Islamist terrorism
Bergen writes, "[T]here is a great deal of ambiguity about what exactly constitutes al Qaeda. Is it a terrorist organization run in a regimented top-down fashion by its CEO, Osama bin Laden? Or is it a loose-knit group of Islamist militants around the world whose only common link is that many of them trained in Afghanistan? Or has al Qaeda, the organization, morphed into something best described as al Qaeda, the movement -- a movement defined by adherence to bin Laden's virulent anti-Westernism/anti-Semitism and propensity for violence? Is 'al Qaeda' all of the above?"Iraq war and occupation
"At night, most of downtown Baghdad is still in darkness, with only the blue and red police sirens lighting the streets and the only sound that of intermittent gunfire puncturing the silence -- definitely not a picture of a festive, newly liberated capital. With most of Iraq suffering from power interruptions lasting an average of 16 hours daily, it's a little hard to party in the dark. ...South of the city, a double-columned queue of cars up to three kilometers in length snakes around street blocks and crosses a bridge over the Tigris, before finally terminating at a barbed wired gasoline station protected by a Humvee and an armored tank. Come closing time, so as not to abandon the queue and line up all over again the following day, most of the car owners decide to leave their vehicles parked overnight, in a nightly vigil for gasoline in a country with the world's second-largest reserves of oil. During the day, some of Iraq's 12 million unemployed hang out in front of Checkpoint 3 of the Green Zone, the heavily fortified headquarters of the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA). The chances of an American accepting their resumes is next to nil, but they come every day anyway. Others try their luck loitering in the hotel lobbies, besieging journalists or non-government workers in need of drivers and translators. With many unemployed former university professors, engineers and civil servants choosing to become cab drivers instead, Baghdad probably has the most educated taxi drivers per square kilometer in the world. Strike up a conversation and the cabbies will most likely tell you what seems to have become the conventional wisdom today: not even Saddam Hussein could have screwed up this badly. Not that they want him back, but neither could they have expected the occupation forces to completely bungle such simple tasks as switching the lights back on. The lack of power is most Iraqis' number one gripe, but the list is long: uninstalled phone lines, shoddily repaired schools, clogged roads, uncollected garbage, defective sewerage, a nonexistent bureaucracy, mass unemployment and widespread poverty -- the general chaos that Iraq is still in today. Iraqis are in broad agreement that life is deteriorating rather than improving. The prevailing sentiment is a complex mix of resentment and resignation, frustration and incredulity. On the one hand, Iraqis feel bitter about being occupied, and yet many are resigned to entrusting their day-to-day survival to the hands of the Americans. On the other hand, they could not quite believe how despite all the time and money, the world's sole superpower can't make the reconstruction process go right."Plame outing
Administration and CIA officials say they have seen signs in the past few weeks that the investigation continues intensively behind closed doors, even though little about the investigation has been publicly said or seen for months. FBI agents apparently started their White House questioning with top figures, including President Bush's senior adviser, Karl Rove, and then worked down to more junior officials. The agents appear to have a great deal of information and have constructed detailed chronologies of various officials' possible tie to the leak. The Justice Department has added a prosecutor specializing in counterintelligence, joining two other counterintelligence prosecutors and one from Justice's Public Integrity section. But the CIA believes that people in the administration continue to release classified information to damage the figures at the center of the controversy, former ambassador Joseph Wilson and his wife, Valerie Plame Wilson, who was exposed as a CIA officer by unidentified senior administration officials for a July 14 column by conservative columnist Robert Novak. Some administration officials say they believe charges will eventually result, although it could be as long from now as 2005. A Republican legal source who has had detailed conversations about the matter with White House officials said he "doesn't get any sense at all that they're worried or concerned, or that they're covering up." Apparently the administration wants the findings to either emerge soon, or not to come out until after the November elections. The legal source says, "The only fear I've heard expressed is that the investigation will be too slow or too fast and will kick into a visible mode in a way that is poorly timed for the election. If they prosecuted someone tomorrow, I don't think the White House would care. And they can do it in December 2004. They just don't want it to become an issue in the election." (Washington Post)War in Afghanistan
"Writing a constitution on a piece of paper isn't important," says tribal elder Abdul Ahad Madimah. "What is really important is that the constitution should be implemented. It must bring changes to people's lives. ...My province is full of Taliban, and they are growing stronger every day. If we can't show results to the people, they will...all turn against the government." How the constitution's vague provisions for rights and freedoms will be enforced in a country that has no functioning judicial system is not clear. "It's my biggest concern," says Fatima Gailani, a member of the commission that drew up the draft constitution. "This constitution will achieve a lot if it's implemented. If even 70 percent of it is implemented, it will make a huge difference. But how? If there are people in power who don't want to follow it, there's nothing we can do." The new draft constitution enshrines human rights, equalities and freedoms that Afghans have never enjoyed in the past, but so loosely as to make the provisions almost meaningless, legal experts say. Outside of the capital city of Kabul, justice is enforced, not by police, but by tribal militias or by citizens themselves. Since there are no courts, local mullahs often dispense justice, often arbitrarily or by religious or tribal standards instead of by legal standards. (Chicago Tribune)Iraq war and occupation
The board consists of Americans, Britons and Australians -- one Iraqi sits on the board, but due to "scheduling conflicts" he has attended only one of 20 meetings -- and uses Iraqi money that includes oil revenue and seized assets from the Hussein era to pay for projects not anticipated by the country's budget. So far the board has approved more than $4 billion in such spending. The spending is done privately, with little outside reporting and no accountability except to itself and to Bremer, who has unilateral veto power. The PRB is one example of the strict secrecy budget and fund allocations are handled with in Iraq. Despite detailed regulations and pronouncements about 'transparency,' the Coalition Provisional Authority's process for spending Iraq's money has little of the openness, debate and paper trails that define such groups in democratic nations. Though the interim government has extensive information on its Web site, it doesn't include, for example, when contracts have been awarded. Citing security concerns, it also doesn't say what companies won them. An international monitoring board, set up when the United Nations transferred money from the oil-for-food program to the occupation authority, is supposed to audit the Program Review Board's work. But its formation was delayed for months and it is still being organized. It held its second meeting Monday. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has yet to appoint an inspector general for the Coalition Provisional Authority, as Congress mandated. Meetings of the review board aren't public and there are no transcripts. Hence billions of dollars are being spent, much of these dollars going to private contracts with American corporations, with no records or accountability either to the Iraqi or American peoples. (Washington Post)Iraq war and occupation
many of them played key roles in the repression of leftist peasant uprisings in Central America in the '80s, a set of lessons they are trying to apply to the violent resistance in Iraq. Parry writes, "The key counterinsurgency lesson from Central America was that the US government can defeat guerrilla movements if it is willing to back a local power structure, no matter how repulsive, and if Washington is ready to tolerate gross human rights abuses. In Central America in the '80s, those tactics included genocide against hundreds of Mayan villages in Guatemala's highlands and the torture, rape and murder of thousands of young political activists throughout the region. ...The body dumps that have been unearthed across Central America are thus little different from the mass graves blamed on Saddam Hussein in Iraq, except in Central America they represented the dark side of US foreign policy and received far less US press scrutiny. Another lesson learned from the '80s was the importance of shielding the American people from the ugly realities of a US-backed 'dirty war' by using PR techniques, which became known inside the Reagan administration as 'perception management.' The temptation to recycle these counterinsurgency strategies from Central America to Iraq is explained by the number of Reagan-era officials now back in prominent roles in George W. Bush's administration. They include Elliot Abrams, who served as assistant secretary of state for Latin America in the '80s and is a National Security Council adviser to Bush on the Middle East; John Negroponte, US ambassador to Honduras in the '80s and now Bush's UN Ambassador; Paul Bremer a counter-terrorism specialist in the '80s and Iraq's civilian administrator today; Bush's Secretary of State Colin Powell, who was the senior military adviser to Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger in the '80s; and Vice President Dick Cheney, who was a Republican foreign-policy stalwart in Congress two decades ago."Iraq war and occupation
The soldiers in question, members of the 428th Transportation Company, have been unable to obtain any armor for their vehicles; they are scheduled for deployment in January. Major Gary Tallman, a Pentagon spokesman for Army weapons and technology issues, says, "It's important that other units out there that are getting ready to mobilize understand that we are doing things" to protect them, "but there's policy you have to consider before you go out on your own and try to do something." The possibility that soldiers could be denied extra protection because of an Army policy has outraged some of the friends and neighbors who helped the Jefferson City, Missouri-based unit. "I think it's the stupidest thing I ever heard of," says Virgil Kirkweg, owner of a Jefferson City steel company, which rushed to meet the reserve unit's armor request. "I just hope the government is not dumb enough to make them go out there without something that's going to protect them somewhat." The 72 vehicles operated by the 428th are not designed for battle. They have thin metal floorboards and, in some cases, a canvas covering for doors. Iraqi guerrilla groups have been targeting all types of military vehicles with homemade bombs and small-caliber weapons. E-mails from soldiers already deployed in Iraq urged the Missouri reservists to get extra armor if possible, says one member of the 428th. The soldiers persuaded a local funeral home director who is active in community affairs to pay the $4,000 tab for 13,000 pounds of quarter-inch steel. Industrial Enterprises Inc. donated the fabricating work, also valued at about $4,000, so the steel could be fitted under vehicle floorboards and on the inside of doors. The soldiers drove off December 12 for Fort Riley, Kansas, planning to fasten the specially made steel to their vehicles when they arrived in Iraq. "We're doing what we can to protect our soldiers. That's the bottom line," says one first sergeant as news of the donated steel was being praised locally as an example of grass-roots support for the troops. "It not only boosts morale of the soldiers, but also of the soldiers' family members, who know their soldiers will be afforded some extra protection." Fort Riley spokeswoman Deb Skidmore said the reserve unit will be allowed to take the steel to Iraq, but US Central Command will decide later whether the troops will be permitted to use it. (Washington Post)2004 presidential elections
and ready to spend plenty more than that against his Democratic opponent between now and November 2004, he is being opposed by a single billionaire and a loosely affiliated group of grass-roots liberal activist organizations with more purpose than money. Naturally, the Bush campaign is crying foul. "Liberal special interests, led by billionaire currency trader George Soros, are raising millions in soft, unregulated money to defeat President Bush," cries the Bush campaign in one Internet posting. The campaign insists that Soros and anti-Bush groups plan to spend as much as a preposterous $400 million trying to defeat Bush, thus justifying the Bush primary-season goal of raising a record $170 million, largely through a network of major supporters who funnel donations to the campaign. However, campaign finance experts say there is little chance of Bush being outspent. "The Bush campaign is raising money hand-over-fist," notes Common Cause's Celia Wexler. "He has the aura of the incumbency and the power of the presidency. He's in the catbird seat." Soros has pledged $12.5 million (not $400 million) ""to ensure that the money spent on trying to re-elect President Bush doesn't overwhelm the process," as he says. Political activist group MoveOn.org has raised another $7 million in its fight to displace Bush as the president. Groups such as MoveOn are banned from coordinating activities with any party or candidate. But they have gained prominence under last year's McCain-Feingold campaign finance act which ended unregulated "soft money" donations. Democrats had relied on soft money to help offset an enormous Republican advantage in individual donations. "They [the soft money donations] have the potential to do an incredible amount of damage," said Scott Reed, a Republican consultant with close ties to the White House. He said the independent groups could run "over the top" ads attacking Bush with political impunity, and there was little financial accountability. (Presumably Reed knows this from his own party's extensive experience with "soft money" ad campaigns, including the Willie Horton smear campaign of 1988, the Whitewater smear campaign of 1992, and Bush's successful efforts to paint primary opponent John McCain as a victim of "Vietnam psychosis" in 2000.) Reed suggests that Soros is trying to help defeat Bush to promote his own business interests in France and Germany. The conservative Club for Growth, a similar group supporting the Republican Party, has already launched attack ad campaigns against Howard Dean in Iowa. (CNN)GOP campaign strategies
The plan is to portray Dean as reckless, angry and pessimistic, and frame the 2004 election as a referendum on the direction of the nation more than on the president himself. Some advisors think that the campaign should begin attacking Dean now, but others are counseling patience, pointing out that the other Democratic presidential candidates are "doing a great job for us" with their own attack strategies. "Voters don't normally vote for an angry, pessimistic person to be president of the country," says senior Bush advisor Matthew Dowd, laying out the Bush campaign's key focus on Dean. "They want somebody, even if times are not great, to be forward looking and optimistic." January 20's State of the Union address is considered a kickoff speech for the Bush campaign, and will stress upbeat messages and a list of administration accomplishments. The campaign is considering using the address to propose a big new national goal that would not be partisan or ideological, and would help rally the country behind Bush's leadership, says an outside adviser to the administration. The possibilities include a major initiative for the space program or an ambitious health-care goal like increasing life expectancies. "They want to have the president talk about an important national goal that is big and a unifying theme," the adviser says. But conservatives outside of the White House are already firing on the Dean campaign. Gary Bauer, a conservative who ran for president in 2000, says: "The opponent does not have the values of the American people -- and I'm assuming Dean will be the nominee. Dean is so positioning himself as the angry left-wing candidate that if nominated he's going to take whole sections of the country and make them impossible to win for the Democratic Party." Dean's campaign dismisses the strategy and invites the Bush campaign to continue "underestimating" their candidate. (New York Times/Atlanta Journal-Constitution)Iraq war and occupation
In a Christmas message to British troops, Blair claimed there was "massive evidence of a huge system of clandestine laboratories." The Iraq Survey Group (ISG) had unearthed compelling evidence that showed Saddam Hussein had attempted to "conceal weapons," Blair said. However, Bremer flatly dismisses the claim as untrue, before he realizes that Blair made the remark. Bremer suggests that the claim is a "red herring," probably put about by someone opposed to military action in Iraq who wanted to undermine the coalition. "I don't know where those words come from but that is not what [ISG chief] David Kay has said," he tells a British news program. "It sounds like a bit of a red herring to me." (Guardian)Anti-terrorism and homeland security
and have done nothing besides confuse and frighten American citizens without need. Kucinich says if administration officials have information about terror threats, they should act on it, instead of advertising the threat to scare Americans. "Why didn't they just put extra security out?" he asks. "They are building up fear to become more powerful politically. ...My whole campaign is to challenge this fear, this fear about the Patriot Act, the fear about Iraq," he continues. "The fear of Iraq was not founded. They didn't attack us. They didn't have weapons of mass destruction." (San Jose Mercury News)Terrorism detainees and "enemy combatants"
and long after the US government acknowledges that he has no connections with the 9/11 bombings or with any terrorist organizations, the government still holds Algerian Benemar Benatta without charges. Most of his time in jail was spent in solitary confinement, and he was subject to a range of physical and verbal abuse from his captors. "If they took me outside, outside my cell, sometimes they twist my hands," Benatta says. "sometimes they knock my head with the wall." Two months after the bombings, the FBI determined that Benatta had committed no crimes and had no connections with terrorists of any kind. But Benatta was never told that he had been cleared, and he remained in solitary confinement without legal representation for five more months. "No attorney that I know of knew that he existed," says Joe Mistrett, a federal public defender now representing Benatta. Eventually, Benatta was sent to a detention facility in Buffalo to face charges for possession of a fake American ID, and granted a lawyer, Mistrett. "I'm not faulting the government for taking an interest in Benemar Benatta," Mistrett says. "I just don't understand why they persisted, and the way he was held in custody." In September 2003, a federal magistrate in Buffalo concluded the government's handling of Benatta bordered on the bizarre. The judge recommended that the criminal charges against Benatta be dropped. They were, yet Benatta still remains in jail, fighting deportation to Algeria, where he fears for his life. "One thing we need to find out is, how many more Mr. Benattas are there in custody?" says Elisa Massimino of the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights. "How many people have, either intentionally or not, been slipped through the cracks and are being held without charge and without access to counsel?" "I tried to be understanding," Benatta said, "[but] what happened has happened already, you know? Apology or anything, it's not going to change anything." (ABC News)Conservative hate speech and intolerance
S/he characterizes it as: "the repugnant agenda of the Evangelical Christians (who see any social progress as a delay for their beloved Second Coming) to the blatant hypocrisy of attacking sexual misconduct (unless it is Newt Gingrich), degenerate gambling (unless it is Bill Bennett), government expansion and increased spending (unless it is done by G.W. Bush), drug use (unless it is done by Rush Limbaugh), the lies of the government (unless it is about a country the Republicans want to invade), treason (unless it is perpetrated by Robert Novak), and providing aid and comfort to the enemy (unless it [is] done by Geraldo Rivera on FOX News)." (Kuro5hin)Iraq war and occupation
Dean also points out that, as he predicted, the capture of Saddam Hussein has made Iraq and the world no safer: "If we are safer, how come we lost 10 more troops and raised the safety alert" to the orange level, he asks. "National security and economic security are the touchstones of the election," he says in a later interview. "I think the president has been fairly reckless in just about every area I can think of." Dean accuses Bush of taking "enormous risks" by refusing to negotiate with North Korea, permitting "warlords" to control much of Afghanistan and failing to address the most serious threats to homeland security. "We've made progress" on strengthening defenses at home, he says. "The problem is, on the things that are enormously important to us we have apparently made no progress. That is the ultimate nightmare of the so-called dirty bomb or a terrorist nuclear attack on the United States." Dean receives glowing praise from Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle and the endorsement of Representative John Conyers Jr., the dean of the Congressional Black Caucus. "I am proud to state and stand with the man that's ahead of everybody else, that is raising money from the little guys to the shock of everybody who thought it should always be the big fat cats," Conyers says. (Washington Post)Iraq war and occupation
MI6 organized and ran Operation Mass Appeal, a campaign to plant stories in the media about Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction. A senior official admits that MI6 was at the heart of a campaign launched in the late 1990s to spread information about Hussein's development of nerve agents and other weapons, but denied that it had planted misinformation. "There were things about Saddam's regime and his weapons that the public needed to know," says the official. The admission follows claims by UN weapons inspector Scott Ritter, who led 14 inspection missions in Iraq, that MI6 had recruited him in 1997 to help with the propaganda effort. Ritter describes meetings where the senior officer and at least two other MI6 staff had discussed ways to manipulate intelligence material. "The aim was to convince the public that Iraq was a far greater threat than it actually was," Ritter said last week. He says there was evidence that MI6 continued to use similar propaganda tactics up to the invasion of Iraq earlier this year. "stories ran in the media about secret underground facilities in Iraq and ongoing programs [to produce weapons of mass destruction]," said Ritter. "They were sourced to western intelligence and all of them were garbage." David Kelly, himself a former United Nations weapons inspector and colleague of Ritter, might also have been used by MI6 to pass information to the media. "Kelly was a known and government-approved conduit with the media," according to Ritter. (London Times/Information Clearinghouse)Iraq war and occupation
Bremer says, "I don't know where those words come from, but that is not what David Kay [head of the Iraq Survey Group] has said. I have read his reports, so I don't know who said that. It sounds like a bit of a red herring to me. It sounds like someone who doesn't agree with the policy sets up a red herring then knocks it down." Robin Cook, the former foreign secretary, says, "It is undignified for the Prime Minister, and worrying for his nation, to go on believing in a threat which everyone else can see was a fantasy. Nor will Tony Blair ever recover his credibility until he stops insisting he is right when the public can see he was wrong." Liam Fox, co-chairman of the Conservative Party, adds: "Once again the impression has been given of a prime minister willing to say anything to save his skin and of a Labour government divided, untrustworthy and seemingly incapable of telling the truth to the British people." (Independent)Iraq war and occupation
The plans for a constitution and the privatization of government-owned businesses have gone by the wayside and have been extensively covered, but some "lesser" ideas have not. For example, the US occupation has decided not to terminate the Hussein-era food rationing system, in which over 90% of Iraqis received monthly supplies of flour, beans, cooking oil, and other staples; the US had planned to eliminate those rations and replace them with $15/month handouts. Although the proposal has the enthusiastic support of economic conservatives in the occupation authority, concerns about the logistics have put the effort on hold. "It's a great idea that the academics thought up, but it wasn't in tune with the political realities," says a US official familiar with discussions of the issue. "We have to look at what we gain versus what we risk." Also tabled is the idea of disarming various local and tribal militias, particularly the Kurdish pesh mergas. Instead of being integrated into the new army and police forces, the militias will be allowed to remain independent. The occupation authority has also substantially decreased the number of new recruits it intends to put through a three-month boot camp designed to build an improved, professionally trained army. Instead, the occupation authority is increasing the ranks of police officers and civil defense troops, who can be deployed faster but receive far less training and screening than the soldiers. "The Americans promised to limit our security forces to a professional army and a professional police," says Ghazi Yawar, a Sunni member of Iraq's US-appointed Governing Council. "They should not tolerate these militias. They should be dissolving them." (Washington Post)Global nuclear proliferation
according to International Atomic Energy Agency director-general Mohamed El Baradei; he says it appears that Libya was not even close to making a nuclear weapon. Libya's decision earlier this month to abandon its weapons of mass destruction programme and allow in international observers was seen as a major coup for the UK and US, who had been putting pressure on Libyan leader Colonel Muammar Gaddafi. The British government said at the time that Libya had not "acquired a nuclear weapons capability, though it was close to developing one." However, El Baradei's comments appeared to suggest the extent of Libya's WMD may have been exaggerated, possibly by the Libyans themselves. The weapons inspector says, "From the look of it, they were not close to a weapon, but we need to go and see it and discuss the details with them. We need to understand a lot of what was going on. We expect they will show us everything relevant to the [nuclear] program. Whether they succeeded to a weapons program, we will have to see, but as far as I was told they have only a rudimentary program." (Scotsman)Iraq war and occupation
Short accuses Blair of deceiving the British people over the Iraq war, and says that Blair has risked his own legacy because of an obsession with "his place in history." Labour MP Diane Abbott says that Blair has risked backbench rebellions by making loyal MPs feel like "pillocks" over the Iraq war, and adds, "I never believed this thing about missiles being ready for fire in 45 minutes but sadly some of my colleagues did and they are the ones that are most bitter and disgruntled." Short suggests that Mr Blair had behaved worse than John Profumo, a cabinet minister who resigned in 1963 over his affair with Christine Keeler. "Profumo lied about having an affair with a prostitute and had to resign," she says. "If you are going to start getting into deceit when you are going to war and risking human life it has gone too far." She says both British and US intelligence agencies knew Saddam Hussein did not have weapons of mass destruction, the premise for the war. Further, going to war without the second UN resolution had been a disaster. She says she had not ruled out the use of force but it had to have UN backing, and adds that there were other ways to get rid of Hussein. "We could have done it right but I think what Tony did was promise Bush he would be with him come what may, promise us a second resolution." She says what followed was "deceit and all the disgruntlement in the UK and the failure to prepare for afterwards which is a complete disaster for the Middle East, for Iraq, for the world. ...No one thought there was some imminent danger. That was all talked up and talked up to a point of deceit. I think he thought it was an honorable thing to do and he thought it was important to stick with the US and not let them be alone. If he had to tell a few lies on the way it was for a good cause. I think he thought it was honorable." A Blair spokesperson says that regardless of claims about WMDs, the war was justified because of Hussein's cruel and inhuman treatment of his people. (BBC)GOP campaign strategies
and while few, if any, Bush election officials are seen as yet on mainstream television news shows, the campaign is working night and day to push its themes on right-wing talk radio. Not only the national talk shows hosted by the Limbaughs and the Hannitys are being focused upon, but the local right-wing radio shows are receiving daily bulletins from Bush's election campaign, which in many cases are going out on the air almost verbatim. The New York Times reports that "strategists and radio experts say the Bush campaign has taken [the practice of using radio to promote political campaigns] to a new level of sophistication, using it far earlier in the campaign cycle and appearing regularly on shows with even the tiniest of audiences." Campaign officials like Terry Holt, a regular on local radio, say they like the smaller talk shows because they are given kid-gloves treatment, and they can have their say without having to defend their talking points from Democratic criticisms. (New York Times/Free Republic)Oil profiteering and the "oiligarchy"
could pave the way for the return of US oil companies that left the North African country in 1986 when then-President Ronald Reagan imposed sanctions on the country. The US is expected to lift the Libyan portion of the Iran-Libya Sanctions Act next year. However, this may not occur until after the presidential elections in November. The United Nations lifted sanctions against Libya in September. JJ Traynor, an oil analyst at Deutsche Bank, says talks between Libya and US oil companies could start early in the new year. Traynor says the companies most likely to seek a return to Libya are ConocoPhilips, Marathon Oil and Amerada Hess, partners in the Oasis group in Libya. Occidental Petroleum is also interested in returning to Libya. Libya's nuclear program was at a very early stage, Mohammmed ElBaradei, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, said after touring four atomic sites. "We haven't seen any enriched uranium," he added, referring to the essential material for a nuclear bomb. (Financial Times)Anti-terrorism and homeland security
The FBI, in a bulletin sent on Christmas Eve to about 18,000 police organizations, cautions that the reference books could be used for terrorist planning. Terrorists, the FBI asserts, may use almanacs "to assist with target selection and pre-operational planning." The bulletin urges officers to watch during searches, traffic stops and other investigations for anyone carrying almanacs, especially if the books are annotated in suspicious ways. "The practice of researching potential targets is consistent with known methods of al-Qaeda and other terrorist organizations that seek to maximize the likelihood of operational success through careful planning," the FBI notes. "For local law enforcement, it's just to help give them one more piece of information to raise their suspicions," says David Heyman, a terrorism expert for the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies. "It helps make sure one more bad guy doesn't get away from a traffic stop, maybe gives police a little bit more reason to follow up on this." The FBI notes that use of almanacs or maps may be innocent, "the product of legitimate recreational or commercial activities." But it warned that when combined with suspicious behavior -- such as apparent surveillance -- a person with an almanac "may point to possible terrorist planning." The FBI says that information typically found in almanacs that could be useful for terrorists includes profiles of cities and states and information about waterways, bridges, dams, reservoirs, tunnels, buildings and landmarks. It said this information is often accompanied by photographs and maps. The FBI urges police to report such discoveries to the local US Joint Terrorism Task Force. (AP/CNN)US torture allegations
The unit commander found the three soldiers, all members of the 143rd Transportation Command, had mistreated and abused prisoners at Camp Bucca in southern Iraq on May 12. Two soldiers were demoted and all three forfeited their salaries for two months. One of the three, a master sergeant, was found to have slammed a prisoner to the ground and kicked and stomped him in the groin, abdomen, and head, and encouraged her subordinates to follow suit. She received an "other-than-honorable conditions" discharge from her immediate commander. The second soldier, a staff sergeant, was found to have dragged a prisoner by his shoulders and then to have held his legs apart "and encouraging others to kick him in the groin while other U.S. soldiers kicked him in the abdomen and head," says the commander. He was also found to have thrown the detainee face-down to the ground and have stomped his arm, which had already been injured. The staff sergeant has also been found to have made "a false sworn statement to a special agent of the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Division." He was demoted to sergeant and later received a "general, under honorable conditions" discharge. The third, a specialist, was found guilty of similar charges, including making a false statement to the army's criminal investigators and holding a detainee's legs apart "while others kicked him in the groin," in addition to "violently twisting his previously injured arm and causing him to scream in pain." He was demoted to private, two grades lower than specialist, and received a "general, under honorable conditions" discharge from his commander. All three soldiers have returned to the US. A fourth soldier was charged in the same case, but that soldier, a sergeant, requested and received an "other-than-honorable" discharge from the military last year rather than face a court-martial. (AP/Miami Herald)Bush's foreign policies
The government's public-relations drive to build a favorable impression abroad, particularly among Muslim nations, is a shambles, according to Republican and Democratic lawmakers, State Department officials and independent experts. They say the effort, known as public diplomacy, lacks direction and is starved of cash and personnel. "I was really shocked by the level of animosity over our policies toward Israel and the Palestinians, even in places like Turkey," says conservative journalist and American Enterprise Institute fellow James Glassman. Critics say that the Bush administration has failed to capitalize on the ouster of Saddam Hussein, and did not maintain the sympathy generated by the 9/11 attacks. In Iraq, occupation officials routinely place blame for their miscalculations on pessimistic American news media, a reflex that even some hawks denounce as deceptive. Public diplomacy is "a complete and utter disaster in Iraq," said Mark Helmke, a senior staff member on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, who holds that the occupation authority has done little to counter criticism that it is an imperial, occupying force. "We have four different agencies running media operations there. There's no coordination, no strategy." A senior State Department official wonders, "Why, in Jordan, do people think Osama bin Laden is a better leader than George Bush? It's not just Arabs who are angry with the United States. It's worldwide." Two years ago, the Bush administration, hoping to tap the expertise of the private sector, hired Charlotte Beers, a Madison Avenue advertising whiz, as officials built their case for war with Iraq. After producing a feel-good video about Muslims in the United States, which was rejected by some Arab nations and even scoffed at by some State Department colleagues, Beers retired in March, citing health reasons. Now, the administration has retained an old government hand, Margaret Tutwiler. Tutwiler is a former State Department spokeswoman and former ambassador to Morocco. She will attempt to convey the administration's intentions in the Middle East and elsewhere, and to counter the virulent anti-Americanism that fosters terrorism. Most administration officials feel that Tutwiler will do a good job of countering the spread of anti-American sentiment spreading throughout the globe. (New York Times/CommonDreams)Iraq war and occupation
Trade minister Ali Allawi says he discovered a month ago that a contract for wooden doors worth about $80 million had been manipulated. "I think a third of it was stolen," he says, specifically estimating that "probably around 30, 40 million" disappeared. Allawi says the allegations mainly involve "contract manipulation and...contract prioritization" which he has asked a prosecutor to investigate. "There is strong evidence...of the implication of certain individuals, senior management who have since been asked to leave, together with, unfortunately, figures in the CPA," says Allawi; "If the evidence is confirmed then obviously I'll bring charges." It is not the first time post-war contracts in Iraq have come under scrutiny. The Middle East Economic Survey predicted earlier that it was increasingly unlikely Iraq's new mobile telephone service would be in place by year's end because of a Pentagon investigation into allegations of corruption in the awarding of the three licences. In October, the British charity Christian Aid alleged $4 billion in oil revenues and other Iraqi funds earmarked for the country's reconstruction had disappeared into "opaque" bank accounts administered by the CPA. Allawi said the latest allegations ran counter to the mentality he was trying to instill within his department. "We are trying as much as possible to instill a culture of resisting corruption," he says. The ministry is organizing a public forum to create a non-governmental organisation that would combat the problem. (Agence France-Presse/ABC News)Antiwar protests
accuses the religious conservatives who back President Bush of espousing "a very strange distortion of Christianity," and calls for the creation of a UN army to settle international disputes. Wright says: "For Bush and Blair to go into Iraq together was like a bunch of white vigilantes going into Brixton to stop drug dealing. This is not to deny that there's a problem to be sorted, just that they are not credible people to do it." Wright's criticisms come on the heels of a major political embarassment for Prime Minister Blair, when CPA head Paul Bremer dismissed as a "red herring" Blair's claims that "massive evidence of a huge system of clandestine laboratories" had already been uncovered in Iraq. (Independent)Plame outing
Fitzgerald will report to Ashcroft's deputy, James Comey. Comey says of Ashcroft's decision, "The attorney general, in an abundance of caution, believed that his recusal was appropriate based on the totality of the circumstances and the facts and evidence developed at this stage of the investigation. I agree with that judgment. And I also agree that he made it at the appropriate time, the appropriate point in this investigation." Many observers have called for Ashcroft to recuse himself for months, and believe that his involvement up to now may have irreversibly tainted the investigation. Fitgerald, the newly named head of the probe into the leak, is called "fiercely independent, relentless, tireless, fearless" by those who have worked with him. A Chicago-based US attorney, Fitzgerald has sent al-Qaeda terrorists, mob hit men and drug dealers to jail; last month he indicted the former governor of Illinois. American Lawyer magazine has written of his "almost frightening brilliance." Author Daniel Benjamin, having studied Fitzgerald's work in prosecuting terrorists in New York, calls him "an awesome public servant." On the other hand, Fitzgerald is a close friend of Department of Justice official James Comey, the second highest official in the department behind John Ashcroft, leaves some critics wondering if Fitzgerald can be objective and aggressive in his investigation. Presidential candidate Joseph Lieberman says Fitzgerald's appointment means "there is still no real independence and autonomy." Fitzgerald's assignment is to find out who told columnist Robert Novak last summer that the wife of former ambassador Joseph Wilson, Valerie Plame Wilson, was a CIA operative. Wilson was in the news because he had disproved President Bush's assertion, in his 2003 State of the Union speech, that Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein had tried to buy uranium from Niger.Iraq war and occupation
"The complaint about the military holding back pictures is one part of the attempt to make you as unaware as possible that soldiers are dying in Iraq. They have this Bremer who stands in his jacket, shirt and tie and talks about the new Iraqi government that we have set up. He doesn't seem to know about death. He doesn't know that every time we try to put our democracy into one of these totalitarian countries, the scum comes to the top. They have been living elsewhere and rush back to lick American boots and get positions in the great new government. The government folds and the imams take over. And the dead are brought back here almost furtively. There are no ceremonies or pictures of caskets at Dover, Del., air base, where the dead are brought. 'You don't want to upset the families,' George Bush said. That the people might be slightly disturbed already by the death doesn't seem to register. The wounded are flown into Washington at night. There are 5,000 of them and for a long time you never heard of soldiers who have no arms and legs. Then the singer Cher went into Walter Reed Hospital and came out and gave a report that was so compelling she should walk away with a Pulitzer Prize. Finally, a couple of television stations and a newspaper here and there began to cover these things. There are miles to go." (Newsday)Oil profiteering and the "oiligarchy"
Oil analysts say that number is likely to increase in 2004. In 1991, the US imported only 28% of its oil. Senator Charles Schumer, a Democrat, says, "If we don't take measures to stem our reliance on foreign oil, we're going to pay an awful price down the road." George Beranek, oil analyst with the Petroleum Finance Company, says that drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) is not a viable near-term solution to this dependence. "ANWR is going nowhere anyway," Beranek said, referring to the Senate quagmire on allowing drilling in ANWR. "Even if it were opened for drilling tomorrow, it wouldn't be producing oil for five years." Saudi Arabia is the biggest provider of the US's imported oil, with Mexico, Canada, and Venezuela coming in next. (Reuters)Iraq war and occupation
The decision, which is all but certain to be implemented, comes without an explanation from the administration. The set-aside contracts will not be provided to countries like France, Germany, and Russia, which are all prohibited by the administration from doing business in Iraq. (CNN)Plame outing
has a large amount of material to work with already, including over 30 interviews with senior Bush administration officials, as well as notes of White House meetings, calendars, phone records and datebooks that officials have said provided telling clues about who within the administration may have had access to Ms. Plame's identity. Fitzgerald, is armed with a full range of prosecutorial powers, including the authority to convene a grand jury to obtain sworn testimony from officials suspected of having knowledge of the matter. (New York Times/Spy News)Plame outing
focusing on the fact that the prosecutor, Patrick Fitzgerald, is a political appointee, and that Attorney General John Ashcroft's deputy, James Comey, will supervise Fitzgerald's investigation. "The public will not likely trust the results of an investigation headed by a political appointee, especially when the special counsel is constrained by Department of Justice regulations that severely curtail the prosecutor's autonomy," says Senator Joseph Lieberman. "Whether it is a special counsel or the Justice Department inspector general, the American people deserve a person whose honesty, objectivity and fairness are guaranteed to investigate this serious matter," said former Vermont governor Howard Dean. Senator John Edwards did not criticize the appointment, but said Ashcroft's decision "comes far too late. President Bush knows how to get what he wants inside his White House, yet for months, his administration has somehow failed to find the person responsible for this dangerous and destructive leak." Senator John Kerry called Fitzgerald's appointment "a half measure and nowhere good enough to restore public confidence in this tarnished agency." He says Comey and Fitzgerald "are both Bush political appointees and carry the same baggage as John Ashcroft." (Fox News)Conservative media slant
flatly predicts another "major terror attack" on an American target just before the 2004 presidential elections. Safire, Richard Nixon's former speechwriter and political aide, and a consummate Washington insider, neither explains nor elaborates on his prediction, and gives no sources, but his status as a major Washington player makes it clear that Safire is echoing a train of thought and discussion commonly heard in the corridors of power. WSWS asks, "Given the record of lies, conspiracies and provocations of the Bush administration, and Safire's well-known connections to the centers of power in Washington and the White House, several obvious questions arise from the New Year's eve column: (1) Who are the sources and what is the information on which Safire bases his prediction of a major pre-election terror attack, and, (2) Is the perpetration, or at least allowance, of such an attack being discussed within government, intelligence or military circles as a serious option for keeping Bush in power in 2004, regardless the sentiment of the electorate?" (World Socialist Web Site)Iraq war and occupation
recalls former Wasit governor Mark Etherington. He writes, "I had always thought this evidence of a lack of substantive thought, because the object of the race -- indeed its very purpose -- was so rarely articulated. If we were racing against anyone, it was Moqtada al-Sadr and insurgents for the support of ordinary Iraqis. To pursue the metaphor further, we were neither in condition for the race nor properly equipped for it; and we did not always have a full view of our competitors or their preparations." (Mark Etherington)Iraq war and occupation
Subtracting the usual amount of violent deaths occuring in Baghdad before the war, the rate of death by violence has more than doubled. Gunshot wounds, once accounting for 10% of violent deaths, now cause 60%. Some Iraqis were killed by US troops, but the majority of deaths are Iraqis killing Iraqis. The root cause seems to be the lawlessness and anarchy that have reigned throughout the city since the invasion. (Peter Singer)