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Tuesday, March 11, 2008
New Look Into Hitler's World

The release in Germany of previously classified World War 2 documents has caused a re-examination of the war by a new generation.
 

It took two decades and a second cornerstone laying ceremony, but on Friday, construction at the 'Topography of Terror' got underway. The site is to document the headquarters of the SS and the Gestapo.

Memory in Berlin has never been easily approached. The fight over the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe was long and bitter, and disagreements over the planned monuments to the gay and to the Sinti/Roma victims of the Holocaust have likewise overshadowed both projects.

None of the dust ups, though, have even come close to that surrounding the so-called Topography of Terror. But on Friday -- fully two decades after the project was originally set in motion -- the cornerstone was laid in Berlin for a documentation center chronicling some of Nazi Germany's most horrific crimes. For the second time.

"The whole process was unbearable," Andreas Nachama, head of the organization in charge of creating and managing the exhibition, told SPIEGEL ONLINE. "We kept getting different stories about when the center would be finished. Now at least we have a date we can shoot for."

http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,515088,00.html
 
 

When most people think of the images of World War II, they think in black in white. From the image of American G.I.s raising a flag over Iwo Jima to the picture of Russian soldiers on the Reichstag, most of the public photos from the war are in shades of grey. But that doesn't mean color photos weren't taken. In a new book, DER SPIEGEL presents 330 largely-unknown full color images from the last world war.

http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,339540,00.html
 
 

In this quiet castle town in the foothills of the Alps, I learnt that in the last days of the Second World War, Margit hosted a party for SS officers, Gestapo leaders and local collaborators during which 200 Jews were slaughtered, as entertainment. Ever since, the Thyssens have not accepted involvement and have played down their Nazi past. '

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/the-killer-countess-the-dark-past-of-baron-heinrich-thyssens-daughter-395976.html
 
 
Aga Khan III offered to help Adolf Hitler
London, pti:
Aga Khan III, one of the founders and the first President of the All India Muslim League, had offered the services of 30,000 armed Arabs to Adolf Hitler during the Second World War but still evaded treason trial.

According to recently released de-classified documents, the Karachi-born spiritual leader of the world’s Shia Ismaili Muslims had pledged to raise an army of 30,000 Arab troops to back a Nazi occupation of Egypt, Syria and Palestine almost 60 years back. But despite evidence, Britain had to abandon a plan to charge Sultan Muhammad Shah alias Aga Khan III with treason fearing the move would anger Muslims across the world, the Daily Mail reported on Sunday.

According to the documents, in a 1942 memo submitted to the German Foreign Office by a Nazi agent, Aga Khan III had expressed admiration for the puppet government in France and then offered to help raise 30,000 troops in the Middle East.

 
 
Hitler was confident of winning World War II and planned to give Berlin a monumental makeover by 1950. A group in Berlin has collected records about his 'Germania' vision -- and plans to lead tours through what's left of the old construction site.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,540558,00.html
 
 
Desperate for a glimpse into Adolf Hitler's unpredictable mind, British spies hired an astrologer during the Second World War to write horoscopes for him and other Nazi leaders, documents declassified Tuesday show.

They soon regretted it.

The file released to Britain's National Archives catalogues the frustrations of MI-5 handlers as they tried to prevent the astrologer, Louis de Wohl, from publicly embarrassing high-ranking intelligence and military officers.

http://www.thecanadianpress.com/english/online/OnlineFullStory.aspx?filename=w0303133A&newsitemid=34213021&languageid=1
 
 
A new television film about the sinking of a Nazi ship carrying thousands of German refugees at the end of World War II has lifted the lid on one of Germany’s most painful memories.

The film, to be broadcast on Sunday and Monday in Germany, tells the story of the former Nazi cruise ship “Wilhelm Gustloff,” torpedoed by a Soviet submarine in the Baltic Sea on January 30, 1945. As many as 9,300 people died — believed to be biggest loss of life on a single ship.

Yet the tale of the Gustloff, which has frequently been referred to as Germany’s Titanic, remains relatively unknown outside the country due to the reluctance of postwar generations to examine publicly Germans’ suffering during the war.

“It’s been very hard to talk about this because it raises the difficult question of German victimhood in a war the Nazis began,” said British historian Roger Moorhouse. “This enforced silence for years will have been painful to many people.”

“But it’s really a testament to how the treatment of German history is returning to normal that the story is now being told as a big budget film on prime-time German television.”

The multi-million euro production “Die Gustloff” was to be aired on ZDF state television.

The imposing 209 meter-long (685 feet) Gustloff, named after the assassinated head of the Swiss Nazi party, was launched in 1937 and conceived as a cruise liner for the Nazis’ leisure organization Kraft durch Freude, or “strength through joy.”

Once war broke out, it was used by the German military.

http://www.sptimesrussia.com/index.php?action_id=2&story_id=25259
 
 
The atmosphere was understandably tense in the magnificent drawing room. The year was 1942, and the horrified Amery family gathered round their wireless at No. 112 Eaton Square, Belgravia.

They were waiting in disbelief to hear their beloved son, John, make a Nazi propaganda broadcast from behind enemy lines.

As the radio crackled to life declaring: "Germany calling, Germany calling!" the presenter announced that John, the son of a British government minister, was about to speak to his countrymen from Berlin.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=527332&in_page_id=1770&ito=newsnow

Posted at 12:36 pm by Psychomike
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Monday, March 10, 2008
The Censored Story Of Election Year!

THE MOST CENSORED STORY OF THE ELECTION YEAR!

CLINTON'S FOLLY: HOW SANCTIONS OVER "WMD" DESTROYED IRAQ!

Iraq after the Gulf War: Sanctions, Part 1
by Rahul Mahajan, Posted March 3, 2008

 

I am willing to make a bet to anyone here that we care more about the Iraqi people than Saddam Hussein does. — U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, CNN Town Hall Meeting, Columbus, Ohio, February 18, 1998

We have heard that a half million children have died. I mean, that’s more children than died in Hiroshima. And, you know, is the price worth it? — Lesley Stahl on UN sanctions against Iraq, 60 Minutes, May 12, 1996

I think this is a very hard choice, but the price — we think the price is worth it. — U.S. Ambassador to the UN Madeleine Albright replying

While inspections continued, a far more compelling and significant drama was playing out — the progressive deterioration and destruction of an entire society.

The mainstream U.S. discourse about sanctions on Iraq has generally oscillated between the two poles marked out by the above statements of Madeleine Albright — a hard-nosed assessment that U.S. policy objectives are more important than the deaths of children (rarely so honestly stated), and sanctimony about the great U.S. government concern for the Iraqi people combined with crocodile tears about Saddam Hussein’s cruelty (which few people contest). Just as the big question with regard to inspections was “Why doesn’t he just cooperate and get sanctions lifted?” the big questions regarding sanctions include “Why did he wait so long before agreeing to the Oil for Food program?” and “Why did he spend the money on palaces and weapons instead of feeding his people?”

Let’s start by noting that the term “sanctions” is itself highly misleading. The United States has levied unilateral sanctions on hundreds of occasions. The United Nations has authorized sanctions on 14 different occasions. Never, however, have there been such comprehensive international restrictions on all exports and imports as were imposed on Iraq after the Gulf War; never have prohibitions on imports been enforced by attaching a country’s entire foreign earnings and placing them in a closely monitored bank account, with numerous bureaucratic impediments to disbursement of funds. The confusion engendered by the term is exemplified in a particularly fatuous statement by Marc Cooper, one of an emerging group of self-appointed spokesmen for the anti-war movement. In an article lamenting the stupidity of said movement, he suggests that the Left “must get its story straight on sanctions” — how can it oppose those on Iraq when “the entire American Left supported similar painful sanctions against the apartheid state of South Africa?”

Of course, in South Africa, the African National Congress, the mass movement representing those who would be hardest hit by sanctions, called for them. But even more important are the dramatic differences in the actual sanctions: Just imagine the response had anyone suggested that South Africa be ringed by a naval blockade; that it be denied the right to export anything for years and when it did, that all its foreign earnings be seized and held, with disbursement of funds for medicine and essential civilian infrastructure such as water treatment regularly blocked or delayed; and that all this be done after the country had been bombed into rubble.

When you’ve got the story straight, the sanctions on Iraq emerge as one of the worst horrors of our time.


Brief historical review of the sanctions

Within months after the end of the Gulf War, numerous reports indicated a catastrophe in the making. In April, the Harvard Study Team, a group of doctors and social scientists, predicted that unless something was done, “at least 170,000 children under five years of age will die in the coming year from the delayed effects of the Gulf Crisis.” A similar report issued in March by UN Undersecretary General Martti Ahtisaari said that the Gulf War had inflicted “near-apocalyptic results,” and predicted “imminent catastrophe.”

By 1994, with its industrial base in ruins and devoid of any outside income, Iraq was in the grip of widespread, severe malnutrition. In 1996, the Oil for Food (OFF) program was instituted. Initially, it allowed Iraq to sell $4 billion worth of oil per year. Later, the cap on sales was raised to $10.5 billion and in December 1999 it was eliminated entirely. Of that money, initially 30 percent and more recently 25 percent was taken for the UN Compensation Fund, intended to compensate victims of Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait. Its largest beneficiaries have been oil companies, including the Kuwait Petroleum Company, which was awarded damages of $15.9 billion. Another 3 to 4 percent went for UN administrative expenses, including those of the weapons inspectors.

All of the money Iraq got for selling its oil through the program was deposited in a bank account in New York, and funds were disbursed only to meet contracts with foreign corporations that were approved by the Sanctions Committee, each member of which could delay or put on hold any contract, without giving any reason. The situation improved only with the passage in May 2002 of UNSCR 1409, which allowed for all goods except those on a special Goods Review List to be automatically approved.

Oil for Food goods started entering Iraq in March 1997. As of February 21, 2003, $43 billion worth of goods had been approved for import, but only $26.6 billion had actually entered Iraq through the program. Between March 1997 and January 2002, the average rate of entry of goods was about $14–$15 per month per person, and since then it has only been roughly double that.

Needless to say, this was never enough. In May 1997, UNICEF released a finding, based on studies of 15,000 Iraqi children, that 27.5 percent of children were malnourished, noting that if the condition persisted past the age of two, effects were “difficult to reverse” and “damage to the child’s development [was] likely to be permanent.” Over the course of the sanctions, adult literacy declined from 80 percent to 58 percent and child literacy similarly — something seen in no other country during the 1990s, not even the countries of sub-Saharan Africa being ravaged by AIDS.

Numerous estimates of child deaths due to sanctions have been made, but by far the most authoritative study — and the only one involving independent new data — was done by UNICEF in 1999. Based on a survey of nearly 24,000 households, it concluded that for central and south Iraq the under-age–5 mortality rate averaged 56 out of 1,000 in the period from 1984 to 1989 and 131 out of 1,000 from 1994 to 1999 — an increase of more than 130 percent. Comparing mortality during the sanctions with an extrapolated trend line, it estimated 500,000 excess deaths of children under the age of five from 1991 to 1998. It was careful not to attribute all of them to sanctions. However, the devastation caused by the Gulf War and the sanctions, regarded as a unit, must necessarily account for the vast majority of those deaths; they are the primary things that changed between the 1980s and the 1990s.

The usual response from the U.S. government when confronted with these numbers is both to deny the numbers and to claim that the deaths are Saddam Hussein’s fault.

Some of the claims are transparent falsehoods, such as the one that billions in Oil for Food (OFF) funds were diverted to military purchases (not possible because the money never entered Iraq, but was disbursed only for approved purchases). Another problem constantly cited was the president’s building of palaces and mosques. Although Saddam’s extravagance was never in doubt, again, OFF money simply could not used for this; furthermore, the total expenditure involved was minuscule as a percentage of national income.

Another objection, which has some merit, is that at times Iraq spent a great deal of money on sophisticated medical equipment (such as MRI machines) to provide high-quality care to the wealthy, while government hospitals were pitifully short of needles, antibiotics, and other basic goods. It’s true that the OFF money could at least theoretically be better spent, not by the huge margin that proponents of the sanctions like to suggest, but certainly significantly. Still, this objection rings very false.

Perhaps the most notable thing about the sanctions is the long delay before allowing Iraq to sell oil, its only significant source of external income: four years until passage of UNSCR 986, five until Iraq accepted it, five and a half until oil sales started. Since the United States was seemingly willing to allow some oil sales from as early as August 15, 1991, with passage of UNSCR 706, it seems as if the blame for the delay rests entirely on Saddam Hussein, who was content to watch his people starve for years while he asserted his prerogatives.

Actually, the story is somewhat different.

In July 1991, Sadruddin Aga Khan, sent to Iraq by the UN secretary general, estimated that it would cost $22 billion to restore basic sectors in Iraq to pre-war levels. Since this represented far more oil than Iraq would be likely to be allowed to sell, he prepared a minimum estimate of $6.9 billion for full restoration of health and agriculture, half of electrical power, 40 percent of water and sanitation, provision of bare subsistence-level amounts of food, and limited repairs to northern oil facilities. He then suggested that Iraq be allowed to sell $2.65 billion worth of oil over four months, with permission to be renewed if no problems emerged.

When this proposal was discussed in the Security Council, the United States caused the period to be lengthened to six months, reduced the amount to $1.6 billion, and required that 30 percent of that be taken for the UN Compensation Fund. All told, when the proposal finally passed, the amount to be available for humanitarian needs would have been $930 million for six months — per month, 23 percent of what the Aga Khan had suggested as a minimum, rock-bottom figure.

Thus, it’s no surprise that the Iraqi government turned down this measure, which would have minimal benefit for its population, bind it to numerous conditions entailing major potentially harmful consequences in the long run, and reduce political pressure for approving higher oil sales. In fact, an aid agency staff member who observed the process said that within weeks of the issuance of the Aga Khan’s report, “U.N. officials were convinced ... that the intention was to present Saddam Hussein with so unattractive a package that Iraq would reject it and thus take on the blame, at least in Western eyes, for continuing civilian suffering.”

By the end of 1994, with minimal money available, the government announced a 37 percent cut in the food ration, which went below 1,100 calories per person per day—starvation level. As conditions worsened through 1995, Iraq was finally forced to accept Resolution 986, which allowed for $2 billion in sales every six months. Iraq had been forced to capitulate, accepting significant infringement of its sovereignty and what was to turn out to be a crippling way of running its economy in return for a wholly inadequate level of oil sales.

In the end, the United States accepted the resolution only because international political pressure would have made retaining the sanctions untenable otherwise. As Clinton administration official Robert Pelletreau said to a skeptical congressional committee at the time, “Implementation of the resolution is not a precursor to lifting sanctions. It is a humanitarian exception that preserves and even reinforces the sanctions regime.” One can still hold that the Iraqi government should have accepted the very poor deal offered earlier, because the humanitarian crisis was acute and other concerns were longer-range. To claim, however, as Madeleine Albright did, that the United States had a greater level of humanitarian concern for Iraqis than did the Iraqi government is simply a shameful distortion of the truth.


Holds, delays, and vetoes

Nothing shows the United States’s politicization of humanitarian questions and lack of concern for the people of Iraq better than its history of holds, delays, and vetoes. In what follows, I draw heavily from an article by Joy Gordon published in Harper’s in November 2002.

In UNSCR 687 itself, although Iraq’s possession of conventional military equipment is not proscribed, all imports of military equipment are. Theoretically, potential “dual-use” goods that can have either a civilian or military use are to be handled with care, with their end uses monitored; in practice, the United States simply banned most dual-use items, and construed their definition rather broadly. For most of the duration of the sanctions, the United States followed an unwritten policy of banning goods that were inputs to industry, necessary for revival of the Iraqi economy, but allowing entrance of finished goods for consumption — a fairly typical colonial pattern of economic relationships.

Gordon’s investigations span the length of the sanctions and involve numerous sources close to the process; they have led her to the conclusion that “the United States has fought aggressively throughout the last decade to purposefully minimize the humanitarian goods that enter the country.”

The United States imposed well over 1,000 holds on contracts, followed by Britain with over 100. According to Gordon,

In early 2001, the United States had placed holds on $280 million in medical supplies, including vaccines to treat infant hepatitis, tetanus, and diphtheria, as well as incubators and cardiac equipment.

The rationale was that the vaccines contained live cultures, albeit highly weakened ones. The Iraqi government, it was argued, could conceivably extract these, and eventually grow a virulent fatal strain, then develop a missile or other delivery system that could effectively disseminate it.

UNICEF and UN health agencies, along with other Security Council members, objected strenuously. European biological-weapons experts maintained that such a feat was in fact flatly impossible. At the same time, with massive epidemics ravaging the country, and skyrocketing child mortality, it was quite certain that preventing child vaccines from entering Iraq would result in large numbers of child and infant deaths.

The United States relented only after the Washington Post ran a story on the situation. But subsequently, on December 30, 2002, with passage of UNSCR 1454, the United States once again had several basic antibiotics, including streptomycin, added to the Goods Review List if they were contracted for in quantities that “exceed the established consumption rates.” Such medicines had already been in perilously short supply in Iraq.

Another problem occurred so frequently that it was given a special name: “complementarity.” The United States would selectively approve contracts in such a way that Iraq got insulin without syringes, blood bags without catheters — even a sewage treatment plant without the generator needed to run it. Against its will, Iraq ended up wasting money on useless goods, which then piled up in warehouses, leading to the omnipresent claims that the Iraqi government was “hoarding” its goods.

Holds were also used to target entire infrastructure sectors. According to Gordon, most contracts pertaining to electrical power generation and telecommunications were blocked by the United States.

Potable water was perhaps the single biggest humanitarian concern since the late 1990s (as food was during the first several years of the sanctions). By 1996, Iraq’s previously excellent sewage treatment system had completely broken down. This breakdown was due to damage from the Gulf War (including the systematic bombing of all electrical power, which caused water treatment to shut down), and then to Iraq’s inability to fix the system under sanctions. After five years of Oil-for-Food, UNICEF found that access to potable water had scarcely improved and “specifically cited the half-billion dollars of water- and sanitation-supply contracts then blocked — one- third of all submitted.”

The United States cannot even claim ignorance of the likely effects of keeping Iraq from fixing its water treatment facilities. A number of declassified documents, including a Defense Intelligence Agency report entitled “Iraq Water Treatment Vulnerabilities” that was circulated to all allied commands the day after bombing started in 1991, show that the strain on Iraq’s water system and the concomitant explosion of waterborne disease was explicitly anticipated.

Holds were also explicitly politicized. In June 2001, when the United States was pushing an early version of its “smart sanctions” proposal (a very different and watered-down form of which was eventually encapsulated in UNSCR 1409), it suddenly lifted $800 million in holds, $200 million of which involved key Security Council members. To court China, a few weeks later it unblocked $80 million in Chinese contracts, including some that had been blocked for dual-use concerns. After Russia indicated that it would veto the draft resolution, “the United States placed holds on nearly every contract that Iraq had with Russian companies.” Such behavior makes a mockery of the claim that holds had to do with security concerns. The Iraqi people suffered directly as a result of the political games that the United States played.


The sanctions and Iraqi social structure

The United States, in its partial administration of Iraq through the sanctions, oversaw a decline in literacy, as elementary schools emptied for lack of supplies, and Iraq was forced to impose user fees. It saw the near-total destruction of the middle class and a massive “brain drain,” as doctors, scientists, engineers, and other socially necessary people fled to the West. Iraqi society reconstructed along typical Third World lines, with the evolution of a phenomenally corrupt and fabulously opulent elite while people begged for bread in the streets.

While it is true that Saddam Hussein built palaces and cared more for maintaining his power and his military than for the well-being of the Iraqi people, the United States knew this well while it supported him in the 1980s. The sanctions by design threw the Iraqi people to the mercy of the government because the local economy was devastated and all necessary goods came via the government. The United States has never explained the logic behind inflicting suffering on Iraqis to get Saddam Hussein to change his policies, while simultaneously claiming that he didn’t care about that suffering. It was an overt recipe for a stalemate, while people starved and died.

The sanctions on Iraq were a form of economic control far beyond the dreams of the average IMF economist (though they talk about “free markets,” what they want is countries whose economies they can tightly control for the benefit of foreign corporations). Other countries are pressured to cut government payrolls. Iraq’s oil earnings were simply seized and put in a foreign bank account so they couldn’t be used to pay government salaries. Other countries are encouraged to buy from foreign corporations (through lowering of tariffs and other measures) — Iraq’s oil earnings could only be used to buy from foreign corporations, or they sat in the bank, untouchable by Iraq.

This external control of Iraq’s oil money meant a complete collapse of the country’s economy — the government could not hire local contractors or pay salaries with the oil money, and there was virtually nothing available for any kind of investment. The government also had to pay high prices for foreign food rather than buying from Iraqi food producers, causing a drain on its funds and destroying agricultural markets.

These fundamental structural problems persisted even as formal restrictions on goods were relaxed — first with the passage of UNSCR 1284 in December 1999, which mandated the creation of “green lists” of items that would automatically be approved for import and later with the passage of UNSCR 1409 in May 2002, which made all approval automatic except for items on a special proscribed “red list.” To borrow a phrase used by The Economist about an earlier “smart sanctions” proposal, those resolutions were “an aspirin where surgery is called for.”

As Kofi Annan has reported, Oil-for-Food was “never intended ... to be a substitute for normal economic activity.” And, according to Human Rights Watch, “an emergency commodity assistance program like Oil-for-Food, no matter how well funded or well run, cannot reverse the devastating consequences of war and then ten years of virtual shut-down of Iraq’s economy.”

In addition to the destruction of normal economic functioning under the sanctions, the centralized purchase and distribution of a whole society’s needs imposed a burden that the Iraqi bureaucracy could not bear. In 2000 and 2001, when larger amounts of money were coming into the OFF program, the secretary general reported that “with the increased funding level and the growing magnitude and scope of the program, the whole tedious and time-consuming process of the preparation and approval of the distribution plan and its annexes are no longer in step with current realities.”

The sanctions also caused a complete collapse of Iraq’s currency. The official exchange rate originally maintained by Iraq was .311 dinar to 1 dollar; sanctions caused the actual rate to collapse to 2,000 dinars to 1 dollar by 2002. As a result, long-time civil servants were making $5 or $10 per month and even skilled government employees couldn’t support themselves without an outside job.

Even leaving aside all of the political manipulation involved in the holds, the external control of Iraq’s economy was an evil in itself. It kept the country from being reconstructed by the efforts of its people and even led to a progressive deterioration in numerous crucial areas. Superficially, nothing could be further apart than the overbearing trade restrictions imposed on Iraq and the “free trade” being imposed on most of the rest of the world at the same time, but in fact the results were very similar because of the crucial shared feature — First World control of or influence over a Third World economy.

 

Rahul Mahajan has been to occupied Iraq twice and reported from the first siege of Fallujah. He publishes the blog EmpireNotes.org. This excerpt is adapted from his book Full Spectrum Dominance: U.S. Power in Iraq and Beyond. Copyright (c) 2003 by Rahul Mahajan. Reprinted with the permission of the author and Seven Stories Press.

Posted at 10:45 am by Psychomike
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Friday, March 07, 2008
Clinton's Plan Became Bush's!

GAY IRANIAN TEEN FIGHTS FOR HIS LIFE, THE LINCOLN- BUSH AGENDA, HOW THE CLINTON IRAQ PLAN BECAME BUSH'S!

Scott Horton Interviews Rep. Ron Paul

March 6th, 2008

Rep. Ron Paul M.D., congressman representing district 14 on the Texas gulf coast and champion of human liberty, discusses the relative powers of the president, congress and UN over U.S. foreign policy, his recent vote against a resolution condemning one side in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the counter-productive nature of American foreign policy in fighting al Qaeda terrorism and his upcoming "no" votes on warrantless wiretapping and immunity for the telecoms.

MP3 here. Or listen without downloading at the link below

Dr. Ron Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.

 
 
 
 
 
Our media and the Democratic Party have erased the actions undertaken by President Clinton against Iraq over supposed Weapons of Mass Destruction. Even the 911 conspiracy crowd postulates that the WTC attack was allowed to happen to "justify an attack on Iraq", completely erasing the blueprint in place by President Clinton. Erased from history are the 1,000,000 dead from bombings and the use of sanctions against Iraq under Clinton. Erased from history are the thousands of articles from around the world stating that the Clinton administration forced the UN into sanctions in Iraq. Erased from history is this video from 60 Minutes:
 
 
Today the media allows Hillary to claim credit for actions taken under Bill's term. Yet none ask her, if Iraq had no WMD, what did those 1 million die for? If Bush's actions have created more terrorists, did Clinton's as well? Rather than admit neither party has a clue about the Middle East, the press simply refuses to ask the really tough questions. Democrats hope everyone forgets, conspiracy freeks refuse to ask any questions prior to the Bush Presidency.
 
Here is a reminder:
 
Iraq crisis: At a glance




Overview of the key news stories, analysis and statements from BBC News Online's coverage of the Iraqi weapons crisis.

The aftermath

Strikes end


    Strikes: Day three

    Strikes: Day two

    Strikes: Day one

    Standoff


    Behind the headlines

    Profiles
     
     
     
     
    Questions About Lincoln Truth

     
    This blog has received a lot of attention and I thank those of you who have linked to this site. I have received questions I'll deal with tonight. One recurring one is, didn't Lincoln have to put the Constitution on hold because America was fighting on its own soil? This is a fascinating question to me for two reasons: first, what is the point of the Constitution that guarantees us the rights we are born with, if those rights can be taken away if we are under threat? If we accept the idea that the Constitution is a nuisance under hard times, then we have to ask ourselves why hasn't President Bush gone all the way with putting the Constitution on the back burner? Clearly he hasn't tried to arrest the head of the Supreme Court, he hasn't shut down newspapers that disagree with him, he hasn't jailed reporters who disagree with him without trial, he has not had troops fire on unarmed protesters, he hasn't even jailed comedians who tell jokes about him. All of those things and far more, Lincoln did. Support Lincoln, you must support President Bush. After all, 911 happened on our soil!
    Yet oddly, the same people who say Bush is our worst President ever often support Lincoln's actions! This is philosophically a contradiction, and when faced with a contradiction it must mean that one side of the argument is wrong. If you support Bush and Lincoln, you are at least sound in your beliefs, though you should be pressing for Bush to go much farther. If you don't support Bush, there is no logic in supporting Lincoln. It makes no sense. Second, shouldn't the Constitution and Bill Of Rights have the most importance during times of strife? If it is so fragile that it must be put away in times of war, civil rights, suffrage, peace movements then what good is it? Couldn't one argue that the initial government resistance to all those movements was a result of Lincoln and his crushing of protest during the war? Once you have put people in jail for disagreeing with the government, haven't you set precedent?
     
    Over time we have come to believe that our rights are granted to us, and can be withdrawn in case of emergency. Our founding fathers believed we were BORN with those rights. The change in meaning happened because of Lincoln. 
    MORE HERE: 
    http://lincolntruth.blogdrive.com/archive/cm-03_cy-2008_m-03_d-06_y-2008_o-0.html
     

    The shadow of the Sept. 11 terror attacks is eclipsing press freedom and other constitutional safeguards in the United States, Associated Press President and CEO Tom Curley said Thursday.

    "What has become clear in the aftermath of 9/11 is how much expediency trumps safeguards," Curley said in remarks prepared for the annual dinner of the Radio and Television News Directors Foundation.

    "Congress steps back from its constitutional role of executive oversight. Civilian oversight of the military wanes. A Justice Department interprets laws in ways that extend police powers. More drastically, prisons are established in places where government or military operatives circumvent due process or control trials," Curley said in accepting the foundation's First Amendment Leadership Award.

    "It's at moments like these when a free press matters most,"  http://wiredispatch.com/news/?id=74558

     

    A gay teenager who sought sanctuary in Britain when his boyfriend was executed in Iran is battling authorities who want to return him to his home country.

    Mehdi Kazemi, 19, came to London to study English in 2005 but later discovered that his boyfriend had been arrested by the Iranian police, charged with sodomy and hanged.

    Mr Kazemi was told by his father in Tehran that his boyfriend had been questioned about his sexual relationships before his execution in April 2006 and named him under interrogation.

    Mr Kazemi claimed asylum in Britain, fearing for his life if he returned to Iran but his case was refused late last year. He fled Britain for the Netherlands, where he is now being detained.

    He appeared before a Dutch court this week to fight his return to Britain, where he fears authorities will send him back to Iran.

    http://www.gazette-news.co.uk/news/national_news/index.var.192963.0.iran_will_hang_me_gay_teenager.php?

    Posted at 07:27 am by Psychomike
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    Thursday, March 06, 2008
    American Hiroshima

    Paul Williams details 'American Hiroshima'
    Al-Qaida plotting nuclear attack with weapons already in U.S.

    © 2008 WorldNetDaily.com

    Paul L. Williams is a former consultant to the FBI on organized crime and terrorism. Since then, he has become an award-winning investigative journalist and written several books. In his new book, "The Al Qaeda Connection," he claims Osama bin Laden has obtained nuclear weapons and smuggled them into the U.S. through Mexico for use in a plot known as "American Hiroshima."

    Ryan Mauro: Much has been written about the "American Hiroshima" report. How did you first learn about the plot?

    Paul Williams: I have a unique background. I hold a Ph.D. in philosophy from Drew University and I am a seasoned and award-winning journalist. I came upon the story of bin Laden's acquisition of tactical nuclear weapons while working as the editor/publisher of The Metro and a consultant on organized crime for the FBI. Several members of the Chechen Mafia, who had emigrated to Little Odessa, muscled into the operations of the Bufalino Crime Family in Northeast Pennsylvania by selling choice No. Four heroin, guns of every description, and stolen high-end cars from New York and New Jersey .

    I learned that they came to the U.S. after Makhmud and his associates sold tactical nukes and nuclear materials to Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri. I began to search for evidence of this sale and came upon stories in The Jerusalem Report and The London Times and Arab stories in Muslim magazines, Al-Watan al-Arabi and al-Majallah This led me to other sources and reports of further sales of nukes from the former Soviet Union to al-Qaida not only by the Chechens but also the Russian Mafia and black-marker arms-dealers, including Semion Mogilevic from the Ukraine . Such information can be obtained by any journalist with a telephone, a computer, and a library card.

    I further learned that the sales to al-Qaida have been verified by a host of intelligence officials and weapons inspectors, including Hans Blix, former director general of the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency. The sales were even verified by bin Laden and al-Zawahiri in their pronouncements that they have obtained a small arsenal of nuclear weapons from black-market sources. My research took me farther into dealings between bin Laden and Dr. A. Q. Khan and the fact that over 20 nuclear scientists and technicians from Khan's research laboratories in Pakistan worked with al-Qaida on a regular basis to maintain and modify the weapons that had been purchased and to develop other weapons from the highly enriched uranium and plutonium that bin Laden hade purchased from Uzbekistan and other countries.

    Dr. Mahmood and Dr. Majeed, two of the leading officials at the Khan facility, confessed to CIA and ISI interrogators that they participated in al-Qaida's nuclear projects. The fact that the Chechens possessed the nukes should be no surprise to any reporter or investigator. In 1995, the Chechens under Com. Shamail Basayev planted a radiological bomb in Izmailovsky Park near Moscow . The bomb was made of cesium-137, and, if detonated, would have killed thousands of Russians. This incident represented the first case of a nuke to be deployed as a weapon of terror. Later that same year, Dzokhar Dudayev, the leader of the Chechen Mafia, offered to sell his collection of nuclear weapons to the United States in exchange for U. S. recognition of Chechnya 's independence. The Clinton Administration declined and so the weapons were sold to al-Qaida.

    More importantly, there is empirical proof that al-Qaida possesses nukes. In 2000, British agents posed as recruits from a London mosque to infiltrate al-Qaeda training camps in Afghanistan . In Herat , they saw nuclear weapons being manufactured. Similarly, an al-Qaeda operative was arrested at the checkpoint at Ramallah with a weapon strapped to his back. At first, Israeli intelligence thought that the weapon was a radiological bomb but later confirmed, as reported by Richard Sales of UPI and other reputable journalists, that it was a tactical nuke. There are more examples, including the canister of uranium 238 that U.S. military officials discovered in a lead canister in Kandahar at the outset of Operation Enduring Freedom.

    RM: How come other terrorism experts, Steven Emerson for example, haven't warned us about the plot? In other words, why does it seem so out of the mainstream?

    PW: Few military and intelligence officials question bin Laden's ability to launch his plan for the American Hiroshima. Gen. Eugene Habiger, former Executive Chief of Strategic Weapons at the Pentagon, said that an event of nuclear mega-terrorism on U. S. soil is "not a matter of if, but when." During the 2004 presidential debates, President Bush and Sen. Kerry said that nuclear weapons in the hands of terrorists represent the greatest danger facing the American people, while Vice President Cheney, on the campaign trail, warned that a nuclear attack by al-Qaida appears imminent. Before leaving office, Attorney General John Ashcroft and Homeland Security Director Tom Ridge both voiced that belief that al-Qaida's plan to nuke cities throughout the country soon might come to fruition.

    From the private sector, Warren Buffet, who establishes odds against cataclysmic events for major insurance companies, concluded that an imminent nuclear nightmare within the United States is "virtually a certainty." From the academic community, Dr. Graham Allison, director of Harvard University 's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, said: "Is nuclear mega-terrorism inevitable? Harvard professors are known for being subtle or ambiguous, but I'll try to the clear. 'Is the worst yet to come?' My answer: Bet on it. Yes." Finally, from the mainstream media, Bill Keller, editor of The New York Times, concluded that the only reason for thinking a nuclear attack won't happen is because "it hasn't happened yet," adding that such reasoning represents "terrible logic." And so, Ryan, the message has been delivered but few are listening.

    Emerson's importance as an analyst pales in comparison to that of Michael Scheuer, of the CIA and author of "Imperial Hubris," who was in charge on "the Alec file," the CIA's file on bin Laden. On Nov. 14, 2004 , Scheuer appeared on "60 Minutes" to alert the American people that a nuclear attack by al-Qaida "is pretty close to being inevitable."

    RM: In your upcoming book, "The Al-Qaeda Connection," you write that former Russian KGB and Spetsnaz operatives maintain bin Laden's nuclear arsenal. When were they hired and how do we know they are capable of such a monumental task?

    PW: Bin Laden and al-Zawahiri began recruiting former Spetsnaz technicians circa 1997. By 1999, a host of such technicians (along with nuclear scientists from China ) were working at al-Qaida laboratories in Afghanistan and Pakistan . By 2000, al-Qaida also secured the help of scientists and technicians from the A. Q. Khan Research Facility in Pakistan , including the assistance of Khan himself.

    On Sept. 11, 2001 , when the attack was taking place in America , bin Laden and company were meeting with Dr. Sultan Bashiruddin Mahmood, former Chairman of Pakistan's Atomic Energy Commission, and Dr. Chaudry Abdul Majid, chief technician for the A. Q. Khan Facility, to discuss the maintenance and deployment of al-Qaida's nuclear arsenal. When the CIA confiscated records from Ummah Tameer E-Nau ("Islamic Reconstruction"), Dr. Mahmood's bogus charity in Kabul , they discovered evidence from Mahmood's computer that at least one al-Qaida nuke had been forward deployed to the U.S. from Karachi in a cargo container. After interrogating Mahood and Majid, CIA officials discovered that more than a score of scientists and technicians from the A. Q. Khan Facility worked on a daily basis to develop, upgrade, and maintain the al-Qaida nuclear arsenal. Almost all of these scientists have escaped from Pakistan to avoid arrest.

    U.S. officials have been denied permission to interrogate Dr. Khan, even though we know that he provided nuclear technology and designs for atomic bombs not only to Libya , Iran and North Korea, but also Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Sudan, Nigeria, Brazil, Egypt, Malaysia, Indonesia, Algeria, Abu Dhabi and Myanmar. In Myanmar , for example, Dr. Sulieman Asad and Dr. Mohammad Ali Mukhtar are building a 10-megawatt nuclear reactor while still providing help and expertise to the al-Qaida network. It's a hellava situation and the press is not reporting it.

    RM: Do you have any information on what the U.S. and its friends are doing to try to stop the plot?

    PW: On Oct. 11, 2001 , George Tenet, former CIA director, met with President Bush to inform him that at least two tactical nukes have reached al-Qaida operatives in the U.S. This news was substantiated by Pakistan 's ISI, the CIA and the FBI.

    In accordance with this discovery, the Bush administration deployed hundreds of new and sophisticated Gamma Ray Neutron Flux Detector sensors to U.S. borders, overseas facilities and "choke points" around Washington, D.C. The administration further assigned Delta Force, the elite special operations detachment unit of the U.S. Army, the task of killing or disabling any or all suspects. Such measures have proved to be ineffective. Richard L. Wagner, senior staff member at the Los Alamos National Laboratory, testified before the House Homeland Security Subcommittee on the Prevention of Nuclear and Biological Attack that the currently installed radiation detection systems are highly limited in their capabilities and, in general, insufficient to the task. To add to the problem of insecurity, the borders remain almost completely porous and less than 10 percent of the freight that arrives at major ports (including New York/New Jersey) is inspected.

    RM: Where is the WMD arsenal now that Afghanistan is occupied?

    PW: The nuclear weapons were not contained solely in Afghanistan. Al-Qaida laboratories were established in the Balkans, Sudan, Pakistan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and even places like Myanmar. A number of these weapons have been forward deployed to Mexico and the U.S.

    My educated guess would be that arsenals have been established in several of the following countries: Pakistan, Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Myanmar, Algeria, Indonesia, Malaysia, Abu Dubai, Iran, Syria and Lebanon . The last three in light of the al-Qaida truce and bonding with Hezbollah. Myanmar looms large since very sinister events are taking place there. These events, including the construction of large reactors, have been made possible by fugitive scientists and technicians from the Khan Research Facility .But don't lose sight of the fact that nukes have been forward deployed to al-Qaida cells in Canada, Mexico and the U.S.

    RM: Why haven't the weapons been used already? One can't help but think that the best time to use the weapons would have been during the invasions of Afghanistan or Iraq .

    PW: The worst time for al-Qaida to use its nuclear weapons would have been during the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq when the U.S. remained on high alert. A defining characteristic of bin Laden is patience. His favorite Islamic verse is as follows: "I will be patient until Patience is outworn by patience." He started plotting the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania when he was in the Sudan in 1993; the attack of the USS Cole was more than two years in the making and eight years passed between the first attack on the World Trade Center and the second. The planned American Hiroshima is enormous in scope. It requires not only development and (in some cases) rebuilding of the weapons along with codification for detonation but also forward deployment, site preparation and precise strategic coordination with scattered cells.

    Bin Laden will not allow the attack to take place unless there is certainty of success. His entire resources (including the gains from the poppy fields) have been spent on this operation. After scrutinizing the situation and analyzing the data, Bill Keller, editor of The New York Times , said that the "best reason" for thinking that the nuclear attack by al-Qaida will NOT happen is because "it hasn't happened yet," adding this conclusion represents "terrible logic." I agree with him.

    RM: Is there any indication of when Bin Laden intends to use the arsenal?

    PW: Bin Laden can't sit on these weapons for years. They require constant maintenance. At any given time, a tactical nuke exudes a temperature in excess of 100 degrees Fahrenheit. This means that they are prone to oxidation and rust. Moreover, the triggers that emit large quantities of neutrons at high speeds decay rapidly and have short half-lives ? most would become useless without maintenance in less than four months. The nuclear cores also are subject to decay and over the course of several years would fall below the critical mass threshold. Though the shells that encase the cores are the most durable parts of the weapons, they, too, are subject to contamination. The tritium used to compensate for the required amount of conventional explosives to compress the fissile core within the compact devices is less of an issue since it has a half-life of 12.3 years. Taking all things into consideration, the attack should occur within the very near future. The bombs which bin Laden began building in 1992 are for the American Hiroshima.

    RM: Given the heat and radiation given off by the nuke, couldn't it be detected?

    PW: Richard L. Wagner, senior staff member at the Los Alamos National Laboratory and one of the founders of the Department of Energy's Nuclear Emergency Search Team, recently told Congress that major breakthroughs in the ability of the U.S. government to locate rogue nukes may be five years away. Wagner, a Ph.D. whose specialty is radiation detection, testified that better technology and more radiation detention devices are needed to stop the nuclear terrorist threat. "Currently installed radiation detection systems, or systems which could be procured in quantity in the next year or two, are quite limited in their capabilities and, in general, are insufficient for the task," he testified. "Substantial research and development is needed to improve detection capabilities."

    A nuclear gun bomb that could be fired from a 155 millimeter recoilless rifle could be packed in the small container, stuffed into the truck of a car or van and transported into any major metropolitan city within the U.S. without detection.

    That's the fact of the matter. Other weapons could be transported by private plane to any major airport. Less than 25 percent of the freight on private planes is inspected let alone subjected to radiation detection. To complicate matters, the ports of entry (such as the airports) are now controlled by the Albanian Mafia. The Albanians have taken over the operations of the Italian-American crime families and have become, according to the FBI, the leading criminal organization in the U.S. The Albanians, as you know, are Muslims with ties to radical Islam and, through the KLO, al-Qaida.

    RM: I have trouble believing that teams required to maintain a nuclear weapon wouldn't be detected here in the U.S.

    PW: There isn't just one team but, at least, seven. They are working within mosques and Islamic centers. In the U.S., a federal judge will not provide any FBI or law enforcement agent with a warrant to search a mosque of an Islam center for any reason since such places are listed as "houses of worship."

    RM: Seven teams?

    PW: At least seven teams, according to information obtained from Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and other al-Qaida operatives, in at least seven metropolitan areas. These areas have been identified as New York, Miami, Houston, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Chicago and Washington, D.C. The attack will occur simultaneously at the seven sites.

    RM: How do you know you can trust what Khalid Sheikh Mohammad said? In the past, he's given us bogus information, some of which led to orange alerts. Some say he and other al-Qaida operatives are waging a disinformation campaign meant to dull our senses.

    PW: No, you can't trust Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, but you can trust the information that was obtained from his laptop when he was arrested on March 1, 2003 .

    RM: Will Bin Laden use them on the American homeland or also forces overseas and countries that have joined the war on terrorism?

    PW: They are not for use in the United Kingdom, Spain, Italy, Iraq or Afghanistan . The declaration of war was issued against the United States and al-Qaida insists that over 4 million Americans must die for the sake of parity. They are intent upon realizing this objective and the doomsday clock by all reckoning is very near midnight .

    Ryan Mauro is the author of the upcoming book "Death to America: The Unreported Battle of Iraq" and owner of WorldThreats.com.

    Related stories:

    How al-Qaida terror nukes got into U.S.

    Meet al-Qaida's nuke trigger man

    Al-Qaida's nuclear efforts: 'sophisticated, professional'

    Pentagon drills for nuke terror

    http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=46127

    Posted at 12:48 pm by Psychomike
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    Monday, March 03, 2008
    Guru Of Global Warming Shocker!

    'Enjoy life while you can'
    Climate science maverick James Lovelock believes catastrophe is inevitable, carbon offsetting is a joke and ethical living a scam. So what would he do?

    Decca Aitkenhead
    Saturday March 1 2008
    The Guardian


    In 1965 executives at Shell wanted to know what the world would look like in the year 2000. They consulted a range of experts, who speculated about fusion-powered hovercrafts and "all sorts of fanciful technological stuff". When the oil company asked the scientist James Lovelock, he predicted that the main problem in 2000 would be the environment. "It will be worsening then to such an extent that it will seriously affect their business," he said.

    "And of course," Lovelock says, with a smile 43 years later, "that's almost exactly what's happened."

    Lovelock has been dispensing predictions from his one-man laboratory in an old mill in Cornwall since the mid-1960s, the consistent accuracy of which have earned him a reputation as one of Britain's most respected - if maverick - independent scientists. Working alone since the age of 40, he invented a device that detected CFCs, which helped detect the growing hole in the ozone layer, and introduced the Gaia hypothesis, a revolutionary theory that the Earth is a self-regulating super-organism. Initially ridiculed by many scientists as new age nonsense, today that theory forms the basis of almost all climate science.

    For decades, his advocacy of nuclear power appalled fellow environmentalists - but recently increasing numbers of them have come around to his way of thinking. His latest book, The Revenge of Gaia, predicts that by 2020 extreme weather will be the norm, causing global devastation; that by 2040 much of Europe will be Saharan; and parts of London will be underwater. The most recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report deploys less dramatic language - but its calculations aren't a million miles away from his.

    As with most people, my panic about climate change is equalled only by my confusion over what I ought to do about it. A meeting with Lovelock therefore feels a little like an audience with a prophet. Buried down a winding track through wild woodland, in an office full of books and papers and contraptions involving dials and wires, the 88-year-old presents his thoughts with a quiet, unshakable conviction that can be unnerving. More alarming even than his apocalyptic climate predictions is his utter certainty that almost everything we're trying to do about it is wrong.

    On the day we meet, the Daily Mail has launched a campaign to rid Britain of plastic shopping bags. The initiative sits comfortably within the current canon of eco ideas, next to ethical consumption, carbon offsetting, recycling and so on - all of which are premised on the calculation that individual lifestyle adjustments can still save the planet. This is, Lovelock says, a deluded fantasy. Most of the things we have been told to do might make us feel better, but they won't make any difference. Global warming has passed the tipping point, and catastrophe is unstoppable.

    "It's just too late for it," he says. "Perhaps if we'd gone along routes like that in 1967, it might have helped. But we don't have time. All these standard green things, like sustainable development, I think these are just words that mean nothing. I get an awful lot of people coming to me saying you can't say that, because it gives us nothing to do. I say on the contrary, it gives us an immense amount to do. Just not the kinds of things you want to do."

    He dismisses eco ideas briskly, one by one. "Carbon offsetting? I wouldn't dream of it. It's just a joke. To pay money to plant trees, to think you're offsetting the carbon? You're probably making matters worse. You're far better off giving to the charity Cool Earth, which gives the money to the native peoples to not take down their forests."

    Do he and his wife try to limit the number of flights they take? "No we don't. Because we can't." And recycling, he adds, is "almost certainly a waste of time and energy", while having a "green lifestyle" amounts to little more than "ostentatious grand gestures". He distrusts the notion of ethical consumption. "Because always, in the end, it turns out to be a scam ... or if it wasn't one in the beginning, it becomes one."

    Somewhat unexpectedly, Lovelock concedes that the Mail's plastic bag campaign seems, "on the face of it, a good thing". But it transpires that this is largely a tactical response; he regards it as merely more rearrangement of Titanic deckchairs, "but I've learnt there's no point in causing a quarrel over everything". He saves his thunder for what he considers the emptiest false promise of all - renewable energy.

    "You're never going to get enough energy from wind to run a society such as ours," he says. "Windmills! Oh no. No way of doing it. You can cover the whole country with the blasted things, millions of them. Waste of time."

    This is all delivered with an air of benign wonder at the intractable stupidity of people. "I see it with everybody. People just want to go on doing what they're doing. They want business as usual. They say, 'Oh yes, there's going to be a problem up ahead,' but they don't want to change anything."

    Lovelock believes global warming is now irreversible, and that nothing can prevent large parts of the planet becoming too hot to inhabit, or sinking underwater, resulting in mass migration, famine and epidemics. Britain is going to become a lifeboat for refugees from mainland Europe, so instead of wasting our time on wind turbines we need to start planning how to survive. To Lovelock, the logic is clear. The sustainability brigade are insane to think we can save ourselves by going back to nature; our only chance of survival will come not from less technology, but more.

    Nuclear power, he argues, can solve our energy problem - the bigger challenge will be food. "Maybe they'll synthesise food. I don't know. Synthesising food is not some mad visionary idea; you can buy it in Tesco's, in the form of Quorn. It's not that good, but people buy it. You can live on it." But he fears we won't invent the necessary technologies in time, and expects "about 80%" of the world's population to be wiped out by 2100. Prophets have been foretelling Armageddon since time began, he says. "But this is the real thing."

    Faced with two versions of the future - Kyoto's preventative action and Lovelock's apocalypse - who are we to believe? Some critics have suggested Lovelock's readiness to concede the fight against climate change owes more to old age than science: "People who say that about me haven't reached my age," he says laughing.

    But when I ask if he attributes the conflicting predictions to differences in scientific understanding or personality, he says: "Personality."

    There's more than a hint of the controversialist in his work, and it seems an unlikely coincidence that Lovelock became convinced of the irreversibility of climate change in 2004, at the very point when the international consensus was coming round to the need for urgent action. Aren't his theories at least partly driven by a fondness for heresy?

    "Not a bit! Not a bit! All I want is a quiet life! But I can't help noticing when things happen, when you go out and find something. People don't like it because it upsets their ideas."

    But the suspicion seems confirmed when I ask if he's found it rewarding to see many of his climate change warnings endorsed by the IPCC. "Oh no! In fact, I'm writing another book now, I'm about a third of the way into it, to try and take the next steps ahead."

    Interviewers often remark upon the discrepancy between Lovelock's predictions of doom, and his good humour. "Well I'm cheerful!" he says, smiling. "I'm an optimist. It's going to happen."

    Humanity is in a period exactly like 1938-9, he explains, when "we all knew something terrible was going to happen, but didn't know what to do about it". But once the second world war was under way, "everyone got excited, they loved the things they could do, it was one long holiday ... so when I think of the impending crisis now, I think in those terms. A sense of purpose - that's what people want."

    At moments I wonder about Lovelock's credentials as a prophet. Sometimes he seems less clear-eyed with scientific vision than disposed to see the version of the future his prejudices are looking for. A socialist as a young man, he now favours market forces, and it's not clear whether his politics are the child or the father of his science. His hostility to renewable energy, for example, gets expressed in strikingly Eurosceptic terms of irritation with subsidies and bureaucrats. But then, when he talks about the Earth - or Gaia - it is in the purest scientific terms all.

    "There have been seven disasters since humans came on the earth, very similar to the one that's just about to happen. I think these events keep separating the wheat from the chaff. And eventually we'll have a human on the planet that really does understand it and can live with it properly. That's the source of my optimism."

    What would Lovelock do now, I ask, if he were me? He smiles and says: "Enjoy life while you can. Because if you're lucky it's going to be 20 years before it hits the fan."

    To see this story with its related links on the guardian.co.uk site, go to http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian/2008/mar/01/scienceofclimatechange.climatechange

    The Middle East

    The Gaza Bombshell

    After failing to anticipate Hamas’s victory over Fatah in the 2006 Palestinian election, the White House cooked up yet another scandalously covert and self-defeating Middle East debacle: part Iran-contra, part Bay of Pigs. With confidential documents, corroborated by outraged former and current U.S. officials, David Rose reveals how President Bush, Condoleezza Rice, and Deputy National-Security Adviser Elliott Abrams backed an armed force under Fatah strongman Muhammad Dahlan, touching off a bloody civil war in Gaza and leaving Hamas stronger than ever.

    by David Rose April 2008

    Condoleezza Rice and George W. Bush

    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and President George W. Bush, whose secret Palestinian intervention backfired in a big way.


    “A Dirty War”

    The Al Deira Hotel, in Gaza City, is a haven of calm in a land beset by poverty, fear, and violence. In the middle of December 2007, I sit in the hotel’s airy restaurant, its windows open to the Mediterranean, and listen to a slight, bearded man named Mazen Asad abu Dan describe the suffering he endured 11 months before at the hands of his fellow Palestinians. Abu Dan, 28, is a member of Hamas, the Iranian-backed Islamist organization that has been designated a terrorist group by the United States, but I have a good reason for taking him at his word: I’ve seen the video.

    It shows abu Dan kneeling, his hands bound behind his back, and screaming as his captors pummel him with a black iron rod. “I lost all the skin on my back from the beatings,” he says. “Instead of medicine, they poured perfume on my wounds. It felt as if they had taken a sword to my injuries.”

    On January 26, 2007, abu Dan, a student at the Islamic University of Gaza, had gone to a local cemetery with his father and five others to erect a headstone for his grandmother. When they arrived, however, they found themselves surrounded by 30 armed men from Hamas’s rival, Fatah, the party of Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas. “They took us to a house in north Gaza,” abu Dan says. “They covered our eyes and took us to a room on the sixth floor.”

    The video reveals a bare room with white walls and a black-and-white tiled floor, where abu Dan’s father is forced to sit and listen to his son’s shrieks of pain. Afterward, abu Dan says, he and two of the others were driven to a market square. “They told us they were going to kill us. They made us sit on the ground.” He rolls up the legs of his trousers to display the circular scars that are evidence of what happened next: “They shot our knees and feet—five bullets each. I spent four months in a wheelchair.”

    Abu Dan had no way of knowing it, but his tormentors had a secret ally: the administration of President George W. Bush.

    http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2008/04/gaza200804



    Posted at 02:38 pm by Psychomike
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    Sunday, March 02, 2008
    How Peace Came To Ireland

    Chavez Orders Troops to Colombian Border
    President Hugo Chavez on Sunday ordered thousands of troops to the border with Colombia after Colombia's military killed a top rebel leader.

        Chavez told his defense minister: "Move 10 battalions for me to the border with Colombia, immediately." He also ordered the Venezuelan Embassy in Colombia closed and said all embassy personnel would be withdrawn.

        The announcements by Venezuela's leftist leader pushed relations to their tensest point of his nine-year presidency, and Chavez warned that Colombia could spark a war in South America.

        He called the U.S.-allied government in Bogota "a terrorist state" and labeled President Alvaro Uribe "a criminal."

        The leftist leader warned that Colombia’s slaying of rebel spokesman Raul Reyes could spark a war.

        “It wasn’t any combat. It was a cowardly murder, all of it coldly calculated,” Chavez said.

        “We pay tribute to a true revolutionary, who was Raul Reyes,” Chavez said, recalling that he had met rebel in Brazil in 1995 and calling him a “good revolutionary.”

        Chavez: Colombia "the Israel" of Region

    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/030208X.shtml

     

    UN: Refugees Fleeing New Attacks In Darfur

    As West Darfur continues to be scourged by a new wave of air and ground attacks, the United Nations refugee agency estimated today that more than 13,000 Sudanese have fled to a remote area of Chad that is beset by its own inter-ethnic strife.

    According to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), just this week an additional 3,000 refugees arrived in eastern Chad's volatile Birak area, where an assistance mission was cancelled yesterday after armed men on horseback were spotted, along with black smoke rising from a burning village.  http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/WO0803/S00005.htm

     

     
    Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean stepped up his verbal assault on Republican presidential front-runner John McCain on Sunday, questioning the Arizona senator's integrity.

    "Here's a guy who has a typical situation ethicist. He runs on his integrity, but he doesn't seem to have any," Dean told CNN's "Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer."

    The Democratic chairman has spent a week pounding McCain — one of the architects of 2001's McCain-Feingold campaign finance law — over his attempt to opt out of public financing for his Republican primary campaign. In a complaint to the Federal Election Commission last week, Dean accused McCain of using the promise of federal funds to obtain a bank loan and automatic ballot access for his presidential bid while dodging federal spending limits.

    "John McCain has a history of doing what it takes, regardless of what the ethics of this are," Dean said. "I think he's going to be a flawed candidate."

    There was no immediate response to Dean's broadside from McCain's campaign. http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2008/03/02/dean-hits-mccains-integrity-he-doesnt-seem-to-have-any/

     

    Dmitry Medvedev was elected as Russia's next president, early results showed on Sunday, after a vote that will preserve the power of his mentor President Vladimir Putin but which opponents said was unfair.

    Medvedev, a 42-year-old former lawyer who has worked at Putin's side since the 1990s, will take over the trappings of the presidency from his patron in May but it was still unclear which of the two men would really be in charge.

    Showing off the double act that will be at the helm of the vast, nuclear-armed country, Medvedev and Putin walked side by side out of the Kremlin gates and climbed onto the stage at a victory concert on Red Square.

    "We can preserve the path that President Putin has proposed and I am convinced that we have every chance of doing that", a smiling Medvedev, dressed in jeans and a black leather jacket, said from the stage.

    Opponents complained the contest was a stage-managed by Putin, a former KGB spy. "This is a secret service KGB operation to transfer power from one person to another," said ex-premier Mikhail Kasyanov, who was disqualified from the ballot.

    But Russia voters are enjoying the biggest economic boom in a generation and most see Medvedev as the best hope of prolonging their new prosperity.

    http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/latest/2008/03/02/putin-medvedev-side-by-side-after-poll-victory-89520-20338120/

     

    The price of peace

    By John Ware
    BBC News

    In the run-up to the tenth anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement, BBC reporter John Ware looks back at how peace was brokered in Northern Ireland.

    President Bush's former special envoy to Ireland has signalled his distaste for what he regarded as No. 10 Downing Street's indulgence of IRA demands during the Northern Ireland peace process.

    Dr Mitchell Reiss says he had "some pretty violent disagreements" with No. 10 over how much "pain to inflict" on Sinn Fein to push them into delivering their side of the Good Friday Agreement.

    Reiss believes Sinn Fein had become used to No. 10 "doling out benefits" in the face of Republican demands in exchange for decommissioning of weapons, ending criminality and endorsing the new Police Service of Northern Ireland.

    Sinn Fein signed up to the Belfast Agreement ten years ago next month, but it took Gerry Adams and Martin McGuiness nearly nine years to deliver on decommissioning and policing - both pre-requisites for the unionist leader Rev Ian Paisley's historic decision to form today's power sharing Executive with Sinn Fein.

    Although Adams and McGuinness raised the spectre of dissident splits whenever the IRA was pushed to deliver progress, Irish security sources have said that threat was limited and intelligence showed Adams to be in "uncontested control" of the republican movement.

    Reiss's comments to the BBC echo those of the former Northern Ireland Secretary Peter Mandelson who has said Tony Blair was "always saying 'give more, do more, concede more'," despite "excessive and unreasonable" republican demands.

    Jonathan Powell - Mr Blair's chief of staff and peace process fixer will give his version of events in his book to be published next month.

    Tom Kelly, No 10's spokesman at the time, denies that Blair and Powell were too solicitous of the IRA.

    A former senior Irish government official, however, says that No. 10 "love-bombed Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness" citing Powell's invitation to Adams and McGuinness to a post-wedding party last summer although they did not attend.

    The former unionist leader David Trimble was also invited but says he had "transport difficulties".

    Following his appointment as special envoy to Ireland in 2004, Reiss and other US and Irish government officials became concerned at what they saw as a relaxed attitude by No. 10 to IRA criminality, including a string of IRA armed robberies culminating in the £26.5m stolen from the Northern Bank in Belfast and the murder of Robert McCartney in a bar brawl involving several Sinn Fein supporters who also wiped away the forensics.

    Reiss knew Paisley's bottom line for a power-sharing deal with Sinn Fein was their endorsement of the police.

    But the IRA had yet to get rid of its weapons, even though nearly seven years had passed since Adams and McGuiness had signed the Belfast Agreement.

    'Red lines'

    So Reiss decided to "put down some red lines" by crossing Adams off the guest list of the White House's St Patrick's Day celebration in March 2005 and imposed a fundraising restriction on Sinn Fein visas.

    By July, the IRA had formally ordered all units to dump their arms. Even so, a former senior Irish government source says at the 11th hour the IRA had threatened to call off the deal unless some senior members were allowed to keep weapons for their personal protection.

    The source says that during the wrangling over decommissioning, No. 10 had been prepared to "accept that 95% was pretty good." Tom Kelly says: "I don't believe that is an accurate reading."

    According to Mitchell Reiss, however, the Irish Justice Minister Michael McDowell stood firm against the IRA's 11th hour demands for weapons, likening him to "Horatio on the bridge." The IRA then backed down. Gerry Adams denied there were any demands to hold on to guns.

    In November 2005, Adams asked Reiss to lift the fundraising ban in recognition of the IRA having decommissioned. Adams wanted to attend a fundraising gala event in New York. Reiss refused because Sinn Fein was still refusing to recognise the police and the IRA was still engaged in criminality.

    Adams contacted No. 10 and, according to Reiss, persuaded them to telephone the White House to argue for the ban being lifted. Reiss only discovered this when No. 10 telephoned him as a courtesy 30 minutes before the call was due to be made.

    This, says Reiss, made him "extraordinarily angry." He was at a New York City airport and "got into a shouting match over my cell phone" with No. 10 "with everybody else in the waiting room wondering who this maniac was screaming at the top of his voice to try to turn around a decision."

    Had No. 10 made the call, says Reiss "it would have sent exactly the wrong message to Sinn Fein - and through Sinn Fein to the IRA - about policing and violence, and I think that would have set back the cause of peace, not advanced it."

    One US official says relations with No. 10 became "open and nasty" because Reiss insisted the fundraising ban should stay. They believed No.10 was preparing to fudge on policing. But because Reiss knew that policing was a pre-requisite for Paisley's agreement to power sharing, he maintained the ban.

    Finally, in December 2006 Adams did recognise the police. Ian Paisley then agreed to go into government with Sinn Fein headed by him and the former IRA Chief of Staff Martin McGuiness as First Ministers with equal status.

    Sticks or carrots?

    So, was it American sticks or British carrots that finally pushed Sinn Fein and the Paisleyites across the finishing line?

    All parties to the peace process, Reiss included, agree that a lasting settlement wouldn't have been achieved without Powell and Blair's intense involvement. But Reiss also believes his hard line helped play a "decisive" role in clinching the final agreement.

    Reiss says No. 10 - and he means Powell - "felt that the United States was messing up the peace process." "Many" British officials "weren't reluctant to share their anger with me."

    But, says Reiss, "in one of my last meetings at No.10... very gracefully, very graciously, people admitted that they had been mistaken and that the American way forward was the right way." It will be interesting to see if, in his book, Powell agrees.

    John Ware presents The Price of Peace on Radio 4 at 1330GMT on Sundays from 2 March, or afterwards at the Radio 4 website. http://www.bbc.co.uk

    Posted at 05:05 pm by Psychomike
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    MI5 In Ireland

    MI5 targets Ireland's al-Qaeda cells

    A secret unit is working with police on both sides of the border to monitor Islamist extremists

    MI5 has set up a dedicated team to monitor suspected al-Qaeda activists and supporters in Ireland.

    The Observer has learnt that an eight-strong unit is spying on Islamists based in Belfast, Lisburn and mid-Ulster, but is also liaising via the Police Service of Northern Ireland with the Garda Siochana across the border. The revelation coincides with the arrest yesterday of a suspected Islamist terror unit in Co Kerry. Three Afghans were in custody after the Garda swooped on an apartment in Tralee and found devices they believe could be used to make bombs.

    The new unit at MI5's regional headquarters at Holywood, on the outskirts of Belfast, also monitors inbound US military flights to Shannon airport in case of an Islamist terror attack on Irish soil.

    All reports on suspected al-Qaeda activities across Ireland are to be handed over to the head of MI5 in Northern Ireland, Trevor Harper. He is based at the new £20m headquarters inside Palace military barracks. Last week The Observer revealed that, in the event of a major terror attack on MI5's HQ at Thames House in London, command of the security services would be switched to Holywood.

    Security sources said al-Qaeda 'sleeper cells' in Northern Ireland were being watched in particular, because of suspected links to other cells in Britain. 'They operate a very tight structure, just like the IRA. There are possible links to cells on the mainland,' one source said.

    A cell in Lisburn, Co Antrim, has been under investigation for almost two years after it was found to be operating out of a housing estate close to the town. Another cell believed to be operating in the Mid-Ulster area has planted roots around Portadown, Lurgan and Craigavon.

    A number of suspects are believed to be working in restaurants which are being monitored. And there are said to be ongoing inquiries into those suspected of being linked to a Belfast cell controlled by Kafeel Ahmed, said to have been a leading light in al-Qaeda in Ulster. Ahmed is believed to have arrived in Northern Ireland in 2001 and enrolled at Queen's University to study aeronautical engineering, graduating in 2003. The 27-year-old stayed on at the campus as a paid researcher.

    In July 2007, Ahmed was 'activated' to carry out an alleged suicide bomb attack on Glasgow airport. A second man, Iraqi doctor Bilal Talal Samad Abdullah, was in the car which burst into flames on impact at the airport terminal. Abdullah survived and was later charged with conspiracy to cause explosions. Ahmed suffered 90 per cent burns and died several days later in the Royal Alexandra hospital in Paisley.

    Security sources said the new MI5 complex coordinates intelligence on all al-Qaeda cells operating on both sides of the border. It liaises via the PSNI with the Garda's special detective unit, which monitors subversive organisations and foreign nationals suspected of being involved in international terrorism.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/mar/02/alqaida.ireland

     

    Too bad we don't have a MI5 type group in the U.S., because of anti-Joe McCarthy sentiments most Americans don't even believe in "cells" of spies and terrorists.

    Israeli forces killed 61 people in the Gaza Strip on Saturday, the bloodiest day for Palestinians since an uprising against Israeli occupation began in 2000.

    Almost half the dead were civilians, including children.

    Israel, which lost two soldiers, seemed ready to press home its fiercest air and ground assault since it pulled troops back to the borders of the coastal enclave in 2005. It blamed rocket attacks by the Islamist Hamas movement for provoking four days of fighting, in which 96 Palestinians have been killed.

    The U.N. Security Council prepared to meet in emergency session. A U.N. official in Gaza appealed for international action to end the "inhuman suffering" of its 1.5 million people and said killing women and children would not help Israel.

    U.S. President George W. Bush sounded more supportive of his Israeli allies. While regretting all loss of life, his spokesman said: "There is a clear distinction between terrorist rocket attacks that target civilians and action in self-defence."

    Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, a sworn enemy of the Islamist militant group Hamas which took control of Gaza from his forces in June, called the attack "more than a holocaust". Aides to Abbas said fighting could wreck new U.S.-backed peace talks. Israeli officials said Palestinian chief negotiator Ahmed Qurie called his Israeli counterpart, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, to call off a meeting due on Monday. But Abbas's aides said no decision to suspend the process had been taken.

    Bush hopes for a deal on founding a Palestinian state before he leaves office in January. Many view that as very optimistic.

    http://wiredispatch.com/news/?id=67434

     

    Hamas vowed on Saturday to keep up armed resistance against Israel even if the Jewish state launched an all-out invasion of Gaza.

    Palestinian fighters battling Israeli forces in the coastal strip had little option but to keep firing rockets on the Jewish state and resist "Israeli aggression", exiled Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal said in the Syrian capital.

    "No one in his right mind would like to see Israel invade Gaza, but the battle has been forced on us. The rockets are a reaction. Israeli aggression came first," Meshaal said.

    "We won't surrender. Rockets are the arsenal we have to protect our people. The only option in front of us is resistance and self-defence," Meshaal told reporters.

    Israel killed 41 Palestinians on Saturday in its deadliest and deepest incursion into the Gaza Strip since pulling out in 2005, stoking fears of a broader conflict that could derail renewed U.S.-backed peace talks.

    It said it was responding to cross-border rockets, which killed an Israeli man in the border town of Sderot on Wednesday and wounded others in the southern city of Ashkelon.

    At least 76 Palestinians have been killed since Wednesday in intense Israeli air strikes and ground raids in the tiny Hamas-controlled territory, home to 1.5 million people, bordering Israel, Egypt and the Mediterranean.

    Two Israeli soldiers were also killed and seven wounded, the army said -- its first casualties in four days of fighting.

    Meshaal dismissed suggestions that Hamas should declare a truce, saying similar moves by the Islamist movement between 2003 and 2006 had not helped end Israeli attacks.

    He told Israel what he believed it would face if it mounted an invasion: "I say to the Zionist leaders, if they decided to raid Gaza, they will not be fought by dozens of fighters but they will be fought by 1.5 million people." http://wiredispatch.com/news/?id=67065

     

    Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's office lashed out Friday at the Iraqi presidential council for refusing to approve the executions of two of the three men sentenced to hang for the genocidal campaign against Iraq's ethnic Kurdish minority under Saddam Hussein.

    The public dispute highlighted the persistent rancor between Iraq's major ethnic and religious factions, which continues to paralyze the highest levels of government nearly five years after Saddam's fall.

    Al-Maliki, a Shiite Muslim, has pressed for speedy executions for the three men, who were convicted in June of genocide and other crimes for their rol