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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tejek who wrote (181990)2/1/2004 2:46:31 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1575465
 
EU chief laments "tragedy" of deadly Hajj stampede

01 February 2004

European Commission chief Romano Prodi lamented as a "tragedy" Sunday the deadly stampede which killed nearly 250 people among Muslim Hajj pilgrims near Mecca.

"This is without doubt a very sad day for the whole Muslim community, in these times of Al-Adha celebration," he said, adding that it was "with great sadness that I've heard the tragedy which happened in Saudi Arabia."

"I express my sympathy for the victims and their families, as well as for Saudi Arabia," he said.

According to officials, a total of 244 people were trampled to death and about the same number injured Sunday in a valley near Mecca as Muslim pilgrims scrambled to throw stones at pillars representing the devil.

An estimated 17 million Muslims live in western Europe, according to recent figures cited by top French Muslim cleric Dalil Boubakeur, who recently called for a new EU constitution to refer to Islam as well as Judeo-Christian roots.

Text and Picture Copyright © 2004 AFP.

eubusiness.com



To: tejek who wrote (181990)2/1/2004 3:10:30 PM
From: Tenchusatsu  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1575465
 
Kay Questions U.S. Pre-Emptive Strike Doctrine

reuters.com

Sun February 1, 2004 02:11 PM ET

By Jackie Frank
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The former top U.S. weapons hunter in Iraq, David Kay, said on Sunday flaws in U.S. intelligence in prewar Iraq brought into question President Bush's policy of pre-emptive strike against countries deemed a threat to the United States.

Bush based his decision to invade Iraq on what he called a "grave and gathering danger" posed by Iraq's biological and chemical weapons and warranted assertion of his post-Sept. 11, 2001, doctrine of pre-emptive military action to guard U.S. security in the face of new terror threats.

"If you cannot rely on good, accurate intelligence that is credible to the American people and to others abroad, you certainly can't have a policy of preemption," Kay said on Fox News Sunday.

"Pristine intelligence -- good, accurate intelligence -- is a fundamental benchstone of any sort of policy of preemption to even be thought about."

Kay, who resigned last week, concluded Iraq had no stockpiles of biological or chemical weapons, and the White House has said it will review its prewar intelligence.

Until the investigation is complete, Kay said, it would be difficult for the Bush administration to make a convincing case to allies for action in the next security crisis.

It is necessary, he said, that "they understand that we've taken the steps to be sure that we're correct and that, in fact, we're honest about what we're talking about," he said.

Democratic Sen. Joseph Biden of Delaware, a senior member of the Foreign Relations Committee, warned of damage to U.S. credibility around the world as a result of the intelligence failures.

Recalling former French President Charles De Gaulle's statement that he so trusted President John F. Kennedy's word he did not need to see satellite photos of Soviet missiles near Cuba, Biden told CNN: "No leader in the world would respond to President Bush that way today."

Sen. Chuck Hagel, a Nebraska Republican, agreed the faulty intelligence needed to be addressed to prevent future miscalculations that damage U.S. credibility. "It's not just the intelligence capability ... the credibility of who we are around the world and the trust of our government and our leaders" is at stake, Hagel told CNN.

Kay noted that although Iraq did not have weapons, its corruption and political instability contributed to a willingness of people to sell their knowledge of how to build small amounts of banned weapons.

"A marketplace phenomena was about to occur, if it did not occur; sellers meeting buyers. And I think that would have been very dangerous if the war had not intervened," Kay said.

What was available for sale was "the knowledge of how to make small amounts, which is, after all, mostly what terrorists want. They don't want battlefield amounts of weapons."

The White House has acknowledged flaws in its intelligence gathering prior to the war, and was considering whether to endorse calls for an independent probe into the evidence used to justify the invasion of Iraq.