Be INFORMED

Monday, February 19, 2007

EFP's Made From Common Items In Middle East

    From The First Post we learn that just about anyone can make an EFP from common items found all over the middle east, not just in Iran.

   EFP's are what the Bush hounds are claiming the Iranians are supplying the Iraqi militia's with to kill the American troops with.

The improvised EFPs used as roadside bombs in Iraq most certainly don't need to have Iranian-manufactured components. All you need (so I am informed by Pierre Sprey, a former weapons designer with the A-10 and F-16 planes on his CV) is the copper bowl (a hand-beaten one like they sell to tourists all over the Middle East is fine), a 6" to 9"-diameter sewer pipe or oil pipe (the oil pipe is excellent quality steel), a few pounds of explosive and a fuse. The 380 tons of US RDX explosive that went missing due to lax security would be ultra-high quality stuff for the job.

The people doing almost all the killing of American troops in Iraq are not Shia but Sunni, therefore unlikely to have been supplied by Iran.

 

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11 Dead, 10 Wounded In Iraq On Monday Evening

From Voices Of Iraq

 Baghdad-Mortars
Posted by: saleem on Monday, February 19, 2007
Baghdad mortar attack leaves 11 dead, ten wounded
By Adel Fakher
Baghdad, Feb 19, (VOI)- At least 11 people were killed and ten others were wounded on Monday evening in a mortar attack at a residential area in southern Baghdad, a police source said.
"Five mortar rounds slammed today evening on a residential area in Abu-Tisher district in southern Baghdad, killing eleven people and wounding ten others," the source told the independent news agency Voices of Iraq (VOI).
The source added "there were women and children among the casualties."
The attack also damaged four houses in the area, he added.
Ambulances rushed the wounded to a nearby hospital for treatment, the source said.
The mortar attack came as a large-scale military operation was being carried out by Iraqi and U.S. troops to secure the Iraqi capital Baghdad.

         

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Posted by: saleem on Monday, February 19, 2007 - 06:17 PM
Missan-Smuggling
Attempt to Smuggle oil and livestock foiled in Missan
Missan - Feb 19, (VOI) – Iraqi Police patrols foiled on Monday an attempt to smuggle semi-refined oil and livestock in north of Ammara city, a police source in Missan said.
"Police patrols foiled on Monday an attempt to smuggle two tank-trucks with 58,000 liters of semi-refined oil near Kumit checkpoint about 25 km north of Ammara city", the source, who asked not to be named, told the independent news agency Voices of Iraq (VOI).
Meanwhile, police patrols on Baghdad-Ammara international highway checkpoint, 5 km north of Ammara, seized a lorry with 50 livestock in preparation for smuggling abroad in contrary to Agriculture ministry instructions that banned sheep exports, he added.
Ammara, capital city of Missan province, is 380 km southeast of Baghdad.

   So goes another wonderfull day in the life of the Iraqis under the George Bush " protect & conquer " regime!

   Iraqi newspapers and such have some interesting stuff in them at times.  You may wish to check this one out.

 

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Iraq Insurgents Off To A Busy Start

     It would appear that the insurgents in Iraq have somewhat re-grouped after last weeks drive by the U.S. and friends to calm things down.

    The insurgents have started the week off with an attack on a U.S. combat post killing two soldiers and wounding seventeen in the process.

   First up was the dreaded suicide bomber who exploded a car outside of the base which is just north of Baghdad , then we another bomber that blew up a belt loaded with explosives while on a bus. Five people were killed in that attack.   But wait, there's more!

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Yahoo News

In Mahmoudiya, 20 miles south of the capital, a car bomb went off among auto repair shops, killing two and wounding two, police said. Mahmoudiya is mostly Shiite with Sunnis living in villages around the community and has long been a flashpoint for sectarian violence.

Outside the capital, a car bomb in Ramadi, about 90 miles west of Baghdad, killed at least nine bystanders congregated at a police checkpoint in the aftermath of a failed suicide attack. In Duluiyah, a Sunni area about 45 miles north of Baghdad, at least four were killed when a bomb-rigged car exploded.

   Bush would say that things are going well in Iraq.

 

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Iran Nuclear Power Plant Behind On Russian Payments

  I'd like to know how Iran can be working on nuclear missiles when it seems as if they cannot even get their nuclear power plants going because they cannot meet their payment schedule with the Russian company which is doing the building.

 Al Jazeera

Irina Yesipova, of Russia's nuclear monopoly Atomstroiexport, said on Monday: "The difficult situation with financing construction of Bushehr by the Iranian side could cause changes in the timetable."

 

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Al Qaeda Making Strides In Re-Growth

   It was not so long ago that the emperor Bush and the rest of his court jesters' were saying that Osama bin Laden and his side-kick Ayman al-Zawahri were not in control of their Al Qaeda network group of hoods but now it seems that view is not correct.

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NYTimes

Officials said the training camps had yet to reach the size and level of sophistication of the Qaeda camps established in Afghanistan under Taliban rule. But groups of 10 to 20 men are being trained at the camps, the officials said, and the Qaeda infrastructure in the region is gradually becoming more mature.

“The chain of command has been re-established,” said one American government official, who said that the Qaeda “leadership command and control is robust.”

   Just what would one expect with the GOP circus up in the White House? Instead of staying focused on bin Laden and Al Qaeda, Bush had to change course and go play with Iraq for no apparent reason, except for a need of greed and oil.  Instead of staying the real course and dogging bin Laden and the others, Bush has dropped the ball and let the terrorist network rebound once again. This mess could have been stopped along time ago, but NOOOOOO! War profiteering came first no matter how many get killed ( troops ) in the process.

                            IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

   

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The John Murtha Smear Attack

    Quotes provided by DailyKos.com

      Last week we read this from the Washington Post:

Rep. John Murtha, who heads a subcommittee with jurisdiction over defense spending, told reporters he hopes to add a provision to the bill that would forbid the Pentagon from sending additional troops "unless they have adequate training and unless they have adequate equipment."

   Then there was Politico with this:

Top House Democrats, working in concert with anti-war groups, have decided against using congressional power to force a quick end to U.S. involvement in Iraq, and instead will pursue a slow-bleed strategy designed to gradually limit the administration's options.

  After being picked up by many news outlets ( Wall Street Journal, U.S. News & World Report, for starters )  the slow-bleed strategy took off in a different way which was intended to make Murtha and the rest of the Democrats look bad. That has not worked yet, so now we get this.

Robert Novak:

Murtha has shaped party policy that would cripple Bush's Iraq troop surge by placing conditions on funding. That represents the most daring congressional attempt to micromanage ongoing armed hostilities since the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War challenged President Abraham Lincoln.

It seems all but certain that Democrats will pass what Murtha frankly calls an attempt to prevent funding of the surge. Improbable though it may seem, blunt and brassy Jack Murtha is moving close to command over U.S. policy on Iraq.

 

The Beltway Boys:

And this Murtha resolution is clever in that it pretends to be pro-troops and anti-war, in reality would deny troops that are already in the field fighting for their lives the reinforcements they need in order to survive and possibly win.

Investor's Business Daily:

The party of John Murtha shamelessly seeks to defund and defeat U.S. troops on the battlefield and snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. The Congress the terrorists wanted is doing their bidding.

Now it's the House of Representatives' turn, led by Rep. John Murtha, who believes the fine young men and women we send to defeat terror and our sworn enemies are cold-blooded killers.

We find it scary that the Democratic and terrorist game plans are indistinguishable.

 

Brit Hume:

That sound bite from John Murtha suggests that it’s time a few things be said about him...Look, this man has tremendous cache among House Democrats, but he is not — this guy is long past the day when he had anything but the foggiest awareness of what the heck is going on in the world.

   I could go on with more but I think that you get the point. The GOP/Media smear group is out in full swing gunning for John Murtha and the Democrats in general.

   I'm waiting to see what Murtha and the Dems are going to do about it. Will they just sit back and be quiet as they have been known to do quite often or will they become vocal themselves and set the record straight?

      This is what really scares the GOP and has brought out the chiefs of smear against Murtha

The legislation I'm putting together, first of all, puts restrictions on the President, on the administration, saying you can't send people back into battle until they've had a year at home.  Now they should traditionally have two years at home...They must have the equipment and the training and they must be certified by the Chiefs of the various services before they can go back.  Second, we can't extend people.  Now if they can't extend people, if they can't send people back that don't have equipment and so forth, they can't continue the surge is what it amounts to.  [...]

What I've found in readiness hearings we're having, I found that in the United States, we only have 3/4 of the units that are prepared with the equipment they need and they're not training on the equipment...If they don't train on equipment, if they don't train on their radios, the armored Humvees, there's different feel to them.  There's more chance of accidents, there's more chance of vulnerability to enemies, so they need to train on that equipment and then take it with them...They're going to have to certify to us that they are ready and they're going to have to stop the extensions.   DailyKos

 

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Sunday, February 18, 2007

McCain Preaches That Roe V. Wade Should Be Overturned

   Presidential hopeful ( in his own mind ) John McCain told a crowd of around 800 people that if he is elected president in 2008 said, "I do not support Roe versus Wade. It should be overturned."

   He also said that if is elected that he would only appoint judges that, "strictly interpret the Constitution of the United States and do not legislate from the bench."

   Sure John, and Bush is a Christian. All that McCain is trying to do is kiss up to the conservative group. Next you know he will be sleeping with John Hagee and the rest of that " Christian " group.

  McCain did announce on Sunday that he has been endorsed by former governor Frank Keating of Oklahoma and Phil Gramm, former senator from Texas. Being endorsed by anyone from Texas can't be a good thing! Unless, you are John McCain and you are running pretty much under the Bush operating system.

   He also went to a rally and spoke to a group of young people about abstinence from sex. I'm not even going to touch that one! However, I do think that abstinence is a good thing in this day and age and that it should be practiced.

 

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GOP Funded By Terrorist

    Here's a good one that I somehow missed between working on servers and other's computers during the week. Proof that the Republicans are terrorist.

   A blogger caught my attention with this story which, being busy or not, I would have heard if it had been in the mainstream media outlets.

Saturday, February 17, 2007

Republican Al Qa'eda Terrorist... No Joke

Terrorism charges brought Friday against the administrator of a loan investment program claimed that he secretly tried to send $152,000 to the Middle East to buy equipment such as night vision goggles for a terrorist training camp in Afghanistan.
Abdul Tawala Ibn Ali Alishtari, 53, of Ardsley, N.Y., pleaded not guilty in U.S. District Court in Manhattan to an indictment accusing him of terrorism financing, material support of terrorism and other charges

CBS News has confirmed that Alishtari is a donor to the Republican Party, as he claims on his curriculum vitae. Alishtari gave $15,500 to the National Republican Campaign Committee between 2002 and 2004, according to Federal Election Commission records. That amount includes $13,000 in 2003, a year when he claims to have been named NRCC New York State Businessman of the Year.  More

 

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Who Will Protect and Defend Our Military From the Bush Administration

Published on Saturday, February 17, 2007 by CommonDreams.org

Who Will Protect and Defend Our Military From the Bush Administration?

by Barbara Miller

Last night, I attended a MoveOn event, one of more than a thousand nationwide. Our principal agenda was to view the film, "The Ground Truth." The movie focused briefly on the recruiting, training and deploying of U.S. military troops to Iraq. It did not shy away from deaths-ours, theirs, calculated, accidental. However, the film's main focus was on women and men who physically survive the Iraq War, with or without all of their limbs, facial features and internal organs intact.

The "lucky ones" look much as they did when they left for war. But they're not. To some extent, they're soul-scarred humans who are sent home after their literal involvement in the killing stops. They are forever changed. They're also trained killers who have seen and participated in the worst the world has to offer. They must attempt to distance themselves from all of that when they come "home," however that is defined.

Just so you know, I'm not going to do a synopsis here. "The Ground Truth's" message is a visual thing, which is why it's a film and not an IPod broadcast. Click here and here for more information and to view a trailer.

It's not the best movie ever made, Oscar nod notwithstanding. But its message is profoundly important. Shortcut: "What the hell are we doing?"

"The Ground Truth" combines live footage of carnage and chaos in Iraq, interspersed with commentary from multiple military vets and a few mental health experts. The troop commentary was very moving. As was the additional commentary from some of their spouses and parents. Lives upside down and hind-side to. This is sacrifice that is rarely if ever mentioned, and certainly not by the Bush administration or the DOD.

Frankly, I wasn't sure I'd be able to handle this film. I don't do very well with graphic violence. It was hard to watch brutality, murder of children, a soldier whose face was completely disfigured by fire. Bodies and blood. Plenty of both. The things of war.

So why watch it? I can only answer retrospectively. I now believe it is incumbent upon every American man, woman, and child whose parents believe they can handle it to watch "The Ground Truth." That includes our elected officials. All of them. It is not enough to hear platitudes ("On behalf of a grateful nation and the President of the United States . . .") nor to see video of the occasional vet who has rehabbed from a lost limb. Oh, no. Not even close to enough.

George Bush's war has killed something approaching 100,000 Iraqis and roughly 3,100 Americans. But that's just for starters. How many inner lives and relationships have been utterly destroyed in the wake of George's war?

According to "The Ground Truth," to some extent, virtually every American assigned to an ultra-dangerous 24/7 war zone like Iraq returns a different person from the one who was deployed. Some of them are able to eventually manage their fear, rage and self-loathing. Many are not. And they may struggle with the aftermath of war for the rest of their lives. Or they may choose to end their lives. Some do. Sound familiar? Can you say "Vietnam"?

Do not tell me I'm an angry liberal. I already know that. The greater issue here is this: Why isn't everyone furious about this war and the one being ginned up as its successor? Why isn't everyone doing everything in their power to protect and defend our military from George Bush? If not us, then who? This is a humanity issue. And so I echo the refrain, "What the hell are we doing?"

Here's the real deal. George Bush sends American troops into the bowels of Iraq from his "beautiful White House." And each time he does, he is sentencing them to death. If not death of the body, then degrees of death of the spirit. If they do manage to survive, in whole or partial bodies, there is no bridge long enough to close the emotional chasm between the Iraqi war zone and home. Upon discharge, troops are required to answer (then and there) such questions as: Do you have PTSD? Do you have thoughts of suicide? Do you have thoughts of murder? etc., etc., etc.

Give me a break. Who can possibly answer questions like that with any degree of accuracy until there is some distance from war? And even if they can, admission that they may be experiencing some stress/distress means they will be held by the military for some indeterminate period of time and won't get to go home. What would you choose after six months, a year, two years in Iraq?

And so it is that our military heroes--and all of them are heroes--find themselves back home with little or no support from the government that sent them to hell.

I wept as I watched. What we have done to Iraq is tragic. What we are doing to our own troops is appalling. An image from "The Ground Truth." Boot camp. Soldiers in formation, row upon row. A four-beat cadence. (1) face forward; (2) chin drops to chest; (3) hold for one count; (4) chin snaps up, face forward. Repeat, shouting the following: (1) Let's (2) pray (3) A (4) men.

Barbara Miller lives and writes in Eagan, Minnesota. She blogs at www.clotheslineblog.com

 

The 1/2 Hour News Show

   Fox's answer to "The Daily Show” ,"The 1/2 Hour News Show " is a lousy rip-off from the beginning to the end.

   Just as is with the rest of Fox programming, this show has nothing in it. Even the little bit of humor that is there is pathetic. But don't take my word for it. Hit the above link and decide for yourself, if you dare!

   If the first clip wasn't enough for you to base a decision on, then try one more short clip. You may wish to take something for your stomach afterwards.     Short Clip

 

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Oh What A Malleable War

Crossposted from TruthOut

    By Frank Rich
    The New York Times

    Sunday 18 February 2007

    Maybe the Bush White House can't conduct a war, but no one has ever impugned its ability to lie about its conduct of a war. Now even that well-earned reputation for flawless fictionalizing is coming undone. Watching the administration try to get its story straight about Iran's role in Iraq last week was like watching third graders try to sidestep blame for misbehaving while the substitute teacher was on a bathroom break. The team that once sold the country smoking guns in the shape of mushroom clouds has completely lost its mojo.

    Surely these guys can do better than this. No sooner did unnamed military officials unveil their melodramatically secretive briefing in Baghdad last Sunday than Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, blew the whole charade. General Pace said he didn't know about the briefing and couldn't endorse its contention that the Iranian government's highest echelons were complicit in anti-American hostilities in Iraq. Public-relations pandemonium ensued as Tony Snow, the State Department and finally the president tried to revise the story line on the fly. Back when Karl Rove ruled, everyone read verbatim from the same script. Last week's frantic improvisations were vintage Scooter Libby, at best the ur-text for a future perjury trial.

    Yet for all the sloppy internal contradictions, the most incriminating indictment of the new White House disinformation campaign is to be found in official assertions made more than a year ago. The press and everyone else seems to have forgotten that the administration has twice sounded the same alarms about Iranian weaponry in Iraq that it did last week.

    In August 2005, NBC News, CBS News and The Times cited unnamed military and intelligence officials when reporting, as CBS put it, that "U.S. forces intercepted a shipment from Iran containing professionally made explosive devices specifically designed to penetrate the armor which protects American vehicles." Then, as now, those devices were the devastating roadside bombs currently called E.F.P.'s (explosively formed penetrators). Then, as now, they were thought to have been brought into Iraq by members of Iran's Revolutionary Guard. Then, as now, there was no evidence that the Iranian government was directly involved. In February 2006, administration officials delivered the same warning yet again, before the Senate Intelligence Committee.

    Timing is everything in propaganda, as in all showmanship. So why would the White House pick this particular moment to mount such an extravagant rerun of old news, complete with photos and props reminiscent of Colin Powell's infamous presentation of prewar intelligence? Yes, the death toll from these bombs is rising, but it has been rising for some time. (Also rising, and more dramatically, is the death toll from attacks on American helicopters.)

    After General Pace rendered inoperative the first official rationale for last Sunday's E.F.P. briefing, President Bush had to find a new explanation for his sudden focus on the Iranian explosives. That's why he said at Wednesday's news conference that it no longer mattered whether the Iranian government (as opposed to black marketeers or freelance thugs) had supplied these weapons to Iraqi killers. "What matters is, is that they're there," he said. The real point of hyping this inexact intelligence was to justify why he had to take urgent action now, no matter what the E.F.P.'s provenance: "My job is to protect our troops. And when we find devices that are in that country that are hurting our troops, we're going to do something about it, pure and simple."

    Darn right! But if the administration has warned about these weapons twice in the past 18 months (and had known "that they're there," we now know, since 2003), why is Mr. Bush just stepping up to that job at this late date? Embarrassingly enough, The Washington Post reported on its front page last Monday - the same front page with news of the Baghdad E.F.P. briefing - that there is now a shortfall of "thousands of advanced Humvee armor kits designed to reduce U.S. troop deaths from roadside bombs." Worse, the full armor upgrade "is not scheduled to be completed until this summer." So Mr. Bush's idea of doing something about it, "pure and simple" is itself a lie, since he is doing something about it only after he has knowingly sent a new round of underarmored American troops into battle.

    To those who are most suspicious of this White House, the "something" that Mr. Bush really wants to do has little to do with armor in any case. His real aim is to provoke war with Iran, no matter how overstretched and ill-equipped our armed forces may be for that added burden. By this line of thinking, the run-up to the war in Iraq is now repeating itself exactly and Mr. Bush will seize any handy casus belli he can to ignite a conflagration in Iran.

    Iran is an unquestionable menace with an Israel-hating fanatic as its president. It is also four times the size of Iraq and a far more dangerous adversary than was Saddam's regime. Perhaps Mr. Bush is as reckless as his harshest critics claim and will double down on catastrophe. But for those who don't hold quite so pitch-black a view of his intentions, there's a less apocalyptic motive to be considered as well.

    Let's not forget that the White House's stunt of repackaging old, fear-inducing news for public consumption has a long track record. Its reason for doing so is always the same: to distract the public from reality that runs counter to the White House's political interests. When the Democrats were gaining campaign traction in 2004, John Ashcroft held an urgent news conference to display photos of seven suspected terrorists on the loose. He didn't bother to explain that six of them had been announced previously, one at a news conference he had held 28 months earlier. Mr. Bush played the same trick last February as newly declassified statistics at a Senate hearing revealed a steady three-year growth in insurgent attacks: he breathlessly announced a thwarted Qaeda plot against the U.S. Bank Tower in Los Angeles that had already been revealed by the administration four months before.

    We know what Mr. Bush wants to distract us from this time: Congressional votes against his war policy, the Libby trial, the Pentagon inspector general's report deploring Douglas Feith's fictional prewar intelligence, and the new and dire National Intelligence Estimate saying that America is sending troops into the cross-fire of a multifaceted sectarian cataclysm.

    That same intelligence estimate also says that Iran is "not likely to be a major driver of violence" in Iraq, but no matter. If the president can now whip up a Feith-style smoke screen of innuendo to imply that Iran is the root of all our woes in the war - and give "the enemy" a single recognizable face (Ahmadinejad as the new Saddam) - then, ipso facto, he is not guilty of sending troops into the middle of a shadowy Sunni-Shiite bloodbath after all.

    Oh what a malleable war Iraq has been. First it was waged to vanquish Saddam's (nonexistent) nuclear arsenal and his (nonexistent) collaboration with Al Qaeda. Then it was going to spread (nonexistent) democracy throughout the Middle East. Now it is being rebranded as a fight against Tehran. Mr. Bush keeps saying that his saber rattling about Iran is not "a pretext for war." Maybe so, but at the very least it's a pretext for prolonging the disastrous war we already have.

    What makes his spin brazen even by his standards is that Iran is in fact steadily extending its influence in Iraq - thanks to its alliance with the very Iraqi politicians that Mr. Bush himself has endorsed. In December the president welcomed a Shiite leader, Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, to the White House with great fanfare; just three weeks later American forces had to raid Mr. Hakim's Iraq compound to arrest Iranian operatives suspected of planning attacks against American military forces, possibly with E.F.P.'s. As if that weren't bad enough, Nuri al-Maliki's government promptly overruled the American arrests and ordered the operatives' release so they could escape to Iran. For all his bluster about doing something about it, Mr. Bush did nothing.

    It gets worse. This month we learned that yet another Maliki supporter in the Iraqi Parliament, Jamal Jafaar Mohammed Ali Ebrahimi, was convicted more than two decades ago of planning the murderous 1983 attacks on the American and French Embassies in Kuwait. He's now in Iran, but before leaving, this terrorist served as a security adviser, no less, to the first Iraqi prime minister after the American invasion, Ibrahim al-Jafaari. Mr. Jafaari, hailed by Mr. Bush as "a strong partner for peace and freedom" during his own White House visit in 2005, could be found last week in Tehran, celebrating the anniversary of the 1979 Iranian revolution and criticizing America's arrest of Iranian officials in Iraq.

    Even if the White House still had its touch for spinning fiction, it's hard to imagine how it could create new lies brilliant enough to top the sorry truth. When you have a president making a big show of berating Iran while simultaneously empowering it, you've got another remake of "The Manchurian Candidate," this time played for keeps.

 

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Militants Strike Back With 69 Dead and 129 Injured In Car Bomb Attacks

Iraqi militants are striking back against the U.S. led crackdown that has been going on in Baghdad this past week with a Sunday car- bombing spree that left 63 people dead, mostly in Shiite sections. This is where it will start to get very ugly once again for the U.S. troops patrolling these streets since they are not, even after all these years, trained for this kind of warfare.             SEE BELOW

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        AP

The first blast tore through a produce market in the mostly Shiite area of New Baghdad, toppling the wooden stalls and leaving pools of blood and vegetables trampled in the chaos. Minutes later, another car bomb exploded near a row of stores.

More than 129 people were injured, including many women who were shopping, said police and rescue officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak to the media.

U.S. soldiers pressed closer to Sadr City on Sunday and the reception changed noticeably. In previous days, Shiite families opened their doors to welcome the troops — feeling that the American presence would be a buffer against feared attacks from Sunni militia.

On Sunday, in areas closer to Sadr City, parents slapped away the candy and lollipops given to children by soldiers.

 

Democrats To Restrict Bush's War Authorization

    It is reported that the Democrats might try to restrict Bush's war in Iraq by limiting the 2002 measure that authorized the use of force against Saddam Hussein.

   My question is, if they do such a thing, will Democrats also cut the $93 billion that Bush is seeking for the war? It would make no sense to do one without the other, the argument being that since Bush cannot go about things in the manner which he would like, then he would not need all of that cash to use in a curtailed action. I should note that the Democrats say that they may try to restrict some of the funds. Try? The House holds the strings to the war chest, there should be no trying about it. It should be done, period!

                                     MORE BELOW

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AP

""That was a wide-open authorization which allowed him to do just about anything and put us now deep into combat in Iraq," said Sen. Carl Levin ( voting record), who heads the Senate Armed Services Committee.

"We can modify the authorization in order to provide a much more limited mission which will remove our troops from the middle of a sectarian civil war," said Levin, D-Mich.

Sen. Joe Biden, a 2008 presidential candidate who leads the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, spoke of repealing that original authorization and restating the president's authority, to clarify the current mission of U.S. troops in Iraq.

"I've been working with some of my colleagues to try to convince them that that's the way to go ... make it clear that the purpose that he has troops in there is to, in fact, protect against al-Qaida gaining chunks of territory, training the Iraqi forces, force protection and for our forces," said Biden, D-Del.

 

Gulf stands on brink of all-out war

   I would consider the following article a must read. This was originally posted in December,2006.

FirstPost     February 18,2007

Saudis say they’ll fight for their fellow Sunnis if the coalition forces quit Iraq, says robert fox

While the Bush administration remains locked in argument with the consiglieri of the Baker-Hamilton Iraq Study Group about what to do in Iraq, events on the ground are now moving ahead of them.

There is now every chance that civil war could turn into a major regional war as the Saudis and Jordanians threaten to come in on the side of the Sunni community, and the Shia militias in turn look to Tehran and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard for backing.

"The intervention of Saudi Arabia and Jordan is now the most dangerous possibility facing us," a British commander told me, on condition of anonymity.

"We can't go, and we can't stay in the present posture. We've got to find a way of keeping a presence, but without it becoming the main problem."

    The main proposals of the Baker-Hamilton report are seen as unrealistic by force commanders on the ground in Iraq. The plan is for American forces to pull back next year and assume primarily an oversight and training role with the Iraqi army, national guard and police.

The bulk of US forces would go home by April 2008. The British would move faster, handing back Maysan province to the Iraqis next January and Basra in April. By July 2007, Britain would have only 2,000 service personnel in Iraq, at most.

But US commanders, led by General John Abizaid of US Central Command, do not believe the Iraqi army will be ready to run anything much in terms of security for years to come.

This is what the Saudis realise too. And they have given warning to the US and Britain that if they make a quick exit by April 2008, they and their allies will have no choice but to enter Iraq to help their co-religionists, the Sunni Arabs.

Until now the Saudis have only hinted at their frustration with the allies.

"Since America came into Iraq uninvited, it should not leave Iraq uninvited," said the Saudi Arabian ambassador to the US, Prince Turki al-Faisal.

Now, according to my anonymous British commander, their threat is unambiguous.

The Saudis' King Abdullah has said that, for the time being, his forces will not give arms and training to the Sunni insurgents of Iraq. But reports from Baghdad suggest this is already happening.

This is not the only threat facing the allies as they stare defeat in the face in Iraq. Tensions are rising between the Americans and the British.

American officials, particularly in the CIA, have criticised the British approach to dealing with the Iraqis, particularly the Shia militias in the south of the country.

A confidential British briefing paper says this is now a major bone of contention. "The Americans believe the British should take out the Mahdi Army (otherwise know as the Jaish al-Mahdi or JAM) of Moqtada al Sadr," said a British official last week.

This is because the Americans are backing the rival militia of the Badr Brigades, attached to the Supreme Council for the Revolution in Iraq of Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, for whom they rolled out the red carpet in Washington earlier this month.

As civil war edges towards regional war in Iraq and the Gulf, the Arab powers have just thrown a large fly in the ointment - and it's a nuclear one.

At the meeting of the Gulf Cooperation Council at the weekend, Saudi Arabia and its allies discussed openly for the first time the necessity for the Gulf Arab alliance to begin developing its own nuclear industry - for civil, and peaceful purposes, of course.

But why else would Arab kings and emirs, sitting on the largest commercial fossil fuel reserves in the world, want access to nuclear know-how, except to create a deterrent to protect their interests in an ever more unstable region?

 

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Bush's Place In History

"I don't think you'll really get the full history of the Bush administration until long after I'm gone. I tell people I'm reading books on George Washington and they're still analyzing his presidency," Bush told CBS' "60 Minutes" in an interview last month.   Reuters

   What Bush should have said is that history may not know the full extent of his and this administrations crimes against not only the United States but the rest of humanity until long after he is gone.

   I think that this man has alot of gall to compare himself to even the worst president up until he came into office much less the better ones.

   History will remember Mr. bush as an arrogant, lying, gutter-crawling corporate puppet no matter what transpires in Iraq or elsewhere for that matter.

   History will remember Bush as the man who illegally wire tapped our phone calls and detained prisoners without the right of counsel, who revoked many of our constitutional rights even though he will never admit it and the citizens will not know it until it is to late for them to do anything about it.

   I could go one and on and maybe I will at another time, but right now I have a race to prepare for.

   Besides, we all know what Bush stands for anyway.

   A ' C grade ' president who thinks that he'll be ranked up their with some of the better presidents in our history? This man needs therapy.

 

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Arab States Are On A Weapons Buying Binge

    Worrying about a possible confrontation with Iran, the Arab states seem to be on a military weapons spending spree and they are spending alot of oil money for the weapons.

    Saudi Arabia  is thought to have ordered almost $50bn in military hardware, including fighter aircraft, cruise missiles, attack helicopters and more than 300 new tanks.

Al-Jazeera

Saudi Arabia's purchase of 72 Eurofighter Typhoon jets from BAe Systems is the largest deal to be made.

Saudi Arabia's
military power

Army, air force and navy manpower: 200,000

Tanks: 1055

Combat aircraft: 300

2005 defence spending: $25.4bn

The deal is yet to be finalised but appears to be back on after Britain's serious fraud office dropped an investigation into the company's accounting.

Meanwhile, the UAE has set aside $2bn for a rapid reaction brigade and has earmarked a further $6bn for missile defence batteries, airborne early-warning systems and aircraft.

Both countries are members of the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) established in 1984.

Other members of the GCC, including Kuwait, Bahrain and Qatar, are also expected to invest heavily in arms.

  I smell Bush administration written all over this! For the kingdom to just now be concerned about all of the crap that has been going on in the last few years means either that Bushco is telling them something that the public doesn't know or that the Arab states do not think Bush can accomplish another one of his missions. At the same time, it could be both!

 

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Syria and Iran vow unity against U.S.

Al-Jazeera

Syria and Iran vow unity against US

Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian president, and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, his Iranian counterpart, have pledged to work together to confront US and Israeli "plots" in the Middle East.

Al-Assad arrived in Iran for a two day visit aimed at bolstering robust ties, his second trip to the Islamic republic since Ahmadinejad took power in August 2005.

Al-Assad said: "We should co-operate and work to make the public aware of the sinister aims of the United States and the Zionists."

The two leaders, accused by the US of destablising the region, warned against the dangers of disunity between Sunni and Shia Muslims in Lebanon and Iraq.

 As much as I hate to say it, they are correct about the aims of the U.S. and those Zionist which Bush seems to lay in bed with.

 

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Senator Elizabeth Dole Campaigning For Re-Election

   I was hoping that this broad would just limp off into the sunset, preferably in another state other than North Carolina, but NOOOOOO!

  Dole hit the trail on Friday praising her service to the state of NC and still backing Bush and his failed Iraq war. She gave a talk at a GOP dinner on Friday night, which served some pretty good barbecue from what I hear.  Dole is now 70 years old.

                              MORE BELOW         

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Charlotte Observer

"I want to tell you tonight I am going to run for re-election to the United States Senate," Dole said, prompting a standing ovation from 250 people attending a Lincoln/Reagan Day barbecue dinner at Southwood Memorial Christian Church. "I am going to need your help as we rev up the campaign for 2008."

She talked about the billions of dollars that will be available to North Carolinians because of her efforts to push through Congress a buyout of the federal tobacco program. Dole noted that North Carolina's military installations survived the base closings and added 4,000 jobs at Fort Bragg.

 

Senate After The Overseas Tax Shelters

   Now it looks as if the Senate is clamping down on some of those overseas tax shelters that the wealthy like to stick their cash into.

    Three senators, Carl M. Levin (D-MI), Norm Coleman (R-Minn.) and Barack Obama (D-Ill.), are proposing a bill that would clamp down on the $100 billion a year that the treasury loses in tax revenue because of the loopholes in the tax laws which make the overseas investments so attractive.

Washington Post

Sunday, February 18, 2007

The measure would impose tougher requirements on U.S. taxpayers using offshore secrecy jurisdictions, give the U.S. Treasury the authority to take action against foreign jurisdictions that impede tax enforcement, stiffen penalties against abusers and close offshore trust loopholes.

The Treasury Department and top lawmakers in both houses of Congress have made a priority this year reducing the so-called tax gap, the difference between what individuals and companies owe and what they pay. The IRS said a study of 2001 tax returns shows the tax gap is about $345 billion a year, only $55 billion of which is recovered.

   The only problem with this legislation is the fact that even if it does as promised, another way will be found to get around the measure. It seems that for every tax loophole closed, another one or two takes its place, so what's the point?

 

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How Senator's Voted on Resolution Advancement on Saturday

AP

The 56-34 roll call by which the Senate refused to advance a nonbinding resolution disapproving of President Bush's troop surge in Iraq.

 On this vote, a "yes" vote was a vote to advance the resolution and a "no" vote was a vote to stop it.

Voting "yes" were 48 Democrats, seven Republicans and one independent.

Voting "no" were no Democrats, 33 Republicans and one independent.

 

Sessions (R) No; Shelby (R) No.

Murkowski (R) Not Voting; Stevens (R) No.

Kyl (R) Not Voting; McCain (R) Not Voting.

Lincoln (D) Yes; Pryor (D) Yes.

Boxer (D) Yes; Feinstein (D) Yes.

Allard (R) No; Salazar (D) Yes.

Dodd (D) Yes; Lieberman (I) No.

Biden (D) Yes; Carper (D) Yes.

Martinez (R) No; Nelson (D) Yes.

Chambliss (R) No; Isakson (R) No.

Akaka (D) Yes; Inouye (D) Yes.

Craig (R) No; Crapo (R) No.

Durbin (D) Yes; Obama (D) Yes.

Bayh (D) Yes; Lugar (R) No.

Grassley (R) No; Harkin (D) Yes.

Brownback (R) No; Roberts (R) No.

Bunning (R) No; McConnell (R) No.

Landrieu (D) Yes; Vitter (R) No.

Collins (R) Yes; Snowe (R) Yes.

Cardin (D) Yes; Mikulski (D) Yes.

Kennedy (D) Yes; Kerry (D) Yes.

Levin (D) Yes; Stabenow (D) Yes.

Coleman (R) Yes; Klobuchar (D) Yes.

Cochran (R) Not Voting; Lott (R) No.

Bond (R) Not Voting; McCaskill (D) Yes.

Baucus (D) Yes; Tester (D) Yes.

Hagel (R) Yes; Nelson (D) Yes.

Ensign (R) Not Voting; Reid (D) Yes.

Gregg (R) No; Sununu (R) No.

Lautenberg (D) Yes; Menendez (D) Yes.

Bingaman (D) Yes; Domenici (R) No.

Clinton (D) Yes; Schumer (D) Yes.

Burr (R) No; Dole (R) No.

Conrad (D) Yes; Dorgan (D) Yes.

Brown (D) Yes; Voinovich (R) No.

Coburn (R) No; Inhofe (R) No.

Smith (R) Yes; Wyden (D) Yes.

Casey (D) Yes; Specter (R) Yes.

Reed (D) Yes; Whitehouse (D) Yes.

DeMint (R) No; Graham (R) No.

Johnson (D) Not Voting; Thune (R) No.

Alexander (R) No; Corker (R) Not Voting.

Cornyn (R) No; Hutchison (R) No.

Bennett (R) Not Voting; Hatch (R) Not Voting.

Leahy (D) Yes; Sanders (I) Yes.

Warner (R) Yes; Webb (D) Yes.

Cantwell (D) Yes; Murray (D) Yes.

Byrd (D) Yes; Rockefeller (D) Yes.

Feingold (D) Yes; Kohl (D) Yes.

Enzi (R) No; Thomas (R) No.

                    * * * *

   I know a few Republicans who are in for a bad time after this vote.

 

U.S. Helicopter Crashes In Afghanistan Killing 8

   The U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan says that eight of our troops were killed and another fourteen were wounded when helicopter crashed. The crew had reported engine failure just before it went down

   NATO spokesman Tom Collins said,"It was not enemy fire related. The pilot was able to radio in that he was having engine problems. We're confident it was not due to enemy action."

    Reporters were not allowed at the crash sight.

 

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Sunday Morning Video Fest!

   I've been a little behind with the video thing this past week because I've spent most of the week either fixing my servers or someone else's, and these things take up alot of time when you do not want to do it in the first place. But one has to make the dollars when ever you can, right?

   Go visit some of these vid's even if just for a good laugh.

   First off is Keith Olbermann's Worst Person in the World and no, it isn't Bush this time around though it should always be.

   Next up is a parody of one of Bush's State of the Union speeches which is pretty dam close to the truth.

   Now we get a little dose  of sex education  from Stephen Colbert followed by a speech from Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-TX) and another speech by Paul Hodes (D-NH) just before the votes on the Iraq war resolutions.

   Last, but not least. the Sunday Funnies where Bush has a problem with the days in February.

   

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Saturday, February 17, 2007

Senator McCain Says Failure Will Turn Americans Against the War

   Well, it would appear that Senator John McCain has lost his sense of direction and his mind, both at the same time.

AP

"I don't know what the other options are because if we fail here I think it's going to be very difficult to maintain the support of the American people," he said. "And when the American people don't support a war ... then we aren't able to maintain a foreign endeavor."

       Apparently, Mr. McCain has been out of the planet for some time and hasn't watched nor read the latest news, like back to November 7, 2006.

   I guess that he hasn't heard of that new instrument that they call the latest polls, either.

   63% oppose sending more troops to Iraq while 35% approve of it.

   Call the eye doctor and get McCain an appointment ASAP!

   Can you believe it? This senile old man thinks that he will be the next president when he can't even live in reality. Maybe I should change that statement, Bush made it in.

 

 

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Clinton Says Pull Troops Out Of Iraq Within 90 Days

 Reuters

"Now it's time to say the redeployment should start in 90 days or the Congress will revoke authorization for this war," the New York senator said in a video on her campaign Web site, repeating a point included in a bill she introduced on Friday.

 

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    It's a good thing that  Mrs. Clinton  is finally beginning to open her mouth a bit but I think that it's a little late for that as was the attempt to open debate on the escalation in the Senate today, which failed by four votes.

  So now I'll guess that both the House and the Senate will continue to fuss over another version of the non-bindiing resolution that will never be agreed on between the both of them so long as the Senate Republicans want language inserted saying that funding will not be cut for the escalation.

    I can't wait for the list of who voted ' no ' on Saturday because I am going to run those sorry bastards through the mud at every chance that I get! That goes for those from both sides of the fence in the Senate today and in the House vote on Friday,

   It is time for our new employees ( House, Senate ) to do the will of their employers ( Citizens of the United States of America ). It is time now to tell Mr. Bush to go to hell and to deny him the $100 billion that he seeks for more of this mess in Iraq!

   It is time for everyone in Washington, D.C. to do as they were told to do back on November 7, 2006. What part of that do you not understand?

 

Senate Blocks Iraq War Resolution Debate

  I'll have a bit to say about this in a little while after I have the whole story.

AP

WASHINGTON - The Senate gridlocked on the
Iraq war in a sharply worded showdown on Saturday as Republicans foiled a Democratic attempt to rebuke President Bush over his deployment of 21,500 additional combat troops.

The vote was 56-34. That was four short of the 60 needed to advance the measure, which is identical to a nonbinding resolution that Democrats pushed through the House on Friday.

"The Senate, on behalf of the American people, must make it clear to the commander in chief that he no longer has a rubber stamp in Iraq," said Majority Leader Harry Reid  D-Nev., in the final moments before the vote.

Republicans blasted him and the Democratic leadership for refusing to allow a vote on an alternative that ruled out any reduction in money for troops in the field.

"A vote in support of the troops that is silent on the question of funds is an attempt to have it both ways," said Sen. Mitch McConnell (news, bio, voting record) of Kentucky, the GOP leader. "So we are asking for an honest and open debate."

 

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All Peter Pan Bought Since May 2006 Should Be Discarded

   Well now! the Peter Pan peanut butter salmonella case has expanded to all Peter Pan varieties bought since May of 2006!

 

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Reuters

Fri Feb 16,2007

All Peter Pan peanut butter bought since May 2006 should be discarded, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said on Friday in a statement broadening its warning about salmonella-contaminated peanut butter.

The FDA said the suspect Great Value peanut butter also could be identified by the 2111 code.

The CDC has identified the strain of bacteria as Salmonella Tennessee, one of many strains of salmonella bacteria.

They can cause nausea, diarrhea and other ill effects, but usually the sickness clears up on its own in less than a week.

"Although Great Value peanut butter with the specified product code has not been linked by CDC to the cases of Salmonella Tennessee infection, the product is manufactured in the same plant as Peter Pan peanut butter and, thus, is believed to be at similar risk of contamination," the FDA said in a statement.

"Great Value peanut butter made by manufacturers other than ConAgra is not affected."

The FDA said it persuaded ConAgra to recall the peanut butter on Wednesday, shortly after the CDC confirmed it was investigating the outbreak.

 

John McCain: Resolution Vote Is Meaningless

   John McCain is in Chicago seeking cash and votes for his presidential nomination for a shot at the presidency in 2008.

   He is missing the Senate vote Saturday because resolution critical of President Bush's troop surge is " a meaningless exercise fraught with partisanship."

McCain's spokesman said he is a staunch supporter of sending more troops to Iraq. His presence or absence would have no impact on the outcome of the vote.   Chicago Sun-Times

  John McCain, you are a total asshole and do not deserve to be in office anymore much less a president of any nation seeing as how you have sold your soul to the devil just to be a leader somewhere!

   It may be a great thing that McCain will not be in D.C. for the Senate vote as that is one less for the GOP side. I suspect that at his old age, a six day work week is really taxing it a bit.

 

 

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Bank of America Facing Boycott Over Credit Card

            

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  Charlotte Observer 02/17/2007

Coalition says bank should be charged with `aiding and abetting' illegal immigrants

RICK ROTHACKER  rrothacker@charlotteobserver.com

A coalition of groups that advocate for tighter U.S. borders has launched a boycott against Bank of America Corp. because of a new credit card that could be used by illegal immigrants.

The National Illegal Immigration Boycott Coalition is asking people to close their accounts and sign a petition at www.bankofamericaboycott.com. Organizer William Gheen, president of Raleigh-based Americans for Legal Immigration PAC, also argues bank officials should face federal charges for "aiding and abetting" illegal immigrants.

"Nobody is above the law, including Bank of America," he said.

The boycott is the latest backlash against a credit card the Charlotte bank is testing in Los Angeles that requires little or no credit history. Customers must have a checking account in good standing with the bank, but they don't necessarily need a Social Security number to sign up.

Two Republican members of the House Financial Services Committee also told Fox News on Friday they would ask for hearings on the program, citing concerns about promoting illegal immigration and identity theft.

Bank of America spokeswoman Betsy Weinberger said the card was not "specifically developed or marketed for illegal immigrants," adding the initiative allows customers to build a credit history with a "leading bank."

Eager to find new customers among the nation's burgeoning ranks of Hispanic immigrants, U.S. banks are increasingly offering checking accounts, money transfer services and mortgages that don't require a Social Security number. Bank of America is the first major credit card company to step into the arena.

Bank of America Facing Boycott Over Credit Card

            

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  Charlotte Observer 02/17/2007

Coalition says bank should be charged with `aiding and abetting' illegal immigrants

RICK ROTHACKER  rrothacker@charlotteobserver.com

A coalition of groups that advocate for tighter U.S. borders has launched a boycott against Bank of America Corp. because of a new credit card that could be used by illegal immigrants.

The National Illegal Immigration Boycott Coalition is asking people to close their accounts and sign a petition at www.bankofamericaboycott.com. Organizer William Gheen, president of Raleigh-based Americans for Legal Immigration PAC, also argues bank officials should face federal charges for "aiding and abetting" illegal immigrants.

"Nobody is above the law, including Bank of America," he said.

The boycott is the latest backlash against a credit card the Charlotte bank is testing in Los Angeles that requires little or no credit history. Customers must have a checking account in good standing with the bank, but they don't necessarily need a Social Security number to sign up.

Two Republican members of the House Financial Services Committee also told Fox News on Friday they would ask for hearings on the program, citing concerns about promoting illegal immigration and identity theft.

Bank of America spokeswoman Betsy Weinberger said the card was not "specifically developed or marketed for illegal immigrants," adding the initiative allows customers to build a credit history with a "leading bank."

Eager to find new customers among the nation's burgeoning ranks of Hispanic immigrants, U.S. banks are increasingly offering checking accounts, money transfer services and mortgages that don't require a Social Security number. Bank of America is the first major credit card company to step into the arena.

D-M sergeant sent to prison for child porn

    Tucson Citizen

A.J. FLICK
Tucson Citizen 2.17.2007

A Davis-Monthan Air Force sergeant was sentenced today to 6 1/2 years in federal prison after he pleaded guilty to two child pornography charges.

U.S. District Court Judge John M. Roll sentenced Ernest David Craighead, 35, to prison for attempted transportation and possession of child pornography, the U.S. Attorney's Office said.

In July 2004, the FBI traced two pornographic images to Craighead's on-base residence, the U.S. Attorney's Office said. A search later found 16 images of child pornography on the hard drive of Craighead's computer and about 15 images and three movies of child pornography on three discs.

Once Craighead is released from prison, he will be on supervised release for the rest of his life and must register as a sex offender, the U.S. Attorney's Office said.

 

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