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To: Jim McMannis who wrote (188104)5/8/2004 2:29:52 AM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1573922
 
Let 'er rip hey Teddy?

Okay.....but why the question mark? Unsure? Perplexed? Stressed out?

"Mr. Rumsfeld conceded that he failed to adequately inform Mr. Bush and Congress about the seriousness of the abuse allegations, but denied there was a cover-up."

If you believe the above horse$h*t, then I have a couple of bridges to sell ya.

**********************************************************

Rumsfeld: It gets worse


By ALAN FREEMAN
From Saturday's Globe and Mail





Washington — A contrite Donald Rumsfeld apologized yesterday to Iraqi prisoners abused by their American captors, and warned that the outrage will worsen if other images of the actions of U.S. soldiers at Abu Ghraib prison become public.

"There are a lot more photographs and videos that exist," the U.S. Defence Secretary told the Senate armed services committee. "If these are released to the public, obviously it's going to make matters worse. That's just a fact.

"I mean, I looked at them last night and they're hard to believe," he continued glumly, without going into detail.

Mr. Rumsfeld did not duck responsibility for the scandal, but rejected widespread calls to resign. "Needless to say, if I thought I could not be effective, I would resign in a minute," the Pentagon chief said, adding that he will not quit "simply because people try to make a political issue out of it.

"These events occurred on my watch," Mr. Rumsfeld said. "As Secretary of Defence, I am accountable for them and I take full responsibility ..... To those Iraqis who were mistreated by members of the U.S. armed forces, I offer my deepest apology."

Mr. Rumsfeld said efforts would be made to offer compensation to Iraqis who suffered the abuse. He also announced that an inquiry would be held into the handling of the prison affair and said that not just those who perpetrated the acts but those who authorized or condoned them would be brought to justice.

"The pictures I've seen depict conduct, behaviour that is so brutal and so cruel and so inhumane that anyone engaged in it or involved in it would have to be brought to justice," he said.

The scandal broke last week after CBS television broadcast photographs of naked Iraqi prisoners being humiliated and forced into simulated sexual positions by their smiling U.S. captors.

A military report into the abuse speaks of threats against some detainees and the sodomizing of others. Six U.S. soldiers, members of the army reserves, have been charged in connection with the abuse at Abu Ghraib and face courts-martial.

Yesterday, the military also charged Private Lynndie England, the woman shown in photographs smiling and pointing at naked prisoners, with four counts, including assaulting detainees and committing an indecent act. Six officers of the reserve unit have been issued career-ending reprimands.

President George W. Bush has insisted he retains confidence in Mr. Rumsfeld, but Democratic presidential contender John Kerry said Mr. Bush must take ultimate responsibility for the scandal. "The chain of command goes all the way to the Oval Office," he said while campaigning yesterday. "Harry Truman did not say 'the buck stops at the Pentagon.'."

Mr. Rumsfeld conceded that he failed to adequately inform Mr. Bush and Congress about the seriousness of the abuse allegations, but denied there was a cover-up.

"The idea that this is a story that was broken by the media is simply not the fact," he said, noting that the U.S. military had announced an investigation in January, two days after a soldier reported on the abuse to his superiors.

But he said that the scale of the problem was not evident until the photos were made public. "It is the photographs that give one the vivid realization of what actually took place," Mr. Rumsfeld said.

"Words don't do it."

He called the pictures "radioactive" and said if he had known what was in them sooner he would have made a public statement, himself, rather than wait until they were shown on televised.

Several senators wanted to know whether the abuse was being authorized up the military chain of command, a contention made by some of the accused. and their families.

One of the reservist soldiers facing charges told The Washington Post yesterday that part of her assignment was to break down prisoners to prepare them for interrogation.

"They would bring in one to several prisoners at a time already hooded and cuffed," Specialist Sabrina Harman said in e-mail interviews from Baghdad. in an article on the paper's website. "The job of the MP was to keep them awake, make it hell so they would talk."

She said military police took direction from military intelligence officers in charge of the facility and from civilian contract employees who conducted interrogators.

Yesterday's congressional hearings also focused on the role of General Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who telephoned CBS-TV anchor Dan Rather last week and pleaded with him not to air the offending photos on the 60 Minutes program. Gen. Myers said he found out about the pictures in January but had not seen them before calling Mr. Rather.

Gen. Myers insisted he wasn't trying to "suppress" the news, arguing that making the images public at a time of renewed violence in Iraq would have inflamed the situation and put the lives of soldiers in danger. "I thought it would bring direct harm to our troops. It would kill our troops."

Democratic Senator Edward Kennedy said the abuse scandal has resulted in "a catastrophic crisis of credibility for our nation.

"To people in the Middle East, the symbol of America is not the Statue of Liberty; it's the prisoner standing on a box wearing a dark cape and a dark hood on his head, wires attached to his body, afraid that he's going to be electrocuted."

globeandmail.com



To: Jim McMannis who wrote (188104)5/8/2004 2:32:30 AM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573922
 
Friday, May 7, 2004 · Last updated 10:46 p.m. PT

Sadr gunmen attack U.K. troops in Basra

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS


BASRA, Iraq -- Gunmen loyal to a radical Shiite cleric attacked British troops in the southern city of Basra on Saturday, a day after the cleric's top aide in the city offered a reward for the capture or killing of coalition soldiers.

The black-garbed militiamen of cleric Muqtada al-Sadr moved in large numbers through the streets of the city, assaulting the governor's building and opening fire on British patrols in several neighborhoods. A rocket-propelled grenade was fired at the U.S.-led coalition headquarters, witnesses said.

British troops arrived to reinforce the guards at the governor's building and took control, witnesses said.

At least one person was wounded, but the full extent of casualties was not immediately known.

Al-Sadr's al-Mahdi Army militia controls the holy Shiite cities of Najaf, Kufa and Karbala, and has clashed with U.S. and other coalition troops over the last several weeks.

The fighting came a day after al-Sadr's top aide in Basra, Sheik Abdul-Sattar al-Bahadli, told worshippers during Friday prayers that $350 would be given to anyone who captures a British soldier and offered $150 for killing one. He also said Iraqis who take female soldiers can keep them as slaves.



To: Jim McMannis who wrote (188104)5/8/2004 2:37:07 AM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1573922
 
May 7, 2004, 9:56PM

23 Iraqis die in clashes with U.S.

Associated Press
RESOURCES



Polish reporter, colleague killed

Poland's best-known war reporter and a colleague were killed Friday by gunmen who ambushed the TV crew on a road south of Baghdad, but Poland's president said the deaths would have no effect on his country's role in Iraq.

Waldemar Milewicz, an award-winning correspondent for Poland's TVP television, and producer Mounir Bouamrane, an Algerian-Polish national, died in volleys of gunfire.


KUFA, Iraq -- U.S. troops clashed with militiamen loyal to radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr in fighting that killed at least 23 Iraqis, and al-Sadr denounced U.S. abuse of Iraqi prisoners in a defiant sermon Friday.

An aide to al-Sadr offered rewards for the capture of coalition troops and told worshippers that anyone who captures a female British soldier can keep her as a slave -- apparently in retaliation for the mistreatment of prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison.

Six members of a family, including three children aged 2, 4 and 5, were killed and three others were wounded when their home was hit, apparently by American fire, during a mortar clash between U.S. troops and al-Sadr fighters in Najaf overnight. At least one militiaman was also killed in the battle.

Clashes in Najaf killed at least 12 al-Sadr gunmen, Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt said in Baghdad. At least four Iraqis were killed in fighting in Karbala, according to hospital sources.

Despite the presence of hundreds of U.S. troops nearby, al-Sadr traveled from Najaf to the main mosque in nearby Kufa surrounded by a large number of his heavily armed, black-garbed gunmen.

"What sort of freedom and democracy can we expect from you (Americans) when you take such joy in torturing Iraqi prisoners?" al-Sadr told several thousand worshippers during a a sermon blasting the United States over the abuse of Iraqi detainees at Baghdad's Abu Ghraib prison.

An aide to al-Sadr in Basra, which is controlled by British troops, offered rewards for the capture or killing of British soldiers or U.S.-allied Iraqi leaders.

Meanwhile, Houston-based Halliburton Co. said an employee in its KBR unit was killed Friday when an explosive device detonated near a military convoy near Baghdad. The death of Daniel Parker, 56, of Summerville, S.C., is the 35th among employees of Halliburton and its subcontractors in Iraq and Kuwait.

chron.com



To: Jim McMannis who wrote (188104)5/8/2004 2:43:56 AM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573922
 
Rummy on the Rocks

Analysis - By Jim Lobe

WASHINGTON, May 7 (IPS) - With the scandal over the abuse of prisoners in U.S. military custody in Iraq still growing, the administration of President George W Bush appears to be shaken to its very core.

While the immediate question is whether Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld could be sufficiently persuasive in Congressional testimony scheduled Friday to survive the fast-spreading calls for his resignation, the larger issue has abruptly become whether the U.S. occupation of Iraq, for which the administration has just asked an additional 25 billion dollars this year, is sustainable.

That question was put front and centre Thursday by Rep. John Murtha, a conservative and highly influential Democrat close to the Pentagon. In private meetings earlier this week, he reportedly told fellow-Democrats that the war was ''unwinnable'' and Thursday issued a blistering attack on the administration's strategy and ''miscalculations'' on Iraq.

''We either have to mobilise or we have to get out,'' Murtha declared in an emotional press conference in which he disclosed the content of a series of written warnings he had sent to Bush and other top officials since his first of many visits to Iraq since September last year.

''Today our forces in Iraq are undermanned, under-resourced, inadequately trained and poorly supervised.
There's a lack of leadership, stemming from the very top,'' he said, adding that the most recent scandal should result in resignations ''right up the chain of command''.

Murtha's fury reflected a growing sense that the administration, whose internal splits are now more apparent than ever before, has lost its way in Iraq. This is a point underlined by the unexpected request for 25 billion dollars more -- bringing total spending on Iraq and Afghanistan since 2001 to 191 billion dollars.

That the Bush administration has very little idea about what to do was made clear by the news -- printed in bold across the front pages of the morning's 'Washington Post' and the 'New York Times' -- that Bush had ''privately'' scolded Rumsfeld for not warning him about the photographs before they were broadcast.

While Bush insisted Thursday that the defence secretary will ''stay in my Cabinet'', the fact that White House officials, presumably with the president's authorisation, briefed reporters on the ''private'' dressing-down was unprecedented.


<B.It also encouraged Rumsfeld's State Department rivals to pile on. State officials, who were also furious that the Pentagon had kept them in the dark about its own investigation, told reporters that they had repeatedly warned Rumsfeld and his top aides about problems relating to detainees, not only in Abu Ghraib prison, but also in Afghanistan and at the detention facility at the U.S. navy base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

''It's something Powell has raised repeatedly -- to release as many detainees as possible -- and, second, to ensure that those in custody are properly cared for and treated,'' a ''senior State Department official'' was quoted as telling the 'Post'.

But Rumsfeld, an experienced bureaucratic infighter, was not entirely defenceless. Without quoting a source, the 'Los Angeles Times' reported a few hours after the 'Post' went to press that Rumsfeld was informed about abuses at Abu Ghraib in January and personally told Bush about them shortly thereafter.

That in turn led to embarrassing questions at the White House briefing Thursday about what Bush had done with that information. The questions echoed those raised by the revelation just a few weeks ago about what the president had done after hearing an intelligence briefing on al-Qaeda's intention to hijack airplanes inside the United States one month before the Sep. 11, 2001 attacks on New York and the Pentagon.

Both the White House and Rumsfeld are now insisting that they had only been told about the abuses orally and had never seen the photographs until CBS' Sixty Minutes II broadcast them last week.

Whether that explanation will suffice to contain the scandal, however, is highly doubtful, particularly in light of reports that the photographs may only be the tip of a very large iceberg.

In an interview on Fox News Wednesday night, Seymour Hersh, the investigative reporter who broke the prisoner story in 'The New Yorker', predicted that ''(I)t's going to get much worse. This kind of stuff was much more widespread....I can tell you just from the phone calls I've had in the last 24 hours, ...there are other photos out there. ...There are videotapes of stuff that you wouldn't want to mention on national television...''

Hersh based his prediction largely on the 53-page report by Maj Gen Antonio Taguba, parts of which have remained classified.

He investigated the abuses beginning in January, when Rumsfeld was first informed about them, and finished his report in early March. The report put much of the responsibility for what had taken place at Abu Ghraib prison on the application of interrogation tactics used against Taliban and al-Qaeda suspects at Guantanamo against captives in Iraq and Afghanistan itself.

The fact that Rumsfeld -- who had the time to attend a festive black-tie dinner of the White House Correspondents Association Saturday night, two days after the photos were first aired -- admitted to not having read the full report as recently as Wednesday this week has emboldened those, still mostly Democrats, who are now calling on him to resign.

But Democrats are not alone. Republican lawmakers have privately told reporters that they are fed up with his arrogance and inflexibility, particularly on the issue that Murtha is most angry about -- the administration's failure to provide more troops to secure Iraq, and their own safety, both during and after the invasion.

Several leading Republican lawmakers, including some who are considered very close to the White House, also complained bitterly about not being informed about the abuses or the investigation in advance.

Murtha, a decorated Marine veteran and senior member of the subcommittee that deals with Pentagon appropriations, poured scorn on the administration's optimistic predictions about Iraq.


Without explicitly stating that the war was ''unwinnable'', he at one point said the public had turned against it and that it was unlikely the administration would provide the troops needed to stabilise the situation to such an extent that other countries would be willing to help out.

While Murtha's angry defection created shockwaves in Congress, a stunning attack on Rumsfeld by the generally hawkish 'Washington Post' spread through the capital with unaccustomed force.

Entitled 'Mr. Rumsfeld's Responsibility', the lead editorial of the 'Post' put the blame for the abuse scandal squarely on his shoulders by arguing that his policies on incommunicado detention and refusal to apply the Geneva Conventions have created a ''lawless regime in which prisoners in both Iraq and Afghanistan have been humiliated, beaten, tortured, and murdered -- in which, until recently, no one has been held accountable''.


Rumsfeld's statements since the disclosure of the abuses, moreover, suggested that ''(h)is message remains the same: that the United States need not be bound by international law and that the crimes Mr Taguba reported are not, for him a priority. That attitude has undermined the American military's observance of basic human rights and damaged this country's ability to prevail in the war on terrorism'', the 'Post' observed. (END)

ipsnews.net



To: Jim McMannis who wrote (188104)5/8/2004 2:48:07 AM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1573922
 
'Cooks and drivers were working as interrogators'
Witness: private contractor lifts the lid on systematic failures at Abu Ghraib jail

Julian Borger in Washington
Friday May 7, 2004

The Guardian

Many of the prisoners abused at the Abu Ghraib prison were innocent Iraqis picked up at random by US troops, and incarcerated by under-qualified intelligence officers, a former US interrogator from the notorious jail told the Guardian.

Torin Nelson, who served as a military intelligence officer at Guantánamo Bay before moving to Abu Ghraib as a private contractor last year, blamed the abuses on a failure of command in US military intelligence and an over-reliance on private firms. He alleged that those companies were so anxious to meet the demand for their services that they sent "cooks and truck drivers" to work as interrogators.


"Military intelligence operations need to drastically change in order for something like this not to happen again," Mr Nelson said. He spoke to the Guardian in a series of interviews by phone and email.

He claimed that "many of the detainees at the prison are actually innocent of any acts against the coalition and are being held until the bureaucracy there can go through their cases and verify their need to be released."

"One case in point is a detainee whom I recommended for release and months later was still sitting in the same tent with no change in his status."


Mr Nelson said that the same systemic problems were also responsible for large numbers of Afghans being mistakenly swept into Guantánamo Bay. He estimated that "30-40%" of the inmates at the controversial prison camp had no connection to terrorism.

"There are people who should never have been sent over there. I was involved in the process of reviewing people for possible release and I can say definitely that they should have been released and released a lot sooner," he said.

The former commander of the Guantánamo Bay Camp, Major General Geoffrey Miller, was transferred to Iraq a month ago to overhaul the prison system there, although he has been criticised for his recommendations last year that US prison guards in Iraq help "set the conditions" for interrogations by softening up detainees.

Such allegations have been made before by victims' families and human rights groups but Mr Nelson's story represents the first insider's account by an American interrogator. It amounts to an indictment of a system gone awry, and contradicts claims by the White House and the Pentagon that Abu Ghraib does not represent a systemic problem.

Mr Nelson denies any involvement in the physical and sexual abuse of Iraqis at Abu Ghraib, and is listed in the official military report into the scandal as a witness rather than a suspect. He says he resigned from his job in February in fear for his life, because Abu Ghraib was coming under increasing attack by Iraqi insurgents, and because of his disillusion in the military leadership there. He is now working for a private contractor - but not as an interrogator - in another country that is part of the US "global war on terrorism". He did not want his whereabouts published.

Mr Nelson said he had come forward to speak now because he believed that military intelligence was seeking to blame the Abu Ghraib scandal on a handful of soldiers to divert attention away from ingrained problems in the military detention and interrogation system.

As a witness in an ongoing investigation, Mr Nelson said he could not talk about the abuses of specific prisoners at Abu Ghraib, but he said the nature of the detention system makes the imprisonment and abuse of innocent people all but inevitable.

"A unit goes out on a raid and they have a target and the target is not available; they just grab anybody because that was their job," Mr Nelson said, referring to counter-insurgency operations in Iraq. "The troops are under a lot of stress and they don't know one guy from the next. They're not cultural experts. All they want is to count down the days and hopefully go home. They take it out on the nearest person they can't understand."

"I've read reports from capturing units where the capturing unit wrote, "the target was not at home. The neighbour came out to see what was going on and we grabbed him," he said.

According to Mr Nelson's account, the victims' very innocence made them more likely to be abused, because interrogators refused to believe they could have been picked up on such arbitrary grounds.

"Now, whether the detainees are put into the general intelligence holding area, where they rot for a few months until final release, or if they are placed in solitary confinement because their story seems unbelievable is completely in the hands of the interrogator's opinion," he said. "It is in solitary that the abuses can be committed. So, in theory it is in fact very possible that purely innocent Iraqis could be placed in an environment where they could be brutalised, abused, "softened up" or even killed."

"At Abu Ghraib there were plenty of detainees talking or wanting to talk, but the leadership was focused on the "hard" targets of high-value," Mr Nelson said. "This was mainly because the leadership was almost completely focused on getting the highest ranking Ba'ath party members still in hiding. And many of the interrogators were anxious to "go after" the difficult eggs. They wanted to be the one interrogator who broke the linking detainee and found such and such high value target. They weren't interested in going through the less glamorous work of sifting through the chaff to get to the kernels of truth from the willing detainees, they were interested in "breaking" the tough targets."

Much of the problem lay in the quality of US interrogators, Mr Nelson said, explaining that only the youngest and least experienced intelligence officers actually question detainees.

"Once you get up to a level of NCO [non commissioned officer] or warrant officer you generally get moved into administration. You are taken out of working as an interrogator," he said.

As the number of suspects sucked into the system exploded, the Pentagon came to rely increasingly on interrogators from private contractors to question them. Mr Nelson was one of a team of roughly 30 in Abu Ghraib employed by a Virginia-based firm, CACI International. He believes his decade of experience in military intelligence made him well-qualified to do the job, but he had growing doubts about his colleagues.

"I'd say about of the contractors that it's kind of a hit or miss. They're under so much pressure to fill slots quickly... They penalise contracting companies if they can't fill slots on time and it looks bad on companies' records," Mr Nelson said. "If you're in such a hurry to get bodies, you end up with cooks and truck drivers doing intelligence work."

"There was someone was hired as an interrogator or screener whose previous job was a truck driver. That was pretty close to when I was leaving," Mr Nelson recalled. "My eyes went really wide at that point - really scraping the bottom of the barrel."

CACI International did not respond to a request for comment on Mr Nelson's account. The firm has told other reporters that it has not been contacted by military investigators about the work of its employees at Abu Ghraib. Its recruitment notices seeking interrogators state that the job "requires a top secret clearance" and note that the successful applicant would operate "under minimal supervision."

Mr Nelson worked at Guantánamo Bay as a senior interrogator attached to the Utah National Guard. He said that most of the interrogators there were military professionals, but that by the time he left in early 2003, private contractors had begun to arrive.

There is no evidence of abuses on the scale of Abu Ghraib being committed at Guantánamo Bay, but Mr Nelson said that like the Iraqi jail, it was packed with innocent people, who are only now being released.

"Mistakes were made and people who should never have been sent there ended up there, and it's taken this amount of time to get people to take the decision to get these people out of there," Mr Nelson said.


"All it takes is the signature of a low ranking NCO to send someone right around the world and have them locked up indefinitely but it takes the signature of the secretary of defence to let them go."

guardian.co.uk



To: Jim McMannis who wrote (188104)5/8/2004 2:54:05 AM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1573922
 
Abuse photos undermine Bush's religious rhetoric
Church leaders object to casting God on U.S. side

Don Lattin, Chronicle Religion Writer
Friday, May 7, 2004





The abuse of Iraqi prisoners by some U.S. soldiers points to the danger of President Bush describing the occupation of Iraq and the war on terror as battles between forces of good and the "evildoers" of the world, religious leaders say.

Even before compromising photos of nude and hooded prisoners surfaced in the news media, some mainline Protestant and American Muslim leaders had criticized the president for a series of speeches that appeared to say that God was on the side of America.

"We question that kind of theology -- putting 'good' on us and 'evil' on the other,''
said Antonios Kireopoulous, the associate general secretary for international affairs at the National Council of Churches, the major ecumenical agency in the United States.

"Seeing these photos of prisoner abuse puts the lie to that,'' he said in an interview Thursday. "It shows the crack in that kind of thinking.''

In his remarks Thursday marking the annual National Day of Prayer, President Bush showed new caution in his use of religious language. "God is not on the side of any nation," he said during the White House gathering.


"He finds his children within every culture and every tribe,'' the president added.

Former President Ronald Reagan established the first Thursday in May as a National Day of Prayer. While the day is described as an interfaith event, it is primarily promoted by conservative evangelicals. Before the Sept. 11 attacks, President Bush often spoke of his Christian faith in personal, self- help terms, revealing how a conversation with evangelist Billy Graham and a "born-again" conversion helped him overcome a drinking problem and lack of direction in his life.

But in the aftermath of the terror attacks, Bush's religious rhetoric began to reflect what one noted theologian calls "American messianic nationalism.''

Rosemary Ruether, a professor of theology at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, said the president and many of his supporters on the Christian right speak of his administration as "messianic agents chosen by God to combat evil and to establish good.''

But that is not the impression given by the photos coming out of Iraq in the past week.


"They fly in the face of that kind of language,'' Ruether said. "There is something horrendous and contradictory in having all this torture come out of the very same prison used by Saddam Hussein's torturers.''

At a White House news conference Thursday, Bush continued his defense of U.S. troops in Iraq, calling them "honorable, decent, loving people.''

Later in the day, the president seemed to go out of his way to answer theological critiques of his religious rhetoric during his National Day of Prayer remarks.

"Americans do not presume to equate God's purposes with any purpose of our own,'' the president said. "God's will is greater than any man, or any nation built by men. "

Those comments come one week after "Frontline" aired a PBS documentary on Bush titled "The Jesus Factor.''

In the program, a top leader in the Southern Baptist Convention says Bush told him that "God wants me to be president.''

Before that, journalist Bob Woodward quoted Bush as saying that he didn't ask his father, the former president, whether he should invade Iraq, but that he turned instead to "a higher Father" for advice.

Earlier this week, the president's God-talk was criticized at a national convention of Bush's own United Methodist Church.

And at a news conference Tuesday in Pittsburgh, Bishop McKinley Young of the African Methodist Episcopal Church said Bush "is not the only one who hears from God.''

"We did not elect him as priest of the nation,'' Young said. "We elected him as president.''


The most controversial comments about God's role in the Iraq war have come from Army Lt. Gen. William Boykin, the president's deputy undersecretary for intelligence.

Referring to an encounter he had with a Muslim general in Somalia, Boykin said, "I knew that my God was a real God, and his was an idol.''

As for the war on terror, the general told a church group, "We are an army of God raised up for such a time as this."

The comments offended many Muslims, including Helal Omeira, the Northern California director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

Omeira also has been shocked by the abusive photos coming out of Iraq in the past week, but has urged his fellow Muslims not to overreact.

"Blaming Americans for the actions of a few soldiers,'' he said, "is the same as blaming all Muslims for 9/11.''

sfgate.com



To: Jim McMannis who wrote (188104)5/8/2004 3:05:45 AM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573922
 
Powell Wasn't Told of $25 Billion Iraq Request

by Kathy Kiely and Barbara Slavin

WASHINGTON — Shortly before Bush administration officials presented Republican congressional leaders with a request for $25 billion in Iraq funding this week, Secretary of State Colin Powell was telling members of the Congressional Black Caucus that no such request would be forthcoming.

"I'm stunned he didn't know," Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones, D-Ohio, one of the Black Caucus members who met with Powell, said Thursday.

Powell's associates tried to downplay the mix-up. But it underscores the continuing rift between President Bush's departments of State and Defense and deepens the impression that the nation's top diplomat is being cut out of the decision-making process.
"It's unbelievable that our chief diplomat is not being heard," said Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif., another Black Caucus member. "It's tragic and it's dangerous."

Powell recently denied a report in a book by journalist Bob Woodward that he's not on speaking terms with Vice President Cheney. This week, he had to tamp down fresh rumors that he's poised to leave the administration.

Even so, the secretary and his aides have been using the media to signal Powell's frustration with administration policy on Iraq, which has been dominated by the Pentagon and White House.

Powell told Woodward that he warned the president before the war that the United States would be responsible for rebuilding a broken country.


An article published this month in GQ magazine quotes numerous Powell associates complaining about efforts in the Pentagon and vice president's office to cut Powell and the State Department out of decision making on Iraq and other issues. The article describes Powell as "frustrated, exhausted and bitter." Powell's spokesman earlier this week denied the story's claim that the secretary of State doesn't want to continue in office if Bush is re-elected. But Powell refused to comment on his future plans.

"It raises a significant question as to whether the administration is coordinating with itself well enough to coordinate foreign policy," Rep. Artur Davis, D-Ala., said.

After word of the $25 billion Iraq funding request broke Wednesday, Powell called Congressional Black Caucus Chairman Elijah Cummings, D-Md., to assure him he hadn't deliberately misled the caucus. Powell explained he hadn't been informed of the funding request because it was for the military, Cummings said: "Apparently the decision was held closely between the Pentagon and the budget offices."

Traditionally, the State Department takes the lead role in guiding nation-building efforts after a conflict. The Defense Department's insistence on maintaining substantial control over activities and funding in Iraq has been a source of friction in Congress; some members believe it would be easier to win Iraqis' trust, and other countries' assistance, if civilians had a more prominent role in the reconstruction effort.



usatoday.com



To: Jim McMannis who wrote (188104)5/8/2004 3:08:43 AM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1573922
 
The New York Times

Tape of Air Traffic Controllers Made on 9/11 Was Destroyed

by Matthew L. Wald

WASHINGTON — At least six air traffic controllers who dealt with two of the hijacked airliners on Sept. 11, 2001, made a tape recording a few hours later describing the events, but the tape was destroyed by a supervisor without anyone making a transcript or even listening to it, the Transportation Department said Thursday.

The taping began before noon on Sept. 11 at the New York Air Route Traffic Control Center, in Ronkonkoma, N.Y., where about 16 people met in a basement conference room known as the Bat Cave and passed around a microphone, each recalling his or her version of the events of a few hours earlier. The recording included statements of 5 or 10 minutes each by controllers who had spoken by radio to people on the planes or who had tracked the aircraft on radar, the report said.


Officials at the center never told higher-ups of the tape's existence, according to a report made public on Thursday by the inspector general of the Transportation Department.

A quality-assurance manager at the center destroyed the tape several months after it was made, crushing the cassette in his hand, cutting the tape into little pieces and dropping them in different trash cans around the building, according to the report. The tape had been made under an agreement with the union that it would be destroyed after it was superseded by written statements from the controllers, the report said.

The quality-assurance manager told investigators that he had destroyed the tape because he thought making it was contrary to Federal Aviation Administration policy, which calls for written statements, and because he felt that the controllers "were not in the correct frame of mind to have properly consented to the taping" because of the stress of the day.

None of the officials or controllers were identified in the report.

The inspector general, Kenneth M. Mead, said that keeping the tape's existence a secret, and then destroying it, did not "serve the interests of the F.A.A., the department, or the public," and would raise suspicions at a time of national crisis.

The value of the tape was not clear, Mr. Mead said, because no one was sure what was on it, although the written statements given later by five of the controllers were broadly consistent with "sketchy" notes taken by people in the Bat Cave. (The sixth controller did not give a statement, apparently because that controller did not speak to either of the planes or observe them on radar.)

Mr. Mead had been asked by Senator John McCain, the Arizona Republican who is chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee, to look into how well the aviation agency had cooperated with the federal commission investigating the Sept. 11 attacks. Mr. McCain said in a statement that he looked forward to "appropriate disciplinary actions" and that he might investigate this matter further.

A spokesman for the 9/11 commission, Al Felzenberg, said Mr. Mead's report was "meticulous" and "came through the efforts of a very conscientious senator." Mr. Felzenberg said that the commission would not comment now on the content of the report, but that it "does speak to some of the issues we're interested in."

The quality-assurance manager destroyed the tape sometime in December 2001, January 2002 or February 2002. By that time he and the center manager had received an e-mail message from the F.A.A. instructing officials to safeguard all records and adding, "If a question arises whether or not you should retain data, RETAIN IT."

The inspector general ascribed the destruction to "poor judgment."

An F.A.A. spokesman, Greg Martin, said that "we have taken appropriate disciplinary action" against the quality-assurance manager.



To: Jim McMannis who wrote (188104)5/8/2004 3:12:40 AM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1573922
 
Israel is trying to see if they can get into more wars than us. God is working with Bush and Sharon on this matter! ;~))

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The New York Times

Israelis and Hezbollah Clash at Lebanon Line

By GREG MYRE

Published: May 8, 2004

JERUSALEM, May 7 - Israeli troops and Hezbollah guerrillas from Lebanon traded artillery fire for several hours on Friday along the border region in their most intense shooting exchange in months. One Israeli soldier was killed and five were wounded, the military said.

Friday was the third straight day of fire across the frontier, and the shooting took place in the areas around Shabaa Farms, a rocky, uninhabited hillside that has been the focus of periodic battles in recent years.




Israeli-Hezbollah skirmishes always raise the possibility of a rapid escalation that could set off a wider conflict. But Israel's deputy prime minister, Ehud Olmert, told Israel radio that the fighting was "limited to this area and no rocket was fired against Israel civilian targets."

Still, at least one Israeli politician called on Israel to single out neighboring Syria, which supports Hezbollah, a Shiite Muslim movement. Israel, along with the United States, regards Hezbollah as a terrorist group.

"Syria, and not Lebanon, is the one who gives Hezbollah permission to carry out these actions," said Ephraim Sneh, a member of Parliament and a former deputy defense minister.

Syria "needs to be reminded of the results of these actions," Mr. Sneh told Israel radio.

After two days of small-scale shooting exchanges, Hezbollah unleashed dozens of artillery shells, rockets and mortars at Israeli military positions shortly after 4 a.m. Friday, Israel said.

Hezbollah said it opened fire when Israeli troops tried to enter Lebanese territory, Reuters reported from Lebanon.

One soldier was killed and five were wounded, two of them seriously, according to the Israeli military. The soldiers were checking a border post when they came under attack, and they did not cross into Lebanon, the military said.

Israel hit back with artillery, and Israeli jets carried out airstrikes at suspected Hezbollah bases in southern Lebanon, the Israeli military said. Several houses in the Lebanese border town of Kafr Shuba were damaged, but there were no reports of injuries, Reuters said.

In Beirut, Lebanon's foreign minister, Jean Obeid, said "the situation is taking a dangerous course," and he called on the United Nations to restrain Israel, news agencies reported.

After nearly two decades in southern Lebanon, Israel pulled its troops out four years ago, and the region has been mostly quiet. The United Nations put down markings at the border and said Israel had withdrawn fully from Lebanese territory.

But Lebanon claims the small enclave of Shabaa Farms, which remains under Israeli control. It has been the focus of the fighting in recent years.

Israel captured Shabaa Farms when it took the Golan Heights from Syria in the 1967 war. The United Nations says Israel and Syria should negotiate the status of Shabaa Farms.

Israeli warplanes carry out frequent reconnaissance missions over southern Lebanon, and Hezbollah, which controls the area, often responds with anti-aircraft fire, which sometimes lands in northern Israel. Such incidents periodically develop into artillery exchanges.

The last serious bout was in January, when an Israeli military bulldozer went to clear the explosive planted by Hezbollah along the border, and ventured a short distance into Lebanese territory.

Hezbollah hit the bulldozer with a rocket, killing one soldier. Israel retaliated with airstrikes on Hezbollah bases.

Meanwhile, in other violence on Friday, Israeli troops killed three armed Palestinians in the northern West Bank, according to the military and Palestinians.

Israeli soldiers searching for militants in the center of Nablus spotted a Palestinian man with a pistol on a rooftop and shot him, the military said.

In a refugee camp just outside the town of Tulkarm, soldiers on an arrest raid approached a house and called for members of the Palestinian faction Islamic Jihad to surrender, the army said. One wanted man gave himself up, but two others began shooting at the soldiers and were killed by return fire, the military said.

Also, the Israeli military said it found a Palestinian car outside Nablus that was packed with more than 200 pounds of explosives. The vehicle was blown up in a controlled blast, the military said.

nytimes.com



To: Jim McMannis who wrote (188104)5/8/2004 3:18:02 AM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1573922
 
Okay, jimbo, I think that's enough to get you started. I want you to read everything that I've posted. Let me know when you're done........there will be a quiz! This is the first step in your learning process. Its a brand new day!

Rock on! ;~)


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As US troops fight radical Shiite Sadr’s forces in Najef, Karbala and al Kufa, his Mehdi Army attacks British forces further south and seizes parts of central Basra and al Amara early Saturday. Fierce battles in progress. Friday Sadr announced $350 for capture of British soldier, $150 for killing one, and any female prisoners caught kept as slaves.

Rumsfeld said he took full responsibility and was accountable for US troop abuses of Iraqi prisoners. Offering deepest apology to Iraqis who suffered mistreatment, he admitted failing to assess importance of raising issue at highest level including President.

Rumsfeld announced appointment of top ex-officials to assess investigation underway and report in 45 days. His testimony Friday before Senate Armed Forces Committee was loudly heckled by protesters demanding he be fired. I would resign if I couldn’t be effective, he said and warned: There are more photos and videos. It will get worse.

Sayeret Egoz Staff Sgt. Dennis Laminov, 21, from Bath Yam, was killed, 8 soldiers injured – three seriously - in massive Hizballah artillery, mortar, anti-tank missile attack on Gladioli positions on Mt. Dov early Friday.

Hizballah opened fire – its third attack in as many days - on Israeli troops clearing explosive charges planted around their position. A fierce cross-border duel ensued and Israeli air force went into action against Hizballah firing positions in south Lebanese Shabaa and Shuba villages.

On West Bank, two Jihad Islami terrorists killed in exchange of fire in Nour Shams camp near Tulkarm Friday when large Israeli force closed in on Palestinian terrorist suspects. One detained. IDF intercepted and blew up vehicle packed with three large explosives in Nablus Salem village.

Bush backs away from promises to Sharon. Responding to Arab complaints, he assured Jordan’s King Abdullah that borders and refugees issues must be negotiated against Security Council 1967 and 1973 resolutions that demanded Israel’s withdrawal from captured land. He promised not to prejudice such negotiations.

Bush did not repeat his support for Israel’s retention of some West Bank settlements or opposition to settling Palestinian refugees in Israel. Rice to meet Qureia in ten days in Germany, re-establishing White House link with Palestinians for first time since last summer in Aqaba

US tank force enters Karbala. In Najef, 41 Sadr militiamen killed battling takeover of governor’s offices by US troops backed by tanks and armored cars. Sadrists captured offices last month. Clashes followed Bremer's appointment of Adnan al Sharifi as new provincial governor for Najef. He called on Sadr’s Mehdi militia to lay down arms.

DEBKAfile adds: Americans concluded pact with Four Grand Ayatollahs of city to refrain from entering or battling in environs of Shiite shrines. Sadr’s militiamen and arsenal are holed up in shrines area.

First arrest in US of suspect in Madrid train bombing. FBI takes US citizen Brandon Mayfield, a Muslim lawyer, into custody in Portland, Oregon after his fingerprints found on items used in attack.

Rewards of 10 kgs of gold on offer for assassination of Bremer, senior US officers, Kofi Annan or Brahimi on web site used by al Qaeda that claims it was made on transcript of Bin Laden audio tape.

Likud “Quartet” set to move in on party leadership and ascertain final demise of PM’s unilateral disengagement and withdrawal plan. See DEBKAfile Special Analysis below

Nautilus laser beam jointly developed by US and Israel destroyed long-range rocket in first successful test over White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico this week. The Nautilus can answer Israel’s need for a system to intercept missiles and cruise missiles for which there is no other solution.

Some Bush administration members say Syria has centrifuges to enrich uranium for bombs. Report disputed by some parts of US intelligence comes amid mounting pressure in Washington to clamp sanctions down on Syria. Several Western diplomats in Vienna certain Syria was customer of Khan, Pakistani nuclear secrets black marketeer.

debka.com