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


To: Bald Eagle who wrote (405316)5/12/2003 1:57:11 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769670
 
The TRUTH hurts Don't IT?
The BIG LIE CONTINUES TO BE EXPOSED
Frustrated, U.S. Arms Team to Leave IraqTask Force Unable To Find Any Weapons
By Barton Gellman
Washington Post Staff Writer

Sunday 11 May 2003

BAGHDAD -- The group directing all known U.S. search efforts for weapons of mass destruction
in Iraq is winding down operations without finding proof that President Saddam Hussein kept
clandestine stocks of outlawed arms, according to participants.

The 75th Exploitation Task Force, as the group is formally known, has been described from the
start as the principal component of the U.S. plan to discover and display forbidden Iraqi weapons.
The group's departure, expected next month, marks a milestone in frustration for a major declared
objective of the war.

Leaders of Task Force 75's diverse staff -- biologists, chemists, arms treaty enforcers, nuclear
operators, computer and document experts, and special forces troops -- arrived with high hopes of
early success. They said they expected to find what Secretary of State Colin L. Powell described
at the U.N. Security Council on Feb. 5 -- hundreds of tons of biological and chemical agents,
missiles and rockets to deliver the agents, and evidence of an ongoing program to build a nuclear
bomb.

In other words....
ZEEEEERO WMD's....they are all HERE in the US with Bush getting us to start testing MORE NUCLEAR WEAPONS
CC



To: Bald Eagle who wrote (405316)5/12/2003 1:58:14 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769670
 
And THESE are the "leaders" who are ONLY interested in POWER AND MONEY at the expense of lives and peace
Bush Ally Set to Profit From the War on Terror
Antony Barnett and Solomon Hughes
The Observer

Sunday 11 May 2003

James Woolsey, former CIA boss and influential adviser to President George
Bush, is a director of a US firm aiming to make millions of dollars from the
'war on terror', The Observer can reveal.

Woolsey, one of the most high-profile hawks in the war against Iraq and a key member of the
Pentagon's Defence Policy Board, is a director of the Washington-based private equity firm
Paladin Capital. The company was set up three months after the terrorist attacks on New York
and sees the events and aftermath of September 11 as a business opportunity which 'offer[s]
substantial promise for homeland security investment'.

The first priority of Paladin was 'to invest in companies with immediate solutions designed to
prevent harmful attacks, defend against attacks, cope with the aftermath of attack or disaster and
recover from terrorist attacks and other threats to homeland security'.

Paladin, which is expected to have raised $300 million from investors by the end of this year,
calculates that in the next few years the US government will spend $60 billion on anti-terrorism
that woul not have been spent before September 11, and that corporations will spend twice that
amount to ensure their security and continuity in case of attack.

The involvement of one of the most prominent hawks in Washington with a company standing to
cash in on the fear of potential terror attacks will raise eyebrows in some quarters.

In 2001 US Defence Secretary Paul Wolfowitz sent Woolsey to Europe, where he argued the
case for links existing between Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda. He was one of the main
proponents of the theory that the anthrax letter attacks in America were supported by Iraq's former
dictator.

More recently Woolsey told CNN about Saddam's attempts to produce a genetically modified
strain of anthrax. He told the US broadcaster: 'I would be more worried over the mid to long term
about biological weapons, because the chemical gear, we're - I think we're pretty well equipped to
deal with. But there have been stories that Saddam has been working on genetically modifying
some of these biological agents, making anthrax resistant to vaccines or antibiotics.'

Little evidence was provided for the Iraq link to the anthrax attacks and the FBI is now
investigating a lone US scientist whom it believes was responsible. But Woolsey's assertions
added to a political atmosphere in which spending on equipment designed to protect individuals
and firms from terror was predicted to mushroom.

One of Paladin's first investments was $10.5m in AgION Technologies, a firm devising anti-germ
technology that it hopes will 'be the leader in the fight against bacterial attacks initiated by
terrorists on unsuspecting civilian and military personnel'.

Woolsey is not alone among the members of the Pentagon's highly influential Defence Policy
Board to profit from America's war on terror.

The American watchdog, the Centre for Public Integrity, showed that nine of the board's members
have ties to defence contractors that won more than $76bn in defence contracts in 2001 and
2002. Woolsey's fellow neo-conservative, Richard Perle, had to resign his chairmanship of the
board because of conflicts of interest, although he remains a board member.

The hawks and their money

DICK CHENEY, Vice President

Cheney once ran oil industry giant Halliburton whose subsidiary, Kellogg Brown &
Root, has won lucrative contracts in post-Saddam Iraq. The Defence Department
gave KBR exclusive rights to a $90m contract to cater for the Americans who are
working on rebuilding Iraq. KBR also won a lucrative contract to repair Iraq's oilfields.

DONALD RUMSFELD, Defence Secretary

Rumsfeld was a non-executive director of European engineering giant ABB when it
won a £125m contract for two light water reactors to North Korea - a country he now
regards as part of the 'axis of evil'. Rumsfeld earnt $190,000 (£118,000) a year
before he joined the Bush administration.

RICHARD PERLE

An influential member of the Pentagon's Defence Policy Board, Perle is managing
partner of venture capital company Trireme, which invests in companies dealing in
products of value to homeland security. It sent a letter to Saudi arms dealer Adnan
Kashoggi arguing that fear of terrorism would boost demand in Europe, Saudi Arabia
and Singapore.

GEORGE SHULTZ, ex-Secretary of State

Shultz is on the board of directors of the Bechtel Group, the largest contractor in the
US and one of the favourites to land lucrative contracts in the rebuilding of Iraq.
Shultz is chairman of the the advisory board of the Committee for the Liberation of
Iraq, a fiercely pro-war group with close ties to the White House.



To: Bald Eagle who wrote (405316)5/12/2003 1:59:51 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769670
 
People and STATES are going bankrupt, healthcare is suffering it's worst moments, and BUSH SPENDING MILLIONS AND MILLIONS ON NUCLEAR WEAPONS!
Bush's Nuclear Arms Plan - Administration Aants Billions to Update U.S. Warheads
James Sterngold
SF Chronicle

Sunday 11 May 2003

The Bush administration is proposing to spend billions of dollars rebuilding the country's nuclear
weapons manufacturing industry, resuming the production of nuclear components and materials
halted after the end of the Cold War.

Proposals in President Bush's 2004 budget would refurbish virtually every facet of the nuclear
weapons complex, ranging from the nuclear test site in Nevada to the Savannah River plant in
South Carolina.

There has been intense opposition in Washington to some aspects of President Bush's nuclear
weapons policies. The Democrats have fought, for instance, a proposal to build a new generation
of smaller warheads, which cleared a Senate committee last week. But there has been virtually
no congressional dissent or debate over the president's proposed multibillion- dollar resuscitation
of America's nuclear infrastructure.

The president's budget includes $320 million to build new plutonium cores -- known as "pits" -- for
nuclear warheads, $40 million of which would be used to design a plant capable of producing 500
such pits a year.

An additional $135 million would go to restart production of tritium, which has not been produced
by the government for more than a decade, and more funds would be spent in coming years.

The tritium, a gas that dramatically increases the force of thermonuclear explosions, will be
produced at a commercial reactor in Watts Bar, Tenn. -- an unprecedented breaching of a
long-standing policy that kept weapons work at military facilities.

While rebuilding plans were begun under President Bill Clinton, the current budget proposals
advance the effort more broadly. Some arms experts say the proposals indicate the White House
is planning on a far larger nuclear arsenal than that envisaged in the recently signed Moscow
Treaty with Russia. The treaty, ratified by the Senate in March, mandates more than a 60 percent
reduction in deployed warheads over the next decade.

"The clearest answer to what is happening comes from the fact that they want to build a pit
production facility that can make 500 pits a year," said Robert Civiak, a scientist who formerly
analyzed nuclear weapons spending at the Office of Management and Budget.

"Add to that the tritium production, and it's clear they want to support much more of a stockpile
than what is in the Moscow Treaty. They're preparing the capacity to completely replace the
existing stockpile in five to 10 years."

Further, according to Civiak, the fastest growing program in the budget of the National Nuclear
Security Administration, which oversees the weapons complex, is the refurbishment of the rest of
the industrial machinery of nuclear warhead production.

From 2001, when it was launched, through 2008, the rebuilding program is expected to cost
nearly $2.5 billion, Civiak estimated in a recent analysis of the White House numbers.

RETURN OF NUCLEAR TESTING

The budget also includes $25 million to increase the readiness at the Nevada Test Site, so that a
nuclear test could be arranged in as little as 18 months, down from the current limit of three
years.

Nuclear testing has been banned since 1992, and the Bush administration has said it has no
plans to resume underground blasts. But some arms experts and congressional Democrats
charge that the proposed spending seems aimed at a resumption of testing.

"People don't realize that we're getting back into the nuclear bomb business in a big way, and it's
a very expensive business," said Joseph Cirincione, director of the nonproliferation project at the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Significant portions of the nuclear weapons infrastructure were shut down near the end of the Cold
War, either because of severe environmental contamination, as at the Rocky Flats pit plant near
Denver, or because of reduced needs, as the standoff with the former Soviet Union eased.

But upgrading the aging infrastructure is now regarded as a cornerstone of the Bush
administration's more assertive defense strategy.

"That infrastructure is part of the nuclear deterrent," Linton Brooks, the administrator of the
nuclear safety agency, said in an interview with The Chronicle.

Brooks added that the aim was to develop a more flexible U.S. nuclear complex that would not
only maintain the existing stockpile of warheads "forever," but would also be able to respond to
any new threats that might emerge.

"We can't predict the future," Brooks said. "We need to be able to respond to the unforeseen," by
having the capability to produce new kinds of nuclear weapons quickly.

He strongly denied, however, that the aim was to maintain a nuclear stockpile larger than that
permitted by the Moscow Treaty, a reduction from the 10,650 warheads now held by the military
to somewhere between 2,200 and 1, 700 deployed in 2012. The facilities and components being
developed would be used to maintain the effectiveness of the existing stockpile, Brooks insisted.

'STOCKPILE STEWARDSHIP'

Overall spending on nuclear weapons activities has doubled since its low point of $3 billion in
1995, to a proposed $6.4 billion in the next fiscal year, even though the stated mission, begun in
the Clinton administration, is "stockpile stewardship" -- maintaining the weapons and certifying
they will work as designed without testing.

"We already spend more today just to maintain the existing stockpile than we did on design and
production during the Cold War," said Stephen Schwartz, publisher of the Bulletin of the Atomic
Scientists. "That will only go higher if we restart things, as they are planning."

Some of the proposals may set dangerous precedents, say arms experts.

Kenneth Bergeron, a former nuclear scientist at the Sandia National Laboratory, warned in a
recent book, "Tritium on Ice: The Dangerous New Alliance of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear
Power," that the decision to develop tritium at the Watts Bar reactor blurs the line between
commercial and military reactors, something the United States has insisted other countries
should not do.

He also disagrees with administration defenders who insist that new production of tritium is
needed to maintain the existing arsenal. Bergeron said he believes enough of the material can be
recycled from retired warheads for the military's purposes.

"The tritium developments are the first tangible action which show a commitment to expanding
the arsenal," said Bergeron. "We're spending money, retraining workers. This is very real. It also
represents an erosion of the restraints put in place at the end of the Cold War."

ORIGINS OF NEW DOCTRINE

The first signs of the administration's new nuclear policy came last January in its Nuclear Posture
Review. The policy paper, produced by the Pentagon, said the United States should not just
maintain the capability to launch large nuclear counterstrikes as a deterrent to nuclear powers,
but should consider possibly striking pre-emptively at those countries developing nuclear,
chemical or biological weapons.

The new doctrine has spurred a contentious debate in Congress, as has administration proposals
to begin design work on a new generation of nuclear "bunker-busters" intended to destroy caches
of prohibited weapons buried deep underground.

The president also has proposed repealing a decade-old law prohibiting the development of
smaller, low-yield weapons. The law was intended to discourage other countries from developing
what are regarded as more "usable" nuclear warheads.

Congressional committees are scheduled to continue debating the proposals next week.

The Senate Armed Services Committee on Thursday approved $15.5 million for research into the
bunker-busters, officially called the Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator. It set aside an additional $6
million for research into advanced nuclear concepts, and approved a repeal of the 10-year-old ban
on the development of low-yield warheads. Democrats say there is little hope of halting the
initiatives.

But there has been virtually no discussion of the far more costly proposals to rebuild the weapons
production capability.

Rep. Ellen Tauscher, D-Walnut Creek, while expressing intense opposition to the administration's
new nuclear posture, said she considered the rebuilding of the existing nuclear infrastructure
prudent.

"We need to balance restraint with credibility," she said. "We have said, 'Let's not go out of the
nuclear business.' We need to maintain our capability and not have cold production lines."

Still, the country retains an enormous stockpile of nuclear materials. The figures are now
classified, but in 1999 the Energy Department said there were more than 12,000 plutonium pits in
storage at the Pantex plant, near Amarillo, Texas, said Schwartz of the Bulletin of Atomic
Scientists. In addition, there are nearly 200 tons of highly enriched uranium at the Oak Ridge
Reservation in Tennessee.

The irony, say some analysts, is that for all the money to be spent on reviving the nuclear
weapons complex, the prospect of the weapons actually being employed is slim.

"The reality is there aren't going to be many, if any, opportunities to use them," said Michael
O'Hanlon, a military expert at the Brookings Institution who favors maintaining a powerful arsenal.
"It's still a relatively unusable deterrent of last resort."

NUCLEAR WEAPONS ACROSS THE GLOBE
There are approximately 30,000 nuclear weapons in the world, more than 95 percent of them in
the United States and Russia. Aside from the admitted nuclear powers, a number of countries are
suspected by international arms monitors of having clandestine weapons or pursuing weapons
programs. The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) went into effect in 1970. To date, 187
countries have ratified the NPT, which is monitored by the U.N. International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA).

COUNTRIES WITH CONFIRMED NUCLEAR WEAPONS
The five major nuclear-armed states - the United States, Russia, China, France and Britain - are
permanent members of the U.N. Security Council, and are bound under the NPT not to transfer
nuclear weapons or to help nonnuclear states to obtain them. The other nuclear states, India and
Pakistan, have not signed the NPT. United States: 10,500 nuclear warheads Russia: 20,000
warheads, half of which are deployed China: 400 warheads France: 450 warheads Britain: 185
warheads India: 65 warheads Pakistan: 30-50 warheads

COUNTRIES WITH UNCONFIRMED NUCLEAR WEAPONS
Israel: 100 (projected number) warheads; has not signed NPT. North Korea: 1-2 (projected
number) warheads; announced its withdrawal from NPT in January.

COUNTRIES REPORTED TO BE PURSUING DEVELOPMENT OF NUCLEAR PROGRAMS
Algeria, Syria: Suspected intentions to produce nuclear weapons, but no nuclear weapons
programs have been identified. Iran, Libya: Suspected of undertaking nuclear weapons programs
since the early 1970s, but status of programs difficult to determine. Iraq: Nuclear weapons
program started in the early 1970s, but was effectively halted in 1991 by Security
Council-mandated inspections. After inspections ended in late 1998, it was suspected of
resuming its quest for nuclear weapons, but U.S. troops have found no evidence to date in their
post- war searches.

COUNTRIES THAT HAVE DISBANDED NUCLEAR WEAPONS PROGRAMS
Belarus, Ukraine, Kazakhstan: Inherited nuclear weapons at the breakup of the Soviet Union, but
returned the weapons to Russia and signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty as a nonnuclear
weapons state. Argentina: Admitted only that it conducted unsafeguarded uranium enrichment
and reprocessing. Australia, Egypt: Ended their programs before they signed the NPT. Brazil,
South Korea, Switzerland: Ended their programs before 1970. Romania: Former Warsaw Pact
country once had a plutonium-separation program. South Africa: Abandoned its program before it
signed the NPT in 1991, but maintains stockpiles of plutonium and highly enriched uranium under
IAEA safeguards. Spain: May have had an unacknowledged nuclear weapons program under the
previous military dictatorship. Sweden: Had a program that was essentially ended by the time it
signed the NPT. Taiwan: Ended its program after 1970. Yugoslavia: The former communist
government had a program that was ended after 1970.

Sources: Nuclear Threat Initiative; Center for Defense Information; Monterey Institute for
International Studies; Robert Norris and William Arkin, "Global Nuclear Stockpiles, 1945-2000";
Institute for Science and International Security; Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, March/April
2000; BBC News; additional research by Chronicle librarian Lois Jermyn

CC