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


To: LindyBill who wrote (21978)12/29/2003 2:04:20 AM
From: Nadine Carroll  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 793575
 
debka says that Mush owes his life to a couple of American and Israeli gizmos:

Assassinations Integral to al Qaeda’s Terror Agenda

DEBKAfile Updates DEBKA-Net-Weekly 139

December 28, 2003, 7:47 PM (GMT+02:00)

Al Qaeda’s determined assassination attempts on Pakistani president Pervez Musharraf on December 14 and again on the 25th bring to mind an ominous sequence that preceded the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 on New York and Washington. Two days earlier, on September 9, al Qaeda assassins murdered Ahmad Shah Massoud, semi-legendary leader of the Northern Alliance in Afghanistan. Osama bin Laden and his chief lieutenant, Dr Ayman Zawahiri, sent a group of suicide bombers to pose as journalists and kill Massoud while pretending to interview him. A bomb hidden in either a belt or a television camera detonated and killed the opposition leader, famous for his role in the campaign to drive the Red Army out of the country in the late 1980s and with a good chance of ousting the Taliban-al Qaeda regime.

To subscribe to DEBKA-Net-Weekly click HERE .

The Afghan hero’s assassination turned out to have been a pre-emptive tactic of al Qaeda’s for wiping out America’s chief ally in Afghanistan and so undercutting the Bush administration’s retaliatory resources in advance of its horrendous airborne suicide strikes in the United States.

In December 2003, Osama bin Laden looked as though he was repeating his pre-9/11 ploy against President Musharraf – except that this time, he did not pull it off. Western nations under threat fortified themselves with preventive measures to fend off a major terror strike in the holiday season, while at the same time forearming the Pakistani president with the latest protective gadgetry. This episode has important applications also for Israel’s defenses against terror.

Sunday, December 28, Pakistani information minister, Sheikh Rasheed Ahmed, identified two of the suicide bombers who failed to murder Musharraf as belonging to Kashmiri and Afghan militant groups – the little known Kashmiri Al Jehad and Pakistan’s North Western Frontier Province which borders on Afghanistan.

DEBKAfile’s counter-terror experts doubt whether either has the sophistication or inside foothold for mounting the latest attempts on the Pakistani ruler.

The ever-present menace facing pro-American world leaders is exacerbated by the advances made by the Osama bin Laden’s international network in the penetration of certain countries’ security and intelligence services. Where does al Qaeda get its deep intelligence on the innermost security and secrets of its targets? This question has never been satisfactorily answered since 9/11. The capability stood out starkly in both attacks on the Pakistani ruler. The FBI has therefore seen fit to join the Musharraf investigation so as to draw lessons applicable for the protection of other world leaders, as well as establishing which of the newly developed high-tech gadgets worked best for saving the Pakistani leader’s life.

As reported in DEBKA-Net-Weekly 139 of Dec. 27, it is a realistic possibility that al Qaeda’s repeated targeting of Musharraf is part of a larger plan to eliminate pro-Western Arab and Muslim rulers. The Pakistani president was lucky till now, but King Muhammad VI of Morocco and Prince Abdullah of Saudi Arabia are also thought to be imminent targets as linchpins of America’s global war on terror. Al Qaeda appears to believe that by knocking over key US props within the Arab and Muslim world, it will undermine America’s strategic standing universally.

On December 14, Musharref was driving back to his residence at The Army House from a formal reception in honor of Indonesian president Megawati Sukarnoputri after they had signed a pact to cooperate in the war against terror. The route taken by his motorcade was fixed moments before its departure and was known to no more than three to five trusted security officers. They would have relayed the route to the security forces protecting the president.

To guard against leaks to potential assassins, two or three motorcades routinely set off for the presidential residence along different routes. Two are decoys, one is real. Musharref himself picks the one that will carry him and his personal party home just before he steps into the presidential limousine.

So how did al Qaeda know which motorcade to target?

Their operatives planted two smart bombs, each packed with 275 kgs of explosives and fitted with both a remote control and a timing device to trigger it, under the very bridge crossed by the real motorcade and detonated it at the very moment it passed.

Although they had the right motorcade, the attempt failed.

Musharref himself reported in a Pakistani television-PTV interview after the failed attack that he had heard and felt the blast between 30 seconds and a minute after he crossed the bridge. His bodyguards described a 30-second pause between crossing and blast.

Minute variations in time span are significant, according to DEBKA-Net-Weekly’s counter-terror sources. The Pakistani president’s armor-plated limousine was fitted with high-tech jamming devices that stopped the timer for about a minute and also jammed the remote control. It was enough to let Musharraf cross the bridge safely.

Our sources report that the secret services of the United States, Russia and Israel have developed these devices to protect their leaders and for the use of special forces operating under cover or agents on special assignments.

The gadget in the Pakistani president’s car was supplied by the CIA. Like others of its kind it is not perfect. It cannot detect pulses sent by remote control mechanisms or bomb timers. But it worked perfectly in the first attack on Musharref and saved his life.

In the second attempt, al Qaeda demonstrated that its intelligence penetration of the Pakistani ruler’s inner circle and SIS intelligence was deeper than thought. They hit on a novel method of beating the jamming gear in his car. Instead of bombs and roadside devices, they used two pickup trucks packed with explosives and driven by two suicide killers with bomb-belts strapped to their bodies. To make absolutely sure of getting their victim, they parked the two trucks outside two gas stations fairly close together. The second was timed to detonate during the minute that the first was delayed. Al Qaeda therefore knew about the delaying device which aborted the first assassination attempt. The killers were also supplied with bomb belts. If the truck-bombs failed to explode, the drivers would ram them into the presidential motorcade while detonating their personal explosives at one of the gas stations, so creating a double fire ball from which the target had no hope of escaping alive.

However, realizing that al Qaeda was gunning for him and would try again, the Pakistani ruler was prepared. DEBKA-Net-Weekly’s counter-terror sources report that in addition to the American jamming equipment, the president provided himself with a second gadget designed in Israel especially for detonating explosive belts carried by suicidal terrorists. This gadget is still being developed for the American army in Iraq. Instead of stopping a timer to gain one minute for escape, this system detonates the bomb belt on the terrorist’s body.

Israel’s development of this device has been guided by three objectives:

1. To acquire the ability to pre-empt a suicide bomber by detonating his charge before he reaches target, thereby cutting down casualties.

2. Of late, Palestinian terror groups have taken to using advance parties to conceal a would-be suicide killer’s bomb belt at safe drops like mosques or caves, where he picks it up a short time before he sets out for attack. The new system once perfected can be used to detect a suspected terrorist’s hiding place and blow his belt up before he straps it on.

3. Israeli intelligence has received word of a new weapon developed by al Qaeda and the Lebanese Hizballah in partnership: an explosive that is not activated by the bomber but is preset to blow up at a given time regardless of whether he is caught before he strikes. It also acts as back-up for faulty mechanisms. The two terror groups started working on their pre-timed device after the partial miss of the two British bombers, Muhammed Hanif and Omar Sharif, in their attack on a Tel Aviv bar on April 30, 2003. Hanif blew himself up, while Sharif’s bomb-belt was faulty.

The Israeli device is still experimental. It will undergo further testing before it goes into service.
debka.com



To: LindyBill who wrote (21978)12/31/2003 12:37:56 AM
From: Brian Sullivan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793575
 
Here is the Public Teachers approach to gifted and talented students programs in a suburb of Seattle. Quotas, Quotas, Quotas...

Federal Way widens search for gifted kids

By Linda Shaw
Seattle Times staff reporter

Only a handful of students at Lake Grove Elementary used to qualify each spring for the gifted and talented program in the Federal Way School District.

This year, however, the parents of 27 students got calls inviting their children to a new gifted class at the school.

In the name of equity, Federal Way is changing the way it selects students for advanced classes, relying less on tests and more on teacher observations and student work to look harder for students, especially students of color, who have been overlooked before.

The district started the changes in two Federal Way elementary schools this year — Lake Grove and Panther Lake. Next year, the changes will expand to all elementary schools.

If Lake Grove's experience holds elsewhere, Federal Way may soon become one of the few districts in the state where classes for gifted students are as ethnically diverse as their student population as a whole.

Some worry that the changes, which include expanding the definition of gifted to include those with special abilities in art and leadership, may dilute the value of the classes for students who are the most academically advanced. But they also say Federal Way's efforts are laudable and worth watching.

"It sounds like a worthy experiment," said Nancy Robinson, professor emeritus at the University of Washington and former director of the Robinson Center for Young Scholars, which helps highly capable students enter college early.

Until now, Federal Way, like most districts, relied heavily on tests to select students for its Gifted and Talented Education (G.A.T.E.) program. Students who scored the highest in the most subjects usually were the ones to enroll in a full-day program at a handful of schools — about 250 students each year. Another 500 students spent a day, or part of a day, in an enrichment class, said Gwen Knechtel, G.A.T.E. program manager.

Yet, in Federal Way and most districts, white students and sometimes Asian Americans tend to be overrepresented in gifted classes when compared with their numbers in the district as a whole.

In Washington state overall, black students make up about 6 percent of fourth-grade classes, but only 2.6 percent of the fourth-graders in gifted classes are black, according to estimates by the Academic Achievement and Accountability Commission. White students account for 70 percent of the fourth-graders, but 81 percent of fourth-graders in gifted programs are white.

That can give an impression that white students are smarter, said Karen Dickinson, Federal Way's assistant director of curriculum and instruction.

"I don't think that's what we want to be saying ... or anyone should be saying," she said.

Dickinson and others think the tests used to select gifted students tend to favor those from middle- and upper-class backgrounds.

"Whatever it is that causes kids from poor backgrounds not to perform well on tests is obviously what's keeping some of them out of gifted programs," said Joseph Renzulli, director of The National Research Center on the Gifted and Talented in Connecticut.

"Life would be a lot easier and identification would be a lot tidier if we could say, 'Let's look at the test score and see who's gifted,' " he said. "I don't think that's the way it is."

Paul Slocumb, co-author of "Removing the Mask: Giftedness in Poverty," says school districts shouldn't ignore students who score high on tests — but shouldn't stop with testing.

"There are other children who are equally as bright; it just looks a little different," he said. "They're a little harder to find, but they're there."

For the Lake Grove class, students were selected based on a review of scores on district exams, teacher observations and examples of their work. The three areas were weighted equally.

Teachers were trained to look for aptitude beyond the traditional areas of reading, math and writing. The Lake Grove class, for example, includes students with leadership skills, strong verbal abilities and some whom the district calls "gifted underachievers" — talented students who don't always do their work or do only the work that interests them.

The class is 52 percent white and 48 percent minority, compared with 48 percent white and 52 percent minority for the rest of the school.

Many of the students — whites and minorities — say they were surprised to be asked to enroll.

"It's cool that I'm smart," said Shaylee Jackson, 9, who is white. Until this year, she said, "I didn't feel smart."

Karen Mauthe, an articulate 11-year-old with a background that's Native American, Latino and white, said the class changed her whole attitude about school.

Before, she was bored, and when she got bored she'd crumple paper or fail to listen — and get in trouble. When it came to math, she felt dumb.

Now, she says, she's the first one to raise her hand, even during math lessons.

"I feel smarter and better about myself," she said.

Not all the students have excelled academically, said teacher Mindy Thompson, but all are above grade level in at least one area. "We're widening our embrace," she said. "We're gifting them, in my opinion. We're giving them confidence."

The district hopes that confidence will carry into middle and high school and that more minorities will enroll in the most challenging courses.

"We believe that, starting at this level, we can create a cadre of kids able to take advanced-placement classes," said Dickinson, the assistant curriculum director.

"We hope to do this for all children, but you have to start with something very overt and very symbolic."

However laudable Federal Way's goals, however, some wonder if classes for the gifted are the place to pursue them.

Robinson, who has worked in gifted education for decades, says she's always leery of opening gifted classes to those whose strengths aren't academic.

"When a child is artistically gifted, a regular class is not necessarily inappropriate for them because classes are not about art. They're about reading, math and social studies," she said.

The fact that students of color are underrepresented in gifted classes reflects larger societal issues, she said, including "the reality that children are different in the opportunities they've had, and therefore what they're ready for."

"I think we're asking programs for gifted children to solve problems that our society has not been able to manage."

Federal Way knows its program will be challenging for teachers.

Along with changing the G.A.T.E. selection process, the district is expanding its full-day gifted program to all its elementary schools, and each of those classes will include students from grades three, four and five.

Thompson, the Lake Grove teacher, says it's not easy to teach a class whose students have such a wide range of ages and abilities. But it's not impossible.

Rather than teaching to the middle, she says, she teaches to the top, then builds bridges to help other students get to that level. And much of the instruction is tailored to each student.

On a recent morning, a group of fifth-graders sat in a circle in the back, discussing a book they'd all read. Other students worked individually at their desks, including Mauthe, who sang quietly as she looked up definitions of words.

Thompson brought a few students at a time to the front to talk about how to write a summary of a book. After each group, she circled the room, checking to make sure every child was doing something productive.

Federal Way isn't alone in its efforts to diversify its gifted classes. Puyallup, Tacoma, Kent and other school districts also work to ensure that students of color don't get overlooked.

Barbara Maurer, an education consultant who helped start one of Seattle's programs for highly capable students, says all districts are struggling with the ethnic makeup of their gifted programs.

And Federal Way's approach is not the only way to nurture the academic potential of more students. Bellevue, for example, is working to increase the number of minorities in advanced-placement programs by strengthening the curriculum for all students.

But Maurer and others say what Federal Way is doing is exciting and worth watching.

seattletimes.nwsource.com