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To: Alan Markoff who wrote (747)11/5/1998 9:26:00 AM
From: SOROS  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1151
 
Survivors of Storm in Nicaragua Emerge to a Vision of 'Hell'

By Molly Moore Washington Post Service

LEON, Nicaragua - After the wall of muck roared down the slope of the dormant Casitas volcano, burying her family's village and
most of the people in it, Rosa Maria Hurtado embarked on a tormented search for relatives that she described as a trek through hell.

''I saw tens of people walking nude out of the mud, crying and telling horror stories of how many others had died,'' Mrs. Hurtado, 38,
said between sobs in a telephone interview from a hospital near this northwestern Nicaraguan town. ''Most of them were bleeding
and all bruised. I saw pieces of bodies in the mud. I saw a headless body of a child. They rescued a few people alive, but most of
them were dead bodies.''

Her brother survived by clinging to a piece of roof anchored in the mud until a rescue helicopter arrived. But 13 of her 20 relatives
who resided near the volcano are dead, said Mrs. Hurtado, who had recently moved from the buried village to nearby Chinandega.

Six days after the hurricane designated Mitch and its remnants dumped 50 inches (127 centimeters) of rain on Central America, the
death toll in the region is estimated at 9,000, about 7,000 in Honduras and 1,800 to 2,400 in Nicaragua. About 13,000 people are
still reported missing in Honduras and Nicaragua in the aftermath of one of the most deadly natural disasters to strike the region this
century. An estimated 1 million people have been left homeless, according to government officials and aid organizations.

Relief efforts have been thwarted by a shortage of helicopters. The Nicaraguan Air Force only has seven aging Soviet choppers. The
United States has diverted five helicopters from its U.S. Southern Command in Panama, and Mexico has donated two choppers to
the relief efforts.

''People are still out there, buried up to their chests, screaming for help,'' said Jairo Javier Perez, a Red Cross worker.

On Tuesday, President Arnoldo Aleman of Nicaragua led a convoy of all-terrain vehicles through the waterlogged northwestern region
of Nicaragua, which has been cut off from the rest of the country. Raging torrents have leapt every riverbank in the region, gobbling
bridges, uprooting giant trees as though they were matchsticks, and flattening houses and crops.

But even the president's convoy, which was attacked by angry residents at two stops and became stuck while trying to ford a river,
could not reach the stricken area at the base of the Casitas volcano. ''We don't want inspections,'' screamed an irate woman who
joined a rowdy mob that surrounded the president's vehicle at a river crossing. ''There are women and children dying here!''

But complaints about the government's slow response to the crisis were repeated by numerous people interviewed along the rural
roadsides as well as in the makeshift refugee camps that have mushroomed in Managua, the capital, this week.

''People are without water - they don't have anything,'' said Elena Benavidas, 35, who was attempting to make her way from the
capital where she works to her home villages with boxes of clothes, sacks of rice and jugs of water. ''They're dying of hunger. Some
haven't eaten in days.'' iht.com





To: Alan Markoff who wrote (747)11/5/1998 6:30:00 PM
From: SOROS  Respond to of 1151
 
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1998

New Shield for More-Vulnerable Israel: US

Faced with growing military threats from its neighbors, Israel signs a deal that may bring the US to its defense.

Scott Peterson Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

AMMAN, JORDAN

In sharp contrast to the high-profile White House signing ceremony that sealed last month's Mideast peace agreement, President
Clinton has quietly signed a far-reaching American guarantee of Israeli security that stops just short of a defense treaty.

The deal, signed separately by Mr. Clinton and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over the weekend after months of
negotiations, pledges the United States to enhance Israel's "defensive and deterrent capabilities."

The deal will also help Mr. Netanyahu persuade hard-liners that Israel will be compensated for handing back more West Bank land
to Palestinians.

The closer security alliance is a recognition that Israel's traditional policy of military self-reliance may no longer be sufficient to
protect it from longer-range ballistic missiles that are changing the face of the Middle East.

Israeli officials point especially to potential threats from Iran - which in July tested the Shahab-3 missile, with an 800-mile range that
can strike Israel - and Iraq, which during the 1991 Gulf War fired primitive Scud missiles at Israel. "The focus now is on 'over the
horizon' threats," says Shai Feldman, head of the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University.

"So this is about missiles," Mr. Feldman says. "But more than anything else, this is a political statement [to Israel from the US]: 'If
you take risks for peace, we will back you up and try to reduce the threat.' " Enemies of Israel, he says, should be worried about the
enhancement of America's already extensive ties to the Jewish state: "The deal doesn't threaten them, but their ability to threaten
us is diminished."

MISSILE PARADE: An Iranian Shahab-3 missile was part of a recent commemoration of the war with Iraq. The missile has an
800-mile range that can strike Israel. Iran is also believed to be pursuing nuclear weapons. (MOHAMMAD SAYYAD /AP)

Iraq has been largely disarmed by United Nations weapons inspectors, but technical expertise remains. And Iran is widely believed
by Western intelligence officials to be secretly pursuing nuclear weapons.

Adding to the list, Syria has a vast arsenal of Scud missiles that can hit targets anywhere in Israel, and it has the most
sophisticated chemical-weapons programs in the Mideast.

An already formidable Israel

By contrast, Israel already has the most formidable military force in the region. Its own array of ballistic missiles can reach any
target in the "outer ring" of states like Iran, and its maximum range can be intercontinental.

Though it is officially denied, experts say that Israel also has a nuclear arsenal of some 200 to 400 bombs, with boosted destructive
power.

Though not known to maintain large stockpiles of chemical or biological weapons, Israel is believed to be capable of producing such
nonconventional arms. It recently confirmed that an Israeli cargo jet that crashed in Amsterdam in 1992 was carrying large
quantities of three of the four ingredients for the deadly nerve gas Sarin - a substantial amount that Tel Aviv says was to be used for
testing gas masks.

The new US-Israel Memorandum of Agreement - a legally binding executive accord that does not require the approval of Congress -
is similar to one from 1975, but this one carries a presidential signature.

It is "a virtual US umbrella" against missile attack, an Israeli government source told Ha'aretz newspaper, which "preserves Israel's
right to self-defense, but incorporates beyond this an American layer."

"We have the advantages of a [defense] treaty," the Ha'aretz source added, "without the disadvantages."

The deal may be a surprise to some Arab nations, which often can't imagine that US-Israel ties could be closer. For Palestinians -
who for nine days were locked in tough US-brokered peace talks with Israel at Wye - the deal is likely to undermine America's
self-described role as an "honest broker."

Current commitments

The only concrete US military presence now in the region focuses on the Persian Gulf, where some 20,000 American troops have
been deployed to protect oil-rich allies such as Saudi Arabia and Kuwait since the Gulf War.

Since Israel signed the 1979 Camp David peace accord with Egypt, it receives more than $3 billion a year in US largess alone - $1.8
billion for military procurement and $1.2 billion for military-related economic assistance.

Despite a few embarrassing episodes such as the Jonathan Pollard spy case - in which a Jewish-American naval intelligence officer
gave volumes of top-secret US documents to Israel - US commitments to ensuring that Israel maintains its "qualitative" military
edge in the region have for years been "iron-clad."

As part of the Camp David accord, Egypt receives $2.1 billion annually, mostly for arms purchases. The total "aid" to both countries
accounts for 85 percent of the entire US foreign-aid budget.

Us-Israel intelligence sharing is routine. Several joint military technology projects are under way, including the $1.6 billion Arrow
antiballistic missile program, and high-level security meetings are convened every six months to assess regional threats.

"The question is whether this agreement will really place the strategic threats facing Israel on a higher plane among American
priorities," notes an editorial in the Jerusalem Post.

Israel has already been indirectly helped by US moves to counter the proliferation of nuclear and missile material from countries
such as Russia and former Soviet states to Iran and Iraq.

Not bound to intervention

The question of direct intervention by the US may prove to be the deal's weak point.

But the question of direct intervention by the US - which is not required by the accord - may prove to be its weak point. Washington
will view missile threats to Israel "with particular gravity," it states, but is bound only to consultation on what support or assistance,
"diplomatic or otherwise," it can provide.

"This agreement is significant, but with one condition: At the time it is to be implemented, US-Israel relations must be good," says
Reuven Pedatzur, a missile expert and director of the Galili Center for Strategic and National Security at Tel Aviv University.

"So Israel must decide which is more important: holding on to an extra 1 percent of the West Bank [against US wishes], or future
strategic security."

America's interest in the deal stretches further than Israel, Mr. Pedatzur says.

"A balance of terror in the Mideast is very dangerous," he says, "and an Israel threatened by those things is a very dangerous Israel.
So this deal gives Israel confidence for the future."

The benefit for an embattled prime minister shouldn't be discounted either, says Gabriel Sheffer, a political scientist at Hebrew
University in Jerusalem. Netanyahu "needs everything. His coalition is very shaky."

The deal is more symbolism than substance because "Israel already gets whatever it needs."

"It's not a quantum leap forward, there are no secrets in this, and symbolically it was very important," Mr. Sheffer says. "But if I were
Syrian or Iranian, I wouldn't rely on that analysis. I would be very concerned." csmonitor.com




To: Alan Markoff who wrote (747)11/8/1998 7:41:00 PM
From: SOROS  Respond to of 1151
 
UN Agency Promotes Pantheism, Denigrates Judaism, Christianity, and Islam

The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) is supporting the campaign by radical environmentalists to create a new world
religion. This campaign is intimately connected to the UN drive to formulate an "Earth Charter," in which the "planetary ethics" that
green activists seek to impose upon all human societies would be codified.

On October 20-21 in New York, UNEP co-sponsored a conference entitled "Religion and Ecology: Discovering the Common
Grounds." Among the notables participating were Maurice Strong, Chairman of the Earth Council and Secretary-General of the 1992
Earth Summit; and Tim Wirth, president of Ted Turner's United Nations Foundation and formerly U.S. Undersecretary of State for
Global Affairs, where he served as point man on population and environmental issues for the pro-abortion Clinton Administration.

Last week's session represented the culmination of a ten-conference series held between May 1996 and July 1998 at the Harvard
University Center for the Study of World Religions. A background paper prepared by Mary Ellen Tucker, the Bucknell University
religion professor who directed the series along with her husband John Grim, reflects the series' anti-traditional perspective. The
objective, Tucker writes, is the "creative revisioning of mutually enhancing human-earth relations" away from the orthodox
monotheistic understanding, which places man at the center of God's Creation. "If religions have traditionally concentrated on
divine-human and human-human relations, the challenge is that they now explore more fully divine-human-earth relations."

Tucker specifically identifies the great monotheistic religions as those most culpable in devaluing nature. "For the most part, the
worldviews associated with the Western Abrahamic traditions of Judaism, Christianity and Islam have created a dominantly
human-focused morality. Because these worldviews are largely anthropocentric, nature is viewed as being of secondary
importance." In contrast, Confucianism and Taoism are praised for their "life-affirming" outlook, as are the religions of indigenous
peoples.

Similar attitudes infused the presentations at last week's UNEP-sponsored discussions. Stephen Rockefeller, who is directing the
drafting of the Earth Charter, participated in a concluding session that discussed the Charter's implications. One of the speakers
was Wangari Maathai of the Kenyan Green Belt Movement, who characterized herself as a "student" of Maurice Strong. The Earth
Charter is a new set of Commandments, Maathai declared. "This is like rewriting the Bible."

The Earth Charter will be formally unveiled in the year 2000 at the "Millennium People's Forum" and subsequently submitted to the
UN General Assembly. But the pantheistic and anti-humanity thrust of the Charter is already plainly evident in its last draft, which
repeatedly deifies "Earth" and declares that "Earth itself is alive."

The draft Charter also promotes abortion. Number 11 of its 18 "interrelated principles" reads as follows: "Secure the right to sexual
and reproductive health, with special concern for women and girls." "Sexual and reproductive health" is the euphemism commonly
employed by pro-abortion activists for abortion and artificial contraception. cafhri.org