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


To: RetiredNow who wrote (213631)12/20/2004 9:44:20 AM
From: RetiredNow  Respond to of 1577900
 
Hi all, not going to debate the content of the following article. It's just more evidence that Iran is a serious threat.
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Tehran Accuses Israel after FBI Catches Iranian Surveillance Teams Red-handed

Excerpt from DEBKA-Net-Weekly 186 Updated by DEBKAfile

December 19, 2004, 9:46 PM (GMT+02:00)

Iranian Intelligence and Security Ministry ordered surveillance of Israeli diplomatic missions

Iranian foreign ministry spokesman announced Sunday December 19 that intelligence minister Ali Younessi would “soon” report to the government on an eight-member spy ring that gathered information for Israel. No further information was offered about the identities of the “spies,” the nature of the “information” they had gathered or when.

DEBKAfile’s intelligence sources classify this vague, unverifiable charge as a typical Iranian exercise to cover up a fiasco. (Only recently they claimed to have put unnamed al Qaeda terrorists on trial.) It came two days after DEBKA-Net-Weekly broke the story that Iranian and Iran-sponsored surveillance teams has been discovered hanging about outside Israel’s diplomatic missions in the United States, South America, West Europe and the Middle East. Team members rounded up by the American FBI and Egyptian intelligence in the last ten days admitted under interrogation that they were collecting information for Iranian intelligence.

Here is an excerpt from the DEBKA-Net-Weekly exclusive:

Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak gave Israel’s trade and industry minister Ehud Olmert some disturbing news on Tuesday, December 14, when the two countries signed an accord that grants certain Egyptian exports duty-free status in the United States.

The day before the Israeli minister’s arrival in Cairo, Egyptian security services arrested a group of Egyptian Islamic fundamentalists carrying out surveillance of the Israeli embassy in Cairo and monitoring the movements of Israeli diplomats and their families in the city. They told their interrogators they were working for Iran.

Jerusalem was not bowled over by this friendly tip from the Egyptian president.

DEBKA-Net-Weekly’s counter-terrorism sources report that foreign intelligence services have been telling Israel since late November that Iranian spy teams have been spotted outside Israeli missions in various parts of the world, including one nabbed by the FBI watching Israeli consulates in Los Angeles, Atlanta and Houston. It was made up of Iranian Americans, Arab and Pakistani students - some of them US citizens, and all activists belonging to Muslim fundamentalist groups.

They were perfectly aware that the data sent to Iranian intelligence was intended for use in hostage taking and bombing attacks against Israeli missions.

The notion of Tehran-instigated terrorist strikes in the middle of America’s main cities struck alarm in US intelligence agencies and Homeland Security department. Clearly, operations of this magnitude could not have been planned without top-level sanction from spiritual leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, or without the presence in America of an operational network. Although assigned with striking Israeli consulates, there is nothing to stop this network from expanding its mission to American strategic targets as well.

Of particular concern are the close ties evolving between Iranian intelligence and al Qaeda cells based inside the Islamic republic. US intelligence sources have learned that Khamenei in person has created a new clandestine umbrella organization for bringing together as an arm of his bureau all the al Qaeda-linked groups and likeminded movements.

US intelligence experts are certain that data gathered for Tehran by the captured Iranian surveillance team may well have reached al Qaeda, some of it passed deliberately. Osama bin Laden’s organization is believed to be plotting a major attack in the United States. The Islamic Republic is in the habit of using proxies for its terror campaigns, like the Lebanese Hizballah against Israeli targets. That Al Qaeda operatives are harbored in Iran and run cells in many countries make it a natural partner-in-terror.


In the wake of the round-up of Iranian teams, al Qaeda cells were also picked up in Brussels, Amsterdam, Madrid and the Uruguayan capital of Montevideo. Hizballah surveillance teams were rounded up in parts of West Europe.

The US interrogation of the Iranian surveillance team and sightings of other watchers have led Israeli intelligence and security chiefs to conclude that Tehran was plotting simultaneous terrorist strikes across America and other parts of the world, blowing up Israeli missions and Jewish centers and taking hostages in several places at once. The captured team may even have been feeding deeply buried terrorist cells set up to carry out this string of assaults and still at large.

Israel has accordingly put all its embassies, consulates and other missions, as well as airlines, shipping companies and overseas company offices on high terror alert. Security has also been stepped up at overseas Jewish institutions and schools.



To: RetiredNow who wrote (213631)12/20/2004 10:40:59 AM
From: Road Walker  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1577900
 
re: However, my point was that 51% of the people out there want something done about SS. Our government's function is to act in accordance with the will of the people.

Then I guess it DOA (see the bold below):

Bush urges quick action on Social Security, economic issues

By Marilyn Geewax
Cox News Service
Monday, December 20, 2004

WASHINGTON — President Bush sought Americans' support Thursday for quick action on an economic agenda that would bring far-reaching changes to their lives.

"Now is the time to confront Social Security," Bush said on the closing day of a two-day economic conference called to promote his economic plans for 2005.

Besides altering the nation's largest social program, Bush urged Congress to simplify the tax code, rein in government spending, hold down lawsuits and roll back regulations.

He also wants Congress to turn the temporary tax cuts he won in his first term into enduring legacies. "All the tax relief we passed must be made permanent," he said.

Bush said he is especially eager to tackle problems facing Social Security. The huge federal retirement and disability program is projected to run out of money to pay benefits by 2042.

"I'm looking forward to working with members of both chambers (of Congress) and both parties to confront this issue today, before it becomes more acute," Bush said.

Bush said Congress can work out the legislative details for Social Security, but must adhere to his guiding principles for reform:

— Guarantee that for current retirees, "nothing will change" in terms of monthly benefits.

— Ensure that payroll taxes will not increase.

— Allow younger workers to open personal savings accounts that could be funded with a portion of their Social Security taxes.

"I will continue to articulate principles that I think are important and reach out to members of both parties to fashion a plan that solves the problem," he said at the conference, which was held in the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center near the White House.

The president has a sales job to do in convincing Americans to back his plan. A Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll released Thursday shows that by a margin of 50 percent to 38 percent, people are inclined to believe it's "a bad idea" to let workers invest Social Security taxes in the stock market.

The idea was denounced Thursday at a news conference held by leaders of several labor, women's, civil rights and retirees organizations.

Labor leader John Sweeney, president of the AFL-CIO, said Bush's proposal "will take trillions of dollars out of the Social Security trust funds, further balloon our nation's deficit and jeopardize the retirement security of working families."

Sweeney called the economic summit "just another public relations gimmick to promote the president's damaging proposal to privatize Social Security."

Sweeney and others suggested that Social Security could be made solvent by raising the cap on earnings subject to the payroll tax, currently $87,500, and by earmarking federal estate and gift taxes collected after 2009 for the Social Security trust fund.

Kim Gandy, president of the National Organization for Women, noted that many women, who generally earn less than men, would be unable to save enough in private investment accounts to offset the high cost of administering them.

But Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist for Charles Schwab and Co. and a participant in the White House conference, said administration costs would be low.

"The fees are structured to be so minimal that in fact, even the studies have shown that under any set of proposals, Wall Street doesn't make any money on this for another seven or eight years," she said.

Bush also said he is not worried that Americans would make poor savings choices because any new system would have guidelines to steer investors.

"You can't take it to the race track and hope to really increase the returns," he said. "It's not there for the lottery."

He suggested the accounts could be patterned after the investment plan available to federal workers — the Thrift Savings Plan, a tax-deferred retirement investment plan similar to a 401(k).

Another conference participant, Richard Parsons, chairman and CEO of Time Warner Inc., said that even if reform proposals have some drawbacks, Congress must be willing to act because Social Security is "on a train wreck course" if nothing changes.

"You can't fix this problem with no pain, without making some sacrifices, but the time to start making those sacrifices is now," he said.

Bush did not suggest how Congress should handle any funding shortfall that would result from diverting payroll taxes away from Social Security. Some experts say the partial privatization of Social Security could create a funding gap of $1 trillion or more.

But Bush said he would reduce the federal budget deficit, estimated at $413 billion this year, by cracking down on government spending.

"If the deficit is an issue — which it is — therefore it's going to require some tough choices on the spending side," Bush said.

During Bush's first term, administration officials tended to downplay the significance of the rising deficit, saying its size was manageable. Many fiscal conservatives within the Republican Party have been making it clear recently they want deficit reduction to be a higher priority.

Throughout the conference, attended by hundreds of supportive business leaders, lobbyists and economists, Bush reiterated his commitment to ending "frivolous" lawsuits that he says hurts small businesses and reform medical liability.

He said he would not shrink from political battles to make big changes.

"Why think little when it comes to making sure America is still the center of excellence in the world?" Bush asked. "Great economies do not get weak all at once. They're kind of eaten away, you know, year by year, by challenges that people just refuse to meet. Slowly but surely, an economy, a great economy, can be eroded to the point of mediocrity."

Larry Lipman of the Pam Beach Post contributed to this article.

On the Web:

White House: www.whitehouse.gov

Marilyn Geewax's e-mail address is marilyng(at)coxnews.com