Tuesday, February 12, 2008

'A new phase in the arms race is unfolding' says Putin

By Shaun Walker in Moscow
Saturday, 9 February 2008

the independent

Vladimir Putin has used one of the last major speeches of his presidency to deliver a defiant message to the West, accusing it of unleashing a new arms race that left Moscow no choice but to retaliate in kind. Less than a month before presidential elections that his hand-picked successor is almost certain to win, the speech removed any lingering doubts that Russian foreign policy might become less aggressive after Mr Putin steps down.

"It's clear that a new arms race is unfolding in the world," said Mr Putin, one that Russia did not start. And he vowed that Russia would respond to the threats by developing newer and more modern weapons that were as good as if not better than those possessed by Western countries. "We are being forced into retaliating ... Russia has and always will have the answers to these challenges," he said.

The speech in which he also condemned Nato expansion came as defence chiefs of the 26-nation alliance, increasingly alarmed by Russia's flexing of its military muscles, met in Vilnius, the Lithuanian capital, and urged Moscow to tone down its rhetoric.

Russian bomber patrols have recently been made over the Atlantic, Pacific and Arctic oceans and approached close to the borders of Nato airspace. Two Russian Tupolev-95 aircraft strayed south from their routine patrol pattern off the Norwegian coast and headed towards Scotland last September.

In the most recent incident, two long-range "Blackjack" bombers flew to the Bay of Biscay off France and Spain to test-launch missiles. The Russians have also hinted they want to re-establish a naval presence in the Mediterranean, probably using Syrian ports. The strategy is designed to heighten the visibility of Russia's military might but the sabre-rattling has alarmed Western countries and fuelled talk of a new Cold War.

Mr Putin went into overdrive yesterday, painting Russia as the victim of Western aggression and expansion, and promised a Russian response. He said Western countries spent far more on defence than Russia, and also returned to a theme he has raised many times before – that of Nato enlargement towards Russian borders. "We pulled out of bases in Cuba and Vietnam," he said. "And what did we get? New American bases in Bulgaria and Romania."

He also complained about US plans to build elements of a missile defence system in Poland and the Czech Republic. "They try to persuade us that all these actions are not aimed against Russia," he said, "but they have no constructive answers to our well-founded concerns."

Russia has previously threatened to deploy nuclear missiles in its Baltic exclave of Kaliningrad if the US goes ahead with its plans. Russia's annual defence spending has quadrupled since Mr Putin came to power and the Kremlin has announced a £100bn programme to modernise ageing military hardware.

Symbolically ominous changes are under way too: Russia recently announced that vast parades in Red Square to showcase the nation's military strength are to be revived this year for the first time since the collapse of the Soviet Union. Mr Putin also accused unnamed foreign countries of cynically trying to gain unfair access to Russia's natural resources. "Many conflicts, foreign policy acts and diplomatic démarches smell of oil and gas," he said. "This is the context in which we understand the growing interest towards Russia." He said the sovereignty of certain countries had been completely destroyed under slogans of freedom and democracy.

The speech was broadcast live on Russian television. Mr Putin was addressing the State Council, an influential gathering of the country's elite, including Dmitry Medvedev, the man virtually guaranteed to be Russia's next president. Also present was the Chelsea owner, Roman Abramovich, Russia's richest man, attending in his capacity as governor of Russia's Chukotka region.

Mr Putin has consistently portrayed Western attempts to foster democracy in Russia as nefarious intentions. Last month, he told the security services to beware of foreign meddling in the upcoming presidential elections, and earlier this week the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe announced it would not monitor the election because of an unco-operative attitude from Russian officials.

Yesterday's bellicose remarks came at the end of a speech devoted to outlining achievements during his eight years in office and setting out a blueprint of Russia's development to 2020. He rattled off economic and social achievements over

the past eight years, boasting that Russians were now immeasurably better off than eight years ago, and laid out a development strategy to improve incomes, life expectancy, and quality of life for Russians by 2020.

Bizarrely, Mr Putin made no reference in his speech to the fact that the presidency will soon be changing hands, and spoke repeatedly of what "we" need to do.

Mr Medvedev, who is virtually certain to win the elections on 2 March, has asked Mr Putin to stay on as prime minister

Egomaniac Thug Cop Assaults 14 Year Old Kid



Don't call him "dude" or he may "kill you"

Steve Watson
Infowars.net
Tues
day, Feb 12, 2008

Is it a man? Is it a dude? No, it's officer Rivieri of the Baltimore Police Department who is the latest small membered thug cop to believe that it is his duty to go around bullying and wrestling discipline into innocent children.

Unfortunately for this PC podge, he is also the latest cop caught on camera and made famous by Youtube.

On the video, the officer, Salvatore Rivieri, puts the boy in a headlock, pushes him to the ground, questions his upbringing, threatens to "smack" him and repeatedly accuses the youngster of showing disrespect because the youth refers to the officer as "man" and "dude." reports the Baltimore Sun.

"I'm talking to you, can you hear me? Don't get defensive with me son, cos you'll spend some time in juvenile." Rivieri yells.

"OK, i didn't hear you." 14 year old Eric Bush replies.

"Don't get defensive with me, you backed off me, i'm not your father, you keep that attitude for your father, you give it to me, I'll smack you upside the head." Rivieri fires back.

As young Eric tries to respond, Rivieri loses it "SHUT YOUR MOUTH, I'M TALKING" he bawls, clearly frightening the boys as one of them tell Eric to stop answering back.

Rivieri then marches over to Eric and grabs at his skateboard while wrestling him to the floor by the neck.

"SIT DOWN, I AM NOT A DUDE" the portly enforcer cries.

Skateboarding AND calling an officer "dude", young Eric certainly does seem to be the scourge of decency and a potential Al Qaeda member.

"I didn't do anything" the child pleads.

"When I'm talking to you, you shut your mouth and listen. First of all you disrespected me, my badge and this department."

No Salvatore, I think you did a pretty good job of that all by yourself.

"Obviously, your parents don't put a foot in your butt quite enough, because you don't understand the meaning of respect. First of all, you better learn how to speak. I'm not 'man.' I'm not 'dude,' I am Officer Rivieri. The sooner you learn that, the longer you are going to live in this world. Because you go around doing this kind of stuff and somebody is going to kill you." Rivieri froths.

Rivieri addresses the person with the camera, saying, "You got that camera on? If I find myself on ... " The video cuts off before Rivieri finishes his sentence.

Watch the video:

The video was posted on YouTube on Saturday but probably was made late last summer, according to the Police Department. Rivieri, who has been suspended pending review, has refused to comment.


Last Summer a similarly podgy officer was suspended in Hot Springs, Arkansas after an almost identical incident involving a group of 13 year old kids skateboarding down the street and minding their own business.

Officer Joey Williams was investigated after the incident was captured and posted on YouTube, revealing that in his thuggish outrage Williams had grabbed one of the youths in a choke hold, forcing him to the ground, while later chasing and wrestling two others, including a young girl whom he then applied a headlock to.

watch the video:

“When I tell you to stop and you tell everybody to keep going, that’s fleeing, that’s disorderly conduct, that’s a violation of city ordinance,” Williams is heard saying in the video.

Williams also threatened one of teens laying on the ground that he’d spray him with pepper spray if he moved.

Of course after the dust had settled Williams was cleared of any wrongdoing by an internal review board and went back to policing the vicious streets of Hot Springs, protecting the public from deadly 13 year old skateboarders.

What was it that made officer Rivieri snap? What made him so desperate to exercise his masculinity by beating up on kids? Maybe it was it the fact that he has to wear an outfit that wouldn't look out of place on a circus clown, or perhaps it was having to drive around in a loaf of bread on wheels (see opposite) that pushed him over the edge?

Joking aside, a cursory search on Youtube reveals that this type of incident is commonplace. When will one of these egomaniac thugs be made an example out of? When will these fools realize that a badge does not give them the right to go around choking out kids?

Cops like Rivieri and Williams, acting as if they are gods , epitomize the slide toward the police state society and they smear the name every other good cop out there.

It is high time that other cops and city officials move to set the precedent to eradicate these thugs from what is supposed to be our primary public service.

Authorities have begun an internal-affairs investigation into Rivieri, but no doubt that means they will wait until the matter dies down before quietly reinstating the rotund trooper.

DHS Singles Out "Pregnant Women" As Likely Terrorists

Follows on from call to watch out for "blonde haired, blue eyed, western-looking" Al-Qaeda members

Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet
Tuesday, February 12th, 2008

The Department of Homeland Security has embarked on its latest bold move to eliminate terrorists from our midst and keep America safe, by advising law enforcement officials about a deadly new threat - pregnant women.

"The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is reminding law-enforcement officials of the increased use of female suicide bombers worldwide, and warning that women terrorists might hide explosives in devices “that mimic the look of a pregnant woman," reports NBC News.

"The unclassified DHS threat assessment, released Monday and obtained by NBC News, shows photographs of “pregnancy prosthetics,” hollowed-out devices that could hold explosive devices. The report says “female suicide bombers have used devices that make them appear pregnant to hide explosive devices.”

Despite this burst of rampant fearmongering, the report admits that, "DHS and the FBI have no specific, credible intelligence indicating that terrorist organizations intend to utilize female suicide bombers against targets in the Homeland.”

Even before this announcement, little Hitler thug airport security guards had been enjoying the opportunity to manhandle naked pregnant women ever since 9/11.

In one harrowing case, the wife of film producer Nicholas Monahan was forced to expose herself and have screeners touch her breasts in full public view at Portland International Airport. Upon seeing his wife crying her eyes out, Monahan complained and was subsequently arrested and thrown in the airport jail. Monahan likened his experience to something out of The Gulag Archipelago. The trauma of the experience contributed to his wife having to have a caesarean section.

Targeting pregnant women as terror suspects is just the latest chapter of this virulent breed of mindlessness. Regular readers will recall last month's baseless claim that Al-Qaeda had recruited 1,500 white Britons to carry out attacks in the UK.

Fox News quickly seized upon the comment, made by a single MI5 spook, to imply that the new breed of Al-Qaeda are white Caucasian westerners with blonde hair, blue eyes, and no criminal record. You probably have a few neighbors that fit that description.

This followed a December 2003 nationwide FBI alert to police which stated that people traveling with almanacs and maps should be viewed as potential terrorists and searched at checkpoints. Now you can add pregnant women to people who own maps and those with blonde hair and blue eyes as Osama's deadly new acolytes.

Of course, the intention and consequences of this are twofold. If there really were any Al-Qaeda terrorists running around planning to blow stuff up then the DHS is too concerned with mothers pushing baby strollers and lost tourists to give a damn.

Secondly, this inculcates the paranoia that anyone and everyone is a potential suicide bomber and fosters a stasi-like mentality where people are zealous to report on anything they perceive as suspicious activity.

The fact that Americans are more likely to be killed by peanuts, accident causing deer or lightning strikes than die in a terror attack also necessitates the creation of a boogey man who could be waiting around every corner.

All of which beefs a police state that is solely reliant on keeping the fearmongering alive by providing an ample supply of comic book villains and if they are not to be found, average everyday people like you and me, in order to justify swinging around the mammoth apparatus of anti-terror to target innocent citizens.

GM posts loss, offers workers buyouts

DETROIT (Reuters) - General Motors Corp on Tuesday posted a quarterly loss reflecting a slump in its North American market and losses at former finance subsidiary GMAC and said it would offer buyouts or early retirements to all U.S. hourly workers represented by the United Auto Workers.

The sweeping deal with the union, which covers 74,000 workers, will clear the way for GM to hire lower-cost replacements. The No. 1 U.S. automaker said those buyouts would start to generate savings by the second half of 2008.

GM has said the first half of 2008 is likely to be tough for industry sales in North America, but it expects to see a rebound in the second half of the year.

Chief Financial Officer Fritz Henderson said January sales results strengthened that view after a fourth quarter that was hurt by lower North American production and deeper discounting on the automaker's pickup trucks.

For the year, GM expects to post improved global automotive results driven by emerging markets but declined to offer a more specific forecast for the crucial and troubled U.S. market, still its largest.

"We are talking about global automotive operations. That is where we see an improvement," Henderson told reporters. "We are not really breaking it down between what regions are going to be the drivers."

NORTH AMERICA SWAMPED

For the fourth-quarter, GM posted a net loss of $722 million, or $1.28 per share, in the fourth quarter, compared with net income of $950 million, or $1.68 per share, a year earlier.

GM posted combined losses of almost $1.7 billion in North America and Europe that swamped gains of $437 million from operations in emerging markets in Asia and Latin America.

Excluding one-time items, GM posted a fourth-quarter profit of 8 cents per share for the fourth quarter that reflected a $1.6-billion tax accounting adjustment that boosted reported results for continuing operations.

Analysts surveyed by Reuters Estimates had forecast an adjusted per-share loss of 61 cents for GM, but it was not immediately clear how fully that reflected the tax gain the automaker booked in the fourth-quarter.

Shares of GM, which had gained 5 percent on Monday, initially moved higher after the quarterly results were announced, but they retreated to trade down 1.5 percent later in pre-market action.

GM's fourth-quarter revenue fell to $47.09 billion, from $50.8 billion in the same quarter a year earlier, a drop attributed to the spin-off of GMAC.

Auto revenue rose $3 billion to $46.7 billion on gains in Latin America, Asia and Eastern Europe.

GMAC, GM's former financing arm, reported a fourth-quarter net loss of $724 million a week ago. GM sold GMAC to a group led by Cerberus Capital Management, but retained a 49 percent stake that still contributes to the automaker's results.

GMAC's Residential Capital LLC unit is the second-largest independent U.S. mortgage lender.

GM ended 2007 with $27.3 billion in cash and marketable securities, up from $26.4 billion a year earlier.

Henderson said GM's pension plan, including reserves for factory and white-collar workers, was overfunded by about $20 billion at the end of 2007.

Call to scrap 'anti-teen' device

BBC
Tuesday February 12, 2008

A high-pitched device used to disperse teenagers is being challenged by campaigners, who say it is not a fair way to treat young people.

There are estimated to be 3,500 of the devices, known as the mosquito, in use across the country.

Their sound causes discomfort to young ears - but their frequency is above the normal hearing range of people over 25.

The Children's Commissioner for England says they should be scrapped as they infringe the rights of young people.

Negative views

The devices, which exploit the fact that a person's ability to hear high frequencies generally declines once they reach their 20s, have proved popular with councils and police who aim to tackle anti-social behaviour by using them to disperse groups of youths.

But a new campaign called "Buzz off", led by the Children's Commissioner for England and backed by groups including civil liberties group Liberty, is calling for them to be scrapped.

The organisations want to highlight what they call the "increasingly negative" way society views and deals with children and young people.

Sir Al Aynsley-Green, Children's Commissioner for England, said he had spoken to many young people who had been "deeply affected" by the deterrents.

He said: "These devices are indiscriminate and target all children and young people, including babies, regardless of whether they are behaving or misbehaving.

Full article here.

Ron Paul Calls For March On Washington DC

Congressman admits move would be "risky" but that media would be forced to sit up and take notice

Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet
Tuesday, February 12th, 2008

Congressman Ron Paul has called on his supporters to organize a march on Washington DC, admitting that such a move would be "risky" but impossible for the media to ignore and could have a big impact on the eve of the Republican convention.

In a campaign update posted on You Tube last night, the Texan outlined his thinking behind the plan.

"One of the projects that I've been working on in my mind and in my head that I want to share with you....we ought to make a grand display, we ought to have a true march to show what our numbers are," said Paul, adding that such a move would be "risky".

Paul said that the march was necessary because the media would not be able to ignore it and such an action would "send a powerful message."

"Others have gone to Washington and people remember the grand rallies, so I'm at the point where I think we have to make a grand stand, we have to stand firm and see where the numbers are and be counted and see if the remnant is there and see how big it is," said Paul, adding that such a display could make delegates sit up and take notice at the Republican convention in September.

Paul said the rally was vital, "If we want to really take a stand for freedom, take a stand that nobody can ignore, to see what would happen if we really had this grand march on Washington."

The Congressman said the march would have to take place within three or four months so that it would occur before the convention.

The prospect of such a huge public display is obviously going to send chills down the spines of the elite and they will no doubt be considering plans to infiltrate and provocateur violence so as to demonize legitimate demonstrators in the eyes of the watching audience.

Numerous important demonstrations down the years have been infiltrated by authorities posing as anarchists who instigate violence to give the police carte blanche to crackdown on peaceful protesters.

Nowhere was this more evident that in Quebec last summer where during the SPP summit protest, Canadian police were caught and later forced to admit to posing as violent rock-carrying anarchists as other police staged their arrest when they were pointed out as cops by protesters.

The potential of more staged violence is particularly high considering the fact that the media has engaged in a year-long campaign to insinuate that Ron Paul supporters are extremists, racists and possibly violent. They seized upon several "money-bomb" campaigns to link the terminology with Guy Fawkes' 16th century Gunpowder Plot to bomb the British parliament.

During his campaign update, Ron Paul also emphasized why his supporters should not be disheartened by his recent decision to scale back his presidential campaign in order to safeguard his congressional seat.

"We do have to be very positive about what we have achieved this year, far beyond my expectations and far beyond the expectations of most of those individuals in the media who wrote us off rather quickly," said Paul.

"If we drop the ball now, if we fade away and disappear, all the work and effort that we've done in this past year could be lost so that is why I believe we have to stay in this race and do what we can."

"We can't turn this around in a week or two or a year or two, but if conditions deteriorate as I suspect we have to have a hardcore of people who understand these issues who are able to rebuild this society," he added.

"We need everybody to stay engaged and stay active and not be disillusioned that this is all over....we can't drop the ball right now, we have to continue this process," concluded Paul.

Robust dollar signals switch of focus

Peter Garnham
Financial Times
Tuesday February 12, 2008

The dollar’s resilience in the wake of recent dire US economic data has raised the prospect that the currency market may be experiencing one of its periodic changes in focus.

Analysts say currency investors could be eschewing their long-held chase for yield and instead looking through the current slowdown to reward currencies with the best prospects for growth.

Currency investors love a theme and for much of the past six years they have been happy to reward central banks that raise interest rates by buying these countries’ currencies while selling currencies where rates are being cut.

This held true as the Federal Reserve started cutting interest rates in the second half of last year, sending the dollar down to a record low of $1.4968 against the euro in November.

However, the dollar has held up against its major trading partners over the past three months in spite of a string of bad news suggesting that the US economy could be heading into recession.

Even the 125 basis-point cut in the Fed funds rate over the last month has not forced the dollar beyond last year’s lows. Last week, the dollar put in its best performance against the European single currency for 18 months.

Analysts say the counter-intuitive strength of the dollar is a warning that the drivers of the foreign exchange market may be changing.

“The market does not seem to be driven at the moment by interest rate differentials, which would point to a weaker US dollar,” says Marc Chandler at Brown Brothers Harriman.

He also says the foreign exchange market no longer seems so closely correlated to the equity market

At the start of the global equity market correction in November, rising risk aversion boosted the low-yielding yen and Swiss franc as investors liquidated carry trades, in which the purchase of riskier, higher-yielding assets is funded by selling the low-yielding currencies.

But the yen and the Swiss franc lost ground against the dollar last week in spite of a sharp sell-off in global equities.

Mr Chandler says it is possible that the focus of the currency markets will shift towards economic growth.

“With the nearly unprecedented pace of US monetary easing and fiscal stimulus, more observers seem to be be coming around to our view of a short and shallow economic landing in the US rather than a long and deep downturn and this is supportive of the dollar,” he says.

Full article here.

D.C. Police Begin Watching Live Crime Cameras

WRC-TV
updated 8:49 a.m. ET, Tues., Feb. 12, 2008

WASHINGTON - Police are now watching live images from surveillance cameras posted in D.C. in hopes of responding faster to shootings, robberies and other crimes.

The city has installed 73 cameras since August 2006 at a cost of about $4 million. The cameras are in public places and are marked with the D.C. police logo.

Until recently, officers mostly checked the recordings after crimes were committed in hopes of turning up leads. But Police Chief Cathy Lanier said she thought the department was missing opportunities to more quickly solve crimes or stop them in progress.

Police will now monitor images from 10 to 15 cameras in high-crime areas for about 40 hours per week, News4's James Adams reported.

Related: Watch The Report

Police hope to add 50 cameras over then next two years at a cost of $4.5 million.

The District is following cities such as Baltimore, Chicago, New York and Philadelphia, where police have actively monitored live camera scenes for years. Still, the initiative that began in mid-November has raised privacy concerns.

"They cost a great deal of money to install, to maintain and, especially, to monitor, if they're going to be monitored live," said Art Spitzer with the American Civil Liberties Union. "We've paid a lot of attention to thte data from other places that have used surveillance cameras, and the data shows that they're really not very effective."

Supporters said public safety outweighs privacy concerns.

"I see the crime camera as another tool in the MPD toolbox," said D.C. Council member Jim Graham. "It's not a magic wand. It's just another thing that assures the neighborhood we're serious about stopping crime."

Travelers to Europe May Face Fingerprinting

Travelers to Europe May Face Fingerprinting

By Ellen Nakashima and John Ward Anderson
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, February 12, 2008; A01

The European Commission will propose tomorrow that all foreign travelers entering and leaving Europe, including U.S. citizens, should be fingerprinted. If approved by the European Parliament, the measure would mean that precisely identifying information on tens of millions of citizens will be added in coming years to databases that could be shared by friendly governments around the world.

The United States already requires that foreigners be fingerprinted and photographed before they enter the country. So does Japan. Now top European security officials want to follow suit, with travelers being fingerprinted and some also having their facial images stored in a Europe-wide database, according to a copy of the proposal obtained by The Washington Post.

The plan is part of a vast and growing trend on both sides of the Atlantic to collect and share data electronically to identify and track people in the name of national security and immigration control. U.S. government computers now have access to data on financial transactions; air travel details such as name, itinerary and credit card numbers; and the names of those sending and receiving express-mail packages -- even a description of the contents.

"It's the only way to be really sure about identifying people," said a European Commission official familiar with the new fingerprinting plan. "With biometric data, it's much easier to track people and know who has come in and who has gone out, including possible terrorists," said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak publicly.

The timing and logistics of the plan remain uncertain, but it would probably not start for at least a year. Travelers' fingerprints would probably be taken upon arrival and then checked against a database, the official said. That, initially at least, would mean airports where fingerprints would be scanned electronically, the European official said.

"It seems like a steamroller," said Sophie in 't Veld, a Dutch member of parliament who follows privacy and security issues. "There is a new trend in particular in the U.S., the E.U. and Australia to register every single detail of our life. We're tagged. They can follow everything we do. They know where we are. The whole question is: What for? Does this actually make the world a safer place?"

The Bush administration says it does.

"Not only do we support these measures, we applaud them," said Russ Knocke, a spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security. "Measures like fingerprint and passenger-data collection can disrupt the ability of terrorists to move easily across international borders. They also serve to protect American citizens traveling overseas."

DHS already has a database of 85 million sets of fingerprints collected, for instance, from U.S. and foreign travelers stopped at the border for criminal violations, or for U.S. citizens adopting a child overseas. The FBI is building a huge biometric database for criminal justice purposes. All are supposed to be built to the same standards so data queries can be easily exchanged.

The "common ambition across the Atlantic," the European official said, is to achieve "as much interoperability as possible," through common technical standards for fingerprints and facial images. He said strict European data-protection laws would have to be respected before any sharing took place.

The proposal is part of a broader package of measures to strengthen the European entry and exit system so officials can know exactly who is in their country. The United States has a similar entry program and has piloted an exit program, but does not yet automatically track those leaving the country. The measures are also aimed at easing border crossings for law-abiding travelers.

The new European proposals nearly match initiatives undertaken in the United States to screen out terrorists, people who overstay their visas and others.

For several years, the United States has required that airlines that fly into the country transmit detailed passenger data before the flight's arrival. In November, the European Commission, the E.U.'s executive arm, issued the same proposal. The United States is working on an electronic travel authorization system, requiring travelers from countries where visas are not required to visit here to submit identification and travel details before departure. Now the commission is proposing something similar.

Armed guards in plainclothes already sit on flights to and from Europe and within Europe, but the United States wants to be able to put air marshals on many more flights from Europe, DHS spokesman Knocke said. The Bush administration is negotiating this with individual European states.

European privacy advocate Simon Davies said European officials are "blindly following" the United States "without the slightest commitment to openness or accountability."

The problem with border fingerprint systems is that their success rate diminishes as they grow, said Davies, director of the London-based Privacy International. "Adding a hundred million fingerprints of dubious quality on top of an inaccurate database will exponentially increase the failure rate," he said.

About 13 million U.S. citizens fly from the United States to Europe each year, according to the International Air Transport Association. David Stempler, president of the Potomac-based Air Travelers Association, said he has no problem with the proposal, given that the United States requires something similar. "So what's good for the goose is good for the gander," he said.

But Susan Gurley, executive director of the Association of Corporate Travel Executives, which represents 2,500 business executives in the United States and abroad, said that such a database poses the risk of abuse. "Unauthorized access to info of this nature could reveal executive travel patterns," she said. "It's another way to know what you're doing and where you are going."

Anderson reported from Paris. Staff writer Spencer S. Hsu contributed to this report.