Archive for May, 2006

Ministry Reports 51 Bound Bodies Found In Capital

Monday, May 8th, 2006

BAGHDAD, May 7 — A series of car bomb attacks in Baghdad and the Shiite Muslim holy city of Karbala killed about 30 Iraqis early Sunday, police and witnesses said, while an Interior Ministry source reported that 51 bodies had been found in the capital since Saturday morning.

An attacker detonated a car bomb at an Iraqi army checkpoint in the Sunni Arab neighborhood of Adhamiyah in northern Baghdad, killing at least six Iraqi soldiers and three civilians, hospital and Defense Ministry officials said.

Shrapnel and blood covered the area, near the Ibn al-Haitham College of Education. At least four vehicles were damaged.
washingtonpost.com

Universities: the new front line of Sunni-Shiite hostilities

Monday, May 8th, 2006

Zina Hassan drops her voice to a whisper when she talks about student politics at Baghdad University. ‘We are surrounded by spies,’ said the 22-year-old Iraqi Sunni Muslim.

Kadhem al-Muqdadi, a Shiite Muslim, scans the campus before getting into his car. A teaching colleague was killed when a student alerted a waiting assassin with a phone call.

Mohammed Jassim, also a Sunni, resigned as a lecturer at Mustansiriyah University in northeast Baghdad. Members of the Mahdi Army, the militia of Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, threatened twice to kill him if he stayed.

With Iraq on the brink of civil war, university campuses have joined the rest of the country along the fault line that’s widening between Sunnis and Shiites. Student governments, backed by powerful political parties, intimidate professors and fellow students. Killing and other violence have become increasingly common.

‘All the powers-that-be in Iraq are trying to find a presence on the campuses,’ said Basil al-Khateeb, a spokesman for the Ministry of Higher Education, which oversees a university system for 737,000 students. ‘There are clashes between students in many of the universities.’

Muqdadi added: ‘We pay the cost of the political chaos at the university.’ The Shiite professor fears that, one day, he too will be killed by someone alerted to his presence by a student with a mobile phone.
sundayherald.com

MAY 7: Spain accepts Bolivia gas plans

Sunday, May 7th, 2006

A Spanish delegation says it has reached a “good understanding” with Bolivian President Evo Morales over his energy nationalisation programme.

The issue matters to Spain because of the huge Bolivian gas reserves controlled by Spanish firm Repsol.

But Spain’s Deputy Foreign Minister, Bernardino Leon, said he respected Bolivia’s decision to nationalise.

He said Spanish firms would have to decide whether to stay in Bolivia under the new terms.

Earlier this week Mr Morales took control of Bolivia’s natural gas industry and told foreign firms to leave if they were not willing to comply with the new conditions.

The Bolivian government has said it will start renegotiating energy contracts with all foreign companies from next week, giving them 180 days reach agreement, or face eviction.

In the meantime, the government will take 82% of profits.
bbc.co.uk

CIA boss Goss is cooked

Sunday, May 7th, 2006

WASHINGTON – CIA Director Porter Goss abruptly resigned yesterday amid allegations that he and a top aide may have attended Watergate poker parties where bribes and prostitutes were provided to a corrupt congressman.

Kyle (Dusty) Foggo, the No. 3 official at the CIA, could soon be indicted in a widening FBI investigation of the parties thrown by defense contractor Brent Wilkes, named as an unindicted co-conspirator in the bribery conviction of former Rep. Randall (Duke) Cunningham, law enforcement sources said.

A CIA spokeswoman said Foggo went to the lavish weekly hospitality-suite parties at the Watergate and Westin Grand hotels but “just for poker.”

Intelligence and law enforcement sources said solid evidence had yet to emerge that Goss also went to the parties, but Goss and Foggo share a fondness for poker and expensive cigars, and the FBI investigation was continuing.
nydailynews.com

Exit of Chief Viewed as Move to Recast C.I.A.
WASHINGTON, May 6 Ñ The choice of Gen. Michael V. Hayden of the Air Force as the new director of the Central Intelligence Agency is only a first step in a planned overhaul to permanently change the mission and functions of the legendary spy agency, intelligence officials said Saturday.

Porter J. Goss, who was forced to resign Friday, was seen as an obstacle to an effort by John D. Negroponte, the director of national intelligence, to focus the agency on its core mission of combating terrorism and stealing secrets abroad. General Hayden, who will be nominated to the post on Monday, is currently Mr. Negroponte’s deputy, and he is regarded as an enthusiastic champion of the agency’s adoption of that narrower role.

A senior intelligence official said that General Hayden, in a recent presentation to the President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, had sharply criticized Mr. Goss for resisting that transformation. Mr. Goss was seen as trying to protect the C.I.A.’s longtime role as government’s premier center for intelligence analysis, but under General Hayden, who is currently Mr. Negroponte’s top deputy, much of that function is intended to move elsewhere.

Dolts or liars?

Sunday, May 7th, 2006

Either most members of the media elite have a reading comprehension problem which would necessarily result in low scores for them on standard IQ tests or they deliberately misrepresent to you what they have read.

Now, that’s not too serious when you can determine for yourself whether they are dolts or liars. But in the case of the most recent report Director-General Mohamed ElBaradei has made to the Board of Governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency, since it is still confidential, there is no site where that report is posted.

Hence, secure in the knowledge that you’ll have to take their word for it, there are more than a few inflammatory accounts extant of what the report said.
worldnetdaily.com

US ‘blocks’ Palestinian aid plan

Sunday, May 7th, 2006

European diplomats say the US is blocking a plan to resume direct financial aid to the Palestinians.

The European Commission is considering plans to send funds to the office of the president, bypassing the Hamas-led Palestinian government.

…The United Nations estimates that a quarter of the Palestinian population depends on government salaries. The PA employs some 165,000 people.

But the severance of donor funding has meant that the government has been unable to pay wages for March and April.

BBC Middle East analyst Roger hardy says the Bush administration wants to maintain the economic pressure on the Hamas-led government.

The official view in Washington is that if Hamas refuses to recognise Israel, and eventually collapses, it will have no-one to blame but itself.

But, our correspondent says, many in Europe feel that wielding the big stick against Hamas will be counter-productive, and that it is in no-one’s interests for Gaza and the West Bank to descend ever deeper into poverty and lawlessness.
bbc.co.uk

Homeless Heroes

Sunday, May 7th, 2006

The next generation of American Veterans is on its way home. Over 1.3 million American troops have already served in Iraq or Afghanistan, and tens of thousands more will return from combat over the years to come. After these young men and women put away their uniforms, they will still be coping with the consequences of years spent at war. When these conflicts have faded from the headlines, will we, as Americans, continue to honor our yellow-ribbon commitment to ‘Support the Troops’? Already there are many disturbing signs that we are not prepared to meet that obligation.

More than a year ago, I met my first homeless Iraq Vet. Only months after her return from combat, former Army Specialist Nicole Goodwin, 24, was staying in New York City shelters with her infant daughter. Just a few days later, I met former Private First Class Herold Noel. Herold had driven fuel trucks to the front lines during the invasion of Iraq, but when I met him, Herold was on three kinds of medication for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and living in his car with his son, a shy two-year-old named Anthony.

Herold and Nicole are not isolated cases. Ricky Singh, of the Brooklyn-based veterans’ service organization Black Veterans for Social Justice does outreach in some of the toughest parts of New York. Mr. Singh, on the front lines of the new battle against homelessness, says he has seen the dozens of homeless Iraq War veterans, ‘and we know that this is only the tip of the iceberg.’
military.com

British soldiers die as helicopter is shot down. Then Basra erupts in bloody gun battles

Sunday, May 7th, 2006

Bloddy battles were fought on the streets of Basra last night after a British helicopter crashed in the city, reportedly killing four airmen and drawing an Iraqi crowd shouting ‘Victory to the Mahdi army’.

At least three British army vehicles were set on fire as the crowd hurled petrol bombs at troops trying to reach the blazing wreckage. Iraqi police officials believed the aircraft had been brought down by a shoulder-fired missile. Four charred bodies were seen inside it, reports said.

In the ensuing fighting, unconfirmed reports suggested that four Iraqis – some of them bystanders and thought to include a child – had also been killed. Soldiers fired three live rounds as they moved to seal off the area. A curfew was imposed from 8pm local time in a bid to restore calm.
guardian.co.uk

Taliban claim helicopter kill

Sunday, May 7th, 2006

An Aljazeera correspondent in Afghanistan said Muhamad Hanif, a spokesman for the Taliban, claimed that his movement had brought down the US Chinook.

The US-led forces said the 10 multinational force soldiers on board were all killed, but denied that the Chinook, which crashed near the Pakistan border, had been brought down by the Taliban.
aljazeera.net

FBI Counterterrorism Unit Spies on Peace Group School of the Americas Watch

Sunday, May 7th, 2006

The ACLU released evidence Thursday showing that the FBI has been monitoring the peace group, School of Americas Watch. SOA Watch was founded by Father Roy Bourgeois in 1990. The group conducts research on the U.S Army School of the Americas, now renamed the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation. The School, which is located at Fort Benning, Georgia, trains hundreds of soldiers from Latin America each year and is funded entirely by the U.S government. SOA Watch holds an annual vigil calling for the closure of the facility. Last year the vigil drew 19,000 people.

SOA Watch is the latest organization that the ACLU has found to have been subject to U.S government surveillance in the name of counterterrorism efforts. In December, NBC News revealed the existence of a secret Pentagon database to track intelligence gathered inside the United States including information on anti-war protests and rallies. The database included information on counter-military recruiting meetings held at a Quaker Meeting House in Lake Forth, Florida and anti-nuclear protests staged in Nebraska on the 50th anniversary of the U.S. atomic bombing of Nagasaki.

And in March the ACLU uncovered files showing that the FBI had been monitoring and possibly infiltrating the Thomas Merton Center which is a Pittsburgh-based peace center, actively opposed to the war in Iraq.
democracynow.org