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WAR/TERRORISM NEWS ARCHIVE
WAR/TERRORISM NEWS ARCHIVE
THIS FORUM WILL CONTAIN UNCENSORED NEWS AND EDITORIALS CONCERNING THE WAR AND TERRORISM. PLEASE FEEL FREE TO CONTRIBUTE YOUR OWN NEWS AND/OR OPINIONS.
http://www.ameritech.net/users/moonotter/W.html

Subject: Threat of Nuclear Terrorism Is Growing, Experts Warn


Author:
No name
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Date Posted: 13:25:29 12/03/01 Mon

Threat of Nuclear Terrorism Is Growing, Experts Warn
http://ens-news.com/ens/nov2001/2001L-11-02-06.html

VIENNA, Austria, November 2, 2001 (ENS) - The ruthlessness of the September attacks against the United States has alerted the world to the potential of nuclear terrorism, making it "far more likely" that terrorists could target nuclear facilities, nuclear material and radioactive sources worldwide, the chief of the United Nations International Atomic Energy Agency said Thursday.

IAEA Director-General Mohamed ElBaradei opens the agency's special session on nuclear terrorism today (Photo courtesy IAEA)

"September 11 presented us with a clear and present danger and a global threat that requires global action," said IAEA Director-General Mohamed ElBaradei, according to a statement released by the agency at its headquarters in Vienna. "Many of our programs go to the heart of combating nuclear terrorism, but we now have to actively reinforce safeguards, expand our systems for combating smuggling in nuclear material and upgrade our safety and security services."

More than 400 experts from around the world have been meeting at the IAEA's Vienna headquarters since October 29 at an international symposium on nuclear safeguards, verification and security. Today, the conferees are holding a special emergency seminar on combating nuclear terrorism.

The IAEA says there have been about 400 cases of nuclear smuggling over the past decade, but none have involved anything close to enough fissionable material to construct a nuclear weapon.

However, ElBaradei warned, the September 11 attacks on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center point to an additional threat - terrorists willing to die for their cause. The IAEA is no longer convinced that the hazards associated with handling radioactive materials will be enough to deter terrorists..

"If the terrorist is willing to die, that changes the security equation drastically," said ElBaradei.

Nuclear power plant produce radioactive waste that could potentially be used to make weapons, and the plants themselves could be targeted for terrorist attacks. This nuclear plant, Calvert Cliffs in Maryland, recently received approval to operate until 2034 (Photo courtesy Nuclear Regulatory Commission)

The IAEA, which helps countries to prevent, intercept and respond to terrorist acts and other nuclear safety and security incidents, has the only international response system in place that would be in a position to immediately react in case of a nuclear terrorist attack.

This week, the agency warned of "the potential of terrorists targeting nuclear facilities or using radioactive sources." The agency noted that "radiation knows no frontiers," and warned that, "safety and security of nuclear material is a legitimate concern of all states."

"An unconventional threat requires an unconventional response, and the whole world needs to join together and take responsibility for the security of nuclear material," ElBaradei said.

To prevent a terrorist nuclear attack, the agency is now proposing a number of new initiatives. It estimates that at least $30-$50 million each year will be needed in the short term to strengthen and expand its programs to meet terrorist threats.

Speaking to reporters at United Nations headquarters in New York, Gustavo Zlaufvinen, director of IAEA's office in the U.S., said efforts were under way to secure funding for the new measures.

"We are thinking of different ways to get that money, taking into account that our budget is limited by the 'zero-growth' policy for the last 10 years," said Zlaufvinen.

The Sellafield nuclear facility in Cumbria, UK, operated by British Nuclear Fuels Ltd., reprocesses spent nuclear fuel into mixed oxides (MOX) fuel containing both uranium and plutonium (Photo courtesy BNFL)

The Nuclear Control Institute (NCI), a Washington DC based research and advocacy center specializing in problems of nuclear proliferation, welcomed the IAEA's new focus on nuclear terrorism, but warned that it is "long overdue."

"For more than two decades, we have urged the IAEA and the nuclear power industry to take seriously the risks of terrorists stealing bomb usable nuclear materials and attacking nuclear plants," said Paul Leventhal, president of NCI. "The need for action, not rhetoric, is long overdue."

Leventhal said the IAEA should call for a ban on the production and use of all atomic bomb materials, including separated plutonium and highly enriched uranium, in both nuclear power and research programs. In the U.S., projects are now underway to turn tons of weapons grade plutonium into fuel for commercial nuclear power plants.

"More separated plutonium has been produced in civilian than military nuclear programs worldwide," Leventhal added. "Unless commercial reprocessing of spent fuel is halted, there will be nearly twice as much weapons usable plutonium in civilian than military programs by the end of this decade. Civilian plutonium, like plutonium removed from weapons, should be disposed of as waste, not used as fuel."

The NCI charges that the IAEA's safeguards against the diversion of civilian nuclear materials for use in weapons are "ineffective."

A study prepared for NCI by Dr. Marvin Miller of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology concluded that bulk handling plutonium facilities, such as large reprocessing plants for spent nuclear fuel, could lose up to 263 kilograms of plutonium a year without detecting the loss.

"That is enough plutonium to make dozens of nuclear bombs," said Levental. "The IAEA is supposed to provide prompt detection of the loss of one bomb's worth of plutonium - officially eight kilograms."

NCI called on Director-General ElBaradei to retract his claim that "while we cannot exclude the possibility that terrorists could get hold of some nuclear material, it is highly unlikely they could use it to manufacture and successfully detonate a nuclear bomb."

Paul Leventhal, president of the Washington DC based Nuclear Control Institute (NCI) (Photo courtesy NCI)

In fact, Leventhal countered, "Those who have actually designed nuclear weapons do not agree with the IAEA's sanguine assessment."

In a study commissioned by NCI for its International Task Force on the Prevention of Nuclear Terrorism, a team of five former U.S. nuclear weapon designers found that terrorists would be capable of making an effective, first generation nuclear weapon if they could obtain enough reactor grade plutonium or highly enriched uranium, Leventhal said.

Even without the ability to make nuclear weapons, terrorist groups could still use radioactivity as a weapon.

Dr. Edwin Lyman, a physicist and NCI's scientific director, notes that a direct, high speed hit by a large commercial passenger jet on a nuclear plant "would in fact have a high likelihood of penetrating a containment building" that houses a power reactor.

"Following such an assault," Lyman said, "the possibility of an unmitigated loss of coolant accident and significant release of radiation into the environment is a very real one."

Such a release, whether caused by an air strike, or by a ground or water assault, or by insider sabotage could result in tens of thousands of cancer deaths downwind of the plant. A number of these plants are located near large cities.

At least seven U.S. states - Arizona, Arkansas, Connecticut, Louisiana, Massachusetts, New Jersey and New York - have deployed National Guard troops to protect their nuclear power plants.





Republished with permission from the ENS, available online at: http://ens-news.com

© Environment News Service (ENS) 2001. All Rights Reserved.
Subject: Anti-war protests demand an 'A.N.S.W.E.R.'


Author:
No name
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Date Posted: 13:24:15 12/03/01 Mon

from Erth...thanks!

Anti-war protests demand an 'A.N.S.W.E.R.'

Saturday, November 3, 2001
http://www.naplesdailynews.com
By I.M. STACKEL, imstackel@naplesnews.com



In the first month after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the nation rallied to share pain and avoid xenophobia.

Then the U.S. military began bombing Taliban targets in Afghanistan on Oct. 7, and an anti-war movement has been growing quickly ever since.

The protests are consistently two-pronged. One is the call for an end to the war against Afghanistan. The other is for honest, accurate data on current and former U.S. foreign policies.

On Oct. 27, thousands of Americans in 70 U.S. cities demanded an end to the war against Afghanistan, pointing to civilian deaths. Similar groups from Lancaster, England, to Melbourne, Australia, protested the same day.

They were organized by a 6-week old New York-based organization called A.N.S.W.E.R. for Act Now to Stop War and End Racism.

At the same time the nation's Green party condemned U.S. and British leaders as "inhumane" for bombing Afghanistan.

It is a position embraced by some in Southwest Florida, even though official demonstrations have not yet sprung up.

Shelley Fite, a Green party member on the New College campus in Sarasota, said she's working on a Nov. 10 Day of Dialogue.

While Fite initially said it's not an anti-war event, just a bunch of people getting together "to talk about issues," it is clear she supports her party's position on the U.S. war against terrorism.

"What's going on is a political maneuver. We're not retaliating against the people" responsible for the Sept. 11 attacks, Fite said.

Students are slow to rally, because they're not getting good information, she said.

What they're getting is a single message filtered through the media: "America strikes back." However, for people like Fite, it's not an accurate depiction of America's policies.

"We haven't killed any major members from al-Qaida (Osama bin Laden's terrorist network.) We're killing innocents," she said.

Community activist Ian Harvey has been outspoken about American and British attacks on Afghanistan, and figures that Naples is lagging behind other Florida cities that held demonstrations last week, along with hundreds more around the world.

"It was pretty inspiring. When I feel kind of isolated, I look at that," he said.

"There are a lot of people out there who just don't know what to do. We aren't being presented with any options."

The presumption is that those who speak out against the bombings are anti-American, Harvey said.

The attitude is "you're either with us, and if you don't like it, you're one of the suicide bombers," he said.

It's a lot more complicated than that, he said.

The United States has bolstered governments around the world that have been less than kind or civilized, he said. The Taliban was one of them. The United States trained and armed them, he said.

Now, the United States is supporting the Northern Alliance that opposes the Taliban.

The reason for that, Harvey asserts, is to protect a proposed oil pipeline that traverses Afghanistan.

"They need a pliable government," said Harvey, a 46-year-old media teacher at Lely High School and a member of A.N.S.W.E.R.

Punta Gorda resident Phyllis Meisel is a member of Floridians for Middle East Peace, and said "the peace movement for years was viewed as anti-American."

While her group hasn't been active, it will probably start meeting again soon.

And while the current war is not her focus, Meisel has insight into the nature of the Sept. 11 attacks: she is committed to the Palestinian fight for equality in Israel.

"The anger. That's what we have to fear. The Middle Easterners who fear the imbalanced policy in relation to Israel," she said.

"What I fear are suicide bombers in U.S. as they have in Israel. Last night on TV, there was a panel discussion group, and there were questions from the audience. One young man said 'I am a Palestinian. My father has told me the truth. My brother has told me the truth. My grandfather has told me the truth. No one cares about the truth. The only thing left is action.'"

Meisel said the truth to which that boy referred is of the "peace process, the history of the Palestinians, the Israel situation," Meisel said.

Rev. Jim McDonald is director of Christian Education at Vanderbilt Presbyterian Church and a founder of the Naples Peacemaking Group, which has also been drmant for a while.

While McDonald doesn't see an anti-war stance as the answer — "Generally, we take an approach that peace is not necessarily the absence of war, as it is the presence of justice" — he does view accurate information as part of the answer.

He's trying to bring over a teacher from Davie who spent one month in Afghanistan prior to Sept. 11.

"I'd like to get him down here and have the public have an opportunity to hear what he has to say, enlighten us about that part of the world. I believe we can eliminate bias and prejudice by education and awareness," McDonald said.

As for to bomb or not to bomb, McDonald is still struggling with answers.

Terrorism is designed to produce divisiveness and unsettling fear, McDonald says: "And it works. Look at the paranoia abounding. That's what terrorism is supposed to do and it is very effective. We can let it go unchecked, but then what path do we take? That's what we explore."

Many people who call for an end to the bombings don't actually propose viable alternatives. And while that's frustrating for some, it is not good cause to question another's national allegiance, say protesters.

Harvey has been slammed by locals who believe his questions about American policy are anti-American. Harvey says it is hurtful for someone who is exercising his most fundamental American right: to question. Many agree it also has hampered a more vocal outpouring of criticism for the bombings.

Some just sidestep the protest issue altogether.

Magali Solimano, president of the student government association on the Florida Gulf Coast University campus, said she and her classmates held a fund raiser for the relief fund in New York.

While she's fairly certain some students oppose current U.S. policy, FGCU student actions "just aren't expressed as a demonstration."

"That's not to say anything rules out an anti-war demonstration," but the focus right now is on "peer prayer groups," she said.

They are "indirectly protesting what's happening. You could interpret it to be that way," she said.

Solimano was not being coy.

People have been cautious about speaking their minds.

"This is different from Vietnam or World War II," noted Fite, a religion major.

"One thing about the Green Party. If there's ever any time that tells us we need a third party, it's now: only one person voted against (this) war in our Congress."
Subject: Green Party USA elected Coordinator targeted as "terrorist" -denied rights-FRENCH AND ENGLISH


Author:
No name
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 13:22:05 12/03/01 Mon



Pourquoi ne sont-elles pas les histoires importantes comme ceci dans les medias traditionnels? Le public compte sur vous pour fournir des nouvelles pendant cette période de la crise. J'ai reçu cette nouvelle sur un listserv. Je devrais l'avoir vu dans les medias traditionnels. Joyce M. Dallenbach
Partie verte Etats-Unis élue coordonnateur visé en tant que " terroriste " - les droites niées par la partie USA-Mitchell Cohen de Greens/Green 12:49am ont reposé l'adresse '01 nov. de 3: 226 Wabash du sud, 6ème cadre 1406-Chicago, téléphone de floor-PO de l'Illinois 60690: La PARTIE VERTE Etats-Unis de 1-866-GREENS-2 gpusa@igc.org ÉLUE COORDONNATEUR DÉTENU À AIRPORT-PREVENTED PAR LES MILITAIRES ARMÉS DE VOLER À LA RÉUNION des VERTS GNC CHICAGO IL Etats-Unis Nancy Oden, un coordonnateur vert élu des Etats-Unis de partie, a été niée pilotant des privilèges et ses droits constitutionnels, en raison de l'opposition verte des Etats-Unis de partie au bombardement en Afghanistan. Le nouveau " terrorisme " lois ont juste retiré toutes nos droites et ont créé de nouveaux " ennemis que lists"-WHO SERA PROCHAIN?? La PARTIE VERTE Etats-Unis ÉLUE COORDONNATEUR DÉTENU À L'CAéroport A EMPÊCHÉ PAR LES MILITAIRES ARMÉS DE VOLER À LA RÉUNION des VERTS GNC CHICAGO " que j'ai été visé parce que la partie verte Etats-Unis s'oppose au bombardement des civils innocents en Afghanistan. " -- Nancy Oden (le rapport vert des Etats-Unis de partie sur la guerre contre l'Afghanistan est à http://www.greenparty.org/911.html qu'ils sont la partie verte initiale aux États-Unis depuis 1986) de ========== PRIÈRE DE à TOUS LES MEDIAS ET LISTSERVES. THANX (Mitchel Cohen) les verts / partie verte Etats-Unis 226 Wabash du sud, 6ème cadre 1406, téléphone en service libre appel de l'étage PO de Chicago, l'Illinois 60690: 1-866-greens-2 Pour La Version Immédiate Novembre 2, 2001 Medias Alertent: La PARTIE VERTE Etats-Unis tiendra la conférence de presse CHICAGO SAMEDI, novembre 3 10 heures du matin. à J. Ira et au congrès est Parkway de la pension 24 de famille de Nicki (chez Wabash), 2ème étage le COORDONNATEUR VERT des Etats-Unis de PARTIE DÉTENU À L'CAéroport EMPÊCHÉ PAR LES MILITAIRES ARMÉS DE VOLER AUX VERTS SE RÉUNISSANT DANS les agents de gouvernement armés par CHICAGO a saisi Nancy Oden, le membre de comité vert de coordination des Etats-Unis de partie, jeudi à l'aéroport international de Bangor à Bangor Maine, car elle a essayé d'embarquer un vol américain de lignes aériennes vers Chicago. " un fonctionnaire m'a dit que mon nom avait été marqué dans l'ordinateur, " un Oden secoué dit. " j'ai été visé parce que la partie verte Etats-Unis s'oppose au bombardement des civils innocents en Afghanistan. " Oden, un fermier organique à long terme et l'activiste de paix au Maine nordique, ont été commandés loin de l'avion. Le personnel militaire avec les armes automatiques a entouré Oden et a demandé à toutes les lignes aériennes pour nier son passage sur N'IMPORTE QUEL vol. " on m'a dit que l'aéroport a été fermé à moi jusqu'à nouvel ordre et que mon billet ne serait pas remboursé, " Oden ai dit. Oden est programmé pour parler dans la nuit de Chicago vendredi sur un panneau au sujet des pesticides comme armes de guerre. Elle avait aidé à coordonner les efforts pacifistes verts de la partie USA's ces derniers mois, et devait rendre compte de ces derniers au comité de national de verts. " non seulement ils m'ont arrêté à l'aéroport mais une certaine partie mystérieuse avait appelé l'hôtel et annulé ma réservation, " Oden a indiqué. Le Comité national de verts -- le corps régissant de la partie verte Etats-Unis -- se réunit en novembre 2-4 de Chicago pour résoudre les détails des campagnes nationales contre la guerre biochimique, la pulvérisation des pesticides toxiques, la génétique, et la participation de la partie dans le mouvement burgeoning de paix. " on me choque que les militaires des USA ont empêché un de nos membres verts en avant de partie d'assister à la réunion Chicago, " ai dit Elizabeth Fattah, un représentant de GPUSA de Pennsylvanie qui a piloté à Chicago. " je suis outragé à la voie que la déclaration des droits est piétinée au moment. " L'activiste vert Lionel Trepanier de Chicago conclu, " l'attaque du côté droit d'association d'une partie politique d'opposition refroidit. Le harassment des activistes de paix est reprehensible. " Pour de plus amples informations, appelez s'il vous plaît 1-866-GREENS-2 (en service libre appel) -30-

Why aren't important stories like this in mainstream media? The public is counting on you to provide news during this time of crisis. I received this news item on a listserv. I should have seen it in mainstream media.
Joyce M. Dallenbach

Green Party USA elected Coordinator targeted as "terrorist" -denied rights
by The Greens/Green Party USA-Mitchell Cohen 12:49am Sat Nov 3 '01
address: 226 South Wabash, 6th floor-PO Box 1406-Chicago, Illinois 60690 phone: 1-866-GREENS-2 gpusa@igc.org
GREEN PARTY USA ELECTED COORDINATOR DETAINED AT AIRPORT-PREVENTED BY ARMED MILITARY FROM FLYING TO GREENS GNC MEETING IN CHICAGO IL USA
Nancy Oden,an elected Green Party USA coordinator,has been denied flying privileges and her constitutional rights, because of Green Party USA opposition to the bombing in Afghanistan.
The new "terrorism" laws have just removed all our rights and have created new "enemies lists"-WHO WILL BE NEXT??
GREEN PARTY USA ELECTED COORDINATOR DETAINED AT AIRPORT
PREVENTED BY ARMED MILITARY FROM FLYING TO GREENS GNC MEETING IN CHICAGO
"I was targeted because the Green Party USA opposes the bombing of innocent
civilians in Afghanistan."
--Nancy Oden

(The Green Party USA statement on the war against Afghanistan is at
http://www.greenparty.org/911.html
They are the original Green Party in the U.S. since 1986)
==========
PLEASE FORWARD TO ALL MEDIA AND LISTSERVES. THANX (Mitchel Cohen)
The Greens / Green Party USA
226 South Wabash, 6th floor
PO Box 1406,
Chicago, Illinois 60690
Toll-free Phone: 1-866-GREENS-2
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 2, 2001
MEDIA ALERT:
GREEN PARTY USA will hold press conference in CHICAGO
SATURDAY, NOV. 3
10 a.m.
at the J. Ira and Nicki Family Hostel
24 East Congress Parkway (at Wabash), 2nd floor
------------------------------------------------
GREEN PARTY USA COORDINATOR DETAINED AT AIRPORT
PREVENTED BY ARMED MILITARY FROM FLYING TO GREENS MEETING IN CHICAGO
Armed government agents grabbed Nancy Oden, Green Party USA coordinating
committee member, Thursday at Bangor International Airport in Bangor Maine,
as she attempted to board an American Airlines flight to Chicago.
"An official told me that my name had been flagged in the computer," a
shaken Oden said. "I was targeted because the Green Party USA opposes the
bombing of innocent civilians in Afghanistan."
Oden, a long-time organic farmer and peace activist in northern Maine, was
ordered away from the plane. Military personnel with automatic weapons
surrounded Oden and instructed all airlines to deny her passage on ANY
flight. "I was told that the airport was closed to me until further notice
and that my ticket would not be refunded," Oden said.
Oden is scheduled to speak in Chicago Friday night on a panel concerning
pesticides as weapons of war. She had helped to coordinate the Green Party
USA's antiwar efforts these past few months, and was to report on these to
The Greens national committee. "Not only did they stop me at the airport
but some mysterious party had called the hotel and cancelled my
reservation," Oden said.
The Greens National Committee -- the governing body of the Green Party USA
-- is meeting in Chicago Nov. 2-4 to hammer out the details of national
campaigns against bio-chemical warfare, the spraying of toxic pesticides,
genetic engineering, and the Party's involvement in the burgeoning peace
movement.
"I am shocked that US military prevented one of our prominent Green Party
members from attending the meeting in Chicago," said Elizabeth Fattah, a
GPUSA representative from Pennsylvania who drove to Chicago. "I am outraged
at the way the Bill of Rights is being trampled upon."
Chicago Green activist Lionel Trepanier concluded, "The attack on the right
of association of an opposition political party is chilling. The harassment
of peace activists is reprehensible."
For further information, please call 1-866-GREENS-2 (toll-free)
-30-
Subject: Shades of dissent


Author:
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Date Posted: 13:18:53 12/03/01 Mon

Shades of dissent

Like air hissing from a shrapnel-punctured lung, support for the pulverizing of the poorest nation on earth by the richest nation on earth is slipping away.

The Winston wannabe, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, begged his increasingly skeptical countrymen this week to remember how they felt watching the planes fly into the twin towers of the World Trade Center.

"Never forget those answering machine messages. Never forget how we felt imagining how mothers told their children they were about to die," said Blair as he warned that suspending the bombing would play into the hands of the terrorists. British opinion polls show 54 per cent favour a pause to allow humanitarian aid to reach millions of starving Afghans.

If support is fading in Britain, a country which likes nothing better than giving its impudent foes (who begin at Calais) a jolly good thrashing, rest assured it's crumbling elsewhere.

And little wonder. Almost eight weeks into what most of us assumed would be a superpower's precise surgical operations to eliminate Osama bin Laden and his henchmen, this campaign is looking more and more like the fumbling of an apprentice butcher who fears for his fingers.

We were told this was war. But what kind of war is it when our side shows an unerring ability to score bull's-eyes on Red Cross facilities and no talent whatsoever for tracking down the evil ones? Jeez. An army of FBI agents can't find some whacko in a white coat who's running around New Jersey mailing anthrax. And we're supposed to believe they can pry bin Laden from his mountain hidey hole with precision-guided munitions?

This wasn't how it was supposed to be. Brimming with righteous anger, armed with every high-tech tool imaginable and braced by a wave of global sympathy, the world's greatest military power should be busy erecting Burger Kings in conquered Kabul and holding victory parades in New York City.

I thought for sure the supermen of Delta Force would have hauled back bin Laden, Iraq's Saddam Hussein and, for good measure, Libya's Moammar Gadhafi, for a quick trial and a snappy public electrocution with President George W. Bush, a guy who knows plenty about these things, yanking the lever while massed choirs sing God Bless America.

Instead we have generals holding news conferences where they insist no Americans have died in battle and no helicopters have been lost to enemy action. We didn't get the job done. But hey, look on the bright side. Our people and their expensive gear are safe and sound.

The other day we witnessed the demeaning spectacle of an American admiral complaining that the Taliban were tougher than expected. Has this guy ever read a history book? Or a CIA report on how its Afghan clients sent the Soviets packing?

And now the National Post reports the Pentagon is contemplating a full-scale invasion (read quagmire) next spring if the current campaign fails to achieve its objectives.

Can you believe this? The superpower that was prepared to battle the mighty Soviet Army in Europe at a moment's notice now wants to take the winter off to crank up a conventional assault against poorly armed religious fanatics in one of the planet's most backward countries. The army that fought panzer divisions to a standstill in the snow at Bastogne in January of 1945 is now an army that doesn't want to fight in an Afghan winter.

The optics are terrible -- stone-age David versus space-age Goliath -- and can only get worse as the civilian death toll mounts and we see more haunting images of innocent babies mangled by bombs dropped with impunity.

If the warnings from humanitarian organizations are right, millions of Afghans could starve or freeze to death this winter in that shattered land. What do you do? Feed and cloth them during the blizzards. And then bomb and shell them as soon as the nice weather returns?

CAW Local 444 president Ken Lewenza was castigated this week for criticizing the bombing. Say what you will about the guy. But it takes guts to express a contrary view in this rabidly intolerant climate. It would be so much easier just to keep one's head down.

We should remember this. Dissent is healthy. Dissent is the emergency brake which keeps governments from flying off the rails. Tolerating dissent is what our democracy is all about.

And if we keep dropping bombs from safe heights instead of launching waves of daring commando raids to find and eliminate bin Laden and his followers, Lewenza's view will find plenty of company.

We're reluctant to shed a single drop of our own blood in pursuit of infinite justice. Some war.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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Design and contents copyright The Windsor Star ©2001
The Windsor Star Group Inc., a CanWest company.
Subject: Bin Laden hits out at UN 'infidels'


Author:
No name
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Date Posted: 13:17:03 12/03/01 Mon

Bin Laden hits out at UN 'infidels'
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/south_asia/newsid_1636000/1636257.stm

Saudi-born militant Osama Bin Laden has condemned the United Nations as a "tool" for crimes against Muslims, in a new recorded video address.

Parts of the statement were broadcast by the Qatar-based satellite television channel al-Jazeera on Saturday. It was not clear when or where it was recorded.

Bin Laden, chief suspect in the 11 September attacks on the US, denounced as "infidels" Arab leaders who co-operated with the United Nations.

"Those who today are referring our tragedies to the United Nations and want to resolve them there are hypocrites, who try to deceive God and His prophet and the believers. Have our tragedies not resulted from the United Nations?"

He said the United Nations had given Arab land "to the Jews" in 1947.

"Those who claim to be leaders of the Arabs and who are still at the United Nations have disavowed what was revealed to Prophet Muhammad," he said.

"Under no circumstances should a Muslim - or any sane person for that matter - resort to the United Nations.

Muslims 'slaughtered'

"The United Nations is only one of the tools of crime. Every day we are being slaughtered and the United Nations does not lift a finger.

"For over 50 years, our brothers in Kashmir have been suffering the worst pain. They have been killed and slaughtered and their honour, blood, and homes are being violated and the United Nations did not lift a finger," he said.

"Today, without any evidence, the United Nations peddles the resolutions that support the unjust and tyrant America against a helpless people who have just come out of a fierce war against the Russian Federation."

He said there was no evidence linking Afghanistan to the 11 September attacks on the United States.

"The entire West, with the exception of a few countries, supports this unfair, barbaric campaign, although there is no evidence of the involvement of the people of Afghanistan in what happened in America.

"The people of Afghanistan had nothing to do with this matter. The campaign, however, continues to unjustly annihilate villagers and civilians: children, women, and innocent people," he said.

US curbs coverage

Al-Jazeera has previously broadcast statements by Bin Laden and a spokesman for his al-Qaeda organisation, Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, which praised the 11 September attacks and warned that more would follow.

The United States says it has evidence of al-Qaeda's role in the attacks which killed more than 4,000 people.

Five major US television networks have agreed to limit broadcasts of statements by Bin Laden and his associates.

White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said that broadcasts from suspected terrorists could contain anything from incitement to coded messages.

The US has put pressure on Qatar over the television station's coverage.
Subject: Analysis: The allies' Afghan gamble


Author:
No name
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Date Posted: 13:15:54 12/03/01 Mon

Analysis: The allies' Afghan gamble

By the BBC's Paul Adams
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/americas/newsid_1631000/1631326.stm


With Western military officials admitting openly that they are making their campaign against Afghanistan up as they go along, it is hardly surprising that questions are being raised about strategy.

Do Washington and her allies still know what they are doing?

With a number of factors now pressing in - notably the onset of winter and the Muslim holy month of Ramadan - strategy is evolving.

Washington and London can ill-afford to enter this period with no tangible gains.

Alliance attention

Winter will not bring the coalition campaign to a halt, but it will restrict the type - and area - of ground operations.

Ramadan, meanwhile, is likely to be an issue to would-be Muslim coalition partners, rather than to the warring parties in Afghanistan.

It is perhaps with these two factors in mind that the Pentagon now says it is dropping supplies of ammunition to the Northern Alliance.

Not only that, but US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has said that US planes are now devoting more of their effort to hitting Taleban frontline troops.

On Wednesday, B-52 bombers pounded some of these positions north of Kabul.

For the first time on Tuesday, Mr Rumsfeld also admitted that a small number of US ground troops were operating with the Northern Alliance, "doing an excellent job of assisting with the coordination for resupplies of various types as well as targeting".

Northern Alliance commanders have been pressing hard for greater co-ordination and for more direct American action against their Taleban opponents.

They do now seem to be getting more of what they want.

This could result in a renewed push for the strategically important northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif, which American officials have identified as a possible forward base for US troops.

It could also clear the way for the Northern Alliance to use the Bagram airbase, north of Kabul.

Seeking friends

But if the picture in northern Afghanistan is complex, little hard information exists about the situation in the south.

Western officials say they are anxious to win friends among ethnic Pashtun tribesmen but admit that they are not making much progress.

Intelligence is the key to success but Britain's Chief of Defence Staff, Admiral Sir Michael Boyce, last week admitted that this was still "the biggest problem".

Speaking at the Pentagon on Tuesday, Rear Admiral John Stufflebeem said the south was "more problematic" than the north.

"We have not been invited, we have not been asked for, we have not been requested, as we have in the north," he told reporters.

More than 230 Royal Marines commandos will soon be ready to conduct ground operations.

Officials say it could be months before they are used.

One last word on coalition strategy: We should not necessarily base our conclusions on what we can see.

At the Pentagon, officials have warned for some time that some parts of the campaign would be visible, others would not.

In the words of one observer: "We are deep in disinformation at the moment...which is where we should be."
Subject: Join the free speech interactive revolution.


Author:
No name
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Date Posted: 13:14:50 12/03/01 Mon

Hey check out this site www.thebumperbanner.com Hundreds of free bumper stickers that you can print right from your pc. Lots of cool graphics and updated daily. Join the free speech interactive revolution.
Subject: "War on Terrorism" Hits Green Party USA


Author:
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Date Posted: 13:13:13 12/03/01 Mon

To: actiongreens@yahoogroups.com
Cc: manhattangreens@yahoogroups.com
From: "Paul"
Date: Fri, 02 Nov 2001 20:26:20 -0700
Subject: [ActionGreens] "War on Terrorism" Hits Green Party USA

GREEN PARTY USA COORDINATOR DETAINED AT AIRPORT
PREVENTED BY ARMED MILITARY FROM FLYING TO GREENS
MEETING IN CHICAGO

"I was targeted because the Green Party USA opposes the bombing
of innocent civilians in Afghanistan."
--Nancy Oden


(The Green Party USA statement on the war against Afghanistan is at
http://www.greenparty.org/911.html
They are the original Green Party in the U.S. since 1986)
==========

PLEASE FORWARD TO ALL MEDIA AND LISTSERVS.
THANX (Mitchel Cohen)

The Greens / Green Party USA
226 South Wabash, 6th floor
PO Box 1406,
Chicago, Illinois 60690
Toll-free Phone: 1-866-GREENS-2

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 2, 2001

MEDIA ALERT:

GREEN PARTY USA will hold press conference in CHICAGO
SATURDAY, NOV. 3
10 a.m.
at the J. Ira and Nicki Family Hostel
24 East Congress Parkway (at Wabash), 2nd floor
------------------------------------------------

GREEN PARTY USA COORDINATOR DETAINED AT AIRPORT
PREVENTED BY ARMED MILITARY FROM FLYING TO GREENS
MEETING IN CHICAGO

Armed government agents grabbed Nancy Oden, Green Party USA coordinating committee member, Thursday at Bangor International Airport in Bangor Maine, as she attempted to board an American Airlines flight to Chicago.

"An official told me that my name had been flagged in the computer," a shaken Oden said. "I was targeted because the Green Party USA opposes the bombing of innocent civilians in Afghanistan."

Oden, a long-time organic farmer and peace activist in northern Maine, was ordered away from the plane. Military personnel with automatic weapons surrounded Oden and instructed all airlines to deny her passage on ANY flight. "I was told that the airport was closed to me until further notice and that my ticket would not be refunded," Oden said.

Oden is scheduled to speak in Chicago Friday night on a panel concerning pesticides as weapons of war. She had helped to coordinate the Green Party USA's antiwar efforts these past few months, and was to report on these to The Greens national committee. "Not only did they stop me at the airport but some mysterious party had called the hotel and cancelled my reservation," Oden said.

The Greens National Committee -- the governing body of the Green Party USA -- is meeting in Chicago Nov. 2-4 to hammer out the details of national campaigns against bio-chemical warfare, the spraying of toxic pesticides, genetic engineering, and the Party's involvement in the burgeoning peace movement.

"I am shocked that US military prevented one of our prominent Green Party members from attending the meeting in Chicago," said Elizabeth Fattah, a GPUSA representative from Pennsylvania who drove to Chicago. "I am outraged at the way the Bill of Rights is being trampled upon."

Chicago Green activist Lionel Trepanier concluded, "The attack on the right of association of an opposition political party is chilling. The harassment of peace activists is reprehensible."

For further information, please call 1-866-GREENS-2 (toll-free)

-30-
Subject: Firefighters in Angry Scuffle With Police at Trade Center


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Date Posted: 13:11:16 12/03/01 Mon

Firefighters in Angry Scuffle With Police at Trade Center

http://www.nytimes.com/2001/11/03/nyregion/03PROT.html?pagewanted=print



November 3, 2001
Firefighters in Angry Scuffle With Police at Trade Center
By DAN BARRY and KEVIN FLYNN
brief but emotionally wrenching scuffle broke out yesterday morning between New York City firefighters and police officers at the scene of their shared grief, the World Trade Center disaster site. A dozen firefighters were arrested and five police officers were injured in the incident, which rattled the city's top officials and laid bare the frustrations of the living who are unable to bury their dead.

What began as a demonstration by several hundred firefighters to protest a reduction in the number of firefighters permitted at the site turned into a jagged succession of awkward moments — some ugly, some poignant. One moment punches were being thrown in a melee between firefighters and police officers; the next, hundreds of firefighters were chanting their appreciation for the very officers they had just grappled with.

The two-hour protest concluded outside City Hall, where dozens of helmeted police officers, some on horseback, prepared for more trouble as firefighters called for the ousters of Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani and Fire Commissioner Thomas Von Essen and demanded the right to retrieve the remains of dead colleagues. Later, Mr. Giuliani emphasized that few bodies remained to be recovered.

"Bring our brothers home!" they shouted, referring to the 250 firefighters still buried in the rubble after the Sept. 11 attack. "Bring our brothers home!"

The shoving match between the firefighting force, which lost 343 of its members on Sept. 11, and the police force, which lost 23 in the same awful event, was like the eruption of a familial brawl at a never- ending wake. Commissioner Von Essen apologized; Police Commissioner Bernard B. Kerik bristled; and Mayor Giuliani was the understanding but determined father.

After acknowledging that "emotions are very, very high for all of us," and noting that "we all have lost people that we love," the mayor called the firefighters' actions unacceptable. "You can't hit police officers," he said. "You can't disobey the law, and you have to have enough professionalism and dignity about yourself to not conduct yourself in that way. No matter how bad you feel, no matter how much you feel like crying, and no matter how much you feel like venting your emotions."

Last night, the bickering among the city's uniformed officers had not abated, and the potential for further confrontation remained. Seven firefighters, four ranking fire officers and one fire marshal were being held at the 28th Precinct station house in central Harlem. The charges included inciting to riot, second degree assault, criminal trespass, disorderly conduct and obstruction governmental administration, the police said last night. Fire union officials blamed the police for some of the day's embarrassment.

At the center of the emotions and frustrations exposed yesterday is the site itself: the slowly diminishing pile of rubble, acres wide and several floors deep. Thousands of people are believed to have died, many of them apparently reduced to dust, when the terrorist attack caused the twin towers to collapse. It is a construction site, but it is also a grave site.

In the beginning, the Fire Department was in charge of the site, and its members had complete access; they put out fires and searched for survivors who were never found. The search-and-rescue operations eventually ended, though, and firefighters dedicated themselves to finding the remains of their dead colleagues and carrying them away with dignity. It is part of their code.

But the Giuliani administration, heeding the advice of safety experts, has been reducing the number of firefighters permitted at the site, where swinging girders and rumbling backhoes pose a danger, and where many workers have developed chronic chest pains and coughing fits. On Wednesday, the city announced that only 25 firefighters would be assigned to the recovery of remains, down from 64 at the time.

Officials for the two unions that represent uniformed firefighters said this latest reduction set off feelings of hurt and betrayal among many firefighters. They felt that the city was treating hallowed ground as just another construction site, the officials said; that the mayor wanted the site tidied up by Dec. 31, when his tenure ends; that city officials seem to care more about removing the hoards of gold and silver underneath the trade center than they do about removing human remains.

Mr. Giuliani said he felt "really, really bad" that his efforts to ensure safety at the site had been distorted by "certain people." He also emphasized that firefighters and police officers would continue to be assigned to the site, and that the city was determined to "recover the maximum number of human remains that we can recover."

On Thursday afternoon, Deputy Mayor Anthony P. Coles and the leaders of the two firefighters' unions, representing about 11,500 men and women, met at City Hall to discuss the growing tensions, but little was resolved. Fire Capt. Peter L. Gorman, the president of the Uniformed Fire Officers Association, recalled telling Mr. Coles that firefighters and grieving families were very upset, and that a demonstration was going to take place with or without union support. "I told them the prudent thing to do was to prevent it," Mr. Coles said yesterday.

That night, the union leaders faxed a notice to their members: there would be a demonstration on Friday morning to protest the city's decision to turn the trade center site into what one union announcement called a "full-time construction scoop and dump operation."

Shortly before midnight Thursday, Mr. Von Essen received a call from Mayor Giuliani, who was at the World Series but wondering about talk of a demonstration. "I told him they jacked up a lot of families and they're going to have a demonstration at the site," Mr. Von Essen recalled.

City officials said yesterday that they knew the approaching protest would be uncomfortable but did not expect violence. In fact, police officials said they had been assured by union officials that the protesters would remain behind the barricades surrounding the disaster site.

The demonstration, which began on a clear and unseasonably warm morning at the corner of West and Chambers Streets in Lower Manhattan, could have been just another airing of union gripes if it were not for that central issue of death and missing human remains.

Mike Heffernan, a firefighter, told the crowd of the great relief that comes when a family recovers the body of a loved one — as his did on Oct. 1 when the remains of John Heffernan, his brother and a firefighter, were found and buried.

Then Bill Butler, a retired fire captain, spoke. "My son Tommy, from Squad 1, is still in that building, and we haven't gotten to him yet," he said, urging everyone to challenge the decision to cut back on the Fire Department presence at the site.

Soon the streets resounded with chants. "Bring Tommy home!" "Bring the brothers home!" "They took the gold out!"

And, in an appeal to halt work at the site in deference to the firefighters: "Shut 'em down, shut 'em down!"

Kevin E. Gallagher, the president of the Uniformed Firefighters Association, raised his bullhorn and addressed the dozens of police officers who had been casually watching the protest unfold. "Please allow us to walk to the site in a dignified manner," he said. "Some of you officers have also lost brothers. Walk with us, and we'll go peacefully."

The protesters pushed aside a steel fence and began marching south down West Street, closer to the disaster site, while police officers watched, as if taken aback. It was not until the protesters pressed against a second barricade that matters turned ugly.

Punches were thrown, profanities exchanged. People either fell or were pushed to the ground. Police officers grabbed whom they could and, after brief struggles, slapped on handcuffs. Then the scuffling ended almost as quickly as it had begun, and the police officers stepped aside.

Mr. Gallagher also thanked the police, but not before vowing to rouse thousands more protesters — including "brothers from other cities" — if the protests were ignored. The protesters then filed out of the restricted area, through an impromptu honor guard created by dozens of applauding construction workers.

Hundreds of protesters continued on to City Hall, where dozens of police officers were gathering.

Nervous city officials watched from behind the fences that surround City Hall. "Rudy must go!" the firefighters shouted. And "Tom must go!" And "Bring our brothers home!"

By 12:30 p.m., the protest had petered out. Some firefighters went to a bar on Nassau Street; others headed to work. On the J train bound for Queens, for example, Larry Mooney tried to explain the emotions.

"They want to pull out people with cranes," he said. "We want to bring back the brothers with dignity. They think the quicker they can clean it, the better they look. We've got friends there, brothers and family. We've known these guys for years. This goes very deep."

Such sentiments did little to mollify Mr. Kerik, who said fire union officials had assured the police that they were planning a peaceful protest. "We didn't anticipate that they would pick up and flip the barricades on top of the cops," he said, sounding betrayed. "We didn't anticipate that they would punch police officers in the face. We didn't anticipate the behavior that came out of the demonstration. As a result, we have five police officers injured; two with black eyes and trauma to the face, three with neck, shoulder and back injuries."

Last night, union officials snapped back. They said police supervisors at the scene had provoked the scuffling.

"Unfortunately, not everybody's cooler heads prevailed, all right?" Mr. Gallagher said. "It was over 1,000 firefighters there; they were emotionally strained. They were drained from what they've been doing over the last seven and eight weeks. Basically, all they want to do is what's right for the families."



Copyright 2001 The New York Times Company | Privacy Information
Subject: Student Charged With Burning Flag


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Date Posted: 13:09:13 12/03/01 Mon

So in Va one can burn a cross on someone's lawn and it is protected speech..but not a flag..hmm.

--------------------
Student Charged With Burning Flag
--------------------

By Associated Press

November 2, 2001, 11:23 PM EST

LANGLEY, Va. -- A university student was charged with burning the U.S. flag in a fire that charred more than two acres of woodland in northern Virginia.

Oleg S. Asserin, 18, of Falls Church, was arrested Tuesday on a felony charge of setting a fire capable of spreading and a misdemeanor charge of burning the U.S. flag.

Virginia is among 48 states that still have flag desecration laws on the books, even though the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that flag burning is constitutionally protected speech.

Fairfax County Commonwealth's Attorney Robert Horan said Friday he will decide whether to pursue the flag-burning charge after he reviews the case.

"We'll wait and see what the facts are," Horan said.

Firefighters from Fairfax County and neighboring Montgomery County, Md., responded to the fire Sunday morning. It burned more than two acres of brush near the George Washington Memorial Parkway before it was extinguished Tuesday.

Firefighters found a charred American flag among the damage.

Fire department spokesman Dan Schmidt said authorities checked medical facilities and found Asserin receiving treatment for burns on his arms and upper body.

Fire officials said they did not believe Asserin was expressing support for recent terrorist acts. The motivation for the burning was unclear.

Asserin, who is Russian, attends George Mason University. A message left at the school's public relations office was not returned late Friday.

At his arraignment, Asserin was ordered held pending a psychiatric evaluation. A preliminary hearing is Dec. 12.

Kent Willis, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia, said the flag-burning law, enacted in 1960, is unconstitutional and that the ACLU will seek to have the charge dismissed if prosecutors don't drop it.

Copyright (c) 2001, The Associated Press

--------------------

This article originally appeared at:
http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/wire/sns-ap-flag-burning1102nov02.story
Subject: "Intelligence" as an Alternative to Repression


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Date Posted: 13:08:11 12/03/01 Mon

"Intelligence" as an Alternative to Repression
Friends,
Since most of you received the complete entry on “Terrorism” from the Oxford Companion to Politics that I sent out earlier this note will focus on those things that seem to me to most be in need of discussion during the present crisis.
What has most struck me from reading this essay ­ and I should certainly appreciate hearing what most struck you ­ is the extent to which “state actors” have historically been among the major offenders, i.e., terrorists. The use of the term in this way seems to have waxed and waned but the willingness of states to engage in acts which meet the definition of terrorism has been disconcertingly frequent.
A major feature article on Anne McLellan’s Anti-Terrorism bill, C-36 in the Canadian House of Commons concludes that the bill is not excessively repressive “if you trust the Government.” But if you perceive that this Government, Canadian governments at large and most governments, democratic or otherwise, exhibit strong recidivistic tendencies, i.e., they revert to terror as a means of achieving their goals with great regularity then the question of whether we should trust the present Government is one where the Attorney General needs to prove her trust worthiness and that of all her successors for the life of the legislation. Considering the unwillingness of the Prime Minister to include a sunset clause this might be hard to do.
The second thing that struck me was that every First Nation that
resisted the westward or northward expansion of the United States,
Canada or other imperial powers engaged in terrorism from the
perspective of this definition. Whether or not it was state terrorism depends in part on whether you conceive that First Nations are states.
Whether or not it was terrorism or a war of self defence depends upon whether you support imperialist aggression when it is performed by a state from which you receive benefits. (There must have been some reason that Mohawk communities referred to George Washington as “Town Killer.”)
Those who indulge in intellectual honesty and who also life in North America will, however, want to curtail their obeisance to the Eternal Flame and their willingness to support a War on Terrorism that, Mr. Bush proposes, will continue until all terrorism is forever stamped out. We might even ask if such a proposal emanates from a responsible, mature political mind or whether it arose from a fundamentalist in search of a crusade. (It was he who introduced the word.)
The third thing that struck me was that there is not a consistent
correlation with any one religious movement to the exclusion of others.
This might give us reason to pause yet again if we have started to move about after the consideration of state terrorism and its use against peoples whose populations have recently been collapsed through the spread of smallpox. (See, for ex., Thornton’s American Indian Holocaust and Survival for full documentation).
Although it is apparent that some Islamic groups presently embrace
violence and terrorism, it is not evident that Islam has historically been more inclined toward terrorism than other imperial religions. By imperial religions I mean those who seek to constantly expand their territory and their adherents through conversion.
What, after all, is the medieval doctrine of the Christian Church,
“compelle entrare” if it is not a form of “sanctified terrorism”. Those who lend credence to the idea that there is an internal terrorism condoned by the state, such as women’s movements have identified, need to consider that such internal terrorism runs through much of the history of settler populations in North America and elsewhere. Ask the folks who were burned at Salem. Ask the folks who were lynched in one or another southern State during the hundred years following the U.S. Civil War. This kind of internal terrorism, although not directly committed by the state is only possible with the collaboration of the state.
State collaboration enabled the pogroms of eastern Europe and Russia no less than the lynchings of the southern United States. So if there is now a president who proposes to stamp out terrorism in all its manifestations let us watch carefully to see whether he curtails the collaboration of his government and those with which his Republic is allied.
Only now, after accounting for state terrorism and state collaborated terrorism am I really ready to look at the terrorism associated with nationalist movements. This is the one kind of non-state terrorism that has been seen to appreciably further the goals of the movements who do these acts. Terrorism committed by nationalist movements is, on the other hand, somewhat hard to distinguish from civil warfare.
The examples arising in pre-independence Israel are justified if you conceive that the occupation by Britain was of dubious legitimacy and if you conceive that the small remnant of European Jews who survived the Holocaust had no place else to go except their most ancient homeland.
This justification is open to challenge by showing that there were other safe havens for the Jews of the Displaced Persons camps ready, willing and able to receive them.
The difference in the role of the IRA in 1916 and the role of the IRA in its most recent manifestations will be apparent to all.
What then, are the questions, to be asked?
One question that needs to be asked again and again, may not be whether certain acts are acts of terror, but whether those who perform the acts have been placed in a position in which no other means of resistance and self-preservation is possible.
Another, is whether we are in danger of being victims of our leaders’ rhetoric? Does a declaration of war against terrorism even constitute a proper sentence? Does the war have an identifiable enemy? This is possibly a more fundamental question than whether it can be won.
A third question arises when we distinguish between the charismatic fanatic leaders who seek to enlist people in organizations bent on acts of terrorism and those vast numbers that are needed to sustain such activities. Hitler, as a personality, might well have emerged from the end of World War I, whether or not the Treaty of Versailles maintained the German republic in a state of penury. But would he have attracted
such a large following.
A fourth question that arises from a global perspective is whether the “rhetoric of uniqueness” that has been invoked by many American leaders and leaders of American allies serves a public interest other than the careers of those who make the speeches. Is it possible for those who lost family, friends, colleagues or even simply a sense of security in the city that they love (and many people love New York who do not live within its boundaries) to express their grief without their leaders
declaiming that such events have never happened before?

My final and most pressing question is whether the repressive
legislation that has been passed in the United States, and its
counterpart that is making its way through the Canadian Parliament have anything to do with the prevention of terrorism. Several more knowledgeable commentators have pointed out that the U.S. and the U.K. have each had anti-terrorist legislation on the books for several years. At least one witness in an earlier antiterrorist trial in New York City testified that the Al Qaeda was planning something along the lines of the horrors of September 11 long before those events took place.

One might have though that real “intelligence” would stand as an
alternative to repression. Just as there is no evidence that terrorism actually furthers the goals of non-state parties who perform such acts neither is there any evidence that repressive laws provide greater security against acts of terrorism.

Those are my questions. Feel free to add your own or to borrow these.
Give credit if you care to do so. Unlike fine china, when you borrow ideas there is no need to return them. Nor is there much likelihood you will ever really be finished with them.


Michael (Mickey) Posluns.


--
If we knew where knowledge goes when it evaporates, perhaps we might learn to recover what we have lost and to reconstitute it as distilled wisdom.

"How long will you judge unjustly, and show partiality toward the
wicked? Do justice to the poor and fatherless, deal righteously with the afflicted and destitute. Rescue the poor and needy; save them from the hand of the wicked." (A Psalm of Asaph, The Psalm for the Third Day.)

How can we be sure that the unexamined life is not worth living?

Michael W. Posluns,
The Still Waters Group,
First Nations Relations & Public Policy

Daytime: 416 995-8613
Evening: 416 656-8613
Fax: 416 656-2715

36 Lauder Avenue,
Toronto, Ontario,
M6H 3E3


<<<<=-=-= Tsonkwadiyonrat (We are ONE Spirit) =-=-=>>>>
The preceding message has been distributed courtesy of Native News Online. A Barefoot Connection
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Subject: Little space for dissent to the military line


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Date Posted: 13:06:38 12/03/01 Mon

FAIR-L
Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting
Media analysis, critiques and news reports

ACTION ALERT:
Op-Ed Echo Chamber:
Little space for dissent to the military line

November 2, 2001

During the weeks following September's terrorist attacks, two leading dailies used their op-ed pages as an echo chamber for the government's official policy of military response, mostly ignoring dissenters and policy critics.

A FAIR survey of the New York Times and the Washington Post op-ed pages for the three weeks following the attacks (9/12/01 - 10/2/01) found that columns calling for or assuming a military response to the attacks were given a
great deal of space, while opinions urging diplomatic and international law approaches as an alternative to military action were nearly non-existent.

We counted a total of 44 columns in the Times and Post that clearly stressed a military response, against only two columns stressing non-military solutions. (Though virtually every op-ed in both papers dealt in some way with September 11, most did not deal specifically with how to respond to the attacks, with many focusing on economics, rebuilding, New York's Rudolph Giuliani, etc. During the period surveyed, the Post ran a total of 105 op-ed columns, the Times ran 79.)

Overall, the Post was more militaristic, running at least 32 columns favoring military action, compared to 12 in the Times. But the Post also provided the only two columns we could find in the first three weeks after September 11 that argued for non-military responses; the Times had no such
columns. Both dissenting columns were written by guest writers.

The Times' and Post's in-house columnists provided the bulk of the pro-war commentary. Two-thirds of the Times columns urging military action were written in-house, as were more than half of the Post's pro-war columns. This may say something about which journalists are singled out for promotion to the prestigious position of columnist.

In addition, both op-ed pages showed a striking gender imbalance. Of the 107 op-ed writers at the Post, only seven were women. Proportionally, the Times did slightly better, with eight female writers out of 79.

When critics argue that U.S. news media have a duty to provide a broad debate on war, a common response is to ask why-- after all, isn't there a political and popular consensus in favor of war?

Perhaps, but there's reason to believe that the extent and nature of that consensus has been overstated and distorted.

In polls that offered a choice between a military response or nothing, it's true that overwhelming majorities chose war. But given the choice between a either military assault or pressing for the extradition and trial of those
responsible (Christian Science Monitor, 9/27/01), a substantial minority either chose extradition (30 percent) or were undecided (16 percent). These people had next to no representation in the op-ed debate; in fact, it's likely that many people asked to choose whether or not to go to war had never seen an alternative to war articulated in a mainstream outlet.

There is also a little-acknowledged gender gap in poll responses about military action, a fact that lends new significance to the gender imbalance in Washington Post and New York Times op-eds. In the final two paragraphs of
a 1,395-word story titled "Public Unyielding in War Against Terror " (9/29/01), the Washington Post pointed out that women "were significantly less likely to support a long and costly war." According to the Post, while 44 percent of women would support a broad military effort, "48 percent said they want a limited strike or no military action at all."

Similarly, a CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll (Gallup.com, 10/5/01) showed that 64 percent of men think the U.S. "should mount a long-term war," while 24 percent favored limiting retaliation to punishing the specific groups responsible for the attacks. In contrast, "women are evenly divided-- with
42 percent favoring each option." Noting that "women's support for war is much more conditional than that of men," Gallup reports that though 88 percent of women favored taking retaliatory military action, that number dropped to 55 percent if 1,000 American troops would be killed (76 percent of men would support a war under these circumstances).

Of course, gender equity on the op-ed pages would not guarantee proportional representation for dissenters-- some of the most virulently pro-war and anti-Muslim columns have been written by female commentators (e.g., Mona Charen, who called for mass expulsions based on ethnicity--Washington Times, 10/18/01). But given the gender differences suggested by polling, more women on the op-ed pages might well give the lie to the conventional wisdom that all Americans have no-holds-barred enthusiasm for an open-ended war.

Even, however, if one accepts the idea that the public overwhelmingly favors war, the task of journalism is to remain independent and to ask tough questions of policy makers. After all, American history includes many official policies that were popular in their time, but which today are viewed as disasters. Wouldn't the country have been better off if journalists had provided a stronger, more abiding challenge to the consensus that supported Vietnam, or the internment of Japanese-Americans?

More than any other newspapers, the New York Times and the Washington Post-- with their unmatched influence in the nation's capitol and in U.S. newsrooms-- have a duty to provide readers with a wide range of views on how to deal with terrorism, its causes and solutions. If the purpose of the op-ed page is to provide a vigorous debate including critical opinions, both papers failed their readers at a crucial time.

ACTION: Please urge the Washington Post and the New York Times to broaden the range of debate on their op-ed pages about the U.S. war in Afghanistan.

CONTACT:
New York Times
Terry A. Tang, Op-Ed Page Editor
mailto:nytnews@nytimes.com
Toll free comment line: 1-888-NYT-NEWS

Washington Post
Michael Getler, Ombudsman
mailto:ombudsman@washpost.com
(202) 334-7582

As always, please remember that your comments are taken more seriously if you maintain a polite tone. Please cc fair@fair.org with your correspondence.

----------

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Subject: Support for war slips across Europe


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Date Posted: 12:59:23 12/03/01 Mon

Support for war slips across Europe
Last Updated: Fri Nov 2 09:46:27 2001
http://cbc.ca/cgi-bin/view?/news/2001/11/02/war_oppos011102

LONDON - The Church of Scotland came out against the military campaign in Afghanistan on Thursday, joining a growing anti-war chorus across Europe.

Some political, religious and labour groups in Europe are calling for an end to the bombing. Opinion polls show public support for the campaign is slipping.

A poll this week in a London newspaper showed support for the war has fallen 12 percentage points, from 74 to 62 per cent.

In London, peace activists are taking to the streets to drum up support for the Stop the War movement, said organizer John Reese.

"I think over the course of the war, the increase of civilian casualties, the bombing of hospitals, old people's homes, Red Cross depots, has increased people's reservations about the war," he said.

The majority of Europeans still back the war. But politicians are struggling to find a balance between support for the United States and growing public concern about the bombing.

The leaders of the five Scandinavian countries said this week they regretted civilian causalities in Afghanistan. They called for an end to the war as soon as possible.

The Church of Scotland said on Thursday the killing of thousands in the United States should not be answered by killing thousands more.

The British government defeated a motion brought forward by some of its own members who said the vote itself was a symbolic protest against a war they say should be stopped immediately.

Written by CBC News Online staff
Subject: Pashtun Uprising Reported in Afghanistan Prominent Tribal Leader Said to Lead Insurgency in South of Country


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Date Posted: 12:58:04 12/03/01 Mon

Pashtun Uprising Reported in Afghanistan Prominent Tribal Leader Said to Lead Insurgency in South of Country

By Marc Kaufman
Washington Post Staff Writer Friday, November 2, 2001; Page A01
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A27306-2001Nov1?language=printer

A prominent Afghan tribal leader has begun the first known armed uprising against the Taliban in southern Afghanistan since the U.S.-led airstrike campaign began, fighting off a Taliban attack yesterday and claiming to control part of a southern province, according to his family and media reports.

Hamid Karzai, an influential figure from the leading ethnic Pashtun tribe, said he survived a Taliban attack on a meeting of tribal elders he convened in Uruzgan province, and that his forces captured 12 Taliban soldiers in the skirmish.

Karzai, who is close to Afghanistan's exiled former king Mohammed Zahir Shah, returned to Afghanistan last month to promote a national gathering aimed at forming a broad coalition government to replace the ruling Taliban, according to his brother, Qayum Karzai.

Although any rebellion led by Karzai would seem to be in its infancy, its onset would be welcomed by U.S. officials, who have been eager for the Taliban to come under attack in the Pashtun heartland, where the hard-line Islamic militia is strongest. The Bush administration has been working to foment a Pashtun insurgency in the south to match the military campaign being waged by the Northern Alliance coalition led by ethnic Tajik, Uzbek and Hazara minorities in the north of the country.

Absent a local uprising in the south, some Bush administration officials say they fear the U.S.-led anti-terrorism war could become too closely associated with the Northern Alliance, further cementing support among the Pashtuns for the Taliban. The Taliban is overwhelmingly made up of Pashtuns.

Karzai told the British Broadcasting Corp. yesterday that his forces had been attacked by the Taliban and had fought them off. Another Pashtun tribal leader, Mahalem Abdul Ghader, told the BBC that Karzai's group had withdrawn to the mountains with supporters and local people to start an armed rebellion.

The Taliban ambassador to Pakistan, Abdul Salam Zaeef, also reported that a battle with Karzai had taken place. He said that Karzai was being chased in the mountains and that some of his group had been killed or wounded.

Karzai's brother Qayum, who lives in the Washington area, said he had spoken with Karzai yesterday morning and that he was safe and well protected. "The Taliban and foreign soldiers did not get too close to the meeting -- we anticipated they would come and had good security arrangements," Qayum Karzai said in an interview. "The tribal forces are supporting my brother, and the Afghan people have an enormous amount of weapons to use. They are not running from the Taliban."

Until yesterday, there had been no reports of fighting against the Taliban in the south, and few confirmed defections of local commanders. Another anti-Taliban leader who tried to return last week and recruit Pashtuns to the opposition, Abdul Haq, was captured and executed by the Taliban. Haq's supporters feared that his death would set back the Pashtun opposition, but other Americans and Afghans involved in the anti-Taliban effort said that Abdul Haq did not have significant support inside Afghanistan to match Karzai's..

Zaeef also told the Afghan Islamic Press that four U.S. helicopters had come to Karzai's aid during the battle. But Karzai's brother said the report was false and that Karzai was not receiving American support.

There was no independent confirmation of the battle or Karzai's location.

A U.S. official said that he knew nothing about Karzai's battle with the Taliban, or about the Taliban report that U.S. helicopters were sent in to help. He said the U.S. government is aware of Karzai's effort, however, and knows that he is better armed "than Abdul Haq," who reportedly entered the country with few weapons or soldiers.

• Understanding Afghanistan A look at the country, the ruling Taliban, and the opposition forces.

Qayum Karzai said his brother entered Afghanistan on Oct. 8 -- the day after the United States and Britain launched the airstrike campaign -- and spent a week in his home village less than five miles from the headquarters of Taliban leader Mohammad Omar in the southern city of Kandahar.

"These are our tribal forces, and we can go in and around the country on our own footing," Qayum Karzai said. "We know the Taliban is not 10 feet tall, and that many Afghans hate what they have done to our religion, our culture and our country."

Hamid Karzai is well educated, speaks fluent English and served as deputy foreign minister during the mujaheddin government of the early 1990s. He was elected the leader of the Popalzai tribe in 1999 after his father, Abdul Ahad Karzai, was assassinated in Quetta, Pakistan. His sons accused the Taliban and the Pakistani secret service of organizing the murder.

The Karzai family at first supported the Taliban in the belief it could help Afghanistan recover from its lawlessness after a 10-year Soviet occupation and civil war, but soon went into opposition. Qayum Karzai said that his family has been opposing the Taliban since 1996, "when the U.S. was still supporting them."

The CIA has sought to encourage Pashtuns to desert the Taliban, using money and offers of future prominence. But the agency has few people who can speak Pashtu, the local language, and reports say it has been relying on Pakistan to make the contacts.

The Karzais, however, have strained relations with Pakistan. Qayum Karzai said that his brother was possibly "safer now in Afghanistan than in Pakistan."

Staff writers Alan Sipress and Thomas E. Ricks contributed to this report.

© 2001 The Washington Post Company
Subject: Critics Blast Bush Order on Papers


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Date Posted: 12:56:59 12/03/01 Mon

Critics Blast Bush Order on Papers


Critics Blast Bush Order on Papers
Updated: Fri, Nov 02 5:01 AM EST
http://news.excite.com/news/ap/011102/05/presidential-papers
By DEB RIECHMANN, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - One historian calls it a "disaster for history," but the White House insists a new executive order issued by President Bush balances the public's right to see the records of past presidents with a need to protect national security.
Advocates for the release of government documents say the executive order violates the spirit of the 1978 Presidential Records Act and will usher in a new era of secrecy for papers left behind by America's chief executives.
The White House says the order simply sets up a procedure for implementing the act and gives former presidents more authority to claim executive privilege to withhold certain papers. Absent "compelling" circumstances, the incumbent president will agree with a former president's decision to
disclose or withhold documents, the White House says.
Bruce Craig, director of the National Coordinating Committee for the Promotion of History, claims the order is "blatantly unlawful top to bottom." He predicted a quick legal challenge to the order, which probably will come up at a hearing Tuesday by a House Government Reform subcommittee.
The hearing was scheduled for last month but was canceled in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terror attacks.
Craig said that under the order, if a former president says certain papers are privileged, they will remain secret even if the sitting president disagrees. Conversely, if a sitting president says certain papers from a past administration are privileged, they will remain under wraps even if the former president disagrees.
"In the interest of keeping historical papers closed, the incumbent president can trump the wishes of a former president," says Craig, who claims the order is "a disaster for history."
In a letter, Bruce Lindsey, lawyer for the William J. Clinton Foundation, said the former president objects to Bush's executive order because laws already exist to restrict disclosure of sensitive documents, The Washington
Post reported Friday.
The act affects the presidential papers of Clinton, Bush's father, George H.W. Bush, and Ronald Reagan. It also applies to vice presidential papers, including those of former President Bush.
Reagan's papers are the first governed by the Presidential Records Act, which followed Watergate and Richard Nixon's attempts to hold on to his papers and tape recordings. The act made presidential records the property of government, not ex-presidents.
Some 68,000 pages of Reagan's White House records, including vice presidential papers from the elder Bush, were supposed to have been opened under the law in January, 12 years after Reagan left office. The White House delayed the release three times to review constitutional and legal
questions, and Thursday's executive order resulted.
White House counsel Alberto Gonzales defended Bush's executive order but did not say when the Reagan papers would be opened to the public.
White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said the order provides a "safety valve" for a current administration. A former president, out of office for 12 years, might not recognize national security implications of releasing certain documents, he said.
Fleischer emphasized that "except in very compelling cases, if a former president were to say `That (document) should go out,' this administration would say, "It should go out."
Moreover, any claims of executive privilege, including those involving military, diplomatic or national security secrets, legal work or advice, presidential communications or the deliberative processes of the president and his advisers, can be appealed in court, Gonzales said.
"It will not be driven by politics or what looks good. It will driven by what is allowed under the Constitution," Gonzales said.
Steven Aftergood, director of the Federation of American Scientists'government secrecy project, thinks the order will make it harder for the public to gain access to historically valuable presidential papers because both the former president and the incumbent must consent to disclosure.
A private citizen will have little luck trying to persuade a court to overturn a claim of executive privilege, he said. "When Joe Blow goes into court to overturn it, he's probably going to lose," Aftergood said.
Some historians, including American University historian Anna Nelson, have suspected the Bush White House is worried about what the Reagan papers might reveal about officials now working for President Bush who also worked for Reagan. Among them are Secretary of State Colin Powell, Budget Director Mitch Daniels Jr. and White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card.
Gonzales says that is not the reason.
"There may in fact be embarrassing documents," he said, but that would not be considered a legitimate reason to withhold something.
Other historians suggest the White House is taking advantage of heightened public interest in national security after the terror attacks on New York and Washington. Craig speculated that the Bush White House might be worried the war on terrorism may generate documents it would rather not see exposed down the road.
"Everybody is in agreement that materials that can be used by terrorists to threaten national security should be closed up," Craig said. "There already are existing laws and exemptions that keep that kind of stuff closed up.
"This is about confidential information - communication between a president and top people - that they would simply prefer not to be released to the public."
Subject: WE SEE GODZILLA, THEY SEE KING KONG


Author:
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Date Posted: 12:55:02 12/03/01 Mon

FROM UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE
FOR RELEASE: WEEK OF NOVEMBER 2, 2001
COLUMN OF THE AMERICAS by Patrisia Gonzales and Roberto Rodriguez
WE SEE GODZILLA, THEY SEE KING KONG

Terrorism. Trauma. Fear. Anger. Revenge. Hate. Evil. Anthrax. Homeland
security. Censorship. War. These words have dominated the news lately.
Ironically, these are the antitheses of the words heard immediately after
Sept. 11: courage, heroism, unity, kindness, neighborliness, selflessness and
love.

Why do we seem less secure and less confident today now that we're bombing
Afghanistan to dust? We recently asked trauma expert Bessel Van de Kolk of
Boston University what he thought about the trauma that the nation has been
experiencing. "The nation is not experiencing trauma," he responded. "Tens of
thousands of people have been traumatized. The rest of us are simply acting
as though we've been traumatized.

"Those who fled for their lives, who were injured or who lost loved ones, the
firemen and the rescue workers. ... Those are the ones who've been
traumatized. I'm very fearful that if not treated, they're in danger of
developing horrendous Post Traumatic Stress Disorder." He warned that if they
aren't treated, they're at a high risk of traumatizing (through neglect and
abuse) loved ones in the future. They're also at risk of becoming alcoholics.

Tens of thousands were clinically traumatized on Sept. 11, not tens of
millions. So then what are we feeling or experiencing? Frayed nerves? Fear?
He believes we're suffering from an addiction to victimization -- fueled by a
sensationalist media that is feeding a public "that's hooked on trauma and
that doesn't want to have no news."

"The chances of getting hurt by people we love are much greater than by some
terrorist. Every two minutes women are beaten by their husbands; every few
minutes a child is molested." The chances of most Americans being hurt by
terrorist action are minuscule in comparison. "I'm much more concerned about
drunk drivers."

Perhaps what's afflicting America is not clinical, but cultural and political
trauma. Perhaps in Osama bin Laden, we're seeing Godzilla, whereas his
supporters are seeing King Kong. As a result, many have turned to sc
apegoating, going so far as calling for massive deportations of all aliens.
"We all have the capacity for terrorism in our souls," notes Van de Kolk.
"Those who've been harassing Arabs/Muslims are terrorists who've been
inspired by terrorists."

As the president has noted, we're in a different kind of war. Since the Civil
War, no U.S. war has been fought on U.S. soil. And since Vietnam, we've
fought proxy wars or have bombed other nations long-distance, which has
insulated us from death and destruction. That's now changed as this nation's
enemies have struck back with unconventional weapons. The result is extreme
fear, perhaps the most powerful emotion known to humankind.

The fear and anxiety gripping the nation are unfolding as our elected and
appointed leaders appear to be cowering, confused at best, having abandoned
their offices. Their most courageous act has been to encourage us to ...
shop? We have the most powerful weapons in the history of humanity -- having
spent trillions of dollars for national defense -- yet we don't feel secure.
Why? Because they weren't designed to defend us at home. Neither can they
stop fear. So, we ask, who is winning this war? A better question is what war
are we engaged in?

A war to ensure U.S. security, against terrorism, to overthrow the Taliban
and install freedom-fighters in Afghanistan? A war to protect our freedoms?
(Then why did Congress just roll over and pass the USA Patriotic Act that
curtails our basic privacy rights and chills our freedom of speech?) The war
we really need to wage is the one against fear, a fear so great that many
people would readily sacrifice the Constitution.

Whatever we're feeling, terrorism is something that the people of the Middle
East, Third World countries and, to a lesser extent, Europe have been living
with for generations, yet they've not eradicated it. In that sense, Americans
are now indeed culturally traumatized, afraid to travel, open their mail,
shop at malls and leave their homes. We are close to being paralyzed by fear.
Interestingly, many people of color who've lived with racial intimidation and
violence and fear of law enforcement -- including dragnet immigration raids
-- already know this experience.

As Van de Kolk suggests, what we're in dire need of at this time, is strong
leadership that takes us out of this gripping fear, while reassuring us that
our rights and freedoms remain sacrosanct during these most difficult times.

Where's Godzilla' nemesis, Gamera, now that we need him?


COPYRIGHT 2001 UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE


** Gonzales is the author of the forthcoming "The Mud People: Anonymous
Heroes of Mexico" and co-author of "Gonzales/Rodriguez: Uncut & Uncensored"
(ISBN: 0-918520-22-3 -- Ethnic Studies Library Publications Unit, UC
Berkeley. Rodriguez is the author of Justice: A Question of Race (Cloth- ISBN
0-927534-69-X paper ISBN 0-927534-68-1 -- Bilingual Review Press). We can be
reached at PO BOX 100726, San Antonio, TX 78201-8726, or by phone at
210-734-3050 or XColumn@aol.com "Column of the Americas" is posted every
Friday and archived under "Opinion" at www.uexpress.com
Subject: Noam Chomsky Interview


Author:
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Date Posted: 12:53:43 12/03/01 Mon

Noam Chomsky Interview

http://www.imdiversity.com/villages/native/article_detail.asp?Article_ID=7254


Noam Chomsky Interview
by NAV Staff


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Note:
B92 is a multi-faceted media house at the very forefront of the transformation of post-Milosevic Yugoslavia’s cultural life. In their 12-year history, they've grown from their tentative origins as a student radio station to become an umbrella association comprising over 250 staff in the fields of television, radio, internet, music, film and publishing. Along the way they have pioneered the use of the internet as a means of bypassing media repression; won global acclaim for our part in the downfall of a corrupt and violent regime; and nurtured a thriving creative scene in Yugoslavia.

B92 has granted permission for the Native American Village to inlcude the following interview with Noam Chomsky at the NAV site.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

B92: Why do you think these attacks happened?

Chomsky: To answer the question we must first identify the perpetrators of the crimes. It is generally assumed, plausibly, that their origin is the Middle East region, and that the attacks probably trace back to the Osama Bin Laden network, a widespread and complex organization, doubtless inspired by Bin Laden but not necessarily acting under his control. Let us assume that this is true. Then to answer your question a sensible person would try to ascertain Bin Laden's views, and the sentiments of the large reservoir of supporters he has throughout the region. About all of this, we have a great deal of information. Bin Laden has been interviewed extensively over the years by highly reliable Middle East specialists, notably the most eminent correspondent in the region, Robert Fisk (London "Independent"), who has intimate knowledge of the entire region and direct experience over decades.

A Saudi Arabian millionaire, Bin Laden became a militant Islamic leader in the war to drive the Russians out of Afghanistan. He was one of the many religious fundamentalist extremists recruited, armed, and financed by the CIA and their allies in Pakistani intelligence to cause maximal harm to the Russians - quite possibly delaying their withdrawal, many analysts suspect - though whether he personally happened to have direct contact with the CIA is unclear, and not particularly important. Not surprisingly, the CIA preferred the most fanatic and cruel fighters they could mobilize. The end result was to "destroy a moderate regime and create a fanatical one, from groups recklessly financed by the Americans" ("London Times" correspondent Simon Jenkins, also a specialist on the region).

These "Afghanis" as they are called (many, like Bin Laden, not from Afghanistan) carried out terror operations across the border in Russia, but they terminated these after Russia withdrew. Their war was not against Russia, which they despise, but against the Russian occupation and Russia's crimes against Muslims.

The "Afghanis" did not terminate their activities, however. They joined Bosnian Muslim forces in the Balkan Wars; the US did not object, just as it tolerated Iranian support for them, for complex reasons that we need not pursue here, apart from noting that concern for the grim fate of the Bosnians was not prominent among them. The "Afghanis" are also fighting the Russians in Chechnya, and, quite possibly, are involved in carrying out terrorist attacks in Moscow and elsewhere in Russian territory.

Bin Laden and his "Afghanis" turned against the US in 1990 when they established permanent bases in Saudi Arabia - from his point of view, a counterpart to the Russian occupation of Afghanistan, but far more significant because of Saudi Arabia's special status as the guardian of the holiest shrines.


Bin Laden is also bitterly opposed to the corrupt and repressive regimes of the region, which he regards as "un-Islamic," including the Saudi Arabian regime, the most extreme Islamic fundamentalist regime in the world, apart from the Taliban, and a close US ally since its origins. Bin Laden despises the US for its support of these regimes.

Like others in the region, he is also outraged by long-standing US support for Israel's brutal military occupation, now in its 35th year: Washington's decisive diplomatic, military, and economic intervention in support of the killings, the harsh and destructive siege over many years, the daily humiliation to which Palestinians are subjected, the expanding settlements designed to break the occupied territories into Bantustan-like cantons and take control of the resources, the gross violation of the Geneva Conventions, and other actions that are recognized as crimes throughout most of the world, apart from the US, which has prime responsibility for them. And like others, he contrasts Washington's dedicated support for these crimes with the decade-long US-British assault against the civilian population of Iraq, which has devastated the society and caused hundreds of thousands of deaths while strengthening Saddam Hussein - who was a favored friend and ally of the US and Britain right through his worst atrocities, including the gassing of the Kurds, as people of the region also remember well, even if Westerners prefer to forget the facts. These sentiments are very widely shared. The "Wall Street Journal" (Sept. 14) published a survey of opinions of wealthy and privileged Muslims in the Gulf region (bankers, professionals, businessmen with close links to the US). They expressed much the same views: resentment of the US policies of supporting Israeli crimes and blocking the international consensus on a diplomatic settlement for many years while devastating Iraqi civilian society, supporting harsh and repressive anti-democratic regimes throughout the region, and imposing barriers against economic development by "propping up oppressive regimes." Among the great majority of people suffering deep poverty and oppression, similar sentiments are far more bitter, and are the source of the fury and despair that has led to suicide bombings, as commonly understood by those who are interested in the facts.

The US, and much of the West, prefers a more comforting story. To quote the lead analysis in the "New York Times" (Sept. 16), the perpetrators acted out of "hatred for the values cherished in the West as freedom, tolerance, prosperity, religious pluralism and universal suffrage." US actions are irrelevant, and therefore need not even be mentioned (Serge Schmemann). This is a convenient picture, and the general stance is not unfamiliar in intellectual history; in fact, it is close to the norm. It happens to be completely at variance with everything we know, but has all the merits of self-adulation and uncritical support for power.

It is also widely recognized that Bin Laden and others like him are praying for "a great assault on Muslim states," which cause "fanatics to flock to his cause" (Jenkins, and many others.). That too is familiar. The escalating cycle of violence is typically welcomed by the harshest and most brutal elements on both sides, a fact evident enough from the recent history of the Balkans, to cite only one of many cases.

B92: What consequences will those attacks have on US inner policy and to the American self reception?

Chomsky: US policy has already been officially announced. The world is being offered a "stark choice": join us, or "face the certain prospect of death and destruction." Congress has authorized the use of force against any individuals or countries the President determines to be involved in the attacks, a doctrine that every supporter regards as ultra-criminal. That is easily demonstrated. Simply ask how the same people would have reacted if Nicaragua had adopted this doctrine after the US had rejected the orders of the World Court to terminate its "unlawful use of force" against Nicaragua and had vetoed a Security Council resolution calling on all states to observe international law. And that terrorist attack was far more severe and destructive even than this atrocity.

As for how these matters are perceived here, that is far more complex. One should bear in mind that the media and the intellectual elites generally have their particular agendas. Furthermore, the answer to this question is, in significant measure, a matter of decision: as in many other cases, with sufficient dedication and energy, efforts to stimulate fanaticism, blind hatred, and submission to authority can be reversed. We all know that very well.

B92: Do you expect US to profoundly change their policy to the rest of the world?

Chomsky: The initial response was to call for intensifying the policies that led to the fury and resentment that provides the background of support for the terrorist attack, and to pursue more intensively the agenda of the most hard line elements of the leadership: increased militarization, domestic regimentation, attack on social programs. That is all to be expected. Again, terror attacks, and the escalating cycle of violence they often engender, tend to reinforce the authority and prestige of the most harsh and repressive elements of a society. But there is nothing inevitable about submission to this course.

B92: After the first shock, came fear of what US answer is going to be. Are you afraid, too?

Chomsky: Every sane person should be afraid of the likely reaction - the one that has already been announced, the one that probably answers Bin Laden's prayers. It is highly likely to escalate the cycle of violence, in the familiar way, but in this case on a far greater scale.

The US has already demanded that Pakistan terminate the food and other supplies that are keeping at least some of the starving and suffering people of Afghanistan alive. If that demand is implemented, unknown numbers of people who have not the remotest connection to terrorism will die, possibly millions. Let me repeat: the US has demanded that Pakistan kill possibly millions of people who are themselves victims of the Taliban. This has nothing to do even with revenge. It is at a far lower moral level even than that. The significance is heightened by the fact that this is mentioned in passing, with no comment, and probably will hardly be noticed. We can learn a great deal about the moral level of the reigning intellectual culture of the West by observing the reaction to this demand. I think we can be reasonably confident that if the American population had the slightest idea of what is being done in their name, they would be utterly appalled. It would be instructive to seek historical precedents.

If Pakistan does not agree to this and other US demands, it may come under direct attack as well - with unknown consequences. If Pakistan does submit to US demands, it is not impossible that the government will be overthrown by forces much like the Taliban - who in this case will have nuclear weapons. That could have an effect throughout the region, including the oil producing states. At this point we are considering the possibility of a war that may destroy much of human society.

Even without pursuing such possibilities, the likelihood is that an attack on Afghans will have pretty much the effect that most analysts expect: it will enlist great numbers of others to support of Bin Laden, as he hopes. Even if he is killed, it will make little difference. His voice will be heard on cassettes that are distributed throughout the Islamic world, and he is likely to be revered as a martyr, inspiring others. It is worth bearing in mind that one suicide bombing - a truck driven into a US military base - drove the world's major military force out of Lebanon 20 years ago. The opportunities for such attacks are endless. And suicide attacks are very hard to prevent.

B92: "The world will never be the same after 11.09.01." Do you think so?

Chomsky: The horrendous terrorist attacks on Tuesday are something quite new in world affairs, not in their scale and character, but in the target. For the US, this is the first time since the War of 1812 that its national territory has been under attack, even threat. It's colonies have been attacked, but not the national territory itself. During these years the US virtually exterminated the indigenous population, conquered half of Mexico, intervened violently in the surrounding region, conquered Hawaii and the Philippines (killing hundreds of thousands of Filipinos), and in the past half century particularly, extended its resort to force throughout much of the world. The number of victims is colossal. For the first time, the guns have been directed the other way. The same is true, even more dramatically, of Europe. Europe has suffered murderous destruction, but from internal wars, meanwhile conquering much of the world with extreme brutality. It has not been under attack by its victims outside, with rare exceptions (the IRA in England, for example). It is therefore natural that NATO should rally to the support of the US; hundreds of years of imperial violence have an enormous impact on the intellectual and moral culture.

It is correct to say that this is a novel event in world history, not because of the scale of the atrocity - regrettably - but because of the target. How the West chooses to react is a matter of supreme importance. If the rich and powerful choose to keep to their traditions of hundreds of years and resort to extreme violence, they will contribute to the escalation of a cycle of violence, in a familiar dynamic, with long-term consequences that could be awesome. Of course, that is by no means inevitable. An aroused public within the more free and democratic societies can direct policies towards a much more humane and honorable course.


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Subject: Foreigners are shackled, then jailed and denied their rights in FBI crackdown


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Date Posted: 12:51:14 12/03/01 Mon

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/story.jsp?story=102762


News
© 2001 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd

02 November 2001 05:21 GMT
Home > News > World > Americas
Foreigners are shackled, then jailed and denied their rights in FBI crackdown
War on Terrorism: Investigation
By Andrew Gumbel in Washington
02 November 2001
Internal links

Golden Gate bridge is threatened, says Governor

Foreigners are shackled, then jailed and denied their rights in FBI crackdown

'Arrested al-Qa'ida men knew in advance of attacks'

Traces of anthrax found in Lithuania and Kansas City

When the FBI came for Al-Badr al-Hazmi in the early hours of 12 September at his home in San Antonio, Texas, it thought that it had hit the jackpot in its burgeoning anti-terror investigation.

The softly spoken Saudi radiologist had booked five tickets on a flight from San Antonio to San Diego through the online service Travelocity – a pattern of behaviour similar to the suicide hijackers who struck New York and Washington the day before.

San Antonio appeared to be a jumping-off point for two other suspects taken into custody after they were caught with box-cutters and large amounts of cash on an Amtrak train, suggesting that Dr al-Hazmi might have been part of a local terrorist cell. He also had a history of large money transfers from the Middle East. And, most promising of all, he shared a surname with two of the men who perished in the 11 September onslaught.

The trouble was, none of it added up to anything. Al-Hazmi is one of the most common names in Saudi Arabia. The plane tickets were for Dr al-Hazmi and his family to attend a medical conference. He had never heard of Mohamed Atta, the suspected ringleader of the 11 September attacks, or the two men arrested on the train. And the big money transfer was funding for Dr al-Hazmi's medical residency at the University of Texas Health Science Centre.

A simple misunderstanding, one might think, but the story turned out to be far from simple. Dr al-Hazmi was taken into custody, shackled, flown to New York and held in solitary confinement in a Manhattan correction centre a short distance from the World Trade Centre. For six days he had no access to a lawyer, and his attorney in San Antonio said she was literally unable to find out where he was. For 12 days he had no opportunity to learn what the case against him was, or to answer it. When he did finally come face to face with FBI interrogators, it took less than 24 hours to clear his name and obtain his release.

He was one of the lucky ones. More than seven weeks after the attacks, the Justice Department says it has taken about 1,100 people into custody but almost nothing is known about who they are, why they have been detained, what charges, if any, have been filed, and how many of them have been cleared and released. One man has died in custody, in New Jersey, and others are being held indefinitely on immigration violations.

While about a dozen detainees appear to have some link to the terror attacks, almost nothing is known about the rest except that they are all foreigners. Court proceedings have been sealed in many cases, making it almost impossible to find out why they are in detention and what access they have had to lawyers and consular officials.

The veil of secrecy being maintained by the Attorney General, John Ashcroft, has appalled civil liberties activists and is now starting to cause widespread concern among members of Congress.

Yesterday, a group of Democratic senators including Patrick Leahy, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, wrote to Mr Ashcroft asking him to release the names of those held and the reason for their detention. Russ Feingold of Wisconsin, one of the signatories, said: "To offer no information on these people, why they are locked up and what access they have to lawyers doesn't seem consistent with any law or provision that I'm aware of." Senator Feingold is deeply concerned that innocent people might be held needlessly and in possible violation of the Bill of Rights.

His concern, and that of civil liberties groups, deepened this week after the passage of a new law granting the authorities broad powers to wiretap phones, track e-mail and examine financial and education records with minimal judicial oversight. It was rushed through Congress in record time, bypassing numerous committee hearings and raising further concerns that the "war on terrorism" is eroding the system of checks and balances at the heart of America's democratic system.

In the Senate, Mr Feingold was the only person to vote against Mr Ashcroft's Bill, arguing – against the grain – that this is not the time to give up on political debate and the very democratic values that define America. His stance has earned him considerable abuse, and accusations of disloyalty from his colleagues, but it has also prompted widespread support among his constituents and citizens across the political spectrum. "People don't want us to get carried away," he said in an interview yesterday. "They understand the system of checks and balances better than some members do. They want Congress to ask questions, not just give their approval like the Supreme Soviet."

Mr Feingold and his supporters do not take issue with the need to crack down on terrorism but they feel many of the law's provisions are open to easy abuse – in stifling political dissent, say – with no discernible benefit to public safety. In the light of cases like Dr al-Hazmi's, they worry that the new law will encourage the FBI and its sister agencies to be more incompetent, not less.

The scanty reports to have surfaced about detainees are not encouraging. Some are said to have been beaten – either by their guards or by fellow prisoners, with the guards looking on. In at least one case, a detainee appeared in court with fresh bruises clearly visible.

A Saudi Arabian student, Yazeed al-Salmi, reported that he spent 17 days in custody in San Diego, Oklahoma and New York despite being told early on that he was not a suspect. He said he was denied contact with his family, held in solitary confinement, prevented from washing or brushing his teeth and repeatedly humiliated by his guards. "They don't call you by name," he said of his time in Manhattan, "they call you 'f****** terrorist'."

In many cases, the immigration violations justifying the detentions have been so minor that in the past they would have been dealt with by exchange of letter. For example, Ali Maqtari, a Yemeni citizen married to an American was detained on 12 September on the grounds that there was a 10-day gap between the expiry of his tourist visa and the beginning of his marriage visa. He remains in custody in a Tennessee jail.

Dr al-Hazmi told The New York Times: "I would suggest that Americans don't rely on the FBI.''
Subject: Pakistani Daily Paper Says It Finds Anthrax Spores


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Date Posted: 12:49:35 12/03/01 Mon

http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/news/news-attack-anthrax-pakistan.html?pagewanted=print



November 1, 2001
Pakistani Daily Paper Says It Finds Anthrax Spores
By REUTERS
Filed at 11:08 p.m. ET

KARACHI (Reuters) - The editor of a leading Pakistani daily said on Friday suspicious powder found in an envelope hand-delivered to his newspaper the previous week has tested positive for the presence of anthrax spores.

``We received a press release envelope which contained white powder...and it has tested positive for containing anthrax spores,'' said Mehmood Sham, Editor of Pakistan's largest Urdu language newspaper Daily Jang.

He said no staff appeared to have been infected, but some had been put on extended courses of antibiotics.

It is the first confirmed anthrax case in Pakistan. There have been at least three other scares, but all turned out to be false alarms.



Copyright 2001 Reuters Ltd. | Privacy Information
Subject: In Overheard Calls, Terrorists Spoke of Major Attack, Officials Say


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Date Posted: 12:47:52 12/03/01 Mon

http://www.nytimes.com/2001/11/02/national/02THRE.html?pagewanted=print


November 2, 2001

THE ALERT

In Overheard Calls, Terrorists Spoke of Major Attack, Officials Say

By JAMES RISEN and DAVID JOHNSTON

ASHINGTON, Nov. 1 — Government officials intercepted telephone conversations in recent days in which members of Osama bin Laden's terrorist network, Al Qaeda, spoke urgently of an imminent attack against American targets even larger than the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, senior government officials say.

Intelligence reports based on the intercepted communications frightened the officials who read them and played a decisive role in the Bush administration's decision to issue its latest warning Monday of an imminent terrorist attack, the senior officials said.

Al Qaeda intercepts were interpreted as extraordinarily clear signals of potential danger in part because of the urgent and serious tone of the conversations. Officials said the terrorist operatives were overheard talking about an operation that would be even bigger than the Sept. 11 hijackings. Officials said they intercepted several of these conversations between Al Qaeda members in several countries.

Counterterrorism analysts at the C.I.A. and F.B.I. who reviewed the intercepts judged their credibility to be high also because they determined that the participants believed no one was eavesdropping on their discussions, the officials added.

The reports, supported by other intelligence, were rushed to President Bush and his national security aides on Monday morning. Senior national security officials were quickly persuaded that the potential threat was grave. But the debate at the White House over whether to issue an alert lasted several hours. Some counterterrorism officials expressed strong disagreement with issuing another nonspecific alert like the warning issued on Oct. 10.

When the administration issued the public warning of another attack on Monday, senior members of Congress criticized the decision, saying it raised fears among Americans without providing any specific information that would allow the nation to prepare. But the administration said the intercepts were so worrying that they had little choice.

Officials who have seen the intelligence reports said they raised greater concerns than did the intelligence that prompted the Oct. 10 warning. The latest intercepts indicated that Al Qaeda operatives were talking about a big event and discussed a specific time frame for action, prompting the government to warn of a terrorist attack within the week.

The intercepted communications did not provide specific clues about where the attacks might come, and the intelligence did not indicate whether the terrorists were planning actions inside the United States or against American interests overseas. The reports also did not even suggest the nature of the plot or the methods, officials said.

Tom Ridge, director of homeland security; George Tenet, director of central intelligence; Robert S. Mueller III, the F.B.I. director; and Attorney General John Ashcroft were each advised of the threat soon after the intelligence was collected. The information, along with sanitized but still secret summaries, was described in secret briefings for a few top lawmakers, officials said.

Throughout Monday, the government's still evolving threat-assessment network worked to reach a consensus on whether to issue a new alert — knowing that the Oct. 10 warning was criticized by lawmakers and state and local authorities for spreading fear without offering any information about where or how terrorists might strike.

As a result, some senior officials at the Federal Bureau of Investigation were reluctant to recommend issuing a second warning on Monday. But Mr. Ashcroft and other senior administration officials were persuaded that the threat was too significant to be ignored. In the end, the White House said it was Mr. Bush who made the decision to issue the threat warning, the officials said.

Officials also said they hoped the warning would persuade state and local authorities to increase their vigilance. They added that they had believed an attack was imminent when they issued the Oct. 10th warning, but that it was delayed or prevented, possibly as a result of the arrests and detentions of suspected Al Qaeda operatives in the United States and overseas.

Frustration by state and local officials about the vague nature of the warnings on both Oct. 10 and Monday may help explain the F.B.I.'s decision to issue a more specific warning that terrorists were planning rush- hour attacks against four California bridges, possibly as early as Friday. Senior officials added, however, that they found the intelligence behind that threat less credible than the intelligence leading to the national warning issued on Monday.

Gov. Gray Davis of California, who announced the threat warning this afternoon, said law enforcement officials believed that the Golden Gate Bridge or Bay Bridge, both in San Francisco, the Vincent Thomas Bridge at the Port of Los Angeles or the Coronado Bridge in San Diego were all potential targets.

While the intelligence that prompted Monday's warning was general, officials have scrambled to respond to potential vulnerabilities. Aviation authorities have barred flights over nuclear power plants and have created a no-fly zone in the vicinity of buildings thought to be potential targets, like the Sears Tower in Chicago.


Copyright 2001 The New York Times Company | Privacy Information
Subject: Trouble in Deploying Commandos Is Said to Hurt U.S. Air Campaign


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Date Posted: 12:44:52 12/03/01 Mon

http://www.nytimes.com/2001/11/02/international/asia/02MILI.html
November 2, 2001

THE BATTLE
Trouble in Deploying Commandos Is Said to Hurt U.S. Air Campaign

By ERIC SCHMITT and THOM SHANKER

ASHINGTON, Nov. 1 — The American military's growing ability to bomb front-line Taliban

forces accurately in northern Afghanistan has been delayed for weeks by difficulties in infiltrating up to 100 elite American commandos, senior Pentagon officials said today.
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and other officials said howling sandstorms, ground fire from Taliban militiamen and coordination problems with opposition forces had slowed the deployment of small teams of American Special Operations forces to identify specific Taliban positions for strikes.

Those forces are training rebel militias, principally the Northern Alliance, and organizing their resupply of fuel and ammunition. They are also working to make the bombing more effective by spotting targets for American warplanes.

The first of the special forces arrived in the last several days, but they number only about two dozen and are not yet working in all the areas where the resistance faces Taliban troops, officials have said.

The delays have complicated a campaign to oust the Taliban and capture or kill the accused terrorist Osama bin Laden. More than three weeks into the bombing, the Northern Alliance shows little sign of being ready to advance. At the same time, the bombardment has complicated efforts to form a "Southern Alliance" among the Pashtuns dominant the south of Afghanistan. Angered by the attacks, some Pashtuns seem to have rallied to the Taliban.

Condoleezza Rice, the national security adviser, said there would be no pause in the bombing for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which begins in mid-November. "This is an enemy that has to be taken on and taken on aggressively and pressed to the end, and we're going to continue to do that," she said during a White House briefing. "We have to continue the military action. We can't afford to have a pause."

American warplanes hit barracks, caves and forces in the field today in and around Kabul, the Afghan capital; Mazar-i-Sharif, a strategic city in northern Afghanistan; and Kandahar, the Taliban's spiritual and political capital. Gen. Richard B. Myers, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said B-52's, dropping loads of more than 40 unguided bombs at a time, were "having some effect" on the entrenched Taliban troops around Kabul and Mazar-i-Sharif. But reports from some parts of the front line suggested that the strikes had missed their targets.

Mr. Rumsfeld told reporters he wanted to increase the number of Special Operations forces on the ground dramatically. There is now what he called "a modest number."

"We have a number of teams cocked and ready to go; it's just a matter of having the right kind of equipment to get them there and the landing zones in places where it's possible to get in and get out," Mr. Rumsfeld said. "I'd like to see as soon as humanly possible the numbers of teams go up by three or four times."

Despite the delays, Mr. Rumsfeld and other top Pentagon officials insisted that the war on terrorism in Afghanistan, now in its 26th day, has gone according to plan.

Mr. Rumsfeld and General Myers said strikes against entrenched front-line forces now account for about 80 percent of the missions flown over Afghanistan. But Mr. Rumsfeld said that figure would have been even higher had the United States been able to dispatch more ground forces sooner.

"We would probably be using a higher percentage if we had more people effectively providing the target information than we currently do, and the weather had been better over the last week or two or three, and we could have gotten those folks in," Mr. Rumsfeld said.

Front lines in Afghanistan remain frozen where they were at the beginning of the campaign. The Northern Alliance, made up mainly of Tajiks, Uzbeks and other ethnic groups, has proved far more energetic in complaining about the nature of the American bombing than in planning or executing an offensive.

Senior military officers and Defense Department officials said war planners had indicated that a company of Special Operations forces, or about 100 soldiers and their officers, were needed at this point in the mission.

But increasing the number of American forces to turn the Northern Alliance into a more credible fighting force has run into unexpected problems, Mr. Rumsfeld said. "We have been working very diligently to do that for many, many, many weeks now, and it is difficult to do, for a host of reasons," he said. The bombing campaign began on Oct. 7.

Fog and sandstorms with 100 mile- per-hour winds and sub-freezing temperatures in the north have grounded American helicopters that ferry Special Forces to their landing areas inside Northern Alliance-held territory, military officials said.

Mr. Rumsfeld also said one team of special forces met heavy fire from Taliban ground troops and was forced to retreat. "The ground fire was simply too heavy to unload the folks," he said. "And so they went back. And they'll try it again in a different landing area."

After Mr. Rumsfeld earlier this week confirmed that American commandos were operating in Northern Alliance areas, Pentagon officials put the number at no more than two 12-man teams.

Today, military officers and Pentagon officials indicated that the goal is to insert a full Army Special Forces company, which is six 12-man teams, as well as complement of command and logistics troops, bringing the total number to about 100. The latter group would specialize in communications, intelligence, emergency medical care and engineering, typically led by a commander of at least a major's rank and an experienced non-commissioned officer, like a sergeant major.

Officials pointed out that an Army Special Forces company could fan out across a wide front line and train rebel militias, organize resupply, pick targets and then guide attacks from the air.

Pentagon officials have said repeatedly that the United States has no plan to occupy territory in Afghanistan, and the forward base for an Army Special Forces company "can have as small a footprint as you want, down to the size of a gully with a satellite radio," one official said.

To increase the military's surveillance and targeting ability, a military official said, the Pentagon has dispatched the first of three Global Hawks, a high-flying unmanned reconnaissance drone, as well as three Joint Stars, a surveillance plane that can track precisely the movements of troops on the ground. The deployment marks the first use in combat of the Air Force's Global Hawk, a drone that is still in development.

Turkey announced today that it was sending 90 special forces troops to Afghanistan to help train anti- Taliban forces. Turkey has had especially close ties over the years with the Uzbek faction of the Northern Alliance.

On Wednesday, Pentagon officials said today, American warplanes struck in eight planned target areas, principally around Mazar-i-Sharif, Kabul and Kandahar as well as in a number of engagement zones around Afghanistan. The military used about 55 aircraft in the strikes, including about 40 tactical jets off four carriers, between 4 and 6 land-based fighter-bombers and 8 to 10 long- range bombers.

The number of planes assigned to hit targets in Afghanistan today and on Wednesday was smaller than in previous attacks because one aircraft carrier was taken off combat operations to get a fresh supply of ammunition, bombs, missiles and fuel.

The carrier will rejoin combat operations on Friday, officials said.
Subject: 'Tell Them Nothing Till It’s Over And Then Tell Them Who Won' In Wartime, Government Considers Media a Menace


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Date Posted: 12:43:48 12/03/01 Mon

http://www.voy.com/cgi/addpost?fid=30291
Commentary 'Tell Them Nothing Till It’s Over And Then Tell Them Who Won' In Wartime, Government Considers Media a Menace

By Phillip Knightley
http://www.public-i.org/commentary_01_103101.htm

(London) There is an irreconcilable conflict in the way war is reported, highlighted once again by the allied attack on Afghanistan and the anthrax terror in the United States. Two quotations explain this conflict better than any reasoned argument.

A government censor, asked in 1943 what he thought the American public should be told about the war, replied: "I’d tell them nothing till it’s over and then I’d tell them who won."

And the BBC broadcaster Sir Robin Day pondering on whether uninhibited reporting in Vietnam had led to America’s defeat there, doubted whether a democracy would ever be able to fight a war again, no matter how just, because of television news.

There we have it. Governments and their armies go to war to win and do not care how they do it. For them, the media are a menace. Only in wars of national survival, such as the Second World War, can they count on the media to support them to the hilt. Reuters war correspondent Charles Lynch said, "It’s humiliating to look back at what we wrote during the war. It was crap -- and I don't exclude the Ernie Pyles or the Alan Mooreheads. We were just a propaganda arm of our governments."

But in other wars -- the Falklands, the Gulf War, Kosovo and now Afghanistan -- no government can automatically assume that the media will be "on side.." And without the media on side, public support for the war could well ebb away.

In democracies like Britain and Australia, with a powerful press and a tradition of dissent, or like the United States, where freedom of expression is constitutionally guaranteed, the media cannot be coerced into supporting the war. They have to be seduced or intimidated into self-censorship.

So in all the countries supporting the attack on Afghanistan, we have already seen appeals to the media’s patriotism, the national interest, security and the need to support "our boys." This has been combined with accusations that the media have favored the enemy, endangered the safety of the nation’s leaders, stabbed the troops in the back, fallen for enemy propaganda and sabotaged the war effort. Australia has been calmer because the "detachment of distance" lends an air of unreality to what is going on in the Northern Hemisphere.

But in Britain, the prime minister, Tony Blair, summoned media bosses to Downing Street and asked them to agree not to rebroadcast messages from Osama bin Laden, particularly recorded videos, because they might contain coded messages to his followers. Or they might encourage British Muslims to volunteer for service with the Taliban.

The American defense secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, warned the American media chiefs that they could expect little cooperation from the Pentagon because this was a new type of war in which secrecy was paramount.


Images of bomb victims

Of course, the real reason Blair and Rumsfeld wanted to control the flow of news from Afghanistan was concern that images of civilian bomb victims would shake public support for the Western alliance. An attack led by two powerful industrial nations against a Third World agricultural one, already reduced to ruin and in the grip of a famine, was never going to be an edifying sight or an easy one to sell.

It depended on convincing the public that this was purely a war on terrorism, that the West has no quarrel with the people of Afghanistan and no quarrel with Islam. Only the Taliban and Osama bin Laden’s forces would be attacked.

The latest high-tech weaponry, with its pinpoint accuracy, would keep civilian casualties to a minimum. Bloody TV footage or grim still photographs of civilian bomb victims would threaten this most outrageous piece of propaganda, so an essential part of the Western alliance’s strategy has been not only to bomb in the dark but, as far as possible, to keep the public in the dark as well.

With no war correspondents on the ground where the bombs and missiles are striking, hundreds of correspondents have gathered across the borders in nearby countries, where they have been reduced to reporting rumors. TV anchor men back home have had to telephone the latest news to their correspondents in the field so that they can then interview them on air. By force of circumstance, the main source of news has become official statements. Thus, the reporting of war has come full circle. Before William Howard Russell of The Times [of London] became the first civilian war correspondent in the Crimean War (1854-56), generals reported their own wars -- Wellington on Waterloo, for instance.

Now, nearly 150 years later, if we want to know what is happening in Afghanistan, we turn on CNN and there is an American four-star general, medals glinting in the spotlight, telling us what he has decided we should know. "How many Taliban were killed, general?" -- "I don’t want to discuss casualties." "Were any Americans killed?" -- "I’m not going to get into that."

The danger of trusting only official sources emerged when the U.S. Defense Department spokeswoman admitted that a 1,000 pound bomb aimed at a Taliban vehicle depot had gone astray and landed near a "senior citizens residence," causing an unknown number of casualties. This statement caused some bewilderment (to say the least) among aid agencies, which said that old people’s homes are virtually nonexistent in Afghanistan, where the average life expectancy is 40 years.


Media have no choice

Never mind, thought the Western media. When the land invasion gets under way, the Pentagon will no doubt accredit at least a few war correspondents, probably under a "pool" system, like in the Gulf War. (Five or six correspondents accompanied the armed forces there and wrote stories that were then distributed to all the media.)

Think again. A war correspondent for the American armed forces' own newspaper, Stars and Stripes, told me in late October that he had just been informed of a Pentagon ruling that even he would not be allowed to accompany any invasion force and nor would any other correspondent.

Will the media bosses accept this? They have no choice. If reporters enter Afghanistan on their own and against the military’s wishes, they will risk being killed by the Taliban, who think all reporters are spies, or risk being arrested by their own side.

Newspapers and broadcasters could mount a legal action in the United States claiming that their right of freedom of expression had been infringed. The major American media groups considered such an action during the Gulf War but fell to quarrelling among themselves and dropped it. The left-wing magazine The Nation pushed ahead on its own, but the war ended before the court could deliver a decision. The judge did suggest, however, that The Nation had a case.

It is likely that the American media realize that Rumsfeld is right about this being a different war in which the old rules of reporting do not apply. This would explain why it is concentrating on the home front news -- the battle against anthrax terrorism. The newspaper and TV programs are empty of news from Afghanistan. But here, too, freedom of expression is in danger.

The news organizations appear to be censoring themselves.

Their argument is that round-the-clock coverage of the anthrax attacks is frightening Americans and risks creating panic. In a late October CNN discussion, several panelists argued that there was too much news of anthrax and that the media should lay off for a while.

In Britain, the BBC guidelines on reporting the war urge its correspondents and editors to be careful in referring to chemical and biological terrorism. "The possibility of their use is to be discussed calmly . . . If their use is rumoured only, our reports must not be alarmist or excited."


Stories deserving attention

Given all these difficulties, what stories in this war have not had the attention they deserved? First and foremost, the effect of the bombing on the civilian population of Afghanistan -- although by Oct. 25, newspapers in Britain were beginning to carry reports and photographs of victims. "Families blown apart, infants dying. The terrible images of this ‘just war’," said The Independent.

The extent of the opposition to the war. When readers of The Guardian wrote complaining that antiwar marches were not mentioned in the paper, the readers’ editor reported that he had raised this at an editorial meeting only to be told that it was not the paper’s policy to cover marches. The next day, the paper carried a correction saying that it WAS the paper’s policy to cover antiwar marches if newsworthy, and it would do so in future.

The oil conspiracy theory. Early in the bombing of Afghanistan, rumors that the United States was anxious to install a pro-American government there because it wanted to build an oil pipeline across the country were dismissed as another conspiracy theory.

But now respected academics like the British professor of politics, George Monbiot, have uncovered evidence that this is probably true. Monbiot says that just a few days before the attack on New York, the U.S. Energy Information Administration reported: "Afghanistan’s significance from an energy standpoint stems from its geographical position as a potential transit route for oil and natural gas exports from central Asia to the Arabian Sea."

Monbiot says, "I believe that the U.S. government is genuine in its attempt to stamp out terrorism by military force in Afghanistan, however misguided that may be. But it would be naive to believe that this is all it is doing.." Before this war is over, there will no doubt be other stories that are not covered, that are distorted, exaggerated, slanted and "spun."

Does it matter?

In 1999, a group of American congressmen traveled to Yugoslavia because they felt that they could trust neither their own government nor the media to tell them what was really happening there.

"The enormous confusion which has taken place due to media manipulation on all sides has only contributed to the blood lust which -- if it is the only basis for decision-making -- could lead to a much wider and longer war."

So yes, it does matter.

Phillip Knightley, a member of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, a project of the Center for Public Integrity, is author of The First Casualty: the War Correspondent as Hero and Myth-maker from the Crimea to Kosovo. To write a letter to the editor for publication, send to letters@publicintegrity.org. Please include a daytime telephone number.



© Copyright 2001, The Center for Public Integrity. All rights reserved.

RELATED ARTICLE:
Will Truth Again be the First Casualtry?
http://www.public-i.org/story_01_092001.htm
Subject: Pakistan bans rallies in bid to stem unrest


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Date Posted: 12:41:42 12/03/01 Mon

http://www.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/asiapcf/central/11/01/ret.pakistan.measures/index.html
Pakistan bans rallies in bid to stem unrest
November 1, 2001 Posted: 5:41 AM EST (1041 GMT)


November 1, 2001 Posted: 5:41 AM EST (1041 GMT)


ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (CNN) -- In an effort to crack down on civil unrest, the Pakistani government ordered new measures Wednesday night that bans rallies and restricts freedom of assembly.

A complete ban on any kind of rally is now in effect nationwide, Interior Ministry sources told CNN.

Under the measures, the government could take both punitive and preventive action against leaders and individuals who are found to be planning or carrying out what the government terms seditious conduct or language, promising they will be caught and imprisoned.

Ministry sources acknowledged similar measures have been announced before, but were rarely followed up on or enforced.

This time, they said, the measures will be enforced because the present climate in the country does not allow for this kind of activity.

Under the measures:

-- Afghan refugees are warned to stay away from any agitating activity or face the possibility of deportation without a hearing.

-- The use of loud speakers is banned, except for Friday sermons and five times daily call during calls to prayer.

-- Any gathering that causes disruption in civic life or economic dislocation or disruption is banned.

Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf held an inter-provincial meeting on law and order Wednesday to layout the new measures, which were then approved by the cabinet.

The new parameters on the government's policy to law and order problem have been officially communicated to religious leaders, Interior Ministry sources said.

But observers are doubtful these would be effective, since Pakistan has announced similar measures in the past but were not strictly enforced.

They noted the significance of these latest restrictions would be apparent when demonstrations are attempted, which are likely to be as soon as Friday.

-- CNN and Time Magazine Journalist Sayed Talat Hussain and CNN Producer Allison Flexner contributed to this report.
Subject: Turk special forces boost alliance


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Date Posted: 12:40:28 12/03/01 Mon

http://www.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/asiapcf/central/11/01/ret.turkey.afghanistan/index.html
Turk special forces boost alliance
November 1, 2001 Posted: 1:47 PM EST (1847 GMT)


November 1, 2001 Posted: 1:47 PM EST (1847 GMT)


ANKARA, Turkey -- Turkey's foreign minister says its decision to send troops to Afghanistan signals the war against terrorism "is not a war against Islam -- terrorism does not have a religion."

Ismael Cem was speaking to CNN on Thursday after Turkey said it was to deploy special forces troops to Afghanistan.

The move, revealed on Thursday, means Turkey is the first Muslim nation to join in the U.S. attacks against the Taliban and Osama bin Laden.

Turkey, a member of NATO, said it would send a 90-man unit to northern Afghanistan to combat terrorists, train anti-Taliban fighters and support humanitarian aid operations.

Turkey's contribution is the latest sign that allied forces are preparing for a sustained campaign of surprise raids by small, elite units.

Britain, Australia and Canada are sending special forces to fight alongside U.S. troops, and France is considering a similar contribution.

Turkey's Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit said the government decided to send troops after becoming convinced that the hard-line Taliban must be removed.

Cem told CNN: "In Turkey we believe that this is not a war that belongs to the United States alone. It's our war, Turkey's war, as well."

He added: "Of course, we don't want to have our soldiers getting shot and we want them to come back home safely.

"This is what the public opinion's main concern is and it seems with what the framework is we have put together we are minimising such risks, but, of course, in such an environment, no one can be sure of everything."

The Taliban are sheltering bin Laden, the main suspect in the September 11 terrorist attacks on the United States.

"The Taliban regime and its archaic practices pose a threat primarily to Central Asia, and to the world," Ecevit said at a news conference.

The Turkish force would also take on reconnaissance missions as well as protect and evacuate civilians, Ecevit's office said.

CNN Turk, citing unidentified sources, said an advance group of 15 soldiers would travel through Uzbekistan over the weekend to make the first contact with local forces and U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

Turkey's special forces are experienced in guerrilla warfare after fighting Kurdish rebels for more than 15 years in mountainous southeast Turkey.

However, such deployment could spur protests in Turkey, where polls suggest more than 80 percent of Turks oppose troop deployment in Afghanistan.

Some Turks are uncomfortable with attacking another Muslim country, but most fear that the war could spread to Iraq and then to Turkey, deepening an already crippling economic crisis.

Police on Thursday used tear gas to break up a group of university students in Istanbul who chanted anti-U.S. slogans and condemned the attacks against Afghanistan. Fifty students were arrested.

Turkey has opened its air space to U.S. aircraft and has shared intelligence with the United States since the beginning of the current crisis.

The country has a 99 percent Muslim population, so troop involvement would provide a potentially valuable component in any broad-ranging coalition the United States formed.

Turkey's special forces have fought Kurdish rebels in southeast Turkey for 15 years in mountainous conditions that resemble parts of Afghanistan.

Turkey has long had contacts with Afghan opposition groups, especially the forces of Gen. Rashid Dostum, one of the Northern Alliance leaders.

Dostum's fighters are largely Uzbeks, a group that has close ethnic links with Turks. The Taliban are mostly ethnic Pashtun.
Subject: US Marines prepare for new war, say patience is the key


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Date Posted: 12:39:08 12/03/01 Mon

US Marines prepare for new war, say patience is the key
Reuters
(Aboard USS Peleliu, October 31)

The psychiatrist aboard the flagship of a US Marine Corps unit in the Arabian Sea says the marines are ready to fight a "new genre of war" and they understand it will need patience.

"We don't have a country that is the enemy," said Commander Kenneth Hirsch, who has worked with the military for 18 years. "We have individual groups of people who are the enemy and that's very different."

"It's a new genre of war. You can't target a national entity," he said.

"Everyone has talked about Afghanistan, but it's not the country of Afghanistan, it's certain specific people who are controlling Afghanistan, not the Afghani people, and our own warriors recognise that.

"That recognition is critical because that dictates how they function in a combat situation. It's a level of sophistication that hasn't historically been required of them, but they're meeting that challenge very well."

Commander Hirsch is one of 22 medical personnel who have been deployed to the boost the medical staff of the warship Peleliu, which along with two other ships in its amphibious ready group can carry a full complement of around 2,200 marines.

The military is cagey about the extent to which the marines may have already seen action, saying only that they are supporting Operation Enduring Freedom. The only confirmed action was the recovery of a downed US helicopter in Pakistan last week.

"I think that most of our people understand why we have to wait, that the actions we take have to be judicious," said Hirsch.

"The immediate impulse is to go do something impulsively... (but) we have to make the right response, not just any response."

BEHIND ENEMY LINES

Travis, a staff sergeant in a force reconnaissance platoon trained to penetrate behind enemy lines and send back information, said the uncertainty was the biggest challenge for him.

"The most difficult part about this operation for myself is just not knowing exactly what they want us to do yet," said Travis, who did not want to be identified further due to security concerns.

The marines in his platoon volunteer for special assignment and are trained in demolition, sniper shooting, amphibious reconnaissance, parachute drops and what he called "direct action" in an urban setting.

"Any time you're out on a reconnaissance mission it gives you a lot of responsibility," said Travis, who saw action in Somalia in 1992 and said it was "an honour" to be supporting Operation Enduring Freedom. "You have to keep in mind what you send back is what they're going to believe."

William Griesmeyer, 33, from Kettering, Ohio, works in the intelligence centre on the Peleliu, and is another veteran of Somalia.

"We got a test of a real operation then. And it's definitely more intense and you have to pay a lot more attention to the job knowing there's actual people out there on duty," he said.

Hirsch says the problems he has to deal with cover a spectrum from men worried about sick relatives back home to serious depression and people considering suicide.

"It might be `I'm nervous, I'm anxious and I don't know if I going to do okay when I get to the beach' or `I can't stand being in the ship in the middle of the ocean and I can't see land', or `I'm going crazy' and they really are."
Subject: Remarks of National Chief Matthew Coon Come-Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights


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Date Posted: 12:38:05 12/03/01 Mon

Remarks of National Chief Matthew Coon Come
Assembly of First Nations
Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights
Bill C-36, Anti-Terrorism Act
Ottawa - November 1, 2001

Mr. Chair, Honourable Members of Parliament, I appreciate this opportunity to express the serious concerns of First Nations peoples regarding the government's proposed Anti-Terrorism legislation.

First, I want to convey to you the sense of seriousness that First Nations peoples hold the September 11, 2001 events. This is our homeland. Our Elders refer to it as mother earth, and when anyone harms our mother in whatever form, be it through the destruction of the environment or by the taking of human life that was put here, it hurts us. We feel for the families who senselessly lost their loved ones, for we too have known loss. We have been here for many, many generations and too have known terror in our homelands, but never on the scale recently experienced. Skilled Mohawk Ironworkers helped build those buildings which were destroyed, and, in fact, were the first on the scene to help with rescue attempts. First Nations citizens feel the same fear as other Canadians. Our people travel on both sides of the border because our homelands and our relatives are on both sides. Our ancestors are buried on both sides of the border and we have many friends in the United States. With this unspeakable act the world has changed; our world has changed, and we are prepared to do our part to return to the sense of security that we formerly had.





First Nations peoples believe in peaceful relations, harmony and non-violence. We support the efforts of states, like Canada, to address the scourge of terrorism. First Nations people have always responded quickly to humanitarian crises in Canada and elsewhere. In the two World Wars, our people voluntarily enlisted and gave up their lives in disproportionate numbers.



The AFN has reviewed the Anti-Terrorism Bill to the extent possible, with limited resources, in the short time that has been available. In this presentation, I will emphasize only the core concerns raised by the Bill, as well as the amendments to the Bill that are necessary to address these core concerns.



In order to understand First Nations concerns with respect to the Anti-Terrorism legislation, it is essential to have a picture of our overall context - which unfortunately is one of continuing systemic discrimination and disproportionate adverse impact at every stage of the Canadian justice system.



Across Canada there are untold numbers of stories of unlawful arrest, police violence, abuse, shootings and false convictions, including such recent cases as the native men in Saskatchewan who were abandoned by police in the middle of winter on the outskirts of Saskatoon to die of exposure. The crime for which they received this death sentence was that they were native.



Our people are over-represented in the prison populations, a matter about which even the Solicitor General of Canada has stated "all Canadians should be deeply disturbed". Government study after study has noted the indicators of the systemic discrimination suffered by First Nations peoples in the justice system, including that we are far more likely to be denied bail, be unrepresented, spend more time in pre-trial detention than non-aboriginal people, and plead guilty simply because our people are intimidated and alienated.[1]



Within this context, the submissions of a number of organizations on the Anti-Terrorism Bill, including the Canadian Bar Association, have expressed specific concern about the legislation, including its potential impacts on First Nations peoples. The AFN supports these expressions of concern, particularly with respect to the definition of "terrorist activity" and the proposed expanded powers of police and the security establishment. We know too well the potential scope for misapplication, misuse and even abuse that is inherent in these expanded powers. We are deeply concerned that First Nations people will inevitably suffer such misuse and abuse disproportionately.



In 1995 a handful of unarmed native men, women and children asserted their peoples' land rights to an ancestral burial ground by occupying a corner of Ipperwash Provincial Park in Ontario. They had notified the Park Superintendent of their intentions, and occupied the park only after it had closed for the season. Despite these facts, a huge and heavily-armed tactical police response was deployed to quell this lawful and non-violent protest. It now appears that the use of lethal force was ordered at the highest levels of the Ontario provincial government. The result was the police shooting of three native protestors, one of whom, Dudley George, was killed.



The federal and provincial governments justified this lethal use of force by immediately painting the events at Ipperwash as a terrorist-like incident. Hours after the shooting, the Ontario police informed the public that the demonstrators had been armed, fired on the police, and the police had returned fire. Weeks later in late 1995, the federal government reported to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Extra-Judicial, Summary and Arbitrary Executions that armed natives in the park had fired on the police and the police had merely returned fire.



Six years later, and even after a conclusive judicial finding that the native demonstrators were unarmed, the governments of Ontario and Canada has not corrected the record, and refuses to remove the slander of insurgency that it cast on First Nations dissent in Canada.



Ipperwash stands as just one case study among many which demonstrates the risk posed to First Nations of legislation which gives heightened powers to police, narrows the civil rights of those involved in legitimate dissent and protest activities and limits or suspends the civil rights of those perceived by the government to be involved in "terrorist" activities.



I myself have in the past been termed a "guerrilla" by governments because of my people's use of the judicial process. The repeated characterization of First Nations peoples as insurgents in the past justifies our grave concerns about the risk of Anti-Terrorism legislation harming our most basic rights. It points to the need to define "terrorist activity" in a much more precise and careful way, so as to ensure that the net of the expanded provisions is never too broadly cast. Although Canada is one of the more democratic and free countries in the world, its governments and law enforcement institutions are fallible, and as far as many of our people are concerned, sometimes mal-intentioned at high levels.



As you well know, First Nations peoples across this country suffer conditions of mass poverty and unemployment, ill health, and epidemic rates of suicide. As noted by the United Nations Committee on Economic Social and Cultural Rights in its most recent review of Canada's human rights record: "gross disparities [exist] between Aboriginal people and the majority of Canadians". The causes of these conditions - our landlessness and dispossession, in contravention of our Aboriginal, treaty and other human rights - go significantly un-remedied.



First Nations people continue to be, as stated by the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples, on the margins of Canadian society and "either excluded or positioned at the back of the line." In 1999 the United Nations Human Rights Committee confirmed that the situation of Aboriginal peoples in Canada is "the most pressing human rights issue facing Canadians".



In this context of continuing social and political exclusion and socio-economic marginalization, First Nations demonstration, protest, and even civil disobedience, often remain the only effective means available for us to defend and assert our Aboriginal and treaty rights. The Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples is an example of a direct and peaceful result of one such protest.



Yet many times, when we exercise these rights, such as at Burnt Church or Ipperwash, the law is often used to punish or prevent us. One technique of intimidation and quelling of dissent by First Nations peoples is the practice of systematically charging native peoples engaged in exercising their rights with criminal or regulatory offenses. This technique of charging entire groups of natives asserting their rights has not stopped, even though time and again the great majority of natives accused in such demonstration contexts are acquitted of all charges. This was the story at Ipperwash and at Oka/Kahnesetake, where prosecution took on the appearance of persecution.



Justice Minister Anne McLellan has stated that native assertions of Aboriginal and treaty rights are not intended to be captured by the broad definition of terrorist activity in the Bill. We are not reassured. The actions of government in the past lead us to fear that the strictest force of law is inevitably applied to First Nations protest and dissent, including - we fear - the misapplication of the Anti-Terrorism legislation in the future.



If the legislation is not intended to cover assertions of Aboriginal and treaty rights by First Nations peoples, then it should say so explicitly. There is no reason not to make this legislative intent absolutely clear. The AFN, therefore, calls for this Bill to be amended so that the assertion by Aboriginal peoples of their Aboriginal and treaty rights is specifically excluded from the definition of terrorist activity. The AFN further joins the 37,000 lawyers and judges of the Canadian Bar Association in calling for the deletion of the entire subparagraph (E) in the definition of terrorism, so that civil disobedience -- unlawful but legitimate dissent -- First Nations people and others cannot be defined as terrorism.



Our people continue to face unlawful state and other encroachment on our lands, removal of our resources, and deprival of our own means of subsistence. We must have access to broad means of expression and protest, as a matter of our cultural survival, without fear of being labeled or detained as terrorists.



The AFN also supports the calls for a three year sunset clause in the legislation. The U.S. Patriot Bill contains such a clause. The Canadian Bar Association and the Senate Committee have stated that this is imperative. We agree. The curtailments on liberties in the Anti-Terrorism Bill (and the potential for abuse of the powers it contains) must expire automatically in three years time and be re-enacted only if there is substantial evidence before Parliament to justify renewal of the legislation as an effective anti-terrorism measure, as well as evidence that it has been used with the utmost restraint. We believe that it is in the interest of all that the law should expire automatically.



First Nations historical and modern experience with the Canadian justice system lead us to believe that this sunset clause is essential. A study of the Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History has found that in the 19th century, disproportionate execution, purportedly mandated by law, was used by the Crown against our people as a means of colonial subjugation. In the 20th century, and now, we face disproportionate imprisonment and selective prosecution. Professor Peter Russell of the University of Toronto has concluded that [quote] "the application of the rule of law, an essential element in the 'liberal treatment' of Indians, can serve as a blunt instrument for the dispossession and subjugation of Aboriginal people."



We can only fear the misapplication of this anti-terrorism law to us. We are not alone in raising this fear. The Canadian Bar Association and others across the country have noted that the proposed legislation would appear to inhibit, if not prohibit, demonstrations and other forms of expression by First Nations peoples asserting their rights.



In sum, as a result of these reasoned and, I believe, justified concerns about the risk of misuse of the Anti-Terrorism legislation as proposed, the AFN urges that:



1. The definition of "terrorist activity" must include a paragraph which specifically excludes from the definition of terrorism assertions by Aboriginal peoples of Aboriginal and Treaty rights. I have a suggested text for your consideration;



2. Subparagraph (b)(ii)(E) be removed from the definition of terrorism;



3. The legislation must contain a "sunset clause", thus requiring a comprehensive Parliamentary and societal assessment of the legislation in not more than three years, before it can be re-enacted.



We also wish to be further consulted and fully involved in the process of further development of this legislation.



Miigwetch. Thank you. Merci.


[1] Manitoba Aboriginal Justice Inquiry (1991), Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples (1996), Canadian Criminal Justice Association (2000).



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Subject: US Information Lockdown


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Date Posted: 12:35:09 12/03/01 Mon

US Information Lockdown
By Bruce Shapiro
The Nation.com
10-30-1Viewers of the old spy spoof Get Smart will remember the Cone of Silence--that giant plastic hair-salon dryer that descended over Maxwell Smart and Control when they held a sensitive conversation. Today, a Cone of Silence has descended over all of Washington: From four-star generals to lowly webmasters, the town is in information lockdown. Never in the nation's history has the flow of information from government to press and public been shut off so comprehensively and quickly as in the weeks following September 11. Much of the shutdown seems to have little to do with preventing future terrorism and everything to do with the Administration's laying down a new across-the-board standard for centralized control of the public's right to know.
The most alarming evidence of the new climate emanates from the Justice Department. Investigators still hold in custody 150 of the 800 people rounded up in the aftermath of the attacks. (One detainee died in custody in New Jersey.) No charges have been filed, no hearings convened. The names of nearly all those still held remain classified, as do the reasons for their incarceration. Lawyers for some of the hundreds cleared and released have told reporters of questionable treatment of their clients--food withheld, attorneys blocked from access. Of the 150 who remain detained, only four presumed Al Qaeda suspects have been publicly named. FBI agents frustrated at the lack of progress in their interrogations of those four now mutter in the Washington Post about using sodium pentothal, or turning the suspects over to a country where beatings or other torture is used. The government's stranglehold on information about other arrests makes it impossible to know just how far agents have already gone down that road, or whether the dragnet was mainly a public-relations exercise.
Just as damaging as these detentions is an October 12 memo from Attorney General John Ashcroft reversing longstanding Freedom of Information Act policies. In 1993 then-Attorney General Janet Reno directed agencies to disclose any government information upon request unless it was "reasonably foreseeable that disclosure would be harmful." Ashcroft reverses this presumption, instead calling on agencies to withhold information whenever the law permits: "You can be assured that the Department of Justice will defend your decisions," he writes. Ashcroft is in effect creating a "born secret" standard; in the words of the Federation of American Scientists, the order "appears to exploit the current circumstances" to turn FOIA into an Official Secrets Act.
One after another, federal agencies are removing public data from their websites or restricting access to their public reading rooms. Caution is understandable, but OMB Watch and Investigative Reporters and Editors have both documented egregious examples that seem at best tangentially related to terrorism and more likely designed as butt-coverage for mid-level bureaucrats. The Energy Department has removed information from its web-posted Occurrence Reporting Program, which provides news of events that could adversely affect public health or worker safety. The EPA removed information from its site about the dangers of chemical accidents and how to prevent them, information the FBI says carries no threat of terrorism. More relevant than Al Qaeda, it appears, was hard lobbying by the chemical industry, which found the site an annoyance. The FAA pulled the plug on long-available lists of its security sanctions against airports around the country--depriving reporters of their only tool for evaluating the agency's considerable failures to enforce its own public safety findings. At the Pentagon, news has been reduced to a trickle far more constricted than anything during Kosovo, which in turn was more restrictive than during the Gulf War. So comprehensive is the shutdown that on October 13, presidents of twenty major journalists' organizations declared in a joint statement that "these restrictions pose dangers to American democracy and prevent American citizens from obtaining the information they need."
In the short run, the Cone of Silence did most damage at the Centers for Disease Control. Could the two (at this writing) Washington, DC, postal workers who died of inhalation anthrax have been protected by earlier treatment? Did any of the CDC's doctors or scientists recommend a course of antibiotics for postal workers along the trajectory of anthrax-laden letters? Who knows? With the CDC's staff muzzled, the public and postal workers alike were left with politicians as the conduits for contradictory and inadequate information about the risk.
The uncertain dimensions of the Al Qaeda threat make equally uncertain which information the government publishes might contribute to another attack and what to do about it. But it should be noted that the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks apparently involved data no more confidential than an airline schedule. The Administration's response has been to treat all information and press access as suspect--an approach that will subvert public confidence and undercut legitimate media scrutiny more than it will damage Al Qaeda. During Vietnam, the famous credibility gap resided at the Pentagon, with briefings and Congressional testimony at odds with battlefield evidence. Just weeks into this war, the Bush Administration is risking a new credibility gap roughly the size of the District of Columbia.
© 2001 The Nation Company, L.P.The motto of the CIA: "Proudly Overthrowing FidelCastro Since 1962." Dave Berry
Subject: Mohawk police stretched watching busy, porous border Doing extra work without increased federal resources


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Date Posted: 12:34:02 12/03/01 Mon

Mohawk police stretched watching busy, porous border Doing extra work without increased federal resources

Posted: October 31, 2001 - 11:00am EST
by: Jim Adams / Indian Country Today
http://indiancountry.com/?2756

HOGANSBURG, N.Y. — On a busy Tuesday night in late September, the undermanned St. Regis Mohawk tribal police took six hours from regular duties to track and arrest an illegal crossing the border from Canada.

Although security has peaked on the International Boundary since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the arrest was almost routine for the 13 uniformed officers of the Tribal Police Department. Not only does the force serve the 4,500 inhabitants of the 14,000-acre St. Regis Mohawk Reservation in far northern New York, it provides an indispensable part of the United States watch along a border hot spot.

"We’d be in a deep problem if we didn’t have the cooperation we do," said Ed Duda, assistant chief of the U.S. Border Patrol. "This stretch of border is extremely hard to patrol. It’s got to be the biggest operational challenge for the U.S. Border Patrol."

"We’ve been very concerned about border issues for many years," St. Regis Police Chief Andrew Thomas said. "We’ve had very close cooperation with the U.S. Border Patrol for the past six or seven years."

Yet the tribal police pays for border work out of the department budget, with no extra help from the federal government. Thomas said he has discussed additional funding with federal officials, so far with no result.

The last incident highlighted the popularity of Akwesasne as an illicit point of entry. Another 4,000 Mohawks live on the Canadian portion of the reservation, and many regard the border between two Euro-American entities as an irrelevancy. The nine miles of river and island territory have long seen free movement of Natives and "contraband," but a sinister new element has appeared in the past decade with immigrant smuggling.

"We have a lot of contact with illegal aliens," Thomas said. In spite of the tension over terrorist infiltration, this focus "is not anything new, we’ve been doing it right along."

Duda provided statistics showing the dramatic growth in enforcement. In 1994, he said, the Akwesasne sector produced 67 arrests for illegal border crossings.. In 2000, arrests peaked at 484.

St. Regis police played a role in almost all of them, he said. Since Jan. 1, tribal police have made 68 illegal alien arrests.

The figures vary in the wake of major crackdowns, Duda said. In December 1998, federal agents and tribal police made headlines with Operation Over the Rainbow, which cracked a major immigrant smuggling ring reaching to China and Malaysia. The result of a two-year investigation, it led to 47 arrests.

The smugglers wee accused of planning to bring at least 3,600 undocumented Asians into the country at a going rate of $47,000 each. "That’s $170 million from one operation," Duda said. "It’s big money."

Thomas said that unfortunately, the money attracted some Mohawks. "A few from our community participated with that ring."

Enemies of the Mohawks have used these incidents to portray Akwesasne as a lawless frontier. A series of newspapers ads sponsored last year by casino rival Donald Trump tried to tar the tribal government with the crimes. Trump later paid a record fine to a New York State commission, which ruled that the ads were an illegal lobbying campaign.

Thomas noted that tribal police work on the case won an Inter-Agency Assistance award from the federal Department of Immigration and Naturalization. "We are one of three agencies around the country that received that award. We have a nice plaque hanging in our office."

Duda said the border patrol planned to step up its cooperation with the tribal police, trying ride-alongs with tribal officers. He said the patrol had also begun "cultural sensitivity" training to acquaint its agents with Mohawk traditions.

He also mentioned a suggestion from Mohawk Grand Chief Michael Mitchell, a leader on the Canadian side, to set up a Mohawk border patrol. "I think the Mohawk community would be receptive to that idea," Duda said.

Although border patrol officials are not allowed to discuss security measures since the Sept. 11 attacks, Duda said that Washington would be much more conscious of the Mohawk contribution as a result.

The attacks brought an immediate response from Chief Thomas and the St. Regis Tribal Council. On Sept. 12, they issued a "Special Alert" to all community residents "to report any suspicious people or questionable activity."

"Unrestricted border entry points in Akwesasne have made our community an easy target for terrorist groups to gain illegal entry into the United States or Canada," the alert noted.. "Police authorities have repeatedly warned Akwesasne officials of the criminal activities of dangerous individuals who are unable to enter the United States through proper legal channels and who may travel through our territorial waters, islands and mainland."

The tribal council said it "will not condone such conduct nor support any community member involved and convicted of such activities."

The threat of terrorist border crossings used to be a perception, Duda said, but now it is very real for all enforcement personnel, including the tribal police. "The guys are taking it personally."

©2001 Indian Country Today
Subject: ACTION ALERT-CNN Says Focus on Civilian Casualties Would Be "Perverse"


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Date Posted: 12:32:46 12/03/01 Mon

ACTION ALERT
CNN Says Focus on Civilian Casualties Would Be "Perverse"

November 1, 2001

According to the Washington Post (10/31/01), CNN Chair Walter Isaacson "has ordered his staff to balance images of civilian devastation in Afghan cities with reminders that the Taliban harbors murderous terrorists, saying it 'seems perverse to focus too much on the casualties or hardship in Afghanistan.'"

Post media reporter Howard Kurtz quotes a memo from Isaacson to CNN's international correspondents "As we get good reports from Taliban-controlled Afghanistan, we must redouble our efforts to make sure we do not seem to be simply reporting from their vantage or perspective. We must talk about how the Taliban are using civilian shields and how the Taliban have harbored the terrorists responsible for killing close to 5,000 innocent people."

The memo went on to admonish reporters covering civilian deaths not to "forget it is that country's leaders who are responsible for the situation Afghanistan is now in," suggesting that journalists should lay responsibility for civilian casualties at the Taliban's door, not the U.S. military's.

Kurtz also quotes a follow-up memo from Rick Davis, CNN's head of standards and practices, that suggested sample language for news anchors

" 'We must keep in mind, after seeing reports like this from Taliban-controlled areas, that these U.S. military actions are in response to a terrorist attack that killed close to 5,000 innocent people in the U.S.' or, 'We must keep in mind, after seeing reports like this, that the Taliban regime in Afghanistan continues to harbor terrorists who have praised the September 11 attacks that killed close to 5,000 innocent people in the U.S.,' or 'The Pentagon has repeatedly stressed that it is trying to minimize civilian casualties in Afghanistan, even as the Taliban regime continues to harbor terrorists who are connected to the September 11 attacks that claimed thousands of innocent lives in the U.S.' "

Davis stated that "even though it may start sounding rote, it is important that we make this point each time."

The New York Times reported (11/1/01) that these policies are already being implemented at CNN, with other networks following a similar, though perhaps not as formalized, strategy. "In the United States," the Times noted, "television images of Afghan bombing victims are fleeting, cushioned between anchors or American officials explaining that such sights are only one side of the story." In other countries, however, "images of wounded Afghan children curled in hospital beds or women rocking in despair over a baby's corpse" are "more frequent and lingering."

When CNN correspondent Nic Robertson reported yesterday from the site of a bombed medical facility in Kandahar, the Times reported, U.S. anchors "added disclaimers aimed at reassuring American viewers that the network was not siding with the enemy." CNN International, however, did not add any such disclaimers.

During its U.S broadcasts, CNN "quickly switched to the rubble of the World Trade Center" after showing images of the damage in Kandahar, and the anchor "reminded viewers of the deaths of as many as 5,000 people whose 'biggest crime was going to work and getting there on time.'"

If anything in this story is "perverse," it's that one of the world's most powerful news outlets has instructed its journalists not to report Afghan civilian casualties without attempting to justify those deaths. "I want to make sure we're not used as a propaganda platform," Isaacson told the Washington Post. But his memo essentially mandates that pro-U.S. propaganda be included in the news.

ACTION Please tell CNN to factually report the consequences of the U.S. war in Afghanistan without editorializing. Including a justification for the bombing with every mention of civilian casualties risks turning CNN from a news outlet into a propaganda service.

CONTACT
CNN, Walter Isaacson, Chairman and CEO
Phone (404) 827-1500
Fax (404) 827-1784
mailtocommunity@cnn.com

As always, please remember that your comments are taken more seriously if
you maintain a polite tone. Please cc fair@fair.org with your
correspondence.

For further details, see Howard Kurtz's full Washington Post story
http//www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A14435-2001Oct30.html

----------

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Subject: ACLU Responds to President's Signing of Anti-Terrorism Bill-Joins Freedom of Information Request


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Date Posted: 12:31:10 12/03/01 Mon

October 31, 2001

ACLU Responds to President's Signing of Anti-Terrorism Bill

Safe and Free Update: ACLU Joins Freedom of Information Request

News and Action: Facial Recognition Technology, DC Domestic Partners

What YOU Can Do to Protect Our Freedoms
Thank you for being a card-carrying member of the ACLU! Your membership is the life-blood of our organization, and makes possible all that we do to defend our most basic liberties. If you'd like to make an additional gift to support the ACLU, please click here.

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Phil Gutis, Editor

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"We cannot as a nation allow very legitimate public anxiety to immunize the Administration and Congress from their obligation to protect the Bill of Rights and the fundamental values that document embodies."

Laura W. Murphy, Director of the ACLU Washington National Office
As President Bush signed new sweeping law enforcement legislation last week, the ACLU pledged anew to work with the Bush Administration and law enforcement agencies to ensure that civil liberties in America are not eroded by the newly approved USA Patriot Act.

"The passage of this broad legislation is by no means the end of the story," said Anthony D. Romero, ACLU Executive Director. "We will now work with ACLU affiliates around the country to monitor its implementation. The ACLU remains firm in our belief that we can be both safe and free."

On Friday afternoon, in fact, ACLU officials met with FBI Director Robert Mueller, the second meeting in what the ACLU hopes will be a continuing dialogue with the nation's top law enforcement authorities. The ACLU will use these meetings to express its continuing concerns about the anti-terrorism legislation and other government actions.

"We cannot as a nation allow very legitimate public anxiety to immunize the Administration and Congress from their obligation to protect the Bill of Rights and the fundamental values that document embodies," said Laura W. Murphy, Director of the ACLU's Washington National Office.

Congress adopted the bill signed by President Bush in near record time with only one public hearing and little debate. In fact, under intense pressure from Attorney General John Ashcroft, Republican leaders in the House torpedoed compromise legislation adopted unanimously by the House Judiciary Committee in a late-night deal with the Justice Department.

"These new and unchecked powers," said Gregory T. Nojeim, Associate Director of the ACLU's Washington Office, "could be used against American citizens who are not under criminal investigation, immigrants who are here within our borders legally and also against those whose First Amendment activities are deemed to be threats to national security by the Attorney General."

To learn more about how the ACLU is working to keep America SAFE and FREE in this time of crisis, please see our special feature, Safe and Free.


Compelled by the government's refusal to answer previous inquiries, the ACLU has joined with a coalition of civil liberties, human rights and electronic privacy organizations in filing a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for information about the individuals arrested or detained since September 11.

On October 17, the ACLU wrote to Attorney General Ashcroft, saying that it was troubled by reports that some detainees have been impeded in their ability to contact lawyers and their families. In that letter -- and in a subsequent meeting with FBI Director Robert Mueller -- the ACLU asked for information about:
* Those arrested or detained, the circumstances of their detention or arrest and any charges brought against them.
* Any lawyers representing any of the detainees.
* Any courts that have been asked to enter orders sealing any proceedings.
The ACLU recognizes that some aspects of this important investigation are necessarily and appropriately confidential. "But we also believe," Gregory T.. Nojeim, Associate Director of the ACLU's Washington National Office said, "that specific information can and should be released to assure the American public that the government's investigation is both thorough and fair."

Click here to view the text of the FOIA request online.


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ACLU URGES AIRPORT OFFICIALS TO RECONSIDER USE OF FACIAL RECOGNITION TECHNOLOGY

In a letter sent last week to the Chair of the Rhode Island Airport Corporation, the ACLU called on officials to reconsider their to decision to install facial recognition technology at T.F. Green Airport.

The four-page letter points out that the effectiveness of the technology is far below the highly inflated claims of the manufacturers of the equipment.. The letter also raised concerns that, although purportedly being implemented to catch terrorists, the technology would inevitably be expanded to monitor and target other Americans.

Click here to learn more about facial recognition technology.

TAKE ACTION: URGE CONGRESS TO OPPOSE ANTI-DEMOCRATIC AMENDMENTS IN D.C.!

The Senate is expected to soon consider amendments known as "social riders" to the District of Columbia appropriations bill. These amendments prevent the funding of measures approved by the D.C. government or its citizens and thereby render them meaningless.

It is likely that this year's "social riders" will include a measure to block the implementation of the D.C. domestic partners law as well as one that would prevent the use of federal or local money on needle exchange programs.

We must support the right of District of Columbia residents and their elected officials to decide policy questions for themselves. But, most importantly, we must allow them to protect their families and communities as they see fit.

Take Action! Click here to send a FREE fax to your members of Congress urging them to oppose these anti-democratic amendments.

..

"Look at the mess we've got ourselves into, just because we invited a gringo to eat some bananas."
--Col. Aureliano Buendia in 100 years of Solitude



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Subject: Americans did secret tests off Newfoundland


Author:
No name
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Date Posted: 12:30:09 12/03/01 Mon

Americans did secret tests off Newfoundland
http://stjohns.cbc.ca/editorServlets/View?filename=nf_secret011031

Placentia, Nfld. - The United States military conducted secret and confidential chemical and germ warfare experiments in Placentia Bay in 1965.

The Americans wanted to know if their warships were vulnerable to chemical attacks.

Jets from the American Air Force base in Stephenville repeatedly sprayed a U.S. destroyer in the bay with common bacteria and a potentially toxic compound, zinc cadmium sulfide.

At the time, it was thought to be safe, but recent studies have shown it can be absorbed through the lungs. Cadmium is poisonous.

The sailors on the ship were not wearing protective clothing and were never told anything.

Some of them said they now wonder if their present health problems are connected to their time in Newfoundland 36 years ago.

Human Radiation Experiments Searchable Government Data Base
http://hrex.dis.anl.gov/
{if it hasn't been removed}

DUCK AND COVER(UP): U.S. RADIATION TESTING ON HUMANS
http://ishgooda.nativeweb.org/nuclear/nuke27.htm
Subject: 'Scariest good guy' in Afghanistan A Vietnam veteran and Knight of Malta delivers aid in war zones and wages peace


Author:
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Date Posted: 12:21:34 12/03/01 Mon

November 1, 2001

'Scariest good guy' in Afghanistan A Vietnam veteran and Knight of Malta delivers aid in war zones and wages peace

Stewart Bell National Post
http://WWW.NATIOnalpost.com/home/story.html?f=/stories/20011101/765072.html

DASHT-E QALA, Afghanistan - The refugees crowded around the flatbed truck in this tent city on the desert plain may have seen international humanitarian workers before, but never one like the Vietnam War veteran with the silver beard handing out sacks of food aid.

He wears a military-style uniform with a U.S. flag sewn on the shoulder. Above his shirt pocket appears the inscription, "Sir Edward Artis, Knight Commander, Knights of Malta." On his finger is a hefty red ring bearing the Maltese Cross.

"I thought he was a soldier," said one young European humanitarian worker.

Mr. Artis's methods of delivering aid are as unusual as his appearance.

When he travels, the former U.S. Army paratrooper sometimes packs a parachute, in case his plane is unable to land safely in a war zone.

He once snuck illicitly into Russia to deliver medicine to Chechens displaced by war and loosened three teeth diving out a window to escape a soldier during the Rwandan genocide.

"I've been called one of the scariest good guys you're ever going to meet," he said, explaining his gung-ho approach, which combines combat skills, a tough-as-spit demeanour and rapport with various rebel leaders. "I'm a warrior, but I'm waging peace."

His latest mission has brought him to a refugee camp at Dasht-e Qala, near the dusty mountains where Taliban and Northern Alliance troops face each other in trenches filled with empty shell casings. He delivered tents and 15 tonnes of wheat this week, paid for by his private humanitarian group, Knightsbridge International. Another 45 tonnes of wheat are on the way.

He is also searching for 200 more tents to replace the primitive shelters made of sticks, mud and blankets that house the 300 refugee families living here.

Five children died of starvation and hunger-induced respiratory diseases at the camp this week, yet there is little humanitarian activity because of the danger caused by the war.

As Mr. Artis handed out his supplies, U.S. bombers were striking just a few kilometres away.

Food supplied by his group will feed residents for four months, he said. He also wants to bring food farther south to the Panjshir Valley and perhaps Kabul, the capital, which has been heavily bombed by U.S. warplanes since Oct. 7.

"I want to serve those people on the front line, and now more than ever because those people hate me [because of the U.S. bombing campaign]," he said.

"They don't need to hate me because I'm an American any more than I need to hate them because they are Afghans."

Mr. Artis, who grew up in Concord, Calif., northeast of San Francisco, spent five years in the Vietnam War as a helicopter medic and was injured three times.

He returned to civilian life, but found it unfulfilling, so he embarked on a humanitarian career focused on helping war veterans that has spanned 30 years and taken him to dozens of countries.

In 1993, Russia made him a commander of the Knights of Malta, a religious order formed in France in 1054. That year he met another Maltese knight, Dr. James Laws, an Ohio cardiologist, and they decided to team up to save the world.

They formed Knightsbridge International and began a series of missions to bring relief to the worst war-affected zones on the planet, beginning in Russia, and later Rwanda and Afghanistan. They are not afraid to admit they enjoy the excitement of the work.

"Two rules," Mr. Artis said. "High adventure and service to humanity."

The two volunteer their time, have no staff and put 100% of their donations into the hands of the needy. They do not hide their disdain for the United Nations, which they consider overly bureaucratic, or the brand of aid workers they call "phony, ticket-punching disaster tourists," who they say only want to go to war zones to have their photos taken so they can raise money for their organizations.

Mr. Artis said Knightsbridge focuses on getting the job done, and doing it in areas where other aid groups cannot or will not go.

"I'm proud of what we do," he said. "We have been beat up like a pinata at a Puerto Rican wedding. I don't care. But we are going to get our food in to these people."

Fights erupted as Mr. Artis and Mr. Laws unloaded their first aid shipment in Dasht-e Qala this week. Women wearing burkas hovered at a safe distance while men in camouflage jackets with antiquated Russian rifles on their shoulders pushed to the front.

"It's more confusing than we expected," said Mr. Artis. "There's a lot more people with weapons, but what can you do? We tried to do this in a more civilized manner."

This relief mission carries an added risk, he confided, because Taliban officials placed a US$50,000 bounty on his head after his last visit here in 1998.

He dared them to try to kill him: "I can think of no better place to die than here. It's better than lying in some veterans' hospital dying of some Agent Orange-induced disease that my own government gave me."
Subject: Indonesia warns U.S. against prolonged war


Author:
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Date Posted: 12:20:31 12/03/01 Mon



Indonesia warns U.S. against prolonged war
Last Updated: Thu Nov 1 09:26:32 2001
http://cbc.ca/cgi-bin/templates/view.cgi?category=Canada&story=/news/2001/11/01/indonesia011101

JAKARTA - Indonesia's president had a warning for the United States in its military campaign against Afghanistan: prolonged war will be counter-productive.

In her first state of the nation speech since taking office more than three months ago, President Megawati Sukarnoputri said the coalition could crumble if Muslim states such as her own become impatient with the attacks.

Prolonged war, particularly if civilian casualties mount, "will not only be counter productive, but will also weaken the global coalition to wage war on terrorism," she said.

Indonesia is the world's most populous Muslim nation, and has seen many anti-U.S. demonstrations since Megawati agreed to join the coalition against terrorism.

About 1,000 activists demonstrated outside the parliament during her speech.

Shortly after the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, Megawati visited Washington and told U.S. President George W. Bush that Indonesia would support the fight against terrorism.

Since then, she has appeared to back off in the face of the sometimes intense public pressure from conservative Muslims at home.

On Thursday, Megawati told the People's Consultative Assembly that Indonesia wants the bombing to stop during the coming holy month of Ramadan, and on Christmas Day.

Written by CBC News Online staff
Subject: Public Apprehension Felt in Europe Over the Goals of Afghanistan Bombings


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Date Posted: 12:19:01 12/03/01 Mon

THE CONTINENT

Public Apprehension Felt in Europe Over the Goals of Afghanistan Bombings

By WARREN HOGE
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/11/01/international/europe/01EURO.html?todaysheadlines

LONDON, Oct. 31 — Prime Minister Tony Blair began yet another diplomatic mission today — this time to the Middle East — but at home and elsewhere in Europe, public unease with the course of the war in Afghanistan and its rationale was on the rise.

One of the most surprising criticisms came from the leader of Britain's opposition Conservatives, who until today had given Mr. Blair's strong advocacy of the war effort his unquestioning approval.

"Even those who have supported military action from the outset are beginning to ask what our real objectives are and whether we are going about securing them in the right way," the Tory leader, Iain Duncan Smith, said in an article in The Daily Telegraph. "For a government that prides itself on presentation, it has appeared to be losing the battle for the hearts and minds of the British people," he wrote.

Members of Parliament expressed concern over the reports of bombing blunders and civilian deaths, and dismay over the absence of early successes and the likelihood of prolonged warfare. A poll in The Guardian showed that Britons' support for the war effort had slid to 62 percent, from 74 percent two weeks ago, and that 54 percent now favored a pause in the bombing to permit aid to get through. No margin of error was given.

Similar anxieties were arising on the Continent.

"Europeans are worried," Le Monde said today in its lead story. "They are not expressing this publicly because they know they have no immediate alternative to maintaining their solidarity with the military campaign waged by the U.S. in Afghanistan. Their hesitations, however, and even their refusal to comment on the logic and the increasingly worrisome consequences of the American bombings against the Taliban regime are worth more than many words.."

In Germany, Michael Naumann, the publisher of Die Zeit and formerly Chancellor Gerhard Schröder's minister of culture, said of the American-led campaign, "Despite solidarity with a tested friend, doubt is growing about its war methods in Afghanistan." What was described as a representative poll — but with no margin of error or sample size given — in the weekly Die Woche showed 69 percent support for a pause in the bombing and 55 percent opposed to the unquestioning backing that Mr. Schröder has given the United States.

Mr. Blair has been President Bush's staunchest ally and the coalition's most vocal and well-traveled ambassador. On his latest foray, he devoted this morning to talks with President Bashar Assad in Damascus, Syria, then traveled on to Riyadh, the Saudi capital, where he saw King Fahd and Crown Prince Abdullah. He then flew to Jordan and is expected in Israel on Thursday.

Before leaving Britain Tuesday night, Mr. Blair took note of the flagging support in an emotive speech to the Welsh National Assembly in Cardiff, defending the war as a "principled conflict" and urging the British to show their time-tested moral fiber.

"It is not moral fiber that is required," replied the Labor legislator, Tam Dalyell, known as the father of the Commons for his four decades of service. "It is brains and an understanding of the Middle East. It is pretty galling to be told we lack moral fiber when we are asking legitimate questions about what exactly is being attacked outside Kabul."

In his speech, Mr. Blair took notice of the growing preoccupation and extended an olive branch to the critics. "All these concerns deserve to be answered," he said. "No one who raises doubts is an appeaser or a faint heart."

A spokesman for the prime minister said no pause in the bombing should be expected for the holy month of Ramadan, which begins in mid-November. "It is not the case that the terrorists would stop planning murder during the religious period," he said.

British newspapers this week have published stories claiming that thousands of British Muslims are going to Pakistan to join the Taliban as fighters. The reports have been attributed to the London-based Islamic extremist organization al-Muhajiroun led by Sheik Omar Bakri Muhammad, a Syrian expelled from Saudi Arabia who has lived here since 1986. Sheik Omar said that four of the recruits — whose numbers appear exaggerated — had been killed in American bombing.

Family members of three of the four men reported killed — two from Luton in Bedfordshire and one from Crawley, West Sussex — confirmed that the men had died there but contended that they were performing humanitarian duties rather than fighting.

Britain's Muslim population is estimated at two million, with most from Pakistan and Bangladesh. Many of them have felt torn between the pull of their ancestral lands and that of their adopted country. Many also say they are unconvinced by Mr. Blair's argument that the current effort is not a war on Islam.

A Downing Street spokesman said that Britons who fought for the Taliban could face prosecution on charges including belonging to an outlawed organization, manslaughter, murder and treason.

Those who recruited fighters in Britain for action overseas could be charged under antiterrorism laws passed last year, he said.

Dr. Ghuyasuddin Siddiqui, leader of the Muslim Parliament of Great Britain, said al-Muhajiroun was a "lunatic fringe" group that brainwashed impressionable young Muslims.

He said, "Unfortunately the kinds of statements they make attract a lot of column inches."


Arms Sales Ban Lifted BRUSSELS, Oct. 31 (Reuters) — The European Union agreed today to lift a ban on supplying weapons to anti-Taliban rebels in Afghanistan. A spokeswoman said ambassadors from the 15-member nations agreed to modify their understanding of United Nations sanctions to exempt the rebels from the bloc's previous blanket ban on sending arms.

A senior diplomat said the shift, adopted after Sweden, Finland and Ireland dropped reservations, would allow European Union states to help Northern Alliance states whose chief arms suppliers have been Iran and Russia.
Subject: U.S. fears nuclear experts helped bin Laden


Author:
No name
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Date Posted: 12:17:37 12/03/01 Mon

http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/breaking/1031attacks-nuclear-ON.html


U.S. fears nuclear experts helped bin Laden
USA TODAY
Oct. 31, 2001 08:20:00

WASHINGTON - Pakistan's recent detention of two prominent Pakistani nuclear scientists with ties to Afghanistan's Taliban regime has set off alarms within the Bush administration and among nuclear experts.


Their worry: The possibility that the scientists, one of them a pioneer in Pakistan's nuclear energy program, might have helped Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaida terrorist network develop nuclear weapons.

"It's very intriguing and obviously raises the question of: Did they provide anything?" says David Albright, president of the Institute for Science and International Security and a leading authority on Pakistan's nuclear program. "We think this case should be investigated much more thoroughly than I think the Pakistanis would like to."

U.S. officials say there is no definitive intelligence on whether bin Laden has any nuclear capability. But, in a 1999 interview with ABC, bin Laden said he considered his quest for such weapons his "religious duty."

U.S. officials say he has made numerous attempts over the years to purchase nuclear material:

- The London Sunday Times reported in October that British officials are investigating claims that al-Qaida representatives tried to buy spent nuclear fuel rods from a Bulgarian nuclear plant.

- Jamal Ahmed al-Fadl, a prosecution witness who testified against bin Laden last year in a case concerning the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, said he tried to help al-Qaida obtain enriched uranium from Sudan in 1993-94.

- U.S. officials remain concerned about the sale or theft of so-called suitcase-size nuclear devices designed by the former Soviet Union.

Because of this history, U.S. officials are closely monitoring the Pakistani case, which began when authorities picked up Sultan Bashiru-Din Mahmood and Abdul Majid last week for questioning about their ties to Afghanistan. Pakistani officials said their interest in the two men had nothing to do with concerns about them passing nuclear secrets.

A Pakistani diplomat in Washington said Mahmood is being questioned about his work with a relief group that has operated in Afghanistan with the backing of Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar.

"There are certain questions that we need to ask him," Major Gen. Rashid Qureshi, a spokesman for President Pervez Musharraf, said in Islamabad on Tuesday.

Mahmood was released last weekend but taken back into custody Monday. His family said Wednesday that he has been hospitalized after suffering chest pains.

Majid is a junior colleague of Mahmood and is seen as a lesser security risk, U.S. officials say.

Pakistani authorities said neither man was involved in Pakistan's nuclear weapons program, but instead with nuclear reactors. Pakistan is believed to have enough fissionable material for 30 to 50 nuclear bombs or warheads and 10 or more reactors or other nuclear facilities, according to U.S. estimates.

U.S. officials say privately that they believe Mahmood has played a more prominent role in nuclear weapons design than Pakistan has indicated.

Mahmood, according to U.S. experts, took early retirement from the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission in 1998 and has since devoted his time to welfare work, particularly within Afghanistan.

Administration officials continue to receive assurances from Musharraf that Pakistan's nuclear arsenal and the scientists who oversee it are uncompromised.

Secretary of State Colin Powell said Wednesday he is confident that Musharraf "understands the importance of ensuring that all elements of his nuclear program are safe and secure."

Still, the murky nature of the detentions has unsettled many experts. Press reports in Pakistan, citing Pakistani intelligence sources, say Mahmood also has been questioned by U.S. intelligence officials. A CIA spokesman would not confirm or deny the reports.

Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association, says it's hard to draw a clear link between al-Qaida and Pakistan's nuclear program. "But what it does indicate is a continuing concern at the official level in Pakistan about the safety and security of that arsenal," he says.

Experts say bin Laden would face huge technological obstacles in building a nuclear bomb, but a small-scale device would be within al-Qaida's reach if it could buy or create nuclear material.

Analysts say bin Laden also might be able to build a "dirty bomb" that wouldn't cause a nuclear explosion but could spread enough radioactivity to kill thousands in an urban environment.




Copyright 2001, azcentral.com. All rights reserved.
USA Today | Gannett Co. Inc. | Gannett Foundation | Real Cities Network
Subject: U.S. fears nuclear experts helped bin Laden


Author:
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Date Posted: 12:16:34 12/03/01 Mon

http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/breaking/1031attacks-nuclear-ON.html


U.S. fears nuclear experts helped bin Laden
USA TODAY
Oct. 31, 2001 08:20:00

WASHINGTON - Pakistan's recent detention of two prominent Pakistani nuclear scientists with ties to Afghanistan's Taliban regime has set off alarms within the Bush administration and among nuclear experts.


Their worry: The possibility that the scientists, one of them a pioneer in Pakistan's nuclear energy program, might have helped Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaida terrorist network develop nuclear weapons.

"It's very intriguing and obviously raises the question of: Did they provide anything?" says David Albright, president of the Institute for Science and International Security and a leading authority on Pakistan's nuclear program. "We think this case should be investigated much more thoroughly than I think the Pakistanis would like to."

U.S. officials say there is no definitive intelligence on whether bin Laden has any nuclear capability. But, in a 1999 interview with ABC, bin Laden said he considered his quest for such weapons his "religious duty."

U.S. officials say he has made numerous attempts over the years to purchase nuclear material:

- The London Sunday Times reported in October that British officials are investigating claims that al-Qaida representatives tried to buy spent nuclear fuel rods from a Bulgarian nuclear plant.

- Jamal Ahmed al-Fadl, a prosecution witness who testified against bin Laden last year in a case concerning the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, said he tried to help al-Qaida obtain enriched uranium from Sudan in 1993-94.

- U.S. officials remain concerned about the sale or theft of so-called suitcase-size nuclear devices designed by the former Soviet Union.

Because of this history, U.S. officials are closely monitoring the Pakistani case, which began when authorities picked up Sultan Bashiru-Din Mahmood and Abdul Majid last week for questioning about their ties to Afghanistan. Pakistani officials said their interest in the two men had nothing to do with concerns about them passing nuclear secrets.

A Pakistani diplomat in Washington said Mahmood is being questioned about his work with a relief group that has operated in Afghanistan with the backing of Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar.

"There are certain questions that we need to ask him," Major Gen. Rashid Qureshi, a spokesman for President Pervez Musharraf, said in Islamabad on Tuesday.

Mahmood was released last weekend but taken back into custody Monday. His family said Wednesday that he has been hospitalized after suffering chest pains.

Majid is a junior colleague of Mahmood and is seen as a lesser security risk, U.S. officials say.

Pakistani authorities said neither man was involved in Pakistan's nuclear weapons program, but instead with nuclear reactors. Pakistan is believed to have enough fissionable material for 30 to 50 nuclear bombs or warheads and 10 or more reactors or other nuclear facilities, according to U.S. estimates.

U.S. officials say privately that they believe Mahmood has played a more prominent role in nuclear weapons design than Pakistan has indicated.

Mahmood, according to U.S. experts, took early retirement from the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission in 1998 and has since devoted his time to welfare work, particularly within Afghanistan.

Administration officials continue to receive assurances from Musharraf that Pakistan's nuclear arsenal and the scientists who oversee it are uncompromised.

Secretary of State Colin Powell said Wednesday he is confident that Musharraf "understands the importance of ensuring that all elements of his nuclear program are safe and secure."

Still, the murky nature of the detentions has unsettled many experts. Press reports in Pakistan, citing Pakistani intelligence sources, say Mahmood also has been questioned by U.S. intelligence officials. A CIA spokesman would not confirm or deny the reports.

Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association, says it's hard to draw a clear link between al-Qaida and Pakistan's nuclear program. "But what it does indicate is a continuing concern at the official level in Pakistan about the safety and security of that arsenal," he says.

Experts say bin Laden would face huge technological obstacles in building a nuclear bomb, but a small-scale device would be within al-Qaida's reach if it could buy or create nuclear material.

Analysts say bin Laden also might be able to build a "dirty bomb" that wouldn't cause a nuclear explosion but could spread enough radioactivity to kill thousands in an urban environment.




Copyright 2001, azcentral.com. All rights reserved.
USA Today | Gannett Co. Inc. | Gannett Foundation | Real Cities Network
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