Monday, June 11, 2007

'Military plan against Iran is ready'

YAAKOV KATZ
Jerusalem Post


Predicting that Iran will obtain a nuclear weapon within three years and claiming to have a strike plan in place, senior American military officers have told The Jerusalem Post they support President George W. Bush's stance to do everything necessary to stop the Islamic Republic's race for nuclear power.

Bush has repeatedly said the United States would not allow Iran to "go nuclear."

A high-ranking American military officer told the Post that senior officers in the US armed forces had thrown their support behind Bush and believed that additional steps needed to be taken to stop Iran.

Predictions within the US military are that Bush will do what is needed to stop Teheran before he leaves office in 2009, including possibly launching a military strike against its nuclear facilities.

On Sunday, Sen. Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut said the US should consider a military strike against Iran over its support of Iraqi insurgents.

"I think we've got to be prepared to take aggressive military action against the Iranians to stop them from killing Americans in Iraq," he said. "And to me, that would include a strike over the border into Iran, where we have good evidence that they have a base at which they are training these people coming back into Iraq to kill our soldiers."

According to a high-ranking American military officer, the US Navy and Air Force would play the primary roles in any military action taken against Iran. One idea under consideration is a naval blockade designed to cut off Iran's oil exports.

The officer said that if the US government or the UN Security Council decided on this course of action, the US Navy would most probably not block the Strait of Hormuz - a step that would definitely draw an Iranian military response - but would patrol farther out and turn away tankers on their way to load oil.

On Sunday, the Israel Air Force held joint exercises with visiting US pilots, but IDF sources dismissed speculation that the drills were connected to an attack on Iran.

The US officer said that perhaps even more dangerous to Israel and the Western world than Iranian nukes was the possibility that a terrorists cell associated with al-Qaida or global jihad would acquire a highly radioactive "dirty bomb" or a vial of deadly chemical or biological agents. The officer said al-Qaida was gaining a strong foothold in the Middle East and that Israel was being surrounded by global jihad elements in Lebanon, Jordan and Sinai.

"Iran is a state-sponsored type of terrorism that can be dealt with," he said, adding that it was far more difficult to strike at the source of an isolated terrorist cell.

To combat this threat, the US Navy has come up with a plan for a "1,000-ship navy" - a transnational network composed of navies from around the world that would raise awareness of maritime threats and more effectively thwart sea-based terrorism and the illicit transfer of arms by sea.

"The idea is to allow free trade and to prevent criminal and terror activity at sea," the officer said.

A smaller-scale example of the US Navy's vision is NATO's Active Endeavor antiterrorism operation based in Naples. Israel plans to send an officer to be stationed there in the coming months. NATO launched Operation Active Endeavor in wake of 9/11 and has succeeded in bringing together a number of Mediterranean countries to work together in Naples to share information on naval terrorism and suspicious vessels in the region.

Michael Crichton on Environmentalism as a Religion

YOUTUBE

Author and anthropology expert Michael Crichton explains why he believes Environmentalism has become a new form of Religion and why that spells bad news for any real environmental threat facing the planet.

All eyes are on Watchung surveillance program

COURIER NEWS
WATCHUNG -- If you've driven by the Watchung Police Department in the past year, chances are your license plate has been captured by a video camera.

And if you've walked in the department's lobby or the municipal court, your image has been taken for high-tech face recognition software.

Many Central Jersey towns have varying forms of surveillance camera equipment as part of their public-safety programs.

But Watchung has taken one additional high-tech leap, by participating in an experimental, year-long program that incorporates license-plate and face-recognition software in its digital video camera systems.

The borough's police chief and the private company that is running the program hope that the department will be a model for video surveillance in the state. In fact,Wat-chung's camera system, with live video feed, will be featured during the Police Security Expo June 19 and 20 in Atlantic City.

"These are tools to allow the police to be more effective," said Rob Merchant, president of MTS Intelligent Surveillance Solutions, the Howell-based company which installed the software in Watchung for free when he converted the department's video-tape based surveillance system to digital.

Only a few other New Jersey towns have the same type of technology, Merchant said. They include the Deal, Bradley Beach, Sea Isle City and Maplewood police departments.

But apparently, no other Central Jersey towns have tried incorporating this advanced technology into their public-safety arsenal, according to law-enforcement officials.

How it works

The license-plate recognition program allows the department to download a database of stolen vehicles' registration numbers. The computer system alerts dispatchers if a matching license plate passes the cameras, which are installed at the Somerset Street department, the Watchung Municipal Building and the Watchung Square Mall on Route 22. If the camera spots a possible stolen vehicle at the mall's east entrance, a recorded voice comes over the system saying, "Vehicle match at mall entrance east."

"This is like a police officer sitting on the side of a road checking plates," police Chief John Frosoni said. "It's an extra set of eyes."

The cameras in the police department's lobby and the municipal court entrance are wired with face-recognition software, capturing images of people coming and going from the building, Frosoni said. After the system captures an image, it is designed to match it with the facial features of mug shots from people wanted on warrants, and to alert the dispatch center that someone who looked like a wanted person had entered the surveillance area.

"This is a tap on the shoulder to say, 'You might want to check that out' and that's very useful," Merchant said.

Watchung is MTS Intelligent Surveillance Solutions' beta site for the software system, Merchant said. He's spent the past year adjusting algorithms, to get the camera's capture of license plate numbers just right. He and Frosoni said they are still perfecting the face-recognition software.

If the department had to pay for the software, it would cost $1,000 to $3,000 per camera, Merchant said.

The borough already has 22 cameras; most were installed when police headquarters was built in 1999. There are three at the Watchung Square Mall entrances. (Frosoni said the police department has access to the cameras, but the shopping center doesn't have access to the license plate recognition system.)

How it helps

Merchant said the technology could be helpful, if, for example, there was a robbery at the Watchung Square Mall and a witness could only remember part of the license plate number of an escape car. Police could sort through the list of vehicles which passed through the parking lot, trying to find a match.

Plus, Merchant said, video is a tremendous piece of evidence.

The cameras in the municipal hall will record if they detect motion, Frosoni said. That's a security tool he would have liked to have during the two unsolved arsons at the municipal building in the mid-1990s.

Frosoni, who will retire at the end of June, said, about a decade ago, Watchung was the first municipal department in Somerset County to install video cameras in all of its patrol cars.

Surveillance cameras monitored by police aren't new. Many police patrol cars are have video cameras. The state requires investigators to video interviews with people charged with third-degree or higher crimes, Frosoni said.

But what Watchung is doing is apparently unique in Central Jersey.

Somerset County Prosecutor Wayne Forrest believes the Watchung Police Department is the first police force in Somerset County to use this license and face recognition technology. And Union County Prosecutor's Office spokeswoman Eileen Walsh said she is not aware of any municipalities within her jurisdiction using software like Watchung's.

In Maplewood, Merchant said the cameras are placed in key intersections, with a link back to police headquarters. He said the cameras have collected information in about 10 crimes over the past four months, including a robbery at a convenience store.

"Agencies like Watchung and us are ahead of the curve, trying to be proactive rather than reactive with our crime-prevention efforts," Maplewood Police Sgt. Dean Naddeo said.

Public reaction

Jennifer Lobozzo, who lives in Watchung and drives by the camera locations in the borough daily, said, "I don't think it's a terrible thing at all. With four young children, I'm all for safety."

Lobozzo was a little concerned about how effective the cameras would be, particularly if a someone driving the stolen car knew the location of the cameras around the borough.

Gerald Staffin, who also lives in Watchung, applauded an extensive video-monitoring system in London. While London and Watchung don't share much in common, Staffin liked the ideas of cameras also watching over his hometown.

"I don't think it's an invasion of privacy and if it cuts down on crime, that's wonderful," Staffin said.

According to the American Civil Liberties Union Web site, www.aclu.org, the organization doesn't object to cameras "at specific, high-profile public places that are potential terrorist targets."

However, according to the Web site, "the impulse to blanket our public spaces and streets with video surveillance is a bad idea. ... Its benefits -- preventing at most a few street crimes, and probably none -- are disproportionately small."

Security experts to meet on preventing nuclear terrorism

AFP
Security experts from around the world will meet here Monday to discuss how to boost cooperation between governments to better confront the threat of nuclear terrorism.

The International Nuclear Terrorism Law Enforcement Conference aims to provide "law enforcement and Homeland Security officials with the proper tools to prevent, detect, disrupt, and deny terrorists from seeking, acquiring, or using nuclear materials," said the Federal Bureau of Investigation, which is organizing the event.

US Attorney General Alberto Gonzales is scheduled to address the meeting at 11:30 am (1530 GMT).

The meeting falls under the scope of the Global Initiative to Combat Nuclear Terrorism announced last year by US President George W. Bush and Russian President Vladimir Putin during the Group of Eight summit in St. Petersburg, Russia.

Israel Launches Super Spy Satellite With Eyes On Iran

Israel Launches Super Spy Satellite With Eyes On Iran

Israel Launches Super Spy Satellite With Eyes On Iran
Israel Launches Satellite That Officials Suggest Can Spy on Iran
The Associated Press

TEL AVIV, Israel

Israel's military launched a spy satellite early Monday, the Defense Ministry said, and a senior official suggested it could help keep track of developments in Iran.

The Ofek 7 satellite was "launched and successfully injected into orbit," the ministry said in a statement. Israel's Army Radio said its resolution was high enough to detect objects of 28 inches on the ground.

The chief of the Defense Ministry's space program, Haim Eshed, suggested that the satellite could be used to counter Iran's efforts to develop a nuclear weapon. When asked if the Ofek-7 could be used to strike Iran, Eshed said "Intelligence is intelligence and you can do with the intelligence what the leaders decide."

"But this is definitely intelligence on the best level that it's possible to obtain from satellite systems," Eshed told Army Radio.

The satellite weighs 66 pounds, is 7.5 feet long and will operate at least four years, Israel Radio reported.

The launch was carried out at 2:40 a.m. local time, Israel Radio reported. Ofek 7 is to replace Ofek 5, which has been orbiting for almost five years.

Ofek 5's life had to be extended when the launch of its planned replacement, Ofek 6, failed two years ago.

Israel has labeled Iran as its most serious strategic threat.

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

Copyright © 2007 ABC News Internet Ventures

Powell: It's time to close Guantanamo - Los Angeles Times

Powell: It's time to close Guantanamo - Los Angeles Times

Powell: It's time to close Guantanamo
The onetime secretary of State says the prison is only damaging the United States in the eyes of the world.
By Paul Richter, Times Staff Writer
June 11, 2007

WASHINGTON — Former Secretary of State Colin L. Powell on Sunday called for the closing of the Guantanamo Bay prison and a rethinking of the "don't ask, don't tell" policy he authored as head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The public comments represent Powell's effort to further distance himself from the Bush administration he once served.

A key architect of the Pentagon's policy on homosexual troops, Powell said the country is moving away from the attitudes about gays it had in 1993, when the policy was adopted. But he stopped short of calling for a redesign while the country is at war.

Appearing on NBC's "Meet the Press," Powell urged that the military commission system for accused terrorists be scrapped, and that detainees at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, be taken to the United States and handled through the federal justice system. The United States continues to hold about 385 people in the detention center, despite the complaints of human rights advocates and other foreign and domestic critics. Their continued imprisonment there, he said, has "shaken the belief that the world had in America's justice system."

Responding to defenders of the current system who are reluctant to allow detainees access to lawyers and judicial protections, Powell said, "So what? Let them…. America, unfortunately, has 2 million people in jail, all of whom had lawyers and access to writs of habeas corpus…. We can handle bad people in our system."

With authoritarian world leaders citing Guantanamo to "hide their own misdeeds," he said, Guantanamo "is causing us far more damage than any good we get from it."

Powell's comments are a step further in his steady evolution as a public critic of the Bush administration he served. Even as secretary of State in President Bush's first term, Powell privately expressed misgivings about the Iraq war and its aftermath. Since leaving the administration in 2005, Powell has made more and more clear his unhappiness with administration policy.

Last September, Powell made a stir by attacking, in a letter to Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), Bush's plan to handle detainees through military commissions. He wrote that "the world is beginning to doubt the moral basis of our fight against terrorism."

But now, with Bush and the war in Iraq increasingly unpopular, Powell's concerns about the system are shared even within the administration. Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates, for example, has expressed his preference to move to a different approach.

Powell was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff when President Clinton began devising the military policy on gays. Called "don't ask, don't tell," the policy was intended to allow homosexuals to serve in the military only as long as they did not disclose or act on their orientation. In recent weeks, Democratic presidential candidates have urged that the policy be jettisoned.

Powell said the policy was "an appropriate response to the situation back in 1993. And the country certainly has changed."

But unlike his successor as Joint Chiefs chairman, Gen. John M. Shalikashvili, Powell said he was not yet convinced that the country had changed so much that the system needed to be changed.

At debates in New Hampshire last week, all the Democratic candidates said it was time to move on from the "don't ask, don't tell" policy, while none of the GOP candidates expressed that view.

On the war in Iraq, Powell expressed pessimism about the status of the U.S. effort. Noting that the current strategy is built on three "legs" — the U.S. military escalation, the attempt to train Iraqi security forces, and the effort to move the country to political reconciliation through changes in its laws and constitution — he said the most crucial political component "is not going well."

Though Powell has served Republican presidents, his comments on Guantanamo put him closer to the Democratic field than the GOP.

And Powell, who was urged to run for the presidency in 1996, acknowledged that he had not decided which party to back in 2008 and that he had twice been consulted recently by Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois on national security issues.

On another issue, on CBS' "Face the Nation," Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) said the United States should consider "aggressive" military action against Iran.

The comment put Lieberman in a minority among U.S. officials.

Though the Bush administration says it will not take options off the table, few U.S. officials are speaking of military action against Tehran because of the risks and costs of a wider war when U.S. forces are already stretched thin.

paul.richter@latimes.com

U.S. Arming Sunni Insurgents in Iraq


NEW YORK TIMES
With the four-month-old increase in American troops showing only modest success in curbing insurgent attacks, American commanders are turning to another strategy that they acknowledge is fraught with risk: arming Sunni Arab groups that have promised to fight militants linked with Al Qaeda who have been their allies in the past.

American commanders say they have successfully tested the strategy in Anbar Province west of Baghdad and have held talks with Sunni groups in at least four areas of central and north-central Iraq where the insurgency has been strong. In some cases, the American commanders say, the Sunni groups are suspected of involvement in past attacks on American troops or of having links to such groups. Some of these groups, they say, have been provided, usually through Iraqi military units allied with the Americans, with arms, ammunition, cash, fuel and supplies.

American officers who have engaged in what they call outreach to the Sunni groups say many of them have had past links to Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia but grew disillusioned with the Islamic militants' extremist tactics, particularly suicide bombings that have killed thousands of Iraqi civilians. In exchange for American backing, these officials say, the Sunni groups have agreed to fight Al Qaeda and halt attacks on American units. Commanders who have undertaken these negotiations say that in some cases, Sunni groups have agreed to alert American troops to the location of roadside bombs and other lethal booby traps.

But critics of the strategy, including some American officers, say it could amount to the Americans' arming both sides in a future civil war. The United States has spent more than $15 billion in building up Iraq's army and police force, whose manpower of 350,000 is heavily Shiite. With an American troop drawdown increasingly likely in the next year, and little sign of a political accommodation between Shiite and Sunni politicians in Baghdad, the critics say, there is a risk that any weapons given to Sunni groups will eventually be used against Shiites. There is also the possibility the weapons could be used against the Americans themselves.

American field commanders met this month in Baghdad with Gen. David H. Petraeus, the top American commander in Iraq, to discuss the conditions Sunni groups would have to meet to win American assistance. Senior officers who attended the meeting said that General Petraeus and the operational commander who is the second-ranking American officer here, Lt. Gen. Raymond T. Odierno, gave cautious approval to field commanders to negotiate with Sunni groups in their areas.

One commander who attended the meeting said that despite the risks in arming groups that have until now fought against the Americans, the potential gains against Al Qaeda were too great to be missed. He said the strategy held out the prospect of finally driving a wedge between two wings of the Sunni insurgency that had previously worked in a devastating alliance — die-hard loyalists of Saddam Hussein's formerly dominant Baath Party, and Islamic militants belonging to a constellation of groups linked to Al Qaeda.

Even if only partly successful, the officer said, the strategy could do as much or more to stabilize Iraq, and to speed American troops on their way home, as the increase in troops ordered by President Bush late last year, which has thrown nearly 30,000 additional American troops into the war but failed so far to fulfill the aim of bringing enhanced stability to Baghdad. An initial decline in sectarian killings in Baghdad in the first two months of the troop buildup has reversed, with growing numbers of bodies showing up each day in the capital. Suicide bombings have dipped in Baghdad but increased elsewhere, as Qaeda groups, confronted with great American troop numbers, have shifted their operations elsewhere.

The strategy of arming Sunni groups was first tested earlier this year in Anbar Province, the desert hinterland west of Baghdad, and attacks on American troops plunged after tribal sheiks, angered by Qaeda strikes that killed large numbers of Sunni civilians, recruited thousands of men to join government security forces and the tribal police. With Qaeda groups quitting the province for Sunni havens elsewhere, Anbar has lost its long-held reputation as the most dangerous place in Iraq for American troops.

Now, the Americans are testing the “Anbar model” across wide areas of Sunni-dominated Iraq. The areas include parts of Baghdad, notably the Sunni stronghold of Amiriya, a district that flanks the highway leading to Baghdad's international airport; the area south of the capital in Babil province known as the Triangle of Death, site of an ambush in which four American soldiers were killed last month and three others abducted, one of whose bodies was found in the Euphrates; Diyala Province north and east of Baghdad, an area of lush palm groves and orchards which has replaced Anbar as Al Qaeda's main sanctuary in Iraq; and Salahuddin Province, also north of Baghdad, the home area of Saddam Hussein.

Although the American engagement with the Sunni groups has brought some early successes against Al Qaeda, particularly in Anbar, many of the problems that hampered earlier American efforts to reach out to insurgents remain unchanged. American commanders say the Sunni groups they are negotiating with show few signs of wanting to work with the Shiite-led government of Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki. For their part, Shiite leaders are deeply suspicious of any American move to co-opt Sunni groups that are wedded to a return to Sunni political dominance.

With the agreement to arm some Sunni groups, the Americans also appear to have made a tacit recognition that earlier demands for the disarming of Shiite militia groups are politically unachievable for now given the refusal of powerful Shiite political parties to shed their armed wings. In effect, the Americans seem to have concluded that as long as the Shiites maintain their militias, Shiite leaders are in a poor position to protest the arming of Sunni groups whose activities will be under close American scrutiny.

But officials of Mr. Maliki's government have placed strict limits on the Sunni groups they are willing to countenance as allies in the fight against Al Qaeda. One leading Shiite politician, Sheik Khalik al-Atiyah, the deputy Parliament speaker, said in a recent interview that he would rule out any discussion of an amnesty for Sunni Arab insurgents, even those who commit to fighting Al Qaeda. Similarly, many American commanders oppose rewarding Sunni Arab groups who have been responsible, even tangentially, for any of the more than 29,000 American casualties in the war, including more than 3,500 deaths. Equally daunting for American commanders is the risk that Sunni groups receiving American backing could effectively double-cross the Americans, taking weapons and turning them against American and Iraq's Shiite-dominated government forces.

Americans officers acknowledge that providing weapons to breakaway rebel groups is not new in counterinsurgency warfare, and that in places where it has been tried before, including the French colonial war in Algeria, the British-led fight against insurgents in Malaya in the early 1950s, and in Vietnam, the effort often backfired, with weapons given to the rebels being turned against the forces providing them. Maj. Gen. Rick Lynch, commander of the Third Infantry Division and leader of an American task force fighting in a wide area between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers immediately south of Baghdad, said at a briefing for reporters on Sunday that no American support would be given to any Sunni group that had attacked Americans. If the Americans negotiating with Sunni groups in his area had “specific information” that the group or any of its members had killed Americans, he said, “The negotiation is going to go like this: ‘You're under arrest, and you're going with me.' I'm not going to go out and negotiate with folks who have American blood on their hands.”

One of the conditions set by the American commanders who met in Baghdad was that any group receiving weapons must submit its fighters for biometric tests that would include taking fingerprints and retinal scans. The American conditions, senior officers said, also include registering the serial numbers of all weapons, steps the Americans believe will help in tracing fighters who use the weapons in attacks against American or Iraqi troops. The fighters who have received American backing in the Amiriya district of Baghdad were required to undergo the tests, the officers said.

The requirement that no support be given to insurgent groups that have attacked Americans appeared to have been set aside or loosely enforced in negotiations with the Sunni groups elsewhere, including Amiriya, where American units that have supported Sunni groups fighting to oust Al Qaeda have told reporters they believe that the Sunni groups include insurgents who had fought the Americans. The Americans have bolstered Sunni groups in Amiriya by empowering them to detain suspected Qaeda fighters and approving ammunition supplies to Sunni fighters from Iraqi Army units.

In Anbar, there have been negotiations with factions from the 1920 Revolution Brigades, a Sunni insurgent group with strong Baathist links that has a history of attacking Americans. In Diyala, insurgents who have joined the Iraqi Army have told reporters that they switched sides after working for the 1920 group. And in an agreement announced by the American command on Sunday, 130 tribal sheiks in Salahuddin met in the provincial capital, Tikrit, to form police units that would “defend” against Al Qaeda.

General Lynch said American commanders would face hard decisions in choosing which groups to support. “This isn't a black and white place,” he said. “There are good guys and bad guys and there are groups in between,” and separating them was a major challenge. He said some groups that had approached the Americans had made no secret of their enmity.

“They say, ‘We hate you because you are occupiers' ” he said, “ ‘but we hate Al Qaeda worse, and we hate the Persians even more.' ” Sunni militants refer to Iraq's Shiites as Persians, a reference to the strong links between Iraqi Shiites and the Shiites who predominate in Iran.

An Iraqi government official who was reached by telephone on Sunday said the government was uncomfortable with the American negotiations with the Sunni groups because they offered no guarantee that the militias would be loyal to anyone other than the American commander in their immediate area. “The government's aim is to disarm and demobilize the militias in Iraq,” said Sadiq al-Rikabi, a political adviser to Mr. Maliki. “And we have enough militias in Iraq that we are struggling now to solve the problem. Why are we creating new ones?”

Despite such views, General Lynch said, the Americans believed that Sunni groups offering to fight Al Qaeda and halt attacks on American and Iraqi forces met a basic condition for re-establishing stability in insurgent-hit areas: they had roots in the areas where they operated, and thus held out the prospect of building security from the ground up. He cited areas in Babil Province where there were “no security forces, zero, zilch,” and added: “When you've got people who say, ‘I want to protect my neighbors,' we ought to jump like a duck on a june bug.”

Damien Cave and Richard A. Oppel Jr. contributed reporting.

Putin calls for new financial world order

Russian president Vladimir Putin called on Sunday for a radical overhaul of the world's financial and trade institutions to reflect the growing economic power of emerging market countries – including Russia.

Mr Putin said the world needed to create a new international financial architecture to replace an existing model that had become “archaic, undemocratic and unwieldy”.

His apparent challenge to western dominance of the world economic order came at a forum in St Petersburg designed to showcase the country's economic recovery. Among 6,000 delegates at the biggest business forum ever held in post-Soviet Russia were scores of international chief executives including heads of Deutsche Bank, BP, Royal Dutch Shell, Nestlé, Chevron, Siemens and Coca-Cola.

Business deals worth more than $4bn were signed at the conference – including an order by Aeroflot for Boeing jets – as executives said they were continuing to invest in Russia despite deteriorating relations with the west.

Mr Putin's hosting of the forum capped a week in which he dominated the international stage. He warned last Monday that Russia might target nuclear missiles at Europe if the US built a missile shield in Poland and the Czech Republic, then offered a compromise at the G8 summit involving switching part of the US system to Azerbaijan.

His speech on financial institutions suggested that, along with an aggressive recent campaign against US “unilateralism” in foreign policy, he was also seeking to challenge western dominance of the world economic order.

Mr Putin said 50 years ago, 60 per cent of world gross domestic product came from the Group of Seven industrial nations. Today, 60 per cent of world GDP came from outside the G7.

“The interests of stable economic development would be best served by a new architecture of international economic relations based on trust and mutually beneficial integration,” Mr Putin said.

The Russian president said there was increasing evidence that existing organisations were “not doing a good job regulating global economic relations”.

“Institutions created with a focus on a small number of active players sometimes look archaic, undemocratic and unwieldy. They are a far cry from recognising the existing balance of power,” he said.

Lieberman U.S. Should Take Aggressive Military Action Against Iran

ap
Sen. Joseph Lieberman said Sunday the United States should consider a military strike against Iran because of Tehran's involvement in Iraq.

"I think we've got to be prepared to take aggressive military action against the Iranians to stop them from killing Americans in Iraq," Lieberman said. "And to me, that would include a strike over the border into Iran, where we have good evidence that they have a base at which they are training these people coming back into Iraq to kill our soldiers."

The U.S. accuses Iran of fostering terrorism and Tehran's nuclear ambitions have brought about international reproach.

Lieberman, the Democratic nominee for vice president in 2000 who now represents Connecticut as an independent, spoke of Iranians' role in the continued violence in Iraq.

"We've said so publicly that the Iranians have a base in Iran at which they are training Iraqis who are coming in and killing Americans. By some estimates, they have killed as many as 200 American soldiers," Lieberman said. "Well, we can tell them we want them to stop that. But if there's any hope of the Iranians living according to the international rule of law and stopping, for instance, their nuclear weapons development, we can't just talk to them."

He added, "If they don't play by the rules, we've got to use our force, and to me, that would include taking military action to stop them from doing what they're doing."

Lieberman said much of the action could probably be done by air, although he would leave the strategy to the generals in charge. "I want to make clear I'm not talking about a massive ground invasion of Iran," Lieberman said.

"They can't believe that they have immunity for training and equipping people to come in and kill Americans," he said. "We cannot let them get away with it. If we do, they'll take that as a sign of weakness on our part and we will pay for it in Iraq and throughout the region and ultimately right here at home."

To deal with Iran's nuclear ambitions, Democratic presidential hopeful Bill Richardson said tough negotiation is called for.

"I would talk to them, but I would build an international coalition that would promote and push economic sanctions on them," Richardson said. "Sanctions would work on Iran. They are susceptible to disinvestment policy. They are susceptible to cuts, economic sanctions in commodities."

On Friday, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Iran's detention of at least four Americans is unwarranted but will not stop Washington from trying to engage Iran on other matters, including its disputed nuclear program and alleged support of insurgents in Iraq.

In an Associated Press interview, Rice also appeared to cast doubt on whether the U.S. would take its tentative diplomatic outreach to Iran any further for now.

The U.S. and Iranian ambassadors in Iraq met last month for the first public, substantive high-level discussions the two countries have held in nearly three decades. Although limited to the topic of violence and instability in Iraq, the talks have been seen as a possible window to better relations.

Immediately after the meeting in Baghdad, Iran announced plans for another. But U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker said Washington would decide only after the Iraqi government issued an invitation.

U.S. officials also said they wanted to see Iran follow up on U.S. complaints that it is equipping and helping insurgents who attack American forces.

Lieberman spoke on "Face the Nation" on CBS. Richardson was on "Late Edition" on CNN.

Bush Vows to Get Immigration Bill Passed

ny times
SOFIA, Bulgaria, June 11 — As he heads home from an eight-day European swing to face a hostile Congress, President Bush today lashed out at Democrats for holding a vote of no confidence on his attorney general, and vowed to get his stalled immigration legislation passed, saying, “I’ll see you at the bill signing.”

Addressing reporters at a news conference, Mr. Bush said the vote on Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales — which he called “a political statement on a meaningless resolution” — would have no bearing on Mr. Gonzales’ future, no matter how it turns out.

“They can try to have their votes of no confidence, but it’s not going to determine — make the determination who serves in my government,” Mr. Bush said, adding, “This process has been drug out a long time, which says to me it’s political.”

Mr. Bush’s eight-day, six-country tour through Europe has been a welcome escape from his political woes at home. The president was mobbed with well-wishers on Sunday in Albania, and received a warm welcome today here in Bulgaria, where President George Purvanov hailed Mr. Bush’s arrival as “very cogent proof of the fact that our two countries’ relations are in their best state now in more than a hundred years of their establishment.”

But while the president has been gone, his already diminished clout on Capitol hill has seemed to deteriorate further. The immigration bill was put on hold when Republicans revolted. He was forced to withdraw his nomination of General Peter Pace to be chairman of the military’s joint chiefs of staff to avoid a bruising nomination fight. Mr. Bush put the blame on Congress.

And now Democrats, seeking to revive the controversy over Mr. Gonzales’ role in the dismissal of federal prosecutors, have scheduled the no-confidence vote.

“It’s an interesting comment about Congress, isn’t it, that, on the one hand, they say that a good general shouldn’t be reconfirmed, and on the other hand, they say that my Attorney General shouldn’t stay,” he said Monday. “And I find it interesting. I guess it reflects the political atmosphere of Washington.”

On immigration, Mr. Bush is facing a backlash in his party’s conservative wing, whose members decry the bill as amnesty. On Tuesday, he plans to attend the Senate Republican policy luncheon on Capitol Hill — a rare step for a president who typically has lawmakers come to him at the White House — in an effort to revive the measure.

“I’m under no illusions about how hard this is,” he said, adding that he was disappointed that the measure had been “temporarily derailed.”

Mr. Bush did not do much lobbying from afar. While on Air Force One Friday evening, on the way from Poland to Rome, he telephoned three top Republicans: Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the party leader; Senator Trent Lott of Mississippi, the whip, and Senator Jon Kyl of Arizona, an architect of the bill.

“The political process sometimes isn’t pretty to look at,” Mr. Bush said. “There’s two steps forward and one step back. We made two steps forward on immigration, we took a step back, and now I’m going to work with those who are focused on getting an immigration bill done and start taking some steps forward again. I believe we can get it done. I’ll see you at the bill signing.”

Md. police raid the wrong apartment, kick resident in groin before realizing their mistake

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) - Annapolis police raided the wrong apartment Wednesday night, using flash grenades and kicking a resident in the groin before they realized their mistake, police and the family said.

Police spokesman Hal Dalton said something must have gone amiss in the briefing beforehand. "We don't know how the mistake was made," Dalton said.

Silvia Bernal, 30, told The (Annapolis) Capital that about 15 officers burst through the front door of her apartment while she was cooking dinner about 8:20 p.m. She said the officers kicked her husband in the groin while she fled into a bedroom and barred the door with her body.

Then she said both of them were taken to the ground and handcuffed. The Capital said a police officer went outside and realized they had raided the wrong residence.

Dalton said they were supposed to have raided a different apartment and said the incident was regrettable.

Spa Cove apartment manager Latisha Marshall says there is a large dent in the front door. And she said there are two large black stains from the flash-bang grenades police deployed after entering the apartment.

When officers and the city's tactical squad went to the right unit, they said it was empty.

Torture shame Britain helped CIA fly terror suspects to secret prison

uk daily mail
Britain helped the CIA fly terror suspects to secret torture centres, it has emerged.

Dramatic details of the agency's post-9/11 "extraordinary rendition" programme were revealed in a damning dossier from the Council of Europe human rights organisation.

On the day Tony Blair lectured Vladimir Putin about human rights, democracy and the Litvinenko murder, his own government was accused of colluding in breathtaking lawbreaking. The report said the CIA ran secret prisons in Poland and Romania for two years. Britain provided logistical support by letting the agency's aircraft use UK civilian and military airports dozens of times.

The British Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia was also a "black site" used to process "ghost" prisoners whose locations were kept secret.

The Council of Europe dossier, compiled by Swiss senator Dick Marty, said the jails in Poland and Romania operated with the full knowledge of the countries' presidents and defence ministers.

It said the U.S., with Britain's help, had been pursuing a war on terror without rules.

The CIA is accused of setting up the secret centres so it could use interrogation techniques amounting to torture which are illegal in the U.S. They include waterboarding. where a suspect is strapped to an inclined board with his head at the lower end, blindfolded and then either "dunked" into a bath or has water poured over his face so he believes he is drowning.

The technique is said to have been used on Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who has been named as the mastermind of the 9/11 attacks in 2001.

The report includes details of further harsh treatment meted out by masked guards.

It included months of solitary confinement, constant shackling in cramped cells, poor food, being kept naked for weeks and exposure to extremes of heat or cold and noise to prevent sleep.

In Poland, the report says, the CIA flights used the northern airport of Szymany and were met at the end of the runway – out of sight of terminal buildings – by Americans in vans. They drove through pine forest to the Stare Kiejkuty intelligence base.

Mr Marty, a former prosecutor, says the conclusions of his 19-month inquiry – immediately denied by Polpreliminaryish and Romanian officials – are based on interviews with former CIA operatives. He said collaboration by U.S. allies was critical to the detention programme.

The report says: "While it is likely that very few people in the countries concerned, including in the governments themselves, knew of the existence of the centres, we have sufficient grounds to declare that the highest state authorities were aware of the CIA's illegal activities."

Allowing either clandestine prisons or secret CIA flights to countries where suspects could face torture would be breaches of the European Convention on Human Rights. In a report last year, Mr Marty said 20 countries colluded in a "global spider's web" of secret CIA jails and prisoner transfers.

Britain is said to have let CIA aircraft use airports but officials here have denied they knew any "ghost" prisoners were on the flights.

Some flights are believed to have refuelled at Prestwick in Scotland.

Few details of what is alleged to have taken place in Diego Garcia were given in the report.

But Clive Stafford Smith, legal director of the UK charity and human rights group Reprieve, accused the Blair government of deliberately ignoring "clear proof that British territory has been used to support this illegal, repugnant system of kidnap and torture".

He added: "Today's report creates an imperative for Tony Blair and Gordon Brown to act. It is vital that we find out just how many prisoners passed through British territory. Were they tortured? Where are they today? Somebody needs to be held publicly accountable for this complete violation of human rights and the law."

The UK's Association of Chief Police Officers held an 18-month inquiry into the allegations of secret flights, but confirmed that it had found no evidence.

President Bush admitted last September that the CIA had run detention centres abroad but named no countries.

A CIA spokesman said he had not yet seen the report. He added: "Europe has been the source of grossly inaccurate allegations about the CIA and counter-terrorism. People should remember that Europeans have benefited from the agency's bold, lawful work to disrupt terrorist plots."

As the report was issued, 26 Americans, almost all suspected CIA agents, went on trial in their absence in Italy, accused of kidnapping a Muslim man in Milan in 2003 and flying him to Egypt.

Autism Vaccine Case Hits Federal Court

Alleging That Thimerosal In Shot Caused Developmental Disorder
(AP) Science has spoken when it comes to the theory that some childhood vaccines can cause autism. They don't, the Institute of Medicine concluded three years ago.

Now, it is the court's turn to speak.

More than 4,800 claims have been filed against the federal government during the past six years alleging that a child contracted autism as a result of a vaccine. The first test case from among those claims will be the subject of a hearing that begins Monday in a little-known "People's Court" - the U.S. Court of Federal Claims. A special master appointed by the court will hear the case.

For the parents filing a claim, there is the potential for vindication, and for financial redress.

Lawyers for the parents are expected to present their expert testimony during the first week of the hearing. Then lawyers representing the federal government are to present their case. The hearing is open to the public.

Officials plan to post transcripts on the court's Web site about 24 hours after each day's proceedings.

The test case addresses the theory that the cause of autism is the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine in combination with other vaccines containing the preservative thimerosal. That preservative, which contains a form of mercury, is no longer in routine childhood vaccines. However, it is used in influenza vaccines.

One of the parents who has filed a claim against the federal government and has great interest in the case is Scott Bono of Durham, N.C. His son, Jackson, 18, has autism. While acknowledging the findings of the IOM's study, Bono believes those findings were preordained by the federal government.

"The charge before the IOM committee was: 'You're not going to find anything wrong here,"' Bono said.

He said that parents of children with autism have been marginalized, but they see specific outcomes in their children that are consistent with exposure to mercury. And those outcomes did not present themselves until after they received their vaccinations. In short, the children tell the story better than the numbers, he said.

"It's a thrill in the sense that, for the first time, the stories of these children are going to be heard in court," Bono said.

In July 1999, the U.S. government asked vaccine manufacturers to eliminate or reduce, as expeditiously as possible, the mercury content of their vaccines to avoid any possibility of infants who receive vaccines being exposed to more mercury than is recommended by federal guidelines.

Dr. Paul Offit, who developed a vaccine for the rotovirus, is chief of the division of infectious diseases at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. He said epidemiological studies pick up minute, almost invisible differences in the populations that have received a vaccine versus those that have not.

For example, a swine flu vaccine in the 1970s caused the sometimes paralyzing Guillain-Barre syndrome in 1 out of 100,000 cases, he said.

But no such correlations have been found for autism, which affects about 1 out of 150 children, he said.

"It should be easily picked up," he said. "It hasn't been and the reason it hasn't been is because vaccines do not cause autism."

Offit said mercury is part of the natural environment. There's no escaping it and, in fact, children will get more mercury from breast milk than they get from a vaccine. Yet, he's frustrated when he hears lawmakers speak of having zero tolerance for mercury.

"On this planet you can't have zero tolerance for mercury," he said. "You would have to move to another planet."

Autism is characterized by impaired social interaction. Those affected often have trouble communicating, and they exhibit unusual or severely limited activities and interests. Meanwhile, classic symptoms of mercury poisoning include anxiety, fatigue and abnormal irritation, as well as cognitive and motor dysfunction.

The report from the Institute of Medicine pointed to five large studies, here and abroad, that tracked thousands of children since 2001 and found no association between autism and vaccines containing the preservative thimerosal.

Some members of the National Autism Association see drug manufacturers and the federal government as working too closely together to the point that the federal government is working to protect the industry from liability. The association says its mission is to raise awareness of environmental toxins as causing neurological damage that often results in an autism or related diagnosis.

Bono, a member of the association, said he doesn't believe his son was intentionally poisoned.

"I just want someone to step up and say, 'You're right, this did happen,"' he said.