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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: unclewest who wrote (9359)9/25/2003 6:34:29 AM
From: KonKilo  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 793757
 
Iraqi Governing Council member dies; blast in Baghdad hotel housing US press

BAGHDAD (AFP) - Iraqi female Governing Council member Akila al-Hashimi died from wounds sustained in an earlier assassination bid, as a bomb blast at a central Baghdad hotel housing US television staff killed a maintenance worker.
 
And in the northern city of Mosul, witnesses said a US military vehicle was hit with an explosion, leaving at least four American soldiers badly wounded.

The latest bloodshed overshadowed heightened diplomatic efforts at the United Nations (news - web sites) to seek a common stance on rebuilding post-war Iraq (news - web sites), which has been crippled by one deadly bomb blast after the other.

Hashimi was ambushed by gunmen who lobbed a bomb and sprayed her two-car convoy with machine-gun fire Saturday in the first such attack on an Iraqi official of the US-installed administration.

She underwent two stomach operations and was taken to a US medical facility, but her condition had gradually deteriorated.

"Today the people of Iraq have lost a champion and pioneer of freedom and democracy," US civilian administrator Paul Bremer said in a statement.

Thursday's bomb blast at a hotel housing staff from the US television network NBC killed a Somali maintenance worker in what Iraqi police said was the first such attack aimed at foreign journalists.

Witnesses said two other people, including an NBC soundman, were wounded by the explosive device placed by a generator on the sidewalk outside the Aike hotel, on the corner of al-Hindi street, a main thoroughfare in the capital.

Soundman David Moodie, 44, a Canadian, had a cut on his arm from the blast, and said no other staffer of the network was hurt.

The bombing was the third in a week in Baghdad following Monday's second attack on the UN headquarters, which killed an Iraqi securityman, and a roadside bomb Wednesday that hit a commuter bus, killing an Iraqi civilian.

In Mosul, about 10 witnesses reported seeing the bodies of four US soldiers after their military vehicle was hit with an explosion then ambushed.

But there was no confirmation of their deaths on a main road in front of the telecommunications center and the US military said it had no report of the blast.

On Wednesday, US troops were blamed for two incidents of violence in which two Iraqis were killed and at least three injured.

Meanwhile, US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said the nation-building effort in Iraq is on track to becoming "a model for a successful transition from tyranny to democracy."

Rumsfeld predicted that the much maligned post-war plan for Iraq would turn out as well as the April war that toppled Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein (news - web sites), which at the start seemed a failure.

"It will take longer than 21 days, but I believe that the plan to win the peace in Iraq will succeed -- just as the plan to win the war succeeded," he said in a letter published in The Washington Post.

But as an already fragile Iraqi security situation continued to deteriorate, France, Germany and Russia, promised a "constructive" approach to US efforts to enlist international help to rebuild the war-ravaged country.

Interactive:
Downtown Baghdad

 

Leaders of the three countries spearheaded opposition to the war on Iraq, which US President George W. Bush (news - web sites) had defended before a sceptical audience of world leaders at the United Nations on Tuesday.

Franch President Jacques Chirac acknowledged common ground on how to approach the question of a US resolution that seeks a UN mandate for multinational troops in Iraq.

"Naturally we talked about the preparation of the resolution on Iraq which is due soon at the Security Council," he said. "We have concluded that we would like to go about this preparation in a positive and constructive spirit."

German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, who met with Bush Wednesday, ending their year-long rift, later said his country's support for a US-backed resolution was not a given, and Berlin may abstain if its conditions are not met.

A chief foreign policy advisor to Russian President Vladimir Putin (news - web sites) stressed that the three nations were not seeking to counter the United States.

"These contacts are in no way directed against those leaders who have not been invited" to the three-way talks, Sergei Prikhodko said.

Viewing the moves as the start of a thaw between the trio and Washington over the war, diplomats nonetheless said they were waiting to see tangible support for a US-backed Security Council resolution.

China, another Security Council permanent member with power of veto, meanwhile, called on the United Nations to play a greater role in Iraq.

Meanwhile the vexed question of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction continued to haunt coalition leaders, as the BBC reported that US and British arms inspectors will report next month that none have been found.

The Iraq Survey Group, a 1,400-strong Anglo-American team, will report that not even "minute" amounts of nuclear, chemical or biological weapons material have been unearthed, BBC television said, quoting an unnamed US government source.

In the United States, the Central Intelligence Agency (news - web sites) said an interim report by former weapons inspector David Kay was not expected to reach any firm conclusions or rule anything in or out.

Australian Prime Minister John Howard, whose country supported the war, said he still believes evidence will emerge of a WMD programme in Iraq.

Iraq's refusal to give up its alleged weapons of mass destruction was cited by London and Washington as a main reason for going to war on Saddam Hussein's regime in March.

Also in London, the inquiry into the suicide of government scientist David Kelly, at the centre of claims that Britain embellished its case for war, wraps up Thursday after 22 days of testimony from 74 witnesses, including British Prime Minister Tony Blair (news - web sites) and Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon.

story.news.yahoo.com



To: unclewest who wrote (9359)9/25/2003 7:55:02 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793757
 
Say what you will of the "Washington Times," they have excellent sources at the DOD. Nobody better.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Guantanamo espionage probe grows
By Bill Gertz
Published September 25, 2003

Defense and intelligence officials expect to make more arrests in the expanding espionage probe at the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and are investigating a third serviceman who they suspect provided Syria information about terror suspects being detained there.
The officials said yesterday the third serviceman is a sailor, who has not been identified or arrested. The probe has already led to espionage charges against an Air Force translator and an Islamic Army chaplain at the base.
One intelligence official said the compromise of information to Syrian intelligence is likely, but that there are no signs of a connection between Syrian intelligence and al Qaeda in the case.
"We don't presume that the two [suspects] we know about is all there is to it," Marine Corps Gen. Peter Pace, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters at a breakfast.
"But just by virtue of the fact that we have a potential spy problem, it makes you go back and relook at the way you do business and make modifications. And that's a healthy thing."
Senior Airman Ahmad al Halabi, an Air Force Arabic translator, and Capt. James J. Yee, an Islamic Army chaplain, have been charged with espionage and aiding the enemy. Airman al Halabi was arrested in July, and his case was kept secret until the arrest of Capt. Yee was disclosed Saturday in The Washington Times.
Capt. Yee, who ministered to more than 600 Taliban and al Qaeda terror suspects at Guantanamo, was arrested Sept. 10. Investigators are looking into whether the two servicemen were working together as part of an espionage ring.
Airman al Halabi is a native of Syria and is engaged to a Syrian woman, while Capt. Yee learned Arabic and studied Islam in Syria. The most serious charges against both servicemen carry the death sentence.
The airman denies the charges, said his attorney, Air Force Maj. James Key III. "[His relatives] are shocked at the allegations he may have done something contrary to the United States' interests," Maj. Key said.
In Damascus, Syrian Information Minister Ahmed al-Hassan rejected the accusations of Syrian espionage. Mr. al-Hassan told reporters he knew little about the arrest of Airman al Halabi, but based on reports said, "How could Syria have a spy in Guantanamo?"
"Any allegations that al Halabi has any kind of connection with Syria are baseless," Mr. al-Hassan said.
Syria is on the State Department's list of state sponsors of terrorism, and its government has supported Palestinian terrorists and Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed terrorist group. The CIA recently established a relationship with Syrian intelligence.
The espionage case has raised questions among some intelligence officials as to whether the CIA is being compromised by its Syrian connections.
One official said the CIA was behind recent efforts within the Bush administration to delay the congressional testimony of John Bolton, the undersecretary of state for arms control. Mr. Bolton testified on any Syrian efforts to create missiles and weapons of mass destruction.
"The CIA's liaison with Syria has skewed U.S. policy in favor of Damascus," the official said. "Just as there are pro-China analysts in the CIA, there are pro-Syrian officials as well."
A second intelligence official defended the liaison.
"We work with all manner of intelligence services in the war on terror and try to enlist the efforts of a lot of people," this official said. "That doesn't mean those countries have given up what they see as their own interests."
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld declined to comment on the case yesterday but said screening procedures can break down.
"Well, clearly, throughout the history of mankind there have always been individuals who have gotten through screens and done bad things," he said, noting that "history can repeat itself."
Airman al Halabi is accused of spying for Syria between Dec. 20, 2002, and July 23, 2003. An Air Force charging document in the case states that he "did ... knowingly give intelligence to the enemy by posting through an unsecured Internet system several e-mails. ..."
Investigators believe Airman al Halabi, 24, sent e-mails containing sensitive information about the prisoners held at Guantanamo to Syrian intelligence. The charging document said there is "reason to believe that it would be used to the injury of the United States or to the advantage of Syria."
The information was related to "intelligence gathering" and "planning for the war against terrorists" and was passed to "a citizen of a foreign government by carrying such notes en route to Syria," the document stated.
On Capitol Hill, meanwhile, Gen. Richard B. Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said security procedures at Guantanamo Bay were being reviewed.
"Any time you have allegations like this, you always look at your procedure and process," Gen. Myers told reporters.
Sen. Charles E. Schumer, New York Democrat, called developments "two remarkable security breaches" and called for a "top-to-bottom review of security" at military installations.
At a press conference, Mr. Schumer said, "This has not been a good week in the war on terror."
Airman al Halabi is being held at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Capt. Yee is being held at a military brig in Charleston, S.C.
washtimes.com



To: unclewest who wrote (9359)9/25/2003 9:27:30 AM
From: JohnM  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793757
 
Demos want the government to respond to and solve their problems.

Repos want the freedom to solve their own.


I'm not at all clear what "Demos" and "Repos" want. However, what I would prefer is a government that's not bought by large campaign contributors, which has been increasingly the case since at least the late 60s. And I would prefer an electorate that votes in large numbers, let's say 80% turn out numbers. I consider the two connected and the source of just about every other problem with the federal government.