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Quartet
to keep funding interim PA government (February 22, 2006)
- Financial support for the Palestinian Authority should continue
while there is an interim government, Quartet principals decided
during a conference call Monday, a day before US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice set out for a trip to the region. Rice did not
schedule a stop in Israel even though her talks are focusing on two
matters critical to the country - Hamas and a nuclear Iran. Israeli
officials said there was no intent by Rice to "slight"
Jerusalem, and added that Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni was just in
Washington two weeks ago. "No one here is insulted," one
official said. "Her visit is dealing with Iraq, Iran and how
the outside world deals with Hamas. This is not the first time that
senior administration officials have come to the region without
visiting Jerusalem." more...
Actor
Gary Sinise: Positive Support for Iraq (February 22, 2006)
- The following is an exclusive NewsMax interview with actor Gary
Sinise. James Hirsen reports from Hollywood. "Everybody
needs a good day in a war zone." – Actor Gary Sinise
The U.S. media present a "completely opposite" view of
what is really happening with American troops in Iraq, highlighting
the negative and ignoring the positive, Emmy Award-winning actor
Gary Sinise tells NewsMax. With so many in Hollywood knocking
American efforts in the Middle East, Sinise – star of TV's
"CSI: NY" – openly shows his support through actions as
well as words. Sinise has entertained troops in Iraq and is a
co-founder – along with "Seabiscuit" author Laura
Hillenbrand – of Operation Iraqi Children, a program that enables
ordinary Americans to provide boys and girls in Iraq with school
supply kits distributed by our men and women in uniform. The actor,
who played disabled Vietnam veteran Lieutenant Dan in "Forrest
Gump," is also a spokesman for the U.S. Disabled Veterans Life
Memorial Foundation. He is also the co-founder of the Lt. Dan Band,
a musical ensemble that entertains troops via USO tours. (Sinise
plays a mean bass guitar.) Sinise recently spoke exclusively with
NewsMax's James Hirsen, revealing what prompted him to get involved
with American troops and veterans, how Iraqis really feel about the
U.S. presence in Iraq - and more.
Reported from harpazo
Ready:
Ex-Official:
Russia Moved Saddam's WMD (February 22, 2006)
- A top Pentagon official who was responsible for tracking Saddam
Hussein's weapons programs before and after the 2003 liberation of
Iraq, has provided the first-ever account of how Saddam Hussein
"cleaned up" his weapons of mass destruction stockpiles to
prevent the United States from discovering them. "The short
answer to the question of where the WMD Saddam bought from the
Russians went was that they went to Syria and Lebanon," former
Deputy Undersecretary of Defense John A. Shaw told an audience
Saturday at a privately sponsored "Intelligence Summit" in
Alexandria, Va. (www.intelligencesummit.org). "They were moved
by Russian Spetsnaz (special forces) units out of uniform, that were
specifically sent to Iraq to move the weaponry and eradicate any
evidence of its existence," he said. Shaw has dealt with
weapons-related issues and export controls as a U.S. government
official for 30 years, and was serving as deputy undersecretary of
defense for international technology security when the events he
described today occurred. He called the evacuation of Saddam's WMD
stockpiles "a well-orchestrated campaign using two neighboring
client states with which the Russian leadership had a long time
security relationship." more...
Blast
destroys dome of shrine (February 22, 2006)
- An explosion has brought down the golden dome of one of Iraq's
most famous Shi'ite shrines, triggering a wave of protests and
retaliatory attacks on Sunni mosques across the country. According
to the interior ministry, four men entered the Askariya mosque in
the town of Samarra, north of Baghdad, at around 6.55am local time,
before detonating two bombs which caused the shrine's golden dome
and part of its northern wall to collapse. No injuries were
reported. No group claimed reponsibility for the explosions, but
suspicion immediately fell upon Sunni extremists such as Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi's al-Qa'eda in Iraq organisation. Responding to the
attack, Shi'ite militants attacked at least six Sunni mosques in
Baghdad and two in Basra. Also in Basra, Shi'ite gunmen exchanged
fire with guards at a Sunni political meeting. The army reported
that around 500 soldiers had been sent to Sunni neighborhoods in
Baghdad to quell the violence. more...
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Security
fears about infiltration by terrorists (February
22, 2006)
- Several Bush-administration security officials expressed
concerns yesterday that terrorists could infiltrate seaports through
a United Arab Emirates company that is vying to manage six U.S.
ports. Intelligence and security officials opposed to the deal with
Dubai Ports World said ports are vulnerable to the entry of
terrorists or illicit weapons because of the large number of
containers that enter U.S. territory, regardless of who manages
them. A Persian Gulf state such as the United Arab Emirates could
provide an infrastructure for terrorists to penetrate U.S. security
as part of a major terrorist operation, the officials said. One
long-term worry is that al Qaeda terrorists will attempt to smuggle
a nuclear device into the United States through a port via a
shipping container. Allowing a Middle Eastern company to manage key
ports "would be like putting the fox in charge of the
henhouse," said one security official, who, like most other
critics, spoke on the condition of anonymity. Another official said
the problem is not the company but its location in a region rife
with Islamic terrorism. "You have to be concerned about a firm
from that part of the world managing the ports," this official
said. "They are more vulnerable to compromise and penetration
by terrorists, even if they are just managing the port." Company
officials would be briefed on security procedures and
countermeasures that, if compromised, could allow foreign terrorists
to get through various screening procedures, the official said.
The Coast Guard is responsible for port security, tracking ships,
crews and cargo and search vessels based on intelligence. There
is no cohesive hiring or screening process for port workers,
however. Critics said the port deal reflects the Bush
administration's pro-business policy bias. The Treasury Department's
point man on the issue, Deputy Treasury Secretary Robert Kimmitt,
was described by officials as a liberal Republican who in the past
clashed with conservative national-security officials during
interagency policy disputes. more...
Hamas
tells Arabs: Eliminate Israel (February
22, 2006)
- Confronted by confusion in the Arab world over its stance on
Israel's right to exist, Hamas Political Bureau deputy head Musa Abu
Marzouq affirmed to an Egyptian interviewer that the terrorist group
that won the recent Palestinian Authority elections believes the
entire Jewish state must be eliminated. In an appearance on Egypt's
Dream 2 channel, Marzouq was pressed by an interviewer who insisted
Hamas says one thing in English to foreigners and another in Arabic
to Palestinians. Meanwhile, the head of Hamas' Political Bureau,
Khaled Mash'al, reiterated the group's views of Israel in a visit to
Sudan in which he was honored with a poetry reading in a meeting
with local intellectuals. Abdallah Abu Qiqa's poem declared:
"We will unite the armies, and they will cry 'Allah Akbar' to
Tony and to Bush." more...
Carter
backs Bush's stand on seaport-operations (February
21, 2006)
- President Bush is taking a battering from fellow Republicans,
even the governors of New York and Maryland, over the
administration's support for a decision that gives an Arab company
control of some commercial operations at six major seaports --
including Miami-Dade's. But he got a boost Monday from an unlikely
source, frequent critic and former president Jimmy Carter, who
downplayed fears that the deal poses a risk. ''The overall threat to
the United States and security, I don't think it exists,'' Carter
said on CNN's The Situation Room. ``I'm sure the president's done a
good job with his subordinates to make sure this is not a threat.''
The show of support from the Democrat, who has not hesitated to
criticize Bush, underscores the odd political lines that have
emerged since news broke last week that the United States gave the
thumbs-up to the $6.8 billion sale of the British firm P&O Ports
to a company owned by the United Arab Emirates. Both Democrats and
Republicans have called on the president to scrap the deal. On
Monday Republican Govs. George Pataki of New York and Robert Ehrlich
of Maryland questioned the decision. And congressional outrage
persisted even as the White House signaled it's unlikely to block
it. more...
Mandatory
abortion proposed in Holland (February 21, 2006)
- A health official in the Netherlands has called for a debate
on the idea of forced abortion and contraception to deal with what
she sees as a crisis of unwanted children. Alderman Marianne van den
Anker of the Leefbaar Rotterdam Party wants specifically to target
communities of Antilleans and Arubans where she sees the biggest
problems of unwanted children. Her comments have stirred protest by
a health foundation working with those communities in Rotterdam. The
group, which called the comments degrading, is asking Mayor Ivo
Opstelten and other politicians to distance themselves from Van den
Anker's views. Van den Anker is a mother of two children and the
official in charge of Rotterdam's health and security portfolios. In
an interview in a newspaper Saturday, she said she had tried
everything to prevent child abuse. "I fail, I fail," she
told the interviewer as she outlined her controversial idea for a
debate on compulsory abortion and contraception. The target groups
for her program are Antillean teenage mothers; drug addicts and
people with mental handicaps, she said, according to a report in
Expatica. more...
500
doctoral scientists skeptical of Darwin (February
21, 2006)
- More than 500 scientists with doctoral degrees have signed a
statement expressing skepticism about Darwin's theory of evolution.
The statement, which includes endorsement by members of the
prestigious U.S. National Academy of Sciences and Russian Academy of
Sciences, was first published by the Seattle-based Discovery
Institute in 2001 to challenge statements about Darwinian evolution
made in promoting PBS's "Evolution" series. The PBS
promotion claimed "virtually every scientist in the world
believes the theory to be true." "Darwinists continue to
claim that no serious scientists doubt the theory and yet here are
500 scientists who are willing to make public their skepticism about
the theory," said John G. West, associate director of Discovery
Institute's Center for Science & Culture. The institute is the
leading promoter of the theory of Intelligent Design, which has been
at the center of challenges in federal court over the teaching of
evolution in public school classes. Advocates say it draws on recent
discoveries in physics, biochemistry and related disciplines that
indicate some features of the natural world are best explained as
the product of an intelligent cause rather than an undirected
process such as natural selection. West said Darwinist "efforts
to use the courts, the media and academic tenure committees to
suppress dissent and stifle discussion are in fact fueling even more
dissent and inspiring more scientists to ask to be added to the
list." more...
Paris:
Gang suspected of killing Jew nabbed (February
20, 2006)
- The French police arrested 13 people on suspicion of
kidnapping, torturing and murdering Ilan Halimi, a 23-year-old
Parisian Jew. Halimi was found on Monday tied to a tree, naked and
wounded, with burns covering all parts of his body. He died on the
way to the hospital. Police officials said that the abduction and
murder were apparently not motivated by anti-Semitism, but added
that they have not yet discovered what led the group to commit the
acts.
The affair, which stunned France's Jewish community, began about a
month ago, when a good-looking young woman entered a cellular phone
store in Paris, where Halimi worked, and began talking to him. The
two exchanged telephone numbers, and after speaking on the phone a
number of times, set a meeting in a suburb south of Paris. Halimi
left for the meeting on January 20, and has been missing ever since.
Later, the kidnappers contacted Halimi's family members and asked
them for a ransom of Euro 400,000 (about USD 476,239). The family,
however, was unable to collect such a large amount of money, and the
kidnappers thus lowered their demand to Euro 5,000 (5,953). Then, a
week and a half ago, they stopped contacting the family. The police,
who had launched a secret investigation into the affair, were unable
to locate the kidnappers, who had used stolen cellular phones and
were photographed wearing masks. The investigation did reveal that
the kidnappers had already attempted to execute similar abductions
at least four times before, but had failed for various reasons. more...
TA
artist takes on Iranian cartoons (February 18, 2006)
- While riots over the cartoon depiction of Muhammad continue to
rage worldwide and controversy surrounds an Iranian newspaper's
decision to hold a Holocaust cartoon competition, an Israeli
cartoonist has come up with his own ironic - some say misguided -
response. And it's attracting a wide audience. Amitai Sandy, 29, a
Tel Aviv graphic artist, has launched the Israeli Anti-Semitic
Cartoon Contest, a challenge, led by Jews, to find the best
cartoons, caricatures and short comic strips that demonize the
Jewish people. "We'll show the world we can do the best,
sharpest, most offensive Jew-hating cartoons ever published!"
wrote Sandy on his Web site. "No Iranian will beat us on our
home turf!" Sandy told The Jerusalem Post that his intention
was to challenge bigotry by using humor - an approach that officials
at Yad Vashem are not convinced is the best idea. "We're not
sure this is the best way to respond," said spokeswoman Esti
Ya'ari. Ephraim Zuroff, head of the Simon Wiesenthal Center's Israel
office, was more emphatic. He pointed out that the initial response
of many Jews to Hitler was one of ridicule. "It might have been
funny at the time, but it wasn't an effective response," Zuroff
said. But the contest, launched on Tuesday, is getting lots of
attention among Jewish bloggers - at sites like www.Jewschool.com,
which receives thousands of visitors a day. Bloggers are playing up
news of the contest and directing Web surfers to Sandy's site at www.boomka.org.
more...
Reported from Steve
Quayle:

Nuke
Nightmare (February 22, 2006)
- Now a new threat looms. At their facility near Natanz,
Iranian scientists earlier this month successfully restarted four
centrifuges necessary to produce weapons-grade uranium. Iranian
officials blocked international inspectors' access to the site and
disabled security cameras set up by the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) 13 years ago when Iran admitted to violating the
nuclear nonproliferation treaty. This new buzz comes at the end of
two years of French, German, and British negotiations with Iran and
protracted investigative work by the IAEA. That agency on Feb. 4
reported Iran to the UN Security Council as out of compliance—once
again—with nuclear nonproliferation norms. With 27 IAEA countries
approving the resolution and only three (Cuba, Syria, and Venezuela)
voting against it, the report is likely to precipitate further
sanctions against Tehran. Iran's leaders could light their crumbling
cities with nuclear power, but few now doubt that they are intent on
building a nuclear arsenal. Full-scale production of nuclear weapons
is years away, but Iran right now has its own uranium ore and all
the infrastructure needed for weapons-grade plutonium production.
The radical Islamic regime will be able to export nuclear packages
to any of the many terror organizations with which it maintains
ties. more...
Is
There Life After Death? An Emminent International Cardiologist
Believes He Can PROVE IT! (February
22, 2006)
- Clinically dead people have been brought back to life and
have recounted in great detail what had been done to them in the
hospital ... Whilst they were dead! A leading cardiologist —
who has become convinced of the existence of life after death after
hearing his patients’ experiences — is talking about his
research and beliefs at a major conference in London in March. Dr
Pim van Lommel was so inspired by the stories related by his
patients of their Near Death Experiences (NDEs) that he became the
first medical practitioner to risk his reputation with a full,
systematic trial into the phenomenon. He interviewed 344 heart
patients at his hospital in Arnhem, Netherlands who had all
clinically died, some for five minutes or longer, before being
resuscitated. Of these, 62 — or 18 per cent — reported some
ongoing experience after the medical monitors had pronounced them to
be dead. Half were aware they were ‘dead’, and 15 had
out-of-body experiences where they were aware of the actions of the
hospital staff around the body. One patient was able to tell staff
who were looking for his dentures that a blond nurse had removed
them, and had been put them on a tray on the other side of the room.
more...
Mad
Mullahs Issue Fatwa to Use Nuclear Weapons (February
21, 2006)
- An Iranian fatwa (holy edict) permitting the use of nuclear
weapons has been issued for the first time. Mohsen Gharavian, a
disciple of Ayatollah Mesbah Yazdi, has stated that using nuclear
weapons as a counter-measure is acceptable in terms of sharia
(Islamic law), depending upon the goal for which the weapons are
used. Up until now, the religious leaders of the Islamic Republic of
Iran have publicly declared that the use of nuclear weapons are
opposed to sharia, maintaining this position to buttress the
argument that Iran's nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only.
Gharavian, a lecturer at the religious schools of Qom, stated that:
One must say that when the entire world is armed with nuclear
weapons, it is only natural that, as a counter-measure, it is
necessary to be able to use these weapons. However, what is
important is the goal they may be used for. more...
-
Chief
Rabbi Asks Dalai Lama to Help Set up Religious UN in Jerusalem (February
21, 2006)
- Israel's Ashkenazi chief rabbi, Yonah Metzger, meeting with
the Dalai Lama, a Buddhist monk who is the leader of Tibet,
suggested that representatives of the world's religions establish a
United Nations in Jerusalem, representing religions instead of
nations, like the UN currently based in New York. "Instead of
planning for nuclear war and buying tanks and fighter jets, it will
invest in peace," Metzger said. He later reported that the
Tibetan leader was very excited about the idea and offered to help
advance it. Also at the meeting was Chief Sephardic Rabbi Shlomo
Amar, Rabbi David Rosen of the American Jewish Committee (who is on
good terms with the Roman Catholic Church), Rabbi Menachem Froman of
Tekoa, kadis (Ethiopian rabbis) and various Islamic sheikhs.
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