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


To: E. T. who wrote (203760)11/18/2001 7:38:54 AM
From: E. T.  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Bush is quietly reversing Clinton environmental policies -- From The Atlanta Journal-Consitution

accessatlanta.com
By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE

Washington -- In the last two months, the Bush administration has proceeded with several regulations, legal settlements and legislative measures intended to reverse Clinton-era environmental policies.

These include moves to allow road-building in national forests, reverse the phaseout of snowmobiles in national parks, make it easier for mining companies to dig for gold, copper and zinc on public lands, ease energy-saving standards for air-conditioners, bar the reintroduction of grizzly bears in the Northwest and, environmentalists say, make it easier for developers to eliminate wetlands.

Environmentalists are angered that in some cases the administration, in the name of national security, is taking steps that they say promote the interests of timber, mining, oil, gas and pipeline companies, at the expense of the environment.

"They've used the smoke screen of the last two months to make key decisions out of public view," said Philip E. Clapp, president of the National Environmental Trust. "The most difficult situation we face is that the attention of the media is almost exclusively on Afghanistan and anthrax."

Most notable, critics say, is the administration's renewed advocacy of drilling for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska. As President Bush said last month, "The less dependent we are on foreign sources of crude oil, the more secure we are at home."

Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., said the administration's view that oil drilling in Alaska was a matter of national security represented a "false patriotism."

"I certainly think that the re-emergence of the Arctic drilling is a direct effort to capitalize on events," Kerry said. "And it's a misplaced definition of patriotism to use Sept. 11 as a rationale for doing something that has no impact on price or dependency or immediate supply."

Administration officials say that while national security is a paramount concern, it is not their only argument for reversing many policies enacted by President Bill Clinton. They defend the changes as a way to balance what they said was an extreme tilt in favor of the environmentalists during the eight years of the Clinton presidency.

"Many of the things we have done are to put in place common-sense approaches that we feel are a better balance," Gale Norton, the secretary of the interior, said in an interview on Friday. "They better involve local people in decision making, they are based on cooperation rather than conflict. Our push for involving state governments in the decision-making process, our push for negotiated solutions, our push for tailoring decisions to particular areas of land are all based on philosophy, not on a wartime situation."

But both sides in the environmental debates say that the political balance changed after Sept. 11.

"In the past, you had to make an environmental argument to deflect an environmental criticism," said Scott Segal, a lawyer and lobbyist in Washington for several industrial concerns. "Since Sept. 11, it is possible to articulate an energy-security rationale that can offset environmental criticism. In comparison to security issues, criticism premised on environmental protection begins to sound parochial and not selfless."

Before the attacks, environmentalists seemed to have political momentum in casting Bush as unfriendly to the environment and his administration as beholden to the extractive industries. But in the last two months, environmentalists have been stymied for fear of appearing unpatriotic or even petty in the face of a national crisis.

For example, the administration has ordered the U.S. Coast Guard to fortify its patrol of coastal waters, a duty that makes it less able to enforce antipoaching rules, leaving species like rockfish, Atlantic salmon and red snapper vulnerable. Environmentalists have remained silent, though before Sept. 11 they might have complained loudly.

Administration officials insist they are still protecting the environment. Norton said her department was starting a program to help individual property owners protect endangered species. Bush's Environmental Protection Agency is battling his Energy Department's plan to weaken standards for air-conditioners. And while this administration has been more responsive to governors of Western states than the Clinton administration was, it has not always pleased them.

Just last week, Gov. Dirk Kempthorne, R-Idaho, said at a public hearing that he was so frustrated over federal cleanup plans on a toxic Superfund site that he was "on the verge of inviting the EPA to leave Idaho."

The Bush administration has also decided to adhere to the Clinton administration proposals for limiting arsenic in drinking water. Some environmentalists thought the Bush administration should have called for lower levels, but by setting the same amount as proposed by Clinton, it defused the issue.

But the administration has let slide other matters that environmentalists argue are vital to protecting air and water quality. These include a global pact on climate change and a plan to reduce power plant emissions.

Sen. James M. Jeffords, I-Vt., who is chairman of the Environment and Public Works Committee, is advancing his own plan to require power plants to reduce four major pollutants. The administration opposes it, in part on national security grounds, saying the changes could disrupt power supplies because they might force the closing of coal-burning plants.



To: E. T. who wrote (203760)11/18/2001 11:32:35 AM
From: Gordon A. Langston  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Al-Qa'eda massacre Taliban
By David Harrison in Kunduz, northern Afghanistan
(Filed: 18/11/2001)

OSAMA BIN LADEN'S elite al-Qa'eda guard, mainly Arabs and Pakistanis, are slaughtering
Taliban troops to prevent them surrendering to the Northern Alliance army besieging
Kunduz, the Taliban-controlled northern enclave.

In the first eye-witness accounts of life inside the city, escaping
civilians last night told The Telegraph that an Arab al-Qa'eda
commander had ordered the massacre of 150 Afghan Talibs who
wanted to defect.

As alliance commanders prepared for their latest offensive on
Kunduz, refugees described atrocities committed by al-Qa'eda
militiamen.

Mohammed Ibrahim, 50, who escaped from the city yesterday,
said: "A commander who was foreign gave the order for 150 local
Afghan Taliban to be killed because they wanted to surrender.
They showed them no mercy."

He said the massacre took place on Friday and followed the
defection of 1,000 Afghan Talibs under Gen Mirai Nasery, a local
commander. Al-Qa'eda soldiers had arrested more than 100 prominent Kunduz citizens
and were holding them hostage to stall an alliance attack.

Mr Ibrahim said the Taliban leadership and al-Qa'eda were also refusing to allow civilians
to leave.

He said: "All the shops are closed and the streets are deserted except for the Taliban
soldiers walking around with their guns. The people are terrified. They are trapped in
their homes and too frightened to go out."

Mr Ibrahim said that the Taliban and al-Qa'eda were forcing local men to fight for them,
and beating or killing them if they refused. Some civilians were using this as a means of
escape, agreeing to go to the front line then running away when night fell.

Details of the Kunduz massacre came as alliance forces consolidated their grip on areas of
the country captured from the Taliban last week.

There were reports that Mullah Mohammed Omar, the Taliban supreme leader, was trying
to negotiate guarantees for his own safety and the safety of his fighters in their last
remaining stronghold of Kandahar before surrendering.

Earlier claims that the Taliban were fleeing the city proved to be premature, and large
numbers of fighters are still believed to be based there. They vowed not to give up
without a fight.

Negotiations over their fate took place as final preparations were being made for the
deployment of up to 4,000 British troops in Afghanistan. At least 680 members of 2 Para
are expected in the region later this week.

Special forces troops hunting bin Laden believe that they are now closing in on him. Last
night a Ministry of Defence official said that special forces were "only hours" behind bin
Laden as he fled from one hideout to another.

Military commanders are convinced that he is constantly on the move in the mountains of
southern Afghanistan, despite Taliban claims that he had slipped over the border into
Pakistan.

The Qatar-based al-Jazeera television station quoted the Taliban envoy to Pakistan,
Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef, as saying that bin Laden had left Afghanistan "with his wives
and children" for an unspecified destination.

Mr Zaeef, however, later told reporters that bin Laden was still in Afghanistan and that
his exact location was unknown. Mr Zaeef was speaking after crossing the border into
Pakistan from visiting Kandahar.

A Pentagon spokesman said that the United States military had no evidence that bin
Laden had left Afghanistan and was still hunting him.

Taliban officials dismissed reports that Omar had ordered the Taliban to retreat from
Kandahar and head for the hills. Last night the Afghan Islamic Press said the Taliban,
facing a popular uprising even among fellow Pathans in the south, had agreed to leave
the city and hand over control to two former mujahideen commanders.

Meanwhile Burhanuddi Rabbani, the former president ousted by the Taliban five years
ago, returned to Kabul, where the alliance was reported to have said that it did not want
foreign troops in the country. One senior alliance commander insisted that most of
Britain's 100 special forces must be immediately withdrawn, claiming that they had arrived
at Bagram air base without consultation.

A Ministry of Defence spokesman said, however, that the British troops would not leave
Bagram and said the mission was not in doubt.

He said: "We can confirm that we have not had any such approach from the Northern
Alliance leadership. We have spoken to our people in Kabul and they say there are no
difficulties with the presence."

Alliance forces committed a series of atrocities when they ran the country during the
1992-96 civil war. The fear of a return to bloodletting has prompted some countries to
discuss the prospects for a peacekeeping mission.

Mr Rabbani, who still holds Afghanistan's UN seat, is unpopular even within some factions
of the alliance. Many anti-Taliban groups want the deposed former King Zahir Shah, in
exile in Rome, to be the figurehead of a new regime rather than Mr Rabbani.

Mr Rabbani said: "We have not come to Kabul to extend our government. We came to
Kabul for peace. We are preparing the ground to invite peace groups and all Afghan
intellectuals abroad who are working for the peace."

17 November 2001: Saddam also can be forced out

17 November 2001: Betray your comrades and you can live

17 November 2001: Rebellion helps bring the fall of Kandahar

17 November 2001: Taliban's last stronghold falls

16 November 2001: Special Boat Service to form British vanguard in Kabul

16 November 2001: Defiant army caught between life and death

2 October 2001: 'New era' for Afghanistan as king and rebels unite

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