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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DuckTapeSunroof who wrote (749803)9/21/2006 6:02:46 PM
From: pompsander  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
We have a deal on detainees....Bush blinks

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Bush, GOP rebels agree on detainee bill By ANNE PLUMMER FLAHERTY, Associated Press Writer
20 minutes ago


WASHINGTON - The White House and rebellious Senate Republicans announced agreement Thursday on rules for the interrogation and trial of suspects in the war on terror. President Bush urged Congress to put it into law before adjourning for the midterm elections.

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"I'm pleased to say that this agreement preserves the single most potent tool we have in protecting America and foiling terrorist attacks," the president said, shortly after administration officials and key lawmakers announced agreement following a week of high-profile intraparty disagreement.

Sen. John McCain (news, bio, voting record) of Arizona, one of three GOP lawmakers who told Bush he couldn't have the legislation the way he initially asked for it, said, "The agreement that we've entered into gives the president the tools he needs to continue to fight the war on terror and bring these evil people to justice."

"There's no doubt that the integrity and letter and spirit of the Geneva Conventions have been preserved," McCain said, referring to international agreements that cover the treatment of prisoners in wartime.

Details of the agreement were sketchy.

The central sticking point had involved a demand from McCain, Sen. John Warner (news, bio, voting record) of Virginia and Sen. Lindsey Graham (news, bio, voting record) of South Carolina for a provision making it clear that torture of suspects would be barred.

One official said that under the agreement, the administration agreed to drop language that would have stated an existing ban on cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment was enough to meet Geneva Convention obligations.

Convention standards are much broader and include a prohibition on "outrages" against "personal dignity."

In turn, this official said, negotiators agreed to clarify what acts constitute a war crime. The official spoke on condition of anonymity, saying he had not been authorized to discuss the details.

The agreement did not extend to a related issue — whether suspects and their lawyers would be permitted to see any classified evidence in the cases against them.

Warner, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said he wouldn't consider the agreement sealed until Bush signed on.

That happened within an hour, when the president stepped before microphones in Orlando, Fla., where he was campaigning for Republican candidates in the fall.

The agreement "clears the way to do what the American people expect us to do — to capture terrorists, to detain terrorists, to question terrorists and then to try them," he said.

The accord was sealed in a 90-minute session in the office of Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, who had earlier in the day told Warner, McCain and Graham it was time to close the deal. The four lawmakers were joined by Stephen Hadley, the president's national security adviser, as well as other administration officials, for the final session.

If it survives scrutiny, the accord would fulfill a Republican political and legislative imperative — pre-election party unity on an issue related to the war on terror, and possible enactment of one of Bush's top remaining priorities of the year.

The evident compromise came less than a week after Bush emphatically warned lawmakers at a news conference he would shut down the interrogation of terror suspects unless legislation was sent to his desk. "Time's running out," he said.

The White House shifted its tone from combative to compromising within 48 hours, though, and officials began talking of a need for an agreement that all sides would be comfortable with.

Whatever the outcome, the controversy has handed critics of the president's conduct of the war on terror election-year ammunition.

Bush's former secretary of state, Colin Powell, dismayed the administration when he sided with Warner, McCain and Graham. He said Bush's plan, which would have formally changed the U.S. view of the Geneva Conventions on rules of warfare, would cause the world "to doubt the moral basis" of the fight against terror and "put our own troops at risk."

The handling of suspects is one of two administration priorities relating to the war on terror.

The other involves the president's request for legislation to explicitly allow wiretapping without a court warrant on international calls and e-mails between suspected terrorists in the United States and abroad. One official said Republicans had narrowed their differences with the White House over that issue, as well, and hoped for an agreement soon.

Republican leaders have said they intend to adjourn Congress by the end of the month to give lawmakers time to campaign for re-election.

The Supreme Court ruled in June that Bush's plan for trying terrorism suspects before military tribunals violated the Geneva Conventions and U.S. law.

The court, in a 5-3 ruling, found that Congress had not given Bush the authority to create the special type of military trial and that the president did not provide a valid reason for the new system. The justices also said the proposed trials did not provide for minimum legal protections under international law.

About 450 terrorism suspects, most of them captured in Afghanistan and none of them in the U.S., are being held by military authorities at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Ten have been charged with crimes.



To: DuckTapeSunroof who wrote (749803)9/21/2006 6:40:07 PM
From: pompsander  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
"New Twist in Virginia Senate Race

After The Forward last month reported his mother was Jewish, the New York Times says Sen. George Allen's (R-VA) re-election campaign "took another unexpected turn" when Allen "issued a statement confirming his Jewish ancestry."

The controversy was not so much over the news as it was over his initial reaction to the news and his delayed repsonse. The Washington Post notes the issue came up in a debate earlier this week and Allen "became visibly upset, saying his mother's religion was not relevant to the campaign and chiding the reporter for 'making aspersions about people because of their religious beliefs.'"

Meanwhile, this latest twist in an increasingly bizarre Senate campaign spurred CQ Politics to change the rating on the race to Leans Republican from Republican Favored."

Allen is one gooofy guy.



To: DuckTapeSunroof who wrote (749803)9/21/2006 6:57:11 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Iraqis Using Kidnap Victims As Bombers
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By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: September 21, 2006
Filed at 6:28 p.m. ET

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- Insurgents are now using unwitting kidnap victims as suicide bombers -- seizing them, booby-trapping their cars without their knowledge, then releasing them only to blow up the vehicles by remote control, the Defense Ministry warned Thursday.

A U.S. official who spoke on condition of anonymity said he was aware of such incidents but was unable to provide further details.

The Iraqi announcement -- the latest development in the deadly war waged by the insurgency -- came as widespread lawlessness swept the capital Thursday with kidnappings, deadly attacks on police, the discovery of more mutilated death squad victims and a brazen daylight bank heist by men dressed as Iraqi soldiers.

It was unclear from the Defense Ministry's statement whether the insurgents are using kidnap victims because they are having trouble finding recruits for suicide missions. U.S. officials have said insurgents often tape or handcuff a suicide driver's hands to a car, or bind his foot to the accelerator pedal, to ensure that he did not back out at the last minute. The remains of such hands and feet have been found at blast sites.

Although roadside bombs are the main weapon used by insurgents, suicide car bombers are often their most effective one -- designed to maximize casualties and sow fear among the population. According to the Washington-based Brookings Institution, since the fall of Saddam Hussein to Sept. 17 there have been 343 suicide car bombings involved in attacks causing multiple deaths around Iraq.

''According to our intelligence information, recent car bomb explosions targeting checkpoints and public places have nothing to do with (traditional) terrorist operations,'' the Defense Ministry said in its statement.

It said that first ''a motorist is kidnapped with his car. They then booby-trap the car without the driver knowing. Then the kidnapped driver is released and threatened to take a certain road.''

The kidnappers then follow the car and when the unwitting victim ''reaches a checkpoint, a public place, or an army or police patrol, the criminal terrorists following the driver detonate the car from a distance.''

The U.N. Assistance Mission in Iraq's Human Rights office warned that the number of Iraqi civilians killed in July and August hit 6,599, a record high number that is far greater than initial estimates had suggested and points to the grave sectarian crisis gripping the country.

It offered a grim assessment across a range of indicators, reporting worrying evidence of torture, unlawful detentions, the growth of sectarian militias and death squads, and a rise in ''honor killings'' of women.

The United Nations' chief anti-torture expert warned Thursday that torture may now be more widespread than it was under Saddam's regime, with militias, terrorist groups and government forces disregarding rules on the humane treatment of prisoners.

''What most people tell you is that the situation as far as torture is concerned now in Iraq is totally out of hand,'' Manfred Nowak said in Geneva.

More than a dozen apparent victims of death squads were found in the capital Thursday, many showing signs of torture.

A U.S. soldier was killed Thursday while operating in the restive Anbar province west of Baghdad, the military announced. Earlier in the day, the military said another American soldier was killed in northern Baghdad on Wednesday when a roadside bomb exploded next to the vehicle in which he was traveling.

Despite the bloodshed, coalition forces moved ahead with plans to turn security responsibilities over to Iraqi troops by the end of 2007.

Italy formally handed over the reins of the relatively quiet Dhi Qar province in the south. It was the second of Iraq's 18 provinces to be turned over to local control, and paves the way for most of Italy's 1,600 troops to return home by the end of the year -- a campaign promise by new Prime Minister Romano Prodi.

The overall U.S. strategy calls for coalition forces to redeploy to larger bases and let Iraqis become responsible for their security in specific regions. The larger bases can act in a support or reserve role to Iraqi troops should they need help. No timeframe has been set for the eventual drawdown of troops from Iraq.

In the Baghdad bank robbery, an Associated Press reporter saw about 15 armed men in three pickup trucks pull up outside a branch of the Rafidain Bank in the Karrada area, a downtown commercial neighborhood.

The well-organized robbery appeared to witnesses to be a regular salary pickup. Two or three of the men entered the bank, then five people exited with bags, accompanied by a man in civilian clothes who appeared to be carrying documents. They got back into their vehicles and drove off.

No shots were heard, but police 1st Lt. Mahmoud Khayyoun said a bank manager was injured and the assailants got away with an unknown amount of cash.

Elsewhere, four employees of a government-owned company were seized by eight armed men in three cars in the commercial heart of the capital as they left work, Khayyoun said. The kidnappers left the victims' car on the spot and sped off, he said.

A group of armed men also attacked a minibus carrying employees of a cell phone company, seriously wounding five of them, police Lt. Mohammed al-Baghdadi said. The attack took place in the southern Baghdad neighborhood of Dora, one of those recently swept by Iraqi and U.S. troops in the security crackdown dubbed Operation Together Forward.

Gunmen also opened fire on a car in western Baghdad and wounded two civilians. When police arrived to evacuate the wounded they too came under fire, police Lt. Thair Mahmoud said. One policeman was killed and another wounded.

Six more policemen were killed and one more was wounded in an attack on a Baghdad police station in the Khadra neighborhood, when assailants first fired a mortar at the building and then drove up in four cars and opened fire with machine guns, police said.

Another eight civilians were killed and 20 wounded in other car bombings and mortar attacks in the capital, police said.

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Associated Press reporters Patrick Quinn, Qais al-Bashir, Muhieddin Rashad and Bushra Juni contributed to this report from Baghdad.