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Turks jug Qaeda big shot
Today's Headlines
Headline Comments [Views]
21:55 1 00:00 Phuck Ulonter5085 [6]
20:37 7 00:00 Barbara Skolaut [5]
19:35 0 [5]
19:23 7 00:00 Anonymoose [7]
19:21 4 00:00 Poison Reverse [9] 
19:16 3 00:00 trailing wife [6] 
19:13 1 00:00 .com [2]
18:32 4 00:00 trailing wife [2]
17:29 2 00:00 john [3]
16:05 3 00:00 Shipman [2]
16:00 0 [3] 
15:56 8 00:00 Howard UK [5]
15:36 2 00:00 Phil Fraering [3]
15:26 7 00:00 Frank G [3]
15:21 0 [4]
15:17 3 00:00 Jackal [11]
15:15 2 00:00 .com [5]
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15:06 7 00:00 Frank G [3]
15:02 4 00:00 BigEd [5]
14:59 2 00:00 Omaling Sleter7907 [13] 
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14:57 5 00:00 Dead Jerry [6] 
14:55 0 [2]
14:54 1 00:00 Glolusing Flereth5459 [4]
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14:47 1 00:00 BigEd [3]
14:47 2 00:00 .com [3]
14:45 0 [6] 
14:44 2 00:00 BA [2]
14:43 0 [7] 
14:41 2 00:00 BigEd [2]
14:41 4 00:00 Bernie [6]
14:41 1 00:00 Glolusing Flereth5459 [4]
14:39 5 00:00 Spese Jains6227 [6] 
14:25 5 00:00 CrazyFool [1]
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12:59 12 00:00 .com [6]
12:21 2 00:00 Chris W. [2]
12:03 2 00:00 growler [3]
12:01 7 00:00 .com [4]
11:53 4 00:00 Shipman [1]
11:46 21 00:00 Frank G [9] 
11:30 3 00:00 eLarson [7] 
11:19 6 00:00 Sock Puppet 0’ Doom [9]
11:11 2 00:00 BigEd [6]
11:09 8 00:00 Dave D. [3] 
11:08 10 00:00 Captain America [8] 
11:08 1 00:00 Captain America [5]
10:53 0 [5] 
10:24 6 00:00 eLarson [4]
10:19 11 00:00 Frank G [4]
09:59 1 00:00 Captain America [3]
09:47 8 00:00 Chris W. [3]
09:37 4 00:00 Poison Reverse [4]
09:34 7 00:00 CrazyFool [3]
09:26 21 00:00 Abdominal_Snowman [3]
09:26 5 00:00 mac [6]
09:17 11 00:00 BA [18] 
09:16 11 00:00 mac [9] 
09:05 2 00:00 Dick Durbin [5] 
08:30 4 00:00 BigEd [4] 
08:29 3 00:00 tu3031 [4]
08:03 17 00:00 mac [11] 
06:24 6 00:00 Phil Fraering [12] 
06:24 0 [8] 
06:22 1 00:00 Midnight Express [7] 
01:59 9 00:00 AlanC [4]
00:26 3 00:00 BigEd [5]
00:16 4 00:00 Colt [5] 
00:15 4 00:00 trailing wife [4]
00:11 9 00:00 Frank G [4]
00:07 51 00:00 Frank G [11]
00:05 1 00:00 Captain America [7]
00:03 2 00:00 BigEd [6]
00:00 3 00:00 MunkarKat [1]
00:00 3 00:00 Frank G [4] 
00:00 2 00:00 Barbara Skolaut [5] 
00:00 4 00:00 Chris W. [6] 
00:00 6 00:00 Poison Reverse [5]
00:00 6 00:00 Xbalanke [4]
00:00 1 00:00 glenmore [3] 
00:00 4 00:00 BA [6] 
00:00 16 00:00 Sub Commander Megar [3]
00:00 1 00:00 tu3031 [4]
00:00 4 00:00 Tony (UK) [3]
00:00 7 00:00 eLarson [4]
00:00 12 00:00 Shipman [4]
00:00 2 00:00 Frank G [7] 
00:00 9 00:00 trailing wife [10] 
00:00 14 00:00 BigEd [3]
00:00 44 00:00 RJSchwarz [3]
00:00 2 00:00 2b [7] 
00:00 8 00:00 hey mo [3]
00:00 20 00:00 Bernie [6]
00:00 3 00:00 Poison Reverse [8]
00:00 5 00:00 Zpaz [3]
00:00 14 00:00 BA [5]
00:00 9 00:00 Frank G [9]
00:00 2 00:00 Sub Commander Megar [2]
00:00 7 00:00 eLarson [2]
00:00 4 00:00 Spemble Phemble3444 [3]
Africa: North
Mauritanians Say They're Not Terrorists
Islamic leaders freed from jail after last week's coup in Mauritania said Wednesday they were wrongly branded as terrorists — and that the toppled president himself was responsible for any extremism in this overwhelmingly Muslim nation.
It's that old definition of terrorism thing again...
Experts also said U.S.-allied President Maaya Sid Ahmed Ould Taya's allegations that Islamic terrorists were at work in Mauritania were exaggerated, adding to widespread resentment that led to his downfall in an Aug. 3 military putsch. Taya, who seized power in a 1984 coup, had cracked down hard on political enemies for years, imprisoning dozens of politicians, soldiers and Islamic leaders. His toppling was celebrated in the streets of the capital.

African Union envoys who came here decrying the coup left on Wednesday convinced that most Mauritanians wanted the dictator out and expressing confidence the military junta would keep its promise to usher in democracy within two years. On Sunday, a judge in Nouakchott freed 21 prisoners jailed since April 25 on charges of plotting against the state. At least 50 others remain behind bars on similar charges. "The deposed regime accused all its opponents of extremism and terrorism," said Mohamed Hassan Ould Dedew, a prominent Islamic spiritual leader among those released. Those repressive tactics only radicalized extremists and risked producing "young terrorists ready to kill themselves," Dedew said.

"This change of regime came at a good time, because Mauritania needs moderate Islamists who want to participate in a democratic debate that banishes extremism and cultivates a culture of tolerance and openness," he said. While Mauritania has not seen suicide bombings, Taya's government accused some opponents of training with al-Qaida linked insurgents in neighboring Algeria. On June 4, a guerrilla raid on a remote army post in northern Mauritania left 15 soldiers and nine attackers dead. Algeria's Salafist Group for Call and Combat — on the U.S. list of terrorist organizations — purportedly claimed responsibility. Some of those jailed by Taya's regime were accused of setting up local terror networks who allegedly trained with the Salafists.

Moktar Ould Mohamed Moussa, another prominent Islamic-oriented politician who was freed Sunday, said he was not abused during his time in jail. But he said detainees accused of being Salafists "were savagely tortured and forced to admit relations with foreign jihadist organizations." Moussa, a former ambassador to the United Arab Emirates, said Taya should be imprisoned for repressing "imams, religious scholars and preachers who never called for violence, and who've explained for years that Islam prohibits killing."
That last sentence is why I ain't buyin' what they're trying to sell...
Posted by: Fred || 08/10/2005 21:55 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  If you call us terrorists again we'll blow you up.
Posted by: Phuck Ulonter5085 || 08/10/2005 22:23 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
RSS Feed for Rantburg?
Is there one?

Would anyone other than me use it?
Posted by: OldSpook || 08/10/2005 20:37 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I'd use it.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 08/10/2005 21:00 Comments || Top||

#2  If I knew what is was, I might be able to say whether I'd use it or not.
Posted by: Jackal || 08/10/2005 22:14 Comments || Top||

#3  I think there used to be one. But for some reason I could not get it to receive articles past 2003 or something... Kind of odd.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 08/10/2005 22:37 Comments || Top||

#4  What is it for?
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 08/10/2005 23:20 Comments || Top||

#5  I have been using it for months.
Posted by: Scott B || 08/10/2005 23:39 Comments || Top||

#6  RSS stands for Real Simple Syndication.

It's a XML programming format for distributing and gathering content from sources across the Web.

Once it's in place on the server. The category's that RB mods have created for example:

Afghanistan/South Asia
Africa: North
Arabia
Britain
Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Down Under
Europe
Great White North
Home Front: WoT
International-UN-NGOs
Iraq-Jordan
Israel-Palestine
Southeast Asia
Syria-Lebanon-Iran

can be updated with the latest content. Also, the great thing about RSS is that each individual can pick their favorite categories. For example, my interest maybe in only "HomeFront:WoT" and "Israel-Palestine." So I would want to know the latest that RB has posted for these two categories, in real time.

The other benefit is that for the above mentioned categories, multiple URL's can be setup for each category. For example, if the "Iraq-Jordan" category is setup with -world news Iraq or Jordan- URL's from CNN, AP, Reuters, or WaPo, the "Iraq-Jordan" category is constantly updated, in real time. Yea, I know is sounds like blog outsourcing but, it has some benefits.
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 23:43 Comments || Top||

#7  Thanks, PR - I think. Sounds complicated.

Why not just click on Rantburg when I have a chance to read it - as I do now?
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 08/10/2005 23:45 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Tech
Uncle Sam recruits hackers
US federal officials are trolling hacker conferences to scout talent and talk up the glories of a career on the front lines of the information wars.

"If you want to work on cutting-edge problems, if you want to be part of the truly great issues of our time ... we invite you to work with us," Assistant Secretary of Defence Linton Wells told hackers at a recent conference in Las Vegas.
Mr Wells and other "feds" didn't exactly blend in at Defcon, an annual gathering of computer-security experts and teenage troublemakers that celebrates the cutting edge of security research.

The buttoned-down world of Washington seems a continent away at Defcon, which was named as a spoof on the Pentagon's code for military readiness derived from "defence condition." Graffiti covers the bathroom walls, DJs spin by the pool until dawn and hackers who "out" undercover government employees win free T-shirts.

At a "Meet the Feds" panel designed to bridge the cultural divide, a young man waved a pages-long manifesto and demanded, "I would like to know why the federal government, especially some of the law enforcement agencies, are destroying this country."

Despite appearances, hackers and the government have long enjoyed a symbiotic relationship.

Federal research dollars funded development of the internet and many other cutting-edge technologies, and many hackers first learn the ins and outs of computer security through military service before moving on to private-sector jobs.

College students in computer-security programs can have their tuition picked up by the government if they agree to work there when they graduate.

The Pentagon is rumoured to employ hackers to attack foreign networks. A Pentagon spokesman was not available for comment.

Feds have been a key part of the Defcon audience since its inception in 1992, though they are required to stay at off-site hotels to avoid some of the wilder goings-on.

Along with recruiting, the conference gives federal officials a chance to develop sources and keep up with new research.

"I'm learning while I'm here but I'm also getting the names of people I can maybe call on later so we have a better understanding as cases go along," said Don Blumenthal, who oversees the internet lab for investigators at the Federal Trade Commission.

Tensions between feds and hackers ran high in 2001 when the FBI arrested Russian programmer Dmitri Skylarov at the conference for writing a program that could break copy protection on electronic books.

The relationship between the two sides has turned less adversarial in recent years, according to long-time attendees, and government employees now account for nearly half of the audience. Some Defcon staffers even hold down day jobs with the National Security Agency and other government shops.

"You can't be deceived by the uniforms," said technology commentator Richard Thieme. "I talked at the Pentagon, and one-third of the people in the audience I already knew from Defcon."

That's not to say that Defcon has gone straight. The ability to break into computer systems is prized above all, and conference attendees whose computers fell prey to their colleagues' attacks are displayed on a "wall of sheep".

Some hackers spent the weekend in their hotel rooms cooking up a new way to take control of the Cisco Systems routers that underpin much of the internet.

Many defend this "black hat" approach, arguing that attacks that cause damage in the short term raise awareness of online threats and thus improve the security picture as a whole.

Mr Lynn and other agents made clear that they are not interested in working with those who break into computer systems without permission.

"We're looking for people who haven't crossed that line yet," said Jim Christy, director of the Pentagon's Cyber Crime Institute. "You've got to get folks with the right morals."

The FTC's Blumenthal said that while he was impressed with the honesty of the people he had met, he would double-check the information he receives from them as he does with other sources.
Posted by: Oztralian [AKA] God Save The World || 08/10/2005 19:35 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:


Down Under
Antartic snow blanket covers S.E Australia
TWO people died when their car overturned on an ice-covered road yesterday as a blast of freezing air pushed up from Antarctica, producing snow that dusted Parliament House, teased Hobart and blanketed large tracts of Victoria in what might be the lowest-lying snowfalls recorded.

The weather bureau called it a "cold outbreak" - an unusual event where a mass of air travels at speed behind a cold front, too quickly for the sun and warmer sea temperatures to heat it.

"There's only one way this can happen and that's one of these cold outbreaks from the deep south," senior forecaster Stuart Williams said.

"I would have to say it is the most widespread snowfall I have seen in my 21 years at the bureau, and there's a good possibility that it is the first time it has snowed in many of these localities."

Two people died near Beechworth, in northeastern Victoria, when their car skidded and flipped on to its roof. "There was a lot of snow and ice on the road," an ambulance spokeswoman said.

Elsewhere in Victoria, the Mornington Peninsula, Ballarat, Gippsland, the La Trobe Valley and suburban Melbourne received falls that forced the closure of several roads and schools.

In the ACT, the Brindabella Ranges received up to 30cm of snow, and the central and southern tablelands of NSW also received falls.

But snow forecast for Melbourne's CBD failed to materialise, and the temperature climbed to 10.4C in the city. It had been predicted that yesterday would be the coldest day of winter. The temperature was well above Melbourne's coldest recorded day, in 1872, when the thermometer dipped to 6.7C.

The last time it snowed in Melbourne's suburbs was in June 1986, while the last major Melbourne snowfall was in 1951.

At Mirboo North primary school in West Gippsland, about 120 students who travelled to school by bus faced the prospect of spending the night at school as parents tried to make their way along snow-blanketed roads to collect their children.

But the school's vice-principal Garry Adams said by late yesterday afternoon, all the children had either returned home or made arrangements to be picked up by friends or relatives.

It was the first time most of the Mirboo North schoolchildren had seen snow. "They were so excited when they first got to school," Mr Adams said.

"All the faces were at the window, and looking at it with astonishment in their eyes."

Canberra received snowshowers, but the snow failed to settle on the ground.

Snow fell at sea level in Hobart, and snow and ice forced the closure of at least two roads in Tasmania. Police said a school bus slid off the road near Strahan, in the northwest, but no injuries were reported.

Temperatures are expected to be cold again today in Victoria, but a repeat of yesterday's snowfalls is not forecast.
Posted by: Oztralian [AKA] God Save The World || 08/10/2005 19:23 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Except for the people injured or killed - cool.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 08/10/2005 20:10 Comments || Top||

#2  Global warming. Backwards downunder.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis || 08/10/2005 20:23 Comments || Top||

#3  this normally only occurs when AlGore is in town to do a pro-Kyoto speech
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 20:39 Comments || Top||

#4  If Al Gore remains in the area and this continues, sea levels will go down and Indonesian Muslim fanatics will attempt to attack Australia via the resulting land bridge. Luckily, the northward stampede of kangaroos will probably hold them back long enough for Al to leave the country. With a little more luck, warming will then eliminate the land bridge, drowning the fanatics in the process. Kangaroos that make it to Indonesia will be okay -- they're not halal anyway.
Posted by: Darrell || 08/10/2005 20:56 Comments || Top||

#5  Can I get a climate study grant for that?
Posted by: Darrell || 08/10/2005 20:57 Comments || Top||

#6  Actually darrell, after yesterday's report of multiple marsupials being beheaded in Aussie land, we're wondering if the jihadis are already practicing down there.
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 21:09 Comments || Top||

#7  Just curious. I've never seen any references to ice age glacial activity down under. I would guess not a whole lot, but really have no idea.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 08/10/2005 23:34 Comments || Top||


Muslim radical barred from entering Australia
ABDUR Raheem Green, a radical Muslim convert from Britain who has said Muslims and Westerners "cannot live peaceably together", has been blocked from coming to Australia.

Mr Green - whose name appears on the Immigration Department's "movement alert list" - attempted to board a plane from Sri Lanka to Wellington on Monday.

The plane was due to make a one-hour stop in Brisbane en route.

"I was told I could not board because the plane had to stop in Australia," Mr Green said yesterday.

"I was with my two teenage sons and they were free to go, but I was not."

Mr Green, a British citizen born Ashley Green, is due to make a series of speeches in Australia next week, including one at the Lakemba Mosque in western Sydney.

He has said conflict between Islam and the West is "ordered in the Koran", and "dying while fighting jihad is one of the surest ways to paradise and Allah's good pleasure".

He now claims to have moderated his views.

A spokeswoman for the Immigration Department said Mr Green had been prevented from boarding the plane because his name was on the movement alert list. "That doesn't mean he's been banned from Australia. The Australian Government has not come to any particular view about Mr Green," the spokeswoman said.

"But when he tried to check in, his name popped up on that list and he was not cleared for embarkation. That basically means he wasn't allowed to get on the plane.

"If he tries to board another plane to Australia, his name will pop up again and then we will consider his case and he may be allowed to enter."

Mr Green was invited to Australia by the Sydney-based Islamic Development Centre of Australia. It is not clear whether he will be cleared to enter the country in time for his planned lecture tour starting on August 17.

John Howard last week backed British plans to deport Islamic extremists who preached hate and terror. The Prime Minister said yesterday he saw merit in plans by his counterpart Tony Blair in the wake of the London bombings to expel extremists.

But Mr Green said he had changed his radical views about Islam over time.

"I was a bit younger then and maybe I was a bit passionate or whatever, and did say things I would never say now," he said.

"For the past five, six, seven years, my message to Muslim youth has been to condemn terror, to be good Muslims and show people the real face of Islam."

Mr Green said he was "devastated" by the London bombings.

"I hope Australia can understand I'm not a radical extremist," he said.

"If I was going to go around recruiting people for suicide bombings, I'd expect the Government to ban me, but that's absolutely not what I'm about. I've always been known as a moderate. I condemn terror. Killing women and children is against Islam."

Mr Green said he would visit the Australian embassy in Wellington tomorrow to try to sort out the problem in time to give his lectures in Sydney.

His New Zealand host, Javed Khan of the Federation of Islamic Association, said he was "very surprised" Mr Green was denied permission to board the plane to Australia.

"He was very surprised too," Mr Khan said. "I was with him last night, and I assure you he's very moderate. He has always promoted peace and harmony."
Posted by: Oztralian [AKA] God Save The World || 08/10/2005 19:21 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Sorry bub, I don't buy your line of fecal matter. Keep him out of the US as well.
Posted by: Sock Puppet 0’ Doom || 08/10/2005 19:46 Comments || Top||

#2  50 cal sniper rifle. head shot. 1200 m.

Priceless!
Posted by: anymouse || 08/10/2005 21:18 Comments || Top||

#3  O the humiliation! *snicker*
Posted by: trailing wife || 08/10/2005 22:39 Comments || Top||

#4  "I was a bit younger then and maybe I was a bit passionate or whatever, and did say things I would never say now,"

If you think we are going to fall for that, you've been watching way too many reruns of TaxiCab Confessions on HBO. BTW, infidel HBO is contrary to Islam.

Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 23:21 Comments || Top||


Australian women take on military combat roles
WOMEN will be posted to frontline combat zones under changes to military rules to tackle a recruiting crisis in the armed forces.

Defence Personnel Minister De-Anne Kelly is expected to announce as early as today that restrictions will be lifted on women serving in the army's four frontline war units, making them eligible for active service in Afghanistan and Iraq.
The new rules will make the Australian Defence Force one of the most progressive in the world, putting female soldiers in more dangerous battlefield positions than their British or US counterparts.

Women will be able to join the infantry, tank and armoured vehicle units, heavy gun units and combat engineers. However, they will still be banned from serving in the elite SAS.

Although they will not be involved in frontline fighting, the army's 2600 women will serve in support positions including logistics and communications. Research still suggests women lack the physical strength and power required in close combat and have lesser load-carrying stamina than men.

Government sources last night confirmed the proposal put forward by the army. "It still has to go through the channels of government," one source said. "But the Government's policy on women in frontline combat will not change."

The 52,000-strong Australian Defence Force, which boasts 7000 women across the three services, is in the grip of a recruiting crisis and fell about 1000 short of its recruiting target last year.
John Howard has asked Mrs Kelly to address the recruiting crisis in the wake of a survey in May that showed up to a third of defence force personnel were considering quitting the force.

Soldiers complained of poor pay, the lure of private sector jobs and dissatisfaction with long deployments.

Mrs Kelly is looking at a range of options, including breaking the long-held notion that the military is a life-long vocation and turning it into a more flexible career.

Changes to pay rates, childcare and spousal support and moves to ease the stress of postings and long periods away from home are all being considered.

While women serve widely aboard navy ships, including in command positions, and now as fighter pilots, and have already seen action in these capacities in Afghanistan and Iraq, some restrictions remain.

Navy women still cannot be involved in the clearance of deadly sea mines and are not allowed to serve in the guarding of airfields in the RAAF.

In 2001, the German defence force was the first to move to open combat units to women, closely followed by the Royal New Zealand Defence Force.

Britain has lifted its ban but left it up to the defence force to decide whether to recruit women to combat units. The US bans women in units that "co-locate with ground combatants".

RSL national president Major-General Bill Crews welcomed the decision "for a modest expansion of positions available to women". "It will mean women will be able to fill support positions in combat units but still won't be exposed to hand-to-hand combat," he said last night. "We believe its a sensible move."

But Women's Auxiliary Air Force of NSW president Beryl Evans said she believed it was time "the ladies be allowed to decide" whether they occupy frontline combat positions.

Mrs Evans, who served in the WAAF in World War II, said: "When we took the oath to serve our king and country, we were prepared to do whatever we were asked to do. I know men are concerned about women in combat but I think its great that women are taking on more roles."

NSW secretary of the Council of Ex-Servicewomen Grace McDonald, who served in the navy auxiliary in World War II, stressed it was her personal opinion that frontline combat was too physically demanding for women.

"But it's certainly a good thing that women are being allowed to do a lot more than they did in my day," she said. "We weren't allowed to serve on ships and now the lasses tell me they run them."

Of the 16,000 young Australians who applied for places in the defence force last year, only 4747 were accepted.

Former defence force chief Peter Cosgrove told a parliamentary inquiry that most of those rejected could not meet rigorous physical and psychological standards, but dropping standards was not the answer.
Posted by: Oztralian [AKA] God Save The World || 08/10/2005 19:16 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  This should be on page 3, my mistke - sorry !
Posted by: Oztralian [AKA] God Save The World || 08/10/2005 19:40 Comments || Top||

#2  Looks like Page 1 to me, Oz (though it could also be Page 2).

It will definitely affect the WOT.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 08/10/2005 19:42 Comments || Top||

#3  Barbara is right, Oztralian (love the new nym... or is it nick?). More soldier girls for the Lions of Islam to be humiliated by! And besides, I've met Australian girls on holiday -- best not to mess with them unless they want you to. ;-)
Posted by: trailing wife || 08/10/2005 22:36 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
TV Host Robbed On Air
FORT SMITH, Ark. -- Viewers of an Arkansas cable access show helped Fort Smith police crack a case late Thursday night after they watched a robbery on live TV.

Gary Spirito, host of the Shopping Mania Auction Show, thought it was a prank.

When a man came in and demanded Spirito's car keys, Spirito informed his audience that this was no joke.

"There's a guy robbing us, somebody call the police, he came in with a gun. Somebody call police, there's a guy in here trying to rob us," Spirito said.

That's when Spirito addressed the alleged robber directly.

"Then I looked up at him and said, 'We're doing a live show here and there's probably hundreds of people out there right now calling the police to come down on this building, just so you know,'" he said.

Mary Schell watches the Shopping Mania Auction Show every night, but still thought Spirito's call for help was a joke.

"We thought he was kidding at first," Schell said. "Then I waited a minute after, and then I was like, 'No, he can't be joking. He can't be. Just call.'"

Spirito said the suspects escaped with nothing, but thanks to the 911 calls made by viewers, Fort Smith police caught two male suspects early Friday morning.

Fort Smith police said 23-year-old Eddie Crisp and 22-year-old Timothy Suggs are accused of robbing Keith Cox, owner of the Legacy Motor Co., at 11 p.m. Thursday. About an hour later, police said the suspects robbed Spirito.

The men face two counts of aggravated robbery and probation violations, according to police.
Posted by: whitecollar redneck || 08/10/2005 19:13 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Heh. File under Stupid Criminals or You just can't make up shit this good! - your choice. Amazing.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 19:39 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Cindy Sheehan shows Anti-Semitic Colors in Letter to NIghtline - Blasts Koppel too
March 15, 2005

To Whom it May Concern:

Imagine my distress when I turned Night Line on last night and I was confronted with the gory details of my son's murder in Sadr City, Baghdad, Iraq on 04/04/04. Imagine, also, my sorrow and rage at the side of the story that you presented to the American public.
Shame on you for besmerching the memory of your son and his sacrifice, you nutty old bat!

I was on the Night Line Townhall Meeting in Washington, DC on 01/27/05. After I spoke (which I think was a fluke), Ted Koppel dismissed me as being "emotional." First of all, how can I approach this discussion without emotions, MY SON WAS KILLED, AND KILLED FOR LIES? Second of all, that show was not fair and balanced and I think the conclusion "Should we stay" was foregone.
Howdy Doody is usually pretty kind to lefty types like you. You musta really pissed him off!

The show last night was also not fair and balanced. To see all the wives being interviewed who had not lost their husbands and to hear what "hard work" it is to be left behind when their husbands are at war. How hard to you think it is to have a child killed in an illegal and immoral war? In this "wonderful" group of families left behind, we had exactly ONE of the wives call us..she is Diane Rose who was my son's Colonel, Frank Rose's wife. The last time we heard from Diane was in October and we feel we have been left behind by anyone connected to the 2-5 Cavalry. Is support only given if your loved one stays alive? One wife was quoted as saying that Sundays were the hardest for the families left behind. My son was killed on Palm Sunday last year..how does anybody think Sundays are for my family?
People are giving you a W-I-D-E berth, my dear!

{SNIP}

Am I emotional? Yes, my first born was murdered. Am I angry? Yes, he was killed for lies and for a PNAC Neo-Con agenda to benefit Israel. My son joined the Army to protect America, not Israel. Am I stupid? No, I know full-well that my son, my family, this nation, and this world were betrayed by a George Bush who was influenced by the neo-con PNAC agenda after 9/11. We were told that we were attacked on 9/11 because the terrorists hate our freedoms and democracy...not for the real reason, becuase the Arab-Muslims who attacked us hate our middle-eastern foreign policy. That hasn't changed since America invaded and occupied Iraq...in fact it has gotten worse.
The jooooos killed my son!


It would be so amazing if your show would put me, or another parent who lost their child on who disagrees with the war and this administration: to have just an entire show..without presenting the false side of the debate. That would take a lot of courage and integrity. I hope your program will exhibit these qualities.

It is unfair that we can't propogandize with our pacifist organization, to the exclusion of others, supported by anti-american Arab types, who we must appease...

I also think that Mr. Koppel owes me an apology for the rude way I was treated on his show. After I expressed myself about the war being based on lies and that the troops should be brought home immediately because the war was based on lies, I was not thanked for my comments, or my son's sacrifice. He just said to keep the discussion away from emotions. Then, the wife of a soldier who was killed was allowed to speak and she praised the policies of this deplorable and despicable administration, and she was thanked and praised by the panel.

Who stole the strawberries?

Also, another aspect that Mr. Koppel refused to acknowledge was when a man walked up to a microphone and asked Richard Perle to explain PNAC..he was rudely ignored.
Explanations are beyond a wombat like you...

WEBSITE SEZ : The Project for the New American Century is a non-profit educational organization dedicated to a few fundamental propositions: that American leadership is good both for America and for the world; and that such leadership requires military strength, diplomatic energy and commitment to moral principle.

{SNIP}

Your show needs to show both sides of this debate and stop being a propanda tool for this administration. This is my challenge to you from a true patriot who wants the lies exposed.
ABC a propoganda tool for the administration? LOL!


Love and Peace!!!
Cindy Sheehan
Mother of Hero: Spc Casey Austin Sheehan KIA 04/04/04
Casey's Peace Page
Co-Founder of Gold Star Families For Peace

This is only about 1/3 of the entire letter where she rants on & on about the same BS she's been spouting off for the MSM in front of the Prez's. ranch...
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 18:32 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I hate to say this but screw this insane POS.

Her son and his memory is to be honnored.

The mother should have the shit slapped out of her to wake her foolish ass up.

FOAD is all I can say.
Posted by: Sock Puppet 0’ Doom || 08/10/2005 19:19 Comments || Top||

#2  Absolutely agree, SPo'D - her son would obviously be mortified by her behavior and shameless use of his sacrifice to parade her personal dementia. Is this solely her doing or is someone putting her up to this display? A quick check of the records for her travel, accommodations, and sundry expenses might be very revealing. I think "tool" is the operative word.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 19:33 Comments || Top||

#3  I think the anti-Semitism would lead one to believe she may have many new friends w/ Middle Eastern "connections"

There is this fellow with her at Crawford named Hadi Jawad. He usually hang out in Dallas from what I can see... "Dallas Peace Center" is a favorite spot...

Now, while composing this, I poked around on Google.

There is the Government List
Q: What is the Excluded Parties Lists System (EPLS)?

A: EPLS is the electronic version of the Lists of Parties Excluded from Federal Procurement and Nonprocurement Programs (Lists), which identifies those parties excluded throughout the U.S. Government (unless otherwise noted) from receiving Federal contracts or certain subcontracts and from certain types of Federal financial and nonfinancial assistance and benefits.

Name : HABUBI, Dr. Safa Hadi Jawad
Class : Entity
Record Type : Primary
Exclusion Type : Specially Designated Nationals
DUNS : -- --
Program : IRAQ
Addresses :
1 : Flat 4D Thorney Court, Palace Gate, Kensington, England
2 : Iraq
Description :
CT Actions --
Action Date : -- --
Term Date : Indef.
CT Code : -- --
Agency : TREAS - OFAC
Alternate identity : aka AL-HABOBI, Dr. Safa
aka AL-HABOBI, Dr. Safa Haji J., DOB 01 Jul 46.
aka AL-HABUBI, Dr. Safa Hadi Jawad
aka HABUBI, Dr. Safa Jawad
aka JAWAD, Dr. Safa Hadi

The updated link deletes addresses, but a Google cache has him as above

Hadi Jawad


Hadi Jawad al-Habooby

He also had an addess in Kensington, England

Is that address close to the home of any of the dead terrorists of July 7, or the incearcerated terrorists of July 21?

AL-HABUBI, Dr. Safa Hadi Jawad (a.k.a. HABUBI, Dr. Safa Hadi
Jawad; a.k.a. JAWAD, Dr. Safa Hadi; a.k.a. HABUBI, Dr Safa Jawad;
or a.k.a. AL-HABOBI, Dr. Safa; a.k.a. AL-HABOBI, Dr. Safa Haji
J.), Minister of Oil; DOB 01 Jul 46; Flat 4D Thorney Court,
Palace Gate, Kensington, England; Iraq (individual) [IRAQ]*


The names of the following Iraqis were specifically added to the
list as Specially Designated Nationals of Iraq:
....
AL-HABUBI, Dr. Safa Hadi Jawad (a.k.a. HABUBI, Dr. Safa Hadi
Jawad; a.k.a. JAWAD, Dr. Safa Hadi; a.k.a. HABUBI, Dr Safa Jawad;
or a.k.a. AL-HABOBI, Dr. Safa; a.k.a. AL-HABOBI, Dr. Safa Haji
J.), Minister of Oil; DOB 01 Jul 46; Flat 4D Thorney Court,
Palace Gate, Kensington, England; Iraq (individual) [IRAQ]*
Link of Above

Then this:

Dr Safa Hadi Jawad al-Habboubi, a person with complementary talents, joined this group. He had graduated in mechanical engineering from the universities of Baghdad and Lyon and had the necessary expertise in the fields of heavy industry and automated machine tools. This special qualification, together with his proven leadership qualities, predisposed him to run various production units, such as the above mentioned Public Company of Technical Industries. Simultaneously charged with procurement issues, he distinguished himself by his sense of initiative and inventiveness. In London he used a front company, the "Technological Development Group", in order to buy the American company Matrix Chrurchill Co., whose president he became. Later-on he engineered likewise the purchase of a special alloys factory. Furthermore, it is worth mentioning his involvement in the Atlanta negotiations concerning unlimited loans from the "Banca nazionale del lavoro", a particularly sensational scandal.

Link

HE'S A F*****G BA'ATHIST SADDAHM LOYALIST, and Cindy Sheehan thinks that is OK?

MSM, as Ms. Ingraham says, "I hear the crickets chirping!"




Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 20:07 Comments || Top||

#4  Good headline and commentary, Big Ed.

I think this woman's son would be furiously angry with her. This is the kind of behaviour that leads children to cut all ties with their parents.
Posted by: trailing wife || 08/10/2005 20:21 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan/South Asia
The riposte to Indo-US Defence Pact
By General (Retd) Mirza Aslam Beg
Posted by: john || 08/10/2005 17:29 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Sheesh! Gen'l Beg musta been paid by the word for this schlock. He's got a mighty bright outlook for someone from PakiWakiLand writing about a US - India joint defense agreement. I thought he was bitching, at first, but nope, not really. Why, he's got silver linings, rosy outlooks, and trite DU-style memery to burn! PakiWakiLand is so bold and enlightened and pragmatic and geopolitically strategic that it's simply breathtaking! Who'da thunk it?

*golf clap*

Now ease off on the meds, Gen'l, they're probably addictive.

The Nation... john, I'm worried about you! Spend too much time there and you'll see them go blind! Fascinatingly weird post, Thx!
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 19:53 Comments || Top||

#2  What is frightening is that this madman was a chief of staff of the Pak military and in the nuclear command/control loop.

Posted by: john || 08/10/2005 21:18 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
NYC confirms UK earl's death was natural
NEW YORK, Aug. 10 (UPI) -- The New York City Medical Examiner's office has confirmed the sudden death in May of a 28-year-old British earl was caused by a simple heart attack.
"He's still dead, Jim"
Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 28, the 11th Earl of Shaftesbury, died May 15 in a friend's apartment in Greenwich Village, the New York Post said.
28 is awfully young for a "simple" heart attack. Was his "friend" that talented?
His death followed the discovery of the dismembered body of his 66-year-old father in the French Alps on April 6.
We covered the late Earl's murder in depth.
The 10th earl went missing on the French Riviera Nov. 6, and his third wife, Jamila M'Barek and her brother, Mohammed M'Barek, are under investigation in France.
Jamila, the sultry "entertainer" lured Earl to her place one last time, with her brother lurking in the back room.
Posted by: Steve || 08/10/2005 16:05 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1 
The elder Earl and Jamila
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 16:53 Comments || Top||

#2  Goodbye, Earl!
Posted by: Jimmy Wah || 08/10/2005 16:55 Comments || Top||

#3  By gawd that's gotta be an Apache Dancer.
Posted by: Shipman || 08/10/2005 18:28 Comments || Top||


Great White North
Hearing for man allegedly tied to millennium-bomb plot adjourned until Monday
A detention review hearing for a man who allegedly had links to millennium-bomb plotter Ahmed Ressam has been adjourned until Sept. 15. The delay in the hearing by the Immigration Refugee Board was granted at the request of Samir Ait Mohamed's lawyer because he wanted more time to familiarize himself with the immigration case. Mohamed was accused of having links to Ressam, who last month was sentenced to 22 years in a U.S. prison for plotting to bomb the Los Angeles airport. The United States wanted Mohamed extradited but dropped their request after Ressam stopped co-operating with American authorities in fingering his accomplices. Ressam had provided the initial information that led to Mohamed's arrest.

Once the extradition request was formally dropped, the Canadian Border Services Agency faced the choice of detaining the Algerian-born Mohamed on an immigration warrant or letting him go free. This hearing was ordered after Mohamed made an appearance Monday in B.C. Supreme Court. Mohamed faced a removal order before being charged in February 2002 in connection with Ressam. He was initially arrested in 2001 on an immigration matter.

The United States initially charged Mohamed with conspiring to commit terrorist acts, giving support to a terrorist act and conspiring to commit credit-card fraud. He was held in custody pending extradition.
But Mohamed's Vancouver lawyer, Ian Donaldson, said this week U.S. officials knew as early as 2003 that Ressam, caught in 1999 trying to cross into Washington state from British Columbia with a car-load of explosives, was not helping them make a case against Mohamed. Mohamed maintains Ressam lied to implicate him in the so-called millennium-bombing plot in hopes of a lighter prison sentence. Mohamed left Algeria in 1989 and tried unsuccessfully to gain refugee status in England and Germany before entering Canada in 1997. He was denied Canadian refugee status in 1998 but appealed and was granted a new hearing in 1999.
Posted by: Steve || 08/10/2005 16:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:


Britain
Mr Punch punished for bashing Bin Laden
LONDON (AFP) - A puppeteer in Britain has been rapped for portraying Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein as villains, a report said.
American-born Brent de Witt, 41, has been scolded for using the pair's characters in the traditional children's puppet play, Punch and Judy.
The show had crowds in fits of laughter -- but a few dissenters at the seafront in Broadstairs, southeast England, failed to see the joke.
Leftist wankers have no sense of humor
"I put them in the show as villains who would go and steal Punch's sausages," De Witt told the Daily Express. "It was very topical and just a bit of fun. "But then we had a few people who did not care for it and instead of telling me they went straight to the council.
"Waaaa, the evil puppet man is being mean! Make him stop!"
"They sent word down for me to take the characters out of the show."
Osama bin Laden heads the Al-Qaeda global terror network, while ousted Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein is in US custody near Baghdad awaiting trial on charges of crimes against humanity.
But other than that....

Bin Laden, cast as the devil, is defeated by Mr Punch in traditional fashion: clobbered with a stick.
Works for me
Posted by: Steve || 08/10/2005 15:56 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Great. The PC puppet police are on the job. I feel much safer now.
Posted by: mojo || 08/10/2005 16:12 Comments || Top||

#2  What do you expect this is TRANZI England. 99% of the population sees everyting in the EU issued shades of grey not the black and white reality. If it had been puppets of GWB and TB it would have been acceptable.
Posted by: Sock Puppet 0’ Doom || 08/10/2005 16:26 Comments || Top||

#3  Maybe it has to do with the fact that this guy's show uses only normal size puppets. The Left only likes really BIG puppet shows.
Posted by: eLarson || 08/10/2005 16:48 Comments || Top||

#4  Could've been those famous British puppeteering critics Achmed and Mahmoud. That's my bet.
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 16:51 Comments || Top||

#5  There is only one group of puppets that will put an end to this PC nonsense:

http://www.teamamerica.com
Posted by: Glolusing Flereth5459 || 08/10/2005 17:34 Comments || Top||

#6  Lol, GF! Dirka dirka, heh. PC amokness.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 17:38 Comments || Top||

#7  I think if enough of these dog chew toys were distributed to overwhelm the PC Totalitarians, they might just give up...



To all our Engligh Friends... Here's where to order...Note : the only Republican is Bush, but they have a Kery, a Bubba, and a Hillary...

Political Pet Toys
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 17:42 Comments || Top||

#8  a few dissenters at the seafront in Broadstairs, southeast England, failed to see the joke.

Political street theatre for the masses. The Marxists got their wish.
Posted by: Howard UK || 08/10/2005 19:18 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Tech
Fly me to the moon? That'll be $100 million
The ultimate honeymoon??

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Want to send someone over the moon? All it takes is $100 million.

A U.S. company said on Wednesday it wants to send two tourists on a trip around the moon at a cost of $100 million per ticket.

Space Adventures Ltd, which has already sent two civilians on separate trips into space, says it has researched and identified more than a thousand prospective customers with the necessary wealth for a moon shot as early as 2008.

Posted by: DanNY || 08/10/2005 15:36 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Energia can build a moon capable rocket with two person payload for 200 million dollars.

Bull.

Unless the trip is one way only.

Posted by: john || 08/10/2005 16:07 Comments || Top||

#2  John, the old Soviet Union did send two-person capsules on an around-the-moon trajectory and back in the 60's.

They were equipped with instrumented dummies and dummy life support.

The capsule was a modified version of a Soyuz (i.e. no orbital module); the reentry forces were pretty high, so you'd want someone in reasonably good physical shape, and space was tight, so you'd probably want two really good friends for your customers... but they launched those missions from a single modified Proton. I don't know what Protons sell for these days, but the overhead cost of launching one is supposedly pretty cheap.

I suspect the Russians *could* have done a manned moon surface mission way back when with multiple Proton launches, but they got too fixated on their super-booster based mission, and when they finally figured out they couldn't get the N-1 to work Apollo had already gotten there, and they figured it would be less embarrassing to not go and pretend they never wanted to.
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 08/10/2005 18:46 Comments || Top||


Terror Networks & Islam
Al-Zawahiri video reveals depth of al-Qaeda arsenal - Ayman's weapon may be Chinese or Nork
Ayman al Zawahiri, the No. 2 man in al Qaeda's terror network, appeared on a videotape last week delivering a new warning of death and destruction to the West, unless coalition forces withdraw from Iraq and the West stops supporting corrupt regimes in the region.

"Our message to you is clear, strong and final: There will be no salvation until you withdraw from our land, stop stealing our oil and resources and end support for infidel, corrupt rulers," said al Zawahiri, in the tape first aired on the Qatar-based Al Jazeera network.

In short, there was nothing new in al Zawahiri's message. Or was there? While the verbal message delivered by the al Qaeda leader was "standard," there was an important -- albeit subtle -- point made in the video, which contained some revealing, and one might add, disturbing, information. But you had to see, not hear it.

As with most such videos delivered by al Qaeda in the past and aired on the Arab networks first and later picked up by Western media, weapons are frequently used as props. This time was no exception, and behind Osama bin Laden's deputy was a weapon nonchalantly positioned against the wall of wherever al Zawahiri taped his message.

At first glance, the weapon passes for a Kalashnikov AK-47 assault rifle, initially built by the Soviets, but since cloned by several former Eastern Bloc countries, as well as by Yugoslavia, China and North Korea. More than 50 armies in the world have firearms created by Kalashnikov.

But a closer inspection of the weapon reveals it has a little black tube attached under the barrel, quite similar to the ones on the American M-16, which turns it into an M-203 grenade launcher.

The disturbing fact in this instance is that al Zawahiri is making a bold statement in showing off his new hardware. New, sophisticated weapons, such as the one in the video are not the kind peddled by arms dealers in shady backwater Middle East arms bazaars. This weapon appears to be a state-of-the-art modern gun made in either China or North Korea.

Quick research shows the weapon behind al Zawahiri is called a Wz. 1974 Pallad grenade launcher. According to the Kalashnikov Web site, the attachment was initially developed in the late 1960s to replace the not entirely successful Wz. 1960.72 grenade-launching adaptations of the AK. But as is often the case, the plans remained shelved for many years before it was developed and manufactured.

Interestingly, in a dozen conflicts this reporter has covered in the Middle East since the early 1970s, he had never come across such a weapon. Instead, the preferred adaptation used by fighting forces throughout the Middle East, from the Palestinians to the Iraqis, starting from the early 1960s and through the most recent conflicts, has been a grenade attached to a rod that fits into the barrel of the AK47, called "energa."

Charles Henderson, a former U.S. Marine warrant officer and author of several books on warfare, who saw action in Vietnam and Lebanon, thinks al Zawahiri's weapon "is more modern than any old Soviet Kalashnikov." Mr. Henderson, too, has never come across one before during his years of deployment in Vietnam and Beirut.

Al Zawahiri displaying his new model Kalashnikov sends a message that al Qaeda is still able to purchase sophisticated gear. This detail begs the question; who is still selling al Qaeda such guns?

Mr. Henderson thinks the Pallad can only come from governments.

"The weapon is no doubt North Korean or Chinese," he told United Press International. "The modern rifle raises many questions, and I think makes a statement that there are governments with arms-making capacities who are supplying these devils."

One of the problems in fighting, particularly affecting undercover agents, is troop morale, explains Mr. Henderson. And when sleeper agents hiding in the West see brand-new weapons of that caliber on television, Mr. Henderson says "it sends a message saying we are not out of it, not by a long shot."

"Meanwhile, North Korea, China and half a dozen other nations are having their diplomatic discussions about maintaining peace in that region, and all the while [North Korean leader] Kim [Jong Il] is selling Kalashnikovs to al Qaeda, and thinking us the fools. They have the perfect distraction, Iraq, while they rebuild too," said the former Marine.

"While we are being distracted by Iraq, al Qaeda is regrouping and reorganizing," said Mr. Henderson.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 15:26 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I noticed that weapon in the background but never got around to asking my nephews about it.

It seems we are going to be fighting a series of proxy wars again with the puppeteer being China trying to unobtrusively wear us down.

It would be a good time to start undermining that regime with all means necessary.
Posted by: DanNY || 08/10/2005 16:08 Comments || Top||

#2  Pakistan is a big buyer of both Chinese and North Korean military equipment.

Its past acquisitions have gotten into terrorist hands.

The timers used in the 1993 Bombay financial district blasts (prior to 9/11 the largest coordinated terror attack anywhere) were identified by the FBI labs as having come from US military stocks supplied to Pakistan.

The Indian army has captured Stinger MANPADs from Pakistani terrorists in Kashmir.

The ISI arms its terrorist clients well.

Posted by: john || 08/10/2005 16:13 Comments || Top||

#3  John, Bingo - its a Paki gun.
Posted by: buwaya || 08/10/2005 16:40 Comments || Top||

#4 
Its past acquisitions have gotten into terrorist hands.


Almost like they're bought specifically for terrorists.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 08/10/2005 21:01 Comments || Top||

#5  so....how much does an AK47 go for in Peshawar?


one of the older hands had to say it...for old times' sake...right, LH?
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 21:06 Comments || Top||

#6  ok does this really surprise anyone?
Posted by: Thraing Hupoluper1864 || 08/10/2005 21:10 Comments || Top||

#7  mmmmm no
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 21:21 Comments || Top||


The Web as a Weapon
The jihadist bulletin boards were buzzing. Soon, promised the spokesman for al Qaeda in the Land of the Two Rivers, a new video would be posted with the latest in mayhem from Iraq's best-known insurgent group.

On June 29, the new release hit the Internet. "All Religion Will Be for Allah" is 46 minutes of live-action war in Iraq, a slickly produced video with professional-quality graphics and the feel of a blood-and-guts annual report. In one chilling scene, the video cuts to a brigade of smiling young men. They are the only fighters shown unmasked, and the video explains why: They are a corps of suicide bombers-in-training.

As notable as the video was the way Abu Musab Zarqawi's "information wing" distributed it to the world: a specially designed Web page, with dozens of links to the video, so users could choose which version to download. There were large-file editions that consumed 150 megabytes for viewers with high-speed Internet and a scaled-down four-megabyte version for those limited to dial-up access. Viewers could choose Windows Media or RealPlayer. They could even download "All Religion Will Be for Allah" to play on a cell phone.

Never before has a guerrilla organization so successfully intertwined its real-time war on the ground with its electronic jihad, making Zarqawi's group practitioners of what experts say will be the future of insurgent warfare, where no act goes unrecorded and atrocities seem to be committed in order to be filmed and distributed nearly instantaneously online.

Zarqawi has deployed a whole inventory of Internet operations beyond the shock video. He immortalizes his suicide bombers online, with video clips of the destruction they wreak and Web biographies that attest to their religious zeal. He taunts the U.S. military with an online news service of his exploits, releasing tactical details of operations multiple times a day. He publishes a monthly Internet magazine, Thurwat al-Sinam (literally "The Camel's Hump"), that offers religious justifications for jihad and military advice on how to conduct it.

His negotiations with Osama bin Laden over joining forces with al Qaeda were conducted openly on the Internet. When he was almost captured recently, he left behind not a Kalashnikov assault rifle, the traditional weapon of the guerrilla leader, but a laptop computer. An entire online network of Zarqawi supporters serves as backup for his insurgent group in Iraq, providing easily accessible advice on the best routes into the country, trading information down to the names of mosques in Syria that can host a would-be fighter, and eagerly awaiting the latest posting from the man designated as Zarqawi's only official spokesman.

"The technology of the Internet facilitated everything," declared a posting this spring by the Global Islamic Media Front, which often distributes Zarqawi messages on the Internet. Today's Web sites are "the way for everybody in the whole world to listen to the mujaheddin."

Little more than a year ago, this online empire did not exist. Zarqawi was an Internet nonentity, a relatively obscure Jordanian who was one of many competing leaders of the Iraq insurgency. Once every few days, a communique appeared from him on the Web. Today, Zarqawi is an international name "of enormous symbolic importance," as Army Lt. Gen. David Petraeus put it in a recent interview, on a par with bin Laden largely because of his group's proficiency at publicizing him on the Internet.

By this summer, Internet trackers such as the SITE Institute have recorded an average of nine online statements from the Iraq branch of al Qaeda every day, 180 statements in the first three weeks of July. Zarqawi has gone "from zero to 60" in his use of the Internet, said Michael Scheuer, former chief of the CIA unit that tracked bin Laden. "The difference between Zarqawi's media performance initially and today is extraordinary."

As with most breakthroughs, it was a combination of technology and timing. Zarqawi launched his jihad in Iraq "at the right point in the evolution of the technology," said Ben N. Venzke, whose firm IntelCenter monitors jihadist sites for U.S. government agencies. High-speed Internet access was increasingly prevalent. New, relatively low-cost tools to make and distribute high-quality video were increasingly available. "Greater bandwidth, better video compression, better video editing tools -- all hit the maturity point when you had a vehicle as well as the tools," he said.

The original al Qaeda always aspired to use technology in its war on the West. But bin Laden's had been the moment of fax machines and satellite television. "Zarqawi is a new generation," said Evan F. Kohlmann, a consultant who closely monitors the sites. "The people around him are in their twenties. They view the media differently. The original al Qaeda are hiding in the mountains, not a technologically very well-equipped place. Iraq is an urban combat zone. Technology is a big part of that. I don't know how to distinguish the Internet now from the military campaign in general in Iraq."

After Abu Musab Zarqawi swung the curved blade of his sword and decapitated Nicholas Berg, he picked up the bloodied head of his victim and screamed out praise to Allah. The camera lingered on the dead man's wild eyes.

The exact date of this atrocity is unclear. The date the world came to know about it is not.

On May 11, 2004, a posting with a link to the video appeared on the al-AnsarWeb forum. Soon, it had been downloaded millions of times, freezing up servers from Indonesia to the United States. A wave of copycat beheadings by other groups followed. Zarqawi became a household name.

It was, said Kohlmann, "the 9/11 of jihad on the Internet -- momentous for them and momentous for us. For years, people were saying how the Internet would be used by terrorists. And then all of a sudden somebody was beheaded on camera and it was, 'Holy smokes, we never thought about the Internet being used this way!' "

Televised beheadings were not uncommon in Saudi Arabia. But Zarqawi did not use the long executioner's sword of Saudi government-sanctioned beheadings. Instead, he invoked the imagery of his American captive as an animal.

"They take what anyone who's ever been to a halal butcher shop would recognize as a halal butcher knife and they cut the side of the neck and saw at it, bleed him out, just as they do when they're killing sheep," said Rebecca Givner-Forbes, who monitors the jihadist Web sites for the Terrorism Research Center, an Arlington firm with U.S. government clients. "Originally, they used the word for 'sacrifice,' which suggests the death has some kind of meaning, and then they used the word they use to butcher animals."

Khattab, a Jordanian-born commander of foreign fighters in Chechnya, videotaped graphic attacks on Russian forces in the 1990s and packaged them together as videotapes called "Russian Hell," which sold in Western mosques and Middle Eastern bazaars and now circulate on the Internet.

The immediate precursor to the Berg video was the 2002 execution-style killing of journalist Daniel Pearl in Pakistan, which was taped and distributed electronically when mainstream news outlets refused to show it. But even the horrific scene of Pearl's throat being slit failed to gain the audience that Zarqawi commanded two years later, coming as it did before widespread availability of broadband Internet to play back the video.

Zarqawi, a veteran fighter who had run his own training camp in the western Afghan city of Herat before fleeing to northern Iraq during the 2001 U.S.-led war in Afghanistan, had never been known as an Internet innovator. His first statement from Iraq that gained wide circulation did so not because it was online but because it was intercepted and released by the U.S. occupation authority. The January 2004 letter to al Qaeda urged creation of "armies of mujaheddin."

On April 9, 2004, a short video clip was posted on the Internet, the first attributed to Zarqawi's group, according to Kohlmann. It was called "Heroes of Fallujah," and it showed several black-masked men laying a roadside bomb, disguising it in a hole in the dusty road, then watching as it blew up a U.S. armored personnel carrier.

Later that month, on April 25, Zarqawi issued his first written Internet communique, asserting responsibility for an attack near the southern city of Basra. "We have made the decision and raised the banner of the jihad," it said. "We have taken spearheads and javelins for a boat in our cruise toward glory."

And then it cited a verse from the Koran: "Fight them, Allah will torture them at your hands. . . . "

"The Winds of Victory" opens with footage of the American bombing of Baghdad. It is nighttime, and the screen is dark except for the violent orange explosions and the wry captions "Democracy" and "Freedom" written in Arabic.

The film was the first full-length propaganda video produced by Zarqawi's organization, complete with scenes of mutilated Iraqi children and the horrors of Abu Ghraib prison -- and it hit the Internet in June 2004, a month after Berg's killing.

For the first time, the video put names and faces on the foreign suicide bombers who had flocked to Iraq under Zarqawi's banner, showing staged readings of wills and young men from Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Libya and elsewhere in the Arab world looking alternately scared and playful. Video footage of their explosions followed their testimonials, often filmed from multiple angles.

But the hour-long film was too big to send out all at once online and had to be broken into chapters released one a week. "Hardly ideal for a propaganda video," Kohlmann said.

That same summer, as copycat beheaders circulated footage of their attacks in Iraq and Saudi Arabia, Zarqawi was fully exploiting his electronic distribution network. In early July, he released his first audio recording, putting it directly on the Internet -- unlike the tapes of al Qaeda leaders bin Laden and Ayman Zawahiri, which still go directly to Arab satellite television. His beheading of Berg was completely justified, Zarqawi said, and those Muslims who disagreed were just "slaves."

Later that month, "astonished" at mistaken reports about the group's activities, Zarqawi's organization urged its audience "not to believe this false information." Henceforth, Zarqawi said, "all of our statements are spread by means of the brother Abu Maysara al-Iraqi," making him an official Internet spokesman.

At the same time, Zarqawi was in negotiations in a series of online missives with al Qaeda about pledging allegiance to bin Laden. For months, a main sticking point was Zarqawi's insistence on targeting representatives of Iraq's Shiite majority as well as the U.S. military, bin Laden's preferred enemy.

But Zarqawi had acquired huge new prominence through his Internet-broadcast beheadings. The once-wary al Qaeda leadership seemed to take a new attitude toward him, and the online magazine of al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia hailed him as the "sheikh of slaughterers."

On Oct. 17, 2004, the deal was struck and announced in cyberspace as the U.S. military was launching an offensive in Fallujah, determined to drive Zarqawi's men out of their sanctuary. Zarqawi pledged fealty to bin Laden and spoke in his online posting of eight months of negotiations, interrupted by a "rupture." Experts believe their contact was almost exclusively in the open space of the Internet.

Two days later, Zarqawi put out his first statement in the new name of his organization. Once called Tawhid wal Jihad (Unity and Holy War), it was now the Al Qaeda Committee for Jihad in the Land of the Two Rivers.

For 26 minutes, the instructional video lays out in precise detail how to construct the item that more than any other has come to symbolize the Iraq insurgency -- a suicide bomber's explosive belt.

It shows how to estimate the impact of an explosion, how best to arrange the shrapnel for maximum destruction, how to strap the belt onto the bomber's body, even how to avoid the migraine headache that can come from exposure to the recommended explosive chemicals.

The video -- all in Arabic -- appeared on the al-Ansar forum, where it was found one Sunday in December 2004 by the SITE Institute. The forum where Berg's beheading had also first appeared was one of Zarqawi's preferred Internet venues, among the dozens of password-protected jihadi Web forums that have proliferated over the last few years.

This and other Arabic-language forums hosted discussions on the latest news from Iraq, provided a place for swapping tips on tradecraft, circulated religious justifications for jihad, and acted as intermediary between would-be fighters and their would-be recruiters. Most of the sites prohibit postings from unapproved users, but they can be accessed in the open and rely on widely available software called vBulletin ("instant community," promises the software's maker).

Many postings to the boards were not official statements from al Qaeda but unsolicited advice, such as the recent notice called "the road to Mesopotamia" posted on an underground Syrian extremist site, in which one veteran offered a detailed scouting report, down to advice on bribing Syrian police and traveling to the border areas by claiming to be on a fishing trip.

The bulletin boards also make information quickly available from Iraq, where fighters are gaining combat experience against the U.S. military. In one case cited by John Arquilla, a professor at the Naval Postgraduate School in California, would-be insurgents in the Sahara Desert were able to ask for -- and receive -- information from the ground in Iraq about how best to build bombs.

And the bulletin boards keep track of Zarqawi's corps of suicide bombers, with long online lists of the "martyrs" compiled from various sources. Israeli researcher Reuven Paz has a list gleaned from the postings of more than 400 Zarqawi recruits who have died in Iraq. Paz said the biographies are an informal census very much in keeping with the profile of an Arab Internet user -- middle class and highly educated, "people with wives and kids and good jobs," Paz said, "going, as if by magic, after the virtual leader."

In March, one of the al-Ansar forum's own members became another entry. For the previous 11 months, Zaman Hawan had confined his jihad to 178 online postings to the forum. But on March 24, 2005, according to another forum member's announcement, he "carried his soul on his hand, and went to jihad for the sake of Allah," dying in a suicide attack in Baqubah, Iraq. The posting went on to list phone numbers in Sudan for forum members to call Hawan's father and brother and congratulate them on his "martyrdom."

By April, the al-Ansar bulletin board had become too well known as Zarqawi's outlet. The forum closed without notice. Alternatives quickly appeared. For a while, "mirror" sites emerged featuring many of the same users, with the same logins and passwords. They, too, disappeared. The al-Masada forum briefly took up the banner. Then participants began to warn that it had been breached by Western intelligence -- and the jihadists abandoned it, as well.

The upheaval has resulted in a much more decentralized system for disseminating the bulletins from Iraq, with new boards constantly cropping up. As soon as a posting from Zarqawi's group appears now, dozens of new links to it are copied to the other jihadist sites within minutes, making for an intricate game of Internet cat-and-mouse. And even if the forums or fixed Web sites are temporarily out of commission, other ways still exist -- such as mass e-mails sent out several times a day with the latest in Iraq guerrilla videos, communiques and commentary from Yahoo e-groups such as ansar-jehad.

While Zarqawi's group has moved away in recent months from videotaped beheadings of foreigners, the shock value of the Berg beheading has created a race for more and more realistic video clips from Iraq. Filming an attack has become an integral part of the attack itself. In April, a cameraman followed alongside an armed insurgent, video rolling, as they ran to the scene of a helicopter they had just shot down north of Baghdad. The one member of the Bulgarian crew found still alive was ordered to stand up and start walking, then shot multiple times on film as the shooter yelled, "This is Allah's judgment." The three-minute video from the Islamic Army of Iraq came at a time when many of the bulletin board sites were down; SITE Institute's Rita Katz found the link through the ansar-jehad e-group.

"It's the exact reason why we built the Internet, a bargain-basement, redundant system for distributing information," said Kohlmann. "We can't shut it down anymore."

Indeed, just last week, a notice went out on the jihadist bulletin boards: The Ansar forum that had disappeared in April was back up and running.

A few weeks ago, al Qaeda in the Land of the Two Rivers released the third version of its online magazine, Thurwat al-Sinam. This latest issue lectured on the recipe for a successful raid, an almost-scientific procedure involving six steps for planning and executing, with five groups of fighters designated by tasks such as "protection," "gap-making" and "pushing in."

The magazine also held up a model for the Internet campaign that has built Zarqawi's reputation, provided his recruits, served as his propagandist and his carrier pigeon. In an essay aimed broadly at the Muslim world, the magazine claimed the 7th-century Koran as a useful blueprint for today's wired warriors in Iraq, calling its story of the prophet Muhammad's pitch to the people of Mecca "a very good example of how to conduct an information battle with the infidels."

Battles can be won in Iraq but then ultimately lost if they are not on the Internet. "The aim is not to execute an operation, which is followed by complete silence, but telling the reason why it was executed," the magazine advised. "It is a must that we give this field what it deserves. . . . How many battles has this nation lost because of the lack of information?"
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 15:21 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:


Iraq-Jordan
Iraq IEDs are of IRGC manufacture
U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld says coalition forces have unambiguous evidence that weapons and bombs are being sent across the border from Iran into Iraq. He stopped short of saying whether the Iranian government is directly involved in the arms transfers, which Washington says add to the instability in Iraq. The charges come despite recent progress by Iran and the Shi'a-led Iraqi government to forge closer ties, including Iranian aid for building a new airport and an offer to help train Iraqi troops.

Washington is stepping up charges that weapons from Iran are contributing to the conflict in Iraq.

"It is true that weapons -- clearly, unambiguously from Iran -- have been found in Iraq," U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said yesterday. He stopped short of saying the Iraqi government is directly involved in the weapons transfers and did not specify to whom the arms are going.

But he suggested the Iranian government at least bears responsibility for failing to stop the activity. "It's a big border, and it's notably unhelpful for the Iranians to be allowing weapons of those types to cross the border," Rumsfeld said.

The charges come a week after U.S. media quoted intelligence officials as saying that a large shipment of machine-manufactured bombs coming from Iran had been captured in northeastern Iraq late last month.

"The New York Times" reported that the shipment contained so-called shaped charges designed to destroy armored vehicles. Shaped charges focus the force of the bomb’s explosive power in a specific direction to increase the chances of penetrating armor plating. Until now, most of the bombs targeting U.S. armored vehicles in Iraq have been improvised explosive devices assembled from weapon stockpiles in Iraq itself.

In recent weeks, coalition officials have also reported the seizure of a shipment of mostly small arms sent from Iran into southern Iraq.

The recent evidence of these arms transfers prompted U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad to complain publicly last week that Iran was taking actions that undermine Iraqi security. “Iran is working along two contradictory tracks," he said. "On the one hand, Tehran works with the new Iraq. On the other, there is movement across its borders of people and material used in violent acts against Iraq.”

Jonathan Lindley, who researches regional issues at the Royal United Services Institute in London, says it is not clear who in Iran would be sponsoring the weapons transfers. But he says U.S. suspicion would almost certainly focus on such institutions as Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guard Corps, which might or might not be acting with broader government approval.

“Iran tends to have a sort of multichannel administrative structure, and these sorts of issues of transnational support for Shi'a groups tend to be linked to the Revolutionary Guards, the Pasdaran, and it would seem highly likely that any weapons that have been found are in some ways traceable back to them,” Lindley told RFE/RL.

The Revolutionary Guards, a branch of Iran’s armed forces, is often accused by the United States of supplying help to the Lebanese Shi'ite Hizballah. "The New York Times" reported that the seized shaped charges closely match those Hizballah has used against Israel.

The finding of the shaped charges in northeast Iraq suggests that they were delivered to groups of Arab Sunni insurgents in that area and intended for use against U.S. armored patrols.

The discovery also raises the question of whether the charges could be used by Arab Sunni insurgents against the Iraqi government -- with which Iran has improving relations -- or even against Iraqi Shi'ite targets. If so, Iran’s supplying the bombs would appear paradoxical.

But Lindley said the shaped explosives would likely not be suitable for the kind of attacks that Arab Sunni insurgents have carried out previously against Iraqi security forces and that some Al-Qaeda-linked groups have conducted on Shi'ite mosques. Those attacks have used car bombs or suicide bombers in explosive vests against nonarmored targets.

Meanwhile, the seizure of small arms from Iran in southern Iraq suggests continued Iranian support for Iraqi Shi'ite groups that forged close links with Tehran during the Saddam Hussein era.

These include two formerly exiled anti-Hussein groups that sheltered in Iran -- the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) and the Al-Da'wah Party. SCIRI’s militant wing, the Badr Brigades, was armed by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards to conduct guerrilla operations in Iraq against Hussein.

Both SCIRI and Al-Da'wah are today part of the U.S.-supported Iraqi government, but they are reported to maintain close ties with Iran.

Lindley says Iranian goals in Iraq appear to include pressing the U.S. military to leave Iraq without risking a war with Washington and trying to forge close ties with the emerging Iraqi government.

“It’s quite conceivable that what one is seeing is different parts [of the Iranian] government pursuing their own strategies with regard to Iraq. But it would seem quite credible that there is both a desire to prevent direct conflict with the United States over Iraq but to ensure that the government that does eventually emerge in Iraq is one that is pro-Iranian. Or if not pro-Iranian, at least resolves Iran’s continual security problems with Iraq,” Lindley said.

Iran and Iraq fought an eight-year war in the 1980s and have yet to sign a full peace treaty. But relations have greatly improved since Iraqi Shi'ite politician Ibrahim al-Ja'fari became Iraq’s transitional prime minister in April.

In recent months, the two sides have discussed construction of a multimillion-dollar airport near the Shi'ite holy city of Al-Najaf in southern Iraq. The project would be largely financed by a low-interest loan from Iran.

They have also announced plans to build an oil pipeline between Al-Basrah and Abadan, in Iran; the possible return of some of the 153 civilian and military aircraft that Saddam Hussein sent for storage in Iran during the early days of the 1991 Gulf War; and an Iranian offer of military cooperation, including training Iraqi armed forces.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 15:17 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [11 views] Top|| File under:

#1  My answer to this is simple, load up every Iranian bomb we confiscate and send them back to Iran.

Posted by: Sloluper Jaick1158 || 08/10/2005 16:05 Comments || Top||

#2  It's important that all the explosives we send back be accurately delivered to the responsible personnel.

I think we should attached appropriate guidance systems to those explosives to ensure that they are appropriately directed to the responsible parties.
Posted by: Leigh || 08/10/2005 16:35 Comments || Top||

#3  Return to sender,
Address unknown.

Posted by: Jackal || 08/10/2005 22:06 Comments || Top||


Iraq IEDs clearly from Iran - Rummy
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said Tuesday that weapons recently confiscated in Iraq were "clearly, unambiguously from Iran" and admonished Tehran for allowing the explosives to cross the border.

Iran's defense minister denied the claims in a report carried by the state-run news agency IRNA.

According to Ali Shamkhani, Iran is playing no role in Iraqi affairs, including "its alleged involvement in bomb explosions."

The shipment of sophisticated bombs was confiscated in the past two weeks by U.S. and Iraqi troops in southern Iraq, senior U.S. officials said Monday.

Although he would not comment on whether the Iranian government was directly involved, Rumsfeld said, "it's notably unhelpful for the Iranians to be allowing weapons of those types to be crossing the border."

"What you do know of certain knowledge is the Iranians did not stop it from coming in," he said.

Rumsfeld said the weapons create problems for the Iraqi government, coalition forces and the international community.

"And ultimately, it's a problem for Iran," he added.

When asked if that was a threat of possible retaliation, Rumsfeld replied, "I don't imply threats. You know that."

"They (the Iranians) live in the neighborhood. The people in that region want this situation stabilized with the exception of Iran and Syria," he said.

The U.S. officials said the weapons were more lethal and more sophisticated than the bombs typically used by Iraqi insurgents.

After examining the truckload of weapons, intelligence analysts said the explosive parts are similar to those used by Iran's Revolutionary Guard.

While there is no evidence Iran's government sanctioned the weapons shipment, the analysts said it may indicate a rogue element inside Iran is making the weapons and trying to ship them to Iraq's insurgents.

Troops found the bombs inside crates seized near a border crossing on the Iraqi side, the officials said.

Three senior U.S. officials told CNN the weapons were made in such a way that their blast would have been focused in a single direction, thereby increasing their lethality.

One official said the shipment included "tens" of bombs.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 15:15 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1 
Paraphrasing...
"I know what you're thinking.... But being as ... we have the most powerful army in the world, and we could blow your head clean off, you've got to ask yourself one question: Do I feel lucky? Well, do ya punk?"


Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 15:35 Comments || Top||

#2  "And ultimately, it's a problem for Iran," he added.

Lol! I think Rummy's bucking for British citizenship. That's about as understated and dry as a human can get, heh. Heads up, MM's, that was your subtle cue to grab a clue.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 15:45 Comments || Top||


Africa: North
GSPC gearing up for major attack
Algerian police are on high alert over the threat of an attack by the al-Qaeda aligned militant Salafite Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC) - possibly on the capital, Algiers, itself, the pan-Arab daily Al-Sharq Al-Awsat reported on Monday. The number of GSPC incursions in Algeria have increased recently, especially in provinces to the east of the capital, the paper said.

New military units have been deployed to the area around Boumerdes, 45 kilometres east of Algiers, believed to be the militants' stronghold, where the Algerian army has suffered its worst losses. The newly deployed Algerian troops are especially keen to rout the Dals group, a small formation Algerian intelligence reckons to contain some 30 militants, led and trained by Yhaya Abu al-Haytham. The group is notorious for its rapid and deadly military actions during which the guerrillas split into two smaller more 'agile' groups.

Haytham has been fighting in the area for 10 years. Military experts say he knows the terrain around Boumerdes and the various hiding places intimately. He is very close to Hasan Hattab, the GSPC founder and former leader. So far, 19 militants from the Dals group have been captured and sentenced to death.

Although militant attacks have decreased in Algeria in recent years, and have been sporadic over the past twelve months, they have never entirely ceased. In June, the GSPC claimed responsibility for an attack on a military base in northeastern Mauritania, close to the border with Algeria, in which at least 15 soldiers were killed.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 15:11 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: Culture Wars
Short-fuse shootout: The Tale of Yosemite Sam
A quarrel between two firearms vendors at a Floyd County [ed.: Kentucky] flea market on Thursday allegedly led both men -- described as "good friends" -- to draw guns. Douglas Moore, 65, of Martin, who supports the war, shot and killed Harold Wayne Smith, 56, of Manchester, who opposed it, investigators said.
Proof that anti-war folks have lousy aim.
...the episode might mark the first death in the United States resulting from a dispute over the war.

Both Smith and Moore maintained gun-trading tables at the Bull Creek Trade Center near Prestonsburg, and witnesses said they began arguing over the war early Thursday morning.

One witness, Sam Hamman of Prestonsburg, told The Floyd County Times that the two men always carried guns and bickered frequently about the quality of guns, knives and the war.

"Harold was talking about the 14 people that were killed in Iraq the other day and Doug said that just as many people were killed on the highways here," Hamman told the paper.

Another witness, Chuck Newsome, said yesterday the Sept. 11 attacks also were included in the argument, which quickly escalated into an altercation and then to a kind of showdown in front of the market's snack stand.

After a scuffle, Newsome said he saw Smith stand beside the snack shed, pull a small pistol out of his pocket, cock the hammer and sounding much like Yosemite Sam say, "Now, you dog-blasted, ornery, no-accountvarmint! Come back here, ya card-carryin' commie! "I'm going to blow your ... brains out."

Witnesses said Moore responded, Dem's fightin' woids!" andpulled a .38-caliber pistol from his pocket.

"Doug was just quicker," Harold Hannah of Salyersville said.
Ouch! I knew I shoulda taken dat left toin at Albe-koi-kee!
Posted by: growler || 08/10/2005 15:06 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  DId I get that right? The anti-war guy pulled his gun first?
Posted by: Bobby || 08/10/2005 16:17 Comments || Top||

#2  Sounds like mutual combat and righteous self defense. Watch some wanker Democrat DA try this guy.
Posted by: Sock Puppet 0’ Doom || 08/10/2005 16:30 Comments || Top||

#3  So the Smith guy was a Conscientious Objector Arms Dealer?

Boggles. This fits into the "You just can't make shit this good up!" category.

Nice shooting, Doug.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 16:41 Comments || Top||

#4  Hmmm, the anti-war guy drew first.

That's an interesting twist:

"I like violence, it's war I can't stand!".
Posted by: Carl in N.H. || 08/10/2005 17:02 Comments || Top||

#5  I thought we lost a troll.....
Posted by: Shipman || 08/10/2005 17:54 Comments || Top||

#6  Agreed, .com. You couldn't make this stuff up if you tried. If anything, this serves as a lil' lite news in a day full of MM/nuke nonsense.
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 21:21 Comments || Top||

#7  Kentucky? Not likely there'll be prosecutions
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 21:27 Comments || Top||


Europe
Irish al-Qaeda fighters mentioned in propaganda tape
FIGHTERS from Ireland have joined al-Qaida in Afghanistan and took part in the downing of a helicopter that left 16 US troops dead, it was claimed yesterday.

A video shown on Arab television and also delivered to British Prime Minister Tony Blair claims the recruits from Ireland were part of a multinational force that took part in the attack and the ransacking of a US military base.

While a small number of militants living in Ireland are thought to have travelled to training camps in Pakistan, this is the first time it has been claimed that Irish people are directly involved in fighting within Afghanistan.

Part of the video was screened on Dubai-based al-Arabiya television channel and showed a man speaking in a pronounced British Midlands accent warning the "people of the West, don't be fooled by the lies of Blair and Bush".

The station's reporter, in a voiceover, said: "It is noteworthy that al-Qaida fighters from Britain, Ireland, France and Pakistan, in addition to Arabs, speak in the film before the military operation."

The British man, wielding an AK-47 and wearing a black balaclava and combat gear, proclaims he is a mujahedeen and speaks in English as he addresses a camera in the centre of woodland.

"Oh people of the West, don't be fooled by the lies of Blair and Bush that you are free nations, for the only freedom that you have is the freedom to be slaves of your whims and desires," he said.

Blurred video footage also shows the rocket attack on a Chinook helicopter which claimed the lives of 16 US Navy Seals in June.

A French-speaking fighter vows to "slit the throats of the Americans and the Jews" and makes a sawing motion with his hand.

It claims a group attached to al-Qaida were involved in what was called Operation Vanquishing the Cross. The attack, in the Kunar province, was the first involving a downed helicopter since March 2002.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 15:02 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  a man speaking in a pronounced British Midlands - The media is convinced its an Australian accent.
Posted by: phil_b || 08/10/2005 15:38 Comments || Top||

#2  I believe there are two different jihadis, one with a UK and another with an Australian accent.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 15:45 Comments || Top||

#3  I'm a pronounced British Midlander, I need to hear this. I'm also drunk. The title 'Irish Al Qaeda' is going to make some SAS men salivate.
Posted by: Howard UK || 08/10/2005 18:17 Comments || Top||

#4  'Irish Al Qaeda' : Do the women wear green burkas?
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 19:05 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
Lodi holy man tied back to Binny
The FBI is now drawing a link between their terror investigation in Lodi and Osama bin Laden. The government believes al Qaeda was trying to set up a school in Lodi to recruit terrorists. The accusations from the FBI came Tuesday morning during an immigration hearing for Shabbir Ahmed. He's the 39-year-old religious leader of the Lodi mosque -- one of five men connected to the mosque that have been arrested on immigration charges. Today the government drew links to all five and then to Osama bin Laden.

The FBI says it has information that two of the religious leaders at this Lodi mosque were acting as intermediaries for Osama bin Laden. Agents say Hamid Hayat and his father Umer Hayat confessed after being arrested in June. Agents say Hamid Hayat admitted attending a terrorist training camp in Pakistan and his father admitted financing his son's trip. And both named Shabbir Ahmed and Mohammed Adil Kahn and as part of the al qaeda chain of command. Shabbir Ahmed and Adil Kahn are both represented by defense attorney Saad Ahmad.
Saad Ahmad, defense attorney: "You know I just believe the government believes two men who lied to the FBI who are charged with lying to the FBI."
Saad Ahmad, defense attorney: "My clients said he made statements against the United States against the United States policy in Afghanistan but he was never against the United States but when he came to the U.S. he started liking it even more."
Hamid Hayat and his father are charged with lying to the FBI. Both at first denied any connection to terror training. Today, Shabbir Ahmed admitted to the court he did make speeches against the U.S. and may have encouraged Pakistanis to defend bin Laden, but that was four years ago in Pakistan. Defense attorney Ahmed said the most damaging evidence today came from the FBI organization chart showing a direct link from Osama bin Laden to a Taliban commander and then to Sabbir Ahmed and Muhammed Adil Kahn.

Lawyers for the government would not be interviewed, neither would the FBI. But in court today the lead agent said they have secretly taped conversations between several of the five men arrested in Lodi. Umer Hayat and his son are awaiting trial. Adil Kahn and his son have agreed to be deported. That should happen next week. Shabbir Ahmed wants to stay here and his immigration hearing is set for late October. Today, the judge decided to keep him in custody saying he considers Ahmed flight risk and a threat to the community. None of the five has ever been accused of terrorist crimes.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 14:59 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [13 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Adil Kahn and his son have agreed to be deported. That should happen next week.

Freaking unbelievable. Are the FBI and Justice all smoking dope in CA? Here you have the US leader (dare I say mastermind?) of Al Qaeda cells in the formative stage. So what do the feds do? Why send him back to Pakistan into the loving arms of his masters in Let, LeJ, ISI, and AQ, instead of having him finger the leaders of those organizations for arrest. Deportation? Pshaw. Gitmo and rubber truncheons are tailor made for scum such as Khan.

The only small consolation is that when the next islamist atrocity takes place because of the rank incompetence of these people we taxpayers pay to protect us, it will be in LA or SF and there will be a small chance these feds will get a clue in the final seconds before their office building crashes down on them.

As for deportation, deport the entire mosque congregation back to Pakistan. Consider it a prophylactic.
Posted by: ed || 08/10/2005 17:41 Comments || Top||

#2  there are many reasons why the FBI, etc send guys back to wherever. Let's see: 1)they are tired of feeding them in detention...........2) the FBI budget is not big enough to have him around......who knows....but believe me that the FBI, CIA, etc are not as stupid as they like to appear, right?
Posted by: Omaling Sleter7907 || 08/10/2005 20:35 Comments || Top||


Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Old IMU/IMT arms cache found
A large cache of weapons and munitions was discovered in the mountains of eastern Tajikistan, in an area formerly used by both opposition groups in the Tajik civil war and by guerrillas with connections to Al Qaeda. The cache, which includes anti-tank weapons, rocket launchers and other weapons, was discovered by the Interior Ministry in the Tavildara district, Interfax reported. Tajikistan, impoverished and corrupt, has been generally stable in recent years, but is a main route for drug smuggling from Afghanistan. The Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, a regional terrorist group that fought alongside the Taliban against the United States in 2001, used to be based in the area.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 14:58 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: WoT
Lodi investigation expanding
Newly obtained FBI documents allege that in addition to one man already in custody, six other Lodi-area residents may have attended terrorist training camps in Pakistan. The Sacramento Bee reported that Hamid Hayat and his father Umer Hayat contended in FBI documents that a half-dozen other men were trained in jihadi camps in Pakistan. The pair reportedly alleged that the men were recruited by Muhhammed Adil Khan and Shabbir Ahmed, two Pakistani imams involved with the Lodi Mosque. In FBI interviews, the Hayats alleged that the men took direction from Ahmed, the imam at the mosque. Over Ahmed was Adil Khan, who followed the orders of the terrorist training camp's operator Fazlur Rehman. He is reportedly a follower of Osama bin Laden.
I'm guessing that they're referring to Fazlur Rehman Khalil, rather than to Mullah Diesel. Fat Fazl would take great care to avoid any overt connection with a camp, much less running one, he being on the legit side of things and all.
According to the documents, the elder Hayat told investigators the camp attendees were taught to target U.S. financial institutions and government buildings. He reportedly identified the men but they were not identified in the Bee report. The FBI and United States Attorney's Office issued a joint statement Friday afternoon saying they could not comment on the ongoing investigation.

In Pakistan, Adil Khan was a teacher and administrator at a large jihadi school in Karachi. He moved to Lodi in early 2001 to serve as imam at the mosque and to start a school and Islamic center. In 2002 he recruited Ahmed to take over as the mosque's imam while he concentrated on the school. Adil Khan and Ahmed are being held on alleged immigration law violations. The attorneys for the two men deny their clients' involvement in terrorist activities.
"Nope. Nope. Wudn't them."
The younger Hayat allegedly confessed to federal interrogators that he attended a Pakistani terrorist training camp run by al-Qaeda in 2003 and 2004.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 14:57 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I think this deserves a surprise meter pegged low.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 08/10/2005 16:01 Comments || Top||

#2  It almost seems like one gargatuan spider web. Pull on one part, and almost every other part seems to move to a degree.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 08/10/2005 16:53 Comments || Top||

#3  Isn't it wonderful, BaR? Shke the web hard enough and all the spiders fall out! ;-)
Posted by: trailing wife || 08/10/2005 19:36 Comments || Top||

#4  Of course, it might work better if you shake it.
Posted by: trailing wife || 08/10/2005 19:37 Comments || Top||

#5  Oh my,
stuck in Lodi
again...
Posted by: Dead Jerry || 08/10/2005 20:13 Comments || Top||


Down Under
More on the Aussie al-Qaeda member
THE Aussie accent is as distinct and as portentious as the threats the demented, black-robed, AK-47-carrying terrorist is screaming against the West.

"The Muslim world is not your backyard," he shrieks.

"The honourable sons of Islam will not let you kill our sons. It is time for us to be equals. As you kill, you will be killed. As you bomb, you will be bombed."

Apart from a slight tonal inflection which would indicate that the speaker is from an immigrant community within Australia, the impassioned words could be those which renegade Adelaide Taliban fighter David Hicks wrote to his parents of his desire to see Islam conquer the world.

Not surprising, really, since Hicks was an enthusiastic convert to al-Qaeda's bloody philosophy of Islamic world domination.

"Pakistan, Kashmir and Afghanistan [will] join together in a true Islamic state. The Islamic state is nearly completed," he wrote in a letter to his parents.

"As a Muslim, I believe in destiny. I will always fight for the truth, Islam."

And on al-Qaeda's video, Hick's doppelganger, his features covered in a black balaclava, howls: "The animals under Islam will not just let you kill our families in Palestine, Afghanistan, Kashmir and the Balkans, Indonesia, the Caucasus and elsewhere.

"Oh people of the West, don't be fooled by the lies of Blair and Bush that you are free nations, for the only freedom that you have is the freedom to be slaves of your whims and desires."

The image of the shrouded terrorist appears in a three-part two-hour al-Qaeda recruitment video titled The War of the Oppressed People, sections of which have been aired by Dubai's al Arabiya television network.

It includes blurry footage purporting to show a rocket attack on a US Chinook helicopter in which 16 Americans were killed in June, a wounded US serviceman and a US laptop computer, and the planting of a roadside bomb which killed an Afghan security chief.

It also seems to show al-Qaeda terrorists examining weapons and preparing bombs packed with bolts in Afghanistan, before attending a briefing by an instructor on "Operation to Defeat the Crucifix", a campaign targeting US and allied forces.

Senior al-Qaeda figure Abd al-Hadi al-Iraqi is featured warning that the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have created "two fronts" for recruiting terrorists to the cause of Hicks' heroes, Osama bin Laden and Taliban leader Mullah Omar, and a Pakistani recruit says: "If this is terrorism and fundamentalism, then OK, we are terrorists and fundamentalists."

Which seems to undermine the argument put forward by Hicks' civil libertarian lawyers and anti-Western supporters that he was just a well-meaning dope who strayed into bad company.

The film is subtitled in Arabic, with interviews in English, French, Pashto and Urdu, as well as Arabic spoken with Yemeni, Saudi and Iraqi accents, according to linguistic experts. Its evil doctrine needs no translating, however. It is the doctrine that Hicks says he was destined to fight for, and if necessary, die for.

Perhaps he even knows the Australian-accented terrorist who wants to extend the terrorist campaign against innocent men, women and children.

In recent weeks The Daily Telegraph has revealed that bookshops associated with radical Muslim groups in Sydney and Melbourne peddle books filled with anti-Western, anti-Semitic hate. Perhaps the masked terrorist began his journey to Afghanistan fuelled by the poisonous lies contained in such garbage?

Or perhaps he was a student of the self-styled clerics and leaders like Australian-born Muslim Wassim Doureihi from the extremist Islamist organisation Hizb ut-Tahrir, who have called for the defeat of Western civilisation and its replacement with a medieval theocracy, a religious government under which women are subjugated, homosexuals and adulterers are put to death, and thieves mutilated?

But whoever he is, it is a fair bet to suggest that he doesn't care that al-Qaeda has killed more innocent Muslims than Christians since it began its campaign of global terror, or that the Islamic nations are gradually moving away from the feudal fundamentalism he represents.

He may, like Hicks, find some sympathy among the Lunar Left and the skinheads of the Ultra-Right, but won't win any from decent Australians of any religion concerned about maintaining a law-abiding liberal democracy for their children to inherit.

Just as Hicks has condemned himself by his words and deeds, so too has the anonymous braggard behind the balaclava identified himself with al-Qaeda's nihilistic Islamist death cult.

Moderate Muslims must disown these monsters and their particular perverse stream of Islam and the fifth column apologists for such evil-doers should join them in branding all those who proclaim their support for terror as outlaws.

Those within Australia who encouraged Hicks and his Aussie-accented brother-in-blood to take the path of violence and terror must be hunted and captured with the same energy used by allied troops in Iraq and Afghanistan to restore peace in those nations.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 14:55 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: WoT
Are terrorist cells still in the US?
New charges that a Maryland paramedic gave "material support" to terrorists raise anew troubling questions for post-9/11 America.

Do extremist cells still exist in the United States? If they do, how much progress is being made to route them out?

The homegrown nature of the July attacks in London as well as the arrest of a man in Zambia on charges that he'd tried to set up a terrorist training camp in Bly, Ore. in 1999, gives the questions extra salience, according to terrorism experts.

Their assessments of the law enforcement's success rate are mixed. Critics note that most of the suspected terrorists arrested in the US so far were not engaged in any active plan to harm the US. Some, like the newly charged paramedic Mahmud Faruq Brent, had allegedly gone for training in camps in Afghanistan or Pakistan, but mostly they were caught bragging to undercover agents - who openly encouraged them - about their willingness to engage in jihad.

At the same time, analysts point out that the nature of Al Qaeda has changed so much in the light of aggressive law enforcement tactics since 9/11 that the traditional "sleeper cell" model may no longer be attractive to al Qaeda here in the US. As a result, capturing potential terrorists may be the best thing the FBI can be doing right now.

"Measured against [FBI director Robert] Mueller's very confident assertion that there are hundreds of individuals who are members of sleeper cells in the US, these arrests don't indicate to me that we are making progress," says Michael Greenberger, director of the Center for Health and Homeland Security at the University of Maryland. "At the same time, I sympathize with the need to nip terror in the bud and it may very well be that indictments that focus on proposed activities or bragging about future activities may be effective. But we also have to wait to see what the facts in each case were."

Martial-arts beginningBrent was arrested as a result of a sting operation. His former martial arts teacher, a jazz bassist from the Bronx named Tarik Shah, set up the encounter with the FBI shortly after he himself was arrested in May on charges that he gave material support to terrorists. Prior to 9/11, Mr. Shah had taught martial arts at a mosque in Beacon, N.Y. and Brent was one of his prize pupils.

Terrorism experts say that martial-arts training can be the first step in Al Qaeda's elaborate recruitment process. The most able and dedicated are singled out, invited to weekends that involve things like white water rafting - or as in the case of the Virginia Jihad Network, paintball battles in the woods. That creates bonding and allows recruiters to identify those that are especially aggressive or have leadership qualities and aids in indoctrination. Eventually, this process leads to the terrorist training camps in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

According to the indictment, Brent had ties to the Virginia Jihad Network, the leaders of which were convicted in March 2004 and are serving lengthy prison sentences. It was through them that Brent allegedly made his way to Pakistan to one of the terrorist training camps there.

Shortly after Brent's old friend and teacher Shah was arrested in another FBI sting, Shah turned informant and set up a meeting with Brent at a hotel in Maryland, according to the indictment. During the meeting, Shah indicated that he wanted to go overseas to a training camp, and Brent encouraged him. But Brent said it would be difficult to help him because his "only connect" was "doing time now." He also said in the post-9/11 climate it was hard to know whom to trust anymore. "We don't know who is who," the indictment quotes him as saying in a taped conversation. "We were not in a position to make new friends."

Experts say such comments indicate the success law enforcement has had in creating a "hostile operational environment" for any sleeper cell like the one responsible for the 9/11 attacks. And that has markedly changed Al Qaeda's style in the US.

"Not so many people are going back and forth between borders. They're avoiding communications that can be intercepted, exchanges of money that can be tracked," says Brian Jenkins, a senior terrorism expert at the RAND Corp. in Santa Monica, Calif. "All of these are dangerous."

But all this also makes them harder to detect.

The fact that neither Shah nor Brent were actively involved in any plans fuels critics' concern that the FBI is targeting "B" or "C" potential recruits while more dangerous sleeper cells may be lying in wait - those that are more careful about their new friends.

At the same time, experts note that federal authorities are under "great pressure to move in early and operate preventively or preemptively."

"That means that as opposed to waiting for full-fledged conspiracies, they may be picking up individuals when they are still in the early part of this [recruiting] trajectory. They may have only taken a few steps down the path," says Mr. Jenkins. "But if you're going to wait until there are mature terrorist plans, then that runs a risk. And in this post-9/11 environment, authorities are unwilling to take that risk."
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 14:54 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Do bears shit in the woods?
Posted by: Glolusing Flereth5459 || 08/10/2005 17:35 Comments || Top||


Down Under
Australian al-Qaeda member seen on latest propaganda tape
BRANDISHING an automatic rifle and vowing in a broad Australian accent to take revenge against the West, this man could be our latest homegrown terrorist.

ASIO officers were stunned when this balaclava-clad man appeared on Arab television yesterday threatening a bloody campaign against Western countries with troops inside Iraq.

He then boasted that his al-Qaeda comrades had brought down a US helicopter in Afghanistan in June, killing 16 troops.

"It is time for us to be equals. As you kill us, you'll be killed. As you bomb us, you will be bombed," the heavily-armed young man said in what seemed to be an Australian accent.

A crack team of intelligence agents was last night working on the ground in the Middle East, scanning the video footage for clues. While the tape could be an elaborate hoax, they are treating

it as genuine until proved otherwise. The video was broadcast on the Dubai-based network Al-Arabiya and warned British Prime Minister Tony Blair and US President George W. Bush to remove troops from Iraq or face further attacks from Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda.

Deliberately switching between a London cockney and Australian accent, the man appeared determined to disguise his origins.

But language experts yesterday told The Daily Telegraph the man probably spent part of his childhood in Australia and it was more likely his British accent was fake.

"From listening to this man speak, it's clear he has spent quite a bit of his youth in Australia," Dr Felicity Cox from Macquarie University said.

A spokeswoman for Attorney-General Philip Ruddock said the video was being treated seriously and copies had been passed on to ASIO.

"We've been advised that ASIO is looking at the footage very carefully and will keep us informed of any developments," the spokeswoman said.

Mr Ruddock's office said about 10,000 people from around the world poured into Afghanistan to fight alongside the Taliban in 2002 and "there was every possibility" some were Australians.

Adelaide man David Hicks trained alongside Taliban forces, while Mamdouh Habib has refused to explain why he was in Pakistan and Afghanistan before and just after the September 11 attacks in New York.

In a two-minute assault on Western values, the self-declared freedom fighter featured in the yesterday's video declared war on the perceived enemies of Islam.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 14:52 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:


Terror Networks & Islam
Al-Arabiya airs video of British, French al-Qaeda members
The Arabic television network Al-Arabiya aired a videotape purportedly by Al Qaeda (search) that shows terrorists training for attacks on the United States and on coalition troops in the mountains of Afghanistan.

U.S. intelligence officials believe the tape is authentic. The two-hour tape, which Al-Arabiya (search) described as a documentary and ran over the weekend, bears the name of Al Sahab productions – the production company used by Al Qaeda for numerous other videos.

In the tape, terrorists are seen in classroom settings, planning attacks, building bombs and training for ambushes. It’s subtitled in Arabic but carries interviews in English, French, Pashtu, Urdu and Arabic spoken with Yemeni, Saudi and Iraqi accents. English-speaking members address people in the West directly.

A British- or Australian-accented man wearing a black robe, AK-47 and military-style vest, warns Westerners of "the lies of Blair and Bush."

"The Muslim world is not your backyard," he yells. "The honorable sons of Islam will not let you kill our sons. It is time for us to be equals. As you kill, you will be killed. As you bomb, you will be bombed."

U.S. intelligence officials said the tape is the latest in a long list of efforts to recruit and promote for Al Qaeda on the Web and over the airwaves. An Al-Arabiya official said the network received the tape last week but he would not say how or where it was delivered.

A British member of Parliament blasted Al Arabiya for keeping its sources quiet, especially after London was targeted by terrorists twice recently – on July 7, when four bombs exploded on the city’s subways and a bus, killing 56 people; and again on July 21, when another series of four bombs failed to detonate. Al Qaeda did not take responsibility for the attacks.

“This has nothing to do with Islam,” Lord John Taylor (search), told FOX News. “They’re not martyrs. They’re murderers.”

The three-part video, titled "The War of the Oppressed People," depicts what appears to be a few months in the lives of a group of fighters in wilderness camps in the Afghan mountains.

The men cook tea over campfires and kneel in prayer under the open skies, then duck into a makeshift classroom where an instructor outlines the coming "Operation to Defeat the Crucifix" against U.S. and allied forces.

In one scene, the tape claims Al Qaeda was responsible for shooting down a U.S. Chinook helicopter, killing all 16 American troops on board.

The tape features an appearance by top-ranking Al Qaeda member Abd al-Hadi al-Iraqi, as well as shots of a U.S. Air Force A-10 jet making bombing runs on a mountainside, and a close-up of a U.S. soldier quivering face down on the ground.

Al-Iraqi, speaking with a scarf hiding his face, says the U.S.-led wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have created "two fronts" for recruiting terrorists to the cause of Usama bin Laden (search) and Taliban leader Mullah Omar (search).

"Now all the world is united behind Mullah Omar and Sheik Usama," he says.

The program includes interviews with bearded fighters claiming they are avenging the killing of Muslims by the U.S., Britain, Israel and India.

"If this is terrorism and fundamentalism, then OK, we are terrorists and fundamentalists," a Pakistani man who identifies himself as Bilal says in Urdu.

One grisly segment shows a dead soldier lying face up, his bearded face caked in blood. The soldier, perhaps an Afghani, is dressed in green camouflage fatigues with a red shoulder patch. The insurgents display his rifle, an American M-16.

In another scene, a group of bombmakers slices white bricks of plastic explosive, packing them into cooking oil cans along with heavy steel bolts and gobs of glue.

Green-hued night footage shows the men digging holes at the roadside and planting the bombs.

Later, shaky footage follows a blue SUV as it travels along a remote dirt road. Text on the bottom of the screen says the car is carrying the head of security for Afghanistan's Kunar province.

Without warning the vehicle is ripped apart in a giant fireball. The attack appears to depict the June 28 roadside bombing that killed a district police chief and two other officers.

Yet another scene pans across a cache of captured U.S. gear, including a laptop, an M-16, military radios, a global positioning satellite display and the Department of Defense ID card of slain Navy SEAL Danny Phillip Dietz Jr.

Dietz, 25, of Littleton, Colo., was killed June 28 after his four-man reconnaissance team came under attack in Kunar province. The Chinook helicopter was downed and the 16 troops killed as the craft was on its way to aid Dietz, killing all aboard.

An insurgent is shown going through the laptop's hard drive, zooming in on a U.S. military document marked "For Official Use Only" and a map of Kabul marked with the locations of the U.S. and British embassies.

The film is subtitled in Arabic, but carries interviews in English, French, Pashto and Urdu, as well as Arabic spoken with Yemeni, Saudi and Iraqi accents.

Baker Atyani, Al-Arabiya's Asia bureau chief, said the network received the tape last week, but would not say how or where it was delivered.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 14:47 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The program includes interviews with bearded fighters claiming they are avenging the killing of Muslims by the U.S., Britain, Israel and India.

I'll bet you that Indian PM Singh took a note of the company he was included with...

How times have changed...
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 15:47 Comments || Top||


Iraq-Jordan
US sez Iran allowing weapons into Iraq
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld accused Iran yesterday of allowing weapons to be exported to insurgents in Iraq who use them to kill U.S. troops, coalition forces and civilians.

"It is true that weapons, clearly, unambiguously, from Iran have been found in Iraq," Mr. Rumsfeld said in one of his sharpest attacks on the hard-line Islamic regime in Tehran. "It's notably unhelpful for the Iranians to be allowing weapons of those types to cross the border."

Commanders have said they have seen evidence that deadly improvised explosive devices (IEDs), the chief killer of Americans and allied Iraqis, were assembled in Iran.

Commanders have stopped short of accusing Tehran of funding the bomb making. But Mr. Rumsfeld went a step further yesterday at a Pentagon press conference, saying Iran was "allowing" weapons to enter Iraq.

"It's a problem for the Iraqi government," Mr. Rumsfeld said. "It's a problem for the coalition forces. It's a problem for the international community. And, ultimately, it's a problem for Iran."

Syria has received most of Washington's wrath for allowing foreign fighters and suicide bombers by the hundreds to pass through Damascus, get training, financing and passports, and then slip into Iraq.

In an interview with The Washington Times last year, Mr. Rumsfeld said Iran was funneling people and money into Iraq to try to influence the political process.

The Times previously reported that Iran's Revolutionary Guard, the regime's ideological enforcer, pumped cash into southern Iraq to aid extremist Shi'ites who support turning Iraq into a theocracy, just like Iran.

On the overall war, Mr. Rumsfeld and Gen. Richard B. Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, continued to be generally upbeat on Iraq's political progress, but tight-lipped on when the U.S. can turn over all counterinsurgency missions to the 178,000-strong Iraqi security forces.

Gen. Myers said that, while the political process may convince Sunni insurgents to stop fighting and join the new Iraq, it will not stop al Qaeda-linked terror leader Abu Musab Zarqawi.

"There is one that will not be deterred, and that's the al Qaeda piece, the Zarqawi piece," Gen. Myers said.

Mr. Rumsfeld said: "Dick Myers said Zarqawi's not going to give up. That's what he does. He gets up in the morning and wants to recruit people and arm them and finance them and kill people, preferably anybody he can get his hands on. ... That's what he does. He isn't going to give up."
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 14:47 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Your tax dollars at work! Now, after more than two years of this BS, Rummy see an Iranian connection? My eyes are wide shut!
Posted by: Glolusing Flereth5459 || 08/10/2005 17:36 Comments || Top||

#2  You don't seriously believe Rummy wasn't aware of this before now, do you? That he has irrefutable evidence in hand to publicly prove it, now, is why the MSM has suddenly shown interest in publicizing the issue. Just cuz they're not running the stories doesn't mean anything - I saw him interviewed by Brett Baeir on Fox TV twice (the first was about a year ago, IIRC) and he said much the same back then as now.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 17:44 Comments || Top||


Southeast Asia
16 hurt in Zamboanga blasts
At least 16 people were injured in the southern port city of Zamboanga after two bombs believed planted by Abu Sayyaf terrorists exploded late Wednesday.

The first bomb, planted under a parked mini-van in downtown Zamboanga, exploded around 7:20 p.m., wounding four civilians. The powerful blast destroyed the van completely and damaged two small buildings nearby.

A second explosion ripped through the second floor of another building just 50 meters away from the main police headquarters in the busy business district. At least a dozen people were wounded in the blast, but independent sources said the casualty toll could be higher.

Other reports said as much as two dozens were injured in the twin bombings blamed by authorities on the al-Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf group. Witnesses said they saw a cloud of black smoke billowed from the second floor of the damaged building.

The blast tore through the second floor that houses the St. Anne's budget motel. Below the motel was a Chinese fastfood restaurant Chowking and several smaller shops that were also destroyed by the explosion.

Bomb experts sift through the debris, searching for clues on what kind of explosives were used in the attacks.

Paramedics rescued trapped and wounded motel guests from the second floor. The facade of the building was destroyed.

Shattered glass and twisted metals and debris littered the streets.

The shock waves from the explosions destroyed display windows of several shops around the blast scenes. Fear gripped many civilians who were rushing to their homes at the time of the explosions.

Some 100 soldiers and policemen, backed by armored vehicles, secured downtown Zamboanga until security officials declared it was safe.

Last week, security forces in Zamboanga City arrested Abu Sayyaf bomb maker Alex Alvarez, blamed for the series of bombings since 2002 that killed dozens of people, including a US soldier participating in an anti-terror training with Filipino troops.

Authorities suspect the attacks were in retaliation for his arrest.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 14:45 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:


Iraq-Jordan
Al-Qaeda releases video of "Top 10" attacks on US in Iraq
A video showing a so-called "Top Ten" of bloody attacks against US forces in Iraq that were claimed by Al-Qaeda-linked groups appeared on an Islamist web site Wednesday.

The 17-minute video is aimed at "those who like to see American crusader blood flowing," said the group calling itself the Islam Media Front which said it posted the footage.

One segment shows American soldiers' bodies torn to pieces in an attack near the Syrian border that was claimed by the Al-Qaeda Organisation in the Land of Two Rivers (Iraq), the group of Iraq's most wanted man Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.

Another shows a US helicopter that was shot down and reduced to shreds of metal by a group calling itself the Islamic Army of Iraq.

Yet another scene shows seven US soldiers whose bodies were pulverised in a landmine explosion, before other US soldiers come to collect their remains.

The scenes are backed by an audiotrack of Koranic chants, war cries and calls of "Allahu Akhbar" (God is Greatest).

The makers of the video call on their sympathisers to "spread the video on foreign forums so that Americans will be ashamed of themselves at the weakness of their army."

Al-Qaeda-linked groups regularly use web sites to distribute shocking footage of kidnappings and slayings as a tactic to increase the psychological impact of their attacks.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 14:44 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "spread the video on foreign forums so that Americans will be ashamed of themselves at the weakness of their army."

To make our Army stonger, we need to follow allen and blow up children? Or would it help to use mentally disabled folks and canines to self-destruct? Mebbe we just all need frontal lobotomies?

Eat sh*t, three meals a day, and live forever. In hell, that is.
Posted by: Bobby || 08/10/2005 15:18 Comments || Top||

#2  That's it! Calling for all video of C-130's bombing the jihadis, any on the ground video of us shooting it up with the jihadis (even in mosques), etc. These goons need to be taught a lesson. Let's get Michael Yon a video camera to film our guys in their next staged roadside bombing shooting up the jihadis who come to celebrate (w/ AK-47s in tow, no less)! Maybe we could set up a separate section (a'la Thugburg) w/ links to any US videos there may be out there (I'm sure Fred doesn't wanna host video himself, so we could just collect links).
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 15:22 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
Lodi men indicted in al-Qaeda investigation
A federal grand jury has handed up indictments against a Lodi father and his son accused of having ties to the terrorist group al-Qaeda.

Hamid Hayat, 22, is charged with two of counts of lying to a federal agent according to court documents. Each count carries a potential penalty of eight years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Hayat's father Umer, is charged with one count of lying to a federal agent.

Hamid Hayat allegedly confessed to federal interrogators a week and a half ago that he received training at a Pakistani terrorist training camp run by al-Qaeda in 2003 and 2004.

Hayat's father is accused of lying to investigators about his son's activities. The FBI believes Umer Hayat, 47, gave his son $100 a month while the younger man was allegedly in Pakistan at a terrorist training camp. Last week federal Judge Peter Nowinski denied bail
to both defendants.

According to an FBI affidavit, the investigation into Hamid Hayat began on May 29, when he flew from Pakistan to San Francisco. After the plane left South Korea, it was discovered Hayat was on the federal government's "No Fly" list.

The plane was diverted to Tokyo. An FBI agent interviewed Hayat and he was moved to the "Selectee List" which allowed him to continue his trip to the U.S.

After Hayat arrived in the U.S. he was interviewed Friday by the FBI at the bureau's Sacramento office. Documents allege he initially denied attending terrorist training camps. A lie detector test indicated deception and after two more hours of questioning, investigators say he admitted to attending a Jihadist terrorist camp for six months from 2003-04. While there he allegedly received training in the use of weapons and explosives.

Three other Lodi men have also been arrested in connection with the investigation. Muhammed Adil Khan, 47; his son Mohammad Hassan Adil, 19; and Shabbir Ahmed, 42, are charged with immigration violations.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 14:43 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:


Afghanistan/South Asia
Bin Yousaf had Euro maps on his labtop
The alleged al-Qaeda operative who was arrested in Pakistan on Sunday had in his laptop, maps of cities in Italy and Germany. According to Pakistani intelligence sources, Osama bin Yousaf, 33, confessed on Tuesday to his participation within the al-Qaeda terrorist network and maps of Italy, Germany, Pakistan and Britain were also found in his home. According to the Pakistani newspaper, The Daily Times, bin Yousaf is also said to have been in contact with al-Qaeda operatives in Pakistan and Europe.

“Bin Yousaf confessed to being part of the al-Qaeda network and to have provided logistic support to militants,” according to officials quoted in the Daily Times. The intelligence officials also said that his cell phone numbers were found in the telephone index of Abu Faraj al-Libbi’s - a senior al-Qaeda leader who was arrested in Pakistan in May - after which American and Pakistani intelligence agencies put him on their watch list.

Bin Yousaf was arrested after the authorities in Pakistan tracked phone calls made by him from several locations around Pakistan to Italy, Germany and Britain.

“He called someone in the UK on Thursday, called someone else in Italy on Friday and made two long phone calls to somebody in Germany on Saturday,” said the officials quoted in the daily. Through the calls the police managed to track his location and eventually arrested bin Yousaf in Faisalabad, a city 350 kilometres from the Pakistani capital Islamabad.

During his interrogation, bin Yousaf described how he had travelled to Afghanistan in 1992 where he received guerrilla training and was injured in fighting a year later after which he returned to Pakistan. He travelled back to Afghanistan in 1995 where he was introduced to al-Qaeda leaders. Intelligence officials in Pakistan have described bin Yousaf as being a close aide of al-Libbi and Amjad Hussain Farooqi, the, who was killed by pakistani security forces in September 2004.

In addition to the maps, officials also found, three credit cards, a computer, dozens of CDs, three grenades, two AK-47s and hundreds of bullets in bin Yousaf's possession.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 14:41 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  In addition to the maps, officials also found, three credit cards, a computer, dozens of CDs, three grenades, two AK-47s and hundreds of bullets in bin Yousaf's possession.

You know a man could have a purdy good time in Karachi with all this stuff.
Posted by: Shipman || 08/10/2005 16:33 Comments || Top||

#2  Let us not be so suspicious {Wink} Bin Yousaf might have just had a yen for a BigMac!

Map From my paternal grandfather's hometown to a McDonald's in Exeter, Devonshire, England... The nearest city to where my mother's side of the family came from.... Easily available on the web...
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 19:35 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
9/11 commission to look into Pentagon claims
The Sept. 11 commission will investigate a claim that U.S. defense intelligence officials identified ringleader Mohamed Atta and three other hijackers as a likely part of an Al Qaeda cell more than a year before the hijackings but didn't forward the information to law enforcement.

Rep. Curt Weldon (R-Pa.), vice chairman of the House Armed Services and Homeland Security committees, said Tuesday that the men were identified in 1999 by a military intelligence unit known as Able Danger. If true, it's an earlier link to Al Qaeda than any previously disclosed intelligence about Atta.

Sept. 11 commission Vice Chairman Lee H. Hamilton said Tuesday that Weldon's information, which the congressman said came from multiple intelligence sources, warranted a review. He said he hoped the panel could issue a statement on its findings by the end of the week.

"The 9/11 commission did not learn of any U.S. government knowledge prior to 9/11 of surveillance of Mohamed Atta or of his cell," Hamilton said. "Had we learned of it, obviously it would've been a major focus of our investigation."
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 14:41 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  It's called defensiveness. These worthless ashholes refuse to go away, clinging to their 15 minutes of fame (disgrace is more like it).

Get lost. You commissioners have already demonstrated the Peter Principle in detail.
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 18:33 Comments || Top||

#2  Jamie Gorelick? Any comment? She was the one that held the wall against info cooperation among agencies. She should've been testifying instead of on the panel. Perhaps Sandy Burglar can take her place?
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 19:56 Comments || Top||

#3  Michael Savage's entire show today devoted to this story. 2nd hour is interview with Jacob Goodwin, who broke story

Will be repeated at 6pm pst MichaelSavage
Posted by: Bernie || 08/10/2005 20:34 Comments || Top||

#4  Why Sandy Berger stuffed his underwear & socks Able Danger?
Posted by: Bernie || 08/10/2005 20:48 Comments || Top||


Terror Networks & Islam
Global terrorism — The Pakistan-Saudi Arabia nexus
There is no dearth of evidence that Pakistan and Saudi Arabia are partners in global terrorism. Mosques and jehadi-oriented madrassas in both countries spout anti-Western venom. Terrorist groups such as the Lashkar-e-Taiba have links in Saudi Arabia. There are reports of extensive nuclear cooperation between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia since 1994. Hopefully, says G. Parthasarathy, the new Saudi monarch, King Abdullah, will avoid the path of sponsoring terror abroad.
Posted by: john || 08/10/2005 14:41 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  This demands a MASTER OF THE OBVIOUS cartoon!
Posted by: Glolusing Flereth5459 || 08/10/2005 17:32 Comments || Top||


Europe
Turks jug al-Qaeda leader
Turkish police have detained a suspected al Qaeda militant from Syria who they believe was organizing an attack on Israeli targets in Turkey, security sources said on Wednesday. The suspect, believed to be the top figure in Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda network in Turkey, was apprehended in the southeastern city of Diyarbakir on Sunday as he attempted to board a plane for Istanbul, the sources said. The suspected militant, identified as Syrian national "Luia Sakra," was due to appear in an Istanbul court on Thursday, courthouse sources said.
"Ever been in a Turkish prison, Louie?"
Judges on Wednesday ordered the arrest of another Syrian national brought to the court on charges he is Sakra's courier, the sources said. Police earlier on Wednesday denied news reports that at least 10 al Qaeda-linked militants had been detained while planning attacks on foreign-flagged ships. "The news reports that al Qaeda members have been caught with C-4 explosives as they prepared attacks on several foreign ships in the southern provinces are completely wrong and ill-intentioned," police headquarters said in a statement.

Private news channel NTV said that the group was gathering information on synagogues in Turkey as well as on Israeli ships to prepare for attacks. It said the suspects were detained in Turkey's largest city of Istanbul and in the Mediterranean tourism hub of Antalya. The reports followed remarks by Israel's counter-terrorism chief who on Tuesday said Turkey had caught al Qaeda-linked militants who were planning attacks against foreign tourists. Israel this week diverted four cruise shops from Turkey to Cyprus and urged its citizens to avoid Turkey's popular southern coast, citing "concrete and grave terror threats" against them.

Security sources said Sakra, considered an expert bomb maker, had undergone plastic surgery and was attempting to fly to Istanbul under an assumed name for a second operation. He arrived in Diyarbakir from Antalya. Sakra is thought to be responsible for al Qaeda's cells in Turkey and to have played a key role in bombings in Istanbul in November 2003 that killed more than 60 people.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 14:39 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I wonder how a Turkish jail compares to Gitmo?

Hmmmm...
Posted by: Bobby || 08/10/2005 14:57 Comments || Top||

#2  Bobby : Do Turkish Prisons serve glazed chicken?
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 15:02 Comments || Top||

#3  There was a long article in the Stars and Stripes when I was in Germany the last time about Turkish prisons. You'd be better off being shoved into the trunk of a Volkswagen. The rats are as big as alley cats, the cockroaches are only slightly smaller, and the only place to empty body wastes is in a crack in the floor. You get a bucket of water twice a week to wash things down. Most cells are 4'x4'x6' tall, with a solid steel door and NO windows. Most Turkish prisoners would consider Guantanimo paradise on earth.
Posted by: Old Patriot || 08/10/2005 16:24 Comments || Top||

#4  Also, any naked man piles in the Turkish Prison system constitute R&R for the guard staff, not humiliation for interrogation, if you catch the drift.
Posted by: Shieldwolf || 08/10/2005 20:06 Comments || Top||

#5  "All those going to Istanbul, take one step forward!...Not so fast, Sakra."
Posted by: Spese Jains6227 || 08/10/2005 20:26 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
post tramatic slavery syndrome foils mayoral bid
Posted by: muck4doo || 08/10/2005 14:25 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The truely sad part is that there are still alive men who were POWs under the Japanese during WWII and did serve as slaves to Japanese companies engaged in war production.
Posted by: Thinemble Hupomotch7256 || 08/10/2005 15:57 Comments || Top||

#2  Gee, for a quality candidate like that the rules should be bent. Post traumatic slavery syndrome, what the fuck will they think of next.
Posted by: Sloluper Jaick1158 || 08/10/2005 16:09 Comments || Top||

#3  Seattle? Looks like a shoo in to me.
I'd just love to hear his platform...
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 16:42 Comments || Top||

#4  "I'd just love to hear his platform..."

A sure-fire winner in Seattle:

Meds for thee, but not for mee!
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 16:45 Comments || Top||

#5  King County prosecutors filed a challenge to Garrett's registration last week after questions were raised about his legal status. Under state law, candidates for public office must be legally registered voters.

The hearing was presided over by Dean Logan, director of the county elections office. Logan said he will issue a written ruling within a few days on Garrett's status as a voter. If Garrett's registration is revoked, county officials would move to have his name deleted from the ballot.


Notes: King County is the Washington State County which allowed felons (as in this case), illegals, the dead, and imaginary friends vote.

Dean Logan is the one who oversaw the last election for king county. Personally I wonder if he is able to count his own fingers twice and get the same result....
Posted by: CrazyFool || 08/10/2005 17:06 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan/South Asia
India Building A Military Satellite Reconnaissance System
Posted by: john || 08/10/2005 14:16 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:


Iraq-Jordan
Baghdad Mayor Is Ousted by a Shiite Group and Replaced
BAGHDAD, Iraq, Aug. 9 - Armed men entered Baghdad's municipal building during a blinding dust storm on Monday, deposed the city's mayor and installed a member of Iraq's most powerful Shiite militia.

An Iraqi walking through the aftermath of a suicide bombing in Baghdad that killed seven people and wounded at least 90.
The deposed mayor, Alaa al-Tamimi, who was not in his offices at the time, recounted the events in a telephone interview on Tuesday and called the move a municipal coup d'état. He added that he had gone into hiding for fear of his life.

"This is the new Iraq," said Mr. Tamimi, a secular engineer with no party affiliation. "They use force to achieve their goal."

(more at the link, maybe registration required)
Posted by: glenmore || 08/10/2005 12:59 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  ive seen elsewhere that the provincial govt wanted to oust this guy. The prov govt is dominated by Shiite religious parties, while the city mayor is a secularist. So its not quite the militia coup the NYT implies. Dont have a cite handy, though.
Posted by: Liberalhawk || 08/10/2005 14:10 Comments || Top||

#2  It could be possible, but the method to HOW it was done bothers me. Also, I don't know how Islamic this "militia" is.

The man the group installed, Hussein al-Tahaan, is a member of the Badr Organization, the armed militia of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq, known as Sciri.
Posted by: Anon4021 || 08/10/2005 14:17 Comments || Top||

#3  I'm not sure how much difference (if any) there is between Provincial Shia Religious parties and Shia militia.
I am curious about the motive - a power play on political/religious grounds, or an attempt to either remove, replace or install a corrupt official.
Posted by: glenmore || 08/10/2005 14:17 Comments || Top||

#4  If Iraq is actually to become a nation of laws, this cannot stand. Those who did it must be dealt with, summarily, or the Govt is a joke.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 14:20 Comments || Top||

#5 
.com If Iraq is actually to become a nation of laws

Then it would've become such a nation any time in the last 13 centuries.
Posted by: gromgoru || 08/10/2005 14:45 Comments || Top||

#6  Who are these bozos? Can we ignore them?
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 14:47 Comments || Top||

#7  I'll agree to "could've", but "would've" suggests they are incapable. Few here hold the Arabs in as much contempt as I do, but I ascribe that to a barbaric tribalist society and indoctrination by The Religion of Hate, not to some congenital condition. They certainly may waste this golden opportunity, but I believe we have to play it out and let them prove that case, themselves.

If this is, indeed, a Sadr action, then he just negated all of the stupid forgiveness he's enjoyed since the start of the war. Sitting with Jaafari just last week for the TV cameras and looking so chummy, pretending to be a civilized politician instead of a killer, thug, and agent of the MM's, this action will put Jaafari in a bind. That's good. Time for the blinders to come off and for Tater to be fried. That's what I hope this pointless act, and it should be obvious that it is pointless, leads to.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 15:05 Comments || Top||

#8  As far as I can tell, this is a case where the elected representatives of the region were trying to fire the manager hired by the previous, appointed representatives, and he was refusing to go. So they sent roughly twice as many goons as he had on his payroll to make sure he went this time.

1) Mayor of Baghdad isn't the same thing as an American mayor. Far as I can tell he's a glorified chief-of-staff for infrastructure and maintenance.
2) Most of these articles are quoting the offended party heavily, which suggests that all of these characterizations of al-Tamimi as "secularist" and his enemies as "religious" is al-Tamimi's own spin.
3) His own vice-Mayor was quoted in one of the articles as complaining that al-Tamimi had a hundred goons on his payroll, all hanging out around the offices.

In short, he's a Sunni holdout from the Governing Council days who was refusing to turn over his office to the new party. It all strikes me as about on the par with similar armed standoffs that periodically occur in the deeply corrupt Sioux reservations in the Dakotas. Not particularly appetizing, but I don't have to eat the resulting sausage.
Posted by: Mitch H. || 08/10/2005 15:27 Comments || Top||

#9  Mitch - Can you cite a source or two? You post puts an entirely different light on it - Thx! I did presume he was an elected official... my bad!
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 15:41 Comments || Top||

#10  Its a SCIRI thing, not Sadr.
SCIRI and Sadr are feuding in Sammawah down south too.
SCIRI and Dawa are the main Shiite alliance.
Posted by: buwaya || 08/10/2005 16:44 Comments || Top||

#11  If this is, indeed, a Sadr action, then he just negated all of the stupid forgiveness he's enjoyed since the start of the war.

Don't count on that. Unwarranted as it may be, there's plenty more stupid forgiveness for Sadr in reserve, all in the usual places.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 08/10/2005 17:25 Comments || Top||

#12  I was hoping that Jaafari would lose enough Arab "face" that he'd realize what a tool he his just because Sadr's a Shi'ite, but you're prolly right on the money. The sectarian Islamic BS is why I am not optimistic that Iraq the (Yugoslavia of the M.E.) will survive intact.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 17:31 Comments || Top||


Fifth Column
Vet: Kerry Pressured Me to Lie About Atrocities in 'Winter Soldier"
Vietnam veteran Steve Pitkin claims that John Kerry pressured him to lie in 1971 when he claimed U.S. soldiers engaged in atrocities during the Vietnam War. Pitkin had been a key participant in John Kerry’s infamous “Winter Soldier” hearings of the same year, which concluded that the U.S. military was allegedly engaging in war crimes against the Vietnamese. These days, Pitkin appears in the controversial anti-Kerry documentary “Stolen Honor: Wounds That Never Heal.” The film features a clip of Pitkin from another documentary film, "Winter Soldier." In that clip, the bearded and bandana-wearing Pitkin seems stunned and vague while being questioned by John Kerry in a preliminary interview – apparently overwhelmed over being asked to describe his combat tour.

Today, however, Pitkin discloses that his lack of candor in the 1971 film clip actually reflected his efforts to avoid giving Kerry what he so desperately wanted: war stories about how American troops in Vietnam were daily committing war crimes in a last-ditch attempt to turn the tide in that 10-year conflict. In the end, Pitkin said, he gave in to Kerry’s pressure and made up allegations of war crimes. "The VVAW [Vietnam Veterans Against the War] found me during a difficult time in my life, and I let them use me to advance their political agenda,” Pitkin now confesses. “They pressured me to tell their lies, but that's no excuse for what I did. I just want people to know the truth and to make amends as best I can. I'd hate to see the troops serving today have to go through what Vietnam veterans did."

During a speech at the Kerry Lied Rally on Sept. 12, 2004, Pitkin first identified himself as a vet who, with prodding from Kerry, lied about atrocities in Vietnam:“They knew I was one of the very few real combat veterans in the room. I told them I didn’t have anything to say. Kerry said, ‘Surely you’ve seen some of the atrocities.’ “I kept saying ‘no’ and the mood turned ugly. One of the other leaders whispered to me, ‘It’s a long walk back to Baltimore.’ I’m not proud of this, but I finally agreed to speak. They told me what to talk about – American troops beating civilians and prisoners, shelling and destroying villages for no reason, and acts of racism against the Vietnamese.
“John Kerry knew that the Winter Soldier testimony was a pack of lies. I know, because I was there, and I told some of those lies.”

In “Stolen Honor,” Col. Bud Day, a Medal of Honor winner who spent 67 months as a POW, and 16 other POWs of that war lambaste Kerry for creating the myth of brutal GIs terrorizing the countryside. “The thing about the Kerry comments in 1971 is that they were so sensational, so outrageous, that they were precisely the kind of thing that a propaganda expert and the news media were looking for ...,” Day said. “He has destroyed the good name of all Vietnam veterans. Now he wants us to forget. I can never forget.” In “Stolen Honor,” Day and the sixteen other POWs who served years in captivity while undergoing torture claimed that Kerry’s Winter Soldier hearings gave the North Vietnamese fodder for their attacks on the POWs and their desire to continue the war.

After years of living a lie, the turnabout by Pitkin is 180 degrees.
In 1971 he introduced himself before the “Winter Soldiers” investigative panel this way:
“My name is Steve Pitkin, age 20, from Baltimore. I served with the 9th Division from May of '69 until I was air-evacuated in July of '69. I'll testify about the beating of civilians and enemy personnel, destruction of villages, indiscriminate use of artillery, the general racism and the attitude of the American GI toward the Vietnamese. I will also talk about some of the problems of the GIs toward one another and the hassle with officers.”


Now, in a sworn affidavit recently executed in Palm Beach County, Fla., he has set the record straight:
“... During my service in Vietnam, I neither witnessed nor participated in any American war crimes or atrocities against civilians, nor was I ever aware of any such actions. I did witness the results of Vietcong atrocities against Vietnamese civilians, including the murder of tribal leaders. ...

“I joined Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW), at Catonsville Community College in Baltimore in 1970.

“In January of 1971, I rode in a van with John Kerry, a national leader of the VVAW, and others from Washington D.C. to Detroit to attend the Winter Soldier Investigation, a conference intended to publicize alleged American war crimes in Vietnam. Having no knowledge of such war crimes, I did not intend to speak at the event.

“During the Winter Soldier Investigation, John Kerry and other leaders of that event pressured me to testify about American war crimes, despite my repeated statements that I could not honestly do so. One event leader strongly implied that I would not be provided transportation back to my home in Baltimore, Maryland, if I failed to comply. Kerry and other leaders of the event instructed me to publicly state that I had witnessed incidents of rape, brutality, atrocities and racism, knowing that such statements would necessarily be untrue.”


In his affidavit, Pitkin also describes how John Kerry’s famous medal tossing in front of the U.S. Capitol was staged:
“In April 1971, I attended a VVAW protest in Washington D.C. known as ‘Dewey Canyon III.’ During this event I was present when protestors, including John Kerry, threw medals and ribbons over a fence outside the U.S. Capitol. I witnessed a man holding a bag of ribbons and medals and handing them out to other protestors. I saw that many of the ribbons and medals were not those that would be received by veterans of combat in Vietnam.”


Pitkin served with the Ninth Division of the U.S. Army beginning May 25, 1969. A mortar explosion wounded him and later the wounds became infected, resulting in his removal from the combat zone. During his tour he received the Combat Infantry Badge, Army Commendation Medal, RVN Cross of Gallantry, Air Medal and Purple Heart. He went on later in life to retire from the U.S. Coast Guard. NewsMax spoke to Scott Swett of SwiftVets.com and Wintersoldiers.com, who gave some background as to how Steve Pitkin surfaced after three decades. According to Swett, Pitkin placed a comment on the SwiftVets.com bulletin board about a month ago. Swett says it was he who followed up, interviewing Pitkin over the course of a couple of days.

Says Swett: “Pitkin is unique in a couple of ways. He is the only Winter Soldier investigation subject to come forward and under oath recant his testimony. Pitkin is furthermore the only investigation interviewee to return to the military. But most significantly, Pitkin was interviewed directly by Kerry himself on a segment called the ‘miscellaneous panel.’”
Posted by: Steve || 08/10/2005 12:21 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Just when the "Kerry 2008" campaign had achieved a critical mass of 10 potential voters.
Posted by: Matt || 08/10/2005 12:49 Comments || Top||

#2  Old news. Swift Vets had added a post-Unfit for Command chapter on their website last year detailing some of this guy's story. I'm glad it's still in the news though.
Posted by: Chris W. || 08/10/2005 13:23 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
President Bush Signs Transportation Bill at Caterpillar Factory
Proof that everything they say about the neocons and the Zionists is true. Loonbat Alert Meter just pegged out. Juan Cole, call your office.
Caterpillar Inc. today hosted President George W. Bush at the company's manufacturing facility in Montgomery, Illinois, where he signed HR3, the Transportation Equity Act, into law. The measure sets funding levels over the 2004-2009 time frame for critical infrastructure projects. "We are honored President Bush is signing this important legislation at our Montgomery location and that House Speaker Denny Hastert is with us today after working so hard to get this bill passed in Congress," said Jerry Palmer, Caterpillar vice president with responsibility for the Wheel Loaders and Excavators Division. "The wheel loaders and excavators made in Montgomery can be seen all around the country, working to build the roads, highways and bridges that are such a vital part of the American economy." Caterpillar's Montgomery operation is one the company's largest U.S. manufacturing facilities, and it is located in House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert's 14th Congressional District.
Posted by: Seafarious || 08/10/2005 12:03 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  For a minute there, I thought Bush signed it at the D9 Convention in Israel.
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 12:23 Comments || Top||

#2  "build the roads, highways and bridges"

He left out "pancakes."
Posted by: growler || 08/10/2005 12:41 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
Four-star General Relieved of Command
Followup. EFL.
Is this weird?
In a rare move, the Army relieved a four-star general [Gen. Kevin Byrnes] of his command amid allegations that he had an extramarital affair with a civilian, Army officials said Tuesday.

Byrnes, who several military sources said had a previously unblemished record, was set to retire in November after 36 years of service.

Byrnes' defense attorney, Lt. Col. David Robertson, said the allegation against Byrnes involves an affair with a private citizen. Byrnes has been separated from his wife since May 2004; their divorce was finalized on Monday, the same day he was relieved of command.

"The allegation against him does not involve a relationship with anyone within the military or even the federal government," Robertson said..."It does not involve anyone on active duty or a civilian in the Department of Defense."

So he's been separated, he's fixing to retire, he's a four-star general with an unblemished record, and his girlie isn't in the military or the DoD. Maybe it's not a girlie. This article from the Chicago Tribune mentions other offenses for which generals have been relieved. Still, this seems excessive, especially if they aren't allowing him to resign his command for "health reasons". Does it strike anyone else as really strange?
Posted by: The Low Countries || 08/10/2005 12:01 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Not necessarily. Adultery is still a crime in most states and therefore truly forbidden to a senior officer.

I once knew a lieutenant colonel who was court martialled when he had 19+ yrs of service for having (against the regs of the time) collected a lot of frequent flyer miles due to official travel and used them for personal vacations. The rules at the time required them to be turned into the government to pay for other official travel .... this was before the feds negotiated low rates across the board for govt tickets.

Anyway, the guy was in a position to basically decide how often, when and where he would go TDY. He abused it by scheduling a lot of trips with a lot of extra legs to build up the points. They busted him hard not too long before he was due to retire.
Posted by: leader of the pack || 08/10/2005 15:52 Comments || Top||

#2  Nope. Wonder if the civilian was someone's wife. Cause that is adultry. And since Kelly Flynn played to the 'they're picking on me game' [even though dozen of male officers had face similar charges in the prior year], the services have been hammering a number of generals for having loose zippers. Its just the hetro version of 'don't ask, don't tell'. If it is known, then you get treated like those drummed out of the service before you. Now unless they court martial the General, because he has completed the time necessary, he'll get his retirement.
Posted by: Thinemble Hupomotch7256 || 08/10/2005 15:52 Comments || Top||

#3  I'm having a hard time finding this egregious enough to warrant the punishment - the other potential actions put forward make more sense, IMHO. No personal gain. No abuse of power. Legally (I presume) separated. The only point is the marital status of the other person. Harsh stuff, IMHO, after 36 years. Must've flaunted it in some manner.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 16:06 Comments || Top||

#4  Or it could be that the 'other' man/woman is a registered/unregistered foreign agent.

Not enough to bag him for espionage...?
Posted by: DanNY || 08/10/2005 16:25 Comments || Top||

#5  That was me that posted that, by the way. I changed my name, but I see it didn't take. Damn preview button doesn't work for me when posting an article.

I'm having a hard time finding this egregious enough to warrant the punishment...

That was my point. Kelly Flynn was sleeping with the husband of an enlisted woman, so I can see how her case would have an impact on the service. I was just wondering if there was more going on here than meets the eye.
Posted by: Angie Schultz || 08/10/2005 16:28 Comments || Top||

#6  Odd way to introduce a change in policy. Got to be more to the story. It's slowly leaking out. Beats spending a no-news-August on Aruba and Roberts.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis || 08/10/2005 16:30 Comments || Top||

#7  Lol, Dan - mebbe it was one of those FBI-irresistible Chinese agents! The tricks they know can turn a man's mind to Jello! Could've been pure jealousy, too, cuz she turned the Fibbie down...

;-)
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 16:36 Comments || Top||


Fifth Column
Winter Soldier' Vietnam Distortion Rides Again
The 34-year-old antiwar documentary "Winter Soldier," which famously features, for about a minute of its 95 minutes, young Vietnam vet John Kerry, is poised for its first significant theatrical release in the U.S., according to the New York Times. And that fact has some Vietnam Veterans, who believe the film was thoroughly discredited, hopping mad. The film's renaissance is scheduled for Friday at the Film Society of Lincoln Center – followed by other public screenings in Chicago, Detroit, Hartford, Minneapolis and other venues.

The film's distributors claim that the war in Iraq has made the Vietnam-era film as relevant as when it was a campy favorite on the nation's college campuses. But B.G. Burkett, Vietnam veteran and author of "Stolen Honor: How the Vietnam Generation Was Robbed of its Heroes and its History," tells NewsMax, "It's amazing how a paper like the New York Times would publish such a story without vetting or commenting on the claims [of atrocities] in the film.
Well, no it's not
"It's pretty much settled now that much of the so-called atrocities was the product of outright fabrications and some even offered by persons with criminal records. "Some of this stuff is ludicrous on its face," adds Burkett, "but it's being offered as gospel."

Burkett singles out Scott Camil, a former Marine scout and forward artillery observer, who in the film confides, "If I had to go into a village and kill 150 people just to make sure there was no one there to kill me when we walked out, that's what I did." Burkett recalls to NewsMax a gathering at Texas Tech University where the whole phenomenon of Vietnam Vets Against the War was being addressed. When Camil made a comment directed at Burkett, the author recalls firing back, "Aren't you the same Camil that wanted to assassinate eight U.S. senators?" Indeed, the VVAW reportedly voted on the draconian assassination measure to off the hawkish lawmakers – a vote, Burkett says, in which Kerry participated. "Kerry voted against the assassination," recalls Burkett. "I guess he was already thinking ahead to the time those guys would be his colleagues." Made at a three-day gathering in 1971 of Vietnam veterans telling of alleged atrocities they had reportedly seen and committed, "Winter Soldier" was later shown at the Cannes and Berlin film festivals, on screens in France and England, and on German television.

"The context is why we wanted to do it," said Amy Heller, co-owner with her husband, Dennis Doros, of Milestone Films. "We have a 9-year-old son," Heller added, "but if he were 19 and wondering what he should do with the next stage of his life, I sure would want him to see this film before considering going into the military." One of the apparent pretexts for releasing "Winter Soldier" now is that the U.S. is involved in an unpopular war in Iraq. The distributor notes that with the Abu Ghraib coverage in Iraq, the old film manifests an eerie prescience.

Case-in-point, the backers claim: a sequence in "Winter Soldiers" where a former Army interrogator describes using "clubs, rifle butts, pistols, knives" to extract information - "always monitored" by superiors or military police - and back dropped by the admonition: "Don't get caught." Mr. Doros, who wants to broaden the potential modern audience even further, noted that he hoped the film would be shown on cable television. "They [potential military recruits] should see that war isn't always what they imagine from movies and books and modern media," Doros said. "That the atrocities, the gore, the daily horror of bombs bursting out and bullets riddling your friends' bodies next to you, have been glossed over." The Doros couple finds a segment with Rusty Sachs, a former Marine helicopter pilot, particularly instructive about how brutality in war inevitable evolves. Reportedly, Sachs describes contests to see "how far they could throw the bound bodies out of the airplane."

Critics then and now, however chide the grainy documentary as including nothing to elucidate what it shows. There is no narration per se. Witnesses are left to tell their stories to the camera's eye. No less than 18 unknowns working with borrowed equipment and donated stock shot more than 100 hours over that three-day weekend in 1971. The team then spent six months editing. "We did a screening at NBC," recalls Fred Aronow, one of the original filmmakers. "We got the reply back that this was incredibly interesting material that the American public should see, and it's unfortunate that NBC cannot broadcast it. They did not give a reason." The modern backers hope all that will change – if the new release builds any momentum, not to mention an interested audience.

Most recently the producers of "Stolen Honor," an attack on candidate John Kerry that was shown on Sinclair Broadcasting stations last fall, used outtakes from "Winter Soldier," but the film was never shown in its entirety. Burkett shared with NewsMax his thoughts about the International Court at the Hague, a forum which deals with war crimes – offenses that know no statute of limitations. His fantasy is that the Hague would someday charge those who claimed atrocities during the Vietnam conflict. "I'd like to hear their defense," he says.
Posted by: Steve || 08/10/2005 11:53 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Well, of course, kids today have no idea that war is icky. I mean, like, people die and stuff, y'know?

Damn, can these assholes be any more patronizing??
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 08/10/2005 13:03 Comments || Top||

#2  Any chance there will be an annotated version giving the real service records of those speaking?
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 08/10/2005 13:39 Comments || Top||

#3  The film's distributors claim that the war in Iraq has made the Vietnam-era film as relevant as when it was a campy favorite on the nation's college campuses.

So was "Reefer Madness" and Three Stooges festivals....and they made more sense.
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 14:26 Comments || Top||

#4  It's like some sorta '60 lobe. The always funny Stones and now this.... jeez, Ima waiting for Hunty to give us the low down.

..... wait a second, he's still dead.
Posted by: Shipman || 08/10/2005 17:51 Comments || Top||


Britain
Bakri to get NHS heart op
EXTREMIST preacher Omar Bakri Mohammed may undergo heart surgery in an NHS hospital if he returns to the UK. Bakri, who says he has a congenital brain heart problem, has already missed several appointments or had them postponed, friends said, but another one is likely to be scheduled before the end of the year. The so-called "Tottenham Ayatollah" is currently in Lebanon but says he plans to return to the UK in a month's time. That would allow him to have a free operation which would otherwise cost thousands of pounds privately. Bakri's health problem is understood to involve the narrowing of arteries in his heart and the likeliest operation is an angioplasty.
That's not a congenital problem, that's diet, genetics and bad living. Should have laid off the goat cheese.
More than 20,000 of the operations are carried out by doctors in the UK every year.
His condition is believed to be made worse by his weight.
Friends say that, because he is missing a bone in his ankle, he is unable to exercise and that has contributed to the narrowing of his coronary arteries.
From the photos, he's clearly unable to do the 'two-hand pushaway' exercise from the dinner table.
Earlier this year the father-of-seven, who uses a walking stick, took delivery of a £30,000 people carrier paid for under the Motability scheme. He is estimated to have received several hundred thousand pounds in benefits during his two decades in the UK. It is not clear where Bakri would have his treatment and hospitals refused to discuss confidential patient details. But Anjem Choudary, another leading figure in the al-Muhajiroun movement, said: "He had an appointment for a heart operation at some point. I'm not sure exactly when. "He had appointments before but he missed them - he doesn't like to take medicine, he likes to recover naturally. He has a congenital problem he has had the whole of his life. It's a problem with his arteries but I'm not a doctor so I don't know exactly."

Bakri, who had his mobile phone turned off today, sparked outrage last week by saying he would not inform police if he knew Muslim extremists were planning a bomb attack in Britain. He left for Beirut amid suggestions that he could be tried for treason but the Government has since made clear there is no prospect of that.
Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott admitted there was nothing to stop the firebrand cleric coming and going at the moment from the UK.
But a review of the Home Secretary's powers to exclude people who promote terrorism could be complete by the time Bakri heads home, allowing him to be barred. Tory leader Michael Howard argued that present powers were already sufficient to keep Bakri out and he called on the Government to use those powers "without delay". "The Home Secretary has the power to exclude from this country people whose presence here is not conducive to the public good," he said.
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 11:46 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  As was mentioned yesterday, this terr isn't a UK citizen and requires a visa to return. That can be denied without providing any reason. There is no pressure (real or imagined) on the UK to allow this asshat back in, in fact the opposite is true, there should be pressure to throw his entire freeloading clan out.

Freebie heart operation, sheesh. That'd just be circumventing Allan's will. Must be an apostate, methinks.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 11:56 Comments || Top||

#2  Send him over here. I'll do the surgery for nothing...so what if I'm not a doctor.
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 12:04 Comments || Top||

#3  Remember tu, washing your hands is for sissies.
Posted by: Seafarious || 08/10/2005 12:15 Comments || Top||

#4  I stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night....
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 08/10/2005 12:16 Comments || Top||

#5  B-a-r: That's priceless! Thank you.
Posted by: Xbalanke || 08/10/2005 12:25 Comments || Top||

#6  Lol, all!

I keep wondering when the average UK citizen will suddenly snap to the largess ladled out to non-citizens. One of two likely responses, I guess... one would be something like, We gave this hate mongerer | downtrodden everyman what? And I paid for it all?" Or perhaps it will be... "How did he get all that? I don't get anywhere near that much shite! Omar, baby, let's talk..."
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 12:30 Comments || Top||

#7  Hmmm. Do a smell fatal medical "misadventure" in the air or what. The rpeferred surgical procedure for the hamtongued, hookhanded cleric and his poor little heart (probably 20 sizes too small though still larger than his brain) would be to drive a 4x4 pressure treated stake through it with a sledge hammer. Hefty problems sometimes take super-sized solutions.
Posted by: MunkarKat || 08/10/2005 12:40 Comments || Top||

#8  Doctor, "The MI5 insists that they take over the operation."

Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 12:47 Comments || Top||

#9  Heart operation? Wonder if they will find anything.
Posted by: SR-71 || 08/10/2005 12:54 Comments || Top||

#10  SR-71: No heart, but a staggering amoung of bile.
Posted by: mom || 08/10/2005 13:13 Comments || Top||

#11  Demons in the keyboard! Should read, "a staggering AMOUNT of bile."
Posted by: mom || 08/10/2005 13:14 Comments || Top||

#12  Replace all his heart valves with porcine equivalents.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 08/10/2005 13:57 Comments || Top||

#13  Friends say that, because he is missing a bone in his ankle

Why arabs can't jump.
Posted by: Shipman || 08/10/2005 14:13 Comments || Top||

#14  Friends say that, because he is missing a bone in his ankle

It's probably stuck in his buddy Anjem's ass...
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 14:17 Comments || Top||

#15  Friends say that, because he is missing a bone in his ankle, brain in his head, he is unable to exercise think and that has contributed to the narrowing of his coronary arteries crazy things he is saying.
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 14:36 Comments || Top||

#16  I'd kick the man's name down the list for a couple of dozen Iraqi kids who need attention by the medics in the UK. When they run out of kids, then think about it.
Posted by: Thinemble Hupomotch7256 || 08/10/2005 14:48 Comments || Top||

#17  Nice thought, TH! The kids certainly have a better future than he does!
Posted by: Bobby || 08/10/2005 15:00 Comments || Top||

#18  B-a-R: I need a beverage alert on that one!

"Paging Dr. Kevorkian, paging Dr. Kevorkian!"
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 15:33 Comments || Top||

#19  First we got to sort that mental health problem.
Posted by: rhodesiafever || 08/10/2005 18:20 Comments || Top||

#20  Okay, seven kids. The ankle bone is connected to the.......bone? All that moving around, must not get on top much.
Posted by: Steven || 08/10/2005 22:39 Comments || Top||

#21  let hook-boy do the surgery. Inshallah!
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 22:41 Comments || Top||


Iraq-Jordan
When shooting stops, troops turn detective
This "kinder, gentler war" shit has got to stop...
Posted by: Mamadou Tandja || 08/10/2005 11:30 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Should the victims investigate?

Some Iraqi defense attorneys question whether the victims of a crime can fairly investigate it.

"It's unnatural within the principles of law," defense attorney Shahla Naif al-Alalousi says. "I don't know of a court in the world that would accept such interpretation of the law."


Hey! We can go home now! Let their lefties run it! Take A Terrorist Home time!

Every silver lining has a cloud™

Posted by: Bobby || 08/10/2005 16:10 Comments || Top||

#2  This is nuts. If the police catch him, it's a police matter and a civilian trial. If the soldiers catch him, it ought to be a military tribunal. So let an Iraqi cop and judge observe. They can call AI if they think it's getting out of hand. Checks and balances, but no free rides. That's only in advanced countires!

I mean, Iraqi defense lawyers need jobs, too. Who pays for them, I wonder? Pro Bono? Pro Terroristo?
Posted by: Bobby || 08/10/2005 16:14 Comments || Top||

#3  Was reading Michael Yon's most recent dispatch... it seems that if our forces catch a bad guy they CAN'T give them to the Iraqi police... even when the Iraqi police chief really, REALLY wants to break the guy down and pull all the info out.

So why would our guys give terrs over to an Iraqi court? It would seem that would be what should happen if their police have custody.
Posted by: eLarson || 08/10/2005 16:45 Comments || Top||


Arabia
Saudi Arabia's Envoy
The links between Saudi Arabia and the September 11 terrorist attacks are not something we'd expect the desert kingdom to be trumpeting, but it has done just that by appointing one of its princes, Turki al-Faisal, as its new ambassador to Washington. It's an odd choice, to say the least. Save for diplomatic immunity, one could just as easily make an argument that Riyadh's newest envoy should, on arrival at Dulles Airport, be brought in for questioning by the authorities. Here's a brief resume:

Prince Turki served as head of Saudi intelligence from 1977 until 10 days before September 11, 2001. As such, he was Riyadh's main contact with the Taliban in Afghanistan - and thereby also with Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda. He admits to having met Mr. bin Laden a few times, according to "Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, From the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001," a Pulitzer-winning book by the Washington Post's Steve Coll. Mr. Coll writes that while the Saudis deny Mr. bin Laden was ever a Saudi agent, "it seems clear that bin Laden did have a substantial relationship with Saudi intelligence."

The Saudi intelligence services, under the prince, also oversaw the funding of "radical Islamists in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and elsewhere," Mr. Coll reports. One such Islamist was Abdullah Azzam, who "preached stridently against the United States" and helped found the terrorist group Hamas. The prince was named in a civil lawsuit filed in 2002 by September 11 families seeking $1 trillion from alleged financiers of Al Qaeda. The lawsuit notes that the testimony of a senior Taliban official who defected, Mullah Kakshar, "implicates Prince Turki as the facilitator" of money transfers from wealthy Saudis, "in support of the Taliban, al Qaeda, and international terrorism."

The lawsuit also alleges that the prince was party to a 1998 agreement between the Saudis and the Taliban. In the alleged deal, the Saudis promised not to seek Mr. bin Laden's extradition or the closing of his terrorist training camps and would provide the Taliban with oil and financial assistance, in exchange for Mr. bin Laden promising not to try to overthrow the Saudi monarchy. The prince, in his role as head of intelligence, the lawsuit suggests, "was in a position to know the threat posed by bin Laden, al Qaeda, the Taliban, and the extremist and violent perversion of jihad and hatred that the Saudi religious schools were fomenting in young people."

The prince denied the allegations against him. But that denial has never been adjudicated by a jury. Prince Turki successfully persuaded Judge Richard Casey to dismiss the claims against him because they stem from his alleged actions when he was acting for the Saudi government, so he cannot be held accountable for them in an American court. One of the lawyers for the September 11 families, Michael Elsner, told The New York Sun that a letter has been filed with the court asking permission to appeal the dismissal.

It may well be that Prince Turki was simply acting on behalf of the Saudi monarchy, but that only raises the bigger question of America's relations with the kingdom. The knowledge that 15 of the 19 September 11 hijackers were Saudis and that Saudi money and religious instruction helped finance and inspire the terrorists has already put the relationship between the kingdom and America in a precarious spot.
Recent reports indicate that links between Saudi Arabia and terrorism continue to this day. The Sunday Telegraph reported this week that Saudi officials admitted that two senior Al Qaeda operatives in the kingdom - both of whom are now reportedly dead - "made money transfers and used coded text messages to communicate with suspected terrorists in Britain before last month's terrorist attacks in London." The Telegraph reported that one of the terrorists, Abdel Karim al-Mejati, was alleged to have been behind last year's terrorist attacks at Madrid. The Telegraph also reported last week that two men arrested for the July 21 attempted bombings at London were also linked to Riyadh. Hussain Osman called the kingdom on his cell phone just before he was arrested. Muktar Said Ibrahim, according to friends cited by the Telegraph, traveled to the kingdom for a few months in 2003 for a "training course."

On American soil the Saudis are propagating a "totalitarian ideology of hatred that can incite to violence," according to an 89-page Freedom House report released in January. It was based on the study of more than 200 documents distributed in American mosques by the Saudi government. Muslims are reminded that it is a religious obligation to hate Christians and Jews. They are told that they must behave as on a mission behind enemy lines while living in the lands of unbelievers. They must make money and acquire knowledge to use either for jihad against the infidels or to proselytize them. Textbooks, Freedom House reported, also "propagate a Nazi-like hatred for Jews" and "avow that the Muslim's duty is to eliminate the state of Israel."

There are no signs that the princes in Riyadh are ending their support for radical Islamists and terrorism - let alone granting women equality, introducing democracy, and all the other reforms President Bush is demanding from other repressive countries. Prince Turki's own resume reads like a checklist of the many faults Americans find in the Saudi monarchy. That the prince is the most suitable candidate the Saudis can offer for ambassador is but another reminder of why the kingdom is a prime candidate for regime change.
Posted by: Steve || 08/10/2005 11:19 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Wouldn't it be something if Turki's "credentials" were rejected... Since his true credentials read like an indictment of everything wrong with the "Special Relationship"...

Certainly, we can fully expect no change in the double-dealing subversive backstabbing asshattery of the House of Saud with this "appointment" - a rather comical and disingenuous term given that he is one of the small cabal that run SA. Why tolerate it any further?

Time to break with the PC BS. Everything done above-board henceforth, everything described in plain-speak, everything worthy of the values we espouse.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 12:47 Comments || Top||

#2  I come...bearing gifts. They smooth out the "rough edges".
Posted by: Turki al-Faisal || 08/10/2005 12:52 Comments || Top||

#3  ...Muslims are reminded that it is a religious obligation to hate Christians and Jews...

There will soon be a reckoning, and if the government doesn't have the will to handle security, others will...

The Minutemen in Arizona and California is just the beginning...

Any ACLUans who get in the way may also be "surprised" as well at the reaction...
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 14:32 Comments || Top||

#4  The Saudis hold the world economy hostage to their oil production. More the point, the Saudis, along with Iran, are the major suppliers of Western Europe (I'm not sure where Japan gets its supplies). Loathesome though they are, I don't see Bush doing anything substantial about Saudi Arabia until Iraq's oil production is up to speed. I don't see him risking a world wide depression at this stage; allies as money grubbing as France, Germany and Russia would never stand for it. I know this is old news for Rantburgers, but frustrating as it may be, we can't forget it. Especially as I'm sure the Saudis are counting on this fact to protect them from Saddam's fate... at least until they can find something better to fight us with.
Posted by: trailing wife || 08/10/2005 14:47 Comments || Top||

#5  Japan gets oil from Indonesia...
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 15:40 Comments || Top||

#6  Japan gets oil from the US too.
Posted by: Sock Puppet 0’ Doom || 08/10/2005 19:14 Comments || Top||


Britain
Tube bomb suspect was newlywed
ONE of the prime suspects in a failed bid to repeat the July 7 bombings in London got married four days before the attack, a source at the mosque where he tied the knot said ovenight. Yasin Hassan Omar, 24, wedded his bride on July 17 in a private ceremony before family and close friends at North Finchley mosque in north London, where he had been a regular worshipper for the past year. "He came in that day with his family. Just after prayers they announced there was a bride and a marriage," a source at the mosque was quoted as saying by Britain's domestic Press Association news agency. "They got married and there was a small feast for whoever was present and they shared some food. There were not a lot of people there, it was just his close family and friends, and it was just like other marriages."
In other words, a islamist wedding party consisting of the usual terrorist suspects
Somali-born Omar appeared in court on Monday charged with two others with attempted murder, conspiracy and possession of explosives in connection with the July 21 bid to repeat the July 7 bombings. Fifty-six people were killed in the July 7 morning rush-hour attacks on three Underground trains and a double-decker bus, including four apparent suicide bombers.
Detectives from London's Metropolitan Police are studying a list of guests given to them by the North Finchley mosque, pending the return from holiday of the imam who conducted the ceremony.
Guess the Met has been reading Rantburg.
Posted by: tipper || 08/10/2005 11:11 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Since AK's and RPG's are probably a bit harder to get in the West, I guess blowing up a train full of infidels would be a proper Muslim substitute for marital celebration?
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 12:57 Comments || Top||

#2 

Yasin Hassan Omar
Not a very good husband, I reckon...
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 13:39 Comments || Top||


International-UN-NGOs
Guilty Oil-for-Food official likely to expose UN fraud
A KEY UN procurement officer could give prosecutors valuable evidence of wrongdoing at the organisation after becoming the first official to plead guilty to fraud in the Oil-for-Food scandal. Alexander Yakovlev admitted three charges carrying 20 years each in New York on Monday, as a UN inquiry reported that he had taken almost a million dollars in bribes from companies that won more than $79 million (£44 million) in UN business. That he surrendered to the authorities in New York and immediately entered guilty pleas suggests that he may have struck a plea bargain to co-operate with prosecutors in return for a lighter sentence.
That's the first thing I thought when he pleaded so fast.
His lawyer, Arkady Bukh, told The Times that he could not comment because of a confidentiality agreement. “Normally, if you enter a guilty plea in an expedient manner, we expect from a judge quite a lenient sentence,” he said. UN officials said that they believed Mr Yakovlev would become a co-operating government witness. “It’s obvious. He struck a deal. He’s going to testify,” one UN official said.
"Now excuse me, I have to go get Kofi off the ledge."
Take your time ...
Prosecutors said that they were not allowed to comment.
"We can say no more!"
Mr Yakovlev, 52, a Russian once employed in a Soviet-era ministry, worked in the UN procurement division from 1985 until his abrupt resignation after a media leak about the investigation last month. He was the “line” procurement officer who handled the controversial award of a UN border-inspection contract to a Swiss company that employed the UN Secretary-General’s son, Kojo Annan. He told UN investigators that he did not know Kojo Annan was involved with the company, Cotecna, even though one of his colleagues, who sat only yards away, said “everyone in her office knew” the UN chief’s son “because he was friendly and good with computers, such that he would help her colleagues with problems”.
"Koko was especially good with spreadsheets, though he said that it was the Pentium chip math error that kept messing up the bottom line."
The UN inquiry, headed by Paul Volcker, found that Mr Yakovlev had solicited a bribe from another Swiss company called Société Générale de Surveillance for a UN contract to monitor Iraq’s oil shipments. There is no evidence that the bribe was ever paid. The UN investigation found, however, that Mr Yakovlev had taken more than $950,000 from companies and records showed that since 2000 almost $1.3 million was wired into a bank account in Antigua in the name of Moxyco Ltd, controlled by Mr Yakovlev.

He appeared in court after being stripped of his diplomatic immunity by the UN, admitting money laundering, wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud. He was released on $400,000 bail, secured by his house in New York, until his sentencing on February 10. The case is being handled by federal prosecutors from the US attorney for the Southern District of New York, who have vowed to “wring the towel dry” of UN corruption.
Hanging the UN's scalp on your belt would be an excellent ticket to higher office
Posted by: Steve || 08/10/2005 11:09 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I'm ticked off that it has taken so long to get to this point in the UN- Food4Fraud investigation.

However, anything this Yakovlev fellow says will have to verified independently and this will take more time before the next brick falls.

Posted by: mhw || 08/10/2005 11:20 Comments || Top||

#2  Important lesson from this: If you're going to commit a crime, do it by yourself.
Posted by: Matt || 08/10/2005 11:45 Comments || Top||

#3  You got that right...
Posted by: Benon Sevan || 08/10/2005 12:01 Comments || Top||

#4  mhw...

I think they already have a "paper trail", and ol' Sasha is doing the independent verification....



Someone is hoping someone gets elected so that when that elected person leaves office then maybe there will be a pardon?
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 12:39 Comments || Top||

#5  This is good news. Start squealing, stoolie.
Posted by: Chris W. || 08/10/2005 13:21 Comments || Top||

#6  Oh, I almost forgot. When will I be offered my deal?
Posted by: Benon Sevan || 08/10/2005 13:25 Comments || Top||

#7  Benon, baby, the trick is to be the first to flip. That train's already left the station.
Posted by: Matt || 08/10/2005 13:54 Comments || Top||

#8  One thing I'd dearly love-- more than a new puppy, even, and almost as much as seeing the Iranian Mad Mullahs crushed-- is to watch Kofi Annan do the Perp Walk complete with handcuffs and leg shackles.

That, and seeing the U.N. relocate to Gaza...
Posted by: Dave D. || 08/10/2005 17:20 Comments || Top||


Terror Networks & Islam
Debka: IBDA-C arrests
These appear to be the same folks with the AQ newspaper.
Such nice fine lads...


DEBKAfile discloses: The 10 suspects Turkey arrested in plot to blow up Israeli cruise ships belong to IBDA-C, the Great Eastern Islamic Raiders Front

August 10, 2005, 3:08 PM (GMT+02:00)
Jailed Turkish terror chief Mirzabeyoglu

According to DEBKAfile’s exclusive counter-terrorist sources, the ten people detained in Turkey Wednesday, Aug 10, were part of an al Qaeda plot to ram fast rubber dinghies loaded with explosives into several Israeli cruise vessels docking in southern Turkish ports last weekend. The same IBDA-C group struck Jewish synagogues in Istanbul on November 15, 2003.

The Israel liners were diverted to Cypus from their destination port of Antalya and Israelis warned to avoid that coast. Our sources add the link between the IBDA-C and al Qaeda goes back to 1998 when its leader Mirzabeyoglu and his followers were sent to prison. Between 50 and 70 escaped the country, splitting up between Afghanistan, Chechnya, Greece, Bosnia and Germany. In the first two countries, the fugitives joined up with al Qaeda and fought with them. In Bosnia, they received terrorist training; in Greece they exploited old connections in Greek intelligence to secure assistance. In the 1980s, when tensions were running high between Athens and Anakara, Greek intelligence used IBDA-C members for forays into Turkey.

In Germany, the Turkish terrorists set up logistics and intelligence networks to support members operating in conjunction with al Qaeda.

From the late 1990s, therefore, far from the gaze of western counter-terror and Turkish security authorities, the IBDA-C and al Qaeda quietly built up one of the most dangerous undercover terrorist networks operating today in Europe.

Posted by: 3dc || 08/10/2005 11:08 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  In Germany, the Turkish terrorists set up logistics and intelligence networks to support members operating in conjunction with al Qaeda.

Oh my Gawd, the terrorists are radiating out of Germany@
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 11:20 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran's nuclear facility operational
IRAN'S uranium conversion facility in Isfahan was fully operational overnight after all the seals placed by international inspectors were removed, an Iranian nuclear official said.

"We have removed the seals, the Isfahan conversion facility is fully operational," the deputy head of Iran's atomic energy agency Mohammad Saidi said.
Posted by: tipper || 08/10/2005 11:08 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Balls in our court, what do we do?
Posted by: Clolutle Sniger6060 || 08/10/2005 12:11 Comments || Top||

#2  Shoot some hoops?
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 12:34 Comments || Top||

#3 

"Yes, this is a dielemma!"
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 12:41 Comments || Top||

#4  Because we went into Iraq our hands our tied when we need them free.

Honestly, I have never understood or bought into the reasons given for invading Iraq first knowing that Iran was the major terrorist supporter in the world. I'm just an IT guy in Colorado - but it always seemed to me that if we really wanted to take on terrorism we should have taken on Iran first. Iran supports Syria, Hezbollah, was supporting Arafat, Islamic Jihad, etc. They were and are allot closer the getting the bomb then Saddam ever was.

What is all of your takes on my idea?
Posted by: Yosemite Sam || 08/10/2005 12:55 Comments || Top||

#5  YS I think that you haven't been paying attention.

The short form is that we invaded Iraq first for the same reason that we invaded North Africa first in WWII.
Posted by: AlanC || 08/10/2005 13:34 Comments || Top||

#6  If anyones been paying attention they'd note that now even Germany and Russia are pretty much admitting that Iran is planning on developing nuclear weapons. That might mean that the big Euro 3 finally just give up trying to appease and let the US take out the facilities.
Posted by: Valentine || 08/10/2005 14:50 Comments || Top||

#7  Methinks the Joooooos Israelis are firing up the F-16s now!
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 15:06 Comments || Top||

#8  Valentine:
The problem is that France and Germany were stating that Iraq was developing weapons in 1998-99. But, once it turned out we might do something about it, they changed their minds. Why wouldn't they weasel out this time, too?

Posted by: Jackal || 08/10/2005 15:46 Comments || Top||

#9  One of the reasons for leaving Iran alone so far is that they have 3 times the population of Iraq and far more resources. I've read articles on how invulnerable Iran's nuclear facilities are to aerial attack, indicating an invasion would be necessary to prevent an Iranian bomb. No one has written about the need for electrical power to support nuclear weapons development. In the US, nuclear weapons production sites are always associated with substantial electrical power supplies, see Oak Ridge and the other site in Washington. If the nuclear sites are buried far underground, the electrical supplies are not likely to be, the wasted electrical energy has to be vented to the surface of the earth somehow, unless the Iranians have figured out how to do this underground.
I wouldn't be surprised if a sustained aerial attack to eliminate all Iranian power grids and electrical production would be the penultimate sanction against the mullahs's grasp at the ultimate weapon. The ultimate sanction would probably be nuclear bunker-busters.
Posted by: Crairong Omomotch6492 || 08/10/2005 17:28 Comments || Top||

#10  The only way to resolve this matter is through regime change. The Iranians have the intellectual capital to build and rebuild nuclear weaponry.

This doesn't go away with bombing raids, although strategic attacks may slow things down for a short while. Bombing could be pretty entertaining as well.
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 18:20 Comments || Top||


Iraq-Jordan
Keeping the Pressure on the Bad Guyz
Too lengthy for the MSM, I guess, plus no dead soldiers, either. Multinational Corps Iraq operations continue to place pressure on terrorist operations in Iraq, with coalition and Iraqi security forces conducting more than 182 combined and independent offensive operations throughout the country since late July. Results from operations conducted between July 30 and Aug. 5 include the discovery and clearance of 109 improvised explosive devices and 32 caches; the capture of 805 insurgent fighters, with the subsequent detention of 493; and the death or capture of 11 foreign fighters.

"These are great successes for the coalition and Iraqi security forces. The terrorists' command and control will continue to deteriorate as the coalition forces continue to pressure terrorists and disrupt their operations network," Col. Jessie Farrington, MNCI chief of operations, said.

Highlights of operations from Aug. 6 and 7 include: In Mosul, coalition forces detained two individuals for handing out terrorist propaganda. The two individuals revealed the location of their source and, during a resulting raid, Iraqi police killed one terrorist later confirmed to be a Syrian national. In a combined raid, coalition and Iraqi security forces captured three men connected to terror leader Abbass Fadhel Zangana.

Near Hit, Iraqi Intervention Forces and U.S. Marines captured three terrorists in a truck towing another vehicle modified as a car bomb. In Haqlaniyah, coalition forces destroyed a booby-trapped house that contained improvised explosive devices. In Baghdad, coalition forces captured a car bomb and four terrorists who were involved in a car-bomb cell. Iraqi forces captured ten members of a terrorist cell in Sadr City.

In other developments, Iraqi army soldiers and coalition forces captured suspected insurgents in a targeted search Aug. 7 in Rawah, Iraq, according to a Multinational Force Iraq report. The suspects included one Syrian man, one Sudanese man, a former Rawah police officer, and a civilian. The Sudanese man was in possession of an expired passport. He's toast!

In Fallujah, Iraqi army soldiers found and eliminated improvised explosive devices while conducting search operations Aug. 6, according to a MNFI report.

Soldiers with the 2nd Battalion, 2nd Brigade, 1st Iraqi Intervention Force, discovered an IED while on a dismounted patrol. The IED consisted of one 130 mm artillery round enclosed in a white burlap bag with a car-alarm receiver, a washing machine timer, and a battery. The area was secured and the IED was disarmed and removed for later disposal. If you have a battery and a timer, what's the purpose of the 'car-alarm receiver'?

In Mugdadiyah, a patrol located one 155 mm artillery round and an unknown initiation device. An Iraqi explosive ordnance disposal team removed the IED. An IRAQI Explosive Ordance Disposal team! No injuries or damages were reported during the operations.

In other news from Iraq, Iraqi security forces and coalition forces conducted a combined raid on a location known to be manufacturing car bombs Aug. 7 in Baghdad. An Iraqi SWAT team and a coalition support unit discovered two vehicles in a carport partially wired as suicide car bombs. Both vehicles had holes cut in the dashboard exposing detonators with wire connections to the trunk and under the hood. Four male suspects were detained.

Elsewhere in Baghdad, Iraqi police and elements of the U.S. Army's 1st Battalion, 9th Field Artillery Regiment, located a possible car bomb on a roadway. The dark blue, four-door sedan was secured, and the immediate area was cleared. An Iraqi explosive ordnance disposal team confirmed the presence of explosives and conducted a controlled detonation.

No injuries or damages were reported during the operations.

(Compiled from Multinational Force Iraq and Multinational Security Transition Command Iraq news releases.)
Posted by: Bobby || 08/10/2005 10:53 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: Politix
CNN to air NARAL lies about Roberts
Via Drudge Report
CNN has reviewed and agreed to run a controversial ad produced by a pro-abortion group that falsely accuses Supreme Court nominee John Roberts of filing legal papers supporting a convicted clinic bomber! The news network has agreed to a $125,000 ad buy from NARAL, the DRUDGE REPORT has learned, for a commercial which depicts a bombed out 1998 Birmingham, AL abortion clinic. The Birmingham clinic was bombed seven years after Roberts signed the legal briefing.

The linking of Roberts to "violent fringe groups" is the sharpest attack against the nominee thus far.

However, the non-partisan University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg Factcheck.org reviewed the NARAL ad and found it to be “false.” Factcheck.org found "in words and images, the ad conveys the idea that Roberts took a legal position excusing bombing of abortion clinics, which is false."

The Republican National Committee is preparing to send a letter to television stations asking them to pull the spot, according to sources. The RNC’s letter claims: "NARAL's ad is a deliberate misrepresentation of the facts that has no purpose but to mislead the American people."
So, if he doesn't have any skeletons in his closet, make some up. I swear, the left is so pathetic nowdays. CNN and NARAL should be sued out of exsistance for libel, slander, outright fraud, etc.
RNC is doing this wrong. Let the ads run -- 1st amendment, yadda-yadda. Buy air time immediately after each one and set the record straight, and ask viewers to think why NARAL has to lie about this.
Posted by: mmurray821 || 08/10/2005 10:24 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Just have Dan Rather break the story instead. Problem solved.
Posted by: Raj || 08/10/2005 10:55 Comments || Top||

#2  From what I understand, Roberts filed papers on behalf of Operation Rescue (anti-abortion group), who do have questionable tactics/teachings. I, as a Christian, wholeheartedly disagree w/ abortion, but I completely disagree with killing in the name of stopping abortions (two wrongs don't make a right). However, as in most stories, timing is everything and he represented this group 7 years prior to this bombing? And, even if he signed it afterwards, he represented the group, not the individual who took their teachings to heart and bombed the place. Much like the imams who preach hatred (akin to Operation Rescue), you still have to hold the suicide bomber HIMSELF responsible for taking that preaching and putting it into practice. No worse than any other defense attorney (Johnnie Cochran anyone) representing his client (except that at the time, no one linked to O.R. had done any violence, as I recall).
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 10:55 Comments || Top||

#3  Bottomline is that when you work for a lawfirm, sometimes you have to defend unscruplous people. Simply, filing a brief is hardly supporting murder.

If this is the Left's litmus test, then half the congressman and sentator's shouldn't be in office.

These people know that there is no wind, yet getting angry at the windmill for not turning.
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 11:11 Comments || Top||

#4  BA, this is BS...

Roberts' filing pertained to jurisdiction only, meaning that his papers supported state and local laws over federal. It had nothing to do with the antics of Operation Rescue some 7 years later.
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 11:37 Comments || Top||

#5  Touch'e, Cap'n. That was the point I was trying to make...#1, it was 7 years prior to the bombing, #2, it was for the group, not the individual, and #3 the MSM is hiding some details and the Demos are using this for ammo. I did not realize it was over jurisdiction only. Even if not, the timing's completely off.
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 14:44 Comments || Top||

#6  FactCheck.org has debunked it before it has even aired.
Posted by: eLarson || 08/10/2005 16:59 Comments || Top||


Fifth Column
ACLU refuses funds because of "no terrorism" requirement
CLEVELAND (AP) – The American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio said today it will no longer accept funding from the United Way so as not to complete a required counterterrorism compliance form.

At issue is a counterterrorism form the ACLU believes can be intrusive on individual liberties. The form requires agencies to comply with the U.S. Patriot Act by assuring they are not involved with anyone on a federal terrorism watch list.

In October of 2004, the ACLU turned down $1.15 million in funding from two of it’s most generous and loyal contributors, the Ford and Rockefeller foundations, saying new anti-terrorism restrictions demanded by the institutions make it unable to accept their funds.

The Ford Foundation now bars recipients of its funds from engaging in any activity that "promotes violence, terrorism, bigotry, or the destruction of any state."

The Rockefeller Foundation’s provisions state that recipients of its funds may not "directly or indirectly engage in, promote, or support other organizations or individuals who engage in or promote terrorist activity."
Posted by: Jackal || 08/10/2005 10:19 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Headline here isnt the ACLU. Its the Ford Foundation, traditionally an aggressively liberal place. Good for them.
Posted by: Liberalhawk || 08/10/2005 11:11 Comments || Top||

#2  "Even the right to be a terrorist is protected under the First Amendment," ACLU spokes-transgenderperson, Missy Asslitch

AP: American Freikorps units guns down ACLU assembly members

July 20, 2008 (Boston): Police and FBI believe that the American Freikorps struck again, this time gunning down fifteen ACLU members who were attending a conference ironically titled "Terrorism is a protected status."

Police and FBI have had difficulty shutting down the Freikorps organization which many law enforcement counter-terrorism experts believe consists of Iraq War vets and right-wing militias that have declared war on the Fifth Column left in America. ...
Posted by: Ward C the Moron || 08/10/2005 11:18 Comments || Top||

#3  Right on, Lh. But I wouldn't give them credit for some change of heart... I'd say it's self-preservation and self-serving greed, more likely. The people controlling these two Moonbat bagmen recognize their lucrative positions could be in jeopardy if they don't demonstrate at least the pretense of having standards. That it's merely pretense is a matter of historical record for both. Nonetheless, it worked to the public good in this case, at least.

Of course, that the ACLU won't take funds if they are merely required to declare they don't support or otherwise consort with the Bag Guyz© and their mouthpieces / minions is remarkably telling, no?

Hmmm. Unable to formally declare they don't support terrorists... Why, without a great deal of effort, one could argue that's a declaration that they do...
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 11:37 Comments || Top||

#4  Now a real headline would be "Free Speech Group Refuses ACLU Legal Support"
Posted by: Cheaderhead || 08/10/2005 12:37 Comments || Top||

#5  Why on earth is ACLU receiving funding from the United Way?
Posted by: JackAssFestival || 08/10/2005 12:39 Comments || Top||

#6  Well. If this isn't an indicator of who's side the ACLU is on,....
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 08/10/2005 12:39 Comments || Top||

#7  Nope. Ain't doing it. The ACLU may be about civil liberties but they surely have little to do with protecting the civil liberties of Americans.
Posted by: MunkarKat || 08/10/2005 12:44 Comments || Top||

#8  In truth, most of the women lawyers in the ACLU are "industrial" looking, or angry1 anti-male lesbians, so, they want an Islamofascist takeover of the USA so all women will be forced to wear burquas, and level the playing field. Sort of a Socialism of Looks thing...

1- Hold on - before you call me a homophobe - Not all lesbians are ugly, angry, or leftist... but the ones in the ACLU... ARE!
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 13:49 Comments || Top||

#9  Whew! BigEd! I'm glad your cleared that up! I was about to toss my Jenna Jameson vids your way.
Posted by: Glolusing Flereth5459 || 08/10/2005 17:31 Comments || Top||

#10  Silence? (except GF5459) Nobody understands tongue-in-cheek!
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 19:13 Comments || Top||

#11  that's your tongue?
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 20:06 Comments || Top||


Britain
Britain too soft on radicals, say allies
LONDON, Aug. 10 (UPI) -- Two of Britain's closest allies in the war on terror have criticized the government for being too soft on Muslim extremists at home.
The U.S.? Australia?
In an interview with the Times of London Tuesday, Prince Turki al-Faisal, the outgoing Saudi ambassador to London, said that he had been "going around in circles" during his 2 1/2-year posting trying to make Britain understand the threat from Saudi dissidents in London linked to al-Qaida.
That would be the reform-minded "dissidents" who think Saudi isn't islamic enough
His comments coincided with those of Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf who accused the government of failing to extremism in mosques. Asked by the BBC if Britain had been too soft, he said: "Yes, I think so, absolutely. It should be stopped, nobody should be talking of hatred and militancy and aggression ... That is not what the mosque is meant for."
Then his lips fell off...
The Home Office is in urgent talks over powers to exclude radicals who advocate or glorify terrorism.
Like the outgoing Saudi ambassador? No?
Posted by: Steve || 08/10/2005 09:59 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Some would argue that the US was far too soft on radicals (i.e., Al Qaeda) prior to the 9-11 roof falling in.

And of course the Paki Wakis and the Soodies were/are "allies"
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 10:51 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
Jellyfish -- why do they hate us?
MADRID (Reuters) - Unusually high concentrations of jellyfish have appeared along Spain's Mediterranean coast this summer, to the discomfort of thousands of tourists, officials said on Wednesday.

The Red Cross said its lifeguards had treated almost 11,000 people for stings on beaches so far this season in the northeastern region of Catalonia alone, twice the number from the same period last year, when the jellyfish count had already begun to rise.

Almunecar on the south coast had to cancel an annual swimming race across the bay last Sunday because of the number of jellyfish in the water shouting "allahu akbar", a town hall spokesman said.

Factors such as the US's rejection of Kyoto, drought, heat and over-fishing all contribute to a rising jellyfish count, said Xavier Pastor, vice president of the international environmental group Oceana. It is also suspected that the Korans flushed down toilets at Guantanamo later floated to the Mediterranean and were read by the jellyfish.

Warmer than usual coastal waters encourage the creatures to venture closer to shore, in search of lower salt concentrations and nutrients in urban waste water and agricultural run-off.

At the same time the Mediterranean's population of larger fish and turtles -- which feed on jellyfish -- has declined.

"This year's crisis is not only affecting the Mediterranean," Pastor said. "In the Azores we recently found high concentrations of Portuguese Man-of-War, which is much more dangerous." The related Spanish Man-of-War has been extinct since March 14, 2004. It's unknown whether a Belgian Man-of-War ever existed.
Posted by: Jackal || 08/10/2005 09:47 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1 
Click Me!
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 11:22 Comments || Top||

#2  The jellyfish learned from the Spanish troop pullout after the 3-11 bombing.

They have an agenda and will not relent until Zappy drops and gives them twenty.
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 11:23 Comments || Top||

#3  "We come in peace to join our spineless friends in Spain"
Posted by: BH || 08/10/2005 11:33 Comments || Top||

#4  We must try to understand the root cause of the jellyfish hate, maybe it's our policies?
Posted by: Clolutle Sniger6060 || 08/10/2005 12:05 Comments || Top||

#5  take advantage! The sting can produce swelling and temporary paralysis... swim without shorts, and you'll come out with a wooden leg, if ya know what I mean, and no, not a pirate :-)
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 12:13 Comments || Top||

#6  Frank,

Do you mean 5th leg in elephant talk?
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 12:20 Comments || Top||

#7  Them folk are lucky they aren't in Australia.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 08/10/2005 12:27 Comments || Top||

#8  Being spineless, most jellyfish voted for Kerry in the last election.
Posted by: Chris W. || 08/10/2005 13:39 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
Maricopa County, AZ is a Tough Place
Maricopa County Attorney Andrew Thomas is stamping out plea bargains for people suspected of a dozen different violent crimes. Thomas says under his new policy, those charged with a serious violent crime must either plead guilty as charged, or go to trial. Thomas says the change, which takes effect next month, targets the "worst of the worst" criminals. Judges have already been notified. He says the move will lead to more trials but he believes it will be a "manageable increase."
Already home to Sheriff Joe Arpaio, notorious for his "tent city" jails, chain gangs, and trail mix and bologna menus. When asked what people should do if a burglar breaks into their home, a previous prosecutor replied, "You shoot the S.O.B."
Posted by: Anonymoose || 08/10/2005 09:37 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Not as tough as Maricon county, though...
Posted by: mojo || 08/10/2005 10:17 Comments || Top||

#2  Yeah, but nicer than Cabron County, mojo! ;)
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 08/10/2005 10:23 Comments || Top||

#3  When asked what people should do if a burglar breaks into their home, a previous prosecutor replied, "You shoot the S.O.B."

An English prosecutor might say, "Don't shoot the S.O.B. or YOU'LL be prosecuted."
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 08/10/2005 10:31 Comments || Top||

#4  DB,

Obviously, you never heard of lush greens at the Puto's Valley neighborhood and golf course.
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 11:30 Comments || Top||


Illegal Aliens can be denied benefits in AZ
PHOENIX -- A federal appeals court refused Tuesday to block part of an Arizona law that denies some public benefits to illegal immigrants, saying the plaintiffs had no right to sue.
Something which needs to be said many, many more times to many, many more people.
The voter-approved law appeared on Arizona's November election ballot.
And Yours Truly helped in the campaign.
The portion at issue bars illegal immigrants from getting certain public benefits and makes it a crime for public employees to fail to report illegal undocumented immigrants who seek the benefits.
And absolutely nothing about restricting benefits to those here legally, regardless of what MALDEF says.
A separate provision, unaffected by the court challenge, though opposed by the Democratic National Committee requires people to show proof of citizenship when registering to vote.
Though not actually to vote.
If the election judges do their jobs on election day and only let properly registered voters in line, it wouldn't be a problem, but the judges in Seattle and Milwaukee were kinda fuzzy on this point last time ...
The plaintiffs had asked the 9th U.S. Circuit Court, known for its loopy rulings to rule that U.S. District Judge David Bury had abused his discretion when he refused to grant a preliminary injunction to stop the law from going into effect until after a trial is held to determine its constitutionality. The appeals court panel denied their request (!), saying the plaintiffs had not demonstrated they were hurt by the law.
Since for illegal aliens benefits are supposed to be zero in the first place.
The Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund had argued that the law was unconstitutional on the grounds that it usurps the federal government's power over immigration and naturalization.
Does the Constitution mandate that Arizona spend money on hospitalization for illegals? Does it prohibit citizens (who happen to work for the State) from reporting criminals to federal law enforcement? No. It's scum like you that make Me start to dislike even legal immigrants, which isn't fair to them.
Supporters argued it was necessary because Arizona, the busiest illegal entry point on the country's southern border, spends millions of dollars annually to provide food stamps, welfare and other social services to illegal immigrants.
Posted by: Jackal || 08/10/2005 09:34 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I guess the 9th decided to do something different and use their brains for a change.
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 08/10/2005 12:06 Comments || Top||

#2  Don't get too excited. The 9th Circuit vacated the lower court's ruling in Arizona's favor because the folks who brought the suit can't yet show actual harm or an imminent threat of prosecution. As soon as benefits are denied or a public employee is charged this issue will go right back through the courts and I've got a case of beer that says that the 9th Circuit will spike the Arizona law the first time they actually hold on the merits of the issue.
Posted by: AzCat || 08/10/2005 12:21 Comments || Top||

#3  Shades of Prop 187. Except in AZ, there are more reasonable folk.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 08/10/2005 12:25 Comments || Top||

#4  But the extra time taxpayers have to work to fund these non-taxpayer non-citizens due to the increase in financial success punishmentswon't be classed as harm.

You need to mug ANY judge who decides that taxpayers are there to be milked and take 50% of his/her wallet and claim you haven't harmed him/her.
Posted by: Ulereger Clavigum6227 || 08/10/2005 12:30 Comments || Top||

#5  Once again, note that one hundred years ago, Senators were not directly elected by the people. Its is long past time that the federal judiciary be directly accountable to the people as well. Since Congress has obviously politicized the process anyway, since Congress refuses to perform its function to remove justices for bad behavior [as in creating new law or levying taxes (see the Kansas City Missouri School system case)], the power of consent should revert back to the people. King George III was independent. We don't need to call this a republic or a democracy if we tolerate a new defacto aristocracy. Far fewer cases will even appear before the bench if the power goes back to the real people, not the neo-marxist claim of in the name of the 'people'. Lets move the fight from the Senate to the country. Why should the Senators have all the fun.
Posted by: Thinemble Hupomotch7256 || 08/10/2005 14:36 Comments || Top||

#6  The reality of life in southern Arizona is shaded gray not black or white: what to do concerning a undocumented mother of three, residing in the U.S. for years, whose children are all born on U.S. soil... ???
Posted by: borgboy || 08/10/2005 18:05 Comments || Top||

#7  borgboy

As hard it is seems the 'black%white' view in me says to strip the kids of their citizenship and send them (and their mother) back. Citizenship should not be granted if either parent is illegal.
That is the 'hardcase' in me talking :)

Of course the law, as it now is, gives the kids citizenship. So legally we cannot deport them. However we should still deport and/or deny benefits to the mother.

We simply cannot give residence or benefits simply because an illegal had a baby in the united states otherwise we will invite (in fact are inviting) a flood of women to come here to have a baby in order to be able to 'stay' and/or get on welfare. And of course to deny the fathers would be 'sex discrimination' so we would have to give benefits to them as well.

Yes - its a hard line and a hard case. But we have to draw the line somewhere.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 08/10/2005 19:25 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Air Force Colonel Accused of Defacing Cars Bearing Pro-Bush Bumper Stickers
DENVER (AP) - An soon to be former Air Force Reserve colonel could face criminal charges for allegedly vandalizing cars at Denver International Airport bearing pro-Bush bumper stickers. Lt. Col. Alexis Fecteau, director of operations for reserve forces at the National Security Space Institute in Colorado Springs, is believed responsible for defacing at least 10 parked vehicles between December and June, police spokesman Sonny Jackson said Tuesday. A bait car left by a police detective was also defaced and the detective tracked down Fecteau, who turned himself in Friday. He was released on bond. A message left for a man of the same name in Colorado Springs wasn't immediately returned.
Jackson said Fecteau is suspected of blacking out the Bush bumper stickers and then spray painting an expletive and the president's name on the vehicles. Fecteau supervises 11 full-time and 30 part-time reservists at the institute, which is part of the Space Warfare Center at Schriever Air Force Base, said base spokesman Staff Sgt. Donald Branum.
This will go over real well with his boss
The bait vehicle was equipped with a camera that captured an image of the suspect and his car. Then a detective was able to find footage from a camera monitoring cars leaving the parking lot and traced Fecteau using the car's license plate, Jackson said. Police have referred the case to prosecutors, who are considering filing criminal charges, he said.

888. ART. 88. CONTEMPT TOWARD OFFICIALS
Any commissioned officer who uses contemptuous words against the President, the Vice President, Congress, the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of a military department, the Secretary of Transportation, or the Governor or legislature of any State, Territory, Commonwealth, or possession in which he is on duty or present shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.

909. ART. 109. PROPERTY OTHER THAN MILITARY PROPERTY OF UNITED STATES - WASTE, SPOILAGE, OR DESTRUCTION
Any person subject to this chapter who willfully or recklessly wastes, spoils, or otherwise willfully and wrongfully destroys or damages any property other than military property of the United States shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.

917. ART. 117. PROVOKING SPEECHES OR GESTURES
Any person subject to this chapter who uses provoking or reproachful words or gestures towards any other person subject to this chapter shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.

933. ART. 133. CONDUCT UNBECOMING AN OFFICER AND A GENTLEMAN
Any commissioned officer, cadet, or midshipman who is convicted of conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.

934. ART. 134. GENERAL ARTICLE
Though not specifically mentioned in this chapter, all disorders and neglects to the prejudice of good order and discipline in the armed forces, all conduct of a nature to bring discredit upon the armed forces, and crimes and offenses not capital, of which persons subject to this chapter may be guilty, shall be taken cognizance of by a general, special or summary court-martial, according to the nature and degree of the offense, and shall be punished at the discretion of that court.
That should finish his career
Posted by: Steve || 08/10/2005 09:26 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Lt. Col. Alexis Fecteau, director of operations for reserve forces at the National Security Space Institute in Colorado Springs, is believed responsible for defacing at least 10 parked vehicles between December and June, police spokesman Sonny Jackson said Tuesday.

His name wouldn't have French origins, would it? Naw, couldn't be!
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 9:50 Comments || Top||

#2  And don't forget that any security clearances should be pulled immediately as his personnel files should be flagged pending investigation into these charges.
Posted by: Gligum Ebbeager4829 || 08/10/2005 10:08 Comments || Top||

#3  Ba said: His name wouldn't have French origins, would it? Naw, couldn't be!

So, has General Lejeune's (USMC) name. Any problem?
Posted by: JFM || 08/10/2005 10:17 Comments || Top||

#4  I don't care what his name is, he should be put in front of a firing squad and shot. This crap is out of control and there is no excuse for someone from the armed forces, ESPECIALLY A COLONEL, in doing this behavior. I hated Clinton during my time in, but I would not even think about stooping to the level that this guy did. Do your time, buck up, get out and then bitch.
Asshat...
Posted by: mmurray821 || 08/10/2005 10:32 Comments || Top||

#5  Nothing personal, JFM. We all have our moonbats! I agree w/ mmurray!
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 10:46 Comments || Top||

#6  which he is on duty or present shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.

It ever reminds me the scennes on the first "Bounty" movie (with Clark Gable and Charles Laughton):

-Captain Bligh reading from a book: "Article 46: any sailor or officer disobeying an order will be punished as a court martial can direct". (Turning to Master Of Arms). "Two dozens, I believe"
-Master Of Arms: "Two dozens, Sir"


Posted by: JFM || 08/10/2005 10:49 Comments || Top||

#7  The story and consequences should be the same if the cars being defaced had pro Kerry or Democrat stickers. He swore an oath to support and defend the Constition which includes free speech even if he does not agree with that speech.
Posted by: Cheaderhead || 08/10/2005 10:49 Comments || Top||

#8  You hate to see an O-5 doing something so childish. More than anything, he disrespected the people who worked for him.
Posted by: Penguin || 08/10/2005 11:06 Comments || Top||

#9  In zabasearch there are two of these names in Colorado Springs. One born in December 1962, and one in October 1917. Since it is reasonable to assume that the 87-year-old would not be active in the military, one must assume that the 43-year-old is our man... Note: He also shows up on the Google search... Hmmm...
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 11:14 Comments || Top||

#10  The story and consequences should be the same if the cars being defaced had pro Kerry or Democrat stickers.

I think you have forgotten that Georges W Bush is also the President and the Commander in Chief ie a superior so painting derogatory comments on him is also a breach of army discipline and should entail the additional penalties for it.
Posted by: JFM || 08/10/2005 11:18 Comments || Top||

#11  This just proves the axiom that 5% of any large population is fruit loops.
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 11:40 Comments || Top||

#12  "Space Warfare Center", and a Colonel in his late forties, eh? Anyone want to lay money against this guy being transferred as far out of everybody else's presence as they could without cashiering him, and pissed as hell about it?

JFM: hear, hear. Why make fun of his name being sort-of-French-sounding when you can make fun of how it looks like it was derived from some variant on "fecal"?
Posted by: Mitch H. || 08/10/2005 13:18 Comments || Top||

#13  The Space Warfare Center? I hope the stress of keeping us safe from the Klingons didn't make the Lt. Col. snap.
But that'd be my story and I'd be sticking to it...
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 13:30 Comments || Top||

#14  Ah, I shouldn't make fun. Looks like the Fecteau family is an Air Force family of long standing. At least, I'm finding a lot of Air Force officers of that name.
Posted by: Mitch H. || 08/10/2005 13:32 Comments || Top||

#15  transferred as far out of everybody else's presence as they could without cashiering him


Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 13:33 Comments || Top||

#16  BigEd,

I note that in the latest Army reorganization there is to be a Stryker Brigade Combat Team at Fort Wainwright in Alaska. Probably will need an AF LNO.
Posted by: Thinemble Hupomotch7256 || 08/10/2005 14:42 Comments || Top||

#17  "Looks like the Fecteau family is an Air Force family of long standing. At least, I'm finding a lot of Air Force officers of that name." Oddly enough, I knew one of them at Sondrestrom, Greeland in 1982--- one Lt. Al Fecteau, from Maine, I believe. His nickname was "Preppy", and he was the base PAO, for what that's worth, but he would be too old now to be this doofus.
Posted by: Sgt. Mom || 08/10/2005 15:21 Comments || Top||

#18  It just happens that I knew Fecteau personally, though he was an O-3 at the time. He was a bit of an odd duck but very smart, or at least was until recently.
I think he could only do this if he is seriously mentally ill. He needs treatment rather than a firing squad, but his career is well and truly over in any case.
Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy || 08/10/2005 17:32 Comments || Top||

#19  Beware of Guard LtCols. Remember the yaho n texas that turned in the false docs was an Army Guard LtCol. I am sure we will find out some more about this person before he starts his whir; wind tour of TV shows, Move On rallies, and culmanting in the announcement that he is not afraid to tell the world about his life partner(s). So sad.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 08/10/2005 19:15 Comments || Top||

#20  He was AF Reserve, but on full-time active duty, meaning he falls fully under the UCMJ.

Damn deskbound zoomies (unlike the PJ's and guys at the pointy end of the stick).

He beter be glad he's USAF. If he were a Marine, the local gunnys would have rounded up a squad and seen to it he had a "fall in the shower" a few dozen times.

But the UCMJ will end his career - the only question is

A) rank reduction
B) time in the stockade
C) dishonorable discharge
D) loss of all pay and benefits (including retirement)
or
E) All of the above.

If they stick all the parts of the UCMJ they can on this guy, the answer will be "E". It all depends on how much of a hard-on the commanders have for presecuting him, and how hard they tell the JAG to ride this pony.

The other problem is that the place he was working requires some serious security clearance/access activity, polygraph and SSBI type stuff.

This is one of the more serious cases of BDS (Bush Derangement Syndrome) I have ever seen.
Posted by: OldSpook || 08/10/2005 20:50 Comments || Top||

#21  The other problem is that the place he was working requires some serious security clearance/access activity, polygraph and SSBI type stuff.

This is one of the more serious cases of BDS (Bush Derangement Syndrome) I have ever seen.


Goa'uld Symbiote, anyone?
Posted by: Abdominal_Snowman || 08/10/2005 21:31 Comments || Top||


Caribbean-Latin America
Guatemalan Government Cares More About Their People Than the Mexican Government.....
EFL. Think the Mexican government will care enough about their citizens to do this? Nah....me neither.

Alarmed by the increasing number of undocumented immigrants from Guatemala dying in the Arizona desert, the Guatemalan government is warning its countrymen to stay home rather than risk their lives trying to enter the United States illegally from Mexico.

Last week, several high-level officials from Guatemala along with a Guatemalan television crew toured both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border near Nogales to document the dangers involved with crossing illegally into the United States. U.S. Border Patrol officials have counted a record 199 deaths in Arizona since Oct. 1, the start of the federal fiscal year.

"It's not as easy as it seems," said Milton Alvarez, acting Consul General of Guatemala in Los Angeles. He visited the Arizona border along with Guatemala's Secretary of Foreign Relations Jorge Briz and Deputy Secretary of Foreign Relations Juan Jose Cabrera. "The smugglers are telling the migrants at the border they'll get them to Phoenix in three hours and the three hours can turn into three days or longer walking through the desert," Alvarez said. If they're lucky, they'll walk out....

Officially, the Guatemalan government has counted 10 migrant deaths in Arizona since May. But the government believes the actual number is "much higher" because many Guatemalans trying to cross illegally into the United States use fake Mexican documents to avoid being deported all the way back to Guatemala, Alvarez said.

Tighter enforcement in the Tucson sector has pushed much of the traffic west. In the Yuma sector, apprehensions of Central Americans increased 808 percent from a year ago, to 1,090.

Before setting out, most undocumented migrants from Guatemala are unaware of the risks of trying to enter the United States illegally, said Eliseo Dardon, president of Maya Tikal Organization, a Guatemalan community group based in Phoenix.
Besides temperatures that can exceed 110 degrees in the summer, migrants risk being robbed, raped, abandoned or killed by smugglers, who charge $5,000 or more for the trip from Guatemala to the U.S. Not to mention the ones held hostage once they get here...lovely bunch of people, migrant smugglers.

"What they see is (migrants) coming back after four or five years with money in their pockets," said Dardon, who was interviewed for the documentary to be aired as a weeklong special this month on Telediario, Canal 3, a major television network in Guatemala. "But they don't see the other side of the coin. This is not an American Dream anymore. It's become a nightmare."

Ira Mehlman, spokesman for the Federation for American Immigration Reform, a Washington, D.C-based organization that advocates for tighter restrictions on immigration, praised Guatemala's efforts to discourage people from trying to sneak into the United States, though he said it won't stop people from trying.

The United States needs to do a better job enforcing U.S. immigration laws against employers that hire undocumented immigrants, he said. That would send the message "that it's futile, that even if you do make it you aren't going to realize your goal of access to jobs," he said.

Posted by: Desert Blondie || 08/10/2005 09:26 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Trouble is, Guatemala is a humid country with lots of water. Mexico North of DF is generally hot and dry. For this reason, Guatemalans are a lot more likely to die crossing the desert than are Mexicans, who have a greater likelihood of knowing how harsh a desert can be.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 08/10/2005 11:41 Comments || Top||

#2  They want to be Americans? Fine. Invade and annex right down to Panama. Scrap their cultures and defend the wee little border.
Posted by: BH || 08/10/2005 11:51 Comments || Top||

#3  The United States needs to do a better job enforcing U.S. immigration laws against employers that hire undocumented immigrants, he said. That would send the message "that it's futile, that even if you do make it you aren't going to realize your goal of access to jobs," he said.

I agree completely. If employers are still willing to gamble on someone's identity without conducting anything more than a cursory check, then it's time to hit 'em where it'll hurt the most.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 08/10/2005 12:35 Comments || Top||

#4  Bill Clinton is President of Guatemala now?

"I feel your pain."
Posted by: Chris W. || 08/10/2005 13:26 Comments || Top||

#5  BAR, we need to perp walk some illegal-hiring CEOs and bankrupt their companies. It wouldn't take many before the word got around that hiring illegal "cheap" labor had a damned expensive downside and that the risk/reward ratio was prohibitive. Most businessmen aren't stupid. Make that negative cost/benefit relationship clear and our problem with illegals will go away quickly.
Posted by: mac || 08/10/2005 23:51 Comments || Top||


Iraq-Jordan
The Dogs of War
EFL

At a checkpoint leading to the U.S.-protected Green Zone, Gordy stands sentry. The affable Belgian Malinois has a nose finely tuned to detect the nitrates, plastic explosives, gunpowder and detonation cords that suicide bombers use to blow up people.

On a barren stretch of road in northern Iraq, a dog rigged with explosives approaches a group of Iraqi police officers. Detonated by remote control, the bomb tears the dog apart but doesn't harm the cops. I'm glad the cops are OK, but PO'ed about the bastards using a dog for this. I mean, what if they start using jackals?

In a war where the line between civilian and soldier is blurred, even man's best friend has been caught up in the combat. U.S. forces hail their trained dogs as heroes, but to terrorists insurgents, canines provide the means for a more sinister goal.

Iraqi police cite the recent use of dogs rigged with explosive devices in Latifiya, just south of Baghdad, in Baqubah in central Iraq and in and around the northern city of Kirkuk.

Some Iraqis are horrified by the ethics of dragging the animal world into a human conflict.

"How can they use these lovely pets for criminal and murderous acts?" asked Rasha Khairir, 25, an employee of a Baghdad stock brokerage. "A poor dog can't refuse what they are doing with him because he can't think and decide."

Despite a common prejudice in the Muslim world against dogs, which are considered unclean, even the most virulent clerical opponents of the U.S. presence in Iraq have decried the use of canines as proxies in the war.

Abdel Salam Kubaisi, a spokesman for the Muslim Scholars Assn., a hard-line Sunni Arab clerical organization sympathetic to terrorists insurgents, called the practice un-Islamic. "Our religion does not permit us to hurt animals," he said, "neither by using them as explosive devices nor in any other manner." So then, how about a fatwa against those using it, eh? Or is this simply more taqiya?

U.S. troops extol the virtues of their canine allies in the war against the terrorists insurgents.

"Dogs are vital in Iraqi counterinsurgency efforts," said Staff Sgt. Ann Pitt, 35, of Buffalo, N.Y., a U.S. Army dog handler based near the southern city of Nasiriya.

"We have many items to help us do our mission, but I don't think we have a better detection tool than a dog," said Pitt, who cares for Buddy, another Belgian Malinois, a dog similar to a German shepherd. "These dogs are amazing. They are more dependable and effective than almost anything we have available to us." I love dogs (though not in the Seattle sense), but I would rather send a dog into certain death than risk a human.

Of 4,300 dogs sent to Vietnam, 2,000 were handed over to the South Vietnamese army and 2,000 were put to sleep, . Only 200 managed to make it home, said Ron Aiello, Vietnam War-era dog handler who runs U.S. War Dog, a 1,100-member Burlington, N.J., organization.

His group set up a website to raise funds for a memorial to honor the dogs and their handlers.

"What we do is prevent people from getting killed," said Artwell Chibero, Gordy's 29-year-old Zimbabwean handler, an employee of a private security firm hired by the Defense Department.

Terrorists Insurgents have long stuffed roadside bombs into the carcasses of animals. But Iraqi security officials say they increasingly worry about the use of live animals.

"Dogs have been used in many areas by terrorists insurgents throughout Iraq" to carry explosive devices, said Noori Noori, inspector-general at the Interior Ministry. "They used mentally retarded people for operations during the elections, so why wouldn't they use animals?"

The daily newspaper Al Mada recently published an editorial cartoon showing an terrorists insurgent who strongly resembled Saddam Hussein trying to persuade a dog to strap on a belt bomb to advance the cause of the Baath Party, which once ruled Iraq.

"It is such a simple task," the terrorists insurgent tells the terrified dog. "All you have to do is to put on this explosives belt, repeat the party's slogans, and may Allah have mercy on your father's soul!"

Times staff writers Zainab Hussein and Suhail Ahmad contributed to this report. And the Jackal put it on RB.

I work weekends trying to get dogs (and cats) adopted out of the local pound. These bastards work weekends making explosive vests for them.
Posted by: Jackal || 08/10/2005 09:17 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [18 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "How can they use these lovely pets for criminal and murderous acts?" asked Rasha Khairir, 25, an employee of a Baghdad stock brokerage. "A poor dog can't refuse what they are doing with him because he can't think and decide."

Doesn't sound ANY different than a jihadi to me! Waiting on PETA in 4, 3, 2...
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 11:21 Comments || Top||

#2  The kind folks at PETA haven't gotten wind of the jihadi seeking suicide pitbulls yet have they?
Posted by: MunkarKat || 08/10/2005 11:25 Comments || Top||

#3  I mean, what if they start using jackals?

Don't worry..... they won't use their own Parents....
Posted by: CrazyFool || 08/10/2005 12:06 Comments || Top||

#4  Gordy, ... affable Belgian Malinois ...

My wife's business is that of a mobile pet groomer...

One of her occasional clients was a Belgian Malinois police dog. This dog escaped from the cop that housed him. He turned up a couple of days later a couple of blocks away at a house of a woman who had taken him in and fed him, until she figured out who owned him...

It made the local news, that's what prompted the women to call the cops... My wife says the dog is very sweet except when he gets a whiff of narcotics... Then he is very "serious."

As you see in the link... they are closely related to German Shepherds...
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 12:27 Comments || Top||

#5  Just what is that supposed to mean, CF? Are you implying that there are Jackals with enough self-loathing to raise moslems?
Posted by: Jackal || 08/10/2005 12:40 Comments || Top||

#6  Undercover Dog:

http://www.attackchi.org.au/kits.htm
Posted by: Anonymoose || 08/10/2005 12:41 Comments || Top||

#7  Suicide dogs? It's so hard to tell the difference between insurgents and their canine.

Question: Does Fito get 72 virgin dogs?
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 15:10 Comments || Top||

#8  "Suicide dogs?"

I'm sure the MSM will have a spin that it/they were upset about the ABUSES AT ABU GHRAIB where dogs were used.
Posted by: Dave || 08/10/2005 16:00 Comments || Top||

#9  On a more serious note, "affable Belgian Malinois???" The ones we had were very ill tempered; they were always biting their handlers. German Shepherds were much calmer.
Posted by: Dave || 08/10/2005 16:05 Comments || Top||

#10  but I would rather send a dog into certain death than risk a human.

I like to think my dawgs would insist on going first, the damn cats on the other hand would wait around and check the wind.
Posted by: Shipman || 08/10/2005 16:29 Comments || Top||

#11  hear, hear, Ship!
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 21:35 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
U.S. agent accused of aiding illegals is one himself
EFL:A U.S. Border Patrol agent accused of being an illegal alien and smuggling other illegals into the United States faces a bail hearing today in federal court in San Diego. Oscar Antonio Ortiz, 28, a Mexican citizen born in Tijuana, is charged with using a fraudulent birth certificate to obtain a job with the agency in 2001 and alien smuggling. The numbered certificate claimed he was born in Chicago, although authorities have since discovered it belonged to a man born a month earlier.
Nice job on the backround check, morons.
Mr. Ortiz, who was assigned at the agency's El Cajon field station 35 miles east of San Diego, pleaded not guilty to the felony charges during a hearing Friday. He was ordered held until today's bail review before U.S. Magistrate Judge Anthony J. Battaglia.

Law-enforcement authorities said Mr. Ortiz and another unidentified Border Patrol agent became the targets of an undercover investigation after they were overheard on intercepted telephone conversations discussing on "many occasions" the smuggling of migrants into the United States through a border area near Tecate, which they patrolled.

Transcripts from the intercepted calls show the unidentified agent told a family member in May that he and Mr. Ortiz smuggled several dozen people into the country and had been paid fees ranging from $300 to $2,000 a person. The intercepted calls, authorities said, came during an investigation by the North County Regional Gang Task Force in San Diego into a suspected drug ring.

Mr. Ortiz was arrested Thursday in Escondido, Calif., by agents from the Department of Homeland Security's Office of Inspector General and placed on administrative leave. Assisting in the arrest were Escondido police, the North County gang unit and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents. "Any agent who defies the Border Patrol's motto of 'Honor First' and chooses to violate the trust of the citizens they swore to protect will be held accountable," Border Patrol Chief David V. Aguilar in Washington said. "There is no place in the Border Patrol for behavior that tarnishes and discredits the badge we proudly wear." Mr. Ortiz's attorney, Stephen White, was not available yesterday for comment. If convicted, Mr. Ortiz could face up to 13 years in prison.

Border Patrol officials declined to discuss the case, although Assistant U.S. Attorney Alana Wong in San Diego told Judge Battaglia during Friday's hearing that Mr. Ortiz has resigned from the agency. Prosecutors argued that Mr. Ortiz should remain in jail until his case is decided. Federal prosecutors have not identified the second agent or said whether that agent also faces charges. Authorities said the second agent also had been placed on administrative leave.
Any chance they'll intercept him at the airport as he leaves the country?
Posted by: Steve || 08/10/2005 09:16 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Going to check if he was taking flight training [skipping the landing course] as well?
Posted by: Gligum Ebbeager4829 || 08/10/2005 9:33 Comments || Top||

#2  good catch - jail him. BTW - El cajon is 15 max, not 35 miles east - good reporting :-(
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 10:01 Comments || Top||

#3  Blast. Scooped once again by the AoS. (Please delete My posting as a duplicate.)

I wonder how many OTMs he let in?

Note that he's on "administrative leave," so he's still drawing a paycheck.

Anyone who's worked in the government feels a little twinge when hearing that OPM has been tasked to do something. The need to give the background checking back to the FBI, at least for the Border Patrol.
Posted by: Jackal || 08/10/2005 10:09 Comments || Top||

#4  Prosecutors argued that Mr. Ortiz should remain in jail until his case is decided.

Hoo boy. Given the tendency toward blind governmental stupidity where immigration is concerned, the judge will probably release the scumbag on his OR, and he'll likely promptly disappear, only to surface in Mexico soon afterward.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 08/10/2005 10:17 Comments || Top||

#5  Perhaps there is a problem here dear Senators and Representatives?
Posted by: MunkarKat || 08/10/2005 10:47 Comments || Top||

#6  Living in Tucson, I suggest that the rot is deeper than most think...
Posted by: borgboy || 08/10/2005 17:58 Comments || Top||

#7  Borgboy:
I live in Rita Ranch. Perhaps we can have our own little Rantapalooza some day. Invite whoever it is in Phoenix.
Posted by: Jackal || 08/10/2005 21:52 Comments || Top||

#8  Since he was a foreigner deliberately subverting the laws of the US Government to smuggle in foreigners, it would seem logical to put this guy at Guantanomo Bay for the rest of his natural life.
Posted by: RWV || 08/10/2005 22:03 Comments || Top||

#9  Leavenworth: big rocks => small rocks
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 22:10 Comments || Top||

#10  This is never ending. These are only the ones we catch too.
I feel we need American born folks to work these border patrol jobs like I feel American born should work the security in the airports. Maybe if these positions weren't so sympathetic to people trying to get through and have these folks be more vested in doing their job it might start making a difference. Ya think?
Posted by: Jan || 08/10/2005 23:29 Comments || Top||

#11  This MF deserves two bullets to the head and then to have his corpse thrown back across the border in a place where stray dogs could be expected to eat it.
Posted by: mac || 08/10/2005 23:41 Comments || Top||


Britain
Bomb quiz chemist 'fears return'
An Egyptian bio-chemist freed in Cairo after questioning over the 7 July London bombs says he is wary of returning to his home in the UK. Magdi al-Nashar, 33, recently completed a chemistry PhD at Leeds University. He says he was held during a trip to Egypt after having innocent contacts with bomber Jermaine Lindsay.
You mean helping him get the flat where the bombs were made? Those "innocent contacts"?
Just trying to help the lad make a new start in life.
He told the BBC he may delay his return to the UK after being held during a holiday in Egypt as he feared people might not know he has been cleared.
Rats, he figured it out. Egypt wouldn't extradite him, but if he returned on his own the Brits could pick him up at the airport for more "questioning".
Mr Nashar was arrested in Cairo on 15 July. He was freed on Tuesday after the authorities said there was no link between him and the bombs or al-Qaeda.
As far as I can tell, it's only the Egyptian authorities that have made that statement.
He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme he met Lindsay at a mosque in Leeds in October 2004. And he had found a location for a bomb lab accommodation for him in the city shortly before the bombings. "He told me his name was Gamal, but from the papers I knew his name was Jermaine Lindsay," he said.
"but his friends just called him Nancy..."
"...in June he phoned and asked me if I could help him get a flat for his family to move completely from London to Leeds." Mr Nashar said he was concerned after being portrayed as a "a bad person and a terrorist" by some of the media after 7 July. "If somebody has seen my picture on the front page as a terrorist or something like that and then he will not know I am innocent and has seen me in the streets, what will he think?".
That the cops are waiting for the right time to bag you?
Posted by: Steve || 08/10/2005 09:05 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Sung to "Guantanamera"

I am a jihadi from a desert place
I am right up in your ugly face
I want to take out all infidels
So virgins will service me
My verses honor Osama
But my acts create great drama

Guantanamo base
I’m off to Guantanamo base
Guantanamo base
I’m off to Guantanamo base

I reform young minds in Madrassas
Teach boys that bombing’s what it's about
Women only come in great paradise
To die for this would be nice
While Durbin cultivates much doubt
And other’s undermine Bush’s clout

Guantanamo base
I’m off to Guantanamo base
Guantanamo base
I’m off to Guantanamo base

With the naive of the West
I want to encourage them to be best
With those fools of the land
I want to sing to their band
Galloway’s words do please me
Soon I hope that I will be free

Guantanamo base
I’m off to Guantanamo base
Guantanamo base
I’m off to Guantanamo base
Posted by: Ogeretla 2005 || 08/10/2005 13:19 Comments || Top||

#2  I am a United States Senator.
I have a right not to be made fun of!
Posted by: Dick Durbin || 08/10/2005 14:45 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan/South Asia
Militants kill Afghan woman 'spy'
Suspected Taleban militants have killed an Afghan woman they accused of spying for the Americans, officials say. Gunmen shot the woman dead near her house on Tuesday night in southern Zabul Province. She has not been named. Rebels have killed many men in a rising wave of intimidation, but this is the first time a woman has been targeted since the Taleban fell in 2001.
Just catching up on their backlog, how many women did the Taleban kill before 2001, mister BBC?
Meanwhile, a US soldier has died from wounds sustained in a bomb attack in central Afghanistan on Tuesday.

Six militants burst into the woman's house in Mizan district of Zabul Province on Tuesday night, district chief Haji Mohammad Younus said.
They dragged her out of her house and shot her dead before leaving on motorcycles, taking her brother and father with them, he said. Abdul Latif Hakimi, who claims to speak for the Taleban, said the guerrillas killed the woman "because she was spying for the American invaders".
He confirmed that two male relatives of the victim had been kidnapped but said they were alive.
"For now"
The death of the US soldier following Tuesday's bomb attack in central Ghazni Province brought to five the number of US troops killed in Afghanistan in the past week. He died of his wounds shortly after arrival at the US military base at Bagram where he had been airlifted for treatment, a US military statement said. Another soldier wounded in the attack is in a stable condition. The US unit was conducting an operation to "disrupt enemy activity in the region" when they came under attack, the statement said.
Posted by: Steve || 08/10/2005 08:30 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "but this is the first time a woman has been targeted since the Taleban fell in 2001."

BBC,

You just can't report the news without the "Finger In The Eye Syndrome," can you?

"Six militants burst into the woman's house"

Art thou bravest among all of Allah's children.
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 10:20 Comments || Top||

#2  They dragged her out of her house and shot her dead before leaving on motorcycles, taking her brother and father with them, he said.

I'd bet that if someone took a random shot at any person on a motorcycle, the Taliban would lose another member. :D
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 08/10/2005 10:36 Comments || Top||

#3  But it won't be the last. If this is bad, imagine if we let them ever gain power again. There would be a lot of women killed.
Posted by: plainslow || 08/10/2005 10:42 Comments || Top||

#4 
BBC
Burquas are
Best
Club
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 13:42 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran breaking seals while IAEA looks on
VIENNA (Reuters) - Iran began breaking U.N. seals at a uranium processing plant on Wednesday, the IAEA said.

"They have begun breaking the seals," International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) spokesman Mark Gwozdecky said. "They are going to break all the seals and begin operating the plant in full."

He said IAEA surveillance equipment was in place at the plant near the central city of Isfahan.

Get ready to rummmmmmmble!

Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 08:29 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Time for GW and Puty to talk about reducing their own nuclear holdings by, say, 50 warheads apiece. Of course the problem will be with the Russian translator trying to understand nukleeoor, but then they can put Laura on the line to clear that up. She can pronounce it.
Posted by: Gligum Ebbeager4829 || 08/10/2005 10:19 Comments || Top||

#2  Somehow, my thoughts turn to Madonna singing like a virgin.
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 11:13 Comments || Top||

#3  Stop in the name of the IAEA!
Cease and desist in the name of the IAEA!
I'm sternly warning you in the name of the IAEA!
Cease and desist or recieve a strident warning in the strongest possible terms in the name of the IAEA!
You won't?
Okay.
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 14:38 Comments || Top||


Iraq-Jordan
Michael Yon: Jungle Law
Posted by: ed || 08/10/2005 08:03 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [11 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Deuce Four is an overwhelmingly aggressive and effective unit, and they believe the best defense is a dead enemy. They are constantly thinking up innovative, unique, and effective ways to kill or capture the enemy; proactive not reactive. They planned an operation with snipers, making it appear that an ISF vehicle had been attacked, complete with explosives and flash-bang grenades to simulate the IED. The simulated casualty evacuation of sand dummies completed the ruse.

The Deuce Four soldiers left quickly with the "casualties," "abandoning" the burning truck in the traffic circle. The enemy took the bait. Terrorists came out and started with the AK-rifle-monkey-pump, shooting into the truck, their own video crews capturing the moment of glory. That's when the American snipers opened fire and killed everybody with a weapon. Until now, only insiders knew about the AK-monkey-pumpers smack-down.


Good to know the terrs aren't the only ones who are creative and adaptive.

Read the whole thing at the link!
Posted by: Bobby || 08/10/2005 8:31 Comments || Top||

#2  Damn. I was going to quote that part, too.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 08/10/2005 8:33 Comments || Top||

#3  Me too! This is outstanding Yon.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis || 08/10/2005 8:50 Comments || Top||

#4  Newsflash for Seymour Hersh and News Outlets:
The most serious terrorists do not fear prison here. Captain Jeff VanAntwerp, who commands Alpha Company, recently told me that Iraqis joke among themselves that they would pay 5,000 Dinar per night to stay at Abu Ghraib prison. It's air conditioned, the showers are good, the food is good, and the water is good. The mother seemed to know this and it curled in contempt behind her smile.
Posted by: ed || 08/10/2005 9:20 Comments || Top||

#5  Thank God for folks like Yon who take the time to document and publish what really goes on in Iraq day to day.
Posted by: MunkarKat || 08/10/2005 11:04 Comments || Top||

#6  I wonder why the US Army hasn't started issuing transparent gun shields? Most likely expense. They are clear, light, curved shields that attach to the top of a rifle, and are designed to deflect frag, flash-bang and bullets that would otherwise hit the unprotected face and neck area of the rifleman. Using such a shield you can look around corners and over ledges with some protection, as well as inspect possible small bombs, all the while your rifle barrel is pointing towards whatever you are looking at.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 08/10/2005 11:13 Comments || Top||

#7  Yon is just awesome.
Posted by: anymouse || 08/10/2005 12:14 Comments || Top||

#8  The press should be proud of great journalists like Yon and support them.
Posted by: 3dc || 08/10/2005 12:29 Comments || Top||

#9  we should start a campaign to send emails with Yon's BLOG URL to all the MSM with the

Subject: This man is doing your job, so what the hell are you doing?
Posted by: Glosing Fleamble8782 || 08/10/2005 13:37 Comments || Top||

#10  That's when the American snipers opened fire and killed everybody with a weapon. Until now, only insiders knew about the AK-monkey-pumpers smack-down.

I hope this happens more often then we know. A lot more often...
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 13:57 Comments || Top||

#11  absolutely incredible posting.
Posted by: bgrebel9 || 08/10/2005 14:08 Comments || Top||

#12  I read the whole article - and I had my heart in my mouth at times! He's a great writer (and has balls of steel!).

Really, read it all - it's *well* worth the time to do so.
Posted by: Tony (UK) || 08/10/2005 14:16 Comments || Top||

#13  I really can't add anything to the comments, but I'll try anyway: not only does Yon write extremely well, he puts it all on the line to get the truth out (not the MSM's Truth).
I would say he's worthy of a Pulitzer, but the award's so debased it would be an insult to his work.
Posted by: Xbalanke || 08/10/2005 16:26 Comments || Top||

#14  Maybe it's time to create a special award for those filing such vital news reports while in great danger.
Posted by: Crairong Omomotch6492 || 08/10/2005 17:00 Comments || Top||

#15  Hey, check out the Belmont Club. (link) Richard's got some really interesting commentary on some of Yon's recent work.
Posted by: Rory B. Bellows || 08/10/2005 17:39 Comments || Top||

#16  The muslim boyz like to kill the infidel when the infidel comes to the aid of a fallen friend. I think Duece Four has found a way to minimize the muslim pastime affectionately known as the "paleo-car swarm". Wonderful reporting.
Posted by: Mark Z. || 08/10/2005 17:59 Comments || Top||

#17  Yon, who truly deserves all the accolades bestowed by Rantburgers, noted that Deuce-Four only killed every terrorist with an AK. They should have taken out every scumbag with a camera, too. Press MFs want to play with the terrorists, they should suffer the same consequences as their playmates.
Posted by: mac || 08/10/2005 23:44 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Four Iranian soldiers killed in clash with HPG
Two Kurdish human rights activists from the 'Kurdistan Human Rights Organisation' (RMMK) were arrested by Iranian forces in the city of Mahabad in eastern Kurdistan. Saman Resulpur was arrested at 00:30 (00:30 am GMT+3.30) on Tuesday, August 9 in his house in the Sehrek district of Mahabad. During the raid the Iranian soldiers seized Resulpur's computer, all his CDs, video and audio cassettes and a great number of his books. The other RMMK-member Zeyneb Bayezidi was arrested at the same time when soldiers raided her family's home in Mahabad. After searching through the house, the soldiers arrested Bayezidi together with her little sister, her father and her brother named Aso. It was also reported that several family members were seriously beaten and injured during the raid.

Meanwhile, it's been reported that the leading oppositional journalist Akbar Ganji has now ended the hunger strike which he started on July 11. When he exactly ended his hunger strike was not reported. Ganji was jailed in 2001 and sentenced to six years in prison after writing regime-critical articles.
Posted by: Phish Glulet6297 || 08/10/2005 06:24 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [12 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "Two Kurdish human rights activists from the 'Kurdistan Human Rights Organisation' (RMMK) were arrested by Iranian forces"

I am sure your fellow Int'l Human Rights Group, led by the UN, will be flying in ASAP to bail you out.

Oops! I just found out that they won't be able to help you. The UN is a little busy right now putting together bail money for themselves, you know, with the scandal and all. But, please feel free to fend for yourselves and don't call us anymore. Good Luck!
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 10:34 Comments || Top||

#2  If UN can't fly in, then what about US? Who's going to save the Kurds from Iran (who "kills its own people")... Or is it because Kurds in Iran doesn't have oil to give Bush?
Posted by: Fleck Glavitch1437 || 08/10/2005 18:30 Comments || Top||

#3  Raspberry, methinks.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 18:32 Comments || Top||

#4  melon.
Posted by: Howard UK || 08/10/2005 18:38 Comments || Top||

#5  Heh ;-)
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 18:43 Comments || Top||

#6  Somehow, if the US ever does anything to help the Kurds in Iran, the author of comment number 2 will be the first to scream that it's because of oil there...
Posted by: Phil Fraering || 08/10/2005 19:55 Comments || Top||


Kurdish human rights activists arrested by Iran
Posted by: Angoluter Ebboluse7809 || 08/10/2005 06:24 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [8 views] Top|| File under:


Europe
Israeli head of anti-terror: Al-Qaida terrorists arrested in Turkey
Turkey has arrested several Al-Qaeda terrorists near the Turkish tourist resort of Alanya in western Turkey, Danny Arditi the head of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's Counter-Terrorism said. Arditi made a statement on August 9 to the Israeli TV-channel 'Channel Two' saying that Turkish security forces have broken up an Al-Qaeda cell in Alanya, seizing weapons, C-4 plastic explosives, transport vehicles and communication equipments.

Arditi had earlier requested Israeli tourists to not visit any tourist resort between Alanya and Kemer in western Turkey. Boats from Israel carrying a total of 6,000 Israeli tourists were on Friday and Monday ordered by Arditi to change route.

Several attacks believed to have been carried out by suicide bombers in the tourist resorts of western Turkey have initially been blamed on the Kurdish PKK by Turkish police, but English and Israeli sources have repeatedly instead warned that Al-Qaeda are planning to carry out attacks in Turkish tourist resorts.

The Kurdish militant organisation TAK (Kurdistan's Freedom Falcons) which has been blamed for all bomb attacks in western Turkey had only claimed one attack which was carried out in Cesme on July 10, slightly injuring more than 20 people. TAK had used minimal explosives which was placed in a radio and put in a trash bin close to a bank. TAK had also stated that they warned Turkish authorities before setting off the bomb, but the warning was ignored by the authorities.
Posted by: Chung Omeater5887 || 08/10/2005 06:22 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The Kurdish militant organisation TAK (Kurdistan's Freedom Falcons) which has been blamed for all bomb attacks in western Turkey had only claimed one attack which was carried out in Cesme on July 10, slightly injuring more than 20 people. TAK had used minimal explosives which was placed in a radio and put in a trash bin close to a bank. TAK had also stated that they warned Turkish authorities before setting off the bomb, but the warning was ignored by the authorities.

What the hell? They are trying to make political statements, but the Turkish police are so inept that they are now considered full fledged terrorists.

I guess all the competent Turkish police are prison guards buggering western drug mules.
Posted by: Midnight Express || 08/10/2005 13:33 Comments || Top||


Israel-Palestine
"Today Gaza, Tomorrow Jerusalem"
By Daniel Pipes
Excerpt:
But I forecast a very different outcome. Given that some 80 percent of Palestinians continue to reject Israel’s very existence, signs of Israeli weakness, such as the forthcoming Gaza withdrawal, will instead inspire heightened Palestinian irredentism. Absorbing their new gift without gratitude, Palestinians will focus on those territories Israelis have not evacuated. (This is what happened after Israeli forces fled Lebanon.) The retreat will inspire not comity but a new rejectionist exhilaration, a greater frenzy of anti-Zionist anger, and a surge in anti-Israel violence.

Palestinians themselves are openly saying as much. Ahmed al-Bahar, a top Hamas figure in Gaza, says that “Israel has never been in such a state of retreat and weakness as it is today following more than four years of the intifada. Hamas’ heroic attacks exposed the weakness and volatility of the impotent Zionist security establishment. The withdrawal marks the end of the Zionist dream and is a sign of the moral and psychological decline of the Jewish state. We believe that the resistance is the only way to pressure the Jews.”

Sami Abu Zuhri, a Hamas spokesman, says likewise that the withdrawal is “due to the Palestinian resistance operations
and we will continue our resistance.”

Others are more specific. At a mass rally in Gaza City last Thursday, some 10,000 Palestinians danced, sang, and chanted, “Today Gaza, tomorrow Jerusalem.” Jamal Abu Samhadaneh, commander of Gaza’s Popular Resistance Committees, announced on Sunday, “We will move our cells to the West Bank” and warned that “The withdrawal will not be complete without the West Bank and Jerusalem.” The Palestinian Authority’s Ahmed Qurei also asserts, “Our march will stop only in Jerusalem.”
Posted by: ed || 08/10/2005 01:59 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Sliced salami approach to the dismemberment of Eretz Israel.
Posted by: borgboy || 08/10/2005 2:21 Comments || Top||

#2  There's no surprises here. I may well be proved wrong - but I think that Israel is better off finishing the castle walls and moving inside where they can better control who comes and goes and be free to lob missles at anyone who shoots arrows at them. Besides, I think the Paleos will soon be really busy killing each other and may actually begin looking to their Arab neighbors to get some of their land back. It's like The Club - make it a little difficult and the thiefs will often move on to the next car.

But I may very well be proved wrong. At least they are doing something to see if they can make it work, which IMHO is a better option than just maintaining the unmaintainable status quo. Besides, with the settlers gone, they can always take back the land, raze it, and make a nice buffer zone, if that's what they really need.
Posted by: 2b || 08/10/2005 4:47 Comments || Top||

#3  oh..and btw PR - your analogy of Mexifornia (yesterday) is absurd. A better analogy would be if we gave back a bit of farming land out by El Centro (that's populated by only 8,000) and in exchange for that got secure wall to restrict the free flow of illegal immigrants that cross our border specifically to blow up discos and busses. It seems a fair exchange to me.
Posted by: 2b || 08/10/2005 5:28 Comments || Top||

#4  agreed
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 8:40 Comments || Top||

#5  Dont forget that the Palistinians also lose any 'alledged justification' for their acts (at least for the Euros and the left). The next bombing should be viewed more for what it really is deliberate and intentional murder of innocents.

Not that it actually will by the left who will make up any 'justification' for the murders.
Posted by: CrazyFool || 08/10/2005 9:13 Comments || Top||

#6  2b,

I don't think my analogy is absurd and I am not alone. I don't understand your mindset. You are willing to give up U.S. land (El Centro) to build a wall. The difference between my thinking and your thinking is that, I will build a wall alright, I will build it on the BORDER. I will give up nothing and reward no one, for breaking the INS laws. I will make no deals with illegals.

In the case of Israel, they should never reward terrorism. There is no denying that Israel is moving the settlers under constant rocket barrage. Even if I agree on the pullout, which I won't, I would set a mandate. The mandate states that not one rocket lands in settler land for at least two years. Being the pigs that they are, they can't even stop launching a rocket for two days much less two years. Hamas and PLF, have already coregraphed their victory parade.

Your mindset states that, once the settlers leave, the Pali's are going to destroy each other. I am saying that is, absurd thinking. We may have the popcorn bowl on our lap, but we will never get to enjoy one popped kernel. Hell, I've waiting to enjoy some popcorn concerning Judea, Samaria, and Golan but, as predicted, my popcorn is stale now and lost its flavor.

I don't know if this is true, but I have been getting some emails that says that Sharon has purposely denied IDF protection, for several months now in the settler area, in order to "motivate" the settlers to move out. If it is true, this is one despicable man.

The simple truth is that, as long as Israel exists, the PLF and Hamas are not going to destroy each other. We will not be able to enjoy mutual destruction until Israel disappears and no one at RB wants that.
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 9:54 Comments || Top||

#7  The problem, PR, is that Israel cannot take the steps necessary to annex Gaza. They really have only have one option.

That is to build the fence / wall around what they consider Israel to be, and ethnically cleanse the area of "Palestinians".

The only way they could keep Gaza (or sections of the West Bank) was to formally annex the land and kick out anyone who didn't like it.

Once they have established their borders, any incursion, either human or ordnance, is a casus belli and they can respond appropriately.

A better analogy would be the US relation to Peurto Rico. Imagine that the vast majority of PRs wanted nothing to do with the US. But, the settlers from NY or FLA or Kansas wanted to stay.
The US should say fine stay, but, PR is no longer a part of the US. Never really was, never will be.
Have fun, and don't forget to write.
Posted by: AlanC || 08/10/2005 10:31 Comments || Top||

#8  AlanC,

There is one minor glitch to your viewpoint. The U.S. didn't tell the settlers from NY or FLA or Kansas to move to Puerto Rico and the U.S. will take care of you (militarily & financially) even, under the threat of terrorism. If the settlers from NY, FLA, Kansas, move to Puerto Rico under their own cognizance without gov't knowledge or approval, then I can maybe understand your point. As a Christian, I can't Biblically, compare the Israeli land situation with other land, such U.S. or British land. Every other land situation is different from a Biblical point of view.

Yes, the previous administrations of Israel promised the settlers protection and funding and told them to move to Gush Katif. Now, all of a sudden a new administration comes along wants to destroy the promise/agreement. This is wrong.
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 10:57 Comments || Top||

#9  I don't buy any historical or biblical arguments about who should own what cause there's no way to know when to stop.

Re Israel encouraging the settlers it doesn't change any facts on the ground. Fine they were told they could go, they went, the gov't now says oops my bad; come on back. This goes directly to my point, the only option for Israel was to say this land (all of Gaza, some of Gaza, whatever) is ours; all you Paleolithians go back to Egypt and Jordan, etc. AKA ethnic cleansing.

Re: the analogy, you can push any analogy to the breaking point, but, if you don't think that the US govt has encouraged mainlanders to set up in PR you haven't been paying attention. The economics of the situation greatly encourage business to move in, and that means people.

What do you think will happen if the PRs voted for independence instead of the status quo? Do you think that the US would still protect people that wanted to stay there? At best we'd evacuate them from a hostile crowd.
Posted by: AlanC || 08/10/2005 11:53 Comments || Top||


Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Whistleblower broke secret of Russian sub
Via Drudge:
Without an anonymous phone call by a tearful woman to a local radio station, the world may have heard too late about the Russian submarine stranded in the Pacific to save its seven crew, the journalist who took the call claimed. Guzel Latypova, a journalist in the port city of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, says the mysterious caller shattered an official silence and in doing so pressured the authorities to look abroad for help in mounting the rescue. The telephone rang at Radio 3, where Latypova is news director, about 24 hours after the AS-28 mini-sub became trapped 190 meters under the Pacific.

"A woman called in tears. She was saying that a mini-sub had got stuck with seven men aboard in the Bay of Berezovaya," Latypova, 32, recounted to AFP. The mystery caller said she had got the news from "someone" in the military. "She saved these lads. A monument should be raised to her. If she had not called it would have remained a secret, I'm sure." Latypova, who also works for the Kamchatka Peninsula region's STS television and the Russian news agency Interfax, was not sure at first what to make of the sensational tip-off. "That day there was hardly any news. I called my colleague at Ria Novosti news agency, Oksana Guseva, and we tried to verify the report through our own sources." Guseva managed to get through to Rear Admiral Viktor Gavrikov, commander in chief of the armed forces for the northeast of Russia. "Immediately his voice changed. He said 'no comment' and put the phone down. That convinced us it was serious," Latypova said. Five minutes later, she had broadcast over the radio, and soon afterward the report was spreading across Russia through news agencies and television stations.

It was only thanks to the media that the wife of the submarine's commander, 25-year-old Vyacheslav Miloshevsky, then discovered the news. "She heard on the local television at 7:00 p.m. No one gave her any official warning," Latypova said. When the worried family tried to find out from the navy what the chances were of seeing their loved one again, a military psychologist arrived. "This is Russia -- pray!" he told Miloshevsky's wife Yelena, according to Latypova, who went to offer the family support. "That's the sort of psychological help they got."

Media pressure may have played a role in President Vladimir Putin's decision to dispatch Defence Minister Sergei Ivanov to the scene, and -- crucially -- in the military's painful acknowledgement of the need for foreign help. As soon as a high-tech British naval robot cut the cables and nets trapping the submarine, the seven men inside were saved.

This was not the first scoop for Latypova's Radio 3, which has bucked the Russian trend of extreme loyalty to the authorities and caution about running any embarrassing news. "This is not a region here, but the edge of Russia, and that changes everything. It's the peninsula of freedom," Latypova quipped. "Don't forget that the inhabitants here are the descendants of adventurers."
Barkeep, let's have a round in honor of all the peninsulas of freedom!
Posted by: Seafarious || 08/10/2005 00:26 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Heh.
Posted by: Seafarious || 08/10/2005 1:09 Comments || Top||

#2  Kamchatka is one place I want to see before I die.

Good link Sea!
Posted by: phil_b || 08/10/2005 3:27 Comments || Top||

#3  Ïåòðîïàâëîâñê-Êàì÷àòñêèé Ñóáìàðèíà

Put in google search would yield stories on the subject...

PS you are searching for "Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky" and Submarine... Nothing uncivil...

Then all you do is move it to a translate source to get an answer
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 11:44 Comments || Top||


Israel-Palestine
Red Cross Thingy leaves 'lawless' Gaza
Via Daily Pundit:
The Red Cross Thingy has shut down its field activities in the Gaza Strip because of growing lawlessness in Palestinian areas in the build-up to Israel’s pullout next week. The move came after a surge in kidnappings as powerful clans have seized Western hostages to use as bargaining tools in disputes with Mahmoud Abbas’s increasingly weak Palestinian Authority security forces. The decision was taken after the Red Cross office in Khan Younis was shot at by members of Al-Aksa Martyrs' Brigades an unknown militant group. Two UN staff were also briefly kidnapped and. It was the fourth kidnapping of Westerners in three weeks. Mr. Abbas, the Palestinian President, urged his people to maintain law and order, and promised elections in January. But one aid official said that law and order is breaking down after corrupt security chiefs were replaced by “cleaner” but less influential figures. With the pullout approaching, the Mufti of Jerusalem and the Palestinian territories yesterday issued a fatwa forbidding any act that impeded the pullout departure of troops and settlers from the Gaza Strip, which Israel has held under military occupation for 38 years.
There is no Palestine. There is only chaos, and hatred, and the coppery scent of blood on the desert breeze.
Posted by: Seafarious || 08/10/2005 00:16 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  My cousin's near scrub ranch is about 1/4 the size of the Gaza Strip. It barely supports her family of four and 1000 cattle. (No rain in years).
But, it is still better land than Gaza and millions live there. Go figure!

Posted by: 3dc || 08/10/2005 1:36 Comments || Top||

#2  wonder which will ultimately end up worse: Ein-El-Hellhole or Gaza...they have the same mix of death-cults, thug-lords, willing-to-kill populace, and many many weapons. Should be fun
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 8:38 Comments || Top||

#3  "But one aid official said that law and order is breaking down after corrupt security chiefs were replaced by “cleaner” but less influential figures."


My laughter is so loud that, my Bit Stream Richter Scale is picking up the waveform.

This article is not stating whether if it is the Int'l Red Cross or the Red Crescent. Probably, in reality, there is no difference.

I believe the real reason that they got shot at is because the Red Cross no longer wants to carry weapons caches, bombs, and/or rockets, in their ambulances.
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 10:13 Comments || Top||

#4  But, it is still better land than Gaza and millions live there. Go figure!

There's nothing to figure - your taxes at work...
Posted by: Colt || 08/10/2005 13:31 Comments || Top||


Down Under
Aussie PM pays tribute to secret warriors
Prime Minister John Howard has paid tribute to Australia's secret warriors to whom he has given more work and more money than any previous Australian government.

Officially launching a new book on the Special Air Service (SAS) Regiment, Mr Howard said he felt a special obligation to the SAS, as well as all others in the defence force - because he had sent them into danger in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"It is true that in the time that I have been prime minister the activities of the SAS have been the most intense since the time the regiment was formed," he said.

As Australia's premier counter-terrorist force, the SAS has been granted vast resources over the past few years.

Mr Howard said his associations with the SAS, most recently when the soldiers provided protection for his trip to Iraq late last month, had left an indelible impression.

"They have left first and foremost the impression of that high derring-do courage which is so essential to special forces and so characteristic of how we like to depict ourselves as Australians," he said.

"They have left the indelible impression of superb professionalism and, where necessary, discipline. They have also left a great impression of a humanitarian understanding of the role of a modern army."

Army chief Lieutenant General Peter Leahy said much was asked of the Perth-based unit of about 500 highly trained troops.

"The public know little of the Special Air Service Regiment and this is by choice and for good reason. We asked the men of the SAS Regiment to do difficult tasks, usually at short notice and in very complex, dangerous and often sensitive circumstances," he said.

"This book lifts the veil of secrecy that surrounds the SAS ever so slightly."

The book, The Amazing SAS by journalist Ian McPhedran, details the exploits of Australia's special forces soldiers in East Timor, Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as in the controversial MV Tampa affair in 2001.

The SASR prides itself on its mystique and low profile. Mr McPhedran said he managed to convince senior officers and soldiers that their story should be told and the book is the product of hundreds of hours of recorded conversations.

He said a group of Australian special forces soldiers was now preparing to return to Afghanistan.

"Some may not return and it is my hope that under such tragic circumstances their families will be looked after properly," he said.

"Things have improved in recent times in terms of compensation for war veterans but there is a long way to go. It is not good enough for families to have to rely on charities such as the SAS Resources Trust to make up the shortfalls."
Posted by: Oztralian [AKA] God Save The World || 08/10/2005 00:15 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  God bless them and their families. And thanks to the Aussies for standing firm with us. The "quiet warriors" are doing the deeds we need done in this war. Personally, I think it best that they're so "secret."
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 10:12 Comments || Top||

#2  The Aussies have always been our greatest ally. A deserved well done to these brave warriors and friends.
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 11:01 Comments || Top||

#3  good on ya.
Posted by: bk || 08/10/2005 14:34 Comments || Top||

#4  Hear, hear!
Posted by: trailing wife || 08/10/2005 20:10 Comments || Top||


International-UN-NGOs
Weekly Piracy Report 2-8 August 2005
Suspicious Crafts

[August 07 2005] at 0754 UTC in position 15:06N - 041:49E, Southern Red Sea. Four small boats equipped with powerful outboard engines were sighted by a container ship underway. Each boat was manned by 10 persons and had no fishing gear.

Recently Reported Incidents

[August 04 2005] at 0600 LT in position 02:19.5N - 101:50E, 5nm off Tanjung Tuan, Malacca Straits. Several persons in an unlit speedboat, length 6 meters, approached a bulk carrier underway. They came within one cable intending to board. Crew mustered, activated fire hoses and directed searchlights. Speedboat slowed down and fled.

[August 04 2005] at 0430 LT in position 01:41.7S - 116:38.4E, Adang Bay Anchorage, Indonesia. Four robbers were in the process of boarding a bulk carrier using hooks attached to ropes. Alert crew raised alarm and robbers aborted boarding.

[August 04 2005] at 0250 LT at No. 2 Anchorage, ILO, Peru. Two robbers armed with long knives boarded a general cargo ship at forecastle. They stole ship's stores and escaped in a fishing boat. Master called port authorities on VHF but received no response.

[August 04 2005] at 0006 LT at Callao Anchorage area no.8, Peru. Three robbers boarded a tanker by climbing anchor chain. They broke padlocks of forward locker, stole ship's stores and escaped. Master reported to port authorities and police.

[August 03 2005] at 1600 UTC in position 13:24N - 049:25E, Gulf of Aden. Persons armed with guns in two speedboats trailed a chemical tanker underway at a range of 10nm. Ten mins later, they increased speed and came within two cables astern. Alert crew prevented boarding. Later, three speedboats made similar attempts to board but ship took evasive manoeuvres and boarding was averted.

[August 03 2005] at 0212 LT Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania. Ten persons in a white boat attempted to board a container ship underway. Crew mustered and robbers aborted attempted boarding.

[July 25 2005] at 2100 LT at Chittagong Port, Bangladesh. Robbers in a small boat approached a bulk carrier at berth. They stole zinc anodes welded to the hull using crowbars. Crew raised alarm but robbers threw stones at them and escaped. Master called authorities and a security boat arrived 10 mins later to investigate.

[July 15 2005] at 0400 LT at Chittagong Anchorage, Bangladesh. Four robbers boarded a bulk carrier coming in to anchor. One robber held watchman at knifepoint while others broke into aft locker and stole ship's stores. Alert crew raised alarm and robbers escaped.
Posted by: Pappy || 08/10/2005 00:11 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Yar, a fine week of piracy it be. Me coffers and me dead man's chest be overflowing. Avast, ye scurvy dogs, hoist the mainsail and shove off... there be piracy that needs doin'!
Posted by: Chris W. || 08/10/2005 0:28 Comments || Top||

#2  I'm sure these are the same guys appearing, week after week.
Posted by: gromky || 08/10/2005 1:58 Comments || Top||

#3  The standards for pirates seemed to have dropped way off since I've died. These blighters wouldn't have made decent second story men in my day...
Posted by: Errol Flynn || 08/10/2005 9:20 Comments || Top||

#4  Just think what a few big fat juicy Q-Ships could do. No need for heavy guns or automatic weapons. There are only about eighty gazillion Soviet PRGs in the world
Posted by: Cheaderhead || 08/10/2005 13:03 Comments || Top||

#5  Let's all chip in and buy Pappy a comfortable Bell F1 Helmet! We owne it to 'em.
Posted by: Shipman || 08/10/2005 17:59 Comments || Top||

#6  Of course I would fight this trend with the reconstituted Able Danger Team.
Posted by: Shipman || 08/10/2005 18:00 Comments || Top||

#7  Not having the faintest clue what Americans are talking about is the cat in the lap of my days.
Posted by: Howard UK || 08/10/2005 18:06 Comments || Top||

#8  Howard, dear, I'm as confused as you are. Errol Flynn was a film star back in the early talkie days -- he played Robin hood and various dashingly romantic pirates, highwaymen and stray princelings -- so long as he could wave a sword, wear tight pants and woo pretty ladies, all were content. Other than that, I don't seem to have the cultural referents. ;-)
Posted by: trailing wife || 08/10/2005 20:34 Comments || Top||

#9  IMA thinkr RAB equipped with waterwings
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 20:49 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
‘Iran would rather be hit by sanctions than back down ...'
Hokay ...
TEHRAN - Iran would rather submit to UN economic sanctions than back down on its nuclear program, the defence minister said on Tuesday ahead of a meeting of the UN nuclear watchdog on how to respond to Iran’s resumption of uranium conversion.

Meanwhile, Iranian officials said they have improved the range and accuracy of the Shahab-3 missile which is a conventional weapon but can be fitted with a nuclear warhead. The missile can now strike targets as far away as 2,000 kilometers with an accuracy of within one meter, they said.

Iran denies US accusations that its nuclear program aims to develop weapons, saying it is intended only to produce electricity.
The missiles are only for a space program ...
Admiral Ali Shamkhani, Iran’s outgoing defense minister, said the board should consult with Iran on “why it did not follow the Paris Agreement.” He underlined that Tehran has not violated the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which gives countries the right to pursue peaceful nuclear technology. “We will go along with possible sanctions rather than submit to humiliation if there is no other choice,” he told a press conference in Tehran.

Ali Agha Mohammadi, a spokesman for Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, said Iranian officials would explain their country’s stance to the IAEA. Iran continues to give the IAEA access to its nuclear sites. But Shamkhani warned that if the United States or any other country tries to attack its sites it would cut ties with the agency. “If some day they attack, we will drop all our nuclear commitments,” he said. “We are capable of meeting our defense needs and improving (the Shahab-3’s) specifications at any time.” He did not mention retaliating to an attack by military means.

Gen. Ahmad Vahid, the father of Iran’s missile industry, told the Associated Press that Iran has boosted the missile’s range from about 1,300 kilometers to 2,000 kilometers. “We have been working on the missile’s range since we started manufacturing it,” said Vahid, a member of Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards. In July, Iran said it carried out a successful test of a solid fuel motor for the Shahab-3. Vahid did not specify whether the new fuel was behind the missile’s improved performance.

Iran has been careful to disperse its nuclear facilities and protect parts of it underground, wary of airstrikes to take out the program such as the 1981 Israeli air raid that destroyed neighbouring Iraq’s main nuclear reactor at Osirak.

Shamkhani said Iran’s missiles were not targeting any particular country. “We have reached a level of regional deterrence,” he said.
Posted by: Steve White || 08/10/2005 00:07 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [11 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The Ha'aretz version of the story also contains this blurb:

"Our nuclear capabilities are not annihilable," Vahid said. "We have mastered nuclear science by ourselves. In case of any damage, we could construct it somewhere else."


He's probably right but it still sounds like a challenge worth taking.
Posted by: AzCat || 08/10/2005 0:52 Comments || Top||

#2  Once Iranian nukes are mated with the 4000km range Shahab-5 (Taep'o-dong-2) expect all of Europe, including the UK, to assume the dhimmi position.
Posted by: ed || 08/10/2005 2:31 Comments || Top||

#3  And we'll be able to differentiate that from the current European position precisely how?
Posted by: AzCat || 08/10/2005 2:41 Comments || Top||

#4  Allies will become non-allies. Neutrals or covert opponents will move to active opposition. Why would the Brits, Italians, or Poles help us when they could get London, Rome, or Warsaw destroyed? Germany and France will move to active opposition to the US in order to stave off terrorist attacks on their populace. Iran will have a free hand to subvert the Sunni mideast and launch terrorist raids (like Mo) to terrorize, weaken, and take over the infidels.
Posted by: ed || 08/10/2005 2:51 Comments || Top||

#5  France have plenty of nukes but I don't know if they have the stomach to play playing nuclear chicken with Iran, they will get blackmailed.
Posted by: Omoluger Groger3629 || 08/10/2005 3:44 Comments || Top||

#6  It's going to take one of these garbage dumps like Iran or NKor to pop a nuke before someone acts. When they do, I hope the response ensures that neither place has any hope of supporting life again for at least 300 years.
Posted by: mac || 08/10/2005 5:31 Comments || Top||

#7  The Europeans are so not in the heads of their middle eastern friends. Note to Europeans: the Muslims aren't dhimmis. They have no intention of being your dhimmis, victims or patrons. They would rather die than to bow to you in exchange for your beads and trinkets. In fact, they'd rather you die than to be humiliated by your pandering. Every time you offer them something as a token, you insult them. Not that they won't take whatever you offer them - you see, they aren't stupid - you are.
Posted by: 2b || 08/10/2005 5:45 Comments || Top||

#8  in fact, each time you give them a welfare check, you insult them. They'll take it, but they are insulted. With all that insulting going on, no wonder they are so ticked off. Better to kill you than to be so humiliated.
Posted by: 2b || 08/10/2005 5:58 Comments || Top||

#9  "Iran would rather submit to UN economic sanctions than back down..."
Ooooh, sanctions -- the horror! Just look at how sanctions have improved Cuba, Libya, Iraq...
Kojo must be drooling already.
Posted by: Darrell || 08/10/2005 8:29 Comments || Top||

#10  ‘Iran would rather be hit by nuclear weapons sanctions than back down ...'
Posted by: Ward C the Moron || 08/10/2005 8:39 Comments || Top||

#11  in fact, each time you give them a welfare check, you insult them.

Just the opposite, from what I can see. The check is viewed as jizya, and considered only what's due their status as the rightful rulers of the universe.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 08/10/2005 8:42 Comments || Top||

#12  Fox had video of the Iranians breaking the IAEA seals on nuke equipment this AM. Faster, please
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 8:54 Comments || Top||

#13  Sanctions? That's a great idea! What do you think, Kojo?
Posted by: Kofi || 08/10/2005 9:31 Comments || Top||

#14  60-40 my way this time, Dad.
Posted by: Kojo || 08/10/2005 10:49 Comments || Top||

#15  The US strategy on this is plain. We have given full permission for the EU, Russia and China to do all they can to peacefully get the Iranians to cooperate. Both knowing that they won't, and that they intend to make nuclear weapons, and that they might use them, the US has already reached the following agreement with the EU, Russia and China.
We will not attack Iran first, believing this to be problematic. Instead, we will put our resources into building a missile defense shield *around* Iran, so that if Iran launches a nuclear missile, we can shoot it down. *But*, if they do so, *then* the US will have free reign to do to Iran *anything* it needs to do to de-nuclearize it as a nation, without argument, disagreement, interference, or complaint from the EU, Russia and China.
From that point on is speculation, but I suggest that after such a launch and shoot-down the US would make an ultimatum to Iran as a nation, not to the Iranian government. "Either the *people* of Iran immediately dissolve their government, to become a UN protectorate until such time as a fully democratic government can be elected under UN auspices, or the nation of Iran will be permanently dismantled and will cease to exist as a nation."
Posted by: Anonymoose || 08/10/2005 11:59 Comments || Top||

#16  Moose - Interesting speculation. I do not believe we are quite that confident (100% successful shoot-downs and with the debris landing where?), given the horrific mother-loving stakes involved. If I were an Israeli, I would certainly harbor serious doubts.

The after speculation is equally interesting - and I would not follow that scenario as my first choice - a UN protectorate? But a couple of very interesting speculation exercises, indeed... But I can't buy in.

This indicates, does it not, you do not believe the US or Israel, either one, will attempt any pre-emptive action? I find that hard to believe. In Israel's case, very hard. For them, this goes so far beyond speculative exercises that, well, the chances it will play out this way approach nil.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 12:16 Comments || Top||

#17  In essense, the Iranians are correct, they *can* make a nuclear weapon, and missiles to carry it, and there is very little, short of the (unacceptable) nuclear annihilation of their country, with horrific loss of life, that we can do to stop it. 350 hardened targets is just too many. As much as some of you more "macho" types might want to anyway, the US won't do that. However, that being said, under *any* circumstance, the US would then need to build a multi-layered missile defense shield around Iran. Granted, no such shield can be 100%, but even if the missile gets through, none of Iran's potential targets are harmless, and could annihilate Iran anyway. So you work on the assumption that everything works. That their nuclear missile flies and that we can shoot it down. So now you must plan what to do afterwards. Since they could otherwise continue to make and shoot nuclear missiles, we must at that point stop them cold. And no other country would stand against us. This means that we could slowly and methodically destroy as much of Iran as necessary, using conventional weapons as in Gulf War I. And faced with this prospect, at some time we should issue an ultimatum to the Iranian people, ordering them to decapitate their government and turn their country over to the UN for temporary management. I say the UN, because the other nuclear powers would insist on it. I might also add that the first use of a nuclear missile might invoke several obscure UNSC Cold War era resolutions that are unbelieveably harsh and punitive.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 08/10/2005 13:03 Comments || Top||

#18  Gee, "350 hardened targets" Really? Cite your source or state you're guessing - its' not in the story and I would guess it's at least 5x reality.

Or nothing? That's just silly, not to mention proof of limited or non-existent military knowledge.

Are you familiar with the word "strategic"? See any application here?

I was rather nice on the first pass, but your response is pure wanking speculation and hand-wringing. We shall see, won't we? HAND, Moosey.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 13:49 Comments || Top||

#19  350 hardened targets is just too many.

I have no doubt that as many "hardened" targets were destroyed in the opening of OIF.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 08/10/2005 14:11 Comments || Top||

#20  Gee, .com, why so upset? I did mis-speak when I said 350 hardened targets. Only a dozen or two are perhaps hardened.

The 350 number:

http://www.debka.com/article.php?aid=940

And, horrors!, the data comes from Debka, which you will now says proves that it is unreliable.

So, continue on by detonating a tactical nuclear device over a university in a populated area, just because they make some critical widget for the program. They can still play a shell game with their hardened bunkers and their nukes. How many of our divisions will it take to invade and conquer their country to insure they have no nuclear program? 15? 20? Killing how many million Iranians?

No, the US is not going to do that. It just won't, unless they manage to attack one of our carrier groups in the Persian Gulf, Med, or Arabian Sea. So, then, what are the alternatives?

I refuse to accept the notion that this early in the game, a major nuclear war is the only option.

Do you disagree?
Posted by: Anonymoose || 08/10/2005 14:57 Comments || Top||

#21  Geez, Moose - your ass must be getting sore from pulling out all of this silly drivel. I thought your original post was interesting - and said so - though I didn't agree with the scenario. I guess I offended your sense of self-importance, lol. Ideas get shot down with reality everyday. Deal with it. Now you're just being a tedious child.

First, I'm not "so upset", lol. You haven't said anything worthy of such a response. Except maybe the pejorative context you used for "macho". It takes "macho" people to do the hard work, to protect you so you can publicly wank off about being "macho". The Michael Yon piece today is a good example of "macho" people doing "macho" things without half of your pretentious self-aggrandizing attitude - want to expand your comment to include them? - or are you trying to suggest something else? Maybe you think you can cow me, suggesting I'm a chickenhawk, perhaps? I served in the US Army and was sorta "macho" - I admit it - wanna take me on? Lol. But no, sorry to burst your bubble, you aren't upsetting - you're just irrelevant and irritating. This is par for the course for pretentious voyeurs like you.

I didn't say or even suggest nuking Iran - point out my comment or support for it, lol. If you had been around a bit longer, you would know better. The RB archives are there if you wish to discover what I've suggested are possible courses of action regards Iran. Nuking them was never one of them. You're just playing strawman games - to cover your wounded pride, I guess. Who cares? Just state your ideas and take what comes, sonny.

The argument that Debka is less than reliable is denied me? Lol. Wotta wanker. I can say what I believe and your silly attempt to pre-empt me is causing a severe straw shortage. Get a grip. BTW, did you check out "strategic"? Seems not.

Your #20 is a silly blurb of strawman BS and posturing. None of it applies to the story, my comments, or anything else that I can see. Please do continue, however - after you hit the tip jar.

HAND.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 15:31 Comments || Top||

#22  .com and Moose: whether 12 or 350 or any number in-between, there are too many targets in Iran for us to hit in a pre-emptive strike. Much as we'd all prefer an Osirak scenario, it ain't gonna happen. The Mullahs are Mad but not stupid: all the sites we'd like to clobber are well-dispersed, hidden and defended.

.com is right, and I don't need to hit the archives (I actually have a memory for some of this stuff).

Essentially, the two of you are in violent agreement.

As much as we kvetch about it, there wasn't and isn't any other alternative to sitting back and watching the MMs' join the nuclear club. Hell, we didn't stop the NKors, and when we (correctly) stopped Saddam most of the rest of the world peed on us in response. So we devise a plan to contain the rat bastards, whether it's Moose's plan or someone else's [1], and wait for the day the Iranian people get upset enough to remove the MMs.


[1] Not John Frickin' Kerry's, if you don't mind.
Posted by: Steve White || 08/10/2005 15:43 Comments || Top||

#23  Lol, Dr Steve. You old softy, you.

I do believe the US or Israel will take pre-emptive action. You are now officially added to the list of Mikey, Moosey, and Stevey say it ain't gonna happen.

We'll see. There are 2 points I offer that suggest otherwise, assuming the Persian people don't take care of it for us:

1) Bush said they would not be allowed to obtain deliverable nuke weapons. He's been pretty good at keeping his promises.

2) The US sold a buttload of bunker-busters to Israel. Wotta ya think they might be for?

Lol. Fun speculating, but I'll wait and see.

Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 15:54 Comments || Top||

#24  Well I said I'd prefer an Osirak. I think we'd get a nice two-fer if the bunker-busters could be used: the loss of face for the MMs would inspire a new revolution.

But to possess bunker-busters is one thing, the will to use them is another. I don't think Sharon has it. He's old, he's tired, and this whole Gaza thing is taking a lot out of him. See of the photos of the man lately? He's whupped.

I agree that Bush keeps his promises. But I think he also knows that there are too many sites to whack all at once. I keep wondering if he's doing the hard, dirty work of getting the intel net in Iran re-established with an eye towards revolution in, oh, 2007. Just wondering.
Posted by: Steve White || 08/10/2005 16:09 Comments || Top||

#25  ABM systems aren't cheap. Appropriations, contracts and plans for that much gear would be hard to do quietly in the current DC. We may have some Aegis in the neighborhod from time to time, but hardly a secure ring.

The problem with a land based ABM ring around Iran is which countries will we still be in in 4 years? Which countries will still be there in 4 years? I can see Iraq trifurcating soon after we leave. Very thin reeds all, including our close ally Turkey.

Finally, the least problematic means of delivery of nukes is ICBMs launched from Iran. If they do that, glass 'em over, short debate. The real problem is when they get it to the point where one can be put in a container with a half dozen suiciders in Istanbul and shipped to NYC or LA on a containership. Wasn't us mullahs. Musta been Kimmie.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis || 08/10/2005 16:25 Comments || Top||

#26  I don't think that Iran will be allowed to become a nuclear state for exactly the reasons .com has pointed out.

If there's a screw-up though, and they do end up with some weapons, things could start to get nasty very quickly.

Two articles come to mind.
1) The classic The Three Conjectures from about 2 years ago, where Wretchard starts from the premise of Islamic terrorists getting hold of a continuous supply of mass produced nukes. The conclusion is that if one of these weapons is detonated, because there is no central authority to negotiate with (or destroy) and it is assumed that more and more of these weapons can be used with impunity, the logical outcome is to annihilate the entire Muslim world on the detonation of the first of these weapons.
2) What would you do?, from almost a year ago, where the author speculates that Israel will have little choice but to annihilate as many of their enemies as they can;

I would most likely hit at all of the Arab/Muslim world's military facilities and large units, industrial base, critical infrastructure (including any large cities), and so forth. Some of these attacks would be conventional, but most would be nuclear. And as part of that, I would have to strike Pakistan and eliminate their military and nuclear capability as well, because they are the only Muslim state with a declared nuclear capability, and even if they didn't want to strike directly, there's no guarantee that the ISI wouldn't give weapons to terrorists for revenge attacks.


So let's all hope that Iran does get de-fanged eh?
Posted by: Tony (UK) || 08/10/2005 16:39 Comments || Top||

#27  Quite.
Posted by: Howard UK || 08/10/2005 16:45 Comments || Top||

#28  .com doesn't take disagreement well, does he?

There's a lot to Moose's scenario. Israel is in a very tough position. I'm not sure the Osirak option is a realistic one at this time, unless they have agents physically on the ground at all the major sites. And even then I'm not sure it's realistic.

More to the point, there are wider objectives here than *merely* preventing nukes in Mullah hands (huge an objective as that is). The Iranian people have an increasing pride in their country. It would be a lot better for the region and the world if they themselves were to finally overthrow the Mullahs because THEY decided they're hurting Iran's future.

Now ... we can provide both pressure and options to help that along. Might could be the pressure is already being applied in some quiet ways via spec ops / peshmerga aiding and abetting some of those increasingly violent clashes with the security forces in a variety of cities at once. More overt pressure will backfire unless the Iranian people in general perceive it to be warranted due to Mullah actions.

So IMO there's some solid analysis in Moose's scenario. Will it work that way? Who knows? But .com's nasty little attack on it is both unwarranted and unhelpful.
Posted by: leader of the pack || 08/10/2005 16:48 Comments || Top||

#29  Amen, Tony (UK).

Howard, um, given your classic comment, lol, how's Rummy's Honorary British Citizenship coming along? He seems to have the right touch, to me...
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 16:50 Comments || Top||

#30  "I keep wondering if he's doing the hard, dirty work of getting the intel net in Iran re-established with an eye towards revolution in, oh, 2007. Just wondering."

One hopes that some friendly Iraqi Shia are doing regular talent spotting among the Iranian pilgrims to the Shia holy sites.


Sharons tiredness is irrelevant, I think. Israel wont act till the last possible moment - when that is depends on whose intell you believe. And when they do, it is of course a very iffy thing, as above posts layout. OTOH, if youre the mullahs you have to worry about a substantially complete hit, and what that does to you domestically. Gets to be a bit of chess game. Or Poker.

ABMS - i thought current tech was designed to kill a warhead as its in descent. So you protect the target country, not surround the would be attacker. But i know to little about this tech to say.

Note violence the last few days in Iranian Kurdistan - even made it into the Guardian. 12 Kurds killed. Reports from Iranian kurdish groups based in IRAQ.
Posted by: liberalhawk || 08/10/2005 16:56 Comments || Top||

#31  .com - quite agree with Tony's point. Back from pub and rendered incapable therefore cannot offer much. Sorry man.
Posted by: Howard UK || 08/10/2005 17:10 Comments || Top||

#32  I'm betting we'll see a pre-emptive de-fangment of the Mad Mullahs before Bush's term is over, and before the MMs have a chance to acquire a functioning weapon. Bush has said we "will not allow the world's worst regimes to possess the world's most dangerous weapons," and I take him at his word.

I've no idea how that de-fangment is going to be achieved, or when; but I'm certain that it must be done, and therefore will be done.

God help us if it isn't.
Posted by: Dave D. || 08/10/2005 17:12 Comments || Top||

#33  lotp - Lol! Who got excited about being disagreed with? Geez, you really need to pay closer attention. As for agreeing with Moosey, knock yourself out. I presented a different view of his assertions and Moosey got defensive, then popped a vein. It has yet to actually respond coherently.

I said the original post was interesting BS, lol! What more do you want? You though it was deep analysis? Okay...

Regards intel, the point is that we don't know how close or far away they are, do we? None of us here, anyway. Those who do know aren't likely to share that info. As I mentioned above, I've been here awhile - and posted quite a bit on this particular topic on several occasions. The favored option is the Persians, themselves, taking back their country, of course. Time is the key. And we just don't know if there's enough of it. Clinton / Tenet / et al wasted so much time and did so much damage to both our military and intel that they are on the hook for what happens in both NorKieLand and Iran.

My attack was not nasty, but you seem to want to make this more personal. Do you wanna play, lotp? I can play. I've been nice because The Sheriff wants nice. But don't presume you know dick about me, son, since it's self-apparent you do not, lol.

I agree with Lh - Sharon will do what he has to do if that moment comes. I hope it doesn't come to that, but I have doubt about the Israelis having the will to survive. I'd also wager that in-country intel is much better that many believe - though not because of the CIA, damnit.

BTW, the Word of the Day is still Strategic. Every process has choke-points and it takes a lot of pieces, each the result of processes, to create a deliverable nuke.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 17:15 Comments || Top||

#34  "but I have doubt"

Edit: "but I have NO doubt"
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 17:18 Comments || Top||

#35  Well, for those who don't get agitated about speculation, I'll follow up on several trains of thought. First being, while we might like there to be a popular revolution in Iran, it is hardly something we can base policy on, especially where nuclear weapons are involved. Personally, I just don't see it happening. Second, our theater missile defenses, what can be said about them, do add up to something. In Israel and Iraq we have Patriot batteries, possibly in other locations like Arabia and the Gulf States. There are the aforementioned Aegis systems (note that we are also setting up area defenses to protect Japan and the US from Nork in this concept, so we are definitely thinking about it). Then there are heavy 747-based lasers, 4 of them, deployment unknown, and a larger number of high performance aircraft with anti-electronics microwave weapons capable of scrambling a missile. Strategically, if we unilaterally attack Iran, or do so with the help of Israel, which I do think is a strong probability, we will do it in one of two ways: preemptively, with strong opposition from the rest of the world, and with a probability that we would be declared an "aggressor" nation, which could invoke sanctions against us that could last for years. Or we could make arrangements before such a conflict, giving the opportunity for mostly the EU and Russia to try and stop Iran from making nukes, but only *on the condition*, that if they failed and Iran did one or more of the following: made a nuclear weapon and declared they were now a nuclear power; tested a nuclear weapon; or (most likely), launched a nuclear weapon in an act of aggressive war--then the US could attack them without any international resistance, and perhaps the other UNSC members would be pre-obligated to support us, at least nominally, the aggression involving nuclear weapons. In either case, while I don't envision the conquest of Iran to be a cake-walk, it would optimally be done much like the 1-month air war of Gulf War I--which would also make having a theater anti-missile defense a very good idea. Then, "What do you do with Iran once you have it?" becomes the big question. The Kurdish northwest would be very strongly drawn to secede and join Iraqi Kurdistan. Other areas, such as the Arab southwest (with many of their oilfields) and Balochistan might also be drawn to secession or violent civil war against the Persians. In addition, there is a worldwide dilemma. That being, would Russia, the EU and China demand UN control of Iran, both to establish IAEA control over their nuclear production; but also because by dominating both Iraq and Iran, the US would have strategic control over most of the world's oil? And would the US agree to this demand, not for their reasons, but for our own: namely that with our armed forced already stretched thin between two countries, instead of risking overtaxing ourselves, the UN could pick up the slack on the relatively (compared to Iraq) easier job of returning real democracy to Iran, once we just assured that there was no "great leader" or guardian council around to bias things anymore. The bottom line is that I doubt Israel thinks it can go it alone, and our leaders won't be willing to launch based solely on intelligence estimates--the Iranians will have to *do* something first, before we can kick their butts.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 08/10/2005 18:10 Comments || Top||

#36  The "return" key, also know as the "enter" key, can do wonders. It can even give the appearance of organization, if applied judiciously.

That said, there are a lot of points in that mass of Joycian schtuff - some of which might be plausible, but I'm not interested in building and populating an outline to verify. Most do not echo the blunt speculative assertions in the original post with which I took issue.

Speculation's fine. So is rebuttal and / or alternative views. If you care to have an honest discussion, then post in a fashion that doesn't preclude it.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 18:30 Comments || Top||

#37  We can discuss strategy til the cows come home and there is nothing wrong with that. The word of the day maybe Strategic, but eventually the other "s" word in order. The word "Survival." As I have posted before, it's going to get to a point where its no longer about making deals, concessions, or sanctions but about "Survival."

There are two words that we should NEVER forget that the Jews stated after the Holocaust, "Never Again." So, the world can make all the deals they want over lobster, steak, or fine wine. Or make 10,000 page list of ramifications, if Israel does a preemptive strike. But, the Jews say "Never Again". Bottomline, the Jews will do what they have to do. If that means 5 millions Muslims die, so be it. Of course the Israeli's will wait til the last bit negotiations run out but eventually, the Jews could care less about deal making.

.com is right. The word of the day is "Strategic." Pretty soon the word of the day is "Survival." But, since the mid 1940's, the words have always, and forever will be, "Never Again."

Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 18:34 Comments || Top||

#38  A few operational parameters re ABMD based on open source data:

There are a couple phases to ballistic missile defense. First, the satellites need to detect the missile launch during the boost phase. The constellation is in geosynchronous orbit, so there's a pretty constant lookout for that. Detection time is pretty quick once the missile breaks through cloud cover - on the order of a small number of seconds.

The next phase is the time-critical one, depending on which system is deployed. It is possible that in the newer system the satellite alerts the radars directly, passing look angles and estimated trajectory info automatically. In that case the radars would attempt to acquire the missile automatically while the humans in the loop are just getting the alert. For those older systems in which that is not automated, the lag time depends critically on whether or not the crew is already on alert and expecting a potential attack.

Once the incoming is acquired, the response must be launched.

It's roughly 8-10 min. from early boost stage in northern Iran to Israel, 10-15 min from more southern potential launch sites. Very little time for humans in the loop to turn the radars on and set look angle, but doable if the system has the direct commo link for initial radar control by the satellite.

Just some parameters that can give a little shape to speculation. A lot of both strategy and tactics ultimately hinge on technical capabilities ... a truism but one that's easy to forget.
Posted by: leader of the pack || 08/10/2005 19:20 Comments || Top||

#39  A direct missile attack is not the way Iran operates. They will go the usual islamic route of a sucker punch, an attack through a third party with a smuggled device/devices really is the Iranian way. The missiles are a misdirection. Their intent is to attack "The Great Satan" and kill it.

Screw the diplospeak. We need to be very direct with the EU Russia and China. None of who will risk a disruption in the flow of oil to do jack shit about this issue. Of course Iran hasn't been threating them with destruction since it's inception. So it really is our problem.

Our news media doesn't show us 1/10 of 1% of the anti US propaganda and rhetoric the government of Iran puts out. It does a huge disservice.
Posted by: Sock Puppet 0’ Doom || 08/10/2005 19:33 Comments || Top||

#40  I mostly agree with you, SPOD, with one exception. I think the mullahs are quite willing to threaten missile use in a credible way. I wouldn't be surprised to see a launch that just barely skims the Iraq/Iran border out into the waters of the Gulf, for instance, if they can time it to avoid any of their own oil shipments out at sea.

And I'm not sure they are sufficiently sane to be totally safe WRT Israel. If Hizbollah gets their heads handed to them in a definitive way by Israel, I think there are some in Iran who would shoot first and think later.
Posted by: leader of the pack || 08/10/2005 19:44 Comments || Top||

#41  Vahid's probably correct that we can't really stop Iran's nuclear program dead in its tracks but we can deal it serious setbacks. If we're serious about slowing the Iranian's nuclear ambitions we'll know in the next few months because the uranium enrichment plant at Isfahan, the reactor at Bushear, and the mass scale heavy water plant at Arak, almost certainly among other complete or near complete sites to be used for the mass production of fissile material, will be flattened. It's the massive industrial infrastructure necessary to produce the nuclear material in the first place that's the vulerable point. After that infrastructure has a year or two to operate full-bore it'll be too late.

Problem is we, or whomever takes on the task, will have to flatten similar facilities every year or two as they're rebuilt until we or the MMs get tired of the game. At some point they'll just import a sufficient quantity of material from Pakistan, North Korea, China or elsewhere, light off a test in the desert somewhere and thereby bring the game to a screeching halt. Doesn't mean we shouldn't play though.

I find the idea that the MMs might be insane enough to fire a nuclear-tipped Shahab-3 at western Europe (or any nuclear power or nation under the western nuclear umbrella) questionable. They have to know that the response would very likely be overwhelming and, despite the fact that we question their sanity daily, I've got to think that they probably do care at least a little about keeping their nation somewhat intact. Those toys IMHO are destined to land in Israel alone, that's the only target that might allow their hatred to get the better of their limited judgment.

And ed, that's pretty much what I was getting at: nothing in your scenario is a dramatic shift away from the stance of western Europe towards the US right now. What you describe wouldn't be anything new it would just be a continuation of the current trends. That said I think you underestimate Europe. One day they'll awaken to Islamo-fascist homicide bombers in their subways and a news report featuring an MM threat to nuke their cities and enough will finally be enough.
Posted by: AzCat || 08/10/2005 19:52 Comments || Top||

#42  Azcat - "questionable"?

December 14, 2001

September 23, 2003

May 27, 2005

And this was Rafsanjani, the "moderate" defeated in the "Presidential elections"...
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 20:10 Comments || Top||

#43  A "true muslim" doesn't fear death as they automagicly are transported to paradise and 72 virgins if they die as a martyr. These MM's truly believe that and would put their nation at risk. They already evidence no fear of the EU 3, as the EU3 can't project power more than a few blocks with out heavy lifting from the USA. Attack the US in a surprise attack using smuggled nukes and use missiles on Israel. If they get sent to allen because of retaliation no big deal. They get 72 virgins. It's a win, win deal.

It's a much graver situation than it appears to be. 20 something years of death to America as a focus of this regime isn't something that can be put aside as just talk. These SOBs have acted on everything they desired up to this point. We can't allow them to achieve there goal of possession of nuclear weapons.
Posted by: Sock Puppet 0’ Doom || 08/10/2005 20:28 Comments || Top||

#44  Don't have to nuke Iran. Just issue an ultimatum saying that all tankers leaving Iran will be escorted to a US holding center and emptied of their cargo. Of course this will upset a whole bunch of people in Europe and elsewhere but I bet a compromise would soon be reached after loss of such a significant source of income.
Posted by: Elmaitle Shineling6893 || 08/10/2005 20:46 Comments || Top||

#45  Attack the US in a surprise attack using smuggled nukes and use missiles on Israel.

Agreed and that's not contra to anything I said above. The MMs may or may not be insane enough to launch in Israel after they acquire their nuclear weapons and they're certainly insane enough to hand one or more over to terrorist organizations if they believe they can get away with doing so, but my point was that they gain absolutley nothing by threatening or attacking their partners and allies in Europe. The only thing that would accomplish is shifing European public opinion away from their side. I don't think they're that dumb.

I'm well aware of the 72 raisins / virgins promise but there are many stories circulating that the MMs live somewhat less than pure Islamic lives. I'd be willing to be that some / most of them have been corrupted by power and wealth to the point where religion has become primarily a tool to control the masses and preserve their own status. Most of 'em are probably about as religious as our televangelists. After all, we don't see many of them going to fight in the jihad in Iraq now do we and one of the strongest demands on Muslims with respect to jihad is that they *must* go to neighboring nations and fight infidels when their Muslim neighbors are under seige. If they were truly rabid sword of Islam types they'd be hoofing it across the border so they could collect their 72 raisins post-haste.
Posted by: AzCat || 08/10/2005 20:49 Comments || Top||

#46  I'm not convinced we can't take out the majority of facilities via reconstituted cruise missile stocks and JDAM packages. Conventional, not nukes.
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 20:53 Comments || Top||

#47  Moose, lotp, and AzCat,

You guys to a great job of explaining military options. But, its the cart before the horse. We must study the psychological strategy of MM's first, before military. If have to hear that the MM's are going to attack "Great Satan" using nuclear weapons first, again, I am going to go crazy. They are not going to attack the U.S. first. The attack on the U.S. will come later.

Please listen, the motis operendi of the MM's is the same as the motis operendi used by Hitler. Create a divide between Christians first, then attack the Jews. The Christians are already divided when it comes to Israel. So the first part is taken care of. All that remains is to destroy Israel. The MM's know, just like Hitler, that it is a bad psychological and military strategy to attack a Christian's before the Jews. Yes, Hitler attacked Poland first. There is a reason for that, he wanted to exterminate the Polish Jews first. In 1939, Poland had huge Jewish population. The stratedy was to fool the Christians into thinking that Hitler was only after the Jews.

Hitler created such a successful propaganda inside Germany, that the Christians never saw what hit them. What the world seem to have forgotten is that 6 million Christians were also killed by Hitler. Again, 1. create a divide among Christians 2. then kill the Jews 3. then kill the Christians. Inside Germany, the Christians were told that Jews were evil Christ-killers among many other things. Please read this article carefully and you tell me if you see a difference between Hitler's propaganda and the current MM's. Personally, I think the strategy is similar.

Do I think the MM's will attack the "Great Satan?" Sure I do. But, not first. It wouldn't be strategic.

Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 21:18 Comments || Top||

#48  PR - we rarely agree, but I'm with you on this one. The Israelis will face an annihilation option, and whether Sharon appears tired (sorry SW) or not - he'll make the call to tak them out first. I think that option will become too damaging to world-wide "stability" and we will do the job first, and with good reason...I'll put $ on that
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 21:25 Comments || Top||

#49  Frank,

What do you mean, we rarely agree? I agree with you 99% of the time. Are you forgetting the old battles with Aris?
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 21:44 Comments || Top||

#50  heh heh - I misspoke....damn beer
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 21:58 Comments || Top||

#51  D 'oh!
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 21:59 Comments || Top||


Russia pleads with calls on Iran to stop nuke work
MOSCOW - Russia called on Iran on Tuesday to halt all uranium conversion work immediately and continue cooperating with the UN nuclear watchdog. “It would be a wise decision to immediately stop the resumed work on uranium conversion and continue close cooperation with the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) to remove all remaining questions relating to the Iranian nuclear programme,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
Posted by: Steve White || 08/10/2005 00:05 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Ruskies playing CYA
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 11:17 Comments || Top||


Arabia
Kuwait Emir returns home after months of treatment
KUWAIT CITY - Sheikh Jaber Al Ahmed Al Sabah, the emir of Kuwait, returned Tuesday, after months of treatment and rest in the United States and Switzerland. Sheikh Jaber, 79, spent more than two months in the US, where he had medical tests and surgery for a dilated blood vessel in his left leg. He then moved to Zurich, Switzerland, for recuperation.

He has made few public appearances in recent years. Whenever he did appear, he spoke with difficulty and relied on support from his aides. With the crown prince, Sheikh Saad Al Abdullah Al Sabah, also ailing, Sheikh Sabah Al Ahmed Al Sabah, the prime minister and the emir’s half brother, seems to be the most likely candidate.
Posted by: Steve White || 08/10/2005 00:03 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  ...and I hear he came in first in the King Fahd Lookalike Contest.
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 8:41 Comments || Top||

#2  Sheikh Jaber Al Ahmed Al Sabah
Sheikh Saad Al Abdullah Al Sabah
Sheikh Sabah Al Ahmed Al Sabah

Can't tell the sheikhs without a scorecard...



Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 14:57 Comments || Top||


Africa: Subsaharan
Niger's President Plays Down Food Crisis
Niger's president played down the food crisis ravaging his desert nation, insisting Tuesday that people in the impoverished West African country "look well-fed."
"All my friends are fat and happy. How about yours?"
In an interview with the British Broadcasting Corp., President Mamadou Tandja acknowledged that a devastating locust invasion last year and poor rains have produced food shortages. But he said that was not unusual for his country — or for the entire Sahel region, a semi-desert scrubland that straddles the southern edge of the Sahara desert. "We are experiencing like all the countries in the Sahel a food crisis due to the poor harvest and the locust attacks of 2004," Tandja told the BBC.
"The common folk are used to going without a few meals now and then."
"The people of Niger look well-fed, as you can see," he added. TV networks have for weeks broadcast images of severely malnourished, skeletal children in Niger, many too weak to brush flies from their faces. Scores have died.
Is it just me, or did he just spout an entire mouthful of utter nonsense?
Posted by: Fred || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Does this mean the west and their money can go home now?
Posted by: ed || 08/10/2005 2:58 Comments || Top||

#2  Now look western man, what's a little bit of Malthusian-inspired starvation? We can handle it.
Posted by: Ward C the Moron || 08/10/2005 8:48 Comments || Top||

#3  Hey, all I know is I'm eating.
I could use another Mercedes though, so keep that aid money rolling in...
Posted by: Mamadou Tandja || 08/10/2005 9:38 Comments || Top||

#4  This guy is blind. A UN funded lasik is in order.

"look well-fed"

Sir, could you clarify that statement? Are you telling me that there is no hunger crisis in Niger?

Well, Ambassador Wilson spent weeks here and did he look hungry when he came back to the US? Well, I rest my case. No more questions.
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 11:58 Comments || Top||

#5  Two words. Yellow cake.
And is that the president or some UN tour guide?
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 14:13 Comments || Top||

#6  He consulted with the best NKor scientists on this matter.
Posted by: Xbalanke || 08/10/2005 16:47 Comments || Top||


China-Japan-Koreas
Karaoke craze in N. Korea
EFL
SEOUL — Karaoke is part of everyday life for many Koreans, most of whom love to sing. So popular is karaoke that even in communist North Korea — known as the "Hermit Kingdom" — singing rooms are proliferating, according to recent reports by North Korean sources.
Mainly in the former restaurants that have all closed due to lack of product.
Just means more space for the dance floor ...
In addition to the obligatory 'Let's safeguard socialism,' the available songs include harmless Korean traditional folk tunes enjoyed both in South and North Korea before the country was divided. "People know South Korean songs because of the Korean cultural trend sweeping throughout Asia and they love to sing them in private, but they are not available in singing rooms," said Lee Nam-Shik from Shineuiju, across from the Chinese city of Dandong. "Besides, they may get into trouble if caught singing South Korean songs, although the 'Dear Leader' seems to like them."
No indication if anything from Team America is available.
Of course, there are special cases where South Korean songs are allowed publicly. "Those people are trained to give a good impression to South Korean tourists, to demonstrate that they enjoy full freedom in the North," Lee, who now lievs in China said. "If you think that's the case for ordinary North Koreans, you are grossly mistaken."
But George Galloway says they are better-off than in the hellhole to the south.
"The average wage for North Korean workers is about 2,500 Won. Workers can use up a month's earnings in less than an hour's singing," said Lee. "I did not realize how funny it was singing songs like 'Let's Safeguard Socialism,' and 'Bless the Workers' in a karaoke place — and paying for it — until I saw singing rooms here in China."
Funny? Obviously gallows humor.
Posted by: Jackal || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Turning North Korean
I think I'm
turning North Korean
I really think so
Posted by: Chris W. || 08/10/2005 0:25 Comments || Top||

#2  In true Clintonian style, its NOT Cannibalism, but a walking "Long Pig/Cow"!?
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 08/10/2005 1:09 Comments || Top||

#3  Kimmie > I am reminded of a scene from a movie about George Washington and his attack on Trenton and Princeton, where one of George's Generals from New England criticizes artillerist Henry Knox for being obese, ala "In an Army that hasn't eaten in many months, ITS A SIN TO BE FAT"!
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 08/10/2005 1:13 Comments || Top||

#4  Songun, F*ck Yeah!

2,500 SK Won = 2.46 USD
Posted by: ed || 08/10/2005 3:06 Comments || Top||

#5  Now, Kimmie dressed as Elvis singing 'Teddy Bear' would be pretty funny...
Posted by: Raj || 08/10/2005 10:49 Comments || Top||

#6  Raj, maybe you should contact the guys about a "Team America 2: Electric Boogaloo"!
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 11:01 Comments || Top||

#7  Huh. I didn't think they'd have the energy for it...
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 08/10/2005 17:19 Comments || Top||

#8  Spray on monitor BA.
Posted by: Sub Commander Megar || 08/10/2005 18:39 Comments || Top||

#9  SCM - BA has Windex insurance. Check with Fred for filing a claim. :)
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 18:45 Comments || Top||

#10  Wha? I'm not following you two, but whatever floats your boat, .com and sub!
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 20:36 Comments || Top||

#11  he says you're consistently spray-on-the-monitor funny :-)
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 20:51 Comments || Top||

#12  Ah! Get it now. As we say down here in the red south..."I smell what you're steppin' in, now!"
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 21:05 Comments || Top||

#13  myself? I let my cat sit on the monitor (tough now that it's an LCD) and use the tail as a wiper blade
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 21:07 Comments || Top||

#14  lol, Frank. I'm a "dog guy" myself, but I can mentally picture that scene!
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 21:10 Comments || Top||


Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Gunmen Fire on Car in Chechnya; One Dead
Gunmen sprayed bullets at a car Tuesday in the capital of Chechnya, killing one person, wounding a child in the head, and setting the vehicle ablaze. Three members of a special Chechen security force were believed to have been in the car, said a police official, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of angering the force, controlled by Chechnya's deputy prime minister, Ramzan Kadyrov. One of the people in the car was killed and two were wounded.

The shooting happened at around 6 p.m. in Grozny's Staropromyslovsky district. Flames engulfed the black passenger vehicle, sending up dark plumes of smoke, as rescuers tried to extinguish the fire. The identities of the attackers was not known.
I imagine the Russers will crack a few heads and not manage to catch the guys who did it. They're like that, you know.
Posted by: Fred || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Well, we've cracked quite a few heads and still haven't caught bin Laden. Chances are good that most of the heads Russia cracks needed cracking anyway.
Posted by: glenmore || 08/10/2005 7:21 Comments || Top||


Down Under
Casey the Australian Crocodile hates raw meat, prefers mud cake & potatoes
Casey is no ordinary crocodile. Her favourite dishes are Danish potatoes - preferably with lashings of gravy - and mud cake.
She also likes fried fish and well-cooked steak. The one thing Casey can't abide is raw meat. The 3m saltie even has her own plate.
The 12-year-old croc has become the unofficial mascot at the fishing lodge on the Adelaide River's Goat Island, 75km from Darwin. Lodge owner Kai Hansen said: "She's getting really fussy and only wants things we have made in the kitchen." She has lived at the island since 1994 after being brought there by previous owners Tony and Dixie Kaissis.
Casey climbs up the river bank of the island every night to get to the food left out on her plate. But despite putting meals out for the croc most nights, Mr Hansen said she was not a pet. "She is a wild animal and we treat her accordingly," he said. "No one is allowed to get close to her and I leave the food out while she is at a distance." In September she disappears for a week to mate, and leaves again in December to lay eggs. But at other times of the year Mr Hansen said her appearance on the steps of the lodge was part of life on the island.
"She comes up every night without fail," he said. "I call her Casey the Cute Croc because I love her." Despite his familiarity with the croc, Mr Hansen said he wasn't about to touch her or drop food in her mouth.
"I will leave that to Steve Irwin," he said.
Posted by: Oztralian [AKA] God Save The World || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  In Wilmington, NC, there is an old alligator who has taken up residence by the battleship North Carolina, and is regularly feed tidbits from the patrons of a nearby snack bar. Having tried to eat food at that snack bar, I can understand why the alligator is overweight.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 08/10/2005 10:23 Comments || Top||

#2  Waaaaaay back in the early '80s I was working in Mobile, Alabama and after work most (OK, EVERY) evening we went to a small bar that had a deck on one of the bayouus there. There was a rather large alligator that we named Izod and fed marshmallows off the deck. One evening when we went in the owner told us we couldn't feed Izod any more marshmallows because Izod had chased him across the parking lot earlier that day. It seems the owner had on a brand new pair of very white tennis shoes and Izod must have thought they were marshmallows. It can be dangerous to feed meat-eating wild animals.
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 08/10/2005 10:36 Comments || Top||

#3 
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 11:24 Comments || Top||

#4  Huuum....Excess Islamic-Fascisti *and* hungry 'Gators & 'Crocs...what to do..what to do.


/Mick Jagger + Reptiles = law suit, Peta.
Posted by: Spemble Phemble3444 || 08/10/2005 14:01 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Death threat for Tehran's Public Prosecutor
Iran's Judiciary Spokesman Jamal Karimi-Rad in a press briefing [said that Tehran's public prosecutor has] been threatened with death by a terrorist group. Karimi-Rad said a terrorist grouplet calling itself the Rotary International Oprah's Book Club Dalai Lama Brigade in the Land of the Too-Tight Turbans Fedaiyan Guerillas, which claimed to have killed Judge Masoud Moqaddas, has issued such a threat on its website. The spokesman added that international organizations and countries allegedly fighting terrorism refused to condemn the assassination of an Iranian judge and once again showed their double standards and gave lie to their claim of defending human rights. "This places a heavy responsibility on the press to disseminate and deplore such dualism," ISNA further quoted him as saying.
"Yeah. It was all the fault of the West. Certainly the noble mujahideen...er, gunnies and shadowy insurgency ringleaders bear no responsibility. It's a cultural thing. You wouldn't understand."
Judge Masoud Moqaddas, involved in some of Iran's high-profile political cases, was gunned down while leaving office a week ago. The motive is still unclear.
Nope, nope. No clues at all. Not even one. Better go ask the Magic 8-Ball® then. Although it will prolly tell you to "Ask again later."
Karimi-Rad said coordinated efforts are underway by judicial, intelligence and police forces to identify the assailants.
Posted by: Seafarious || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Not much mercy for corrupt judges, who wrongly lock away or execute innocent people.
Posted by: Omoluger Groger3629 || 08/10/2005 3:58 Comments || Top||

#2  Such threats are nonsense. A bullet in the back of the head to somebody is the best threat around. You need not leave a note, the message is clear and unambiguous. Cowards and bullies especially have a deep and abiding clarity of the meaning of such communications.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 08/10/2005 10:07 Comments || Top||

#3  Moose,

I agree. No need for "Johnny can't read" or "Hooked on Phonics" to comprehend "Lead in the back of the Head"
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 11:46 Comments || Top||


Iraq-Jordan
Being There
He would rather be drunk. He rarely knows the real names of the women with whom he consorts. He frequently complains. He would rather be high. Ask him what he’d be doing if he hadn’t taken his current job and he’ll say, time and again, "I’d be in trouble like my friends back home — dead or in jail." He is profane, uneducated, impious, lecherous, and unwashed. He doesn’t care much about the war. In most cases, he misses his mother badly.

But the American combat infantryman in Iraq is doing just fine. His emotions tamped into a predatory groove by a long night of remotely observing the Milan runways, his reflexes tuned to Pentium speed by his Xbox, he pulses with caffeine, androstene, maltodextrin, sodium citrate, high-fructose corn syrup, nicotine, and a psychedelium of food dyes. He scores a 10-1 kill ratio when the enemy fights him head-on.

Interesting article on the 506th. Definitely told from an angle you don't often see.
Posted by: Slung Uluper3293 || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  He has just reenlisted in the army for a further six years. "Saddam’s time is gone, man," says Krebbs. "I’m more interested in studying up on these insurgents. We got to learn more about Syria." He takes a pinch of Skoal from a small hockey puck of dip. Almost half the platoon dips.
Posted by: 3dc || 08/10/2005 0:40 Comments || Top||

#2  Appropriately for young men involved in a nation—building project, philosophical and cultural issues are frequently addressed in a political context, as in "Shut up, you Democrat fag" or "Fuck off, you redneck Nazi." In a month of listening to soldiers make extraordinary confessions and talk about how much they wanted home (for sex, for their parents, for a drink), I never hear a word about wanting out.

The average soldier in the unit has spent only two or three weeks in the States over the past two years. Out of nine wounded soldiers in the platoon, one is still an invalid, four chose never to leave the base, three returned home, and four are trying to get back to the unit.

Nash: "When I went to the hospital in Germany I was offered 30 days’ convalescent leave back home, and then I could probably have stayed in the States. Even then I said, "Fuck that, I’m going back to my friends." Now they’re the only friends I have. The people at the hospital tried to talk me out of it. Then they said, "What part of the service are you in?" I said Eleven Bravo — the infantry.

They never bothered me again about going home."
Posted by: Steve || 08/10/2005 9:59 Comments || Top||

#3  Good stuff.
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 14:06 Comments || Top||

#4  Overall, it was a good read, IMHO. A little melodramatic and swaggering here and there - with some subtle denigration / belittling of those with the stones to do the hard jobs, which almost pissed me off. There are echoes of James Jones in this piece - the good and the bad.
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 14:18 Comments || Top||

#5  This is a hyper-ventilating anti-war piece in the Michael Herr tradition. Could the author have done a better job of documenting every negative aspect of these soldiers? How can anyone's reflexes be tuned by X-box? My thumbs reflexes maybe, but little else. Do you pulse with caffeine? Or corn syrup for that matter? Psychodelium? Huh? Is that supposed to convey information or perhaps just invoke an image from an Oliver Stone movie? The picture of the Iraqi in the thermal sights with the "War Games" caption - what's the implication? Killing is a game for soldiers and thus they and us are damnable? War games is right, only we are the ones being played. Phooey.
Posted by: Zpaz || 08/10/2005 15:04 Comments || Top||


China-Japan-Koreas
Suicide theme park planned
A HONG Kong official said one of the territory's tiny islands could make a killing with a novel theme park based on its unsavoury reputation as a suicide spot, a media report said.
Oooh! Mom! Take me there!
The morbid suggestion to create a ghost-town attraction where guests were dared to spend the night in "haunted flats" came at a meeting of local leaders on little Cheung Chau island.
Councillor Lam Kit-sing said the island should capitalise on the grisly reputation of one of its holiday homes, where 20 people have taken their lives in the past eight years. Another five people attempted suicide there.
"Oh, my Gawd! If those people don't turn down that stereo I'm gonna kill myself!"
"I'll get the pills!"
Lam believes the macabre park could be an added attraction for the millions of people expected in the city when Hong Kong Disneyland opens in September. "A dirty spot yesterday will be an attraction tomorrow," he was quoted as saying in the South China Morning Post. "This is innovative and has a selling point." The proposal received little support from fellow councillors, the paper said.
Posted by: Oztralian [AKA] God Save The World || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  does greed or the lack of good taste know no bounds
Posted by: Cheaderhead || 08/10/2005 0:55 Comments || Top||

#2  Must've been reading "You Only Live Twice".
Posted by: Pappy || 08/10/2005 1:22 Comments || Top||

#3  Invite some muslims!
Posted by: Omoluger Groger3629 || 08/10/2005 3:36 Comments || Top||

#4  Until last year, a Chinaman could buy cattle and release them in lion's dens in public zoos. Wacky people.
Posted by: Vlad the Muslim Impaler || 08/10/2005 3:50 Comments || Top||

#5  OG is on to something. Maybe have an Islamic week or month for the park. Ya know, in support of the hajj or something. For those who can't make it to the TRUE Majik Kingdom.
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 9:46 Comments || Top||

#6 

Special consultant hired to increase realism
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 13:27 Comments || Top||

#7  Just don't eat the Soylent Green.
Posted by: eLarson || 08/10/2005 16:53 Comments || Top||


Britain
Attack on London financial centre inevitable
An attack on London's financial district is inevitable despite tighter security in the wake of the July bombings on the capital's transport network, the area's police chief said in an interview published on Tuesday.
Seems like an attack on everything is inevitable, doesn't it? It's kind of like everything you eat, drink, smoke, or touch giving your cancer...
James Hart, who heads the City of London police force, said police had disrupted "hostile reconnaissance" of the region several times but made no arrests. He did not give details of which buildings had been staked out, saying only that they were businesses, iconic sites and prominent buildings. "Every successful terrorist group pre-surveys its target," Hart said in an interview carried on the Financial Times Web site (www.ft.com). "There is no doubt that we have been subject to that surveillance. If you want to hurt the government ... where better to hit than at the financial centre?"
Where, indeed? Except that in Beslan they hit an elementary school. In Moscow they hit a theater. In Bali they hit a few beer joints. In Turkey they hit a bank and a synagogue. In New York they hit the World Trade Center. In Madrid it was trains. And in London they've so far hit buses and trains.
The City of London is home to scores of banks, law firms, the London Stock Exchange and the Bank of England. Tourists attractions include St Paul's Cathedral and the Monument, a stone tower commemorating the 1666 Great Fire of London. Hart said it was only a matter of time before bombers targeted the City, bombed twice by the IRA in the early 1990s. "Look at the number of times we were hit by the IRA," Hart said. "I think (another attack) is a question of when rather than if."
Well, you're probably right. Hitler bombed the place, too. Given determination on their part, you can't stop them from doing terrible things. Best to concentrate on making them wish they hadn't. Think Guy Fawkes...
He said security in the district had been tightened since the July 7 bombings, which killed 52 people on three London trains and a bus, and the failed July 21 attacks also targeting city transport. Hart told the FT he believed those behind the July bombings were not linked to al Qaeda, contradicting previous statements by London police chief Sir Ian Blair. Instead, the bombers were a third-tier grouping with intellectual sympathies to al Qaeda propaganda, Hart said.
The guys who boomed were cannon fodder. Look for their support network and you'll find people who're maybe "second tier" who're allied with al-Qaeda.
Posted by: Oztralian [AKA] God Save The World || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  My travel plans to central London are firm. F*CK the coward, I give no ground to such losers.
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 10:57 Comments || Top||

#2  Why always "inevitable" this or "inevitable" that?

Why not this: It is inevitable that if Muslim world continues to assault every faith, nation, etc. sooner or later, an unrestrained, nuclear-armed power like Communist China will make a wasteland of much of the Muslim universe.
Posted by: Ward C the Moron || 08/10/2005 11:09 Comments || Top||

#3  It's Inebbitabbbable!
Posted by: Kim Jong Il || 08/10/2005 11:28 Comments || Top||

#4  One more time please?
Posted by: Tony (UK) || 08/10/2005 14:26 Comments || Top||


Arabia
Soddies spring GTMO returnees
Five Saudis who were held at the U.S military base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, before they were handed over to Saudi security officials, have been released, the Saudi Interior Ministry said Tuesday. The Saudi Press Agency quoted an unnamed official as saying the five were released after they underwent "the regular procedures and completed the prison terms which they received according to court verdicts." The report did not name the five, say when they were handed to Saudi authorities or for how long they were detained in Guantanamo and in Saudi jails. Last month, the United States released three Saudi men from Guantanamo to Saudi custody. American lawyers representing Saudi detainees at Guantanamo said in June that 124 Saudis were held there.
Posted by: Seafarious || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [10 views] Top|| File under:

#1  How many of these five will we have to recapture like some of the others that have left club gitmo? It would be nice to at least know their names in advance.
Posted by: NYer4wot || 08/10/2005 0:40 Comments || Top||

#2  If they are indeed recaptured, hopefully the second time they are sent home will be in body bags.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 08/10/2005 0:50 Comments || Top||

#3  We'll be able to match their DNA after they explode in a subway.
Posted by: ed || 08/10/2005 1:33 Comments || Top||

#4  If they were Pakistani or Afghani I would worry more. What are the odds that they never intended to actually dirty their hands with real fighting, and are just grateful to be back where they can talk big while living off Daddy's money until they get married?
Posted by: trailing wife || 08/10/2005 1:36 Comments || Top||

#5  *sigh*

TW -- you haven't been paying attention. Most of the foreign fighters in Iraq have been Saudis.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 08/10/2005 7:25 Comments || Top||

#6  "The Saudi Press Agency quoted an unnamed official as saying the five were released after they underwent 'the regular procedures and completed the prison terms which they received according to court verdicts.'"

I'm hoping those "regular procedures" include pulling out fingernails, use of pilers to yank out teeth. That will make it easier for future profiling:

BOLO for young Saudi men missing fingernails and more teeth than your typical Hockey player.

Posted by: Ward C the Moron || 08/10/2005 8:05 Comments || Top||

#7  Remember. Without the Saudis, there'd be no War on Terror...
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 8:20 Comments || Top||

#8  The Soudi gov only cares if they are going to make attacks in Soudi Arabia. I would bet once the terrorist agreed to bet on a bus out of country (Im sure enroute to Iraq) they were released and deemed not a threat.
Posted by: C-Low || 08/10/2005 13:01 Comments || Top||

#9  True, Robert. But they expected to gloriously kill many infidels, not to die trying or, even worse, be ignominiously captured. (Remember that lad who called his father from the Iraqi hospital with burns over just enough of his body that he was scarred for life, but not killed? He was furious because he was told only to park the bomb-laden truck , but instead his handlers blew it up while he was still inside.) The Gitmo returnees have spent three boring years collecting their feces to throw through the bars of their cages at the infidel soldier girls who controlled their lives. Are such likely to head to Iraq for a second round?
Posted by: trailing wife || 08/10/2005 14:14 Comments || Top||


Israel-Palestine
Abbas urges restraint during pullout
Posted by: Fred || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "Have a towel ready..."
Posted by: mojo || 08/10/2005 10:14 Comments || Top||

#2  "Abbas Urges Restraint until stooopid Jooos Pullout"
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 11:35 Comments || Top||

#3  lol Mojo
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 12:14 Comments || Top||


Britain
Prescott suggests Bakri make his vacation a long one
Amid growing calls to charge some clerics under incitement and treason laws, one of the most radical firebrand leaders left Britain. Sheik Omar Bakri, who earned a reputation for extremism during his 20 years in Britain, announced Tuesday that he was in Lebanon. Bakri said he was visiting relatives. "Enjoy your holiday - make it a long one," Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott said when asked about Bakri at a news conference. Bakri has dual Syrian and Lebanese citizenship, and has permission to live in Britain.
Sorry Deputy Prime Minister, but snarky comments should be reserved for blogs. You, sir, have a responsibility to get things done. Deeds not words, Prescott.
"Provisionally, (Bakri) left for a month, obviously he will be monitoring the situation to determine if it is feasible to return," Bakri's close associate, Anjem Choudary, told The Associated Press. "I think he would return if the political situation changed in this country ... (but) it is incumbent upon Muslims to go to a place where they can propagate Islam and now in Britain, Muslims are under siege."
"Muslims are under seige"; read: terrorist sponsors not welcome.
Bakri has made it clear that if he is told that he is not welcome in Britain, he won't return, Choudary said. "Good," Prescott said when told that. "I don't think he is welcome by many people in this country, is he?" Prescott said. "But at the moment he has the right to come in and out. ... It's a democracy, not a dictatorship, for God's sake."
Again with the rhetoric. The guy should have been deported. Leaving under his own free will is not a victory for you, Mr. Prescott.
Home Secretary Charles Clarke already has wide-ranging powers to exclude people from the country if he finds their "presence is not conducive to the public good" or based on national security reasons, the Home Office spokeswoman said. Last year, Britain barred 14 people from entering the country - 12 for national security reasons, the spokeswoman said. The Home Office refused to comment on specific cases.
The Crown Prosecution Service has said it would investigate whether Bakri's past comments - which have included reported praise for the Sept. 11 attacks - fall under laws banning inciting violence.
Nice to see you're "investigating" that - four years later.
In Egypt, authorities Tuesday released an Egyptian chemist, Magdy el-Nashar, who had been sought by Britain in connection with the July 7 attacks, which killed at least 56 people, including four suspected suicide bombers. El-Nashar said after he was freed that he knew two of the bombers casually. Egyptian authorities said they found no evidence against him.
Egyptian officials finding no evidence = el-Nashar bribed the hell out of them.
Posted by: John Kerry || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Son of a bitch! I posted this! Why can't I get the "JK" name off my submit form?! Am I doomed to be a French-looking, boring idiotarian who served in Vietnam forever?
Posted by: Chris W. || 08/10/2005 0:20 Comments || Top||

#2  Your name came through on the other article you posted. I'll check the way the cookies are set.
Posted by: Fred || 08/10/2005 0:37 Comments || Top||

#3  Thanks.
Posted by: Chris W. || 08/10/2005 0:38 Comments || Top||

#4  If he does come back, strip search, cavity search, rip his luggage to shreds. If they find anything, Hookboy gets a roomate.
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 8:46 Comments || Top||

#5  This "rhetoric" is telling Bakri he is self deported. If he comes back, the re-de-portation is likely to be less pleasant. No need for deeds when words do the job. And give a hint to lots of others that this can be done the easy way or the hard way, it's your choice. Faster, better, cheaper. Works for me.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis || 08/10/2005 8:55 Comments || Top||

#6  Pack his 2 wives and 7 baby boomers into a shipping box and mail to Syria.
Posted by: ed || 08/10/2005 9:25 Comments || Top||

#7  powers to exclude people from the country if he finds their "presence is not conducive to the public good"

why not call him a lazy leech for sponging off the taxes paid by hard-working Brits and be done with it - he's gone - no return, and kick his misbegotten offspring and chattel out too. Buh-bye!
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 10:05 Comments || Top||

#8  Prescott suggests Bakri make his vacation a long one

For the right price, someone would probably be willing to make it a permanent one, as in six feet under....
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 08/10/2005 10:43 Comments || Top||

#9  Bomb: You make a good point. Moving the problem does not solve the problem. With the UK, US, France, Pakis, etc. all kicking the mad men out, they need somewhere permanent to go (hell).
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 10:53 Comments || Top||

#10  Excellent. Bakri puts the lie to his own martyrdom rhetoric by declining to be a martyr in any deportation process. The man who would have others give their own blood won't even make an argument in court. Take note all potential suicide bombers: You are being duped! Run Bakri run. See Barkri run.
Posted by: Zpaz || 08/10/2005 13:53 Comments || Top||

#11  "Sorry Deputy Prime Minister, but snarky comments should be reserved for blogs. You, sir, have a responsibility to get things done. Deeds not words, Prescott."

Snarky comments should be reserved for blogs?
Posted by: Don Rumsfeld || 08/10/2005 16:46 Comments || Top||

#12  Yes, I affairs of State snarky comments can be unhelpful.
Posted by: Shipman || 08/10/2005 17:44 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
Al-Arian Defense Demands Mistrial Over Late Evidence
TAMPA - A month before the Sami Al-Arian trial began, two FBI agents interviewed a former Kuwaiti legislator in Washington. But Isma'il al-Shatti didn't tell the agents what they wanted to hear. Al-Shatti said he never received any packages or letters from Al-Arian, according to an FBI report of the May 5 interview. That includes a February 1995 letter Al-Arian wrote to Al-Shatti in which Al-Arian bragged about a recent double suicide attack and asked for money on behalf of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad. The letter was seized from Al-Arian's home during a search in November 1995 and is an important piece of evidence in Al-Arian's trial on charges he helped organize and finance the Palestinian Islamic Jihad. It was the first direct evidence presented by the prosecution that it says shows Al-Arian tried to raise money for the organization after providing material support to the Islamic Jihad became illegal in January 1995.

Defense attorneys Tuesday morning asked U.S. District Judge James Moody for a mistrial because they had just received the FBI's report on the Al-Shatti interview. According to Al-Arian attorney William Moffitt, the defense attorneys argued that this was a violation of the prosecution's legal obligation to promptly turn over to defendants any material that might help the defense. The argument took place at a sidebar conference out of earshot of spectators in Moody's courtroom. Jurors were not in the room. Moody did not grant the mistrial request, but he is scheduled this morning to consider defense arguments related to the exchange of evidence.

According to the FBI report, Al-Shatti said he knew Al-Arian when Al-Arian was a student and Al-Shatti had come to the United States to earn a master's degree. Al-Shatti said he met with Al-Arian in December 1990 in either Houston, Chicago or Washington. Shown a copy of Al-Arian's letter, al-Shatti said he never received it. He told the agents he did not want to get involved in the case. At the time the letter was written, Al-Shatti said, "it would have been impossible to do this because the Kuwaitis were very angry with the Palestinians," the report states. "After the invasion of Kuwait, al-Shatti was blacklisted by the Palestinians since he supported America."
Yah sure, yewbetcha. Taqiyyah at its finest.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Walter E. Furr III told jurors in his opening statement June 6 that wiretaps in the case show that the letter was hand-delivered to al-Shatti. On Wednesday, prosecutors read transcripts of conversations Al-Arian had with Ahmad Makki, from Sudan, who was in Chicago in February 1995. In the conversations, Al-Arian told Makki he had "messages that we must have you carry." Yet to be read to jurors is a Feb. 23, 1995, conversation Al-Arian had with an unidentified man in Saudi Arabia.
Al-Arian asks, "Did you give the package to Zoumai?"

The man says, "Yes, the uh, I gave it to Zoumai, and I conveyed it to ... al-Shatti and all of them.

"May God bless you," Al-Arian says.
Posted by: Seafarious || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Al-Arian Letter To Kuwaiti Offered As Proof Of Guilt
Jurors were read a Feb. 10, 1995, letter Al-Arian wrote to Kuwaiti legislator Isma'il al- Shatti. The letter was seized from Al-Arian's house during a search in November 1995.

It was written 18 days after a double suicide bombing in Beit Lid, Israel, that killed 22 people, including 20 Israeli soldiers. The letter was dated 16 days after President Clinton designated the Islamic Jihad a foreign terrorist organization, making it illegal to provide it material support.

``The latest operation, carried out by the two mujahideen who were martyred for the sake of God, is the best guide and witness to what the believing few can do in the face of Arab and Islamic collapse at the heels of the Zionist enemy and in keeping the flame of faith, steadfastness and defiance glowing,'' the letter states, according to a government translation consented to by the defense.
Posted by: ed || 08/10/2005 1:57 Comments || Top||

#2  Sami better take it hard - I'm counting on it
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 23:44 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan/South Asia
Witch trials resume
WaPo. Registration required, but EFL anyway.
PALANI, India -- At sundown, Pusanidevi Manjhi recalled, nine village men stormed into her house shouting, "Witch, witch!" and dragged her out by her hair as her six small children watched helplessly.

"This woman is a witch!" the men announced to the villagers, said Manjhi, 36. She said they tied her ankles together and locked her in a dark room.

"They beat me with bamboo sticks and metal rods and tried to pull my nails out. 'You are a witch, admit it,' they screamed at me again and again," Manjhi said, tearfully recalling her four days of captivity in June.

"They accused me of casting an evil spell that turned them into newts on their paddy crop that was destroyed in a fire. I begged them and told them I was not a witch," she said, showing wounds on her legs, thighs, hips and shoulders one recent morning in this village in the eastern Indian state of Jharkhand.

After a police investigation, the men who attacked Manjhi were arrested. An official said that the attack was spurred by a powerful landowner who owned rice paddies in the village and used local superstition to mask his attempts to maintain control. The evil capitalist strikes again.

Threats and charges of witchcraft occur in a number of Indian states that have large tribal populations with traditional beliefs about witches. Indian newspapers periodically publish reports about women who, after being accused of being witches, have been built into bridges beaten, had their heads shaved or had strings of shoes hung around their necks. Some have been killed.

"Sometimes it is used to punish women who question social norms," said Pooja Singhal Purwar, an official at the Jharkhand social welfare department. Oppression by Da Man.

Purwar said she sees an average of five women a month being denounced as witches and tortured in rural Jharkhand.

The nine men were charged under a Jharkhand state law that forbids accusing people of being witches. One of them was Gahan Lal, the man whose paddy had caught fire. Lal later confessed to torturing Manjhi.

"Gahan Lal was a powerful landlord. There were fights all the time in the village over land and wages," said Jayant Tirkey, the police officer investigating the case. "When his paddy caught fire, he blamed [Manjhi] for casting an evil spell. But that is merely an excuse. His real motive is to instill fear among the poor."

Tirkey said he thinks that village witch doctors are to blame for superstitious practices, but added that witch doctors are not arrested and tried because they are not directly involved in the violence. Guess we can call them the Moderates.

"I never name a witch. I only give villagers some clues to find her," I think that was called "plausible deniability." said Leena Oraon, who is known as a witch doctor in Aragate village and who says she compares their weights to ducks studies rice grains to ascertain the presence of a witch in the village. "Today's doctors cannot cure ailments that are caused by a witch's curse. That is why people come to me." Either that, or because they are a bunch of ignoramuses.

"People go scot-free because witnesses are hard to come by. Villagers often approve of the torture meted out to these women," said Girija Shankar Jaiswal, a lawyer who heads the organization. "They think suicide bombing witch-hunting is a heroic act and that it will clean the society of evil."

Only two Indian states, Jharkhand and Bihar, have outlawed witch-hunting. Last year, one of India's northeastern states, Tripura, conducted a discussion in the legislative assembly about the need to ban the practice of witch-hunting. After a day-long debate, the assembly unanimously decided that killing of people for practicing witchcraft should be prevented.

However, members failed to reach a consensus on whether witchcraft was a science or superstition. You want My answer?

Are Jharkhand and Bihar predominantly Hindu, or perhaps a certain other religion?
Posted by: Jackal || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I thought this was going to be about the Roberts nomination...or Rove or some other person about to be burned by the left.
Posted by: 2b || 08/10/2005 7:36 Comments || Top||

#2  Oddly, she wasn't a witch, but a vampire.
Posted by: Chuck Simmins || 08/10/2005 9:32 Comments || Top||

#3  They should see if she floats.
Posted by: Highlander || 08/10/2005 9:51 Comments || Top||

#4  Only two Indian states, Jharkhand and Bihar, have outlawed witch-hunting.

However it has also been outlawed in Chappequa, New York...

"I never name a witch. I only give ... some clues to find her," said Leena Oraon, who is known as a witch doctor....

Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 12:19 Comments || Top||

#5  "she turned me into a newt!"



(highlander got there first, dammit)
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 12:59 Comments || Top||

#6 

Frank G. ! Thank you for noticing...

Please help me...
Posted by: Leena Oraon || 08/10/2005 13:24 Comments || Top||

#7  Funny, I didn't read anything about Maureen Dowd, Hillary Clinton, or Mad Albright being tried.
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 18:50 Comments || Top||

#8  Captain America:
That's Witch trials. With a W not a B.
Posted by: Jackal || 08/10/2005 22:16 Comments || Top||

#9  and all three have shown they have no special powers...in fact, they lack many human characteristics
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 22:23 Comments || Top||


Israel-Palestine
Mufti forbids Gaza pullout disorder
Posted by: Fred || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Wow! King Canute2.

Yeah, Hamas and Hizbollah are really on tight leashes.
Posted by: Vlad the Muslim Impaler || 08/10/2005 3:46 Comments || Top||

#2  Uh-Huh.

Yeah, that'll do it.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 08/10/2005 19:48 Comments || Top||


Palestinian official: Pullout needs work
Posted by: Fred || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  But this is not the end of Palestinian struggle," Abd Allah said.
The perverbial BUT. No surprise here
Posted by: Jan || 08/10/2005 0:35 Comments || Top||

#2  Here's a "but":

The pullout may "need work", BUT it's all you're gonna get until you jerks work on creating a civil society.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 08/10/2005 2:04 Comments || Top||

#3  Taking credit for other people's work again, heh, Mr. Palestinian?
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 11:19 Comments || Top||

#4  Yes, the pullout needs work. Not enough Jooos being driven back into the ocean.
Posted by: Chris W. || 08/10/2005 13:27 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Tech
URCV 'Gladiator' Makes It's Debut
It could have been the Iraqi desert with the burning sun and dusty blue sky. The "Gladiator," an unmanned remote-controlled vehicle, makes its way over a dirt obstacle yesterday as a crowd observes. Carnegie Mellon and BAE Systems held a public demonstration of the robot, developed for the Marine Corps.

But instead of sand, it was a tidy asphalt surface in Uniontown yesterday, where a military-green robot resembling a large all-terrain vehicle climbed and tumbled over makeshift stacks of wood planks and piles of stone-filled dirt, preening before a crowd uttering "ohs" and "ahs".

Known as the Gladiator Tactical Unmanned Ground Vehicle (TUGV), the six-wheeled combat robot spun around in circles displaying its strength and durability at what could have been its coming-out party-- the first public demonstration of the prototype designed and developed at Carnegie Mellon University and set to be built and manufactured at BAE Systems' Ground Vehicle Unit plant in Fayette County.

In February, CMU beat out defense giant Lockheed Martin for a $26.4 million Defense Department contract to produce a line of six Gladiator TUGV prototypes. The goal is to build big remote-controlled reconnaissance robots capable of carrying out search-and-discovery missions in potentially hostile areas, to warn soldiers of the dangers ahead, and to protect them from mine fields, craters, trenches, hidden enemies or even greater threats such as chemical, biological or nuclear traps. Eventually, the military hopes to arm the remote-controlled TUGVs with machine guns and other weapons, giving them the capacity to destroy enemy targets.
Just don't connect them to Skynet.
Marine Corps Col. Terry Griffin, the project manager for the Department of Defense Robotic Systems Joint Project Office, called the Gladiator "the future of war-fighting.
"Remote combat task is to accomplish the mission and save friendly lives," Griffen told a crowd of BAE employees, politicians, CMU researchers, staff and reporters on hand for yesterday's demonstration. "We're going to do that with the Gladiator."

Although the vehicle, weighing nearly 3 tons, is large enough for combat, it appears remarkably friendly, looking and acting like an oversized remote-controlled toy. Designed to fit into a military Humvee for transport, the Gladiator will be driven remotely by a soldier using a Sony PlayStation-like joystick. The soldier will wear a special helmet fitted with an eyepiece that serves as a camera, allowing the soldier to see what the robot sees, even though it could be miles away.

The latest Gladiator prototype has containers for hand grenades that can be used for clearing obstacles and creating a footpath on difficult terrain for soldiers following behind. It also features what looks like organ pipes to produce smoke, and it has a mount on top for a medium-size machine gun or multipurpose assault weapon.

The six prototypes, which will be tested under a variety of conditions before the Department of Defense orders up to 200 Gladiators, are the third stage of the robot's development process. A joint team of CMU researchers, consultants with military-experience and BAE engineers are now tweaking the Gladiator to a "bible-like" set of military requirements and expect to deliver the six prototypes to the Marine Corps by May 2007. "The Marines are a tough customer. They have continually pushed them to make it easier to use," said Randy Bryant, dean of CMU's School of Computer Science.

Researchers at CMU's Robotics Institute and the National Robotics Engineering Consortium have been developing and fine-tuning the Gladiator since 2002, when several research teams and defense contractors began competing to present the Department of Defense with a specialized robotic vehicle to venture into unknown territory on battlefields and deliver real-time pictures to soldiers. CMU began working with BAE in the most recent phase of the project -- needing an experienced defense contractor to build and manufacture the Gladiator.

Yesterday's demonstration was to showcase not just the the first unmanned ground vehicle used for reconnaissance, but also to highlight the region's economic-development success in winning a big military contract. "We wanted to show the public what we were doing," said BAE spokesman Herb Muktarian, who noted that most of the 150 employees in the company's Fayette County plant are not yet working on the Gladiator but refurbishing Bradley combat vehicles.
Amazingly enough, the Pentagon wants 1/3rd of its combat vehicles to be unmanned robots by 2010.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I wonder does this vehicle need a link to an air vehicle to operate?

I wonder what it's degree of autonomy is if the link is shut off?

I wonder how they protect the location of the transmitter?
Posted by: Ulereger Clavigum6227 || 08/10/2005 6:52 Comments || Top||

#2  It's important to remember that any such vehicle is interwoven into a much greater whole. To start with, its operator probably can multitask on his PDA, so he can also see the terrain ahead, live pics from any UAVs about, and has lots of other information readily available, such as from sensors and other users. Second, the armored vehicle itself might be interconnect to other such vehicles, like Strykers, giving it coordinated fires. Third, there might be an overall commander directing the mass movement remotely (leaving the actual maneuver to users), and coordinating between different military units to produce a cohesive robotic front lines.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 08/10/2005 10:14 Comments || Top||

#3  I wonder when it's gonna find Sarah Connor?
Posted by: Raj || 08/10/2005 10:30 Comments || Top||

#4  Does anyone have a link to video of recent UAV take-out of Jihadi mortar team in Iraq?
Posted by: Ward C the Moron || 08/10/2005 11:06 Comments || Top||

#5  BAE engineers are now tweaking the Gladiator to a "bible-like" set

The project is doomed with the use of the word bible. The Left will soon product a sequel to the movie "Stealth" (which bombed at the box office too).
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 11:08 Comments || Top||

#6  Amazingly enough, the Pentagon wants 1/3rd of its combat vehicles to be unmanned robots by 2010.

Yeah, that's cause the bean counters have figured all the savings from not paying retirement or veterans medical benefits that'll be saved. BTW, didn't someone mention Skynet? :)
Posted by: Thinemble Hupomotch7256 || 08/10/2005 14:55 Comments || Top||

#7  that's cause the bean counters have figured all the savings from not paying retirement or veterans medical benefits

Yeah, that *must* be the reason. It's certainly not because a robot is a force multiplier that enables sensors and weapons to be deployed in high-risk situations without risking soldier's lives.

Personally, I think this is great because we are one step closer to unleashing Giant Killer Robots. Woo woo!
Posted by: SteveS || 08/10/2005 16:25 Comments || Top||

#8  #3 raj LOL
Posted by: hey mo || 08/10/2005 16:37 Comments || Top||


Great White North
36% support two-state solution, for Canada
More than one-third of western Canadians surveyed this summer thought it was time to consider separation from Canada, a poll suggests. In the survey, 35.6 per cent of respondents from Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia agreed with the statement: Western Canadians should begin to explore the idea of forming their own country. Albertans, at 42 per cent, were most apt to consider independence, followed by Saskatchewan at 31.9 per cent. Residents of B.C. and Manitoba were the least likely to consider separation, at 30.8 and 27.5 per cent respectively.

The survey was commissioned by the Western Standard, a right-leaning bimonthly news and opinion magazine based in Calgary, to assess how well the federal government has been managing the issue of western alienation - something that Prime Minister Martin promised to reduce as part of his 2004 election campaign. The research was conducted by pollster Faron Ellis, a political science professor at Lethbridge Community College, who surveyed 1,448 adult western Canadians between June 29 and July 5. The results are considered accurate within plus or minus 2.6 percentage point, 19 times out of 20.

Ellis noted that surprisingly, separatist sentiment appeared to run highest among young people - 37 per cent of respondents between the ages of 18 and 29 were open to the notion of breaking away from Canada. Support was lowest - 33.7 per cent - among the baby boom generation aged between 45 and 64. In the poll's supplementary questions, 64 per cent of respondents said Martin had done a "poor job" at ending western alienation.
Posted by: Jackal || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  There is a strong minority of sane people in Western Canada.... This is not surprising...
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 0:19 Comments || Top||

#2  British Columbia was 30%? I was under the impression that BC was essentially Ontario West. That's... interesting.
Posted by: Mitch H. || 08/10/2005 9:47 Comments || Top||

#3  Another 42% favor submission under shari'a law.
Posted by: Ward C the Moron || 08/10/2005 11:07 Comments || Top||

#4  BC too close to Seattle
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 11:33 Comments || Top||

#5  you step out of Vancouver/Victoria and BAM, you're in serious redneck territory...Loggers mostly, very tough people. It'll never happen though... so why worry.
Posted by: bk || 08/10/2005 11:59 Comments || Top||

#6  you step out of Seattle/Tacoma and BAM you're in serious republican territory. Businessmen mostly, very tough people. Trying to run a business in Washington State isnt an easy thing especially with all the Taxes that the Dems come up with all the time.
Posted by: bk || 08/10/2005 12:02 Comments || Top||

#7  via Small Dead Animals: "Daddy, What's a separatist?"
Posted by: eLarson || 08/10/2005 16:57 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
Runaway Bride Mows Lawn
Okay. It's August. The news is supposed to be slow in August. But isn't that headline going overboard with the idea?
Instead of cutting out of town, runaway bride Jennifer Wilbanks is cutting lawns.
"Maudette! Come quick! The Runaway Bride® is cutting the Wilsons' grass!"
"Yes, Herb."
Wearing an orange community service vest and a baseball cap with the slogan "Life is good," Wilbanks did part of her court-ordered community service Tuesday for lying to police after she ran off days before her wedding.
Wow! That's amazing! She's actually doing it in public?
"I'm doing well. ... I'm getting there," a sweating Wilbanks told a throng of reporters and photographers after her mower died out in the tall, wet grass.
"Maudette! Lookit dat! She's sweating!"
"Horses sweat, Herb. Gents perspire. She's glowing."
"I need to get back to work. I don't want to get into trouble." But her mower kept sputtering out, prompting her to repeatedly yank on the pull cord to get it started again. After the eighth time, she let out a huge sigh.
"[Sigh!] I'd run away if I wasn't wearing this vest!"
In all, Wilbanks was ordered to do 120 hours of service, and she has already completed 24 by scrubbing toilets in probation offices, picking up trash and washing public vehicles...
"Maudette! She washes cars, too!"
"Yes, Herb. Should I start the Studebaker?"
Wilbanks pleaded no contest in June to telling police her phony story. She also was sentenced to two years of probation and ordered to pay $2,550 in restitution to the sheriff's office that helped with the search. The nearby city of Duluth, where Wilbanks had lived with her fiance, spent nearly $43,000 to search for her; Wilbanks has repaid $13,249.
snip part deux. Keep cutting those lawns, crook. I hope word gets out that you're cleaning the probation office toilets too, so somebody can get in there and dump a mean one right on the floor.
Posted by: Chris W. || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Hope they kept the keys to the John Deere.
Posted by: Chuck Simmins || 08/10/2005 9:30 Comments || Top||

#2  The nearby city of Duluth, where Wilbanks had lived with her fiance, spent nearly $43,000 to search for her; Wilbanks has repaid $13,249.

She already paid it - it's called taxes. If the gov't is going to start billing us when we make them do their f*cking jobs, than what are we paying taxes for?
Posted by: BH || 08/10/2005 9:44 Comments || Top||

#3  BH - She wasted a lot of other taxpayers' money because she couldn't do the honorable thing. Don't forget that.

If she would have been honest, the cops could have "done their f*cking jobs" instead of wasting time on an idiot like her.

Posted by: Desert Blondie || 08/10/2005 10:27 Comments || Top||

#4  I think she should be spanked.
Posted by: Chuck Simmins || 08/10/2005 10:52 Comments || Top||

#5  This being the South, I noted that it was often mentioned that both she and her fiance had come from "prominent families" in the area. To me, this means that she was being forced into a marriage with this guy, who most agree looks rather 'oafen', and had zero choice in the matter. Marry that guy or else is a heck of a choice. Even if she was dead set against it, they would probably only give her the other option of never marrying anyone. Going from a "belle of the ball" debutante at the head of her social circle, to "chattal", overnight, would have to suck.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 08/10/2005 10:53 Comments || Top||

#6  I don't know, anonymoose. I live right next to Duluth, and, in fact, many in this area are NOT Southerners. Even so, many Southern women these days fight against that stereotype. Finally, it was HER decision...she could've chosen to NOT marry. I think the point is being lost here, though. Must be a VERY slow news day if this is being posted at Fox News!
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 10:59 Comments || Top||

#7  with that rack, she should be washing cars a la Coolhand Luke
Posted by: Kim Jong Il || 08/10/2005 11:31 Comments || Top||

#8  oops - that were me
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 11:32 Comments || Top||

#9  So, Frank, um, you wanna help Chuck with the spanking thingy? She exhibits at least some signs of a masochistic personality...
Posted by: .com || 08/10/2005 11:44 Comments || Top||

#10  Marry that guy or else is a heck of a choice. Even if she was dead set against it, they would probably only give her the other option of never marrying anyone.

You been reading too many Southern Gothic novels, Moose. Marry him "or else", what? They'll cut off her charge accounts? She won't get Grandma's silver? They'll send five of her cousins 'round to gang rape her? It ain't the NWFP, you know.
Posted by: The Low Countries || 08/10/2005 11:48 Comments || Top||

#11  "Runaway Bride Mows Lawn"

Yea, but is she wearing eye protection?
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 12:13 Comments || Top||

#12  Desert Blondie:

She wasted a lot of other taxpayers' money because she couldn't do the honorable thing. Don't forget that.

Actually, if you want to get technical, the person who called the police on her is the one who wasted the taxpayers' money. What she did was to leave home without telling anybody. It's a selfish thing to do, but do you really want them to pass a law saying you MUST inform somebody of your whereabouts at all times? No thanks, comrade.

She did a stupid thing. People do them all the time. People fall asleep with a cigarette and set apartment complexes on fire, but we don't hand them the fire department's bill. The gov't takes money out of our pockets to provide certain services, and I expect them to provide them. And it is not your prerogative as a taxpayer to cherry-pick the cases which you consider to be worthy. Either provide the service and accept the occasional false alarm, or don't provide the service at all. But I'm sick of seeing this women pilloried on a national level because she happens to be an moron.
Posted by: BH || 08/10/2005 13:30 Comments || Top||

#13  What she did was to leave home without telling anybody.

No, she lied to the cops, BH:
She called her fiance, John Mason, from Albuquerque, N.M., early in the morning of her planned wedding day, claiming to have been abducted and sexually assaulted. She soon recanted her story, saying she fled because of personal issues.
Posted by: Steve || 08/10/2005 15:19 Comments || Top||

#14  She called her fiance

No, she didn't - at least, not in her own state. She did give the NM police a fraudulent report, and they chose not to charge her.
Posted by: BH || 08/10/2005 15:35 Comments || Top||

#15  BH, with the insinuation that the "crime" started in Georgia (the abduction, at least....), her fiance did the normal thing and made a police report.

The difference is, he was acting on good faith, and she knowingly lied. She couldn't possibly be that damn dumb to think that someone who cared about her wouldn't make a police report in that situation. I know I would if someone I loved said they had been raped, kidnapped, and dragged across the country.

Also, you forget that for a while the authorities believed he killed her and were treating him as a suspect. Most normal people don't go off on a run and not come back unless there's some foul play. She didn't just wake up one day and get her happy ass on a bus. She deliberately made it look like something bad happened to her.

He filed that report, assuming that the woman he loved was telling the truth, in Georgia. New Mexico could have chosen to charge her but didn't. That doesn't mean they couldn't have....maybe they were just sick of her crap by then and wanted her out of there.

If she had just been honest and said she didn't want to go through with it, guess what? NOTHING would have happened. She's over 18 and can do what she wants to. Even if her fiance wanted to make a report, there would have been nothing anyone could do absent evidence of a crime.

I still think that dumb broad got off easy....and that she's guilty as hell.


Posted by: Desert Blondie || 08/10/2005 16:25 Comments || Top||

#16  I clap my Palps with glee! She remembers nothing!
Posted by: Sub Commander Megar || 08/10/2005 18:32 Comments || Top||


Down Under
War veteran 'in club bomb hoax'
A WAR veteran who allegedly threatened to blow up a club with explosives supposedly wired to his body was released on bail yesterday - and then saluted by his wife as he left court. Outside the court, David Buck's wife Michelle put on a captain's hat and saluted her husband as he got into their car.

Buck, 53, was allegedly wearing an earpiece, a small microphone on his shirt and a backpack containing a battery and wires when he walked into Umina Bowling Club on Monday at 1.35pm. A police statement tendered to Gosford Local Court alleged Buck handed the club manager a note claiming "two cell members" were inside the club and that explosives would be detonated if the manager did not fill a bag with money.

Magistrate Garry Cocks said the alleged incident was "everybody's worst nightmare" in the current climate of terrorism. The court heard that Buck, who was wearing a floppy tan coloured canvas hat, sunglasses, backpack and bumbag, was shaking uncontrollably after handing the note to the club manager. "The Jew that handed you this note is wired with 11kg of remotely detonated explosives - 10kg in the backpack and one kilo in the bag around his waist," the note allegedly stated. "Two of my cell members are inside your club and will be watching. Raise no alarms and do not attempt to evacuate the club or I will detonate the explosives.

"You are to place all the paper money into a bag and give the bag to the Jew. The Jew is to confirm there are no dye bombs with the money.

"Should you fail to comply immediately I will not hesitate to kill the Jew and all the other unbelievers in your club."

The court heard that the club manager began to evacuate patrons through a rear door while they waited for police to arrive. A short time later Buck walked out the front door and was followed by a club maintenance manager who had experience with explosives in the army. The maintenance manager approached the accused and said "OK I think we have gone far enough" before Buck sat in the gutter and waited for police. He was arrested a short time later. No bomb or explosives were found.

Buck, of Umina Beach, dressed in a navy blue suit, sat calmly in the dock during his court appearance yesterday where he faced charges of robbery and demand property with menaces with intent to steal.

Legal aid solicitor Lesley Jansen, appearing for Buck, told the court her client had been receiving treatment at Richmond's St John of God Hospital for three years for being a looney post-traumatic stress disorder caused by his war service. The court was told he was having money problems because of gambling habits but did not have a record for dishonesty offences. "It just seems to have come out of the Guardian blue," Ms Jansen told the court.

Mr Cocks granted bail but banned Buck, who entered no plea, from Umina Bowling Club and ordered him to report to Woy Woy police station daily. The case was adjourned to September 22.
Posted by: Oztralian [AKA] God Save The World || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I wouldn't be crossing that maintenance man.
Posted by: Shipman || 08/10/2005 7:33 Comments || Top||

#2  "war veteran" as the lede. The press never gives up, do they?
Posted by: 2b || 08/10/2005 7:43 Comments || Top||


Africa: North
AU members in Mauritania for talks
A delegation from the African Union has arrived in Mauritania to urge leaders of last week's coup to restore constitutional order to this oil-rich nation.
While they're there, I hope they asked the colonels or generals or whatever they are to overthrow that guy in Niger, too...
The 53-nation body condemned the 3 August coup and suspended Mauritania's membership of the organisation, but has stopped short of calling for exiled President Maaouiya Sid Ahmed Ould Taya to be restored to office. Taya, who had ruled since a 1984 coup, was widely unpopular and most Mauritanians welcomed his ousting. The African Union (AU) delegation includes Nigerian Foreign Minister Oluyemi Adeniji, South African Safety and Security Minister Charles Nqakula and an official of the African Union Commission. They are expected to meet the newly declared president, Colonel Ely Ould Mohamed Vall, and other leaders of last week's coup.

Nigeria holds the chairmanship of the AU, and South Africa is this month's head of the organisation's Peace and Security Council. Speaking in an interview on Monday broadcast on the Arabic news channel Al-Arabiya, Taya vowed he would return to power and called on his country's armed forces to reverse the coup. Taya issued orders "in my capacity as president of the republic to the armed forces to restore the natural order and put an end to this crime. I am determined to return to Nouakchott to continue the job of building our nation."
I hate to say this, but I think you've been fired.
Taya on Tuesday left the west African state of Niger where he had been given refuge and headed for The Gambia, an aide of Niger President Mamadou Tandja said. Taya, who was toppled by top army brass while he was abroad on Wednesday, left for Banjul, the capital of the tiny West African state, he added. The Gambia, a narrow strip of land that is surrounded on three sides by Senegal, is an English-speaking state that does not have a border with Mauritania.
Posted by: Fred || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Can the international community form a worldwide Society of Useless Debating Clubs that can combine all these useless, impotent hackeramas for people that can't hold legitimate jobs? We got the UN, The African Union, the Arab League, the EU and I don't even think I've scratched the surface.
It might help cut down on costs...
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 8:40 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Stones target "hypocrite" patriots in new song
The Rolling Stones, not exactly a band at the forefront of rock 'n' roll activism, are taking aim at the American right with a new song on their upcoming album, according to Newsweek magazine.
Uhuh. Right. We're supposed to take his opinion seriously.
That's probably the signal to start the revolution. Is Charlie Manson still locked up? Is it 1969 again? I keep playing this Stones CD backward, and it sez "Jagger is dead"...
The track, "Sweet Neo Con," boasts the line, "You call yourself a Christian, I call you a hypocrite/You call yourself a patriot, well I think you're full of s---," according to the weekly newsmagazine.
"You call yourself an intellect, I call you a dumbass/You ain't got no voice left/And you never had any looks"
"It is direct," singer Mick Jagger was quoted as saying, adding that his collaborator, Keith Richards, was "a bit worried" about a backlash because the guitarist lives in the United States and Jagger does not.
So what's he know about the U.S.?
"Sweet Neo Con" is one of 16 tracks featured on the Stones' new album, "A Bigger Bang," which comes out in the United States on September 6, and a day earlier internationally. It was not featured on a 12-track advance CD circulated to critics. The group's publicist was traveling and not able to confirm the quoted lyrics or provide the complete lyrics. The band is currently rehearsing in Toronto ahead of a world tour that begins on August 21 in Boston. In their 43-year career, the Stones have observed political developments in songs like 1968's "Street Fighting Man," but have generally avoided taking sides. Notable exceptions included the 1983 single "Undercover (of the Night)," about civil rights abuse in Latin America, and 1991's Gulf War-related track "Highwire."
Whoopdy doo. Somehow, when I sit down and think real hard on the great minds of the 20th century, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards don't immediately spring to mind. I dunno why.
Posted by: Oztralian [AKA] God Save The World || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  He should stick to songs about picking up ugly women.... something he knows more about than politics...
Posted by: Glaick Uneresing1986 || 08/10/2005 0:10 Comments || Top||

#2  They should deny their Visa's and not allow them into the country. Sounds fair to me.
Posted by: Silentbrick || 08/10/2005 0:20 Comments || Top||

#3  Well that settles it. I'm changing my party affiliation to Democrat first thing in the morning and I'm off to the Lefty blogs right now. So long, SUCKERS!
Posted by: Chris W. || 08/10/2005 0:23 Comments || Top||

#4  Notable exceptions, so many notable exceptions are not anymore exceptions. I remmeber the liar line at time of Gulf War "we sell them missiles we sell them bla bla..." Just money seekers...
Posted by: Hupomoque Spoluter7949 || 08/10/2005 1:39 Comments || Top||

#5  Set them up a gig in Pakistan and lose the return tickets.
Posted by: ed || 08/10/2005 2:12 Comments || Top||

#6  This should play well with the Air Head America crowd. And we all know what a massive consumer audience that is. Other than that, well who cares? All's it means is that I won't buy their album, you won't buy their album and they'll be lucky to fill little venues like Humphreys By the Sea - even after the radio stations give away 110% of their tickets. And Soros will have to fund rent a crowds to make it look successful.

"Number 3 caller, YOU are the lucky winner of tickets to the see the Stones!"

"Oh man, I never win anything".
Posted by: 2b || 08/10/2005 4:32 Comments || Top||

#7  Who the hell wants to see 60+ year old geezers prancing around on stage dressed like ponces and singing the songs of their 30-year-gone youth? It was time for these characters to hang it up a long time ago.
Posted by: mac || 08/10/2005 5:35 Comments || Top||

#8  Jagger is from Dartford. Nuff said.
Posted by: Howard UK || 08/10/2005 5:44 Comments || Top||

#9  Keith Richards is a burnt out junkie.
Posted by: Sock Puppet 0’ Doom || 08/10/2005 5:55 Comments || Top||

#10  And to begin with, the Stones were, even at the age of their splendor, a very overstated group: the Beatles could do rock like the Stones (cf return from USSR) and alot of things teh Stones couldn't do (cf "Yesterday"). It was their demagogical "rebelness" who kept them in the charts. Furthermore unlike the Beatles they weren't lucky enough to find a bitch Yoko forcing the split of the group before their timle had passed so survived on their myth while producing mediocrity.

But this is a moot point, whatever his musical merits the real point is why is Mr Jagger's using the stage to voice his opinion as if he were anything else but a sixty years old guy who didn't go beyond high school, has probabbly read little during his life, lives in a bubble and has had his mind altered by drugs and excess alcohol? Your average blue collar can give sounder advice than Mike Jagger so why is nobody telling Mr Jagger to shut up out oif respect for that blue collar who doesn't have the same tribune and is smarter and better informed than him?
Posted by: JFM || 08/10/2005 5:58 Comments || Top||

#11  A different spin. Jagger has always been a give the punters what they want kinda guy. He has doubtless seen the market for idiotic Leftist nonsense - M Moore etc. Just someone else grabbing his slice of the tax on Leftist ignorance.
Posted by: phil_b || 08/10/2005 6:10 Comments || Top||

#12  The youth is correct wing.

Thanks Mick, you old man, for helping move a couple mo(o)re youngsters from the idiocy of the left.
Posted by: Ulereger Clavigum6227 || 08/10/2005 6:41 Comments || Top||

#13  Talk about bad timing with the dust still settling from the London bombings. Even so, am I supposed to care about the political opinions of an aged burned out rock star?
Posted by: canaveraldan || 08/10/2005 6:47 Comments || Top||

#14  Honky Twonk Man

http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a3_257b.html

http://blather.newdream.net/t/twonk.html
Posted by: Ulereger Clavigum6227 || 08/10/2005 6:55 Comments || Top||

#15  HEY MICK!!!STUFF IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by: ARMYGUY || 08/10/2005 7:38 Comments || Top||

#16  He's nothing but an over-the-hill, phliandering, alcoholhic, hypocrite. Jeez, I never new Jagger and Ted Kennedy had so much in common.
Posted by: anymouse || 08/10/2005 8:07 Comments || Top||

#17  The utterances of aging Lord Rockstars who long ago became walking self-parody are just about as valuable as the words of the 60 year old street person riding a girl's bike around my slice of the city collecting second hand tobacco at 7:30 am. They share alot in common.
Posted by: MunkarKat || 08/10/2005 8:12 Comments || Top||

#18  It's all about free publicity and about introducing more excitement into a fading career that could use a little Viagra. It's also typical of Newsweek, which is why I no longer subscribe.
Posted by: Darrell || 08/10/2005 8:40 Comments || Top||

#19  Didn't these guys write a songe titled "Sympathy for The Bin Laden Devil?"

Too much sex, drugs, underaged females, and ... hmmm was it these guys who had sex with a small shark or was that Led Zep? Somebody out there will recall that one. Please clarify.
Posted by: Ward C the Moron || 08/10/2005 8:42 Comments || Top||

#20  2b - you from SD too?
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 8:57 Comments || Top||

#21  This is a joke, right? I mean, the tour's sponsored by Ameriquest Mortgage, for crissakes! Hahahaha... Oh, you ancient, rebellious bastards you! Street Fighing Man, my ass! Just don't trip over your walkers when you take a swing at THE MAN!
Hey, kiddos! We think Bush sucks, so we're still hip or fly or whatever the kids call cool today...
so come on out and spend 150 bucks a ticket just so you can tell the story about the time you saw US in concert. Just try to ignore the fact that we lost the magic about 25 years ago...
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 9:04 Comments || Top||

#22  I like the stones, this is brilliant.
Posted by: Ebbuse Thriper9740 || 08/10/2005 9:34 Comments || Top||

#23  I'm just waiting for their biting commentary on prescription drug prices called, "I Can't Get No Medication".

/sorry, couldn't help myself.....
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 08/10/2005 9:42 Comments || Top||

#24  lol, DB! Put them in line with the Dixie Twits and Babs Streisend. Hey, maybe there's a future "music festival" coming to a town near us soon?
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 9:59 Comments || Top||

#25  Heh.

http://wuzzadem.typepad.com/wuz/2005/08/mick_jagger_not.html
Posted by: mojo || 08/10/2005 10:23 Comments || Top||

#26  "Sweet Neo Con," boasts the line, "You call yourself a Christian, I call you a hypocrite


Stones aint even got the standard brit far leftie line on neocons down pat.
Posted by: Liberalhawk || 08/10/2005 10:53 Comments || Top||

#27  No furry like a Stone gathering moss.
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 11:03 Comments || Top||

#28  Mick's just following the AARP party line. He knows where his bread is buttered.
Posted by: Matt || 08/10/2005 11:08 Comments || Top||

#29  ...following the AARP party line. LOL, Matt!
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 08/10/2005 11:18 Comments || Top||

#30  they have first amendment rights just like you, so if you want to censor them, good luck!
Posted by: Omaiper Crinenter3853 || 08/10/2005 11:29 Comments || Top||

#31  OC,

Other than one poster suggesting that visas be denied (not a constitutional right BTW), I don't see a single call for censorship. Mockery? Yup. General snarkiness? Heck yeah. Rude comments about aging ignorant musicians? You bet. Censorship? Nah. Our enemies serve us best when we let them keep blabbering.
Posted by: Dreadnought || 08/10/2005 12:18 Comments || Top||

#32  Mick Jagger? Oh, I yeah - he was on the Simpsons once, wasn't he?
Posted by: Xbalanke || 08/10/2005 12:30 Comments || Top||

#33  geriatric rock sucks
Posted by: Thaing Cravise5611 || 08/10/2005 13:46 Comments || Top||

#34  Good to hear Keith already lives here now. Won't have to go through that "blood replacement" thing to get in anymore.
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 14:04 Comments || Top||

#35  What no dig at Haliburton? Dick Cheney? Blood for Oil?

I can't beleive they missed this.....
Posted by: TomAnon || 08/10/2005 14:10 Comments || Top||

#36  Mindless bunch of ole' burned out junkies....
Posted by: TomAnon || 08/10/2005 14:10 Comments || Top||

#37  "What no dig at Haliburton? Dick Cheney? Blood for Oil?

I can't beleive they missed this....."

seems more pro forma, than like they really meant it.
Posted by: Liberalhawk || 08/10/2005 14:12 Comments || Top||

#38  Tu, I'm tellin' ya, you have no idea how much business that cost us.
Posted by: Halliburton: Blood Replacement Division || 08/10/2005 14:15 Comments || Top||

#39  What a drag it is getting old...

(hey that could be a song!)
Posted by: Frank Martin || 08/10/2005 14:30 Comments || Top||

#40  After the asteroid hits, it'll be the roaches, the rats, and Keith Richards left on this rock.
Posted by: Thinemble Hupomotch7256 || 08/10/2005 14:57 Comments || Top||

#41  Five-year-old mind in a century old body.
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 15:13 Comments || Top||

#42  NO GOOD REACTION
Sung to the Stone’s
NO SATISFACTION

I can’t get no good reaction,
I can’t get no good reaction,.
’cause I try and I try and I try and I try.
I can’t get no, I can’t get no.

Sittin’ in my big ol’ house.
I see my cat chasin’ a big mouse.
I’m glad I don’t have to feed him today,
‘Cause my record profits I’ve frittered away,
Drugs were no fire to my imagination.
I can’t get no, oh no no no.
Hey hey hey, that’s what I say.

I can’t get no good reaction,
I can’t get no good reaction,.
’cause I try and I try and I try and I try.
I can’t get no, I can’t get no.

Watchin’ my nose hair a-grow
Realize that aging ain’t so slow
I wonder if I got some bad beef,
Mad cow syndrome has no releif,
I don’t wanna drool on the nurse’s sleeve...
I can’t get no, oh no no no.
Hey hey hey, that’s what I say.

I can’t get no CD sale action,
Purchases of them are, but a fraction.
But I try, and I try, and I try and I try.
I can’t get no, I can’t get no.

When Cigarettes haven’t killed me yet
With what Jennings and Superman’s wife did get
Doc tells me, “you’d better quit this week
’cause you see you’re sinking.” - life is bleek.
I can’t get no, oh no no no.
Hey hey hey, that’s what I say.

I can’t get no, I can’t get no,
I can’t get no good reaction,
No good reaction, good reaction, good reaction,

PS. I would like to see Jagger himself sing this.
That is what I had in mind. -O'05
Posted by: Ogeretla 2005 || 08/10/2005 15:22 Comments || Top||

#43  The stones still rock, however their politics suck.
Posted by: hey mo || 08/10/2005 16:08 Comments || Top||

#44  Just had a weird thought. What if an aging rock band put out a really, really shitty song. What if that shitty song went up the charts because of the lefty lyrics despite being so lame. What if there was some kind of bet on the outcome of weather politics could trump art?

Just a thought.
Posted by: RJSchwarz || 08/10/2005 18:25 Comments || Top||


Europe
Pakistani travelling on fake British IDs arrested in France
A Pakistani man arrested with several false British identity papers in his possession is in French custody after being arrested at a Paris airport, airport officials said Tuesday.
Pay attention now. The details get a little...detailed.
Mohammed Billal Youssaf, 23, a resident of Brescia in Italy, had arrived at Charles de Gaulle airport from the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore and was headed to Britain when he was arrested Sunday, one official said.
Italian named "Mohammed", heading to Britian via Pakistan and Paris. Must have gone on-line for one of those cheap fares.
He had five fake British passports and five fake British driving licences on him, the official said. Youssaf was being held by the police crimes unit and checks were being conducted to confirm his identity given in the Pakistani passport he was using.
Good luck
Police on Monday handed him over to France's DST counter-espionage service specialised in anti-terrorism work, and he remains in detention.
"Jean-Pierre! Please bring me my Number Neuf truncheon and that Victoria's Secret bag over there in the corner..."
Youssaf's arrest came as intelligence services in France and elsewhere in Europe step up their surveillance of Pakistani immigrant communities in the wake of the deadly July 7 bomb attacks in London. On Monday, Le Figaro newspaper said a confidential report by France's DCRG intelligence service finalised days before the London bombings pointed to the threat of an al-Qaeda attack on Britain and highlighted the need to closely observe France's 40,000-strong Pakistani community with a view to preventing an attack on French soil. An interior ministry official confirmed the existence of the report, but cautioned that it was "a very technical study on the Pakistani community in France."
"It's far too technical for you paisans, but don't worry, us pros have it covered."
Posted by: Seafarious || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  *gasp* It could not be that they are profiling! But my girlish illusions are shattered!!
Posted by: trailing wife || 08/10/2005 1:40 Comments || Top||

#2  Mo violated the EU passport and license limit laws. Pakistanis are allowed 4 fake passports max.
Posted by: ed || 08/10/2005 1:45 Comments || Top||

#3  "No but truly I am being only a baker and I am coming to Britain to meeting my family so that we are selling bread to many, many people, inshallah!"
Posted by: Ward C the Moron || 08/10/2005 8:24 Comments || Top||

#4  lol, ed! Of course, I'm not chuckling, as this is deadly serious. In between this guy and the guy a few weeks ago busted with HUNDREDS of blank UK IDs/Passports, it's good to see the Frenchies actually profiling. Now, if we could just do it here!
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 10:16 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan/South Asia
Musharraf's double game unravels
Since the July 7 bombings in London, Pakistan's military ruler, President Pervez Musharraf, has again come under severe international pressure to clamp down on local extremist groups linked to Al Qaeda, bring extremist religious schools under control and stop the Taliban from using Pakistan as a base for attacks in Afghanistan. As a result, serious cracks are developing in the 35-year alliance between Pakistan's army, its intelligence services and Islamic fundamentalist parties.

Musharraf has parried international criticism of Pakistan by accusing Prime Minister Tony Blair of allowing Islamic extremism to flourish in Britain, but since July 7 he has arrested 800 militants and is expelling 1,400 foreign students studying in the religious schools, or madrasas.

For decades, Islamic fundamentalist parties in Pakistan have provided manpower and ideological support for the military intelligence services' forays in Afghanistan and Indian Kashmir. Under outside pressure, however, the inherent contradictions in this relationship are coming to the fore.

In an unprecedented broadside on Sunday, Maulana Fazlur Rehman, the head of an alliance of six Islamic fundamentalist parties and leader of the opposition in the National Assembly, accused the army of helping militants to attack Afghanistan, supporting "jihadi" training camps in Pakistan and deceiving the West in its commitment to combat terrorism. ''We will have to openly tell the world whether we want to support jihadis or crack down on them - we cannot afford to be hypocritical any more," he said.

For nearly two decades, Maulana Rehman has been one of the strongest Islamic leaders in the country. He heads Jamiat-e-Ullema Islam, or JUI, the most powerful fundamentalist party in the Pashtun tribal belt bordering Afghanistan. Since the 2002 elections, the JUI has dominated the provincial governments of North West Frontier Province and Baluchistan. Working closely with the intelligence services the JUI has spawned numerous virulently anti-Western, violence-prone extremist groups who now work for Al Qaeda. In the 1990s, the JUI helped the army provide arms and manpower to the Taliban regime in Afghanistan. Since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in the United States, JUI mullahs have allowed Taliban leaders to recruit Afghan and Pakistani students from JUI-run madrasas.

Now there are severe tensions between the army and the JUI. Under considerable American pressure to explain the Taliban resurgence, Lieutenant General Safdar Hussain, the Corps Commander in Peshawar, said on July 25 that the Taliban "are getting public support in Pakistan, especially from some Pakistani religious parties." He was clearly pointing the finger at the JUI and Maulana Rehman was furious.

On Aug. 1, Maulana was detained in Dubai International Airport while on his way home from Libya and promptly deported, with officials in the United Arab Emirates hinting that he was on a terrorist list. Maulana Rehman accused the Pakistan government of not doing enough to save him from humiliation.

Musharraf's declaration that he would send home foreign students was seen as another attack on the JUI, who control the largest number of madrasas. Rehman and other leaders from his six-party alliance mounted a tirade against Musharraf and have threatened to start a campaign to unseat the government. The fundamentalist leaders don't like Musharraf's liberal stance and are determined to protect their parties and institutions. But they are also furious with the army for trying to make them a scapegoat for all of Pakistan's ills, when they have only been a junior partner to the army's own past policies that have encouraged Islamic extremism to flourish.

Rehman is now defying the army by declaring that it bears responsibility for the fruits of its past policies, and that it should not seek to parry American pressure by blaming Pakistan's Islamic parties. At one level, such statements are part of the kind of political wheeling and dealing that can be expected before local council elections later this month and general elections scheduled for 2007, when Musharraf wants to get himself elected as president. The fundamentalist parties feel threatened because they know that Musharraf may be trying to reduce their influence. But the danger is that Rehman and others could divulge more details of the intelligence services' links, which might diminish the military's credibility at home and abroad.

Musharraf is in a difficult position. Since Sept. 11 he has successfully ridden two horses, placating the West with promises of reform and crackdowns on extremists while pandering to the Islamic parties in order to retain their support. But now that Pakistan's political system is in danger of slowly unraveling as he loses support across the political spectrum, Musharraf could fall off altogether.

(Ahmed Rashid is the author of ''Taliban'' and, most recently, ''Jihad: The Rise of Militant Islam in Central Asia.'')
Posted by: john || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Has push finally come to shove?

Since 9/11 there has been lots of slop the Perv could clean up that would appease us and not piss off the Mullahs too much. Now, the issues left are the real ones.

He's cleaned up all that gorilla poop so all that's left is dealing with the 800 lb. beast itself.

Good luck, you'll need it.
Posted by: AlanC || 08/10/2005 10:36 Comments || Top||

#2  Shipman and I had a concern about this yesterday and unnfortunately, the concern is valid.
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 11:16 Comments || Top||

#3  My inner paki kept saying he wan't going to live to see 2002 and yet there he is, still in the game with his 2001 playbook.
Posted by: MunkarKat || 08/10/2005 13:27 Comments || Top||


Delhi's cowboys ride urban range
Greed often scores over all else, including religion. The past few days India's capital city of New Delhi has been witness to a peculiar sight - cowboys (many on motorcycles) with lassos spanning the city to round up cattle. The Indian version of the Pamplona bull run or the American cattle roundup has begun following the announcement of a cash award of US$50 per cow caught, announced by the Delhi high court to rid the city of the traffic menace.
Posted by: john || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1 

Click Me!
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 12:11 Comments || Top||

#2  O give me a home
Where the hindu boyz rome
And the shit is all over the street

Where seldom is slurred
an anti-cow word,
and the flies are bloated all day.
Posted by: Sub Commander Megar || 08/10/2005 18:34 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
Pentagon team spotted Sept 11 leader a year before attacks
A secret US military intelligence team identified the September 11 hijack leader Mohammed Atta and three of his accomplices as probable al-Qa'eda terrorists a year before the attacks.
I'm not real confident about the veracity of this story, for what the story's worth. It sounds like somebody's being fed a line of bull...
But its suspicions were never shared with the FBI because the military was nervous about breaking restrictions on spying on US territory imposed after the Watergate scandal.
I think this guy's seen one too many movies where rogue elements within the government set up their own illegal operations and unfairly target the nice-looking young guy who doesn't know what's going on but they do terrible things and that cheeses him off so that he turns into a killing machine and many car chases and explosions follow.
But he and the bottle blonde always figure it out at the end ...
Until yesterday it was believed that Atta was never identified as a threat before leading the 19-man suicide squads which hit New York and Washington in 2001. However, according to an intelligence official, a Pentagon team, Able Danger, named Atta, Marwan al-Shehhi, Khalid al-Mihdhar and Nawaf al-Hamzi as members of an al-Qa'eda squad which it dubbed the "Brooklyn cell" a year earlier.
"Able Danger"? Oh, yes. I recall it well. It was a sub-project within "Frightening Claw."
"We knew these were bad guys and we wanted to do something about them," the intelligence officer told the New York Times.
"We tried to enlist the A-Team, but their car blew up. Again."
The officer took the information to the Special Operations command headquarters in Florida with a recommendation that it be passed to the FBI. It was not.
"Bob, I've got a report here from some operation called 'Able Danger.' Can I use your shredder?"
Able Danger, which used computers to throw up links in information from unclassified sources, had another purpose. "Ultimately, Able Danger was going to give decision-makers options for taking out al-Qa'eda targets," the officer said.
Maybe I should just rename Rantburg as "Able Danger" and submit a budget request for next fiscal year...
Posted by: DanNY || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Actually the FDNY had very good intel coming out of the Arabic community in Brooklyn during the late 70s and early 80s. Informers were IDing bad guys in relation to arsons, etc... But with a change in mayoral administrations the whole operation was shut down, too politically incorrect.
Posted by: DanNY || 08/10/2005 0:25 Comments || Top||

#2  It wasn't the military, though...
Posted by: Fred || 08/10/2005 0:39 Comments || Top||

#3  But with a change in mayoral administrations the whole operation was shut down, too politically incorrect.

This "desire" to be politically correct needs to taken out back and shot twenty times. We as a nation are paying too high a price for it.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama || 08/10/2005 0:49 Comments || Top||

#4  Let's say that Atta was ID'ed in early 2001 just for the sake of arguement. Now the question is just what agency ID'ed him and who under federal guidlines or law could they share information with or whop would they have to rely on to pass the information to the party they wanted. And could all of this been done legally. the intelligence sharing system was a mess in 2001 and I am not sure it is fixed today (I have the feeling the people at the floor level are doing just fine, it is the agency heads that are butting heads over territory
Posted by: Cheaderhead || 08/10/2005 0:52 Comments || Top||

#5  Sounds plausible to me. And I thought the A-Team had a van.
Posted by: Rory B. Bellows || 08/10/2005 1:18 Comments || Top||

#6  The A-D Team was going to take them down on the flights, but B A Baracus wouldn't get on the plane.
Posted by: ed || 08/10/2005 2:19 Comments || Top||

#7  Yeah. All his gold kept setting off the metal detectors...
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 9:09 Comments || Top||

#8  Red flag alert! I thought Atta and Co. were all in Germany (Hamburg, I think) up until about a month or so before 9/11. Thus, maybe, just maybe the DoD DID tag them as potential AQ baddies. However, the 2nd paragraph says they didn't forward the info because of domestic spying concerns. Something doesn't jive. Quite possible they tagged them overseas???? But couldn't tell the FBI cause they were (by then) on US soil? Doesn't fly to me.
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 10:06 Comments || Top||

#9  Here is an Atta timeline: http://www.abc.net.au/4corners/atta/maps/timeline.htm
His first known entry into the US is June 2000.
Posted by: ed || 08/10/2005 10:20 Comments || Top||

#10  Thanks for the tip, Ed! However, this raises an interesting question. If the DoD's intel units were knowledgable of a jihadi overseas and said jihadi shows up in the U.S., can they still track him? Or do they have to hand over tracking to the FBI. Or is it even legal for them to hand over tracking to the FBI? Enquiring minds, ya know?
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 11:27 Comments || Top||

#11  Even if the intel reached the FBI, Gorelick at the DOJ, put a wall up.

I don't think this is a MSM spill, this hurts the Clinton's more than anyone else.
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 12:29 Comments || Top||

#12  If this is true, I want my money back for that fraudulent 9-11 Commission book.
Posted by: Chris W. || 08/10/2005 13:31 Comments || Top||

#13  So many bad details ...
Posted by: Dan Darling || 08/10/2005 14:39 Comments || Top||

#14  I saw PA Rep. Curt Weldon on Fox and Friends, saying he wants to get to the bottom of this. He said it was a top secret military intelligence unit that was prevented from giving the info to the FBI by the Clinton's DOJ lawyers. They were still reeling about Waco and said they were here with green cards and gathering intelligence on them was illegal. Supposedly some on the 9-1-1 Commission was briefed but it wasn't in the report and killed by higher ups. I think he said he thought the military was circumventing the CIA because of previous intel failures. Sounds truthful fo me. Weldon was researching his book Countdown to Terror.
Posted by: Danielle || 08/10/2005 14:50 Comments || Top||

#15  If the DoD's intel units were knowledgable of a jihadi overseas and said jihadi shows up in the U.S., can they still track him? Or do they have to hand over tracking to the FBI. Or is it even legal for them to hand over tracking to the FBI?

a) my understanding is that the ID was done via datamining from open source materials, i.e. sifting through masses of published info and correlating details. there hasn't been any hint that military people physically surveilled or tracked anyone within the US.

b)the military is pretty much forbidden from such tracking activities within the country

c) they can hand over info. however, it was a sensitive political call since under the Clinton admin strong firewalls were erected to make that hard to do

d) it was also politically sensitive because, although the datamining in question used publicly available info, it could be mischaracterized as "electronic invasion of privacy" and therefore was touchy ....
Posted by: leader of the pack || 08/10/2005 15:10 Comments || Top||

#16  Thanks, LotP! To me, though, it seems asinine that the military (intelligence) can't watch these guys. I know you'll get the ACLU crying "They're looking at what books Achmed checked out at the library", but if they were truly searching PUBLICLY available info (e.g. Google), why can't they follow-up? It's one thing to place military in use against the citizenry (Posse Comitatus), it's another to just gain intel on foreigners (non-U.S. citizens) in the WoT.
Posted by: BA || 08/10/2005 15:17 Comments || Top||

#17  ed, thanks for the timeline. There are people with other ideas about Atta's timeline. This fellow (link) thinks the FBI isn't being very honest about where Atta was, and so the timeline is unreliable. Unfortunately, Hopsicker subscribes to the "inside job/war for oil" school of thought. Nevertheless, I believe his research commands attention. He's stumbled onto part of the whole, and doesn't know what to make of it.
Posted by: Rory B. Bellows || 08/10/2005 17:34 Comments || Top||

#18  Sorry posted on duplicate thread. I repeat:

Michael Savage's entire show today devoted to this story. 2nd hour is interview with Jacob Goodwin, who broke story

Will be repeated at 6pm pst MichaelSavage
Posted by: Bernie || 08/10/2005 21:07 Comments || Top||

#19  Why Sandy Berger stuffed his underwear & socks Able Danger?
Posted by: Bernie || 08/10/2005 21:09 Comments || Top||

#20  Dan, forget the MSM - the original source material is linked below. Can you list the "bad details"?

The story was broken in GSN: Goverment Security News.

Rep. Curt Weldon is a longtime Republican congressman from Pennsylvania who is currently vice chairman of both the House Homeland Security and House Armed Services Committees. His testimony was entered into the Congressional Record: June 27, 2005. It was universally ignored.

Goodwin was interviewing Weldon on another matter when Weldon interjected Able Danger (from Savage interview of Goodwin today). Goodwin broke the story in GSN yesterday & it was finally picked up widely today.
Posted by: Bernie || 08/10/2005 21:39 Comments || Top||


Britain
Britain May Create Secretive Terror Courts
Britain is considering setting up secretive courts to make it easier to prosecute terror suspects — and to hold them without charge for longer than the current 14 days — as part of the crackdown following the deadly London bombings, officials said Tuesday.
Ahah! Star Chamber coming back, is it? Well, I knew it was too good to last...
The Home Office said it was weighing changing the pretrial process to deal with particularly sensitive terror cases, with the aim of "securing more prosecutions." Currently, terror suspects can be held for two weeks without charge; after they are charged, police can no longer question them. Police have asked the government to extend this period to three months.
And then off with their heads?
The anti-terror courts — run by judges with high-level security clearance — would meet behind closed doors to study the merits of the case against terror suspects, rule on highly sensitive evidence and decide how long the suspect could be held, The Guardian newspaper reported Tuesday, citing unidentified Home Office officials.
Judges with security clearances? Behind closed doors? But that'd keep people from wandering in and gawping as the nation's secrets are being discussed! What about the people's right to know?
A spokeswoman for the Home Office confirmed a new pretrial procedure is under consideration, but couldn't provide any other details. "I want to emphasize: There is no question of secret trials, there is no question of jury-less trials, there is no question of any sort of internment," Britain's chief legal official, Lord Chancellor Charles Falconer, told the British Broadcasting Corp. radio.
No Star Chamber? No Judge Jeffries?
"What is being suggested is ... just a sensible period to detain suspects while a sensible investigation is going on."
No circus midgets? No tumblers? No jugglers? No elephants?
The July 7 bombings and the failed attacks two weeks later prompted the British government to propose new anti-terrorism laws aimed at rooting out Islamic extremists. The sweeping measures, which could include deporting foreigners to countries where torture is believed to be widespread, sparked concern Tuesday from the U.N. special envoy on torture. Human rights laws now prevent Britain from deporting people to a country where they may face torture or death. But Prime Minister Tony Blair wants to win pledges from the countries that they would not subject deportees to inhumane treatment.
Seems a reasonable, even soft-hearted step to me, since we're talking about people who're apt to either explode among honest Britons without warning or to incite others to do so...
An agreement has been reached with Jordan, and Britain is talking to Algeria, Tunisia and Egypt. Blair also said the government might amend Britain's human rights legislation to make it easier to deport Islamic extremists. "If there is a substantial risk in a certain country like Algeria, Jordan, Egypt, etc., then diplomatic assurances cannot be used," U.N. envoy Manfred Nowak told BBC radio. "If a country usually and systematically practices torture, then of course they would deny they were doing it because it is absolutely prohibited."
And of course there's always the possibility that they won't be beaten with rubber hoses after deportation from Britain, but that they will the first time they step out of line back in the Olde Countrie. So, really, there's no way to be sure, so Tony's just supposed to keep 'em.
Posted by: Fred || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  There is no question of secret trials, there is no question of jury-less trials, there is no question of any sort of internment," Britain's chief legal official, Lord Chancellor Charles Falconer, told the British Broadcasting Corp. radio. "What is being suggested is ... just a sensible period to detain suspects while a sensible investigation is going on."

Of course any number of cell mates may encourage talking about what they know...



Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 0:15 Comments || Top||

#2  Put em in with 'the sisters'
Posted by: Howard UK || 08/10/2005 6:18 Comments || Top||

#3  Yes! At last! The return of the Star Chamber! Oh its been sooooo many years since we had yah!
Posted by: Ward C the Moron || 08/10/2005 8:46 Comments || Top||

#4  Is that the Ghost Goony Bird?
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 8:48 Comments || Top||

#5  That's an image of the CIA's JARS: Jihadi Air Rendition Services.
Posted by: Ward C the Moron || 08/10/2005 11:05 Comments || Top||

#6  "just a sensible period to detain suspects while a sensible investigation is going on."

Just came up with that idea all on your own, did you? Your paycheck is well deserved.

Watch yourself, the British Moonbats may spray paint your house.
Posted by: Poison Reverse || 08/10/2005 12:08 Comments || Top||


Fifth Column
POS Dances on Reagan's Grave, Pisses on Nixon's
Photos at the link
A California man dubbed a "Satanist" on an online message board has posted photos of himself dancing on President Ronald Reagan's grave, raising the ire of the former chief executive's admirers. Posted on Ruthlessreviews.com (warning: vulgar site), the photos show a thin, white man likely in his 20s wearing an AC/DC T-shirt and having hopped over the fence that protects Reagan's grave. The poster, who goes by "The Freak Kingdom" and claims he's from San Diego, writes with one photo: "Judging from my expression and body language, combined with what little I do remember, this appears to be about the time security guards noticed I had jumped the fence and started jigging over Reagan's rotting corpse (the original plan called for the Electric Slide, and then humping the ground, and then whatever else I could get away with, but security was stricter than we had anticipated)."
I hope "strict security" means they beat this asswipe to within an inch of his life.
Continues the post: "We had to tear a-- out of there and lose security in the parking lot, but we appear to have gotten away scot-free."
Damn.
The post is signed "Monte."

Most responding to the post were congratulatory, with one poster exclaiming, "That is spectacular." Several e-mails have crisscrossed the Internet about the incident, with one person claiming to have contacted authorities: "I forwarded the pictures to the Reagan Library, the FBI and the National Archives. They have turned the case over to their lawyers and have been in the process of determining if there is any legal action they can take against this individual. I tracked down a website where this guy has posted more pictures of presidential grave desecration and even has orchestrated a national contest to see how many of these website members can desecrate the most presidential graves around the country."
I hope this works. That scumbag needs to spend a few hours answering "questions" in a Secret Service back office.
"Monte" appears to be pursuing that goal, also posting on a different site a photo of himself purportedly urinating on President Richard Nixon's grave at the presidential library in Yorba Linda, Calif.

Talk-radio host Chris Dickson was enraged by the Reagan incident. "I was at the Reagan Presidential Library in February of this year," he told WND. "'Dutch' was my commander in chief. I have personal interest in getting this individual and trying to protect the desecration of presidential graves against First Amendment rights."

A spokeswoman at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, Calif., refused to talk about the incident, saying – after putting WND on hold for a time – that she had "no comment."
Wimp. You're fired.
Posted by: greenchair || 08/10/2005 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  What a sicko, and with a flag wrapped around him as well.
Damn piece of slime.
It's upsetting to see our youth not show proper respect and behave so asinine.
Posted by: Jan || 08/10/2005 0:22 Comments || Top||

#2  I'm upset in the way that I get upset when I see somebody doing something so utterly stoopid and tasteless that I want to look away. This is just Beavis and Butthead on a political trip, complete with the AC/DC tee shirt.
Posted by: Fred || 08/10/2005 0:42 Comments || Top||

#3  Another Lefty Alternatist andor Anarchist who supps despotic, Govt-led Universal Regulation, Centralism, and Socialsm, etc. as long as it doesn't apply to him. All Americans should give thanks to God for Nixon, Reagan, and Bush 1, and even for the Democrat POTUSes of yore, however imperfect, for these would not recognize, and do not compare to, the "Treason = Patriotism"," Nazism > Hitlerists-for-Stalin" Commie DemLeft and Clintons of today!
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 08/10/2005 1:07 Comments || Top||

#4  actually, I think they are smart to say, "no comment". The worst thing they can do is to dignify the little brat with an official comment. We all know what happens when you feed trolls. More publicity will only mean more copycats.
Posted by: 2b || 08/10/2005 4:57 Comments || Top||

#5  Oh, c'mon. We all know it'll take years for the urine smell to dissipate from Carter's grave, and Clinton's will have its own, unique source of pollution.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 08/10/2005 7:19 Comments || Top||

#6  This guy is such a loser, if he were to "disappear" forever tomorrow, I doubt his family and acquaitances would know or care. Waste of a good AC/DC shirt
Posted by: Frank G || 08/10/2005 9:02 Comments || Top||

#7  Someday "Monte" will be in the wrong place at the wrong time...and it won't be pretty.
Posted by: tu3031 || 08/10/2005 9:25 Comments || Top||

#8  Neither of the corpses gives a damn.
Posted by: mojo || 08/10/2005 10:19 Comments || Top||

#9  Once again, this raises the "willingness to be civil to the uncivil" question. At what point does society say 'enough' to *ssholes like this and physically punish them? Nonsensical tolerance results in kooks and freaks abusing ordinary people minding their own business. It is not vigilantism to attack those who attack you and that which you love, though that is what proponents of nonsensical tolerance would train you to think. "Let the law punish them", is a meaningless statement to such malefactors. They are either unable to appreciate, or indifferent to their offense and its potential punishment. They do not understand the legal punishment, so let them be physically punished. The state is unable to mete out such punishment, so it must be done by the populace as a whole. Just as the United States is geographically too large to expect a policeman within easy distance at all times, and thus every person must behave at times as a policeman in enforcing the law; so, too, people must be willing to physically punish lawbreakers at the scene of their crime. Just as a puppy would receive a swat for defacating on the floor, an ordinary citizen should automatically give a swat to someone who would defacate on our flag, or our society, or its or their loved and cherished possessions. In real terms, what would be your response if you read "Man caught urinating on grave of President Nixon, beaten by security guards and thrown off premises"? Would it strike you as either unjust or a violation of his rights, or as a fair and equitable punishment, and one likely to deter such behavior in the future? Cruel and unusual punishment is a relative thing.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 08/10/2005 10:46 Comments || Top||

#10  Could have been Ronnie Jr.?
Posted by: Captain America || 08/10/2005 11:31 Comments || Top||

#11  It's good for his well being that he only signed, "Monte". If he gave his real name, some of the regular citizenry might get to him before any of the authorities, (owing to all the internet resources available) and then there would really be a mess -- literally and figuratively...
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 11:50 Comments || Top||

#12  Well, if you do a Google Search on "Freak Kingdom" and "San Diego" You get the fact that the creatin posts to alot of blogs. Also there is one curious hit with "Man seeking Woman in the United States" as the title. Don't go there unless you are curious about exhibitions of localized anatomy... {Warning XXX}.

He has "issues".... big time... But there are plenty of lefty "babes" who'd go for the stunt... It could have been done to show off to some woman he is trying to impress...
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 12:00 Comments || Top||

#13  Could have been Ronnie Jr.?

No, Ron's been shitting on his old man for decades, long before the great man passed on.
Posted by: Chris W. || 08/10/2005 13:43 Comments || Top||

#14  Ronnie Jr?

1966-The only reason that the Reagans didn't move into the historic governor's mansion in Sacramento, was that Nancy was worried about then 7-year-old Ronnie walking to school in downtown Sacramento traffic...

I KID YOU NOT!
Posted by: BigEd || 08/10/2005 14:42 Comments || Top||



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