28
Jun
2004

The Disaster of Failed Policy

Here it is at last. An editorial in a major mainstream newspaper (LA Times) completely condemning Bush, his lies, the war, the lives and money spent, the squandering of goodwill towards America... Linda

Go to Original

The Disaster of Failed Policy

Los Angeles Times | Editorial

Sunday 27 June 2004

OWEN E. DELL

In its scale and intent, President Bush's war against Iraq was something new and radical: a premeditated decision to invade, occupy and topple the government of a country that was no imminent threat to the United States. This was not a handful of GIs sent to overthrow Panamanian thug Manuel Noriega or to oust a new Marxist government in tiny Grenada.

It was the dispatch of more than 100,000 U.S. troops to implement Bush's post-Sept. 11 doctrine of preemption, one whose dangers President John Quincy Adams understood when he said the United States "goes not abroad, in search of monsters to destroy."

In the case of Vietnam, the U.S. began by assisting a friendly government resisting communist takeover in a civil war, though the conflict disintegrated into a failure that still haunts this country. The 1991 Persian Gulf War, under Bush's father, was a successful response to Iraq's invasion and occupation of Kuwait - and Bush's father deliberately stopped short of toppling Saddam Hussein and occupying Iraq.

The current president outlined a far more aggressive policy in a speech to the West Point graduating class in 2002, declaring that in the war on terror "we must take the battle to the enemy" and confront threats before they emerge. The Iraq war was intended as a monument to his new Bush Doctrine, which also posited that the U.S. would take what help was available from allies but would not be held back by them. It now stands as a monument to folly.

The planned transfer Wednesday of limited sovereignty from the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority to an interim Iraqi government occurs with U.S. influence around the world at a low point and insurgent violence in Iraq reaching new heights of deadliness and coordination.

Important Arab leaders this month rejected a U.S. invitation to attend a summit with leaders of industrialized nations. The enmity between Israelis and Palestinians is fiercer than ever, their hope for peace dimmer.

Residents of the Middle East see the U.S. not as a friend but as an imperial power bent on securing a guaranteed oil supply and a base for U.S. forces. Much of the rest of the world sees a bully.

The War's False Premises

All the main justifications for the invasion offered beforehand by the Bush administration and its supporters - weapons of mass destruction, close ties between Al Qaeda and Iraq, a chance to make Baghdad a fountain of democracy that would spread through the region - turned out to be baseless.

Weeks of suicide car bombings, assassinations of political leaders and attacks on oil pipelines vital to the country's economy have preceded the handover.

On Thursday alone, car bombs and street fighting in five cities claimed more than 100 lives. Iraqis no longer fear torture or death at the hands of Hussein's brutal thugs, but many fear leaving their homes because of the violence.

The U.S. is also poorer after the war, in lives lost, billions spent and terrorists given new fuel for their rage. The initial fighting was easy; the occupation has been a disaster, with Pentagon civilians arrogantly ignoring expert advice on the difficulty of the task and necessary steps for success.

Two iconic pictures from Iraq balance the good and the dreadful - the toppling of Hussein's statue and a prisoner crawling on the floor at Abu Ghraib prison with a leash around his neck. Bush landed on the aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln in May 2003 to a hero's welcome and a banner declaring "Mission Accomplished."

A year later, more than 90% of Iraqis want the U.S. to leave their country. The president boasted in July that if Iraqi resistance fighters thought they could attack U.S. forces, "bring them on." Since then, more than 400 personnel have been killed by hostile fire.

Iraqis hope, with little evidence, that the transfer of limited sovereignty to an interim government will slow attacks on police, soldiers and civilians. Another goal, democracy, is fading. The first concern remains what it should have been after the rout of Hussein's army: security. The new Iraqi leaders are considering martial law, an understandable response with suicide bombings recently averaging about one a day but a move they could hardly enforce with an army far from rebuilt.

The new government also faces the difficulty of keeping the country together. In the north, the Kurds, an ethnically separate minority community that had been persecuted by Hussein, want at least to maintain the autonomy they've had for a decade. The Sunnis and Shiites distrust each other. Within the Shiite community, to which the majority of Iraqis belong, Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani and the violent Muqtada Sadr are opponents. Sadr was a relatively minor figure until occupation officials shut his party's newspaper in March and arrested one of his aides, setting off large protests and attacks on U.S. troops.

The U.S. carries its own unwelcome legacies from the occupation:

* Troops are spending more time in Iraq than planned because about one-quarter of the Army is there at any one time. National Guard and Army Reserve forces are being kept on active duty longer than expected, creating problems at home, where the soldiers' jobs go unfilled and families go without parents in the home.

* The Abu Ghraib prison scandal has raised questions about the administration's willingness to ignore Geneva Convention requirements on treatment of prisoners. Investigations of prisons in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantánamo Bay must aim at finding out which high-ranking officers approved of the abuse or should have known of it. The U.S. also must decide what to do with prisoners of war. The Geneva Convention requires they be released when the occupation ends unless they have been formally charged with a crime. The International Committee of the Red Cross says fewer than 50 prisoners have been granted POW status. Thousands more detained as possible security threats also should be released or charged.

* The use of private contractors for military jobs once done by soldiers also demands closer examination. Civilians have long been employed to feed troops and wash uniforms, but the prevalence of ex-GIs interrogating prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison raises harsh new questions. For instance, what, if any, charges could be brought against them if they were found complicit in mistreatment?*

Investigate the Contracts

The administration also put private U.S. contractors in charge of rebuilding Iraq. Congress needs to take a much closer look at what they do and how they bill the government.

Halliburton is the best-known case, having won secret no-bid contracts to rebuild the country. A Pentagon audit found "significant" overcharges by the company, formerly headed by Vice President Dick Cheney; Halliburton denies the allegations.

Iraqis say they want the Americans out, but most understand they will need the foreign forces for many more months. A U.S. troop presence in Iraq should not be indefinite, even if the Iraqis request it. By the end of 2005, Iraq should have enough trained police, soldiers, border guards and other forces to be able to defend the country and put down insurgencies but not threaten neighboring countries.

The Bush administration should push NATO nations to help with the training. Once the Iraqis have a new constitution, an elected government and sufficient security forces, the U.S. should withdraw its troops. That does not mean setting a definite date, because the U.S. cannot walk away from what it created. But it should set realistic goals for Iraq to reach on its own, at which time the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad becomes just another diplomatic outpost. It also means living up to promises to let Iraq choose its own government, even well short of democracy.

France, Germany and others that opposed the war seem to understand that letting Iraq become a failed state, an Afghanistan writ large, threatens them as well as the U.S. and the Middle East. But other nations will do little to help with reconstruction if Iraq remains a thinly disguised fiefdom where U.S. companies get billion-dollar contracts and other countries are shut out.

A Litany of Costly Errors

The missteps have been many: listening to Iraqi exiles like Ahmad Chalabi who insisted that their countrymen would welcome invaders; using too few troops, which led to a continuing crime wave and later to kidnappings and full-blown terror attacks. Disbanding the Iraqi army worsened the nation's unemployment problem and left millions of former soldiers unhappy - men with weapons. Keeping the United Nations at arm's length made it harder to regain assistance when the need was dire.

It will take years for widely felt hostility to ebb, in Iraq and other countries. The consequences of arrogance, accompanied by certitude that the world's most powerful military can cure all ills, should be burned into Americans' memory banks.

Preemption is a failed doctrine. Forcibly changing the regime of an enemy that posed no imminent threat has led to disaster. The U.S. needs better intelligence before it acts in the future. It needs to listen to friendly nations. It needs humility.


"I see in the near future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my country. Corporations have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed."

President Abraham Lincoln (R)
November 21, 1864

Anti-Bush Ad Overstates Case Against Halliburton

http://factcheck.org/article.aspx?docid=201

Sizing Up the Earth's Glaciers

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Study/GLIMS/


Informant: NHNE

The Nuclear Arms Race

The administration of George W. Bush has restarted the nuclear arms race. It did so by abandoning the START II treaty, by withdrawing from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, and by expanding NATO to the borders of Russia...

http://reese.king-online.com/Reese_20040628/index.php


From Information Clearing House

Billions of Iraqi Funds Missing

Reports

Billions of dollars belonging to Iraq is not accounted for by the Coalition Provisional Authority, which was given responsibility by the United Nations for the country's finances, British lawmakers and aid activists said Monday...

http://www.timesdaily.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20040628/API/406280628


From Information Clearing House

Iraq chaos a result of blinkered arrogance

This is my third trip to Iraq since the war, and the situation is the worst I've seen...

http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/newssentinel/news/editorial/9031657.htm


From Information Clearing House

Former terrorism czar calls Iraq invasion 'enormous mistake'

The invasion of Iraq was an ''enormous mistake'' that is costing untold lives, strengthening al-Qaida and breeding a new generation of terrorists, former White House counterterrorism czar Richard Clarke said Saturday...

http://www.boston.com/dailynews/178/nation/Former_terrorism_czar_calls_Ir:.shtml


From Information Clearing House

U.S. Readies for Draft

Despite denials that the U.S. plans to re-institute the draft, the Pentagon has stepped up preparations for a new Selective Service System that could allow for a full-blown draft by next year...

http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2004/6/24/104815.shtml


From Information Clearing House

The Logic of Torture

I came across prisoners who signed what they were ordered to sign, only to get what the interrogator promised them. He did not promise them their liberty. He promised them -- if they signed -- uninterrupted sleep!"...

http://hrw.org/english/docs/2004/06/28/usint8967.htm


From Information Clearing House

Terror Suspects Win Right to U.S. Courts

The court refused to endorse a central claim of the White House since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11 2001: That the government has authority to seize and detain suspected terrorists or their protectors and indefinitely deny access to courts or lawyers while interrogating them...

http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,1280,-4254778,00.html

http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=5531739


From Information Clearing House

Mother Allows Photos Of Soldier's Coffin To Protest Media Ban

The mother of a soldier killed in Iraq summoned news outlets to photograph her son's flag-draped casket arriving at Sacramento International Airport to protest a Pentagon policy banning media coverage of America's war dead...

http://www.nbc4.tv/news/3467974/detail.html


From Information Clearing House

A rush to join the insurgency

U.S. commanders acknowledge that military might alone cannot defeat the insurgency; in fact, the frequent use of force often spurs resistance by deepening ill will...

http://www.iht.com/bin/print.php?file=526961.html


From Information Clearing House

Arabs unimpressed by Iraq power transfer

The transfer of authority to an Iraqi government has failed to impress Arab analysts, who predict violence against U.S. troops will continue and Arab governments will withhold full diplomatic recognition...

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/040628/325/ewua8.html


From Information Clearing House

Iraq's problems passed on

Legal niceties, are unlikely to cut much ice with the insurgents - so long as foreign troops remain, they will provide both a sitting target and a rallying point for discontent...

http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1249241,00.html


From Information Clearing House

A Pseudostate Is Born

With nearly 140,000 American troops on Iraq's soil, plus tens of thousands of additional foreign soldiers and civilian security guards armed with everything from submachine guns to helicopters, most military power will not be in Iraqi hands, nor will the power of the budget, largely set and paid for in Washington...

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article6400.htm

THE CORPORATION

One hundred and fifty years ago, the corporation was a relatively insignificant entity. Today, it is a vivid, dramatic and pervasive presence in all our lives. Like the Church, the Monarchy and the Communist Party in other times and places, the corporation is today’s dominant institution. But history humbles dominant institutions. All have been crushed, belittled or absorbed into some new order. The corporation is unlikely to be the first to defy history. In this complex and highly entertaining documentary, Mark Achbar, co-director of the influential and inventive MANUFACTURING CONSENT: NOAM CHOMSKY AND THE MEDIA, teams up with co-director Jennifer Abbott and writer Joel Bakan to examine the far-reaching repercussions of the corporation’s increasing preeminence. Based on Bakan’s book The Corporation: The Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power, the film is a timely, critical inquiry that invites CEOs, whistle-blowers, brokers, gurus, spies, players, pawns and pundits on a graphic and engaging quest to reveal the 4corporation’s inner workings, curious history, controversial impacts and possible futures. Featuring illuminating interviews with Noam Chomsky, Michael Moore, Howard Zinn and many others, THE CORPORATION charts the spectacular rise of an institution aimed at achieving specific economic goals as it also recounts victories against this apparently invincible force...

http://www.thecorporation.com/


Informant: Romy



The Corporation: The Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/501787/

If an Agent Knocks

Federal Investigators and Your Rights

Center for Constitutional Rights

http://bcn.boulder.co.us/environment/vail/ifanagentknocks.html

The Neutralizers

It is VERY simple.

Those who spend their time fighting tyranny are patriots.

Those who spend their time fighting patriots are advancing tyranny.

The message to which this is a reply, is a good example of one or more of the common strategies of disinformers. A brief discussion is listed below.

The items of relevance, in the message, to which this is a reply are:

2. Dividing patriots into fighting each other by creating strife among patriots

6. ABOVE ALL: Accusing the most effective patriots of being false opposition.

THE GOLDEN RULE OF DISINFORMERS:
Always accuse your adversary of whatever is true about yourself.
How to recognize false opposition (NEUTRALIZERS)

NEUTRALIZERS are people who distract patriots from defending freedom. AMONG MANY OTHER TACTICS, they do this by:

1. Deceiving patriots into supporting hoaxes.

2. Dividing patriots into fighting each other by creating strife among patriots

3. Deceiving patriots into creating class struggle by promoting ethnic hatred.

4. Attempting to waste the time of patriots, by forcing them to respond to personal attacks.

5. Using multiple aliases to create the appearance that there is someone, who believes them to be credible.

6. ABOVE ALL: Accusing the most effective patriots of being false opposition.

THE GOLDEN RULE OF DISINFORMERS:
Always accuse your adversary of whatever is true about yourself.

Any person, who does ALL of the above is certain to be a NEUTRALIZER.

Rather than wasting time responding to personal attacks, it is better to respond quickly to this foolishness, basically by sending a "form letter", which addresses anything worthy of comment.

Then go back to work opposing tyranny.

IN THIS WAY Neutralizers ACTUALLY DO NOT waste the time of patriot activists. Just dispense with them, with a standard response
(This is also a standard response).

Those who seek truth can use facts. Those who argue fiction must resort to insults.

It is unusual to find adults who resort to name calling in the place of addressing issues.

Making personal attacks does not evade the responsibility to provide facts about issues.

Those who seek truth can resist the tempation to shift the discusion from the message to the messenger.

If you have a point to make, about some issue of relevance I would be happy to discuss it with you.

Great minds discuss ideas. Average minds discuss events. Small minds discuss people.

I am not here to talk about you. I am not here to talk about me.
I am here to talk about ideas, if there is anyone else here, who has that type of intellect.


Informant: John Perna (excerpt from his message)

Pentagon to Show Memos Rumsfeld OK'd Interrogation Methods

http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/062304B.shtml#1


Informant: Planttrees

A Pentagon memo undermines the US Constitution

http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=5&article_id=5498
http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/062304B.shtml


Informant: Planttrees

The Resistance Always Increases

http://www.lewrockwell.com/wiggins/wiggins9.html


Informant: Deborah Sobwick

Omega-News Collection 28. June 2004

Avoidable health crisis
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250472/

Record 600,000 Protest Bush Plan to Weaken Mercury Emission Controls
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251799/

Victory on Arctic Refuge
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250543/

FRANCE, BRITAIN IN JOINT WARNING ON DANGER OF CLIMATE CHANGE
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250764/

Climate experts urge immediate action
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250773/

Western Shoshone Payoff Bill Passes Both Houses of Congress
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250548/

Anti-logging activists prepare for national forest loggers
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250995/

CHEMTRAILS OVER AMERICA
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250600/

KEYS to the CHEMTRAILS
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250673/

CHEMTRAILS-CULLING THE USELESS EATERS
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250684/

Patent for Contrail Generation Method
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250685/

The Mind Altering Abilities of Chemtrails
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250687/

FIERY HELL ON EARTH, Pt. 3
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250767/

Nuclear Power 'Can't Stop Climate Change'
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251543/

The US Has Lost Its Moral Authority
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250636/

Ron Reagan criticizes Bush administration's handling of war in Iraq
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250641/

Iraq war 'will cost each US family $3,415'
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250643/

Paying the Price: The Mounting Costs of the Iraq War
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250644/

Militarism and the American Empire
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250645/

GIs to Testify in CIA Prisoner Abuse Case
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250646/

Testimony: Leaders knew of abuse
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250647/

Officials: Abuse probe must hit brass
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250648/

End the EU's embarrassing silence on US torture
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250649/

Congressional report warns CIA is heading over 'proverbial cliff'
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250652/

Cheney obscenity shocks senators
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250654/

Ashcroft’s big con
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250935/

The news media's political "F" word
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250759/

Bush in trouble
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251910/

'Embedded Patriots'
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250656/

The multibillion robbery the US calls reconstruction
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250932/

Indians carry horror tales from US camps
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250934/

Irish President Warns Bush Over Torture Of POWs
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251413/

’Torture in a good cause’
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251414/

Memo lists acceptable "aggressive" interrogation methods
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251883/

Washington Renews War Crimes Immunity In “Sovereign” Iraq
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250996/

White House Counting on Public Apathy
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250933/

The neo-cons' manufactured case for war
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251898/

Racism at Core of Iraq Invasion
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251864/

Promises vs. Real Costs for the Iraqi People
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251868/

Iraq and global victim disarmament
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251892/

US to Employ Surveillance Drones
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251420/

Liberation Will Come Only When the US Leaves
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251871/

Iraq Occupation Erodes Bush Doctrine
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251879/

Realism takes root in Washington
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251920/

The View From America: Responses to Fahrenheit 9/11
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250923/

Activists Using Fahrenheit 9/11 as an Organizing Tool
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251094/

What `October Surprise' might be in store for Americans this fall?
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/250991/

Call to action on electronic voting
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251091/

White House Tries to Rein In Scientists
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251383/

No right to remain silent
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/251927/

No right to remain silent

by Sheldon Richman

Future of Freedom Foundation

06/25/04

You have the right to remain silent -- unless you're asked your name
when you aren't even charged with a crime. That's right: it can now
be a crime to refuse to tell a policeman your name. What's happening
to America? Nevada and 20 other states have criminalized remaining
silent in the face of a policeman's question 'What's your name?...

http://www.fff.org/comment/com0406j.asp


Informant: Thomas L. Knapp

Realism takes root in Washington

by Jim Lobe

Asia Times

06/26/04

The Bush administration has gotten America into its worst foreign-policy debacle since the Vietnam War, the kind of crisis that creates a moment when you realize you can't continue this way,' said John Ikenberry, professor of politics and international affairs at Princeton University. 'We are as close to an open rebellion against American leadership in the world as we've seen since after World War II,' he told IPS. 'The costs of a unilateral, hardline, go-it-alone
approach are much greater than those who championed that style have anticipated.' Indeed, the tilt to the realists has been driven by the convergence of Washington's steadily growing diplomatic isolation and its patent failure to cope by itself, or with its dwindling number of allies, with the situation in Iraq...

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/FF26Ak02.html


Informant: Thomas L. Knapp

Bush in trouble

by David Hogberg

The American Spectator

06/28/04

Some of the erosion in Bush's numbers comes from a rather surprising cohort. While Iraq has undoubtedly hurt Bush, he is also facing trouble among his base. Bruce Bartlett recently speculated that Bush has lost the support of fiscal conservatives with his betrayal on a number of issues: tariffs, higher spending on education and agriculture, support for the National Endowment of the Arts, and, of course, the prescription drug bill. A look at the historical numbers from the Washington Post/ABCNews poll suggests this is true...

http://www.spectator.org/dsp_article.asp?art_id=6759

The neo-cons' manufactured case for war

by Stefan Halper and Jonathan Clarke

Cato Institute

06/28/04

In 2001, an America largely disinterested and uninformed about foreign affairs was convulsed by terrorism from abroad. ... This was the moment when a small, largely unknown group of neoconservatives injected itself decisively into the foreign policy process. These neoconservatives, with origins among formerly left internationalist Democrats, tend to be characterized by a Jacobin, uncompromising set of values. In retrospect, one could not know how susceptible an inexperienced president and a less informed polity would be to the policies that have brought about the risky positions in which the nation now finds itself...

http://www.cato.org/dailys/06-28-04.html


Informant: Thomas L. Knapp

Iraq and global victim disarmament

by Anthony Gregory

The Libertarian Enterprise

06/27/04

If World Government comes, it will not only be the U.N. taking over the world, as the Right fears, nor will it be the U.S. doing so, as the Left suspects. It will be a combination of both: the most powerful government on earth working with the other powerful governments to expand and centralize global authority over everyone, using international law to legitimize its activity. And this of course includes taking away our guns, as well as monopolizing the larger weapons, keeping them in the hands of the politicians who can
most be trusted. Want to talk about international victim disarmament?

Read the papers and see how U.S. soldiers are being directed to disarm Iraqi civilians. Put blue caps on the soldiers and imagine the project on a grander scale...

http://www.webleyweb.com/tle/tle277-20040627-02.html


Informant: Thomas L. Knapp

Memo lists acceptable "aggressive" interrogation methods

USA Today

06/27/04

The Justice Department spelled out specific interrogation methods that the CIA could use against top al-Qaeda members in a still-classified August 2002 legal memo, issued as the spy agency pressed terrorism suspects about possible strikes on the anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, current and former Justice officials said. CIA officials had demanded specific guidance for handling 'high-value al-Qaeda captives,' said a former Justice official who worked on the memo."

http://tinyurl.com/2o4af


Informant: Thomas L. Knapp

Iraq Occupation Erodes Bush Doctrine

Analysis

by Robin Wright
Washington Post Staff Writer

Monday, June 28, 2004; Page A01

The occupation of Iraq has increasingly undermined, and in some cases discredited, the core tenets of President Bush's foreign policy, according to a wide range of Republican and Democratic analysts and U.S. officials.

When the war began 15 months ago, the president's Iraq policy rested on four broad principles: The United States should act preemptively to prevent strikes on U.S. targets. Washington should be willing to act unilaterally, alone or with a select coalition, when the United Nations or allies balk. Iraq was the next cornerstone in the global war on terrorism. And Baghdad's transformation into a new democracy would spark regionwide change.

But these central planks of Bush doctrine have been tainted by spiraling violence, limited reconstruction, failure to find weapons of mass destruction or prove Iraq's ties to al Qaeda, and mounting Arab disillusionment with U.S. leadership.

"Of the four principles, three have failed, and the fourth -- democracy promotion -- is hanging by a sliver," said Geoffrey Kemp, a National Security Council staff member in the Reagan administration and now director of regional strategic programs at the Nixon Center.

The president has "walked away from unilateralism. We're not going to do another preemptive strike anytime soon, certainly not in Iran or North Korea. And it looks like terrorism is getting worse, not better, especially in critical countries like Saudi Arabia," Kemp said.

As a result, Bush doctrine could become the biggest casualty of U.S. intervention in Iraq, which is entering a new phase this week as the United States prepares to hand over power to the new Iraqi government.

Setbacks in Iraq have had a visible impact on policy, forcing shifts or reassessments. The United States has returned to the United Nations to solve its political problems in Iraq. It has appealed to NATO for help on security. It is also relying on diplomacy, with allies, to deal with every other hot spot.

"There's already been a retreat from the radicalism in Bush administration foreign policy," said Walter Russell Mead, a Council on Foreign Relations senior fellow. "You have a feeling that even Bush isn't saying, 'Hey, that was great. Let's do it again.' "

Some analysts, including Republicans, suggest that another casualty of Iraq is the neoconservative approach that inspired a zealous agenda to tackle security threats in the Middle East and transform the region politically.

"Neoconservatism has been replaced by neorealism, even within the Bush White House," Kemp said. "The best evidence is the administration's extraordinary recent reliance on [U.N. Secretary General] Kofi Annan and [U.N. envoy] Lakhdar Brahimi. The neoconservatives are clearly much less credible than they were a year ago."

The administration would not make a senior official or spokesman available for quotation by name to support its policy. But top administration officials insist the Iraq experience has not invalidated Bush doctrine, and they contend its basic principles will endure beyond the Bush presidency.

Policy supporters argue that current realities will keep some form of all four ideas in future policy. "Despite all the problems of implementation and despite mistakes made by the Bush administration, I don't see many other choices," said William Kristol, editor of the Weekly Standard and chief of staff for Vice President Dan Quayle.

"No one thinks the Middle East pre-September 11 is acceptable, or that we should work with its dictators. No one says in a world of weapons of mass destruction we can rule out preemption or that they're not worried about the linkage between terrorism and states producing weapons of mass destruction," he said. "So I don't see much of an alternative to the Bush doctrine."

Challenges to its four central tenets, however, are likely to influence U.S. foreign policy for years, some analysts predict.

The Preemptive Strike

The most controversial tenet of Bush doctrine was also the primary justification for launching the Iraq war. In the president's June 2002 address to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, Bush said deterrence and containment were no longer enough to defend America's borders. The United States, he said, had the right to take preemptive action to prevent attacks against the United States.

"We must take the battle to the enemy, disrupt his plans and confront the worst threats before they emerge. In the world we have entered, the only path to safety is the path of action. And this nation will act," Bush told cadets.

In the policy's early days, its supporters hinted that preemption could eventually justify forcible government change in Iran, Syria and North Korea as well as in Iraq. But that sentiment is evaporating, because Iraq showed the "pitfalls of the doctrine in graphic detail," said Ted Galen Carpenter, vice president for defense and foreign policy studies at the Cato Institute.

Preemption has been "damaged, if not totally discredited," and the outcome in Iraq may prove to be "an inoculation against rash action" by the United States in the future, Carpenter said.

The administration is working overtime to reduce the sense of alarm that Washington is posed "on a hair trigger" to launch a new offensive against governments it does not like, said James F. Hoge Jr., editor of Foreign Affairs magazine. White House officials are relying on diplomacy to defuse confrontations over nuclear programs in Iran and North Korea, the two other countries with Iraq that Bush labeled the "axis of evil."

The administration now contends its decision was discretionary, not preemptive, because Saddam Hussein had a decade to meet several U.N. resolutions. U.S. officials also say that after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, they had to learn to deal with threats faster -- and proactively.

"The notion that preemption has been discredited is entirely mistaken," said Robert Kagan, a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace who has argued for a muscular approach to international affairs.

"It's a fact of life in the international system, because of the reality of the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction," Kagan said. "The normal lead time that a nation has to protect itself is not what it used to be, so preemption will have to be part of the international arsenal."

Unilateralism

Bush has repeatedly made clear his intent to act alone or with a U.S.-led coalition when the international community balks at confronting perceived threats.

"I will not wait on events while dangers gather. I will not stand by as peril draws closer and closer. The United States of America will not permit the world's most dangerous regimes to threaten us with the world's most destructive weapons," he said in his 2002 State of the Union address.

Later that year, he told the U.N. General Assembly that Washington would work with the world body to deal with the "common challenge in Iraq" but stressed that action would be "unavoidable" if Hussein did not comply. "The purposes of the United States should not be doubted," he warned.

Yet Washington has made a grudging retreat after its limited coalition could not cope with all the problems in Iraq, analysts say. The shift was evident when the administration turned to a U.N. envoy to form an interim Iraqi government after two failed U.S. attempts. It has also deferred to the United Nations to oversee elections and to help Iraq write a constitution.

"Going it alone doesn't really work in the world as it exists today," said Mark Schneider, senior vice president of International Crisis Group, a nonpartisan Brussels-based group that tracks global hot spots. "We need allies. We become more vulnerable and exposed when we don't have them."

The administration counters that its coalition included more than 30 countries, including the majority of NATO members, and that the idea is far from new. "Every administration reserves the right with respect to protecting vital American interests to act alone, but every administration seeks to avoid it," said a senior administration official involved in Iraq policy.

The War on Terrorism

Bush turned his sights on Iraq within weeks of the war in Afghanistan. "Iraq continues to flaunt its hostility toward America and to support terror," he said in the 2002 State of the Union address. He added later: "The price of indifference would be catastrophic."

Whatever the merits of deposing Hussein, foreign and domestic polls now consistently show that the failure to find concrete evidence of significant ties or joint actions between the Iraqi leader and al Qaeda has dissipated international support for the United States and generated skepticism at home about the benefits of the Iraq war.

The Iraq war may even have hurt U.S. efforts to combat terrorism, analysts say, noting the increase in car bombings, hostage abductions and beheadings in Iraq as well as oil-rich Saudi Arabia. "We have assisted al Qaeda in recruiting fresh adherents by the war in Iraq and the antagonism it's generated," Hoge said.

The administration is "drifting," Carpenter said. It "clings to the idea of state-sponsored terrorism as a motive for the Iraq war, but it was wildly off the mark," he said. "Afghanistan continues to be the real central front, to the extent there is a front at all."

U.S. officials say waging war in Iraq was vital to eliminate a refuge for extremists after Afghanistan.

Early supporters of administration policy also say the problem is not with the principles, but with their implementation. Any government has limited chances to enact policy, and early setbacks in execution can lead the public or policymakers to back away even if the ideas remain valid, Kristol said.

Promoting Democracy

The most ambitious aspect of Bush doctrine is pressing for political and economic reform in the Islamic world, the last bloc of countries to hold out against the democratic tide that has swept much of the rest of the world. Iraq was to be the catalyst of change.

"Iraqi democracy will succeed -- and that success will send forth the news, from Damascus to Tehran -- that freedom can be the future of every nation. The establishment of a free Iraq at the heart of the Middle East will be a watershed event in the global democratic revolution," Bush said in a November 2003 speech to the National Endowment for Democracy.

Although the administration is still pushing its new democracy initiative for the wider Middle East, Muslim disillusionment with the United States over Iraq has deeply hurt this goal, analysts warn. Democratic and Republican foreign policy experts almost unanimously predict that progress will be much slower than expected even six months ago.

"The idea that the Middle East can be repaired by external intervention has been seriously damaged. And the ideas of reform are going to be a much harder sell after Iraq," said Moises Naim, editor of Foreign Policy magazine.

After six decades as the main mediator in the region, the United States may also be losing its standing as an honest broker because of Iraq and the U.S. failure to fulfill promises to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Naim said.

The Iraq intervention also discredited the president's approach to regional peace. "The administration argued that if you removed the security threat in Iraq, you'd improve the chances of solving the Arab-Israeli conflict -- that the road to Jerusalem went through Baghdad. If anything, we learned it's just the other way around," Hoge said.

Supporters of the administration's efforts argue that promoting democracy is the oldest goal in U.S. foreign policy worldwide, dating back more than 200 years. Whatever the current problems, they contend, it will remain a top goal -- particularly in the Islamic world as a key to countering extremism.

The overall impact of policy challenges in Iraq, analysts say, is that the Bush White House has been forced back to the policy center or scaled back the scope of its goals. They cite the president's appeal for NATO assistance and cutbacks in the democracy initiative.

"It's a lesson in hubris," Carpenter said. "The administration thought it had all the answers, but it found out through painful experience that it did not."

Yet administration supporters say Iraq has not produced backtracking or policy reassessment. "Enormously sharp distinctions are being made between different policy views, which are largely artificial," Kagan said. "There was an enormous consensus going into this war and there's a consensus now about what needs to be done. So we are having a huge, vicious debate, and yet I'm not sure what the debate is about."


Informant: M Jenny

Liberation Will Come Only When the US Leaves

Jonathan Steele / The Guardian

June 18th, 2004

With less than two weeks until the much-vaunted transfer of power from the Americans to an Iraqi government, a few hints of the limits to Iraqi independence have emerged from the men Washington has "approved" to participate in the new government. Last week America passed an order banning the radical cleric, Moqtada al-Sadr, from taking part in Iraq's first democratic elections in January. It was an odd decision for a country which claims to be bringing democracy to Iraq...

http://mailhost.groundspring.org/cgi-bin/t.pl?id=85703:740526,2763,1241809,00.html

Promises vs. Real Costs for the Iraqi People

Glen Rangwala / The Independent

June 27, 2004

Tony Blair's message to the Iraqi people, 8 April 2003 promised: "Coalition forces will make the country safe, and will work with the United Nations to help Iraq get back on its feet." What happened: Coalition military leaders now recognise that a substantial sector of the Iraqi population has been engaged in fighting an insurgency against them from the start of the occupation. At first, it was thought that stability could be achieved simply by taking out the leaders of anti-coalition paramilitary groups in "mopping-up operations". From September 2003, however, the occupation authorities began to think of the violence as a broadly based insurgency...

http://mailhost.groundspring.org/cgi-bin/t.pl?id=85702:740526

Promises vs. Real Costs for the Iraqi People

Glen Rangwala / The Independent

June 27, 2004

Tony Blair's message to the Iraqi people, 8 April 2003 promised: "Coalition forces will make the country safe, and will work with the United Nations to help Iraq get back on its feet." What happened: Coalition military leaders now recognise that a substantial sector of the Iraqi population has been engaged in fighting an insurgency against them from the start of the occupation. At first, it was thought that stability could be achieved simply by taking out the leaders of anti-coalition paramilitary groups in "mopping-up operations". From September 2003, however, the occupation authorities began to think of the violence as a broadly based insurgency...

http://mailhost.groundspring.org/cgi-bin/t.pl?id=85702:740526

Racism at Core of Iraq Invasion

Firas Al-Atraqchi / Freelance Columnist

April 17, 2004

The popular perception in the US is that Iraq is a country of uncivilized criminals and terrorists raised to hate America because common people hate freedom and liberty, ragheads and sand niggers who brought down the Twin Towers in New York City and attacked the Pentagon. US columnists have taken to calling Iraqis lazy and ungrateful. Take Coalition Provisional Authority head L. Paul Bremer who issued Order 39 (September 19), which declares that 100 percent ownership of Iraqi banks, mines and factories is allowed to be foreign-owned and 100 percent of profits from these Iraqi institutions is allowed to be moved out of the country. Where do Iraqis fit in? Is it any surprise they feel cheated and robbed? Does a robbed man stand by and watch his possessions dwindle?...

http://mailhost.groundspring.org/cgi-bin/t.pl?id=85700:740526

Burgerbewegung

Möglicherweise sind Sie schon informiert, aber falls noch nicht, möchte ich Sie gerne persönlich zur Teilnahme an der "Burgerbewegung" einladen. Sie hat das Ziel, McDonald's zu überzeugen, Hamburger anzubieten, deren Fleisch von Tieren stammt, die mit gentechnikfreiem Futter gefüttert worden sind .

80 Prozent (!) aller gentechnisch veränderten Pflanzen gehen in die Futtermittelproduktion. Zwar müssen Futtermittel gekennzeichnet werden, jedoch nicht tierische Erzeugnisse (Fleisch, Milch). Die Verbraucher werden deshalb zu Zwangsunterstützern der neuen Technologie. Sie können sich beim Kauf nicht gegen oder für die neue Technologie entscheiden. Der Verbraucher wird entmündigt.

Die Entscheidung über eine echte Wahlfreiheit für Verbraucher fällt im Futtermittelsektor. McDonald' s ist als bedeutender Nachfrager von Rindfleisch in der Lage, von seinen Lieferanten den Einsatz von gentechnikfreien Futtermitteln zu verlangen und damit die Wahlfreiheit der Verbraucher zu stärken. Vorausgesetzt: Die Verbraucher wollen das.

McDonald's hat angesichts der von foodwatch organisierten Kundenwünsche bereits signalisiert, dass der Konzern in Deutschland auf gentechnikfreie Futtermittel umzusteigen bereit ist. Also müssen wir jetzt den "Druck" auf McDonald's aufrechterhalten, damit aus Worten Taten werden!

Deshalb meine Bitte:

Gehen Sie auf http://www.burgerbewegung.de und mailen Sie den versandfertigen Kundenbrief an die Konzernzentrale!

Und noch etwas:

Bitte empfehlen sie den Link weiter! Das wäre großartig!

Für Rückfragen stehe ich gerne zu Ihrer Verfügung!

Herzlichen Dank und beste Grüße,

Thilo Bode

http://www.burgerbewegung.de

Die Burgerbewegung ist eine Mitmach-Aktion für Wahlfreiheit bei Gentechnik - auf zur Burgerwahl bei McDonald's!

Dr. Thilo Bode
foodwatch e.V.
Brunnenstr. 181
10119 Berlin
Tel. 030 - 240 476 - 0
Fax 030 - 240 476 - 26
E-Mail: bode@foodwatch.de
Internet: http://www.foodwatch.de

Jetzt neue Aktion zum Mitmachen: http://www.burgerbewegung.de


www.burgerbewegung.de

Record 600,000 Protest Bush Plan to Weaken Mercury Emission Controls

June 28, 2004

Tomorrow marks the last day for the public to comment on the highest-profile battle in years between the Bush administration and advocates of public health. The administration is under court order to finalize the first-ever federal regulations to reduce poisonous emissions of mercury from power plants--the largest uncontrolled source of mercury pollution in the U.S.

The battle is marked by an unprecedented public protest against a Bush administration Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposal that would allow power plants to emit six to seven times more mercury into America's air--and for at least a decade longer--than would be the case if the current Clean Air Act were simply implemented in good faith.

An EPA analysis earlier this year stated that 630,000 American newborns are at risk each year of having unsafe levels of mercury in their blood. Mercury can cause serious developmental and neurological problems in children. It is a highly toxic chemical whose effects on the central nervous system are comparable to those of lead. Many people are exposed to mercury by eating tainted fish. Currently, more than 40 states have issued advisories against eating mercury-contaminated fish from their rivers, lakes and streams.

Properly implemented, the Clean Air Act would bring about a 90 percent reduction of mercury emissions over three years. But the Bush administration has stubbornly defended its plan to reduce mercury emissions by only 70 percent--and over a period of 13 years. As a result, over 600,000 citizens have submitted comments opposing the Bush plan. This is more than twice the highest number of comments EPA has ever received on a rulemaking--greater even than the outcry when the administration tried (unsuccessfully) to fend off stronger controls over arsenic in drinking water.

Two months ago 45 Senators and 10 attorneys general called on EPA Administrator Michael Leavitt to abandon the EPA proposal and instead finalize a rule that complies with the Clean Air Act. And this week 184 members of the House did the same.

"It seems the only people applauding the administration's mercury rule are the people who wrote it: power companies and the Bush administration," Angela Ledford, director of Clear the Air, an environmental health advocacy group, told BushGreenwatch. "Today's Washington Post reports that mercury releases are up 10 percent. This underlines the need to require power plants to reduce emissions as much and as fast as technology allows."

Critics of the Bush plan note that a combination of 25 mercury-emitting utilities have donated nearly $6 million to President Bush's campaign, and that they would share a savings of $2.7 billion under the administration proposal.

TAKE ACTION
Submit a comment to EPA through MercuryHurts.org :
http://www.mercuryhurts.org

Source: http://www.bushgreenwatch.org/mt_archives/000144.php

World Without Waves (WWW) debuts in Moscow to packed theatre

Moscow report

Dear friends,

Thanks to all of you for your support and kind words. I'm sorry to send a group letter.

It's difficult for me of course to give a completely objective account of yesterday evening, but I am pleased to report that last night was really a pretty big success. I was really surprised that the screening was sold out..people were turned away, and actually people were standing in the theater. I estimate the theater holds about 250..maybe more.

I was given a generous introduction by the head of the film museum of Russia, a really great and famous man of cinema here named N.I. Kleiman.

I made short introductory speech, then Will Stewart, the actor made a few comments. Will and I were presented flowers. Then I found a seat and the film rolled on.

It went really well. I felt the audience was brought into the film and
stayed with it. Afterwards we got a really good round of applause. I'm told that audiences here are very honest about their reactions.in fact I attended films here where there were no applause afterwards.

I was approached afterward by many people asking lot of questions and giving great feedback. I was surprised how insightful the comments. One woman actually recited word for word the Doug dialogue about electricity..I was shocked.

Another young man very much wanted a sound track cd..he thought the music was great.

Another commented that the reason the film is great for the Russian and European audiences is that is shows that American people have the same problems which they have....that the film was honest and didn't use a grandiose story, technical tricks, or other distractions to entertain.

We have not yet been written covered by the Moscow times, so this has been so far a goal not met. More about this later. Monday we'll see if nick holdsworth comes through. I'm hoping.

In summary, I think we're now on the map, and that the festival organizers will hear good things about this evening.

Mitchell Johnson


Informant: David Jones

Mobile phones can cut a man's fertility by a third

Hi Klaus: The article below on research evidence that cell phone radiation can cause male infertility appeared on the front page of yesterday's print edition of THE SUNDAY TIMES. Best, Imelda, Cork


THE SUNDAY TIMES

June 27, 2004

Mobile phones can cut a man's fertility by a third

Jonathan Leake, Science Editor

(excerpt)

RESEARCH into the fertility of men who regularly carry and use mobile phones has suggested their sperm count can be cut by up to 30%, reducing chances of conception.

The study is the first to indicate male fertility may be damaged by the radiation emitted by mobiles. Men who carry the phone in a belt holster or trouser pocket are thought to be at the highest risk and could one day be advised to put the mobile in a bag or briefcase and away from vulnerable areas.

Details of the research will be released on Tuesday at an international scientific conference of fertility experts in Berlin. The researchers studied 221 men for 13 months comparing the sperm of those who used their phones heavily with others who did not.

They found that heavy users of mobile phones, those who carried their phone around with them most of the time, had their sperm counts reduced by nearly 30%.

Many of the sperm that did survive showed abnormal movements further reducing fertility.

While the research suggests an effect on the sperm, the scientists say further work will need to be done to confirm the finding and establish the mechanism by which it might happen.

In the paper, Dr Imre Fejes of the obstetrics and gynaecology department at the University of Szeged in Hungary concludes: “The prolonged use of cell phones may have a negative effect on spermatogenesis (sperm production) and male fertility, that deteriorates both concentration and motility.”

Unlike previous studies, the researchers believe that phones may cause damage while in stand-by mode. Although not in use, they make regular transmissions to maintain contact with the nearest radio masts. It had been assumed such transmissions were too short to cause harm.

The findings will be presented at the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology’s annual conference.

BGH billigt Grenzwerte für Mobilfunk-Strahlen

"Weiterkämpfen"

Der Bundesgerichtshof (BGH) in Karlsruhe hat eine Klage von Bruchköbeler Mobilfunkgegnern gegen eine Sendeantenne im Kirchturm zurückgewiesen. Dazu heißt es in zwei Leserbriefen:

Dieses Urteil des BGH bietet keinen Anlass zur Resignation. Leserbriefe Frankfurter Rundschau 24-02-04 zum BGH Urteil. Immerhin ist doch jetzt höchstrichterlich festgestellt, dass die untergeordneten Gerichte aufgefordert sind, nach eigenem Ermessen die Beweise Recht suchender Bürger für durch Mobilfunksendeanlagen zu befürchtende Gesundheitsgefährdungen zu prüfen und zu einem eigenen, individuellen Ergebnis im Einzelfall zu kommen. Die Vorgaben des Bundesgerichtshofs sind insoweit eindeutig.

Danach haben die Grenzwerte der 26. Bundes-Immissions-Schutzverordnung (BImSchV) zunächst die Indizwirkung, dass Bürger durch in der Nähe ihrer Wohnungen befindliche Mobilfunksendeanlagen diese nur "unwesentlich" beeinträchtigen. Diese Indizwirkung kann jedoch bei wissenschaftlich begründeten Zweifeln und dem fundierten Verdacht bestehender Gesundheitsgefährdungen, die nicht ins Blaue hinein von betroffenen Bürgern vorgetragen werden, durchaus erschüttert werden, und zwar durch Vorlage neuerer Forschungsergebnisse, die die Grenzwerte in Frage stellen und deshalb dazu führen, dass die untergeordneten Gerichte auf eine Umkehr der Beweislast dahingehend zu erkennen haben, dass nunmehr die Mobilfunkbetreiber die Ungefährlichkeit der von ihren Anlagen ausgehenden Strahlung nachweisen müssen.

Genau dies war bisher nicht der Fall. Nur allzu gerne haben sich bisher die untergeordneten Gerichte auf die Rechtsprechung des Bundesverfassungsgerichts zurückgezogen und diese dahingehend interpretiert, dass ihnen eine eigene Beweisaufnahme verboten sei, solange die Grenzwerte der BImSchV noch gelten. Von Recht suchenden Bürgern vorgelegte, neueste wissenschaftliche Ergebnisse und Beurteilungen unabhängiger Wissenschaftler weltweit wurden unter diesem Gesichtspunkt einfach nicht beachtet.

Dies ist nach dem Urteil des Bundesgerichtshofs nun nicht mehr möglich. Vielmehr ist jeder einzelne, mit einer Mobilfunkstreitigkeit befasste Richter aufgerufen, nach seinem eigenen Gewissen und Ermessen die ihm vorgelegten wissenschaftlichen Ergebnisse zu prüfen und zu entscheiden, ob diese begründete Zweifel und den fundierten Verdacht bestätigen, dass die Grenzwerte der BImSchV die Bürger gerade nicht vor gesundheitlichen Beeinträchtigungen durch Mobilfunksendeanlagen schützen. Keineswegs fordert der Bundesgerichtshof also den Beweis für eine Gesundheitsgefährdung durch Mobilfunksendeanlagen, sondern von den betroffenen Bürgern nur noch den Nachweis wissenschaftlich begründeter Zweifel und den eines fundierten Verdachts derartiger gesundheitlicher Beeinträchtigungen.

Nach alledem bleibt es den untergeordneten Gerichten vorbehalten, in Einzelfällen künftig unabhängig von politischen und wirtschaftlichen Erwägungen bürgergerechter die ihnen vorgelegten Beweismittel zu entscheiden. Dies setzt allerdings den grundsätzlichen Wissen unserer Gerichte voraus, die Gesundheit unserer Bürger den wirtschaftlichen Interessen der Lobbyisten und Politiker voranzustellen, denn der Unterschied zwischen einem demokratischen Rechtsstaat und einem Bananenstaat ist und bleibt die Unabhängigkeit der Justiz!

Jürgen Ronimi, Rechtsanwalt, Oberursel


Leserbrief Frankfurter Rundschau 24-02-04 zum BGH Urteil (Auszug)

Weiter im Internet zum Thema "Recht und Mobilfunk unter:
http://www.buergerwelle.de/body_recht.html

History of New World Order

http://www.pushhamburger.com/bin/wwwboard/messages/397.html#postfp


Informant: kat

Nuclear Power 'Can't Stop Climate Change'

by Geoffrey Lean

Published on Saturday, June 26, 2004 by the lndependent/UK

Nuclear power cannot solve global warming, the international body set up to promote atomic energy admits today.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which exists to spread the peaceful use of the atom, reveals in a new report that it could not grow fast enough over the next decades to slow climate change - even under the most favorable circumstances.

The report - published to celebrate yesterday's 50th anniversary of nuclear power - contradicts a recent surge of support for the atom as the answer to global warming.

That surge was provoked by an article in The Independent last month by Professor James Lovelock - the creator of the Gaia theory - who said that only a massive expansion of nuclear power as the world's main energy source could prevent climate change overwhelming the globe.

Professor Lovelock, a long-time nuclear supporter, wrote: "Civilization is in imminent danger and has to use nuclear - the one safe, available, energy source - now or suffer the pain soon to be inflicted by our outraged planet."

His comments were backed by Sir Bernard Ingham, Lady Thatcher's former PR chief, and other commentators, but have now been rebutted by the most authoritative organization on the matter.

Unlike fossil fuels, nuclear power emits no carbon dioxide, the main cause of climate change. However, it has long been in decline in the face of rising public opposition and increasing reluctance of governments and utilities to finance its enormous construction costs.

No new atomic power station has been ordered in the US for a quarter of a century, and only one is being built in Western Europe - in Finland. Meanwhile, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands and Sweden have all pledged to phase out existing plants.

The IAEA report considers two scenarios. In the first, nuclear energy continues to decline, with no new stations built beyond those already planned. Its share of world electricity - and thus its relative contribution to fighting global warming - drops from its current 16 per cent to 12 per cent by 2030.

Surprisingly, it made an even smaller relative contribution to combating climate change under the IAEA's most favorable scenario, seeing nuclear power grow by 70 per cent over the next 25 years. This is because the world would have to be so prosperous to afford the expansions that traditional ways of generating electricity from fossil fuels would have grown even faster. Climate change would doom the planet before nuclear power could save it.

Alan McDonald, an IAEA nuclear energy analyst, told The Independent on Sunday last night: "Saying that nuclear power can solve global warming by itself is way over the top." But he added that closing existing nuclear power stations would make tackling climate change harder.

© 2004 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd

http://www.commondreams.org/cgi-bin/print.cgi?file=/headlines04/0626-05.htm


Informant: Chris

27
Jun
2004

US to Employ Surveillance Drones

Salt Lake Tribune | June 26 2004

Comment: I post this in the big brother section because in past programs of this nature, the drones 'accidentally' strayed and started spying on US citizens. This has nothing to do with border control, since Bush's proposal of blanket amnesty, illegal immigrants attempting to cross has increased 15%.

FORT HUACHUCA, Ariz. -- The Border Patrol launched an unmanned drone Friday that uses thermal and night-vision equipment to help agents spot undocumented immigrants trying to cross the desert into the United States.

The stepped-up surveillance is part of a mission that officials hope will stem the tide of undocumented immigrants who have made Arizona the busiest illegal entry point along the 2,000-mile border with Mexico.

The two drones used in the project can detect movement from 15 miles up, read a license plate, view a vehicle's occupants and even detect weapons, officials said.

The drones weigh almost 1,000 pounds, have a 35-foot wingspan and can fly faster than 100 mph. They will patrol at 12,000 to 15,000 feet. They can stay aloft for 20 hours.

The overall cost of the mission is $10 million. The government spent about $4 million on the drones.

Pilots on the ground will remotely control them unless the flight is preprogrammed. Another agent interprets the images and uses global positioning to send agents to respond to what the drones detect.

The aircraft are a key element of the Department of Homeland Security's efforts to achieve "operational control" of the border in Arizona. The drones' mission ends Sept. 30, when it will be assessed to determine the future of drones with the Border Patrol.

Border Patrol agents catch hundreds of thousands of undocumented immigrants trying to cross Arizona's sprawling, cactus-covered deserts each year. The agency had recorded more than 330,000 apprehensions since Oct. 1 in the Border Patrol's Tucson sector, which covers most of the Arizona border.

The Hermes 450s, which Israel uses to patrol its frontiers, join a number of unmanned aerial vehicles used in the United States.

Remote-controlled planes help gather data for environmental studies and patrol Western skies on wildfire watch. In Alaska, the Coast Guard is also testing a drone this summer for fisheries patrols and other uses.

Drones called Predators have also been successful in U.S. military and CIA operations. Missiles fired from Predators have killed al-Qaida operatives in Afghanistan and Yemen.

http://www.prisonplanet.tv/articles/june2004/062604surveillancedrones.htm


Informant: m macleod

’Torture in a good cause’

US armed forces are now realising that crushing military superiority is not enough to save them from hostage-taking, ambushes and other deadly assaults. For soldiers on the ground the occupation of Iraq is fast becoming a descent into hell...

http://mondediplo.com/2004/06/01leader


From Information Clearing House

Irish President Warns Bush Over Torture Of POWs

President Mary McAleese voiced strong concerns over the maltreatment of Iraqi POWs by coalition forces during a private meeting with George Bush yesterday...

http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1248432,00.html


From Information Clearing House

Mobile phones can cut men's fertility

In an item that was defined as "the most intersting item in the news", a hungarian study was cited, the study is going to be presented in a Berlin Conference, it is also in today's Sunday Times:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/newspaper/0,,2761-1159951,00.html

Mobile phones can cut men's fertility

Men who carry the phone in a belt holster or trouser pocket are thought to be at the highest risk...

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/

Iris.

Keine Mietervertreibungen durch Hartz IV

Zur Kenntnisnahme an div. Verteiler

Den folgenden Brief habe ich an alle Bundestagsabgeordneten der SPD und ähnlich lautend an die Abgeordneten der anderen Fraktionen geschickt.

Knut Unger, MieterInnenverein Witten im Deutschen Mieterbund.


Sehr geehrte Damen und Herren,

im Zuge der Zusammenlegung von Arbeitslosen- und Sozialhilfe drohen auch die von den Städten zu übernehmenden Wohnkosten auf das bisherige Sozialhilfeniveau abgesenkt zu werden. Wir müssen befürchten, dass ab 1.Januar Hunderttausende von Arbeitslosen Aufforderungen zur Senkung ihrer Wohnkosten erhalten und dass es nach 6 Monaten dann zu Kürzungen der Wohnkostenzahlungen kommt. Die Folge wären massive Mieterverdrängungen, die Wohnsicherheit gefährdende Zahlungsrückstände und die Abdrängung in benachteiligte Wohnquartiere. Ich fordere Sie dringend auf, es nicht so weit kommen zu lassen!

Im SGB II wurde der Begriff der "Angemessenheit" der Wohnkosten aus der Regelsatzverordnung zum BSHG übernommen. Von der Ermächtigung zum Erlass einer Rechtsverordnung dazu will, wie uns das Arbeitsministerium schriftlich mitgeteilt hat, Minister Clement keinen Gebrauch machen. Das Ministerium geht davon aus, dass die bisherigen kommunalen Regelungen zur Angemessenheit der Unterkunftskosten nach BSHG übernommen werden. In allen uns bekannten Städten liegen die Sätze sowohl hinsichtlich der Wohnungsgrößen als auch der Quadratmetermieten am untersten Rand. Schon jetzt ist es für die betroffenen Sozialhilfe-EmpfängerInnen sehr schwierig, wenn nicht unmöglich, zu diesen Kriterien Wohnraum zu finden. Seit Jahren kommt es zu Verdrängungen und sozialen Härten, wenn zum Beispiel Alleinerziehne mit kleinen Kindern auf ihrer Lebensumwelt verdrängt werden, wenn Menschen, die bereits am Existenzminimum knappsen auch noch Kürzungen der Wohnkosten hinnehmen müssen. Die BSHG-Rechtsprechung hat sich eindeutig zu Lasten der Hilfe-EmpfängerInnen entwickelt. Die Kommunen sind weitgehend frei, niedrigste Obergrenzen festzusetzen, ohne dass die Betroffenen realistische Chancen haben, dies rechtlich zu beanstanden.

Wenn diese Regelungen nun zum 1.Januar auf alle bisherigen ALHI-EmpfängerInnen ausgedehnt werden, ist eine Katastrophe unausweichlich.

Soweit es überhaupt einen Markt mit derart niedrigen Mieten gibt, wird er durch die amtlich erzwungenen Umzüge schnell "dicht" sein. Auch Sozialamtsleiter und Sozialdezernenten diverser Städte bestätigen: Es gibt diese Wohnungen nicht in ausreichender Anzahl! Es drohen starke Verwerfungen auf den lokalen Wohnungsmärkten! Unabhängig davon aber werden unzählige Menschen nicht nur eine rabiate Kürzung ihrer "Stütze" hinnehmen müssen, sie werden auch noch mit dem Problem konfrontiert, dass ihre Wohnung gefährdet
ist!

Das SGB II sieht vor, dass die tatsächlichen Wohnkosten in der Regel nur für 6 Monate übernommen werden, danach sind auch dann Kürzungen zu befürchten, wenn Bemühungen um Kostensenkungen erfolglos blieben! Kommt es zu Zahlungsrückständen und dann zu einer Räumungsklage ist nicht einmal mehr wahrscheinlich, dass die Mietschulden übernommen werden, weil dies nur noch dann geschehen soll wenn es der Aufnahme eines konkret in Aussicht stehenden Arbeitsverhältnisses dient. SGB II kennt auch nicht die im SGB XII aufgenommene Hinweise auf örtliche Mietspiegel und die lokalen Bedingungen des Wohnungsmarktes.

Die möglichen Folgen dieser Regelungen widersprechen allem, was ich bislang für Zielsetzungen der Wohnungs-, Sozial- und Städtebaupolitik der Bundesregierung gehalten habe: Das Programm "Soziale Stadt" zum Beispiel wird zum reinen Hohn, wenn hier per staatlicher Regelung Millionen Arbeitslose in Substandardquartiere oder ohnehin schon benachteiligte Wohnbereiche abgedrängt werden. In Leipzig sollen bereits Leerstände gehortet werden, um die neuen sozialen Brennpunkte zu schaffen. Jahrzehnte an Bemühungen um soziale Mischung werden handstreichartig erledigt. Wir werden eine starke Erhöhung der Obdachlosenquoten erleben. Empfehlungen und Programme zur Vermeidung von Wohnungslosigkeit werden zur Makulatur. Gigantische Sozialkosten sind die Folge. Ich gehe davon aus, dass die amtliche Massenvertreibung verfassungswidrig wäre, sie würde zudem gegen internationale Menschenrechtsvereinbarungen verstoßen, die die Bundesrepublik unterzeichnet hat.

Es ist mir unbegreiflich, wie die SPD diesem Gesetzespaket zustimmen kann.

Es gibt drei Möglichkeiten, die Gefahren abzuwehren:
1. Es wird unmittelbar mit dem Gesetzgebungsverfahren zur Rückabwicklung der Hartz IV- "Reformen" begonnen, weil die Umsetzung nicht möglich und verfassungswidrig ist. Dies würde nicht bedeuten, dass positive Aspekte des Hartz-Konzeptes ein für alle mal erledigt wären. Aber es wäre das ehrliche Eingeständnis, dass die Zielsetzung dieser Reform verfehlt war und dass im Zuge des Gesetzgebungsverfahrens die Umsetzbarkeit endgültig unmöglich gemacht wurde.

2. Es werden durch - allerdings massive - Änderungen am Gesetzespaket die schlimmsten Auswüchse repariert. Das würde in unserem Fall zum Beispiel bedeuten, dass der Begriff der Angemessenheit im SGB II sozialverträglich definiert wird und dass Klauseln zum Schutz bestehender Wohnverhältnisse eingeführt werden, die sich in Übereinstimmung mit dem Recht auf Wohnen befinden. Da es aber zahlreiche andere derartige Nachbesserungsanforderungen gibt, zum Beispiel hinsichtlich der Zumutbarkeit der Arbeitsangebote oder der Allmacht der Fallberater, und weil diese Nachbesserungen natürlich erst einmal zu erheblichen Kostensteigerungen führen werden, halte ich das für unrealistisch.

3. Es werden im vorliegenden Fall Etat-Mittel bereit gestellt, die es den Kommunen ermöglichen, die bisherigen tatsächlichen Wohnkosten zu tragen. Das heißt, dass die geplante Revisionsklausel so gestaltet werden muss, dass die Kommunen nachgewiesene tatsächliche Wohnkosten in jedem Fall ersetzt bekommen, und zwar einklagbar. Im Grunde erfordert eine solche Regelung aber eine rechtliche Bestimmung, die bislang nicht vorgesehen ist, zu weiteren Kosten führt und die unter Punkt 2 gemachten Ausführungen gelten ja auch in diesem Fall.

Kommt es nicht zu einer dieser Lösungen, werden sich die Kommunen im nächsten Jahr mit massivsten Protesten, massenhaften Widersprüchen, Musterklagen usw. auseinander setzen müssen. Wir werden nicht scheuen, dieses Thema bereits in den Kommunal-Wahlkampf NRW und dann in die Landtagswahlauseinandersetzung einzubringen!

Ich bin Mitarbeiter des MieterInnenvereins Witten. Zusammen mit den Mietervereinen Bochum, Dortmund Essen bilden wir das Mieterforum Ruhr im Deutschen Mieterbund. Hinsichtlich der Einschätzung der HARTZ IV Wohnkosten Regelung sind wir uns völlig einig und haben das in Briefen, Beteiligung an Protestaktionen und Presserklärungen deutlich gemacht. Ich bin außerdem Sprecher der AG Habitat im Forum Umwelt und Entwicklung.

Mit freundlichen Grüßen
Knut Unger

Email: unger@mvwit.de
MieterInnenverein Witten u. Umg. e.V. / Habitat-Netz. e.V.
Postfach 1928, 58409 Witten
Bahnhofstr. 46, 58452 Witten
Geschäftsstelle Tel. 02302-51793
Direkt/ Habitat-Netz: 02302-276171
Fax. 02302-27320

White House Tries to Rein In Scientists

by Tom Hamburger Times Staff Writer

Sat Jun 26, 7:55 AM ET

Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration has ordered that government scienists must be approved by a senior political appointee before they can participate in meetings convened by the World Health Organization (news - web sites), the leading international health and science agency.

A top official from the Health and Human Services (news - web sites) Department in April asked the WHO to begin routing requests for participation in its meetings to the department's secretary for review, rather than directly invite individual scientists, as has long been the case.

Officials at the WHO, based in Geneva, Switzerland, have refused to implement the request, saying it could compromise the independence of international scientific deliberations. Denis G. Aitken, WHO assistant director-general, said Friday that he had been negotiating with Washington in an effort to reach a compromise.

The request is the latest instance in which the Bush administration has been accused of allowing politics to intrude into once-sacrosanct areas of scientific deliberation. It has been criticized for replacing highly regarded scientists with industry and political allies on advisory panels. A biologist who was at odds with the administration's position on stem-cell research was dismissed from a presidential advisory commission. This year, 60 prominent scientists accused the administration of "misrepresenting and suppressing scientific knowledge for political purposes."

The president's science advisor, Dr. John Marburger, has called the accusations "wrong and misleading, inaccurate."

The newest action has drawn fresh criticism, however, as the request has circulated among scientists.

"I do not feel this is an appropriate or constructive thing to do," said Dr. D.A. Henderson, an epidemiologist who ran the Bush administration's Office of Public Health Preparedness and now acts as an official advisor to Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy G. Thompson. "In the scientific world, we have a generally open process. We deal with science as science. I am unaware of such clearance ever having been required before."

Henderson worked for the WHO for 11 years directing its smallpox eradication program. He said he could not recall having to go through government bureaucrats to invite scientists to participate in expert panels, except in the case of small Eastern European countries. In 2002, Henderson received the Presidential Medal of Freedom (news - web sites), and was praised by Bush as "a great general in mankind's war against disease."

A few scientists have been worried about the department's vetting demand since April, but concerns heightened this week when Rep. Henry A. Waxman (D-Los Angeles) complained in a letter to Thompson. "The new policy … politicizes the process of providing the expert advice of U.S. scientists to the international community," Waxman wrote.

Thompson's spokesman, Tony Jewell, called Waxman's criticism "seriously misguided."

"No one knows better than HHS who the experts are and who can provide the most up-to-date and expert advice," Jewell said. "The World Health Organization does not know the best people to talk to, but HHS knows. If anyone thinks politics will interfere with Secretary Thompson's commitment to improve health in every corner of the world, they are sadly mistaken."

The WHO, founded in 1947, is the United Nations (news - web sites) agency dedicated to health. It is governed by 192 member states and conducts forums, recommends international health and safety standards and draws leading scientists from around the world to expert panels that review the latest literature on chemical, biological, industrial and environmental threats.

The organization traditionally insists on picking experts to sit on official scientific review panels.

"It's an important issue for us," Aitken said. "We do need independent science. If we want government positions, we have government meetings. We have many, many of these government assemblies, but they address a separate set of concerns" than the scientific gatherings.

Scientists who attend the meetings are reminded that they are invited to offer their scientific views, not to represent their government or financial interests.

The letter to Aitken declaring the new vetting policy was signed by William R. Steiger, special assistant to Thompson. He came to Washington with Thompson from Wisconsin, and is the son of a congressman and the godson of former President George H.W. Bush.
"Except under very limited circumstances, U.S. government experts do not and cannot participate in WHO consultations in their individual capacity," Steiger wrote. Civil service and other regulations "require HHS experts to serve as representatives of the U.S. government at all times and advocate U.S. government policies."

The letter asserts that "the current practice in which the WHO invites specific HHS officials by name to serve in these capacities has not always resulted in the most appropriate selections."

The letter provided no specifics. But WHO panels sometimes have disagreed with positions taken by the administration. A WHO panel met in Lyons, France, this month and declared formaldehyde a known carcinogen — relying on studies that Bush administration political appointees in the Environmental Protection Agency (news - web sites) had rejected as inconclusive.

Voting members of the panel included scientists from the National Cancer Institute (news - web sites) and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health who had been authors of the studies.

Several leading scientists said the new policy would undermine scientific deliberations.

"This is really tampering with a process that has worked very well," said Linda Rosenstock, the dean of the UCLA School of Public Health who directed the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health under President Clinton (news - web sites). "To have this micromanaged at the HHS departmental level raises the specter that political considerations rather than scientific considerations will determine who is allowed to go" to the world's most important scientific meetings.

Rosenstock said that some WHO divisions — including the one reviewing cancer threats — have become targets of industry groups. "There is real concern that science could be trumped by politics and vested interests."

For Waxman, a frequent critic of the administration, the department's letter to the WHO is part of a pattern of mixing politics with science — and one he contends diminishes U.S. stature internationally.

Times staff writer Kathleen Hennessey contributed to this report.

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=2026&e=1&u=/latimests/whitehousetriestoreininscientists


Informant: Halojumper82

Weniger Kinder durch das Handy

Zahl der Samenzellen sinkt deutlich

LONDON. Der Streit, ob Handystrahlung schädlich ist oder nicht, geht in eine neue Runde: Ungarische Experten sagen, dass sie die männliche Zeugungsfähigkeit reduziert.

Wissenschafter der ungarischen Universität Szeged kamen nach einer Langzeitstudie zum Ergebnis, dass Männer, die häufig Mobiltelefone nutzen, damit rechnen müssen, dass die Zahl ihrer Samenzellen dramatisch sinkt. Die Untersuchung soll Dienstag bei einem Kongress in Berlin vorgestellt werden und wurde vorab in der Londoner "Sunday Times" veröffentlicht.

221 Männer waren für diese Studie über einen Zeitraum von 13 Monaten untersucht worden. Dabei verglich man immer wieder die Samenproduktion von intensiven Handy-Nutzern und Telefon-abstinenten Männern. Besonders gefährdet sind offenbar Männer, die ihr Handy am Gürtel oder in der Hosentasche tragen. In der Nähe dieser "sensiblen Zonen" wächst das Risiko dramatisch, rund 30 Prozent weniger Spermien wurden bei dieser Gruppe gezählt. Viele der Samenzellen, die überlebten, zeigten zudem abnorme Bewegungsstörungen, die ebenfalls die Fortpflanzung gefährden könnten.

Das würde bedeuten, dass nicht nur häufiges Telefonieren, also direkter Gebrauch, schädlich sein könnte, sondern auch ein Handy in Bereitschaftsfunktion, das ja auch Signale sendet und empfängt, eine Gefährdung darstellt.

vom 28.06.2004

© Wimmer Medien / OÖNachrichten

http://www.nachrichten.at/weltspiegel/281655?PHPSESSID=f4c194fe4c41b0c3d4710b9d9a1efe74

Handy-Nutzer sollen für Kampf gegen den Terror zahlen

28.06.2004

Datenschützer und Telekommunikationsunternehmen ziehen gegen den EU-Plan zu Felde, aus Sicherheitsgründen Telefon- und Internet-Daten zu speichern

Berlin – Diesmal sitzen sie in einem Boot: die Datenschützer und die deutsche Industrie. Beide Seiten fürchten, dass aus Brüssel großes Unheil auf sie zukommt. Das könnte passieren, wenn die EU sich auf einen Rahmenbeschluss einigt und Telekommunikations- und Internetfirmen verpflichtet werden, alle Daten über die Nutzung von Telefon, Handy und Internet mindestens zwölf Monate zu speichern. Es sind die Innen- und Sicherheitspolitiker, die diese Daten gern zur Verfügung hätten – zur Bekämpfung von organisierter Kriminalität und Terror.

Doch die Datenschützer sehen die Grundrechte auf freie Meinungsäußerung in Gefahr und die Unternehmen fürchten, dass Kosten in dreistelliger Millionenhöhe und unbeherrschbare Datenmengen auf sie zukommen. Heute ist es technisch möglich, nicht nur Daten über jedes Telefongespräch, jede SMS und jede E-Mail zu erfassen. Jeder Schritt eines Mobilfunkkunden lässt sich überwachen. Ein eingeschaltetes Handy übermittelt permanent Signale, wo sich der Nutzer gerade befindet.

So lassen sich theoretisch lückenlose Bewegungsprofile erstellen. Heute schon können Strafverfolgungsbehörden solche Daten bei den betreffenden Firmen erfragen.

Aber bisher werden diese Daten nicht generell gespeichert. Die Unternehmen erfassen nur die Daten, die sie brauchen, um eine Rechnung schreiben zu können. Nach 80 Tagen werden die Daten gelöscht – so verlangen es die Datenschützer. So sieht es auch das neue Telekommunikationsgesetz vor, das am Sonnabend gerade erst in Kraft getreten ist.

Doch Frankreich, Großbritannien, Irland und Schweden haben einen europäischen Rahmenbeschluss vorgeschlagen, der eine Speicherung dieser Daten für mindestens zwölf bis maximal 36 Monate vorsieht. Hintergrund der Initiative ist eine am 25. März vom Europäischen Rat verabschiedete Erklärung zum Kampf gegen den Terrorismus. Würde der Rahmenbeschluss so wie vereinbart umgesetzt, müsste er auch von Deutschland in nationales Recht gegossen werden. Erste Sympathisanten gibt es: Bayern begrüßt die Initiative aus Ländern, die nicht so „überempfindlich in Datenschutzdingen sind“, wie ein Sprecher des bayerischen Innenministeriums dem Tagesspiegel sagte. Die Vorratsdatenspeicherung sei aberwitzig teuer und unverhältnismäßig, kritisiert dagegen Hubertus Heil, telekommunikationspolitischer Sprecher der SPD, gegenüber dem Tagesspiegel.

Der Bundesverband der deutschen Industrie (BDI) fürchtet vor allem die hohen Kosten. Dem „fraglichen Mehrwert“ der Informationen stünden auf der anderen Seite erhebliche Belastungen der Wirtschaft gegenüber, argumentiert der BDI in einem Positionspapier. „Nach ersten Schätzungen liegen allein die Investitionskosten bei größeren Festnetz- und Mobilfunkunternehmen zusammen in dreistelliger Millionenhöhe“, schreibt der BDI. Hinzu kämen die jährlichen Betriebskosten von insgesamt mindestens 50 Millionen Euro. Zudem würde ein Suchlauf durch die Daten bei der heute vorhandenen Technik ohne zusätzliche Investitionen cirka 50 bis 100 Jahre dauern, hat der BDI errechnet. Dass die Strafverfolgungsbehörden für die Kosten der Datenspeicherung aufkommen sollen, davon stehe im Rahmenbeschluss nichts.

„Wir wollen nicht der verlängerte Arm der Strafverfolgungsbehörden sein und Daten sammeln, die wir für unser Geschäft gar nicht brauchen – noch dazu ohne dafür bezahlt zu werden“, sagte Jürgen Grützner, Geschäftsführer des VATM (Verband der Anbieter von Telekommunikations- und Mehrwertdiensten). „Am Ende müsste das der Verbraucher mit höheren Telekommunikationsgebühren bezahlen.“

Die Datenschutzbeauftragten haben erhebliche Zweifel, ob der vorgeschlagene Rahmenbeschluss mit der europäischen Menschenrechtskonvention vereinbar ist. „Die Telekommunikationsnetze sollten nur für Kommunikation und nicht für andere Zwecke genutzt werden“, sagte der Berliner Datenschutzbeauftragte Hansjürgen Garstka dem Tagesspiegel. Menschen hätten das „Recht, ihre Kommunikation zu verschlüsseln und zu anonymisieren“.

Corinna Visser

1995 - 2004 © Verlag Der Tagesspiegel GmbH

http://www.tagesspiegel.de/wirtschaft/index.asp?gotos=http://archiv.tagesspiegel.de/toolbox-neu.php?ran=on&url=http://archiv.tagesspiegel.de/archiv/28.06.2004/1211866.asp

Activists Using Fahrenheit 9/11 as an Organizing Tool

by Scott Galindez

t r u t h o u t | Report

Friday 25 June 2004

As moviegoers come out of Fahrenheit 9/11 this weekend, anti-war activists hope to take advantage of the anger Michael's Moore's award-winning film seems likely to inspire.

MoveOn.org has organized a National Interactive Town Hall Meeting for next Monday, June 28th. They have already organized over 700 house parties across the nation that night and have reserved large meeting halls for the event. MoveOn has 110,000 people pledged to see the movie this weekend, many of whom will hand out fliers promoting the Town Hall Meeting.

"This movie is one of the greatest opportunities we'll have between now and November to get new folks involved," said MoveOn's Adam Ruben. "The powerful footage in this film is going to outrage many, many people. They'll be looking for ways to take action - and we'll be there to connect them to other like-minded people in their community."

Voice4Change.org will have members outside theatres promoting the Town Hall Meeting and registering people to vote. Some of the activists will be in the traditional liberal hotspots. But many people in small towns around the country have either pledged to register voters or are looking for theatres near them so they can get involved.

One obstacle they face is that some theatre owners are refusing to show the film. If you live in the Dakota's or Wyoming, for example, you have only one place to see it - in Fargo, North Dakota.

One chain that has so far said no is Carmike, which owns theatres in the Mid-West. Mike Patrick, Carmike's president, insists that he made the decision purely for business reasons.

"This is in the biggest part of our season," he told the Chicago Tribune. "Business is great this year, and you think I'm going to play a documentary [instead of] 'Spider-Man?'"

"I'm not so sure that has commercial appeal compared to 'Spider- Man' or 'The Notebook' or 'White Chicks' or 'Around the World in 80 Days' and the other seven or eight pictures I have doing great business."

If inquiries placed to Mr. Patrick's theaters are any indication of potential ticket sales, he might be misjudging his market.

"We're getting about a hundred calls a day," said Kai Segrud, who works for Carmike in Rapid City, South Dakota,

The calls started over the weekend and have continued through this week, he said.

If hundreds of people demand to see Fahrenheit 9/11 in Rapid City, records for attendance elsewhere this weekend will likely be broken. With activists around the country poised to organize the huge numbers expected to attend, this will not be a good weekend for George W. Bush…


Informant: Ace

Call to action on electronic voting

Molly Ivins - Creators Syndicate

06.24.04 - AUSTIN, Texas -- Heads up, team, the voting machine situation requires sustained attention, but not panic or paranoia. There is time to act, but act we must.

Yes, it is high time to "view with alarm" (an editorial page cliché rivaled only by "point with pride"), and with bipartisan alarm at that. It's in everyone's interest to have the cleanest, fairest elections possible -- that's one of those things you can watch even the most partisan politicians serving on legislative elections committees figure out in no time. The only way to make sure nobody's ox gets gored is to keep it clean. If you don't think there are just as many bright, 14-year-old hackers who would rig a vote in favor of Democrats as there are who would rig it for Republicans, you've been neglecting the 14-year-old hacker set.

I suppose I've been calmer about the possibility/probability that electronic voting machines can be rigged than some others who are now looking at the bad news because it's an old story to me. Ronnie Dugger, a veteran Texas journalist (despite the fact that he's taken to living in, of all places, Cambridge, Mass.), has been on this case for years. I suppose I mentally assigned it to some "Ronnie's taking care of that" category.

But as Dugger's questions and predictions keep turning out to be more and more eerily prescient, it's clear this is something about which the general public needs be aroused and even plenty upset.

The problems with electronic voting machines are numerous and grave, starting with the fact that the software which runs them is considered "proprietary information" by the companies that make them. In other words, they won't tell anyone what it is, how it works or anything else about the systems, meaning we have no way of knowing if they're clean, reliable or even functional.

That uncomfortable situation was rather dramatically underlined when Walden (Wally) O'Dell, chairman and CEO of Diebold Election Systems and a Bush campaign "Pioneer" (meaning he raised at least $100,000), wrote in a 2003 fund-raising letter that he is "committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president." At the time, Diebold was trying to get on Ohio's "favored vendor" list and is now on it. Elections Systems and Software, the country's largest maker of the machines, also has a Republican pedigree.

It's a shame Diebold isn't a big Democratic fund-raiser who said he was committed to delivering Ohio for Kerry, so the Republicans could see how they like that. But I'm sure there are enough Republican conspiracy theorists to contemplate the happy proposition that, while chairmen and CEOs may lean Republican, there are any number of partisan Democrats lurking in engineering departments and liberal
moles in software-writing offices.

Last July, a team of computer scientists from Johns Hopkins and Rice universities studied the Diebold machines and concluded they are "a threat to democracy." Bev Harris, author of "Black Box Voting: Ballot Tampering in the 21st Century," reports electronic voting machines are "designed for fraud." Apparently, you can rig these things so that Osama bin Ladin can win an election. One experiment in how long it took to open one up and swipe its software produced a record of 10 seconds.

Making the software for voting machines both bug-less and hacker- proof simply may not be possible, but as many have observed, the things as they stand are an open invitation to voter fraud. As The New York Times pointed out, slot machines in Las Vegas are held to far higher standards of transparency and inspection.

The simplest way to make sure the machines aren't miscounting is to require a paper trail on each ballot. In California, the Voting Systems and Procedures Panel recommended the machines be shelved, and then Secretary of State Kevin Shelley revoked certification of Diebold's paperless electronic voting machines.

Eight other states now require a paper trail, something that is not difficult to design or install, despite Diebold's initial protests that it is oh-so-hard. Florida, scene of so many painful voting memories in 2000, had a single race election in January in Palm Beach where the victory margin was 12, but the machines registered more than 130 blank ballots. You think 130 people came to the polls to not vote? There was no recount because the machines had no paper records.

There are bills in both the U.S. Senate and House to require paper trails in time for the 2004 election, but they're stuck in committee. Take pen in hand and write (or email, or petition) your elected representative, ASAP. Then bask in the benign glow of civic rectitude that follows. Well done.

(c) 2004 Creators Syndicate

http://www.workingforchange.com/printitem.cfm?itemid=17176


Informant: Ace

Mensch wird zum Daten- und Stromleiter

'golem.de' berichtet:

Microsoft: Mensch wird zum Daten- und Stromleiter

Dazu kurz:

Techniker haben eine Energiequelle, basieren auf thermoelektrischen Elementen (Pelitier- Elemente) gebaut, die mit einer Temperaturdifferenz von 2°K auskommen um hinreichend Strom und Spannung für kleine Geräte zu liefern. Diese Elemente sollen direkt unter die Haut implatiert werden, so dass die Temperaturdifferenz zwischen Körper und Hautoberfläche zur Energieversorgung genutzt wird. Angedacht sind die Versorgung von Sensoren , Sonden und natürlich Funkanwendungen....


Zur Vervollständigung unten Anschreiben an die Kandidaten zur Wahl in Thüringen, zweiter Teil morgen .... !

Viele Grüße aus Westhausen!

Bernd Schreiner

Sehr geehrte/r ...xxxxxx

Sie bewerben sich als Kandidat zur Landtagswahl und bewerben sich damit für die Vertretung der Bürgerinteressen.

Neben den in vielen Varianten diskutierbaren, sehr aktuellen Fragen zur Bildungs-, Wirtschaft- und Gesundheitspolitik berühren uns Bürger vor Ort, in den Thüringer Gemeinden, die wir als Landesverband Thüringen vertreten spezielle, nicht weniger wichtige Fragen.

Wie stehen Sie zu den außergewöhnlichen Vorkommnissen hier an unserem Wohnort, und zu den Ereignissen in anderen Thüringer Gemeinden?

Bei uns im Dorf sind innerhalb weniger Monate mehrere Todesfälle aufgetreten, aus persönlichkeits- und datenschutzrechtlichen kann ich keine Details darlegen, jedoch sind alle angesprochenen Fälle sehr überraschend, sehr plötzlich und ungewöhnlich schnell im letalen Verlauf der Krankheiten gewesen, und lassen sich in einen sehr engen, räumlichen Umkreis zusammenfassen.

Alle Verstorbenen lebten im Nahbereich der lokalen Mobilfunkanlage, deren Betrieb nach unseren Informationen und Einschätzungen in vielerlei Hinsicht unglücklich und fragwürdig ist. In fast alle Fällen handelt sich es um Krebskrankheiten, jedoch nicht von älteren Personen, sondern in der Personengruppe zwischen 26 und ca. 55 Jahren. Auch gibt es weitere, weniger drastische Folgen, die wir in Verbindung mit der Sendeanlage bringen müssen.

Auch gibt es bis heute keinen Nachweis, dass die Gesundsheitbeeinträchtigung, gerade bzgl. dem Krebsgeschehen nicht von dieser Mobilfunkanlage ausgeht, der geltende deutsche Grenzwert schützt nachgewiesener Weise nicht vor möglichen, schädlichen Gesundheitsfolgen, und die Hersteller haben bis heute keine Unbedenklichkeitsnachweis bzgl. den Risiken geführt. Im Gegenteil, aufgrund der nicht kalkulierbaren Risiken sind diese bisher nicht auszuschließenden Folgen auch nicht versicherbar, so wie jedes Unternehmen eigentlich seine Betriebsanlagen und deren Auswirkungen absichern müsste. Und aktuelle Forschungsergebnisse geben Hinweise darauf, wie die durch die EG mitfinanzierte REFLEX- Studie, dass karzinogene Folgen aufgrund von Mikrowellenstrahlung der Mobilfunknetze beim menschlichen Erbgut eintreten können, was vielfach schon fälschlicher Weise physikalisch ohne Nachweis ausgeschlossen wurde.

Es wäre leicht, unser Dorf und die ungewöhnliche, statistisch bei 600 Einwohner und ca. 200 im Nahbereich lebenden Menschen schwerlich erklärbare Krankheits- und Todeshäufung in der direkten Umgebung zur Sendeanlage als Einzelfall darzustellen.

Leider gelingt dies nicht, da in der nahen Umgebung, von Nordbayern bis Nordthüringen uns zahlreiche dieser "Einzelfälle" bekannt wurden, und sich dort aktive Personen, Bürgerinitiativen und Gemeindevertreter mit entsprechenden Hinweisen an uns gewandt haben. Wir reden also nicht von analogen Ereignissen in Spanien, Israel, Frankreich und den vielen anderen internationalen Pressemeldungen dazu, obwohl diese unsere Befürchtungen weiter untermauern, sondern konkret von den Häufungen in Thüringen.

Der leidige Hinweis auf die nötige Forschung kann weder uns vertrösten, noch die Gesundheit unserer Kinder sicher stellen. Auch sind in unserem Fall, alle Kindergartenkinder mögliche, direkt Betroffene, da die Kindertagesstätte in unmittelbarer Nachbarschaft zur Sendeanlage steht, die erst Monate nach der unrühmlichen Vereinbarung zwischen Bundeskanzler und Mobilfunk- Betreibervertreter in Betrieb genommen wurde.

Sollen wir wirklich warten müssen, bis die Wissenschaft die Folgen, die wir konkret erleben, erklären kann, und können diese Folgen solange als nicht möglich, nicht vorhanden, und somit als nicht vorhanden eingestuft werden?

Weiter sehen wir in der öffentlichen und von Politikern gerne zitierten Infragestellung von negativen Folgen auf die Gesundheit unterhalb des geltenden, nur für nachweisbare, thermische Folgen geschaffenen Grenzwertes in Deutschland keine Lösung, denn hier vor Ort haben wir der Sendeanlage sicher zuzuordnende Folgen auf uns Anwohner.

Wie kann heute jede Folge unterhalb der thermischen Leistungsgrenze pauschal negiert werden, schrieben doch die Fachexperten des Bundes noch 1991, dass diese athermischen Einwirkungen, also Wirkungen bei Leistungsstärken unterhalb des aktuell geltenden Grenzwertes, als "vielfach bestätigt, so dass ihre Existenz heute als gesichert gilt" (Zitat aus Bundesanzeiger 1992, Quelle siehe unten)

Dabei geht es uns weder um die Abschaffung des mobilen Kommunikationsmittel Handy, sondern um einen bewussten und verantwortlichen Umgang mit dieser potentiell unsicheren Technologie der Mikrowellenstrahlung, und für einen vernünftige, vorsorgeorientierte Installationsstrategie.

So kann unseres Erachtens bei Abwägung der Interessen eine tragbare Lösung für Netz- Betreiber und Anwohner gefunden werden, doch der Wille ist auf Betreiberseiten nicht vorhanden.

Haben Sie den politischen Willen dazu?

Wie stehen Sie zu den konkreten Problemen vor Ort, und den einseitigen Rechten der Mobilfunkbetreiber, den beschriebenen Folgen und der unsicheren Zukunft der Kinder?

So würden wir uns freuen, unseren Mitgliedern ihre hoffentlich bürgernahe Haltung zu diesem schlimmen und wenig erfreulichen Thema mitteilen zu können und damit Ihre Chancen für die Wahl zu verbessern.

Bernd Schreiner
Freier Architekt, Dipl.-Ing. (FH) Mitglied AKT
Baubiologe IBN
Öffentlichkeitsarbeit
+Landesverband Thüringen+
Bürger gegen Elektrosmog
http://www.buerger-gegen-esmog.de
mail@landesverband-thueringen.de
036875 fon 69873 fax 69874
98663 Westhausen/Thüringen


Bundesanzeiger Nr. 43 vom 03. März 1992 – Veröffentlichungen der Strahlenschutzkommission, Band 24)

Über spezielle Effekte, die nicht auf der Erwärmung beruhen, wird in der Literatur seit ungefähr 15 Jahren berichtet. Wenn eine Hochfrequenzstrahlung mit einer anderen Frequenz amplitudenmoduliert ist, können Feldwirkungen auftreten, welche bei unmodulierter Strahlung nicht existieren. Es handelt sich meistens um Veränderungen der Permeabilität von Zellmembranen.

Beispielsweise wurde festgestellt, dass bei einer HF-Strahlung mit einer Frequenz von 147MHz, die mit Frequenzen zwischen 6 und 20 Hertz moduliert war, der Kalziumausstrom aus Zellkulturen bei bestimmten Frequenzen signifikant (um 10 bis 20 %) erhöht war.
Insgesamt wurde eine komplexe Abhängigkeit dieser Effekte von Intensität und Frequenz beobachtet, wobei spezielle Frequenzbereiche besonders wirksam sind. Die Membraneffekte wurden vielfach bestätigt, so dass ihre Existenz heute als gesichert gilt.

Hervorzuheben ist, dass die SAR-Werte hierbei teilweise kleiner als 0,01 W/kg sind und damit erheblich unterhalb thermisch relevanter Intensitäten liegen.

Anmerkung:

Deutscher Handygrenzwert am Kopf: 2,0 W/kg somit 200mal höher als die gesichert- beschrieben Folgen lt. SSK.

Das gesamte Dokument selbst ist beim Bund, oder auf unser Landesverbandwebsite unter
http://www.buerger-gegen-esmog.de/content/ssk1991.html als Einzelseite (Bild) ladbar, oder als pdf komplett unter
http://www.buerger-gegen-esmog.de/content/infoordner.html, dann Link dazu laden.

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Inhaltlich Verantwortlicher gemäß § 10 Absatz 3 MDStV: Klaus Rudolph (Anschrift wie oben)

Washington Renews War Crimes Immunity In “Sovereign” Iraq

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2004/jun2004/iraq-j25.shtml


Informant: Friends

Anti-logging activists prepare for national forest loggers

By CHRIS KAHN
Associated Press Writer

Published June 26, 2004

JEFFERSON NATIONAL FOREST, Va. -- The wide net on which they'd defy the government was at least 80 feet above the forest floor, tied at the corners to sturdy trees. Several women hooted with excitement as they shinnied up ropes and took their seats.

When the loggers come, as expected sometime this year, the women and possibly a hundred more environmental activists say they'll be ready. Tree-sitting nets like this can be installed within minutes.

"Water and food can be towed up after everyone gets in," said veteran tree-sitter Inez DeLoach of Seattle, who instructed would-be protesters at a weeklong "action" camp earlier this month.

Such West Coast tactics are a rarity in this part of the country, but after losing a federal court fight against a plan to trim 618 acres in Jefferson National Forest, Southern environmentalists say it may be time to get more aggressive.

"We don't want this kind of action unless as a last resort," said Steve Brooks, spokesman for the Clinch Coalition, a group of about 40 activists in southwest Virginia that invited organizations including Earth First! to the camp. "But at some point, it's necessary."

Local groups have been trying to stop the Bark Camp timber sale since it was proposed in 1997. The mountainous region is corrugated with rivers and streams that give sanctuary to 27 federally protected aquatic species and 29 types of rare mussels.

After residents along the Clinch River blamed timber cutting for mud slides and flooding in 2001, the Forest Service agreed to reduce the harvest by a quarter. But the district ranger who supervises the area around the timber sale said the government will not bend to confrontational tactics by environmental groups.

"They're using threats to demoralize and intimidate us and other locals," said District Ranger Doug Jones, who dealt with Earth First! and others while working for the Forest Service in Utah. "I'm afraid these loggers are getting the fear of God put in them. Someone needs to stand up for them too."

This fall, the government will put the first 170 acres up for sale in the "Joel Branch" part of the forest. Forest Service spokeswoman JoBeth Brown said the logging company that wins the contract will have three years to build roads and cut trees that the Forest Service preselected to build habitat.

Meanwhile, Forest Service officers and local police will monitor the logging for protests, Brown said. "If they're breaking the law, we'll take action."

The Ruffed Grouse Society, a Pittsburgh-based conservation group that receives funding from the timber industry, supports the Forest Service plan.

"There's probably 70 species of just songbirds that require young forest habitat," said Mark Banker, a wildlife biologist who works for the group. "And the only way to create that habitat is to cut trees and let the little ones grow back."

Those arguments didn't sway any of the activists interviewed at the action camp. Logging contracts, many of them said, were simply ways for the government to subsidize the timber industry.

"There's another name for it: 'corporate welfare,"' Brooks said.

The government "could make more money from supporting recreation in the forest," 18-year-old Meghan O'Dea added while dangling from a poplar tree in her climber's harness. "Look at all the hiking trails around here."

About 100 people attended the action camp, squatting under tarps in the intermittent rain as camp leaders lectured about the history of nonviolent protests and how to delay loggers by blocking roads.

Most didn't live in the region, but instead learned about Bark Camp through Web sites and friends. Andrew George, the campaign coordinator with the National Forest Protection Alliance, said environmental groups around the country are taking notice of the Clinch Coalition's fight in the Jefferson.

"The movement is rallying around these folks," said George, of Chapel Hill, N.C. "Bark Camp is becoming one of our highest priorities."

Still, many local environmentalists aren't sure whether they'll follow through with the protest. Officially, the Clinch Coalition will probably stay out of anything illegal, Brooks said, though some members are willing.

"I'm prepared to put my body and my life on the line," said John King, a professional kayaker and coalition member who lives in Wise.

Brooks said it's likely that if a protest develops, Earth First! members would do most of the tree sitting while Clinch members helped from below.

"We can't climb a tree, but we can hug a tree," said 63-year-old Nancy Ward, a member who lives several miles from the action camp. Ward and her husband, Otis, 68, traveled to the camp every day, bringing corn bread and cabbage casserole to the weary campers.

Otis Ward, an avid hunter, blames logging for scaring away many of the wild turkeys, deer and owls from the region. He hopes that the government realizes how many citizens are against the plan.

"This is our last stand," Otis Ward said. "If they don't listen, we'll have to show them."


On the Net:

http://www.clinchcoalition.org/
http://www.ruffedgrousesociety.org/

End ADV for June 26-27

Copyright ©2004 The Daily Press

http://tinyurl.com/2ydfo



Informant: Deane T. Rimerman

`October Surprise'

http://cgi.citizen-times.com/cgi-bin/story/columnist/57183?storytemplate=columnist

Informant: Laurel


http://conspire.com/chapters/octobersurprise.htm


Informant: m macleod
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