Thursday, May 10, 2007

BBC NEWS | Middle East | US Marine 'shot unarmed Iraqis'

BBC NEWS | Middle East | US Marine 'shot unarmed Iraqis'

US Marine 'shot unarmed Iraqis'
A US Marine who led the unit accused of killing 24 Iraqi civilians in Haditha shot five men as they stood with their hands in the air, another marine said.

Staff Sgt Frank Wuterich then told his comrades to lie about it and blame the Iraqi army, a court heard on Wednesday.

Sgt Sanick Dela Cruz was speaking at a hearing for one of the four officers charged with dereliction of duty for not investigating the killings.

Three other marines have been charged with second-degree murder.

Iraqi witnesses say the shootings were in retaliation for a roadside bomb that had killed Lance Cpl Miguel Terrazas as his convoy drove through Haditha, 240km (150 miles) north-west of Baghdad, on 19 November 2005.

'Bad thing'

Sgt Dela Cruz also told the military courtroom at Camp Pendleton in California that he urinated on the body of an Iraqi civilian.



He told the court of the distress he felt after discovering the explosion had ripped Lance Cpl Terrazas, known as TJ, in half.

"I know it was a bad thing what I've done, but I done it because I was angry TJ was dead and I pissed on one Iraqi's head," he said.

He also testified that after the explosion Staff Sgt Frank Wuterich had shot dead five men as they stood by a white car with the hands in the air.

"They were just standing, looking around, had hands up," he said.

"Then I saw one of them drop in the middle."

"Looked to my left, saw Sgt Wuterich shooting."

Afterwards Sgt Dela Cruz said he himself had "sprayed" the bodies with gunfire.

"I knew they were dead, I wanted to make sure," he explained.

Immunity

Sgt Wuterich then shot each of the men in the upper body and head, Sgt Dela Cruz testified.

He told me that if anybody asked, [we should say] they were running away and the Iraqi army shot them
Sgt Sanick Dela Cruz

"He went to every single one of them, sir, and shot them," he added.

"He told me that if anybody asked, they were running away and the Iraqi army shot them."

Sgt Wuterich's lawyer, Neal Puckett, said Sgt Dela Cruz's account was "false" and that he had told investigators up to five different versions of the events.

"It's unfortunate that in exchange for his freedom he's being forced to testify against his brothers," Mr Puckett told the Associated Press.

In April, the Marine Corps dropped all charges against Sgt Dela Cruz and granted him immunity in exchange for his testimony.

If found guilty, the three marines charged with second-degree murder could face life imprisonment.

The Haditha inquiry is just one of a number the US military has been conducting into incidents of alleged unlawful killings by US forces in Iraq.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/6641843.stm

Published: 2007/05/10 11:13:33 GMT

© BBC MMVII

BBC NEWS | Americas | US probes director Moore on Cuba

BBC NEWS | Americas | US probes director Moore on Cuba

US probes director Moore on Cuba
Award-winning film-maker Michael Moore is being investigated by US authorities for a possible violation of the trade embargo against Cuba, he has announced.

Mr Moore took a group of 9/11 rescue workers to Cuba in March to film part of his new documentary about healthcare provision in the US.

The US Treasury has sent him a letter asking him to explain himself.

Mr Moore is a long-time critic of the Bush administration and has campaigned against the war in Iraq.

The US imposed an economic embargo on Cuba more than 40 years ago in a bid to isolate Fidel Castro's communist government.

Ailing workers

Mr Moore made the trip to Cuba to film part of Sicko, an examination of America's health care industry which, according to the film's producer, Meghan O'Hara, will "expose the corporations that place profit before care and the politicians who care only about money".

His spokeswoman, Lisa Cohen, told the French news agency AFP that he took around 10 ailing New York rescue workers with him for medical treatment.

The group were suffering from conditions thought linked to their work clearing up debris from the site of the World Trade Center bombings on 11 September 2001.

In a letter dated 2 May, the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control gave Mr Moore 20 working days to provide more details of his visit, including who went with him and why.

"This office has no record that a specific licence was issued authorising you to engage in travel-related transactions involving Cuba," it said.

Sicko is due to open at the Cannes Film Festival next week.

Mr Moore won an Oscar in 2002 for the documentary Bowling for Columbine, a critique of US gun culture in the wake of the shootings at Columbine High School.

He followed that up with Fahrenheit 9/11, an examination of the White House's decision to go to war in Iraq and Afghanistan after the 11 September attacks.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/americas/6644845.stm

SWAT team searches high school - CNN.com

SWAT team searches high school - CNN.com

SWAT team searches high school
Story Highlights
• NEW: Police conducting third search of Boulder, Colorado, high school
• NEW: Surveillance video shows two people running from building at 5 a.m.
• NEW: Woman says she encountered people near school around 4:30 a.m.
• Officers respond to unconfirmed report of two camouflage-clad men inside

(CNN) -- Taking no chances, Boulder, Colorado, police Thursday were combing through every space in Boulder High School after two young males wearing camouflage were spotted in the building long before opening, police and school officials said.

The alert prompted school authorities to cancel classes for the day.

Boulder Police Chief Mark Beckner said police conducted an initial search to clear the building, then sent a SWAT team in for a more thorough search.

A third search was under way Thursday afternoon, with school administrators accompanying police to let them know if anything was out of place or suspicious.

The reported sighting occurred about 6 a.m. in a hallway, as a cafeteria worker left the kitchen area. She told police she did not see any weapons on the youths, whom she described as high-school age.

She said one was wearing a ski mask, but said she did not get a look at the one who was not wearing a mask.

"She yelled at them and they both turned and ran," Beckner said. She then shut the door and called police.

"We don't know if this is a prank, we don't know if this is a burglary, we don't know if this is something more than that, but we're going to take every precaution we can," he said. (Watch how students were steered away from the schoolVideo)

Surveillance videos from cameras posted around the school's perimeter showed two individuals running east away from the school about 5 a.m., an hour before the sighting, Beckner told reporters.

A woman told police she encountered three or four people dressed in black, one wearing a ski mask, on a bike path behind the school about 4:30 a.m.

The woman said she exchanged pleasantries with the group, and one of them asked if she had dropped something on the path behind her, but there was no confrontation, Beckner said.

"Whether that's related at all ... that's tough to say, although it is highly coincidental," he said.

It was unknown how the two entered the school, Beckner said. There were no signs of a break-in.

A Boulder Valley School District deputy superintendent said no doors should have been unlocked at 6 a.m., although the arriving employees could have been followed inside.

"It would have been way outside of the norm for doors to be left open at that time," he said. The school's surveillance cameras are not focused on its entrances.

King said that since a school shooting last year in Bailey, Colorado, only one door is left open during school hours.

Bailey is not far from Columbine High School, where two students killed 12 classmates and a teacher before killing themselves in 1999.

King said administrators have not decided whether school will be held Friday.

"We want to have school tomorrow, if it's safe," he said.

Police have offered additional security, and some of the district's security personnel would also be on site as a precaution, he said.

He said school authorities Thursday morning immediately alerted parents about the situation by e-mail and telephone.

The Boulder Daily Camera newspaper reported that the nearby University of Colorado temporarily shut down 19 buildings during the initial search of the high school.

King said most of the school's students were unhappy about the cancellation. Advanced-placement exams were scheduled Thursday for some students and will have to be made up, he said.



Find this article at:
http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/05/10/school.lockdown/index.html?eref=rss_topstories

U.S. hands out $445 million in security grants - U.S. Security - MSNBC.com

U.S. hands out $445 million in security grants - U.S. Security - MSNBC.com

U.S. hands out $445 million in security grants
Boost in port, transit security includes $93 million for New York City area
The Associated Press
Updated: 3:29 p.m. ET May 10, 2007

WASHINGTON - The Bush administration on Thursday divvied up $445 million in grants to protect commuters, shipping ports, and transit systems from attacks — a boost of more than 10 percent from last year.

The Department of Homeland Security devoted most of the money to seaports and mass transit: $202 million for ports, $155 million in grants to bus and rail lines, and $48.5 million for critical infrastructure around the United States.

Smaller amounts were distributed to protect the nation's passenger rail carrier Amtrak, and bus services like Greyhound and Trailways, as well as trucking and passenger ferry services.

Grant awards are closely scrutinized by city and state officials who measure their funding against previous years — though the bigger fight is usually over which cities are judged at highest risk of attack, and how much money they each get.

New York City, which has complained for years that such grants are spread around too widely, was a big recipient of transit and port aid again this year, receiving some $93 million.

Some of that money is shared with New Jersey and Connecticut, where many of the city's workers live. The area received $79.5 million in 2006, and $50 million in 2005.

© 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18596679/
MSN Privacy . Legal

Engineer convicted of stealing secrets - U.S. Security - MSNBC.com

Engineer convicted of stealing secrets - U.S. Security - MSNBC.com

Engineer convicted of stealing secrets
Calif. jury finds Chinese-born U.S. citizen guilty of stealing military data
BREAKING NEWS
The Associated Press
Updated: 4:07 p.m. ET May 10, 2007

SANTA ANA, Calif. - Jurors convicted a Chinese-born engineer Thursday of conspiring to export U.S. defense technology to China, including data on an electronic propulsion system that could make submarines virtually undetectable.

Chi Mak also was found guilty of being an unregistered foreign agent. Prosecutors had dropped a charge of actually exporting defense articles.

When the verdict was read, Mak at first showed no emotion but then appeared to hold back tears as a defense attorney rubbed his back. He faces up to 35 years in prison when he is sentenced Sept. 10.

Mak, 66, acknowledged during the trial that he copied classified documents from his employer, a defense contractor, and kept copies in his office. He maintained he didn’t realize at the time that making the copies was illegal.

Authorities believe Mak, a naturalized U.S. citizen, took thousands of pages of documents from his employer, Power Paragon of Anaheim, and gave them to his brother, who passed them along to Chinese authorities for years.

Mak was arrested in 2005 in Los Angeles after FBI agents stopped his brother and sister-in-law as they boarded a flight to Hong Kong. Investigators said they found three encrypted CDs in their luggage containing sensitive military documents.

His wife, brother and other relatives have pleaded not guilty and await trial this month.

The six-week trial featured testimony from a parade of FBI agents, U.S. Navy officials, encryption and espionage experts.

Mak testified that during an hours-long interrogation immediately after his arrest, he lied repeatedly to FBI agents about the number of times he had visited China and when he told them he didn’t have friends or relatives there. He said he felt intimidated during the interrogation.

“This is why I lied,” he said. “They were pushing me that night.”

This breaking story will be updated.
© 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18596770/

Widow of U.K. bomber arrested, source says - International Terrorism - MSNBC.com

Widow of U.K. bomber arrested, source says - International Terrorism - MSNBC.com

Widow of U.K. bomber arrested, source says
Source: London bomber's widow, 3 others held in connection with '05 blasts
Reuters
Updated: 4:36 p.m. ET May 9, 2007

LONDON - British police arrested the widow of one of the London suicide bombers of July 7, 2005, along with three other suspects on Wednesday, a source familiar with the operation said.

A police statement said a 29-year-old woman and three men were arrested in early morning raids in the northern region of West Yorkshire and in the West Midlands.

The source confirmed the woman was Hasina Patel, whose husband Mohammad Sidique Khan was one of four young British Muslims who blew themselves up, killing 52 people, on three London underground trains and a bus.

Khan, the oldest of the four, had trained at an al-Qaida camp in Pakistan and is regarded as the ringleader of the group.

Revelation of his involvement in the attacks caused deep shock in his local community, where he had worked as a mentor in a primary school. He and Patel had a daughter who was a baby at the time of the attacks.

The suspects held on Wednesday, aged between 22 and 34, are suspected of the commission, preparation, or instigation of acts of terrorism.

String of arrests
It was the second wave of arrests within weeks in the vast and long-running investigation into the 7/7 attacks, the first suicide bombings by Islamist militants in Western Europe.

Three men were charged last month with conspiring with the four young British Muslims who carried out the bombings on three London underground trains and a bus.

“This is the second phase of arrests ... but there’s still plenty to do, and it’s not over,” a security source told Reuters.

Police said the suspects were being taken to a central London police station to be interviewed by counter-terrorism detectives. They were searching five houses in West Yorkshire and two flats in Birmingham in central England.

Tracking those who helped
Security sources say a key focus of investigations into the 2005 attacks is to trace people who may have provided logistical support to the bombers.

Peter Clarke, head of Scotland Yard’s counter-terrorism command, said last month he was certain some people with knowledge of what lay behind the attacks had so far withheld information from police. He said at the time it was highly likely there would be more arrests.

Britain’s domestic spy service, MI5, last week issued a rare public defense of its operations after it emerged that its counter-terrorism agents had taken photographs and recorded conversations of two of the suicide bombers, well over a year before they carried out the attacks.

The agency said the men surfaced as unidentified contacts of a group of men under surveillance in a separate plot, and there was no evidence at the time that the two were involved in terrorist activity in Britain.

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/18566309/

Pentagon urges keeping Guantanamo open - U.S. Security - MSNBC.com

Pentagon urges keeping Guantanamo open - U.S. Security - MSNBC.com

Pentagon urges keeping Guantanamo open
Official: ‘No readily available facilities’ to move Cuban jail’s inmates to
Reuters
Updated: 7:08 p.m. ET May 9, 2007

WASHINGTON - The Pentagon on Wednesday urged Congress to avoid an early closing of the U.S. military prison in Cuba, despite widespread recognition that the infamous jail has eroded U.S. standing in the world.

Defense officials told the U.S. House of Representatives that it could take about three years to try 60 to 80 Guantanamo Bay inmates identified as terror suspects who could be successfully prosecuted on war crimes charges before military tribunals.

Others from among a current prison population of 385 inmates would also require years to gain release or be transferred into the custody of their home countries.

Although President George W. Bush and Defense Secretary Robert Gates have both expressed a desire to close the prison, officials appearing before a House Appropriations subcommittee suggested closure would be a long-term project with a range of nettlesome legal and security issues to be resolved.

“Neither the president nor the secretary has said we’re going to close it tomorrow,” said Joseph Benkert, principal deputy assistant defense secretary for global security affairs.

“There are no readily available facilities to take these guys,” he added, stressing that the administration has no timeline or proposal for shutting the jail.

'Tainted worldwide'
The prison at the U.S. naval station at Guantanamo, which has housed about 775 terrorism suspects since it opened in early 2002, has been condemned worldwide as an affront to human rights because most inmates are held without charge.

“This has been completely tainted worldwide,” said Rep. John Murtha, the Pennsylvania Democrat who chaired the panel.

Benkert and other officials including Guantanamo prison commander, Navy Rear Adm. Harry Harris, spoke as two House Democrats separately introduced a bill calling for the prison to be closed within a year.

Defense officials sought to bolster the prison’s image, saying 95 percent of detainees are connected to al-Qaida, the Taliban or their associates and more than 70 percent have had a role in attacks on U.S. or coalition forces.

“Our critics would say that those we’re holding are farmers, cooks or other types of noncombatants. I think if you look at the classified records, they tell a different story,” Benkert said.

They warned that early closure could threaten security, saying 30 of about 390 Guantanamo detainees already released or transferred have rejoined Islamist militant comrades fighting against U.S. interests.

Democrats were skeptical that detainees could not easily be tried on U.S. soil or that inmates, the bulk of whom have been held for years, remain a source of vital intelligence.

Murtha openly ridiculed an assertion by Daniel Dell’Orto, the Pentagon’s principal deputy general counsel, that closing the Guantanamo Bay jail would “cripple” the U.S. intelligence effort against terrorism.

“This is beyond my belief,” Murtha said.

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/18578986/

Hezbollah builds a Western base - Nightly News with Brian Williams - MSNBC.com

Hezbollah builds a Western base - Nightly News with Brian Williams - MSNBC.com

Hezbollah builds a Western base
From inside South America’s Tri-border area, Iran-linked militia targets U.S.
By Pablo Gato and Robert Windrem
NBC News
Updated: 9:29 a.m. ET May 9, 2007

CIUDAD DEL ESTE, Paraguay - The Iranian-backed Hezbollah militia has taken root in South America, fostering a well-financed force of Islamist radicals boiling with hatred for the United States and ready to die to prove it, according to militia members, U.S. officials and police agencies across the continent.

From its Western base in a remote region divided by the borders of Paraguay, Brazil and Argentina known as the Tri-border, or the Triple Frontier, Hezbollah has mined the frustrations of many Muslims among about 25,000 Arab residents whose families immigrated mainly from Lebanon in two waves, after the 1948 Arab-Israeli war and after the 1985 Lebanese civil war.

An investigation by Telemundo and NBC News has uncovered details of an extensive smuggling network run by Hezbollah, a Shiite Muslim group founded in Lebanon in 1982 that the United States has labeled an international terrorist organization. The operation funnels large sums of money to militia leaders in the Middle East and finances training camps, propaganda operations and bomb attacks in South America, according to U.S. and South American officials.

U.S. officials fear that poorly patrolled borders and rampant corruption in the Tri-border region could make it easy for Hezbollah terrorists to infiltrate the southern U.S. border. From the largely lawless region, it is easy for potential terrorists, without detection, to book passage to the United States through Brazil and then Mexico simply by posing as tourists.

They are men like Mustafa Khalil Meri, a young Arab Muslim whom Telemundo interviewed in Ciudad del Este, Paraguay’s second-largest city and the center of the Tri-border region. There is nothing particularly distinctive about him, but beneath the everyday T-shirt he wears beats the heart of a devoted Hezbollah militiaman.

“If he attacks Iran, in two minutes Bush is dead,” Meri said. “We are Muslims. I am Hezbollah. We are Muslims, and we will defend our countries at any time they are attacked.”

Straight shot to the U.S.
U.S. and South American officials warn that Meri’s is more than a rhetorical threat.

It is surprisingly easy to move across borders in the Triple Frontier, where motorbikes are permitted to cross without documents. A smuggler can bike from Paraguay into Brazil and return without ever being asked for a passport, and it is not much harder for cars and trucks.

The implications of such lawlessness could be dire, U.S. and Paraguayan officials said. Rep. Silvestre Reyes, D-Texas, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said Hezbollah militiamen would raise no suspicions because they have Latin American passports, speak Spanish and look like Hispanic tourists.

The CIA singles out the Mexican border as an especially inviting target for Hezbollah operatives. “Many alien smuggling networks that facilitate the movement of non-Mexicans have established links to Muslim communities in Mexico,” its Counter Terrorism Center said in a 2004 threat paper.

“Non-Mexicans often are more difficult to intercept because they typically pay high-end smugglers a large sum of money to efficiently assist them across the border, rather than haphazardly traverse it on their own.”

Deadly legacy of a lawless frontier
Since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the Tri-border has become a top-level, if little-publicized, concern for Washington, particularly as tension mounts with Iran, Hezbollah’s main sponsor. Paraguayan government officials told Telemundo that CIA operatives and agents of Israel’s Mossad security force were known to be in the region seeking to neutralize what they believe could be an imminent threat.

But long before that, U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies regarded the region as a “free zone for significant criminal activity, including people who are organized to commit acts of terrorism,” Louis Freeh, then the director of the FBI, said in 1998.

Edward Luttwak, a counterterrorism expert with the Pentagon’s National Security Study Group, described the Tri-border as the most important base for Hezbollah outside Lebanon itself, home to “a community of dangerous fanatics that send their money for financial support to Hezbollah.”

“People kill with that, and they have planned terrorist attacks from there,” said Luttwak, who has been a terrorism consultant to the CIA and the National Security Council. “The northern region of Argentina, the eastern region of Paraguay and even Brazil are large terrains, and they have an organized training and recruitment camp for terrorists.”

“Our experience is that if you see one roach, there are a lot more,” said Frank Urbancic, principal deputy director of the State Department’s counterterrorism office, who has spent most of his career in the Middle East.

A mother lode of money
Operating out of the Tri-border, Hezbollah is accused of killing more than 100 people in attacks in nearby Buenos Aires, Argentina, during the early 1990s in operations personally masterminded by Hezbollah’s military commander, Imad Mugniyah.

Mugniyah is on the most-wanted terrorist lists of both the FBI and the European Union, and he is believed to work frequently out of Ciudad del Este.

For President Bush and the U.S.-led “war on terror,” the flourishing of Hezbollah in the Western Hemisphere demonstrates the worrying worldwide reach of Islamist radicalism. In the Tri-border, Hezbollah and other radical anti-U.S. groups have found a lucrative base from which to finance many of their operations.

Smuggling has long been the lifeblood of the Tri-border, accounting for $2 billion to $3 billion in the region, according to congressional officials. Several U.S. agencies said that Arab merchants were involved in smuggling cigarettes and livestock to avoid taxes, as well as cocaine and marijuana through the border with Brazil on their way to Europe. Some of the proceeds are sent to Hezbollah, they said.

Many Arabs in the Tri-border openly acknowledge that they send money to Hezbollah to help their families, and the man in charge of the local mosque in Ciudad del Este, who asked not to be identified by name, declared that Shiite Muslim mosques had “an obligation to finance it.”

But the U.S. government maintains that the money ends up stained with blood when it goes through Hezbollah, which is blamed for the bombings of the U.S. Embassy and the Marine barracks in Beirut, Lebanon, in the 1980s, as well as the kidnappings of Americans, two of whom were tortured and killed.

Patrick M. O’Brien, the assistant secretary of the Treasury in charge of fighting terrorist financing, acknowledged flatly that “we are worried.”

“Hezbollah has penetrated the area, and part of that smuggling money is used to finance terrorist attacks,” he said.

In Paraguay, looking the other way
The biggest obstacle in the U.S. campaign to counter Hezbollah close to home is Paraguay, whose “judicial system remains severely hampered by a lack of strong anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism legislation,” the State Department said in a “Patterns of Global Terrorism” report.

Since 2004, a draft bill to strengthen money laundering laws has been stalled in the Paraguayan legislature, and the government of President Nicanor Duarte has introduced no draft legislation of its own.

Hampering reform efforts is an endemic reluctance in Paraguay to acknowledge the problem.

Interior Minister Rogelio Benitez Vargas, who supervises the national police, claimed that Hezbollah-linked smuggling was a relic of the 1980s. Today, he said, the Triple Frontier is a safe and regulated “commercial paradise.”

But authorities from the U.S. State and Treasury departments to Interpol to the front-line Paraguayan police agencies all paint a different picture. Eduardo Arce, secretary of the Paraguayan Union of Journalists, said the government was widely considered to be under the control of drug traffickers and smugglers.

Without interference, thousands of people cross the River Parana every day from Paraguay to Brazil over the Bridge of Friendship loaded with products on which they pay no taxes. As police look the other way, he said, some smugglers cross the border 10 to 20 times a day. Earlier this year, Telemundo cameras were present as smugglers in Ciudad del Este loaded trucks headed for Brazil. They could have been laden with drugs or weapons, but no authorities ever checked.

Direct link to Iran alleged
José Adasco knows better than most why Hezbollah has the region in a grip of fear.

In 1992 and 1994, terrorists believed to be linked to Hezbollah carried out two attacks against Jewish targets in Buenos Aires, the Argentine capital. In the first, a car bomb exploded at the Israeli Embassy, killing 29 people. Two years later, a suicide bomber attacked the Argentine Israelite Mutual Association, a Jewish community center, killing 85 more.

Adasco, who represents the Jewish association, has never been able to forget that day and the friends he lost.

“Really, to see the knocked-down building, [to hear] the screams, the cries, people running — it was total chaos. Chaos, chaos. It is inexpressible,” he said.

An investigation by Interpol and the FBI found not only Hezbollah’s involvement, but Iran’s, as well. The Argentine prosecutor’s office said the Iranian president at the time, Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, ordered the attack to retaliate against Argentina for suspending nuclear cooperation with Iran.

A warrant for Rafsanjani’s arrest remains outstanding, and the prosecutor’s office continues its investigation 13 years later.

Hezbollah tells its story
Alberto Nisman, the Argentine district attorney leading the investigation, said the connection between the Hezbollah attack and the Tri-border is unquestionable. Among other things, he said, the suicide bomber passed through the area to receive instructions.

In the intervening years, Hezbollah has spread throughout Latin America.

On their Web page, local Hezbollah militants in Venezuela call their fight against the United States a “holy war” and post photographs of would-be suicide terrorists with masks and bombs. There are also Web sites for Hezbollah in Chile, El Salvador, Argentina and most other Latin American countries.

“The Paraguayan justice [ministry] and the national police have found propaganda materials for Hezbollah” across the hemisphere, said Augusto Anibal Lima of Paraguay’s Tri-border Police.

And it is not only propaganda. In October, homemade bombs were left in front of the U.S. Embassy in Caracas, Venezuela, which is next to a school.

Police arrested a student carrying Hezbollah propaganda in Spanish. One of the pamphlets showed a picture of children and said, “Combat is our highest expression of love and the only way to offer a healthy and uncorrupted world.”

Caracas police were able to detonate the bombs safely. Police Commissioner Wilfredo Borras said they appeared to be “explosive devices made to make noise and publicity” — very different from what would be used if the United States attacked Iran.

“In [the] United States, there are many Arabs — in Canada, too,” said Meri, the Hezbollah member who spoke with Telemundo. “If one bomb [strikes] Iran, one bomb, [Bush] will see the world burning.

“... If an order arrives, all the Arabs that are here, in other parts in the world, all will go to take bombs, bombs for everybody if he bombs Iran.”
© 2007 MSNBC InteractivePablo Gato is a correspondent for Telemundo. Robert Windrem is an investigative producer for NBC News.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17874369/

Italian hospital removes crucifixes - Europe - MSNBC.com

Italian hospital removes crucifixes - Europe - MSNBC.com

Italian hospital removes crucifixes
Crosses replaced with images of Virgin Mary in bid to placate immigrants
Reuters
Updated: 2:24 p.m. ET May 9, 2007

MILAN - A top Italian maternity hospital has drawn criticism from right-wing politicians for replacing crucifixes on the walls of its wards with images of the Virgin Mary so as not to offend immigrant women giving birth there.

Basilio Tiso, head of Milan’s Mangiagalli clinic where 7,000 women give birth each year, said it was felt the Virgin’s image was more fitting to motherhood and was less of a religious statement than a crucifix.

“We have so many people who come here from different backgrounds, different countries,” he told Reuters, adding that the move was intended to “help us all live together in a more civil way.”

But Carla De Albertis, a Milan town hall official in charge of health affairs, called the decision “folly.”

“If I went to a foreign country, I would never dream of asking them to take down a religious symbol representing their faith, culture and traditions,” she said.

“We should not lead people to believe that we are ashamed of our roots,” she said.

Ignazio La Russa, from the right-wing National Alliance, called on the hospital’s patients to take their own crosses with them and put them on the walls.

The Mangiagalli, Milan’s largest obstetric hospital, is known for its secular stance in defending women’s right to have an abortion in a predominantly Roman Catholic country where doctors can refuse to terminate pregnancies for religious motives.

“There weren’t many crosses in this hospital anyway and we thought the image of the Virgin Mary would be more fitting in a maternity ward,” Tiso said.

Italy has one of the lowest birth rates in the world and many of those who have babies are immigrants.
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/18576059/

U.S.: Iran may face more U.N. nuke sanctions - Focus on Iran - MSNBC.com

U.S.: Iran may face more U.N. nuke sanctions - Focus on Iran - MSNBC.com

U.S.: Iran may face more U.N. nuke sanctions
Official says new penalties can be averted if Tehran enters negotiations
Reuters
Updated: 3:43 p.m. ET May 9, 2007

BERLIN - Iran will face further sanctions in June if it continues to defy U.N. demands that it stop uranium enrichment work the West believes is at the center of a secret atom-bomb plan, a senior U.S. official said on Wednesday.

However, U.S. Under Secretary of State Nicholas Burns reiterated that sanctions would be suspended if Iran halted enrichment and returned to the negotiating table.

“If Iran doesn’t say yes to negotiations ... they’re going to find a third Security Council (sanctions) resolution in the month of June,” Burns told reporters at the U.S. embassy.

Iran has repeatedly stated it would not give up its nuclear fuel program which it says is aimed only at producing electricity. The West suspects Tehran wants to build bombs.

The United Nations has imposed two sets of sanctions after Iran rejected resolutions ordering it to freeze nuclear work.

Burns did not give a deadline for Iran to suspend enrichment but said if Tehran had not moved by the Group of Eight summit from June 6-8, it would be time to increase sanctions.

The United States, Britain, France and Germany have made a full suspension of enrichment work a condition for beginning negotiations. Iran says it wants to negotiate but not if it has to freeze enrichment.

“We have agreed that we will suspend our sanctions in the Security Council for the life of any negotiations,” Burns said, a statement in line with a U.N. resolution passed in March.

Burns is in Berlin for meetings with political directors from the G8 nations to prepare for the summit in Heiligendamm, Germany, and meetings on Iran with Germany and the other four permanent U.N. Security Council members -- Britain, France, Russia and China.

U.S. officials said the six world powers were originally planning to meet on Wednesday to discuss Iran. They will now meet early on Thursday. Among the discussion topics is the possible language for a sanctions resolution, diplomats said.

China would participate via telephone, Burns said.

More blacklisted banks possible
Among possible sanctions was an increase in the number of Iranian banks to be blacklisted by the United Nations, several diplomats said.

However, German Foreign Ministry spokesman Martin Jaeger said sanctions would not be on the agenda. The powers intended to prepare for the next meeting between EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana and Iranian nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani.

Solana met Larijani recently and said the meeting was very difficult as Iran had said it had no intention of suspending uranium enrichment.

One diplomat from a G-8 country said the draft of a statement on nuclear non-proliferation to be approved at the summit called for increasing pressure on Iran if it stays defiant.

Under the draft, the G8 would “support adopting further measures should Iran refuse to comply with its obligations,” said the diplomat, declining to be named.

Germany is the G8 president. Other members are the United States, Russia, Britain, France, Italy, Canada and Japan.

Several diplomats said the major powers were satisfied with the impact sanctions were having and that Iranians were growing increasingly worried about the economic pressures.

But Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi dismissed on Wednesday suggestions sanctions were having an impact.
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/18576251/

Iran's Foray Into Latin America - Newsweek: International Editions - MSNBC.com

Iran's Foray Into Latin America - Newsweek: International Editions - MSNBC.com

Iran's Foray Into Latin America
Washington now worries Iran is helping Hizbullah set up shop in Central and South America, but local governments are unimpressed by the claims.
By Joseph Contreras
Newsweek International

Feb. 5, 2007 issue - When Iran's firebrand president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, chose to visit three Latin American capitals earlier this month, there's little doubt he meant his trip to irritate the Great Satan to the north. Sure enough, it had just that effect; "Iran's track record does not suggest it wishes to play a constructive role in the hemisphere," said Eric Watnik, a U.S. State Department spokesman. But U.S. officials are worried about more than just Tehran's diplomacy these days. They fear that Iran might one day help its terrorist proxy, Hizbullah, set up shop throughout the United States' backyard. Indeed, Latin America could be emerging as a quiet new front in the war on terror. So far, however, most regional governments remain unmoved by Washington's requests that they clamp down, and the controversy could further damage some already fragile relationships.

The lawless tri-border region, where Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay meet, has long been a suspected locus for Hizbullah fund-raising, although the State Department continues to rate the threat of terror strikes as low in most of these countries. Last month U.S. Treasury officials issued a statement describing in detail how an established Hizbullah network, based in Ciudad del Este in eastern Paraguay, has sent millions of dollars to the terrorist group over the past two years. The report also fingered nine Lebanese men—most of whom hold Paraguayan or Brazilian passports—it claimed were running the operation.

Latin America is home to between 3 million and 6 million Muslims, many of whose forefathers came from Syria and Lebanon in the 19th century. They settled largely in Brazil (which now has more than 1.5 million Muslims), Argentina (which has 700,000), Venezuela and Colombia. The region is no stranger to terror operations allegedly bearing Tehran's stamp.. In November, an Argentine judge issued arrest warrants for Iran's ex-president, Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, and eight of his associates for complicity in the 1994 bombing of a Jewish community center in Buenos Aires that killed 85 people. An Argentine prosecutor has traced the planning for that operation to a 1993 meeting in the Iranian city of Mashhad. But Iran has denied the charges and said it would ignore any extradition requests from the government of President Néstor Kirchner. The case has yet to produce a single conviction and remains a sore point with Kirchner, who two weeks ago abruptly canceled plans to attend the Inauguration of Ecuador's new president, Rafael Correa, when he learned that Ahmadinejad would be there.

Sources in U.S. military intelligence have also identified Islamic radicals in the Brazilian cities of São Paulo and Curitiba, the Colombian town of Maicao, the Dutch Antilles island of Curaçao and the Chilean free port of Iquique, where one of Hizbullah's fund-raisers traveled frequently to raise cash. The mastermind of the 9/11 attacks, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, spent some time in Brazil in 1995, and another Qaeda operative named Adnan G. al-Shukrijumah visited Panama in 2001 while traveling on a passport issued by Trinidad and Tobago. Dozens of missionaries belonging to a Pakistani-based Islamic organization called Jamaat al-Tabligh are dispatched to the region each year in search of converts. "The bottom line is that there are Islamic radical groups throughout Latin America and the Caribbean and not just in the tri-border area," says a U.S. military intelligence official, who asked not to be named for security reasons. "Latin America is still an area where it's easy for people to move in and out of, and there are communities in which terrorists can hide." Now Iran's increased outreach may be making matters worse, say diplomats. Jaime Daremblum, a former Costa Rican ambassador to the United States, called Iran's new activism "a very explosive cocktail that's being mixed."

The State Department has credited Panama, El Salvador, Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica and Mexico with stepping up their antiterror activities. Yet to Washington's dismay, other local governments seem less willing to address the threat. The Brazilian Foreign Ministry responded to Washington's charges last month by stating that Brazil, Argentina and Paraguay had found no evidence to corroborate the U.S. allegations about terrorist financing activity in the tri-border area. Brasília went on to complain that "unilateral declarations that point arbitrarily to the triple border cause undue damage to the region." Some regional governments have adopted a see-no-evil attitude, treating Hizbullah fund-raising, for example, as innocent cases of Arab immigrants' sending cash remittances back home. "It's difficult sometimes to get these countries to talk about the presence of terrorist organizations within their borders," says Patrick O'Brien, assistant Treasury secretary for terrorist financing. "But Hizbullah is a global organization, and we certainly think [their Latin operatives] are major figures in [this] activity."

If some local governments appear reluctant to crack down on Iranian-backed groups or sever ties with Tehran, it may be because Ahmadinejad has worked hard to make himself an attractive friend. On his recent tour of the region, he promised to open an embassy in Managua, build dams and housing, and improve Nicaragua's drinking-water supplies. Meanwhile, Venezuela's President Hugo Chávez has worked closely with Iran inside OPEC to boost oil prices and has defended Ahmadinejad's nuclear ambitions. During the Iranian president's latest visit to Caracas, Chávez announced that a $2 billion investment fund previously established by the two countries would be used to "liberate" other nations from what he called "the imperialist yoke."

It's no surprise, then, that U.S. concerns keep growing. The United States' porous border with Mexico has long loomed as a tempting entry route for terrorists, and Latin America itself has until recently been what one expert calls a virtual "blind spot" in Washington's war against terror. "Law-enforcement officials are very concerned about [South America's] becoming a transit point [for terrorists], and [governments in the region] have yet to demonstrate in any serious fashion their counterterrorism capacity," says Magnus Ranstorp, a specialist in militant Islamic movements at the Swedish National Defense College. "If I were a terrorist today, I'd be hiding out in South America." If Washington's claims are right, some Islamic radicals have done just that, and with an expanding Iranian presence in the region, others may soon follow in their footsteps.
© 2007 Newsweek, Inc.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16840357/site/newsweek/

Al-Qaida said to recruit in Latin America - U.S. Security - MSNBC.com

Al-Qaida said to recruit in Latin America - U.S. Security - MSNBC.com

Al-Qaida said to recruit in Latin America
Region on alert amid growing evidence of terrorist presence
The Associated Press
Updated: 6:46 a.m. ET Aug 22, 2004

MONTERREY, Mexico - Governments throughout Mexico and Central America are on alert as evidence grows that al-Qaida members are traveling in the region and looking for recruits to carry out attacks in Latin America — the potential last frontier for international terrorism.

The territory could be a perfect staging ground for Osama bin Laden’s militants, with homegrown rebel groups, drug and people smugglers, and corrupt governments. U.S. officials have long feared al-Qaida could launch an attack from south of the border, and they have been paying closer attention as the number of terrorism-related incidents has increased since last year.

The strongest possible al-Qaida link is Adnan G. El Shukrijumah, a 29-year-old Saudi pilot suspected of being a terrorist cell leader. The FBI issued a border-wide alert earlier this month for Shukrijumah, saying he may try to cross into Arizona or Texas.

In June, Honduran officials said Shukrijumah was spotted earlier this year at an Internet cafe in Tegucigalpa, the capital of Honduras. Panamanian officials say the pilot and alleged bombmaker passed through their country before the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States.

U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft in May singled out Shukrijumah as one of seven especially dangerous al-Qaida-linked terrorist figures wanted by the government, which fears a new al-Qaida attack. A $5 million reward is posted for information leading to his capture.

'The alert has been sounded'
Mexican and U.S. border officials have been on extra alert, checking foreign passports and arresting any illegal migrants. In a sign of a growing Mexican crackdown, eight people from Armenia, Iran and Iraq were arrested Thursday in Mexicali on charges they may have entered Mexico with false documents, although they did not appear to have any terrorist ties.

Jose Luis Santiago Vasconcelos, Mexico’s top anti-crime prosecutor, said Mexican officials have no evidence that Shukrijumah — or any other al-Qaida operatives — are in Mexico. But Mexican authorities are investigating and keeping a close eye on the airports and borders.

“The alert has been sounded,” Vasconcelos told The Associated Press last month.

In Central America, Honduran Security Minister Oscar Alvarez said officials have uncovered evidence that terrorists, likely from al-Qaida, may be trying to recruit Hondurans to carry out attacks in Central America. He did not offer details.

El Salvador authorities last week reinforced security at the country’s international airport and along the borders after purported al-Qaida threats appeared on the Internet against their country for supporting the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq. President Tony Saca, undeterred, is sending the country’s third peacekeeping unit — 380 troops — to Iraq.

Terrorists have struck in Asia, Europe, Africa, the Middle East and the United States. Latin America could be next, analysts say, especially as it becomes harder to operate elsewhere.

“If there is a crackdown, they are going to pick up shop and move,” said Matt Levitt, a terrorism analyst and senior fellow at the Washington Institute.

Officials worry the Panama Canal could be a likely target. In 2003, boats making more than 13,000 trips through the waterway carried about 188 million tons of cargo.

Earlier this month, the United States and seven Latin American countries — including Argentina, Chile, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Honduras, Peru and Panama — carried out a weeklong anti-terror exercise aimed at protecting the canal.

In South America, U.S. officials have long suspected Paraguay’s border with Brazil and Argentina as an area for Islamic terrorist fund-raising. Much of the focus has fallen on the Muslim community that sprouted during the 1970s, and authorities believe as much as $100 million a year flows out of the region, with large portions diverted to Islamic militants linked to Hezbollah and the Palestinian militant group Hamas.

But Mexico remains a concern for U.S.
The more immediate concern is Mexico, which shares a porous, 2,000-mile border with the United States and is the home to widespread organized crime.

In December, Mexican officials canceled two Aeromexico flights from Mexico City to Los Angeles, and a third was forced to turn around after takeoff because of terrorism concerns.

At the time, the United States, Canada and Interpol told Mexico that officials suspected terrorists might be using Mexican soil to plan an attack, Vasconcelos said.

Concerns increased this summer about whether Mexico was doing enough to screen international visitors after a 48-year-old South African woman arrived in Mexico with a passport that was missing several pages and then waded across the Rio Grande into Texas.

Farida Goolam Mahamed Ahmed was arrested July 19 while trying to board a flight in McAllen, Texas. She pleaded innocent Friday to immigration violations and was under investigation for links to terrorist activities or groups. Court testimony indicated she traveled from Johannesburg on July 8, via Dubai, United Arab Emirates, to London, then to Mexico City on or about July 14. The countries she traveled through do not require South Africans to have visas.

Mexican officials said Ahmed was not stopped upon entering Mexico because her name did not appear on any international terrorist watch-lists.

Mexican officials say they are closely scrutinizing visa requests from the Middle East and have heightened surveillance at the nation’s largest airports since Sept. 11.

“The requirements for a visa for people from the Middle East have not changed, but all requests are being checked more thoroughly,” said Mauricio Juarez, a spokesman with Mexico’s Migration Institute.

The country is a popular U.S. entry point for people trying to sneak into the United States, and the majority — 46 percent — of all people arrested on immigration violations in Mexico come from Brazil. The rest are largely from the Americas, China or Singapore.

It has become nearly impossible for people from Muslim countries to get visas to come to Mexico since the Sept. 11 attacks.

Fayesa Amin, a 37-year-old Pakistani, started the process to get a Mexican visa two months before she was to attend a wedding in Mexico. The Mexican consulate in Karachi asked her to fill out several forms and to turn in copies of her credit card and bank statements for a full year.

Amin, who runs three beauty salons in Pakistan, said Mexican authorities told her a visa had been approved and it could be picked up in London. But Mexican officials there said her visa was being held in Ankara, Turkey. In the end, she ended up spending her holiday stranded in London.

“I knew it would be hard to get to that part of the world and that everything had become more difficult,” Amin said in a telephone interview from Islamabad. “But I didn’t realize how hard it could be.”
© 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5786549/

Putin Is Said to Compare U.S. Policies to Third Reich

ny times
President Vladimir V. Putin seemed to obliquely compare the foreign policy of the United States to the Third Reich in a speech on Wednesday commemorating the 62nd anniversary of the defeat of Nazi Germany.

The comments were the latest in a series of sharply worded Russian criticisms of the foreign policy of the United States — on Iraq, missile defense, NATO expansion and, more broadly, United States unilateralism in foreign affairs.

Many Russians say the sharper edge reflects a frustration that Russia’s views, in particular opposition to NATO expansion, have been ignored in the West. Outside of Russia, however, many detected in the new tone a return to cold-war-style antagonism, emboldened by petroleum wealth.

Mr. Putin’s analogy was a small part of a larger speech, otherwise unambiguously congratulating Russian veterans of World War II, known here as the Great Patriotic War. Mr. Putin spoke from a podium in front of Lenin’s mausoleum on Red Square before troops mustered for a military parade.

Mr. Putin called Victory Day a holiday of “huge moral importance and unifying power” for Russia, and went on to enumerate the lessons of that conflict for the world today.

“We do not have the right to forget the causes of any war, which must be sought in the mistakes and errors of peacetime,” Mr. Putin said.

“Moreover, in our time, these threats are not diminishing,” he said. “They are only transforming, changing their appearance. In these new threats, as during the time of the Third Reich, are the same contempt for human life and the same claims of exceptionality and diktat in the world.”

The Kremlin press service declined to clarify the statement, saying Mr. Putin’s spokesman was unavailable because of the holiday.

Sergei A. Markov, director of the Institute of Political Studies, who works closely with the Kremlin, said in a telephone interview that Mr. Putin was referring to the United States and NATO. Mr. Markov said the comments should be interpreted in the context of a wider, philosophical discussion of the lessons of World War II. The speech also praised the role of the allies of the Soviet Union in defeating Germany.

Zulueta, the "King," and Lowney

the news today
Where else can you find a public official of national stature who, instead of making initiatives to ensure a clean and honest poll, this "King of Justice" allegedly employs trickery that includes vending of votes (for a 12-0 senate win) to the tune of P10,000?

On top of it all, this so-called "political nincompoop and oxymoron" has even duped some barangay chieftains to ensure the loss of two non-administration candidates, Lex Tupas and Perla Zulueta, for city councilors.

This kind of desperate move is beyond comprehension that even his buddies (also known as dogs, for obvious reasons) can't help but stand still and drool in awe.

I can speak less for Tupas except that he is young, a son of another contentious fellow, a Cable TV Jockey if you will, and a graduate of Ateneo de Manila University. Hence, I would like to zero in the issue that only concerns the staunch fiscalizer Zulueta.

Re-electionist Zulueta has been in metro politics for a long time already and her trailblazing performance (especially against graft and corruption) is beyond reproach. In fact, even in the context of a thinking ally of the administration, it is very difficult to campaign against her for it is simply corrupt to throw away a worthy proposition.

It is as if the city council without Zulueta is like a car without breaks. Her presence in the august hall is highly essential that her absence may mean a local ruling body that will end up blindfolded and that will work like the "King's" stamping pad.

For this man (in all his imperfections, hunger to power, and recklessness) wants Iloilo to function, with him holding the puppet strings. He seems to see himself as the "Angel of Light" and us his non-thinking minions. And these are all given emphasis in how this supposed public servant deals with us, with the law, and with the ballot. History, Benjie Gengos, and Conrado de Quiros are our witnesses.

I understand though where the anger of the "King" came from. I remember before that Inday Perla humiliated him in an interview in the Inquirer. She called him a liar for saying the Supreme Court lifted his indefinite suspension as a lawyer voluntarily and without any appeal from his part.

Zulueta, the Iron Lady of the City Council, instead said in an interview that he "went down to his knees and begged the SC justices to reinstate him in the rolls of lawyers." Nevertheless, the dirty ploys of this cabinet clown against Tupas and Zulueta (and even against all the other anti-administration candidates) is a crystal sign of the worst to come. Henceforth, a conscious effort from the silent majority must be done to counter this clear and present threat. His ways of the world must be answered by our ways of the Word.

Therefore, let this May 14 Elections be the next big thing. Vote well and make the "King" run like hell.

***

Last week I was so privileged to be part of the Workshop on Ignatian School Leadership in Antipolo City sponsored by the Jesuit Basic Education Commission (JBEC) and the Ignatian Institute for Teaching Excellence (IGNITE).

The four-day in-house affair, participated in by 30 or so top and mid-level educators from eight Ateneo's and other Jesuit schools in the country, covers sharing of concerns, strategies, and resolutions on administrative, academic and community leadership--all anchored in the Ignatian ideals of magis (more) and cura personalis (care for self, care for others), among others.

What struck me most is the topic on Herioc Leadership in the words of Chris Lowney, a former Jesuit seminarian.

What can a 16th-century priest tell a 21st-century education leader about leadership? Plenty, Lowney believes.

Here he points out that from a 10-man "company" founded by St. Ignatius of Loyola in 1540, the Jesuits are now the world's largest religious order, with 21,000 professionals. Jesuits have successfully grappled with challenges that test great companies-forging seamless multinational teams, motivating performance, being open to change and staying adaptable.

In the seminar, it was stressed that in Lowney's heroic leadership, an effective leader must have personal reference with the four Jesuit pillars of success: self-awareness (reflection), ingenuity (embracing change), love (positive attitudes toward others) and heroism (energizing ambitions).

Despite the emphasis on the four pillars, this is no formulaic "steps-to-success." Rather than focusing on what leaders do, it shows how the Jesuit approach focuses on who leaders are.

Let's take the case of "self-awareness." Here, it is stressed that a leader must understand his strengths, weaknesses, values, and worldview. This sense of acceptance and discernment will give the person the right condition and tool to make logical and better decisions in the proper context.

But self-awareness must also be peppered with a great sense of ingenuity. One must be confident enough to make innovations and adaptations to a changing world that we have. This is an essential ingredient, especially in the present times for our fast-paced setting.

In the same token, a leader must also engage others with a positive attitude that unlocks their potentials. The approach towards people must be supportive rather than punitive, dogmatic or anything in between. The adaptive challenges must be addressed more than the technical challenges, for the former is more lasting and effective than the latter.

And all these should be powered by the right engine to push everybody forward to a well-thought-of goal. Energizing oneself and others with heroic ambitions and a passion for excellence is a must for a proactive leader. In essence, one must embrace ambitious goals and a passion to excel.

The four principles address a person's whole life--personal and professional--and are rooted in the idea that we are all leaders. They form an integrated way of living, a modo de proceder ("our way of doing things") as the Jesuits called it.

The Jesuit approach scraps the "command and control" model that relies on one great person to lead the rest. Convinced that people perform best in a supportive climate, Loyola and his colleagues sought to create environments filled with "greater love than fear." They lodged their hopes in the talents of their entire team, showing that success flows from the commitment of many, not the isolated efforts of one.

This points how the same principles that inspired sixteenth-century Jesuits can still mold dynamic leaders in the twenty-first century in all walks of life. Indeed, it is a point well taken.

Register in cahoots with Council on Foreign Relations

Napa Valley Register
I have been noticing that the Napa Valley Register is using guest editorials from members of the Council on Foreign Relations.

This New York-based organization is the most visible exponent of America’s Insider establishment and has worked for decades to submerge the United States in a one-world government ruled by the elite. Their timeline now is to dissolve our Republic into a North American Union by the year 2010.

The CFR has successfully kept on track by relying on the controlled media to pave its way, and the Napa Valley Register is no exception. From Dec. 25 through Jan. 25, the Register used 19 CFR guest editorials out of the 32 days. That relates to about 60 percent of the time.

The Register’s main source is the Washington Post, also known as the CFR mouthpiece. At least 22 CFR members are in high-level staff positions. From columnists like Anne Applebaum to editor Fred Hiatt to Vice President of the Washington Post Company Christopher Ma. Even the company’s former president, Alan Spoon, is a member. CFR mastermind David Rockefeller said, “We are grateful to the Washington Post, New York Times, Time Magazine and other great publications whose directors have attended our meetings and respected their promises of discretion for almost 40 years. It would have been impossible for us to develop our plan for the world if we had been subjected to the lights of publicity during those years. But, the world is now more sophisticated and prepared to march towards a world government. The supranational sovereignty of an intellectual elite and world bankers is surely preferable to the national auto-determination practiced in past centuries.” — David Rockefeller, Baden-Baden, Germany, 1991.

The Napa Valley Register doesn’t limit the CFR to the editorial page. Articles throughout have CFR written all over them. An example is the Washington Post “Scary climate change scenarios motivate kids” article the Register posted on B4 of the April 22 edition. This newspaper doesn’t even rely totally on the Washington Post or CFR columnists like Morton Kondracke, for it seems to spew out garbage all on its own, all in concert with the CFR. It has dumped a huge amount of global warming propaganda on readers, enough to turn some locals into total idiots.

Controlled media like the Register use two main methods to generate propaganda. One, it excludes news that will discredit its motive. For example, it pushed Al Gore’s “An Inconvenient Truth,” but then excluded “The Great Global Warming Swindle” documentary. It would have been easy to reprint the June 24, 1974, Time article titled “Another Ice Age?” which stated “Climatological Cassandras are becoming increasingly apprehensive, for the weather aberrations they are studying may be the harbinger of another ice age.” Second, the Register makes outright lies seem plausible. A good example here is a Register comment on Cesar Chavez, “He employed cunning political skills, tireless efforts and non-violent means including worker strikes.”

Maybe using a $267,887 education grant from Office of Economic Opportunity to finance his strikes is cunning. Using coworker Wendy Goepel to write the application and having Dolores Huerta go to Washington for the money is tireless. And having 44 picketers arrested in Delano for storming onto ranches and dumping grapes is, of course, non-violent. Also, Dolores Huerta was a Communist, as were most of the people working with him and for her effort the Communist paper “The People’s World” placed her picture on the front page of their Oct. 2, 1965 issue. The Register referred to her as “another famous farm-worker advocate.”

The Register also controls the local media issues promoting big taxes, big development, big government and candidates of that sort. This is called job security. The more people you can cram into a valley, the more subscriptions and advertising you can sell.

While surfing the Internet news services like www.worldnetdaily.com or www.thenewamerican.com, which are not controlled so far, one discovers the Register blacklists issues that are contrary to the CFR’s plan for world domination. For example, did you know that Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, is running for president? At the time this commentary was submitted, not one word of this appeared. He supports the U.S. Constitution and is against the CFR’s North American Union. The Register has avoided any news on the unconstitutional NAU, its currency, the “Amero” that is proposed to replace the dollar and NAFTA’s super highway. Instead, it dumped numerous articles supporting illegal immigration, which is a primer to implementing the NAU.

The Napa Valley Register has displayed a complete allegiance to the CFR and, by doing so, has become an obvious hypocrite flying the American flag above its building. I suggest the Register either lower its American flag or break its ties with the CFR.

Ethiopia - Eritrea Dismisses UN Call for Border Peace With Ethiopia

nazret.com
09 May 2007 -- The government of Eritrea is defending its right to send troops into the disputed border region with Ethiopia.

Eritrean officials told a government-run newspaper Wednesday they blame the United Nations for the region's instability, saying it has failed to implement a five-year old border agreement.

On Tuesday, the United Nations Security Council said it is "deeply concerned" by growing tension between Eritrea and Ethiopia.

The council urged both countries to withdraw their forces from within and near the buffer zone.

The Security Council asked Ethiopia to implement a 2002 border ruling without delay, and urged Eritrea to end all restrictions on U.N. monitors.

Ethiopia and Eritrea fought a two year border war that killed some 70,000 people and ended in 2000.

The 2002 ruling by an independent border commission granted Eritrea the border town of Badme but Ethiopia has rejected that decision.

Source: VOA News

U.S. Stocks Fall on Earnings Concern; Whole Foods Shares Plunge

May 10 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks dropped after profit trailed analysts' estimates at Whole Foods Market Inc. and EchoStar Communications Corp. and the biggest rise in import prices in almost a year reduced prospects the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates.

Whole Foods plunged to the lowest since October 2004 after costs to open new stores and increased competition sent profit lower at the nation's largest natural-foods grocer. EchoStar fell as the operator of the Dish satellite-television service said increased spending on new services caused net income to miss analysts' projections.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average has climbed to six records in the past eight days, helped by better-than-expected earnings and takeover speculation. Profit growth for S&P 500 companies averaged 12.1 percent in the first three months of the year after 87 percent of the index's members reported results. Analysts expect earnings growth to slow to 3.8 percent this quarter.

``The market may be getting a little bit ahead of itself,'' said Kevin Divney, who manages $8 billion as chief investment officer at Putnam Investments in Boston. ``One concern now is whether the consumer is leveraged more than we understand with too much of their wealth tied to real estate.''

The Dow average lost 57.37, or 0.4 percent, to 13,305.50 as of 10:05 a.m. in New York. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index fell 6.36, or 0.4 percent, to 1506.22. The Nasdaq Composite Index decreased 11.36, or 0.4 percent, to 2564.98.

Economy Watch

The Fed, which yesterday kept its main interest rate unchanged at 5.25 percent, reiterated its assessment that persistent inflation remains a concern. Policy makers also said the economy slowed in the first part of the year and the housing market has yet to stabilize.

In economic reports today, prices of goods imported rose for a third month in April. The 1.3 percent increase in the import price index followed a 1.5 percent gain in March. Prices excluding fuel rose 0.2 percent.

Separately, the nation's trade deficit widened more than forecast in March as higher crude oil shipments drove the biggest increase in imports in more than four years. The gap widened 10.4 percent to $63.9 billion from $57.9 billion in February, the Commerce Department said.

Also, initial jobless claims unexpectedly dropped to 297,000 last week. Economists expected an increase to 315,000.

Retailers

Whole Foods plunged $5.11, or 11 percent, to $40.69 for the steepest decline in the S&P 500. The grocer said second-quarter net income fell 11 percent to $46 million, or 32 cents a share, 4 cents short of estimates.

EchoStar said net income rose to 35 cents a share from 33 cents a year earlier. Profit missed the 44-cent average of analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. The shares lost $1.04 to $47.13.

Hershey Co. cut its full-year profit forecast on higher costs for dairy ingredients. The largest U.S. candy maker said diluted earnings per share from operations will rise between 4 percent and 6 percent. That's less than its April 19 forecast for a gain on that basis of at least 7 percent. The shares dropped $1.90 to $53.09.

Alcoa Inc. was the biggest drag on the Dow industrials, dropping 73 cents to $38. Chief Executive Officer Alain Belda said the company is willing to sell assets to win regulatory approval for its $26.9 billion Alcan Inc. bid, which would create the world's largest aluminum producer. Alcan shares gained 14 cents to $78.45.

U.S. Bombs Taliban Bases, Probes Report Afghan Villagers Killed

May 10 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. military said it carried out air strikes on Taliban bases in southern Afghanistan and is investigating reports that at least 21 civilians were killed in the operation.

American-led forces called in air support during the 16-hour battle two days ago in Helmand province's Sangin district, after troops were attacked by more than 200 insurgents, the military said. Women and children were among the dead when war planes bombed a village in the district, Agence France-Presse reported, citing cited Assadullah Wafa, the governor of Helmand province.

``We are still working on confirming reports of civilian casualties through official channels,'' U.S. military spokesman Major Chris Belcher said by telephone today from Bagram airbase near the Afghan capital, Kabul. ``We take every report of civilian casualties seriously and investigate them.''

Afghan President Hamid Karzai last week told NATO and U.S. officials the nation can no longer tolerate civilian deaths after at least 49 villagers were killed in a coalition raid in western Herat province. Such incidents are a set back to Karzai's government and the coalition, which are trying to win the support of Afghans as they seek to quell a Taliban insurgency and stabilize the country.

North Atlantic Treaty Organization spokesman James Appathurai told reporters in Brussels yesterday that any civilian deaths in Afghanistan are ``tragic,'' although he could not confirm villagers were killed in the May 8 U.S.-led operation.

International forces are ``determined to make every effort to minimize civilian casualties and maintain the support'' of Afghan people, Appathurai told reporters.

`Human Shields'

``I think we have to take into account the profound complication of operations in Afghanistan, where the Taliban does not wear uniforms, where they fight out of urban areas, where they fight out of houses, where they do use civilians as human shields,'' Appathurai added.

U.S. Special Forces and the Afghan National Army were attacked with small arms fire, mortar rounds and rocket propelled grenades near the village of Lwar Malazi in Sangin on May 8, the military said in an e-mailed statement.

War planes destroyed three Taliban ``command and control compounds,'' including a tunnel network, according to the statement. One coalition soldier was killed.

U.S. Apology

The U.S. military formally apologized two days ago for a March 4 incident in which American soldiers killed Afghan civilians by opening fire on a crowded highway in Nangarhar province after being attacked by a suicide bomber.

The incident, in which 19 people were killed and 50 others were injured, was a ``stain on our honor,'' U.S. Army spokesman Colonel John Nicholson told reporters.

The U.S. has about 10,000 soldiers carrying out anti- terrorism operations in Afghanistan, including the hunt for Osama bin Laden, and 15,000 under NATO command. The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force, drawn from 37 countries, has about 37,000 soldiers.

The Pentagon announced yesterday it will keep troop numbers at the same level through 2008. The deployment of soldiers from the 101st Airborne Division early next year, to replace troops already in the country, reflects the U.S. commitment to the NATO mission and ``to perform counterterrorism operations, assist with reconstruction and to train and equip Afghan security forces,'' Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman told reporters.

At least 230 Afghan civilians were killed last year during U.S. and NATO operations because of lack of precautions or the use of indiscriminate force, U.S.-based Human Rights Watch said in a report last month.

Taliban bombings more than doubled last year, compared with 2005, killing at least 669 Afghans, according to the report. Fifty-two civilians died in insurgent attacks in the first two months of 2007.

Marine describes massacre of Iraqis

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ANGERED that a popular member of his squad had been killed in an explosion, a US marine urinated on one of 24 Iraqi civilians killed by his unit in Haditha, the marine has admitted.

Sergeant Sanick Dela Cruz, who has immunity from prosecution after murder charges against him were dismissed, also testified on Wednesday that he watched his squad leader shoot dead five Iraqi civilians who had surrendered.

In dramatic testimony in a pre-trial hearing for one of the seven marines charged over the Haditha killings and alleged cover-up two years ago, Sergeant Dela Cruz described his bitterness after a roadside bomb killed Lance Corporal Miguel Terrazas, known as TJ, ripping his body into two bloody pieces.

"I know it was a bad thing what I've done, but I done it because I was angry TJ was dead and I pissed on one Iraqi's head," an unemotional Sergeant Dela Cruz told the hearing in a military courtroom.

He said he watched the squad leader, Sergeant Frank Wuterich, shoot five men whose hands were tied up near a car.

Wuterich "walked to me and told me that if anybody asked, they were running away and the Iraqi Army shot them", Sergeant Dela Cruz testified.

Three marines have been charged with murder and four officers have been charged with dereliction of duty and obstructing the investigation.

Prosecutors say the killings were revenge for Lance Corporal Terrazas's death, while the marines say it was a clearing operation, conducted under lawful orders, that had disastrous results.

Wuterich's lawyer, Neal Puckett, later said that Sergeant Dela Cruz's testimony was false.

"It's about the fourth or fifth version of events we've heard from Sergeant Dela Cruz," Mr Puckett said. "It's just so sad that he is being required to testify against his fellow [marines] in order to guarantee his freedom. He's a victim, too."

The Marine Corps initially reported the deaths as a result of the roadside bombing and a gun battle with insurgents. However, a report in Time last year prompted an investigation.

Sergeant Dela Cruz said he was asked four times to lie about what happened in Haditha, although no one asked him about the killings for a time.

Another marine, Sergeant Albert Espinosa, testified that he pressed for an investigation of the killings almost immediately after they occurred, but was frustrated by the apparent indifference of his commanding officers.

REVIEW: Blair decade leaves a double-edged legacy

M&C
London - During his 10 years at the helm of British politics, Prime Minister Tony Blair, at once charismatic and controversial, has put his stamp on an era that will forever be linked to his name.

Blairism will be a dirty word for those believing that New Labour reforms have fallen short of expectations, and that an aggressive foreign policy has tarnished Britain's reputation abroad.

But others will credit the longest-ever serving Labour leader with having transformed and modernized his party, and with it Britain's entire political landscape, to bring it into the 21st century.

'He caused British politics to pivot on an axis of delivery and accomplishment rather than on the creaking axis of class versus class and ideology versus ideology,' Professor Anthony King, a leading political analyst at Essex University, said.

By jettisoning socialism, loosening ties with the trade unions and proving that Labour can successfully run the economy, Blair had made the party electable.

'Blair's triumph lay not in moving Labour from the far left to the centre, but in abolishing left, right and centre,' King said in an assessment of the Blair decade.

In that way, Blair's achievements have been compared with the profound changes brought about under the 1980s leadership of Conservative ex-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, a politician Blair is known to have admired.

Despite having won three consecutive election victories - a record in Labour Party history - Blair has not succeeded in his ambition to surpass Thatcher's rule of 11 and a half years.

Blair brought about fundamental changes on the domestic front. But analysts agree that foreign policy has been the defining feature of his Labour government.

While initial initiatives, such as military campaigns in Kosovo, Sierra Leone and Afghanistan were judged a 'qualified success,' Blair's response to the September 11 attacks in the US, and the subsequent invasion of Iraq, is seen as having marked a watershed in British foreign policy.

'The post-9/11 decision to invade Iraq was a terrible mistake and the current debacle will have policy repercussions for many years to come,' the Royal Institute of International Affairs, also known as Chatham House, said in a recent assessment of the Blair years.

'The root failure of Blair's foreign policy has been its inability to influence the Bush administration in any significant way despite the sacrifice - military, political and financial - that the United Kingdom has made,' the report said.

'Iraq may have been the defining moment of Tony Blair's premiership,' it concluded.

An opinion poll published in the Observer newspaper showed that 58 per cent of Britons judge the Iraq war as being Blair's 'biggest failure,' and two-thirds believed he had 'just followed America.'

Blair had also been unable to prevent Britain's standing in the Middle East 'from declining sharply' despite his willingness to invest personal political capital to tackle the most sensitive issues.

He had not 'fully reaped the dividend' that might have been expected to come from India's close historical ties with Britain, and allowed his government to be 'dragged into a classic European fudge' over lifting the arms embargo on China.

The European dimension of Blair's foreign policy had suffered from the divisions caused by the Iraq invasion, a trend enhanced by the 'crumbling of the European project' following the rejection of the constitution in key member states.

'Britain is no longer the outlier when it comes to Europe, but British influence is strictly limited and the British public is still uncomfortable in its European skin,' said the Chatham House report.

The most positive part of Blair's legacy in foreign affairs would be climate change policy, an area where Blair's 'powers of persuasion' had been effective in pushing the international agenda, analysts said.

The same was true of the focus placed on Africa by the Blair government, while the conclusion of the peace process in Northern Ireland must rate as Blair's 'biggest success.'

'Tony Blair will have an enormous political legacy. There can be no doubt about that. The trouble is, it will comprise large debts as well as assets, and history will have to decide the balance,' Professor King concluded.