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To: Elsewhere who wrote (9212)9/24/2003 1:14:58 PM
From: Rollcast...  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793758
 
Reporters See Disconnect in Iraq Coverage

A week after the New York Times' John Burns took the American media to task for not reporting the truth about pre-war Iraq, other correspondents are asking if the current media portrayal of the country is accurate. Time's Brian Bennett says Iraq is not perfect but that Americans "have misperception of what's going on" and MSNBC's Bob Arnot (pictured) wonders "am I in the same country?"...

mediaresearch.org

Three reporters in Iraq see a disconnect between the
bleak media portrayals of Iraq and the better reality. A day after
Democratic Congressman Jim Marshall condemned the media's
excessive negativism in covering Iraq, Time magazine's Brian
Bennett, MSNBC's Bob Arnot and FNC's Molly Henneberg backed him up
on how media reports don't match the improving reality of the
situation, but CNN's Nic Robertson and CBS's Kimberly Dozier
contended it's just as bad as they portray it.

Plus, MSNBC's Keith Olbermann agreed there's a "lack of media
attention about the success stories about what those Americans in
harm's way are accomplishing."

As recounted in the September 23 CyberAlert, in a September 22
op-ed for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, U.S. Representative
Jim Marshall of Georgia, who just returned from a trip to Iraq,
asserted: "I'm afraid the news media are hurting our chances. They
are dwelling upon the mistakes, the ambushes, the soldiers killed,
the wounded....Fair enough. But it is not balancing this bad news
with 'the rest of the story,' the progress made daily, the good
news. The falsely bleak picture weakens our national resolve,
discourages Iraqi cooperation and emboldens our enemy."

For an excerpt of Marshall's piece and link to the full op-ed:
mediaresearch.org

Introducing an interview with Marshall, Tuesday night on his
FNC show Brit Hume recited an e-mail FNC's Molly Henneberg, who
recently returned to Baghdad after a few months, sent to friends
and colleagues earlier in the day (ellipses as in text on screen):
"What a difference three months makes. Yes, there is still
violence here...but oh my goodness...this place feels like a city
again...the city looks/seems so much more alive -- more traffic,
more stores open, more people coming and going, more parties.
Don't get me wrong...there are still a LOT of problems here with
the infrastructure, but this country appears to be getting its act
together."

For a picture and bio of Henneberg:
foxnews.com

Tuesday's USA Today featured a "Media Mix" story by Peter
Johnson about how reporters in Iraq assess coverage. Johnson
relayed how Time magazine's Brian Bennett found that when he
"visited the USA a few weeks ago he realized that, five months
after the U.S. invasion, the Iraq he lives in doesn't mesh with
the bleak picture that friends here are getting from the media."
MSNBC's Bob Arnot told Johnson: "I contrast some of the infectious
enthusiasm I see here with what I see on TV, and I say, 'Oh, my
God, am I in the same country?'"

But, "CNN correspondent Nic Robertson has a much different
take and describes the U.S.-led coalition as tight-lipped. If
anything, he says, the picture is bleaker than reported by the
coalition, and there is widespread resistance to the United States
and its allies." And, "CBS' Kimberly Dozier is increasingly
pessimistic. She has made an effort to find some 'good news'
stories, sensing that her supervisors and viewers are tiring of
'bash the Americans' reports. That said, 'each time you come back
here, it feels more dangerous,' she says."

Maybe one of those distraught supervisors is Dan Rather
himself. Last Friday night, Rather set up a Dozier story on how,
as Rather put it, "ordinary Iraqis are faced with an extraordinary
surge of crime, banditry and thuggery from carjacking and robbery
to kidnaping and murder" resulting "in a population fearful,
frustrated, angry and heavily armed." But after Dozier's dire
piece, Rather conceded that the report he just aired had distorted
the situation: "A reminder that television sometimes has trouble
with perspective, so you may want to note that in some areas of
Iraq, things are peaceful." For details:
mediaresearch.org

For a picture and bio of BBC-veteran Dozier:
cbsnews.com

For a picture and bio of Robertson:
cnn.com

An excerpt from Johnson's September 23 USA Today "Life"
section story:

Is the cup half full or half empty in Iraq?

Just as opinions about the war and its aftermath vary widely,
reporters in Baghdad disagree about what it's like in Iraq these
days.

Although some paint a picture of recovery, with U.S. armed forces
making progress in getting the country going again, others sketch
a bleaker scene, in which bombings, ambushes and looting are the
rule, not the exception.

Reporters agree on this much: Bad news -- not good -- sells.

"It's the nature of the business," Time's Brian Bennett says.
"What gets in the headlines is the American soldier getting shot,
not the American soldiers rebuilding a school or digging a well."

The Baghdad that Bennett sees is a city where gunfire erupts every
night and dozens of Iraqis are reported dead in the morning.
Looting and robberies are common. "There is a mounting terrorist
threat, and the people who want to kill American soldiers are
getting more organized," he says.

But he also sees a city where restaurants are reopening daily,
where women feel increasingly safe going out to shop, where more
police means intersections aren't as clogged as they were this
summer. "My neighbors are nice," he says. "My street is a pretty
quiet place."

When Bennett visited the USA a few weeks ago, he realized that,
five months after the U.S. invasion, the Iraq he lives in doesn't
mesh with the bleak picture that friends here are getting from the
media.

"I'm not saying all is hunky-dory," Bennett says. "But in the
States, people have a misperception of what's going on."

Which is why Bennett plans to pitch a story about the improving
scene in Iraq, where electricity is being restored daily and
people are getting back to work. "There's been a lot of
improvement that I and my colleagues noticed when we came back
here. People in the States just don't see it."

CNN correspondent Nic Robertson has a much different take and
describes the U.S.-led coalition as tight-lipped. If anything, he
says, the picture is bleaker than reported by the coalition, and
there is widespread resistance to the United States and its
allies.

"The coalition tends to brief us only on incidents where soldiers
are wounded," Robertson says. "Many, many incidents (against
coalition forces) go unreported."...

CBS' Kimberly Dozier is increasingly pessimistic. She has made an
effort to find some "good news" stories, sensing that her
supervisors and viewers are tiring of "bash the Americans"
reports.

That said, "each time you come back here, it feels more
dangerous," she says. "We travel everywhere with security. We
refer to our hotel as the 'bat cave' because basically you do not
go outside without a security guy, a four-wheel-drive vehicle and
a planned escape route."...

Though some areas in Iraq are peaceful, others are not. And
because most news organizations have significantly cut back on
staffing in Iraq since the fall of Baghdad, they can't be
everywhere at once.

So if a news organization has reporters traveling with troops that
are attacked, that's the image that is sent back home.

And after any war, "it's usually chaotic for a year or two,"
MSNBC's Bob Arnot says. "I contrast some of the infectious
enthusiasm I see here with what I see on TV, and I say, 'Oh, my
God, am I in the same country?'"...

END of Excerpt

For the USA Today story in full:
usatoday.com

Johnson reported that "Bennett plans to pitch a story about
the improving scene in Iraq." We'll be waiting to see if any such
story ever appears, but it would be a change of pace for Bennett.
His recent stories have been about the hunt for Saddam and the
killing of his two sons, but back in the May 26 issue he was co-
author of a piece titled, "A Journey to the Dark Side of Baghdad:
Two TIME reporters witness victims of the city's chaos firsthand."
It began:
"Baghdad nights are full of menace. The smoke of looted,
burning buildings turns the sunset blood orange. Once darkness
falls, tracer fire arcs across the sky like red fireworks. It's
dazzling but dangerous. One recent salvo came down on a gasoline
tanker, setting off an explosion that killed a man and injured
several others. When the sun goes down, the streets empty quickly.
Curfew unofficially begins at 11 p.m., but few drivers, even those
earning dollars from foreigners, stay out that late. One learns to
fear the shadows that move. Gunfire punches holes in the city's
eerie quiet..."

That's all you get for free on the Time Web site. To pay to
read the whole article:
time.com

On Tuesday night, MSNBC's Keith Olbermann picked up on
Congressman Marshall's op-ed, MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth noticed,
and after disagreeing with Marshall on the derisive impact on the
war effort of negative coverage, Olbermann conceded that he was
"right on the money about the lack of media attention about the
success stories about what those Americans in harm's way are
accomplishing."

On the September 23 Countdown, Olbermann opined:
"A bipartisan group of seven Congressmen, just back from Iraq,
says the U.S. media is guilty of something, if not as
inflammatory, then perhaps as unfair. Democrat Ike Skelton of
Missouri says that in Iraq, the media has adopted a quote, 'crime-
blotter mentality, reporting only the wounds, the injuries, the
deaths and ignoring good stuff that isn't being reported.'
"And in an opinion piece in the Atlanta Journal Constitution,
Georgia Democratic Congressman Jim Marshall writes of escorting
the body of a dead U.S. serviceman home from Iraq and wondering,
quote, 'whether the news media were somehow complicit in his
death. They are dwelling upon the mistakes, the ambushes, the
soldiers killed, the wounded. The falsely bleak picture weakens
our national resolve, discourages Iraqi cooperation, and emboldens
our enemy.' Congressman Marshall does not explain how exactly that
happens. It does not seem to logically hold that the television
you watch here can lead to American deaths there. There's also the
fact that when the President announced the end of major combat
operations, he did not prepare any of us for the awful down sides
of what followed in Iraq.
"Frankly, while what kind of world is created for the Iraqis
is important to most Americans, it cannot possibly rank with
something that is naturally more important still -- the safety of
and the risks facing Americans in Iraq. That's why you're hearing
about those risks rather than the things that are going right.
However, Congressmen Skelton and Marshall are right on the money
about the lack of media attention about the success stories about
what those Americans in harm's way are accomplishing. So here it
is tonight -- not casualty figures, not reporters being defensive,
but good news. Jim Avila is our correspondent in what was once a
part of Baghdad called 'Saddam City.'"

Viewers then saw a look at how things are quiet and peaceful
in the Sadr City area of Baghdad, formerly known as Saddam City --
a story which also aired on the NBC Nightly News.

The Hill newspaper, which covers Congress, on Tuesday ran a
story about the assessment of the situation in Iraq as conveyed by
members of the congressional delegation trip to Iraq which
included Marshall

thehill.com



To: Elsewhere who wrote (9212)9/24/2003 2:30:37 PM
From: MulhollandDrive  Respond to of 793758
 
newsday.com

Virus Hits Federal Visa-Checking System




By TED BRIDIS
AP Technology Writer

September 24, 2003, 1:16 PM EDT

WASHINGTON -- A virus seriously disrupted computer systems at the State Department, including the database for checking every visa applicant for terrorist or criminal history. The outage left the U.S. government unable to issue visas worldwide for nine hours.

Effects of the virus crippled the department's Consular Lookout and Support System, known as CLASS, which contains more than 15 million records from the FBI, the State Department and U.S. immigration, drug-enforcement and intelligence agencies. Among the names are those of at least 78,000 suspected terrorists.

State Department spokesman Stuart Patt said the "Welchia" virus did not affect any data on the name-checking system, and the agency's classified computer network -- used to send its most sensitive messages and files -- was not affected. Service to some consular offices in Asia was restored within 11 hours.

Welchia is an aggressive infection unleashed last month that exploits a software flaw in recent versions of Microsoft Corp.'s Windows software.

"To prevent the worm from spreading to our worldwide network, we closed off the department's intranet unclassified system," Patt said. "The visa name-check is part of that."

Patt said Wednesday that any backlog of applicants waiting to be checked against the system had already cleared. "There will be possibly some people whose visas will be delayed for a few hours or maybe by a day," he said.

In an internal message sent late Tuesday to embassies and consular offices worldwide, officials cautioned that "CLASS is down due to a virus found in the system." There was no backup system immediately available, and officials said they could not predict how long the outage might last.

Hours later, a terse update was sent worldwide: "CLASS is up." A spokeswoman for the U.S. embassy in Seoul, Maureen Cormack, said it was a "short outage" and "not a major problem." She said interviews for visa applicants continued during the outage but decisions were delayed until the system was back up.

The State Department issues roughly 7 million visas annually, Patt said. Every applicant is checked against the names in the CLASS database, and the department's automated systems are designed to not even print a visa until such a check is completed.

"No terrorist is going to take advantage of this nine-hour lapse to somehow gain access to the United States, but it does complicate our ability to be effective and efficient," said Roger Cressey, a former White House cybersecurity adviser. "This is a warning -- someone looking to launch an attack with a malicious payload against the State Department could have had much more consequence."

Collectively, Welchia and a related virus, "Blaster," have infected hundreds of thousands of computers worldwide, including computers at the Federal Reserve in Atlanta, Maryland's motor vehicle agency and the Minnesota Transportation Department.

The State Department has invested heavily in the CLASS system since the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, more than doubling the number of names that applicants are checked against. One provision of the Patriot Act, passed just weeks after the attacks, added FBI records, including the bureau's violent gang and terrorist database. The list also includes the names of at least 20,000 people accused of serious Customs violations and the names of 78,000 suspected terrorists.

The disruption came one day before a technology trade group, the Computer and Communications Industry Association, published a report by seven experts complaining that the U.S. government relies too heavily on software from Microsoft.

These experts contend the widespread dominance of Windows has created an unhealthy "monoculture" inadequately resistant to viruses and attacks by hackers. The CCIA has lobbied aggressively in the United States and Europe for tough antitrust sanctions against Microsoft. Its largest members include Microsoft's biggest rivals, including Sun Microsystems Inc. and Oracle Corp.

"Having more than one operating system running inside your enterprise or government structure would be an improvement," said Perry Metzger, a managing partner of Metzger, Dowdeswell & Co. LLC, a New York-based consulting firm. "It's hardly the only thing that needs to be done, but it's one thing that should be done."



To: Elsewhere who wrote (9212)9/25/2003 7:16:24 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793758
 
Here is another article in "Tech Central Station" on Terrorism by Miniter. The more I read this guy, the better I like him. He does his homework.
--------------------------------------------------------------------

The Iraq -- Al Qaeda Connections

By Richard Miniter Published 09/25/2003


Every day it seems another American soldier is killed in Iraq. These grim statistics have become a favorite of network news anchors and political chat show hosts. Nevermind that they mix deaths from accidents with actual battlefield casualties; or that the average is actually closer to one American death for every two days; or that enemy deaths far outnumber ours. What matters is the overall impression of mounting, pointless deaths.

That is why is important to remember why we fight in Iraq -- and who we fight. Indeed, many of those sniping at U.S. troops are al Qaeda terrorists operating inside Iraq. And many of bin Laden's men were in Iraq prior to the liberation. A wealth of evidence on the public record -- from government reports and congressional testimony to news accounts from major newspapers -- attests to longstanding ties between bin Laden and Saddam going back to 1994.

Those who try to whitewash Saddam's record don't dispute this evidence; they just ignore it. So let's review the evidence, all of it on the public record for months or years:

* Abdul Rahman Yasin was the only member of the al Qaeda cell that detonated the 1993 World Trade Center bomb to remain at large in the Clinton years. He fled to Iraq. U.S. forces recently discovered a cache of documents in Tikrit, Saddam's hometown, that show that Iraq gave Mr. Yasin both a house and monthly salary.

* Bin Laden met at least eight times with officers of Iraq's Special Security Organization, a secret police agency run by Saddam's son Qusay, and met with officials from Saddam's mukhabarat, its external intelligence service, according to intelligence made public by Secretary of State Colin Powell, who was speaking before the United Nations Security Council on February 6, 2003.

* Sudanese intelligence officials told me that their agents had observed meetings between Iraqi intelligence agents and bin Laden starting in 1994, when bin Laden lived in Khartoum.

* Bin Laden met the director of the Iraqi mukhabarat in 1996 in Khartoum, according to Mr. Powell.

* An al Qaeda operative now held by the U.S. confessed that in the mid-1990s, bin Laden had forged an agreement with Saddam's men to cease all terrorist activities against the Iraqi dictator, Mr. Powell told the United Nations.

* In 1999 the Guardian, a British newspaper, reported that Farouk Hijazi, a senior officer in Iraq's mukhabarat, had journeyed deep into the icy mountains near Kandahar, Afghanistan, in December 1998 to meet with al Qaeda men. Mr. Hijazi is "thought to have offered bin Laden asylum in Iraq," the Guardian reported.

* In October 2000, another Iraqi intelligence operative, Salah Suleiman, was arrested near the Afghan border by Pakistani authorities, according to Jane's Foreign Report, a respected international newsletter. Jane's reported that Suleiman was shuttling between Iraqi intelligence and Ayman al Zawahiri, now al Qaeda's No. 2 man.

(Why are all of those meetings significant? The London Observer reports that FBI investigators cite a captured al Qaeda field manual in Afghanistan, which "emphasizes the value of conducting discussions about pending terrorist attacks face to face, rather than by electronic means.")

* As recently as 2001, Iraq's embassy in Pakistan was used as a "liaison" between the Iraqi dictator and al Qaeda, Mr. Powell told the United Nations.

* Spanish investigators have uncovered documents seized from Yusuf Galan -- who is charged by a Spanish court with being "directly involved with the preparation and planning" of the Sept. 11 attacks -- that show the terrorist was invited to a party at the Iraqi embassy in Madrid. The invitation used his "al Qaeda nom de guerre," London's Independent reports.

* An Iraqi defector to Turkey, known by his cover name as "Abu Mohammed," told Gwynne Roberts of the Sunday Times of London that he saw bin Laden's fighters in camps in Iraq in 1997. At the time, Mohammed was a colonel in Saddam's Fedayeen. He described an encounter at Salman Pak, the training facility southeast of Baghdad. At that vast compound run by Iraqi intelligence, Muslim militants trained to hijack planes with knives -- on a full-size Boeing 707. Col. Mohammed recalls his first visit to Salman Pak this way: "We were met by Colonel Jamil Kamil, the camp manager, and Major Ali Hawas. I noticed that a lot of people were queuing for food. (The major) said to me: 'You'll have nothing to do with these people. They are Osama bin Laden's group and the PKK and Mojahedin-e Khalq.'"

* In 1998, Abbas al-Janabi, a longtime aide to Saddam's son Uday, defected to the West. At the time, he repeatedly told reporters that there was a direct connection between Iraq and al Qaeda.

*The Sunday Times found a Saddam loyalist in a Kurdish prison who claims to have been Dr. Zawahiri's bodyguard during his 1992 visit with Saddam in Baghdad. Dr. Zawahiri was a close associate of bin Laden at the time and was present at the founding of al Qaeda in 1989.

* Following the defeat of the Taliban, almost two dozen bin Laden associates "converged on Baghdad and established a base of operations there," Mr. Powell told the United Nations in February 2003. From their Baghdad base, the secretary said, they supervised the movement of men, materiel and money for al Qaeda's global network.

* In 2001, an al Qaeda member "bragged that the situation in Iraq was 'good,'" according to intelligence made public by Mr. Powell.

* That same year, Saudi Arabian border guards arrested two al Qaeda members entering the kingdom from Iraq.

* Abu Musaab al-Zarqawi oversaw an al Qaeda training camp in Afghanistan, Mr. Powell told the United Nations. His specialty was poisons. Wounded in fighting with U.S. forces, he sought medical treatment in Baghdad in May 2002. When Zarqawi recovered, he restarted a training camp in northern Iraq. Zarqawi's Iraq cell was later tied to the October 2002 murder of Lawrence Foley, an official of the U.S. Agency for International Development, in Amman, Jordan. The captured assassin confessed that he received orders and funds from Zarqawi's cell in Iraq, Mr. Powell said. His accomplice escaped to Iraq.

*Zarqawi met with military chief of al Qaeda, Mohammed Ibrahim Makwai (aka Saif al-Adel) in Iran in February 2003, according to intelligence sources cited by the Washington Post.

* Mohammad Atef, the head of al Qaeda's military wing until the U.S. killed him in Afghanistan in November 2001, told a senior al Qaeda member now in U.S. custody that the terror network needed labs outside of Afghanistan to manufacture chemical weapons, Mr. Powell said. "Where did they go, where did they look?" said the secretary. "They went to Iraq."

* Abu Abdullah al-Iraqi was sent to Iraq by bin Laden to purchase poison gases several times between 1997 and 2000. He called his relationship with Saddam's regime "successful," Mr. Powell told the United Nations.

* Mohamed Mansour Shahab, a smuggler hired by Iraq to transport weapons to bin Laden in Afghanistan, was arrested by anti-Hussein Kurdish forces in May, 2000. He later told his story to American intelligence and a reporter for the New Yorker magazine.

* Documents found among the debris of the Iraqi Intelligence Center show that Baghdad funded the Allied Democratic Forces, a Ugandan terror group led by an Islamist cleric linked to bin Laden. According to a London's Daily Telegraph, the organization offered to recruit "youth to train for the jihad" at a "headquarters for international holy warrior network" to be established in Baghdad.

* Mullah Melan Krekar, ran a terror group (the Ansar al-Islam) linked to both bin Laden and Saddam Hussein. Mr. Krekar admitted to a Kurdish newspaper that he met bin Laden in Afghanistan and other senior al Qaeda officials. His acknowledged meetings with bin Laden go back to 1988. When he organized Ansar al Islam in 2001 to conduct suicide attacks on Americans, "three bin Laden operatives showed up with a gift of $300,000 'to undertake jihad,'" Newsday reported. Mr. Krekar is now in custody in the Netherlands. His group operated in portion of northern Iraq loyal to Saddam Hussein -- and attacked independent Kurdish groups hostile to Saddam. A spokesman for the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan told a United Press International correspondent that Mr. Krekar's group was funded by "Saddam Hussein's regime in Baghdad."

* After October 2001, hundreds of al Qaeda fighters are believed to have holed up in the Ansar al-Islam's strongholds inside northern Iraq.

Some skeptics dismiss the emerging evidence of a longstanding link between Iraq and al Qaeda by contending that Saddam ran a secular dictatorship hated by Islamists like bin Laden.

In fact, there are plenty of "Stalin-Roosevelt" partnerships between international terrorists and Muslim dictators. Saddam and bin Laden had common enemies, common purposes and interlocking needs. They shared a powerful hate for America and the Saudi royal family. They both saw the Gulf War as a turning point. Saddam suffered a crushing defeat which he had repeatedly vowed to avenge. Bin Laden regards the U.S. as guilty of war crimes against Iraqis and believes that non-Muslims shouldn't have military bases on the holy sands of Arabia. Al Qaeda's avowed goal for the past ten years has been the removal of American forces from Saudi Arabia, where they stood in harm's way solely to contain Saddam.

The most compelling reason for bin Laden to work with Saddam is money. Al Qaeda operatives have testified in federal courts that the terror network was always desperate for cash. Senior employees fought bitterly about the $100 difference in pay between Egyptian and Saudis (the Egyptians made more). One al Qaeda member, who was connected to the 1998 embassy bombings, told a U.S. federal court how bitter he was that bin Laden could not pay for his pregnant wife to see a doctor.

Bin Laden's personal wealth alone simply is not enough to support a profligate global organization. Besides, bin Laden's fortune is probably not as large as some imagine. Informed estimates put bin Laden's pre-Sept. 11, 2001 wealth at perhaps $30 million. $30 million is the budget of a small school district, not a global terror conglomerate. Meanwhile, Forbes estimated Saddam's personal fortune at $2 billion.

So a common enemy, a shared goal and powerful need for cash seem to have forged an alliance between Saddam and bin Laden. CIA Director George Tenet recently told the Senate Intelligence Committee: "Iraq has in the past provided training in document forgery and bomb making to al Qaeda. It also provided training in poisons and gasses to two al Qaeda associates; one of these [al Qaeda] associates characterized the relationship as successful. Mr. Chairman, this information is based on a solid foundation of intelligence. It comes to us from credible and reliable sources. Much of it is corroborated by multiple sources."

The Iraqis, who had the Third World's largest poison-gas operations prior to the Gulf War I, have perfected the technique of making hydrogen-cyanide gas, which the Nazis called Zyklon-B. In the hands of al Qaeda, this would be a fearsome weapon in an enclosed space -- like a suburban mall or subway station.

Mr. Miniter is a senior fellow at the Center for the New Europe and author of "Losing bin Laden: How Bill Clinton's Failures Unleashed Global Terror" (Regnery) which is now on the New York Times' bestseller list.

Copyright © 2003 Tech Central Station - www.techcentralstation.com