's a good gun. The beam comes on - you put the red dot where you want the bullet to go. You can't miss. Anything else?"

"Plasma rifle in the 40-watt range."

"Hey, just what you see, pal.

"The Uzi nine millimetre."

"You know your weapons, buddy. Any one of these is ideal for home defence. So which will it be?"

"All."

"I may close early today!

It's a 1 5-day wait on the handguns, but the rifles, you can take now."
Posted by: Raj || 12/25/2005 11:32 Comments || Top||


Army Seeking to Hand Iraqis More Posts
BEIJI, Iraq (AP) - The U.S. Army is hastening efforts to hand over command of military posts to Iraqis after parliamentary elections that many hope will produce a more stable government and set the stage for American soldiers to begin going home.

Seventeen of the 109 former Iraqi bases used by coalition troops since the 2003 invasion have already transferred to Iraqi command, while 30 have been shut down, Army officers say. The Pentagon is pushing for more in the coming months. "Eventually they're all going to go," said Maj. John Calahan, executive officer of the 101st Airborne Division's 3rd Brigade. "The ultimate plan is that we're going to have less presence in Iraq until finally we're gone."

Defense analysts caution it may not be a fast process. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld made similar comments in Iraq this week, even as he said two Army brigades would not deploy to Iraq as planned. Commanders said that would cut U.S. troop strength by 7,000, to around 130,000.

Despite the step-up in efforts to turn more security duties over to Iraqi units, Calahan said concerns linger over the readiness of those troops. Some Iraqi forces have excelled and fought well alongside Americans, but other units have been hamstrung by weapons shortages and some have had their soldiers caught working with insurgents. In some places, Iraqi troops have failed to report for duty, gotten caught with bomb-making materials or allowed insurgents to attack U.S. convoys or other coalition soldiers by looking the other way, Americans say.

That reality has fueled an undercurrent of distrust for Iraqi soldiers. "A lot of them want to do a good job, but then you have those who only show up for a paycheck," said Sgt. Paul Hare, 40, of Tucumcari, N.M., a Humvee gunner in the 101st Airborne's 33rd Cavalry Regiment. "I don't trust a one of them."

The plan for turning military posts over to Iraqis has been in place for months, but Army officers say the Bush administration has quickened the timeline and made the message clear: Get Iraqi army units in place. Announced during a speech in November, President Bush's plan envisions moving U.S. and other foreign troops out of cities and having them focus on specialized operations aimed at hitting key terrorist targets. "We are living that speech," Calahan said.

As part of the handover of control, U.S. military units will work with Iraqi battalions, performing missions together until the Iraqis are able to go it alone. Then the Americans will serve as backup for Iraqi forces and eventually will withdraw completely, officials said.

The posts transferred to Iraqi hands are scattered across the country. The next scheduled transfer is Forward Operating Base Gaines Mills, a complex in western Kirkuk province that belonged to Saddam Hussein's cousin, Ali Hassan al-Majid, also known as "Chemical Ali." Posts in Balad and Samara also will transfer to Iraqi command sometime in January, the Army says.

At Forward Operating Base Summerall in Beiji, home to the 101st Airborne's 3rd Brigade, the Army is getting ready to host an Iraqi battalion that will work with American troops. But the uneasiness over the Iraqis' reliability is evident. Preparations include a towering concrete wall that has been built to divide the base into American and Iraqi areas.

U.S. troops say reservations about Iraqi soldiers are not unfounded. Some Iraqi soldiers have been caught with bombs in their cars, and roadside explosions outside the post's gates often are within clear view of observation towers manned by Iraqis who claim to have seen nothing.
Happenings like that make American soldiers wary of letting Iraqis inside secure compounds.

Even officers have doubts about whether Iraqi troops will be ready to take the lead in securing the country. "An American soldier standing next to an Iraqi soldier, there's a difference - a difference of appearance, a difference of discipline," said Capt. Jamey Turner, 35, of Baton Rouge, La., a company commander in the 33rd Cavalry Regiment.

Capt. Mike Starz, 30, of Pittsburgh, a planning officer for the 3rd Brigade, contends there has been progress in finding a level of trust between U.S. and Iraqi soldiers. But he adds it remains clear that Iraqis - soldiers and civilians alike - do not want U.S. troops here.
That makes it difficult to predict how long it will take to put an effective Iraqi army into place, he said. "Maybe it'll be six months, maybe it will be three years before they can perform. But it's a start," Starz said, pausing in thought. "You've got to be very cautious. It only takes one or two bad guys to let the enemy inside the gate."
Posted by: Steve White || 12/25/2005 00:16 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Jordanian's abductors want failed hotel bomber freed
Abductors of a Jordanian embassy driver said they would kill him unless Jordan pulled its diplomats from Iraq and freed a failed woman suicide bomber held by in Jordan, Al Arabiya television said. A video issued by the little-known group Falcons Brigade showed a man identifying himself as Mahmoud Saedat, the driver kidnapped in Baghdad on Tuesday, as three masked militants stood behind him, holding rifles and a grenade launcher. One pointed a gun at Mr Saedat's head. The man appealed to Jordan to withdraw its diplomats from Iraq and free Sajida al-Rishawi, who said on Jordanian television last month that she had tried to blow herself up alongside her husband in hotel attacks in Amman.

A Jordanian Government spokesman told Reuters his country would not give in to the kidnappers' demands but that intensive efforts were under way to secure Mr Saedat's release. "Jordan will not succumb to extortion whatever its nature but will not spare any effort to save the life of a Jordanian citizen," Nasser Joudeh told Reuters. "We call on the kidnappers whoever they are to release this Jordanian citizen without any preconditions." Al Arabiya said the group set a three-day deadline for Rishawi's release.
Posted by: Fred || 12/25/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  It sucks to be Mahmoud Saedat, but you can't go trading hostages for prisoners - it only encourages the hostage takers/terrorists. This technique didn't work in the 60's, or 70's, or 80's ... A sure sign of insanity is continuing to do the same thing but expecting a different result.
Posted by: Glenmore || 12/25/2005 0:21 Comments || Top||

#2  You're right G...

Unless you're Filipino, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Belgian...
Posted by: .com || 12/25/2005 15:53 Comments || Top||


Saddam trial judge attacked
Armed men have tried to assassinate an investigative judge on the Iraqi Special Tribunal, a spokesman for the court says. The unnamed official said the attempt against Judge Munir Hadad had taken place on Friday as he was being escorted by a security convoy through Baghdad's western neighbourhood of Ghazaliya. No one was injured in the attack but some of the vehicles were damaged, he added.
"My Beemer! Those bastards scratched my fucking Beemer!"
Hadad's exact role on the tribunal that is trying Saddam Hussein and members of his former government, was unclear. There are about 20 investigative judges and up to 20 prosecutors on the tribunal. Hadad is not due to participate in the trial, which adjourned on Thursday, until 24 January.
Posted by: Fred || 12/25/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Sudanese diplomat abducted from Baghdad
A Sudanese diplomat and five other Sudanese were kidnapped Friday as they left prayers at a mosque, Sudan's Foreign Ministry said Friday, with one of those kidnapped able to briefly telephone the country's mission after he was taken. Sudanese Foreign Ministry spokesman Jamal Mohammad Ibrahim said that among the six kidnap victims were four employees at the country's diplomatic mission in Baghdad, including one diplomat, identified as a second secretary, Abdel-Moneim Mohammad Tom. One employee managed to call the Sudanese mission briefly on his cell phone immediately after the kidnapping and talk to the charge d'affaires. But so far, there has been no contact between the kidnappers and the Sudanese government, Ibrahim said in a telephone call to The Associated Press in Cairo. "We don't know who they are or what their demands are," the spokesman said.
Posted by: Fred || 12/25/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The Sudan HAS diplomats?
Posted by: Glenmore || 12/25/2005 0:22 Comments || Top||

#2  Of course, The Sudan must be represented at the Court of Chad
and Jeremy and Bruce
Posted by: Leon Clavin || 12/25/2005 7:29 Comments || Top||

#3  A Christmas present from the terrorists, six dead Sudanese terrorists diplomats.
Posted by: 49 pan || 12/25/2005 11:29 Comments || Top||


Southeast Asia
Filippino military accuses MILF of violating truce
Southern Philippine military chief Lieutenant General Edilberto Adan accused the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) again of violating a fragile truce.

He said MILF forces continue to recruit and train rebels in Mindanao and have put the peace talks at risk.

"The MILF continue to recruit and train members while at the same time talking peace with the government. How can you talk peace with the government when you are preparing for war," asked Adan.

Adan said he ordered military commanders to stop the MILF recruitment.

"We have already warned. Their continued violation of the truce puts the peace talks at great risk," he said.

Adan has previously accused the MILF of violating the cease-fire agreement it signed with Manila in 2001.

A rebel spokesman Eid Kabalu denied the allegations and said his group did not violate the truce and accused Adan of scuttling the peace talks.

"General Adan is retiring next month and he is trying to get public attention," Kabalu said.

Government peace negotiators denied that there was massive MILF recruitment and said the talks are on its final stage.

Adan said they have uncovered secret trainings and massive rebel recruitment in at least 8 provinces and towns in the southern Philippines.

Manila's chief peace negotiator Silvestre Afable earlier briefed Adan and senior military commanders in Zamboanga City about the talks with the rebels.

Manila opened peace talks with the MILF in 2001 in an effort to end more than 3 decades of bloody fighting in the southern Philippines.

While the military supports the government peace process, it said it would not allow the MILF to use the cease-fire agreement and negotiations to build-up its forces.

Presidential peace adviser Ramon Santos said there were no indications that the MILF violated the truce agreement.

Adan said intelligence reports suggested that as many as 4,000 were recruited and trained by rebel forces.

The trainings, he said, included suicide attack missions, commando and guerrilla tactics and warfare, and weapons and explosives, among others.

Western intelligence previously linked the MILF to the Indonesian Jemaah al-Islamiya group and the al-Qaeda terror network of Usama bin Laden.

Many Arab countries, including the influential Organization of Islamic Conference and Libya, Saudi Arabia and the United States strongly support the peace talks.

US President George W. Bush offered as much as $30 million in financial assistance to help develop Mindanao should the MILF seal a peace accord with the Arroyo government. It would be used to help the rebels get back to the mainstream of society.

President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo previously said that 80 percent of the peace talks have been completed and that peace in Mindanao is within reach.

MILF chieftain Murad Ebrahim has said that his group is sincere in the talks and is willing to end the war in Mindanao.

Peace negotiations between the Philippines and the MILF rebels are expected to resume next month in Malaysia, which is brokering the talks.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 12/25/2005 08:33 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Does anyone beleve the MILF will abide by any agreement?

Does anyone think they can abide by any peace treaty?

They will simply rename themselves splinter into another group and start fighting again all the while demanding that the Government abide by their agreement.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 12/25/2005 19:02 Comments || Top||

#2  Merry Christmas all.

I couldn't let this one go by - MILF? Hehhee
Posted by: Unique Battle (was NYer4wot) || 12/25/2005 19:06 Comments || Top||


Sri Lanka
Pro-Rebel Lawmaker Killed in Sri Lanka
EFL
Gunmen shot and killed a pro-rebel legislator during midnight Christmas Mass, the government said Sunday, as escalating violence continued to threaten a shaky cease-fire.
nice....during mass? Couldn't they watch Godfather and learn to do it after mass?
Joseph Pararajasingham, 71, was fatally shot at St. Michael's Church in Batticaloa, eastern Sri Lanka's main town, military spokesman Brig. Prasad Samarasinghe said. His wife and eight others were wounded. The lawmaker's bodyguards returned fire, but it was not known if any of the assailants were wounded.

Pararajasingham represented the Tamil National Alliance, a proxy party of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, the rebel group that wants to create a homeland for Sri Lanka's 3.2 million ethnic Tamil minority in the country's northeast. A breakaway faction of the rebels is opposed to the alliance. A pro-rebel Web site reported the incident without comment.

Violence has escalated in the rebel-held northeast since the rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran threatened last month to resume his struggle for a Tamil homeland if the government fails to address Tamil grievances. In December, at least 34 government security personnel have been killed and many more injured in attacks blamed on the rebels. One soldier and five rebels died in a battle Saturday on the Jaffna Peninsula, the military said. The day before, 13 members of Sri Lanka's navy were killed in an ambush.
Posted by: Frank G || 12/25/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Sri Lankan navy says Tamil Tigers behind bombing of sailors
Sri Lanka's navy yesterday accused Tamil Tiger rebels of killing 13 sailors in an ambush that European peace monitors said put the country's fragile ceasefire in jeopardy.
Dead sailors generally being a impediment to peace treaties...
Nearly a year after the Boxing Day tsunami appeared to have brought together the two sides of a two-decade old conflict, there are growing signs of hostilities that could erupt once again into war. The attackers fired rocket-propelled grenades and triggered a land mine in an assault on about 30 sailors travelling by road toward their base in Mannar district, 135 miles north of the capital, Colombo, said Commander Jayantha Perera, a navy spokesman
RPGs and land mines. Very hard to miss those signs.
Some 13 sailors were killed, with two wounded, he said.

The government blamed the Tamil Tigers and said the "pre-planned and inhuman attacks are an impediment to the government's efforts to achieve peace". But the rebels, who agreed to a ceasefire in 2002, denied involvement in the attack. "The Tigers were not involved in any activity that breaches the ceasefire agreement," Daya Master, a rebel spokesman, said. "There is no connection whatsoever between us and this attack."
"Nope. Nope. You must be looking for somebody else."
Hagrup Haukland, a Norwegian who heads the European team monitoring the Sri Lankan truce, said the latest violence has endangered the peace deal. "The ceasefire agreement is in jeopardy, absolutely," Mr Haukland said. "The situation is alarming." He added that he and some other monitors were cancelling their Christmas leave."There is a lot of concern what will happen," Mr Haukland said, suggesting that the two sides meet.
[Tweet!] "Adult swim is over. Everyone back in the peas processor."
Violence has escalated in Sri Lanka's Tamil-majority northeast since the rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran threatened to resume his struggle for an independent Tamil nation if the government fails to address Tamils' grievances.
"Appease me. Or else."
This month alone, 20 government soldiers were killed and many more injured in attacks blamed on the rebels. Security was tightened in Colombo after yesterday's attack to prevent a possible anti-Tamil backlash. Security forces patrolled the streets on motorbikes, armed with assault rifles and wearing body armour.
Posted by: Seafarious || 12/25/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Ahmadinejad practicing his Adolf impression at home and abroad
In its first major social challenge and in continuation of the crackdown of all freedoms in Iran, the new Government under the Islamo-populist President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has arrested at least 14 members of the Single Bus Company of Tehran and Suburbs (SBCTS), informed sources reported on Saturday.

The order for the arrest, detention and seizure of all documents of the arrested men was issued by Judge Sa’id Mortazavi, the Prosecutor for Tehran and Islamic Revolution Tribunals.

A protégé of Ayatollah Ali Khameneh’i, the leader of the Islamic Republic, Mr. Mortazavi is better known by the public, but specially the media as “The Butcher of the Press”, for having successfully shut down more than 120 independent and pro-reform publications during 1999 and 2000.

Though the authorities have remained silent, but Hojjatoleslam Mohseni Ezheh’i, the Intelligence Minister has confirmed that “some forces of public disturbance” have been arrested.

The arrests took place early morning on Thursday 22 December by agents from the Office of the Prosecutor accompanied by plainclothes policemen. “The agents raided our house very early in the morning, presenting warrants from the Prosecutor, took away my husband, searched the house and took away all his documents and computer”, the wife of one of the arrested men told a Farsi-language radio station based outside Iran.

The crackdown follows months of disturbances in the SBCTS, where drivers and the personnel is asking for better work conditions and increase of their salaries, freezed since at least four years while prices for everything in Iran has raised by more than ten times, particularly housing rents and basic food.

The malaise started after leaders of the Union, while in a meeting, were suddenly attacked by plainclothes members of the Ansar Hezbollah and badly beaten up, injuring some of the participants and going as far as cutting the tongue of one of them”, informed sources told IPS. “The Government took no action, when it heard about the attack and instead of ordering investigation, ordered the arrest of the SBCTS’s leaders”, he added.

Ansar Hezbollah is a pressure group controlled by Ayatollah Ali Jannati, an influential cleric close to the leader and the Secretary of the powerful Council of the Guardians.

Drivers, controllers and other personnel of the Company have threatened the Government they would start an indefinite strike from Sunday morning if the leaders of their Union are not freed “immediately and without conditions”.

The call for unlimited strike has been immediately backed by several other unions, including major car industries and miners of gold and copper mines.

If the strike takes place, and if it is backed by other workers unions, it would not only paralyse Tehran and its suburbs, one of the world’s largest megapols with 12 millions inhabitants, but would constitute the most important social challenge the Government of Mr. Ahmadinejad would face, analysts said.

But the Government says the SBCTS’s union is not an authorized force because it is not officially registered with the Labour Ministry and has accused the Company’s Union of “formation of an illegal organization and disturbance of public order by the way of strike”, which if officially allowed on the paper, is considered as an “anti-Islamic action” by the clerical-led regime of the Islamic Republic.

According to Mr. Sa’id Torabian, one of the Union’s leaders, at least 14 members of the Company have been detained*. “This is what we know, but it is probable that more people are arrested”, he told Radio Farda, the 24 hours Persian service of the Prague-based Radio Free Europe-Radio Liberty.

“Strike is labourer’s natural right. For months, we are trying to explain our problems to the authorities. We have talked to most of them, including one of the President’s advisors, but never got any answer to our demands”, Mr. Torabian said, adding that several of the detained people are even not members of the Union’s Executive Committee, “but simple members of the Union involved of informing the people, distributing our communiqués and petitions”.

In a communiqué issued by the Union of Iranian Writers confirms the way the arrests took place, revealing that the detained people had been “dragged off their beds in the most brutal humiliating way, some beaten up and taken to prisons controlled by the Information (Intelligence) Ministry”.

Created under the past regime, the Company runs a fleet of more than a thousands buses, most of them ageing and in very poor conditions, a major source of air pollution in the Capital.

“The way the arrests were carried out shows that the Government of Mr. Ahmadinejad, the very one that had promised justice and help to the poor, is determined to abolish the SBTCS’s Union, one of the oldest and most powerful of all Unions in Iran”, a journalist told Iran Press Service on condition of anonymity, adding that on order from the authorities, the media had been banned to report the event.

Since he came to power more than four months ago, Mr. Ahmadinejad, who describes himself an adept of Ayatollah Khameneh’i, has left no stone unturned to clamp limited social, cultural and political freedoms Iranians enjoyed under the previous government of Mohammad Khatami – who is the target of frequent vicious attacks from the pro-Ahmadinejad press --.

At home, internet cafes have been shut, more segregation between men and women imposed, Western music banned on public Radio and TV, movies with so-called, producing and screening of films with “liberal, secular and feminist tendencies” forbidden while on the international front, Mr. Ahmadninejad has taken a more radical line with regard with the controversial nuclear activities, outraged the Western world with its promises of “wiping Israel off the world’s map”, negating the holocaust and describing Western human rights as “debauchery”.

The arrested unionists are: Mansour Osalou, Ebrahim Madadi, Mansour Hayat-Qeybi, Abbas Nazhand Koudaki, RezaTarazi, Ali Zadhoseyn and Qlamreza Mirza’i. Others are: Akbar Ya’qoubi, Reza Bour Bour, Hamid Reza Reza’i Far, Javad Kefayati, Seyyed Javad Seyyedvand and Morteza Kamsari.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 12/25/2005 08:46 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:


Three people taken in for questioning in Tueni murder investigation
Lebanese judicial sources announced Friday the military judiciary has taken three people in for interrogation in the assassination of MP and journalist Gebran Tueni. Although the sources did not reveal whether the three people were suspects, they said the three may hold information that could serve in the hunt for the perpetrators who parked the Renault that detonated beside Tueni's motorcade. Footage of the assassin was captured on recordings by surveillance cameras installed in surrounding factories.

For his part, Speaker Nabih Berri pressed personal charges on behalf of the Lebanese Parliament on Friday against the assassins of MP Gebran Tueni. He entrusted attorneys at law MPs Edmond Naim, Nicolas Fattoush Robert Ghanem and Walid Eido to follow-up on the case. Elsewhere, Ghassan Tueni, Gebran's father, said "hatred must be buried and revenge must not be sought," but added that he would not "bury justice, rights and the dignity of his son."

Speaking following a meeting with Orthodox Patriarch Ignatius IV Hazim and Beirut's Orthodox Archbishop Elias Aoude, Tueni said he would examine with Aoude the legal means that should be adopted regarding Gebran's assassination.
Posted by: Fred || 12/25/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:


Happy Armed Jews Week
This article was written last year. Since Hanukkah begins this year on Christmas Day, I thought it appropriate to repost. And with the ominous saber-rattling coming from Tehran, I think it's critical to remember...
Tonight is the fourth first night of Armed Jews Week, or as it is more popularly known, Hanukkah. Hanukkah is an eight-day celebration of the Jewish revolution against Syria in the second century B.C. The Syrian government (a remnant of Alexander the Great’s empire) attempted to wipe out the Jewish religion by forcing the Jews to conform to Greek culture. Some of them refused, and a tiny militia, led by Judah the Maccabee (“the hammer”) began a guerilla war.

The Jewish militia grew in force, and repeatedly destroyed much larger Syrian armies which were sent to smash the revolution. Syria’s King Antiochus decided that the Jewish people were so much trouble that he would just get rid of them entirely—slaughtering as many as necessary, and selling all the rest into slavery. But his wicked plans failed, and after years of war, the Jews won their independence.

During the years of Syrian tyranny, Syrian officers enjoyed the droit du seigneur — the authority to deflower virgin Jewish brides on their wedding nights, before they could join their husbands. So some stories which Jewish families retell at Hanukkah, such as the Book of Judith, extol brave Jewish women who went to the tent of enemy officers who were expecting sex—but who instead met their deaths as the hands of lone Jewish women.

During centuries of oppression in Christian and Moslem lands, many Jews adopted attitudes of passivity and helplessness. Those attitudes began to change in the late nineteenth century, with the growth of the Zionist movement.

Zionists believed that Jews had become disconnected from the physical world. That the Jews had no homeland was the most extreme manifestation of the disconnection, but the disconnect could be seen on many levels. Often pale and weak, Jewish boys were easy targets for bullies. Usually passive and timid, Jewish communities were easy targets for mobs. The root cause of Jewish physical weakness and of disrespect by gentiles was the Jewish lack of self-respect.

The Zionists set out to restore a Jewish homeland, and they recognized that such a project would require a widespread change in Jewish consciousness.

So in counties such as Russia and Israel (which was ruled as colony by the Ottoman Empire and then by the British), Zionists organized Jewish self-defense groups. Many of the young Jewish men and women who would lead the resistance to Hitler were members of these Zionist self-defense youth groups in the 1930s in Eastern Europe.

Although there is a widespread myth that Jews in the Holocaust were passive, they were actually more active than any other conquered people. In 1942-43, Jews constituted half of all the partisans in Poland. Overall, about thirty thousand Jewish partisans fought in Eastern Europe. There were armed revolts in over forty different ghettos, mostly in Eastern Poland.

In other parts of Europe, Jews likewise joined the resistance at much higher rates than the rest of the population. Unlike in Eastern Europe, though, Jews were generally able to participate as individuals in the national resistance, rather than having to fight in separate units.

For example, in France, Jews amounted to than one percent of French population, but comprised about 15-20 percent of the French Resistance.

In Greece too, Jews were disproportionately involved in the resistance. In Thessaly, a Jewish partisan unit in the mountains was led by the septuagenarian Rabbi Moshe Pesah, who carried his own rifle. The Athenian Jew Jacques Costis led the team which demolished the Gorgopotamos Bridge, thereby breaking the link between the mainland and Peloponnesian Peninsula, and interfering with the delivery of supplies to Rommel’s Afrika Korps.

One of the great centers of resistance was Vilna, Lithuania, which before the Nazi conquest had been an outstanding center of Jewish learning, compared by some to Jerusalem.

Plans for resistance began in January 1942. The Jews’ only weapons were smuggled in from nearby German arms factories where the Jews performed slave labor. Hopeful of liberation by the Russian army, many of the Vilna Jews did not support the partisans. Partisan resistance postponed by three weeks the German plans to transport all the inhabitants of the Vilna ghetto to death camps, but the deportation of 40,000 Jews was accomplished by the end of September 1943.

A young poet named Abba Kovner led the resistance movement known as the Avengers in the woods around Vilna. His lieutenants, and bedmates, were teenage girls, Vitka Kempner and Ruzka Korczak.

The Avengers were the first partisans in Nazi Europe to blow up a German train.

Towards the end of the war, the Avengers shepherded huge numbers of Jews to Palestine, in violation of the British blockade.

Before the war, Ruzka had belonged to left-wing Zionist youth group called “The Young Guard” (HaShomer HaTza’ir) which trained Jews in self-defense, and taught the older boys how to shoot. Abba was not religious, but he was a fervent Zionist, loving to read the Bible stories of Jewish warriors, and aiming to emulate the Jewish Bible heroes.

In the Vilna Ghetto, it was Abba Kovner who first saw that the tightening of the Nazi oppression was not just a temporary imposition by a local German official; it was a step towards the total destruction of the Jews. The only way out, he argued, was “Revolt and armed defense. This is the only way which promises any dignity for our people.”

Other Jews countered that revolt was hopeless because the Germans were so strong, and that collective reprisals by the Germans would just lead to more Jewish deaths. Ruzka Korczak retorted that the stories of Jewish heroism could not remain only “a part of our ancient history. They must be part of our real life as well.” The next generation of Jews must have something to admire. “How good will they be if their entire history is one of slaughter and extermination? We cannot allow that. It must also have heroic struggles, self-defense, war, even death with honor.”

Vilna was typical, in that the young people were usually the ones who wanted to fight, and the elders usually counseled against causing trouble. Most of the partisan leaders and fighters were young.

Niuta Teitelbaum was a beautiful 24-year-old Jewish Polish woman who looked like she was sixteen. Known as “Little Wanda with the Braids,” she was an expert smuggler of people and weapons, and instructed women’s partisan cells. Her units blew up trains, artillery emplacements, and other German targets.

Once, wearing traditional Polish clothing and a kerchief on her hair, she talked her way past a series of Gestapo guards, whispering that she was going to see the SS commander on “private business.” Alone with the commander in his office, she drew a revolver, shot him dead, and calmly left the building.

Because generation after generation after generation of Jewish families told their children the heroic Hanukkah stories of Judah the Macabbee and Judith, the spirit of freedom and resistance lived in modern heroes such as Abba Kovner and Niuta Teitelbaum.

At the annual Passover Seder, Jewish families say:
In every generation, each person must look upon himself or herself as if he or she personally had come out of Egypt. As the Book of Exodus says, “You shall tell your children on that day: it is because of what the Eternal One did for me when I went forth from Egypt.” For it was not our fathers and mothers alone whom the Holy One redeemed. We too were redeemed along with them.


The point has a broader application than just for Jews at Passover. Hanukkah teaches that God’s redemption of the Jewish people is a continuing act of history—and so does Jewish armed resistance during the Holocaust. The resistance proved to the world that Jews were active fighters, and not mere passive victims. That resistance (most famously, in the Warsaw Ghetto) was an indispensable step towards the rebirth of the modern state of Israel.

The Books of Maccabees and the Book of Judith are part of the Roman Catholic, Episcopalian, and Orthodox Bibles; the stories of resistance to the Nazis are part of the heritage of freedom-loving people everywhere. So as Jewish families light Menorah candles during the eight days of Hanukkah, may people of good will, of all faiths, use the time as an occasion to teach their children about the inspiring Jewish and Gentile men and women who, even in the darkest times, have kept alive the sacred light of freedom.
There are some good links in the original. Happy Hanukkah to all. Let's add some oil to the lamps; we cannot let the lights go out on Civilization.
Posted by: Seafarious || 12/25/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  A moving piece and an appropriate title - Happy Armed Jews Week. Thanks, Sea.
Posted by: phil_b || 12/25/2005 2:50 Comments || Top||

#2  Sea, I'm going to have to share this with my buddy Sparkle Girl. She'll love the "Happy Armed Jews Week" idea!

Happy Chanukah to all the 'burgers!
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 12/25/2005 7:58 Comments || Top||

#3  historical footnote to article

The books of the Maccabees are not part of the Hebrew Bible even though, as Seafarious's article says, they are parts of many Christian Bibles.

Basically there are three reasons for this:

1. The oldest versions of the Book of the Maccabees are in Greek rather than hebrew or aramaic. Greek isn't considered to be a holy language.

2. When the Maccabees, who were priests, took over the country, they violated the rule that Priests aren't supposed to be kings (Kings were supposed to be from the tribe of Judah and of the line of David).

3. The Maccabee (Hasmonaon) dynasty, although having a heroic beginning, had some real nasty folk in charge at times and did some nasty things.
Posted by: mhw || 12/25/2005 9:08 Comments || Top||

#4  "Happy Armed Jews Week"

Works for me! :-D

Happy Hannukah to all!
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 12/25/2005 9:53 Comments || Top||

#5  Thanks for the info, mhw. Just to clarify, *I* did not write this piece. I swiped it from a guest pundit at GlennReynolds.com.

I've also heard that Mel Gibson wants to make a movie about the Maccabees. I hope he does.
Posted by: Seafarious || 12/25/2005 12:55 Comments || Top||


Merry Christmas Everyone
Its already an hour into Christmas day here in Perth and we still call it Christmas, none of that Festivus?? nonsense (yet).

So let me be the first to wish you all a merry Christmas. Have a good one everyone.
Merry Christmas to you too. I'm continuing this post to Xmas day.
Merry Christmas and happy Hanukkah to all the good people of Rantburg. A special Merry Christmas and thank you to those who stand on guard tonight for the rest of us.
Posted by: phil_b || 12/25/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Merry Christmas to you and all as well. Let's hope that it's peaceful.
Posted by: Jan || 12/24/2005 12:44 Comments || Top||

#2  A season / event that results in people acting more charitable and congenial is definitely something to like - and preserve intact.

Merry Christmas and Happy Chanuka (did I get that right?) to you all. My absolutely Sincerest Best Wishes for the safety, health and happiness of You and Yours.
Posted by: .com || 12/24/2005 13:04 Comments || Top||

#3  Merry Christmas Phil, and whatever anybody else celebrates is fine with me as well.
Posted by: Frank G || 12/24/2005 13:21 Comments || Top||

#4  Merry Christmas to all.

Posted by: 3dc || 12/24/2005 13:22 Comments || Top||

#5  ...and peace to men and women of good will!
Posted by: Darrell || 12/24/2005 13:27 Comments || Top||

#6  MERRY CHRISTMAS AND HAPPY HANUKKAH TO ALL !

Posted by: Poitiers-Lepanto || 12/24/2005 13:54 Comments || Top||

#7  Merry Xmas, happy Hanuka to all wimmen and men of good will! Joyeux Noël à tous et à toutes, to thoses who serves in Irak or elsewhere, and to the proud RBers!
Cheers!
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 12/24/2005 14:20 Comments || Top||

#8 

MERRY CHRISTMAS
Posted by: Red Dog || 12/24/2005 15:34 Comments || Top||

#9  :-) - looks like the inner liner to Led Zeppelin 4
Posted by: Frank G || 12/24/2005 15:38 Comments || Top||

#10  ...Merry Christmas...
Posted by: Rantfan || 12/24/2005 16:45 Comments || Top||

#11  Merry Christmas, and if you got little ones, even big ones, 'cause I like this too, remember to take them to:
http://www.noradsanta.org/index.php
choose your language and join in as our military around the world tracks Santa!!!
Posted by: Sherry || 12/24/2005 17:28 Comments || Top||

#12  Sherry, whatever you do, don't tell Congress we're tracking Santa!

Doesn't that require a FISA warrant or something???
Posted by: anon || 12/24/2005 17:32 Comments || Top||

#13  Merry Christmas.
Posted by: Florida Gators || 12/24/2005 17:45 Comments || Top||

#14  Merry Christmas, Happy Hannaukah (sp?), Kickass Kwanzaa, etc., to all at Rantburg.
Posted by: JDB || 12/24/2005 17:45 Comments || Top||

#15 

Happy Hanukkah
Posted by: Red Dog || 12/24/2005 17:51 Comments || Top||

#16  Merry Christmas!! To ALL
Posted by: TomAnon || 12/24/2005 17:56 Comments || Top||

#17 
Santa got into the eggnog! »;)



thisn looks like a verry skeerry XMAS
http://tinyurl.com/cr3kv
Posted by: Santa bin drinkin || 12/24/2005 18:16 Comments || Top||

#18  *woops*

thisn looks like a verry skeerry XMAS

Posted by: Santa bin drinkin || 12/24/2005 18:18 Comments || Top||

#19  Looks like littler Rob Redding Hood
Posted by: LOOK || 12/24/2005 19:07 Comments || Top||

#20  Merry Ho-Ho, Rantburgers!

And Happy, and everything else.

'Tis the season, etc.

Peace on Earth of Those of Good Will - All Others Stand By. :-D
Posted by: Unoluque Sleasing8531 || 12/24/2005 20:19 Comments || Top||

#21  Sorry - Unoluque was me.

(I'm on duty tonight, & keep forgetting my info isn't saved on the squad computer like it is on my home and work computers.)

Anyway, Merry & Happy! ;-p
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut. || 12/24/2005 20:21 Comments || Top||

#22  Merry Christmas!
Posted by: JerseyMike || 12/24/2005 20:23 Comments || Top||

#23  Merry Christmas everyone!!! Even to you LA and BK!!
Posted by: 49 pan || 12/24/2005 20:31 Comments || Top||

#24  "Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good night"
Posted by: Hupomoling Uneresing3032 || 12/24/2005 21:31 Comments || Top||

#25  Happy Southern Christmas to all, (only difference is no snow and ice.
(But we do have Southern Comfort, over ice)
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 12/24/2005 21:34 Comments || Top||

#26  Merry Christmas to all.
Posted by: SR-71 || 12/24/2005 21:51 Comments || Top||

#27  Merry Christmas to all on Rantburg!!
Posted by: KBK || 12/24/2005 22:23 Comments || Top||

#28  Best wishes from DC. How 'bout those Redskins!
Posted by: Seafarious || 12/25/2005 0:03 Comments || Top||

#29  Merry Christmas to all at Rantburg!
Posted by: CrazyFool || 12/25/2005 0:08 Comments || Top||

#30  Merry Christmas and Happy Chanukah to all Rantburgers and to all who can't be home with their families for the holidays. May the Lord bless and keep you all!
Posted by: Jonathan || 12/25/2005 0:11 Comments || Top||

#31  Wow! 30 comments in 11 mintues. Is that a record?
Posted by: Scooter McGruder || 12/25/2005 0:56 Comments || Top||

#32  mery festivus yallz!
Posted by: muck4doo || 12/25/2005 1:58 Comments || Top||

#33  I would like to thank all of you Rantburgers. I have learned alot reading these pages the last few years. I wish all of you a very Merry Christmas! Let's pray for those fighting for us now. From sunny SoCal...IP.
Posted by: Intrinsicpilot || 12/25/2005 2:00 Comments || Top||

#34  Best wishes from DC. How 'bout those Redskins!

How 'bout them Terps?
Posted by: badanov || 12/25/2005 2:01 Comments || Top||

#35  Merry Christmas everyone....Yule love it! And a hearty Festivus as well. Let the tests of strength begin!
Posted by: Rex Mundi || 12/25/2005 2:32 Comments || Top||

#36  Merry Festival-Of-Sunreturn!

I give thanks that my ancestors were watching the great observatories in Britain 1500 years ago, and knew that the world had not ended, once again. And weatherunderground tells me that tomorrow will be 18 seconds longer than today!! (I think I have a better deal than they did. I'm warmer.)

So- Merry Christmas
- Happy Hanukkah
And good cheer to all

GT7392- The American Anglo-Saxon

Posted by: Glains Theash7392 || 12/25/2005 6:58 Comments || Top||

#37  Hallelujah Indeed!
Sol has Sticed 4 days ago and is moving North into the land of the ice people.

Sorry Phil_B, enjoy your summer, but your days are getting shorter.
Posted by: Leon Clavin || 12/25/2005 7:23 Comments || Top||

#38  Merry Christmas
Happy Chanukah
Happy Festivus
Happy Solstice
A wonderful Kwanzaa
Happy Boxing Day
And a profitable Return a Gift Day

to everyone here on the 'burg, but especially to the men and women of the Coalition forces!
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 12/25/2005 7:55 Comments || Top||

#39  And God bless us, everyone!
Posted by: Dan Darling || 12/25/2005 8:22 Comments || Top||

#40  I't's a boy!!

Today in the town of David, a Savior has been born to you; He is Christ the Lord. - Luke 2:11

Merry Christmas all
Posted by: Doc8404 || 12/25/2005 9:02 Comments || Top||

#41  Merry Christmans and Happy Hannukah, and thank you for letting all of us play in your bandwidth, Fred.
Posted by: Mike || 12/25/2005 9:31 Comments || Top||

#42  Merry Christmas everyone.
Posted by: Whiskey Mike || 12/25/2005 10:30 Comments || Top||

#43  Merry Christmas and Happy Hannukah to all here at Rantburg. A special thanks to Fred for creating this wonderful site.
Posted by: remoteman || 12/25/2005 11:02 Comments || Top||

#44  Merry Christmas and Happy Hannukah to all you great Rantburgers and a special 'Thank You!' to Fred.

Don't forget to Thank A Soldier this week!
Posted by: Parabellum || 12/25/2005 12:23 Comments || Top||

#45  Merry Christmas to all from the grumpy old man.(No, not THAT grumpy old man, this one!).
Posted by: Old Patriot || 12/25/2005 15:11 Comments || Top||

#46  Merry Christmas to all!
Posted by: Ptah || 12/25/2005 16:56 Comments || Top||

#47  Merry Christmas and Happy Hanukkah to all of you - I'm looking forward to another year of Rantburg and keeping in touch with all of you.
Posted by: Yosemite Sam || 12/25/2005 18:12 Comments || Top||

#48  Ima still hoping PeeDee is racing my Pony to me.
Posted by: HalfEmpty || 12/25/2005 18:21 Comments || Top||

#49  Merry Christmas and Happy Hanukkah to everyone at Rantburg. Especial thanks to those warriors abroad who risk their all to keep us safe here at home.
Posted by: Zenster || 12/25/2005 22:12 Comments || Top||



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On Sale now!


A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.

Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.

Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has dominated Mexico for six years.
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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
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Two weeks of WOT
Sun 2005-12-25
  Jordanian's abductors want failed hotel bomber freed
Sat 2005-12-24
  Bangla Bigots clash with cops, 57 injured
Fri 2005-12-23
  Hamas joins Iran in 'united Islamic front'
Thu 2005-12-22
  French Parliament OKs Anti-Terror Measures
Wed 2005-12-21
  Rabbani backs Qanooni for speaker of Afghan House
Tue 2005-12-20
  Eight convicted Iraqi terrs executed
Mon 2005-12-19
  Sharon in hospital after minor stroke
Sun 2005-12-18
  Mehlis: Syria killed al-Hariri
Sat 2005-12-17
  Iraq Votes
Fri 2005-12-16
  FSB director confirms death of Abu Omar al-Saif
Thu 2005-12-15
  Jordanian PM vows preemptive war on "Takfiri culture"
Wed 2005-12-14
  Iraq Guards Intercept Forged Ballots From Iran
Tue 2005-12-13
  US, UK, troop pull-out to begin in months
Mon 2005-12-12
  Iraq Poised to Vote
Sun 2005-12-11
  Chechens confirm death of also al-Saif, deputy emir also toes up


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