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


To: tejek who wrote (190505)6/14/2004 12:52:38 PM
From: Thomas M.  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1576376
 
Red Cross Ultimatum To US On Saddam

Release him, charge him or break international law, Bush told

by Jonathan Steele

Saddam Hussein must either be released from custody by June 30 or charged if the US and the new Iraqi government are to conform to international law, the International Committee of the Red Cross said last night.

Nada Doumani, a spokeswoman for the ICRC, told the Guardian: "The United States defines Saddam Hussein as a prisoner of war. At the end of an occupation PoWs have to be released provided they have no penal charges against them."

[continued ...]

guardian.co.uk

(of course, a trial would bring up too much dirt on the U.S.)



To: tejek who wrote (190505)6/14/2004 12:57:54 PM
From: Thomas M.  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1576376
 
James Bamford has a new book that looks like a must-read:

One Expert's Verdict: The CIA Caved Under Pressure


by Michael Duffy

The CIA that George Tenet leaves behind next month is a shadow of its imaginary self, a butt of jokes rather than the envy of the world. It is an agency that has become self-protective and bureaucratic; it is too reliant on gadgets rather than spies to steal secrets. Sometimes the CIA has simply been too blind to see what is hiding in plain sight. Tenet restored the agency's morale, but he leaves behind a string of spectacular intelligence failures.

And that may not be the worst of it. In his new book A Pretext for War, intelligence expert James Bamford alleges that the CIA not only failed to detect and deter the secret army of Muslim extremists gathering over the horizon in the late 1990s but also failed to take action when a group of Administration hard-liners, backed by the Pentagon chief and Vice President Dick Cheney, began to advance the case for war with Iraq in secret using data the CIA widely believed weren't supportable or were just plain false. Instead of fighting back, Bamford argues, the CIA for the most part rolled over and went along. The result was a war sold largely on a fiction, confected from unchecked rumor and biased informants.

[continued ...]

time.com