SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Road Walker who wrote (295091)7/16/2006 2:24:02 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 1572921
 
In Haifa, a Scene of Death and Destruction

By GREG MYRE
Published: July 16, 2006
HAIFA, Israel, July 16 — The train platform, slick with blood and littered with chunks of fallen roof, was the grim evidence confirming a prediction that Israeli security chiefs had made for years. Hezbollah, they said, had acquired larger, more powerful rockets that could soar over Israel’s thinly populated north and wreak havoc on major cities.

This morning, one of those rockets punched through the roof of a huge train maintenance hangar near the Mediterranean coast in the port city of Haifa, killing eight workers and wounding more than 20.

Twisted metal dangled from above and debris covered the site where train company employees had just arrived for the beginning of the Israeli workweek. Two trains were charred with their windows blown out.

Sliman Halaby, a railway worker, saw the missile strike and raced to help. “I saw the people spread out all over” the platform, he said.

“I talked to them so they would not panic or lose consciousness,” he told Israeli radio. “Then I ran to the entrance because I saw the ambulances were having trouble reaching the gate.”

Hezbollah has been shooting rockets at northern Israel on and off for some two decades, but today’s attack was unprecedented on two counts. It was the deadliest Hezbollah rocket attack to date and the first time the Lebanese Shiite group fired on Israel with a rocket that can carry more than 100 pounds of explosives, capable of inflicting far more damage than the Katyusha rockets that are typically used, according to the Israeli military.

Israel said it was a Fajr-3 rocket that can travel up to 30 miles, while Hezbollah said it fired Raad-2 and Raad-3 rockets. Altogether, 10 of the rockets hit in or near Haifa.

While relatives of the dead and injured wailed with grief at the emergency room of the city’s Rambam Medical Center, many Israelis called on their government to strike even harder at Hezbollah.

“We should wipe Hezbollah off the map without pity and without listening to the criticism from the rest of the world,” said Sarah Benchetrit, 57, who was at the hospital with her husband, who had come for a checkup.

Mrs. Benchetrit, who moved to Israel 22 years ago from New Jersey, said today’s attack was even more unnerving than those in the 1991 Persian Gulf war, when Iraq fired dozens of Scud missiles into Israel.


In those attacks, military radar detected the incoming missiles and issued urgent warnings that gave Israelis a minute or more to take cover. No such warning came today, though Israel has set up three Patriot antimissile batteries in Haifa.

“Our homes and families are being attacked and there is no way we will let this continue,” said Israel’s defense minister, Amir Peretz, who visited Haifa after the attack.

Mr. Peretz said that Hezbollah was firing its rockets from civilian areas, and that Israel would not hesitate to strike at such sites.

“Any source of fire that is identified will be dealt with,” Mr. Peretz said.

The fighting began with a cross-border raid by Hezbollah on Wednesday in which the group captured two Israeli soldiers. Hezbollah has fired around 500 rockets into northern Israel in the past five days, and most of the towns are now deserted.

While that has brought the region’s economy to a standstill, the impact will be far greater if Haifa, a major port and Israel’s third largest city with close to a quarter-million people, also shuts down.


The city, which is 20 miles south of the Lebanese border, was hit by rockets for the first time on Thursday, when two Katyushas caused only nominal damage. Haifa was still relatively busy today following the deadly attack, and most residents said they did not plan to disrupt their routines.

But Israel’s Home Front Command called on residents in Haifa and nearby areas to stay in sheltered areas. All ships in the Haifa port were instructed to go to sea, and Haifa University canceled all activities, Israeli radio reported.

“This attack was terrible, but I feel that if we hit back the shooting will only get worse,” said Limor Avrahami, an occupational therapist at the hospital. “I know most people in Israel disagree with me, but I think this would be the best way to quiet things down.”


nytimes.com

More Articles in International »



To: Road Walker who wrote (295091)7/16/2006 2:29:44 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1572921
 
New Lebanon air strikes kill 23

Israeli warplanes have continued to attack targets across Lebanon

At least 16 died in the city of Tyre, while strikes on a border village killed at least seven, including five with Canadian and Lebanese citizenship.

More than 120 Lebanese have died since clashes with Israel began on Wednesday.


Earlier, eight civilians died and dozens were hurt after Hezbollah rocket fire on Israel's city of Haifa.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said the attack - the worst on Israel since clashes started - would have "far-reaching consequences".

The Israeli air strikes began after Hezbollah seized two Israeli soldiers in a raid into Israel on Wednesday.

In other developments:

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah says the battle against Israel is "just at the beginning", in his first televised appearance since the offensive

Iran's foreign ministry denies Israeli allegations that it supplied missiles to Hezbollah and warns Israel it will incur "unimaginable losses" if it attacks fellow Hezbollah supporters Syria

The Israeli military recovers the bodies of three sailors missing after their ship was hit by a Hezbollah missile on Friday, bringing the number of Israeli troops killed in the Lebanon offensive to 12.

Israel raises the rocket alert threat as far south as Tel Aviv

Rescuers searched the debris with more feared trapped under the rubble.

Israel had warned residents of southern Lebanon the area would come under further heavy bombardment after the attack on Haifa.

Correspondents say the large death-count in a strike on Israel's third-largest city has rattled the whole country.

The eight killed were part of a train repair crew working at a railway depot when the rocket crashed through the roof.

It is the second time in three days that Haifa has been hit by Hezbollah rockets, and raises Israel's civilian death toll from the fighting to 12.

According to Israel Radio a second wave of four rockets then hit, followed by a new barrage of rockets to the north of the city.


It is the worst attack on Israel since the violence began

Hezbollah claimed responsibility for the attacks, saying it was retaliation for the deaths of Lebanese civilians and the destruction of the country's infrastructure during the Israeli air raids.

Israel has carried out a heavy bombing campaign across Lebanon, hitting Hezbollah sites, but also a wide range of civilian targets.

City exodus

Sunday saw a number of Israeli air strikes against Lebanese targets.

Hezbollah's al-Manar TV was attacked in the southern suburbs of the capital Beirut, and a major power station in the city was struck.

There was also a raid in the eastern city of Baalbek, where local Hezbollah leaders were believed to have gathered.

US security teams have landed at the US Embassy in Beirut to start planning the evacuation of Americans.

Foreign nationals have been leaving Lebanon to escape the violence.

As the violence has escalated the number of locals attempting to flee has grown, but with the Israelis targeting the border areas and nearby roads, this has become increasingly difficult.


news.bbc.co.uk



To: Road Walker who wrote (295091)7/16/2006 4:56:40 PM
From: combjelly  Respond to of 1572921
 
While on the subject of Niall, I ran across this in the Wiki...

In its August 15, 2005 edition, The New Republic published "The New New Deal", an essay by Ferguson and Laurence J. Kotlikoff, chairman of the economics department at Boston University. The two scholars advocated the following changes to the American government's economic and fiscal policies:

* Replacing the personal income tax, corporate income tax, payroll tax, estate tax and gift tax with a 33% Federal Retail Sales Tax (FRST), plus a monthly rebate, paid to all households, equal to the amount of FRST paid by households with similar demographics living at the poverty line
* Replacing the retirement benefits portion of Social Security with a Personal Security System (PSS), consisting of private retirement accounts for all citizens plus extra benefits to those who could not afford to save enough for a decent retirement
* Replacing Medicare and Medicaid with a Medical Security System (MSS) that would provide health insurance vouchers to all citizens, the value of which would be determined by one's health
* Cutting federal discretionary spending by 20%



To: Road Walker who wrote (295091)7/17/2006 1:46:22 AM
From: Elroy  Respond to of 1572921
 
That article is a bit hooty tooty for me. This kind iof sentence makes my eyes glaze over and wonder what I need to know to do well on the test.

Progressive realism begins with a cardinal doctrine of traditional realism:

Can you sum it up in a sentence or two?