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: Nadine Carroll who wrote (24129)1/13/2004 12:41:33 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 793687
 
Israel: Parliament approval for possible pullback in West Bank & Gaza Strip

Jan 13 - The Israeli parliament has approved Prime Minister Ariel Sharon’s statement threatening to implement unilateral measures in the Palestinian territories outside the framework of the roadmap peace plan.

Sharon said these measures are to "bring maximum security" to Israel. The vote was passed by a majority with 51 in favour and 39 against. Sharon said he would consult with coalition members and the United States before deciding on the unilateral steps.

In a speech in the Knesset, Sharon said the Palestinians have until now failed to meet their commitments in the internationally-drafted peace plan. While, Sharon spoke of a possible unilateral troop pullback in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, he said he would get the Knesset’s approval before imposing, what he says will be “a temporary boundary on the Palestinians”.

Sharon warned that unless Palestinians start complying with the roadmap obligations, Israel would implement unilateral measures in a few months time. He however said the US will be consulted and the Knesset’s approval sought before the steps are taken. Sharon’s speech was made amid fierce heckling, largely from Arab-Israeli deputies.

Sharon’s statement was approved by a majority, with 51 in favour and 39 against.

Meanwhile, thousands of demonstrators came together in Tel Aviv and in Ramallah to protest the security barrier being constructed by Israel in the West Bank.



sunnt.com



To: Nadine Carroll who wrote (24129)1/13/2004 3:25:54 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793687
 
It's tough being the tallest Poppy in the field.

"I'm tired of being a pincushion here."


Dean Goes on Offensive in Iowa
Democrat 'Tired of Being a Pincushion'

By John F. Harris and Dan Balz
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, January 13, 2004; Page A01

PELLA, Iowa, Jan. 12 -- Former Vermont governor Howard Dean opened the final week of campaigning before next week's crucial Iowa caucuses with a sharp attack on his leading rivals Monday, charging that they are part of a Washington establishment that failed to hold President Bush to account and that they cannot bring change to the capital or the country.

The campaign in Iowa remains extremely fluid, with many undecided voters. Dean's decision to push back against his opponents underscored concerns among his advisers and supporters that he has spent too much time on the defensive in recent weeks and that he has sometimes appeared rattled by rivals' attacks and lackluster in debate.

Dean's advisers have worried for some time about how other candidates can gang up on him. On Monday, Dean explained his new, more aggressive posture by saying, "I'm tired of being a pincushion here."

Seeking to recapture the mantle of the anti-establishment outsider and to stoke the enthusiasm of a grass-roots movement he is counting on to deliver him a victory next Monday and elsewhere, Dean struck back.

"We need real change, and we don't just need a change in presidents," Dean said at a pancake breakfast here Monday morning. "We need a change in Washington, and we're not going to get it by electing someone from Washington."

Although he has been declared the Democratic front-runner and holds a strong lead in New Hampshire, Dean is in a tight race in Iowa. With polls showing him roughly even with Rep. Richard A. Gephardt (Mo.), and with Sens. John F. Kerry (Mass.) and John Edwards (N.C.) behind them, each hopes to spring a surprise next week.

A loss by Dean could change the dynamic of the Democratic race, and far from embracing a front-runner's strategy of soaring above the fray, Dean mentioned all his main rivals by name.

Dean said that "Washington politicians and the established press . . . have attacked us for months." He added that although his rivals "want to say they are against the establishment, they are the establishment."

He dismissed them all as politicians who stand for the "Washington establishment," and he repeatedly reminded voters that, with the exception of Rep. Dennis J. Kucinich (Ohio), the other elected Democrats in the race supported the resolution authorizing Bush to go to war with Iraq.

As Dean banged away at his opponents, Kerry received the endorsement of Iowa first lady Christie Vilsack, while his national co-chairman, former New Hampshire governor Jeanne Shaheen, attacked retired Gen. Wesley K. Clark.

Kerry had sought but failed to win the endorsement of Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack, who remains neutral in the Democratic race. But Kerry's aides said they see his wife's support as the next-best thing -- what one described as a "seal of approval." Standing next to Kerry on the steps of the state Capitol, Christie Vilsack said, "Iowans choose not just on policy, but on intangibles." She described the personal relationship she has developed with the Kerry family over the past few years and said that, in listening to Iowa voters, she "heard only good things about Senator Kerry."

Afterward, she joined Kerry for an open meeting in Williamsburg and caught a ride home to Mount Pleasant aboard his campaign bus. There the pair greeted supporters on the white-columned porch of the Vilsack residence and visited inside over coffee.

As Kerry focused on Iowa, Shaheen dealt with his problems in New Hampshire, where Clark has overtaken Kerry for second place, behind Dean. She showed a videotape of Clark's appearance before an Arkansas Republican Party fundraising dinner in 2001, in which he praised Bush and members of his Cabinet, then said:

"I welcome Wesley Clark to our party. I just don't think someone who raised money for Republicans, praised George W. Bush after he had begun his systematic reversal of Bill Clinton's policies, and who as recently as this past summer refused to rule out running for president as a Republican should be the Democratic nominee for president."

"When you're attacked like this, it's the sincerest form of flattery in politics," Clark said in response.

Kerry told reporters traveling with him in Iowa that he had no advance knowledge of Shaheen's decision to go after Clark and refused to echo the attacks.

The multistate attacks by candidates underscored the unsettled nature of the Democratic race and the fact that none of them feels particularly confident as the caucus and primary season begins.

Gephardt, worried about money, campaigned briefly in Iowa on Monday. Then he departed for a campaign swing that will take him to California, Washington state and New York for fundraising, a foreign policy speech and an appearance on CBS's "Late Show With David Letterman."

Although Iowa is crucial to Gephardt's candidacy, the former House Democratic leader said he learned from his 1988 experience that he cannot afford a one-state strategy if he hopes to become the nominee. He won the Iowa caucuses in 1988 but ran out of money, lost a series of primaries on Super Tuesday and was driven from the race.

Dean seemed particularly annoyed with the campaign tactics of Gephardt, who has said that Dean would not protect Social Security and Medicare. "Don't believe any of that stuff you get in your mailbox about me," Dean told one senior citizen in Sigourney. "They're filling me full of buckshot."

He said he plans to spend the next week trying to "hammer" back against what he described as a barrage of attacks motivated by fear of the radical change he would bring to the capital. He said Monday's sharper tone fits his temperament. "It goes to a pattern I have," he said of his critics and his response Monday. "I let 'em pass for a while, and then I really try to hammer" his accusers.

Dean did not dispute a suggestion that he had a lackluster performance in Sunday's debate, but he pronounced himself energized because "the more people attack me, that rejuvenates me."

Edwards spent part of his day scouring for votes in rural Iowa, where he has made a special effort to build an organization. "We're organized everywhere, but I come from rural America and I have a real personal sense of what they care about," he said, adding: "We've gotten a great response in rural Iowa."

Clark and Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman (Conn.), who have skipped Iowa to concentrate on New Hampshire, both left the Granite State on Monday -- Lieberman for Arizona and Clark for Texas.

Before leaving New Hampshire, Clark was asked about a 2002 statement in which he said "certainly" there was a link between Iraq and al Qaeda, and whether that was inconsistent with his assertion that former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein was not responsible in any way for the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States. The statement was captured on home video and reported in Monday's New York Times.

"It would be naive to think the Iraqi intelligence agency never tracked anyone from al Qaeda, but that's a far cry from saying there's any relationship between Saddam Hussein and 9/11," Clark said in explanation.

"The administration was trying to hype the intelligence leading up to their decision to go to war with Iraq," he added. "I was downplaying that intelligence and saying of course there might have been some contacts, but that's not the same thing."

In Texas, Clark was endorsed by Rep. Martin Frost (D).

Staff writers Paul Schwartzman, Vanessa Williams and Jonathan Finer contributed to this report.

© 2004 The Washington Post Company



To: Nadine Carroll who wrote (24129)1/13/2004 10:34:46 PM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793687
 
the antiwar forces cling to their taunt on WMD because every other part of their propaganda and prediction has been utterly exploded.

SLATE From: Christopher Hitchens
To: Paul Berman, Thomas Friedman, Fred Kaplan, George Packer, Kenneth Pollack, Jacob Weisberg, and Fareed Zakaria
Subject: Iraq Revisionism
Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2004, at 9:30 AM PT
Kenneth Pollack's revisiting of his own argument in The Threatening Storm, while admirable and scrupulous (even if it is written by someone who used to be a producer rather than a consumer of WMD information) affects the essential case no more than Paul O'Neill's supposed "disclosure" that the Bush administration was anti-Saddam from the start. It was long ago announced, by President Clinton in a major speech in 1999, that a future confrontation with Saddam on WMD had become inescapable. And it was long ago voted nem con by the Senate that, for other reasons having to do with genocide and tyranny, the Iraq Liberation Act ought to become law. It would have been an occasion for very severe criticism if the incoming Bush administration had sought to dilute either of these historic commitments.

Pollack may have been led to overstate the immediate danger from WMD, but he did so on persuasive evidence that was supported by a long history of exorbitant behavior by the Baathists, and on a long history of culpable underreaction by Washington. (There was no comparable inquisition, as I recall, when the intelligence "community" failed to predict, and very nearly failed to report, the invasion of Kuwait. And the antiwar forces cling to their taunt on WMD because every other part of their propaganda and prediction has been utterly exploded.) That's if WMD ever were much of an argument in that quarter. I myself had a different experience from Pollack, in the run-up to the war. I had to debate, every week and sometimes every day, with anti-interventionists who said that Saddam's possession of WMD was a reason NOT to attack or attempt to depose him. I said that the threat was latent not blatant, and that the main "immediate" danger was an off-the-shelf purchase by Iraq from North Korea, and by the way I think I was right. But I was not an elected officeholder in a democratic government in a post-9/11 atmosphere. If I had been, I would certainly have decided to make the worst assumption about any report on Saddam's capacity for lethality, and I would have been operating at all times on the presumption of guilt. As a civilian, I would have wanted to criticize any Western government that did not err deliberately on this side.

Another way of phrasing this is to remember the line taken by the late Dr. David Kelly, sad subject of the Hutton inquiry in Britain. In an article written just before his death, this experienced inspector stated that you could have genuine inspections only by way of regime change. This essentially commonsensical view, which has been seconded by other veteran inspectors such as Rolf Ekeus and David Kay, takes account of the notorious Iraqi deception and concealment programs; the failure to comply at any point with U.N. resolutions; the sequestration of Iraqi scientists; and the preservation of secret funds, documents, and resources in Baghdad against the day when sanctions might be lifted and another bid for superpowerdom be made. Taken together with the secret bargaining (now exposed) with North Korea, this entitles us to speak of a Permanent Threat if not precisely an Imminent One. "Imminence" might have come when Saddam gave way to the Odai/Qusai regime: a prospect that need no longer concern us but that did not concern the antiwar forces even when it was a possibility.

Thus, we now can account more or less for Iraq's lunatic mixture of missing and undeclared weapons, and that in itself is an achievement. Moreover, the Iraqi economy and military are no longer at the disposal of a crime family with well-attested links to piracy and gangsterism, and that too is a gain. Dr. Howard Dean now tells that al-Qaida is in Iraq after all, but only because of President Bush. He is entitled as a private citizen to his touching belief that the connection began only a few months ago: One would not want a president to have been so insouciant if he had had to take the actual decision at the time, and once again I applaud the presumption of guilt, which was equally well-merited.

I cannot see the point of the case about a "distraction" from the hunt for Bin Laden, and this is not only because I strongly suspect that dear Osama has already passed away. Nor is it because so many of those who stress the Iraq "distraction" were telling me, just a couple of years ago, that it was futile to intervene in Afghanistan lest such a move cause thousands of new Bin Ladens to spring up. … (How soon they forget, but I don't, and I am keeping score.) The tactics and resources that are required to fight a covert war against nihilistic theologues, and the tactics and resources that are required to remove a totalitarian dictatorship, are somewhat distinct. They may well overlap and they have in fact done so, but who can argue that we should not be ready and able to perform both such undertakings, possibly simultaneously? The two in fact reinforce one another, and coalition forces in Iraq are now rapidly acquiring deadly skills that will certainly be required in other places and at other times before the war against jihad and its patrons is over.

This point also applies to the question of cost. One cannot know the price of anything in advance, but one can be determined to pay it no matter what, as in a struggle for one's own life or for the life of loved ones. If it was foolish of the administration to argue that things like Iraq or Afghanistan could be done cheaply, it is flat-out irresponsible for the antiwar populists to argue that the money would be "better spent at home." Do they somehow still imagine that war is another word for "overseas"? For all I know they do. If we are really looking for cost cuts, then we could draw down the wastage and folly of the "war on drugs," or the fantasy of nuclearism. (The failure of the left to seize those chances, by the way, is yet another proof that it cares only for morbid dislike of anything undertaken by the president.)

As for casualties, there is only one apparent way of avoiding them for sure, and that way—abstention or pacifism—runs a risk of greater casualties later on, or as well. I detest utilitarianism, but I prefer it to idealism or neutralism, and I believe a decent case can be made that many, many Iraqis have been saved by the intervention, and that many inhabitants of other countries including our own are better-protected by the abolition of aggressive and unstable dictatorships. The case cannot be literally proved, of course, but we have a shrewd idea of what can happen when such regimes are left to choose the initiative. And this in turn makes one weep to think of what we and the Iraqis might have been spared if Saddam Hussein had been removed by Bush Senior. (Now that the in-between sanctions have been lifted, surely those who claimed that they were genocidal and child-murdering ought to have a good word to say. Or do they want one to suspect that they only wanted sanctions lifted when Saddam Hussein was still in power?)

Staying with the lachrymose for a moment, one weeps also at the missed chances and the blunders. Need I specify the appalling misjudgment of Washington's Turcophiles, the stupefying lack of economic and technological follow-through—the voracious Halliburton lobby seems really to have dropped the ball there—and the ditherings over the Governing Council? However, these seem to me to be second-order objections, since we had well before the turn of 2000 become in effect co-responsible for the future and the care of Iraq. Its future was unavoidably in our future. The chief blemish of that de facto policy, in which every main faction in American politics was already complicit, was that it involved a shame-faced and unstated power-sharing with Saddam Hussein. That was intolerable and could not long endure. So, I think that the president and his advisers deserve credit for acknowledging and shouldering what was in fact an "actually existing" responsibility. While those who tried to disown or disclaim the responsibility are in a very poor position to snipe at the way it is being discharged. Much of the criticism I read expresses one or another form of denial of this basic consideration. Those who say, for example, that they would approve the presence of U.S. forces in Iraq if only there were more French or Russian soldiers there are conceding more than perhaps they intend. (I personally can't say that I yearn to see there the veterans of Rwanda and Cote d'Ivoire and New Caledonia, or the heroes of Grozny.)

Friedman is right to say that the macro-policy, so often and so stupidly attributed to "neocon" conspiracy, has provided an important vindication. Since the regime changes in Kabul and Baghdad, other regimes from Riyadh to Islamabad to Tehran have quietly but decidedly changed their tune, while some others have gone so far as to drop their weapons. There is no serious state-sponsored hiding place for al-Qaida, whereas a quiverful of measures and tactics now exists, well field-tested, to tackle any new challenger in this field. Myself, I still have a fondness for the micro-policies, too. The Marsh Arabs are returning to their habitat, my profession can be practiced again in one of the places where writing was invented, the Shiites can follow their own religion, the Kurds are nearer to self-determination, there is politics again in a serious country, and we have seen the tree of liberty being watered in the traditional manner, which is an event that not every member of every generation can take pride in.

slate.msn.com



To: Nadine Carroll who wrote (24129)1/14/2004 3:29:09 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793687
 
Another proof that a wall works. This one made it to the Gaza checkpoint. And blew up other Pals.

January 14, 2004
At Least 4 Killed in Bombing at Border Between Israel and Gaza
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

JERUSALEM, Jan. 14 — A Palestinian suicide bomber set off an explosion Wednesday at the main crossing between Israel and the Gaza Strip, killing as many as four people, Israeli officials and radio said.

Israel radio reported four people were killed and 10 others were wounded.

Rescue officials said several people were killed.

Israeli media reported the attack was carried out by a female suicide bomber but the army said it was still investigating.

The crossing is the main entry point into Israel for thousands of Palestinian workers. At the time of the explosion, it was filled with workers waiting to cross, according to Israel Radio.

The Gaza Strip is surrounded by an Israeli security barrier, and none of the suicide bombers responsible for the deaths of hundreds of people inside Israel in the past three years of violence have come from there.

Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company



To: Nadine Carroll who wrote (24129)1/14/2004 4:11:15 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793687
 
Very Interesting site. It came to my attention from another Blog. He says the FBI is trying to shut him down.




Internet Haganah
Page 1 | Page 2 | Page 3 | Page 4
December 24, 2003
FAQ: Database of ... web sites
Internet Haganah's core mission is to address the use of the internet by Islamic extremists, their supporters and apologists, and by those who seek the destruction of Israel. From time to time we also call attention to groups, individuals and associated web sites from the Left or Right of the political spectrum, where we observe them making common cause with the global jihad, or where we observe jihadists making common cause with them.

Calling our database "a database of terrorist-affiliated web sites" is simply no-longer accurate, and in many cases what we are trying to communicate might be better described as "affinity". Both terms, affinity and affiliation, have different meanings in different contexts and to different people. We're moving away from the notion of affiliation altogether.

Given the nature of terrorist organizations, even when a site is clearly presented as the official online presense of a particular group, proving a link between the site and the group is often not possible until, for example, the webmaster is captured or killed.

Webmasters of the sites we track do, from time to time, get captured or killed.

Note that not all web sites we mention on this site get added to our database, and very definitely note that not all web sites that get mentioned on this site are in any way associated with terrorist activity.

Some sites are official sites of designated terrorist groups. Some sites promote or celebrate the activities of particular groups or individuals. Some sites provide moral, religious or ethical justifications for actions that the rest of us consider to be terrorism. Some sites provide forums that enable people who support Islamist terrorism to share information. As a rule, forums are characterized by the participants in the forum, whether that jives with the vision or intent of the person running the site, or not. Some sites are of interest only because of one particular aspect of the site. Some sites are merely obnoxious.

The issue freedom of expression is dealt with elsewhere, but suffice it to say here that a web site exists in the public domain, and the public has a right to know about, and to express their concern over what they find online. The First Amendment says, in sum, that "...the Congress shall make no law..."

We are not the Congress, and we're not making laws. We're also not trying to break any laws. We find appealing to people's sense of decency to be considerably more effective than any illegal activity we've seen used against web sites.

See also these FAQs: sending email and libel. We don't knowingly post false information. If you think we have, make your case and we'll stand corrected.

Posted by aaron at December 24, 2003 07:16 AM

haganah.org.il



To: Nadine Carroll who wrote (24129)1/14/2004 7:57:31 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793687
 
Pappu of the "NY Observer" continues to give the best coverage of the Times.

Correspondents Clash; Keller Asserts Order, Sending Over Editor

TIMES Stars Spar: Reporters Rock Baghdad Bureau
by Sridhar Pappu

In the first week of December, Roger Cohen, then foreign editor of The New York Times, visited the Baghdad bureau in hopes of quelling what had become an increasingly volatile, strife-ridden outpost. Located at the center of one of the most dangerous and the most vital reporting theaters today, the bureau, according to sources, had been rife with internal disagreements over security, and personal clashes between its bureau chief—Susan Sachs—and its star reporters Dexter Filkins and John Burns.

When, according to Times sources familiar with the situation, Mr. Cohen sat down with members of the bureau, things only got worse. As evidence of the growing mistrust among Times Baghdad staffers, the beleaguered Ms. Sachs pulled out a tape recorder, demanding that the conversation be recorded. (Mr. Cohen declined to comment for this story. Ms. Sachs did not respond to a request for comment.)

Iraq is no longer the problem of either Mr. Cohen or Ms. Sachs. In the weeks that followed, Mr. Cohen was forced from his post as foreign editor, and on Tuesday, Jan. 13, The Times announced that Susan Chira, currently the editorial director of book development, will be his replacement. In March, Mr. Cohen will begin writing a regular column for The Times’ Eliza Doolittle, The International Herald Tribune.

Ms. Sachs, meanwhile, was called back to New York to consult with top editors in December and is currently working on an investigative project. She had held the Baghdad bureau-chief post since October 2003.

But it remains the concern of Times executive editor Bill Keller. In recent weeks, Mr. Keller has dispatched editor Jack Cushman from Washington to look over things in Baghdad temporarily, as Times sources contacted by Off the Record questioned whether internal backbiting and ego-driven arguments have hampered The Times’ reporting on the most important story in the world—a story The Times should have owned.

One Times source described the situation at the Baghdad bureau as its own "war" with "major turf and ego battles, swaggering and big-footing by some and plenty of pouting, thrown elbows and bureaucratic jujitsu in return."

"This is a huge problem we have to get hold of. This is a big story," another source said, referring to Iraq. "This is huge. I’ve never seen it like this where we [have] operational problems of this magnitude while we try and get on top of the story itself."

Perhaps just as significant, Baghdad represents the first big internal test of Mr. Keller’s tenure. While Mr. Keller’s predecessor, Howell Raines, at points seemed to relish the idea of Timesmen clawing and poking each other’s eyes out as a way of encouraging a "performance culture," Mr. Keller rode in on a wave of good feeling. Mr. Raines’ star system—cf. Bragg, Rick—and the problems that came with it was to be dismantled. A kinder, more team-oriented Times would equal a better paper.

Speaking to Off the Record on the morning of Tuesday, Jan. 13, Mr. Keller said: "I’m not going to comment on the internal dynamics of the bureau, except to say you shouldn’t melodramatize what’s gone on there.

"The bureau had some rough spots," Mr. Keller said. "And I think we’ve got them sorted out."

Mr. Keller did say that the bureau-chief title is "on hold."

"We’re going to try the idea of having an editor on the premises and see how that works," Mr. Keller explained. "This bureau is an amazingly complicated management job. There are dozens of local employees who maintain and drive the cars, translate, provide security. At a given time there are four or five and often six or seven correspondents deployed in different parts of the country.

"All of this is going on in a dangerous place that seems to be getting more dangerous for Americans as time passes," Mr. Keller continued. "So we thought we’d try out the idea of an editor there who’ll do a lot of the coordinating, keeping track of who’s doing what, talking on a regular basis to New York and Washington and just overseeing the kind of running of this large staff and free the correspondents to do their jobs."

Sources within The Times saw the move was meant to ease what had become an untenable situation for Ms. Sachs. According to sources, there were numerous disagreements between Ms. Sachs (who, in addition to her managerial responsibilities, was expected to write and report) and Messrs. Burns and Filkins over a variety of issues. As reported in The Wall Street Journal on Dec. 29, Ms. Sachs and Mr. Filkins clashed over his carrying a weapon. According to one Times source, Ms. Sachs was extremely frustrated in dealing with the staff, most of whom were hired before her arrival in Baghdad by Mr. Burns, and who she felt remained loyal to him. (Mr.Burns and Mr. Filkins did not respond to e-mails seeking comment.)

One Times source likened Ms. Sachs’ former post to "coaching soccer for 6-year-olds.

"Everyone on the team is going for the ball," the source said.

The presence of such strong personalities would be hard in any situation, but was exacerbated by the bureau’s tight quarters and undesirable location. Call it Real World: Baghdad. Put a bunch of reporters together to live and work together and see what happens when they stop being polite and start being real. Houses used by The Washington Post and Los Angeles Times (The Post has a pool and a garden) are nicer than those used by The Times, where often four or five reporters live in the bureau with no locks and no privacy, while sharing one bathroom. One Times source said the conditions were reminiscent of the John Landis masterpiece Animal House. And, around Baghdad, the bureau has been nicknamed "The Jail," because of its tall wire fence.

This, said sources, only adds pressure to what Washington Post Baghdad bureau chief Rajiv Chandrasekaran said was "unlike any other bureau-chief role anywhere else in the world."

"In addition to having cover the most important foreign story of our time," Mr. Chandrasekaran said, "the job involves dealing with security issues and logistical matters that’s different than any operation we have in the world. It’s not pure journalism. It’s security. It’s dealing with the American bureaucracy in Iraq. It’s dealing with the local government. The Bush administration. The military. You’re working 18-hour days. It’s a hell of a lot of work to ask of someone to do."

Recently, Mr. Keller instated a weekly conference call between New York and the Times bureaus in Washington and Baghdad to "talk about ways in which everyone can collaborate."

"We just felt the need to know what everyone else was doing and what everyone else was planning to do so we could plug in stuff from Washington to things the bureau picks up in Baghdad, plug in things to what we’re hearing from the military on the ground to what we’re hearing from the Pentagon."

Before his turn as managing editor under Joe Lelyveld, Mr. Keller served as the paper’s foreign editor and Johannesburg bureau chief. During his tenure as Moscow bureau chief he won his Pulitzer Prize.

The importance of the Iraq bureau to him—and to The Times—can’t be understated. It’s The Times franchise story. It’s the kind of story that is supposed to show why the paper exists, and to cement its place as the most important institution of journalism in the world. Yes, it’s swell that The Times can tell you which Nation of Islam financial adviser is whispering in Michael Jackson’s ear. But that’s dessert. Iraq and what goes on there is the meal.

"We want the bureau to keep us ahead on the story," Mr. Keller said. "That’s its mandate. And they know it."

But, even according to several sources within The Times, concern has grown over what’s seen as The Washington Post’s superior reportage from the region. While The Times has had its share of advances, it’s been The Post—with Mr. Chandrasekaran and Anthony Shadid—that has better answered the larger questions surrounding the occupation. Who are the factions we’re negotiating with? What are the Sunnis up to as a political force? Can the political steps taken so far win support among them?

Asked about the Post coverage, Mr. Keller said: "I certainly can’t deny that I admire a lot of the work" the paper had done.

"I think The Post has done an excellent job and they’ve got two fine correspondents on the ground who have the virtue of having been there almost continuously since the war," Mr. Keller said. "And they also have done a really remarkable job—Bart Gellman in part—on the W.M.D. question. I think that last story he did caused everyone who competes with him a serious case of indigestion followed by admiration.

"We haven’t thrown in the towel on that and will try and find ways to get ahead on that aspect of the story."

Still, not unexpectedly, Mr. Keller stood up for his troops, citing, among other stories, its coverage of the lack of American security surrounding weapons depots that helped armed the insurgency.

"I feel pretty proud of the bureau," Mr. Keller said. "I think it’s done exemplary work against a lot of stiff competition and under conditions of stiff personal peril."

You may reach Sridhar Pappu via email at: spappu@observer.com.

This column ran on page 1 in the 1/19/2004 edition of The New York Observer.



To: Nadine Carroll who wrote (24129)1/14/2004 8:20:51 PM
From: Dayuhan  Respond to of 793687
 

Do you think they will be closer to the Ba'athists and Jihadists running the insurgency? Do the insurgents have widespread popular support?

In some areas, yes, in others, no. It doesn’t much matter either way. Even in the places where the populace and their leaders are not behind the insurgency, they aren’t behind us either – they are for themselves.

The ones with the upper hand right now are the Shiite militants. They aren’t fighting us, of course. They don’t have to. Sooner or later there will have to be elections. The longer the insurgency goes on, the more pressure there will be to make it sooner. Elections mean a Shiite-dominated government, and once an elected government is in place, they can tell us to get stuffed. The US isn’t going to turn around and “do” a government elected under our own supervision.

This is the risk, not a Baath revival. While our attention is on the insurgents, do you really think the Shiite leaders are studying up on Tocqueville and Adam Smith?