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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wharf Rat who wrote (42633)4/14/2004 6:47:03 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Respond to of 89467
 
HEY!!!

The press conference was a diversion. Quit talking about how dyslexic Shrub is, and start focusing on what we were all focusing on Sun... I told youse guys Rove was going to do this to you
Cassandra


Panel Says Bush Saw Repeated Warnings
Reports Preceded August 2001 Memo
By Dana Priest
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, April 14, 2004; Page A01

By the time a CIA briefer gave President Bush the Aug. 6, 2001, President's Daily Brief headlined "Bin Ladin Determined To Strike in US," the president had seen a stream of alarming reports on al Qaeda's intentions. So had Vice President Cheney and Bush's top national security team, according to newly declassified information released yesterday by the commission investigating the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.



In April and May 2001, for example, the intelligence community headlined some of those reports "Bin Laden planning multiple operations," "Bin Laden network's plans advancing" and "Bin Laden threats are real."

The intelligence included reports of a hostage plot against Americans. It noted that operatives might choose to hijack an aircraft or storm a U.S. embassy. Without knowing when, where or how the terrorists would strike, the CIA "consistently described the upcoming attacks as occurring on a catastrophic level, indicating that they would cause the world to be in turmoil," according to one of two staff reports released by the panel yesterday.

"Reports similar to these were made available to President Bush in the morning meetings with [Director of Central Intelligence George J.] Tenet," the commission staff said.

The information offers the most detailed account to date of the warnings the intelligence community gave top Bush administration officials, and it provides the context in which a CIA briefer put together a memo on Osama bin Laden's activities in the Aug. 6 brief for Bush.

The government moved on several fronts to counter the threats. The CIA launched "disruption operations" in 20 countries. Tenet met or phoned 20 foreign intelligence officials. Units of the 5th Fleet were redeployed. Embassies went on alert. Cheney called Crown Prince Adbullah of Saudi Arabia to ask for help. National security adviser Condoleezza Rice asked the CIA to brief Attorney General John D. Ashcroft about an "imminent" terrorist attack whose location was unknown.

"The system was blinking red," Tenet told the commission in private testimony, the panel's report noted.

In this context, Bush "had occasionally asked his briefers whether any of the threats pointed to the United States," the report said. Or, as one U.S. senior official more intimately involved in the summer reporting paraphrased the president's question to the CIA: "This guy going to strike here?"

A partial answer was contained in the very first sentence of the Aug. 6 President's Daily Brief: "Clandestine, foreign government, and media reports indicate Bin Ladin since 1997 has wanted to conduct terrorist attacks in the US."

The document ended with two paragraphs of circumstantial evidence that al Qaeda operatives might already be in the United States preparing "for hijackings or other types of attacks" and said that the FBI and the CIA were investigating a call to the U.S. Embassy in the United Arab Emirates in May "saying that a group of Bin Ladin supporters was in the US planning attacks with explosives."

The commission also released new details showing how the CIA and FBI failures to track the movements of two hijackers, Khalid Almihdhar and Nawaf Alhazmi, and share information foiled what now appears to have been the best chance to disrupt the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

The CIA knew Almihdhar had attended a meeting in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, in January 2000 where, officials later learned, he had helped plan the October 2000 bombing of the USS Cole off the coast of Aden, Yemen. After the meeting, Almihdhar and others went to Bangkok, but the CIA station in Malaysia did not inform the CIA station in Bangkok in a timely manner.

Only two months later, in March, did the CIA learn that Almihdhar had left Bangkok with a visa to the United States.

In January 2001, two surveillance photographs from the Kuala Lumpur meeting were shown to an informant who was helping both the CIA and the FBI. He helped them understand that Almihdhar was at the meeting with a man identified as "Khallad" -- who by then was known to have planned the Cole bombing. But "we found no effort by the CIA to renew the long-abandoned search for [Almihdhar] or his traveling companions," the staff report noted.

CONTINUED
1 2 Next > washingtonpost.com



To: Wharf Rat who wrote (42633)4/14/2004 6:51:32 AM
From: Raymond Duray  Respond to of 89467
 
TIME TO STOP THIS MADNESS IN ITS SICK TRACKS:

atimes.com

The rise of the machines
By Conn Hallinan

(Posted with permission from Foreign Policy in Focus)

The press had lots of fun with the recent robot debacle in California's Mojave Desert. Competing for US$1 million in prize money, 15 vehicles headed off on a 142-mile (229-kilometer) course through some of the most forbidding terrain in the United States. None managed to navigate even eight miles (13km). The robots hit fences, caught fire, rolled over, or sat and did nothing.

However, the purpose of the event was not NASCAR (National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing) for nerds but a coldly calculated plan to construct a generation of killer machines.

Sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), the March 13 "race" was part of the US Department of Defense's (DOD's) plan to make one-third of the military's combat vehicles driverless by 2015. The push to replace soldiers with machines is impelled by an over-extended military searching for ways to limit US casualties, a powerful circle of arms manufactures, and an empire-minded group of politicians addicted to campaign contributions by defense corporations.

This "rise of the machines" is at the heart of President George W Bush's recent military budget. Sandwiched into outlays for aircraft, artillery and conventional weapons are monies for unmanned combat aircraft, robot tanks, submarines and a supersonic bomber capable of delivering six tons of bombs and missiles to any place on the globe within two hours.

Techno-war

DARPA, the agency behind these Buck Rogers weapons systems, has a mixed track record, somewhere between silly and sobering. The mechanical elephant it developed for the Vietnam War was not a keeper, and one doubts that the robot canine for the army, aptly dubbed "Big Dog", will ever get off the drawing boards. But DARPA also gave us stealth technology, such as the M-16 rifle, cruise missiles and the unmanned Predator armed with the deadly Hellfire missile.

It is currently deploying a carbon-dioxide laser to spot snipers in Iraq, as well as a "sonic" weapon that can supposedly disable demonstrators at 274 meters with a 145-decibel blast of sound.

Boeing is busy testing its UCAV X-45A unmanned combat aircraft for DARPA, while Northrop Grumman is working on a competitor, the X-47A Pegasus. DARPA has already field-tested the A-160 Hummingbird, an unmanned chopper for the Marine Corps that can carry 136 kilograms of missiles up to 2,500 miles.

According to Representative Curt Weldon, a Republican from Pennsylvania and chair of the House subcommittee on procurements, one-third of US tactical-strike aircraft will be unmanned within the next 10 years. Already Boeing and defense contractor Lockheed Martin, along with Carnegie Mellon University, are developing ground combat vehicles: the Gladiator, the Retiarius and the Spinner.

The military's interest is in part a function of the Vietnam syndrome; lots of aluminum caskets and weeping survivors play poorly on the evening news. While so far in the Iraq conflict the Bush administration has managed to keep these images at arm's length by simply banning the media from filming C-130s disgorging the wounded and the slain, as casualty lists grow longer, that will get harder to do.

The lure of being able to fight a war without getting your own people killed is a seductive one. "It is possible that in our lifetime we will be able to run a conflict without ever leaving the United States," Lieutenant-Colonel David Branham told the New York Times last year.

A high-tech machine war would allow the United States to strike quickly over enormous distances, an important capability in the Bush administration's preemptive war strategy.

Project Falcon, under development by Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman, is a case in point. While the press has billed the recent successful test of the X-43 Hypersonic Cruise Vehicle with its scramjet as a boon to commercial aircraft - 40 minutes from Washington to Paris - DARPA has something a good deal more sinister in mind.

"The X-43 has everything to do with defense and very little to do with aerospace," Paul Beaver, defense analyst for Ashbourne Beaver Associates, told the Financial Times. "But if it can be dressed up as a commercial aerospace program it allows NASA [National Aeronautics and Space Administration] more access to funding."

Such a bomber - manned or unmanned - could strike a target anywhere on the globe within two hours. The revolutionary scramjet can accelerate an aircraft to 10 times the speed of sound, making it virtually invulnerable.

An inordinately large section of Bush's military budget will end up in the coffers of the "Big Five" - Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Boeing, Raytheon and General Dynamics. But unraveling that budget is no easy task.

The budget request for fiscal 2005 is $401.7 billion, a 9.7 percent jump, but there are a host of programs hidden in other budgets. For instance, the $401.7 billion figure doesn't include $18.5 billion for nuclear weapons, because that expense is tucked away in the Department of Energy budget. Homeland Security, and related programs in Transportation, Justice, State and the Treasury, add another $42.5 billion. What should also be included are the Department of Veterans Affairs ($50.9 billion) as well as the interest on defense-related debt ($138.7 billion).

The administration has already informed Congress that it intends to ask for a $50 billion supplement for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan (it got $62.6 billion last spring and $87 billion in November). Hit the add button, and the military budget looks more like $702.3 billion. That's real money.

Troops left out
But not for the troops. The average front-line trooper makes $16,000 a year, the same as a Wal-Mart clerk, and according to a study by Nickel and Dimed author Barbara Ehrenreich, more than 25,000 military families are eligible for food stamps (government-issued coupons that can be redeemed for food at stores). The new budget will raise wages 3.5 percent, but most of that hike will go to the high-tech air force (9.6 percent), not the larger army (1.8 percent).

The arms corporations are another matter. Lockheed Martin, Boeing and Northrop Grumman will corner one out of every four of those dollars.

There are other spigots besides the military budget that pour money into the coffers of the Big Five. The big winners in NASA's budget boost will be Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman and TRW - all major space contractors.

This generosity is repaid come election day. In the 2002 election cycle, defense firms, led by Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman, poured more than $16 million into Political Action Committees (PAC) at a ratio of 65 percent for Republicans and 35 percent for Democrats. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, those figures appear to be holding in the run-up to the 2004 elections as well.

The collusion among politicians, the military and the defense firms is particularly egregious in the administration's race to deploy an anti-ballistic missile (ABM) system. The ABM soaked up 15 percent of the $43.1 billion slated for weapons development in 2003 - 60 percent of which went to Lockheed Martin, Boeing and Raytheon - and it is getting a major boost in the new budget.

The hemorrhaging of money by the ABM has churned up opposition from current and former military leaders. Led by retired Admiral William Crowe, former chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 48 admirals and generals recently urged that the administration halt deploying the ABM and instead divert the $53 billion slated to be spent on the system over the next five years to protecting the nation's ports from terrorism.

While the military budget and ancillary programs continue to balloon, domestic spending will rise a tepid 0.5 percent; the White House is highlighting its plan to raise education spending by 3 percent, but that will only mean a jump of $1.6 billion, less than the cost of a single Northrop Grumman B-2 bomber.

Machines that think and kill are expensive, and very few companies have the wherewithal to make them on the scale needed for the United States to continue its imperial reach. The synergy among the massive companies that benefit from empire, and their ability to fill the election coffers of those who dream of a world more akin to the 19th than the 21st century, are powerful.

Bloodless war?
Add to that a military beset by re-enlistment difficulties, and the circle comes complete: war that is costly, but for our side, largely bloodless - a virtual war.

Bloodless war is, of course, an illusion. More than 600 American solders have died in Iraq, and thousands of others have been wounded and maimed. No one knows how many thousands of Iraqis have died, because, as Lieutenant-Commander Jane Campbell told the New York Times, "We don't keep a list. It's just not policy."

In his book Virtual War, historian Michael Ignatieff asks the question: "If Western nations can employ violence with impunity, will they not be tempted to use it more often?"

The "impunity", of course, is fantasy. The US military may indeed be able to kill at enormous distances with its Frankenstein killing machines. But all that means is that civilians, not the military, become targets. Ask the relatives of those who died in the World Trade Center, the embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania, the nightclub on Bali and the commuter train in Spain if high-tech war has no casualties.