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Sudan Bars Egelund From Darfur
Today's Headlines
Headline Comments [Views]
20:01 8 00:00 JosephMendiola [9]
18:27 14 00:00 Listen to Dogs [18]
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Science & Technology
Record ocean waves are recorded
British scientists report observing some of the largest waves ever measured -- reportedly so big, some computer models indicate they shouldn't even exist.

The observations occurred Feb. 8, 2000, aboard the Royal Research Ship Discovery during a scientific expedition to the North Atlantic, 155 miles west of Scotland, when a series of gigantic waves hammered the vessel.

The scientists set to sea because an intense storm was forecast and the researchers from Britain's National Oceanography Center, located in Southampton, wanted to closely observe it, der Spiegel reported.

The scientists' measuring instruments showed the tallest of the waves was nearly 98 feet high and the giant waves shook the ship for 12 hours, said Naomi Holliday, the leader of the expedition.

The Discovery's crew witnessed waves of up to 95 feet from trough to crest -- the highest waves ever measured by a scientific instrument on the open sea, according to an article the scientists published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

The new data may be troubling for shipbuilders, said der Spiegel, since the scientists' data suggest giant waves may be much more common than has been thought.
I find it hard to even imagine waves of that height. The RRS Discovery is 90 meters in length, and would be heading right towards the incoming waves. This means 95 feet downward at a 45-or-so degree angle, followed by 95 feet upward at a 45-or-so degree angle, FOR TWELVE HOURS. Urp.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 04/03/2006 20:01 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Surf's up!!!
Posted by: Zenster || 04/03/2006 20:19 Comments || Top||

#2  I'd bet that wasn't the only thing that came up.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 20:21 Comments || Top||

#3  Kraken arises!
Posted by: lotp || 04/03/2006 20:28 Comments || Top||

#4  If that's what you want to believe, lotp.
Posted by: Halliburton, North Atlantic Div. || 04/03/2006 21:01 Comments || Top||

#5  Shhhhh ..... didn't you get the memo on the project code name?

Sheesh.
Posted by: lotp || 04/03/2006 21:10 Comments || Top||

#6  Who bought the New Orleans wet-bus on E-bay? Ray may soon want it BACK!
Posted by: Besoeker || 04/03/2006 21:46 Comments || Top||

#7  Operation Kraken is currently underway.

Fortunately, most of even our own operatives believe this op is designed to generate massive waves at surface level in oceanic bodies.

Little do they know that our bioengineers have been closely monitoring events in other areas of the world and have been preparing for our aquatic servants.

Reports of the Cthulhu-cult "god" Dagon and mysterious "Deep Ones" attacking and destroying our North Sea oceanic platforms is pure myth. Our platforms that have been lost have been lost to natural phenomena and, although multiple personnel have been reported missing from other platfoms, we are confident that these disappearances are due to the strange weather and other environmental phenomena and not some mythical "god-like" entity.

Operation Kraken is to proceed according to plan. Operations Dragon, Gorgon, and Gryphon are on schedule.

Operation Tsunmi remains on hold until blame can be placed properly on HAARP or another DARPA project.

Operations It Came From Beneath The Sea and Twenty Million Miles To Earth are also on schedule despite the recent "odd" events surrounding the loss of our Mars probes and sub-oceanic exploration of the ruins discovered in the Marianis and Puerto Rico Trench areas.

Yours,
Dir, OMD

Posted by: Halliburton Monster Division || 04/03/2006 21:52 Comments || Top||

#8  Science news this week - sunlight getting dimmer, sunlight reaching earth is less, Pacific Ocean gettin' more acidic, and the Artic, or Greenland, will be green and slushy within 50 years, plus PLANET X = X's still approaching. IOW, we're doomed, Doomed, DOOMED, D-O-O-M-E-D, DUUUUUMMMMMEEEDDD they tell ya'.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 22:51 Comments || Top||


Africa North
Egypt: Fatwa Against Statues Creates Uproar
A fatwa issued by Egypt's top religious authority which forbids the display of statues has art-lovers fearing it could be used by Islamic extremists as an excuse to destroy Egypt's historical heritage.

Egypt's Grand Mufti Ali Gomaa, the country's top Islamic jurist, issued the religious edict which declared as un-Islamic the exhibition of statues in homes, basing the decision on texts in the hadith (sayings of the prophet).

Intellectuals and artists argue that the decree represents a setback for art -- a mainstay of the multi-billion-dollar tourist industry -- and would deal a blow to the country's fledgling sculpture business.

The fatwa did not specifically mention statues in museums or public places, but it condemned sculptors and their work.

Still, many fear the edict could prod Islamic fundamentalists to attack Egypt's thousands of ancient and pharaonic statues on show at tourist sites across the country.

"We don't rule out that someone will enter the Karnak temple in Luxor or any other pharaonic temple and blow it up on the basis of the fatwa," Gamal al-Ghitani, editor of the literary Akhbar al-Adab magazine, told AFP.

Gomaa had pointed to a passage from the hadith that stated: "Sculptors would be tormented most on Judgment Day," saying the text left no doubt that sculpting was "sinful" and using statues for decorating homes forbidden.

Gomaa's ruling overturned a fatwa issued over 100 years ago by then moderate and highly respected mufti Mohammed Abdu, permitting the private display of statues after the practice had been condemned as a pagan custom.

Abdu's fatwa had "closed the issue, as it ruled that statues and pictures are not haram (forbidden under Islam) except idols used for worship," Ghitani pointed out.

Novelist Ezzat al-Qamhawi said Gomaa's ruling would "return Muslims to the dark ages."

Movie director Daud Abdul Sayed said the fatwa "simply ignored the spiritual evolvement of Muslims since the arrival of Islam... Clearly, it was natural that they forbid statues under early Islam because people worshipped them.

"But are there Muslims worshipping statues nearly 15 centuries later?" he asked.

The notion sounds "ridiculous," Yussef Zidan, director of the manuscript museum at the prestigious Bibliotheca Alexandrina, told AFP.

"Why would anyone even bring up the issue in a country where there are more than 10 state-owned institutions that teach sculpting and more than 20 others that teach the history of art?"

Ghitani added: "It's time for those placing impediments between Islam and innovation to get out of our lives."

The wave of criticisms against the fatwa has put clerics on a collision course with intellectuals and artists, who say that such edicts only reinforce claims that Islam is against progress.

Some, including Sayed, compared Gomaa's edict to a similar one issued by the former fundamentalist Taliban rulers of Afghanistan that led to the destruction of statues of the Buddha despite international outcry.

Mainstream Islamic scholars, including Egypt's then mufti, Nasr Farid Wasel, and the controversial Qatar-based Islamic scholar, Yussef al-Qaradawi, all condemned the Taliban's actions in March 2001.

But Qaradawi joined Gomaa in declaring that statues used for decoration are "haram" or un-Islamic.

"Islam proscribed statues, as long as they symbolise living entities such as human beings and animals," Qaradawi said on an Islamic website.

"Islam proscribed all that leads to paganism or smells of it, statues of ancient Egyptians included," he added.

The only exception, he said, was "children's toys."

Gomaa was appointed as grand mufti by President Hosni Mubarak. The mufti's fatwas carry much weight and generally represent the official line.

His legitimacy is often challenged by other Muslims over his affiliation to the government and his edicts are not always followed.

The government can choose to enforce or ignore the ruling and its reaction in the past often depended on public opinion.

The Islamist Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt's main political opposition force, dismissed the fatwa.

"The people are more concerned with corruption. What they would like to see is a fatwa banning the presence of the same people at the helm of the country for 25 years and not against statues," the movement's spokesman Issam al-Aryan told AFP.

Gomaa has already put out a few contentious decrees and appears set to break his predecessor mufti Wasel's record on notorious fatwas.

Wasel stirred a controversy in July 2001 for issuing a fatwa against a popular television show, the Arab version of "Who wants to be a millionaire?" that was airing on Egyptian television, saying it was forbidden by Islam.

"These contests are a modern form of betting," Wasel had said.

The show was eventually cancelled, although it was not clear if the move was related to the fatwa.

In another fatwa in May 2001, Wasel ruled that beauty pageants in which women appear half-naked in front of panels of male judges are haram. The authorities played deaf and Egypt continues to host them.

Wasel slapped a fatwa on watching solar eclipses and another on bullfights, but refused to support rights activists in their campaign to outlaw female genital mutilation.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 04/03/2006 18:27 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [18 views] Top|| File under:

#1  This is the other shoe that I've been waiting to drop ever since the Buddhas were blown up.

Oh well, the Sphinx had a good 5,000 years or so.
Posted by: SLO Jim || 04/03/2006 18:40 Comments || Top||

#2  Novelist Ezzat al-Qamhawi said Gomaa's ruling would "return Muslims to the dark ages."


Uhh.....when did they leave?
Posted by: DoDo || 04/03/2006 18:43 Comments || Top||

#3  Interesting that 100 years ago a mufti had more sense.

Posted by: john || 04/03/2006 18:50 Comments || Top||

#4  Novelist Ezzat al-Qamhawi said Gomaa's ruling would "return Muslims to the dark ages."

As has been said, you cannot "return" people to an age from which they have not yet emerged.

The only exception, he said, was "children's toys." Awwwwh, he's got a heart 'o gold. But beware, children, the Mufti is coming to get you next!
Posted by: Thinemp Whimble2412 || 04/03/2006 19:05 Comments || Top||

#5  Ghitani added: "It's time for those placing impediments between Islam and innovation to get out of our lives."

YA THINK?!

I keep trying to picture Egypt without any of its Pharonic legacy, and all I get is an image of this huge sand-filled p!sshole. Funny that.
Posted by: Zenster || 04/03/2006 19:09 Comments || Top||

#6  "Wasel . . . refused to support rights activists in their campaign to outlaw female genital mutilation."

He's REALLY got his priorities in order. What a guy.
Posted by: ex-lib || 04/03/2006 19:26 Comments || Top||

#7  Time for Hosni to take the sledgehammer to the Islamists before they destroy Egypt's entire tourism industry
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 19:34 Comments || Top||

#8  Time to get rid of those pesky piles of stones over by the Nile. Pyramid shaped piles if I remember correctly.
Posted by: DMFD || 04/03/2006 19:52 Comments || Top||

#9  I'm beginning to think the Hadiths as currently interpreted by the Salafists are basically meant to implement a variation of Islam where only the Saudis are allowed to make a decent living.
Posted by: Abdominal Snowman || 04/03/2006 20:06 Comments || Top||

#10  The KORAN/QURAN only says for Muslims not to have or display objects which induce or cause Muslims to engage in sin and hate God, which in my interpretation does not extend to one being proud of one's familial or national past, e.g. ancient Egypt and its Pharonic dynasties.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 22:02 Comments || Top||

#11  Pyramids OK, Animals goe.
Posted by: Fatwa Nutjob || 04/03/2006 22:03 Comments || Top||

#12  Ah, but the ancient Egyptians weren't Arab.
Posted by: lotp || 04/03/2006 22:03 Comments || Top||

#13  correct, they actually produced something
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 22:07 Comments || Top||

#14  Now, what could we do to turn Egyptians against their cleric class?
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 18:56 Comments || Top||


Science & Technology
Turf Warrior - genetically engineered lawn of the future
Nearly 50,000 square miles of the continental US is covered by lawn, according to estimates by ecologists at NASA's Ames Research Center. Using satellite and aerial imagery, the team calculated that irrigated grass covers three times more land in the US than irrigated corn does. That makes turf the nation's most widespread irrigated crop.

Lawn care and gardening is also the most popular outdoor leisure activity in the country, and the global industry supporting it generates an estimated $7 billion a year. ScottsMiracle-Gro accounts for more than a third of that - $2.4 billion in 2005. Numbers aside, though, that neatly trimmed front lawn is a Rockwellian feature of the American landscape. It's safe to say that no other nation commits even a fraction of the land, resources, chemicals, and water that the US does in pursuit of the perfect greensward.

All that vegetation has some environmental benefit. According to the NASA group, lawns collectively absorb some 12 billion pounds of carbon each year - effectively cutting greenhouse gas emissions. And if that grass weren't there, much more soil would run off into storm drains, waterways, and ­rivers, polluting reservoirs and hastening the erosion of hillsides and valuable farmland.

But the great American lawn is not exactly eco-friendly. Lawn mowers cough pollution into the atmosphere, and pesticides and fertilizers trickle into waterways, harming wildlife in wetland and marine environments. Then there's the watering. Pick a rain-starved, water-scarce, growth-crazed state like Nevada or Arizona. All those new subdivisions have lawns, and all those home­owners are watering like crazy. A typical one-third-acre lawn receives 10,000 gallons of water a year; in dry places like Las Vegas and other areas of the Southwest, a lawn needs more than 100,000 gallons annually. This huge demand for water means more rivers dammed, more wildlife threatened, and more aquifers drained.

It doesn't have to be that way. Over the past decade, biotechnology has revolutionized agriculture. In 2005, 13 percent of US farmland was planted with biotech crops - primarily corn, soybeans, and cotton - and biotech proponents happily enumerate the resulting environmental advantages­. The Conservation Technology Information Center at Purdue University estimates that 1 billion tons of topsoil per year is prevented from becoming­ runoff because­ genetically modified crops allow farmers to reduce how much they plow to kill weeds. (Plowing accelerates the loss of topsoil.) Meanwhile, the amount of pesticide used on crops shrank by 34 percent from 2003 to 2004; that's 15.6 million pounds of chemicals not dousing fields, because biotech crops don't require as much herbicide.

If biotechnology can do all that for farmers cultivating thousands of acres, surely it can do the same for busy suburbanites managing their yards. What if grass were engineered to require less water, fertilizer, and pesticide? What if it required fewer trimmings by toxin-spewing mowers? What if lawns were customizable? For Hagedorn, such bio­tech turf is a no-brainer. "If we want to keep gardening attractive and relevant in the Internet age," he says, "we have to meet this need." In other words, GM grass is coming, and Hagedorn is hell-bent on being the first to sell it.
Posted by: 3dc || 04/03/2006 17:25 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [10 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Hell, I'm all for it. Make it really green with no fertilizer, little water and fewer mowes and I'll plunk down thousands to get my yard re-soded.
More time to BBQ and drink beer.
Posted by: DarthVader || 04/03/2006 18:17 Comments || Top||

#2  Nitrogen fixing would be my requirement. Only since the guy runs Scotts I don't see that angle mentioned.
Posted by: 3dc || 04/03/2006 18:54 Comments || Top||


Europe
Porkeaters are Pigs
Neukoelln - A Ham Sandwich? Whoever eats that is a "pig". On schoolyards and even in kindergartens the "children's clash of civilization" rages - around head cloths and eating customs. In Neukoelln the children who do not believe in the Prophet Mohammed are on the retreat. One scene of combat is the Richard primary school in Neukoelln. It has approximately 400 pupils. The proportion of the German children is approximately 20 per cent; in the lower classes as little as ten per cent. "Christ is here a frequently used insult", head mistress Hannelore Mainusch had to admit at a meeting of the school committee of the district. And: "The German children are not really tolerated. We trying to work on that in the lesson plans." But the teacher evaluates the success of the "training" as limited. "Porkeaters stink!" "Whoever eats pork, is a pig." Non-Muslim children in Nordneukoellner daycare centers (Kita) have to listen to that meanwhile.

Under the theme "faith war in Neukoellner Kitas" the FDP local politician Sebastian Kluckert inquired what the district office was doing in response to such stuff. Youth town councillor Thomas Blesing (SPD) granted that such events had occurred. But there are hardly any German children left in the Nordneukoellner Kitas - and so pork was striken from the Kita meal plan. Blesing stated in his written answer: "Since the muslim food regulations were taken into account, there is no source of mutual recrimination in the the rules."

But this answer is for Kluckert a weak retreat in the face of Islamic demands. And it worries him: "What if I inquire, what is the district office doing in response to fact that in the schools girls without head cloths are mobbed? Perhaps I will get the answer someday: We are taking no more girls into school?"
yes, that's the logical next step, isn't it??
Posted by: KBK || 04/03/2006 17:01 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [12 views] Top|| File under:

#1  HHHHmmmmmm, okay, since whoever eats pork is allegedly a pig, then why does Islam, within the context of the occurrence of Islam-specific, extranormal/extra-human divine miracles and related divine works, give priority to pigs, etal. whom "talk" or have weird skin lesions, rather than human-looking apparitions/personages? BY THE ISLAMIC LOGIC USED/DESCRIBED IN THIS ARTICLE, GOD IS A HATED PIG, WHILE THE DEVIL LOOKS HUMAN, ERGO OBEY THE HATED PIG???
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 22:34 Comments || Top||

#2  JM:
Why the excitement? Only about a half dozen people will read your post. There might be 20,000 unique views here per day here, but most come for the news items. Few of the regular pukes ever post an article. And they are likely security-guards with obsessive-compulsive disorders. That is: life losers you wouldn't give the time of day to. .com won't post while i post, because he is a control freak and my presence disturbs his sandbox. His mother spanked him for shitting his diapers, thus began his control obsession. I have only been slumming here for a couple of weeks.

The ones who tell you to take your meds, are on high doses of medication.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 23:04 Comments || Top||


Police brought in as teachers lose control at Berlin school
Teachers at the school published a letter this week widely interpreted as saying conditions at their school had become so bad that it should be closed down.

The letter said teachers had lost all authority and were now so afraid that they only entered classrooms with a mobile phone so they could call for help in an emergency.

[...]

"The German (students) brown nose us, pay for things for us and stuff like that, so that we don't smash in their faces," said a foreign student from the school as quoted by the Berliner Kurier.
Posted by: KBK || 04/03/2006 16:51 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:


Arabia
Getting ready for Spaceport UAE
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates - Adnan al-Maimani insists he isn't looking to be a pioneer — he just dreams of looking down on Earth. So the 40-year-old entrepreneur is paying more than $100,000 to go on the first flight traveling to the edge of space from a Mideast nation. The flight, which will travel about 62 miles toward space and give its passengers up to five minutes of weightlessness, is part of an American company's plan to establish a spaceport in the northern tip of the United Arab Emirates.

Virginia-based Space Adventures — the only company to have successfully sent private citizens into space — won't say when the flight will take place, only that it will be within a few years. But al-Maimani, 40, already thinks the project will be a boost to his homeland, which has seen a boom in construction and finance the past decade. "It's a great social and economic opportunity for the United Arab Emirates. It will create jobs and open up the economy even further," he told The Associated Press. Al-Maimani, who owns a technology development firm, will ride a Russian-designed suborbital craft called the Explorer to the edge of space, experience weightlessness and return. The craft, capable of carrying five people, is carried first on an airplane, from which it launches on rocket power for the remainder of the journey. "I'm not in it for the adventure. My point of view is exploration. To become richer with experience, look back at Earth and realize the potential," said al-Maimani, who will pay $102,000 for the one-hour flight.
Posted by: Secret Master || 04/03/2006 16:19 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  From: Director, Special Space Projects

Gentlemen,

This report is extremely worrisome in such that it deflects our current initiative at establishing a space port at the base of Baja California.

I find it extremely (yes, I said it again - those of you who "do not get it" should at this point) disturbing that our own agents have failed to convince the governments that they have been assigned to to bend their environmental laws such that this division will find a free hand when it comes to building launch facilities.

Indeed! I am forwarding this report and email to CORPORATE head for his advisement.

This cannot and will not be allowed to interfere with current opertions and projects.

Yours,
Dir, SSP

Posted by: Halliburton Suborbital Atmospheric Control Division || 04/03/2006 22:36 Comments || Top||

#2  FREEREPUBLIC.com says the Japanese like Hokkaido to be a Spaceport. * "Sarge, we a'keep gettin' orduhs to let the Aliens win".
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 22:56 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
Moussaoui jury reaches verdict, Death awaits
Zacarias Moussaoui is eligible for the death penalty, a jury decides in the first U.S. trial about the 9/11 attacks.
Posted by: Steve || 04/03/2006 16:14 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [16 views] Top|| File under:

#1  String him up.
Posted by: Dave D. || 04/03/2006 16:24 Comments || Top||

#2  Let's string it out.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 16:30 Comments || Top||

#3  "Terrorists are not afraid of dying, let's not be afraid of killing them".
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 04/03/2006 16:38 Comments || Top||

#4  In this case, I think I'll opt for withholding the virgins until he's 80.
Posted by: Perfesser || 04/03/2006 16:55 Comments || Top||

#5  The other way around, A5089. Dead, he's a martyr. Alive, he's another Mook in the slammer. Let him die like Hess and Speer. He'll be just as threatening by then.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 16:56 Comments || Top||

#6  Moose, meet noose.
Posted by: Mike || 04/03/2006 17:05 Comments || Top||

#7  Proper punishment would be to feed him to the hogs. Just start him bleeding and the hogs will do the rest.
Posted by: BrerRabbit || 04/03/2006 17:12 Comments || Top||

#8  Agree with the rabbit.
Sort of a tarbaby type thingy...

But, first... lets drop him from the hight of the twin towers onto cement without a chute and his clothes onfire.

Posted by: 3dc || 04/03/2006 17:28 Comments || Top||

#9  That's good news. Now all we need to do is complete 15 years of appeals...
Posted by: Iblis || 04/03/2006 17:38 Comments || Top||

#10  I can just see the "Free Mumia/Moussaoui" moonbats in the streets now...
Posted by: Dar || 04/03/2006 17:55 Comments || Top||

#11  Now all we need to do is complete 15 years of appeals...

Where's Jack Ruby when we need him?
Posted by: Zenster || 04/03/2006 17:57 Comments || Top||

#12  It's not a done deal yet. From AP:
he now faces a second phase of the sentencing trial to determine if he actually will be put to death.
Posted by: ed || 04/03/2006 18:35 Comments || Top||

#13  They've got plenty of so-called Martyrs already. I'm not afraid to add one more to the list
Posted by: rjschwarz || 04/03/2006 18:43 Comments || Top||

#14  They ought to raffle off the right to fire the bullet, push the button, turn the knob, or flip the switch that flushes this turd away. Bye bye Zac!
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 04/03/2006 18:53 Comments || Top||

#15  Moussaoui jury reaches verdict, Death awaits

Hopefully with nasty sharp pointy teeth!
Posted by: They Call Me "Tim" || 04/03/2006 20:08 Comments || Top||

#16  Yahoo!!!It's Allaha's will! Despite out legal systems best efforts to free him, he's gonna hang!!!!
Posted by: 49 pan || 04/03/2006 21:37 Comments || Top||

#17  Fuck that 2-bit whore LOTP for using 3 of my posted articles today without attribution.

I gather material from 6 link sites that Whore#1 couldn't even dream of finding, you fucking skank. Any one who links with your 20 fuck-wad regulars' site will know what bags of shit you and your whore, Seafarious are.

Fuck your Father. Fuck your Mother. Fuck your Pimp. Fuck you bastard spawn. And Fuck you. And you are Fucked, you wild animal.

War On Terror, my ass; you are terrorists. Die soon you backwood's freaks. No more slumming.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 23:35 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
PEJAK: Kurds Against Tehran
A little-known organization based in the mountains of Iraq's Kurdish north is emerging as a serious threat to the Iranian government, staging cross-border attacks and claiming tens of thousands of supporters among Iran's 4 million Kurds.
The Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan, better known by the local acronym PEJAK or PJAK, claims to have killed 24 Iranian soldiers in three raids against army bases last month, all staged in retaliation for the killing of 10 Iranian Kurds during a peaceful demonstration in the city of Maku.
Three more soldiers from Iran's elite Republican Guard were killed last week in a gunbattle near the Iraqi border, Iran's official news agency reported.
But the greater threat to the Tehran regime may come from the group's underground effort to promote a sense of identity among Iranian Kurds, who make up 7 percent of that country's population. PEJAK leaders say the effort is spreading quickly among students, intellectuals and businessmen.
"The Iranian government's plan to create a global Islamic state is destroying our people's culture and values," said Akif Zagros, 28, a graduate in Persian literature who was interviewed in a simple stone hut at the group's headquarters. "So we fight back. But our aim is not just to bring freedom to Kurds, but to liberate all the peoples of Iran."
PEJAK units first began targeting the Iranian military in 2004. After attacking, the militants melt back into a supportive society or cross the Iraqi border to join several thousand guerrillas at the group's leafy main camp a few miles from the Iranian border.
"Because the Iranian government oppresses people and prevents demonstrations, we needed a way to defend ourselves," said Mr. Zagros, one of four men and three women who make up the group's leadership council.
"The Iranian government has provoked the people of Iranian Kurdistan to defend themselves," Mr. Zagros continued. "But at the same time, the government is quite weak in these regions, and so our people can respond if they are attacked."
Unlike most other rebel groups in the Middle East, PEJAK is secular and Western-oriented. When the group's members talk, their Kurdish is peppered with such Western words as "freedom," "human rights" and "ecology."
Iran has denounced it as a terrorist group and accused the United States of funding it. But at PEJAK's camp, there is no obvious evidence of American equipment or money. The only weapons on show are AK-47 assault rifles and grenades, and the funding is clearly limited.
Each recruit has a single pair of khaki fatigues, and even its leaders subsist on simple meals of bread, cheese and fresh vegetables at communal outdoor tables.
The group's leaders say that they have had no contact with the United States, but that they would be willing to work with Europe or America against the Tehran government.
"We demand democratic change in Iran," Mr. Zagros said. "And if the U.S. government wants to help us, we are happy to accept their support.
"The U.S. talks about bringing democracy to the region," he added. "But for 200 years, the Kurds have struggled against dictatorship and oppression and in defense of our human rights. And so far the West has not helped us. Why?"
PEJAK's ideology combines the Kurds' traditionally low-key Islam and pagan-influenced culture with the movement's political opposition to the dogmatic Islamic government in Tehran.
Nearly half the group's members are women, attracted by its promotion of sexual equality. Female volunteers receive the same training as the men, wear the same clothes, and greet visitors with a steady eye and firm handshake.
"Here in our camp, the women learn to be strong so that when they go back to Iran, they can teach women and, in fact, all people about our struggle for democracy and human rights," said Gulistan Dugan, 36, a psychology graduate from the University of Tehran and a member of the leadership council.
"The daughters of our movement take part in all our operations, including military ones."
Posted by: Anonymoose || 04/03/2006 15:56 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [15 views] Top|| File under:

#1  If the information here is accurate...

Heh.
Posted by: Glineth Omitle7527 || 04/03/2006 17:54 Comments || Top||

#2  The KURDS = PALESTINIANS, etc > iff the Iranian Mullahs get their nukes and ultimately their empire, they get nuthin'. Their best chance to achieve statehood and democracy is to be patient and work wid Dubya and America, and yes even work wid Israel-Turkey.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 23:54 Comments || Top||


Iraq
DEBKA: 6 Iraqi lawmakers are Iranian generals
Posted by: lotp || 04/03/2006 15:54 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Depressing, if true. Where are the death squads when you really need them?
Posted by: RWV || 04/03/2006 15:59 Comments || Top||

#2  Good news if true, it means the Persians have way the hell to many Chiefs.
Posted by: 6 || 04/03/2006 16:09 Comments || Top||

#3  Tahsin Aboudi – a high-ranking Iraqi interior ministry official,

Wow, Iranian mole in the Iraqi Interior Ministry, who'da thunk it?
Posted by: Rory B. Bellows || 04/03/2006 18:19 Comments || Top||

#4  The article even names the guys!
Posted by: Iblis || 04/03/2006 19:04 Comments || Top||

#5  Whoa - OOOOPPPSSS, looks like Britney got herself into trouble again.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 22:15 Comments || Top||

#6  I guess we all know where al-Sistani was born? Some of us, anyway.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 19:35 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
The World Will End In Three Months
(Press release and shameless plug)

UFO CULT GATHERS IN NEW YORK FOR APOCALYPSE

CLEVELAND, Ohio, April 3, 2006: The Church of the SubGenius has announced that the end of the world will take place on Tuesday, July 5, 2005. In preparation for the fulfillment of this doomsday prophecy, the Church is requesting that all of its members participate in a bizarre religious ceremony taking place in upstate New York, during the final weekend before the arrival of the apocalypse.

Since its inception in 1953, Church founder J.R. "Bob" Dobbs has predicted that a fleet of flying saucers will arrive at the beginning of July to destroy the worldwide Conspiracy against the Church of the SubGenius, while all ordained SubGenius ministers will be rescued by escape vessels piloted by the Alien Sex Goddesses, also known as the Xists.

The Church is inviting all of its members worldwide to gather together for the final hours in Sherman, New York from July 1 to July 5, at a clothing-optional outdoor campground called Brushwood Folklore Center. The first gathering at this compound took place in 1996, and the event has increased in size and participants each following year. 1998 was designated the first true "X-Day," and each successive year has added one to the total. This year's celebration in 2005 is X-Day 8, or X-Day VIII.

The Church has been engaged in a massive recruitment campaign to increase the numbers of its membership before the arrival of the Xists. According to Church records, the organization currently has approximately 100,000 members worldwide. SubGenius recruitment has been especially dedicated among the ranks of people who refuse to conform to the norms of society, including disbelievers, blasphemers, pranksters, rebels, hackers, pornographers, geeks, and outcasts.

The Church is seeking performers and producers from the adult entertainment industry in particular, because sexual freedom has been an important part of Church doctrine from the start. X-Day will be a celebration of pornography and adult entertainment, and certain parts of the event will be restricted to adults only. Only ordained ministers of the Church of the SubGenius are allowed at the event, but the Church is accepting memberships at its standard rate of $30 up until the final hours of July 4.

The Church of the SubGenius has been no stranger to controversy since its foundation, and the upcoming X-Day celebration promises to be no different. In the late 1980s, members of the Church were accused of spreading a virus in Macintosh computers known as the "Peace Virus." Numerous articles have been written on the Church in such noteworthy publications as the New York Times, Washington Post, Wired Online, Boston Globe, U.S. News and World Report; and broadcast reports have been produced by CNN and NPR. In April 1999, officials of the city of Cambridge, Massachusetts shut down an official SubGenius Devival gathering in the belief that the Church was affiliated with the Trenchcoat Mafia (the organization blamed for the Columbine high school shootings), though authorities later realized the association was mistaken. In its January 1, 2000 issue, a Time magazine poll declared J.R. "Bob" Dobbs the biggest fraud of the 20th century.

In addition, a new controversy took place in the early months of 2006 when one of the Church's highest level initiates, Reverend Magdalen, came into conflict with the United States legal system. She found her religious affiliations questioned in court, and her case has become a cause celebre for free speech advocates nationwide. This case has been covered in Boing Boing, Fark, The Wild Hunt, and Wikinews (Wikipedia's news reporting service).

Detailed information about X-Day can be found on the World Wide Web at the X-Day Web site.
I've deleted the contact information. Go to their website if you wish.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 04/03/2006 14:17 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Will there be giant floating heads?
Posted by: Jonathan || 04/03/2006 14:54 Comments || Top||

#2  The end of the world will take place nine months ago? Holy Shit!
Posted by: Mad Mad Mullah || 04/03/2006 14:58 Comments || Top||

#3  If it's gonna be all over on July 5th, why the hell would I wanna waste thirty bucks to join?
Posted by: tu3031 || 04/03/2006 15:00 Comments || Top||

#4  Well, now I'll defintely keep my money...
Posted by: tu3031 || 04/03/2006 15:02 Comments || Top||

#5  Clothing optional sounds nice .... until you realize they all are old, ugly and/or fat, like most nudist areas.

ewwwww.....

I call on the Swiss Bikini team to join!
Posted by: DarthVader || 04/03/2006 15:20 Comments || Top||

#6  DV:

What about the women's bikini snowboarding team?





Posted by: BigEd || 04/03/2006 15:41 Comments || Top||

#7  Can I drive my Fnord there?
Posted by: Secret Master || 04/03/2006 16:01 Comments || Top||

#8  :> SM
Posted by: 6 || 04/03/2006 16:30 Comments || Top||

#9  Well, guess I don't need to worry about that balloon payment on my mortgage.
Posted by: Mike || 04/03/2006 17:33 Comments || Top||

#10  Sure it's not June 6, 2006?
Posted by: Jules || 04/03/2006 18:30 Comments || Top||

#11  I read an interesting statistic once that showed the number of UFO sitings pretty much dropped to near zero after Sept 11. Folks had real issues to fill their nightmares rather than delusions of little green men.
Posted by: rjschwarz || 04/03/2006 18:52 Comments || Top||

#12  I think the SubGeniuses have got it wrong (as a subgenius would be wont to do). The aliens are comming to obliterate them from earth. And what a good bunch to select. This year, last year - if they can get their press release right - what does it matter?
Posted by: Thinemp Whimble2412 || 04/03/2006 19:16 Comments || Top||

#13  what about the number of abductions and anal probes? (.....and why do they always anally probe older single men with drinking problems and drawls?)
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 19:58 Comments || Top||

#14  Frank, STOP with the visuals!!

ferchristeaks its close to suppertime!
Posted by: RD || 04/03/2006 20:03 Comments || Top||

#15  Rjschwartz: I don't know if that's true, but it may be a reporting bias rather than an actual reduction in the number of UFO's (even if they exist); I don't know if you really follow the fringe UFO sites, but some of them were very fast and vehement to jump on the conspiracy theories about 9/11. (There's one in particular I won't mention that basically devolved into nonstop antisemitic frothing-at-the-mouth).

(And the less I say about Alex Jones or David Icke the happier we'll all be, I suspect).
Posted by: Phil || 04/03/2006 20:05 Comments || Top||

#16  sorry RD - I just report it as I hear it
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 20:43 Comments || Top||

#17  "....and why do they always anally probe older single men with drinking problems and drawls?"

You sound worried, Frank.

Posted by: Dave D. || 04/03/2006 20:56 Comments || Top||

#18  I see strange lights at night, DD
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 21:02 Comments || Top||

#19  Frank don't drawl no more -- he's got AutoCAD now.
Posted by: Very SubGenius || 04/03/2006 21:05 Comments || Top||

#20  LOL
Posted by: Dave D. || 04/03/2006 21:19 Comments || Top||

#21  even I'm LOL
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 21:39 Comments || Top||

#22  I'm not
Posted by: Art Bell || 04/03/2006 21:40 Comments || Top||

#23  Knock off the JD a bit, down to a quart a day or so, and maybe you won't have these anxieties about being cornholed by aliens...
Posted by: Dave D. || 04/03/2006 21:45 Comments || Top||

#24  Good lord guys! Get the tin foil hats back on. Everyone knows the end of the world is June 6th and the aliens promised to take Me and Tracy Lords, as well as 500 strippers to their planet! Geeez get it right, and skip the anal probe stuff! LOL!!!
Posted by: 49 pan || 04/03/2006 21:50 Comments || Top||

#25  you're a Dr.? Or just stayed in a Holiday Inn Express?
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 21:51 Comments || Top||

#26  "The World Will End In Three Months"

What, again?
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 04/03/2006 22:35 Comments || Top||

#27  it's a cyclical thang
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 22:39 Comments || Top||

#28  Time to grab a chick, any chick or chicks, even Helen Thomas or Hillary, plus pet dog, and run/head to the hills.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 23:06 Comments || Top||

#29  No, Joe...hold on there...Helen and Hillary do not qualify...
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 23:07 Comments || Top||

#30  SubGenius Instructional Video
You must watch it.
Posted by: 3dc || 04/03/2006 23:53 Comments || Top||

#31  ROFL!!!

Wonderful video! LOL!
Posted by: Glosing Hupesh7946 || 04/03/2006 23:59 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
Biotechnology : Here be dragons
With luck, you may soon be able to buy a mythological pet

PAOLO FRIL, chairman and chief scientific officer of GeneDupe, based in San Melito, California, is a man with a dream. That dream is a dragon in every home.

GeneDupe's business is biotech pets. Not for Dr Fril, though, the mundane cloning of dead moggies and pooches. He plans a range of entirely new animals—or, rather, of really quite old animals, with the twist that even when they did exist, it was only in the imagination.

Making a mythical creature real is not easy. But GeneDupe's team of biologists and computer scientists reckon they are equal to the task. Their secret is a new field, which they call “virtual cell biology”.

Biology and computing have a lot in common, since both are about processing information—in one case electronic; in the other, biochemical. Virtual cell biology aspires to make a software model of a cell that is accurate in every biochemical detail. That is possible because all animal cells use the same parts list—mitochondria for energy processing, the endoplasmic reticulum for making proteins, Golgi body for protein assembly, and so on.

Armed with their virtual cell, GeneDupe's scientists can customise the result so that it belongs to a particular species, by loading it with a virtual copy of that animal's genome. Then, if the cell is also loaded with the right virtual molecules, it will behave like a fertilised egg, and start dividing and developing—first into an embryo, and ultimately into an adult.

Because this “growth” is going on in a computer, it happens fast. Passing from egg to adult in one of GeneDupe's enormous Mythmaker computers takes less than a minute. And it is here that Charles Darwin gets a look in. With such a short generation time, GeneDupe's scientists can add a little evolution to their products.

Each computer starts with a search image (dragon, unicorn, gryphon, etc), and the genome of the real animal most closely resembling it (a lizard for the dragon, a horse for the unicorn and, most taxingly, the spliced genomes of a lion and an eagle for the gryphon). The virtual genomes of these real animals are then tweaked by random electronic mutations. When they have matured, the virtual adults most closely resembling the targets are picked and cross-bred, while the others are culled.

Using this rapid evolutionary process, GeneDupe's scientists have arrived at genomes for a range of mythological creatures—in a computer, at least. The next stage, on which they are just embarking, is to do it for real.

This involves synthesising, with actual DNA, the genetic material that the computer models predict will produce the mythical creatures. The synthetic DNA is then inserted into a cell that has had its natural nucleus removed. The result, Dr Fril and his commercial backers hope, will be a real live dragon, unicorn or what have you.

Readers with long memories may recall GeneDupe's previous attempt to break into the pet market, the Real Goldfish (see article). This animal was genetically engineered to deposit gold in its skin cells, for that truly million-dollar look. Unfortunately Dr Fril, a biologist, neglected to think about the physics involved. The fish, weighed down by one of the heaviest metals in existence, sank like a stone, as did the project. He is more confident about his new idea, though. Indeed, if he can get the dragons' respiration correct, he thinks they will set the world on fire.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 04/03/2006 13:39 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The Economist has this dated 30-March, which seems a couple of days too early.
Posted by: James || 04/03/2006 14:16 Comments || Top||

#2  And the moral of the story is: Never count your boobies before they are hatched.
Posted by: Abdominal Snowman || 04/03/2006 15:48 Comments || Top||

#3  Don't let my D&D-obsessed teenager see this.
Posted by: Mike || 04/03/2006 17:35 Comments || Top||

#4  Fire-breathing dragons? And I thought Fluffy was hard on the furniture. Mind you, a quick puff on sleepy little Johnny will sure get him out of bed for walkies.
Posted by: Thinemp Whimble2412 || 04/03/2006 18:12 Comments || Top||

#5  All Agent Alert!

It appears that security has been breached in Operation Dragon.

It is urgent that this security breach be contained immediately. All necessary measures are hereby authorized to insure the security of Operation Monster Division's (OMD) continued secrecy and operational security.

All other operations are to proceed according to our current schedule.

Operation Dagon and Operation Deep Ones will be operational as soon as negotiations with Persian Gulf entities are completed. This requires that negotiations with North Sea entities be completed and negotiated successfully prior to the launch of the aforementioned operations.

The recent tests of Iranian "secret" submarine "missiles" have been duly observed by our informants and agents. Accurate targeting data has been fed into the Persian Gulf sonar arrays and all attack submarine navigational and targeting data has been updated.

We are in debt to our sub-surface "allies" which is not a position I like to see us in...

We can do better (and we better).

Yours,
Dir, OMD

Posted by: Halliburton Monster Division || 04/03/2006 22:22 Comments || Top||

#6  This one, TW?
Posted by: Glosing Hupesh7946 || 04/03/2006 22:25 Comments || Top||


Europe
Muslim neighbours force censorship on Paris cafe
A gang of young Muslims wielding iron rods has forced a Paris cafe to censor an exhibition of cartoons ridiculing religion, the owners of the establishment said Friday.

Some 50 drawings by well-known French cartoonists were installed in the Mer à Boire cafe in the working-class Belleville neighbourhood of northeast Paris, as part of an avowedly atheist show entitled 'Neither god nor god'. The collection targeted all religions — including Islam — but there were no representations of the prophet Mohammed such as sparked the recent crisis between the West and the Islamic world, according to Marianne who is one of the cafe's three owners.

"We used to give glasses of water to a group of local boys aged between 10 and 12 who played football across the street. On Tuesday a few came in, flung the water on the ground and accused us of being racists," said Marianne, who did not wish to give her family name.
Minors in france = virtual immunity from the law.
"Later more of them came back with sticks and iron rods and tried to smash the pictures. They managed it with a few of them. With the customers we chased them away, but they kept coming back," she said

Later the cafe-owners were approached by a group of older youths. "They said they did not approve of what the youngsters had done. But what we were doing was unacceptable too. They warned us that if we didn't take down the cartoons they would call in the Muslim Brothers who would burn the cafe down," said Marianne. "They kept saying: 'This is our home. You cannot act like this here,'" she said.
"Where do you think you are, in a kufr country?"
Refusing to dismantle the exhibition, the owners have placed white sheets of paper inscribed with the word 'censored' over the cartoons that were targeted by the gang. "To take down the cartoons would have been a surrender. But on the other hand we cannot expose ourselves to this kind of violence. This way you can still see the pictures if you lift the paper," said Marianne.
And it's not like the police or the government will protect you.
One of the cartoons that aroused the wrath of the youths was a bar scene, in which the barman offers a drink to an obviously inebriated man who says "God is great." The caption is: "The sixth pillar of Islam. The bar pillar." In France a "bar pillar" is a barfly or drunk.

The aim of the exhibition was to poke fun at all religions, according to cartoonists who took part. "Putting on this type of show in this place was not in the least a provocation. Unless you think that freedom of expression in itself is a provocation," the cartoonist Charb told Le Parisien newspaper.

The Belleville neighbourhood of Paris's 20th arrondissement is racially mixed, with a large population of north African origin, but Marianne said there were few outward signs of religious extremism. "There are areas near here which do have a reputation for Islamists. But here it's different. These are street gangs for whom religion has become a kind of mark of identity," she said.

The owners of the Mer à Boire, which means "the sea you can drink" and opened in September, have filed suit with the police.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 04/03/2006 13:33 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "They kept saying: 'This is our home. You cannot act like this here,'" she said.

Dis turf may not be much but its all we got!

from - "l'histoire du Cote L'Ouest"
First song "when youre a jihadi, youre a jihadi all the way!"
Posted by: liberalhawk || 04/03/2006 14:06 Comments || Top||

#2  "The owners of the Mer à Boire, which means "the sea you can drink" and opened in September, have filed suit with the police."

Dear kindly officer Krupke,

Da gangs here on da West Side is really outta hand, and we dont even see you comin by here for donuts and coffee no more. Derfore, I has contacted my attorney, and he will be filing suit against da precinct for damages to my establishment.

Signed,
Doc
Posted by: liberalhawk || 04/03/2006 14:09 Comments || Top||

#3  Unless you think that freedom of expression in itself is a provocation,"

Guess what, Charb?
Posted by: Zenster || 04/03/2006 14:37 Comments || Top||

#4  The solution for this is so easy. Just get a van and hire a bunch of young thugs. Give each a bastinado that will leave an inch-long welt anywhere you hit someone with it.

Then have them charge the miscreants, give a bunch of them a good whapping, then when someone blows a whistle, they run back to the van and away.

Give each a hundred Euros, and on the way out give them tips and complements for good performance.

No connection at all with the cafe. No cursing, no shouting. Apparently no cause to the attack. None of the thugs live anywhere near the area, and are unknown to the police there.

Such unexplained assaults make people apprehensive and far less likely to be bold and aggressive.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 04/03/2006 14:38 Comments || Top||

#5  A5089, JFM, how is this going down over there?
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 14:57 Comments || Top||

#6  Moose, that is a good idea.
Posted by: RWV || 04/03/2006 15:41 Comments || Top||

#7  And we all believe in freedom of expression with a Maglite.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 18:49 Comments || Top||


Arabia
Tired of male domination, 5 Saudi women change sex
RIYADH (Reuters) - Tired of playing second fiddle to men in conservative Saudi Arabia, five women decided if you can't beat them, join them...

Al Watan newspaper said the five women underwent sex change surgery abroad over the past 12 months after they developed a "psychological complex" due to male domination.

Women in Saudi Arabia, which adopts an austere interpretation of Islam, are not allowed to drive or even go to public places unaccompanied by a male relative.

The newspaper quoted a senior cleric as saying the authorities have to fill what he described as a legal vacuum by issuing laws against sex change operations.

An interior ministry official told al Watan such cases are examined by religious authorities, and sometimes by psychologists, but those who undergo sex change are never arrested.

The mullahs are really looking to fill a vaccuum? Probably cause with fewer women to vaccuum they need to be more efficient. Hoover or Dirt Devil?
Posted by: BigEd || 04/03/2006 13:10 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Oh, ya. About those 72 virgins....

We are even thinner in that department.
Posted by: Allah || 04/03/2006 13:20 Comments || Top||

#2  But they need to allow the men to women change because when an Iman gets caught having sex with a guy, they can change the guy into a woman and not have to discipline the Iman. This (that is the w to m change to evade sin) has actually taken place a few times in various parts of the Islamic world.
Posted by: mhw || 04/03/2006 14:16 Comments || Top||

#3  I don't remember exactly because I've got a short attention span born of too much surfing on cheezy porn sites, but there has been at least one story here of the iranian MM forcing homosexuals to undergo sex change operation, male to female.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 04/03/2006 15:08 Comments || Top||

#4  Sing to "Gilligan's Island"

Just sit right back and you'll hear a tale,
a tale of a foreign land.
That has a most true tropic clime,
where bikinis can't be seen.
The king was a corrupt oil man,
the crown prince followed suit.
Five women said, "We've had enough!"
"We'll change our pluming now, change our plumbing now!"
The mullahs started getting mad,
there was no law against.
"If we don't stop all this madness now,
Paradise would be lost; Paradise would be lost."
The mullahs set forth to fill the serious legal vacuum there,
Where kites are banned, and chess is too,
Cut out your tongue...if you sing,
Where movies are banned,
The women all wear big black tents,
there Saudi Land!

Posted by: Ogeretla 2006 || 04/03/2006 15:32 Comments || Top||

#5  We'll need to verify with Dr. Steve but I think this procedure is called an 'addadicktomy'.
Posted by: GORT || 04/03/2006 16:21 Comments || Top||

#6  ADDADICTOMY, yes.
It is a Limbaugh-ism as I understand it.
Posted by: BigEd || 04/03/2006 16:51 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
Al Jazeera Buys Welsh Sheep Show
Lock, stock and bleeting barrels.
Posted by: imoyaro || 04/03/2006 13:10 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [10 views] Top|| File under:

#1  So, you can describe this deal as all sheep-shape and Bristol-fashion?
(ducking quickly from the room in a shower of thrown objects)
Posted by: Sgt. Mom || 04/03/2006 14:29 Comments || Top||

#2  That was baaaaad. Ewe should be ashamed of yourself, Sgt. Mom.

Lamb-a-ram-a ding dong!
Posted by: Mike || 04/03/2006 15:33 Comments || Top||

#3 

Who says the Shias and the Sunnis can't be friends?
Posted by: BigEd || 04/03/2006 16:02 Comments || Top||

#4  But the big question of the day: Who becomes the sex symbol over there first?
Posted by: tu3031 || 04/03/2006 16:19 Comments || Top||

#5  The pre-school series, which will be shown on the al-Jazeera's children's channel, is described by S4C as "a live action series following the exploits of an extended family of musical, multi-racial sheep".

Middle eastern porn.
Posted by: DoDo || 04/03/2006 18:49 Comments || Top||

#6  Nah - WAY too easy.
Posted by: DMFD || 04/03/2006 19:54 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
Supreme Court Rejects Padilla Appeal
WASHINGTON — A divided Supreme Court on Monday rejected an appeal from Jose Padilla, held as an enemy combatant without traditional legal rights for more than three years, sidestepping a challenge to Bush administration wartime detention powers. Padilla was moved in January to Miami to face criminal charges, and the government argued that the appeal over his indefinite detention was now pointless.

Six justices refused to hear the case. Three justices said the court should have agreed to take up the case: Justices David H. Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer. But three court members, including Chief Justice John Roberts, said that they would be watching to ensure Padilla receives the protections "guaranteed to all federal criminal defendants."

An appeals court panel had all but called for the high court to deal with the case, saying it was troubled by the Bush administration's change in legal strategy -- it brought criminal charges only after it looked like the Supreme Court was going to step in. Justices first considered in 2004 whether Padilla's constitutional rights were violated when he was detained as an enemy combatant without charges and access to a lawyer, traditional legal rights. Justices dodged a decision on technical grounds. In a dissent Justice John Paul Stevens said then that "at stake in this case is nothing less than the essence of a free society."

Justices are reviewing a second case arising from the government pursuit of terrorists, an appeal by a foreign terrorist suspect facing a military commission on war crimes charges at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Arguments were last week.

Padilla's case was different. It asked the court to clarify how far the government can go when its hunt for terrorists leads to Americans in this country. Based on the vote breakdown, it appears the court would have agreed to hear the appeal had Padilla not been charged.

"In light of the previous changes in his custody status and the fact that nearly four years have passed since he first was detained, Padilla, it must be acknowledged, has a continuing concern that his status might be altered again," Justice Anthony M. Kennedy wrote for himself, Stevens and Roberts. "That concern, however, can be addressed if the necessity arises."
Posted by: Steve || 04/03/2006 12:55 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "sidestepping a challenge to Bush administration wartime detention powers." Ahem, maybe they didn't see anything wrong with those powers? I bet the LLL will just go nuts over this.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 04/03/2006 13:43 Comments || Top||

#2  They will. Listen to Nazi Public Radio tonight and hear it described as a significant defeat for the Bush administration because the court refused to submit to its contention that the case was moot. The judiciary plans to continue to watch closely over the executive in its abuse of habeus corpus. Blah blah blah.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 13:57 Comments || Top||

#3  Funny, the leftie blogs are upset because they think the USSC ducked this one. It's not occurred to them, of course, that the Bush administration might actually be right, so they're fuming about the lack of 'courage' on the part of the USSC.
Posted by: Steve White || 04/03/2006 19:44 Comments || Top||

#4  You *did* wash before you came back to the 'Burg, right, Steve?
Posted by: Seafarious || 04/03/2006 20:12 Comments || Top||

#5  The were upset when the USSC didn't "duck" the 2000 election. They had better be careful what they ask for.
Posted by: Darrell || 04/03/2006 20:15 Comments || Top||


Down Under
Aust-Taiwan uranium deal signed
TWO Australian mining companies have signed contracts for the supply of uranium to a Taiwanese power company, a deal that will be done through US channels. Taiwan, which is not a signatory to the nuclear non-proliferation treaty, confirmed the deals yesterday - the same day that China - Taiwan's arch-rival - and Australia signed a deal in Canberra for the supply of uranium.

Taiwanese officials said the deal had been signed by the electrical producer Taipower with BHP Billiton and ERA during the past 12 months. Osman Chia, from the Taipei economic and cultural office in Canberra, said the arrangement provided for indirect trade route through the US. "We don't have official relations with Australia so we go through the United States," Mr Chia said.

In the past, Australia has rebuffed approaches from Taiwan to sell it uranium, fearing a hostile reaction from China. Australia has also recently turned down requests from India to sell it uranium, citing the fact that it has not signed the nuclear non-proliferation treaty as the reason.

Federal Resources Minister Ian Macfarlane said Taiwan was a member of the International Atomic Energy Agency and subjected itself to inspections by the organisation.
Posted by: tipper || 04/03/2006 11:55 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Oh yeah, you just know the PRC and CCP are gonna complain and scream and break a few chairs, AGAIN.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 22:12 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
UMKC prof's book probes making of human bombs
He hasn't got a clue
Posted by: tipper || 04/03/2006 11:37 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [10 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "Hasn't got a clue" is being pretty damn generous.

From the article:

"What could possibly compel a person to strap a bomb to himself, walk into a restaurant or onto a bus and detonate his charge, with the express intent of killing both patrons and himself?"

A barbaric, primitive, totalitarian murder cult called Islam.

Posted by: Dave D. || 04/03/2006 12:28 Comments || Top||

#2  The promise of 72 c*nts in Paradise, numbwit.
Posted by: Ptah || 04/03/2006 12:39 Comments || Top||

#3  Allan said it. I believe it. That settles it.

Boom.
Posted by: Seafarious || 04/03/2006 12:47 Comments || Top||

#4  Virgins works as well and isn't as unnecessarily offensive.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 12:53 Comments || Top||

#5  yes. mohammad atta and his cohorts were desperate when they took over US airliners and killed Americans. what else could they do?

Or the scores of suicide bombers in iraq. they have no other recourse! They're desperate!

COME ON! Paleos aren't desparate. They're the product of a sick, uncivilized culture. They vote in a group who wants to destroy the only possible partner they have in creating their own country. They worshipped a leader who they knew was corrupt and stealing food from their children's mouths. They continue to support strategies that do not in the least serve their interests.

what about all the other societies that were TRULY desperate throughout the ages? Why didn't they resort to such heinous tactics?

Is it that difficult to conclude that paleos are the product of a despicable culture? Must this asswipe be simply another apologist? Haven't we all seen through that veil of lies by now?
Posted by: PlanetDan || 04/03/2006 12:53 Comments || Top||

#6  Virgins works as well and isn't as unnecessarily offensive.

But not nearly as descriptive. Let's be honest -- "virgin" implies a complete person, someone you can get to know as an individual, and only describes their inexperience in one aspect of life. The houris promised to shahids are described in terms of two things -- their eyes and their constantly regenerating hymens.

I think Ptah's term was perfectly apt.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 04/03/2006 13:29 Comments || Top||

#7  But not particularly pleasant for the women here to read.
Posted by: lotp || 04/03/2006 15:49 Comments || Top||

#8  And we do appreciate the touch of class and culture the fairer gender adds. So let's not gross them out unless there is some positive reason that makes it necessary to do so.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 15:58 Comments || Top||

#9  "Vaginas" would have done Ptah, we're all relative adults here. Your choice of word is an epithet againt women and out of context here. Women have little to do with this virgins in heaven thing for the males - don't curse them.

But receptacles, only receptacles for the martyr's jism. Yup. just like the one's on earth.
Posted by: Thinemp Whimble2412 || 04/03/2006 19:29 Comments || Top||

#10  While I'm not at all fond of the particular epithet in question, I'd wager that all of us would be revolted far more intensely by eavesdropping on the average Islamist's mind for a minute's thought about women in general.

Yes, I am a staunch advocate for civility hereabouts. I'd also like to point out how infrequently Ptah ever descends to such vulgarity. That said, I'm outta here.
Posted by: Zenster || 04/03/2006 20:29 Comments || Top||

#11  quit trying to sugar-coat it, dammit
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 20:29 Comments || Top||

#12  Meanwhile, back at the article...
"Reaching a win-win solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is the only way to take the steam out of the culture of martyrdom, Hafez believes."
But of course he has no prescription for how to reach a win-win when the Palestinians are hell-bent on exterminating the Israelis. He's about as useless as Jimmy Carter.
Posted by: Darrell || 04/03/2006 20:33 Comments || Top||

#13  Islam proves that being ruthlessly violent to your children during their tender years will assure that logical thought processes are replaced by blind obedience and assinine beliefs.
Posted by: wxjames || 04/03/2006 21:54 Comments || Top||

#14  Reaching a win-win solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Since we Jews worship life, whereas Paleos (and ROPers in general) worship death, I do believe that a win-win solution is possible.
Posted by: gromgoru || 04/03/2006 22:25 Comments || Top||


Caribbean-Latin America
Venezuela Takes Control of Total S.A. Oil Field
CARACAS, Venezuela -- Venezuela tightened its grip on the petroleum sector after taking control of an oil field from Total S.A. when the French company refused to sign an agreement to turn the site over to a state-run joint venture. State oil company Petroleos de Venezuela SA, or PDVSA, "took control of our operations at Jusepin. It was during the weekend," Total spokeswoman Patricia Marie told The Associated Press by telephone from the company's headquarters in Paris.

The move is another step in Venezuela's campaign to take on Big Oil at a time when rising oil prices, political instability in the Mideast and Nigeria and new buyers in Asia have put the world's fifth-largest oil exporter in a winning position. Last week, Venezuela's oil minister, Rafael Ramirez, said of Exxon Mobil Corp. "we don't want them to be here" because the Irving, Texas-based company has resisted tax increases and contract changes that are part of a policy by President Hugo Chavez's government to re-nationalize the oil industry. The government has increasingly sought projects with state-controlled oil companies, including China's CNPC, India's ONGC and Iran's Petropars.

In the case of Total, it operated the oil field independently under a contract with the government. Total was unable to immediately provide further details, including how many Total employees work at the site. The 30,000 barrel-a-day Jusepin oil field was one of 32 in the country that have been run by private oil companies under contract. Venezuela demanded last year those contracts be changed into joint ventures giving PDVSA a minimum 60-percent stake.

On Friday, 17 oil companies including Spanish-Argentine Repsol YPF, Royal Dutch Shell PLC and China National Petroleum, signed on to the new legal framework.
"We didn't migrate the field ... and PDVSA took it. That's logical," Marie said, adding the company had not made any formal decision yet on how to proceed.

Meanwhile, Italian oil and gas company Eni SpA said Monday that PDVSA had unilaterally terminated its contract at the Dacion oil field on Saturday.
Posted by: Steve || 04/03/2006 11:32 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Chavex is certifiable. The French were his most likely non-dictatorial ally.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 12:41 Comments || Top||

#2  There is a company that works for us that are experts in running oil operations. Venezuela threw out all western people a few years back and didn't pay them for the work they did. Late last year, they came back, paid up and begged for that company to come back. Seems that Venezuela doesn't have the trained people to run their oil fields.
Stupid little prick....
They only took the job 'cus they didn't want the Chinese in there screwing stuff up even more.
Posted by: DarthVader || 04/03/2006 13:29 Comments || Top||

#3  Amazing. Not even the French can work with these dirtbags. Must have floored them that none of usual offers of bribes, kickbacks and Parisian shopping trips for the wives made a difference.
Posted by: Classical_Liberal || 04/03/2006 18:50 Comments || Top||

#4  I keep telling you that intelligence is finite. There are just far too many around and too little to distribute.
Posted by: Tholet Ulinert1382 || 04/03/2006 19:02 Comments || Top||

#5  Chirac has an opportunity here to salvage his and France's credibility by publicly supporting Total SA's contractual/legal rights under terms.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 22:43 Comments || Top||

#6  Given the French habit of nationalizing and denationalizing industries at home, Chirac might sound a bit hypocritical to complain about others doing the same to French companies abroad.
Posted by: trailing wife || 04/03/2006 23:07 Comments || Top||


Iraq
Gerecht: Can the Shiite Center Hold?
EFL. WSJ.
The various, often mutually hostile, Shiite parties, are likely to plow ahead, however fitfully, to some political deal with the Sunnis and the Kurds, who both now know that the Shiites will no longer passively watch their women and children slaughtered and their holy sites desecrated. Sunni and Kurdish fear of Shiite power--a fickle but growing alliance between Sunni Arabs and Kurds was inevitable--is politically overdue and healthy for all concerned. This is a tightrope act, but the Sunni Arabs must internalize the fact that they cannot leverage the insurgency into power. If they continue to try, they will only convert Shiite "sheep" (the traditional Arab Sunni view of Arab Shiites) into rampant "lions," unstoppable by even the most revered, peace-promoting divines.

And what is most likely to curtail the violence is the U.S. military--not political dialogue among the Sunni and Shiite Arabs and Kurds. Dialogue is important--the all-critical, viscerally anti-U.S. and seriously anti-Shiite Sunni Clerics Association is slowly moving toward reconciliation with a Shiite-led Iraq. But only the U.S. military has the capacity, as recently shown in Tal Afar and brilliantly reported by The New Republic's Lawrence Kaplan, to secure territory against insurgents and holy warriors. The successful operation in Tal Afar is a blatant negation of Gen. John Abizaid's "light footprint" strategy that views large numbers of U.S. soldiers as part of the problem, not the overwhelming part of a counterinsurgency solution. The current approach to counterinsurgency--transfer responsibility to the Iraqis as quickly as possible--will seriously stress Iraq's ethnic and religious divisions, perhaps to the breaking point. Do we really want Shiite and Kurdish soldiers taking the lead in killing Sunnis? Unless heavily monitored by Americans for the foreseeable future, these soldiers could well utilize Algerian-style tactics against the Sunni Arabs. It is astonishing that Shiites have not unleashed more vengeance against their former Sunni Baathist masters and current Sunni tormentors.

It is no coincidence that Shiite militias have grown more powerful and more aggressive as U.S. forces have increasingly adopted an Iraqi-centered strategy. Such an approach will not, anytime soon, curtail Sunni attacks. Counterinsurgency warfare is the last thing you'd expect a newly minted army to undertake. Shiite militias, incorporated within the government and outside it, will not be inclined to stand down: They will react even more harshly to continuing attacks on their community. The Iraqification program has actually started to fuel the very violence that Iraqification in theory was supposed to stop. This gradual, perhaps rapid, U.S. withdrawal could well unhinge the Shiite community, giving victory to the militant minority.

We are now in the unenviable position of having to confront radicalized, murderous Shiite militias, who have gained broader Shiite support because of the Sunni-led violence and the lameness of U.S. counterinsurgency operations. The Bush administration would be wise not to postpone any longer what it should have already undertaken--securing Baghdad. This will be an enormously difficult task: Both Sunnis and Shiites will have to be confronted, but Sunni insurgents and brigands must be dealt with first to ensure America doesn't lose the Shiite majority and the government doesn't completely fall apart. Pacifying Baghdad will be politically convulsive and provide horrific film footage and skyrocketing body counts. But Iraq cannot heal itself so long as Baghdad remains a deadly place. And the U.S. media will never write many optimistic stories about Iraq if journalists fear going outside. To punt this undertaking down the road when the political dynamics might be better, and when the number of American soldiers in Iraq will surely be less, perhaps a lot less, is to invite disaster.

The Iraqis and the Americans will either save or damn Iraq in the coming months. Quite contrary to the purblind charges of Michigan's Democratic Sen. Carl Levin, the Iraqis really are doing their part--better than what anyone historically could have expected. The real question is, will Gen. Abizaid and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld do theirs?
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 11:03 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [8 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: Culture Wars
Theatres Pull Trailer for 'United 93'
The AMC Loews theater on Manhattan's Upper West Side took the rare step of pulling the movie trailer for the upcoming film "United 93," about 9/11, from its screens after several complaints, report Senior Writer Sean Smith and Reporter Jac Chebatoris in the April 10 issue of Newsweek. "One lady was crying," says one of the theater's managers, Kevin Adjodha. "She was saying that we shouldn't have [played the trailer]. That this was wrong ... I don't think people are ready for this.

Viewers in other cities are reacting as well. When the trailer played before "Inside Man" last week at the famed Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, audience members began calling out "Too soon!" And audiences generally seem to be split on the issue. "I don't think that's a movie I really want to see," says Jackie Alvarez, 73, of San Ramon, Calif., after seeing the trailer. "It gave me the creeps. It's way too soon."
Too soon? It's been 5 years
But 17-year-old Antoine Richardson of Memphis, Tenn., is looking forward to it.
"I don't think it's exploitative or too soon," he says. "It helps us remember."
Which could be the problem, some people want us to forget
Carole O'Hare, whose 79-year-old mother, Hilda Marcin, died on the flight, says she feels the criticism that Universal - the studio - is exploiting a national tragedy, is unfair. "This story has to be told to honor the passengers and crew for what they did," she says. "But more than that, it raises awareness. Our ports aren't secure. Our airlines still aren't secure, and this is what happens when you're not secure. That's the message I want people to hear."

Writer-director Paul Greengrass has gone to great lengths to be respectful in his depiction of what occurred, proceeding with the film only after securing the approval of every victim's family. "Was I surprised at the unanimity? Yes. Very. Usually there are one or two families who are more reluctant," Greengrass writes in an email. "I was surprised and humbled at the extraordinary way the United 93 families have welcomed us into their lives and shared their experiences with us."
A quick look at movies from 1942 dealing with Pearl Harbor and the war :
Remember Pearl Harbor
Submarine Raider
A Yank on the Burma Road
The Navy Comes Through
The Battle of Midway
Casablanca
Eagle Squadron
The Flying Tigers
Der Fuehrer's Face
The First of the Few
Attack in the Pacific
Bombs Over Burma
The Commandos Strike at Dawn
To the Shores of Tripoli
I don't seem to recall hearing about any protests about it being "too soon" back then.
I downloaded the trailer from the Apple website. It's very powerful, and I understand the emotional response. We need more of that, not less.
Posted by: Steve || 04/03/2006 10:58 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I don't seem to recall hearing about any protests about it being "too soon" back then.

That's because back then people had something called "patriotism" and "the will to fight back" and also "cheering the home team". These concepts are extinct on the east and west shores.
Posted by: DarthVader || 04/03/2006 11:37 Comments || Top||

#2  cmon, half of those movies were not about Pearl Harbor. I mean Casablanca, cmon. And Pearl was seen as an attack on the US military. The whole emphasis on the deaths of civilians, the individual obits, the focus on tragedy, wasnt there then.

All of which is only a quibble on the "we were so tough" in 1942 meme. Personally I have no problem with this movie being released now. I hope they do a good job of it, Id like to see it.
Posted by: liberalhawk || 04/03/2006 11:41 Comments || Top||

#3  "I don't seem to recall hearing about any protests about it being "too soon" back then."

That was the "Greatest Generation". We have had the "Me Generation" since then.
Posted by: Fordesque || 04/03/2006 11:55 Comments || Top||

#4  cmon, half of those movies were not about Pearl Harbor.

Having reading comprehension problems, LH?

As for whining about the movie -- there are a hell of a lot of people who want us to forget. Look at Yale for a humongous concentration of them.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 04/03/2006 12:16 Comments || Top||

#5  Better too soon than too late.
Posted by: Matt || 04/03/2006 12:19 Comments || Top||

#6  I am so going to this movie.

'Hawk: Casablanca takes place in the week before Pearl Harbor, and Rick's character arc is a bit of an allegory for U.S. entry into the war, as evidenced by my favorite bit of dialouge in the film:

Rick: It's December 1941 in Casablanca, what time is it in New York?
Sam: I don't know. My watch stopped.
Rick: I'll bet they're asleep in New York. I'll bet they're asleep all over America.
Posted by: Mike || 04/03/2006 12:47 Comments || Top||

#7  That's because back then people had something called "patriotism" and "the will to fight back" and also "cheering the home team". These concepts are extinct on the east and west shores.

It was a little easier back then for Hollywood and the press to cheer for the home team, because the home team was fighting on the same side as their beloved Uncle Joe Stalin.

They were patriotic, all right; but not for America.

Posted by: Dave D. || 04/03/2006 13:22 Comments || Top||

#8  I don't want to see this movie at all. I fear it will be FULL of inaccuracies and portray the terrorists of Flight 93 as "human". As for all this nonsense about "remembering", I have no need. I couldn't forget even if I wanted to. The image of those Towers coming down, the whole in the Pentagon, and the seen in Pensylvania is FOREVER engraved in my mind.

If you have to see this movie to remember the events of that day, you just plain out don't CARE. Sadly, to many Americans today have that exact problem. And yes I am angry about this. Something just doesn't sit right with me, thinking about each individual never going home. Mothers, daughters, wives, brothers, husbands, sons, all lost.

I don't seem to recall hearing about any protests about it being "too soon" back then.

War movies GENERALIZE people. You see the uniforms, the guns, the nameless ranks of soldiers. And the characters are almost always fictional. This movie will be about people, specific people, their last moments on earth, the calls of panic and terror on their faces as the plane went down into that field. Trying to picture, yet alone recreat that moment just doesn't sit well with me. To me it feels like we're belittling them by making this movie.
Posted by: Charles || 04/03/2006 13:28 Comments || Top||

#9  I haven't seen a movie (made after 1964) in a movie theater in 20 years. I'm planning to see this one if it lives up to my expectations based on the approval of all the families.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 13:33 Comments || Top||

#10  yeah, mike but we're not talking about something subtle, we're talking about a movie about the events of that day. And lets not forget, the events of that day werent an attack on a naval base - it was the deliberate murder of thousands of civilians. This would be more like a movie about the holocaust in 1942, or 1945. Which would have been a good idea, but I would understand some folks not wanting to see that.
Posted by: liberalhawk || 04/03/2006 14:14 Comments || Top||

#11  SOMERSET, Pa. - The Flight 93 National Memorial will receive part of the box-office revenue from the new movie about the airliner hijacked during the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Writer-director Paul Greengrass' "United 93" is scheduled to open April 28. Universal Pictures plans to donate 10 percent of the first three days' grosses to the memorial, the Families of Flight 93 announced Thursday.

Gordon Felt, whose brother Edward was a Flight 93 passenger, said the studio's efforts "to help permanently memorialize the bravery of the 40 passengers and crew of Flight 93 who chose to fight back in the face of violent adversity are remarkable." Last year, the official 9/11 Commission report said the hijackers crashed the plane as passengers tried to take control of the cockpit.

Chris T. Sullivan, who heads a $30 million fund-raising campaign for the national memorial, said he hopes "United 93" will result in worldwide support for the proposed monument in a field near Shanksville.

"United 93" chronicles in real time the hijacked United Airlines flight that crashed Sept. 11, 2001, killing all 40 passengers and crew. The film makes its world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York this month.

The winning design for the memorial was modified after some critics protested that its initial crescent shape symbolized Islam. The memorial's name also was changed from "Crescent of Embrace" to "40 Memorial Groves."


Posted by: Steve || 04/03/2006 14:29 Comments || Top||

#12  Is not Oliver Stone the Director? Inaccuracies? Yuh think?
Posted by: Sgt. D.T. || 04/03/2006 18:33 Comments || Top||

#13  Writer-director Paul Greengrass, per the article.

Ergo, I think not.
Posted by: SLO Jim || 04/03/2006 18:36 Comments || Top||

#14  Charles: this isn't a film exploiting "last moments on earth, the calls of panic and terror." It's about heroism, about ordinary people rising against terror and panic and doing something extraordinary. They died in the end, but they saved hundreds of others by their sacrifice--and came within an ace of retaking the plane.

The cable movie Flight 93 was a worthy tribute, and I expect this will be as well. If it's as good as I hope, it'll be a welcome antidote to Farenheit 9/11 and Syriana and Cynthia McKinney and Howard Dean and Charlie Sheen and all of the general free-floating moonbattery that's afflicting our media culture.
Posted by: Mike || 04/03/2006 18:38 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
The Real Culprit in Our Worldwide Image Problem
JAMES LILEKS
SecDef Rumsfeld, speaking before the Army War College the other day, graded the way the United States made its case to the world on the war against Islamists. "D plus," he said. "Maybe a D."

He's right. And it's worse than he thinks. Despite the beliefs of some that the Bush team pumps out doublespeak propaganda 24/7 via Fox News mind-control rays, the administration has been unable to persuade millions of Americans that death-cult totalitarians are an existential threat to the civilized world. You'd think the case would be self-explanatory, no? Us equals democracy, whiskey, sexy, as a liberated fellow once summed it up. Them equals theocracy, blood, the burqa. Everyone clear?

Apparently not. It doesn't help that the most vocal and famous elements of the left appear less concerned about the peril posed by the raving nutters, and think Bushies have embarked on some strange, inexplicable crusade to be mean to everyone who doesn't fall down Sunday morning and speak in tongues.

American actors like Gary Busey and Billy Zane appear in anti-U.S. movies for Turkish audiences; piercing intellects like George Clooney spend their time reminding us how the corpse of Joe McCarthy is the real threat to democracy; Western "peace" activists rescued by Spec-Ops from a sword-assisted skull removal couldn't bring themselves to thank the troops, lest anyone suspect that guns might be occasionally useful after all.

You'd call them useful idiots, but it's hard to see the "useful" part.

Most telling event: Yale admits a Taliban spokesman to study in the name of understanding his cultural perspective. The military can't recruit on campus because it discriminates against gays, of course.

But you want to talk about Brokeback Mountain? It's when the government pushes a stone wall on you for being gay. If our institutions of higher learning lack the intellectual courage to tell a Taliban mouthpiece to get lost, how can we expect the rest of the smart set to make the case for the West?

Divided we may be, but that hasn't always stopped liberal democracies from presenting a united front. In World War II the left was squarely behind Hitler-whupping, because they hated fascists, and because -- whew! -- Uncle Joe got on the right side of that issue in the end. But the hard fuming left was a marginal element in the larger culture; isolationism on the right was perhaps a larger force. It, too, came around.

Both recognized that America, for all its flaws, was something worth defending, particularly since the alternative was an illiberal nightmare. If anyone suggested that America lacked the moral standing to face off with Adolf because some drinking fountains in the South were off limits to "Coloreds," they got a hard look and rolled eyes. Look, pal, we'll fix America after we've saved it.

That sentiment now seems rather antique.

We have an ill-timed failure of confidence in the West, just when we need to assert what sets us apart from the bloody run of human history. Old Europe has a bad case of clay feet and gives constant examples where this sort of cultural timidity leads. In his heart the average Frenchman believes his values have more to offer the world than those of an Algerian village, but he can't say so. He's paralyzed by the official dogma of cultural egalitarianism. No one believes it, but they're better people for pretending they do.

If an excitable imam of a smoldering Paris suburb demanded the use of Notre Dame to call the faithful to prayer, you suspect the French would deconsecrate the place and turn it into a dance club. (As long as no one's happy, everyone must be satisfied.) They will sell themselves the rope with which they are hanged, and console themselves with the fact that it's made of organic hemp.

And how would you grade their ability to convince the enemy they had no faith in their own civilization? A, no doubt. A plus.
Posted by: Steve || 04/03/2006 10:54 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [17 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The religion of "sword-assisted skull removal"!
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 || 04/03/2006 18:44 Comments || Top||

#2  Remember Curtis LeMay
Posted by: gromgoru || 04/03/2006 22:26 Comments || Top||

#3  I believe most Americans and Rightists for the want the Rogues to end up like postWW2 Germany and Japan - the Left, however, has no probs with the GOP-Right taking the lead in the WOT as long as the GOP-RIght [and democratic America] loses in the end. i.e. America either "volunteers" to give up its sovereignty and endowments, or else is militarily forced to, and be ruled by a coalition of world states that wierdly and mysteriously ends up being dominated by Russia-China, aka Commie Asia, aka Mackinder's World Island. THE LEFT > WAR IS SOCIALISM, EMPIRE IS SOCIALISM. AMERICA CANNOT RULE ITS OWN EMPIRE NOR EVEN HAVE ITS OWN BRAND OF "SOCIALISM" - just as the Clinton-led Dems may be POTUSES becuz they, NOT Dubya andor the GOP, survived "Amer Hiroshima(s)", ASIA = ASIANISM/ORIENTALISM and Communism will rule becuz democratic sovereign America no longer exists. The Commies and Totalitarianists win by default = by force = by necessity, at no costs or at minima costs to Russia-China, as the greatest single/ultimate threat to free America is from within, our society and NPE, notsomuch from the outside. i.e. wars on foreign soil(s). THE FLIP-FLOP DIALECTIC POLICRATIC LEFTIES STAND FOR EVERYONE AND NO ONE, EVERTHING AND NOTHING - in their Holocaust-happy, Regulation-happy, Universal Policratic/Governmentist, Perfectionist Totalitarian Utopian world, "FASCISM" in any form ultimately leads to [LEFT-BASED]COMMUNISM, since MARXISM-LENINISM teaches that "the REVOLUTION/
FINAL CONFLICT" for Proletarian Utopia WILL COME FROM THE RIGHT. And now you another reason why the seemingly agenda-less DemoLeft are RINOS and CINOS, and why Mother Cindy, when she calls for "occupied NOLA" and by extens "occupied America = Amerika" to be liberated/saved from Dubya, is in reality calling for a Stalin-style PURGE of COMMUNIST-LEFTSOCIALIST AMERIKA's FASCIST MINORITY FROM THE COMMIE-LEFTSOCS MAJORITY. By using the label "FASCIST", etc against Dubya and the GOP, the Dems are indirectly belabeling America as a SOCIALIST NATION, NOT A WESTERN OR DEMOCRATIC CAPITALIST ONE - like the true-blue, John Wayne-style, mano-o-mano pols they are, the Dems don't call themselves COMMUNISTS, i.e. the logical or normal ideo antithesis to FASCISTS, BUT INSTEAD BELABEL THEMSELVES, IN FEEL-GOOD, SUPER-PC MANNER, AS "ANTI-FASCISTS" OR ANTI-FAR RIGHT/
CONSERVATIVES, espec the former. True Rightists are not afraid to tell the truth, even iff in the end its conclusions are wrong/problematic, Lefties are! Lefties have no probs deceiving or killing you, etc. as long as they don't get the blame for anything.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 23:47 Comments || Top||

#4  Our problem is: our leaders want Islamofascists to give up arms and seek electoral solutions, notwithstanding the fact that the enemy has been doing that since Maududi (Pakistan founder of Jamaat-i-Islami) fatwahed for same as a tactical means to achieve strategic annihilation of democracy. Take away the dhimmi-prop and al-Taqiyah and Muslims cede all sovereignty to their fictitious deity. By including Islamofascists in our democracy solution, their refusal to participate is not morally wrong; it is incorrect. We need to end all respect for what Muslim believe, and start telling them what to think. Once our (or their) dhimmi class is out of the way, we will act as superiors and Muslims will be treated as inferior savages.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 19:17 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran boasts of testing 2nd new missile
TEHRAN -- Iran said Sunday that it has test-fired what it described as a sonar-evading underwater missile just two days after announcing it fired a new missile that could carry multiple warheads and evade radar systems. The new missile is among the world's fastest and can outpace an enemy warship, Gen. Ali Fadavi of the Revolutionary Guards told state television.

Fadavi said only one other country has a missile that moves underwater as fast as the model he described, which he said has a speed of 328 feet per second. State television showed what it described as the missile being fired. "The missile carries a very powerful warhead that enables it to operate against groups of warships and big submarines," he said. He contended that the vessels that would launch the missile are able to evade detection systems but that, "even if an enemy's warship sonar can detect the missile, no warship can escape from this missile because of its high speed."

The missile's speed would make it about three or four times faster than a normal torpedo and as fast as the world's fastest known underwater missile, the Russian-made VA-111 Shkval, developed in 1995. It was not immediately known if the Iranian missile was based on the Shkval. The new weapon gives Iran "superiority" against any warship in the region, Fadavi said, in a veiled reference to U.S. vessels in the Persian Gulf. It was not immediately clear whether the projectile can carry a nuclear warhead. Fadavi said that the missile launched Sunday was the result of six years of work.

The test, as well as the one described Friday, was part of a week of naval maneuvers in southern Iran along the Persian Gulf and the Sea of Oman. They involve 17,000 members of the Revolutionary Guards. The news agency IRNA said the maneuvers were intended to display "the country's defensive capabilities."

The underwater missile, called the "Hoot," or "whale," could raise concerns over Iran's power in the gulf, a vital corridor for the world's oil supplies and where the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet is based. During Iran's war with Iraq in the 1980s, Iranian ships attacked oil tankers in the waterway. The United States and its Western allies have been watching Iran's progress in missile capabilities with concern. Iran possesses the Shahab-3 missile, capable of carrying a nuclear warhead and hitting U.S. forces in the Middle East.

Iran's military show of force follows increasing international pressure over its nuclear program. On Wednesday, the UN Security Council urged Iran to suspend its uranium-enrichment activities and asked the director of the International Atomic Energy Agency to report back on Iran's compliance within 30 days.

Iran has refused to comply. The video broadcast Sunday showed crew members on a submarine and described them as preparing to launch the missile. Another film clip supposedly showed it being fired into the water from the deck of a ship.
The Revolutionary Guards air force chief called the weapon tested Friday as "a very advanced missile." Iran's envoy to the International Atomic Energy Agency, Aliasghar Soltanieh, told CNN on Sunday that he does not believe that the weapon could carry a nuclear warhead. "The world should not worry because any country has its own self-defense conventional military activities," he said.
Posted by: Steve || 04/03/2006 10:43 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [15 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Why 'boast'? Sounds like an attempt to deter attack by US. Previous 'signals' from Teheran seemed to actually be daring/inviting US attack. If that was still the case, why advertise your 'new' ability to inflict major damage on your potential foe?
Possibilities:
1) Boast is not true, and is intended to cause US to pursue more difficult attack course.
2) Boast is true, and is indicative of some change in Teheran thinking (if such a word can be used regarding Teheran leadership.) If so, what changed and why?
Posted by: Glenmore || 04/03/2006 11:03 Comments || Top||

#2  Internal consumption. Indication of international support. Hope for last minute change in plans making errors more likely. Faith in Allah.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 11:24 Comments || Top||

#3  So if the press is reporting this, that means W. can attack anytime, since we know they have them?
After all, the press would'nt decieve us or report anything that is just propaganda.
Posted by: plainslow || 04/03/2006 12:05 Comments || Top||

#4  The underwater missile, called the "Hoot,"

It's a Hoot, all right.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski || 04/03/2006 13:14 Comments || Top||

#5 

THIS SHOULD BE THE STANDARD
For all Iranian Rockets
Posted by: BigEd || 04/03/2006 15:59 Comments || Top||

#6  What are people's thoughts on how Iran was able to field this weapon? General Fadavi claims that it took 6 years to produce, which suggests that it was acquired after the 1999 IDEX arms exhibition (where it was aggressively marketed by Russian arms dealers), reversed engineered and indigenously produced. But are Iranian engineers capable of reverse-engineering such an advanced weapon?
Posted by: GradStudent06 || 04/03/2006 16:39 Comments || Top||

#7  Large grain of salt.

Big freakin' mountain of salt!
Posted by: Chuck Simmins || 04/03/2006 16:45 Comments || Top||

#8  But are Iranian engineers capable of reverse-engineering such an advanced weapon?

I say yes. The Skval is essentially a 6000lb unguided solid fueled (tech the Iranians also bought from the neo-Soviets) underwater rocket. While it incorporates some neat hydrodynamic theory, there is little high tech manufacturing in it (i.e. sensors, processors, software). The Iranians are more than capable of copying it after disassembling one of them.

It does allow small massed fast attack craft to launch ship killers, that cannot be spoofed, from outside the range Phalanx and machine guns. Thus requiring the US Navy to attack them farther out with helicopters or ship's cannon, and maybe Sea Sparrows and IR guided RAM missiles.

BTW, an anti-torpedo torpedo. The navy tested one 10 or 15 years ago. I wonder whatever became of it.
Posted by: ed || 04/03/2006 18:18 Comments || Top||

#9  From FT.com:

Iran’s war games see oil futures rise by $2 Crude oil prices jumped to their highest level since Hurricane Katrina amid uncertainty about Nigerian supplies and as Iran announced it had tested new weapons during war games in the Strait of Hormuz.
Posted by: 3dc || 04/03/2006 19:58 Comments || Top||

#10  An underwater missile that "can outpace an enemy warship." Would that be a ..... torpedo?
Posted by: Besoeker || 04/03/2006 21:42 Comments || Top||

#11  an Islamic Torpedo!
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 21:45 Comments || Top||

#12  No surprise here - just more indicia/evidencia that, within the context of defeating America's future GMD, Russia's alleged "real" anti-GMD superweapon is a long-range, standoff underwater weapon capable of extreme self-defense maneuvers, and remote or independent control, and which can "pop-up" like a SLCM/SUBROC near its target or in final attack phase. Iff we were back in WW2, its predecessor would be the famed, but slow-moving, Japanese "suicide" KAITEN? subs. Traditional Cold War, land-based, ICBM strikes, includ MRV/MIRV-capable, MIGHT NOW be relegated to MOSTLY Second-Strike/Follow-On weapons, with post-Cold War priority now given to TERROR = COMMANDO-SAPPER STRIKES, LR Bomber, and UW-Sub = Arsenal Ship-based land- and naval attack!?
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 21:46 Comments || Top||

#13  Ok Iran, so you've got a fast torpedo. We've got Halliburton. Remember Bam do you?
Posted by: Besoeker || 04/03/2006 21:47 Comments || Top||


Iran to test more missiles in Persian Gulf manoeuvres
Tehran - A top Iranian military official said Monday that Iran will test another powerful torpedo and more missiles during the ongoing manoeuvres in the Persian Gulf, national IRIB television reported. 'Another powerful torpedo made by the Revolutionary Guards will be tested today during the war games,' Rear Admiral Mohammad-Ebrahim Dehghani told IRIB, adding more missiles would be test-fired within days.

Iran's paramilitary Islamic Revolution's Guard Corps (IRGC) on Sunday said that an underwater missile was successfully tested during the Persian Gulf naval manoeuvre. Deputy commander of the navy forces of the IRGC, General Ali Fadavi, said the homemade missile could hit a target with a maximum speed of 100 metres per second, but without disclosing further details.

'The Iranian people would have important news that will make them proud,' IRIB quoted Rear Admiral Dehghani as saying. The underwater missile is the second one tested within 72 hours. On Friday, a new missile was successfully tested during the same naval manoeuvre. The missile was able to carry multiple warheads, simultaneously hit several targets and to escape radar systems.
The press seems to be mixing up missiles and torpedos. Or maybe it's the Iranians who are confused.
The week-long 'Holy Prophet' naval manoeuvre started Friday on the northern coasts of the Persian Gulf with more than 17,000 armed forces participating. The manoeuvre came less than two days after the United Nations Security Council issued a deadline calling on Iran to suspend all uranium enrichment activities within 30 days.

Iran's Shahab-3 missiles reportedly have a range of 1,300 to 2,000 kilometres and are also in the hands of the IRGC. They have caused grave concern in Israel, which is within their range.

Tehran has assured the international community that the missiles are for defensive purposes only. Last year, Iran announced that it had successfully tested a new engine using solid fuel to increase the range.
Posted by: Steve || 04/03/2006 10:35 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [16 views] Top|| File under:

#1  My fear is that they will next uncover the secrets to manufacturing the "20,000 mm LePage Glue Gun"! Said gun, as written about in Heller's "Catch-22" can glue togegether an entire formation of planes in flight!
Posted by: borgboy || 04/03/2006 15:13 Comments || Top||

#2  This is proof Bill Gates is helping them. No sooner they purchase something, they have a newer and more advanced one they are told they can buy.
Posted by: plainslow || 04/03/2006 15:41 Comments || Top||

#3 
Posted by: BigEd || 04/03/2006 15:57 Comments || Top||

#4  This is proof Bill Gates is helping them.

Then we're good for at least two easy wins.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 16:00 Comments || Top||

#5  Can we test some too?
Posted by: DMFD || 04/03/2006 20:19 Comments || Top||

#6  The SHKVAL is a dual-use, nuke-capable system, so any IRAN-specific indigenous derivatives will also be dual-use, ergo HANS BLIX says today Iran is 5 + years away from a nuke bomb. BLIX > "Go home, people, its only Uranium, NOT PLUTONIUM. NO WMDS IN IRAN = NORTH KOREA, and Marvin Martian has NOT lost his Explosive Space Modulator-r-r-r" becuz of a certain Fascist Wascally Wabbit".
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 21:54 Comments || Top||


Africa Horn
Sudan Bars UN Offical From Troubled Region
Khartoum, 3 April (AKI) - The Sudanese government on Monday prevented the United Nations' top humanitarian official from visiting Sudan's ethnically troubled Darfur region. Jan Egeland said in an interview with the BBC he thought the government did not want him to see the latest wave of "ethnic cleansing" against black Africans in South Darfur. He said thousands of people had fled after 60 villages were attacked by pro-government Janjaweed militias.

The BBC cited a Sudanese foreign ministry spokesman, Jamal Ibrahim, saying that the government had asked Egeland to delay his visit because it coincided with a holiday to mark the birthday of the Muslim Prophet Mohammed. He said that in the light of the Danish cartoons row, it would not be sensitive or safe for a Norwegian such as Egeland to visit.

Egeland said the Sudanese government, guerrilla forces and ethnic militia groups were all to blame for the current instability in Darfur where he had been scheduled to meet local people and aid workers assisting civilians who have been displaced by he conflict.
Posted by: Steve || 04/03/2006 10:22 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Missing from the story: Did Mr. Egeland say "Oh. Okay" and go home?
Posted by: eLarson || 04/03/2006 13:00 Comments || Top||

#2  Speaking of the Profit,two weekends ago I saw a big group of (Shia, I think, but not entirely sure) Muslims commemorating his death...in Lafayette Sq. Park across from the White House. Lots of chanting and this tall creepy black sail contraption that they furled and unfurled. The (mostly black clad) wimminz and the men mixed freely, and there were no protest/demonstration type signs. I saw a very few gleaming white turbans on the elders. I was there near the end, a few of the group was relaxing with Popeye's fried chicken on the benches nearby.
Posted by: Seafarious || 04/03/2006 14:15 Comments || Top||

#3  of course, with the Popeyes near the White House being the 43,987th holiest place in Islam
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 15:31 Comments || Top||

#4  Jeebus, there's no way Popeye's can be KKKoran Kosher.
Posted by: 6 || 04/03/2006 15:53 Comments || Top||


Arabia
Wanted Pakistani Militant Leader Detained
Dubai, 3 April (AKI) - The reported leader of the Baluchistan Liberation Army (BLA), Ghazain Marri, was arrested last month in Dubai, on the request of the Pakistani government. The BLA is a separatist group fighting for the independence of the south-western Pakistani province of Baluchistan. According to a report on the Dubai-based daily Gulf News, an unnamed UAE official confirmed that Ghazain was detained on 22 March "as a criminal wanted by his country," and that the request for his arrest was made through official channels.

The report also stated that Ghazain remains in custody in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), while the attorney-general examines the documents submitted by the Pakistani authorities with their the extradition request. Pakistan and the UAE have agreement for the extradition of criminals and the exchange of information. The official quoted on Gulf News said that Ghazain is wanted in Pakistan "on murder and terrorism charges".
Posted by: Steve || 04/03/2006 10:19 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Like the German Shepherd in the old veterinarian joke, Ghazain's just getting his nails clipped.
Posted by: Zenster || 04/03/2006 14:30 Comments || Top||

#2  LOL! Thisn a family blog Zman.
Posted by: 6 || 04/03/2006 15:54 Comments || Top||


Caribbean-Latin America
Venezuelans Train for Civilian Militias
The women, some trembling, grasp the assault rifles and awkwardly lower themselves into sniper positions as they take aim and fire at white targets in the distance. Dressed in jeans and sneakers, the women are the unlikely heart of a new civilian militia being trained as Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez warns his country must be ready for a 'war of resistance' against the United States. The U.S. government dismisses Chavez's claims of a possible invasion as ridiculous. But Chavez insists Venezuelans must be prepared for anything, citing a short-lived 2002 coup that briefly unseated him.

Housewives, students, construction workers, social workers and many unemployed have signed up for the Territorial Guard. Lt. Col. Rafael Angel Faria Villalobos, who led the training for 900 volunteers on their first day of bootcamp Saturday, said 20 weeks of instruction will turn them into resistance fighters prepared to defend their communities in the event of a conflict. 'Those who come here have never fired a shot in their lives,' he said.

Ten at a time, the volunteers lined up as officers coached them to fire the military's standard-issue Belgian FAL assault rifles from standing, kneeling and prone positions at numbered targets in an open field. Territorial Guard volunteers aren't issued weapons, but commanders said guns would be made available in emergency situations. 'It was exciting, too good,' gushed Yomaira Alas, a 28-year-old housewife, after firing the gun for the first time.

Officials say the force will be capable of defending communities, protecting hospitals and schools, keeping order and preventing looting. Some Chavez opponents have expressed concern the force could be used to quell internal dissent. But soldiers who led Saturday's drills made clear U.S. troops were the hypothetical enemy as men and women swarmed across an obstacle course of barbed wire, burning tires and concrete fortifications. 'Kill the gringo! That gringo is taking away your women,' yelled a soldier as he tossed a man a rifle to butt a target - a military uniform stuffed with straw. A siren wailed while the acrid smell of smoke hung in the air.

Besides the Territorial Guard, Chavez also has called for an army reserve of 1 million fighters and has sealed arms deals to supply regular soldiers with 100,000 new Kalashnikov assault rifles and helicopters from Russia. Despite Chavez's warnings of a possible U.S. invasion, many trainees said they feel it's a remote possibility. There were light moments during the drills as some snapped photos, stumbled on the obstacle course amid laughter and talked excitedly after target practice.

'I'm having a great time,' said Sujeidy Pereira, 25, through smiles. Giggling, she added: 'Fatherland or death.'
How sweet
Posted by: Steve || 04/03/2006 09:09 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Officials say the force will be capable of defending communities, protecting hospitals and schools, keeping order and preventing looting. Some Chavez opponents have expressed concern the force could be used to quell internal dissent.

And one day they could break bad on El Presidente, himself.

"Remember: you are only Presidente for life"
Posted by: eLarson || 04/03/2006 10:13 Comments || Top||

#2  "here and there, the Yankees will die" is what the Sandinistas used to chant, as they prepared for US invasion.

Except we never invaded. And the Sandinistas fell from power, and havent returned.

Chavez should be wary of that example.
Posted by: liberalhawk || 04/03/2006 11:43 Comments || Top||

#3  Remember, folks: it ISN'T a death squad unless its pro-American.
Posted by: Secret Master || 04/03/2006 12:46 Comments || Top||

#4  I'm pretty sure arming the pesants will prove to be a mistake, Hugo.
Posted by: mojo || 04/03/2006 15:08 Comments || Top||

#5  Assuming we did invade, I think someone else mentioned we had a 500-1 kill ratio against Sadr's militia. Militias might be good for keeping your own people down but they're not really effective as a military force.
Posted by: rjschwarz || 04/03/2006 18:45 Comments || Top||

#6  COASTTOCOASTAM.com had reference to a UT instructor-scholar named ED PIANKA? whom argued that 90% [or more?] of the world's human population must be eliminated in order for the earth to recover from various enviro crises, both natural and espec those caused by mankind. CTC's description/links all indic that Pianka's audience clapped and cheered when he finished his presentation. GUESS CHAVEZ HAS HIGH CONFIDENCE THAT HE WILL BE PART OF THE SURVIVING 10% [or less], INSTEAD OF THE APPROX 5.8Bilyuuuhn [or more]TO BE ELIMINATED.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 22:25 Comments || Top||


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Bomb Explodes in Jordanian Shop; 2 Dead
A bomb exploded Monday at a shop selling Iraqi scrap metal in Jordan, killing two people and wounding four, the official Jordanian news agency reported. The blast occurred when a prospective buyer was looking at merchandise in the shop in Khalidiyah, about 40 miles north of the capital, Amman. The buyer and shop owner died instantly, the Petra news agency reported. The shop sells iron rods and other scrap imported from Iraq.
Including unexploded ordnance, it seems
Jordan prohibited the importation of Iraqi scrap metal early last year following reports that Jordanian scrap yards contained parts of Iraqi missiles that could have been contaminated with radioactive material.
Posted by: Steve || 04/03/2006 09:04 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [11 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: WoT
C-5 Crashes At Dover AFB
DOVER, Del. - A C-5 cargo plane with 17 people aboard crashed near the Dover Air Force Base Monday morning, according to a state public safety official.
There is no word on fatalities but Department of Public Safety assistant director Allen Metheny said some injuries have been reported. Some patients are being taken to a local hospital and others were being taken to a trauma center.

It's not clear if the plane was landing or taking off when it crashed around 6:45 a.m. The plane broke into three pieces, with the cockpit separated from the fuselage and a wing shattered. It wasn't immediately clear whether the plane was taking off or landing when it crashed. The C-5 is one of the Air Force's largest cargo planes and is designed to carry very heavy cargo loads on transcontinental deployments. More as it comes in, photo at Drudge Report. She lost her tail and nose came off just in front of wing. No fire, amazingly.

UPDATE: According to initial reports, it had just taken off and had some indications of a problem, said Col. Kate Haddock, spokeswoman at the Pentagon's Joint Chiefs of Staff. It turned back to land and fell short of the runway, she said. Maj. Ange Keskey of the Air Mobility Command at Scott Air Force Base in Illinois confirmed 17 people were aboard and said the crash is being investigated.

Additional: Pentagon sources told CNN the aircraft "declared an in-flight emergency for a No. 2 engine flameout." The C-5 jet, assigned to the 436th Air Wing at Dover AFB, was being operated by an Air National Guard unit, officials told CNN.

The C-5 Galaxy, the largest aircraft in the U.S. military inventory, came down short of the runway at Dover about 6:30 a.m., the officials said. The Federal Aviation Administration said the plane had taken off from Dover and crashed while attempting to return.

Allen Metheny, assistant director in the Delaware Department of Public Safety, said some people were taken to hospitals with injuries, according to The Associated Press. Television images showed the plane had broken into at least three pieces, with the cockpit separated at a right angle from the rest of the fuselage. The broken-off tail assembly was several hundred yards away, AP reported.
Posted by: Steve || 04/03/2006 08:30 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  No fire, amazingly.
Probably landing then, it would be full of fuel on takeoff, landing it's near empty.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 04/03/2006 10:58 Comments || Top||

#2  Also heard that all are alive! I was always amazed when I watched one of them fly.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 04/03/2006 11:23 Comments || Top||

#3  it would be full of fuel on takeoff, landing it's near empty.

C-5s often take off with minimum fuel load, meeting a tanker soon after. Easier to lift that big bird full of cargo off with lighter fuel load.
Posted by: Steve || 04/03/2006 12:28 Comments || Top||

#4  Loss of engine on takeoff is purty bad but evidently they got altitude and setup for landing, on 3 which shouldn't have been so hard, bet it was more than a single engine failure.
Posted by: 6 || 04/03/2006 15:59 Comments || Top||

#5  DOVER, Del. — A huge military cargo plane crashed shortly after takeoff at Dover Air Force Base on Monday, breaking apart in a belly flop that drenched some of the 17 people aboard with fuel but caused no fire or life-threatening injuries. “It’s a miracle. It’s absolutely a miracle,” said Lt. Col. Mark Ruse, commander of Dover’s 436th Air Wing Civil Engineering squadron.

Military officials said the C-5 Galaxy, the military’s largest plane at more than six stories high and 247 feet long, developed problems soon after taking off for Spain about 6:30 a.m. It crashed just short of the runway while attempting to return to the base and broke in two behind the cockpit. The tail assembly landed several hundred yards away, and an engine was thrown forward by the impact. “It looks like it kind of slid along the ground almost like a water landing of sorts,” Ruse said.

Fourteen of the injured, taken to a Dover hospital, were covered with jet fuel and had to be decontaminated in the parking lot, but officials said none of their injuries was considered life threatening. Three others were taken to Christiana Care in Newark, said hospital spokeswoman Sharon Justice. The hospital would not release further information, but the military said none of the crash survivors’ lives was in danger.

The C-5 was being flown by a reserve crew from the 512th Airlift Wing, said Capt. John Sheets of the Air Mobility Command at Scott Air Force Base in Illinois. All flights from the base were suspended as emergency crews, some in hazardous materials suits, combed through the wreckage in a light rain under overcast skies. Some sprayed foam on the left wing, which had lost its engine, while others removed the remaining fuel from the plane.
Posted by: Steve || 04/03/2006 16:29 Comments || Top||

#6  There's got to be more than a one-engine flameout. Go through the emergency checklest. Set up for a landing.

We had an E3-B AWACS crash at Elmendorf AFB on Sept 22, 1995. Killed all the crew. The #1 engine ingested some birds, blew up, pieces took out #2 engine. She was full of fuel and rolled over on her left wing and became a smoking hole.
It was right near the highway. That black smoke was an awful sight.

These people in the C-5A were very very lucky.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 04/03/2006 16:41 Comments || Top||

#7  The pictures resembled those of a B-52H that crashed at Wright Patt in 1974. The BUFF had lost hydraulics and had neither rudder nor elevator control. The pilots controlled it by the engines, up and down by varying power settings and left and right by differential thrust. After flying around for 8 hours to burn off fuel to get to landing weight, the plane was attempting to land when it suddenly pitched nose down into the runway. The nose broke off and rolled off the runway. The engine cables sheared and put all 8 engines to max power. The remainder of the plane went straight up, did a wingover and impacted 500 yards down the runway in a fireball. It was almost 30 minutes before anyone noticed the nose off to the side of the runway. All 7 crew (6 + 1 IP) were alive, but hanging upside down in their seats. Only the pilot in the IP seat was hurt(a compression fracture). Pilot in Command, Major Charlie Brown.
Posted by: RWV || 04/03/2006 20:30 Comments || Top||

#8  Something to thank our "intelligent designer" about tonight for sure.
Posted by: Besoeker || 04/03/2006 21:36 Comments || Top||

#9  I think this is the third C5 to crash, at least that I know of. Very lucky crew, other two were not so lucky. Hope they figure out the cause soon.
Posted by: 49 pan || 04/03/2006 21:40 Comments || Top||

#10  Agree with STEVE - here on Guam one routinely sees more tankers flying around Andersen USAFB and WESTPAC than transports, fighters or bombers.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 22:09 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
C-SPAN: 7.48 am Zinni calls on Rumsfeld to resign.
Watching Washington Journal right now Zinni called on Rumsfeld to resign. Praised Cohen and Clinton.

Promoting his new book with this opening bombbast.
Posted by: 3dc || 04/03/2006 07:47 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Zinni was against the Iraq war from the beginning. He's also close to a number of Arab leaders. No real surprises here.
Posted by: Jonathan || 04/03/2006 9:49 Comments || Top||

#2  Who?
Posted by: mojo || 04/03/2006 10:42 Comments || Top||

#3  That's what I said. That's what he wants us to find out with his publicity stunt. I'm not even going to click to find out who he is, but then, I was never his target audience to begin with.
Posted by: 2b || 04/03/2006 11:10 Comments || Top||

#4  I echo mojo.

"Who?"
Posted by: DarthVader || 04/03/2006 11:41 Comments || Top||

#5  I call on Nanci Pelosi to take a midol.
Posted by: Secret Master || 04/03/2006 13:49 Comments || Top||

#6  I call on the tides to reconsider the comming in thing.

/goodman - badking
Posted by: Canute || 04/03/2006 16:14 Comments || Top||

#7 

You mean the Pixar Lemur from "Dinosaur" wants Rummy out?

OUTRAGEOUS
Posted by: BigEd || 04/03/2006 17:47 Comments || Top||


Down Under
Accused Aussie terrorist says he was 'framed'
One of three men arrested on terrorism related charges on Friday has told the Melbourne Magistrates Court he was framed by the Australian Federal Police (AFP). Twenty-four-year-old Bassam Raad of Brunswick, 21-year-old Majer Raad of Coburg and 26-year-old Shoue Hammoud of Hadfield have been charged with belonging to a terrorist group and intentionally providing it with funding. They were arrested on Friday and appeared in court today.

The lawyer for two told the court his clients would not be applying for bail.
The other, Raad, said he would be representing himself and he had sacked his solicitors. Raad told the court he will eventually be found guilty because of his religion. When he entered the dock, he made a lewd hand gesture in the direction of AFP officers sitting in court.

Prosecutors alleged he is one of a group of men committed to carrying out a terrorist attack in Australia. Raad told the court he has been framed by the AFP and that in the legal system his Muslim faith will work against him. He was refused bail; all three men have been remanded in custody until a committal hearing in June.
Posted by: Oztrailan || 04/03/2006 05:19 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [12 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Raad sounds like he needs to fall in the shower, several times.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 04/03/2006 11:47 Comments || Top||

#2  He also said that he was getting around in an unlicensed, unregistered $200 car, so how could he afford a machine gun?
A gift from Saudi Arabia, you know, Zak-ah perhaps!
Posted by: tipper || 04/03/2006 11:50 Comments || Top||

#3  "Raad told the court he will eventually be found guilty because of his religion."

I'm going to have to agree with Raad on that one. Not in the discriminatory sense but I think his religion/ideology most likely played a part here.
Posted by: DepotGuy || 04/03/2006 13:29 Comments || Top||

#4 
His Muslim faith will work against him? Is that cuz his Muslim faith teaches him to become a terrorist, I wonder?

Australia never should have let these types in, IMO. These guys are just playing on the Christian protocols that inform poltics and culture in the West: fairness, egalitarianism, tolerance -- foreign concepts to these foreigners.

Posted by: ex-lib || 04/03/2006 19:15 Comments || Top||


Papuan asylum seekers arrive in Australia
A group of asylum seekers from the Papua province of Indonesia have arrived in Melbourne. Forty-two men, women and children from the Indonesian province were recently granted temporary protection visas and they will settle in Melbourne.
The group will be given benefits until they find accommodation and jobs. They have been staying on Christmas Island since their arrival in January.

One of the men granted refugee status says he has spent years in jail and seen his friends killed in the province's struggle for independence. Herman Wainggai says he was jailed twice for protesting against the Indonesian military occupation of West Papua. Another man is still on Christmas Island awaiting the outcome of his visa application. The lawyer representing the group says young people are being targetted by the Indonesian military for abuse and mistreatment. Several of them are children who are here without their parents.

Refugee lawyer David Manne says while he cannot comment on the specifics, there is evidence young people are being singled out for abuse. "One of the things that parents of course guard against, is their young ones being targetted and certainly, I should say one other thing and that is there is excellent care being taken of those young people who have fled to safety in Australia," he said.
Posted by: Oztrailan || 04/03/2006 05:16 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:


Jakarta threatens to axe migration deal with Australia
INDONESIAN President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has called for a review of all cooperation with Australia, including on illegal migration, amid escalating tensions over Canberra's decision to grant Papuan asylum-seekers temporary visas. "Relations between Indonesia and Australia are entering a difficult time that is full of challenges," Dr Yudhoyono said today.

An infuriated Indonesia recalled its ambassador from Canberra last month after Australia granted visas to 42 asylum-seekers from the remote province of Papua, where a low-profile independence struggle has been waged for decades. The group, which arrived in Melbourne today, has alleged that the Indonesian military is perpetrating "genocide" there. Indonesia strenuously denies the claim.

Dr Yudhoyono also described a cartoon depicting him rutting a Papuan dog published in The Australian on Saturday as "obscene" and said it could spark public anger. "A row over cartoons is not the solution, but is the problem," he said, calling for Indonesians to stay calm.

Dr Yudhoyono said Australia's "inappropriate, unrealistic" decision had prompted the need to review relations between the neighbours. "There is a need for the two governments to conduct dialogue again, serious and intensive diplomatic meetings, to review a strategic and comprehensive framework for cooperation and friendship between Indonesia and Australia for now and for the future," he said. "We should review again the various agreements we have agreed on, for example, cooperation in the field of illegal migration."

Indonesia has frequently been used as a stepping stone for illegal migrants to enter Australia.

Australia has insisted that the granting of the visas did not mean it supported Papuan independence, an extremely sensitive issue in Indonesia after its former province of East Timor voted to break away in 1999. Indonesia took over Papua, a former Dutch colony, in the 1960s.

Dr Yudhoyono thanked Australia for backing the archipelago nation's territorial integrity but said the support needed to be reflected in practice. "The really clear message is that Indonesia wishes and really wants to enter into relations and cooperation with Australia and other countries but without compromising on the sovereignty and honor of Indonesia as a nation," he said. "Indonesia will not tolerate whatever elements, in whichever country, including in Australia, that clearly provide support and play for a separatist movement in Papua," he added.

Prime Minister John Howard, who has built a strong relationship with Dr Yudhoyono - the Indonesian President once cracked jokes about Mr Howard's birthday at an address in Canberra last year - also said Sunday relations were going through a "difficult patch".

The tensions over Papua led to a tit-for-tat cartoon campaign in newspapers, with a drawing in an Indonesian newspaper depicting Howard and Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer as fornicating dingoes. This was followed by the reply in The Australian on Saturday.
Posted by: Oztrailan || 04/03/2006 05:07 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Divorces always get so ugly. But these two don't love each other and have little in common anymore. Best just to admit the relationship is sooo over and move on, something I think Australia is more than happy to do.
Posted by: 2b || 04/03/2006 11:12 Comments || Top||

#2  Looks like conquest by illegal immigration is about to resume. But this time in Australia.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 04/03/2006 19:35 Comments || Top||

#3  When the Aussies have war games, the bad guys always look strangely Indonesian.
Posted by: RWV || 04/03/2006 21:01 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
The Twilight of Objectivity
Posted by: tipper || 04/03/2006 03:41 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [12 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Listen to Dogs,
I think you missed the gist of the article.
The sub line was what it was about:
"How opinion journalism could change the face of the news."
Posted by: tipper || 04/03/2006 10:07 Comments || Top||

#2  "Objectivity" was an artifact of the two world wars (the government had a monopoly on all of the lead stories and if the news outlets didn't self-censor, the government would cut off all access) and the fair time doctrine (which died when it became apparent that cable, satellite, etc were providing more than enough bandwidth for everyone to express his opinion). Before WWI all newspapers were partisan. The pendulum has swung back to where it was a century ago.

The bi-partisan consensus is dead. Long live rancorous debate.
Posted by: 11A5S || 04/03/2006 10:33 Comments || Top||

#3  ltd ot? oh no.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 10:49 Comments || Top||

#4  Someone has advocated the EXPLICIT return of newsmedia to partisian support, like in France, where newspapers are explicitly labelled left and right wing.

Lefties seek for, and thrive, in environments with default assumptions, one of which is that the media are impartial. Declaring themselves is like the vampire coming out into the sunlight...
Posted by: Ptah || 04/03/2006 12:42 Comments || Top||

#5  11A5S, yes pre-WW1 all papers were partisan but the news groups such as AP and Rueters were strictly non-partisan in order to sell their stories to as many of those partisan papers as possible. So international news generally was non-partisan.
Posted by: rjschwarz || 04/03/2006 18:58 Comments || Top||

#6  Plus ca change, plus ca reste la meme.
Posted by: Thinemp Whimble2412 || 04/03/2006 19:46 Comments || Top||

#7  Erasmus proved that the more learned the academic, the more ignorant. For further proof, I submit 2 of the most learned jackasses ever to pollute Academia: Fred Halliday and Graham Fuller. Fuller claims to speak 16 languages, but that doesn't give him insight into offering solutions other than the West dhimmi up to Islamofascism. Before Martin Kramer took a hard line on the "what threat?" mentality, he wrote this on those 2 clowns:
http://www.geocities.com/martinkramerorg/IslamicThreat.htm

Paul Johnson and Niall Ferguson openly advocate a return to Imperialism and Colonialism, over those cultures that need to be re-worked by their superiors. They don't get invited to the same Anti-CLASH conventions where John Esposito, Karen Armstrong, Bernard Lewis, Fuller, ad nauseum, etc can be found.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 4:42 Comments || Top||


Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Chechnya leader's aides laugh off sauna sex video
His public image as a devout Muslim warrior who frets about the morals of Chechnya's population as much as he worries about separatist rebels has been carefully constructed by spin-doctors.

But Chechnya's pro-Moscow Prime Minister Ramzan Kadyrov has suffered a public relations reversal after allegedly becoming ensnared in an embarrassing sex scandal that has made his increasingly loud moral preaching look rather hollow.

Though the scandal has received little play in the Russian media, it is potentially embarrassing for President Vladimir Putin since the Kremlin has chosen Ramzan as its point man in the strife-torn republic.

Ramzan's aides have laughed off the scandal, which involves grainy video footage of a man identical in appearance and voice to Ramzan cavorting in a sauna with two prostitutes, as a "provocation."

The Chechen government publicly dismissed the clip and a criminal case into 'defamation of a government official' has reportedly been opened.

True or not, the footage is damaging for Ramzan, 29, since he is married with children and has made a name for himself by criticising the media for broadcasting "immoral programmes" and by urging Chechen women to wear headscarves.

In recent months he has made much of his Muslim credentials by outlawing gambling as a "corrupting influence," clamping down on alcohol sales, promising to build the biggest mosque in the region and by partially introducing Shariah law.

Indeed, so concerned is he to uphold the honour of Chechnya's women that he was recently reported to have issued an order for women's mobile phones to be monitored to ensure that young wives are not in contact with ex-boyfriends.

The offending sauna footage was shot on a mobile phone and first appeared on a Chechen rebel website.

The rebels regard Ramzan as a 'phoney Muslim' who is trying to hijack their religious beliefs to quell separatist sentiment.

Anna Politkovskaya, a veteran Russian reporter who specialises in Chechnya, has added credibility to the clip's authenticity by claiming that she, too, has been sent video footage of a man identical in appearance to Ramzan.

Her claims go beyond debauched infidelity.

"On them (the clips)," she told a website, "were the murders of federal servicemen by Kadyrovtsy (Ramzan's private army), and also kidnappings directed by Kadyrov.

These are very serious things; on the basis of them, a criminal case and investigation should follow.

This could allow this person to be brought to justice, something he has long richly deserved." However Ramzan has become too powerful for the Kremlin to remove easily and is expected in time to become the republic's president, a job his father did before he was assassinated.

Yesterday he was back on state TV - ironically he was talking about a beauty contest he is organising for 200 Chechen girls.
Posted by: tipper || 04/03/2006 03:29 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:


Africa Subsaharan
Longer version on the rise and fall of Taylor
ON Christmas Eve, 1989, a small force of about 100 men led by an obscure former Liberian government official crossed the border from Ivory Coast into Nimba County in northern Liberia.

According to local legend, recounted by the Africa scholar Stephen Ellis in his book "The Mask of Anarchy," a baby born in Monrovia, Liberia's capital, miraculously spoke English straight from the womb. It told its mother that a rain of death would fall Christmas Day, and that it did not want to live in such a vicious world, and promptly drew its last breath.

On Dec. 25, in a driving rain, the news that Charles Taylor had attacked Liberia reached Monrovia. As the child predicted, a rain of death soon drenched West Africa. It would last 14 years.

On Wednesday, with the apocalyptic deluge at a halt, Mr. Taylor was arrested on the tarmac at Monrovia's airport and whisked immediately here, where he sat in a jail cell at an international court set up to try suspected war criminals in Sierra Leone's brutal, decade-long civil war, which Mr. Taylor is accused of starting and supporting.

In Mr. Taylor's rise and fall, one can glean the story of West Africa, a history of death, turmoil and tragedy. In many ways he was the perfect man to exploit the drawn-out ending of one era — the slow demise of nationalist Big Man politics — and the beginning of another, in which warlords presiding over small, nonideological insurgencies played havoc across much of the region, enriching themselves and laying waste to their homelands.

Indeed, the term Big Man, an overworked cliché of African reportage, seems almost too small in describing Mr. Taylor, and calling him a warlord fails to grasp the breadth of his ambition.

It was his blend of the two roles that proved so diabolical and deadly. By the time he was pushed from power in 2003, more than 300,000 people had died in conflicts he ignited. His forces and allies had looted Liberia and Sierra Leone, and parts of their neighbors, down to the studs. Millions of people had been scattered into half a dozen nations around West Africa. From Liberia alone he is believed to have stolen at least $100 million as president between 1997 and 2003.

"Taylor had a map he carried around with him called Greater Liberia," said Douglas Farah, an analyst and author who has written extensively about Mr. Taylor's links of criminal and terrorist networks. "It included parts of Guinea, diamond fields in Sierra Leone. It wasn't something abstract to him. He had a very clear idea of what he was trying to achieve. He had a grandiose plan, and he almost succeeded."

Mr. Taylor was born outside Monrovia, his mother a housekeeper from the Gola tribe and his father a teacher descended from the returned slaves who founded Liberia.

He was a student activist in the 1970's, railing against the corrupt regime of William Tolbert. Then he went to Bentley College in Massachusetts to study economics. He returned to Liberia in 1980, just in time to see a young army sergeant, Samuel Doe, topple Mr. Tolbert's government, murdering the president.

Mr. Taylor immediately insinuated himself into Mr. Doe's clique, and eventually took control of the government's purchasing arm. He fled back to the United States after falling out with Mr. Doe, taking with him $1 million he allegedly embezzled from the government.

He was jailed in Massachusetts, but escaped in 1985 by sawing through the bars of his jail cell. Once back in Africa, he met with Liberian dissidents in Ghana and then made common cause with revolutionaries in Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast and, most critically, Libya, where Colonel Muammar al-Qaddafi was plotting and supporting a continent-wide revolution. In Libya, he trained in camps that also trained men who would later play starring roles in the great African tragedies of the 1990's; they included Sierra Leone's Foday Sankoh, whose rebel movement would become best known for hacking off the arms and legs of civilians, and the Congo's Laurent Kabila, the central figure in a complex civil war that ultimately killed four million people.

With money and arms from Libya and the political and financial backing of Burkina Faso and Ivory Coast, he crossed into Liberia in December 1989. He had never been a soldier and had only a small force behind him. Still, he managed to wreak havoc on an almost unprecedented scale and dominate much of the region for more than a decade. How did he do it?

In part, Mr. Taylor was adept at using and even creating the language of his times. He blended a militant pan-Africanism that called for bloody revolutions against neo-colonialism with a muscular vernacular in which might was unapologetically right. The new pose fit well with the region's mood.

"There is a very strong current within West African diplomacy which basically says you make a deal with the strongest actor because if you don't that person will go back to the bush and fight or otherwise destabilize the situation," said Mike McGovern, an anthropologist with the International Crisis Group who has studied West Africa's conflicts.

At the heart of Taylor's horrific genius was an ability to manipulate West Africa's political, social and cultural values, seeming to smash deep taboos while subtly co-opting them for his purposes.

In societies where power had always come with age and young people grew frustrated under the authority of elders, he espoused a smash-and-grab philosophy. Unable to marry without "bride wealth," or dowries, and lacking means to start their own lives until their fathers and uncles died and passed on wealth and land, these young men proved ideal foot soldiers.

His commanders would force boys to kill their parents or other family members, breaking the ultimate taboo, then ply them with methamphetamines, marijuana and other drugs to keep their killing instincts keen. Often their pay came in the form of a license to rape and plunder.

Yet even as he undermined traditional respect for elders, he subtly substituted himself in those elders' place, simultaneously enthralling and enslaving a generation of young boys who slaughtered on his behalf.

This explains his supporters' chilling election campaign cry in 1997: "He killed my ma, he killed my pa, I'll vote for him."

Mr. Taylor also co-opted the secret societies that dominate life in many West African countries, like the Poro hunting society in Liberia. This gave him access to a world of unseen power and allowed him to project an aura of mystery and invincibility. Rumors that he practiced cannibalism, human sacrifice and blood atonement rituals merely added to his mystique.

"He created an aura around him of a man allied to powerful forces you cannot easily comprehend," said Mr. Ellis, the historian.

Mr. Taylor surrounded himself with objects of protection — scepters carved from sacred trees and amulets of invisibility. It was impossible to say whether he really believed in these objects, or merely used them as props.

He used conventional Christianity as well, managing to convince the Rev. Jesse Jackson, former President Jimmy Carter and the evangelist Pat Robertson that he was at heart a good Baptist Christian.

Mr. Taylor also had plenty of money. In his hands, the Liberian state essentially became an adjunct to organized crime and terrorist networks that included Al Qaeda.

"He ran this amazingly complex criminal enterprise where the state could provide critical things like diplomatic passports and airplane registration to a range of criminal networks," Mr. Farah said.

Even before he was elected president in 1997, the vast countryside he controlled, with its rich endowment of diamonds, rubber and timber, generated an estimated $100 million in revenues a year. During his time as president, diplomats sometimes referred to Liberia as "Charles Taylor Inc."

Undoubtedly a greedy man, Mr. Taylor was not, however, stingy with his friends, Mr. Farah said. He was more than willing to share the wealth he looted with the regional powerbrokers who sponsored him, like Libya and Burkina Faso.

But mostly he ruled through fear. Even now, in a jail cell here, he made West Africans tremble. Liberia and Sierra Leone asked that he be transferred to the Hague for trial.

Tamba Ngawucha, whose hands were amputated by rebels backed by Mr. Taylor during the war in Sierra Leone, said he was glad the tyrant arrested. But when asked if he should be tried here, Mr. Ngawucha's eyes widened.

"We don't want any Charles Taylor here," Mr. Ngawucha said, flailing the dimpled stumps where his hands once were for emphasis. "We are too afraid he will hurt us again. We just want peace."
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/03/2006 03:25 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [11 views] Top|| File under:


Africa North
GSPC looking to recruit released Algerian hard boyz
Instructing magistrate at the court of Sidi M'hamed, Algiers, has ordered journalist of El Khabar Mourad M'hamed to be placed under judicial control. He is accused of "publication of information likely to harm national interest".

Mourad M'hamed was heard by the prosecuting attorney before he appeared in front of the instructing magistrate yesterday morning.

Mourad M'hamed left the court along with with the editor of El Khabar, M. Ali Djerri, and the newspaper's lawyer Khaled Bourayou at 6:00 p.m., after the instructing magistrate ordered the provisional detention the two policemen, indicted in the same case, and the journalist's friend, accused of contributing the information in question.

Mourad M'hamed has already been held, for long hours, at Algiers Central police station to force him to reveal the sources of his information published in El Khabar daily, concerning the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC) which called on the terrorists released within the framework of national reconciliation, to join the organization.

The journalist's appearance before the prosecuting attorney took place without the defendant's lawyer.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/03/2006 03:23 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:


Southeast Asia
Basilan cop killed
Motorcycle gunmen shot dead a policeman and wounded his son in an attack on Sunday in the town of Lamitan, Basilan.

Officials said Senior Police Officer 2 Salvador Castro II was driving his motorcycle with his son, Salvador, and a nephew when the assailants armed with automatic pistols drove near them.

The assassins opened fire at the victims near the village of Semut about 8:30 a.m.

The policeman died. His son was injured. The third passenger was unscathed.

"Castro was shot in the head. He was killed on the spot," Inspector Elmer Acuna, the town’s deputy chief of police, said.

Police appealed to those who witnessed the attack to help in the investigation.

No group or individual claimed responsibility for the killing, but the island is a known lair of the Abu Sayyaf bandits blamed for the series of killing in the South. The island is also notorious for vendetta killings.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/03/2006 03:21 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [10 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Lamitan is where the ASG raided the hospital during the Burnham hostage ordeal and where the ASG continually run ops. I thing Hamsaraji Sali was killed there, by the military, as well.
Posted by: 49 pan || 04/03/2006 21:43 Comments || Top||


Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Former head of state security surrenders in Chechnya
Official sources announced this week that Sultan Geliskhanov, a former top Chechen representative, surrendered to law enforcement officials.

After Chechnya declared its independence in the early 1990s and became the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria, Geliskhanov became head of the Department of State Security. So now his voluntary surrender, widely reported in the Russian media, is being presented as another victory for the federal forces.

It is obvious why the media focus on a man who left his job eleven years ago - since most ordinary Russians do not approve of the Chechen campaign, it is therefore necessary to show them that "we are really right."

As a result, among the list of "guerrilla leaders who surrendered" are two heads of special services of Ichkeria now. One of them is Ibragim Khultygov, who gave himself up at the beginning of the current military campaign and now works in the recently created Council of the Republic, the upper house of the Chechen parliament.

In addition there are also many security guards of the late Ichkerian President Aslan Maskhadov cooperating with the authorities, as well as the staff of various ministries, including former Ichkerian Defense Minister Magomed Khambiyev, who also became a deputy in the current parliament.

Apparently, there are many others waiting in the wings who, when necessary, will play the part of "surrendered guerrillas."
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/03/2006 03:20 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [11 views] Top|| File under:


India-Pakistan
LeT supported the faithful post-earthquake
Saima Sulaiman knew just where to take her father for his diabetes - the hospital run by Jamaat ul Dawa, known for its short lines and free service, part of the group's highly praised relief efforts after last October's devastating earthquake.

She also knew just who makes up the group.

"These are the Islamic fighters," she said simply.

Islamic groups such as Jamaat ul Dawa showed up to help earthquake victims within hours of the Oct. 8 temblor, even before the Pakistani army arrived. They dug out bodies, handed out food and passed out blankets. The country's interior minister called the groups "the lifeline of our rescue and relief work." International aid agencies praised their quick response and cooperation.

But critics charge that at least two of the groups - Jamaat ul Dawa and the Al Rasheed Trust - are linked to terrorism. Critics say the Pakistani government is legitimizing Islamic militants by allowing them to perform relief work and giving them a new toehold in Kashmir.

The issue goes to the core of the main charge made against Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf: that he is not tough enough on extremist groups, also called "jihadi" groups, in reference to holy war.

Some experts believe that Musharraf cannot push militants too hard or he will face a backlash from a hostile public.

Others believe Musharraf and the Pakistani army coddle militants while pretending to crack down on them, especially in Kashmir, the Himalayan territory that India and Pakistan have fought over for almost 50 years. After the government banned several groups in early 2002, most changed their names and continued operating. Despite calls for the reform of madrassas, the Islamic boarding schools, little has changed.

In March, the International Crisis Group released a policy brief asking Pakistan to prevent extremist groups, including those operating under new names, from participating in further earthquake relief and reconstruction work.

"The jihadis are going to gain in every possible way from the earthquake," said Samina Ahmed, South Asia project director for the International Crisis Group, a non-profit agency specializing in conflict resolution. "With the support of Pakistan, they have managed to gain themselves a whole new recruiting ground. They are seen as the saviors. What easier way to spread their message and gain recruits?"

Jamaat ul Dawa is considered to be the fundraising front for Lashkar-e-Taiba, the militant group fighting Indian troops in disputed Kashmir and blamed for most major terrorist attacks in India. Some of Lashkar-e-Taiba's top leaders have been linked to al-Qaida, and several followers have been picked up in Iraq.

In 2002, Pakistan banned Lashkar-e-Taiba, which is also designated a foreign terrorist organization by the U.S. State Department. The man who founded Lashkar-e-Taiba formed Jamaat ul Dawa although leaders say there is no connection between the groups. Efforts to place Jamaat ul Dawa on international terrorist group lists slowed after the earthquake, largely because of the group's relief work.

Attacks by militants crossing the line of control into the Indian side of Kashmir have decreased since the earthquake. But two major terrorist attacks elsewhere in India since October have been blamed on Lashkar-e-Taiba.

Al Rasheed Trust is associated with Jaish-e-Muhammad, a militant group also banned by Pakistan in 2002, according to the International Crisis Group. The U.S. government froze Al Rasheed's U.S. assets in 2003 on allegations of sending money to al-Qaida.

Both Jamaat ul Dawa and Al Rasheed are on Pakistan's terrorism watch list, but neither has been banned.

In Kashmir, government officials praised the groups' relief work.

Sikandar Hayat Khan, the prime minister of the Pakistan side of Kashmir, said the groups have been serving humanity.

"They did their best," Khan said. "What Islam teaches us and what they are doing here, I think the two are the same."

He said he did not believe Jamaat ul Dawa was a militant group. He said the government was "watching" Al Rasheed.

"If they do something against here or the world community, we will not allow it," he said.

Even Western diplomats praised relief work by the militants.

"The only organized force I saw up there was the jihadi groups," said a Western embassy worker who visited two days after the quake.

"We provide people all basic amenities at the hospital and the camp, but we can't give them luxuries," said Dr. Ahmad Ammad at Jamaat ul Dawa hospital in Muzaffarabad. "We give them food and clothes. Other things, we don't like to provide, like TVs or radios. It's better for people to remember God than watch TV."

Khalid Usman, in charge of logistics for Al Rasheed in Muzaffarabad, said the trust was a humanitarian agency, not a militant group.

"We have no political agenda," Usman said. "We have no affiliation with any political or jihadi organization. We try to help deprived people."
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/03/2006 03:19 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [14 views] Top|| File under:


China-Japan-Koreas
Relatives of Aum Shinrikyo supremo ask for mercy
Like good daughters anywhere, Mayumi and Kaori Asahara worry about their father's declining health. They are alarmed that he looks so thin and won't see a doctor. They fret that he refuses to wear the new clothes they gave him to replace his fraying old ones.

But they desperately need something back from their father too. They are seeking an explanation of why the man who taught them to cherish life, even that of an ant, could be a cult leader responsible for Japan's worst terrorist attack.

"I need to ask my father directly what happened," said Kaori Asahara, who was 12 in 1995 when her father ordered the Aum Supreme Truth cult's sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway that killed 12 people and made thousands ill.

On death row, Shoko Asahara isn't talking to anyone. Not to the two daughters who visit him regularly, not to his own lawyers who have tried in more than 140 meetings to get him to help formulate a defense that might save his life.

Asahara, 50, has been sentenced to death, and his time for final appeals has run out. In Japan's secretive penal system, he could be sent to the gallows at any time. But the prospect that he will provide any insight into his motives is becoming slimmer and slimmer.

Still, Kaori and Mayumi say he should not be executed. They say that their father is mentally ill and incapable of understanding what is happening to him, that he is a helpless cripple who must wear diapers to keep from soiling his clothes. He sits in a wheelchair, head lolling to one side. His left hand scratches idly at a leg or his chest.

He does not speak. He only mumbles, making no requests and seeking no last-minute mercy.

Mayumi Asahara, who has visited her father 28 times over the last 19 months, said he was "like a doll."

That is not the image the rest of Japan holds of Asahara. Prosecutors and prison officials contend the cult leader is feigning mental illness in an attempt to escape justice.

And when Japanese close their eyes they still see Asahara as he was when he was orchestrating mayhem: A white-robed guru with a flowing black beard and glass eye, a man who twisted the minds of well-educated men and women who seemed indistinguishable from everyone's else's sons and daughters. The image has become the icon of evil in modern Japan.

But the man in the picture is also a flesh-and-blood father whose children are paying heavily for his sins.

They have been bullied and banned from schools and fired from numerous jobs. They say they still are trailed by police and chased by media that manage to find them every time they move.

Now in their 20s, Kaori and Mayumi grew up in the Aum cult and recalled a very happy childhood.

"We were told: Do not kill and be kind to other people," Kaori said in an interview with three foreign journalists at the offices of her father's defense team. "Now we are told my father directed others to kill people, so there is a very big gap.

"I think the image of the last 11 years is more famous now," she said, tears welling in her eyes.

It was the only time during the interview that either daughter, dressed in sober business suits, cried. Both acknowledged it was "a fact" that the gas attack victims suffered, but said they did not have words to express their feelings about what happened.

Their father's lawyer said they agreed to talk with foreign media because they saw it as their last chance to pressure authorities to provide psychiatric help to Asahara instead of executing him.

The sisters say there is no point talking to Japanese media, which they say are more interested in reporting salacious details about Asahara's prison life.

"Some Japanese media say you are the children of devils so you don't have any rights," Kaori said.

"Whatever I do is all broadcast and most of it isn't true…. Rather than try to change our image, we just want them to forget about us."

But the family has not been able to drop below the radar.

Their mother was found guilty in 1999 of conspiring with her husband to kill another cult member. She was released from jail in 2002.

The Aum cult was declared illegal in the wake of the gas attack, but has been reconstituted as a legal group called Aleph. The sisters denied they were members of Aleph or any organized religion, and said they received no money from it.

"When the name was changed to Aleph, they sent us a form and asked if we would like to submit a subscription," Kaori said. "We did not."

The family name has cost Kaori part-time jobs as a golf caddy, convenience store clerk, waitress and grocery deliverer. She said she was fired from all of them when her identity was exposed.

"The managers would say, 'I'm sorry, but … ,' " Kaori said. Her close friends know who she is, and some have been harassed by reporters seeking gossip.

Two years ago, Kaori went to court when three Japanese universities refused to honor acceptance offers after finding out who her father was.

The courts overturned the ban and Kaori is attending one of the schools, which she declined to name.

"I am studying psychiatry so I can understand about my internal condition and understand other people from a scientific point of view," she said.

She already has had rare insight into human behavior.

Years ago, when bullying at elementary school drove their elder sister to cut her wrists and they feared she would kill herself, the family sought a meeting with the school principal to ask him to intervene.

They received no sympathy.

"The headmaster said: 'Your sister's life is only one. But many people lost their lives in the sarin attacks,' " Mayumi said.

In February, a junior high school refused to admit Asahara's youngest son. The principal said he could not guarantee the safety of other students since the 11-year-old, who was a newborn when his father was arrested, could conceivably be under the influence of the cult.

"The school never even interviewed the son; they just acted on the basis of the Asahara image," said Takashi Matsui, one of Asahara's defense lawyers. He said the boy and Asahara's other son had been prevented from attending elementary school.

Mayumi, 25, says she has no friends and doesn't go out much because she fears being followed. Instead, she studies law by correspondence.

In visits since August 2004, she has recorded her father's condition in notebooks, page after page of his mumbles and her impressions. And she looks for signs that prison officials are lying about his condition.

Prosecutors and prison officials say he acknowledges questions with a mumbled Japanese phrase that means "I understand."

"But he says the phrase even when he's alone," Mayumi said.

The sisters would like to move on with their lives, but won't as long as their father is alive.

Kaori visited Toronto last year and reveled in the freedom of being someplace where no one knew her.

"It was only there that I finally understood about the heavy pressure I'm under in Japan," she said. She would like to leave permanently, but for the time being that is not an option.

"Of course many things are bitter," she says. "But I think I would regret it if I didn't do everything for my father's case."
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/03/2006 03:15 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Change your name, if you refuse then you want the publicity.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 04/03/2006 13:07 Comments || Top||

#2  RJ: I doubt Japan has the English common law right to change one's name.

He's gonna die, no questions about it. There will be no explanations. Aum Shinrikyo is an arm of North Korean intelligence, and the Japanese government isn't about to admit that fact to anyone.
Posted by: Rory B. Bellows || 04/03/2006 18:27 Comments || Top||


Iraq
More on the UIA telling Jafaari to quit
Iraq's dominant Shiite political bloc fractured Sunday when its most powerful faction publicly demanded that the incumbent Shiite prime minister resign over his inability to form a unified government. The split came as Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Jack Straw, the British foreign minister, paid an urgent visit to Iraqi leaders here to convey in the most forceful terms yet that their patience for the country's political paralysis was wearing thin.

It was not clear whether the joint visit by Ms. Rice and Mr. Straw, the top emissaries of the two countries that led the invasion of Iraq three years ago, played a direct role in the splintering of the Shiite bloc, and whether that schism would lead to forward movement on forming a new government, which has been stalled for months.

The developments suggested that a new phase in Iraq's convulsions might have started by opening a possibly violent battle for the country's top job between rival Shiite factions, which both have militias backing them. The incumbent prime minister, Ibrahim al-Jaafari, has said he will fight to keep his job, and his principal supporter is Moktada al-Sadr, a rebellious cleric whose Mahdi Army militia has resorted to violence many times to enforce his wishes.

Ms. Rice and Mr. Straw, who came here unannounced in a driving rainstorm from a meeting in England punctuated by antiwar protests, told reporters they did not want to intervene in the dispute over the prime minister. But at the same time they pointed out that Mr. Jaafari had been unable to win enough political support to form a government since his nomination on Feb. 12.

"They've got to get a prime minister who can actually form the government," Ms. Rice said after a meetings with Iraqi leaders — which included a visibly uncomfortable photo session with Mr. Jaafari — inside the Green Zone, the fortified part of Baghdad that houses the Iraqi government and American Embassy. She added, "I told them that a lot of treasure, a lot of human treasure, has been put on the line to give Iraq the chance to have a democratic future."

Neither Ms. Rice nor Mr. Straw would specify whether they had applied even tougher pressure on the Iraqi leaders. But Ms. Rice's references to the loss of lives — more than 2,300 American soldiers alone have died here since the March 2003 invasion — and the many billions of dollars spent clearly reflected the growing impatience in Washington and London for more progress.

The fracturing of the Shiites became clear in the late afternoon, as a senior official in the leading Shiite party, Sheik Jalaladeen al-Sagheir, said in a telephone interview that his party was putting forward another candidate to replace Mr. Jaafari. "I've asked Jaafari to resign from his job," said Sheik Sagheir, a deputy to the Shiite bloc's leader, Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim. "The prime minister should have national consensus inside the Parliament, and he should have the support of the international body."

Any dispute between the Shiite bloc's two biggest factions — Mr. Hakim's party, the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, and the party led by Mr. Sadr — carries with it the possibility of armed violence. The factions are longtime rivals, have backing from Iran and operate militias with members in the Iraqi security forces. Their militias fought street battles last August throughout Baghdad and the south, even hijacking double-decker buses to storm office buildings.

Nasr al-Saadi, a Sadr member of Parliament, said Sunday that Mr. Jaafari still had the backing of Mr. Sadr's faction. "He was elected in a democratic way," Mr. Saadi said, referring to the fact that Mr. Jaafari won his nomination in a secret ballot among the Shiite bloc's 130 members. "This is democracy. I haven't been informed that the Shiite alliance will change candidates."

The eruption among the Shiites could also redraw Iraq's political coalitions, if some Shiite politicians leave the bloc to side with other groups in the 275-member Parliament. That would weaken the religious Shiites, and it is one of the great fears of the most powerful Shiite cleric in Iraq, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. Since cobbling together the fragile Shiite coalition in late 2004, the ayatollah and his aides have been working hard to keep it together to ensure that the religious Shiites assume power over Iraq's minority Sunni Arab and Kurdish populations through elections.

The Supreme Council's defection came a day after a senior Shiite politician, Kassim Daoud, called for Mr. Jaafari to step down. Mr. Daoud has been mentioned as a possible replacement for Mr. Jaafari, as has Vice President Adel Abdul Mahdi, a deputy in the Supreme Council. Mr. Mahdi lost to Mr. Jaafari by just one vote in February's balloting.

Negotiations to form the government have been deadlocked over Mr. Jaafari's nomination. The Constitution gives the largest bloc in Parliament the right to appoint a candidate, but a two-thirds vote of the entire assembly is needed to install the government. In late February, the main Sunni Arab, Kurdish and secular blocs demanded that the Shiites withdraw Mr. Jaafari and select someone else.

Last Tuesday, Mr. Hakim fired the opening salvo in his campaign to unseat Mr. Jaafari by having his aides tell reporters that the American ambassador, Zalmay Khalilzad, had informed Mr. Hakim that President Bush preferred another candidate. That set off a furor here, with Mr. Jaafari saying in an interview that the Americans should stop interfering. "I accept this position because it's an Iraqi, democratic choice," he said.

Mr. Hakim, a former exile in Iran, and Mr. Mahdi were among the dozen Iraqi leaders who met with Ms. Rice and Mr. Straw on Sunday.

Others in the Shiite bloc who oppose Mr. Jaafari include the Fadhila Party, led by a fundamentalist cleric who has called for Mr. Khalilzad's resignation, and many independent politicians.

Mr. Mahdi is considered the front-runner to replace Mr. Jaafari, but a compromise candidate could end up on top because of the enmity of the Sadr faction toward Mr. Mahdi and the Supreme Council. Options include Hussain al-Shahristani, a former nuclear physicist, and Ali Allawi, the finance minister and a cousin of Ahmad Chalabi, the former Pentagon favorite.

Mr. Mahdi visited Washington last fall and was believed to have the backing of the Americans at the time. A rotund, bearish-looking man, he is a Western-educated proponent of free market economics, having disavowed earlier Maoist beliefs. He owns a house in the south of France, and American officials hope his exposure to the West tempers Islamist ideals honed by years in Iran.

Ms. Rice and Mr. Straw flew into Baghdad in an unusual thunderstorm early on Sunday and were driven to the Green Zone in armored military vehicles. Sectarian violence and migrations have been soaring across Iraq partly because of the power vacuum, and American officials, including Ms. Rice, say a new government must be formed quickly to help stabilize the situation.

"The Iraqi people are losing patience and that's showing up in polling, it's showing up, I'm told, in cartoons, it's showing up in the news coverage here," she said. In the evening, after the rains had ended, Ms. Rice said she had carried "a very direct message" to the Iraqis, and they had responded favorably.

Asked whether she had indicated to Mr. Jaafari that he drop out, she said only that "the message to all parties" was to form a government quickly. She added that Iraq's leaders "have to realize there is a particular urgency to this case."

Ms. Rice was last here in October, Mr. Straw in February. They made plans to spend the night — a rarity for a visiting American official, particularly since an insurgent rocket attack on Al Rashid hotel in 2003 while Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul D. Wolfowitz was staying there.

The decision to stay overnight was intended as something of a political statement. Last month, a senior official noted there was concern within the administration that it seemed hypocritical for top officials to assert that progress was being made in Iraq while refusing to spend more than a few hours. Visiting dignitaries also rarely leave the Green Zone.

The world outside the zone is often awash in blood. The American military said Sunday that two soldiers had died from the crash on Saturday evening of an Apache attack helicopter, shot down south of Baghdad. Two other soldiers were killed Saturday in Baghdad by a roadside bomb, and a soldier died from noncombat injuries sustained in an operation on March 30 in Kirkuk.

In Diyala Province, gunmen killed two civilians in Balad Ruz, and insurgents blew up a Shiite mosque northeast of Baquba. A policeman in Baghdad was killed, as was a lawyer in Basra. Six bodies were found in Baghdad, two of them abducted hospital workers; all had been shot in the head. Armed men kidnapped Waleed Subhi al-Dulaimi, the official in charge of religious tourism.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/03/2006 03:14 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [18 views] Top|| File under:

#1  What's up with Sistani??? Black turbin-check, first name Grand Ayatollah-check. And yet... I still don't trust him, but he seems to be acting as a force for good, so far. Is he just keeping his powder dry (so to speak) to "turn" at a critical moment? Is it a Qom/Najaf turf battle over the Shite world that is causing him to resist Iranian influence? God, I wish I knew.
Posted by: Cleresh Spinese1634 || 04/03/2006 8:33 Comments || Top||

#2  " Is it a Qom/Najaf turf battle over the Shite world that is causing him to resist Iranian influence?"

Yes ... plus Sistani's consistently favored a more secular government. IMHO Sistani has been and remains a key to Iraq's future.
Posted by: doc || 04/03/2006 9:34 Comments || Top||

#3  hmm, while ive been a sistani defender here in the past, Im not sure his role now is so much positive as it is cautious.

Note - Hakim himself hasnt called for Jaafari to step down - hes still using aides do so. And SCIRI hasnt yet threatened to leave the UIA block and directly form a coalition with the Kurd/Sunni/Allawi coalition, leaving the Sadrist and Dawa in the lurch. Until they do, they are bound by the majority vote in the UIA.

My sense is that Sistani is conflicted - we know he hates Sadr and the Khomeinists - but hes commmitted to Shiite unity in the UIA - both cause he wants the Shiite laypeople to dominate Iraq, and hes afraid that if they dont, much of the Shiite street (esp the poor) will follow Sadr, weakening the religious authority of Najaf. But the Dawa-Sadr alliance, and its majority within the UIA has him in a bind - theres no easy way to oust Jaafari without splitting the UIA. IF UIA were split then the coalition of SCIRI-Kurds-Sunnis-Allawi could easily make Mahdi the PM. Instead theyre trying to offer Jaafari and Dawa inducements for change, like offering a compromise candidate.


I think what Rice and Straw are there to do is, basically, bring the message to Sistani that Jaafari has to go, and there has to be a Shiite candidate for PM whos acceptable to the Kurds, Sunnis, and Allawi-secularists. And to assure him that US and UK troops will protect the state, and protect Najaf, and protect him personally, if Sadr calls on his people to hit the mattresses again.
Posted by: liberalhawk || 04/03/2006 10:30 Comments || Top||

#4  Here is the way I see it. Jafaari is gone - it's not if but when. He'll get his dog Sadr to snarl and bark, but it's not going to work. Someone else will get the job and a new set of problems will arise.
Posted by: 2b || 04/03/2006 10:51 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
Taliban still in control of northern Pakistan
Pakistan's military operations on the front line of the US-led war on terror have led to a further "Talibanisation" of the border tribal regions that is now spreading to areas traditionally under government control.

Pakistan's military operations on the front line of the US-led war on terror have led to a further "Talibanisation" of the border tribal regions that is now spreading to areas traditionally under government control.

In 2003 an 80,000-strong Pakistan force was deployed to flush out forces loyal to the Taliban and al-Qa'eda.

But three years after Pakistani soldiers first entered the tribal area of South Waziristan many politicians from the tribal area, media commentators and retired officers are united in the view that the operation has produced few positive results.

Instead, there is a steadily encroaching Taliban-style influence. Shopkeepers have been told not to sell music or films, barbers are instructed not to shave beards, and women have been told not to go to the market. More than 100 pro-government elders and politicians have been killed in the past nine months.

"They create an environment of fear, pretend they are in charge. We can't let those Taliban impose what they want," said Sikander Qayyum, the Peshawar-based security chief for the tribal zones.

Since last year, when a shaky agreement was signed between the army and militants in South Waziristan, an uneasy peace has prevailed.

The local administration has to negotiate the daily running of the area with an alliance of mainly anti-government tribal elders and pro-Taliban clerics. The effect is a clear rise in Taliban influence.

Yesterday a local militant, Asmatullah Shaheen, announced via loudspeaker in the Jandol area of South Waziristan that people were not to shave. In Barmal village, Mufti Fazal-ur-Rehamn Fazli circulated a pamphlet stating that Jews and Christians were encouraging Muslims to take anti-polio drops in a conspiracy to make Muslim populations infertile.

Reports have spread around Pakistan that an Islamic court has been established in Wana, South Waziristan's capital, replacing the traditional council of elders.

Last week Pakistani press reports said that a man had been sentenced to death according to sharia law, although local officials insist it is traditional tribal law.

The problem facing the Pakistan government is underlined by Senator Mohammed Salah Qureshi, a cleric from South Waziristan. "The clerics here have thousands of followers and they are following jihad against the US and the world," he said. Negotiations with tribesmen over handing over foreign al-Qa'eda fugitives have not borne much fruit, other than stoking anti-government and anti-US sentiment.

The fall-out of the campaign is now being felt further afield. Similar Taliban-style edicts to those issued in Waziristan are beginning to be heard in Tank and Dera Ismail Khan.

In these neighbouring "settled areas" of the North-West Frontier Province, police have issued a statement warning local officials that militants who had been driven out of Waziristan by military operations were possibly taking refuge among locals.

Last week a remote-controlled bomb ripped through a police vehicle in Dera Ismail Khan killing seven people. Television sets and cassettes have been burned and internet cafes destroyed.

The province is governed by the Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal, which came to power on an anti-US platform in the October 2002 general elections and has promoted Taliban-style policy.

"It is seepage from the war on terror," said one Dera Ismail Khan official. "The army action has undermined local political influence. So now there is chaos."

• Suspected Islamic militants killed a cleric in Sararogha, South Waziristan, over suspicion that he was a spy for the US and Britain, officials said yesterday.

The bullet-riddled body of Maulana Zahir Shah, who ran an Islamic school, was found yesterday, three days after five armed men abducted him. He helped authorities run a radio station that aired programs critical of the militants from his school, an intelligence official said.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/03/2006 03:12 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [16 views] Top|| File under:


Iraq
More on Zarqawi being phased out
Iraq's resistance has replaced Jordanian-born Abu Musab al-Zarqawi as political head of the rebels, confining him to a military role, the son of Osama bin Laden's mentor said Sunday in Jordan. "The Iraqi resistance's high command asked Zarqawi to give up his political role and replaced him with an Iraqi, because of several mistakes he made," said Hudayf Azzam, who claims close contacts with the rebels.

"Zarqawi's role has been limited to military action," said Azzam, whose late father Abdullah Azzam was bin Laden's mentor. "Zarqawi bowed to the orders two weeks ago and was replaced by Iraqi national Abdullah bin Rashed al-Baghdadi," Azzam said.

Azzam, 35, whose father was known as the "prince of mujahideen," said he regularly receives "credible information on the resistance in Iraq." He said Zarqawi "made many political mistakes," including "the creation of an independent organization, Al-Qaeda in Iraq." "Zarqawi also took the liberty of speaking in the name of the Iraqi people and resistance, a role which belongs only to the Iraqis," Azzam said.

As a result "the resistance command inside and outside Iraq, including imams, criticized him and after long discussions demanded that he be confined to military action," Azzam said. "Zarqawi pledged not to carry out any more attacks against Iraq's neighbors after having been criticized for these operations which are considered a violation of sharia [Islamic law]," Azzam said.
I'm guessing that's in reference to the Jordanian boomings.
Nevertheless, the Amman-based Azzam insisted that Zarqawi remains a strong force on the ground. "He is stronger than before on the battlefield and the resistance has profited from his military experience," he said. "Five organizations have rallied around Zarqawi: the Mujahideen Army, Ansar al-Islam [also known as Ansar al-Sunna], the Islamic Army for the Liberation of Iraq, Al-Tawid Wal Hujra and Revolution 20 Brigades," he said. The joint U.S.-Iraqi operation launched in mid-March around Samarra, north of Baghdad, aimed at "dismantling these five groups," Azzam said.

General John Abizaid, the commander of U.S. forces in the Middle East, said at the time that the offensive targeted Al-Qaeda in Iraq and other insurgent groups in Samarra. "Generally it's linked to the notion that in that vicinity where they're operating that there are some hard Al-Qaeda in Iraq nodes and some hard insurgent nodes that need to be dealt with," Abizaid said.

Azzam also expected "several mistakes made in the past, such as some hostage-taking, not to occur again." Asked about the wave of abductions in Iraq targeting journalists, Azzam said: "Not all journalists are innocent." "The resistance is against the occupiers. It is a natural and legitimate right," he said.

Azzam said that last week's liberation of U.S. hostage Jill Carroll, the Christian Science Monitor journalist who was held in Iraq for 12 weeks, allowed the release from jail of "wives and sisters of resistance brothers." "When the American Army cannot succeed in arresting resistance members, they arrest their wives or other members of their family," Azzam said.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/03/2006 03:02 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Here's another good piece at Strategy Page.
Posted by: Deacon Blues || 04/03/2006 9:45 Comments || Top||

#2  I really like Strategy Page. It's an honest, refreshing read as always.

As for this piece on Zarqawi, it stinks of dishonesty because IMHO, in the world of ambition and lust for power, this just would not happen: Zarqawi bowed to the orders two weeks ago and was replaced by Iraqi national Abdullah bin Rashed al-Baghdadi," Azzam said.
Posted by: 2b || 04/03/2006 11:00 Comments || Top||

#3  Zargy dead then because you don't just bow out of these groups and live.
Posted by: djohn66 || 04/03/2006 12:18 Comments || Top||

#4  "Zarqawi must resign immediately," said Democratic Party national chairman Howard Dean on Sunday's Deface the Nation. "Thanks to his incompetence, the war in Iraq has become an unwinnable quagmire, and we are faced with the very real risk that the Bush administration may defeat us."
Posted by: Mike || 04/03/2006 17:08 Comments || Top||

#5  Good satire Mike!

or is it satire? .....
Posted by: DarthVader || 04/03/2006 18:10 Comments || Top||

#6  I truly hope it is.
Posted by: Mike || 04/03/2006 18:26 Comments || Top||

#7  Yeah, but did he get a severance package?
Posted by: DMFD || 04/03/2006 20:18 Comments || Top||


Iraq's militias
As he steps onto the streets of Baghdad's Shi'ite slum Sadr City, Saed Salah chambers a round into his pistol and shoves it into the back of his pants. A mid-ranking commander in the Mahdi Army, one of the most potent of the armed militias that have carved Baghdad into fiefdoms, Saed Salah has little to fear from the authorities. The whole neighborhood knows who he is. Motorists are aware that his fighters man the makeshift checkpoints that dot the neighborhood. Even though he has attacked U.S. troops countless times, no one will touch him. If the G.I.s could find him, they would slap him straight into Abu Ghraib prison. But that's not likely to happen. The American military may occupy Iraq, Saed Salah says, and an Iraqi Prime Minister may be in power, but neither owns these streets.

He's right. Iraqi army troops set checkpoints on the main thoroughfares in and out of Sadr City, but they are powerless in the face of the Mahdi Army. "They do nothing. They can't even stop a vehicle," says a member of a separate unit of the fractious militia as he speeds past one of the checkpoints. A pickup truck overflowing with gunmen toting AK-47s roars up from behind. Their shirts are emblazoned with the name of one of the country's most formidable armed groups: MAHDI ARMY, PROTECTION COMMITTEE, 2ND BRIGADE. As they approach the army checkpoint, no one makes a move; instead of confrontation, there is acknowledgment. A militia member waves from the pickup, and a soldier sheepishly waves back. With that, the gunmen barrel through.

In Baghdad today, the militias are consolidating their power. A wave of sectarian killings since the Feb. 22 bombing of a holy Shi'ite shrine in Samarra has left hundreds--possibly thousands--of Shi'ites and Sunnis dead across the country, with more tortured and dismembered bodies turning up each day. The U.S. military is pinning its hopes on the Iraqi army and police to stand between the two sides and bring calm to a volatile situation, but in many parts of the capital, the U.S.-backed forces wield less authority than the forces taking their orders from men like Saed Salah and his boss, the rebel anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. Many U.S. and Iraqi officials believe that hard-line Shi'ite militias are behind the daily abductions and executions of Sunnis and that they are doing as much to rile sectarian hatred as terrorists linked to Abu Mousab al-Zarqawi, the leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq.

Yet there's also evidence that the mainstream of armed fighters on both sides is loath to allow the extremists to drag them into full-scale war--for now. In more than a dozen interviews with militia leaders, insurgent commanders and clerics, TIME sought out the men likely to be on the front lines of a full-blown sectarian conflict. What they have to say won't necessarily bolster hopes that Iraq can avoid all-out civil war indefinitely. But few militia members interviewed by TIME believe that they are fighting one now. Their assessments largely accord with those of U.S. military intelligence: that while rival death squads roam unchecked, for now civil war is in no one's interest but al-Zarqawi's. Militants on both sides say U.S. forces remain a bigger enemy than their countrymen. "The elements for civil war are all there," says a senior U.S. military-intelligence officer, "but this society is complex, and it still hasn't generated self-sustaining sectarian strife."

What no one denies is that the violence is becoming more brutal. U.S. officials say 25 bodies are found each day, although it's unclear how many are victims of sectarian killings. Unlike the terrorist attacks committed by al-Zarqawi, sectarian violence rarely bears a calling card. Shi'ite and Sunni militants interviewed by TIME say the worst killings are carried out by small, secretive death squads that the militants conveniently describe as rogue elements. Windows into the machinations of the death squads are rare, but U.S. and Iraqi forces have gained some intelligence on them. Some operations have been uncovered in Sunni-controlled areas, like those of the radical Ansar al-Sunnah group discovered in Latifiyah more than a year ago during a U.S. sweep called Operation River Walk. Execution videos, swords and instruments of torture were found by soldiers in what were deemed to be killing rooms.

A March 26 raid on a Shi'ite militia complex--believed to be a hub for a kidnapping and terrorist network--has raised suspicions that a death squad may have been run out of the complex. Shi'ite leaders claim that the 16 men who died in the raid were worshipping peacefully in what turned out to be a mosque. But Iraqi commandos and U.S. military liaisons told TIME that the dead perished in battle with weapons in their hands. According to U.S. military officials, more than 60 reports of kidnappings or executions have been linked to the mosque, including the slayings of three Iraqi special-forces soldiers. Shi'ite leaders continue to deny the allegations.

Such discoveries lend credence to those, like former Prime Minister and chief U.S. ally Iyad Allawi, who say Iraq is already mired in civil war. Yet despite the bloodshed on both sides, the militants on the front lines don't consider themselves in outright conflict with one another. "War might be tomorrow or one year from now; it all depends on the sparks made by those seeking to inflame it," says Abu Mohammed, a former top-ranking officer in Saddam Hussein's army and now a key Baathist insurgent strategist. Another Baathist insurgent downplays the pervasiveness of sectarian hatred: "It's true there are death squads killing Shi'ite and killing Sunni, and while they're Iraqi, they're really the instruments of foreign interests"--referring to al-Qaeda and Iran. His Shi'ite counterparts in al-Sadr's militia agree. Two mid-ranking field commanders of the Shi'ite Mahdi Army say the violence falls short of war with the Sunnis. "Sectarian violence is made by the occupation forces. There is no civil war," says Saed Salah as members of his cell nod in agreement.

Both Shi'ite and Sunni militants insist they would rather fight to rid Iraq of U.S. forces than take up arms against each other. Abu Mohammed says there's nothing to be gained by waging a costly religious fight while the U.S. remains in the country. "The Shi'ites are an inseparable part of the resistance. We have to unite our efforts against the invaders, so we must be careful to avoid a civil war that will weaken us," he says. Contact between Sunni insurgents and Shi'ite militias like al-Sadr's Mahdi Army have been under way since the battle of Fallujah in 2004, with both exchanging expertise and manpower. "We have nothing against Shi'ites ... our dead are buried with theirs, as theirs are buried with ours in Fallujah," says insurgent commander Abu Saif. It's a sentiment echoed by the Sadrist leaders, who bear scars from dueling with the U.S. "We have many relationships binding us together," says Abu Zainab.

Still, few U.S. or Iraqi officials believe Iraq can ever become a stable, functioning society as long as political parties maintain their armed wings. The U.S. would prefer that the Iraqi security forces disarm the militias, but it hasn't happened. A senior military official in Baghdad says the U.S. is deliberately avoiding confrontations with the militias. But last month alone, soldiers from the 4th Infantry Division in Baghdad have had what the official calls 19 "encounters" with militias, including a shooting incident. The danger is that the bigger the militias get, the more likely they are to intensify their clashes over turf and authority. A U.S. military-intelligence officer says there is still some reason to believe that Iraqis will put their common interests ahead of their rivalries. "In this society, there are many ties that bind--from tribe to clan to educational, social and political," he says. "I don't think the threads have been cut." If they ever are, it may prove impossible to put them back together.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/03/2006 02:59 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [17 views] Top|| File under:

#1  As a pickup full of AK47 holding militia aproaches a checkpoint, a 105 or 125 should take it out. Let's get real out there. We gotta shorten the lives of these militia goons. Hit and run until they go underground, then drag the fine net and pick up the stragglers.
Posted by: wxjames || 04/03/2006 8:33 Comments || Top||

#2  He's right. Iraqi army troops set checkpoints on the main thoroughfares in and out of Sadr City, but they are powerless in the face of the Mahdi Army

ROFL. Yeah right. Ahhh hubris. That glorious feeling one always has just before one gets smacked down hard.
Posted by: 2b || 04/03/2006 11:04 Comments || Top||

#3  Kurdistan - if I can call it that - is effectively run by strong-men ("warlords" doesn't apply) Jalal Al-Talibani and Massoud Al-Barzani. The thing is: they are our strong-men. When Iran was integrated to the civilized world, the Shah held the Mullah parasite class in check, and he delivered prosperity and relative liberty. Jimmy Carter chose to subvert the status quo by attempting to export untenable human rights standards. When the Shah was overthrown, Carter's special advisor referred to Khomenei as a "saint." After taking a human rights bow, Jimmy Carter did nothing while the Khomeneists operated a backward tyranny that destroyed the country.

Strong-man governance of Iran will evolve into a Western type regime. But leave Iranians on their own, and they will rally around self-important control-freaks who are obsessed with maintaining power.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 19:50 Comments || Top||


6 US troops killed, Zarqawi aide captured
The US military yesterday announced the deaths of six of its troops across Iraq, including two pilots of an Apache helicopter that was shot down by insurgents. The announcement comes as US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and her British counterpart Jack Straw made a surprise visit to Iraq yesterday.

The US military said the bodies of two pilots of the Apache Longbow helicopter, that crashed on Saturday evening after coming under enemy fire, were recovered.

The military also announced the deaths of four more troops since Thursday, including two soldiers killed together late on Saturday by a roadside bomb attack during a foot patrol in central Baghdad.

An American soldier died near Kirkuk, northern Iraq, and the other was killed in combat in the restive western province of Al Anbar.

Twelve Iraqis were killed in violence yesterday, while insurgents blew up a Shi'ite mosque near Baquba, on Saturday. Meanwhile, bodies of at least 42 men have been found in several neighbourhoods of Baghdad since Saturday.

Frustrated by Iraq's failure to form a government, the chief US and British diplomats told squabbling leaders yesterday that it was time to pick a governing coalition.

Rice was careful to say the US did not want to interfere in the democratic process, yet harped on Prime Minister Ibrahim Al Jaafari's failure to organise a unity government.

Shi'ite politicians are going public with demands that Al Jaafari withdraw his candidacy to head the next government. A third Shi'ite MP, Sheikh Jalal Al Deen Al Saghir, called yesterday for Jaafari to withdraw his candidacy to head the next government.

The Iraqi government, meanwhile, announced the arrest of an unidentified aide to Al Qaeda in Iraq's leader Abu Musab Al Zarqawi in Baghdad's predominantly western Sunni neighbourhood of Jamaa.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/03/2006 02:58 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [10 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I hope the aide had his laptop handy when he was caught. More fun than a barrel of monkeys, laptops are... or so I've heard.
Posted by: trailing wife || 04/03/2006 21:50 Comments || Top||

#2  Cell phones are fun as well.
Posted by: Besoeker || 04/03/2006 21:54 Comments || Top||


Britain
UK defense secretary sez laws of war need to be redrawn
The laws of war need to be redrawn by the international community, John Reid, defence secretary, will say today, to eliminate the causes of legal anomalies, of which the US detention centre on Guantanamo Bay is the glaring example.

Talking to the Royal United Service Institute for Defence and Security Studies, Mr Reid will argue that the Geneva Conventions, signed in 1949, were written for a world of state-to-state conflict and fail to meet all the needs of today's battles against terrorist groups and insurgents.

"Until recently it was assumed that only states could cause mass casualties and our rules, conventions and laws are largely predicated on that basis," he will say. "That is no longer the case. I believe we now need to debate whether we - the international community in its widest sense - need to re-examine these conventions. If we do not, we risk going on fighting a 21st century conflict with 20th century rules."

One possible move, to which Mr Reid makes an implicit reference, would be to agree a new protocol to the Geneva Conventions to apply the same rules to battles with al-Qaeda-style insurgents, so both sides have a clear duty to obey the standard provisions.
Except that al-Qaeda won't, and hasn't, and wouldn't even if you changed the Convention. This sorta blows the whole theory, doesn't it?
At present the UK and the US say they are not bound by the Geneva Conventions in fighting al-Qaeda in Afghanistan, although the UK obeys its dictates "voluntarily" and that the enemy side is operating in legal limbo.

The US has sought to develop an idea of enemy combatants, who when detained are neither prisoners of war nor ordinary criminals. Extending the conventions would make such fighters subject to criminal proceedings, so ridding the US of any need to detain them in Guantanamo-style centres.
Except that we don't see them as criminals, we see them as terrorists. If they were criminals we'd just return them to Karzai with a sotto-voce hint to dispose of the trouble-makers quickly. They're terrorists, and we're holding them for various reasons, one of the more important being, as long as we hold them, they won't be out there trying to kill Americans.
Mr Reid's speech will focus on updating the international legal system to deal not only with modern terrorism but also with issues of potential genocide and responses to imminent threats.
Sure, that'll go well, just what we need, another definition of 'genocide'. We have one of those already, it's just that no one will do anything about it.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/03/2006 02:57 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I couldn't agree more, we need new rules. Now, what was the penalty for those who don't follow the rules of war ? Cartoons would be made ? Name calling ? Scarlet letters issued ?
We need a phukan reality check.
Posted by: wxjames || 04/03/2006 8:54 Comments || Top||

#2  One possible move, to which Mr Reid makes an implicit reference, would be to agree a new protocol to the Geneva Conventions to apply the same rules to battles with al-Qaeda-style insurgents, so both sides have a clear duty to obey the standard provisions.

*sigh*

There's already a Protocol that would treat al'Qaeda, et. al. the same as regular army -- but the US (and apparently Britain) refused to sign onto the damned thing because it essentialy turns the entire GC into a circle jerk instead of something meaningful.

You can't unilaterally declare that both sides will follow rules. Both sides have to follow them, on their own initiative, and there has to be a penalty for violating them. You can make all the declarations you want, sign all the papers you want, and the terrorists of the world will still be aiming at children, the elderly, non-combatants in general.

There's only one way to put an end to that -- make terrorism and supporting terrorism to freaking dangerous that anyone even putting the idea forward is lynched by his neighbors.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 04/03/2006 9:24 Comments || Top||

#3  "Lessee...who's heading the GC rules re-writing committee this month? Is it Algeria or Chad? The US? No sorry, the US will have to sit this one out, I'm afraid, can't have the fox guarding the henhouse, you understand."
Posted by: Seafarious || 04/03/2006 9:37 Comments || Top||

#4  I for one look forward to the day when we (the US) follows the letter and spirit of the existing Genevea Conventions that we have already signed.

Of course, that means that anyone caught in the battlefield carrying a weapon, but not wearing a uniform, is, ipso facto, an illegal combatant.
That brings an automatic firing squad after a VERY short tribunal.

When and if al-Quaeda signs and follows the Geneva convention, and their forces start wearing uniforms, protecting non-combatants, and all the other parts of the GC, then we can start treating their "soldiers" as soldiers.
Posted by: Rambler || 04/03/2006 9:46 Comments || Top||

#5  We don't follow the Geneva rules. We actually detain and later release terrorists. According to the rules, if you aren't wearing a uniform or a symbol of a recongnized country or government, you have no rights and the other side has every right to lynch, shoot or otherwise put you out of their misery.
Posted by: DarthVader || 04/03/2006 10:35 Comments || Top||

#6  A View From the Eye of the Storm
By Haim Harari
FrontPageMagazine.com | March 15, 2006
Posted by: gromgoru || 04/03/2006 22:07 Comments || Top||


Iraq
Iraqis fleeing to from mixed areas as militia violence intensifies
The war in Iraq has entered a bloodier phase, with the killings of Iraqi civilians rising tremendously in daily sectarian violence while American casualties have steadily declined, spurring tens of thousands of Iraqis to flee from mixed Shiite-Sunni areas.

The new pattern, detailed in casualty and migration statistics from the past six months and in interviews with American commanders and Iraqi officials, has led to further separation of Shiite and Sunni Arabs, moving the country toward a de facto partitioning along sectarian and ethnic lines — an outcome that the Bush administration has doggedly worked to avoid over the past three years.

The nature of the Iraq war has been changing since at least the late autumn, when political friction between Sunni Arabs and Shiite Arabs rose even as American troops began implementing a long-term plan to decrease their street presence. But the killing accelerated after the bombing on Feb. 22 of a revered Shiite shrine, which unleashed a wave of sectarian bloodletting.

About 900 Iraqi civilians died violently in March, up from about 700 the month before, according to military statistics and the Iraq Coalition Casualty Count, an independent organization that tracks deaths. Meanwhile, at least 29 American troops were killed in March, the second-lowest monthly total since the war began.

The White House says that little violence occurs in most of Iraq's 18 provinces. But those four or five provinces where the majority of the killings and migrations take place are Iraq's major population centers, generally mixed regions that include Baghdad, and contain much of the nation's infrastructure — crucial factors in Iraq's prospects for stability.

The Iraqi public's reaction to the violence has been dramatic. Since the shrine bombing, 30,000 to 36,000 Iraqis have fled their homes because of sectarian violence or fear of reprisals, say officials at the International Organization for Migration, based in Geneva. The Iraqi Ministry of Displacement and Migration estimated that at least 5,500 families have moved, with the biggest group being 1,250 families settling in the Shiite holy city of Najaf after leaving Baghdad and Sunni-dominated towns in central Iraq. The families are living with relatives or in abandoned buildings, and a crisis of food and water shortages is starting to build, officials say.

"We lived in Latifiya for 30 years," said Abu Hussein al-Ramahi, a Shiite farmer with a family of seven, referring to a village south of Baghdad that is a stronghold of the Sunni Arab insurgency. "But a month ago, two armed people with masks on their faces said if I stayed in this area, my family and I would no longer remain alive. They shot bullets near my feet. I went back home immediately and we left the area early next morning for Najaf." Mr. Ramahi's family and other migrants are now squatting in a derelict hotel in the holy city.

"It's almost a creeping polarization of Iraq along ethnic and sectarian lines," said Anthony H. Cordesman, a military expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

In the chaos, he said, "We see a slow, steady loss of confidence, a growing process of distrust which you see day by day as people at the political level bicker. Everything has become sectarian and ethnic."

The shifts in violence and migration patterns are fueling discussion about whether Iraq is devolving into civil war. Although that determination may be impossible to make in the short term, the debate itself could increase the political pressure that President Bush is facing at home to draw down significantly the force of 133,000 American troops here. Even if American deaths keep falling, polls show the American public has little appetite for engagement in an Iraqi civil war.

Commanders in Iraq say the insurgent groups in the country, particularly Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, have shifted the focus of their attacks in an effort to foment civil war and undermine negotiations to form a four-year government. "What we are seeing him do now is shift his target from the coalition forces to Iraqi civilians and Iraqi security forces," said Maj. Gen. Rick Lynch, a senior spokesman for the American command. "The enemy is trying to stop the formation of this national unity government; he's trying to inflame sectarian violence."

Dozens of bodies, garroted or executed with gunshots to the head, are turning up almost daily in Baghdad alone. The gruesome work is usually attributed to death squads or Shiite militias, some in Iraqi police or army uniforms. Meanwhile, powerful bombings, a favorite tactic of the Sunni Arab-led insurgency, continue to devastate civilian areas and Iraqi bases or recruitment centers.

At the same time, the number of kidnappings of Iraqis is surging because of an explosion in criminal gangs working for their own gain or with armed political groups. Scores of civilians are abducted every week, usually for ransoms of $20,000 to $30,000. In recent weeks, masked men have stormed offices in Baghdad and hauled away all the workers.

It is not clear whether this change in the nature of the war is permanent. A wider anti-American offensive by the Sunni Arab insurgents or a Shiite rebellion could suddenly shift the brunt of violence back against the foreign forces, resulting in more American deaths, as when the Shiite cleric Moktada al-Sadr ignited two uprisings in 2004.

But in the wake of the shrine bombing, Mr. Sadr's thousands-strong militia is focusing its wrath on Sunni Arabs; the militiamen are accused of killing hundreds in late February alone. As for the traditional insurgency, some hard-line Sunni Arab officials say the Sunnis are more concerned now about the growing power of religious Shiite leaders, their militias and Iran than about the American presence.

The results of the December elections showed that the religious Shiite coalition, backed by Iran, will almost certainly control the new government, and that the Sunni Arabs, no matter their participation in the vote, will face Shiite rule for years. That Sunni-Shiite tension sharpened when insurgents destroyed the golden dome of the Askariya shrine in Samarra in February, and vengeful Shiite militiamen rampaged through Baghdad and other cities.

At the same time, American commanders have decreased the number of patrols, to try to push the Iraqi security forces into a more visible role.

That, along with improved armor and bomb detection, may partly explain the drop in casualties. Last October, 96 American troops died. That number has decreased every month since then, but plummeted most sharply between February and March — to 29 in March from 55 in February.

In the same period, Iraqi civilian deaths generally increased, from 465 in October, according to the Iraq Coalition Casualty Count, which tallies deaths from a wide range of news media reports, a methodology believed to give rough though under-reported estimates.

The broad trend is also supported by statistics on number of attacks. A senior Pentagon official said the number of attacks on Americans, Iraqi forces and Iraqi civilians had remained at about 600 per week since last September.

But the focus of the attacks has shifted — in September, 82 percent of attacks were against American-led forces and 18 percent against Iraqis; in February, 65 percent were against the foreigners and 35 percent against Iraqis.

Top American officials are concerned that despite the growing number of trained and equipped Iraqi security forces being fielded, and the large number of insurgents killed or captured in the past six months, the number of overall attacks has not declined, the Defense Department official said.

"It should be worrisome to us that it's still at the same level," said the official, who was not authorized to speak publicly on the trend. "With the number of operations that are occurring and the number of people we are detaining growing, and truly with the number of tactical successes that we're having, you would expect to see a reduction in the trend."

American officials say the solution to the sectarian bloodshed lies in the Iraqis quickly forming a national unity government, with representatives of all major groups in Iraq checking each other through compromises.

But with each political milestone — the transfer of sovereignty in 2004, two sets of elections in 2005, the referendum on the constitution — the Americans have asserted that the country would stabilize. Instead, the violence has continued unabated, sometimes changing in nature, as it is doing now, but never declining.

If the Americans push too hard against one side or the other in an effort to clamp down on the violence, they risk losing political allies. American relations with Shiite leaders have soured in recent months, partly over Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad's insistence that the Shiite militias be disbanded. He now says those militias kill more people than bombings from the Sunni Arab-led insurgency, a declaration that has infuriated the Shiites.

In any case, the mass migrations could mean that Iraq's political groups will have little incentive to compromise with one another, as they separate into their enclaves. For example, at least 761 families have settled in Baghdad after moving from Anbar Province and other Sunni-dominated areas to the west, according to Iraqi government statistics. The same is happening on the Sunni Arab end — there are reports of 50 families moving from Baghdad to the Sunni enclave of Falluja.

Aid groups have been handing out mattresses, blankets, cooking sets and other gear to families throughout central and southern Iraq.

"The situation for those displaced won't be resolved anytime soon," said Jemini Pandya, a spokeswoman for the International Organization for Migration.

The migrations are partly caused by the fear of partisan Iraqi security forces, many of them trained by the Americans. The police and commando forces are infested with militia recruits, mostly from Shiite political parties, and are accused by Sunni Arabs of carrying out sectarian executions. One Sunni-run TV network warned viewers last week not to allow Iraqi policemen or soldiers into their homes unless the forces are accompanied by American troops.

"The militias are in charge now," said Aliyah al-Bakr, 42, a Sunni Arab schoolteacher who had two male relatives abducted and executed by black-clad gunmen on a recent night in Baghdad. "I'm more afraid of Iraqi militias than of the Americans. But the American presence is still the cornerstone of all the problems. We didn't have these kinds of problems before they came here."
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/03/2006 02:53 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [13 views] Top|| File under:

#1  That should be "fleeing from," not "fleeing to," my apologies.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/03/2006 2:56 Comments || Top||

#2  Sounds like the Iranians are stirring up new troubles, and doing so knowing that Dubya must respond wid better or stronger measures. Iran = North Korea > regional bellicosity is as much to get the USA-World to acknowledge and verify the "greatness" of the Rogue states as presently governed; as well as for inducing national suicide in case the Radics fail. Other than the anti-Bush/GOP MSM and anti-American Americans already inside the Amer NPE, the Iranians next best ace is to cause such handfuls of high profile, PC-incorrect casualties/losses amongst US-Allied milfors, where America wins any ground war in Iran but loses in the Medias. Lastly, the Clinton-led/centric Dems may govern as POTUSes in 2008 becuz new 9-11's in America are in reality [anti-Amer American-approved?] disguised assassination attempts against Bush and the bulk of the GOP-Conservative or anti-Clinton Congress. The Dems > Surviving GOP-caused/blamed Amer Hirsohima(s) = Saving the world from GOP-caused/blamed nuclear war vv "brinkmanship". THE WOT IS ULTIMATELY ABOUT CONTROL OF THE WORLD AND THE FUTURE OWG - AMERICA AND ITS ALLIES MUST WIN, OR FACE BEING DESTROYED. As a Left-alleged Fascist SOCIALIST, Dubya is both Adolf Bushitler whom needs to be stopped iff not wiped out, as well as a "Young Turk", unruly, arrogant, Thinks-He-Knows-Everything self-centered HALF-A-COMMUNIST/SOCIALIST, HALF-A-LEFTSOCIALIST BROTHER TO STALIN, MARX, AND MAO. THe Lefties are RINOS for a reason(s).
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 3:25 Comments || Top||

#3  Joe's off his meds again.

Posted by: Robert Crawford || 04/03/2006 8:08 Comments || Top||

#4  Seems like he entire Iraqi civil war is going on in Joe's mind.
So, even though they have radio, TV, and the internet, you just can't take the caveman out of the Iraqi. It's like a Darwinean black hole. Everything that evolves is sucked inside out and returned to it's most simplistic form, tribal survival. The same is happening in Pakistan.
Posted by: wxjames || 04/03/2006 8:46 Comments || Top||

#5  The U.S> is trying to maintain a balance of power -- read terror -- to see whether some sort of agreement might be reached. The key is really the Sunni insurgents. When they fear the U.S. leaving more than the U.S. staying, then the U.S. can go after the Sadr brigades. Sadr's position is weaker than he thinks because were the U.S. to leave, the Sunni insurgents would have a field day, if one believes that there was good reason why they ruled the country for 35 years despite being a minority.
Posted by: Perfesser || 04/03/2006 10:24 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan
Taliban kill, burn Turkish engineer
Suspected Taliban militants shot dead and burned a Turkish engineer in an area of western Afghanistan where two other foreigners were killed last week, a provincial governor said Monday. The gunmen stopped a vehicle carrying the engineer and three Afghan bodyguards on a remote highway in Farah province Sunday evening, the governor of neighbouring Nimroz told AFP.

"Armed Taliban in a station wagon stopped their vehicle, forced them out of the vehicle, disarmed his three bodyguards and shot the Turkish engineer," said governor Ghulam Dastageer Azad. "Later they poured fuel over his body and burned him."
Hummmm, isn't that un-islamic? Or is it un-islamic only when Americans do it?
The bodyguards were freed although their weapons were stolen.

Two foreign nationals were killed in the area on Tuesday last week when a remote-controlled bomb hit their vehicle. Three Afghans were also killed.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/03/2006 02:52 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [10 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Hummmm, isn't that un-islamic? Or is it un-islamic only when Americans do it?

When a jihadi burns a body is is called preparing meat for dinner 'cause the goat or sheep is more useful alive.
Posted by: BigEd || 04/03/2006 16:56 Comments || Top||


Iraq
Zarqawi shifting tactics in response to orders from al-Qaeda high command
Al Qaeda leader in Iraq Abu Musab al-Zarqawi has shifted tactics, focusing his suicide bombers on Iraqi forces and civilians instead of American troops, the chief U.S. military spokesman said on Thursday.

"What we are seeing him do now is shift his target from the coalition forces to Iraqi civilians and Iraqi security forces," Major General Rick Lynch told a news conference.

While monthly U.S. casualties have been falling since November, attacks on Iraqi forces are escalating as Zarqawi attempts to undermine efforts to build up the army and security forces, Lynch said.

"The number of attacks against Iraqi security force members has increased 35 percent in the last four weeks compared to the previous six months," said Lynch.

"That is by design. The enemy knows the Iraqi security forces are increasing in capability."

A U.S. troop pullout is contingent on the performance of Iraqi troops, who have watched suicide bombers kill thousands of their comrades.

A suicide bomber strapped with explosives killed 40 Iraqi army recruits at a base near the northern city of Mosul this week.

Islamic militants have also been carrying out bolder attacks at police stations.

Guerrillas attacked the police headquarters and courthouse in the Iraqi town of Miqdadiya this month, killing at least 18 people and releasing prisoners, police said.

Zarqawi, who has claimed responsibility for some of the most spectacular suicide bombings in Iraq, has kept a lower profile recently. His large-scale bombings have decreased.

Iraqi Interior Minister Bayan Jabor said this week that Zarqawi was no longer a threat.

But military intelligence sources in Iraq say they have no reason to believe the Jordanian militant has weakened and he remains a recruiting magnet for young Sunni Arabs.

One said recently it appeared that international al Qaeda leaders may have prevailed on Zarqawi to limit attacks on Shi'ite civilians on the grounds this was counter-productive.

Lynch said the improved performance of Iraqi forces and their growing ability to carry out operations on their own had contributed to a fall in the number of daily attacks.

He noted that suicide bombings, the biggest killers in Iraq had dropped, as had the number of overall assaults.

"Last year, May to July, we averaged 50 suicide attacks per month. This year, January to March, it was 24 per month," he said.

Previous lulls in insurgent activity have been followed by a frenzy of attacks.

Lynch said al Qaeda was now focused on car bombs and roadside bombs to try to ignite a sectarian civil war while carrying out selective assassinations.

The bombing of a Shi'ite shrine last month which the United States blamed on al Qaeda triggered reprisals and pushed Iraq closer than ever to sectarian civil war.

Lynch said there had been 955 murders or execution-style killings in Baghdad alone since the shrine attack and 1,313 nationwide: "(In) January in Baghdad we averaged 11 murders or executions per day. They peaked at one point in time recently with an average of 36. We have reduced that back to 25."
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/03/2006 02:51 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [11 views] Top|| File under:


Arabia
Limburg boomer surrenders to Yemeni authorities
One of 23 Al Qaeda convicts who escaped from a Yemeni prison in February has surrendered, a news agency reported Sunday.

Hazam Saleh Majali turned himself in to authorities within the past two days, according to Yemen's official Saba news agency.

The Yemeni was convicted of having a role in the 2002 attack on the French tanker Limburg and sentenced to death.

Majli was the sixth from the group of 23 to have surrendered, the agency said.

The prisoners broke out on Feb. 3 through a roughly 200-yard tunnel that ended inside a mosque. Among those at large is a militant convicted in the 2000 attack on the destroyer USS Cole in Aden's harbor.

Security officials said authorities were in indirect contact with the remaining fugitives and trying to persuade them to surrender.

The officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media, said tribal leaders and Muslim clerics were the intermediaries. The officials did not provide further details.

Security officials said investigations into the prison break had found evidence that three people were bribed to facilitate the escape.

Authorities had offered a reward of $27,800 for information leading to the arrest of any of the fugitives.
Posted by: Dan Darling || 04/03/2006 02:49 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  DAN said: 'Limburg BOOMER'





groan cheese
Posted by: Groan || 04/03/2006 13:19 Comments || Top||

#2  "The Yemeni was convicted... and sentenced to death."

Why would anyone who is sentenced to swing turn themselves in? Is it safe to assume there is some Quid pro Quo action or just more Arabic logic that continues to elude me?
Posted by: DepotGuy || 04/03/2006 13:38 Comments || Top||


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Palestinian PM Whines About U.S. Diplomacy
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) - Prime Minister They Call Me Ismail Haniyeh criticized the United States on Sunday for restricting diplomatic ties with the Hamas government, saying his people were being punished for electing the militant Islamic group.
That's the point, and you got it on the first try!
Seeking to end chaos in the Gaza Strip, Palestinian Interior Minister Said Siyam pledged the new government would pacify the area but appealed for patience. ``Let them bear with us as long as it takes to kill all the Jooooos for a year,'' he said. Four people were killed and 36 wounded in unrest over the weekend.

The United States said Friday that American diplomats have been forbidden to make contact with officials in any Palestinian government agency controlled by Hamas, whose charter calls for Israel's destruction. The Islamic group's new Cabinet controls every ministry. State Department spokesman Adam Ereli said diplomats would maintain contact with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and lawmakers from his Fatah movement, which favors peace talks.

Haniyeh accused the United States of violating its own principles of democracy by ostracizing his Hamas-led government. ``This government was elected in a free and honest election, and according to the democratic principles the American administration is calling for,'' Haniyeh told supporters who had come to his office to wish his new government well. ``We believe this is a punishment of the Palestinian people because of its democratic choice, and at the same time, it increases the people's suffering,'' he said.
Your people made a choice. Now we're making a choice. Your people chose to put a group of gun-toting terrs in charge. We've chosen not to deal with the thugs. Perhaps your people will choose better next time. Then again, they're Paleos.
The Palestinian Authority has received about $1 billion a year in foreign aid, much of which is now in jeopardy. The government is already having trouble making its payroll for March.
That's a shame. Darn. Shoot. Drat. Fudge.
Posted by: Steve White || 04/03/2006 00:59 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "We believe this is a punishment of the Palestinian people because of its democratic choice, and at the same time, it increases the people's suffering," he said.

Just another way of saying:
Tam exanimis quam tunica nehru fio.
(I am as dead as the nehru jacket.)
Posted by: Phosh Uneath3161 || 04/03/2006 2:21 Comments || Top||

#2  I always wondered what made them think that I owed them something.
Posted by: newc || 04/03/2006 5:43 Comments || Top||

#3  I always wondered what made them think that I owed them something.

They're the lions of Islam. As far as they're concerned, you should be glad they let you live.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 04/03/2006 8:10 Comments || Top||

#4  And none survived, save me, to tell thee.
Posted by: mojo || 04/03/2006 10:37 Comments || Top||

#5  Is it possible that maybe, just maybe the Palestinians could get a clue in a year or two, or am I being way overoptimistic?

(Not saying they are going to get all the clues, just maybe a nodding acquaintaince with cause and effect?)
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 04/03/2006 14:39 Comments || Top||

#6  As desolate as:

1) the Sahara in mid-summer
2) the Antarctic plateau in mid-winter
3) a Paleostinian Mensa meeting
Posted by: DMFD || 04/03/2006 20:16 Comments || Top||

#7  I say a decade, DB along with the military crunching of a couple of their patron states: Syria, Iran, and .....next up to the plate...Saudi (after the princelings lose power to extremists)

how's that for a prediction?
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 20:48 Comments || Top||

#8  Sounds lovely to me, Frank. I would love to see you right on this one.
Posted by: trailing wife || 04/03/2006 22:16 Comments || Top||


Europe
Three Killed in Istanbul Bus Attack
ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) - A group of men stopped a passenger bus and tossed gasoline bombs at it, sending the vehicle careening into pedestrians and killing three in Turkey's largest city on Sunday as pro-Kurdish riots continued to spread.

In the attack in Istanbul's Bagcilar district, the driver reversed his flaming vehicle onto a sidewalk after the bombing, running down a group of people nearby, police said. At least two of those killed were elderly women, and police said they suspected Kurdish militants were behind the attack.
Brilliant, officer, simply brilliant.
Television images showed the bus propped up on the sidewalk and engulfed in flames, which shot out of every broken window.

Private NTV television said men had gathered around after the attack and shouted slogans for an outlawed Kurdish separatist group that is considered a terrorist organization by the United States and the European Union. If the Istanbul bus attack is proven to have been carried out by pro-Kurdish demonstrators, it would bring to 12 the total number of people killed in related violence in the past week.
I think the Kurds are a great people, but these mooks need some very direct action.
Posted by: Steve White || 04/03/2006 00:58 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [11 views] Top|| File under:


Iraq
Iraqi factions agree on new cabinet bylaws
BAGHDAD - Iraqi political parties reached an agreement on Sunday on the bylaws for the functioning of the next government, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani’s office announced in a statement. The decision marks the second achievement in as many days from the contentious negotiating sessions to form a coalition government, nearly four months after a landmark national election. It followed the announcement Saturday of a compromise on Iraq’s security file.

Talabani’s office said that a two-thirds cabinet majority would be required for any decisions on the national budget, financial agreements, contracts over 50 million dollars, border issues, security, high-ranking military promotions and questions concerning national sovereignty. Any issues involving the presence of US-led coalition forces in Iraq would also require a two-thirds cabinet majority.

The requirement for more than a simple majority dilutes the power of the dominant conservative Shiite bloc, which holds nearly half the seats in the 275-member parliament.

The parties also agreed that there would be a pair of deputy prime ministers charged with ensuring cabinet decisions get implemented. One of the deputy premiers will be in charge of the economy file, while the other will head be responsible for the country’s basic services, including electricity and water. Of the two, one will also supervise Iraq’s security file in tandem with the prime minister, according to the terms of Saturday’s deal.
Posted by: Steve White || 04/03/2006 00:53 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Can we get a 2/3 majority here to raise taxes?
Posted by: Perfesser || 04/03/2006 10:25 Comments || Top||


US Military Convoys Will Now Stand and Fight
GRAFENWÖHR, Germany — In a change to Army tactics, U.S. soldiers will stand and fight instead of shooting and pressing on when their convoys are attacked on Iraqi roads, according to Harvey Perritt, spokesman for the Army’s Training and Doctrine Command at Fort Monroe, Va.

“In the first two years of Iraq, convoys (under attack) just fired and kept rolling,” said Maj. Roger Gaines, the battalion’s operations officer said Thursday. “That gave bad guys the perception that Americans run away. Now, convoys will stop and engage the enemy.”
Yes, this would be nice - the attacked force fights back to hold the asshats in place - while a quick reaction force - supported by attack helicopters and fast movers - closes in from all sides
The change is part of Army Chief of Staff Gen. Peter Schoomaker’s underlying philosophy of a more rigorous response to attacks, Perritt said in a telephone interview Thursday.

The training is mandatory for all soldiers, regardless of their military occupational specialty. Members of the 1st Armored Division’s 141st Signal Battalion tried out the new policy while practicing live-fire convoys this week at the Grafenwöhr Training Area.
Ah, Graf - a true garden spot - second only to my old stomping grounds in "Beautiful Baumholder"
“We are training to take the fight to the enemy,” said Gaines, a 45-year-old Portland, Ore., native. “If you stop and fight, you can at least neutralize them or take it to the point that they disengage.”
How about something simpler,like: "Kill then where they stand"?

I like these sorts of initiatives.

RLTW!


Posted by: Lone Ranger || 04/03/2006 00:36 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [17 views] Top|| File under:

#1  This is actually a sign that the insurgents are basically done, in terms of their ability to put together attacks involving hundreds of men. As long as they were able to do so, the convoys had to roll on or risk being annihilated. As long as they had that capability, they could destroy Iraqi police stations at will. Now that the guerrillas have been whittled down, both convoys and Iraqi forces can become more aggressive. This isn't a new idea or a fixing of past mistakes - it's a logical progression from one step to another. Just as it's necessary to attend high school before going to college - high school isn't a mistake, but a prerequisite for going to college.
Posted by: Zhang Fei || 04/03/2006 1:03 Comments || Top||

#2  The Marines always stopped to fight. The drivers jumped out to guard their vehicles while the passengers engaged the enemy. I suspect that this was one reason why the insurgents preferred to attack army convoys.
Posted by: RWV || 04/03/2006 1:24 Comments || Top||

#3  RWW's right, Zhang Fei is wrong here. It was always a mistake (in general) to flee, as opposed to making any enemy attack their last. Of course a given tactical situation had to determine the best course of action - but "hundreds" of bad guys were rarely, if ever, engaged against a convoy. Far beyond merely responding much more aggressively to attacks, we should have all along used deception (bait convoys with a large QRF standing by) and extended retaliation (pursuit of all assailants to the last one, with significant repercussions for any neighborhood that appeared to harbor or assist attacks).

Rice herself made a huge blunder - and got the facts wrong - when she idiotically "admitted" "thousands of tactical errors" in Iraq. The tactical errors of consequence, however, all fall on a different side of the ledger than the superficial "critics" assume - lack of aggressiveness and seriousness, not excess of force. The current MNC-I CG has made some alarming comments about more building and less fighting. While we have the best military in human history, I think it's arguable that Iraq, post-kinetic, has often not been their finest hour .....

More McMasters, less hearts-and-minds silliness. Who in the hell thinks Iraqis are conditioned to respect any formula that lacks clear authority, if not compulsion?
Posted by: Verlaine in Iraq || 04/03/2006 2:52 Comments || Top||

#4  I thought SOP was to charge (ie, attack, not try to pull away from) ambushes?
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 04/03/2006 8:13 Comments || Top||

#5  Good to hear from you Verlaine. I agree with the "ton of bricks" strategy.
Posted by: Spot || 04/03/2006 8:41 Comments || Top||

#6  second only to..... "Beautiful Baumholder"

Drank a lot while you were there, eh LR?
Posted by: Steve || 04/03/2006 8:57 Comments || Top||

#7  I'm still waiting for them to use a bait smoking sputtering helocopter for a controlled 'crash' to bring the splodies into the open for some good killin'.
Posted by: wxjames || 04/03/2006 8:59 Comments || Top||

#8  The doctrine I learned was to try to continue ahead out of a "far" ambush, and the assault into a "near" ambush. Actually, the basic idea was that if you were caught in a near ambush, and the opponent knew what he was doing, your chances of survival were almost zero anyway, so you might as well die in attack mode. But - once you could close with the ambush line, it was then man-to-man - because the enemy could not shoot along his own deployed ambush line without hitting his own. Likewise, once you closed with him, he could not bring indirect fire down on you, without himself being in the impact zone.

A well-laid ambush is not simply opening up on a target. A good ambush thinks out the reactions of the target, and trys to get the target to move into a prepared kill zone. Example - ambush a file of troops moving along a road in the open - with a nice ditch running next to the road. Assume that once the ambush is "sprung", the targets will take cover in the ditch. So - you prepare the ditch by laying claymore mines along the entire length, facing upwards. Now - the ambush simply uses a couple of machine guns opening up, to get all the target troops into the ditch - and you then detonate all the claymores - and your targets are all toast. You just mop up the remains (or the few survivors).

Normally, you don't design your ambush to expect that the targets will attack into the ambush line - it takes well-trained troops, and BIG balls to assualt into plunging fire. So - that is generally a good way to avoid the planned "traps" of the ambush. But -you have to move FAST.

Interestingly, I noticed that US Army policy on attendance at Ranger School has recently changed, to begin allowing combat support and combat service support NCO's to attend. This is based on the growing awareness that - in the large-scale counter-insurgency type actions that will predominate in the future, the delineations between "front lines" and "rear area ops" are disappearing - and troops and units of all types need to be able to fight aggressively.

Cheers!
RLTW
(Rangers Lead The Way)
Posted by: Lone Ranger || 04/03/2006 9:05 Comments || Top||

#9  Thanks, Ranger, that makes sense.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 04/03/2006 9:12 Comments || Top||

#10  Is it true the USAF is adding two weeks to Basic to better train Airmen to be trigger-pullers? And that Airmen will actually be issued firearms? And that they will be deployed in ways where they will need to use them?
Posted by: Glenmore || 04/03/2006 9:16 Comments || Top||

#11  Glenmore - a lot of airmen are being used to operate those convoys in Iraq.

As to the change in tactical doctrine, remember the start of the Iraq war and the ambush of the convoy, the prisoner rescue, etc. The Army had for decades ignored proper tactical training for its combat support troops. Training resources and monies went to the maneuver brigades while the combat support elements actually had to operate daily in direct support of those brigades to keep them 'green' in operational status. Yep, you could run a bunch through a two week course and upgrade their immediate skills, but you need skill at each level of the command, and your usual officers and NCOs in the branches didn't have it. They were being thumped by the command chain on keeping their maneuver brigades skilled, not on their own tactical abilities. Now think. You should be seeing that same leadership now on its second, and possibly third, rotation into country. Now you have training with experience leadership. You now have tools to implement doctrine. Being streatched as the service has been, its not like you can take the bulk of the combat support off line for 6 months of intensive training without shutting down everything else. Its the evolution of doctrine, training, implementation, verification, and revision. Two years is about the historical norm.
Posted by: Hupineque Glerelet1305 || 04/03/2006 9:43 Comments || Top||

#12  First order of buisness when you're ambushed is CLEAR THE KILL ZONE. Then turn around, flank, and start killing the ambushers.
Posted by: mojo || 04/03/2006 10:39 Comments || Top||

#13  mojo - that's if you have training. If the last 'training' you had outside the twice annual requirement to simply fire your weapon, was basic prior to tech training, I doubt the probability of success against a well laid ambush.
Posted by: Hupineque Glerelet1305 || 04/03/2006 11:07 Comments || Top||

#14  Why is army announcing changes in tactics? I would think it would be more effective to make opreational changes without announcing them to the enemy.
Posted by: DoDo || 04/03/2006 11:56 Comments || Top||

#15  DoDo -- odds are the change was announced to the field long before it was to the press.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 04/03/2006 12:13 Comments || Top||

#16  Just make sure you get the hell away from those 5 tons. They make damn good targets.
Yes, and have helos flying nearby for quick support. Ambush the ambushers. (or, as we called it, "F**k the F**king F**kers.)
Posted by: DarthVader || 04/03/2006 12:34 Comments || Top||

#17  The next step could be a "Q-truck" convoy--looks like a harmless little bunch of softskins, but it's full of people loaded for bear.
Posted by: Mike || 04/03/2006 12:53 Comments || Top||

#18  I agree with Mike on the Qtrucks but can't understand why it wasn't done a long time ago. Set up a well armoured truck or two and have airpower in the distance and ready and just drive around looking for ambushes.

Then again casualties are generally from IEDs so I'm not sure there's all that much ambushing excitement these past few months to begin with.
Posted by: Thuger Grens9563 || 04/03/2006 13:15 Comments || Top||

#19  I agree with Mike on the Qtrucks but can't understand why it wasn't done a long time ago.

We did it more than once in diyala, in early 2005. Didn't advertise the fact, cause we Knew the enemy were reading the news dispaches. Opsec was better than usual in a few places.

The expression on the survivors faces was priceless. "This is so unfair--Infidels aren't sposed to fight back!!!" They stopped attacking all our convoys by april.
Posted by: N guard || 04/03/2006 14:44 Comments || Top||

#20  Speaking of soldiers with big balls defeating ambushes, let's not forget this one.
Posted by: Matt || 04/03/2006 15:16 Comments || Top||

#21  Fighting back sounds all well and good unless you're driving a truck full of ammo or gasoline. I wouldn't be much for stopping and engaging if I were sitting on any cargo that volatile--and not just to protect my own hide but my mates in the potential blast radius.
Posted by: Dar || 04/03/2006 16:01 Comments || Top||

#22  Dar,if they stand up and fight a few times their will be far fewer ambushes for that eventual convoy of gas to worry about. You also make seperate rules for the gas convoy.
Posted by: rjschwarz || 04/03/2006 18:48 Comments || Top||

#23  Agree with Lone Ranger and others above: it's all situational. Volume of fire, accuracy of fire, cargo, and friendly firepower will help the leader decide. Of course a good ambush is one where you're dead before you have a chance to decide.

Interesting to compare notes with you Lone Ranger. I was trained to charge a near ambush with weapon on full auto and keep running until you were _well_ past the assualt element. Then you'd try to link up with any other survivors and E&E the hell out of there.

All the Way!
Posted by: 11A5S || 04/03/2006 21:08 Comments || Top||

#24  I'm not sure what they mean by "change in tactics" here. First and formost is to clear the "Kill Zone" of the ambush, always has been the rule, always will be. No one can fight and survive in a properly laidout kill zone. Call it running away or what ever, but you must first clear the kill zone. Then as others have said you flank, secure, and call in air and Arty. Catch you enemy on the move and destroy them. Basic tactics that are time and combat tested, and still in use. This sounds like good IO for the home front.
Posted by: 49 pan || 04/03/2006 22:04 Comments || Top||

#25  11a5s,
ATW? Oh gawd folks we got us a paratrooper!
Posted by: 49 pan || 04/03/2006 22:06 Comments || Top||

#26  Wine? No good!
Women? No good!
PT? So good!
Posted by: Glosing Hupesh7946 || 04/03/2006 22:10 Comments || Top||

#27  Nothin like running on Ardennes at 6AM to remind you of the fun in the Army.
Posted by: 49 pan || 04/03/2006 22:12 Comments || Top||

#28  Echoes in the misty morning stillness bouncing between the temporary tinderboxes barracks built in 1943 which required 4 men on fireguard all night long...

Gotta go...
Posted by: Glosing Hupesh7946 || 04/03/2006 22:17 Comments || Top||

#29  Listen to Dogs, did you get into the wrong thread? What has Algeria to do with stopping to fight ambushes?
Posted by: trailing wife || 04/03/2006 23:32 Comments || Top||

#30  WOT? 10 years ago, the government of Algeria launched search and destroy operations against the killers of Christian monks. Now there government is being forced to adopt kill-abandoners legislation, like the Neo-Talibanis tried to enforce in Afghanistan.

Real WOT progress. For those who actually visited the WTC pre-911, this will be interesting:
http://en.france-echos.com/?p=48
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 22:55 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
Ten killed in Balochistan
Ten people including five tribal police were killed and 13 injured in separate bomb blasts in Balochistan on Sunday, officials said. Three civilians — a man, a woman and a young girl — were killed and seven injured in two back-to-back bomb explosions at a state-run farm in the town of Kohlu, 300 kilometres east of Quetta, a security official told AFP.P. The official had earlier said that two paramilitary soldiers were killed in the blast. “Initial reports had indicated that two paramilitary soldiers were killed, but later the dead were identified as three civilians,” the official said, on condition of anonymity. He blamed the attack on tribal militants. The three civilians worked at the farm.

Five tribal policemen and a private security official guarding an oil and gas exploration site of Pakistan Petroleum Limited were killed and four injured in a landmine explosion in the desert region of Sunny in Bolan district, tribal police official major Mohammed Anjum told AFP. Two of the policemen were killed and eight injured in a firefight following the explosion. “The fighting is still on,” a security official told Reuters in condition of anonymity.

A tractor driver was killed and two others injured in Jafferabad district when a tractor-trailer hit a landmine on Sunday, police official Khalid Magsi said.

Paramilitary forces also on Sunday defused a remote-controlled bomb planted on a main railway line near Mach station a couple of hours before two passenger trains were to pass the spot, a paramilitary commander said. Tribal chieftains say they are fighting for more political rights and a greater share of profits from the region’s natural resources. The Frontier Corp seized 35 shells in a raid in the Patokh area of Dera Bugti district.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [19 views] Top|| File under:


Christians protest attack on churches
MULTAN: Christians on Sunday protested against the desecration of the Holy Bible and arson attacks on their places of worship in various parts of the country, terming the incidents ‘religious terrorism’. Special services were held for those who had died in various incidents of violence against minorities. “It is religious terrorism to set our church (in Mian Channu) ablaze during the period when we (Christians) fast. It is an attack on our religion and belief. We feel unsafe and insecure,” said Chaudhry Naveed Amer Jeeva, MPA and the coordinator of All Pakistan Minorities Alliance, South Punjab.

He said that the present regime had failed to protect churches, missionary properties and religious leaders. He said that churches had been burnt down in Sargodha and Sukkur, more than 300 copies of holy Bible were set ablaze in Sangla Hill and the cross desecrated and Christians killed in terrorist activities.
Not to worry. Sipah e-Sahabah's legal again.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [16 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Not to worry. I'm sure the MSM and talking heads will give this full coverage....
Posted by: CrazyFool || 04/03/2006 0:34 Comments || Top||

#2  Mohammed himself stated that it was a good idea to read the bible. Nevermind all that. Arabs want to own the world in and out. Which beast?
Posted by: newc || 04/03/2006 1:18 Comments || Top||

#3  LTD:



Her and some others...

Posted by: BigEd || 04/03/2006 16:13 Comments || Top||

#4  Muslims are required to believe that the Quran abrogates all prior scripture. The Quran has sections which at least imply an obligation to read Jewish, Christian (and Sabian) texts, but they are also required to believe that Satan re-wrote prior scriptures. The "Satanic Verse" episode (disclosed in al-Tabari; al-Tirmidhi texts, etc), reveals Angel Gabriel berating Muhammad after the self-appointed, pedophile "prophet" included Satanic scripture in his Quran terror manual, after he was supposedly possessed by the devil.

Lesson: Muslims are spin-sotted savages void of objectivity, who you can trust as far as you can spit against a hurricane. Respect for freedom of conscience means: Occuping them all and cleaning the ideological dirt out of their brains:
2:087
PICKTHAL: And verily We gave unto Moses the Scripture and We caused a train of messengers to follow after him, and We gave unto Jesus, son of Mary, clear proofs (of Allah's sovereignty), and We supported him with the Holy spirit. Is it ever so, that, when there cometh unto you a messenger (from Allah) with that which ye yourselves desire not, ye grow arrogant, and some ye disbelieve and some ye slay?
2.091
PICKTHAL: And when it is said unto them: Believe in that which Allah hath revealed, they say: We believe in that which was revealed unto us.
---
And I believe that Scarlett Johannsen could personally win the WOT: http://www.geraldpeary.com/interviews/jkl/johannson.jpg
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 2:23 Comments || Top||


Caribbean-Latin America
Petrobras halts $5bn investment plans for Bolivia
under subscription wall. short excerpt:
Petrobras, the largest international company operating in Bolivia, has suspended plans to invest up to $5bn in the country’s gas sector after it said negotiations with the government of Evo Morales had broken down.

The announcement signals a deterioration in relations between the Morales administration and the gas sector. “Within the sector there is complete disappointment and lack of enthusiasm,” said an industry insider. “I’ve never seen anything like it.”

Petrobras’s change of heart appeared to have come in response to a series of aggressive statements from Andrés Soliz Rada, Bolivia’s hydrocarbons minister.
In recent days, Mr Soliz has threatened to raise tax rates on some gas fields from 50 per cent to 70 per cent, refused to negotiate with oil companies that are threatening to go to international arbitration. He has also accused Brazil of hardening its attitude in talks and of viewing Bolivia “as some kind of semi-colony”.
Morales has been spending lots of time with his best buddy Chavez
The industry source said the knock-on effects of Petrobras’s announcement could be extremely serious. “If Petrobras is saying that, it makes it more likely that the whole sector will just stagnate,” he said.
Posted by: lotp || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [18 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Petrobras halts $5bn investment plans for Bolivia

Sea: "Morales has been spending lots of time with his best buddy Chavez"

related,
Venezuelan farms under seige, by Venezuelan land expropriators

It's not well known but Castro has taken over every key office of the Venezuelan agricultural office. And Castro's special target is Cuban immigrants who made this land in Venezuela flourish.

Posted by: RD || 04/03/2006 1:37 Comments || Top||

#2  Bolivia should get some better roads. I travelled this one above 2000 foot sheer cliffs, to the village of Coroico. FYI: it is one way traffic for 2 hours; then they go in the other direction. Just as well, because there were fresh bus-plunge marks on the cliff when I passed it.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/f-jauregui/sets/1020995/
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 3:07 Comments || Top||


Southeast Asia
'No votes' score high in Thai polls
Early results have shown a strong protest vote that could keep Thaksin Shinawatra, the Thai prime minister, from claiming a decisive mandate, after a snap poll following weeks of unrest. Refusing to recognise the election as legitimate, the opposition boycotted Sunday's polls, which Thaksin called three years early to counter the street campaign. The result is that nearly 70% of the 399 seats at stake were uncontested and many will be left empty, according to election rules - preventing a new government being formed. Thaksin's opponents called on voters to tick the "no vote" box on their ballots, a strategy that appeared to work in Bangkok. With half the votes counted in the capital, "no votes" were in the majority, Channel 7 news reported. The city is usually the first to report results.

But Thaksin's main support comes from the countryside and early returns showed he was getting solid support there - enough to hand him another big parliamentary majority. Thai media reported turnout was around 70% of the 45 million electorate, compared with 73% in the last election in February, 2005. Final official results were expected late on Monday.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [10 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Thaksin's opponents called on voters to tick the "no vote" box on their ballots

They won't dare offer this option to Americans. The powers to be know, that "None of the Above" would get a majority vote. And in the next election some slick Willey will change his name to "None of the Above".
Posted by: Hupineque Glerelet1305 || 04/03/2006 9:28 Comments || Top||


Iraq
Iraqi factions agree on cabinet bylaws
Iraqi political parties reached an agreement on Sunday on the bylaws for the functioning of the next government, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani’s office announced in a statement. The decision marks the second achievement in as many days from the contentious negotiating sessions to form a coalition government, nearly four months after a landmark national election. It followed the announcement on Saturday of a compromise on Iraq’s security file.

Before the back-to-back breakthroughs, talks on forming a unity government among Shia, Sunni and Kurdish parties had been deadlocked. Talabani’s office said that a two-thirds cabinet majority would be required for any decisions on the national budget, financial agreements, contracts over 50 million dollars, border issues, security, high-ranking military promotions and questions concerning national sovereignty. Any issues involving the presence of US-led coalition forces in Iraq would also require a two-thirds cabinet majority. The requirement for more than a simple majority dilutes the power of the dominant conservative Shia bloc which holds nearly half the seats in the 275-member parliament.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:


India-Pakistan
Blustering in the 21st century
Every day a couple of bombs go off somewhere in Balochistan destroying a bridge, a culvert, a railway track, an electricity tower or a gas pipeline. The insurgents have become so audacious that even the chief minister’s house isn’t safe from mortar attacks anymore. Every day army convoys and outposts in Waziristan are attacked and the death toll of soldiers and local collaborators is rising. Even the interior minister has conceded that Al-Qaeda/Taliban have spread “trouble” in the neighbouring districts of Bannu, Dera Ismail Khan and Tank. So what’s the Musharraf regime doing about this?

Its strategy in Balochistan is simplistic. Since the insurgents don’t have a visible face or front, and since the Balochistan puppet provincial parliament isn’t too pushed about the issues of rights raised by the insurgents, there is no one with whom the federal government can negotiate the problem. Meanwhile, Sardar Ataullah Mengal is always ready to denounce the “army action” in Balochistan but refuses to act as a spokesman of the Baloch Liberation Army, or whatever. Nawab Khair Bux Marri is 80+ and still as silent and intransigent as ever. And Nawab Akbar Bugti, the trade unionist from Dera Bugti, is languishing in his “secret” cave hideout and giving interviews to foreigners reclaiming his rights as a Baloch “nationalist” after having spent the last thirty five years slamming Messrs Mengal and Marri. Under the circumstances, the federal government, governor, corps commander and IG-FC have jointly determined to run the show with the advice of Military Intelligence. This is based on trying to “win hearts and minds” with “development projects” and promising employment prospects (30,000 new jobs will come online, says the prime minister) and propping up political and tribal opponents of the three rebellious sardars and nawabs (thousands of Kalpar Bugtis ousted by Akbar Bugti from their homelands years ago have been encouraged to return, dig their heels in and lend a helping hand against the insurgents).

In Waziristan, too, steps are being taken to reclaim the initiative. Along with resolute military action, the government is developing plans to buy off and disarm the rebels. The US has pledged money for suitable “development projects” so that strong pro-government vested interests are created. At the same time, the government intends to call a “grand jirga” in the tribal areas consisting of elders, clerics, local councilors and government officials and entrust it with the job of identifying “anti-state elements” and persuading rebellious tribesmen not to shelter foreign militants.
Continued on Page 49
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [24 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Hope India funnels them lots $ & equipment.
Posted by: gromgoru || 04/03/2006 22:36 Comments || Top||

#2  Let it break up. The Urdu language was supposed to unite the different nationalities. Only 8% claim to speak that useless language. Pakistan is: Punjab province and its occupied and oppressed territories.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 4:22 Comments || Top||


Contaminated liquor claims life
LAHORE: A young salesman died after drinking poisonous liquor in the Nishtar Colony police precinct on Sunday. Waqas, 25, a sales representative in a private company, was drinking liquor with his friends when he fainted. Waqas's friends took him to a nearby clinic where doctors pronounced him dead.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [11 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Took the "Listerine" label off the bottles again, did they?
Posted by: Seafarious || 04/03/2006 0:58 Comments || Top||

#2  His friends seems fine. Seems targeted if they were drinking the same drinks, as is likely. I'd look a little closer at his friends.
Posted by: Thinemp Whimble2412 || 04/03/2006 18:48 Comments || Top||

#3  That's how my grandfather died near a logging camp in 1915. His death certificate stated the cause was "alcholic axcess", but it was really contaminated home brew. #2, grandpa's drinking buddies vomited & so saved themselves, he didn't vomit, passed out and died.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 || 04/03/2006 19:04 Comments || Top||


Iraq
U.S., U.K. Urge Iraq Leaders to Form Gov't
The top U.S and British diplomats made a surprise trip to Iraq on Sunday to prod the country's struggling leaders to end nearly four months of wrangling and form a new government. "We're going to urge that the negotiations be wrapped up," Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said as she and British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw flew overnight to the Iraqi capital for meetings with the current interim government and ethnic and religious power brokers. Straw said the choice of leaders is up to Iraqis alone, but neither he nor Rice disguised the blunt nature of their mission. "There is significant international concern about the time the formation of this government is taking, and therefore we believe and we will be urging the Iraqi leaders we see to press ahead more quickly," Straw said.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:


Bangladesh
Outlaw leader killed in Rab 'encounter'
A regional leader of outlawed Purbo Banglar Communist Party (Janajuddho) was killed in an 'encounter' between members of Rapid Action Battalion (Rab) and his accomplices early yesterday at Bellabaria village under Baliakandi upazila of Rajbari district.

The outlaw, Nilu Molla, 31, was arrested on Saturday at his village Barhovellabari under the same upazila with a shutter gun and 13 bullets. Two more shutter guns and five bullets were also seized after the encounter that continued for 15 minutes, a press release of Khulna Rab said, adding that Nilu Molla was wanted in several murder, abduction, rape, extortion and bomb attack cases filed with different police stations of Rajbari district.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [12 views] Top|| File under:

#1  A total of three shutter guns? I guess they weren't kidding about expanding the RAB. They've even gotten the full TO&E.
Posted by: Jackal || 04/03/2006 9:00 Comments || Top||

#2  Not just three guns -- 18 rounds of bullet!
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 04/03/2006 9:19 Comments || Top||

#3  Well, they are adding three more battalions....
Posted by: Pappy || 04/03/2006 11:23 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
Khyber Agency conflict was in the making
It all started last Monday. Supporters of Mufti Shakir, a cleric, tried to knock down a house that belonged to a supporter of his rival Afghan cleric Pir Saifullah Rehman. The fighting led to the killing of five people, most of them supporters of Shakir, whose group calls itself Lashkar-e-Islamia. This prompted the supporters of Shakir to attack the house of another Rehman supporter, Badshah Gul, on Tuesday, killing 19 people, including 16 Afghans.

This is not a scenario from some film but a violent reality that has been simmering in the area for more than a year. While the government claims to have extended its writ to much of the tribal area, the two rivals clerics defied its authority right in the Khyber Agency, merely a few kilometers away from the provincial capital, Peshawar.

Trouble began with two lethal radio stations, one run by Mufti Munir Shakir’s Lashkar-e-Islami and the other by Pir Saifur Rehman, an Afghan cleric based in the Soordand area of the Bara Tehsil of Khyber Agency. Both clerics defied the government writ and continued to spit venom against each other through their illegal radio broadcasts. They continued to mock both the administration and the tribal jirga after they were told to shut down their radio stations. In February, this year, the tribal jirga had also ordered Pir Saifur Rehman, a non-local to leave the area to ease the tensions but the move did not really help since Saifur Rehman returned shortly. In his absence, his supporters kept the rivalry aflame through their radio station.
Continued on Page 49
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [22 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Kill both of them.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 04/03/2006 12:50 Comments || Top||


Europe
Kurds, security forces clash in southeastern Turkey - 8 dead
Agitated protesters went on the rampage in southeastern Turkey on Saturday in the fifth day of street battles with the security forces. Fresh clashes between protesters and police in Kýzýltepe, near the Syrian border, killed one protester and injured 10 others on Saturday, security sources said. The latest death brought the toll in this week's violence to eight dead. In Saturday's violence, demonstrators set fire to a branch of a major bank and a building used by the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP). There were also scuffles in Silopi, at the Iraqi border, where riot police stopped protesters from marching to the office of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), Anatolia said. A three-year-old boy died of gunshot wounds on Friday in Diyarbakir and local media said he was killed after police fired shots over the heads of protesters.
near the air base
Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said children were being used as "pawns of terrorism" in unrest gripping the region and warned that security forces could not guarantee their safety.

The European Union, which Turkey aims to join, has expressed concern about the violence and urged Ankara to do more to combat poverty in the southeast and to boost Kurds' cultural rights. The U.S. government, meanwhile, alerted Americans to violence in southeastern Turkey that the State Department said potentially could spread to the country's main cities in the west.
Posted by: lotp || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [13 views] Top|| File under:


Arabia
Legislative elections in Qatar next year
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [8 views] Top|| File under:


Europe
Fresh violence erupts in Turkey
Turkish police have fired into the air to disperse a protest march in mainly-Kurdish southeast Turkey, killing one person. In Istanbul, three people were reported killed after a molotov cocktail was thrown at a bus. Security sources said additional troops were being deployed to Kiziltepe on Sunday, a town of about 100,000 people south of the region's main city of Diyarbakir.

In Ankara, parliament called a special session for Tuesday to discuss the violence. The southeast has suffered its worst riots in many years since Tuesday's funeral of 14 armed separatists killed in clashes with the army. Tensions reflect discontent over local conditions and resurgence of a Kurdish guerrilla campaign. Police said Mehmet Sidik Onder, 22, received a bullet wound to the stomach after police fired in the air to stop a march in Kiziltepe, near the Syrian border. The protesters were heading for the home of another man shot dead in the town on Saturday. Witnesses said the police fired at the man, the ninth to die in a wave of unrest that could stir serious strains in Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister's, ruling Justice and Development Party and stoke tensions with the influential military. Events are watched closely by the European Union that Turkey seeks to join.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [22 views] Top|| File under:

#1  PKK aren't your noble seekers of independence. They'll be just as vicious to any other Kurd that doesn't agree with them. They need to be taken out.
Posted by: Pappy || 04/03/2006 11:25 Comments || Top||

#2  Turkish Kurds would do well to tone down the independentist movement until Iraq is stabilized.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 1:47 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
Government might allow Sipah-e-Sahaba activities
The government might relax some restrictions on banned militant organisation Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan and allow it to commence political activities in a “very low profile” under the name Millat-e-Islamia Pakistan, sources told Daily Times.
That's a good candidate for Worst Idea of the Week.
Sources said the decision was made after a recent meeting involving officials from law enforcement agencies, the National Crisis Management Cell and the Sipah. Officials have placed two major conditions on the Sipah to resume even low-key political activities, they said. “The government has stressed that the Sipah’s leaders cannot incite sectarian violence in any way nor abuse any person in a public meeting,” they added. “Authorities decided to relax some restrictions on the Sipah after these assurances and allow it to restart political activities under the umbrella of Millat-e-Islamia Pakistan.”
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [20 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Sipahis are a Deobandi terrorist group that doesn't think that Pakistan needs doctors:

http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/324/7341/805

Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 1:34 Comments || Top||


Africa Subsaharan
Chucky's lawyers to argue against court
Posted by: Seafarious || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: Culture Wars
Mexican Labor Strike Planned For May 1st (Mon) or 5th (Fri)
The coalition that organized an estimated 500,000 marchers in Los Angeles to protest immigration reform announced its next mass action is "an economic and labor boycott that will paralyze the U.S. economy."

The radical separatist publication La Voz de Aztlan, the Voice of Aztlan, said the proposed boycott is in response to a "racist" measure in Congress.

The House has passed a bill to tighten border security, but President Bush broadly supports rival legislation being debated in the Senate that contains a guest-worker proposal.

Coalition member Roberto Reveles of "Unidos en Arizona" said his group will host a "summit meeting" April 8 and 9 in Phoenix to work out details of the boycott.

The boycott is scheduled for May 1, the Day of the International Solidarity of Workers, or May 5, the Cinco de Mayo celebration.

Armando Navarro, coordinator of the National Alliance for Human Rights, said, "We are living through very dangerous times and we must take advantage of the moment. If we just sit and wait to see what happens, everything we have accomplished so far may go to waste. That is why we must continue the struggle to once and for all defeat that racist (House) proposal."

In Phoenix, an estimated 10,000 to 12,000 participated in a march and rally last Saturday.

"What occurred on March 24 is a consequence of the people being tired of the treatment we are receiving," Reveles said. "The first step has already been taken, we organized ourselves and have completed the first phase, now we have to prepare for the second."

Reveles said the activists "will not rest" until they see the House bill defeated.

"We are sure that the preparations we make at the summit will lead us to victory," he said. "We are united and only united will we be victorious."

La Voz de Aztlan said the two-day summit will be attended by Mexican-American and other Latino groups from Nevada, Texas, Wisconsin, Washington, New York, Chicago, California and other states.

Representatives from Mexico, Central and South America also will attend.

Navarro said the "international boycott" counts on the support of the consulates of Bolivia, Brazil, Venezuela, Colombia, Cuba and Mexico, along with Mexican labor organizations.

"We have to demonstrate to the nation, one more time, that its economic stability depends on us," Navarro said. "I am sure that our sister nations of Latin America, who are also tired of the situation, will unite with us.

The professor concluded: "That is why we will celebrate May 1, 'Day of the Worker,' with labor strikes, no purchases and go out and march. Soon they will see the impact we will have!"

As WorldNetDaily reported, one of the organizers of the L.A. rally was the Mexica Movement, which already has decided it is the "non-indigenous," white, English-speaking U.S. citizens of European descent who have to leave what they call "our continent."

Both Rep. James Sensebrenner, R-Wis., chairman of the House Judiciary Committee and a proponent of tougher border security, and California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger were caricatured as Nazis by the group on its posters and banners.

The group insists the indigenous people of the continent were the victims of genocide – a campaign of extermination that killed, according to one citation, 95 percent of their population, or 33 million people. Another citation on the same website claims the toll was 70 million to 100 million.

The only solution, says the Mexica Movement, is to expel the invaders of the last 500 years, force them to pay reparations and return the continent to its rightful heirs.

The platform of the group illustrates the diverse – and sometimes extreme – agendas of those participating in the mass mobilizations that have been seen largely as protests against efforts to curb illegal immigration.

The Mexica Movement has big issues with many other equally radical groups participating in the massive, united-front rallies, include the separatist Aztlan Movement.

Aztlan, the mythical birthplace of the Aztecs, is regarded in Chicano folklore as an area that includes California, Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico and parts of Colorado and Texas. The movement seeks to create a sovereign, Spanish-speaking state, "Republica del Norte," or the Republic of the North, that would combine the American Southwest with the northern Mexican states and eventually merge with Mexico.

La Voz de Aztlan identifies Mexicans in the U.S. as "America's Palestinians." Many Mexicans see themselves as part of a transnational ethnic group known as "La Raza," the race. A May editorial on the website, with a dateline of Los Angeles, Alta California, declares that "both La Raza and the Palestinians have been displaced by invaders that have utilized military means to conquer and occupy our territories."

Others in the coalition hope to see a "reconquest" of the American southwest by Mexico. This would not likely take place through military action, they say, but rather through a slow process of migration – both legal and illegal.
Since many Mexicans take May 5th off anyway, why do I think this will be the day? It's also one of the biggest days of the year for Mexican restaurants, who aren't going to be too thrilled with shutting down instead of hosting major holiday parties.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [22 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Oh gee darn. I guess I won't go to La Feista on the 5th.
Posted by: DarthVader || 04/03/2006 0:20 Comments || Top||

#2  Illegal Immigration

Still time to write: One stop link for your House, Senate, Prez, State Gov, Local Gov etc.

Link Here
Posted by: RD || 04/03/2006 1:18 Comments || Top||

#3  These people are in the same alternate reality that sees the reestablishment of the Caliphate. Why is it that the people with the least power talk the loudest?
Posted by: RWV || 04/03/2006 1:29 Comments || Top||

#4  Don't fergot about GORBACHEV, whom in TIME.com and other news blogs seems surprised that Fascist = Half-a-Communist/Totalitarian Russia is regressing back into "dictatorship", that somehow a Commie-controlled/domin national Govt.- Bureaucracy is not still a Commie govt!?
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 2:45 Comments || Top||

#5  "Freedom Wraps", and "Sunrise Beer, a new dawn".
No more tacos and Corona!
Posted by: Skidmark || 04/03/2006 5:56 Comments || Top||

#6  I agree with the Mexica movement. We should turn the land over to its original residents.....and all start speaking Apache, Tohono O'odham, or another Native American language.

Oops, sorry, I guess they didn't mean FBI's (full-blooded Indians). My bad!
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 04/03/2006 8:18 Comments || Top||

#7  That's fine. My gardener's Vietnamese.
Posted by: mojo || 04/03/2006 10:43 Comments || Top||

#8  On the radio in Phoenix, it sounds like the moderates are trying to assert control. For the next protests, they are telling the protestors to get rid of the Mexican flags, no signs in Spanish, enough of the Aztlan bulldada (which is mostly an L.A. thing), and behave themselves. There were also some traffic problems last time, so they are now coordinating with the police.

There are a lot of conservative Mexican-Americans in Phoenix, who are established and prosperous, agree that the flow across the border has to be severely restricted, but are very concerned that they are being singled out for harassment not because they are illegal, but because of their ethnic group.

The thing that really set them off was the suggestion that 11 million people be deported. That would be as violent as trying to force all Mormons out of the US. And there is no way to put a reasonable face on it.

Fortunately, it will not happen, no way. The vast majority are de facto American citizens, whether other American citizens like it or not.

Any arguments about keeping an open border shows the only real split among them. Half want an open border, the other half don't.

Locally, the Mexicans are still agitated because of an insane and illegal "roundup" that went on in the Metro Phoenix city of Chandler some years ago.

Hundreds of local police, INS, and other federal law enforcement did a sweep of the whole city, stopping people on the street to demand papers.

They entered homes and conducted searches without search warrants because a Mexican had been seen in their backyard, usually a gardener. They entered businesses and forced every brown-skinned person out on the street to check their identities. Some people were stopped multiple times.

Anyone found without papers was detained for hours at best, or loaded on buses and driven to the border.

I knew an Irish guy with red hair and a tan who was deported to South Nogales after being held at gunpoint with an M-16, and had to call his father to bring his wallet down so he could get back into the country. He had been picking oranges with some Mexicans when the INS arrived.

The resulting $35M lawsuit was settled for $400K with the agreement of the city of Chandler to totally retrain its police department, and to change all city policies to explicitly follow constitutional procedures in the future.

And yes, out of a city of several hundred thousand people, they did find about 400 illegals. Most of these were clustered in a few public sites, hoping to work as day laborers, as they do every day.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 04/03/2006 11:13 Comments || Top||

#9  We have to demonstrate to the nation, one more time, that its economic stability depends on us

The lesson they will learn is that everyone is replaceable.
Posted by: 2b || 04/03/2006 11:19 Comments || Top||

#10  IF they decide to "strike" on May 5, then I really hope that they are looking for a new job on May 6. You can tell this is being pushed by Gringo-Mexicans because May 5 is not a big deal south of the border. I mean really what country hasn't beaten the Phrench in a battle?
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 04/03/2006 11:25 Comments || Top||

#11  Only the Frogs would celebrate being on the wrong end of a massacre:
http://perso.wanadoo.fr/legion/ecameron.htm
Posted by: mojo || 04/03/2006 11:37 Comments || Top||

#12  The Alamo maybe mojo?
Posted by: Hupineque Glerelet1305 || 04/03/2006 11:47 Comments || Top||

#13  There's a DVD out called A Day Without a Mexican. Check it out, it's pretty funny.

Posted by: DoDo || 04/03/2006 12:01 Comments || Top||

#14  "Only the Frogs would celebrate being on the wrong end of a massacre"

With all due respect, mojo, you are a fool.

It was not a massacre. It was a battle. Sixty-five Legionnaires stood off 2,000 Juarists for an entire day, so that a gold train would not fall into the latter's hands. Seven survived.

The French do not celebrate Cameron. The French Foreign Legion does. There is a difference. They do not celebrate being defeated; they celebrate that the legionnaires died doing their duty.
Posted by: Fordesque || 04/03/2006 12:27 Comments || Top||

#15  "We May Die, but Never Will Surrender" - The Battle of Cameron
"Disasters have a way of spinning noble myths, as if it benefits the survivors to find something worthwhile in the midst of a catastrophe. Sometimes these magnificent moments, if ever they existed at all, have to be dug out of the rubble, and dusted off. At that point they can be held high for everyone to see and proclaim as significant."

"Such incidents fade from memory, pushed off the pages of history books by more monumental occurrences. There is no theme for historians to discuss, and the battle is hardly a watershed as events go. For the Legionnaire there remains a plaque with a few words on it, and a celebration on the anniversary of the battle. Perhaps the Legionnaires understand that such encounters are not usually commemorated outside of the Legion, and therefore people would know very little about Cameron. There is tangible evidence of the day that saw 65 Legionnaires stand off 2,000 Juarists; a relic preserved by the Legion - Danjou's wooden hand found shortly after the battle. It is a reminder of the only theme truly associated with the events of April 29, 1863: courage."
Posted by: Steve || 04/03/2006 12:54 Comments || Top||

#16  Sounds like a movie to me.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 12:57 Comments || Top||

#17  With all due respect, mojo, you are a fool.

Or a provocateur. Hard to tell sometimes.

Sixty-five Legionnaires stood off 2,000 Juarists for an entire day, so that a gold train would not fall into the latter's hands. Seven survived.

And...who ended up with the gold?
Posted by: mojo || 04/03/2006 15:11 Comments || Top||

#18  i suspect around here most of the folks who work in Mexican restaurants are Salvadorans, or Guatemalans, so it shouldnt slow down the mixing of margaritas at all.:)
Posted by: liberalhawk || 04/03/2006 15:41 Comments || Top||

#19  total BS.

1st, plenty of the immigrants, legal and illegal, in the southwest are not hispanic. Certainly LA has plenty of Asian immigrants.
second = as my previous comment points out, many hispanics are NOT Mexican. I doubt the Salvadorans or Guatamalans in LA want to be part of Aztlan, or mourn the defeat of 1846.

Third, most Mexican-Americans arent too keen on it either. The Aztlan/La Raza people are a small group, trying to take advantage of the whole immigration tussel.
Posted by: liberalhawk || 04/03/2006 15:45 Comments || Top||

#20  Liberalhawk, a "small group" may grow to dominate a Revolution, be they bolsheviks, national socialists, Robespierrists, or Aztlan. Indeed, I would suggest that the most radical rise to the top in a revolutionary setting. Aztlan might have been a joke at one time, the current demographic time bomb makes it demonstrably less so nowadays...
Posted by: borgboy || 04/03/2006 16:23 Comments || Top||

#21  Per the demographic timebomb: the prevalent philosophy of "one man, one vote" will insure the morphing of our political/cultural heritage. En cinquenta anos, la idioma y la cultural del suroeste cambiara...
Posted by: borgboy || 04/03/2006 16:30 Comments || Top||

#22  In cinquenta anuses, the language and the cultural one of the southwest changed...

I still don't understand it.
In most countries one is obliged to learn thew national language and speak it to natives.
Not to use your "home"language as a weapon.
Posted by: jim#6 || 04/03/2006 17:10 Comments || Top||

#23  En cinquenta anos, la idioma y la cultural del suroeste cambiara...

In fifty anuses? Yeowch!
Posted by: eLarson || 04/03/2006 17:25 Comments || Top||

#24  Why don't they just take the whole week off? I think the biggest drawback would be that my neighbors lawns won't get mowed.
Posted by: Bob || 04/03/2006 18:59 Comments || Top||

#25  "And...who ended up with the gold?"

The gold train made it to its destination.

As an aside, Danjou's wooden hand was all that was ever found of him. The body disappeared.
Posted by: Fordesque || 04/03/2006 19:35 Comments || Top||

#26  the Aztlanazis are loudmouthed asshole University aides and students. Once tthey're forced into the general world nobody listens to or buys their shit. Only the echo chamber of Academia
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 20:19 Comments || Top||

#27  FrankG, have you ever thought what Southern California would be like if it had stayed part of Mexico? Without a Mulholland to bring rivers from the desert, LA would still be a little port city like Ensenada. Without a Roosevelt to build an aquaduct to support the Pacific Fleet, SD would still be a desert. These people just want the fruits of other peoples vision, capital, and sweat. If the Aztlan idea is so great, why is so much of Mexico a shithole?
Posted by: RWV || 04/03/2006 20:56 Comments || Top||

#28  like Israel if the Palestinians had retained control....
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 21:03 Comments || Top||

#29  although Mulholland did do a number on the Owens Valley ranchers....
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 21:05 Comments || Top||

#30  Voz de Aztlan is a bunch of Marxist die-hard loons like ANSWER. Like ANSWER it can mobilize a lot of idiots at first, but soon the idiots catch on and stop coming to the rallies.

Last time they called a strike, it had zero impact. KFI covered it and it was a joke.
Posted by: 11A5S || 04/03/2006 21:17 Comments || Top||

#31  Barking mad.
Posted by: Glosing Hupesh7946 || 04/03/2006 22:08 Comments || Top||

#32  Joe,

Have you got any extras?
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 22:12 Comments || Top||

#33  Mexicans use the phrase, "Me vale nada," in the same way that we say, "I don't give a shit." If the Aztlanazis use civil war tactics, then a little me vale nada should apply to their lives.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 19:57 Comments || Top||

#34  People crap; countries crap. Lefties support the influxers; contrarian doormats delight the influxers. The dhimmis have announced their "Koufax Award" for leftist blogging. Good who's who (or who's fucked) material, but the late, great Southpaw, Sandy Koufax, was Jewish and a supporter of Israel. He wouldn't associate with these life-loser, brain-dead, spin-vomiters. What about Maglite Awards for latch-on WOT peasants (the security guard class) who make the lefties look good? http://wampum.wabanaki.net/vault/2006/04/002603.html
Some zeros crap through their mouths. How many open-minded, threat-abaters will actually read this thread? Half-dozen?
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 21:41 Comments || Top||


Arabia
Major Reforms Needed in Financial Structures of Saudis charities
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:


Europe
Chirac offer fails to halt protests
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  They need more McDonalds!
Posted by: Skidmark || 04/03/2006 6:03 Comments || Top||

#2  "Would you like pommes frites with that?"
Posted by: mojo || 04/03/2006 10:45 Comments || Top||

#3  MacDonald's wouldn't work any way. The biggest segment of unemployed youth are the muslims. Now, the guys can't work in a store where girls work or where they might have serve infidels. The girls can't work anywhere a guy might work or where male customers can enter the store or where infidels might have to be served.

Can't work in any mixed shop or business. Can't work where alcohol is served. Not a lot of possibilities for that lot, with or without modifications to such a "revolting" law.
Posted by: Thinemp Whimble2412 || 04/03/2006 18:55 Comments || Top||

#4  may as well make it a turning point: cut off welfare
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 20:11 Comments || Top||

#5  Can't Chirac order the state white flag factories to hire some more workers?
Posted by: DMFD || 04/03/2006 22:34 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan
Afghan clerics want convert sent back
MAZAR-E-SHARIF (Rantburg News Service): Afghan holy men and their minions have threatened violence against the government unless a Christian convert spirited out of the country is returned so they can indulge their blood lust. About 1000 hysterical rubes gathered in a mosque in the northeastern town of Kunduz on Sunday and demanded that Abdul Rahman, 40, be brought back from Italy and sentenced to slow, lingering death. Sheikh Mohammad Baqir, a holy man and organiser of the rally, said: "This act of the government is illegal," referring to Abdul Rahman's release. "We have a right to see his blood, to see all his blood! To dip our hands in it! To wallow in it! Blood is the very essence of Islam!"

"Either he should be tried or the government should go. We urge other provinces to raise their voices and if the government doesn't listen, we will resort to violence," he said, attracting calls of "Allah akbar" (Holy Shit God is the greatest) from the crowd. "Violence is the other essence of Islam!" Police refused to let the gathering leave the mosque and march through the town, for fear of it going nutz turning violent.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [13 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Sheikh Mohammad Baqir, a holy man :

Posted by: BigEd || 04/03/2006 16:18 Comments || Top||

#2  Sheikh Mohammad Baqir, a holy man :
"We have a right to see his blood, to see all his blood! To dip our hands in it!"

Sounds like a real "Man of God" to me yessiree.

Did anyone notice to see if he had a bulge in the middle of his schmock when he said that, or is he so poorly equipped it doesn't stick out very far?
Posted by: BigEd || 04/03/2006 16:20 Comments || Top||

#3  Shariah permits trial in abstentia. The should do it, and wait to see how the aid givers respond.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 2:27 Comments || Top||

#4  The West is still waiting for Binny's trial for apostasy. He is apostate from Islam, isn't he? Maybe not. Malaysia prohibits Christian conversion from Islam, and promotion of same, and jails offenders for 3 years. Yet they allow Al-Qaeda terror tapes to be sold anywhere:

http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2006/4/3/nation/13839613&sec=nation

I guess Binny gets the CAIR seal of approval.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 5:06 Comments || Top||


Home Front: WoT
A look at John Walker Lindh's life behind bars
In some ways, he's like a lot of 25-year-olds: After years of running from his upbringing and trying to blaze his own trail, he has become studious, stable and settled. But there's really no other 25-year-old like John Walker Lindh.
Oh, I'm sure there are. They're either dead or not arrested yet.
He will be forever tagged as the American Taliban, a California kid who converted to Islam and left home to find himself - and joined the radical Taliban to fight in Afghanistan. Now Lindh is serving a 20-year prison sentence, and is under a court-imposed silence.
My heart bleeds... No. Wait. It's the chili again...
But Lindh's family and supporters say he deserves a break, and America needs to take another look at what he really did. "His story is indeed a story that needs to come out, and needs to be shared with the world," said Shakeel Syed, who served as a religious adviser to Lindh in prison.
Yeah. He's just a poor, misguided kid. And he's still got his Muslim religious advisor in jug.
In his first-ever account of Lindh's life in a medium-security federal prison in Victorville, Calif., Syed said Lindh is a model inmate who lives as normal a life as possible behind bars - but also is a spiritual beacon to other Muslims there. "Prison has helped him become a better Muslim," Syed said. "He is a Malcolm X with a softer tone."
Just can't stay away from the turbans, can he?
Lindh lives with a lover cellmate, works a prison job and is allowed to mingle with other inmates, Syed said - but he is prohibited from talking about his experiences in Afghanistan, can't see visitors who aren't relatives or lawyers, and isn't allowed to conspire speak Arabic.
But come the caliphate, how will he be able to communicate with the master race?
While Lindh was taunted with cries of "Traitor!" when he first came to Victorville, and was once attacked by another inmate, he now faces no threats to his safety and even has gained a measure of respect, Syed said. "He is an extremely well-liked, well-respected, model inmate in the system by the authorities as well as by the inmates," said Syed, now executive director of the Islamic Shura Council of Southern California. "Some of the inmates have come to sympathize with him because of his special restrictions."
Time passes, doesn't it? The 3000 dead are cold in their graves. Their names are forgotten...
Federal prison officials would not comment on Lindh or release information about him, citing privacy rules.
I'm guessing that if they did the story would be different than what his Islamic mouthpiece is putting out.
He burst into the public eye in November 2001, when CIA commandos working with the Northern Alliance, an Afghan group opposed to Taliban rule, found him among wounded and bedraggled Taliban fighters, who soon killed CIA operative Johnny (Mike) Spann.
That was at Qala-i-Jangi, where they sent the surivors of the siege of Konduz, and the survivors decided to unsurrender. Dostum, bless his vicious little heart, solved that problem by killing most of them.
The image of Lindh, filthy and exhausted, was beamed around the world - shocking the country with his unbelievable journey and stunning his parents, who hadn't heard from him in months. Lindh had converted to Islam as a teen and traveled to Yemen to study the Koran and Arabic. When his visa expired he went to Pakistan, then sneaked across the border to Afghanistan - where he trained in an Al Qaeda-funded camp and twice met Osama Bin Laden.
That makes him a traitor in my book. Binny declared war on us well before 9-11-2001. There were attacks on the WTC, our embassies in Africa, and the USS Cole, but here was young Johnny Jihad, hob-knobbing with him.
Lindh's father, Frank Lindh, said his son was well-meaning but misguided, never taking up arms against America or joining Al Qaeda in its destructive quest. "In simple terms, this is the story of a decent and honorable young man who became involved in a spiritual quest and became the focus of the grief and anger of an entire nation over an event in which he had no part," Frank Lindh told a San Francisco audience earlier this year.
It's the story of a man who loved his country so little that he went and fought against it, joining with the Chechens and Uzbeks and other riff-raff at the Battle of Konduz.
But in the angry months after Sept. 11, Lindh was held up as a candidate for the death penalty.
With damned good reason.
Barely 10 months after he was seized on the battlefield, Lindh accepted a plea deal admitting he aided the Taliban - not plotting terror attacks or battling the U.S. He agreed to a 20-year prison term with no opportunity to appeal or challenge the government's restrictions while he's in prison.
Too cowardly to fight it out to the end with the other Islamic fanatics, he was also too cowardly to take the risk of the death penalty.
Lindh's last public statement came when he was sentenced, where he tried to explain how he ended up in Afghanistan. "I did not go to fight against America, and I never did," Lindh said. "I understand why so many Americans were angry when I was first discovered in Afghanistan. I realize that many still are, but I hope that with time and understanding, those feelings will change."
I hope to God they never do. I hope that Johnny Jihad remains what he is, a symbol of the soullessness of a segment of our society that sees nothing wrong with turning on the rest of us...
His parents have said little since then, but his lawyers are hoping a change in public mood could help him. With few legal options available, they've petitioned President Bush in a long-shot bid to shorten Lindh's sentence. "I think we all have to realize that the odds are against it," Frank Lindh said in his San Francisco speech. "It is difficult to envision a situation where all those hotheads in Washington can turn around and recognize the kid got a raw deal and should be released."
First you'd have to convince the rest of us that he got a raw deal. We think he got off lightly.
Legal observers said the sentence was the byproduct of the national mood at the time, and note that many subsequent terror prosecutions in the U.S. have led to much shorter prison terms.
None of the subsequent cases were caught at Qala-i-Jangi, were they?
"He became an almost cathartic criminal case for the public," said George Washington University law Prof. Jonathan Turley. "Just as the public emotion was at a fever pitch, John Walker Lindh walked right out of central casting as a vicious traitor who betrayed his country. Upon further examination, he appears to be a confused kid playing a low-level role."
He was just cannon fodder, but he was willing cannon fodder, and he left his own side to join theirs. Piss on him.
Posted by: Seafarious || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  John Walker Lindh's life behind bars

Blanket Party!

and Allah Knows Betsy
Posted by: RD || 04/03/2006 1:27 Comments || Top||

#2  I'm sure Yale has a full ride scholarship waiting for him.
Posted by: Classical_Liberal || 04/03/2006 2:25 Comments || Top||

#3  "He is an extremely well-liked, well-respected, model inmate in the system by the authorities as well as by the inmates," said Syed, now executive director of the Islamic Shura Council of Southern California. - "When will American wake up and see that we already have been invaded. Get ready to break out the shotguns and dogs boys, the south is ready to take this country back."
Posted by: desnc || 04/03/2006 8:26 Comments || Top||

#4  Lindh's father, Frank Lindh, said his son was well-meaning but misguided, never taking up arms against America or joining Al Qaeda in its destructive quest.

He traveled to the biggest jihad hot spots in the world; he intended to take up arms. He was involved in the death of a US agent. He supported the jihadists that operated the 9/11 plot.

He should have fried in lard.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 04/03/2006 9:08 Comments || Top||

#5  I had tears streaming down my cheeks as I read this. Yes indeed release him and publically announce the day he will get out and where he will be living. That way other Americans can stop by and show Johnny Jihad how much we respect him. I did find it sad that he was in a medium security prison. Most cons in medium security wouldn't risk an upgrade to slap little Johnny around. If I were the guards I would make sure Johnny gets some additional charges and free upgrade to Folsom. That way he could earn the respect of the hardcore criminals (by becoming their bitch).
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 04/03/2006 10:28 Comments || Top||

#6  "And when you get out, if you get out, there'll be a little old man with a shotgun at the gate waiting to say hello."
Posted by: mojo || 04/03/2006 10:41 Comments || Top||

#7  Well he met OBL twice which doesn't jibe well with the claim that he never meant to join al-Qaida. But even if the claim were true that he only wanted to join the Taliban before 9/11, it's a pretty awful decision to make and it's sickening to hear his supporters describe this a some sort of 'spiritual journey.' Let's be clear about what that entailed, he went to a poor ravaged country to fight in a savage civil war on behalf of a fanatical religious government looking to impose their totalitarian beliefs ethinic minorities (the Northern Alliance).
Posted by: Monsieur Moonbat || 04/03/2006 10:42 Comments || Top||

#8  I didn't know he drank. Is he a bar keep?
Posted by: Captain America || 04/03/2006 11:40 Comments || Top||

#9  But Lindh's family and supporters say he deserves a break ...

Hookay. Arm? Leg? Neck?
Posted by: Zenster || 04/03/2006 12:37 Comments || Top||

#10  #9: But Lindh's family and supporters say he deserves a break ...

Hookay. Arm? Leg? Neck?

Both hands at the wrist, both ankles at the joint, both knees and elbows will do for a start.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 04/03/2006 13:12 Comments || Top||

#11  The CNN guy who was there at his capture has kept mum about Johnny Walker for some time but recently he grew disgusted by the parents rewriting Johnny's history that he came out and said what he really thought of Johnny Walker (hint, Al Queda hardcore).

http://www.kathryncramer.com/kathryn_cramer/2006/01/the_truth_about.html
Posted by: rjschwarz || 04/03/2006 13:22 Comments || Top||

#12  Note to Daddy Frank: 1) STFU, and 2) If you are stil alive when Junior gets out, you might spirit him away before he has his 'coming out' party realized upon him by those of us still able.
Posted by: USN, ret. || 04/03/2006 14:17 Comments || Top||

#13  It is difficult to envision a situation where all those hotheads in Washington can turn around and recognize the kid got a raw deal and should be released.

Pure comedy gold. Pick a better lawyer next time, not some bleeding heart from Marin....
Posted by: Desert Blondie || 04/03/2006 14:32 Comments || Top||

#14  "His story is indeed a story that needs to come out, and needs to be shared with the world," said Shakeel Syed, who served as a religious adviser to Lindh in prison.

Sure. I'll read it.
Long as it's his obituary...
Posted by: tu3031 || 04/03/2006 14:47 Comments || Top||

#15  Both hands at the wrist, both ankles at the joint, both knees and elbows will do for a start.

Look, make up your mind. Either go full-up by starting at each fingertip and working through the individual knuckles with a ball peen, then progressively through the wrists & elbows. Ditto the legs. Or just go for the neck and get it over with.

I suppose we could go for the big kahuna and start with the ball peen and end with the neck (mebbe a stop-off with the ball peen to visit his DNA factory). In fact, it might be fun.
Posted by: Zenster || 04/03/2006 15:35 Comments || Top||

#16  rjs, thanks for the link. I don't know if it's ever been posted here, but it deserves to.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 15:39 Comments || Top||

#17  The article by the reporter is a must read. Paints a totally different picture than Dads’. Burn in hell Jihad Johnny, burn in hell!
Posted by: Cyber Sarge || 04/03/2006 17:39 Comments || Top||

#18  Nimble, I don't know where I found the story original. I just assume that sort of stuff came by way of Rantburg these days.
Posted by: rjschwarz || 04/03/2006 18:50 Comments || Top||

#19  It was posted here. There was a big discussion about it. :-)
Posted by: trailing wife || 04/03/2006 22:11 Comments || Top||

#20  I remember - I was for flogging with barbed wire. Others called me too compassionate
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 22:34 Comments || Top||


Arabia
Why Is There So Much Hate Inside Us?
Abdullah Al-Mutairi • Al-Watan
In the shop next to my house, there is a home delivery service which is run by an Indian. He is a good man, hardworking and devoted to his job. I talk to him whenever he delivers something to my house and he talks to me about the time he spent working in Abu Dhabi and of his dream to live in London. Last week I asked him to deliver a newspaper to my house. When he delivered it to me, he asked me whether I wrote in it. I told him that I did and he asked me to write about why young Saudis hate foreign workers, particularly Indians, Pakistanis and Bangladeshis. He asked, “Why do they throw rocks at us when they see us in the street?” He said that in India they were taught to love others because that is the teaching of the Prophet Muhammad (PTUI peace be upon him). I was moved by his words and promised him that I would write on the subject.
You could write a book on the subject. I'd suggest starting with the theme of tribalism evolving into a peculiarly Arabian form of racism born of xenophobia. I'd imagine the Indian was happier in Abu Dhabi, since the Gulf Arabs are more cosmopolitan than the sand Arabs, but still not ecstatic, since Soddy Arabia exports more than oil. The peculiar arrogance of the Arabs has come to be something of a cultural characteristic, with the fixation on everybody being a supervisor and the manual labor being done by the expats. Societies that are xenophobic generally aren't convinced of their own superiority, but are instead afraid that the foreigners' culture is actually superior to their own, which is why they need to keep it at arms' length — or conquer it.
I took his question to my students and started a discussion in class. The students agreed that they had harassed foreigners, particularly South Asians, in the street. One said that seeing a worker in the street was a perfect chance for them to beat him up and then run away. Some admitted searching for foreign workers to beat up, throw eggs at and generally abuse. I asked my students why they behaved in this way, what was the reason. Some said it was just fun, nothing more or less. Some said it was because those people were weak and unable to fight back. Some said that their favorite pastime was to catch cats, kill them and skin them. I was shocked and disturbed by all this violence and wondered what was causing it.
He's describing a society of sadists. I don't know how representative his students are, but in the civilized world they'd be regarded as socially retarded.
The classroom discussion ended but my questions would not go away. Is this violence only committed by children or can we see it at other levels in other forms? How do older people deal with foreign workers? Do the workers feel that we respect them? Sadly, the rude and sarcastic way we often refer to them sprang to my mind. Can such relationships be called humane? Are they based on equality? Are they in keeping with the tenets of Islam?
They're in keeping with the Arab conviction that they're a master race. Islam purports to accept everyone as equal who bonks his head five times a day, but in practice, as we've seen, it's enamored of violence, glorifies violence, and indulges its violent streak on whoever's available. If there aren't any infidels nearby, Shias will do. If only Sunnis are to be found, then the non-Arabs are convenient targets. If there aren't any non-Arabs around, then the Gulf Arabs are in trouble. And if there aren't any Gulf Arabs around, then it's tribe against tribe.
Do we adult Saudis who sponsor and employ foreigners fulfill the conditions of their contracts — which both we and they have signed? How many housemaids never get a day off? I remember a worker in the school where I work who was on the job every day and who had not been paid for six months. I remember another unpaid worker who asked humbly and politely for his dues and received nothing but curses and insults. It seems to me that our children’s violent behavior has its origins and roots in the behavior and attitudes of adults. My Indian friend’s question should have thus been directed toward all ages and not just at the young.
Actually, he took it in the right order. The adults he's describing are the children he described, only grown up. The attitudes are imbibed from the earliest age.
Are these things related to education? Can we blame this shameful behavior on a lack of education? The answer came all too quickly to my head. I remembered one of my colleagues, a teacher who belongs to a certain tribe. He believes that a student lacking a tribal name is a man with no roots and hence of no importance.
It's not just education, though the education they receive reflects the culture. Rather, the problem lies with the culture itself.
Then I remembered a preacher who visited the school after 9/11 and warned the students against dealing with non-Muslims. I also remember a sheikh in a mosque who would not allow a foreigner to pray next to him — simply because the man was not Saudi. It is not difficult to come up with examples of our relations with people in our country who belong to different religions and cultures. And I will not discuss our own relations with other Saudis. Many of us will not allow our daughters to marry someone just because he is from a certain place or because, for some reason, we look down on him.
It's that tribal thing I mentioned earlier. Within the tribe itself, there are clans and families...
Behind all these examples are beliefs and thoughts toward “others” which glorify us and our egos and degrade them and theirs. Such a situation is fertile ground for the idea of hate and infertile ground for the idea of love. Those brought up to love people will not throw rocks at them and curse them. Those brought up to love people will not degrade those who are different from them? Where is love in our lives?
Arab love itself is a different creature entirely from the Western concept. While romantic love does exist, there is a persistent religious and culturally-based denial of it.
Has it given way to hate?
Is it hatred, or is it the simple denial of the humanity of anyone not a member of the clan?
What answer can I give my Indian friend? Is he going to understand that it will take a long time to change this culture of hate? I do not think that it will be easy since so many of us do not want to and so many believe they are unique and the best in the world.
That's the misplaced arrogance I was talking about earlier.
I remember when I was in England last summer, arriving at the front door of the house where I was staying. I saw a little girl standing outside the house next to mine. I wondered if she would curse me or throw stones at me or whether she would just look away in disgust. Instead, she carried on watering the flowers in the small garden; then she looked up and waved at me, with a big smile on her face. Could that have happened here?
Posted by: john || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [15 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Probably persistent acid reflux in combination with non-muslims breathing and stuff.
Posted by: Phosh Uneath3161 || 04/03/2006 2:06 Comments || Top||

#2  While not to argue it never happens, I personally have never observed any of this alleged sort of widespread behaviors or attitudes in America or England.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 2:39 Comments || Top||

#3  Those people who skin cats, throw stones at strangers, rape their housemaids and don't pay their dues to their servants (1) who according to the haddiths are the best of Muslims (and of men of course).

(1) Since that is in fact stealing anyone wondering why those Saudis are not amputated?
Posted by: JFM || 04/03/2006 9:24 Comments || Top||

#4  I should import some Saudi teens to kill and skin the ferrule cats around my place. Just a summer job, but they may want to get out of the desert.
Posted by: wxjames || 04/03/2006 9:32 Comments || Top||

#5  Shoud have read

Those people who skin cats, throw stones at strangers (even Muslims), rape their housemaids and don't pay their dues to their servants (1) are those people who according to the haddiths are the best of Muslims (and of men of course).

(1) Since that is in fact stealing anyone wondering why those Saudis are not amputated?
Posted by: JFM || 04/03/2006 10:43 Comments || Top||

#6  (1) Since that is in fact stealing anyone wondering why those Saudis are not amputated?

Because the Saudi law against slavery is, at best, an empty gesture meant to appears the rest of the world.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 04/03/2006 11:01 Comments || Top||

#7  Hey Joseph - You Okay?
NO CAPS > A.C.R.O.N.Y.M.S. = NoSymbols OWG==NewMedication???

Posted by: Admiral Allan Ackbar || 04/03/2006 12:18 Comments || Top||

#8  I happen to like cats, I catch anyone skinning a cat and he won't live another 5 minutes.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 04/03/2006 13:30 Comments || Top||

#9  I'm impressed that a Saudi wrote this and that Arab News printed it. It generally limits the scope of the problem to foreign muslims but the picture is bigger than that and I think most readers will make the connection to non-Muslims (the bit at the end about the little girl helps there) without being affronted too badly that they simply ignore.

I applaud the attempt at lest, for all the good it'll do. I think the violent members of the herd still require significant culling before Arabia stops seething and reforms.
Posted by: rjschwarz || 04/03/2006 13:36 Comments || Top||

#10  hmm... I posted this article to a UK based forum and now the forum has no content.

If I was conspiricy minded I would think it touched a raw nerve.

I am not so I think they just had a database crash.

Posted by: 3dc || 04/03/2006 13:38 Comments || Top||

#11  If you feed it, it will grow.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 || 04/03/2006 18:54 Comments || Top||

#12  Between the statue thing in Egypt and this piece and a couple of other outspoken muslims on the same topic (see MEMRI for these - too many to link), I'm thinking some muslims have figured out Step 1. Bravo - keep thinking guys and maybe Step 1 will lead to Step 2. The beginning of rational thought?
Posted by: Thinemp Whimble2412 || 04/03/2006 19:56 Comments || Top||

#13  lame ass culture inherits incredible oil wealth by geographical acident and that makes them the master race, huh? 7th Century bass ackward inbred idjits. I think they refuse to look in the mirror cuz it'll scare the bejesus outta them how little they actually have going for them. Wait'll the oil's gone, Gomer
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 20:10 Comments || Top||

#14  :-) meow loser
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 22:36 Comments || Top||

#15  is this the same thin-skinned whiner from yesterday?
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 22:58 Comments || Top||

#16  I thought comment #1 was clever and funny. Am I missing something?
Posted by: ex-lib || 04/03/2006 23:32 Comments || Top||

#17  What's LTDs all about? He sounds kind of mental. Haven't been here for awhile. Thanks.
Posted by: ex-lib || 04/03/2006 23:34 Comments || Top||

#18  Listen to Dogs, Frank is actually a certified engineer. Braindead he isn't. What's your degree, sirrah?
Posted by: trailing wife || 04/03/2006 23:41 Comments || Top||

#19  Listen to Dogs likes to point out that other people aren't following the rules he intuited, ex-lib. Mostly he fights with .com... or those he thinks is .com being anonymous. *shrug* I guess he went too far when he attacked Frank G. for no apparent reason.
Posted by: trailing wife || 04/03/2006 23:44 Comments || Top||

#20  Check out the SinkTrap.

Mods, since this is a home IP at Shaw Cable, you should notify their abuse email.

24.80.36.113 = [ S010600e0299c7c59.vc.shawcable.net ]
OrgName: Shaw Communications Inc.
OrgID: SHAWC
Address: Suite 800
Address: 630 - 3rd Ave. SW
City: Calgary
StateProv: AB
PostalCode: T2P-4L4
Country: CA
ReferralServer: rwhois: //rs1so.cg.shawcable.net: 4321
NetRange: 24.80.0.0 - 24.87.255.255
CIDR: 24.80.0.0/13
NetName: SHAW-COMM
NetHandle: NET-24-80-0-0-1
Parent: NET-24-0-0-0-0
NetType: Direct Allocation
NameServer: NS7.NO.CG.SHAWCABLE.NET
NameServer: NS8.SO.CG.SHAWCABLE.NET
Comment: ADDRESSES WITHIN THIS BLOCK ARE NON-PORTABLE
RegDate: 2001-07-12
Updated: 2006-02-08
OrgAbuseHandle: SHAWA-ARIN
OrgAbuseName: SHAW ABUSE
OrgAbusePhone: 1-403-750-7420
OrgAbuseEmail: internet.abuse@sjrb.ca
OrgTechHandle: ZS178-ARIN
OrgTechName: Shaw High-Speed Internet
OrgTechPhone: 1-403-750-7428
OrgTechEmail: ipadmin@sjrb.ca
Posted by: Glosing Hupesh7946 || 04/03/2006 23:46 Comments || Top||

#21  no redeeming qualities?
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 23:52 Comments || Top||

#22  Mods? Deodorizer needed in the sinktrap....yikes!
Posted by: Frank G || 04/03/2006 23:55 Comments || Top||

#23  The problem is: Wahabism. They have supremacist attitudes to both disbelievers and Muslims. Blacks are universally referred to as "slaves" ("abds") in the Saud terrorist entity. In 1998, the US Congress reported Saud financing of over 80% of US mosques. Sauds pay; local jihadis play.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 2:32 Comments || Top||

#24  FrankG:
Who do we blame for your gutter language? Were your parents back-woods pigs like you? Why don't you stick to the SciFi forums like other security guards? Give everyone her a heart-attack by actually posting an article. It will show us that you can read, Bubba.
For the intelligent, see this post on yet another trial of an abandoner of Islam. Time to put Islam and the WOT cock-roach class who dhimmi up to Muslims, on trial:
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2006/4/4/courts/13856498&sec=courts

How many open-minded, WOT-abaters will actually read this? Will .com end his adult tantrum and come back here under his own name, to puke up Hanritty's daily comments?
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 22:31 Comments || Top||

#25  Do you carry a big Maglite, Bubba? Or are you handicapped like Robert Crawford? Why don't you run a similar lame website for dirt-for-brains ill-breds like yourself.

If you want to jump off a bridge, I'll give you cab fare to get there you walking slum.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 22:52 Comments || Top||

#26  I recall throwing "whiner" at Cock-Sucker #1. Where is the tantrum boy faggot?

How many people who matter actually read these threads? No more than 2 dozen glances. You actually give a fuck about getting the boot out of here. If you want to join something big, try death. That forum is full of good for fertilizer pigs like you.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 23:10 Comments || Top||


Bangladesh
‘Foreigners Involved in Bangladesh Blasts’
Foreigners were involved in the Aug. 17 series of bombings in which two people were killed and over 200 injured, intelligence agencies said. The agencies have prepared a list of foreigners allegedly involved in the explosions. Most of the foreigners included in the list are from Pakistan and the Middle East. They include Maulana Nur Ahmed, Maulana Yasin, Hafiz Monir Hossain, Touhid Wahab, Mehbub Nur, Joynuddin Khan, Ahmed Abdullah, Ahmed Shah ibn Sharif, and Shah Nur-e-Islam. Intelligence sources claimed that six of the foreigners were certainly involved in the bombings.

The foreigners had close ties with the banned outfit Jamatul Mujahedeen Bangladesh (JMB), sources said. The intelligence agencies are collecting more information about the foreigners. Ruling out JMB’s link with any international terror group, Inspector General of Police Abdul Quaiyum said the agencies had not been able to link JMB with any foreign terror group.
That's my feeling, too. I'd guess JMB is closer in spirit to the Wazir Taliban than to al-Qaeda. HUJI is the local al-Qaeda affiliate, and we seldom hear anything about them.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  There are no "foreigners" among Muslims; that Ummah is the best of humanity. Yeah right.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 1:44 Comments || Top||


Arabia
3 Victims of Bahrain Disaster Buried as Toll Rises to 58
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [8 views] Top|| File under:


Africa Horn
Sudan Denies Chad Charges of Joining Rebels in Raids
Sudan denied yesterday accusations by Chad that it supported gunmen who battled Chadian troops in fighting that killed dozens, the latest tensions between the two nations. Chad's government claimed a day earlier that armed men "backed by the Khartoum government" crossed into Chad on Thursday and attacked the town of Modeina. Twelve Chadian troops and dozens of the attackers were killed, and some 4,000 civilians were driven from their homes, Chad said.

Sudanese Army spokesman Brig. Osman Mohamed Al-Aghbash said the accusations of Sudanese support for the fighters were "unfounded and lack substantiating evidence." Khartoum is fully committed to promises made last month in the Libyan capital Tripoli that Sudan and Chad would avoid backing rebels in each other's territory, Al-Aghbash told the official Sudan news agency. "What is happening inside Chad is an internal Chadian question and the Sudanese army has nothing to do with it," he said.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [6 views] Top|| File under:


India-Pakistan
Three killed in Pakistan border clash
An exchange of rocket fire between Pakistani troops and pro-Taliban fighters near the Afghan border has killed one soldier and wounded 10 people, including three children, officials and residents say.
Eight fluffy bunnies were seriously wounded. No word yet on puppy, kitten, or baby duck casualties.
The fighters opened fire on Saturday night, targeting a fort in the Dattakhel area, west of Miranshah, the main town in the North Waziristan semi-autonomous tribal region.

Major-General Shaukat Sultan, the very model of a modern major general a military spokesman, said one soldier was killed and four wounded in the attack on the fort. Residents said three children were wounded in a subsequent exchange of fire, but it was unclear which side had fired the rocket that hit their house. It was also unknown whether the attackers suffered any casualties as they fled in the darkness. In a separate rocket attack in the Shawal area of North Waziristan, the fighters wounded three paramilitary men.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [13 views] Top|| File under:


Home Front: Politix
Retired General: "crucial time in the nation"
Posted by: lotp || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [15 views] Top|| File under:

#1  When has there not been a crucial time in the nation? Other than that afternoon in 1832, I mean.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 0:09 Comments || Top||

#2  The link at the Daily Times isn't working.

Fred, the last time I checked, their nation didn't even start until 1947 or so...
Posted by: Phil || 04/03/2006 0:17 Comments || Top||

#3  I just checked the link... it was a paper in TN. Sorry.
Posted by: Phil || 04/03/2006 1:29 Comments || Top||

#4  book:
Shadow Warriors: Inside the Special Forces. Tom Clancy with Gen. Carl Stiner, U.S. Army retired, and Tony Koltz. Putnam's Sons, 548 pages; appendices; bibliography; index; $29.95.
Reviewed by Gen. Frederick J. Kroesen, U.S. Army retired
Posted by: RD || 04/03/2006 1:44 Comments || Top||

#5  Optimism means 140,000 US troops backed by Carrier groups and rapid deployment forces,

Pessimism means 140,000 US troops backed by Carrier groups, rapid deployment forces and USS Jimmy Carter
Posted by: JFM || 04/03/2006 9:26 Comments || Top||

#6  Optimism means 140,000 US troops backed by Carrier groups and rapid deployment forces, close to everything pre-emptible. Pre-emption (Bush Doctrine) is another positive.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 2:52 Comments || Top||


Science & Technology
Hunters told to take precautions against bird flu transmission
Oregon waterfowl hunters might find themselves on the front lines of the fight against an avian flu outbreak in North America.

Birds found in Oregon are known to mix in Alaska with birds from Asia, where the virus is most prevalent, leaving birds migrating through the western United States as one of the virus' possible routes to America.

Waterfowl experts are warning hunters to take precautions as a result, from wearing gloves when field-dressing waterfowl to dousing knives with a bleach solution when done. They are also advising hunters to clean and disinfect decoys and waders if hunting in waters where the virus is found.

Hunters are also being told to provide samples waterfowl they've killed for testing, and to ensure that all waterfowl are fully cooked before eaten.



"It's like (hurricanes) Katrina and Rita," spokesman Gregg Patterson of the Tennessee-based Ducks Unlimited told The Medford Mail-Tribune. "You realize we're not insulated against this kind of stuff. What everybody needs to do is prepare for it."

Avian Influenza, or AI, is a set of viruses that are naturally found in wild birds, particularly waterfowl and shorebirds that normally suffer no ill effects from them. However, domestic birds like chickens are generally more susceptible.

But the H5N1 strain now found in 41 countries in Asia, Africa and parts of Europe is frequently fatal to birds and easily transmissible between species. To date, scientists' ultimate fear is that the virus will mutate into one that can be passed among humans.

The National Wildlife Health Center in Wisconsin says as of mid-March, the H5N1 virus has sickened 177 people and killed 98, mostly in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Thailand and Turkey. Most of those were infected from eating or handling infected chickens.

Just the mention of avian flu has scared some Oregonians out of waterfowl hunting, said Brad Bales, waterfowl biologist for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.

"I got, maybe, a dozen calls (last season) from hunters who said their families won't let them hunt anymore because of avian influenza," Bales said.

Oregon expects to receive about $400,000 in federal funds for various sampling efforts beginning in the fall, Bales said.

Cackling Canada geese, a priority species, will be tested by sampling birds at hunter check-in stations in Northwest Oregon, where they concentrate, Bales said. Other species, such as shovelers, pintails and green-winged teals, could be tested elsewhere in the state, he said.
Posted by: Anonymoose || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:


India-Pakistan
Lack of women turns tables on India’s suitable boys
MUMBAI: Long, twirling moustaches and bejewelled daggers are no longer enough for a man seeking to marry in India’s desert state of Rajasthan, long considered a land of fearless warriors. But if he is lucky enough to have a sister, he can relax. A declining sex ratio in the state is prompting a girl’s parents to spurn offers of marriage from men unless the potential groom’s family also has a marriageable daughter for their son, the Sunday Express said. “Around 30 percent of the marriages in the past year in Shekhawati region of Rajasthan were fixed on this swap system,” local lawmaker Rajendra Chauhan said.

The sex ratio in many of Rajasthan’s districts has dropped to 922 girls for every 1,000 boys, according to the last census. In one or two villages, it has plummeted to less than 500, the paper reported. The joint engagement pact, called “aata-saata”, or the “double-couple plan”, has emerged as young women find themselves much in demand in a state where the traditional preference, as in much of India, has been for sons. Heavily skewed sex ratios have emerged in several parts of India as couples use ultra-sound technology to achieve their desire for a baby son despite such tests being illegal. A joint study carried out by researchers in India and Canada recently suggested that half-a-million unborn girls may be aborted in India every year.

But now the absence of girls is changing village dynamics, the newspaper said. “There are no girls. If there is one in a house, the father is like a king. He can demand anything,” said Prahland Singh, the head of Bhorki village in Rajasthan. He said that around 30 families had carried out marriages under the swap system in the village of 3,000 people in the last two years. The report said that dowry, where traditionally a bride’s father had to bestow riches on a groom to secure a marriage, has completely disappeared from many parts of the state. Rather the groom’s families are now offering to bear the cost of finding a suitable bride for their sons.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [19 views] Top|| File under:

#1  ...and these primitives took over the world software industry?
Posted by: Skidmark || 04/03/2006 0:59 Comments || Top||

#2  ..and these primitives took over the world software industry?

Look at how lousy Microsoft is, and they're the leader in the US.

This suggests that quality doesn't have much to do with market dominance.
Posted by: Abdominal Snowman || 04/03/2006 1:27 Comments || Top||

#3  “There are no girls. If there is one in a house, the father is like a king. He can demand anything...”

Econ 101...
Posted by: PBMcL || 04/03/2006 1:29 Comments || Top||

#4  This is becoming a problem in China too. One discordant note to the schadenfreude here is that the traditional method of redressing the balance by reducing the number of males is war.
Posted by: RWV || 04/03/2006 1:34 Comments || Top||

#5  Is anyone else having problems telling Joe from LTD?
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 04/03/2006 8:07 Comments || Top||

#6  Well, Joe's got that crazy sense of hourmor thing going.
Posted by: 6 || 04/03/2006 10:54 Comments || Top||

#7  Once again, basic market economics.
Posted by: anonymous2u || 04/03/2006 11:25 Comments || Top||

#8  But now the absence of girls is changing village dynamics, the newspaper said. “There are no girls. If there is one in a house, the father is like a king. He can demand anything,” said Prahland Singh, the head of Bhorki village in Rajasthan. He said that around 30 families had carried out marriages under the swap system in the village of 3,000 people in the last two years. The report said that dowry, where traditionally a bride’s father had to bestow riches on a groom to secure a marriage, has completely disappeared from many

I predicted that this would happen about 6 years ago to my boys' daycare provider: this imbalance has come about via selective abortion.

Glad to see that the dowery is becoming a thing of the past. The next step is now a REVERSE dowery: "You want my daughter? Fine, here's what I want."

Taking care of excess boys via war OVER THERE isn't a problem with me OVER HERE: I recall that India and Pakistan and China are near neighbors, so let the excess boys kill off the excess boys.
Posted by: Ptah || 04/03/2006 11:26 Comments || Top||

#9  The invisible hand job at work.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 11:27 Comments || Top||

#10  I agree with Ptah on this one. China sees itself as a world player, so plans for war with the U.S. But it will have to deal with its problems with India before it can look further beyond its borders. On the other hand, I suspect, because it's further along in rationalizing its economy, that it has a lot more excess males of a suitable age to dispose of.
Posted by: trailing wife || 04/03/2006 11:51 Comments || Top||

#11  Is anyone else having problems telling Joe from LTD?

RC, did you mean "Joe from LTD" or "Joe on LSD?
Posted by: Zenster || 04/03/2006 12:49 Comments || Top||

#12  The Chinese leadership knows they are a regional power at best for the next 50 years. They can only appear to punch above their weight because the Americans have such defensive public diplomacy. If we were at all aggressive, they would appear the paper tiger they are.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 04/03/2006 12:55 Comments || Top||

#13  "LTD"=>"Listens to Dogs".

Joe sounds like a wild man on drugs, but he's a PATRIOTIC wild man on drugs. Look for posts spouting lefty cliches: OUR Joe doesn't do Lefty, and he's the antithesis of "cliche".
Posted by: Ptah || 04/03/2006 13:05 Comments || Top||

#14  he's the antithesis of "cliche".

And coherence.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 04/03/2006 13:08 Comments || Top||

#15  "and these primitives took over the world software industry?"

Rajastan has no software industry to speak of. Most of India's high tech is in the south, where sex ratios are more normal. To best understand India, think of it as a sub-continent rather than as just a country. It has as much linguistic and general cultural diversity as Europe. Parts of India was doing very well -- others are not.
Posted by: pagan infidel || 04/03/2006 13:38 Comments || Top||

#16  And coherence.

Which was my point in general, in a backhanded snarky sort of way.
Posted by: Zenster || 04/03/2006 14:13 Comments || Top||

#17  #15: And coherence.

Yeah. that too, RC.
Posted by: Ptah || 04/03/2006 14:14 Comments || Top||

#18  "Joe sounds like a wild man on drugs, but he's a PATRIOTIC wild man on drugs"

well i can tell you from the other side, having wild men on drugs on your side aint no blessing.
Posted by: liberalhawk || 04/03/2006 14:16 Comments || Top||

#19  I really like Joe and I sometimes think I somehow understand deep things in his rants. No, really.
Posted by: anonymous5089 || 04/03/2006 15:17 Comments || Top||

#20  When I start to feel that way 5089 I fire up the expresso machine.
Posted by: 6 || 04/03/2006 16:25 Comments || Top||

#21  Dowry is being kept alive by another factor - Caste.

Many rural families will pay handsomely to marry their daughter into a higher caste.

But economic growth, rapid urbanization, selective abortion and the laws of supply and demand will all ensure that dowry customs and the low status of women will change.

As for the excess males.. there are a few parts of India where Polyandry is the norm - one female - several husbands.
There are reports from villages (where this custom was never practised) of several brothers now sharing one wife.

Then there is war. The Indian army has always been an all volunteer force. With the various insurgencies around the Indian countryside, this large reserve of manpower might be useful against maoists, seperatists, jihadists and regular Pakistani troops.

It works the other way of course. The jihad in Kashmir, planned in Pakistan during the tail end of the Afghan campaign, coincided with a surplus of muslim males in Jammu and Kashmir.

The majority of those who volunteered to fight the Indian state, who boarded minibuses with conductors shouting Pindi -- Pindi, destined for the terrorist training camps near Rawalpindi, were killed by the Indian security forces over the next decade.
Now the vast majority of jihadists are Pakistanis.

One advantage the Indian state has had in dealing with insurgency is an unlimited supply of males of fighting age.

Posted by: john || 04/03/2006 17:18 Comments || Top||

#22  Well, that should help the status of women for a little while. And the survival rate of female fetus' (fetuses, feti?), as well as the reduction in "honour killings".

I fear an increase in paedophilia tho' and rape and all the other ugly, "got no women" islamomacho urges.

Need to send all the youts off to pointless islamo war.
Posted by: Thinemp Whimble2412 || 04/03/2006 18:45 Comments || Top||

#23  Be nice to Joe. He lives on Guam. Anyone who has been there for longer than about 6 months starts to talk like that.
Posted by: RWV || 04/03/2006 20:44 Comments || Top||

#24  Can't they do arithmetic? Don't they want grandchildren?
Cordelia Vorkosigan.
Posted by: gromgoru || 04/03/2006 22:18 Comments || Top||

#25  India isn't exactly running out of population quite yet .....
Posted by: lotp || 04/03/2006 22:19 Comments || Top||

#26  With cultural-relativism in decline, and the spin-police in deep sleep, let me say it: Western Civilization is superior to Eastern savagery. Of course, I don't lump friendly Hindus with Muslim hot-headed knee-jerks and their dhimmi apologists.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 2:57 Comments || Top||

#27  Security guards of a feather...
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 18:46 Comments || Top||


Iraq
Saddam to face new charges
An investigative judge will file new criminal charges against Saddam Hussein in the next few days charging him in the deaths and deportation of thousands of Kurds in the 1980s, a government prosecutor has said. Chief prosecutor Jaafar al-Moussawi on Sunday said the new charges, which would be announced in the coming days, would involve Saddam's alleged role in "Operation Anfal", which included the 1988 gassing of about 5,000 Kurdish civilians in the village of Halabja.

In all, Kurds maintain that more than 180,000 of their people were killed in Anfal, which began in 1987 and ended a year later. Hundreds of Kurdish villages in northern Iraq were destroyed and thousands were forced to leave their homes. Al-Moussawi did not specify when the charges would be filed, but the Iraqi court which handles cases against the ousted ruler announced a press conference for Tuesday.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  How about you just convict him of the current charges and hang the SOB. (Why oh why didn't they just chuck a grenade or three into the "spider hole"?)
Posted by: PBMcL || 04/03/2006 1:17 Comments || Top||

#2  The only reason to file more charges is if they think the charges they already have are not going to stick.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 04/03/2006 13:18 Comments || Top||

#3 

When I saw this, I knew there would be new charges against Soddy.
Posted by: BigEd || 04/03/2006 16:07 Comments || Top||


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Hamas vows to end armed chaos
Hamas has said that its government will prosecute anyone involved in inter-faction fighting after three people were killed in clashes between rival groups. Said Siam, the Palestinian interior minister, said on Sunday: "We will ensure that nobody is above the law and demand an end to the instability and armed chaos."

He was speaking in reference to violence on Friday in which 36 people were wounded after the assassination of a commander from the Popular Resistance Committees. "We are giving the security forces all the authority and power to investigate this ugly crime and also the three killings and other casualties that followed," he said, referring to a commission of inquiry set up on Friday night.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Reap the whirlwhind, @ssholes. You have sown the dragon's teeth for so long that nobody can contain the chaos bred up thereby. Have fun with your so-called "government." Idjits.
Posted by: Zenster || 04/03/2006 15:52 Comments || Top||


Bangladesh
50 injured as Shibir clashes with JCD
At least 50 students were injured as the Islami Chhatra Shibir (ICS) clashed with the Jatiyatabadi Chhatra Dal (JCD) at Jessore Govt MM College yesterday. Assistant Superintendent of Police Jillur Rahman, Officer in-charge of Jessore Police Station Mostafa Kamal and Sub-inspector Abdul Karim were also injured as police tried to stop the students from fighting over supremacy on the campus.

The clashes were triggered as Shibir men allegedly attacked JCD activists Shobhan and Monir around 12:30pm on the campus. JCD and other student organisations including the Bangladesh Chhatra League (BCL), Jatiya Chhatra Front and Biplabi Chhatra Moitri retaliated, leading to a series of clashes that continued till 2:30pm. Jalal Uddin, principal of the college, told the journalists the clashes took place as the student organisations were trying to establish their supremacy on the campus.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [10 views] Top|| File under:


Arabia
Work on Bahrain skyscrapers to go on post-boat accident
The builders of a pair of sail-shaped skyscrapers in Bahrain's capital lost 16 executives and engineers when a cruise ship capsized last week, but the companies said Sunday they will press ahead in finishing construction. Fifty-eight people died — 16 of them top executives from Murray & Roberts and the British engineering firm Atkins, including the Bahrain World Trade Center project director. Work has stopped on the World Trade Center site since Friday. But Samir Nass, vice chairman and managing director of Nass Corp., a top partner in the construction, told The Associated Press the $150-million towers remain on schedule for completion later this year. His brother and partner Ghazi Nass said normal construction activity will resume Tuesday.


Posted by: Seafarious || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:


Science & Technology
France's Alcatel buys US firm Lucent
France-based Alcatel SA has announced it will buy its US-based rival Lucent Technologies Inc to form a new telecommunications equipment manufacturer. About 8,800 jobs will be cut. The combined company, to be based in Paris, expects annual sales of $25 billion - close to the 2005 revenue posted by top telcom equipment maker Cisco Systems Inc - and generate $1.7 billion of savings within three years, the companies said.

The companies said the savings would come from several areas, including consolidating support functions, leveraging research and development and services across a larger base and cutting about 10% of their combined worldwide work force. As of December 31, the companies had about 88,000 employees in total. Alcatel said it agreed to buy Lucent to better combat the intense competition in the telecom equipment market.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  They finally got it.
Posted by: anonymous2u || 04/03/2006 2:18 Comments || Top||

#2  Lucent Management + French efficiency & innovation. If there ever was an obvious short sale - this is it.
Posted by: DMFD || 04/03/2006 20:10 Comments || Top||


Afghanistan
4 Policemen Killed at Afghan Checkpoint
A Taliban rebel posing as a traveler shot dead four policemen at a remote checkpoint in southern Afghanistan after eating dinner with them and sleeping in their quarters, officials said Sunday. A fifth officer shot the rebel dead.
I hope he gut shot the bastard...
The assailant asked the officers if he could spend the night with them late Friday because he was walking alone along a stretch of road in Helmand province, a hotbed of insurgency and the country's main poppy growing region, said Helmand provincial administrator Ghulam Muhiddin. After the officers had gone to sleep, the man grabbed one of their rifles and opened fire, killing the four instantly, before the fifth officer woke up and shot him dead, Muhiddin said. A Taliban spokesman, Qari Mohammed Yousaf, telephoned The Associated Press to claim responsibility.

Also in Helmand, rebels attacked a convoy of civilian trucks Saturday that had just dropped off equipment at a U.S.-led coalition base in the region, said Amanullah, a local police chief who uses only one name. The militants burned the trucks but freed the drivers unhurt.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [10 views] Top|| File under:


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syrian Activist Gets 12-Year Jail
Syria's state security court yesterday jailed a man for 12 years, commuted from a death sentence, on charges of belonging to the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood, a human rights activist said. Another Syrian, himself a right activist, was sentenced to five years behind bars for belonging to a "secret organization."

Abdel Karim Rihawi, head of the Syrian Human Rights Organization, told AFP that Abdel Sattar Qattan was first sentenced to death before the term was commuted to 12 years in prison. Since the mid-1980s, convicted Muslim Brothers on death row have all had their sentences — passed under Syria's emergency laws in force since the Baath party came to power in 1963 — commuted to long jail terms.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [10 views] Top|| File under:


International-UN-NGOs
Nato plans stronger military ties worldwide
Nato plans to strengthen its strategic and military ties with Australia, New Zealand, Finland and Sweden – a move that could give it a role far outside its traditional geographical influence. The initiative, led by Washington and supported by Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, Nato secretary- general, would help reinforce the US-led alliance's political and military credentials at a time they have come under scrutiny.

The US would like to see regular Nato “forums” with other countries such as Australia, New Zealand and, later, Japan and South Korea. However, this plan has run into opposition from France, which sees the move as a gambit to bring in countries more likely to see strategic issues from Washington's point of view.

Last week, ambassadors from Nato’s member states discussed a US proposal to create a “global partnership” to rationalise Nato’s current web of partnerships and pave the way for “advanced partnerships” with Nordic, Asian and Australasian countries. “We want one big box, so that countries can go at their own pace and not be the victims of their geography,” said a senior Nato diplomat, who also identified the possibility of an “advanced partnership” for developed democratic countries that helped with Nato missions. “We want to give those countries that are putting blood and treasure on the line with Nato a greater say at the table.”

Stronger ties with countries with established democracies and accomplished militaries could help Nato generate the troops it needs for difficult missions such as Afghanistan. Nato’s James Appathurai said: “It makes sense to consider making this community stronger. We need as many countries as possible that share our values and have effective forces on the same team to face all the challenges we are seeing in places such as Afghanistan.”

The plans are set to be discussed at a Nato foreign ministers meeting in Sofia this month and at a summit in Riga in November, which Washington hopes will endorse the idea of a more flexible “global partnership” for countries that co-operate with Nato. But the idea of a special status for participating Asian and Australasian countries may have to wait until 2008.

The alliance already operates a Partnership for Peace programme with 20 countries, including several from the former Soviet bloc, and has formal ties to seven Mediterranean countries and six Gulf states.

But, while some partner nations such as Sweden and Finland provide troops for Nato's Afghanistan force, others such as Belarus and Uzbekistan have much frostier relations with the alliance. By contrast, New Zealand and Australia, neither of which has formal partnerships with Nato, have sent troops to Nato operations and are present in Afghanistan, either as part of Nato forces or under the US coalition banner. Some Nato officials hope that Japan can also be persuaded to send troops to Afghanistan when it redeploys forces from Iraq.
more at the link
Posted by: lotp || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [9 views] Top|| File under:

#1  NATO if we can get it into a global mind think would be a great counter to the UN. The NATO only has like minded nations who must meet certian standards before being accepted into the fold one being democracy.

I hope we can make this work and isolate or end the France element that sounds to me on most points like this one is more worried about France and her profits than the world.

On this issue here with Japan, Australia, NewZealand, S. Korea the French anger to thier acceptance is more about how that would spell the end to their push to sell the Chicoms weapons and may even force NATO involment to counter the Chicoms.
Posted by: C-Low || 04/03/2006 0:44 Comments || Top||

#2  C-Low, if what you say pans out, we may not have to go down the whole "leave the UN and create a new organization" route...
Posted by: Edward Yee || 04/03/2006 1:43 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
Nuggets from the Urdu Press
‘How I robbed the railways!’
Reported in the Jang, constable Nawaz confessed that he looted the railways treasury in Lahore while he was its guard and ran away with Rs 3 crore 61 lakh but was caught when he kept ringing up his colleagues in Lahore to find out if he was being investigated. He said he was an army soldier but got into the police after leaving the army. He kept trying to get posted to the treasury and finally got the job even though he had bad reports. Then he got three accomplices including one fellow constable to drug the guard and cut the safe open. He thereafter offended his accomplices by giving them a mere Rs 15,000 each and bought a bungalow in Bahawalpur for Rs 28 lakh, and got a new face and hair through plastic surgery. In all Rs 3 crore 25 lakh were found on him after he was caught through entrapment.

Lahore birds too protested against Denmark
According to the daily Pakistan, birds stopped coming to eat grain at Istanbul Chowk in Lahore on the great March 3 Protest Day against insult to the Prophet (pbuh). Birds are known to do ibadat and praise the Prophet (pbuh) but when the birds realised that Lahore was protesting they too absented themselves from the two special places where grain was kept for them.

Be kind to us, master!
Columnist Irfan Siddiqi wrote in the Nawa-e-Waqt that his request to Bush was that he should not insult us in front of others. Indoors (andar-khanay) he could treat us as roughly as he wished but in public he should pat us on the back so that our habit of slavery (khu-e-ghulam) and natural inclination to worship (fitrat-e-bandagi) could be satisfied. Whenever Bush passes through the region to do a big deal with some state or visit one of his colonies he should also call on us so that we can show off (thoon-tthan) too.

Bush cornered Pakistan
Reported in Khabrain, ex-ISI chief Hameed Gul said that President Bush’s March tour of India had pushed Pakistan into a corner while making India into a regional hegemon. He said Pakistan was put under pressure to vote against Iran at the IAEA and to get rid of its nuclear programme. In these circumstances Pakistan’s friendship with China had become more crucial and the Mekran Coast had become strategic. He said Manmohan’s remark about a failed state was important. To get Pakistan to do its bidding, the US may get Pakistan to hold elections in 2006.

Another False prophet appears in Bhai Pheru
According to the Nawa-e-Waqt a new prophet after Imam Mehdi made his appearance in Bhai Pheru near Lahore when Abdul Hamid declared that he was sent by God. He soon set up a Kaaba and started doing hajj around it while introducing his own name into the kalima. He also started doing his tabligh in the area. The people of Bhai Pheru became greatly incensed and attacked him before the police took him and locked him up. The people then stood outside the jail and wanted him to be handed over. Then the people started breaking public property to express their love for Islam, after which the police threw teargas shells at them. This caused bhagdaur (stampede) and people gathered to do some sincere property damage were greatly offended with the police. The following day the city of Qasur remained closed due to hartal by the shopkeepers and more police force was called from surrounding districts in anticipation of widespread vandalism on the part of the pious Muslims. The false prophet was taken to Lahore in a cavalcade of six cars.

Imran bigger leader than Fazl and Qazi
That's hard to pictue, frankly...
Quoted in the daily Pakistan, secretary general PML Mushahid Hussain Syed said that by deciding to hold a protest rally on the visit of President Bush Imran Khan had increased his status, and by not attending his rally, the MMA had allowed its leaders Qazi Hussain Ahmed and Maulana Fazlur Rehman to become smaller leaders than Imran Khan. He said Imran Khan was confined because of his own security; he was no threat to the PML government.

America turned Junejo’s head
Historian Dr Safdar Mehmood wrote in Jang that no Pakistani ruler was legitimate unless he travelled to the United States and took a certificate from Washington. Like all rulers Muhammad Khan Junejo after becoming prime minister of Pakistan in 1985 insisted that he must visit Washington. He finally went and got his certificate of legitimacy from the US. But such visits also turned the rulers’ head. General Zia expressed his fear publicly when he said that Junejo’s head had been turned by Washington. Predictably, Junejo rebelled and Zia removed him.

‘Plotocracy’ instead of plutocracy
Writing in Nawa-e-Waqt Ghiasuddin Janbaz stated that Pakistan’s bureaucracy was deeply involved in the practice of plotocracy (allotting of plots of land) and notocracy (making of currency notes), while the politicians were busy practising lotocracy (becoming ‘lota’ to change political loyalties) to accumulate more wealth.

Shahid Afridi and Tablighi Jamaat
Sarerahe wrote in Nawa-e-Waqt that the Tablighi Jamaat had been praying to capture Pakistan’s top cricketer Shahid Afridi to join its preaching team and this prayer was finally heard. Shahid Afridi had actually led a Tablighi Jamaat preaching team to Umar Kot in Sindh. Sarerahe said that now each sixer hit by Afridi would be an Islamic sixer. All cricketers had already become members of the Jamaat, now only Afridi was left. The prayer had been heard.

Naji and Qaji
Jamaat Islami leader Amirul Azim questioned columnist Nazeer Naji’s probity in selecting Qazi Hussain Ahmed and the MMA for criticism in the context of 14 February destruction of property in Lahore while protesting Danish cartoons. Naji first hinted that the religious leaders could be behind the vandalism in Lahore, then tried to create a rift between Qazi Hussain and Maulana Fazlur Rehman, the two leaders of the MMA. Finally, Naji wrote that now the world had stopped protesting the cartoons, why was protest going on in Pakistan? The truth was that the cartoon controversy was simply the outer excuse; the real protest was propelled by other conditions in Pakistan which were unacceptable to the masses.

Fateh Muhammad and Kissinger and Enlightenment
Columnist Masud Ashar wrote in Jang that famous Pakistani intellectual Fateh Muhammad Malik spoke at a seminar at GC University in Lahore and warned the audience that the idea of enlightenment in Pakistan was nothing but a revival of a strategy followed by Henry Kissinger. Prof Mazur Ahmad said that Pakistan needed an intellectual paradigm shift to cope with the modern world.

Kasuri and Condy Rice’s leg
Columnist Abbas Athar wrote in Nawa-e-Waqt that a photograph issued during President Bush’s visit to Pakistan showed foreign minister Khursheed Mahmud Kasuri talking to his American counterpart Ms Condoleeza Rice. Mr Kasuri was earnestly trying to make a point – probably telling her that Pakistan was making all-out efforts against terrorism – but he seemed actually to be talking to her leg which she had extended by putting it on her other leg.
Posted by: Fred || 04/03/2006 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [19 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "Then the people started breaking public property to express their love for Islam"
"Pakistan needed an intellectual paradigm shift to cope with the modern world."
Not so much nuggetts as gems.

Posted by: pihkalbadger || 04/03/2006 8:30 Comments || Top||

#2  Then the people started breaking public property to express their love for Islam...

I really can't add anything to that.
Posted by: Robert Crawford || 04/03/2006 10:59 Comments || Top||

#3  Nothing sez "Love for Islam" better than breaking public property...
Posted by: Seafarious || 04/03/2006 12:09 Comments || Top||

#4  but he seemed actually to be talking to her leg which she had extended by putting it on her other leg.
I'm surprised there wasn't serious celebratory firing of the AKs.
Posted by: 6 || 04/03/2006 16:01 Comments || Top||

#5  Birds are known to do ibadat

Avian flu, for example?
Posted by: ryuge || 04/03/2006 17:03 Comments || Top||

#6  he seemed actually to be talking to her leg

Khursheed Mahmud Kasuri.. fetish
Posted by: RD || 04/03/2006 17:40 Comments || Top||

#7  the real protest was propelled by other conditions in Pakistan which were unacceptable to the masses.
Qazi's crap-for-brains illbreds torched school buses and a couple of KFCs. The "masses" have worse enemies (like Qazi). Maybe there is a silent Pak majority that would like to swing their cleric class from lampposts.
Posted by: Listen to Dogs || 04/03/2006 1:42 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
Coyote dies, officials fear riots
ScrappleFace

(2006-04-01) — Game wardens from Maine to Pennsylvania issued a Code Red warning today in advance of possible unrest among wild coyotes in the wake of the mysterious death-in-captivity of Hal, a coyote (caninus roaminus impetuous) captured recently by New York City police.

Held in isolation from other coyotes at a now-infamous Department of Environmental Conservation detention facility in Putnam County, Hal died with his legs “restrained” and his snout “muzzled like a dog” as Cornell University researchers attempted to “tag” him before his release.

The New York Times has filed a Freedom of Information Act request demanding that the government hand over images that might show evidence of humiliation and discomfort, if not outright abuse.

Authorities refused the Times’ initial request to release the photos, “out of respect for the family of the deceased,” officials said.

“Even though we did everything according to protocol,” said an unnamed conservation agent, “we’re concerned about the reaction on the so-called ‘coyote street’ if they should see one of their own bound and gagged and about to be tagged.”

In coyote culture, being restrained or caged is considered degrading and humiliating, and the ‘Law of the Pack’ mandates death for the perpetrators.

Ingrid Newkirk, founder of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), has offered to pay for an attorney to file a lawsuit on behalf of the family.

“Hal was guilty of nothing more than loping-while-canine in Central Park,” Ms. Newkirk said, “but his captors and killers are guilty of invading and occupying land that belonged to Hal’s ancestors for thousands of years.”
Posted by: Korora || 04/03/2006 0:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  caninus roaminus impetuous LOL! it fits with the pic! funny
Posted by: RD || 04/03/2006 1:29 Comments || Top||

#2  "Ingrid, I roamed the wilds with Hal Coyote, I howled at the moon with Hal Coyote, Hal Coyote was a packmate of mine. Ingrid, you are no Hal Coyote."
-- Wile E. Coyote

Roadrunner could not be reached for comment.
Posted by: Phosh Uneath3161 || 04/03/2006 1:58 Comments || Top||

#3  ROGER RABBIT (paraphrase0 : "Get out of my way and let someone whom consistently falls of cliffs do his job", D*** YOU!?
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 04/03/2006 2:49 Comments || Top||

#4  Rest his soul.
Posted by: Perfesser || 04/03/2006 10:27 Comments || Top||

#5  I have half a mind....! Wait! That's a different subject.

I am sending a letter to ACME (c) about their defective animal transfer boxes.
Posted by: AlmostAnonymous5839 || 04/03/2006 22:34 Comments || Top||



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