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: Hoa Hao who wrote (23601)1/9/2004 8:05:44 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793634
 
Another thing that really impressed me was that President Bush called their CO the next day. The fact that that type of info gets to the Prez that fast combined with his willingness to take a few minutes to express his sympathy is outstanding.



To: Hoa Hao who wrote (23601)1/9/2004 8:09:44 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793634
 
The article does not specifically mention it, but this is the type of "creatures of the night" raid we are really getting good at. We go in with night vision, quickly and quietly. The Iraqis are stunned by the "magic." You notice they are using Bradleys, which are noisy. When they start doing this with Stryker vehicles, it will really be quiet.


U.S. Troops Swoops on Tikrit in Iraqi 'Cleanup' Raid
Thu Jan 8,11:23 PM ET
By Robin Pomeroy

TIKRIT (Reuters) - U.S. troops in Iraq (news - web sites) raided houses and shops across Tikrit late Thursday in an operation aimed at weeding out remaining resistance in the home town of former President Saddam Hussein (news - web sites).



Some 300 soldiers from the army's 4th Infantry Division burst into targeted properties across the town and detained 13 people suspected of involvement in attacks on forces occupying Iraq, their commanding officer said.

"It was a good night," Lieutenant Colonel Steven Russell told reporters after the raids, which lasted for most of the hours of curfew in town between 11 p.m. and 4 a.m. "Tikrit will be a safer place tomorrow as a result."

The operation, targeting 20 houses and three shops, failed to catch five of the people included on a list of 18 suspects the army drew up on the basis of intelligence from Iraqi sources.

Using tank-like Bradley vehicles to seal off roads, and support from military aircraft, troops barged into houses to search for suspects and for weapons and other incriminating material.

Aside from a few AK 47 assault rifles, common in Iraq and not banned even under the U.S.-led occupation, the soldiers found no arms caches.

They did discover in one property several wireless doorbell sets, items often used to detonate home-made bombs which Iraqi insurgents have used to lethal effect against military vehicles.

In another house, soldiers discovered a stack of fake Iraqi police identity cards and computer equipment which had apparently been used to make them.

Suspects were hauled out of their houses, blindfolded and had their hands cuffed behind their backs with plastic bindings.

Most sat shivering in the chilly damp air while soldiers examined their identity papers.

One suspect managed to break free of his handcuffs and was quickly subdued by two infantrymen who pushed his head down into the pavement. They pulled from his hand a spiked knuckle duster, seen by reporters, which he had apparently taken from his pocket.

Russell, whose battalion is due soon to pull out of Iraq along with the rest of the division which controls a large chunk of northern Iraq, said earlier the raids were a "scrubbing" exercise for Tikrit.

"We're trying to get out the last remaining resistance in the city," he said, while conceding sporadic gun and bomb attacks against U.S. forced in the area were likely to continue.

news.yahoo.com



To: Hoa Hao who wrote (23601)1/12/2004 11:44:03 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793634
 
I think there would be a general Bush Administration sigh of satisfaction if South America broke loose at our border and drifted off to another Hemisphere.

January 12, 2004 - New York Times
Expectations Are Low for Progress at Americas Summit
By TIM WEINER
and ELISABETH BUMILLER

MONTERREY, Mexico, Jan. 12 - President Bush and 33 elected leaders of the Americas will meet here today without a common vision for the future of the Western Hemisphere.

Mr. Bush is scheduled to leave this morning for the meeting from Waco, Texas, near his ranch at Crawford, and meet with President Vicente Fox of Mexico. The two are expected to discuss immigration, border security and trade.

At midday Mr. Bush and Mr. Fox will hold a news conference, and Mr. Bush will then speak at the meeting's inauguration ceremony and meet with Presidents Ricardo Lagos of Chile and Luiz InÀacio Lula da Silva of Brazil. On Tuesday Mr. Bush is to meet with the new prime minister of Canada, Paul Martin, and with Presidents Nestor Kirchner of Argentina and Carlos Mesa of Bolivia.

Expectations for great progress at the summit meeting are low and friction on important proposals is high. The leaders of Brazil and Argentina do not see eye to eye with Mr. Bush on his free-trade agenda. President Vicente Fox of Mexico will press him to do more for migrants than his proposition of temporary work permits.

The national security needs of the United States are being viewed by some leaders as imperious demands on their sovereignty. American agricultural subsidies are seen by some as crushing small peasant farmers and stifling competition.

Government ministers from the 34 nations at this Summit of the Americas, who have met here since Thursday, had not even agreed on a common declaration to be issued by their leaders. An American official here said there were only ``possibilities at the margins'' for the United States' agenda of advancing trade, security and migration control.

``There's a tremendous amount of discontent in Latin America with the United States,'' said Arturo Valenzuela, a former senior National Security Council staff member.

At the top of the political agenda for Mr. Bush in Mexico is his proposal to control illegal immigration by offering temporary work permits. Since more than half of the illegal workers in the United States are Mexicans, he is seeking strong support from President Fox, who says he likes the idea but wants more from Congress.

``I'm convinced it will pass,'' Mr. Fox said in an interview with The New York Times on Friday, ``because it's very convenient for the United States'' to know both the legal identities and the labor value of illegal workers.

Mr. Fox also said Friday that he would ``travel to the United States as often as possible'' promoting the best possible deal for Mexican migrants.

``They are working in restaurants, they are picking mushrooms, they are harvesting broccoli, working in McDonald's, working at Wal-Mart,'' he said of millions of illegal Mexican migrants. They should have the right, he said, to be ``documented and legal,'' and to ``go and work, return home and see their family, return and work. That's the idea, the idea that we want to endorse.''

The proposal's political chances for passage depend in part on the perception of Mexico in the United States. Mr. Fox needs to discourage illegal immigration and, in particular, to continue cooperating with American officials in keeping a vigilant counterterrorism watch at Mexico's airports and borders, a United States official here said.

The United States ``is very happy with the level of cooperation'' on counterterrorism from Mexico, the American ambassador, Tony Garza, said in an interview. ``The level of cooperation is light-years ahead of where it was even a year or two ago.''

Not so with other nations. Some of the discontent at the meeting seems to rise from the ``either you're with us, or you're with the terrorists'' pronouncements made by the United States after the September 2001 attacks. An example is Brazil's decision to fingerprint and photograph Americans arriving at airports, mirroring what the United States is now doing to many foreigners.

Some unhappiness comes from a sense that everything south from the Texas border to Tierra del Fuego fell off the United States' radar after the attacks. ``I think that there's a perception or a line of argument out there that somehow after 9/11 the United States lost interest in anything that didn't relate to terrorism and 9/11,'' said Condoleezza Rice, the president's national security adviser, in a briefing to reporters in Washington on Friday. ``It's just not true.''

More friction comes from a splintering of the so-called Washington consensus of the 1990's, which held in part that free trade could drive democracy forward and promote good government. ``President Bush will have an opportunity to remind his fellow leaders of the benefit of free and open markets and open societies, and the importance of transparent elections,'' Ms. Rice said.

This will be the fourth Summit of the Americas since 1994. Every nation in the hemisphere except Cuba takes part. Many ``are grappling with persistent political, economic, social and, in some cases, ethnic problems,'' said Roger Noriega, the assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs.

Economic growth in many nations from Mexico southward is too slow to generate enough jobs or ease poverty, he said in a speech on Jan. 7 about the summit meeting. In many countries, corrupt or incompetent governments have ``stunted economic development and spawned disenchantment with the label `free market reforms,''' he said.

``Many of their people are weary of waiting for their lives to get better and for their futures to be brighter,'' Mr. Noriega said. ``Soaring rhetoric is not going to meet their down-to-earth demands for concrete action and tangible results.''

Mr. Bush and Mr. Martin of Canada are certain to discuss why Canada, because of its opposition to the Iraq war, is ineligible to compete for billions of dollars in American-financed Iraq reconstruction projects, officials said. Mr. Kirchner may respond to criticism from the Bush administration over Argentina's less than chilly relations with Cuba.

Mr. Bush will not see President Hugo ChÀavez of Venezuela. The United States believes that Mr. ChÀavez may be working in concert with Fidel Castro of Cuba to undermine governments friendly to the United States, including those in Uruguay, Ecuador and possibly Bolivia.

Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company