SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (257524)5/22/2002 12:22:15 AM
From: calgal  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Iran Again Tops Annual Terror Report








Tuesday: State Department official Francis Taylor discusses the annual terrorism report in Washington.
Tuesday, May 21, 2002

WASHINGTON — Iran remains the world's most active sponsor of terrorism while Sudan and Libya took some steps, but not enough, to "get out of the business," the State Department said Tuesday in an annual report to Congress.

North Korea and Syria took smaller steps in that direction, but continued to host militant groups, the department said.

The report listed the same seven countries — Iran, Sudan, Libya, Iraq, North Korea, Cuba, and Syria — as state sponsors of terrorism last year.

The report said Iraq concentrated its terror on opponents of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein but also provided bases for anti-Israel terror groups.

"The terrorist threat is global in scope, many-faceted and determined," Secretary of State Colin Powell said. "The campaign against terrorism must be equally comprehensive."

Releasing the 22nd annual report, Powell said, "Terrorists are trying every way they can to get their hands on weapons of mass destruction, whether radiological, chemical, biological, or nuclear."

Francis X. Taylor, coordinator of the department's Office to Counter Terrorism, summarized the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States and said, "Additional terrorist attacks are very, very likely."

The Al Qaeda terror network is trying to regroup, and "we are very much concerned," he said, despite 1,600 arrests around the world and the uprooting of the group in Afghanistan.

In listing Iran, the department said the country has matched rhetoric with action, acting on supreme leader Ali Khamenei's denunciation of Israel as a "cancerous tumor" that must be removed.

On the other hand, Libya last year sharply decreased its support for international terrorism, trying to shed its "pariah status," and Sudan also moved toward cooperation with the U.S. campaign against militant groups, the department said in "Patterns of Global Terrorism 2001."

Lebanon, which was not listed, nonetheless was accused of refusing to hand over three Hezbollah operatives who are on the FBI's list of most wanted terrorists for their role in the hijacking of a TWA airliner in 1985.

Taylor said the State Department had no reason to question the validity of documents provided by Israel that seek to link Yasser Arafat and other senior Palestinian officials to the financing of terror attacks on Israel.

"We have not been able to make a final judgment who and how far up in the Palestinian Authority" may have been involved, Taylor said. But he said of Arafat, "We believe he can do much more to control those activities."

At the same time, Taylor said Jewish extremists accused in the report of attacking Palestinian civilians were as much terrorists as Palestinian suicide bombers. The report, without elaboration, accuses Israel of destroying the Palestinian Authority's security apparatus, an allegation Israel disputes.

Iran is described as the most active sponsor of terrorism.

Iranian President Mohammad Khatami condemned the Sept. 11 attacks in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania, but supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei continued to refer to Israel as a "cancerous tumor" that must be removed.

The State Department said there was no evidence that Iran sponsored or knew in advance of the Sept. 11 attacks, a point U.S. law enforcement officials have made privately. But Iran continued to supply Lebanese Hezbollah and Palestinian groups with funds, shelter, training and weapons.

Hard-liners who hold the reins of power in Iran thwarted efforts to end the country's support, the report said.

Rep. Brad Sherman, D-Calif., is drafting legislation to cut off future payments by the United States to the World Bank should the bank approve any new loans to Iran. "By borrowing from the World Bank to meet its domestic needs Iran can use its other revenues for terrorism and nuclear weapons," he said in an interview.

In certain areas, including Israel, the West Bank and Gaza, state sponsors remained a driving force behind terrorism, the report said. Iran, Iraq and Syria were all cited for backing terror groups.

Iraq provided training and political encouragement to many terror groups, but its main focus was on dissident Iraqis opposed to President Saddam Hussein, the report said.

It also noted that Syria and Lebanon cooperated with the United States in the fight against al-Qaida, but refused to recognize other groups that conduct terrorism against Israel, such as Hamas and Hezbollah, as terrorists.

In Damascus, Syrian political analyst Imad Shuaibi said the report was "an internal American affair which doesn't concern Syria."

"Syria doesn't accept the policy of being dictated to and responding to those dictates," he said.

Cuban President Fidel Castro, meanwhile, views terror as a legitimate revolutionary tactic, but he signed all 12 U.N. counter-terror conventions, the report said. At least 20 Basque militants and several other terror suspects are given haven in Cuba, it said.

On Monday, President Bush denounced the Castro government and said U.S. trade sanctions against Cuba would be extended.

Overall, terrorist attacks claimed a record number of lives — 3,547 — last year, about 90 percent of them on Sept. 11, the State Department said.

The number of international terror attacks declined to 346 from 426 in 2000. A little more than half of the attacks, 178, were bombings against an international oil pipeline in Colombia.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.


foxnews.com



To: calgal who wrote (257524)5/22/2002 1:03:26 AM
From: bonnuss_in_austin  Respond to of 769670
 
Data Shows Industry Had Extensive Access to Cheney's Energy Task Force

truthout.org

t r u t h o u t | Statement
The Natural Resources Defense Council

Data Shows Industry Had Extensive Access to Cheney's Energy Task
Force
Industry Outnumbered Non-Industry Contacts 25 to 1

Tuesday, 20 May, 2002

WASHINGTON | A close examination of more than 12,000 pages of
documents provided by the Energy Department confirms that energy industry
lobbyists enjoyed extraordinary access to Vice President Cheney's energy task
force. NRDC (Natural Resources Defense Council) has finally compiled from
Energy Department documents a comprehensive, quantitative analysis of
outside contacts during formulation of the Bush administration's national energy
plan. (See attached Excel spreadsheet.)

During the course of its operation - from January to September of 2001 - the
energy task force received input from hundreds of corporations, organizations
and individuals. The data, which validates NRDC's preliminary assessment that
industry had the most access, shows that industry representatives had 714
direct contacts while non-industry representatives had only 29. NRDC could not
definitively categorize another 105 direct contacts.

"A year ago the Cheney task force issued recommendations that read like a
wish list for energy companies," said NRDC senior attorney Sharon Buccino.
"When it came to developing the administration's environmentally and fiscally
reckless energy policy, it was all industry all the time."

The representatives tallying the most direct contacts with the energy task
force were from some of the nation's largest and most influential energy
companies and trade associations. Not surprisingly, these industries stood to
benefit from the president's policies to boost domestic energy production.
Some of them also are major donors to President Bush and Republican
congressional candidates. For example:

Nuclear Energy Institute had contact with the task force 19 times. (NEI has
contributed $437,404 to Republican candidates and the GOP from 1999 to
2002.)

Bonneville Power Administration had contact with the task force 15 times.

Edison Electric Institute had contact with the task force 14 times. (EEI has
contributed $598,169 to Republican candidates and the GOP from 1999 to
2002.)

United States Enrichment Corporation had contact with the task force 12
times.

North American Electric Reliability Council had contact with the task force
11 times.

National Mining Association had contact with the task force nine times.
(NMA has contributed $575,496 to Republican candidates and the GOP from
1999 to 2002.)

Westinghouse had contact with the task force nine times. (Westinghouse
Electric Company has contributed $65,060 to Republican candidates and the
GOP from 1999 to 2002.)

American Gas Association had contact with the task force eight times.
(AGA has contributed $480,478 to Republican candidates and the GOP from
1999 to 2002.)

Electric Power Research Institute had contact with the task force eight
times.

CMS Energy had contact with the task force eight times. (CMS has
contributed $357,715 to Republican candidates and the GOP from 1999 to
2002.)

Southern Company had contact with the task force seven times. (Southern
has contributed $1,626,507 to Republican candidates and the GOP from 1999
to 2002.)

American Petroleum Institute had contact with the task force six times.
(API has contributed $44,301 to Republican candidates and the GOP from 1999
to 2002.)

Exelon Corporation had contact with the task force six times. (Exelon has
contributed $910,886 to Republican candidates and the GOP from 1999 to
2002.)

National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners had contact with
the task force six times.

Enron Corporation had contact with the task force four times, in addition to
the six times that Vice President Cheney reportedly met with company
officials. (Enron has contributed $2,480,056 to Republican candidates and the
GOP from 1999 to 2002.)

Note that these contacts were ones in which Energy Department staff
participated. Other direct contacts with the energy task force, for example
through the vice president's office, are not included in these tallies because the
Bush administration has refused to release that information.

To review political campaign contributions from the energy sector, consult
the Center for Responsive Politics' Web site:
www.opensecrets.org/new/energy_task_force/index.asp.

Methodology

For the purpose of NRDC's analysis, meetings, phone calls, letters, memos
or e-mail communication with the task force are classified as direct contacts.
Excluded from NRDC's analysis are indirect contacts, such as reports, press
releases, hearing statements and information obtained from Web sites.

The category of "industry" is broadly defined to include companies, trade
associations, and law and consulting firms representing energy interests.
NRDC did not distinguish the type of industry, so, for example, the handful of
alternative energy industries are lumped into that general category. Likewise,
the "non-industry" category includes think tanks heavily financed by energy
interests. The "unknown" category represents entities that NRDC was unable to
identify or categorize.

The attached database includes entries that are not part of NRDC's
analysis. For example, direct contacts by representatives from government and
academia are omitted from the count, as are several hundred contacts by
individuals who did not list their affiliation.

-------

The Natural Resources Defense Council is a national, non-profit organization
of scientists, lawyers and environmental specialists dedicated to protecting
public health and the environment. Founded in 1970, NRDC has more than
500,000 members nationwide, served from offices in New York, Washington,
Los Angeles and San Francisco. More information is available at NRDC's Web
site: www.nrdc.org.

Print This Story E-mail This Story

© : t r u t h o u t 2002