Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Moscow signals place in new world order

Guardian UK
The news that an arms race may be underway once more between Washington and Moscow has brought back some unpleasant memories, but it is also a pointer to a more complicated future.

The Kremlin's threat to counter US missile defence installations in eastern Europe is a sign that Russia will no longer acquiesce in a Pax Americana.

What seemed in the west like a post cold-war honeymoon in the nineties is remembered more as a rape by Moscow's new leaders. In their eyes Russia was taken advantage of at a moment of economic weakness by Washington, London and a band of unscrupulous Russian oligarchs. A new Russian foreign policy, published by the government in recent days makes it clear that Moscow believes the era of American hegemony is now over.

"The myth about the unipolar world fell apart once and for all in Iraq," the review says. "A strong, more self-confident Russia has become an integral part of positive changes in the world."

The policy document is an elaboration of an anti-American polemic delivered two months ago by Vladimir Putin to a roomful of shocked western diplomats in Munich. "The Munich speech may be an event ... we look back to and say: that's when everything changed, but we should have seen it coming," said Cliff Kupchan, a former US state department official now at the Eurasia Group, a political risk consultancy.

Around the world, Putin's Russia has been serving notice for some time it is prepared to challenge US leadership of the international community. It is beginning to push back hard against missile defence and Nato's eastward expansion. It has resisted tough sanctions against Iran, and so far refused to go along with a UN-brokered plan to hand Kosovo autonomy. Moscow is also signalling it wants to be treated as a serious player in the Middle East, meeting Hamas officials at a time they are being ostracised by the US and western Europe.

While there are cold war echoes in the Russian rhetoric over missile defence and in the intractability of some of the disputes in the UN security council, there are more differences than similarities between today's friction and the constant rivalry of the Soviet era.

For one thing, disputes are no longer played out against a backdrop of mutually assured destruction. Most US and Russian intercontinental nuclear missiles are pointing at each other, but they are not on a hair-trigger. Nor are the two countries engaged in a global ideological struggle. Washington may be in the throes of intellectual ferment over the Bush doctrine, of defeating extremism by exporting democracy, but the Putin doctrine is by contrast, an exercise in pragmatism. It stresses the importance of national sovereignty and the primacy of the UN in resolving disputes. The common theme is Moscow's demand for its views to be taken into account.

The roots are economic, and they reach back into the era of Boris Yeltsin, when an impoverished Russia offered itself as a eager junior partner to the west. That period is seen by the Kremlin occupants as a national humiliation. "What drives Putin's Russia is an obsession forged in the nineties," said one diplomat. "They detest its instability and the weakness it brought to Russia."

Soaring oil and gas prices have transformed the environment. Russia is no longer a debtor nation. A new self-assuredness was on show when the Russians hosted the G8 meeting at St Petersburg in 2006. "Suddenly, they had all the right suits, watches and the right cars," said a western official who was there.

Along with all the trappings of western affluence came a new determination that Russia would not be absorbed by the west. The Yeltsin government toyed with the idea of joining the European Union, but that idea is now dead. In an article to mark the EU's 50th anniversary, Mr Putin stated openly that Russia has "no intention of either joining the EU or establishing any form of institutional association with it".

Moscow's relationship with Europe is now defined by its role as the continent's oil and gas supplier. Its tactics have been those of a giant corporation seeking to maximise its market power. Rather than deal with the EU as a whole, Russia has negotiated individual deals with different European countries - agreeing with Germany the construction of the Nord Stream pipeline under the Baltic, and the extension of another gas pipeline to Hungary. Moscow has thus undermined the EU's communal efforts to reduce its dependence on Russia by bringing Caspian gas through Turkey.

After Moscow turned off the gas tap to Ukraine, Belarus and Lithuania, there are fears that it will ultimately try to translate its market power over Europe into a new political hegemony. But Dmitri Trenin, a former Russian military strategist, argues those fears misunderstand the Putin era. Russia, he says, is simply striving to extract maximum profits from its customers.

Al-Qaida claims responsibility for launching attacks in Algeria

XINHUA
CAIRO, April 11 (Xinhua) -- The Al-Qaida group in North Africa claimed responsibility for launching bomb attacks in Algerian capital on Wednesday in a statement posted on the internet.

The group also released photos of three suicide bombers who it said carried out the car bomb attacks in Algiers on the website often used by extremist Islamic groups in the past.

Earlier, the Al-Jazeera television station said a people identifying himself as a member of Al-Qaida's branch in North Africa, called the channel and claimed responsibility for Wednesday's blasts in Algiers.

At least 23 people were killed and 162 others wounded in two bomb blasts hitting the Algerian capital Algiers on Wednesday morning, the official APS news agency reported.

"Twelve people were killed in the attack against the Government Palace, while 118 others were wounded," APS said, citing a new death toll released by the civil defence department which said the toll could rise.

In the attack against a police station of Bab Ezzouar east of Algiers, 11 people died and 44 were wounded, it added.

BBC NEWS | Middle East | Iranian envoy wounds 'confirmed'

BBC NEWS | Middle East | Iranian envoy wounds 'confirmed'

Iranian envoy wounds 'confirmed'
The head of the International Red Cross in Tehran says he saw wounds on an Iranian diplomat who has alleged that US forces in Iraq tortured him.
Peter Stoeker said there were marks on Jalal Sharafi's feet, legs, back and nose but he was unable to say if they were the result of torture.

Iranian media quoted Mr Sharafi saying the CIA tortured him "day and night".

Mr Sharafi was abducted in Iraq in February and released last week. The US denies any involvement in the case.

Mr Sharafi, second secretary at the Iranian embassy in Baghdad, says he was kidnapped by Iraqi agents operating under the supervision of the CIA.

Iranian state media has quoted Mr Sharafi saying the CIA subjected him to torture as they questioned him about Iranian assistance to groups inside Iraq.

'Evidence of torture'

Iranian television has shown pictures of Mr Sharafi receiving treatment in hospital and quotes a doctor's report saying there are signs someone drilled holes in his feet as well as broke his nose, injured his ear and wounded his neck and back.

The ICRC's Mr Stoeker said he had been happy to meet Mr Sharafi in hospital because his organisation had been unable to find him in Iraq.

He confirmed he saw wounds on Mr Sharafi's feet, legs, back and nose but, not being a doctor, he was unable to say if they were the result of torture and if so, who inflicted them.

"The United States had nothing to do with Mr Sharafi's detention and we welcome his return to Iran," said Gordon Johndroe, a White House spokesman, last week.

He dismissed the claims as "just the latest theatrics of a government trying to deflect attention away from its own unacceptable actions".

An unnamed US intelligence official also denied any claims of abuse, saying: "The CIA does not conduct or condone torture."

Mr Sharafi was freed in Iraq on 3 April, the day before the 15 British sailors were set free in Iran, but no link has been confirmed between the two cases.


Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/6544055.stm

Clergy sex abuse claims down - Crime & Punishment - MSNBC.com

Clergy sex abuse claims down - Crime & Punishment - MSNBC.com

Clergy sex abuse claims down
714 allegations filed in 2006, marking second year of decline
The Associated Press
Updated: 6:33 p.m. ET April 10, 2007
NEW YORK - The nation's Roman Catholic bishops and religious orders received 714 clergy sex abuse claims in 2006, the second consecutive year that the number of allegations has dropped, according to a new report on the church's child protection reforms.

Costs related to abuse cases also decreased — by about 15 percent over the last year — mainly due to a decline in what dioceses paid to settle molestation cases.

Dioceses and religious orders paid nearly $399 million in 2006 for settlements with victims, attorney fees and support for accusers and offenders. For 2005, that figure was $467 million — considered the highest ever for a single year.

The findings, set for release Wednesday, are part of an annual review that the bishops first commissioned in 2002 as they implemented reforms to better safeguard children at the height of the clergy sex abuse crisis.

The declining number of claims — there were 1,092 in 2004 and 783 the next year — could be taken as evidence that the church is gradually gaining control over the crisis, especially since the vast majority of allegations date back decades.

But more work is needed to address the problem, a key church official said.

"The bishops have done a lot and have spent a lot of money in a lot of different areas, but it's not all done, as you can tell by the number of victims still coming forward," said Teresa Kettelkamp, executive director of the bishops' Office of Child and Youth Protection.

Catholic leaders say abuse-related costs have exceeded $1.5 billion since 1950. More than 13,000 molestation claims have been filed against clergy since then.

Most claim abuse decades ago
As in previous years, most people who made allegations in 2006 said they had been molested decades ago. The majority of the claims concerned cases from 1960 to 1984.

Forty-three percent of the claims involved priests who had not been accused of abuse before, and most of those accused are either dead, missing, or have already been removed from church work or the priesthood, making the new allegations difficult to prove. In dioceses alone, bishops said 11 percent of the 2006 claims could not be proven or were considered to be false.

Only 17 of the people who came forward with complaints last year were under age 18.

The survey of nearly all 195 U.S. dioceses and non-geographic regions called eparchies was conducted by the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University.

An accompanying audit, by The Gavin Group, Inc., a consulting firm led by a former FBI official, checks whether the nation's dioceses are implementing the reforms spelled out in the bishops' Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People.


However, this year's audit was much more limited in scope, so that Kettelkamp's office could shift the dates of its review to match more closely with the survey of new abuse claims.

Only 11 dioceses had full, onsite audits at their request and were found in compliance with the charter by the end of the audit period. Eighteen additional dioceses had limited audits that focused only on remedying past failures, mainly related to training children, volunteers and staff to identify and report abuse. Of that group, the Archdiocese of Cincinnati and the Diocese of Burlington, Vt., still had not completed the trainings by the end of the audit period.


The Survivors Network for Those Abused by Priests considers the audits and the survey ineffective because dioceses control what information researchers see. William Gavin, president of The Gavin Group, noted in the 2006 report that no personnel files were reviewed and "the auditors had to rely on the truthfulness and integrity of those furnishing the information."

But defenders say the annual reviews play an important role in child protection.

"Vigilance is needed to overcome the natural regressive tendency to become complacent," the auditors wrote in their report.

© 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18044446/

Church unveils stained-glass 9/11 image - Europe - MSNBC.com

Church unveils stained-glass 9/11 image - Europe - MSNBC.com

Church unveils stained-glass 9/11 image
World Trade Center pane in Dutch cathedral shows ‘hell on earth’
Reuters
Updated: 8:34 a.m. ET April 9, 2007
DEN BOSCH, Netherlands - A new stained glass window in a Dutch cathedral that contains an image of the World Trade Center attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people was blessed on Sunday by a Dutch bishop.

The window, built up of about 20 different panes with representations of heaven and hell, has the WTC pane at the bottom showing “hell on earth,” its maker Marc Mulders said.

The pane shows an airplane about to crash in one of the Twin Towers on Sept. 11, 2001.

“It was an assignment by the church to make a stained glass window that was related to the spirit of this time,” Mulders 48, said on his Web site, adding that he sees the WTC attacks as an image that speaks vividly to all people.

The window in the Sint Jan cathedral in Den Bosch, a city in the south of the Netherlands, has attracted the attention of the world’s media press because of the Twin Tower image, pastor Geert Jan van Rossem said.


Van Rossem said he expected the window to cause reflection from those who saw it.

“Innocent civilians were killed, that is shocking and makes people think,” he said.

A small crowd applauded and praised the window’s bright colors when the bishop revealed the stained glass window.

Copyright 2007 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18020988/

U.S. military: Iran training bomb makers - Conflict in Iraq - MSNBC.com

U.S. military: Iran training bomb makers - Conflict in Iraq - MSNBC.com

U.S. military: Iran training bomb makers
Spokesman says fighters learning to assemble EFP roadside bombs
The Associated Press
Updated: 8:48 a.m. ET April 11, 2007
BAGHDAD, Iraq - Iran has been training Iraqi fighters in Iran on the assembly of deadly roadside bombs known as EFPs, the U.S. military spokesman said on Wednesday.

“We know that they are being in fact manufactured and smuggled into this country, and we know that training does go on in Iran for people to learn how to assemble them and how to employ them. We know that training has gone on as recently as this past month from detainees debriefs,” Maj. Gen. William Caldwell, the U.S. military spokesman, said at a weekly briefing.

EFP stands for explosively formed penetrator, deadly roadside bombs that hurl a fist-size lump of molten copper capable of piercing armor.

In January, U.S. officials said at least 170 U.S. soldiers had been killed by EFPs.

Caldwell also said on Wednesday that the U.S. military had evidence that Iranian intelligence agents were active in Iraq in funding, training and arming Shiite militia fighters.

“We also know that training still is being conducted in Iran for insurgent elements from Iraq. We know that as recent as last week from debriefing personnel,” he said.

“The do receive training on how to assemble and employ EFPs,” Caldwell said, adding that fighters also were trained in how to carry out complex attacks that used explosives followed by assaults with rocket-propelled grenades and small arms.

“There has been training on specialized weapons that are used here in Iraq. And then we do know they receive also training on general tactics in terms of how to take and employ and work what we call a more complex kind of attack where we see multiple types of engagements being used from an explosion to small arms fire to being done in multiple places,” Caldwell said.

The general would not say specifically which arm of the Iranian government was doing the training but called the trainers “surrogates” of Iran’s intelligence agency.

Caldwell opened the briefing by showing photographs of what he said were Iranian-made mortar rounds, RPG rounds and rockets that were found in Iraq.


© 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11941340/