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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: PROLIFE who wrote (196551)10/26/2001 7:41:46 PM
From: Thomas A Watson  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 769670
 
A Lockheed Martin X-35A Joint Strike Fighter receives fuel from a KC-135 Stratotanker over California's Mojave Desert.
defenselink.mil
defenselink.mil
Artist's redition.
capitol.northgrum.com

Lockheed Martin to Build Fighter Jet
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Pentagon (news - web
sites) chose Lockheed Martin Corp. over Boeing
Corp. on Friday to build its high-tech,
next-generation fighter jet, a contract that will be
worth at least $200 billion, the largest in Defense
Department history.

Air Force Secretary James G. Roche announced
Lockheed and its partners were the winner of a $25
billion engineering and manufacturing development
contract that eventually is expected to lead to the
go-ahead to build 3,000 supersonic F-35 jets with
radar-evading capabilities.

Roche wouldn't release details of why Lockheed was
picked but said during the review process its
proposal ``emerged continuously as the clear winner.
... We looked at performance. There was no
aesthetics, there was no beauty contest.''

He applauded both companies' efforts and said they
will be briefed in detail on the decision in coming
weeks.

Lockheed Chairman Vance Coffman said his
company would honor the trust shown by the
Pentagon ``by building a truly remarkable, capable
and affordable multirole fighter, on schedule and on
cost.''

Boeing Chairman Phil Condit said the contract loss
will cause the company to lower its revenue forecast
by a $1 billion next year, to about $55 billion. He
expressed hope Lockheed would seek help from
Boeing for the project. Lockheed officials said that's
a possibility.

The F-35 will replace the aging fighter jets of the Air
Force, Navy and Marines, albeit with modifications to
fit the needs of each branch. It also will be used by
Britain's Royal Air Force and Navy, which want 150
of the planes. Britain has committed $2 billion toward
development.

The first 22 planes are to be delivered in 2008.

Lockheed and Boeing waged a long and costly
advertising and lobbying campaign for the contract,
which establishes Lockheed as the nation's sole
fighter jet manufacturer.

Lockheed, based in Bethesda, Md., has said the
contract would add up to 9,000 jobs at its Lockheed
Martin Aeronautics division in Fort Worth, Texas,
which currently employs 11,000. Employees there
gathered to watch the announcement and burst into
cheers when Lockheed was chosen.

Lockheed will develop the jet with Northrup
Grumman Corp. and BAE Systems of Great Britain.
Work will be done at facilities in 27 states and Great
Britain, with major subassemblies in El Segundo,
Calif., and Samlesbury, England, and final assembly
at Fort Worth.

Chicago-based Boeing had predicted it would add
3,000 new jobs for its Seattle facility and another
3,000 engineering jobs and 2,000 production jobs at
its St. Louis plant.

Sen. Kit Bond, R-Mo., said the Pentagon was wrong
to place the future of America's air defenses with just
one company. Bond said he may offer legislation that
would require the military to split production
between the companies to keep Boeing in the fighter
business.

``It would be a national security disaster if we allowed
that repository of unique engineering know-how to
be scattered to the four winds,'' Bond said.

Analysts said Boeing may be in a better position to
weather the contract loss. It is developing an
unmanned combat aircraft that could be highly
lucrative and, unlike Lockheed, it has a commercial
airline business. It also has contracts with the
Pentagon to continue building F-18s and F-22s until
2011.

Lockheed shares surged 6 percent in after-hours
trading after finishing the regular session on the New
York Stock Exchange (news - web sites) at $49.92,
up $1.02. Boeing shares fell 7 percent after finishing
trading up $1.78 to $37.68, also on the NYSE.

The Defense Department gave Boeing and
Lockheed $660 million each in 1996 for research and
development of prototypes that could take off
quickly, land vertically and on carrier decks, throw
off radar and provide all the high-tech cockpit
gadgetry demanded by modern warfare.

The plane is designed to replace the Air Force's
F-16 and A-10, the Navy's F/A-18 and the Marine
Corps' AV-8B Harrier.

Boeing's test model, dubbed the X-32, is more
compact than Lockheed's X-35. The X-32 has a
gaping air intake on the front and dual lift nozzles
underneath, while the X-35 achieves its short
takeoffs and vertical landings with a single thruster
and a lift fan at the top of the plane.

Both Boeing and Lockheed's planes for the Marines,
the Royal Air Force and the Royal Navy can land
vertically. Versions for the Air Force and Navy are
designed to land conventionally.

Each F-35 will cost about $40 million. The version
with the ability for short takeoff and vertical landings
will cost more, but less than $50 million.

The General Accounting Office (news - web sites),
Congress' investigative arm, twice warned the jet
could end up costing more, take longer to build and
have performance problems because the
technologies need more development. The
Pentagon has said its independent investigation
found the technologies are adequate.

dailynews.yahoo.com
tom watson tosiwmee



To: PROLIFE who wrote (196551)10/26/2001 9:08:56 PM
From: rich4eagle  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Wow that is such a bigoted mindless statement condemning most of the world's people to something less thn salvation. God is not so mean to do this, and any who believe like you are in themselves doomed for wishing most of the people of the world a place in hell or some other awful place



To: PROLIFE who wrote (196551)10/26/2001 10:50:52 PM
From: J_F_Shepard  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
"I know it does satan, as he continually accuses us"

Amazing!! You KNOW what drives satan nutty, but you don't know the details of what you support about vouchers. And for Srexley's benefit I would point to you as one of his tribe who thinks his god is better than others.....



To: PROLIFE who wrote (196551)10/26/2001 11:09:24 PM
From: Giordano Bruno  Respond to of 769670
 
When Jesus came and died and rose again, his position as King/servant/Savior was such a paradigm shift that many did not(or would not)see what had happened.

You said a mouth full -g-



To: PROLIFE who wrote (196551)10/29/2001 12:03:16 PM
From: goldworldnet  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 769670
 
Church Killings Deal New Blow to Pakistan Chief

Asia: Gunmen fire on Christian congregation in an eastern town, leaving 16 dead. Massacre is an attempt to undermine
Musharraf regime's ties to U.S., analysts say.

By ALISSA J. RUBIN
Times Staff Writer

October 29 2001

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -- A terrorist attack on a Roman Catholic church in eastern Pakistan left 15 worshipers and a security guard dead early Sunday, underscoring the deep domestic difficulties facing the government as it attempts to help the United States.

To some analysts, the attack appeared to be directed against the military regime of President Pervez Musharraf, which has come under pressure from large sectors of the public because of its support for the U.S. campaign against Afghanistan.

For a second day Sunday, thousands of Pakistani men were gathered at their country's northwestern border with Afghanistan, waiting for an order from the Muslim leader who had summoned them there to cross it and join Taliban fighters.

Sunday's massacre came after days of intense bombing along the front north of the Afghan capital, Kabul. B-1 and B-52 bombers blasted Taliban troops with dozens of 500-pound unguided bombs over the preceding 24 hours, U.S. defense officials said Sunday.

At the same time, reports out of Kabul said 13 civilians died as bombs or missiles hit homes in two residential areas of the city. Sunday was the second day in a row that U.S. strikes went awry and killed civilians.

The church attack took place in the Punjab province town of Bahawalpur as congregants were singing the final hymn of the Sunday service at St. Dominic's church. The attackers, who were armed with Kalashnikov rifles, according to witnesses, took the lives of 15 worshipers--including the minister conducting the service--as well as the security guard. At least nine more people were wounded.

Although the shootings occurred in a Catholic church, the victims were Protestant members of an umbrella congregation that includes a number of Protestant faithful, among them Lutherans, Presbyterians and Anglicans. They have used the church because they are not numerous enough to have one of their own. Christians, the majority of them Catholic, make up less than 2% of this overwhelmingly Muslim country.

"We, as Christians, were feeling very safe and didn't fear anything," said Father James Channan, the Pakistani head of the Dominican order in Pakistan, which runs the church as well as a nearby school and hospital.

"But this has really come out of the blue, and we are shocked that it can happen, and we feel very insecure. People in our community are in deep shock--they are crying," Channan said.

The assault has to be viewed as politically motivated and aimed at both undermining Musharraf and stoking domestic instability, said Rifaat Hussain, a professor of security studies at Quaid-i-Azam University, a semiautonomous institution in Islamabad, the capital.

"The timing is very significant. It is meant to show that the government is not in control and to say, 'If we can't kill Americans, we will kill Christians, the people of their faith,' " Hussain said.

"And it is aimed at eroding the newfound relationship between Pakistan and the United States. It comes at a bad time for the Musharraf government, which is facing a very vocal dissent and with a situation along the Afghanistan border that is very volatile," he said.

Musharraf sharply condemned the killers, saying that "the methods used and inhuman tactics employed clearly indicate the involvement of trained terrorists of organizations bent upon creating discord and disharmony in Pakistan."

"It saddens me deeply, and my heart goes out to the victims and their families," a deeply sober Musharraf said.

Without naming India or Afghanistan, government security officials said they had not ruled out the possibility that the attack was the work of forces from outside Pakistan.

At a meeting late Sunday, the chiefs of government intelligence and security agencies decided to increase surveillance of all suspected militant religious groups in the country. Security forces also will ramp up security at all minority places of worship, including Hindu, Christian, Buddhist, Sikh and Shiite Muslim mosques.

In addition, there will be an effort to coordinate central and provincial anti-terrorism efforts under the aegis of the national crisis center, which is headed by a high-ranking military officer. That agency will create an information clearinghouse on the activities of suspected terrorist groups. And in the coming days, Musharraf will address the nation to unveil a national plan to deal with external terrorist threats.

Also Sunday, in the western province of Baluchistan, three people were killed and 17 injured when a bomb exploded on a municipal bus in Quetta. Two of the dead were soldiers. As with the church massacre, there was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.

Although Pakistan has a history of tolerance for Christians, the region surrounding Bahawalpur has been troubled by sectarian violence between Muslims who practice the moderate Shiite form of Islam and more conservative Sunnis and Wahhabis. Two radical groups are operating in the area, according to Hussain, who said that at least one is linked to a series of recent attacks on Iranian diplomats.

One of the groups, the Soldiers of Muhammad, has been campaigning against the Musharraf government's effort to put some limits on the country's broadly worded blasphemy laws, which can now be applied to such a wide range of acts that they can be used as tools of religious discrimination, Hussain said. The penalty for blasphemy is capital punishment.

"Usually anti-Christian feelings were expressed [by the plaintiffs] in blasphemy cases," Hussain said.

Members of hard-line Islamic groups are strongly opposed to the military government's support for the U.S. and British air campaign against Afghanistan, and a number of demonstrations have taken place around Pakistan against the government and the allies' military actions. However, there does not appear to have been any other attack as deadly on Christians in recent years.

Channan said he believed that the attackers' aim was to kill one of the Dominicans, a U.S. native who often celebrates Mass in the church.

"I suspect they came to kill the American Catholic priest. Thank goodness for him that today he had gone to a church seven or eight miles from here," Channan said.

Channan rushed to the church from his hometown two hours away and arrived, he said, to find a scene of carnage.

Some of the bodies still lay inside in pools of blood, and the church walls had "hundreds" of bullet holes so that it "looked like someone had taken a drill to them," he said.

Witnesses said that about 70 churchgoers were just finishing their Sunday morning service and the worshipers for the Catholic Mass, which begins at 9, were just starting to arrive at the church compound when six men roared up on three motorcycles and executed a policeman guarding the church.

Some witnesses said the men wore masks and also the long beards and flowing robes typical of some Muslim militias.

The attackers stormed into the building and began to fire at random into the crowd of worshipers, who cried out for mercy and tried to hide under the pews, according to witnesses.

David Tajdin, a regular at the service, said: "I was just finishing singing the hymn when the firing started. I had no idea what was happening. They rushed in. They fired for maybe 10 minutes, even in
the sacristy."

latimes.com

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