Tuesday, May 22, 2007

9/11 Debunkers Hide From Slam Dunk Evidence Of Controlled Demolition


Electron microscope analysis of steel spheres from WTC site proves thermate, proves collapse of twin towers was an act of deliberate arson
prisonplanet
Professor Steven Jones presented brand new and compelling evidence for the controlled demolition of the twin towers and WTC 7 recently, but the 9/11 debunkers and the corporate media are loathe to tackle it because it represents a slam dunk on proving the collapse of the buildings was a deliberate act of arson.

During a talk at the Rebuilding America's Senses event at the University of Texas last month, Jones laid out facts about steel samples recovered from the WTC site that Popular Mechanics dare not even attempt to debate. Debunkers are scared to even get near this information because the science behind it fundamentally contradicts the official story of what happened on 9/11.

Jones detailed his lab experiments in which he attempted to replicate NIST's conclusion that the lava like orange material flowing out of the south tower is aluminum from Flight 175, the plane that hit the building. Jones clearly documents the fact that liquid aluminum is silver and not orange as is seen in the video of the south tower, therefore the material cannot be aluminum. Jones then explains that the material is in fact a compound that can cut through steel like a hot knife through butter, thermite with sulphur added to make thermate.

The crux of the fresh evidence revolves around newly uncovered globules or spheres that were discovered at the WTC site that Professor Jones was able to obtain and run a electron microscope analysis on.

The spheres contained iron and aluminum, which would be expected in any steel sample, but also sulphur which is a by-product of a thermate reaction.

So having moved from a hypothesis that thermate was used to bring down the towers from using video footage and debunking the aluminum explanation of NIST, Jones now has empirical scientific proof, undertaken under laboratory conditions, that thermate was indeed used as an artificial explosive at the World Trade Center.

It has now been proven beyond a shadow of a doubt that the collapse of the twin towers and WTC 7 was an act of deliberate arson and not as a result of fires from crashing planes.

Jones' evidence offers no other conclusion that insiders planted thermite devices within the buildings to literally pulverize the supporting columns and cause the collapse of the towers and also WTC 7. Debunkers have uniformly failed to address the existence of thermite and also molten metal at the ground zero site because they cannot dismiss the scientific proof, and are forced to resort to ad hominem insults and smears.

We are issuing a challenge to Popular Mechanics to rebut Professor Jones' analysis of the sphere samples and the clear evidence of thermate at the World Trade Center. Address the focused scientific proof without resorting to ad hominem attacks or straying off topic.

We don't expect the progenitors of yellow journalism to have any answers for what constitutes the smoking gun of controlled demolition.

Major Media Still in Denial Over North American Union

JBS
"Forget conspiracy theories about JFK's assassination, black helicopters, Sept. 11, 2001. This is the big one. We're talking about the secret plan to build a superhighway, a giant 10- to 12-lane production, from the Yucatán to the Yukon," snidely commented the Seattle Times.

While the mainstream media blackout remains essentially still in effect on the effort to merge the United States into a North American Union (except for the likes of the Seattle Times), cracks in the system continue to propagate down into local media outlets.

Today, the number one morning talk show in Greensboro, North Carolina offered a case in point as to how those who are willing to keep chipping away at the system might eventually succeed. Going into their interview with Congressman Howard Coble this morning, Brad and Britt read a letter from Roxane Premont of the ad-hoc grassroots group North Carolinians to Stop the North American Union.

Roxane had complained that the screener for their show was not letting calls come through that were trying to link the pending amnesty sell-out by our U.S. Senate to the larger effort to effectively erase our borders with Canada and Mexico via the Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP) launched by the Bush administration in March of 2005. While it was an honorable gesture to read Roxane's letter on the air, Brad and Britt went on to say that trying to equate the SPP to a EU like North American Union sounds too much like a "conspiracy theory." The "C" word being employed, no further explanation was apparently necessary.

In defense of Brad and Britt's current opinion on the matter, I can concede this much: Yes, the effort to expose the North American Union scheme is rife with members and sympathizers of The John Birch Society as well as avid supporters of Ron Paul, who Sean Hannity and Michelle Malkin have on their black list. Peter Brimelow, who is supposedly on the Brad and Britt show's own black list, is also saying mean things about the North American Union scheme.

However, here are the facts that Brad and Britt continue to ignore for some reason or other:

* 18 states have introduced resolutions calling on their federal representatives to halt work on the North American Union (they include Virginia and South Carolina)
* 3 of these states (Idaho, Montana and Oklahoma) have passed their resolutions
* Oklahoma, which is in the path of the NAFTA superhighway component of the North American Union passed their resolution in the Senate 97-0. (see Basic Search Form link - top left - type in SCR10)
* 22 U.S. Congressmen, including NC's Virginia Foxx and Walter Jones, along with all three Republican Congressmen running for President, have signed on as co-sponsors of HCR40, which calls on the executive branch to end all work on the North American Union and NAFTA superhighway
* Even the Sierra Club of Canada is sounding the alarm against the North American Union

I could go on, but I'll close on this: Lou Dobbs, who has been talking non-stop on the North American Union for almost two years, has watched his rating double over that time period. And, he has just landed an additional gig on CBS. Really, it is not like discussing this topic occasionally is going to sink the ratings of Brad and Britt in the Morning, or even the ongoing dwindling circulation of the Seattle Times.

Against all this though, Brad and Britt and the Seattle Times seem willing to stand their ground on nothing better than the arguments of fact vs. myth put out by the same Bush Administration apparatchiks who told us to trust them on WMD. They wouldn't being lying to us now, would they?

By keeping organized pressure on these media mavens, we will eventually meet with success either by gaining air-time or influence with others in the community through the media's continued silence in the face of a growing mountain of facts.

Path to National Suicide

Patrick J. Buchanan
“At what point, then, is the approach of danger to be expected?

“I answer, if it ever reach us, it must spring up amongst us. It cannot come from abroad. If destruction be our lot, we must ourselves be its author and finisher. As a nation of freemen, we must live through all time, or die by suicide.”

So said Abe Lincoln to the Young Men’s Lyceum in Springfield. Observing the Senate last week, and looking over the latest figures from the Census Bureau, America is now risking national suicide.

Last week, senators meeting in secret produced a bill to legalize our 12 million to 20 million illegal aliens. If a path to citizenship becomes law, nothing will stop the next invasion. As President Bush acknowledges, 6 million tried to breach our southern border in his first five years. One in 12 – 500,000 – had a criminal record.

According to the Census Bureau, from mid-2005 to mid-2006, the U.S. minority population rose 2.4 million, to exceed 100 million. Hispanics, 1 percent of the population in 1950, are now 14.4 percent. Their total number has soared 25 percent since 2000 alone. The Asian population has also grown by 25 percent since 2000.

The number of white kids of school age fell 4 percent, however. Half the children 5 and younger in the United States are now minorities.

What is happening to us? An immigrant invasion of the United States from the Third World, as America’s white majority is no longer even reproducing itself. Since Roe v. Wade, America has aborted 45 million of her children. And Asia, Africa and Latin America have sent 45 million of their children to inherit the estate the aborted American children never saw. God is not mocked.

And white America is in flight.

In the 1990s, for the first time since the Spanish came, whites left California. Two million departed. From July 1, 2005, to July 1, 2006, 100,000 more packed up and headed back whence their fathers came. The “Anglo” population of the Golden State is down to 43 percent and falling fast. White folks are now a minority in Texas and New Mexico. In Arizona, Hispanics account for over half the population under 20.

The future is not in doubt. Why ought this be of concern?

First, while the black and Hispanic population combined is now 85 million – five times what it was in 1960 – half of all black and Hispanic kids drop out of high school. And the average math and reading scores of the half who graduate are at seventh-, eighth- or ninth-grade levels.

And the future is not so sanguine as it seemed 50 years ago. As I write in “State of Emergency”:

“In 1960, 18 million black Americans, 10 percent of the nation, were not fully integrated into society, but they had been assimilated into our culture. They worshiped the same God, spoke the same language, had endured the same Depression and war, watched the same TV shows on the same four channels, laughed at the same comedians, went to the same movies, ate the same foods, read the same newspapers and went to schools where, even when segregated, we learned the same history and literature and shared the same holidays: Christmas, New Year’s, Washington’s Birthday, Easter, Memorial Day, July 4, Labor Day, Columbus Day. Segregation existed, but black folks were as American as apple pie, having lived in this land longer than almost every other group save the Native Americans.

“That cultural unity, that sense that we were one people, is gone.”

Today’s immigrants exceed in number anything any nation has ever known. They now come from cultures and countries whose people have never before been assimilated by any First World country. Not only is the Melting Pot broken, it is rejected by our elites. Minorities are urged to hold onto their own language, customs, traditions. Identity politics is in. And the largest cohort, Mexicans, comes from a country with a historic grievance and a claim on the territory they are entering.

Moreover, since the cultural revolution of the 1960s, we have been fighting one another over issues of race and ethnicity, history, heroes and holidays, morality and religion, right and wrong.

All over the Western world, multiethnic, multicultural countries are coming apart over language, ethnicity, history. The Soviet Union broke into 15 nations, Yugoslavia into half a dozen. Czechs and Slovaks divorced. Scots want separation from England. Catalans and Basques seek independence. Corsicans and Bretons want out of France. Northern Italians want to secede. Only immigrants who prefer Ottawa prevent Quebecois from breaking free of Canada.

As we see from the election battles in Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador and Mexico, race and ethnicity are not receding as issues, but rising. In South Central Los Angeles, black and Hispanic gangs are at war over race and turf.

Addressing the Knights of Columbus in 1915, Theodore Roosevelt warned, “The one absolutely certain way of bringing this nation to ruin, of preventing all possibility of its continuing to be a nation at all, would be to permit it to become a tangle of squabbling nationalities.”

In every way possible, Americans have said they do not want to take this risk with their country. Why, then, are our elites taking it?

Airlines may bar 'dangerous' passengers: Canada rule proposal

AFP
Canada's airlines will have greater leeway to bar passengers who appear to be dangerous under a proposed rule change the Ministry of Transportation announced Saturday.

The new rule would "strengthen air operators' ability to protect the safety of all passengers and crew by refusing to board those who may represent a threat to that safety," the ministry said in a statement.

"The proposed regulatory amendment to the Canadian Aviation Regulations would deal with passengers whose words or actions could interfere with the safe operation of the aircraft and create an unintended hazard for the aircraft, its crew and its passengers," the statement said.

The rule would create four classes of threats, from inappropriate language to air sabotage.

Current rules open airlines to lawsuits and place the burden on airlines to justify the refusal of service.

Ron Paul Beats Digg Bury Brigade

Exposure on social networking giant continues viral online trend of Congressman's message
prisonplanet
Ron Paul beat the notorious Digg bury brigade to feature on the main page of the social networking giant this afternoon, with the story about his appearance in Austin receiving over a thousand Diggs within hours of its release.

Digg.com is a news ranking website that is many times bigger than most major newspaper websites and the Drudge Report. Users vote to Digg up stories to the main page or bury them. Digg's ranking system is subject to the whim of a notorious "Bury Brigade" that obsessively votes down anti-establishment political content, leading many like Wired News to attack the concept that Digg is some kind of online democracy.

Prison Planet is routinely targeted by the bury brigade and 99 per cent of our stories are immediately censored, but the sheer popularity of Ron Paul at the moment ensured that today's story was pushed right to the top and is currently enjoying maximum exposure.

This means that thousands of new people are reading about Ron Paul's message, continuing a viral trend that led to the Texas Congressman being ranked amongst the most popular search terms on Yahoo, Google, Technorati and You Tube.

Ron Paul is currently the number one searched for item on Technorati.com, even beating mainstay Paris Hilton.

The establishment are in panic mode over how quickly the Ron Paul snowball is gaining momentum and have repeatedly tried to smear and attack the Congressman, but these tactics are backfiring as more and more people resonate with Paul's message of limited government and bringing the troops home.

Internet surveillance grows under expanded 'wiretapping' law

seattle pi

Local companies are ramping up their Internet surveillance to comply with a law requiring them to provide police with an easy way to intercept data.

May 14 marked the first day that broadband and Voice over Internet Protocol, or VoIP, providers must be in full compliance with the 1994 Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act.

The law aims to create an instant switch to turn on and collect data about individuals whom a court has identified as suspicious. A group is releasing industry standards for service providers to capture "e-mail, instant messaging records, Web-browsing information and other information sent or received through a user's broadband connection, including online banking activity."

Some civil libertarians say such interception, or "wiretapping," is bad for business, privacy and even Internet security.

The CALEA statute threatens constitutional and privacy law, said Lee Tien, senior staff attorney for civil rights group the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

"It's like giving the cops a copy of the key to your house just in case they need to use it," Tien said. CALEA gives law enforcement an instant switch "to see what's going on in your home."

"When you build in back doors, when you have many types of equipment that have to be configured to let someone in, then you are potentially creating a lot of security holes that can be exploited by others. Security experts have always been pretty critical of CALEA for creating this kind of (insecurity) within the phone network," Tien said.

Some say the new CALEA requirements also make it harder for innovation because the great strength of the Internet is its decentralization. If CALEA had applied to the Internet in 1994, many technologies such as gaming service Xbox Live or even VoIP might not have been created because of the FBI's "tappability principle."

The original compromise provided by Congress in 1994 was explicitly not to include the Internet when setting up digital phone networks for lawful interception, Tien said. Under a 2004 joint petition, the FBI, Drug Enforcement Administration and Department of Justice requested that CALEA be re-examined.

The Federal Communications Commission has reinterpreted the ruling to include not just digital phone networks but broadband and VoIP providers. In 2006, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia upheld the decision against Fourth Amendment concerns.

Marc Wallace, vice president of Business Development at Drizzle Internet NW, said his company doesn't monitor individual customers except for fraudulent Internet protocol addresses unless the government makes a request. Usually law enforcement requests concern child pornography or theft.

"Our customers have First Amendment rights, so again we will protect our customers until we are forced to legally comply," Wallace said.

Drizzle has never had to submit evidence related to terrorism, Wallace said.

Drizzle provides broadband Internet and VoIP to Washington, Oregon and Utah.

Comcast, the second largest Internet service provider in the United States, is cooperating with CALEA as it applies today.

"We comply with all valid legal requests," said Sena Fitzmaurice, senior director of communications in government affairs at Comcast.

The race for government agencies' ability to tap telecommunications lines was extremely fast in the mobile telephone field.

"In 2006, 92 percent of all wiretaps were conducted on wireless phones," said Al Gidari, partner at Seattle law firm Perkins Coie.

While CALEA originally was intended for domestic criminal enforcement, the capabilities of the statute have expanded the surveillance abilities for other lawful interception operations like the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

"CALEA is just part of the culture now; for better or worse it's baked into communication networks," Gidari said.

The cost-benefit analysis of programs like CALEA is highly controversial. Millions of dollars are spent on lawful interception programs and Trusted Third Party companies that provide these services, yet they only provide a 16 percent conviction rate, Gidari said. The government does not "pay for it ... the shareholders and the public pay for it."

Wired magazine's blog Threat Level sent the blogosphere spiraling after it reminded bloggers that May 14 was the first day of full compliance with CALEA for many Internet providers.

Liberal blog Blognonymous wrote in response to the CALEA alert, "I'm feeling safer already. Now ... where ... is that encryption program?"

Iran Accuses American of Revolution Plot


nytimes
The Islamic Republic of Iran yesterday accused a prominent American academic it imprisoned two weeks ago of conspiring to foment a velvet revolution there.

A statement from the Intelligence Ministry that was reported on state television said that Haleh Esfandiari and the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, D.C., along with similar institutions like the Soros Foundation, had been trying to establish a network that would work “against the sovereignty of the country.”

“This is an American-designed model with an attractive appearance that seeks the soft-toppling of the country,” the statement said.

Ms. Esfandiari, 67, director of the Middle East program at the Wilson Center, went to Iran five months ago on one of her twice-annual visits to her ailing 93-year-old mother. She was prevented from leaving the country last December, then jailed in the notorious Evin prison on May 8.

While under virtual house arrest before being jailed, she had been interrogated repeatedly, and the Intelligence Ministry statement said she had confirmed that the Wilson Center “invited Iranians to attend conferences, offered them research projects, scholarships ... and tried to lure influential elements and link them to decision-making centers in America.”

The Wilson Center, which provided the quotations from the statement, called the charges both disturbing and far-fetched.

“Haleh has not engaged in any activities to undermine any government, including the Iranian government,” said Lee H. Hamilton, the Wilson Center’s director. “Nor does the Wilson Center engage in such activities. There is not one scintilla of evidence to support these outrageous claims.”

Shaul Bakhash, Ms. Esfandiari’s husband and a professor of Middle East history at George Mason University in Virginia, said, “Any implication that my wife, Haleh, was involved in a plan for a soft overthrow of the Iranian government is totally without foundation.”

Mr. Bakhash said his wife had been able to make brief, one- or two-minute phone calls to her mother almost every evening since her imprisonment, with just enough time to say she was all right and to ask about her family.

The family asked Shirin Ebadi, the Nobel Peace Prize winner and an Iranian human rights lawyer, to represent her. But when representatives for Ms. Ebadi, who is currently traveling in the United States, tried to visit Ms. Esfandiari, the prosecutor denied them access and refused to recognize them as representing her. Her mother has also not been allowed to see her.

Iran analysts said the charges would be laughable were it not that Ms. Esfandiari had been imprisoned. The idea that a 67-year-old academic is being identified as a major threat to the Islamic Republic shows that the administration of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is either paranoid, the analysts said, or more likely, that some hard-line elements within it are determined to ruin high-level talks between Iran and the United States about security in Iraq that are scheduled to occur in Baghdad on May 27.

In the long history of tense relations between the countries since the Islamic Revolution in 1979, whenever there seemed to be a rapprochement in the offing, Iranian hard-liners who believed that confronting Washington was a cornerstone of the revolution have sought to derail it.

Another possible situation, noted Gary Sick, a professor of Middle East politics at Columbia University and a one-time National Security Council adviser on Iran, is that Tehran may be seeking a swap. The American military arrested five Iranian Revolutionary Guards in the Iraqi city of Erbil on Jan. 11 and has held them incommunicado ever since.

Both developments came after Ms. Esfandiari’s initial detention, however, so some analysts lend more weight to the idea that the Iranian government is worried about the $75 million that the United States government budgeted to support development of civil society in Iran. The “soft revolution” referred to is the overthrow of repressive governments in Eastern Europe by broad-based civic movements, so the mullahs are trying to intimidate interested Iranians.

Ms. Esfandiari, who holds both Iranian and American citizenship, had organized conferences in Washington on issues like Iran’s nuclear program and the political opposition, but she had also invited members of the Iranian government itself and provided them with a platform to air Tehran’s viewpoint.

“I think a very small percentage of Iran’s political elite actually believe the country’s national security is enhanced by imprisoning a 67-year-old grandmother,” said Karim Sadjadpour, an associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace who follows Iranian issues. “What is undeniably clear is that the government in Tehran has only increased the ranks of those in Washington who argue that this regime in Iran is too cruel to be engaged.”

Indeed, there has been an outpouring of criticism from American academics ranging from Noam Chomsky at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to the American Association of University Professors, which issued a statement on Monday calling on Iran to respect academic freedom and release Ms. Esfandiari.

The Middle East Studies Association of North America issued a similar statement and its past president, Professor Juan Cole at the University of Michigan, announced on his widely read blog, Informed Comment, on Friday that he would not attend a Tehran conference organized by French academics in June. He also called for public protests.

“They risk returning Iran to the kind of intellectual and cultural isolation that it suffered in the Khomeini period,” Mr. Cole said in an interview.

Another dual national, Parnaz Azima, a reporter for Radio Farda, a Persian language station financed by the United States, has been refused permission to leave Iran since January.

Palestinian Rocket Fire Draws More Israeli Air Strikes in Gaza


voanews
Israel has carried out more air strikes in Gaza, after Palestinian militants fired at least two more rockets at the Israeli town of Sderot early Tuesday.

There were no reports of casualties from the attacks.

Palestinian officials say Israeli air strikes destroyed a metal foundry and another nearby building. Israel says it hit a weapons factory and a militants' command center.

Meanwhile, Israeli Deputy Defense Minister Ephraim Sneh has warned that if the rocket attacks continue, top Hamas leaders, including Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyah, could be in danger.

Sneh made the threat during an interview with Israeli radio today, a day after a rocket fired from Gaza killed an Israeli woman in Sderot.

Israeli officials say nearly 20 rockets were fired on Israel Monday.

Palestinians say at least four Islamic Jihad militants were killed in Israeli air strikes in the northern Gaza

Nearly 40 Palestinians have been killed since Israel began its campaign last week.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called the rocket attacks "completely unacceptable" and a violation of international law. But he called on Israel to ensure that its actions do not target civilians or put them at risk.

Mr. Ban also urged rival Palestinian factions Hamas and Fatah to abide by the ceasefire they reached on Saturday after a week of deadly factional fighting in the Gaza Strip.

U.K. Says Russian Faces Charge Over Litvinenko Murder

May 22 (Bloomberg) -- U.K. prosecutors said Andrei Lugovoi, a former Russian intelligence officer, should be charged with the murder of Alexander Litvinenko, a critic of Russia's government who died in London in November from radiation poisoning.

``I have today concluded that the evidence sent to us by the police is sufficient to charge Andrei Lugovoi with the murder of Litvinenko by deliberate poisoning,'' the U.K. Director of Public Prosecutions Ken MacDonald said in an e-mailed statement. A prosecution ``would clearly be in the public interest.''

MacDonald said he had instructed lawyers to immediately seek the extradition of Lugovoi from Russia so that he could be charged with murder and brought before a British court over ``this extraordinarily grave crime.''

London-based Litvinenko, 43, had previously worked in Russia's FSB intelligence agency before becoming an outspoken opponent of Russian President Vladimir Putin. He died in a London hospital on Nov. 23, more than three weeks after being poisoned with the radioactive isotope polonium-210.

Today's announcement is likely to raise diplomatic tensions between the U.K. and Russia. At the weekend MacDonald was forced to deny media reports that the U.K. Foreign Office was pressuring his prosecutors to take no action in order to avoid damaging relations between the two countries.

Extradition Dispute

The U.K. Crown Prosecution Service said both countries are parties to the 1957 European Convention on Extradition. On Nov. 15 the CPS and the Russian Prosecutor-General's office signed a memorandum of understanding in which they agreed to ``co-operate in the sphere of extradition.''

The Russian government said today though that it won't extradite Lugovoi. It left open the possibility that he may be tried in his own country.

Under Russia's constitution the authorities can't extradite a Russian citizen to a foreign country, a spokeswoman for the Prosecutor-General's office said by telephone. Under the 1957 convention, though, a suspect in a crime committed abroad can be tried in Russia if there is a corresponding offense under Russian law, the spokeswoman said.

``Unless he leaves the country or the constitution is amended it seems there is little Britain can do to get him,'' Mark Kirsh, a lawyer with Linklaters in Moscow, said by phone.

Russian Ambassador Yuri Fedotov was summoned to the Foreign Office in London today to meet Permanent Under-secretary Peter Ricketts, who explained the British position. U.K. Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett, visiting Tokyo, said she expected ``full co-operation'' from Russia.

`Murder is Murder'

The U.K. wouldn't ``shy away'' from pursuing the case, Tom Kelly, spokesman for Prime Minister Tony Blair, said at a briefing for reporters.

``We now have a new development and we need to hear Russia's formal response,'' Kelly said. ``Let us see the legal process and let us see if Russia complies with that process. Murder is murder, and that is very serious.''

The U.K. Attorney General Peter Goldsmith said he was consulted over whether Lugovoi should be prosecuted, as is usual in serious and complex cases. In a statement Goldsmith said he agreed with the decision to prosecute.

``I am now very anxious to see that justice is really done and that Lugovoi is extradited and brought to trial in a U.K. court,'' Marina Litvinenko said in an e-mailed statement. ``We don't know why my husband was killed and who ordered it. I believe it was not only one person.''

Boris Berezovsky

Lugovoi met Litvinenko in London's Millennium Hotel on Nov. 1, the day he fell ill. Lugovoi has repeatedly denied any involvement in the killing in a series of interviews in Russia.

``We have not officially been notified of the charges,'' Lugovoi's lawyer Andrei Romashov said by telephone from Moscow today. ``You have to inform someone of charges, these charges have been released into the air.''

On his deathbed Litvinenko accused Putin of being involved in his murder, an accusation the Kremlin called ``absurd.''

Litvinenko had been granted political asylum in the U.K. and was a friend of the exiled Russian tycoon Boris Berezovsky.

Russia-U.K. ties have been strained previously by Britain's refusal to extradite Berezovsky, a Kremlin power-broker under President Boris Yeltsin in the 1990s who became a critic of Putin. Berezovsky fled Russia in 2001 to avoid charges, including fraud, which he said were politically motivated, and was given political asylum in the U.K. in 2003.

`Double Standards'

Russia demanded Berezovsky, who is worth $1.1 billion according to Forbes magazine, be stripped of his asylum status after he made anti-Putin comments in a British newspaper interview on April 13. Russian First Deputy Foreign Minister Andrei Denisov, in an April 16 interview, accused the U.K. of applying ``double standards'' in the Berezovsky and Litvinenko cases.

The Russian authorities have said they want to interview about 100 people in London as part of their own investigation into the Litvinenko killing and a group of Russian prosecutors, led by Deputy Prosecutor General Alexander Zvyagintsev, traveled to London on March 26.

Onetime Giuliani Insider Is Now a Critic

ny times
As Rudolph W. Giuliani runs for president, his image as a chief executive who steered New York through the disaster of Sept. 11 has become a pillar of his campaign. But one former member of his inner circle keeps surfacing to revisit that history in ways that are unflattering to Mr. Giuliani: Jerome M. Hauer, New York City’s first emergency management director.

In recent days, Mr. Hauer has challenged Mr. Giuliani’s recollection that he had little role as mayor in placing the city’s emergency command center at the ill-fated World Trade Center.

Mr. Hauer has also disputed the claim by the Giuliani campaign that the mayor’s wife, Judith Giuliani, had coordinated a help center for families after the attack.

And he has contradicted Mr. Giuliani’s assertions that the city’s emergency response was well coordinated that day, a point he made most notably to the authors of “Grand Illusion,” a book that depicts Mr. Giuliani’s antiterrorism efforts as deeply flawed.

Mr. Hauer does not disparage Mr. Giuliani’s overall effort at emergency preparedness or appear to have actively sought out a role as a Giuliani scold. But he has emerged as one in several settings where his frank, often blunt, answers to questions have offered a rare view inside the often-insular Giuliani administration.

Mr. Hauer was once part of the coterie of high school chums, fellow former prosecutors and City Hall aides who remain the nucleus of Mr. Giuliani’s tight-knit set of advisers. From that perch, he helped Mr. Giuliani confront some of New York City’s most disquieting predicaments, like the West Nile virus and a potential millennium meltdown.

He emerged from four years of service to Mr. Giuliani as one of the country’s better known emergency preparedness experts and a frequent guest on television news programs.

But in recent years, Mr. Hauer and Mr. Giuliani have had a falling out, though they disagree on just why.

Now from a distance, Mr. Hauer offers views of Mr. Giuliani’s management style, ones that depict him not only as highly competent and exceptionally hands-on, but also as insensitive and retaliatory at times.

Mr. Hauer, for example, recalls a conversation he had with Mr. Giuliani in 2001 when he had decided to endorse a Democrat, Mark Green, for New York City mayor over Mr. Giuliani’s own choice for a successor, Michael R. Bloomberg, a Republican. Mr. Hauer said Mr. Giuliani, upset, called up to say his disloyalty was unforgivable.

“He was shouting, ‘If you do this, you’re done ... I’m going to end your career,’ or something along those lines,” Mr. Hauer said.

Joseph J. Lhota, a former deputy mayor, remembered the endorsement debate differently, suggesting that Mr. Hauer had put politics over principles in a way that “put his whole credibility in question.”

Fred Siegel, the author of “The Prince of the City: Giuliani, New York and the Genius of American Life” (Encounter Books, 2005), said the trust that members of Mr. Giuliani’s inner circle invested in each other was the reason no one apart from Mr. Hauer had ever emerged as even an occasional critic.

“The core of the administration was that these guys would always pull together,” said Mr. Siegel, who once served as speechwriter for Mr. Giuliani. “Once a decision was made, that was it. There wouldn’t be any second-guessing.”

Mr. Giuliani and Mr. Hauer began their relationship in January 1996 when Mr. Hauer was hired to lead the new Office of Emergency Management, created to coordinate the city’s response to crises. Mr. Hauer, who was little known before he became a Giuliani aide, had previously run emergency management programs for the State of Indiana and IBM.

In his book, Mr. Siegel describes Mr. Hauer, who is 6-foot-5, as “a big, plain-spoken and knowledgeable man” who “won wide-spread cooperation.”

One of Mr. Hauer’s first tasks was to find a home for an emergency command center to replace the inadequate facilities at police headquarters. Mr. Hauer suggested an office complex in downtown Brooklyn as a “good alternative” in a memorandum.

But Mr. Hauer said the mayor insisted instead on a site within walking distance of City Hall. Given that concern and others, Mr. Hauer said he decided that offices on the 23rd floor of 7 World Trade Center, next to the twin towers and just a few blocks from City Hall, seemed the best choice.

The site was immediately controversial because it was part of the trade center, which had already been the location of a truck bomb attack in 1993. City officials, though, including Mr. Hauer, have long defended their decision, even after the command center had to be evacuated during the 2001 terror attack.

Last week, in an interview with Fox News, Mr. Giuliani again faced questions about the site. He put responsibility for selecting it on Mr. Hauer.

“Jerry Hauer recommended that as the prime site and the site that would make the most sense,” Mr. Giuliani said. “It was largely on his recommendation that that site was selected.”

Mr. Hauer took immediate exception to that account in interviews. “That’s Rudy’s own reality that he lives in,” he said. “It is not, in fact, the truth.”

Mr. Hauer has also expressed concern about the level of support he felt from Mr. Giuliani, in particular when he tried to bridge the divide between the city’s Police and Fire Departments, two disparate emergency response cultures that battled over turf.

Mr. Hauer said he ended up in something of a feud with the police commissioner at the time, Howard Safir, which came to a head in 1998 when, he said, he offered to help both departments prepare for a chemical disaster drill.

Police officials declined help, Mr. Hauer said, but then sent detectives to follow him and photograph his meeting with fire officials. During a subsequent meeting with the mayor, Mr. Safir held up the photographs, Mr. Hauer said, as triumphant evidence that Mr. Hauer favored the Fire Department.

“Any man worth his salt would have been outraged that the Police Department followed one of his closest commissioners,” Mr. Hauer said. “It was disgraceful.”

But Mr. Hauer said that when he complained to Mr. Giuliani, all he got was a blank stare.

Mr. Lhota, speaking for the campaign, said he was unaware of such an incident. Mr. Safir did not return a call for comment.

Mr. Hauer left his city job in 2000. A year later, Mr. Giuliani called him back into service after the terror attacks. He was assigned to help prepare for possible biological or chemical attacks and to help set up an assistance center for victims’ families.

Mr. Giuliani’s wife, Judith, who was then his companion, also had a role in setting up the center. But last week Mr. Hauer told New York magazine that the campaign’s depiction of her role was “simply a lie.”

The campaign’s Web site said that Mrs. Giuliani had “coordinated the efforts at the Family Assistance Center on Pier 94.”

Indeed, others were at least equally involved in that effort. Rosemary O’Keefe, who was then director of the Community Assistance Unit, said Mrs. Giuliani had helped during the first two days at the pier.

“Judith was a very important part in the very beginning,” Ms. O’Keefe said in an interview. “I ran it 20 hours a day from that point forward.”

Michael McKeon, a Giuliani campaign spokesman, said the campaign never meant to suggest that Mrs. Giuliani played a singular role in coordinating the center, only that she had helped set it up. He said the language on the Web site had been adjusted.

Mrs. Giuliani, Mr. McKeon said, is “the first one to give credit to other people.”

Mr. Hauer, Mr. McKeon said, is just bitter.

Mr. Siegel said that what is indeed singular is the role Mr. Hauer has now assumed, that of a high-ranking Giuliani insider who is now an outsider with pointed opinions on a central topic of the presidential campaign.

“To me, it’s unfortunate,” Mr. Siegel said, “that two people who did so much to prepare the city had a falling out.”