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Politics : Sharks in the Septic Tank -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Solon who wrote (29844)9/27/2001 10:38:58 AM
From: gao seng  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 82486
 
I will have to get back to you on that. Without researching it, I would say that telling people what the Bible says and letting people read the Bible for themselves changed the world. But, I want to get this right, and will research it more tonight.



To: Solon who wrote (29844)9/27/2001 10:39:10 AM
From: Poet  Respond to of 82486
 
What people got rid of what oppressors through reading their very own bibles?

IMO, no people.

Did you see this? All I can say is "wow".

September 27, 2001

THE LAST RESORT

Generals Given Power to Order Downing of
Jets

By ERIC SCHMITT

HEYENNE MOUNTAIN, Colo.,
Sept. 26 — President Bush has
authorized two midlevel Air Force generals
to order commercial airliners that threaten
American cities shot down without checking
first with him, a senior military officer said
today.

The senior officer, Gen. Ralph E. Eberhart
of the Air Force, the head of the North
American Aerospace Defense Command, said in an interview that such
life-or-death decisions would be made by the generals only as a last resort
when an attack was seconds away and there was not enough time to consult
with General Eberhart, a four-star officer, or the president.

Vice President Dick Cheney revealed this month that in the hours after the
attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, Mr. Bush had
ordered the downing of any passenger jets that imperiled Washington. But
days after the Sept. 11 hijackings, Mr. Bush, Defense Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld and the Joint Chiefs of Staff approved new rules of engagement
that reflected the heightened concern over possible new terrorist strikes and
how to confront them swiftly, General Eberhart said.

Before the attacks there were no formal rules on how the military should deal
with an airliner hijacked over the United States, flown by what in essence are
suicide bombers.

"If there's time, we'd go all the way to the president," said General Eberhart,
who also leads the United States Space Command. "Otherwise, the standing
orders have been pushed down to the regional level."

Maj. Gen. Larry K. Arnold, a two- star officer at Tyndall Air Force Base,
Fla., would have that authority for the continental United States. Lt. Gen.
Norton A. Schwartz, a three- star officer at Elmendorf Air Force Base,
Alaska, would have authority for Alaska. Hawaii is covered by the United
States Pacific Command, headed by Adm. Dennis Blair, instead of
NORAD.

Citing security concerns, General Eberhart declined to sketch a course of
events that would result in the decision to down a civilian airliner being made
by someone other than the president.

The change in the rules of engagement regarding shooting down civilian
aircraft is part of the rethinking of the North American Aerospace Defense
Command, better known as Norad, which was born during the cold war and
has always been oriented toward external threats. For more than 40 years in
a bunker deep inside this granite peak, elite Norad specialists with
early-warning radars have peered out over America's borders to alert the
nation to an incoming enemy air strike.

But on Sept. 11, that vaunted defense turned out to be a modern Maginot
line, blind to terrorist attacks originating in the United States that war
planners never dreamed could pose a threat.

"If somebody had called us and said, we have a hijacking 100 miles out
coming from Europe or South America, there are terrorists on board and
they've taken over the airplane, that's a scenario we've practiced," said
General Eberhart, a Vietnam veteran. "We did not practice — and I wish to
God we had — a scenario where this takes off out of Boston, and minutes
later crashes into New York City. This is a whole new ballgame."

Since the attacks, commanders at Norad's nerve center here have quickly
turned their sights to new threats inside the country.

More than 100 fighter jets at 26 bases nationwide stand ready to take off on
10 minutes' notice, up from 14 planes at seven bases on comparable alert the
day of the attacks. F-15's and F-16's fly round-the-clock over Washington
and New York, and randomly over dozens of other cities. Last Sunday,
fighters flew over several National Football League games although officials
would not say which ones.

Since Sept. 11, there has been no such thing here as a routine in-flight
problem. Any commercial airliner with a radio failure or a silent transponder
is immediately suspect, and fighters have been scrambled several times in the
last two weeks to investigate what turned out to be false alarms.

"Everyone is very twitchy right now," said Brig. Gen. J. D. Hunter, a
Canadian Air Force officer who is vice commander of the mountain's
operations center.

Some Federal Aviation Administration radars are not compatible with Norad
military radars that gaze out 200 miles beyond United States territory,
General Eberhart said. So Norad is moving nearly a dozen mobile ground
radars around the country to expand its coverage of the interior United
States. Awacs surveillance planes also patrol the skies.

At the operations center inside this durable fortress outside Colorado
Springs, air battle management officers, as they are called, monitor giant
multihued radar images for the tell-tale blip of incoming attacks. But the
officers also have new computers whose screens display a tiny turquoise dot
for each of the thousands of commercial and private flights the F.A.A. is
tracking at any given moment. A few keystrokes yields information on any of
them.

Norad has also opened a direct telephone line to the F.A.A. If a problem
arises, Norad officials here and at regional commands quickly hold a
teleconference with aviation officials to assess the situation. The aviation
administration now has a liaison in the Norad operations center.

"We've improved our ability to communicate with the F.A.A.," said Brig.
Gen. Michael C. Gould of the Air Force, the operations center commander.
"We really never had the need to respond like this before."

Indeed, the air defense mission here is at the forefront of the renewed focus
on homeland defense. At the height of the cold war, air defenses under joint
Canadian and American control operated 3,600 fighter jets. But with a
declining threat, shrinking Pentagon budgets and higher-priority missions to
monitor ballistic missile launchings around the world, Norad's air defense role
dwindled to the 20 fighters — 14 in the continental United States — on alert
two weeks ago.

Norad's fight against terrorism is coordinated from inside a cavernous
complex bored 1,700 feet into this mountainside. When the bunker was
completed in 1966, it was designed to withstand a 31-megaton Soviet
nuclear strike.

American officials concede that the far more destructive weapons now
available would turn this mountain into a valley if it suffered a direct hit.

But commanders persist in keeping up appearances. A pair of 25-ton steel
doors swung open to allow the first public visitor since the terrorist attacks to
enter a 4.5-acre city of 12 three-story buildings erected on a metal base
sitting atop giant metal coils. Designers figured that if the Big One ever hit,
the command post would sway on its massive shock absorbers and lead a
retaliatory strike.

Nowhere is the contrast between the pre-attack and post-attack visions
more striking than in the command's air warning center, which before Sept.
11 was a quiet, three- person office tucked away down one of the many
corridors in the labyrinthine subterranean complex.

The office has been rechristened the Norad Battle Management Center, and
bustles with more than 40 military specialists who track weather, monitor
security at the air bases where fighters are stationed, and evaluate the effects
of potential attacks from chemical or biological weapons.

Other crews monitor not only the 7,000 daily flights into the United States
from abroad, but also any domestic flights of concern.

"It's good if it keeps us more on top of what's happening," said Staff Sgt.
Claudette Johnson, 31, an instructor pressed into service to monitor the
air-traffic control chatter on the open line to the F.A.A. "Advanced notice
can never be a bad thing."

General Eberhart and other commanders say there is no let up in sight. They
expect air combat patrols to secure the skies over major sporting attractions,
like the World Series, as well as other big events, like launchings of the
space shuttle.

"We're trying to game this out," said General Gould, "and anticipate where
terrorists could strike next."