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June 30, 2006

The Hidden Power

http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/articles/060703fa_fact1
[accessed 6/30/2006 10:36 AM]
The New Yorker
Fact
Letters from Washington
The Hidden Power
The legal mind behind the White House’s war on terror.
Issue of 2006-07-03
Posted 2006-06-26
Jane Mayer [very interesting and critical assessment of the bush administration’s desire to expand executive power] [unitary power of the executive theory] [president’s war powers—statutory and constitutional—give him extraordinary powers during war] [obviously the supremes ruling on hamdun relevant as it appeared to have slapped down that theory partially at least] [**************] [use nsc ms] [use psci 469] [role, bush admin, cheney, individual] [important piece][*********************]
On December 18th, Colin Powell, the former Secretary of State, joined other prominent Washington figures at FedEx Field, the Redskins’ stadium, in a skybox belonging to the team’s owner. [****]During the game, between the Redskins and the Dallas Cowboys, Powell spoke of a recent report in the Times which revealed that President Bush, in his pursuit of terrorists, had secretly authorized the National Security Agency to eavesdrop on American citizens without first obtaining a warrant from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, [*****]as required by federal law. This requirement, which was instituted by Congress in 1978, after the Watergate scandal, was designed to protect civil liberties and curb abuses of executive power, such as Nixon’s secret monitoring of political opponents and the F.B.I.’s eavesdropping on Martin Luther King, Jr. Nixon had claimed that as President he had the “inherent authority” [****]to spy on people his Administration deemed enemies, such as the anti-Vietnam War activist Daniel Ellsberg. Both Nixon and the institution of the Presidency had paid a high price for this assumption. But, according to the Times, since 2002 the legal checks that Congress constructed to insure that no President would repeat Nixon’s actions had been secretly ignored.

http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/articles/060703fa_fact1
[accessed 6/30/2006 10:36 AM]
The New Yorker
Fact
Letters from Washington
The Hidden Power
The legal mind behind the White House’s war on terror.
Issue of 2006-07-03
Posted 2006-06-26
Jane Mayer [very interesting and critical assessment of the bush administration’s desire to expand executive power] [unitary power of the executive theory] [president’s war powers—statutory and constitutional—give him extraordinary powers during war] [obviously the supremes ruling on hamdun relevant as it appeared to have slapped down that theory partially at least] [**************] [use nsc ms] [use psci 469] [role, bush admin, cheney, individual] [important piece][*********************]
On December 18th, Colin Powell, the former Secretary of State, joined other prominent Washington figures at FedEx Field, the Redskins’ stadium, in a skybox belonging to the team’s owner. [****]During the game, between the Redskins and the Dallas Cowboys, Powell spoke of a recent report in the Times which revealed that President Bush, in his pursuit of terrorists, had secretly authorized the National Security Agency to eavesdrop on American citizens without first obtaining a warrant from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, [*****]as required by federal law. This requirement, which was instituted by Congress in 1978, after the Watergate scandal, was designed to protect civil liberties and curb abuses of executive power, such as Nixon’s secret monitoring of political opponents and the F.B.I.’s eavesdropping on Martin Luther King, Jr. Nixon had claimed that as President he had the “inherent authority” [****]to spy on people his Administration deemed enemies, such as the anti-Vietnam War activist Daniel Ellsberg. Both Nixon and the institution of the Presidency had paid a high price for this assumption. But, according to the Times, since 2002 the legal checks that Congress constructed to insure that no President would repeat Nixon’s actions had been secretly ignored.
According to someone who knows Powell, his comment about the article was terse. “It’s Addington,” he said. “He doesn’t care about the Constitution.” Powell was referring to David S. Addington, [*****]Vice-President Cheney’s chief of staff and his longtime principal legal adviser. Powell’s office says that he does not recall making the statement. But his former top aide, Lawrence Wilkerson, confirms that he and Powell shared this opinion of Addington. [****************]
Most Americans, even those who follow politics closely, have probably never heard of Addington. But current and former Administration officials say that he has played a central role in shaping the Administration’s legal strategy for the war on terror. Known as the New Paradigm, this strategy rests on a reading of the Constitution that few legal scholars share—namely, that the President, as Commander-in-Chief, has the authority to disregard virtually all previously known legal boundaries, if national security demands it. [this is the unitary theory of executive power in a nutshell] [unitary theory for dummies] [**********]Under this framework, statutes prohibiting torture, secret detention, and warrantless surveillance have been set aside. A former high-ranking Administration lawyer who worked extensively on national-security issues said that the Administration’s legal positions were, to a remarkable degree, “all Addington.” Another lawyer, Richard L. Shiffrin, who until 2003 was the Pentagon’s deputy general counsel for intelligence, said that Addington was “an unopposable force.” [important for students to understand addington has been there from beginning but I Lewis “Scooter” Libby was above him in the pecking order] [with Libby’s indictment last October] [addington moved up not quite to the hallowed perch Libby had but as close to it as possible] [************]
The overarching intent of the New Paradigm, which was put in place after the attacks of September 11th, was to allow the Pentagon to bring terrorists to justice as swiftly as possible. Criminal courts and military courts, with their exacting standards of evidence and emphasis on protecting defendants’ rights, were deemed too cumbersome. Instead, the President authorized a system of detention and interrogation that operated outside the international standards for the treatment of prisoners of war established by the 1949 Geneva Conventions. [*****] Terror suspects would be tried in a system of military commissions, in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, devised by the executive branch. The Administration designated these suspects not as criminals or as prisoners of war but as “illegal enemy combatants,” whose treatment would be ultimately decided by the President. By emphasizing interrogation over due process, the government intended to preëmpt future attacks before they materialized. [******] In November, 2001, Cheney said of the military commissions, “We think it guarantees that we’ll have the kind of treatment of these individuals that we believe they deserve.” [***********]
Yet, almost five years later, this improvised military model, which Addington was instrumental in creating, has achieved very limited results. Not a single terror suspect has been tried before a military commission. [*******]Only ten of the more than seven hundred men who have been imprisoned at Guantánamo have been formally charged with any wrongdoing. Earlier this month, three detainees committed suicide in the camp. Germany and Denmark, along with the European Union and the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, have called for the prison to be closed, accusing the United States of violating internationally accepted standards for humane treatment and due process. The New Paradigm has also come under serious challenge from the judicial branch. Two years ago, in Rasul v. Bush, the Supreme Court ruled against the Administration’s contention that the Guantánamo prisoners were beyond the reach of the U.S. court system and could not challenge their detention. And this week the Court is expected to deliver a decision in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, a case that questions the legality of the military commissions.
For years, Addington has carried a copy of the U.S. Constitution in his pocket; taped onto the back are photocopies of extra statutes that detail the legal procedures for Presidential succession in times of national emergency. Many constitutional experts, however, question his interpretation of the document, especially his views on Presidential power. Scott Horton, a professor at Columbia Law School, and the head of the New York Bar Association’s International Law committee, said that Addington and a small group of Administration lawyers who share his views had attempted to “overturn two centuries of jurisprudence defining the limits of the executive branch. They’ve made war a matter of dictatorial power.” The historian Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., who defined Nixon as the extreme example of Presidential overreaching in his book “The Imperial Presidency” (1973), said he believes that Bush “is more grandiose than Nixon.” As for the Administration’s legal defense of torture, which Addington played a central role in formulating, Schlesinger said, “No position taken has done more damage to the American reputation in the world—ever.”
Bruce Fein, a Republican legal activist, who voted for Bush in both Presidential elections, and who served as associate deputy attorney general in the Reagan Justice Department, said that Addington and other Presidential legal advisers had “staked out powers that are a universe beyond any other Administration. This President has made claims that are really quite alarming. He’s said that there are no restraints on his ability, as he sees it, to collect intelligence, to open mail, to commit torture, and to use electronic surveillance. If you used the President’s reasoning, you could shut down Congress for leaking too much. His war powers allow him to declare anyone an illegal combatant. All the world’s a battlefield—according to this view, he could kill someone in Lafayette Park if he wants! It’s got the sense of Louis XIV: ‘I am the State.’ ” Richard A. Epstein, a prominent libertarian law professor at the University of Chicago, said, “The President doesn’t have the power of a king, or even that of state governors. He’s subject to the laws of Congress! The Administration’s lawyers are nuts on this issue.” He warned of an impending “constitutional crisis,” because “their talk of the inherent power of the Presidency seems to be saying that the courts can’t stop them, and neither can Congress.”
The former high-ranking lawyer for the Administration, who worked closely with Addington, and who shares his political conservatism, said that, in the aftermath of September 11th, “Addington was more like Cheney’s agent than like a lawyer. A lawyer sometimes says no.” He noted, “Addington never said, ‘There is a line you can’t cross.’ ” Although the lawyer supported the President, he felt that his Administration had been led astray. “George W. Bush has been damaged by incredibly bad legal advice,” he said.

David Addington is a tall, bespectacled man of forty-nine, who has a thickening middle, a thatch of gray hair, and a trim gray beard, which gives him the look of a sea captain. He is extremely private; he keeps the door of his office locked at all times, colleagues say, because of the national-security documents in his files. He has left almost no public paper trail, and he does not speak to the press or allow photographs to be taken for news stories. (He declined repeated requests to be interviewed for this article.)
In many ways, his influence in Washington defies conventional patterns. Addington doesn’t serve the President directly. He has never run for elected office. Although he has been a government lawyer for his entire career, he has never worked in the Justice Department. He is a hawk on defense issues, but he has never served in the military.
There are various plausible explanations for Addington’s power, including the force of his intellect and his personality, and his closeness to Cheney, whose political views he clearly shares. Addington has been an ally of Cheney’s since the nineteen-eighties, and has been referred to as “Cheney’s Cheney,” or, less charitably, as “Cheney’s hit man.” Addington’s talent for bureaucratic infighting is such that some of his supporters tend to invoke, with admiration, metaphors involving knives. [*****] Juleanna Glover Weiss, Cheney’s former press secretary, said, “David is efficient, discreet, loyal, sublimely brilliant, and, as anyone who works with him knows, someone who, in a knife fight, you want covering your back.” Bradford Berenson, a former White House lawyer, said, “He’s powerful because people know he speaks for the Vice-President, and because he’s an extremely smart, creative, and aggressive public official. [******] Some engage in bureaucratic infighting using slaps. Some use knives. David falls into the latter category. You could make the argument that there are some costs. It introduces a little fear into the policymaking process. Views might be more candidly expressed without that fear. But David is like the Marines. No better friend—no worse enemy.” [*******]People who have sparred with him agree. “He’s utterly ruthless,” Lawrence Wilkerson said. A former top national-security lawyer said, “He takes a political litmus test of everyone. If you’re not sufficiently ideological, he would cut the ground out from under you.” [***********]
Another reason for Addington’s singular role after September 11th is that he offered legal certitude at a moment of great political and legal confusion, in an Administration in which neither the President, the Vice-President, the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of State, nor the national-security adviser was a lawyer. [******] (In the Clinton Administration, all these posts, except for the Vice-Presidency, were held by lawyers at some point.) Neither the Attorney General, John Ashcroft, nor the White House counsel, Alberto Gonzales, had anything like Addington’s familiarity with national-security law. Moreover, Ashcroft’s relations with the White House were strained, and he was left out of the inner circle that decided the most radical legal strategies in the war on terror. [*******] Gonzales had more influence, because of his longtime ties to the President, but, as an Administration lawyer put it, “he was an empty suit. He was weak. And he doesn’t know shit about the Geneva Conventions.” [*****] [ouch] Participants in meetings in the White House counsel’s office, in the days immediately after September 11th, have described Gonzales sitting in a wingback chair, asking questions, while Addington sat directly across from him and held forth. “Gonzales would call the meetings,” the former high-ranking lawyer recalled. “But Addington was always the force in the room.” Bruce Fein said that the Bush legal team was strikingly unsophisticated. [*****]“There is no one of legal stature, certainly no one like Bork, or Scalia, or Elliot Richardson, or Archibald Cox,” he said. “It’s frightening. No one knows the Constitution—certainly not Cheney.” [********]
Conventional wisdom holds that September 11th changed everything, including the thinking of Cheney and Addington. Brent Scowcroft, the former national-security adviser, has said of Cheney that he barely recognizes the reasonable politician he knew in the past. [*******] But a close look at the twenty-year collaboration between Cheney and Addington suggests that in fact their ideology has not changed much. It seems clear that Addington was able to promote vast executive powers after September 11th in part because he and Cheney had been laying the political groundwork for years. “This preceded 9/11,” [**********]Fein, who has known both men professionally for decades, said. “I’m not saying that warrantless surveillance did. But the idea of reducing Congress to a cipher was already in play. It was Cheney and Addington’s political agenda.”
Addington’s admirers see him as a selfless patriot, a workaholic defender of a purist interpretation of Presidential power—the necessary answer to threatening times. In 1983, Steve Berry, a Republican lawyer and lobbyist in Washington, hired Addington to work with him as the legislative counsel to the House Intelligence Committee; he has been a career patron and close friend ever since. He said, “I know him well, and I know that if there’s a threat he will do everything in his power, within the law, to protect the United States.” Berry added that Addington is acutely aware of the legal tensions between liberty and security. “We fought ourselves every day about it,” he recalled. But, he said, they concluded that a “strong national security and defense” was the first priority, and that “without a strong defense, there’s not much expectation or hope of having other freedoms.” He said that there is no better defender of the country than Addington: “I’ve got a lot of respect for the guy. He’s probably the foremost expert on intelligence and national-security law in the nation right now.” Berry has a daughter who works in New York City, and he said that when he thinks of her safety he appreciates the efforts that Addington has made to strengthen the country’s security. He said, “For Dave, protecting America isn’t just a virtue. It’s a personal mission. I feel safer just knowing he’s where he is.” [***************]
Berry said of his friend, “He’s methodical, conscientious, analytical, and logical. And he’s as straight an arrow as they come.” He noted that Addington refuses to let Berry treat him to a hamburger because it might raise issues of influence-buying—instead, they split the check. Addington, he went on, has a dazzling ability to recall the past twenty-five years’ worth of intelligence and national-security legislation. For many years, he kept a vast collection of legal documents in a library in his modest brick-and-clapboard home, in Alexandria, Virginia. One evening several years ago, lightning struck a nearby power line and the house caught fire; much of the archive burned. The fire started at around nine in the evening, and Addington, typically, was still in his office. His wife, Cynthia, and their three daughters were fine, but the loss of his extraordinary collection of papers and political memorabilia, Berry said, “was very hard for him to accept. All you get in this work is memorabilia. There is no cash. But he’s the type of guy who gets psychic benefit from going to work every day, making a difference.”
Though few people doubt Addington’s knowledge of national-security law, even his admirers question his political instincts. “The only time I’ve seen him wrong is on his political judgment,” a former colleague said. “He has a tin ear for political issues. Sometimes the law says one thing, but you have to at least listen to the other side. He will cite case history, case after case. David doesn’t see why you have to compromise.” Even Berry offered a gentle criticism: “His political skills can be overshadowed by his pursuit of what he feels is legally correct.”
Addington has been a hawk on national defense since he was a teen-ager. Leonard Napolitano, an engineer who was one of Addington’s close childhood friends, and whose political leanings are more like those of his sister, Janet Napolitano, the Democratic governor of Arizona, joked, “I don’t think that in high school David was a believer in the divine right of kings.” But, he said, Addington was “always conservative.” [********]
The Addingtons were a traditional Catholic military family. They moved frequently; David’s father, Jerry, an electrical engineer in the Army, was assigned to a variety of posts, including Saudi Arabia and Washington, D.C., where he worked with the Joint Chiefs of Staff. [*****]As a teen-ager, Addington told a friend that he hoped to live in Washington himself when he grew up. Jerry Addington, a 1940 graduate of West Point who won a Bronze Star during the Second World War, also served in Korea and at the North American Air Defense Command, in Colorado; he reached the rank of brigadier general before he retired, in 1970, when David was thirteen. David attended public high school in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and his father began a second career, teaching middle-school math. His mother, Eleanore, was a housewife; the family lived in a ranch house in a middle-class subdivision. She still lives there; Jerry died in 1994. “We are an extremely close family,” one of Addington’s three older sisters, Linda, recalled recently. “Discipline was very important for us, and faith was very important. It was about being ethical—the right thing to do whether anyone else does it or not. I see that in Dave.” She was reluctant to say more. “Dave is most deliberate about his privacy,” she added. [*********]
Socially, Napolitano recalled, he and Addington were “the brains, or nerds.” Addington stood out for wearing black socks with shorts. He and his friends were not particularly athletic, and they liked to play poker all night on weekends, stopping early in the morning for breakfast. Their circle included some girls, until the boys found them “too distracting to our interest in cards,” [*********]Napolitano recalled.
When he and Addington were in high school, Napolitano said, the Vietnam War was in its final stages, and “there was a certain amount of ‘Challenge authority’ and alcohol and drugs, but they weren’t issues in our group.” Addington’s high-school history teacher, Irwin Hoffman, whom Napolitano recalled as wonderful, exacting, and “a flaming liberal,” said that Addington felt strongly that America “should have stayed and won the Vietnam War, [********]despite the fact that we were losing.” Hoffman, who is retired, added, “The boy seemed terribly, terribly bright. He wrote well, and he was very verbal, not at all reluctant to express his opinions. He was pleasant and quite handsome. He also had a very strong sarcastic streak. He was scornful of anyone who said anything that was naïve, or less than bright. His sneers were almost palpable.”
Addington graduated in 1974, the year that Nixon resigned. In the aftermath of Watergate, liberal Democratic reformers imposed tighter restraints on the President and reined in the C.I.A., whose excesses were critiqued in congressional hearings, led by Senator Frank Church and Representative Otis Pike, that exposed details of assassination plots, coup attempts, mind-control experiments, and domestic spying. Congress passed a series of measures aimed at reinvigorating the system of checks and balances, including an expanded Freedom of Information Act and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, the law requiring judicial review before foreign suspects inside the country could be wiretapped. It also created the House and Senate Intelligence Committees, which oversee all covert C.I.A. activities. [**********]
After high school, Addington pursued an ambition that he had had for years: to join the military. Rather than attending West Point, as his father had, he enrolled in the U.S. Naval Academy, in Annapolis. But he dropped out before the end of his freshman year. He went home and, according to Napolitano, worked in a Long John Silver’s restaurant. “The academy wasn’t academically challenging enough for him,” [********]Napolitano said.
Addington went to Georgetown University, graduating summa cum laude, in 1978, from the school of foreign service; he went on to earn honors at Duke Law School. After graduating, in 1981, he married Linda Werling, a graduate student in pharmacology. [*******]The marriage ended in divorce. His current wife, Cynthia, takes care of their three girls full-time. [*********]
Soon after leaving Duke, Addington started his first job, in the general counsel’s office at the C.I.A. A former top agency lawyer who later worked with Addington said that Addington strongly opposed the reform movements that followed Vietnam and Watergate. “Addington was too young to be fully affected by the Vietnam War,” the lawyer said. “He was shaped by the postwar, post-Watergate years instead. He thought the Presidency was too weakened. He’s a believer that in foreign policy the executive is meant to be quite powerful.” [****************]
These views were shared by Dick Cheney, who served as chief of staff in the Ford Administration. “On a range of executive-power issues, Cheney thought that Presidents from Nixon onward yielded too quickly,” Michael J. Malbin, a political scientist who has advised Cheney on the issue of executive power, said. Kenneth Adelman, who was a high-ranking Pentagon official under Ford, said that the fall of Saigon, in 1975, was “very painful for Dick. He believed that Vietnam could have been saved—maybe—if Congress hadn’t cut off funding. He was against that kind of interference.” [**************]
Jane Harman, the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, who has spent considerable time working with Cheney and Addington in recent years, believes that they are still fighting Watergate. “They’re focussed on restoring the Nixon Presidency,” she said. “They’ve persuaded themselves that, following Nixon, things went all wrong.” She said that in meetings Addington is always courtly and pleasant. But when it comes to accommodating Congress “his answer is always no.”
In a revealing interview that Cheney gave last December to reporters travelling with him to Oman, he explained, “I do have the view that over the years there had been an erosion of Presidential power and authority. . . . A lot of the things around Watergate and Vietnam both, in the seventies, served to erode the authority I think the President needs.” [********] Further, Cheney explained, it was his express aim to restore the balance of power. The President needed to be able to act as Alexander Hamilton had described it in the Federalist Papers, with “secrecy” and “despatch”—especially, Cheney said, “in the day and age we live in . . . with the threats we face.” He added, “I believe in a strong, robust executive authority, and I think the world we live in demands it.” [******************]
At the C.I.A., where Addington spent two years, he focussed on curtailing the ability of Congress to interfere in intelligence gathering. “He was a rookie, plenty bright,” Frederick Hitz, another C.I.A. lawyer, who later became Inspector General, recalled. After the Church and Pike hearings, legislators came up with hundreds of pages of oversight recommendations, he said. “Addington was very pro-agency. He was trying to figure out how to comply with government oversight without getting hog-tied.” Addington viewed the public airings of the C.I.A.’s covert activities as “an absolute disaster,” Berry recalled. “We both felt that Congress did great harm by flinging open the doors to operational secrets.” [****************]
When Addington joined the C.I.A., it was directed by William J. Casey, who also regarded congressional constraints on the agency as impediments to be circumvented. [*********] [wow] [casey’s ghost is still around] His sentiment about congressional overseers was best captured during a hearing about covert actions in Central America, when he responded to tough questioning by muttering the word “assholes.” After Reagan’s election in 1980, the executive branch was dominated by conservative Republicans, while the House was governed by liberal Democrats. The two parties fought intensely over Central America; the Reagan Administration was determined to overthrow the leftist Sandinista government in Nicaragua. Using their constitutional authority over appropriations, the Democrats in Congress forbade the C.I.A. to spend federal funds to support the Contras, a rightist rebel group. But Casey’s attitude, as Berry recalled it, was “We’re gonna fund these freedom fighters whether Congress wants us to or not.” Berry, then the staff director for the Republicans on the House Intelligence Committee, asked Casey for help in fighting the Democrats. Soon afterward, Addington joined Berry on Capitol Hill.
When the Iran-Contra scandal broke, in 1986, it exposed White House arms deals and foreign fund-raising designed to help the anti-Sandinista forces in Nicaragua. Members of Congress were furious. Summoned to Capitol Hill, Casey lied, denying that funds for the Contras had been solicited from any foreign governments, although he knew that the Saudis, among others, had agreed to give millions of dollars to the Contras, at the request of the White House. Even within the Reagan Administration, the foreign funding was controversial. [******] Secretary of State George Shultz had warned Reagan that he might be committing an impeachable offense. But, under Casey’s guidance, the White House went ahead with the plan; Shultz, having expressed misgivings, was not told. It was a bureaucratic tactic that Addington reprised after September 11th, when Powell was left out of key deliberations about the treatment of detainees. Lawrence Wilkerson, Powell’s aide, said that he was aware of Addington’s general strategy: “We had heard that, behind our backs, he was saying that Powell was ‘soft, but easy to get around.’ ” [*****************] [this jibes with what woodward wrote about cheney in the commanders] [there cheney always held grudge against powell and the professionals who cleaned up the dog shit left behind by north, Abrams, casey, et al.] [************************]
The Iran-Contra scandal substantially weakened Reagan’s popularity and, eventually, seven people were convicted of seventeen felonies. Cheney, who was then a Republican congressman from Wyoming, worried that the scandal would further undercut Presidential authority. In late 1986, he became the ranking Republican on a House select committee that was investigating the scandal, and he commissioned a report on Reagan’s support of the Contras. Addington, who had become an expert in intelligence law, contributed legal research. The scholarly-sounding but politically outlandish Minority Report, released in 1987, argued that Congress—not the President—had overstepped its authority, by encroaching on the President’s foreign-policy powers. The President, the report said, had been driven by “a legitimate frustration with abuses of power and irresolution by the legislative branch.” The Minority Report sanctioned the President’s actions to a surprising degree, considering the number of criminal charges that resulted from the scandal. The report also defended the legality of ignoring congressional intelligence oversight, arguing that “the President has the Constitutional and statutory authority to withhold notifying Congress of covert actions under rare conditions.” And it condemned “legislative hostage taking,” noting that “Congress must realize . . . that the power of the purse does not make it supreme” in matters of war. In his December interview with reporters, Cheney proudly cited this document. “If you want reference to an obscure text, go look at the minority views that were filed in the Iran-Contra committee, the Iran-Contra report, in about 1987,” he said. “Part of the argument was whether the President had the authority to do what was done in the Reagan years.”
Addington and Cheney became a formidable team, but it was soon clear that Addington would not join Cheney as a politician. Adelman recalled Addington’s personality as “dour,” adding that, “unlike with Dick, I never saw much of a sense of humor. Cheney can be witty and funny. David is sober. I didn’t see him at social events much.” But, he added, “Dick wasn’t looking for friends at work. He was looking for performance. And David delivers. He’s efficient and dedicated. He’s a doer.” He went on, “Cheney’s not a lawyer, so he would defer to David on the law.”
In 1989, President George H. W. Bush appointed Cheney Secretary of Defense. Cheney hired Addington first as his special assistant and, later, as the Pentagon’s general counsel. At the Pentagon, Addington became widely known as Cheney’s gatekeeper—a stickler for process who controlled the flow of documents to his boss. Using a red felt-tipped pen, he covered his colleagues’ memos with comments before returning them for rewrites. His editing invariably made arguments sharper, smarter, and more firm in their defense of Cheney’s executive powers, a former military official who worked with him said.
At the Pentagon, Addington took a particular interest in the covert actions of the Special Forces. A former colleague recalled that, after attending a demonstration by Special Forces officers, he mocked the C.I.A., which was constrained by oversight laws. “This is how real covert operations are done,” he said. (After September 11th, the Pentagon greatly expanded its covert intelligence operations; these programs have less congressional oversight than those of the C.I.A.) Cheney, throughout his tenure as Defense Secretary, shared with Addington a pessimistic view of the Soviet Union. Both remained skeptical of Gorbachev long after the State Department, the national-security adviser, and the C.I.A. had concluded that he was a reformer. “They were always, like, ‘Whoa—beware the Bear!’ ” Wilkerson recalled. They immersed themselves in “continuity of government exercises”—studying with unusual intensity how the government might survive a nuclear attack. According to “Rise of the Vulcans,” a history of the period by James Mann, Cheney, more than once, spent the night in an underground bunker.
A decade later, when hijacked planes slammed into the Twin Towers and the Pentagon, Addington, perhaps more than anyone else in the U.S. government, was ready to act. [**********] During the Clinton Presidency, he had worked as a lawyer for various business interests, such as the American Trucking Associations, and in 1994 he had led an exploratory Presidential campaign for Cheney, who decided against running. Once Cheney became Vice-President, Addington helped oversee the transition, setting up the most powerful Vice-Presidency in America’s history. Addington’s high-school friend Leonard Napolitano said Addington told him that he and Cheney were merging the Vice-President’s office with the President’s into a single “Executive Office,” instead of having “two different camps.” Napolitano added, “David said that Cheney saw the Vice-President as the executive and implementer of the President.” Addington created a system to insure that virtually all important documents relating to national-security matters were seen by the Vice-President’s office. The former high-ranking Administration lawyer said that Addington regularly attended White House legal meetings with the C.I.A. and the National Security Agency. He received copies of all National Security Council documents, including internal memos from the staff. And, as a former top official in the Defense Department, he exerted influence over the legal office at the Pentagon, helping his protégé William J. Haynes secure the position of general counsel. A former national-security lawyer, speaking of the Pentagon’s legal office, said, “It’s obvious that Addington runs the whole operation.” [*************]
In the days after September 11th, a half-dozen White House lawyers had heated discussions about how to frame the Administration’s legal response to the attacks. Bradford Berenson, one of the participants, recalled how “raw” feelings were at the time: “There were thousands of bereaved American families. Everyone was expecting additional attacks. The only planes in the air were military. At a moment like that, there’s an intense focus on responsibility and accountability. Preventing another attack should always be within the law. But if you have to err on the side of being too aggressive or not aggressive enough, you’d err by being too aggressive.”
Berry said that Addington felt this keenly. “I’ve talked to David about this a little. Psychologically, it’s really taxing to read every day not about one or two but about a dozen, or two dozen, legitimate reports about efforts to take out U.S. citizens. . . . There’s a little bit of a bunker mentality that set in among some of the national-security-policy officials after 9/11.”
Almost immediately, other Administration lawyers noticed that Addington dominated the internal debates. His assumption, shared by other hard-line lawyers in the White House counsel’s office and in the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel, was that the criminal-justice system was insufficient to handle the threat from terrorism. The matter was settled without debate, Berenson recalled: “There was a consensus that we had to move from retribution and punishment to preëmption and prevention. Only a warfare model allows that approach.”
Richard Shiffrin, the former Pentagon lawyer, said that during a tense White House meeting held in the Situation Room just a few days after September 11th “all of us felt under a great deal of pressure to be willing to consider even the most extraordinary proposals. The C.I.A., the N.S.C., the State Department, the Pentagon, and the Justice Department all had people there. Addington was particularly strident. He’d sit, listen, and then say, ‘No, that’s not right.’ He was particularly doctrinaire and ideological. He didn’t recognize the wisdom of the other lawyers. He was always right. He didn’t listen. He knew the answers.” The details of the discussion are classified, Shiffrin said, but he left with the impression that Addington “doesn’t believe there should be co-equal branches.” Another participant recalled, “If you favored international law, you were in danger of being called ‘soft on terrorism’ by Addington.” He added that Addington’s manner in meetings was “very insistent and very loud.” Yet another participant said that, whenever he cautioned against executive-branch overreaching, Addington would respond brusquely, “There you go again, giving away the President’s power.”
Some of the protests from Democrats about the Administration’s legal arguments and some of the declarations of high principle from Republicans are mere partisan gestures. Both sides have changed their views about the need for a strong President, depending on whether they were in power. “It’s a matter of degree,” the liberal Princeton historian Sean Wilentz said. “War always expands the powers of the Presidency. And Presidents always overreach.” Lincoln infamously suspended habeas-corpus rights during the Civil War, locking up thousands of Confederate sympathizers without due process, and Franklin D. Roosevelt interned more than a hundred thousand innocent Japanese-Americans. “Someone said that this Administration is monarchical,” Wilentz added. “That’s just rhetoric. We’re not a dictatorship. At the same time, this White House has assumed powers for itself that no previous Administration has done.” Bush’s defenders frequently cite the example of Lincoln as a justification for placing national security above the rule of law. But Schlesinger, in his book “War and the American Presidency” (2004), points out that Lincoln never “claimed an inherent and routine right to do what [he] did.” The Bush White House, he told me, has seized on these historical aberrations and turned them into a doctrine of Presidential prerogative.
On September 25th, the Office of Legal Counsel issued a memo declaring that the President had inherent constitutional authority to take whatever military action he deemed necessary, not just in response to the September 11th attacks but also in the prevention of any future attacks from terrorist groups, whether they were linked to Al Qaeda or not. The memo’s broad definition of the enemy went beyond that of Congress, which, on September 14th, had passed legislation authorizing the President to use military force against “nations, organizations, or persons” directly linked to the attacks. The memo was written by John Yoo, a lawyer in the Office of Legal Counsel who worked closely with Addington, and said, in part, “The power of the President is at its zenith under the Constitution when the President is directing military operations of the armed forces, because the power of the Commander-in-Chief is assigned solely to the President.” The memo acknowledged that Article I of the Constitution gives Congress the power to declare war, but argued that it was a misreading to assume that the article gives Congress the lead role in making war. Instead, the memo said, “it is beyond question that the President has the plenary Constitutional power to take such military actions as he deems necessary and appropriate to respond to the terrorist attacks upon the United States on September 11, 2001.” It concluded, “These decisions, under our Constitution, are for the President alone to make.”
Another memo sanctioned torture when the President deems it necessary; yet another claimed that there were virtually no valid legal prohibitions against the inhumane treatment of foreign prisoners held by the C.I.A. outside the U.S. Most of these decisions, according to many Administration officials who were involved in the process, were made in secrecy, and the customary interagency debate and vetting procedures were sidestepped. Addington either drafted the memos himself or advised those who were drafting them. “Addington’s fingerprints were all over these policies,” said Wilkerson, who, as Powell’s top aide, later assembled for the Secretary a dossier of internal memos detailing the decision-making process.
On November 13, 2001, an executive order setting up the military commissions was issued under Bush’s signature. The decision stunned Powell; the national-security adviser, Condoleezza Rice; the highest-ranking lawyer at the C.I.A.; and many judge advocate generals, or JAGs, the top lawyers in the military services. None of them had been consulted. Michael Chertoff, the head of the Justice Department’s criminal division, who had argued for trying terror suspects in the U.S. courts, was also bypassed. And the order surprised John Bellinger III, the National Security Council legal adviser and deputy White House counsel, who had been formally asked to help create a legal method for trying foreign terror suspects. According to multiple sources, Addington secretly usurped the process. He and a few hand-picked associates, including Bradford Berenson and Timothy Flanigan, a lawyer in the White House counsel’s office, wrote the executive order creating the commissions. Moreover, Addington did not show drafts of the order to Powell or Rice, who, the senior Administration lawyer said, was incensed when she learned about her exclusion.
The order proclaimed a state of “extraordinary emergency,” and announced that the rules for the military commissions would be dictated by the Secretary of Defense, without review by Congress or the courts. The commissions could try any foreign person the President or his representatives deemed to have “engaged in” or “abetted” or “conspired to commit” terrorism, without offering the right to seek an appeal from anyone but the President or the Secretary of Defense. Detainees would be treated “humanely,” and would be given “full and fair trials,” the order said. Yet the order continued that “it is not practicable” to apply “the principles of law and the rules of evidence generally recognized in the trial of criminal cases in the United States district courts.” The death penalty, for example, could be imposed even if there was a split verdict. Moreover, in December, 2001, the Department of Defense circulated internal memos suggesting that, in the commission system, defendants would have only limited rights to confront their accusers, see all the evidence against them, or be present during their trials. There would be no right to remain silent, and hearsay evidence would be admissible, as would evidence obtained through physical coercion. Guilt did not need to be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. The order firmly established that terrorism would henceforth be approached on a war footing, endowing the President with enhanced powers.
The precedent for the order was an arcane 1942 case, ex parte Quirin, in which Franklin Roosevelt created a military commission to try eight Nazi saboteurs who had infiltrated the United States via submarines. The Supreme Court upheld the case, 8–0, but even the conservative Justice Antonin Scalia has called it “not this Court’s finest hour.” Roosevelt was later criticized for creating a sham process. Moreover, while he used military commissions to try a handful of suspects who had already admitted their guilt, the Bush White House was proposing expanding the process to cover thousands of “enemy combatants.” It was also ignoring the Uniform Code of Military Justice, which, having codified procedures for courts-martial in 1951, had rendered Quirin out of date.
Berenson said, “The legal foundation was very strong. F.D.R.’s order establishing military commissions had been upheld by the Supreme Court. This was almost identical. What we underestimated was the extent to which the culture had shifted beneath us since World War Two.” Concerns about civil liberties and human rights, and anger over Vietnam and Watergate, he said, had turned public opinion against a strong executive branch: “But Addington thought military commissions had to be a tool at the President’s disposal.”
Rear Admiral Donald Guter, who was the Navy’s chief JAG until June, 2002, said that he and the other JAGs, who were experts in the laws of war, tried unsuccessfully to amend parts of the military-commission plan when they learned of it, days before the order was formally signed by the President. “But we were marginalized,” he said. “We were warning them that we had this long tradition of military justice, and we didn’t want to tarnish it. The treatment of detainees was a huge issue. They didn’t want to hear it.” In a 2004 report in the Times, Guter said that when he and the other JAGs told Haynes that they needed more information, Haynes replied, “No, you don’t.” (Haynes’s office offered no comment.)
At the Defense Department, Shiffrin, the deputy general counsel for intelligence, and a career lawyer rather than a political appointee, was taken aback when Haynes showed him the order. Earlier in Shiffrin’s career, at the Justice Department, his office had been in the same room where the Nazi defendants were tried, and he had become interested in the case, which he said he regarded as “one of the worst Supreme Court cases ever.” He recalled informing Haynes that he was skeptical of the Administration’s invocation of Quirin. “Gee, this is problematic,” Shiffrin told him.
Marine Major Dan Mori, the uniformed lawyer who has been assigned to defend David Hicks, one of the ten terror suspects in Guantánamo who have been charged, said of the commissions, “It was a political stunt. The Administration clearly didn’t know anything about military law or the laws of war. I think they were clueless that there even was a U.C.M.J. and a Manual for Courts-Martial! The fundamental problem is that the rules were constructed by people with a vested interest in conviction.”
Mori said that the charges against the detainees reflected a profound legal confusion. “A military commission can try only violations of the laws of war,” he said. “But the Administration’s lawyers didn’t understand this.” Under federal criminal statutes, for example, conspiring to commit terrorist acts is a crime. But, as the Nuremburg trials that followed the Second World War established, under the laws of war it is not, since all soldiers could be charged with conspiring to fight for their side. Yet, Mori said, a charge of conspiracy “is the only thing there is in many cases at Guantánamo—guilt by association. So you’ve got this big problem.” He added, “I hope that nobody confuses military justice with these ‘military commissions.’ This is a political process, set up by the civilian leadership. It’s inept, incompetent, and improper.”
Under attack from defense lawyers like Mori, the military commissions have been tied up in the courts almost since the order was issued. Bellinger and others fought to make the commissions fairer, so that they could withstand court challenges, and the Pentagon gradually softened its rules. But Administration lawyers involved in the process said that Addington resisted at every turn. He insisted, for instance, on maintaining the admissibility of statements obtained through coercion, or even torture. In meetings, he argued that officials in charge of the military commissions should be given maximum flexibility to decide whether to include such evidence. “Torture isn’t important to Addington as a scientific matter, good or bad, or whether it works or not,” the Administration lawyer, who is familiar with these debates, said. “It’s more about his philosophy of Presidential power. He thinks that if the President wants torture he should get torture. He always argued for ‘maximum flexibility.’ ”
Last month, Addington lost this internal battle. The Administration rescinded the provision allowing coerced testimony, after even the military officials overseeing the commissions supported the reform. According to a senior Administration legal adviser who participated in discussions about the commissions, Addington remained opposed to the change. “He wanted no changes,” the lawyer said. “He said the rules were good, right from the start.” Addington accused officials who were trying to reform the rules of “giving away the President’s prerogatives.”
President Bush has blamed the legal challenges for the delays in prosecuting Guantánamo detainees. But many lawyers, even some inside the Administration, believe that the challenges were inevitable, considering the dubious constitutionality of the commissions. The Supreme Court’s ruling in the Hamdan case is expected to establish whether the commissions meet basic standards of due process. The Administration lawyer isn’t sanguine about the outcome. “It shows again that Addington overreached,” he said.

Meanwhile, Addington has fought tirelessly to stem reform of other controversial aspects of the New Paradigm, such as the detention and interrogation of terror suspects. Last year, he and Cheney led an unsuccessful campaign to defeat an amendment, proposed by Senator John McCain, to ban the abusive treatment of detainees held by the military or the C.I.A. Government officials who have worked closely with Addington say he insists that legal flexibility is necessary, because of the iniquity of the enemy; moreover, he does not believe that the legal positions taken by the Bush Administration in the war on terror have damaged the country’s international reputation. “He’s a very smart guy, but he gives no credibility to those who say these policies are hurting us around the world,” the senior Administration legal adviser said. “His feeling is that there are no costs. He’ll say people are just whining. He thinks most of them would be against us no matter what.” In Addington’s view, critics of the Administration’s aggressive legal policies are just political enemies of the President.
Yet, from the start, some of the sharpest critics of detainee-treatment policies have been military and law-enforcement officials inside the Bush Administration; people close to it, like McCain; and our foreign allies. Just a few months after the Guantánamo detention centers were established, members of the Administration began receiving reports that questioned whether all the prisoners there were really, as Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld had labelled them, “the worst of the worst.” Guter said that the Pentagon had originally planned to screen the suspects individually on the battlefields in Afghanistan; such “Article 5 hearings” are a provision of the Geneva Conventions. But the White House cancelled the hearings, which had been standard protocol during the previous fifty years, including in the first Gulf War. In a January 25, 2002, legal memorandum, Administration lawyers dismissed the Geneva Conventions as “obsolete,” “quaint,” and irrelevant to the war on terror. The memo was signed by Gonzales, but the Administration lawyer said he believed that “Addington and Flanigan were behind it.” The memo argued that all Taliban and Al Qaeda detainees were illegal enemy combatants, which eliminated “any argument regarding the need for case-by-case determination of P.O.W. status.” Critics claim that the lack of a careful screening process led some innocent detainees to be imprisoned. “Article 5 hearings would have cost them nothing,” the Administration lawyer, who was involved in the process, said. “They just wanted to make a point on executive power—that the President can designate them all enemy combatants if he wants to.”
Guter, the Navy JAG, said that, before long, he and other military experts began to wonder whether the reason they weren’t getting much useful intelligence from Guantánamo was that, as he puts it, “it wasn’t there.” Guter, who was in the Pentagon on September 11th, said, “I don’t have a sympathetic bone in my body for the terrorists. But I just wanted to make sure we were getting the right people—the real terrorists. And I wanted to make sure we were doing it in a way consistent with our values.”
While the JAGs’ questions about the treatment of detainees went largely unheeded, he said, the C.I.A. was simultaneously raising similar concerns. In the summer of 2002, the agency had sent an Arabic-speaking analyst to Guantánamo to find out why more intelligence wasn’t being collected, and, after interviewing several dozen prisoners, he had come back with bad news: more than half the detainees, he believed, didn’t belong there. He wrote a devastating classified report, which reached General John Gordon, the deputy national-security adviser for combatting terrorism. In a series of meetings at the White House, Gordon, Bellinger, and other officials warned Addington and Gonzales that potentially innocent people had been locked up in Guantánamo and would be indefinitely. “This is a violation of basic notions of American fairness,” Gordon and Bellinger argued. “Isn’t that what we’re about as a country?” Addington’s response, sources familiar with the meetings said, was “These are ‘enemy combatants.’ Please use that term. They’ve all been through a screening process. We don’t have anything to talk about.”
A former Administration official said of Addington’s response, “It seemed illogical. How could you deny the possibility that one or more people were locked up who shouldn’t be? There were old people, sick people—why do we want to keep them?” At the meeting, Gordon and Bellinger argued, “The American public understands that wars are confusing and exceptional things happen. But the American public will expect some due process.”
Addington and Gonzales dismissed this concern. The former Administration official recalled that Addington was “the dominant voice. It was a non-debate, in his view.” The confrontation made clear, though, that Addington had been informed early that there were problems at Guantánamo. “There wasn’t a lack of knowledge or understanding,” the former official said.
Addington has proved deft at outmaneuvering his critics. Documents embarrassing to Addington’s opponents have been leaked to the press, if not necessarily by him. A top-secret N.S.C. memo describing Powell’s request to reconsider the suspension of the Geneva Conventions appeared in the Washington Times the day after it was circulated to the Secretary of Defense, the Attorney General, and the Vice-President; the article cited unnamed sources who accused Powell of “bowing to pressure from the political left.” The Administration lawyer said, “The way Addington works, he controls the flow of information very tightly.” Addington chastised a Justice Department official who showed a legal opinion on the treatment of detainees to the State Department. He repeatedly directed Gonzales, the White House counsel, to keep Bellinger, the N.S.C. lawyer, out of meetings about national-security issues. “Lip-lock” is the word Addington’s old Pentagon colleague Sean O’Keefe, now the chancellor of Louisiana State University, used to describe his discretion. “He’s like Cheney,” O’Keefe said. “You can’t get anything out of him with a crowbar.” The Administration lawyer said, “He’s a bully, pure and simple.” Several talented top lawyers who challenged Addington on important legal matters concerning the war on terror, including Patrick Philbin, James Comey, and Jack Goldsmith, left the Administration under stressful circumstances. Other reform-minded government lawyers who clashed with Addington, including Bellinger and Matthew Waxman, both of whom were at the N.S.C. during Bush’s first term, have moved to the State Department.
Waxman, a young lawyer who headed the Pentagon’s office of detainee affairs, departed soon after he had a major confrontation with Addington over the issue of clarifying military rules for the treatment of prisoners. Waxman believed that international standards for the humane treatment of detainees should be followed, and argued for reforms in the Army Field Manual. He hoped to reinstate the basic standards that are specified in the Geneva Conventions. This meant the prohibition of torture, overt acts of violence, and “outrages on personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment.” Although the Vice-President’s office is not part of the military chain of command, last September Addington summoned Waxman to his office and berated him. Waxman declined to comment on the incident, but a former colleague in the Pentagon, in whom Waxman confided, said that Addington accused Waxman of wanting to fight the war on terror his own way, rather than the President’s way. The Army Field Manual still hasn’t been revised, and, according to those involved, Addington and his protégé Haynes remain the major obstacles.

Last fall, Richard Shiffrin, the Pentagon lawyer who was left out of the Administration’s initial discussions of the military commissions, learned from the Times about the Administration’s decision to sanction warrantless domestic electronic surveillance by the National Security Agency. This was remarkable, because Shiffrin was the Pentagon lawyer in charge of supervising the N.S.A.’s legal advisers. “It was exceptional that I didn’t know about it—extraordinary,” Shiffrin said. “In the prior Administration, on anything involving N.S.A. legal issues I’d have been made aware. And I should have been in this one.”
Shortly after September 11th, Addington and Cheney, without alerting Shiffrin, held meetings with top N.S.A. lawyers in the Vice-President’s office and told them that the President, as Commander-in-Chief, had the authority to override the FISA statutes and not seek warrants from the special court. According to the Times, Addington and Cheney pushed the N.S.A. to engage in practices that the agency thought were illegal, such as the warrantless wiretapping of American suspects making domestic calls. General Michael Hayden, the former head of the N.S.A., who was recently confirmed as director of the C.I.A., has denied being pressured. Shiffrin, however, doubted that the N.S.A. lawyers were expert enough in Article II of the Constitution, which defines the President’s powers, to argue back. He described the Administration’s legal arguments on wiretapping as “close calls.”
Others are more critical. Fourteen prominent constitutional scholars, representing a range of political views, recently wrote an open letter to Congress, claiming that the N.S.A. surveillance program “appears on its face to violate existing law.” The scholars noted that Bush had made no effort to amend the FISA law to suit national-security needs—he simply ignored it. The Republican legal activist Bruce Fein said, “What makes this so sinister is that the members of this Administration have unchecked power. They don’t care if the wiretapping is legal or not.” But the former high-ranking Administration lawyer suggested that the situation is more serious than an intentional infraction of the law. “It’s not that they think they’re skirting the law,” he said. “They think that this is the law.”
Fein suggested that the only way Congress will be able to reassert its power is by cutting off funds to the executive branch for programs that it thinks are illegal. But this approach has been tried, and here, too, Addington has had the last word. John Murtha, the ranking Democrat on the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense, put a provision in the Pentagon’s appropriations bills for 2005 and 2006 forbidding the use of federal funds for any intelligence-gathering that violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the privacy of American citizens. The White House, however, took exception to Congress’s effort to cut off funds. When President Bush signed the appropriations bills into law, he appended “signing statements” asserting that the Commander-in-Chief had the right to collect intelligence in any way he deemed necessary. The signing statement for the 2005 budget, for instance, noted that the executive branch would “construe” the spending limit only “in a manner consistent with the President’s constitutional authority as Commander-in-Chief, including for the conduct of intelligence operations.”
According to the Boston Globe, Addington has been the “leading architect” of these signing statements, which have been added to more than seven hundred and fifty laws. He reportedly scrutinizes every bill before President Bush signs it, searching for any language that might impinge on Presidential power. These wars of words are yet another battlefront between Addington and Congress, and some constitutional scholars find them troubling. Few of the signing statements were noticed until one of them was slipped into Bush’s signing of the McCain amendment. The language was legal boilerplate, reserving the right to construe the legislation only as it was consistent with the Constitution. But, considering that Cheney’s office had waged, and lost, a public fight to defeat the McCain amendment democratically—the vote in the Senate was 90–9—the signing statement seemed sneaky and subversive.
Earlier this month, the American Bar Association voted to investigate whether President Bush had exceeded his constitutional authority by reserving the right to ignore portions of laws that he has signed. Richard Epstein, the University of Chicago law professor, said, “What’s frightening to me is that this Administration is always willing to push the conventions to the limits—and beyond. With his signing statements, I think the President just goes too far. If you sign these things with a caveat, do the inferior officers follow the law or the caveat?”
Bruce Fein argues that Addington’s signing statements are “unconstitutional as a strategy,” because the Founding Fathers wanted Presidents to veto legislation openly if they thought the bills were unconstitutional. Bush has not vetoed a single bill since taking office. “It’s part of the balancing process,” Fein said. “It’s about accountability. If you veto something, everyone knows where you stand. But this President wants to do it sotto voce. He wants to give the image that he’s accommodating on torture, and then reserves the right to torture anyway.”
David Addington is a satisfactory lawyer, Fein said, but a less than satisfactory student of American history, which, for a public servant of his influence, matters more. “If you read the Federalist Papers, you can see how rich in history they are,” he said. “The Founders really understood the history of what people did with power, going back to Greek and Roman and Biblical times. Our political heritage is to be skeptical of executive power, because, in particular, there was skepticism of King George III. But Cheney and Addington are not students of history. If they were, they’d know that the Founding Fathers would be shocked by what they’ve done.”

House Assails Media Report on Tracking of Finances

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/washington/30cong.html
June 30, 2006
House Assails Media Report on Tracking of Finances
By CARL HULSE [house GOP still attacking the NYTs as seditious behavior] [appears part of the talking points for fall midterms] [*********]
WASHINGTON, June 29 — The House of Representatives on Thursday condemned the recent disclosure of a classified program to track financial transactions and called on the media to cooperate in keeping such efforts secret.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/washington/30cong.html
June 30, 2006
House Assails Media Report on Tracking of Finances
By CARL HULSE [house GOP still attacking the NYTs as seditious behavior] [appears part of the talking points for fall midterms] [*********]
WASHINGTON, June 29 — The House of Representatives on Thursday condemned the recent disclosure of a classified program to track financial transactions and called on the media to cooperate in keeping such efforts secret.
Lawmakers expressed their sentiment through a resolution that was approved on a largely party-line 227-to-183 vote after days of harsh criticism by the Bush administration and Congressional Republicans aimed at The New York Times and other newspapers for publishing details of the program, which the government said was limited to following possible terrorist financial trails.
The vote followed a bitter debate in which Republicans said news accounts had jeopardized the effort, and Democrats accused Republicans of trying to intimidate the press.
Republicans criticized news organizations, and The Times in particular, saying they had not considered the potential damage of revealing the program. "The recent front-page story in the aforementioned New York Times cut the legs out from under this program," said the resolution's author, Representative Michael G. Oxley, Republican of Ohio. "Now the terrorists will be driven further underground."
Mr. Oxley and other Republicans said The Times deserved particular scorn as the first to make public the details of the administration's effort to try to identify and apprehend terrorists by tracing financial transactions processed through an international cooperative called Swift. The Los Angeles Times and The Wall Street Journal published similar accounts soon after The Times. "If you are Al Qaeda, the appropriate response to this publication is, 'Thank you,' " said Representative Spencer Bacchus, Republican of Alabama.
Democrats accused Republicans of engaging in media-bashing for political gain while practicing selective outrage since, they said, Republicans stayed largely silent on the White House disclosure of the identity of the C.I.A. operative Valerie Wilson. They also said the administration had repeatedly disclosed its determination to track money moving to terrorists.
"We are here today because there hasn't been enough red meat thrown at the Republican base just before the Fourth of July recess," said Representative Jim McGovern, Democrat of Massachusetts.
The House vote followed denunciations by President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney of the disclosure, a request for prosecution of the sources of the article and Times employees and calls to revoke their press credentials.
The Republican-written resolution did not identify any publication by name. But many of the resolution's backers said The Times had acted irresponsibly.
Representative David Dreier, Republican of California, said The Times had led other news outlets in deciding to publish classified material. He dismissed arguments that the disclosure served a public interest, saying the public would rather be safe from terrorists than "all-knowing" about antiterror efforts.
Bill Keller, executive editor of The Times, disputed the idea that the had paper acted cavalierly in its decision to reveal the program.
"If the members who voted for the resolution believe the press is insensitive to the risks of reporting on intelligence programs, they could not be more wrong," he said in a statement. "We take those risks very, very seriously." He said the paper had agreed in the past to withhold information when lives were at stake.
"However, the administration simply did not make a convincing case that describing our efforts to monitor international banking presented such a danger," he said. "Indeed, the administration itself has talked publicly and repeatedly about its successes in the area of financial surveillance."
Democrats complained that Republicans refused to allow a vote on a Democratic alternative, which supported tracking terror financing and raised concern about leaks of classified material, including the "names of clandestine service officers of the Central Intelligence Agency," a clear reference to the Valerie Wilson case.
Democrats said the Republican proposal made assertions about the antiterror effort that could not be known since Congress had conducted little or no oversight of it. The resolution declared that it "has been conducted in accordance with all applicable laws, regulations and executive orders, that appropriate safeguards and reviews have been instituted to protect individual liberties and that Congress has been appropriately informed and consulted."
The resolution said the House "expects the cooperation of all news media organizations in protecting the lives of Americans and the capability of the government to identify, disrupt and capture terrorists by not disclosing classified intelligence programs."
Representative John D. Dingell, Democrat of Michigan, said Republicans were trying to stifle criticism of the administration, which he described as the most deceitful he had seen in his 50 years in Congress. Others said the administration was promoting democracy abroad while challenging a free press at home. "If anyone wants to live in a society where journalists are thrown in prison, I encourage them to move to Cuba, China or North Korea to see if they feel safer," said Representative Jane Harman, a California Democrat.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

A Spat Over Iraq Revealed On Tape

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062902086.html
A Spat Over Iraq Revealed On Tape
Rice and Russian Caught Bickering At Private Lunch
By Glenn Kessler
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, June 30, 2006; A20 [rice] [state] [g8 meeting on iran and collective response] [also mentioned in one piece in today’s external] [here more info about the story] [telling regarding rice] [if accurate portrayal, she didn’t act very diplomatic, nor did her Russian counterpart] [who knows what the history might be between them] [still her behavior I suspect is not part of role expectation for sec of state] [individual] [****************] [I learned from Dr. Hillam the following pithy description-allegory of a good diplomat] [it begins with a woman—one supposes it could be update for gigilos too—of debutante and her negotiating skills with a young suiter. “if she says no, she means maybe, if she says maybe, she means yes, if she says yes, she’s no lady] [for the diplomat, it is nearly the reverse: if (s)he says yes, (s)he means maybe, if (s)he says maybe, (s)he means no, if (s)he says no, (s)he is no diplomat] [it seems apt here with this behind scence take of diplomacy] [*********************]
MOSCOW, June 29 -- The official State Department version is that "there was absolutely no friction whatsoever" between Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov during a meeting of foreign ministers in Moscow on Thursday. [*******]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062902086.html
A Spat Over Iraq Revealed On Tape
Rice and Russian Caught Bickering At Private Lunch
By Glenn Kessler
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, June 30, 2006; A20 [rice] [state] [g8 meeting on iran and collective response] [also mentioned in one piece in today’s external] [here more info about the story] [telling regarding rice] [if accurate portrayal, she didn’t act very diplomatic, nor did her Russian counterpart] [who knows what the history might be between them] [still her behavior I suspect is not part of role expectation for sec of state] [individual] [****************] [I learned from Dr. Hillam the following pithy description-allegory of a good diplomat] [it begins with a woman—one supposes it could be update for gigilos too—of debutante and her negotiating skills with a young suiter. “if she says no, she means maybe, if she says maybe, she means yes, if she says yes, she’s no lady] [for the diplomat, it is nearly the reverse: if (s)he says yes, (s)he means maybe, if (s)he says maybe, (s)he means no, if (s)he says no, (s)he is no diplomat] [it seems apt here with this behind scence take of diplomacy] [*********************]
MOSCOW, June 29 -- The official State Department version is that "there was absolutely no friction whatsoever" between Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov during a meeting of foreign ministers in Moscow on Thursday. [*******]
But a recording of the ministers' private lunch, made when an audio link into the room was accidentally left on, showed that "Condi" and "Sergei" -- as they called each other -- had several long and testy exchanges over Iraq. [****]The disputes concerned relatively minor wording changes in the five-page statement issued after the meeting, but grew out of basic differences between the two governments over how to proceed on Iraq. [******]
The State Department's subsequent denial of tensions illustrates how officials manage the information that flows to the public from such closed-door meetings to create an image meant to advance foreign policy objectives. [***]Reporters often have no independent account of such discussions.
At a time of rising tension in U.S.-Russian relations, the two diplomats sparred in sometimes tedious terms for more than 20 minutes over a handful of words in a document that is likely to be quickly forgotten. [****]Other ministers jumped in to cool tempers by suggesting compromises. [********]
During the meal -- the recording picks up the clinking of ice in glasses and the scratch of cutlery on plates -- Rice said she wanted to make a few "small points" about a draft statement prepared by lower-level officials. In particular, she said, she was seeking a stronger show of support for the nascent Iraqi government. [*******]
Lavrov demurred, suggesting the new leaders had not done enough to promote national reconciliation. [*******]
“I’m always a little bit sensitive about this on behalf of the Iraqis,” Rice shot back. “Here we sit in Moscow or in Washington or in Paris telling them to make efforts on national accord when their brothers and sisters are being killed. I just think it’s gratuitous.” [******]
Lavrov eventually gave ground, but then protested when Rice wanted to delete a sentence in a section regarding the killing of five Russian diplomats in Iraq. [see past two days’ external for putin’s reaction to said murders] [**********]
“Urgent methods are being taken to provide security for diplomats,” Rice said. The sentence “implies they are not being taken, and you know on a fairly daily basis we lose soldiers, and I think it would be offensive to suggest that these efforts are not being made.” [***************]
Lavrov countered that the sentence was not intended to criticize but was “just a statement of fact, I believe.” [*******]
"I don't believe security is fine in Iraq, and I don't believe in particular that security at foreign missions is okay," [****]he said. He suggested shortening the sentence to emphasize "the need for improved security for diplomatic missions." [******]
"Sergei, there is a need for improvement of security in Iraq, period," Rice said in a hard voice. "The problem isn't diplomatic missions. The problem is journalists and civilian contractors and, yes, diplomats as well." [********]
She continued: "The problem is you have a terrorist insurgent population that is wreaking havoc on a hapless Iraqi civilian population that is trying to fight back. The implication that by somehow declaring that diplomats need to be protected, it will get better, I think, is simply not right." [*********]
Lavrov began to respond, but Rice cut him off.
"I understand that in the wake of the brutal murder of your diplomats, that it is a sensitive time," [*******]she said. "But I think that we can't imply that this is an isolated problem or that it isn't being addressed." [**********]
Other ministers jumped in and suggested compromise language to calm tempers: “The tragic event underscores the importance of improving security for all in Iraq.” [********]
Then Rice said she wanted to seek an endorsement of an Iraqi proposal for an "international compact" in which the Baghdad government would have to meet certain broad goals in order to collect aid, similar to a package for Afghanistan. But Lavrov refused, saying the concept was too new and needed more development and support from other countries. He suggested the creation of a forum of neighboring governments to oversee reconciliation in Iraq. [*****]
Rice said she worried he was suggesting greater international involvement in Iraq’s affairs.
“I did not suggest this,” Lavrov said. “What I did say was not involvement in the political process but the involvement of the international community in support of the political process.” [**********]
"What does that mean?" Rice asked.
There was a long pause. "I think you understand," he said.
"No, I don't," Rice said.
Lavrov tried to explain, but Rice said she was disappointed. "I just want to register that I think it's a pity that we can't endorse something that's been endorsed by the Iraqis and the U.N.," she said, adding tartly: "But if that's how Russia sees it, that's fine." [******]
The two continued to squabble when Lavrov threw out a new concept -- that the new Iraqi government had to answer questions about former president Saddam Hussein's [**************] alleged weapons of mass destruction because last week Republican lawmakers in the United States had said there was evidence of chemical munitions. [******]
“I think it’s serious,” he said. “While we want to support this government, we also believe that this government has something to do to finalize the leftovers of the past, which is basically nonproliferation concerns.” [*********]
This line of conversation riled Rice, but once again other ministers suggested a compromise that mentioned the idea without endorsing it.
The Lavrov-Rice sparring continued at a subsequent news conference over issues such as Russia's growing control of natural gas supplies in Europe and threats to democratic institutions in Russia. [*******]
Reporters traveling with Rice transcribed the tape of the private luncheon but did not tell Rice aides about it until after a senior State Department official, briefing reporters on condition of anonymity as usual, assured them that "there was absolutely no friction whatsoever" between the two senior diplomats.
Once the flabbergasted official learned of the tape, he continued the briefing. He paused repeatedly, asking before describing a discussion whether reporters had heard it. [*******] [an unusual insight into diplomatic pas de deux] [********]
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

GOP Has a Fix in Mind, but It May Not Be Easy

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-assess30jun30,0,330367.story?coll=la-home-headlines
From the Los Angeles Times
NEWS ANALYSIS
GOP Has a Fix in Mind, but It May Not Be Easy
By Doyle McManus, Peter Wallsten and Richard B. Schmitt
Times Staff Writers
June 30, 2006 [supremes ruling in hamdun] [implications] [prognostications concerning next steps, so on] [**********] [ditto]
WASHINGTON — Since the 2001 terrorist attacks, President Bush has asserted almost unlimited authority to define the rules of what he calls "a different kind of war." Faced with the Supreme Court's rejection of administration policies on "enemy combatants" Thursday, the White House signaled that it had no intention of backing down. [******]

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-assess30jun30,0,330367.story?coll=la-home-headlines
From the Los Angeles Times
NEWS ANALYSIS
GOP Has a Fix in Mind, but It May Not Be Easy
By Doyle McManus, Peter Wallsten and Richard B. Schmitt
Times Staff Writers
June 30, 2006 [supremes ruling in hamdun] [implications] [prognostications concerning next steps, so on] [**********] [ditto]
WASHINGTON — Since the 2001 terrorist attacks, President Bush has asserted almost unlimited authority to define the rules of what he calls "a different kind of war." Faced with the Supreme Court's rejection of administration policies on "enemy combatants" Thursday, the White House signaled that it had no intention of backing down. [******]

Meeting the high court's objections required little more than having Congress put its stamp of approval on a system of military tribunals, the White House suggested. And some congressional Republicans quickly agreed.

"The Supreme Court did not require these people to be let go. They simply said, If you want to try them, Mr. President, you need to get Congress involved.' I agree," Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), a former military lawyer, told CNN. [******]

"Once we do that," he added, "I think this problem will be behind us."

He predicted hearings beginning as early as July, with a vote on a plan in September. [********]

Nonetheless, the court's ruling unquestionably rejected the president's assertion of executive power. And the result may be an election year debate on some of the most basic, and controversial, tenets of the Bush presidency, including its claims of unfettered authority and its approach to international agreements such as the Geneva Convention. [********]

In claiming broad latitude to act, Bush has relied on Congress' original authorization for conducting the war on terrorism. But the Supreme Court specifically said that act contained no explicit authorization to ignore existing laws on judicial procedure and hinted that it might take the same position on other assertions of executive authority on terrorism, potentially including spying on domestic communications and financial transactions.

The White House response was essentially to move the issue into the political arena by announcing it would seek congressional approval for its approach to prosecuting foreign terrorism suspects.

Thus far, the GOP-dominated House and Senate have given Bush almost everything he has asked for when it comes to fighting the U.S.-declared war on terrorism.

Republican strategists are likely to see huge advantages in moving such an issue into the realm of political debate before November's congressional elections. In that sense, Thursday's decision could be a political plus for the GOP.

White House political strategist Karl Rove has said repeatedly that the party's fall campaign will hammer the message that Democrats operate with a "pre-9/11" worldview, and Republicans will attempt to paint Democrats critical of military tribunals as being soft on terrorism. [******]

Still, whatever the immediate political implications, moving concrete legislation through Congress will add a major item to the White House agenda, and some Republicans, especially in the Senate, have grown increasingly wary of the administration's efforts to enhance executive power.

Moreover, whatever emerges must satisfy the Supreme Court.

"The overriding debate has been whether we are in a situation where the executive needs to have unfettered power, or do basic checks and balances still apply," said Harold Koh, dean of the Yale Law School. "The court said today that checks and balances still apply, and on this issue you have clearly overreached."

It was not immediately clear exactly how the White House and its allies in Congress would proceed. But Tony Snow, the White House spokesman, said Thursday that Bush remained determined to assert his authority and, even with the court ruling, there was no "implicit curtailment of his ability to fight the war on terror."

Though Snow acknowledged that the ruling reflected a "disagreement" between the judicial and executive branches, he stood by the administration's initial logic as an "appropriate way to bring to justice people who are not enemy combatants in the traditional sense."

"It was the interpretation of the administration that military commissions were historically and legally an appropriate way to proceed," he said. "What the Supreme Court has not said is you can't try [terrorism suspects]; it hasn't said you can't bring them to justice. I think now it's a question of how properly to do that. So it doesn't tie his hands.

"What it says is that the Supreme Court disagrees with the method that has been designed right now by the administration, and it says, 'We want you to go back and consult with Congress,' " Snow said.

Even as administration critics hailed the court ruling as evidence of Bush's continuing "overreach" in his pursuit of the war on terrorism, the White House insisted the combatants' case would not affect other tactics enacted without congressional oversight such as warrantless surveillance of certain phone calls, e-mails and bank transactions.

"You're talking apples and oranges here," Snow said.

Nor was the White House retreating from its broader goal of strengthening the executive branch even beyond matters of war, a goal that Vice President Dick Cheney has outlined from the early days of Bush's presidency.

Cheney, along with his chief of staff, David S. Addington, has devoted much of his time to regaining presidential powers that the vice president has said have deteriorated too far in the decades after the Watergate scandal.

"I don't see how anybody inside the White House could look at the broadest range of decisions that have been made and say anything other than that they've gained at least 85 yards down the field," said Norman J. Ornstein, an American Enterprise Institute scholar on executive-legislative relations.

"If you gain 85 yards and suffer one sack," he added, "you're still winning the game."

Douglas Kmiec, a Pepperdine University law professor, picked up Ornstein's football analogy, referring to the ruling as a "forced fumble" but saying that where the ball might go remained unclear.

"I don't think that means he's going to change the substance of the process much," Kmiec said of Bush. "That puts the ball that's loose in Congress' hands. Will they go in the same direction? There will be an enormous temptation to go home in the summer and put off action." [********]

Administration officials suggested Thursday that some form of courts-martial might suffice for trying terrorism suspects. And Sen. Graham said in an interview that he was "optimistic that the White House is going to be reasonable, will embrace the court decision and come to Congress to be a willing partner in creating a military commission that will protect our country and be fair." [******]
(INFOBOX BELOW)
By the numbers
450 prisoners now held at Guantanamo Bay.
10 charged with conspiring with Al Qaeda.
287 released or transferred to other governments.
115 deemed eligible for release or transfer.
65 deemed likely to be prosecuted if the court had ruled differently. [******] [now probably shall be deemed eligible for release or transfer] [*******]
Source: Times staff

Ruling Leaves Uncertainty at Guantánamo

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/washington/30gitmo.html
June 30, 2006
Ruling Leaves Uncertainty at Guantánamo
By TIM GOLDEN [supremes ruling in hamdun] [implications] [prognostications concerning next steps, so on] [**********] [ditto]
GUANTÁNAMO BAY, Cuba, June 29 — As the Supreme Court prepared to rule on the Bush administration's plan to try terror suspects before special military tribunals here, the commander of Guantánamo's military detention center was asked what impact the court's decision might have on its operations.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/washington/30gitmo.html
June 30, 2006
Ruling Leaves Uncertainty at Guantánamo
By TIM GOLDEN [supremes ruling in hamdun] [implications] [prognostications concerning next steps, so on] [**********] [ditto]
GUANTÁNAMO BAY, Cuba, June 29 — As the Supreme Court prepared to rule on the Bush administration's plan to try terror suspects before special military tribunals here, the commander of Guantánamo's military detention center was asked what impact the court's decision might have on its operations.
"If they rule against the government, I don't see how that is going to affect us," the commander, Rear Adm. Harry B. Harris, said Tuesday evening as he sat in a conference room in his headquarters. "From my perspective, I think the direct impact will be negligible."
The Defense Department repeated that view on Thursday, asserting that the court's sweeping ruling against the tribunals did not undermine the government's argument that it can hold foreign suspects indefinitely and without charge, as "enemy combatants" in its declared war on terror.
Privately, though, some administration officials involved in detention policy — along with many critics of that policy — were skeptical that Guantánamo could or would go about its business as before. "It appears to be about as broad a holding as you could imagine," said one administration lawyer, who insisted on anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the ruling. "It's very broad, it's very significant, and it's a slam."
For the moment, the effect of the court's ruling on the detention and interrogation operations at Guantánamo is likely to be as political as it is practical.
Construction crews went to work Thursday morning as usual at Camp Six, putting final touches on a hulking, $24 million concrete structure that is to be the permanent, medium-security facility for terror detainees.
President Bush and other officials have said repeatedly of late that they have yet to find a better place to incarcerate the dangerous men still held at Guantánamo, and there is no indication that the administration has seriously begun to widen its consideration of those possibilities.
But administration officials said Thursday that they would have no choice but to start thinking anew about the problem.
Over the last six weeks, the military custodians at Guantánamo have been rocked by desperate protests — the suicides of three detainees who hanged themselves from the steel-mesh walls of their small cells, the intentional drug overdoses of at least two other prisoners, and a riot against guards in a showcase camp for the most compliant detainees. Those events, in turn, set off new waves of criticism of the camp from foreign governments, legal associations and human rights groups.
Thursday, in rejecting the administration's elaborate plan to try Guantánamo detainees by military commission, as the tribunals are called, the court struck at one of the first ramparts the administration built to defend itself against criticism that Guantánamo was a "black hole" in which men declared to be enemies of the United States were stripped of rights guaranteed by the Constitution.
"It strengthens calls for solving 'the Guantánamo problem,' " the administration lawyer said. "Not because it deals with the detention issue directly, but because it removes the argument that soon there would be more legal process there."
While officials at the White House counsel's office, the Justice Department and the Pentagon begin considering how to seek Congressional authorization for a new version of military commissions or perhaps to prosecute terror suspects in military courts-martial, Defense Department officials said Guantánamo would operate much as before.
"Guantánamo serves as an important detention and intelligence facility," said a senior Pentagon spokesman, Bryan Whitman. "These are dangerous people. Many have vowed to go back to the battlefield if released. It enables us to thwart future attacks."
Only 10 of the approximately 450 detainees now held at Guantánamo have been formally charged before the military commissions. Officials declined to say whether those detainees — who include Salim Ahmed Hamdan, a onetime driver for Osama bin Laden who was the plaintiff in the Supreme Court case — might now be moved back out of the maximum-security cells in which they have been held since pretrial hearings for the commissions began to accelerate in early April.
The court's ruling is expected to jump-start litigation in more than 100 district court cases on behalf of the detainees, and could also allow for new cases, officials and lawyers for the detainees said. Those cases cover a wide range of issues dealing with the prisoners' treatment, including their medical attention and how they are interrogated.
"What the decision says is that the government cannot hold these prisoners lawlessly," said Joseph Margulies, a lawyer with the MacArthur Justice Center in Chicago who has defended one of the military commission defendants and is the author of a new book, "Guantánamo and the Abuse of Presidential Power."
"It is now incumbent on the government to come into federal court and demonstrate the lawfulness of the detentions," Mr. Margulies said. "It cannot hold people in conditions that are cruel and degrading. It cannot apply coercive interrogation techniques."
Military and intelligence officials at Guantánamo said they had stopped using such interrogation methods, and had taken many steps over the last two years to treat the detainees more humanely. Now, however, issues like how detainees on hunger strikes should be force-fed will again be litigated.
Officials said the ruling was also likely to influence a long-running debate within the administration over whether to explicitly apply a minimum standard from the Geneva Conventions to the treatment of all military detainees.
The debate has focused on a proposed Pentagon directive that would establish guidelines for interrogating detainees as well as on a draft field manual for Army interrogators.
Some officials, including lawyers in the military services and the State Department, have advocated drawing the language of those documents directly from Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, which sets out that minimum standard for the treatment of captured fighters and others in conflicts that do not involve nation states.
Other officials, led by Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff, David S. Addington, have opposed any direct reference to Article 3. These officials argued in part that Mr. Bush rejected that standard when he determined in 2002 that terror detainees should be treated humanely even though the conventions did not apply to the conflict in which they were involved, officials familiar with the debate said.
In his majority opinion, Justice John Paul Stevens said that the United States was legally bound by Common Article 3, as the provision is known (it is common to all four Geneva Conventions). He said the article "affords some minimal protection" to detainees even when the forces they represent are not signatories to the conventions themselves.
The court's ruling was also a setback to the administration's litigation strategy in cases involving the detention and prosecution of terror suspects. That strategy, according to current and former officials, has been to press for the most expansive interpretation of executive power — and the toughest military commissions possible — and to back down only if the courts required it.
Federal courts previously ruled in the administration's favor in several important decisions involving Guantánamo. And despite the qualms of some legislators, the Congress made no significant effort to intervene in detention policy until Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona, began his successful push last summer to prohibit the cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment of terror detainees held by the military.
However the policies on prisoner treatment at Guantánamo are ultimately resolved, the administration has already quickened the pace of its efforts to repatriate as many of the detainees as possible. Some 300 have been sent home, either for continued detention by their own governments or to be released outright.
In Washington on Thursday, President Bush repeated that he hoped to find "a way to return people from Guantánamo to their home countries." He added, however, that some of the detainees "need to be tried in our courts."
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Justices, 5-3, Broadly Reject Bush Plan to Try Detainees

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/washington/30hamdan.html
June 30, 2006
Justices, 5-3, Broadly Reject Bush Plan to Try Detainees
By LINDA GREENHOUSE [supremes ruling in hamdun] [implications] [prognostications concerning next steps, so on] [**********] [ditto]
WASHINGTON, June 29 — The Supreme Court on Thursday repudiated the Bush administration's plan to put Guantánamo detainees on trial before military commissions, ruling broadly that the commissions were unauthorized by federal statute and violated international law.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/washington/30hamdan.html
June 30, 2006
Justices, 5-3, Broadly Reject Bush Plan to Try Detainees
By LINDA GREENHOUSE [supremes ruling in hamdun] [implications] [prognostications concerning next steps, so on] [**********] [ditto]
WASHINGTON, June 29 — The Supreme Court on Thursday repudiated the Bush administration's plan to put Guantánamo detainees on trial before military commissions, ruling broadly that the commissions were unauthorized by federal statute and violated international law.
"The executive is bound to comply with the rule of law that prevails in this jurisdiction," Justice John Paul Stevens, writing for the 5-to-3 majority, said at the end of a 73-page opinion that in sober tones shredded each of the administration's arguments, including the assertion that Congress had stripped the court of jurisdiction to decide the case.
A principal flaw the court found in the commissions was that the president had established them without Congressional authorization.
The decision was such a sweeping and categorical defeat for the administration that it left human rights lawyers who have pressed this and other cases on behalf of Guantánamo detainees almost speechless with surprise and delight, using words like "fantastic," "amazing" and "remarkable."
Michael Ratner, president of the Center for Constitutional Rights, a public interest law firm in New York that represents hundreds of detainees, said, "It doesn't get any better."
President Bush said he planned to work with Congress to "find a way forward," and there were signs of bipartisan interest on Capitol Hill in devising legislation that would authorize revamped commissions intended to withstand judicial scrutiny.
The ruling marked the most significant setback yet for the administration's broad expansions of presidential power.
The courtroom was, surprisingly, not full, but among those in attendance there was no doubt they were witnessing a historic event, a defining moment in the ever-shifting balance of power among branches of government that ranked with the court's order to President Richard M. Nixon in 1974 to turn over the Watergate tapes, or with the court's rejection of President Harry S. Truman's seizing of the nation's steel mills, a 1952 landmark decision from which Justice Anthony M. Kennedy quoted at length.
Senator Arlen Specter, Republican of Pennsylvania and chairman of the Judiciary Committee, introduced a bill immediately and said his committee would hold a hearing on July 11, as soon as Congress returned from the July 4 recess. Mr. Specter said the administration had resisted his effort to propose similar legislation as early as 2002.
Two Republican senators, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Jon Kyl of Arizona, said in a joint statement that they were "disappointed" but that "we believe the problems cited by the court can and should be fixed."
"Working together, Congress and the administration can draft a fair, suitable and constitutionally permissible tribunal statute," they added.
Both overseas and in the United States, critics of the administration's detention policies praised the decision and urged Mr. Bush to take it as an occasion to shut down the Guantánamo prison camp in Cuba.
"The ruling destroys one of the key pillars of the Guantánamo system," said Gerald Staberock, a director of the International Commission of Jurists in Geneva. "Guantánamo was built on the idea that prisoners there have limited rights. There is no longer that legal black hole."
The majority opinion by Justice Stevens and a concurring opinion by Justice Kennedy, who also signed most of Justice Stevens's opinion, indicated that finding a legislative solution would not necessarily be easy. In an important part of the ruling, the court held that a provision of the Geneva Conventions known as Common Article 3 applies to the Guantánamo detainees and is enforceable in federal court for their protection.
The provision requires humane treatment of captured combatants and prohibits trials except by "a regularly constituted court affording all the judicial guarantees which are recognized as indispensable by civilized people."
The opinion made it clear that while this provision does not necessarily require the full range of protections of a civilian court or a military court-martial, it does require observance of protections for defendants that are missing from the rules the administration has issued for military commissions. The flaws the court cited were the failure to guarantee the defendant the right to attend the trial and the prosecution's ability under the rules to introduce hearsay evidence, unsworn testimony, and evidence obtained through coercion.
Justice Stevens said the historical origin of military commissions was in their use as a "tribunal of necessity" under wartime conditions. "Exigency lent the commission its legitimacy," he said, "but did not further justify the wholesale jettisoning of procedural protections."
The majority opinion was joined by Justices David H. Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer, who wrote a concurring opinion focusing on the role of Congress. "The court's conclusion ultimately rests upon a single ground: Congress has not issued the executive a blank check," Justice Breyer said.
The dissenters were Justices Clarence Thomas, Antonin Scalia and Samuel A. Alito Jr. Each wrote a dissenting opinion. [*******]
Justice Scalia focused on the jurisdictional issue, arguing that Congress had stripped the court of jurisdiction to proceed with this case, Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, No. 05-184, when it passed the Detainee Treatment Act last December and provided that "no court, justice, or judge" had jurisdiction to hear habeas corpus petitions filed by detainees at Guantánamo Bay. [*******]
The question was whether that withdrawal of jurisdiction applied to pending cases. The majority held that it did not.
Justice Thomas's dissent addressed the substance of the court's conclusions. In a part of his opinion that Justices Scalia and Alito also signed, he called the decision "untenable" and "dangerous." [****]He said "those justices who today disregard the commander in chief's wartime decisions" had last week been willing to defer to the judgment of the Army Corps of Engineers in a Clean Water Act case. "It goes without saying that there is much more at stake here than storm drains," [****]he said.
Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. did not take part in the case. Last July, four days before Mr. Bush nominated him to the Supreme Court, he was one of the members of a three-judge panel of the federal appeals court here that ruled for the administration in the case.
In the courtroom on Thursday, the chief justice sat silently in his center chair as Justice Stevens, sitting to his immediate right as the senior associate justice, read from the majority opinion. It made for a striking tableau on the final day of the first term of the Roberts court: the young chief justice, observing his work of just a year earlier taken apart point by point by the tenacious 86-year-old Justice Stevens, winner of a Bronze Star for his service as a Navy officer in World War II. [********]
The decision came in an appeal brought on behalf of Salim Ahmed Hamdan, a Yemeni who was captured in Afghanistan in November 2001 and taken to Guantánamo in June 2002. According to the government, Mr. Hamdan was a driver and bodyguard for Osama bin Laden. In July 2003, he and five others were to be the first to face trial by military commission. But it was not until the next year that he was formally charged with a crime, conspiracy.
The commission proceeding began but was interrupted when the federal district court here ruled in November 2004 that the commission was invalid. This was the ruling the federal appeals court, with Judge Roberts participating, overturned.
Lt. Cmdr. Charles Swift, Mr. Hamdan’s Navy lawyer, told The Associated Press that he had informed his client about the ruling by telephone. “I think he was awe-struck that the court would rule for him, and give a little man like him an equal chance,” Commander Swift said. “Where he’s from, that is not true.” [**********]
The decision contained unwelcome implications, from the administration's point of view, for other legal battles, some with equal or greater importance than the fate of the military commissions.
For example, in finding that the federal courts still have jurisdiction to hear cases filed before this year by detainees at Guantánamo Bay, the justices put back on track for decision a dozen cases in the lower courts here that challenge basic rules and procedures governing life for the hundreds of people confined at the United States naval base there.
In ruling that the Congressional "authorization for the use of military force," passed in the days immediately after the Sept. 11 attacks, cannot be interpreted to legitimize the military commissions, the ruling poses a direct challenge to the administration's legal justification for its secret wiretapping program.
Representative Adam Schiff, a California Democrat who has also introduced a bill with procedures for trying the Guantánamo detainees, said the court's refusal to give an open-ended ruling to the force resolution meant that the resolution could not be viewed as authorizing the National Security Agency's domestic wiretapping.
Perhaps most significantly, in ruling that Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions applies to the Guantánamo detainees, the court rejected the administration's view that the article does not cover followers of Al Qaeda. The decision potentially opened the door to challenges, by those held by the United States anywhere in the world, to treatment that could be regarded under the provision as inhumane.
Justice Stevens said that because the charge against Mr. Hamdan, conspiracy, was not a violation of the law of war, it could not be the basis for a trial before a military panel.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

A Governing Philosophy Rebuffed

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062902300.html
A Governing Philosophy Rebuffed
Ruling Emphasizes Constitutional Boundaries
By Peter Baker and Michael Abramowitz
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, June 30, 2006; A01 [supremes ruling in hamdun] [implications] [prognostications concerning next steps, so on] [**********] [ditto]
For five years, President Bush waged war as he saw fit. If intelligence officers needed to eavesdrop on overseas telephone calls without warrants, he authorized it. If the military wanted to hold terrorism suspects without trial, he let it. [*****]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062902300.html
A Governing Philosophy Rebuffed
Ruling Emphasizes Constitutional Boundaries
By Peter Baker and Michael Abramowitz
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, June 30, 2006; A01 [supremes ruling in hamdun] [implications] [prognostications concerning next steps, so on] [**********] [ditto]
For five years, President Bush waged war as he saw fit. If intelligence officers needed to eavesdrop on overseas telephone calls without warrants, he authorized it. If the military wanted to hold terrorism suspects without trial, he let it. [*****]
Now the Supreme Court has struck at the core of his presidency and dismissed the notion that the president alone can determine how to defend the country. In rejecting Bush's military tribunals for terrorism suspects, the high court ruled that even a wartime commander in chief must govern within constitutional confines significantly tighter than this president has believed appropriate. [*******]
For many in Washington, the decision echoed not simply as a matter of law but as a rebuke of a governing philosophy of a leader who at repeated turns has operated on the principle that it is better to act than to ask permission. This ethos is why many supporters find Bush an inspiring leader, and why many critics in this country and abroad react so viscerally against him. [******]
At a political level, the decision carries immediate ramifications. It provides fodder to critics who turned Guantanamo Bay into a metaphor for an administration run amok. Now lawmakers may have to figure out how much due process is enough for suspected terrorists, hardly the sort of issue many would be eager to engage in during the months before an election.
That sort of back-and-forth process is just what Bush has usually tried to avoid as he set about to prosecute an unconventional war against an elusive enemy after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. He asserted that in this new era, a president's inherent constitutional authority was all that was needed. Lawmakers and judges largely deferred to him, with occasional exceptions, such as the Supreme Court two years ago when it limited the administration's ability to detain suspects indefinitely. [*******]
"There is a strain of legal reasoning in this administration that believes in a time of war the other two branches have a diminished role or no role," Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.), who has resisted the administration's philosophy, said in an interview. "It's sincere, it's heartfelt, but after today, it's wrong." [*******]
Bruce Fein, an official in the Reagan administration, said the ruling restores balance in government. “What this decision says is, ‘No, Mr. President, you can be bound by treaties and statutes,’ “ he said. “ ‘If you need to have these changed, you can go to Congress.’ This idea of a coronated president instead of an inaugurated president has been dealt a sharp rebuke.” [********]
The administration's allies, however, were disturbed that Bush's hands now may be tied by the ruling, written by Justice John Paul Stevens. "Stevens's opinion was quite shocking in its lack of discussion of the president's independent authority," said Andrew McBride, a former Justice Department official who wrote a brief supporting the administration on behalf of former attorneys general and military lawyers.
Bush made no such protest himself yesterday, caught by surprise at the decision. He was meeting with visiting Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi in the Oval Office and was about to head out for a news conference when counselor Dan Bartlett and press secretary Tony Snow informed him of the ruling. White House counsel Harriet Miers then arrived and gave Bush what he called a "drive-by briefing," [****]but he gave little reaction when he met with reporters.
Snow later disagreed that the ruling undercut Bush's authority. "I don't think it weakens the president's hand, and it certainly doesn't change the way in which we move as aggressively as possible to try to cut off terrorists before they can strike again," [*****]he said.
Bush came to office intent on expanding executive power even before Sept. 11, 2001, encouraged in particular by Vice President Cheney, who has long been convinced that presidential authority was improperly diminished after Watergate.
The decision to create military commissions to try terrorism suspects, instead of using civilian courts or courts-martial, represented one of the first steps by the administration after the al-Qaeda attacks on New York and Washington to create a new legal architecture for handling terrorism cases.
As described by the New Yorker this week, the executive order establishing military commissions was issued without consultations with then-Secretary of State Colin L. Powell or then-national security adviser Condoleezza Rice after a concerted push by Cheney's legal adviser, David S. Addington, now his chief of staff. [see jmayer-the-hidden-power. . .doc] [in 2006]
"Rather than push so many extreme arguments about the president's commander-in-chief powers, the Bush administration would have been better served to work something out with Congress sooner rather than later -- I mean 2002, rather than 2006," said A. John Radsan, a former CIA lawyer who now teaches at William Mitchell College of Law.
The administration relied on the same expansive view of its power in detaining U.S. citizens indefinitely as enemy combatants, denying prisoners access to lawyers or courts, rejecting the applicability of the Geneva Conventions in some instances, employing harsh interrogation techniques and establishing secret CIA prisons for terrorism suspects in foreign countries. Only its telephone and e-mail surveillance program, which is operated by the National Security Agency, stirred much protest in Congress.
The administration often fended off criticism by arguing that the commander in chief should not be second-guessed. "The Bush administration has been very successful in defining the debate as one of patriotism or cowardice," said Andrew Rudalevige, author of "The New Imperial Presidency" and a Dickinson College professor. "And this is not about that. This is about whether in fighting the war we're true to our constitutional values."
In some ways, the ruling replicates a pattern in American history where presidents have acted aggressively in wartime, only to be reined in by courts or Congress. Even some Bush supporters said yesterday that it may be appropriate now to revisit decisions made ad hoc in a crisis atmosphere, when a president's natural instinct is to do whatever he thinks necessary to guard the nation against attack.
"That's what presidents do, and I say thank goodness for that," said George J. Terwilliger III, deputy attorney general under President George H.W. Bush. "But once you get past that point . . . both as a matter of law and a matter of culture, a more systemic approach to the use of authority is appropriate."
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

Court's Ruling Is Likely to Force Negotiations Over Presidential Power

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/washington/30assess.html
June 30, 2006
News Analysis
Court's Ruling Is Likely to Force Negotiations Over Presidential Power
By DAVID E. SANGER and SCOTT SHANE [supremes ruling in hamdun] [implications] [prognostications concerning next steps, so on] [**********]
WASHINGTON, June 29 — The Supreme Court's Guantánamo ruling on Thursday was the most significant setback yet for the Bush administration's contention that the Sept. 11 attacks and their aftermath have justified one of the broadest expansions of presidential power in American history. [*****]

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/washington/30assess.html
June 30, 2006
News Analysis
Court's Ruling Is Likely to Force Negotiations Over Presidential Power
By DAVID E. SANGER and SCOTT SHANE [supremes ruling in hamdun] [implications] [prognostications concerning next steps, so on] [**********]
WASHINGTON, June 29 — The Supreme Court's Guantánamo ruling on Thursday was the most significant setback yet for the Bush administration's contention that the Sept. 11 attacks and their aftermath have justified one of the broadest expansions of presidential power in American history. [*****]
President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney spent much of their first term bypassing Congress in the service of what they labeled a "different kind of war." Now they will almost certainly plunge into negotiations they previously spurned, over the extent of the president's powers, this time in the midst of a midterm election [****]in which Mr. Bush's wartime strategies and their consequences have emerged as a potent issue.
The ruling bolsters those in Congress who for months have been trying to force the White House into a retreat from its claims that Mr. Bush not only has the unilateral authority as commander in chief to determine how suspected terrorists are tried, but also to set the rules for domestic wiretapping, for interrogating prisoners and for pursuing a global fight against terror that many suspect could stretch for as long as the cold war did. [******]
What the court's 5-to-3 decision declared, in essence, was that Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney had overreached and must now either use the established rules of courts-martial or go back to Congress — this time with vastly diminished leverage — to win approval for the military commissions that Mr. Bush argues are the best way to keep the nation safe.
For Mr. Bush, this is not the first such setback. The court ruled two years ago that the giant prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, was not beyond the reach of American courts and that prisoners there had some minimal rights. [*]
Then, last year, came the overwhelming 90-to-9 vote in the Senate, over Mr. Cheney's strong objections, to ban "cruel, inhumane and degrading" treatment of prisoners. [**]That forced Mr. Bush, grudgingly, to reach an accord with Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona, on principles for interrogation, which are still being turned into rules.
As seen by Mr. Bush’s critics, the court has finally reined in an executive who used the Sept. 11 attacks as a justification — or an excuse — to tilt the balance of power decidedly toward the White House.
“This is a great triumph for the rule of law and the separation of powers,” said Bruce Ackerman, a professor of law and political science at Yale. “The administration will have to go back to Congress and talk in a much more discriminating fashion about what we need to do.” [*********]
Some allies of Mr. Bush reacted bitterly on Thursday, asserting that it was the court, rather than Mr. Bush, that had overreacted. [******]
"Nothing about the administration's solution was radical or even particularly aggressive," said Bradford A. Berenson, who served from 2001 to 2003 as associate White House counsel. "What is truly radical is the Supreme Court's willingness to bend to world opinion and undermine some of the most important foundations of American national security law in the middle of a war." [*******]
At least rhetorically, the administration is giving no ground about the reach of the president's powers. Just 10 days ago, speaking here in Washington, Mr. Cheney cited the responses to Watergate and the Vietnam War as examples of where he thought Congress had "begun to encroach upon the power and responsibilities of the president," and said he had come to the White House with the view that "it was important to go back and try to restore that balance."
Since taking office, Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney have largely tried to do so by fiat, sometimes with public declarations, sometimes with highly classified directives governing how suspects could be plucked from the battlefield or, in the case decided on Thursday, how they would be tried. [****] The president's tone on Thursday, during a news conference with Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi of Japan, suggested that he recognized he might now have to give ground. [******]
Mr. Bush said he would be taking "the findings" of the Supreme Court "very seriously." [*******]
"One thing I'm not going to do, though, is I'm not going to jeopardize the safety of the American people," he said. But then he backtracked a bit, saying he would "work with Congress" to give legal foundation to the system he had already put in place. [***] [previously offered but shunned by bush admin] [******]
To some degree, the court may have helped Mr. Bush out of a political predicament. He has repeatedly said he would like to close the detention center at Guantánamo, a recognition that the indefinite imprisonment of suspects without trial and the accusations that they have been mistreated were seriously undercutting American credibility abroad. But he set no schedule and said he was waiting for the court to rule. [********]
"The court really rescued the administration by taking it out of this quagmire it's been in," said Michael Greenberger, who teaches the law of counterterrorism at the University of Maryland law school.
Now Congress, with the court's encouragement, may help the president find a way forward. For Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, who said a legislative proposal on military commissions he sent to the White House 18 months ago "went nowhere," the ruling was a welcome restoration of the balance of power.
"The Supreme Court has set the rules of the road," Mr. Graham, a former military lawyer, said, "and the Congress and the president can drive to the destination together."
Supporters of the president emphasized that the question of how to balance suspects' rights against the need for intelligence on imminent attacks was always a daunting challenge, and that the ruling did not change that.
In fact, said Jack Goldsmith, who headed the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel in 2003 and 2004, the fact that no second attack has occurred on American soil is an achievement of the administration that is now complicating its political situation. [*******]
“The longer the president and the administration successfully prevent another attack,” Mr. Goldsmith said, “the more people think the threat has abated and the more they demand that the administration adhere to traditional civil liberties protections.” [**********]
In today's less panicky national mood, tough measures that few dared question as American forces first moved into Afghanistan, and then Iraq, are now the subject of nightly debate on cable television and of a small flotilla of court challenges.
But history suggests that this pendulum swing was inevitable. It took years, but history came to condemn the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II, and to question Lincoln's suspension of habeas corpus during the Civil War.
Sooner or later, that same reversal was bound to happen to Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney.
The question is how far it will swing back while they are still in office and while what Mr. Bush calls "the long war" continues around the globe. [****] [****]
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Did Hoekstra Begin Note to Negroponte With 'Dear John'?

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062901905.html
Did Hoekstra Begin Note to Negroponte With 'Dear John'?
Friday, June 30, 2006; A25 [govt] [HPSCI] [chairman Hoekstra] [letter to DNI Negroponte] [use nsc ms] [*************]
The chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, Rep. Peter Hoekstra (R-Mich.), yesterday wrote Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte to strongly complain about a background briefing for reporters on June 21 organized by Negroponte's staff. The conference call allowed reporters to question four intelligence officials on declassified key points of a study, produced by the Army's National Ground Intelligence Center (NGIC), on hazards to troops in Iraq of old chemical shells and rockets, about 500 of which had been discovered since 2004.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062901905.html
Did Hoekstra Begin Note to Negroponte With 'Dear John'?
Friday, June 30, 2006; A25 [govt] [HPSCI] [chairman Hoekstra] [letter to DNI Negroponte] [use nsc ms] [*************]
The chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, Rep. Peter Hoekstra (R-Mich.), yesterday wrote Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte to strongly complain about a background briefing for reporters on June 21 organized by Negroponte's staff. The conference call allowed reporters to question four intelligence officials on declassified key points of a study, produced by the Army's National Ground Intelligence Center (NGIC), on hazards to troops in Iraq of old chemical shells and rockets, about 500 of which had been discovered since 2004.
-- Walter Pincus
Some excerpts:
First, I am very disappointed by the inaccurate, incomplete, and occasionally misleading comments made by the briefers in two key instances: [*****]
? The briefers attempted to portray my requests to declassify the document as demanding that the document be released "in short order" within a 48 hour time frame, creating the impression that I pressured your office to conduct a hurried declassification review. [*****] This is false and you know it to be false. The document was first requested by Sen. Santorum from the U.S. Army on April 12. He subsequently made a personal request to you for the material on June 5. He received no response to either. . . . This lack of responsiveness by the Intelligence Community is what lead Sen. Santorum to seek my help in the first place. [********]
? The briefers mislead the journalists by stating that "The priority of the ISG [Iraqi Survey Group] was to look for post-Desert Storm munitions, newer stuff. It was not looking for older stuff and so this doesn't really bear on the issue." [****] This assertion is demonstrably false. . . .
Because this call was organized by your office, I assume that you authorized and were familiar with its content. I would appreciate an explanation and correction of these inaccurate and misleading assertions. [****]
Second, I am concerned . . . your office provided a transcript of the call to the committee with the names of the briefers removed. . . . You should be trying to stop anonymous discussion of classified information by persons unwilling to associate their names with their assertions rather than sanctioning and promoting it. . . . [********]
Third, I have additional concerns regarding classified matters that I will raise in a classified format. [******]
I look forward to your response.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

Fight Terror -- With Law

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062901775.html
Fight Terror -- With Law
By David Ignatius
Friday, June 30, 2006; A27
In the weeks after Sept. 11, 2001, the Bush administration secretly began constructing an emergency system to fight the war on terrorism. It asserted broad presidential power to conduct surveillance against American citizens, to harshly interrogate suspected terrorists in secret prisons, and to hold "enemy combatants" [*****]without charges or public trials.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062901775.html
Fight Terror -- With Law
By David Ignatius
Friday, June 30, 2006; A27
In the weeks after Sept. 11, 2001, the Bush administration secretly began constructing an emergency system to fight the war on terrorism. It asserted broad presidential power to conduct surveillance against American citizens, to harshly interrogate suspected terrorists in secret prisons, and to hold "enemy combatants" [*****]without charges or public trials.
The Supreme Court demolished a central pillar of that jury-rigged national security edifice yesterday. [****]In rejecting the administration's plans to try a suspected al-Qaeda member named Salim Ahmed Hamdan before a military tribunal, the court majority was emphatic: The administration's arguments were "unpersuasive," "inapposite," "unsound." Even if Hamdan was as dangerous as the administration claimed, Justice John Paul Stevens wrote for the majority, "the executive nevertheless must comply with the prevailing rule of law."
Justice Stephen Breyer, in a concurring opinion, spoke to the arrogant claims of presidential power made under the rubric of fighting terrorism. The court's conclusion in Hamdan, he wrote, "ultimately rests upon a single ground: Congress has not issued the Executive a 'blank check.' "
The Hamdan ruling should be a cause for celebration, at home and abroad, because it demonstrates that the self-correcting mechanisms of American democracy remain healthy.[****] Governments, as imperfect human institutions, make mistakes -- especially in the pressure cooker the Bush administration faced after Sept. 11. But thanks to checks and balances from the courts, Congress and, yes, the press, this administration's mistakes are being reversed.
We can now see that after Sept. 11 there was a grab for unlimited executive power, led by Vice President Cheney and his lawyer, David Addington. They intimidated or ignored critics within the White House and created a secret system unchecked by the other two branches of government. [***] The best summary I've seen of this power grab is a profile of Addington by Jane Mayer that appears in the current issue of the New Yorker magazine. [****] [see][jmayer-the-hidden-power-NewYorker6-30-06.doc][****] [in 2006 folder] Cheney and Addington steamrolled dissenters within the executive branch, ridiculing and ostracizing those who dared to question their claims of an unlimited executive. But as career intelligence officials feared at the time, the system they were creating was inherently unstable. [*****]
An early breach in this wall was Sen. John McCain's challenge of the administration's insistence that the CIA could use harsh interrogation methods that amounted to torture. McCain at first beat his head against the stone wall of Cheney and Addington, but as public pressure grew, President Bush transferred the issue to his national security adviser, Stephen Hadley, and a compromise was reached.
Then came the New York Times' revelation of the National Security Agency's program for warrantless surveillance of communications. NSA officials had been anxious about the program from the start, and some had urged an effort to draft new legal rules that would place the program squarely under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. But that, too, was rejected by Cheney and Addington, who argued that the president's warmaking powers in this area were absolute. The Times disclosed the program last December, and though it has been blasted ever since by conservatives, the revelation triggered a necessary public debate. As a result, the administration in recent weeks has quietly taken steps to bring the program within a general legal authorization under FISA. That's another defeat for Cheney and Addington and a victory for the rule of law.
The administration is indignant that the Times this month disclosed another secret anti-terrorist program, this one to identify terrorist financial flows using data obtained from the SWIFT money transfer system. SWIFT transfers have long been a target of U.S. foreign intelligence collection; [****]what the new program allowed, near as I can tell, was analysis of all SWIFT data, including that involving U.S. persons. This program may be a valuable and legal tool, but it needs public support. The Times' revelation may, paradoxically, have encouraged that process of legitimization, and in that sense it served a useful purpose.
Rep. Jane Harman (D-Calif.), who has been a leader in trying to balance aggressive intelligence with coherent legal rules, said yesterday that the Hamdan ruling helped clear away the "fog of law" in which the administration has been operating. In that sense, the case marked the end of the national security "state of emergency" that has prevailed for nearly five years. [********]
America is still a country at war, and to protect itself and its allies it must conduct secret anti-terrorist programs. These past few months have shown that such programs will be sustainable only if they have a firm legal foundation. The Supreme Court reminded the world yesterday that America is a nation of laws that insists on following rules, even as it brings killers to justice. Over time, that will be our most effective anti-terrorist weapon of all.
davidignatius@washpost.com
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

Amnesty for Insurgents? Yes.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062901790.html
Amnesty for Insurgents? Yes.
By Charles Krauthammer
Friday, June 30, 2006; A27 [oped] [drk: of course an amnesty shall be needed for insurgents to make –iraq work] [I have been thinking the same for two weeks now, since the issue first arose] [it shall doubtless be controversial in the extreme but of course an amnesty shall have to include those who believed they were defending their homeland form a foreign invader—even when said foreign invader did them the large favor of overthrowing a dictatorial regime] [**********] [though I don’t often agree with him, chas has it about right today] [***********]
We had two political objectives in going into Iraq: [*] deposing Saddam Hussein and [**] replacing his regime with a democratic government unthreatening to the region and strategically friendly to the United States. The first objective proved far more easy to achieve than anticipated. The second has proved far more difficult than anticipated. [*****] [to put it midly]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062901790.html
Amnesty for Insurgents? Yes.
By Charles Krauthammer
Friday, June 30, 2006; A27 [oped] [drk: of course an amnesty shall be needed for insurgents to make –iraq work] [I have been thinking the same for two weeks now, since the issue first arose] [it shall doubtless be controversial in the extreme but of course an amnesty shall have to include those who believed they were defending their homeland form a foreign invader—even when said foreign invader did them the large favor of overthrowing a dictatorial regime] [**********] [though I don’t often agree with him, chas has it about right today] [***********]
We had two political objectives in going into Iraq: [*] deposing Saddam Hussein and [**] replacing his regime with a democratic government unthreatening to the region and strategically friendly to the United States. The first objective proved far more easy to achieve than anticipated. The second has proved far more difficult than anticipated. [*****] [to put it midly]
The most serious misconception had nothing to do with troop levels or whether to disband an army that had already disbanded itself. It had to do with gauging Sunni intentions. Decades of iron rule over the Shiites and Kurds had left the Sunnis militantly unreconciled to any other political order. [******]
Moreover, the melting away of the Baathist regime from Baghdad gave the Sunni resistance weaponry, discipline and organizational know-how of a high order -- far higher, for example, than the Shiites and Kurds were able to muster a decade earlier when they rose up against Hussein's regime, only to be crushed.
Perhaps the current Sunni insurgency could have been defeated by an overwhelming display of American force with a huge number of troops and a scorched-earth counterinsurgency. But that could well have resulted in a Pyrrhic and very temporary victory, increasing Sunni bitterness and resistance that would inevitably return as we drew down our forces. After all, we were never going to keep a huge land army in the desert forever. [*****]
For better or worse, we chose occupation lite. [****]The insurgency continues, and it is not going to be defeated militarily. But that does not mean we lose. Insurgencies can be undone by being co-opted. And that is precisely the strategy of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Given that his life is literally on the line in making such judgments, one should give his view some weight. [**********]
He intends to wean away elements of the insurgency by giving them a stake in the new Iraqi order. These Sunni elements -- unreconciled tribal leaders and guerrilla factions -- may well decide that with neither side having very good prospects of complete victory, accepting a place and some power in the new Iraq is a better alternative than perpetual war. [**********]
The Bush administration is firmly behind this policy. And who is sniping at it from the sidelines? Democratic senators, fresh from having voted for troop withdrawal rather than victory as our objective in Iraq, led the charge to denounce any sort of amnesty for insurgents who had killed Americans. [demogogery here: GOP senators have been saying exactly the same] [Frist, Hatert, the leadership] [*******]
Apart from the hypocrisy, there is the bizarre logic: Is the best way to honor the sacrifice of those who have died in Iraq to decree an impotent, completely hypothetical policy of retribution? (Who, after all, is going to bell the cat?) Or is it to create conditions for precisely the kind of Iraq -- self-governing and internally reconciled -- that these courageous soldiers were fighting for? [*************]
Our objective in any war is not revenge but success. [*******]Confederate soldiers who swore allegiance to the United States were pardoned after the Civil War, even those who had killed Union soldiers. We gave amnesty to legions of Japanese and Germans who'd killed thousands of Americans in World War II.
And those amnesties were granted after total victory. In conflicts in which there is no unconditional surrender -- civil strife that ends far more ambiguously, as in El Salvador and Chile, for example -- amnesty and reconciliation are the essential elements for the establishment of a stable, democratic peace.
In Iraq, amnesty will necessarily be part of any co-optation strategy in which insurgents lay down their arms. And it would not apply to the foreign jihadists, who, unlike the Sunni insurgents who would join the new Iraq, dream of an Islamic state built on the ruins of the current order. There is nothing to discuss with such people. The only way to defeat them is to kill them, as we did Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. [presicely so] [*****************]
But killing them requires depriving them of their sanctuary. Reconciliation-cum-amnesty gets disaffected Iraqi Sunni tribes to come over to the government's side, drying up the sea in which the jihadists swim. [******]After all, we found Zarqawi in heavily Sunni territory by means of intelligence given to us by local Iraqis.
Protests in America over the amnesty suggestion have caused both the administration and the Maliki government to backtrack. But don't believe it. Amnesty will be an essential element in any reconciliation policy. Which, in turn, is the only route to victory -- defined today just as it was on the first day of the war: leaving behind a self-sustaining post-Hussein government, both democratic and friendly to our interests. It is attainable. The posturing over amnesty can only make it more difficult.
letters@charleskrauthammer.com
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

An Alert Press

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/28/AR2006062801954.html
An Alert Press
Oversight of the government's national security policies is needed now more than ever.
Thursday, June 29, 2006; A26 [editorial: the media’s role in safeguarding us civil liberties as us makes national security policy in wartime] [*************] [use nsc ms]
THE DECISION on whether to publish information that government officials assert would damage national security is one of the gravest choices a newspaper can face. There may be times when editors get it wrong, either printing material that proves harmful or withholding information that should have come to light. But these are risks that the Constitution contemplated and that the Framers were persuaded were worth tolerating to ensure a free and vigorous press.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/28/AR2006062801954.html
An Alert Press
Oversight of the government's national security policies is needed now more than ever.
Thursday, June 29, 2006; A26 [editorial: the media’s role in safeguarding us civil liberties as us makes national security policy in wartime] [*************] [use nsc ms]
THE DECISION on whether to publish information that government officials assert would damage national security is one of the gravest choices a newspaper can face. There may be times when editors get it wrong, either printing material that proves harmful or withholding information that should have come to light. But these are risks that the Constitution contemplated and that the Framers were persuaded were worth tolerating to ensure a free and vigorous press.
Justice Potter Stewart stated this trade-off well in a concurring opinion in the Pentagon Papers case 35 years ago. "In the absence of the governmental checks and balances present in other areas of our national life, the only effective restraint upon executive policy and power in the areas of national defense and international affairs may lie in an enlightened citizenry -- in an informed and critical public opinion which alone can here protect the values of democratic government," [*****]he wrote. "For this reason, it is perhaps here that a press that is alert, aware, and free most vitally serves the basic purpose of the First Amendment. For, without an informed and free press, there cannot be an enlightened people." [*************]
The wisdom and perspective of Justice Stewart have been conspicuously lacking in the recent uproar over reports about secret government programs. The latest and most vituperative yet involves the decision by the New York Times and other newspapers to publish stories detailing the administration's examination of private banking records. We recognize that this was a controversial choice. But that does not excuse the politicians who have responded with press-bashing that scores political points at the expense of constitutional values.
Rep. Peter T. King (R-N.Y.) offered a prime example of this on Fox News on Sunday when he called for criminal prosecution of reporters, editors and the publisher at the New York Times. [*****]”The time has come for the American people to realize and the New York Times to realize we’re at war and they can’t be just on their own deciding what to declassify, what to release,” he said.
Mr. King isn’t alone in misunderstanding the critical role of an independent and aggressive press in a free society. Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.) said the paper not only should have withheld the information but should have “worked in cooperation with those authorities in our government to make sure that those who leaked were prosecuted.” Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.), whose chamber is to take up a resolution condemning the story, said, “This is not news; this is something that has been classified, something that is top secret.” [************]
The reactions of President Bush and, even more, Vice President Cheney have been only slightly less chilling. [*******]Mr. Cheney assailed news organizations who "take it upon themselves to disclose vital national security programs, thereby making it more difficult for us to prevent future attacks against the American people."
All administrations jealously guard secrets, often for important reasons. But this administration, more than any since the one that prosecuted the Pentagon Papers case, has resisted disclosure and effective oversight, whether by Congress or the press. This across-the-board aversion to scrutiny makes it all the more difficult for responsible media organizations to separate the legitimate claims of national security from the overblown.
Those who complain about disclosures assert that the war on terrorism has changed the calculus of risk. They would prefer a media meekly obeying official demands for secrecy. But in the end, as Justice Stewart understood, the nation stands to benefit far more than it could lose from a press that is "alert, aware and free."[*******]
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

A Victory for the Rule of Law

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/opinion/30fri1.html
June 30, 2006
Editorial
A Victory for the Rule of Law
[editorial] [court ruling in hamdun] [predictably gloating a bit] [*********]
The Supreme Court's decision striking down the military tribunals set up to try the detainees being held in Guantánamo Bay is far more than a narrow ruling on the issue of military courts. It is an important and welcome reaffirmation that even in times of war, the law is what the Constitution, the statute books and the Geneva Conventions say it is — not what the president wants it to be. [****************]

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/opinion/30fri1.html
June 30, 2006
Editorial
A Victory for the Rule of Law
[editorial] [court ruling in hamdun] [predictably gloating a bit] [*********]
The Supreme Court's decision striking down the military tribunals set up to try the detainees being held in Guantánamo Bay is far more than a narrow ruling on the issue of military courts. It is an important and welcome reaffirmation that even in times of war, the law is what the Constitution, the statute books and the Geneva Conventions say it is — not what the president wants it to be. [****************]
Salim Ahmed Hamdan, a Yemeni being held in Guantánamo, has been charged with conspiring to help Al Qaeda. [****] The Bush administration has contended that he and the other prisoners there are not covered either by Congressional laws governing military trials or by the Geneva Conventions on treatment of prisoners of war. Instead, Mr. Hamdan was put on trial before a military tribunal where defendants can be excluded from the proceedings and convicted based on evidence kept secret from them and their lawyers. [*******]Prosecutors can also rely on hearsay, coerced testimony and unsworn statements.
The Supreme Court held that these rules violate the standards Congress set in the Uniform Code of Military Justice, which requires tribunals to offer the same protections, whenever practicable, as other military trials. It also ruled that the tribunals fall short of the kind of trial required by the Geneva Conventions. It rejected the administration's claim that these venerable international standards cannot be invoked in an American court. [************]
The Bush administration could go to Congress and ask for a special law that allowed it to create a unique system of justice for Guantánamo detainees. That is an argument for another day. The message of this ruling is that the executive branch cannot continue in its remarkable insistence that because there is a war on terror, it no longer needs to follow established procedures that would subject it to scrutiny by another branch of government.[****] The justices rejected the administration's constant refrain — made in everything from its "enemy combatant" policies to its defense of the National Security Agency's domestic spying — that the authority Congress granted the president to use force after Sept. 11, the exigencies of wartime, or simply the inherent powers of the presidency allow President Bush to trample on existing laws as he sees fit. [*********]
The key to the decision was the court's swing justice, Anthony Kennedy. He provided the fifth vote for the majority, and wrote a separate opinion that eloquently distilled the key principles: that "respect for laws" duly passed by Congress and signed into law by the president is particularly necessary in times of crisis, and that "the Constitution is best preserved by reliance on standards tested over time and insulated from the pressures of the moment."
This is the latest in a series of rebukes to the Bush administration. The court has already rejected its claim that the Guantánamo detainees have no right to be heard in American courts, and that an American citizen designated an enemy combatant can be held indefinitely without being brought before a judge. [*********]
The current conservative court is not hostile to law enforcement or presidential power. But it is proving to be admirably protective of individual freedom and the rule of law. Rather than continue having his policies struck down, President Bush should find a way to prosecute the war on terror within the bounds of the law.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Serbia: Court Finds Milosevic Behind Rival's Murder

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/world/europe/30briefs-003.html
June 30, 2006
World Briefing | Europe
Serbia: Court Finds Milosevic Behind Rival's Murder
(REUTERS) [the late Milosevic convicted of murdering a political rival] [******]
The Supreme Court said it "accepts that Slobodan Milosevic gave an order" for the murder of Ivan Stambolic, his mentor and predecessor as Yugoslavia's president, whose ouster he had engineered, because he was a political threat to his hold on power. The killing in 2000 killing was carried out by eight secret policemen, who were found guilty last year and also convicted of the attempted murder earlier in 2000 of the opposition leader Vuk Draskovic, who is now Serbia's foreign minister. The Supreme Court said Mr. Milosevic also gave the order for that. Mr. Milosevic, who died in detention in The Hague in March as his war crimes trial was drawing to a close, was never formally indicted for Mr. Stambolic's murder by any court.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/world/europe/30briefs-003.html
June 30, 2006
World Briefing | Europe
Serbia: Court Finds Milosevic Behind Rival's Murder
(REUTERS) [the late Milosevic convicted of murdering a political rival] [******]
The Supreme Court said it "accepts that Slobodan Milosevic gave an order" for the murder of Ivan Stambolic, his mentor and predecessor as Yugoslavia's president, whose ouster he had engineered, because he was a political threat to his hold on power. The killing in 2000 killing was carried out by eight secret policemen, who were found guilty last year and also convicted of the attempted murder earlier in 2000 of the opposition leader Vuk Draskovic, who is now Serbia's foreign minister. The Supreme Court said Mr. Milosevic also gave the order for that. Mr. Milosevic, who died in detention in The Hague in March as his war crimes trial was drawing to a close, was never formally indicted for Mr. Stambolic's murder by any court.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

As China Ages, a Shortage of Cheap Labor Looms

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/world/asia/30aging.html
June 30, 2006
As China Ages, a Shortage of Cheap Labor Looms
By HOWARD W. FRENCH [china] [general: demographics that shall bight china in the near future] [china shall have to import cheap labor but from where?]
SHANGHAI, June 29 — Shanghai is rightfully known as a fast-moving, hypermodern city — full of youth and vigor. But that obscures a less well-known fact: Shanghai has the oldest population in China, and it is getting older in a hurry.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/world/asia/30aging.html
June 30, 2006
As China Ages, a Shortage of Cheap Labor Looms
By HOWARD W. FRENCH [china] [general: demographics that shall bight china in the near future] [china shall have to import cheap labor but from where?]
SHANGHAI, June 29 — Shanghai is rightfully known as a fast-moving, hypermodern city — full of youth and vigor. But that obscures a less well-known fact: Shanghai has the oldest population in China, and it is getting older in a hurry.
Twenty percent of this city's people are at least 60, the common retirement age for men in China, and retirees are easily the fastest growing segment of the population, with 100,000 new seniors added to the rolls each year, according to a study by the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences. From 2010 to 2020, the number of people 60 or older is projected to grow by 170,000 a year.
By 2020 about a third of Shanghai's population, currently 13.6 million, will consist of people over the age of 59, remaking the city's social fabric and placing huge new strains on its economy and finances.
The changes go far beyond Shanghai, however. Experts say the rapidly graying city is leading one of the greatest demographic changes in history, one with profound implications for the entire country.
The world's most populous nation, which has built its economic strength on seemingly endless supplies of cheap labor, China may soon face manpower shortages. An aging population also poses difficult political issues for the Communist government, which first encouraged a population explosion in the 1950's and then reversed course and introduced the so-called one-child policy a few years after the death of Mao in 1976.
That measure has spared the country an estimated 390 million births but may ultimately prove to be another monumental demographic mistake. With China's breathtaking rise toward affluence, most people live longer and have fewer children, mirroring trends seen around the world.
Those trends and the extraordinarily low birth rate have combined to create a stark imbalance between young and old. That threatens the nation's rickety pension system, which already runs large deficits even with the 4-to-1 ratio of workers to retirees that it was designed for.
Demographers also expect strains on the household registration system, which restricts internal migration. The system prevents young workers from migrating to urban areas to relieve labor shortages, but officials fear that abolishing it could release a flood of humanity that would swamp the cities.
As workers become scarcer and more expensive in the increasingly affluent cities along China's eastern seaboard, the country will face growing economic pressures to move out of assembly work and other labor-intensive manufacturing, which will be taken up by poorer economies in Asia and beyond, and into service and information-based industries.
"For the last two decades China has enjoyed the advantage of having a high ratio of working-age people in the population, but that situation is about to change," said Zuo Xuejin, vice president of the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences. "With the working-age population decreasing, our labor costs will become less competitive, and industries in places like Vietnam and Bangladesh will start becoming more attractive."
India, the world's other emerging giant, also stands to benefit, with low wages and a far younger population than China.
Even within China, Mr. Zuo said, many foreign investors have begun moving factories away from Shanghai and other eastern cities to inland locations, where the work force is cheaper and younger.
As remote as many of these problems may seem today in Shanghai, the country's most prosperous city, evidence of the changes is already on abundant display. If Shanghai represents the future of China, it is in central Shanghai's Jingan district, where roughly 4,000 people, or 30 percent of the residents, are above 60, that one can glimpse that future.
Squads of lightly trained social workers monitor the city's older residents, paying regular house visits aimed at combating isolation and assuring that medical problems are attended to.
At 10 a.m. on a recent spring morning, Chen Meijuan walked up a narrow wooden stairway to the secondfloor apartment where Liang Yunyu has lived for the last 58 years.
"Good morning, Granny," Ms. Chen called out as she entered the 100-year-old woman's small bedroom. "Did you have a good night's sleep?"
Ms. Chen, 49, earns about $95 a month as one of 15 agents who monitor the neighborhood's elderly population. Her caseload exceeds 200.
"I usually pay visits to about five or six households a day, stay a little while and chat with them," she said. "For Grandma Liang I am a little more focused, visiting two or three times a week."
After being introduced to a foreign visitor, Ms. Liang regaled her guests with stories, ranging across the decades of the 20th century. She recounted the arrival of Japanese invaders in the city nearly 70 years ago, her opening of a kindergarten in 1958 and her husband's arrest and death in a labor camp during the Cultural Revolution 40 years ago.
"My daughter always invites me to live with her family, but I feel embarrassed to be with them," said, pausing from her tales. "I'm worried I might die in her home, so I prefer staying where I am."
Her son, Zha Yuheng, 76, a grandfather and retired textile industry worker, lives with her now, which also concerns her. "I am taken good care of here," she said, "but living with my son leaves him with a big burden, I'm afraid."
Mr. Zha protested that his mother was little trouble at all. "Every morning I get water for her and make sure it is not too hot or too cold, and she handles everything else on her own," he said. "She gets up, dresses, makes the beds and even makes food for herself."
In many wealthy societies the very old are candidates for nursing home care. That sector is still tiny in China, though, especially compared with the size of elderly population. Zhang Minsheng opened the city's first private nursing home in 1998 in an industrial area far from central Shanghai. It is now 95 percent occupied.
"People were not willing to enter nursing homes in the past, because they were considered places for those without descendants," Mr. Zhang said. "Now, from the standpoint of ordinary people, it is becoming a normal thing."
The average age of the residents of Mr. Zhang's home is 85, and most live several to a room, sleeping on narrow beds separated by flimsy partitions. Many pass the daytime hours in long corridors furnished with chairs, where they chat or simply stare into the distance.
The sheer magnitude of the aging phenomenon has Chinese officials and academics grasping for answers, but almost everyone agrees that there are no easy fixes. Population experts here speak of "patching one hole and exploding another."
China has a wide range of retirement ages, generally from 50 to 60. Raising the retirement age would relieve pressures on the pension system but make it harder for young people to find jobs. And it would be resented by many elderly people, most of whom have missed out on China's economic boom.
Lifting restrictions on internal migration raises the unwelcome prospect of a mass migration, while abandoning the one-child policy would be politically unpalatable.
The government has already tinkered with the policy. It now allows husbands and wives who were their parents' only children to have a second child, for example, and has eliminated a four-year waiting period between births for those eligible to have a second child.
But Chinese demographic experts say the leadership is unlikely to abolish the one-child rule, because it is reluctant to admit that one of its signature policies was in any way a failure — particularly in view of the disastrous population boom encouraged by Mao in the 1950's.
Moreover, lifting child-bearing restrictions might not help. Poorer people in the interior might have more children, but the rising middle class probably will not, experts say.
"More births would only change the structure of the population and prolong the aging process" of the society as a whole, said Ren Yuan, a professor at the Population Research Center of Fudan University in Shanghai. "But it has nothing to do with the number of old people. The scale of this large group has already become a reality. The beds you've got to add in nursing homes, the labor you need to take care of the old, is a reality than can't be changed."
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Seizures Show New Israel Line Against Hamas

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/world/middleeast/30palestinians.html
June 30, 2006
Seizures Show New Israel Line Against Hamas
By STEVEN ERLANGER [Israel] [returns to gaza over the kidnapping of French Israeli soldier] [response] [***************]
RAMALLAH, West Bank, Friday, June 30 — Israeli troops seized 64 members of Hamas in the West Bank on Thursday, including a third of the Palestinian cabinet and 23 legislators, a move that Israeli officials said indicated a significant change in Israel's policy toward the Hamas government. [**********]

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/world/middleeast/30palestinians.html
June 30, 2006
Seizures Show New Israel Line Against Hamas
By STEVEN ERLANGER [Israel] [returns to gaza over the kidnapping of French Israeli soldier] [response] [***************]
RAMALLAH, West Bank, Friday, June 30 — Israeli troops seized 64 members of Hamas in the West Bank on Thursday, including a third of the Palestinian cabinet and 23 legislators, a move that Israeli officials said indicated a significant change in Israel's policy toward the Hamas government. [**********]
The seizures are partly intended to warn Hamas leaders that they could lose their power and liberty, if not their lives, unless they act to release a captured Israeli soldier, a senior Israeli military official said. But Israel has also concluded that Hamas, which had largely kept to a cease-fire before, is now openly engaged in violent acts against Israel and must be treated differently. [********]
It was unclear what would happen to those held if the Israeli soldier were released, but the officials described the seizures as part of a plan well beyond seeking that.
In and near Gaza, Israeli forces held their positions on Thursday night, appearing to pause in an expected ground assault but continued to pound northern Gaza with artillery fire. Early Friday, the Palestinian Interior Ministry was set on fire by an Israeli airstrike.
In explaining the shift toward Hamas, Israeli officials said Thursday that they had agreed to let Palestinian parliamentary elections go ahead five months ago, despite the participation of Hamas, [*******]under American pressure.
Hamas won the elections and formed a government that Israel and its allies have worked to weaken, especially through economic pressure, in an effort to get it to recognize Israel and forswear violence.
“So long as they were smart enough not to openly exercise terror, no one touched them,” said the senior Israeli military officer. “But now they’ve gone back to it, so we have the right to deal differently with this terrorist government and try to remove them.” [*****]
The Israeli defense minister, Amir Peretz, said Thursday: "The masquerade ball is over. The suits and ties will not serve as cover to the involvement and support of kidnappings and terror."
The Israelis cited Hamas's firing of Qassam rockets beginning this month, its public declaration that the cease-fire with Israel was over and its open involvement in the raid into Israeli territory early Sunday that resulted in the deaths of two Israeli soldiers and the capture of a wounded corporal, Gilad Shalit, 19. [*********]
The seizures of the Hamas political leaders, under criminal law, for alleged membership in a terrorist organization and involvement in terrorist acts, were approved this week by the attorney general, Menachem Mazuz, "because he agreed that the public interest has changed, and there are moments a state can say, 'We have a public interest in activating the criminal law,' " [******]said Jacob Galanti, the Justice Ministry spokesman, in an interview.
"When you see Qassams flying every day and the event on the Gaza border," Mr. Galanti said, the policy changes. "It's true, we knew they were members of Hamas before they ran for office, and for the last six months we know they are in the Parliament. I'm not sure they had any immunity, but officials came to Mazuz and said that the public interest had changed, so they wanted a legal tool to take care of the problem." [*********]
All those seized will be able to have lawyers and will appear in court as in other criminal trials, Mr. Galanti said, like the one successfully prosecuted against the Fatah leader Marwan Barghouti, who was convicted in 2004 of conspiracy to murder. [********]
Jihad al-Wazir, who was the finance minister in the old Fatah government and deputy governor of the Palestine Monetary Authority, was one of those rousted out of bed early Thursday by Israeli soldiers in combat gear who hammered with their feet on his door.
"I tried to calm them down, and said, 'Come in, come in,' " said Mr. Wazir, who lives in the elegant Gemzo Suites apartment building in Ramallah, just across from the headquarters of the Fatah faction.
Numerous Hamas ministers and legislators of the Palestinian Authority live there too, and they, like Mr. Wazir, were ordered to dress and come outside. Unlike Mr. Wazir, many of them were taken away, their hands cuffed.
Mr. Wazir said he knew why. "They're raising the ante," he said. "It's not about releasing the soldier, it's more sinister than that. It seems to me they're going for the long haul." But the result, he said, would actually "reinforce the radicals."
Ali Jarbawi, a professor and dean at Birzeit University here, said he thought the real goal was to remove the Hamas government from power.
Israel wants to continue with its unilateral policies based on the idea that there is no "Palestinian partner," said Mr. Jarbawi, who turned down an offer from Hamas to join the government as an independent. "If you build up your strategy on having no partner, then you have to ensure you don't have one. So when Palestinians tell you that there is about to be a political agreement among the factions, putting their house in order at last, you intervene."
Analysts say the crisis is also further weakening the position of the Palestinian Authority's president, Mahmoud Abbas, known as Abu Mazen. Mr. Abbas, they say, is being pulled, and is pulling Fatah, closer to Hamas in the face of the Israeli threat, when he originally wanted to pull Hamas closer to Fatah. [***********]
"Abu Mazen is being squeezed by everyone, he's being smashed," Mr. Jarbawi said.
Menachem Klein, a political scientist at Israel's Bar-Ilan University and an expert on Palestinian politics, sees Mr. Abbas pushed toward Hamas for two reasons. He cites the cold shoulder Mr. Abbas got from the new Israeli prime minister, Ehud Olmert, which pushed Mr. Abbas "to try to empower himself domestically and build up a coalition against Olmert's unilateral plans," and the Israeli operation, which compels a united Palestinian front. [*************]
“The arrest of the Hamas politicians — Abbas and everyone understands that as a step against the government,” Mr. Klein said. “It’s part of a grand strategy, to undermine the Hamas government, that the Israeli cabinet decided upon in its first meeting after Hamas took power.”
Jonathan Fighel, a former colonel now at the Institute for Counter-Terrorism at the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya, Israel, said the seized Hamas members were really a bargaining chip for the release of the soldier. Israel, he said, “has to collect cards for future negotiations.”
Mr. Jarbawi said with disgust: “Why do we need a Palestinian Authority at all? Just to disguise the occupation? If I were Abu Mazen, I’d say I’m a president without authority and dismantle it, and tell Israel: ‘You’re responsible. You pay.’ And then you should worry about a binational state.” [************]
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Israel Appears to Delay Ground Forays in North Gaza; Airstrikes Go On

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/world/middleeast/30mideast.html
June 30, 2006
Israel Appears to Delay Ground Forays in North Gaza; Airstrikes Go On
By GREG MYRE and IAN FISHER [Israel] [returns to gaza over the kidnapping of French Israeli soldier] [response] [***************] [ditto]
GAZA, Friday, June 30 — With the seizure of dozens of senior Hamas officials and its military hunkered down, Israel appeared to delay any ground raid into northern Gaza on Thursday, but it continued to pound Palestinian territory with artillery fire.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/world/middleeast/30mideast.html
June 30, 2006
Israel Appears to Delay Ground Forays in North Gaza; Airstrikes Go On
By GREG MYRE and IAN FISHER [Israel] [returns to gaza over the kidnapping of French Israeli soldier] [response] [***************] [ditto]
GAZA, Friday, June 30 — With the seizure of dozens of senior Hamas officials and its military hunkered down, Israel appeared to delay any ground raid into northern Gaza on Thursday, but it continued to pound Palestinian territory with artillery fire.
Israel carried out several airstrikes early Friday aiming at buildings that included the Interior Ministry in Gaza City, which was set on fire. However, there were no immediate reports of casualties.
Israeli news media reports said Thursday that the Israeli government still hoped the Israeli soldier seized by Palestinians on Sunday could be freed without more violence.
In neighboring Egypt, which has been in contact with the Palestinian government, President Hosni Mubarak was quoted in the semiofficial newspaper Al Ahram as saying that the Palestinians were prepared to release the soldier under certain, unspecified conditions, but that Israel had not agreed to the terms.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and other foreign ministers from the Group of 8 industrialized nations issued a collective statement in Moscow urging Israel to show restraint and saying that "the detention of elected members of the Palestinian government and legislature raises particular concerns."
Israel said it had seized the Hamas members because the group recently stepped up its involvement in terror. As for Gaza, Defense Minister Amir Peretz said the "army is ready for a severe and extensive operations against the terror organizations" there.
But he also said that if the captured soldier, Cpl. Gilad Shalit, 19, was returned, and the Palestinians halted rocket fire out of Gaza, then "our troops will pull back."
Israeli troops have taken up positions in southern Gaza, but have not engaged in serious fighting. A large Israeli contingent is massed outside the northeastern border of Gaza, and has been firing rockets across the frontier, but has not entered the coastal territory.
Also on Thursday, thousands of mourners in Jerusalem attended the funeral of an 18-year-old Israeli settler, Eliahu Asheri, who was kidnapped Sunday in the West Bank by Palestinians. The Popular Resistance Committees, made up of militants from various factions, claimed responsibility for the killing.
Israel has been applying military pressure in Gaza since Corporal Shalit was captured Sunday by Palestinian gunmen. But on Thursday, Israeli forces broadened their efforts with a sweeping raid throughout the West Bank, seizing 87 Palestinians linked to militant groups, including 64 Hamas members, the military said.
The Hamas members included eight cabinet ministers, one-third of the total, including Omar Abdel Razak, the finance minister.
The Israelis also seized more than 20 Hamas members of the Palestinian Parliament in raids in Ramallah, Jenin, East Jerusalem and elsewhere.
"Kidnapping Palestinian lawmakers and holding the Palestinian government hostage will neither strengthen Israel's hand in bargaining nor bring any good to anyone in the region," said Saeb Erekat, the chief Palestinian negotiator.
Israel has refused to negotiate with the Palestinians for the release of the soldier, though the Egyptian and French governments have been in contact with Palestinian authorities seeking his freedom. The armed wing of Hamas was one of three groups that claimed involvement in the capture of the soldier, though Hamas political leaders said they had not been involved in the planning.
Mark Regev, a spokesman for Israel's Foreign Ministry, said, "If you are in the terrorist business, you can't be surprised if Israel acts against you."
The Hamas leaders were being questioned but had not been charged with any crimes as of Thursday night, Israeli officials said.
Since Hamas won the Palestinian elections in January, Israel has warned that it was prepared to act against Hamas leaders if Israel believed they were linked to violence.
However, until Thursday, Israel had mostly singled out militants believed to be directly tied to attacks, and had not gone after Hamas figures in prominent political positions.
In recent days, Israeli aircraft have destroyed several bridges and bombed a power station, cutting off electricity to more than half of Gaza's population, estimated at 1.4 million.
Álvaro de Soto, the United Nations special envoy for the Middle East, told Reuters that fuel to power Gaza's sanitation system could run out in days.
Around dawn on Thursday, after a night of Israeli shelling, residents in northern Gaza said pink leaflets dropped from the sky, warning them of military operations in the area.
"For your own safety, out of our desire not to hurt civilians who are not involved in operations against our soldiers, you have to stop moving around in places where the Israeli Army is working," said the Israeli military leaflet, in Arabic.
Ayman Talab, 43, said his extended family of 35 people, including 15 children, planned to pack up and get out of the Beit Lahiya, a northern Gaza border area that has been hard hit in previous Israeli raids. On Wednesday night, as Israel resumed shelling in Gaza for the first time in nearly three weeks, they all slept together in one small room that seemed the safest.
"Everybody is scared," Mr. Talab said amid steady thumps of artillery in the distance. Residents there and in adjoining Beit Hanoun and Sheik Zayad said some people left several days ago, when the Israeli Army began massing at Gaza's borders. But most interviewed said they planned to stay put.
Israeli officials say they are making targets of these areas because militants use them to fire homemade Qassam rockets into Israel.
Jamil Ghazal, 55, said he was hit in his right arm and lightly wounded by shrapnel after a shell hit while he was sitting in his courtyard on Thursday morning.
While faulting Israel for shelling so close to civilians like him, Mr. Ghazal defended the use of Qassam rockets fired by Palestinians at Israeli towns. "It is the right of Palestinians to defend themselves," he said.
Mr. Ghazal was one of the few people to be injured after Israeli forces entered Gaza. Sufian Hamad, director of the municipality of Beit Hanoun, said most of the shells Israelis had fired had been aimed at open fields and huge pools used to purify sewage. But, he said, "the infrastructure is being devastated," referring to the Israeli bombing that toppled three bridges and knocked out Gaza's only power plant. "What does this have to do with a soldier?"
With those words, a shell landed close enough to rattle the windows and walls. Mr. Hamad did not even raise his eyes to the outside, nor did anyone else in his busy office.
"We are used to it," he said. In southern Gaza, Palestinian militants blew out a section, perhaps 20 feet wide, of one of the concrete walls that divide southern Gaza from Egypt. Hundreds of boys crowded around the hole, guarded by Palestinian soldiers, and showered a bulldozer with stones as the operator tried to make the hole impassable.
No large-scale attempt was made to cross the border, and by nightfall the Palestinians had resealed the hole.
Two Palestinians died Wednesday in an explosion in Khan Yunis, a town in southern Gaza. Palestinians initially blamed an Israeli shell for the blast, but Palestinian security officials and Palestinian journalists in the area said the blast appeared to have been a Palestinian explosive that went off unintentionally.
Helene Cooper contributed reporting from Moscow for this article.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

In Gaza, Seeking Shelter From Israeli Fire

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062900432.html
In Gaza, Seeking Shelter From Israeli Fire
Missile Strikes Set Interior Ministry Ablaze
By Scott Wilson
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, June 30, 2006; A23 [Israel] [returns to gaza over the kidnapping of French Israeli soldier] [response] [***************]
BEIT HANOUN, Gaza Strip, June 29 -- Fatin Shabaat left home here Thursday with her three hip-high children, looking for safety from a slow-moving Israeli military assault launched to free a 19-year-old soldier being held by Palestinian gunmen.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062900432.html
In Gaza, Seeking Shelter From Israeli Fire
Missile Strikes Set Interior Ministry Ablaze
By Scott Wilson
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, June 30, 2006; A23 [Israel] [returns to gaza over the kidnapping of French Israeli soldier] [response] [***************]
BEIT HANOUN, Gaza Strip, June 29 -- Fatin Shabaat left home here Thursday with her three hip-high children, looking for safety from a slow-moving Israeli military assault launched to free a 19-year-old soldier being held by Palestinian gunmen.
Israeli artillery batteries lobbed shells around this farming community in the Gaza Strip's northeastern corner throughout the day, after leaflets dropped from the sky warned residents to remain clear of Israeli military operations. Shells whistled overhead, slamming into the fields and dunes where Palestinian gunmen regularly fire crude rockets at the Israeli city of Sderot, a white smudge along a ridgeline three miles away.
Although she never received one of the written warnings, Shabaat clutched her children, ages 2, 3 and 4, and headed to her father's home in the town center, far from the dirt paths that have served in the past as routes for Israeli tanks. An Israeli airstrike had already left her without electricity, along with about 700,000 other residents of the strip, and artillery shells were falling close to her back yard.
"This is only going to get worse," said Shabaat, 25, who despite the impending clash favors keeping the Israeli soldier captive until at least some Palestinian prisoners are released from Israeli jails. "We will not get anything otherwise. And they are going to invade anyway. This soldier is just an excuse."
Shabaat's grim prognosis regarding the crisis over the captured Israeli soldier, Cpl. Gilad Shalit, was echoed in the West Bank, where the Israeli military arrested more than 60 officials from the governing Hamas movement in a pre-dawn sweep. The detainees included two dozen members of parliament and nine cabinet ministers, more than a third of the Hamas cabinet.
[Early Friday morning, Israeli military aircraft fired missiles at the Interior Ministry headquarters in Gaza City, setting the building ablaze. An army spokesman said the ministry, headed by Saed Siyam of Hamas, was being used "for the planning and carrying out of terrorist activities." Siyam's office was struck directly.
[Israeli airstrikes also hit several other targets Friday, including the headquarters of a new Interior Ministry militia dominated by Hamas members and a building that military officials said was used by al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, the Fatah party's armed wing. Missiles also struck roads in the north and south of the strip, some landing near a key bridge that had already been hit this week. There were no immediate reports of injuries.]
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's government holds Hamas responsible for Shalit's capture, which occurred Sunday during an attack on an army post just outside Gaza's southeastern corner that left two soldiers dead. The radical Islamic movement's armed wing was involved in the attack and is one of three groups demanding the release of 421 Palestinian women and minors in Israeli prisons in exchange for information about Shalit's welfare.
Israel has arrested elected members of the Palestinian legislature before, but never as many as it did Thursday.
Mark Regev, a spokesman for the Israeli Foreign Ministry, said the detained Hamas officials would be either charged and brought to trial or released in the days ahead. He said plans to arrest Hamas officials for belonging to what Israel designates a terrorist organization had been in the works since Hamas's armed wing ended a 15-month cease-fire with Israel after the June 9 explosion on a Gaza beach that killed seven members of a Palestinian family.
Regev denied speculation that the Hamas legislators would be offered in exchange for Shalit's freedom. "Hamas's involvement in terrorism is the reason for these arrests, nothing more," he said.
But Palestinian political analysts said they believed the arrests were timed to undermine a rare political agreement reached this week by leaders of the two leading Palestinian political movements, Fatah and Hamas.
The two parties have been at odds since Hamas's electoral victory in January over how to respond to the international economic sanctions that have choked off most of the government's funds. The United States and European Union also designate Hamas a terrorist organization, a classification that led to a freeze of most foreign aid.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, who heads the secular Fatah movement, and Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas agreed in principle this week to a unified political program that would usher in a national unity government in the weeks ahead and endorse the creation of a future Palestinian state in the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem, territory occupied by Israel in the 1967 Middle East war.
Since it was founded nearly two decades ago, Hamas has called for an Islamic state across a far larger territory that includes Israel. Abbas and others had hoped the shift in Hamas's position would persuade Israel to revive peace talks, which have been dormant for more than five years.
"I don't think that, at a time ministers are in prison, a national unity government with Fatah can be established," said Ali Jarbawi, a political science professor at Beir Zeit University in the West Bank. "It won't have legitimacy with Palestinian public opinion. What Israel did through these arrests is interfere in a process that would stabilize internal Palestinian relations, thus allowing it to continue to claim that there is no Palestinian partner" for peace talks.
This town, which has been under the arc of Israeli military fire for months, readied itself in small ways Thursday for what many of its 30,000 residents feared was an imminent assault. But Israeli Defense Minister Amir Peretz later postponed a ground incursion into Beit Hanoun, which had been scheduled to begin Thursday evening, after Egyptian diplomats requested more time to negotiate Shalit's release.
A senior Israeli military official said Peretz did so after signs that Khaled Mashal, Hamas's political leader in exile, could be softening his position. Israeli officials and Egyptian diplomats say Mashal, who lives in the Syrian capital of Damascus, has been the most important voice inside the organization opposing Shalit's release.
"If he would change his mind and come around, he really has a lot of influence," the senior military official said. "We will try to wait as long as we can if we feel pressure is being put on him. We are not in a hurry."
But the official also said the operation here was not only about freeing Shalit but also about "weakening the Hamas government" and ending rocket fire into southern Israel. In that sense, the official said, Shalit's release through diplomacy may not be enough to guarantee "our strategy of making sure they know that there will be a very high price to pay for future kidnappings."
Before the operation was suspended, some residents here decamped to stay with relatives, while others prepared to retreat. Some accused Israel of using the capture of one soldier -- at a time when the Israeli government holds 8,503 Palestinians in prison -- to stage an attack that would do little to free him.
Others fired rockets toward Israel. Two of the missiles traced white contour trails against the blue sky during a brief lull in the Israeli artillery barrage.
"We have a plan to withdraw if the Israelis attack," said Hamada Abdullah Hamada, 31, a sergeant with the Palestinian national forces who was manning a makeshift outpost between the town and the Gaza border.
From the five shipping containers that formed the post, Hamada could see flatbed trucks moving Israeli tanks along the border. The two rockets rose from behind a nearby agricultural school a quarter-mile from Hamada's concrete pillbox, and Israeli guns answered minutes later with steady, thumping fire.
Pointing to the tank movements, Hamada said: "Even before the soldier was kidnapped, the Israelis were doing this. They will come in."
Special correspondent Samuel Sockol in Jerusalem contributed to this report.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

On Arab Streets and Airwaves, Shock Over Seizures by Israel

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/world/middleeast/30arab.html
June 30, 2006
On Arab Streets and Airwaves, Shock Over Seizures by Israel
By HASSAN M. FATTAH [Israel] [returns to gaza over the kidnapping of French Israeli soldier] [response] [***************]
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia, June 29 — Arab streets and airwaves reacted with shock on Thursday over Israel's seizure of many Hamas members and the continued bombardment of Gaza. [*******]

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/world/middleeast/30arab.html
June 30, 2006
On Arab Streets and Airwaves, Shock Over Seizures by Israel
By HASSAN M. FATTAH [Israel] [returns to gaza over the kidnapping of French Israeli soldier] [response] [***************]
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia, June 29 — Arab streets and airwaves reacted with shock on Thursday over Israel's seizure of many Hamas members and the continued bombardment of Gaza. [*******]
Many deplored Israeli attacks on civilian targets in response to what they characterized as a legitimate military campaign that resulted in the capture on Sunday of Cpl. Gilad Shalit of the Israeli Army. [*****]Many also contended the latest wave of violence was a pretext for hampering an agreement among Palestinian factions on a unified political program in preparation for talks with Israel.
Yet despite the finger pointing and accusations of Israeli human rights violations in the latest round of violence, at least some in the Arab world acknowledged Thursday that Hamas had made a strategic mistake in capturing Corporal Shalit. [*****]
"Using an Israeli prisoner as a pawn to release Palestinian prisoners wasn't a wise move, because Israel was waiting for a pretext," [******]said Hassan Barrari, senior researcher at the Center for Strategic Studies at the University of Jordan. “The Palestinian position is now helpless, and all the Palestinians can do now is make declarations of outrage.”
Mohammad al-Ameer, political editor at the Saudi daily Al Riyadh, said, “It’s natural for people to resist when they are under occupation.” But, he added, speaking of the capture of Corporal Shalit, “the question is this: Would the operation have changed the outcome of what has been happening?” [***********]
Many editorials dismissed the capture as a pretext for the Israeli Army's return to Gaza. In effect, they said, Israel did not want to negotiate with the Palestinians and needed to prevent any agreement among Palestinian factions as much as it needed to recover Corporal Shalit. [*********]
"The kidnapped Israeli soldier is a good pretext for the Israeli troops' next exercise in bloodletting," wrote Abdel Wahab Badrakhan in the pan-Arab daily Al Hayat. "It seems Israel has decided to make him a victim in order to sweep into the Palestinian territories and do whatever they want and kill and imprison whoever they liked." Even in dovish Arab circles, Israeli soldiers are seen as a legitimate military target for Palestinian fighters.
"It is a legitimate act of resistance against occupation forces," said Said Okasha, director of the Israeli studies unit at Al Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies in Cairo. "These incidents allow Israel to say that it will not negotiate as long as there are terrorist acts."
Arab commentators placed blame all around for the wave of violence, many singling out the United States for what they said was its silence over Israel's attacks on civilians and infrastructure. Many also blamed Arab governments for pressuring Hamas to drop its tough stance on Israel. [*************]
“The kidnappings of government ministers, legislative council members and heads of municipalities will take Hamas back to square one,” Samih Maayteh, a columnist with the Jordanian daily Al Ghad, said in an interview. Hamas is being forced to resort to the kind of violence it has used in the past, he insisted. “Ultimately this should matter a lot to Israel.” [************]
Suha Maayeh contributed reporting from Amman, Jordan, for this article, and Mandi Fahmy from Cairo.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Ethnic Uzbek Legislator Beaten, Afghans Confirm

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/world/asia/30afghan.html
June 30, 2006
Ethnic Uzbek Legislator Beaten, Afghans Confirm
By CARLOTTA GALL [afghan] [hydra] [insurgency] [spring offensive continued] [******************]
KABUL, Afghanistan, June 29 — A member of Parliament from northern Afghanistan was severely beaten this month and taken to Uzbekistan for medical treatment, Afghan officials said Thursday. The legislator, Faizullah Zaki, an ethnic Uzbek, has been the right-hand man of the ethnic Uzbek general Abdul Rashid Dostum for four years.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/world/asia/30afghan.html
June 30, 2006
Ethnic Uzbek Legislator Beaten, Afghans Confirm
By CARLOTTA GALL [afghan] [hydra] [insurgency] [spring offensive continued] [******************]
KABUL, Afghanistan, June 29 — A member of Parliament from northern Afghanistan was severely beaten this month and taken to Uzbekistan for medical treatment, Afghan officials said Thursday. The legislator, Faizullah Zaki, an ethnic Uzbek, has been the right-hand man of the ethnic Uzbek general Abdul Rashid Dostum for four years.
Abdul Wahab Khetab, the director of the Ministry of Interior's criminal department, confirmed reports of the attack on Mr. Zaki, who won a seat in Parliament in the elections last year. Mr. Khetab said Mr. Zaki was beaten two weeks ago, when he returned to Jowzjan, his home province in the north, for the parliamentary recess. "I have not seen him but I think he has been beaten on the head, chest, arms and legs," Mr. Khetab said.
Another legislator, Hajji Ahmad Fareed, who leads a commission on legislators' safety, said, "We heard he was beaten up, intimidated, and now he is in Uzbekistan." The commission could not reach Mr. Zaki for two weeks, and was only now receiving reports that he had been assaulted, Mr. Fareed said. The commission was seeking a briefing about the attack from the interior minister, he said.
Mr. Zaki, who has been General Dostum's spokesman for four years, speaks English and is well known among the international population in Afghanistan. He is leader of the parliamentary commission for the protection of the environment. [******]
Many lawmakers have not been able to return to their home provinces for the summer recess, either because of threats from local opponents or because of the insurgency in the south by people suspected of being Taliban fighters.
But Mr. Zaki may have fallen afoul of his own political leader and erstwhile protector, General Dostum, after showing independence in his voting in Parliament, in particular supporting President Hamid Karzai's cabinet choices, [******]said one Parliament colleague, who spoke on condition of anonymity, fearing retribution.
Rumors were flying around Shiberghan, Mr. Zaki's hometown, that he had been beaten by people loyal to General Dostum, said another legislator who was reached by telephone in Jowzjan. [*******]
Efforts to reach General Dostum's party office for comment were unsuccessful.
General Dostum, a Russian-trained military officer, led a notorious militia during two decades of war in Afghanistan and has been accused of war crimes and of being behind many atrocities committed by his fighters. [****]He was a prominent ally of the United States in the war against the Taliban and Al Qaeda in 2001 [****]and was frequently praised by American officials for his contribution.
Yet his men are blamed for some of the worst excesses of that war, including the suffocation of hundreds of Taliban prisoners who were being transported from the battlefield to a prison in Shiberghan in sealed shipping containers in 2001. [*****]One of his men badly beat an Afghan journalist investigating those killings in 2003.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Car Bomb Is Marker Of Taliban Presence

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062901903.html
Car Bomb Is Marker Of Taliban Presence
U.S., Afghans Struggle In Area Under Threat
By Pamela Constable
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, June 30, 2006; A20 [afghan] [hydra] [insurgency] [spring offensive continued] [******************]
QALAT, Afghanistan, June 29 -- It was high noon when the car exploded Wednesday, right in the middle of the highway through town. The bomb inside was so powerful that it scattered shreds of hot metal for 200 yards and shattered windows in a new schoolhouse surrounded by high walls. [********]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062901903.html
Car Bomb Is Marker Of Taliban Presence
U.S., Afghans Struggle In Area Under Threat
By Pamela Constable
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, June 30, 2006; A20 [afghan] [hydra] [insurgency] [spring offensive continued] [******************]
QALAT, Afghanistan, June 29 -- It was high noon when the car exploded Wednesday, right in the middle of the highway through town. The bomb inside was so powerful that it scattered shreds of hot metal for 200 yards and shattered windows in a new schoolhouse surrounded by high walls. [********]
All that remained of the driver were two black stumps of arm and calf, strewn on a heap of construction dirt near the charred remains of his vehicle. Another man, who had been walking by and sipping on a yogurt drink, was blasted into a culvert, instantly dead. [*****]
Working quickly, U.S. troops cleared the area of unexploded bomb parts, hauled away the wreckage, paid bystanders to sweep debris off the road, interviewed witnesses and bagged up car parts to examine. [****]Within three hours, the highway was clear, and dozens of waiting trucks and buses were allowed to resume their journeys.
"The sky hasn't fallen. We should not overreact," Lt. Col. Frank Sturek, the U.S. military commander in Qalat, told Afghan army and police officials at an emergency meeting Thursday. He called the bomb a "failure," noting that it did not damage a passing U.S. military convoy and did not reach its apparent target of a U.S. or Afghan government facility.
Nevertheless, the first suicide bombing in Qalat was a dramatic sign that the Taliban, ousted from national power by a U.S.-led invasion in 2001, is far from defeated here in Zabol province. The region has been virtually paralyzed by insurgent attacks and threats despite intensive military operations and U.S. and Afghan efforts to make it a showcase for development projects. [*********]
Qalat, the provincial capital, is a major stop on the U.S.-rebuilt north-south highway and a strategic spot in the campaign against the Taliban. It boasts a U.S. military base and an Afghan army base, and the U.S. military runs a center here that offers free classes in computer skills, carpentry, welding, nursing and other fields.
Also in Qalat, the United States, Japan and the United Arab Emirates have financed a new teaching hospital, new schools, a government compound now under construction, and radio and TV towers. There are plans for a new national bank, a women's bathhouse and a tearoom on a scenic hilltop where Alexander the Great's fortress once stood.
But the Taliban is never far away, and everyone in Qalat feels the intimidating, shadowy presence. At the U.S. military compound, students in the all-male nursing class Thursday said their female classmates had stopped attending after their families received threatening letters. The welding teacher said that he had not received any direct threats but that someone had spread warnings that no one should teach there.
"They distributed fliers in the villages saying that going to nursing school can cost you your life. They said that any family who sent a female to the school would be severely punished," [*******]said Abdul Khaliq, 18, a nursing student. "Of course we are scared. Our hearts beat fast every night, but we have to come and learn. This is our future."
At the scene of the suicide bombing Wednesday, witnesses and residents said they feared the insurgent threat was worsening despite the heavy presence of foreign troops. One taxi driver, whose car was knocked into a ditch by the blast, said he escaped serious injury only because he made a point of keeping far behind any U.S. convoy. Another driver said the Taliban had captured two of his friends this week and demanded $15,000 to spare their lives.
In the main bazaar Thursday, several shopkeepers said that while they felt safe inside the small city, which is heavily patrolled by U.S. forces, many villages were constantly under Taliban threat. Policemen said they were poorly equipped, rarely paid and far too few to patrol effectively.
"We receive intelligence, but we do not react to it. The Taliban are always ahead of us," Maj. Abdul Mateen, a police official, said at the emergency meeting. "They are on an offensive, and we are on the defensive. It should be the other way around. We have had donkey bombs, and now vehicle bombs, and we hear there are going to be motorcycle bombs. We should go out there and stop them."
The gathered officials held a lengthy discussion on the best way to control suspicious traffic, such as searching each vehicle, blocking side roads and forbidding people to drive cars they cannot prove they own. The police chief, Noor Mohammed, suggested sending troops to search certain villages where Taliban squads were known to manufacture bombs, but Sturek said he had been there four times "and found absolutely nothing."
At a separate briefing at the U.S. base in Qalat, Sturek demonstrated intimate familiarity with Zabol's Taliban problem, pinpointing specific areas where insurgent groups were based and explaining the complex relations between local Taliban leaders and various tribes.
He painted a mixed picture of the threat, saying that there were no more than 300 Taliban guerrillas in the province and that his troops were working effectively with Afghan security forces to root them out, win tribal support and establish a permanent government presence. He complained bitterly that the United Nations and foreign aid agencies had withdrawn from the region, where their help was desperately needed.
"If we just go in like throwing a rock in the water, the Taliban will go around it. What we need to do is establish a lasting presence," Sturek said. "We have to focus on the problem areas, to deny the insurgents access, to build roads and clinics and barracks and district buildings, to get the government message out."
Sturek and others in the U.S. military acknowledged that violence in Zabol has increased recently, with incidents like the suicide bombing and a June 5 assault by about 100 Taliban fighters on a U.S. firebase, in which 30 Taliban fighters were killed but no U.S. forces died. One soldier described being in a recent convoy that narrowly missed being blown up by a hidden anti-tank mine.
"It was on Mother's Day, and we were in a dry riverbed that was full of gravel," said Sgt. Richard Arnett. "There was a tiny pressure plate, with a switch no bigger than your fingernail. The battery was covered with rocks. There was no way to see it. The front of our vehicle was totaled, and we were very lucky no one was killed. They definitely know what they're doing."
Most Afghans interviewed in Qalat this week expressed alarm and anger about the Taliban's predations, but a few hinted at nostalgic feelings for the orderly days when the Taliban was in charge. This conservative southern region gave birth to the Taliban movement in the early 1990s. [**********]
Many people said they blamed neighboring Pakistan for aiding the insurgents. Most seemed glad the U.S. troops had become active in the province, but some complained that they had failed to bring security and had become magnets for attacks that left Afghans dead. [*******]
On Thursday, Sturek and several of his men took a stroll through the main Qalat bazaar, handing out cookies to children and inquiring politely how shopkeepers were faring. Most were cautious, but several warmed up and became expansive, offering detailed complaints about the lack of electricity and roads.
One merchant, sitting in a dark stall surrounded by ax handles and hammers and coils of rope, waited until the soldiers had passed and then shook his head.
"There is no life, no security here," said Mohammed Akram, 45. "When the Taliban ruled here, we could carry large bags of cash all the way to Kandahar and nothing would happen. I even left my motorcycle outside the shop and it was still there three days later. Now, it would be gone in a moment. We have seen no results from the Americans. The killing still goes on, and no one is safe."
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

U.S. Troops Accused of Killing Iraq Family

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/30/AR2006063000495.html
U.S. Troops Accused of Killing Iraq Family
By RYAN LENZ
The Associated Press
Friday, June 30, 2006; 10:20 AM [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [politics and violence since big 3] [followup] [latest] [*****]
BEIJI, Iraq -- Five U.S. Army soldiers are being investigated for allegedly raping a young woman, then killing her and three members of her family in Iraq, a U.S. military official told The Associated Press on Friday.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/30/AR2006063000495.html
U.S. Troops Accused of Killing Iraq Family
By RYAN LENZ
The Associated Press
Friday, June 30, 2006; 10:20 AM [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [politics and violence since big 3] [followup] [latest] [*****]
BEIJI, Iraq -- Five U.S. Army soldiers are being investigated for allegedly raping a young woman, then killing her and three members of her family in Iraq, a U.S. military official told The Associated Press on Friday.
The soldiers also allegedly burned the body of the woman they are accused of raping.
Maj. Gen. James D. Thurman, commander of coalition troops in Baghdad, had ordered a criminal investigation into the alleged killing of a family of four in Mahmoudiya, south of Baghdad, the U.S. command said. It did not elaborate.
"The entire investigation will encompass everything that could have happened that evening. We're not releasing any specifics of an ongoing investigation," said military spokesman Maj. Todd Breasseale.
"There is no indication what led soldiers to this home. The investigation just cracked open. We're just beginning to dig into the details."
However, a U.S. official close to the investigation said at least one of the soldiers, all assigned to the 502nd Infantry Regiment, has admitted his role and has been arrested. Two soldiers from the same regiment were slain this month when they were kidnapped at a checkpoint near Youssifiyah.
At least four other soldiers have had their weapons taken away and are confined to Forward Operating Base Mahmoudiyah south of Baghdad. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the case.
The official said the killings appear to be unrelated to the kidnappings but that a soldier felt compelled to report the killings after his fellow soldiers' bodies were found.
The killings appeared to have been a "crime of opportunity," the official said. The soldiers had not been attacked by insurgents but had noticed the woman on previous patrols.
AP correspondent Ryan Lenz is embedded with the 101st Airborne Division in Beiji, Iraq. He was previously embedded with the 502nd Infantry Regiment in Mahmoudiyah.
© 2006 The Associated Press

Sunnis and Shiites Clash North of Baghdad

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/world/middleeast/30iraq.html
June 30, 2006
Sunnis and Shiites Clash North of Baghdad
By EDWARD WONG [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [politics and violence since big 3] [followup] [latest] [*****]
BAGHDAD, Iraq, Friday, June 30 — Pitched battles erupted Thursday between Shiite and Sunni Arab fighters in a village north of Baghdad, highlighting the sectarian violence that still plagues the country, [****]even after the installation of a new government. American soldiers were involved in the fighting, but the role that they played was in dispute.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/world/middleeast/30iraq.html
June 30, 2006
Sunnis and Shiites Clash North of Baghdad
By EDWARD WONG [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [politics and violence since big 3] [followup] [latest] [*****]
BAGHDAD, Iraq, Friday, June 30 — Pitched battles erupted Thursday between Shiite and Sunni Arab fighters in a village north of Baghdad, highlighting the sectarian violence that still plagues the country, [****]even after the installation of a new government. American soldiers were involved in the fighting, but the role that they played was in dispute.
An American military spokesman in Baghdad, Maj. William Willhoite, said in an e-mail message early on Friday that American and Iraqi forces had raided the village to pursue terrorists. A fierce battle erupted at a house where guerrillas had barricaded themselves, he said, and the Americans called in air support. At least three insurgents were killed and three wounded, [****]Major Willhoite said.
One villager, Abdul Hadi al-Dulaimi, said in a telephone interview that the mostly Sunni Arab village of Daliqiya was raided by Shiite policemen working with militiamen to avenge a recent suicide bombing. American troops sided with the Shiites and deployed aircraft and ground troops, [*****]he said. The fighting raged through Thursday night, Mr. Dulaimi said. At least one senior Iraqi police officer died in the fighting. Mr. Dulaimi said at least five villagers from his tribe had been killed.
The fighting broke out in the morning when 30 to 40 armed Shiites stormed the village and began shooting at houses, said Mr. Dulaimi, a date farmer and a member of the Dulaimi tribe, one of the country's largest Sunni Arab tribes. [*****]Daliqiya abuts a village called Khairnabat, where a suicide bomber on a bicycle set off his explosives in a crowd on Monday, killing at least 18 people, all of them Shiites.
The fighters drove into Daliqiya looking for revenge, Mr. Dulaimi said. About 30 to 35 families live in the village, most of them Sunni Arabs from the Dulaimi or Ani tribes. [*****]
The fighting in the morning lasted for three hours, with Iraqi policemen aiding the vengeful Shiites, Mr. Dulaimi said, adding that many of the villagers sent their wives and children out of town during a pause in the battle. The Shiites and Iraqi security forces returned in the evening with American forces and continued the attack, he said.
"Each of us is armed with the weapons we have at home, and we're willing to defend our homes, our money, our property," said Mr. Dulaimi, whose wife and six children have fled to Baquba. "We're willing to die for them."
The two villages lie immediately north of Baquba, a mixed Sunni-Shiite city 35 miles north of Baghdad. The region has long been among the most volatile in Iraq, but sectarian animosities appear to have deepened in recent weeks. It is a magnet for armed groups from across the political spectrum, including Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia and the Mahdi Army fighters of the Shiite cleric Moktada al-Sadr. Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian militant who founded Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, was killed this month in an American airstrike in the nearby village of Hibhib.
Gun battles also broke out Wednesday in the market in downtown Baquba, as Shiite militiamen fought with Sunni Arab insurgents, said a shopkeeper, Hassan Abdul Fattah, 25. The Shiite militiamen had distributed fliers in the morning warning Sunni store owners to keep their shops closed or face death, he said. Sunni Arab guerrillas then put out fliers telling the store owners to open their shops or risk death. The Shiite fighters, members of the Mahdi Army, arrived at noon, and "a battle took place with grenades and mortars," Mr. Abdul Fattah said.
Violence was not confined to the Baquba area, however, with at least 31 other people killed or found dead across the country on Thursday.
In the evening, a suicide car bomber rammed into a funeral tent in the northern city of Kirkuk, killing at least 5 people and wounding at least 23, a police official said. The funeral was for a Shiite soldier killed earlier in the week. Gunmen killed a dentist on Wednesday night in Kirkuk, and two bodies were found separately in the province on Thursday.
In Baghdad, two civilians were killed and five wounded by gunmen in the Dawra neighborhood, an Interior Ministry official said. A concealed bomb by a minibus killed a civilian and wounded another. Seven bodies were found in five locations, three of them recruits in the Iraqi commando forces, the official said.
In the areas of Karbala and Hilla, south of Baghdad, 13 people were killed or found dead, officials said.
The Romanian prime minister, Calin Popescu-Tariceanu, said in Bucharest that he would ask for the withdrawal of the country's 890 troops from Iraq by the end of this year, citing the increasing dangers and costs of the deployment. But the withdrawal requires approval from the State Security Council, [*******]which is headed by Romania's president, Traian Basescu, who immediately criticized the proposal.
Two Romanian soldiers have died in Iraq and four in Afghanistan, where Romania has 809 soldiers. Italy has announced the withdrawal of its troops from Iraq, and Japan is already pulling its 500 or so soldiers from Samawa, a dusty southern province. The Romanian Defense Ministry said four soldiers helping to train Iraqi forces would stay in the country.
Marine in Moore Film Dies
[Fahrenheit 9/11 marine dies] [******************]
DETROIT, June 29 (AP) — A marine who appeared in Michael Moore's documentary film "Fahrenheit 9/11" has died in Iraq.
The marine, Staff Sgt. Raymond J. Plouhar, 30, was serving as a recruiter in Flint, Mich., when Mr. Moore showed him approaching prospective recruits in a mall parking lot. In the film, Sergeant Plouhar said it was "better to get them when they're in ones and twos and work on them that way."
Sergeant Plouhar appeared willingly in the film, which criticized President Bush's actions after the Sept. 11 attacks. Sergeant Plouhar's father, also named Raymond, said that his son did not know the film would criticize the war, and that he was proud that his son "wanted to protect the freedom of this country whether we all agree with the war or not."
The Defense Department said in a news release that Sergeant Plouhar died of wounds from fighting in Anbar Province west of Baghdad on Monday. He was married and had two children.
Mona Mahmoud contributed reporting from Baghdad for this article, an Iraqi employee of The New York Times from Kirkuk, and Nicholas Wood from Skopje, Macedonia.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Europeans Cheer Ruling on Guantanamo Trials

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062902248.html
Europeans Cheer Ruling on Guantanamo Trials
U.S. Court's Decision Raises Hopes Prison Will Close but Underscores Problems With Repatriation
By Craig Whitlock
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, June 30, 2006; A08 [gitmo] [bush admin executive power—unitary executive—discussed in detail in today’s govt] [here Europeans who have been embarrassed by Bush admin’s position are please that US supremes put kibosh on it] [they think gitmo will now close leaving them with which fewer things to explain and apologize] [******]
BERLIN, June 29 -- In Europe, where the Bush administration has taken a diplomatic beating over its prison at Guantanamo Bay, the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling Thursday was received with cheers and fueled hopes that the detention center's days are numbered. [********]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062902248.html
Europeans Cheer Ruling on Guantanamo Trials
U.S. Court's Decision Raises Hopes Prison Will Close but Underscores Problems With Repatriation
By Craig Whitlock
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, June 30, 2006; A08 [gitmo] [bush admin executive power—unitary executive—discussed in detail in today’s govt] [here Europeans who have been embarrassed by Bush admin’s position are please that US supremes put kibosh on it] [they think gitmo will now close leaving them with which fewer things to explain and apologize] [******]
BERLIN, June 29 -- In Europe, where the Bush administration has taken a diplomatic beating over its prison at Guantanamo Bay, the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling Thursday was received with cheers and fueled hopes that the detention center's days are numbered. [********]
At the same time, European leaders acknowledged that the court's decision would also increase pressure on their own governments to help their U.S. ally find a solution to an increasingly thorny problem: what to do with the prisoners who are no longer considered a threat but effectively have nowhere to go. [************]
Although a long list of European lawmakers and human rights groups have demanded that the U.S. government shut down the Guantanamo prison as soon as possible, three European countries -- Britain, Bosnia and Germany -- have balked at requests to accept citizens or former residents who are stuck in Cuba, even though there is evidence they do not pose a security risk. [**********]
The State Department struggled for almost two years to find a place to resettle ethnic Uighur Muslims held at Guantanamo, after determining that they could be unfairly prosecuted in their native China. [*********] Last month, five Uighurs were sent to the Balkan nation of Albania, after most other European nations had rejected the U.S. request for help.
Calls in Europe to shutter Guantanamo have become louder in recent months, particularly since U.S. officials announced that three detainees had committed suicide at the camp on June 10. [*******]Last week, during a summit with European Union leaders in Vienna, President Bush preempted what was expected to be a public squabble over Guantanamo by saying he, too, wanted to close the detention center but was waiting for guidance from the Supreme Court on how to proceed. [*********]
At least 19 detainees from Europe have been released and sent to their home countries, where some have been arrested. A dozen others who have citizenship or residency status in Europe remain at Guantanamo, in part because their governments don't want them or have declined to intervene on their behalf. [********]
Manfred Nowak, an Austrian law professor and the U.N. special rapporteur on torture, predicted that the Supreme Court decision would clear the way for Guantanamo to close by the end of the year. [*******]
"Europe should help empty it," said Nowak, who issued a strongly critical report on conditions at Guantanamo for the United Nations in February. "No country is eager to accept people who are accused of having al-Qaeda links. But there should be burden-sharing."
"I would agree with President Bush on this: Criticism is fine, but it should be constructive criticism and that means Europe should help the U.S. develop a plan of action," [*******]he said.
The difficulty of sending some detainees back to their native countries was underscored Thursday when Nowak declared on a fact-finding mission to Amman, Jordan, that "torture is systematically practiced" by the Jordanian intelligence and security agencies. [********] Four Jordanian citizens remain at Guantanamo, and human rights groups have warned that they could be abused if returned home.
Anne-Marie Lizin, president of the Belgian Senate and leader of a European inspection team that visited Guantanamo in March, said it would be possible to "dismantle" the detention center by the end of the year. But she said Europe would have to help.
"It's easy to put all the blame on the U.S.," said Lizin, who is scheduled to present findings of her trip Friday in Washington on behalf of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. "Europe is also responsible. In the first year of the Afghan war, everyone was in favor of being strong. The problem came in 2004, when it became clear that the question of what would happen to Guantanamo would not be so easy to answer."
Although European political leaders have pressed their U.S. counterparts to close Guantanamo, members of their intelligence agencies are regular visitors to the prison and have been allowed to conduct interrogations there. In some cases, European intelligence agencies assisted in the capture of terrorism suspects later taken to Guantanamo. [*******]
For instance, the British security service known as MI5 played an instrumental role in the arrest of two British residents, Jamil el-Banna and Bisher al-Rawi, who are imprisoned at Guantanamo. [*****] According to documents and interviews, MI5 agents tipped off the CIA that the two men were on their way to the West African nation of Gambia for a business trip in November 2002.
The men were taken into custody as soon as they landed on a flight from London, then were taken by the CIA to a secret prison in Afghanistan and then to Cuba. [****]Documents suggest that both men were abducted after MI5 pressured them into working for the British government as informants, but they refused.
Despite pleas from their families, who say the men are innocent of any wrongdoing, Britain refused for years to intervene on their behalf on the grounds that they are not British citizens, only longtime residents. Under pressure from a lawsuit, the British government agreed in March to seek Rawi's release, but his relatives said officials are still dragging their feet. [*******]
“I think from the American standpoint, the Americans want to release him, but the British do not want to play the same game,” Wahab al-Rawi, the brother of Bisher al-Rawi, said in a telephone interview. “It’s one of two things. Either the British government is embarrassed by what it has done, or else it is a matter of malice. It’s one or the other.” [********]
News researcher Julie Tate in Washington contributed to this report.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

G-8 'Disappointed' With Iran Over Nuclear Offer

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062900315.html
G-8 'Disappointed' With Iran Over Nuclear Offer
Tehran Rejects Call for Response to Nuclear Incentives by Next Week
By Glenn Kessler
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, June 30, 2006; A24 [iran] [wmd] [g8 and other western configurations have offered some substantial incentives to iran] [they have said that there is a time window closing] [iran has, somewhat childishly, responded by saying it shall not decide within the specified timeframe] [followup] [************] [ditto]
MOSCOW, June 29 -- Iran should give a "clear and substantive" response next Wednesday to an offer for economic and other incentives as part of negotiations on its nuclear program, the United States, Russia and other industrial nations said Thursday.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062900315.html
G-8 'Disappointed' With Iran Over Nuclear Offer
Tehran Rejects Call for Response to Nuclear Incentives by Next Week
By Glenn Kessler
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, June 30, 2006; A24 [iran] [wmd] [g8 and other western configurations have offered some substantial incentives to iran] [they have said that there is a time window closing] [iran has, somewhat childishly, responded by saying it shall not decide within the specified timeframe] [followup] [************] [ditto]
MOSCOW, June 29 -- Iran should give a "clear and substantive" response next Wednesday to an offer for economic and other incentives as part of negotiations on its nuclear program, the United States, Russia and other industrial nations said Thursday.
Foreign ministers of the Group of Eight countries said in a statement that they were "disappointed" Iran had not yet provided a formal response to the offer, made on June 1 in Vienna by the five permanent members of the Security Council and Germany.
A top Iranian official is to meet with the European Union's foreign policy chief, Javier Solana, on Wednesday to discuss the offer. U.S. officials indicated that more than one meeting might be necessary to get a full answer from the Iranians.
Putting pressure on Iran, U.S. officials said the foreign ministers of the countries that made the offer -- the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany -- will meet on July 12 to assess the Iranian response and decide whether it is adequate to begin negotiations -- or warrants bringing the issue back to the U.N. Security Council for possible sanctions.
Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki, at a news conference at the United Nations, rejected the demand for an answer in July, saying it would not come before August because of "questions and ambiguities" in the proposal.
The offer was made after the Bush administration shifted course and decided to join talks on Iran's program if the Tehran government agreed to suspend its uranium enrichment activities. Enriching uranium is a key step toward the possible development of nuclear weapons. The offer is intended to sharpen the choice facing Iran, giving it a clear reason to choose cooperation over confrontation on its nuclear program, which Iranian officials say is intended solely for generating electricity.
"An agreement of this sort would allow the Iranian people to enjoy the benefits of modern civil nuclear power and would bring Iran many other long-term political and economic advantages," the G-8 statement said.
The statement made no mention of possible sanctions. When Solana formally presented the offer to the Iranian government on June 6, he provided a written copy of incentives but only orally mentioned a list of sanctions, known among diplomats as "disincentives," that might be considered if Iran does not suspend its nuclear program.
Although the six countries agreed on the list of possible sanctions, choosing which ones to impose if Iran refuses to negotiate would likely be a diplomatic challenge.
China and Russia have said they oppose sanctions. Russian President Vladimir Putin, in a speech Tuesday that did not directly refer to Iran, said: "We have no intention of joining in any kinds of ultimatums that only drive the situation into a dead end and deal a blow to the U.N. Security Council's authority." He added that crises cannot be settled by isolating countries but by drawing them into dialogue.
During a news conference here, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov sidestepped a question about whether they were unified on using sanctions if Iran did not respond positively. "We did not discuss anything beyond the offer which we all made in good faith to Iran, which is a positive offer," Lavrov said.
On Wednesday, Solana met with senior officials from the six countries for five hours to discuss strategies for dealing with the Iranian response. A senior U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told reporters that there was firm agreement on the need for a timely Iranian answer.
He also said the six countries agreed that Iran would not be allowed to provide some halfway response to the request to end its enrichment activities. He said that a suspension would have to include no more spinning of centrifuges, no introduction of uranium gas, no more activities at Iran's facility in Nantanz and no new construction of centrifuge arrays known as cascades.
In the statement, which covered a long list of foreign policy issues, the foreign ministers also called on Israel to "exercise utmost restraint" in the Gaza Strip, where it is conducting a major military operation in an attempt to free a soldier held by Palestinian gunmen. The ministers also expressed concern over the detention of about one-third of the Hamas-led cabinet.
"We believe that the political process cannot be restored by way of violence on either side," [******]said French Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

Diplomats Push Iran to Reply Soon to Incentives Offer

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/world/middleeast/30diplo.html
June 30, 2006
Diplomats Push Iran to Reply Soon to Incentives Offer
By HELENE COOPER [iran] [wmd] [g8 and other western configurations have offered some substantial incentives to iran] [they have said that there is a time window closing] [iran has, somewhat childishly, responded by saying it shall not decide within the specified timeframe] [followup] [************]
MOSCOW, June 29 — Diplomats from the world's richest countries said Thursday that they expected to receive a "clear and substantive" response from Iran by next Wednesday to the package of incentives offered by major powers in exchange for suspending its activities relating to enrichment of uranium. [*********]

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/world/middleeast/30diplo.html
June 30, 2006
Diplomats Push Iran to Reply Soon to Incentives Offer
By HELENE COOPER [iran] [wmd] [g8 and other western configurations have offered some substantial incentives to iran] [they have said that there is a time window closing] [iran has, somewhat childishly, responded by saying it shall not decide within the specified timeframe] [followup] [************]
MOSCOW, June 29 — Diplomats from the world's richest countries said Thursday that they expected to receive a "clear and substantive" response from Iran by next Wednesday to the package of incentives offered by major powers in exchange for suspending its activities relating to enrichment of uranium. [*********]
The statement from the foreign ministers of the Group of 8 industrialized countries was the first reference to an explicit deadline for Iran to respond formally. "We are disappointed in the absence of an official Iranian response to this positive proposal," their statement said. [*********]
The statement said Iran's top nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani, and the European Union foreign policy chief, Javier Solana, who presented the proposals to Iran on June 6, would meet Wednesday, adding that the Group of 8 expects "to bring these discussions to a rapid conclusion." [************]
It is unclear, however, whether Iran will meet the deadline. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has said his government will not respond until late August. [******]
After receiving Iran's response, foreign ministers from the major powers that made the nuclear offer — China, Russia, Britain, France, Germany and the United States — will meet July 12 at a as-yet-undecided European city, maybe Paris. [*****]They will consider whether the response can lead them toward an agreement or whether to proceed to seek economic sanctions against Iran, said a senior Bush administration official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity so as not to interfere with the diplomatic process.
The leaders of the Group of 8 countries — Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States — will meet in St. Petersburg on July 15. [*****] Thursday's statement was echoed by comments from China, the only one of the countries making the proposal to Iran not included in the Group of 8. Without mentioning a specific date, a spokesman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry in Beijing urged Iran to respond to the package of incentives "as soon as possible," Reuters reported.
Group of 8 meetings are usually rather boring, ending with communiqués and news conferences in which all parties pretend they are all one big, happy family. Thursday's session, however, was different. [*********]
Officials forgot to turn off the audio feed from the lunch meeting, so reporters were able to hear parts of the discussion, much of it bickering between the Russian foreign minister, Sergey V. Lavrov, and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, [see today’s govt for piece on same] [more info] [***]often over arcane points in the statement.
At one point, the two squabbled about Russia's desire to include wording about "urgent methods" to "provide security for diplomats" in the aftermath of the killing in Iraq of five Russian Embassy staff members. Ms. Rice balked, saying that the wording would made [sic]it look like urgent measures were not being taken to protect Iraqis and American soldiers.
"It implies they are not being taken, and you know on a fairly daily basis we lose soldiers, and I think it would be offensive to suggest that these efforts are not being made," [***]she said.
Mr. Lavrov replied that the sentence was not intended as criticism. "I don't believe security is fine in Iraq and I don't believe in particular that security at foreign missions is O.K.," he said. "If you feel uncomfortable about it, maybe we should make it shorter." [****]
Eventually they agreed that the text would simply condemn the killing of the Russians and add that "this tragic event underlines the importance of improving security for all in Iraq."
No sooner was that compromise reached but Ms. Rice and Mr. Lavrov were at it again, this time over Mr. Lavrov's proposal that the statement include something about the need for the rest of the world to be more involved in the Iraqi political process. [*****]Ms. Rice immediately took exception to that.
"To say the international community is to be more involved in the political process seems to me rather odd, given that they have a democratic elective process," she said.
"I did not suggest this," Mr. Lavrov replied. "What I did say was not involvement in the political process but the involvement of the international community in support of the political process."
"What does that mean?" Ms. Rice asked.
There was a long pause. Then, from Mr. Lavrov: "I think you understand."
Ms. Rice: "No, I don't."
The sparring continued after the lunch and into a news conference. "Condoleezza Rice said that she first came to the Soviet Union in 1979 and she has noticed — seen a change in the country," [*****]Mr. Lavrov piped up, in answer to an unrelated question from a journalist. "I also first visited the U.S.A. in 1979 and I have been taking note of changes, many of which we strive to discuss with our American counterparts." [*******]
Ms. Rice fumed for a few minutes while the discussion went on to other matters. The next time she was asked a question — about whether she thought Russia had resorted to energy blackmail against Europe, she detoured. "Sergey, when did you go and where did you go in the United States in 1979 that you saw so much change?" [******]she asked.
“New York,” Mr. Lavrov replied.
“Oh, New York,” Ms. Rice repeated, smirking. “Now I understand.” [******]
Since Iran received the nuclear proposal, Iranian officials have continued to say that Iran will never give up its right to pursue nuclear enrichment, but they have also described the proposal as "positive."
What happens after the Iranians do respond remains unclear. Russia and China have resisted the idea of hauling Iran before the United Nations Security Council for sanctions, [****]a position pushed by the United States and Britain, with France and Germany somewhere in between.
In order to get Moscow on board, the United States agreed to not include mention of economic sanctions in the written part of the incentives package offered to Iran.
Bush officials continue to express optimism that if Iran turns down the package, Russia will sign on to sanctions, but the Russians continue to send mixed signals.
Speaking to foreign diplomats on Tuesday, President Vladimir V. Putin said, "I repeat once again that we have no intention of joining in any kinds of ultimatums that only drive the situation into a dead end and deal a blow to the U.N. Security Council's authority." [*************]
At the meeting on Thursday, Russian officials pointedly put copies of the text of that speech on the table for journalists.
no author box as of now.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Japan and U.S. Warn N. Korea On Missile

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062901918.html
Japan and U.S. Warn N. Korea On Missile
Launch Would Be 'Unacceptable'
By Peter Baker
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, June 30, 2006; A04 [bush and koisumi] [on dprk’s possible missile launch] [wmd] [warnings] [brinkmanship] [**********] [ditto]
President Bush and Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi escalated pressure on North Korea yesterday not to test-fire a long-range ballistic missile now sitting on a launch pad, and they warned that the nation would be further cut off from the rest of the international community if it proceeds.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062901918.html
Japan and U.S. Warn N. Korea On Missile
Launch Would Be 'Unacceptable'
By Peter Baker
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, June 30, 2006; A04 [bush and koisumi] [on dprk’s possible missile launch] [wmd] [warnings] [brinkmanship] [**********] [ditto]
President Bush and Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi escalated pressure on North Korea yesterday not to test-fire a long-range ballistic missile now sitting on a launch pad, and they warned that the nation would be further cut off from the rest of the international community if it proceeds.
"Launching the missile is unacceptable," Bush said at a news conference with Koizumi after the two privately conferred on the confrontation with North Korea. Referring to Kim Jong Il, the president added, "The leader of North Korea is just going to have to make a decision: Does he want to be isolated from the world, or is he interested in being an active participant?"
Koizumi would not discuss options if North Korea defies Washington and Tokyo, but made clear he would seek to impose diplomatic consequences. "Should they ever launch the missile," he said, "we would apply various pressures."
The discussion of North Korea came during the first day of a two-day visit by Koizumi, his last with Bush before stepping down in September. Bush, who considers Koizumi one of his best friends among foreign leaders, pulled out all the stops, starting with a pomp-filled welcome on the South Lawn, meetings in the Oval Office, an East Room news conference and, finally, last night a black-tie dinner.
Around the White House and Blair House, where Koizumi stayed as Bush's guest, the streets and buildings were festooned with U.S. and Japanese flags. Bush plans to cap the visit by taking Koizumi, a longtime Elvis Presley fan, to Graceland in Memphis today. He gave Koizumi an old-fashioned jukebox yesterday, complete with vinyl records of Presley and other 1950s rock stars. The two leaders peppered their talks with Presley references.
"Thank you, very much, American people, for 'Love Me Tender,' " Koizumi said in accented English.
The meetings touched on a number of serious issues, including Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and U.S. beef exports. But the main purpose was to cement the relationship Bush has built with Koizumi in hopes that it will carry over to his successor. Koizumi has been a chief supporter of Bush even as other foreign leaders kept their distance. Still, he is pulling out 500 Japanese engineers serving in Iraq, although he will increase Japanese airlift support in the country.
The most urgent issue confronting the two was North Korea, which has a Taepodong-2 missile poised for a possible launch, although it is not clear whether it has been fully fueled. The United States has speeded plans to deploy Patriot interceptor missiles at U.S. bases in Japan, acknowledging the threat that North Korea may pose.
Bush said he will look to expand cooperation with Japan on anti-missile programs. "Another interesting opportunity is, over time, to work on missile defenses," he said. "The Japanese cannot afford to be held hostage to rockets, and neither can the United States or any other body who loves freedom."
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

Koizumi Joins Bush in Warning North Korea Not to Fire Missile

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/washington/30prexy.html
June 30, 2006
Koizumi Joins Bush in Warning North Korea Not to Fire Missile
By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG [bush and koisumi] [on dprk’s possible missile launch] [wmd] [warnings] [brinkmanship] [**********]
WASHINGTON, June 29 — After meeting with Japan's prime minister, President Bush warned North Korea on Thursday that Japan "cannot afford to be held hostage to rockets" and said that it would be "unacceptable" for the North to test a longrange missile. [**********]

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/30/washington/30prexy.html
June 30, 2006
Koizumi Joins Bush in Warning North Korea Not to Fire Missile
By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG [bush and koisumi] [on dprk’s possible missile launch] [wmd] [warnings] [brinkmanship] [**********]
WASHINGTON, June 29 — After meeting with Japan's prime minister, President Bush warned North Korea on Thursday that Japan "cannot afford to be held hostage to rockets" and said that it would be "unacceptable" for the North to test a longrange missile. [**********]
At a joint news conference, Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi said the two leaders had agreed to "apply various pressures" on North Korea should it proceed with a test launching. [********]
Neither leader gave any specifics about how they might respond to a test. In the last two weeks, officials have said intelligence agencies have detected signs that a launching may be forthcoming. [*******]
“Launching the missile is unacceptable,” Mr. Bush said. “There have been no briefings as to what’s on top of the missile.” [*************]
Referring to the North Korean leader, Kim Jong Il, Mr. Bush continued: "He hasn't told anybody where the missile is going. He has an obligation, it seems like to me, and the prime minister, that there be a full briefing to those of us who are concerned about this issue as to what his intentions are." [******]
North Korea tested a long-range missile once before, in 1998, firing it over Japan into the Pacific and shaking up financial markets, the public and political leaders. [*********]
Japanese officials have threatened in the past to cut off ferry service and other trade with North Korea or to crack down on the transfer of cash from Koreans living in Japan back to the North. [******]
“Should they ever launch the missile, that will cause various pressures — we would apply various pressures,” Mr. Koizumi said, speaking through an interpreter. “And we discussed that. I believe it is best that I do not discuss what specific pressures we were talking about.” [**********]
The prime minister and the president greeted reporters in the East Room of the White House after their two-hour meeting. North Korea was discussed at length, Mr. Bush said. He issued a pointed reminder that the United States and Japan were cooperating on antimissile technology, calling it an "interesting opportunity" to dissuade North Korea over the long term. [******]
Mr. Koizumi, one of Mr. Bush's closest friends on the world stage, is expected to step down when his term expires in September. [*****]He was welcomed Thursday morning with a majestic arrival ceremony at the White House featuring a 19-gun salute, a military color guard, an Air Force brass band and a fife-and-drum corps in Revolutionary-era uniform: bright red jackets, blue tricorn hats and powdered wigs.
But the high point of his stay will be a private presidential tour on Friday of Graceland, the Elvis Presley mansion in Memphis. Mr. Koizumi is a die-hard Elvis fan, and at the start of Thursday’s visit Mr. Bush presented him with a jukebox filled with old vinyl 45’s, including Elvis tunes.
Mr. Koizumi promptly turned it on, playing one of his favorites, “I Want You, I Need You, I Love You,” for the president.
“Officially he’s here to see the president,” Mr. Bush said at the arrival ceremony. “But I know the highlight of his visit will be paying his respects to the King.”
The Graceland trip is partly a reward to the prime minister for standing firmly with the president on Iraq. Mr. Bush praised Mr. Koizumi as “a strategic thinker” and someone who “believes in freedom,” and went on to recount a story he used often on the campaign trail, about how his father, the first President Bush, and Mr. Koizumi’s father fought on opposite sides in World War II.
“Something happened between our visit to Graceland and when our respective fathers looked at each other with deep suspicion,” Mr. Bush said. “And what happened was, Japan developed a Japanese-style democracy based upon shared values.” [*********]
Despite the closeness there was one delicate bit of diplomacy on the agenda: Japan's recent decision to reopen its markets to United States beef after a ban related to concerns over mad cow disease. [******]Mr. Bush thanked Mr. Koizumi for the move.
"I think the Japanese people are going to like the taste of U.S. beef," Mr. Bush said
To prove it, the White House put steak on the menu for the formal dinner in Mr. Koizumi's honor on Thursday. The main course: Texas Kobe beef.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

U.S. Says Cash, Arms Flowing to Islamists in Somalia

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-somalia30jun30,1,492393.story?coll=la-headlines-world
From the Los Angeles Times
U.S. Says Cash, Arms Flowing to Islamists in Somalia
From Reuters
June 30, 2006 [Somalia] [strategic horn of Africa over which hydra and us-west are fighting] [proximity to Saudi peninsula] [followup] [use psci 469] [***********]

WASHINGTON — Funds are flowing into Somalia from Saudi Arabia and Yemen to support the Islamic courts movement that seized the capital, Mogadishu, this month, a senior U.S. official said Thursday. [oh my god] [another us official just helped the enemy] [sedition] [the entire argument about the media (read NYTs) publishing info that helps thte enemy is a sham plain and simple] [this admin has leaked more stuff during the 2004 election cycle and since than any newspaper] [************]

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-somalia30jun30,1,492393.story?coll=la-headlines-world
From the Los Angeles Times
U.S. Says Cash, Arms Flowing to Islamists in Somalia
From Reuters
June 30, 2006 [Somalia] [strategic horn of Africa over which hydra and us-west are fighting] [proximity to Saudi peninsula] [followup] [use psci 469] [***********]

WASHINGTON — Funds are flowing into Somalia from Saudi Arabia and Yemen to support the Islamic courts movement that seized the capital, Mogadishu, this month, a senior U.S. official said Thursday. [oh my god] [another us official just helped the enemy] [sedition] [the entire argument about the media (read NYTs) publishing info that helps thte enemy is a sham plain and simple] [this admin has leaked more stuff during the 2004 election cycle and since than any newspaper] [************]

"I don't want to say the Saudi government is supporting any particular court, but I do know that there is money coming in from Saudi Arabia," [****]Jendayi E. Frazer, assistant secretary of State for African affairs, told the House International Relations Committee.

She said some of the funds were coming from Somalian businessmen based in Saudi Arabia. [********]

"There is money coming in from Yemen and arms from Eritrea and other places" [****]to Somalia, she said.

Asked what the United States was doing about the flow of funds, she said, "We definitely want to reach out to the governments of Saudi Arabia, Yemen and others in the Middle East."

The United States fears that the Conservative Council of Islamic Courts, formerly known as the Islamic Courts Union, wants to establish a Taliban-style regime in Somalia. [*******]

Bin Laden Tape Calls Zarqawi 'Brave Knight'

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/30/AR2006063000002.html
Bin Laden Tape Calls Zarqawi 'Brave Knight'
By Karen DeYoung
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, June 30, 2006; A06 [dateline unknown] [likely in Pakistan near Quetta] [Osama release tape about zarqawi calling him prince] [Zawahiri’s tape was few days ago, nearly a week ago?] [use psci 469] [***********]
Osama bin Laden praised slain al-Qaeda in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in an audiotape [*****]released yesterday as a "brave knight" [***]and a "lion of jihad"[*******] whose small band of fighters had humiliated the United States and the Iraqis who fought against him.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/30/AR2006063000002.html
Bin Laden Tape Calls Zarqawi 'Brave Knight'
By Karen DeYoung
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, June 30, 2006; A06 [dateline unknown] [likely in Pakistan near Quetta] [Osama release tape about zarqawi calling him prince] [Zawahiri’s tape was few days ago, nearly a week ago?] [use psci 469] [***********]
Osama bin Laden praised slain al-Qaeda in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in an audiotape [*****]released yesterday as a "brave knight" [***]and a "lion of jihad"[*******] whose small band of fighters had humiliated the United States and the Iraqis who fought against him.
The tape's imminent posting on a jihadist Web site was heralded for 24 hours before it appeared late last night, and is the fourth bin Laden has produced this year. [****]A U.S. counterterrorism official said experts were still analyzing the voice on the tape, but that "there's no reason to doubt that it's real."
Officials portrayed the tape, as they have bin Laden's previous productions, as an attempt by the al-Qaeda leader to appear relevant and in touch with current events. [*******] Although his deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri, appeared in a videotape last week discussing Zarqawi's death, bin Laden had not commented on it. [*******]
The 19-minute tape played while a split screen showed a static photograph of bin Laden and a panel featuring footage of a video speech delivered by Zarqawi [*****]shortly before he was killed by U.S. troops north of Baghdad early this month.
Yesterday's audiotape demonstrates both the increasing sophistication of al-Qaeda's propaganda and an aggressive marketing effort to portray bin Laden as in the forefront of the news and the leader of a viable worldwide movement connecting widespread Islamic struggles. [********]
"The flag did not fall" with Zarqawi's death, bin Laden said, "but was transferred from one lion to another Islamic lion," in the form of new leadership of al-Qaeda in Iraq. [***]Addressing President Bush, he said that "we will continue, God willing, fighting you and your allies everywhere in Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia and Sudan, until we exhaust your resources, and kill your men and [you] go back defeated." [*******]
A translation of the tape was provided by the SITE Institute, [******]a Washington-based organization that monitors jihadist Internet sites.
Much of the tape was in praise of the Jordanian-born Zarqawi, who as the head of a major faction of the Sunni insurgency in Iraq had frequent differences with the al-Qaeda leadership. [***]The United States last fall released a letter it said had been intercepted en route from Zawahiri to Zarqawi, in which the al-Qaeda second in command criticized the brutality of Zarqawi's tactics -- including attacks against Shiite Muslim religious sites and videotaped beheading of hostages -- as likely to alienate Iraqis. [*****]
Bin Laden, however, has apparently decided to claim Zarqawi in death as a major martyr for al-Qaeda. [***]God, he said, had "opened the path for [Zarqawi] to establish a base to defend the religion and to regain Palestine. . . . He took revenge on the wicked people [in Iraq], where he hurt the Americans, the allies of the Jewish people, and made them dizzy. He killed their men and destroyed their buildings, and exploited resources and dispersed them and humiliated them so everybody could hurt them." [*******]
Although acknowledging that Zarqawi was "accused" of "killing some of the Iraqi people," bin Laden implied that many of the charges were U.S. propaganda. [****]But he said anyone "who wanted to stand in the Crusaders' trench against Muslims" deserves to be killed "regardless of his faith or tribe." [******]
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

June 29, 2006

Terrorism Index--Center for American Progress and Council on Foreign Relations

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Supreme Court Block Trials at Guantanamo

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/washington/29cnd-scotus.html
June 29, 2006
Supreme Court Block Trials at Guantanamo
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court ruled Thursday that President Bush overstepped his authority in ordering military war crimes trials for Guantanamo Bay detainees. [*******]

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/washington/29cnd-scotus.html
June 29, 2006
Supreme Court Block Trials at Guantanamo
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court ruled Thursday that President Bush overstepped his authority in ordering military war crimes trials for Guantanamo Bay detainees. [*******]
The ruling, a rebuke to the administration and its aggressive anti-terror policies, was written by Justice John Paul Stevens, who said the proposed trials were illegal under U.S. law and international Geneva conventions.
The case focused on Salim Ahmed Hamdan, a Yemeni who worked as a bodyguard and driver for Osama bin Laden. Hamdan, 36, has spent four years in the U.S. prison in Cuba. He faces a single count of conspiring against U.S. citizens from 1996 to November 2001. [******]
Two years ago, the court rejected Bush's claim to have the authority to seize and detain terrorism suspects and indefinitely deny them access to courts or lawyers. [*****]In this follow-up case, the justices focused solely on the issue of trials for some of the men.
The vote was split 5-3, with moderate Justice Anthony M. Kennedy joining the court's liberal members in ruling against the Bush administration. Chief Justice John Roberts, named to the lead the court last September by Bush, was sidelined in the case because as an appeals court judge he had backed the government over Hamdan.
Thursday's ruling overturned that decision. [*****] [****]
Bush spokesman Tony Snow said the White House would have no comment until lawyers had had a chance to review the decision. Officials at the Pentagon and Justice Department were planning to issue statements later in the day.
The administration had hinted in recent weeks that it was prepared for the court to set back its plans for trying Guantanamo detainees. [*********]
The president also has told reporters, "I'd like to close Guantanamo." But he added, "I also recognize that we're holding some people that are darn dangerous."
The court's ruling says nothing about whether the prison should be shut down, dealing only with plans to put detainees on trial.
"Trial by military commission raises separation-of-powers concerns of the highest order," [*****]Kennedy wrote in his opinion.
The prison at Guantanamo Bay, erected in the months after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks on the United States, has been a flash point for international criticism.[****] Hundreds of people suspected of ties to al-Qaida and the Taliban -- including some teenagers -- have been swept up by the U.S. military and secretly shipped there since 2002. [*******]
Three detainees committed suicide there this month, using sheets and clothing to hang themselves. The deaths brought new scrutiny and criticism of the prison, along with fresh calls for its closing.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Bush Seeks to Use Media Leaks to His Advantage

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/28/AR2006062802180.html
Bush Seeks to Use Media Leaks to His Advantage
Attack on Newspapers Continues as Some Democrats Accuse White House of Trying to Divert Attention
By Charles Babington and Michael Abramowitz
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, June 29, 2006; A11 [bush admin] [manipulation of media] [hardly a scoop] [********]
President Bush rallied Republicans with another attack on the media last night, in remarks that highlighted efforts at the White House and on Capitol Hill to gain momentum from recent disclosures about classified programs to fight terrorism. [*****]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/28/AR2006062802180.html
Bush Seeks to Use Media Leaks to His Advantage
Attack on Newspapers Continues as Some Democrats Accuse White House of Trying to Divert Attention
By Charles Babington and Michael Abramowitz
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, June 29, 2006; A11 [bush admin] [manipulation of media] [hardly a scoop] [********]
President Bush rallied Republicans with another attack on the media last night, in remarks that highlighted efforts at the White House and on Capitol Hill to gain momentum from recent disclosures about classified programs to fight terrorism. [*****]
Senior administration officials say the president was outraged by articles in the New York Times and other newspapers about a surveillance program in which the U.S. government has tapped international banking records for information about terrorist financing. But his comments at a Republican fundraiser in a St. Louis suburb yesterday, combined with new moves by GOP congressional leaders, showed how both are working to fan public anger and reap gains from the controversy during a midterm election year in which polls show they are running against stiff headwinds.
Democrats, for their part, denounced Republicans for trying to divert attention from issues such as the Iraq war and high gasoline prices, and some terrorism experts said the White House is exaggerating the damage.
Republican House leaders introduced a resolution yesterday condemning leakers and calling on the media and others to safeguard classified programs. For the second time this week -- at an event on behalf of Sen. James M. Talent (R-Mo.) -- Bush attacked newspapers for disclosures he said make it harder for his administration to thwart terrorists.
"This program has been a vital tool in the war on terror," the president said, receiving a standing ovation. "There can be no excuse for anyone entrusted with vital intelligence to leak it and no excuse for any newspaper to print it."
Hours before Bush spoke, Democrats denounced what they saw as a White House-inspired campaign.
"This is all so people don't realize what else is going on," especially in Iraq, said Rep. Rahm Emanuel (Ill.), who is heading his party's efforts to regain control of the House in the November elections. "This is disingenuous of both the White House and House Republicans."
The White House dismissed such claims. "This is not press-bashing. This is a clear disagreement about a decision to reveal a classified program," White House counselor Dan Bartlett said in an e-mail exchange. "Are we supposed to just sit back and take it?"
Last week, the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Los Angeles Times reported that the banking surveillance program used a new interpretation of the Treasury Department's administrative authority to bypass traditional banking privacy protections, sweeping up large numbers of international money transfers in a bid to identify terrorist funding operations. The Washington Post quickly matched the reports, which were posted on Web sites Thursday night.
There is growing debate about whether the disclosures aided terrorists or added to the government's burden. Victor Comras, a retired diplomat and consultant on terrorism financing, said he finds it "doubtful" that the disclosure had much impact because many terrorists have taken steps in recent years to mask their transactions, aware they might be under surveillance.
"I can understand why people are upset when any classified information is leaked, but I wouldn't call this a major damage to our national security or to the war on terror," Comras said in an interview. "A terrorist would have to be pretty dumb not to know that this was happening."
Administration officials disputed such claims, saying there is a big difference between a terrorist thinking the government may be watching him and knowing exactly what the government is doing to monitor financial flows. In a letter to the New York Times posted on the Treasury Department's Web site, outgoing Secretary John W. Snow wrote, "In choosing to expose this program, despite repeated pleas from high-level officials on both sides of the aisle, including myself, the Times undermined a highly successful counter-terrorism program and alerted terrorists to the methods and sources used to track their money trails."
The House GOP resolution, scheduled for a vote today, takes aim at the media and at government workers who may have shared classified information. Republicans said the resolution will allow their members to register support for Bush's anti-terrorism efforts and the anger that many feel toward news organizations. They said it also is designed to force House Democrats to stand with the media or Bush's criticism of it -- a choice many would prefer to avoid.
The House action came a day after several GOP senators criticized the media -- the New York Times, in particular -- and suggested that reporters and editors should be prosecuted for disclosing classified information. Members of both parties agreed that the uproar would help the administration, at least temporarily, frame the national debate on terms that resonate favorably with its conservative electoral base.
The House resolution does not mention any news organization by name, a decision that resulted from closed-door GOP discussions in which some urged colleagues not to overdo media-bashing. It defends the legality and effectiveness of the financial transactions-monitoring program. It states that the House "expects the cooperation of all news media organizations in protecting the lives of Americans and the capability of the government to identify, disrupt, and capture terrorists by not disclosing classified intelligence programs such as the Terrorist Finance Tracking Program."
A House Democratic staff member said the phrase appears to infringe on the First Amendment's protection of a free press. Democrats were drafting an alternative resolution last night but privately conceded that Republicans probably would not allow a vote on it.
The GOP resolution, sponsored by Rep. Michael G. Oxley (Ohio), also states that "the disclosure of the Terrorist Finance Tracking Program has unnecessarily complicated efforts by the United States Government to prosecute the war on terror and may have placed the lives of Americans in danger both at home and in many regions of the world." It "condemns the unauthorized disclosure of classified information by those persons responsible and expresses concern that the disclosure may endanger the lives of American citizens."
Staff writer Peter Baker in Clayton, Mo., contributed to this report.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

Behind Bush's Fury, a Vow Made in 2001

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/washington/29intel.html
June 29, 2006
Behind Bush's Fury, a Vow Made in 2001
By SCOTT SHANE [bush] [vow made after 9/11] [use nsc ms] [********] [use psci 469] [individual-role as well as govt]
WASHINGTON, June 28 — Ever since President Bush vowed days after the Sept. 11 attacks to "follow the money as a trail to the terrorists," the government has made no secret of its efforts to hunt down the bank accounts of Al Qaeda and its allies. [****]

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/washington/29intel.html
June 29, 2006
Behind Bush's Fury, a Vow Made in 2001
By SCOTT SHANE [bush] [vow made after 9/11] [use nsc ms] [********] [use psci 469] [individual-role as well as govt]
WASHINGTON, June 28 — Ever since President Bush vowed days after the Sept. 11 attacks to "follow the money as a trail to the terrorists," the government has made no secret of its efforts to hunt down the bank accounts of Al Qaeda and its allies. [****]
But that fact has not muted the fury of Mr. Bush, his top aides and many members of Congress at the decision last week by The New York Times and other newspapers to disclose a centerpiece of that hunt: the Treasury Department's search for clues in a vast database of financial transactions maintained by a Belgium-based banking consortium known as Swift. [****]
Speaking at a fund-raising event in St. Louis for Senator Jim Talent, Mr. Bush made the news reports his central theme. [********]
"This program has been a vital tool in the war on terror," Mr. Bush said. "Last week the details of this program appeared in the press."
Mr. Bush received a prolonged, standing ovation from the Republican crowd when he added, "There can be no excuse for anyone entrusted with vital intelligence to leak it — and no excuse for any newspaper to print it."
On Thursday, the House is expected to take up a Republican resolution supporting the tracking of financial transactions and condemning the publication of the existence of the program and details of how it works. The resolution says Congress "expects the cooperation of all news media organizations in protecting the lives of Americans and the capability of the government to identify, disrupt and capture terrorists by not disclosing classified intelligence programs." Democrats are proposing a variant that expresses support for the treasury program but omits the language about the news media.
The director of national intelligence, John D. Negroponte, has ordered an assessment of any damage to counterterrorism efforts from the disclosures, but the review is expected to take months, and its findings are likely to remain classified. [ordered it perhaps] [but according to yesterday’s govt, senator Pat Roberts requested DNI Negroponte to conduct it] [***********************************] [use nsc ms]
Experts on terror financing are divided in their views of the impact of the revelations. Some say the harm in last week's publications in The Times, The Los Angeles Times and The Wall Street Journal may have been less in tipping off terrorists than in putting publicity-shy bankers in an uncomfortable spotlight. [*****]
"I would be surprised if terrorists didn't know that we were doing everything we can to track their financial transactions, since the administration has been very vocal about that fact," [****]said William F. Wechsler, a former Treasury and National Security Council official who specialized in tracking terrorism financing.
But Mr. Wechsler said the disclosure might nonetheless hamper intelligence collection by making financial institutions resistant to requests for access to records. [*****]
"I wouldn't be surprised if these recent articles have made it more difficult to get cooperation from our friends in Europe, since it may make their cooperation with the U.S. less politically palatable," [****]Mr. Wechsler said.
Though privacy advocates have denounced the examination of banking transactions, the Swift consortium has defended its cooperation with the counterterrorism program and has not indicated any intention to stop cooperating with the broad administrative subpoenas issued to obtain its data.
A former federal prosecutor who handled major terrorism cases, Andrew C. McCarthy, said he believed that the greatest harm from news reports about such classified programs was the message that Americans could not keep secrets. [******] [too true]
"If foreign intelligence services think anything they tell us will end up in the newspapers, they'll stop sharing so much information," said Mr. McCarthy, now a senior fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies in Washington.
Mr. McCarthy said he thought the Swift disclosure might encourage terrorist plotters to stop moving money through the banking system, depriving the United States and its allies of a valuable window on their activities. "Methods they assumed were safe they now know are not so safe," he said.
But Bob Kerrey, a member of the 9/11 commission and former Democratic senator from Nebraska, took a different view, saying that if the news reports drive terrorists out of the banking system, that could actually help the counterterrorism cause. [******]
"If we tell people who are potential criminals that we have a lot of police on the beat, that's a substantial deterrent," said Mr. Kerrey, now president of New School University. If terrorists decide it is too risky to move money through official channels, "that's very good, because it's much, much harder to move money in other ways," Mr. Kerrey said.
A State Department official, Anthony Wayne, made a parallel point in 2004 before Congress. "As we've made it more difficult for them to use the banking system," Mr. Wayne said, "they've been shifting to other less reliable and more cumbersome methods, such as cash couriers."
As such testimony suggests, government agencies have often trumpeted their successes in tracking terrorist funding. President Bush set the tone on Sept. 24, 2001, declaring, "We're putting banks and financial institutions around the world on notice — we will work with their governments, ask them to freeze or block terrorists' ability to access funds in foreign accounts."
Since then, the Treasury Department has produced dozens of news releases and public reports detailing its efforts. Though officials appear never to have mentioned the Swift program, they have repeatedly described their cooperation with financial networks to identify accounts held by people and organizations linked to terrorism.
Working with "our allies abroad and our partners in the private sector," an April news release said, "Treasury follows the terrorists' money trails aggressively, exploiting them for intelligence."
Representative Peter T. King, Republican of New York, convened a hearing in 2004 where Treasury officials described at length their efforts, assisted by financial institutions, to trace terrorists' money. But he has been among the most vehement critics of the disclosures about the Swift program, saying editors and reporters of The New York Times should be imprisoned for publishing government secrets. [****]
In an interview on Wednesday, Mr. King said he saw no contradiction. "Obviously we wanted the terrorists to know we were trying to track them," Mr. King said. "But we didn't want them to know the details."
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Cold War Relic in Pieces, but Next Generation Looms

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/28/AR2006062802006.html
Cold War Relic in Pieces, but Next Generation Looms
By Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 29, 2006; A15 [cold war] [arms control] [use psci 498] [******]
The Bush administration is expected to announce today that it has dismantled the last of the most powerful nuclear missile warheads left over from the Cold War. [****]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/28/AR2006062802006.html
Cold War Relic in Pieces, but Next Generation Looms
By Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 29, 2006; A15 [cold war] [arms control] [use psci 498] [******]
The Bush administration is expected to announce today that it has dismantled the last of the most powerful nuclear missile warheads left over from the Cold War. [****]
At the same time, however, a Senate subcommittee has added $10 million to next year's budget to fund a design competition for the second warhead in a new generation of U.S. nuclear weapons. [******]
The National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) [****] has increased by 50 percent the rate at which it is dismantling older weapons in the nuclear stockpile, which has about 5,000 weapons.
But Congress and the administration are pressing ahead with the Reliable Replacement Warhead (RRW) program, which will guarantee production in the next decade of fewer but more reliable and secure nuclear warheads and bombs.
Sen. Pete V. Domenici (R-N.M.) said yesterday that his Appropriations subcommittee had added $35 million to the fiscal 2007 budget "to accelerate the RRW design activities, including $10 million to initiate a second RRW design competition." [****]
The panel's draft report says the second RRW design is proposed "to ensure that our strategic forces have at least two different certified RRW warheads" as a hedge against failure in any one system. [*****]
The nation's two nuclear weapons design centers, the Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore national laboratories, are competing to design the first RRW. [***]The nuclear security agency is scheduled to make a choice late this year. [****]A second RRW design competition may provide an opportunity to the losing lab.
The warhead at the center of today's announcement, the W-56, was put into operation in 1963 atop the Minuteman I intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). It had the explosive power of 1.2 megatons or "roughly 100 times greater" than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima, [***]Japan, according to Thomas B. Cochran, director of the Natural Resources Defense Council's nuclear program.
The W-56 was retired in 1991, when the last Minuteman II ICBMs were taken out of their silos during the George H.W. Bush administration. However, it was not until 1999 that the government started dismantling the first W-56, a slow and precise process because of aging parts and nuclear materials, according to NNSA Deputy Administrator Thomas P. D'Agostino. [******]
"It takes anywhere from a few weeks to a month for each warhead if there are no problems," D'Agostino said. He noted that "they are difficult to take apart because they were not designed to be dismantled."
At the peak, about 1,000 W-56 warheads existed. In 1986, when the warhead was more than 20 years old, a partial test was conducted and it was found to be still reliable. [****]
D'Agostino said NNSA is planning to put more emphasis on dismantling retired nuclear weapons, [****]a process that in the past decade has provided a steady amount of work for the Pantex facility outside Amarillo, Tex., where weapons are assembled and disassembled. Up to now, the programs to refurbish operational warheads have used up almost all the operating space at the facility. But with that program declining, dismantling of retired weapons can increase.
In another step related to reduction of operational weapons, the subcommittee cut $82 million from the budget because the Defense Department has decided that it will not continue a program that would have extended the life of W-80 nuclear warheads carried by several hundred submarine- and air-launched cruise missiles. [****]
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

For Iran, the Man Is the Message

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/opinion/29ghaemi.html
June 29, 2006
Op-Ed Contributor
For Iran, the Man Is the Message
By HADI GHAEMI
Beirut, Lebanon [iran] [wmd] [followup] [latest]
LAST week Iranians woke up to a startling piece of news: their government had dispatched Tehran's notorious prosecutor general, Saeed Mortazavi, to Geneva as a member of Iran's delegation to the opening session of the new United Nations Human Rights Council. [*******]

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/opinion/29ghaemi.html
June 29, 2006
Op-Ed Contributor
For Iran, the Man Is the Message
By HADI GHAEMI
Beirut, Lebanon [iran] [wmd] [followup] [latest]
LAST week Iranians woke up to a startling piece of news: their government had dispatched Tehran's notorious prosecutor general, Saeed Mortazavi, to Geneva as a member of Iran's delegation to the opening session of the new United Nations Human Rights Council. [*******]
Iranians weren't sure whether to laugh or cry. Mr. Mortazavi is one of the country's highest profile rights violators. [*****] Human Rights Watch urged Iran to remove him at once and asked other governments not to meet the Iranian delegation while Mr. Mortazavi remained a part of it.
Well-known and widely despised in Iran, Mr. Mortazavi personifies most of the ills affecting Iran's judicial system: lack of accountability, rampant impunity, disregard for fundamental constitutional rights, manipulation of the law to promote a political agenda, systematic use of torture, and above all, abuse of judicial powers to repress peaceful expressions of dissent and criticism. [******]
Iranians refer to Mr. Mortazavi as "the butcher of the press." In 2000, Mr. Mortazavi, then a judge, closed more than a dozen newspapers in one month alone, invoking an obscure law from the 1950's on "ensuring public safety." [****]The law was originally enacted to keep criminal gangs from intimidating members of the public. Since then he has shut more than 100 newspapers and journals.
Mr. Mortazavi was promoted to prosecutor general of Tehran in 2003. [****]As such, he has prosecuted scores of Iranian human rights defenders, journalists, dissidents, students and activists, and he is alleged to be implicated directly in acts of murder, torture, arbitrary detention and coercing false confessions.
In June 2003, Iranian authorities arrested Zahra Kazemi, a Canadian-Iranian photojournalist, as she photographed Evin prison in Tehran. According to an investigation by the Iranian Parliament, Mr. Mortazavi personally took custody of her, accusing her of being a spy. [****]Lawyers for Ms. Kazemi's family say that her body showed signs of torture, and that Mr. Mortazavi took part in an interrogation session where she received a severe blow to the head. A few days later, Ms. Kazemi fell into a coma and died. The Iranian authorities have not held anyone responsible for her murder. [Canadian journalist whose plight I saw on discovery or similar channel] [****]
In another case documented by Human Rights Watch, Mr. Mortazavi ordered the arbitrary detention of more than 20 bloggers and Internet journalists in 2004. The detainees were taken to a secret prison, held in solitary confinement and interrogated by Mr. Mortazavi's underlings. The interrogators tortured the detainees so that they would falsely implicate their colleagues in immoral acts and confess that they were foreign agents.
As a condition for their release, the interrogators coerced four of them to write false confession letters. The bloggers report that by threatening to harm their families, Mr. Mortazavi personally coerced them to appear on Iran's state-controlled television saying that their jailors treated them as "gently as flowers." [****]One former detainee told me that Mr. Mortazavi's voice still rings in his ears, and that he fears for his young children.
So what was the Iranian government thinking? Perhaps it was still stung by its failure to be elected to the council, which aimed to exclude the most blatant abusers. Or maybe this was the regime's shock and awe strategy: [*****]shock the Iranian people with how little their government cares about human rights, and awe them with its utter impunity.
If Mr. Mortazavi were removed from office and prosecuted, as he should be, there would be no shortage of witnesses to testify. But because this is unlikely, many Iranians hope the new council will develop international mechanisms to bring men like him to justice, rather than facing him as a delegate at its sessions.
As a first step, the council should support the appointment of a United Nations special rapporteur on Iran to monitor and report publicly on human rights abuses and to see that the government's present lack of accountability does not translate into an even more extensive crackdown on political dissent and social freedoms. [*******]
Further, the members of the Security Council and Germany, which are engaged in nuclear negotiations with Iran, should include human rights concerns on their agenda. As a confidence-building measure, they should demand that Iran improve its human rights record — and that it cease protecting violators like Mr. Morta- zavi.
Hadi Ghaemi is the Iran researcher for Human Rights Watch.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Hamas Provokes a Fight

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/opinion/29thur2.html
June 29, 2006
Editorial
Hamas Provokes a Fight
[current situation in gaza where Israel has reentered and captured Hamas members of the Jan elected govt] [***********]
The Palestinians who futilely threw up sand berms on Gaza's main roads to deflect Israeli troop movements were building their defenses in the wrong direction. The responsibility for this latest escalation rests squarely with Hamas, [*****]whose military wing tunneled into Israel on Sunday, killed two Israeli soldiers and kidnapped another. This was a follow-up to a declaration earlier this month by Hamas's political leadership that the group's 16-month intermittent cease-fire would no longer be observed.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/opinion/29thur2.html
June 29, 2006
Editorial
Hamas Provokes a Fight
[current situation in gaza where Israel has reentered and captured Hamas members of the Jan elected govt] [***********]
The Palestinians who futilely threw up sand berms on Gaza's main roads to deflect Israeli troop movements were building their defenses in the wrong direction. The responsibility for this latest escalation rests squarely with Hamas, [*****]whose military wing tunneled into Israel on Sunday, killed two Israeli soldiers and kidnapped another. This was a follow-up to a declaration earlier this month by Hamas's political leadership that the group's 16-month intermittent cease-fire would no longer be observed.
Under the circumstances, an Israeli military response was inevitable. It should also be as restrained as possible. [****]Israel does not seem to want to reoccupy Gaza, but its reported detention of several cabinet ministers in the West Bank is unsettling. Bitterness and distrust on both sides are sure to increase, and the already dim prospects for a return to peace negotiations will diminish even further.
Ironically, Hamas has chosen this bleak moment to finally endorse a document that implicitly recognizes Israel within its pre-1967 borders. In a different context that would represent progress. [*****]But in a week in which Hamas's military wing has crossed those very borders, it is hard to draw much encouragement. [*****]
The renewed presence of Israeli forces in Gaza may give a short-term boost to Hamas's local popularity. But once the immediate adrenaline rush wears off, the Palestinians who elected Hamas, and the Arab nations on which it now depends for financial survival, need to survey the wreckage and draw the obvious conclusions. When Hamas was only an opposition movement, its provocative behavior was a major impediment to peace. As a governing party, it is far worse. [*******]
Contrary to the hopes of many outsiders, five months in government has failed to educate Hamas to the reality of the world the Palestinians live in. [****]Hamas has merely assumed the political privileges of power without accepting the minimal responsibilities that go with it.
If things go on like this, Palestinians can look forward to endless rounds of reckless Hamas provocations and inexorable Israeli responses. That is why things must not be allowed to go on like this. It is not just Israel that needs to be delivering that message to Hamas. [***]
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Sri Lanka: Rebels Clash With Navy

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/asia/29briefs-005.html
June 29, 2006
World Briefing | Asia
Sri Lanka: Rebels Clash With Navy
SHIMALI SENANAYAKE (NYT) [sri lanka] [followup] [yesterday’s external]
Tamil Tiger boats hiding among fishing vessels off the island's northwest coast attacked two navy craft, killing five sailors in a 45-minute battle, officials said. A navy spokesman said 12 rebels were killed and two of their boats destroyed in retaliatory airstrikes. A Tiger spokesman said just one rebel died.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/asia/29briefs-005.html
June 29, 2006
World Briefing | Asia
Sri Lanka: Rebels Clash With Navy
SHIMALI SENANAYAKE (NYT) [sri lanka] [followup] [yesterday’s external]
Tamil Tiger boats hiding among fishing vessels off the island's northwest coast attacked two navy craft, killing five sailors in a 45-minute battle, officials said. A navy spokesman said 12 rebels were killed and two of their boats destroyed in retaliatory airstrikes. A Tiger spokesman said just one rebel died.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Mexico's Election Pits Promise Against Fear

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/americas/29mexico.html
June 29, 2006
Mexico's Election Pits Promise Against Fear
By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr. [mexico’s upcoming national election on july 2] [orbrador vs. fox successor caladron] [**************] [see yesterday’s societal for oped on same]
MEXICO CITY, June 28 — Mexico's polarizing presidential campaign ended officially on Wednesday and, with four days to go before the vote, it has come down to a contest between a gritty, charismatic advocate for the poor and a well-educated technocrat.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/americas/29mexico.html
June 29, 2006
Mexico's Election Pits Promise Against Fear
By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr. [mexico’s upcoming national election on july 2] [orbrador vs. fox successor caladron] [**************] [see yesterday’s societal for oped on same]
MEXICO CITY, June 28 — Mexico's polarizing presidential campaign ended officially on Wednesday and, with four days to go before the vote, it has come down to a contest between a gritty, charismatic advocate for the poor and a well-educated technocrat.
Like many elections, this one is a struggle between promise and fear and remains too close to call. On one side is Andrés Manuel López Obrador, the former mayor of Mexico City who has traveled little outside Mexico and says he is inspired by Gandhi and Franklin D. Roosevelt. On the other is Felipe Calderón, the former energy minister with a Harvard degree who talks of fitting Mexico into the globalized economy.
But for many voters the choice is complicated because Mexico only emerged six years ago from seven decades of single-party, autocratic rule and there are some who say that what is at stake on Sunday is the survival of still-fragile democratic institutions.
"My fear is that with López Obrador we could end up very soon with an all-powerful president again," Enrique Krauze, an author and historian, said Monday at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York, adding that Mr. López Obrador was "very ignorant" and "inward looking" and "dismisses the rule of law as something made by the bourgeoisie to oppress the poor."
Such accusations and concerns — and many consider them nothing short of fearmongering — have defined the race for many voters.
Mr. López Obrador has been hit with advertisements depicting him as a spendthrift populist with a tendency to foment violent protests. His opponents have compared him to President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela and have suggested that he is an autocrat. Many of Mr. Calderón's supporters acknowledge they are voting out of fear of what a maverick leftist like Mr. López Obrador might do, rather than enthusiasm for Mr. Calderón, a dapper man who speaks with all the fire of an economist.
"It's more of a vote against López Obrador than for Calderón," explained Jorge Valenzuela, a cab driver in Mexico City. "López Obrador seems to me like a well-intentioned person, but he's very violent."
The most recent polls last week showed that Mr. Calderón and Mr. López Obrador each had about 35 percent of the vote, with a third candidate, Roberto Madrazo, of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, trailing behind with the support of fewer than a quarter of likely voters.
Recently, Mexico's most important business group has released advertisements suggesting that Mr. López Obrador's slate of welfare programs will bankrupt the state and lead to an economic collapse like the ones in 1982 and 1995. He has promised to crack down on tax evasion and waste, and reduce government salaries to pay for $20 billion in social programs and public works.
Mr. Calderón has offered a starkly different vision, promising to create jobs through private investment. He calls for sticking with the tight monetary, free-trade and pro-business policies of President Vicente Fox. He also proposes cutting income tax rates for businesses and the rich to spur investment.
Still, at his last campaign rally here in the capital on Sunday, speaking to more than 80,000 people, Mr. Calderón spent much of his speech attacking Mr. López Obrador, suggesting he was a throwback to the populist presidents of the 1970's and 1980's and charging that his plan would lead to financial collapse.
"This picture we have already seen, and it was a horror show, for which all Mexicans paid dearly," Mr. Calderón said. "The lesson is clear. Those peoples who do not remember their history are condemned to relive it."
Mr. López Obrador, who leads the leftist Party of the Democratic Revolution, has dismissed these assertions. He notes that he balanced the budget of Mexico City during his five years as mayor, paying for new social programs with better tax collection, just as he wants to do on the federal level.
Indeed, in recent days, he has charged that Mexico's big businesses are in league with President Fox's National Action Party in trying to scare voters, calling them "white-collar criminals" who have gotten rich through influence peddling.
"What are they afraid of?" he asked supporters in Toluca on Tuesday. "That they'll lose their privileges. I would tell them, 'Calm down, be serene, nothing's going to happen.' Vengeance is not my forte. I'm not going to invent crimes. We're not going to hunt down anyone. The only thing that will happen is that Mexico will not be a country of privileges, the government will not be at the service of a minority.' "
Mr. López Obrador finished a grueling whistle-stop campaign Wednesday with a giant rally here in the central square. While he has been more charismatic on the stump, his opponents have outspent and outflanked him on television and radio.
Mr. Madrazo has tried to position himself as a moderate alternative, emphasizing his experience as former governor of Tabasco State and ability to "get things done."
But his Institutional Revolutionary Party, the machine that ruled Mexico with only token opposition for seven decades until losing the presidency in 2000, has been plagued with infighting and defections.
Mr. Calderón, meanwhile, has garnered the support of a handful of the county's most prominent intellectuals, among them the former foreign minister, Jorge G. Casteñeda, and Mr. Krauze, the historian.
These critics worry a charismatic figure like Mr. López Obrador, who has said he identifies with Christ and talks about the need for "the purification of public life," could roll back the democratic changes Mexico has made in the last decade by ignoring Congress and courts and appealing directly to the masses for support.
Others, like Homero Aridjis, a poet and environmentalist, worry that Mr. López Obrador's sharp talk about the gap between rich and poor could provoke civil unrest. "The peace of Mexico is held up by toothpicks," Mr. Aridjis said.
Other intellectuals note that in the past two decades Mexico's central bank, supreme court, electoral commission and Congress have become strong, independent institutions.
"I am confident that were he to try, our institutions, constructed in the last 20 years, and the citizens at large would not allow for that to happen," said Rossana Fuentes Berain, the editor of the Spanish edition of Foreign Affairs. "I am not one of those who thinks he's a danger for the country."
Mr. López Obrador said it was absurd to contend that he would undermine a democracy he had spent much of his life fighting to build.
"It's not true," he said in a recent interview. "One must respect the institutions. I am in favor of the division and the balance of powers. I have said many times I come from the opposition who asked for this. I have written it. It's a conviction."
"But moreover, no one in Mexico can put himself above the institutions, not even being a general and mounting a coup, not even that way," he added. "This country would not permit it."
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Montenegro: Country Becomes Member State of U.N.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/europe/29briefs-003.html
June 29, 2006
World Briefing | Europe
Montenegro: Country Becomes Member State of U.N.
DANIEL B. SCHNEIDER (NYT) [Montenegro becomes 192nd member state] [*****]
Montenegro became a member state of the United Nations by acclamation of the General Assembly, less than a month after the end of its 88-year union with Serbia. A short while later, the Montenegrin flag — a gold double eagle on a red field — was raised alongside the flags of the 191 other member nations.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/europe/29briefs-003.html
June 29, 2006
World Briefing | Europe
Montenegro: Country Becomes Member State of U.N.
DANIEL B. SCHNEIDER (NYT) [Montenegro becomes 192nd member state] [*****]
Montenegro became a member state of the United Nations by acclamation of the General Assembly, less than a month after the end of its 88-year union with Serbia. A short while later, the Montenegrin flag — a gold double eagle on a red field — was raised alongside the flags of the 191 other member nations.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Serbian Prime Minister Makes Charged Visit to Kosovo

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062900314.html
Serbian Prime Minister Makes Charged Visit to Kosovo
By Matt Robinson
Reuters
Thursday, June 29, 2006; A23 [Kostunica visits Kosovo] [not very promising] [on top of which is montenegro’s susescion from Serbia by close vote] [******]
GRACANICA, Serbia, June 28 -- Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica took Serbia's claim to Kosovo to the heart of the breakaway province on Wednesday, commemorating the medieval battle there that Serbs see as the bedrock of their nation. [****]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062900314.html
Serbian Prime Minister Makes Charged Visit to Kosovo
By Matt Robinson
Reuters
Thursday, June 29, 2006; A23 [Kostunica visits Kosovo] [not very promising] [on top of which is montenegro’s susescion from Serbia by close vote] [******]
GRACANICA, Serbia, June 28 -- Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica took Serbia's claim to Kosovo to the heart of the breakaway province on Wednesday, commemorating the medieval battle there that Serbs see as the bedrock of their nation. [****]
Kosovo police and NATO armored vehicles secured his route through the U.N.-run province, anxious to avoid a violent reaction that could derail talks on the Albanian majority's demand for independence from Serbia. [****]
About 1,000 Serbs applauded his arrival at the monastery town of Gracanica, the scene of ceremonies to mark the 14th-century Battle of Kosovo in which Serbs confronted invading Turks. [****]The occasion is also St. Vitus's Day in the Serb Orthodox calendar.
Kostunica paced slowly through the stone courtyard of the monastery, flanked by priests and a Gypsy brass band. [*****]
"There is no better place to repeat what all Serbs should know -- that Kosovo always was and always will be part of Serbia," he told the crowd, which chanted "Serbia, Serbia!"
"No one is on firmer, truer ground in the talks on Kosovo's final status than Serbia," he said.
Riot police, mostly local Kosovo Albanians, scuffled with pro-independence activists trying to block Kostunica's route through the impoverished territory. About 120 people were detained.
The United Nations had billed the trip as a "private, religious visit." But it drew accusations of provocation from ethnic Albanians.
"He used this not as a religious rite but as a political parade," said Kosovo government spokeswoman Ulpiana Lama.
The United States and Western European governments are pushing for a decision this year on Kosovo's final status, seven years after NATO bombing drove out Serb forces and the United Nations took over. Diplomats say the province will likely win some form of independence, under European Union supervision.
Kostunica has visited Kosovo only one other time since Serbia lost control in 1999, after NATO intervened to halt the killing of Albanian civilians in a two-year war between Serb forces and separatist rebels. About 10,000 Albanians died in the violence.
For Serbs, June 28 is a date steeped in history. Their 1389 defeat north of the capital, Pristina, ushered in 500 years of Ottoman Turk rule and holds almost mythic status for Serbs. It is central to Serbia's claim to Kosovo as the cradle of the nation, the place where Orthodox Christian Serbs fought in vain to halt advancing Muslim Turks. [****]
Exactly 17 years ago, Slobodan Milosevic, the Serb strongman, inflamed passions with a speech to a crowd of 500,000 at the site of the battle. He warned of battles to come, in an address laden with nationalist rhetoric. [*******]
In the decade that followed, Yugoslavia was torn apart by wars in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo. Milosevic died in March while facing war crimes charges.
Kosovo's Serbs have left in droves since 1999. About 100,000 remain, roughly half the prewar Serb population. Targeted for revenge, they live in enclaves under the protection of peacekeepers.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

In Rafah, Palestinians Have 'Nowhere to Run'

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-palstreet29jun29,0,2204448.story?coll=la-home-headlines
From the Los Angeles Times
In Rafah, Palestinians Have 'Nowhere to Run'
By Laura King
Times Staff Writer
June 29, 2006 [i-p] [following kidnapping, June 27, of French Jew who served in Israeli army] [after about 24 hours during which Israel encouraged abu mazen to find the solider] [Israel has invaded and captured Hamas leaders—i.e., members of the new govt (Jan 2006)] [*******]
RAFAH, Gaza Strip — Sabrin Hissi, a young Palestinian mother of two, was outside her house Wednesday morning with a plastic bucket, trying to salvage precious water from a shattered irrigation pipe, when she heard the shriek of incoming artillery shells.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-palstreet29jun29,0,2204448.story?coll=la-home-headlines
From the Los Angeles Times
In Rafah, Palestinians Have 'Nowhere to Run'
By Laura King
Times Staff Writer
June 29, 2006 [i-p] [following kidnapping, June 27, of French Jew who served in Israeli army] [after about 24 hours during which Israel encouraged abu mazen to find the solider] [Israel has invaded and captured Hamas leaders—i.e., members of the new govt (Jan 2006)] [*******]
RAFAH, Gaza Strip — Sabrin Hissi, a young Palestinian mother of two, was outside her house Wednesday morning with a plastic bucket, trying to salvage precious water from a shattered irrigation pipe, when she heard the shriek of incoming artillery shells.

Snatching up 2-year-old Salah and 3-year-old Ines, she fled indoors, huddling with them in the family's concrete-block bathroom as shrapnel punched gaping holes in the walls of the living room and back bedroom.

"I felt death was very close to me and to my children," she said tearfully an hour after the midmorning barrage.

Battled-scarred Rafah, home to more than 100,000 people at Gaza's southern tip, is the nearest city to the Israeli troops and armor that have dug in at the territory's long-shuttered international airport. The troops are searching for an Israeli soldier believed to be held somewhere in the area.

Closest of all is Hissi's remote neighborhood of Shoka — Arabic for "thorn," named for the scrubby cactus fields surrounding it — which lies less than a mile from the newly established Israeli front lines.

Rafah took the early brunt of the Israeli offensive, the first such incursion since Israel's withdrawal from the Gaza Strip last summer. On Wednesday, Israeli missiles hit fields just outside the city.

"They always talk about aiming at open land," said Ahmed Hissi, Sabrin's father and the family patriarch. "But we live here!"

As Gazans waited Wednesday to see whether the Israeli ground offensive would be broadened to include urban areas such as Gaza City, the first full day of the military presence in the coastal strip became a war of nerves.

Israeli fighter jets repeatedly streaked low over the coastline, unleashing earsplitting sonic booms overnight and throughout the day. In the streets and shops, many people were bleary-eyed from lack of sleep.

Even before the incursion, life in Gaza was often miserable. The territory, home to 1.3 million Palestinians, is one of the most crowded places on Earth, deeply impoverished, mired in unemployment and largely cut off from the outside world.

With nearly three-quarters of a million people left without power by an Israeli strike overnight on the main electricity transformer, Gazans sat on stoops and sidewalks to try to catch a breeze, glancing skyward when Israeli aircraft circled overhead.

Across Gaza, people hurried to stock up on emergency supplies: bottled water, candles, foods that wouldn't spoil when refrigerators stopped running.

The bustle in open-air markets and darkened shops lent an air of normality, one that was periodically darkened by the distant or not-so-distant boom of artillery.

In the Gaza City neighborhood of Shajaiya, a militant stronghold, masked Palestinian gunmen crouched in alleyways, some cradling rocket launchers. "If they dare to come here, we will fight them," one said.

Most Palestinians, though, said they knew very well there was little chance of halting an all-out Israeli offensive in densely populated towns and refugee camps, something Israeli officials have said is a possibility if Palestinian militants do not free the soldier who was captured Sunday.

"What we have done here, this would not stop a battle tank for even one minute," said 18-year-old Zakaria Kaluseh, pointing to a makeshift barricade erected by residents in the Jabaliya refugee camp, on Gaza City's northern fringes.

"But it's important to us to make some kind of resistance, even if it is only symbolic."

In neighborhoods where Palestinian militants are known to live and operate, there was a clearer sense of menace. Israeli airstrikes aimed at stopping Palestinian rocket attacks have targeted guerrilla leaders and field commanders but also have killed more than a dozen bystanders in the last month.

In a refugee enclave known as Beach Camp, where Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh lives, residents stretched tarpaulins across narrow alleyways to impede the surveillance by airborne Israeli drones that often precedes airstrikes. "It is for our own protection as well," said a young woman who gave her name only as Umm Ahmed, or "mother of Ahmed."

Across Gaza, the spirit of improvisation prevailed, as it does so often in the territory where daily life often boils down to a series of logistical challenges.

On the main North-South road, where Israeli missiles collapsed a highway bridge into a gulch, motorists quickly carved a new roadway through the dry riverbed. Rattletrap cars and donkey carts made their way across the expanse, raising clouds of dust.

After the initial night of airstrikes, few Palestinians interviewed here blamed the militants who snatched the Israeli soldier, or the Hamas government elected early this year, for bringing such troubles literally down on their heads.

"We believe the Israelis would take any excuse to attack us," said Mahmoud Magameh, a young shopkeeper.

And most were adamantly opposed to releasing the soldier without, in turn, winning the freedom of at least some of the thousands of Palestinians held in Israeli jails.

"My cousin, my neighbor, my friend from school, my father's brother," said Salam Sheer, a 32-year-old Rafah man, ticking off the list of relatives and acquaintances jailed in Israel.

"I would rather see my whole family killed than see us get nothing for this soldier," he said.

In the areas closest to where the Israeli troops were deployed, many Palestinians said they wanted to flee their homes — but were reluctant to impose on hard-pressed relatives elsewhere in Gaza. Thousands of Palestinian civil servants have gone unpaid, or received only a fraction of their salaries, since Hamas took power.

"Who can afford to feed another 20 people, even if they are your own kin?" said Sabrin Hissi, who said she wished to leave her shell-damaged home on Rafah's outskirts.

"We would run away if we could. But there is nowhere to run."

Israel Detains Hamas Officials; Jets Buzz Syria Leader's Home

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-gaza29jun29,1,1489260.story?coll=la-headlines-world
From the Los Angeles Times
Israel Detains Hamas Officials; Jets Buzz Syria Leader's Home
By Laura King and Ken Ellingwood
Times Staff Writers
June 29, 2006 [i-p] [following kidnapping, June 27, of French Jew who served in Israeli army] [after about 24 hours during which Israel encouraged abu mazen to find the solider] [Israel has invaded and captured Hamas leaders—i.e., members of the new govt (Jan 2006)] [*******] [ditto]

GAZA CITY — Israel's military intensified its push for the release of an Israeli soldier today, detaining at least two dozen Palestinian lawmakers and Cabinet members with the ruling Hamas movement.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-gaza29jun29,1,1489260.story?coll=la-headlines-world
From the Los Angeles Times
Israel Detains Hamas Officials; Jets Buzz Syria Leader's Home
By Laura King and Ken Ellingwood
Times Staff Writers
June 29, 2006 [i-p] [following kidnapping, June 27, of French Jew who served in Israeli army] [after about 24 hours during which Israel encouraged abu mazen to find the solider] [Israel has invaded and captured Hamas leaders—i.e., members of the new govt (Jan 2006)] [*******] [ditto]

GAZA CITY — Israel's military intensified its push for the release of an Israeli soldier today, detaining at least two dozen Palestinian lawmakers and Cabinet members with the ruling Hamas movement.

Military officials also confirmed that four Israeli warplanes circled early Wednesday over a palace of Syrian President Bashar Assad near the coastal city of Latakia. Assad, who reportedly was at home, is seen as a key source of support for Hamas hard-liners believed to be behind the soldier's kidnapping.

The latest Israeli actions, including airstrikes on Gaza Strip weapons warehouses and roads, were part of the first offensive of its kind since Israel unilaterally pulled out of the coastal territory more than nine months ago.

The attacks came after the Hamas-led Palestinian government joined calls by Palestinian militants holding Cpl. Gilad Shalit to arrange a prisoner swap — an apparent closing of ranks in the face of the Israeli military offensive.

Israel has ruled out such an exchange and demanded the unconditional release of Shalit, a 19-year-old tank gunner seized Sunday during a cross-border raid inside Israel by members of Hamas' military wing and two other armed groups.

Meanwhile, Palestinian militants said they had killed a Jewish settler from the West Bank whom they previously claimed to have abducted, and local media reported that a separate armed group said it had kidnapped another Israeli civilian.

Among the Hamas members reportedly taken into custody in the West Bank and East Jerusalem were five Cabinet members. At least 20 parliament members were arrested, along with some municipal leaders, Hamas officials said. Palestinian Deputy Prime Minister Nasser Shaer was initially named as a detainee, but his office later said that report was incorrect.

The Israeli military had no immediate comment, saying only that an arrest operation was underway.

Israeli troops and tanks held positions at Gaza's disused international airport Wednesday, consolidating a military foothold in the southern area of the coastal strip after launching the opening round of a land and air offensive that officials said was meant to free the captured soldier.

Wire services reported that Israeli tanks had moved into northern Gaza early today, but the military denied that.

The Israeli incursion into Gaza focused in its initial stages on hammering an already weakened infrastructure — knocking out three bridges and a key power installation.

More than half of Gaza's 1.3 million residents were left without electricity, and many without water, a punishing turn of events in a territory where summer's swelter is beginning to take hold. It was unclear how long it would take to restore the utilities.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas called the strikes against civilian installations "collective punishment against the Palestinian people and a crime against humanity."

Human rights groups warned that the infrastructure damage would aggravate hardship in Gaza, which has been battered by international economic sanctions and severe Israeli restrictions on the movement of people and goods since Hamas took power after winning parliamentary elections early this year.

Israeli officials and commentators were describing the Israeli advance into Gaza as a phased operation — limited for now but with the potential to grow.

The army launched artillery rounds from land and warships into northern Gaza near Gaza City late Wednesday and warned residents to leave the area because of possible stepped-up military action.

In his first public comments since Israeli tanks and troops moved into the coastal territory early Wednesday, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said his government was prepared to take "extreme steps" to secure Shalit's release, and he again ruled out negotiations with the soldier's captors.

If Shalit is not released, Olmert said, "we will be forced to continue the military activity. We have no intention of reoccupying Gaza. We also have no intention of remaining there. We have one central goal and that is to return Gilad home."

Haim Ramon, the Israeli justice minister, warned that Israel could target Khaled Meshaal, Hamas' exiled political chief, based in Damascus, Syria, who has been blamed for blocking Shalit's release by the militants in Gaza.

"He is not immune, no matter where he is," Ramon told Army Radio.

"He definitely is in our sights, just as every terrorist, every person who operates against us by means of terror, is a target."

In Washington, White House Press Secretary Tony Snow said, "Israel has the right to defend itself and the lives of its citizens. In any actions the government of Israel may undertake, the United States urges that it ensures that innocent civilians are not harmed, and also that it avoid the unnecessary destruction of property and infrastructure."

Shaer, the Palestinian deputy prime minister, said Wednesday before his reported arrest that 750,000 of Gaza's residents were without electricity. Palestinian officials said the airstrikes had caused as much as $15 million in damage.

Shaer, speaking to the media before a meeting of Cabinet ministers in the West Bank city of Ramallah, called for "finding a logical and just way out of this crisis through diplomatic means."

Finance Minister Omar Abdel Razek, also speaking in Ramallah, said Hamas would not call upon the captors to release Shalit, and instead offered support for the idea of freedom for some imprisoned Palestinians as part of a deal to let the soldier go. Abdel Razek was among those reportedly arrested later.

Hamas leaders have urged the captors to treat Shalit well, but apparently have not ordered his release.

For Israelis, the incursion represented a return to a zone of frequent battle that many were pleased to have abandoned when then-Prime Minister Ariel Sharon withdrew settlers and soldiers from Gaza last summer. Although Israeli leaders Wednesday sought to reassure the public that the offensive was meant to be short-lived, there was uneasiness.

"The summer will pass and autumn will come: A massive military entry into Gaza today means a massive military presence remaining in Gaza," commentator Sever Plotzker wrote in the daily Yediot Aharonot.

"It also means wiping out the last great legacy of Ariel Sharon."

One of the groups that claimed responsibility for the soldier's kidnapping provided evidence Wednesday that it also had abducted a Jewish settler in the West Bank. A spokesman for the Popular Resistance Committees showed reporters what appeared to be a photocopy of the Israeli identification card of 18-year-old Eliyahu Asheri, from the Itamar settlement in the West Bank.

The group threatened to kill the hostage unless Israel halted the incursion, and later reported carrying out the threat.

Israel Radio reported today that Asheri's body had been found in Ramallah.

Israel's Channel 2 reported that gunmen with the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade claimed to have kidnapped an Israeli man from Rishon Le Zion, inside Israel, who earlier had been reported missing.
King reported from Gaza City and Ellingwood from Jerusalem. Special correspondent Maher Abukhater in Ramallah contributed to this report.

Abducted West Bank Settler Found Dead

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062900432.html
Abducted West Bank Settler Found Dead
Israelis Detain More Than 80 Palestinian Officials in Search for Soldier
By Scott Wilson
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, June 29, 2006; 6:54 AM [i-p] [following kidnapping, June 27, of French Jew who served in Israeli army] [after about 24 hours during which Israel encouraged abu mazen to find the solider] [Israel has invaded and captured Hamas leaders—i.e., members of the new govt (Jan 2006)] [*******] [ditto]
GAZA CITY, June 29 -- An 18-year-old Israeli settler was found executed near the West Bank city of Ramallah Thursday morning, hours after his Palestinian captors said they would kill him if Israel continued military operations to free a soldier captured in Gaza this week.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062900432.html
Abducted West Bank Settler Found Dead
Israelis Detain More Than 80 Palestinian Officials in Search for Soldier
By Scott Wilson
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, June 29, 2006; 6:54 AM [i-p] [following kidnapping, June 27, of French Jew who served in Israeli army] [after about 24 hours during which Israel encouraged abu mazen to find the solider] [Israel has invaded and captured Hamas leaders—i.e., members of the new govt (Jan 2006)] [*******] [ditto]
GAZA CITY, June 29 -- An 18-year-old Israeli settler was found executed near the West Bank city of Ramallah Thursday morning, hours after his Palestinian captors said they would kill him if Israel continued military operations to free a soldier captured in Gaza this week.
Israeli officials confirmed that the body was that of Eliyahu Asheri, of the northern West Bank settlement of Itamar, who was taken captive on Sunday. At a news conference Wednesday, members of the Popular Resistance Committees had pledged to execute Asheri unless Israel stopped an offensive underway to free Cpl. Gilad Shalit, 19, who also has been held since Sunday.
But Israeli officials said Thursday morning that it appeared Asheri was killed several days before the militant group made that threat.
Before dawn Thursday, about the time the group was announcing Asheri's execution, Israeli troops raided a compound near Ramallah and arrested dozens of political officials from Hamas, the radical Islamic movement responsible for the operation of the Palestinian government.
Among those taken into custody were Deputy Prime Minister Nasser Shaer, at least two other Cabinet ministers and more than 60 members of parliament. Israeli soldiers had arrested Labor Minister Mohammed Barghouti earlier in the operation, which in all swept up more than 80 Hamas officials across the West Bank.
Asheri's death and the Hamas arrests were certain to inflame the confrontation surrounding Shalit's capture, which broadened early Thursday to include airstrikes on what military officials described as a weapons storage site in Khan Younis, roads in southern Gaza and an open area in Gaza City.
The Popular Resistance Committees is one of three armed groups, including Hamas's military wing, that are holding Shalit. It was not clear, however, how the Hamas arrests were related to either Asheri's or Shalit's case.
The arrest operation followed a call from the Hamas-run government Wednesday to exchange Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails for Shalit, bringing the movement's elected political leadership directly into the dispute.
The statement, issued by the Palestinian Information Ministry, came after Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert warned that Israel "will not hesitate to take extreme steps" to free Shalit, who was captured by Palestinian gunmen during an attack Sunday on an army post that left two soldiers dead.
Near midnight, Israeli aircraft dropped leaflets over towns in northern Gaza warning residents not to interfere with military operations, suggesting that the start of one could be imminent. Israeli artillery batteries, quiet for nearly three weeks, had begun firing into open areas in the northern strip a few hours earlier.
"The full responsibility for the situation we are in belongs to the Palestinian-Hamas government and elements that are connected to it in Syria," said Olmert, referring to the movement's political leadership in exile that Israeli officials believe ordered the Sunday attack. Israeli military jets later buzzed the Syrian coastal city of Latakia, shaking President Bashar Assad's summer residence with a sonic boom.
"Any deterioration in the situation, and any worsening in the situation of the population, will be in their direct responsibility," Olmert said.
The two positions illustrated the gulf between Israel and the Palestinians over Shalit's fate, which appears increasingly likely to be determined by an Israeli military campaign here that began before dawn Wednesday.
An Israel airstrike on a main power station left roughly 700,000 people in Gaza -- about half the population -- without electricity. Engineers estimated that it could take three months to repair.
Meanwhile, Gaza residents gathered at two crumpled bridges struck by Israeli missiles that left two key north-south highways impassable. Children scavenged broken guardrails and steel bars from the sites, piling them on the back of donkey carts as traffic backed up.
Israeli military officials said the targets, including the roads struck early Thursday morning, were chosen to limit the ability of Shalit's captors to move him around the densely populated strip or across its southern border into Egypt where a rescue operation would be more difficult to carry out.
Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas condemned the Israeli operation and called on the rest of the world to exert pressure on Israel to stop the campaign, which has yet to result in any deaths.
"The president considers the aggression that targeted civilian infrastructure as collective punishment and crimes against humanity," read a statement from Abbas's office.
Along the strip's southern edge in Rafah, Israeli troops and armor remained on the mothballed international airport after entering Gaza hours earlier. The modest incursion was the first by a significant number of Israeli ground forces since Israel completed the evacuation of its settlements and military bases in the strip last September.
Tanks appeared dug in behind dirt berms at the edge of the airport compound, as Palestinian gunmen made preparations in the event Israeli forces move into the city.
"We will sacrifice whatever we have," said Atif Zanoun, 28, who gathered with others on the final day of a mourning period here for one of the two gunmen killed in Sunday's raid on the Israeli post. "We have nothing to lose."
Also, the armed wing of Abbas's Fatah movement, the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, asserted Wednesday that it had kidnapped a 62-year-old Israeli man. Israeli police said Noah Moskowitz of the central Israeli city of Rishon Lezion has been missing since Monday.
Olmert has ruled out negotiating for Shalit's release, rejecting a demand issued by his captors that the 421 Palestinian women and minors in Israeli jails be freed in return for information about the soldier's welfare. In its statement, however, the Palestinian Information Ministry noted that the Israeli government had done so in the past.
"The Israeli military escalation can't be the appropriate mechanism for releasing the Israeli prisoner," the ministry's statement said. "The Israeli leadership is going down the wrong path in trying to use the Israeli prisoner issue for political goals and to confuse the Palestinian internal situation."
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

Israelis Batter Gaza and Seize Hamas Officials

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/middleeast/29mideast.html
June 29, 2006
Israelis Batter Gaza and Seize Hamas Officials
By IAN FISHER and STEVEN ERLANGER [i-p] [following kidnapping, June 27, of French Jew who served in Israeli army] [after about 24 hours during which Israel encouraged abu mazen to find the solider] [Israel has invaded and captured Hamas leaders—i.e., members of the new govt (Jan 2006)] [*******]
GAZA, Thursday, June 29 — Israel stepped up its confrontation on Wednesday with Palestinian militants over the capture of an Israeli soldier, battering northern Gazan towns with artillery and sending warplanes over the house of the Syrian president, [****]who is influential with the Palestinian leader believed to have ordered the kidnapping.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/middleeast/29mideast.html
June 29, 2006
Israelis Batter Gaza and Seize Hamas Officials
By IAN FISHER and STEVEN ERLANGER [i-p] [following kidnapping, June 27, of French Jew who served in Israeli army] [after about 24 hours during which Israel encouraged abu mazen to find the solider] [Israel has invaded and captured Hamas leaders—i.e., members of the new govt (Jan 2006)] [*******]
GAZA, Thursday, June 29 — Israel stepped up its confrontation on Wednesday with Palestinian militants over the capture of an Israeli soldier, battering northern Gazan towns with artillery and sending warplanes over the house of the Syrian president, [****]who is influential with the Palestinian leader believed to have ordered the kidnapping.
In the West Bank city of Ramallah early on Thursday, Israeli forces detained 8 ministers of the 24-member Hamas-led cabinet and 20 lawmakers, including Deputy Prime Minister Nasser Shaer and Labor Minister Mohammed Barghouti, security officials said.
The crisis seemed to be tipping toward escalation as Israeli tanks hunkered down inside southern Gaza at the airport on Wednesday after warplanes had knocked out half of Gaza's electricity and pounded sonic booms over houses. [*********]
The Israeli defense minister, Amir Peretz, approved an extension of the incursion into northern Gaza, where Palestinian militants have been firing crude Qassam rockets into Israel. As of early Thursday, though, Israel denied reports that it was moving tanks into northern Gaza. About 9 p.m. Wednesday, after saying they would drop leaflets urging citizens of Beit Hanoun and Beit Lahiya to leave their homes, Israeli artillery batteries began to shell. [******]
On Thursday, an Israeli warplane fired a missile in Gaza City that an Israel spokeswoman said hit a soccer field near the pro-Hamas Islamic University. Reuters reported that the missile hit inside the university.
Political leaders of Hamas on Wednesday joined the militants to demand the release of Palestinian women and minors from Israeli jails in exchange for the soldier — a condition that the Israeli prime minister, Ehud Olmert, rejected.
The choice, Israeli officials said, was the soldier's unconditional release or an escalation that could widen the conflict regionally: Haim Ramon, Israel's justice minister, raised the possibility of a strike in Syria to kill Khaled Meshal, the exiled political leader of Hamas; the men who hold the Israeli soldier, Cpl. Gilad Shalit, 19, are believed to be following his orders.
"We won't hesitate to carry out extreme action to bring Gilad back to his family," [*****]Mr. Olmert said of the soldier, who was captured Sunday in an attack near Gaza led by Hamas.
In what the Israelis said was a message to the Syrian president, Bashar al-Assad, four Israeli warplanes on Wednesday flew over his residence in Latakia, in northwest Syria, where he was believed to be staying. [****]Syrian state television said Syrian air-defense systems had fired on the planes and forced them to flee. [********]
Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, on Wednesday condemned Israel's attacks on infrastructure in Gaza, [****]which disabled its only power plant and knocked down three bridges. In a statement, Mr. Abbas said he considered "the aggression that targeted the civilian infrastructures as collective punishment and crimes against humanity." [*****]
The crisis also spilled over into a second — and possibly third — kidnapping. In Gaza, the Popular Resistance Committees, a militant group with ties to Hamas, displayed the identity card of an 18-year-old Israeli settler, Eliahu Asheri, whom it claimed to have kidnapped in the West Bank. Militants said they would kill him if Israel did not halt operations in Gaza, and early Thursday his body was found near Ramallah. [*****]Israeli media carried unconfirmed reports that a 60-year-old Israeli missing for two days had also been abducted.
Two Palestinians, ages 2 and 17, were reported killed Wednesday while playing with an unexploded Israeli shell in the town of Khan Yunis. But there were no reports of casualties in Israeli airstrikes.
There have been no reported skirmishes between the Israeli military and Palestinian militants, though the Israelis stayed largely out of reach at the airport. The airport, Israeli military officials say, will act as a staging ground for an operation that will escalate until Corporal Shalit, reported to be wounded, is freed. [*****]
For the Israelis, the operation is aimed at deterring Hamas, which now leads the Palestinian government, from carrying out similar attacks in the future. Israeli newspapers carried articles on Wednesday speaking of the attacks on the infrastructure as a way to extract a concrete longer-term cost for the actions of the Palestinian leaders.
For many Palestinians in Gaza, the refusal to back down seemed a collective effort to highlight their own sense of grievance. The economy has broken down under an embargo of Western aid since Hamas took power in January. The Palestinians contend they remain under siege, even after the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza last year, with their borders often closed and encircled by Israeli warplanes and ships. [*****]
And there remains widespread approval for the capture of Corporal Shalit and Hamas's demand for an exchange, given that there are nearly 9,000 Palestinians in Israeli jails, among them 95 women and 313 people under age 18. [*****]
"There is support for this because I am not safe when I walk on the street," said Mustafa Raghib, the director of Gaza's largest flour mill, forced to shut for several hours after the electricity was cut. "Give me a good life and I will not support actions like this."
The White House on Wednesday called for the release of the soldier. Mr. Bush's spokesman, Tony Snow, said that Hamas had been "complicit in perpetrating violence" and that Israel had the right to defend itself.
Mr. Snow said the Bush administration was urging Israel to ensure "that innocent civilians are not harmed" and to "avoid the unnecessary destruction of property and infrastructure." [*****]But he chose his words with precision, steering clear of questions about whether the Israeli response had been appropriate.
Israeli leaders said Wednesday that they had ordered the military forward after seeing little progress on diplomatic efforts — including by Egypt and France — to win Corporal Shalit's release. Amid sonic booms that shattered windows, Israeli military planes hit the three bridges, as Apache helicopters attacked all six of the transformers at the power plant — an attack that Israeli officials said was necessary to make it harder to move the corporal around.
"Nobody understands the logic," Rafik Maliha, the plant's manager, said. "They want to keep people in the dark so kidnappers don't move? What's the relationship?
"If there is no electricity, there is no water," he added. "It is more than collective punishment."
The plant provided 42 percent of the power to Gaza's 1.3 million residents, and now Gaza is completely dependent on Israel for power. [*****]Mr. Maliha said it would take as long as a year to replace the transformers.
On Tuesday, Palestinian negotiators from Fatah, Hamas and other factions rushed to finish a draft of a unified political program, based on a document issued in May by Palestinian prisoners. It contains new language that senior Israeli officials said represented a defeat for President Abbas. [I don’t understand why Israel wishes for abu mazen to fail] [he is the only one who wishes to negotiate] [perhaps they view him as they did Arafat: anything he could deliver would be insufficient] [******]
They said they hoped he would walk away from it because, one official said, "it takes him out of the game" and "further alienates him from Israel." The document now represents, the official said, "the basis for future negotiations with Israel, and for us, this is a total nonstarter."
The Israeli analysis, by the Foreign Ministry, focuses on language, inserted in negotiations with Hamas, that insists on the right of return, "without discrimination," for all Palestinian refugees "to their homes and properties from which they were evicted and to compensate them."
The Israelis argue that this stronger language gives the lie to any claim that Hamas has recognized the right of Israel to exist, implicitly or otherwise, because such an interpretation of refugee rights would eliminate Israel as a Jewish state by flooding it with Palestinians.
The document has always been silent on the statehood of Israel, but has been interpreted to give it an implicit recognition because it calls for the establishment of a Palestinian state, with Jerusalem as its capital, "on all territories occupied in 1967," presumably with Israel next door.
But a senior official, who has also briefed European diplomats, argued that the failure to mention Israel's right to exist speaks more loudly. "We don't see any implicit recognition of Israel by Hamas," the official said. "The most significant reason is that this right of return takes out the two-state solution."
Israel, the official said, is concerned that the document is being praised by European officials, without having yet been read. The document, Israel says, accepts previous Israeli-Palestinian agreements only in so far as they do not "affect the rights of our people," which Israel says means "cherry-picking" previous agreements.
The draft also calls for a new legislature of the Palestine Liberation Organization to be organized by the end of 2006 in a way that favors Hamas, the official argued, and for a "national unity government" that Hamas will still dominate. [***] Mr. Abbas also appears to be giving up the right he had insisted upon to be able to call a referendum by presidential decree, without a law passed by the Hamas-dominated Palestinian legislature, the Israeli official said.
Ian Fisher reported from Gaza City for this article, and Steven Erlanger from Jerusalem.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Taliban Will Be Beaten, Rice Tells Afghan Leader

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/asia/29diplo.html
June 29, 2006
Taliban Will Be Beaten, Rice Tells Afghan Leader
By HELENE COOPER [afghan] [hydra] [insurgency] [spring offensive continued] [****]
KABUL, Afghanistan, June 28 — With Afghanistan starting to assume more of Iraq's violent characteristics in recent months, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice visited here Wednesday in a show of support for the country's besieged president,[*****] Hamid Karzai

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/asia/29diplo.html
June 29, 2006
Taliban Will Be Beaten, Rice Tells Afghan Leader
By HELENE COOPER [afghan] [hydra] [insurgency] [spring offensive continued] [****]
KABUL, Afghanistan, June 28 — With Afghanistan starting to assume more of Iraq's violent characteristics in recent months, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice visited here Wednesday in a show of support for the country's besieged president,[*****] Hamid Karzai.
She promised him that the insurgent Taliban forces who had mounted a string of attacks would be defeated. [*****]
But even as they were discussing ways to combat the Taliban, the attacks continued. Two car bombers killed themselves in a failed attack on American forces in Zabul Province in the south, and an attack in Kunduz Province in the north wounded three German soldiers.
On Tuesday, two British soldiers were killed after their patrol was attacked with rocket-propelled grenades and automatic rifle fire in the Sangin district, a Taliban stronghold in Helmand Province in the south.
"That Afghanistan has brutal enemies is no surprise to anyone," Ms. Rice said during brief remarks with Mr. Karzai after their meeting. "These are people who tried to destroy this country over a long period of time."
Ms. Rice later flew to Moscow in preparation for the foreign ministers' meeting of the Group of 8 industrial nations on Thursday. Iran's nuclear program is expected to dominate the session. [*****]
More than 10,000 American-led soldiers are hunting for the Taliban, who were ousted from power by the United States and its allies in 2001 for sheltering Al Qaeda's leaders and training camps. But the Taliban have been resurgent in recent months, mainly in southern Afghanistan, often singling out foreign and Afghan forces with bombings and ambushes. The civilian death toll is rising. [****]
The measures taken by the State Department and American Embassy here to provide protection for Ms. Rice's five-hour visit to Kabul showed just how tenuous security has become, even in the capital.
Officials at the embassy said they had been prohibited from leaving the sandbagged premises without a military escort. Strolling around marketplaces or bazaars, or mingling with local people, was forbidden.
Ms. Rice's party flew in from Islamabad aboard a gray C-17 military cargo plane, while her standard blue and white Boeing 757, with its distinctive United States of America logo, flew separately to Bagram Air Base, about an hour's drive away.
After meeting with Mr. Karzai, Ms. Rice took a helicopter to Bagram to catch her plane, which made a swift, steep ascent, disappearing from rocket range within minutes.
The United States has about 25,000 troops in Afghanistan but is in the process of turning control of some areas over to NATO forces. Afghan and foreign officials and local villagers blame a lack of United States-led forces on the ground for the Taliban resurgence.
Mr. Karzai disputed reports that he had been largely confined to Kabul in recent months as violence increased. "Every month I'm in one of the Afghan provinces," he said. "I was in Baghlan Province in the northern part of the country. There were so many new schools. In a drive of 20 minutes I saw three new schools."
But officials said the fledgling government needed more help, particularly for training its weak security forces and its equally weak federal bureaucracy.
Ms. Rice tried to moderate the bickering between Pakistan and Afghanistan over rooting out terrorism on their lawless border. Playing the role of peacemaker, Ms. Rice said, "We have to realize we have a common enemy." [*********]
"We have a situation where all of these nations, including the United States, are threatened by the same people," she said. "They are not going to win. They don't have a positive agenda for anyone."
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Iraqi Official Says Insurgent Cell Bombed Shiite Shrine

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/28/AR2006062802028.html
Iraqi Official Says Insurgent Cell Bombed Shiite Shrine
By Joshua Partlow
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 29, 2006; A21 [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [violence and politics] [group who cause feb 22 saarra golden shrine bloodbath] [***********] [ditto]
BAGHDAD, June 28 -- The bombing of a revered Shiite shrine in Samarra that pushed Iraq to the brink of civil war in February was executed by a seven-man cell of the insurgent group al-Qaeda in Iraq that included two Iraqis, four Saudis and a Tunisian man who has been captured, Iraq's national security adviser said Wednesday.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/28/AR2006062802028.html
Iraqi Official Says Insurgent Cell Bombed Shiite Shrine
By Joshua Partlow
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, June 29, 2006; A21 [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [violence and politics] [group who cause feb 22 saarra golden shrine bloodbath] [***********] [ditto]
BAGHDAD, June 28 -- The bombing of a revered Shiite shrine in Samarra that pushed Iraq to the brink of civil war in February was executed by a seven-man cell of the insurgent group al-Qaeda in Iraq that included two Iraqis, four Saudis and a Tunisian man who has been captured, Iraq's national security adviser said Wednesday.
Mowaffak al-Rubaie told reporters that the culprits behind the destruction of the golden-domed shrine emerged a few days ago, after 16 foreign fighters attacked an Iraqi military checkpoint in Duluiyah, 25 miles north of Baghdad.
In the ensuing gunfight, 15 of the fighters were killed and the lone survivor, Yasri Fakher Muhammad Ali al-Trigui, was seriously wounded. Trigui, a Tunisian known as Abu Qadama, admitted in captivity to taking part in one of the most provocative attacks of the Iraq war, Rubaie said.
"Qadama gave full details on the shrine destruction," Rubaie said. "The sole reason behind his action was to drive a wedge between the Shia and Sunnis and to ignite and trigger a sectarian war in this country."
Rubaie identified the leader of the al-Qaeda in Iraq cell as Haitham al-Badri, a Sunni Arab Iraqi born in Samarra. He remains at large, and officials have distributed his wanted poster at checkpoints and border crossings.
Badri was a top official in the group's operation in Salahuddin province. According to Samarra residents, before joining al-Qaeda in Iraq, Badri was a warrant officer in the Special Republican Guard under Saddam Hussein. After the invasion, he joined the insurgent group Ansar al-Sunna, where he trained recruits and carried out attacks.
On the night of Feb. 21, according to Rubaie's account, the al-Qaeda team slipped into the shrine in Samarra, tied up the security guards, locked them in a room and spent several hours arranging explosives that would detonate at dawn.
The bombing changed the dynamics of violence in Iraq. What had been primarily a conflict between Sunni insurgents and people associated with the Iraqi government and the foreign troops defending it became a power struggle between Iraq's two main religious sects that continues today. Reprisal attacks hit hundreds of mosques and shrines, Sunnis and Shiites were murdered with impunity, and thousands of refugees fled their neighborhoods.
The choice of the Samarra shrine as a target fueled much of the outrage. One of the holiest for Shiite Muslims, it is the burial place of two revered 9th-century imams. One of them, Hassan al-Askari, is believed to be the father of the "hidden imam," the Mahdi, whose reappearance will signal the apocalypse.
In Samarra in February, some local officials said the bombers had been dressed in the uniforms of Iraqi security forces. A DVD later distributed in the area, said to be made by Ansar al-Sunna, contended that Interior Ministry commandos had organized the attack. Some Samarra residents said they put more credence in the video than in the national security adviser's account.
"The Iraqi government has made this announcement to look innocent of this crime," said Khaldoon Ahmed, 33, a high school teacher in Samarra. "If they are really prepared to reveal the truth, then we demand the formation of an international committee to investigate this incident, and we will not let anyone rebuild the shrine until that is done."
Others called for a swift demise for those responsible.
"They should be executed in a public square so that they become a lesson to those who violate the sacred places of the Muslims," said Ahmed Hussein, 50, a Samarra lawyer.
Meanwhile, news services reported that Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki had been contacted by several Sunni Arab insurgent groups about his proposal to end violence by bringing them into the Iraqi political process. The Associated Press said nearly a dozen insurgent groups had agreed to immediately halt attacks on all foreign or Iraqi targets if the United States agreed to withdraw foreign forces within two years.
Maliki has said, however, that amnesty offers included in his recent reconciliation proposal did not extend to killers of Americans or Iraqis, and the Bush administration has rejected setting a timetable for troop withdrawals. On Wednesday, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said in Washington that President Bush's view "has been and remains that a timetable is not something that is useful. It is a signal to the enemies that all you have to do is just wait and it's yours."
The daily violence in Iraq continued on Wednesday. A dark blue Daewoo parked outside a Sunni Mosque in Baqubah exploded, killing two people and wounding 12 others, many of them customers at a tea shop across the street, according to Laith Salan, the senior emergency room physician at Baqubah General Hospital.
The U.S. military said that a soldier was killed on Tuesday night when a roadside bomb exploded under his vehicle. A U.S. Marine was killed Tuesday in fighting in predominantly Sunni Anbar province. U.S. and Iraqi forces have been operating in the provincial capital of Ramadi in an attempt to wrest control from insurgents.
In Baqubah, an al-Qaeda insurgent was detained during a raid in which troops mistakenly killed a neighbor who was "acting suspiciously" but turned out to be a noncombatant, the military said.
Special correspondents Hassan Shammari, K.I. Ibrahim and Saad al-Izzi and other Washington Post staff contributed to this report.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

Prisoner Links Iraqi to Attack on Shiite Shrine, Official Says

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/middleeast/29iraq.html
June 29, 2006
Prisoner Links Iraqi to Attack on Shiite Shrine, Official Says
By EDWARD WONG [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [violence and politics] [group who cause feb 22 saarra golden shrine bloodbath] [***********]
BAGHDAD, Iraq, June 28 — An Iraqi affiliated with Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia led the team that carried out the February bombing of a golden-domed Shiite shrine, unleashing waves of sectarian violence that still convulse Iraq today, [*****]an Iraqi security official said on Wednesday.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/middleeast/29iraq.html
June 29, 2006
Prisoner Links Iraqi to Attack on Shiite Shrine, Official Says
By EDWARD WONG [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [violence and politics] [group who cause feb 22 saarra golden shrine bloodbath] [***********]
BAGHDAD, Iraq, June 28 — An Iraqi affiliated with Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia led the team that carried out the February bombing of a golden-domed Shiite shrine, unleashing waves of sectarian violence that still convulse Iraq today, [*****]an Iraqi security official said on Wednesday.
The insurgent, Haitham al-Badri, is in hiding in Iraq and being sought by government forces, [****]said the official, Mowaffak al-Rubaie, the national security adviser. [****]
Mr. Badri also personally killed Atwar Bahjat, an Iraqi reporter for the network Al Arabiya who was abducted and murdered after traveling to Samarra, the site of the Askariya shrine, [****]on the day it was bombed, Mr. Rubaie said. Two of Ms. Bahjat's colleagues were also killed in that ambush.
Mr. Rubaie said the Iraqi government learned the details of the shrine bombing after the capture a few days ago of Yusri Fakher Muhammad Ali,[****] also known as Abu Qudama, [****] a Tunisian militant who confessed to be a member of Mr. Badri's team. Mr. Ali, who entered Iraq in November 2003, also said the assault team consisted of four Saudis and two Iraqis in addition to himself and Mr. Badri, Mr. Rubaie said.
"The crime of Samarra was one of the biggest crimes meant to provoke sectarian division and civil war, but they failed to achieve that," Mr. Rubaie [***]said at a news conference inside the fortified Green Zone.
The participation of Iraqis in the bombing, and the fact that the attack was the brainchild of an Iraqi, could come as a shock to many in this country. [****]The attack was so horrifying that many here blamed foreigners, saying that no Iraqi would do such a thing. Indeed, many Iraqis still blame foreigners for the daily suicide bombings in the country.
The shrine bombing pushed Iraq to the edge of all-out civil war, as Shiite militiamen went on a rampage in neighborhoods across eastern Baghdad and elsewhere, leaving hundreds dead. The government was forced to impose a curfew during daylight hours, and American and Iraqi troops took up positions in the streets.
Mr. Badri was born in Samarra and comes from a predominantly Sunni tribe in Salahuddin Province, the home region of Saddam Hussein, [****]Mr. Rubaie said. He had ties to Mr. Hussein's government and was a member of the Army of Ansar al-Sunna before joining Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia. Ansar al-Sunna is a particularly violent religious group that was founded in the far north [*****]after the American invasion, but has since recruited members from all across Iraq.
Mr. Badri now commands the Qaeda branch in Salahuddin, [***]Mr. Rubaie said. The founder of Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian militant, was killed in an American airstrike earlier this month. The group was believed to have been in some disarray after Mr. Zarqawi's killing, though members of the groups quickly announced a successor. [*********]
Mr. Badri and his team entered the Askariya shrine the night of Feb. 21, after the Iraqi Army had handed over guard duties to policemen belonging to the Facilities Protection Service, run by the Interior Ministry, [****]Mr. Rubaie said. The insurgents tied up the policemen and placed explosives around the shrine. The charges detonated the morning of Feb. 22, ripping apart the golden dome and doing some damage to the tombs of two revered Shiite imams.
Mr. Ali, the Tunisian militant, was captured as he tried storming a checkpoint a few days ago in the town of Dhuluiya, north of Baghdad, [******] Mr. Rubaie said. Fifteen foreign guerrillas were killed in the raid, and Mr. Ali was seriously injured.
Mr. Ali said in his confession that hours after the shrine bombing, Mr. Badri watched as Ms. Bahjat, the Arabiya journalist, did a broadcast from a gas station in Samarra. He then kidnapped her, a cameraman and a soundman and killed them. [*****]
In scattered violence on Wednesday, a car bomb exploded in a market near the city of Baquba, north of Baghdad, killing at least one, while gunmen killed a civilian in the town of Buhruz, south of Baquba, and another civilian in the western suburbs of Baquba, police officials said.
An American soldier was killed Tuesday night by a roadside bomb north of Baghdad, and a marine died from combat wounds sustained Tuesday in Anbar Province, the American military said.
The American military said troops accidentally killed a civilian on Wednesday while arresting a member of Al Qaeda in the area of Baquba. [***]The troops saw someone acting suspiciously at a nearby house and killed him, the military said in a written statement. Later, they determined that the person was a noncombatant.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Putin Orders Death for Killers of Russians in Iraq

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/europe/29putin.html
June 29, 2006
Putin Orders Death for Killers of Russians in Iraq
By STEVEN LEE MYERS [Russia] [former ussr] [followup to yesterday’s external] [where putin ordered the men who kidnapped Russian diplomats be hunted and killed] [recall Russia is not part of the coalition of the willing] [thus is prescense there has been to foster peace, ensure Russian interests, so on] [*****] [use psci 469]
MOSCOW, June 28 — President Vladimir V. Putin on Wednesday ordered Russia's secret services to find and kill those who kidnapped and killed four Russian Embassy employees in Iraq, [******]the Kremlin announced in a statement.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/europe/29putin.html
June 29, 2006
Putin Orders Death for Killers of Russians in Iraq
By STEVEN LEE MYERS [Russia] [former ussr] [followup to yesterday’s external] [where putin ordered the men who kidnapped Russian diplomats be hunted and killed] [recall Russia is not part of the coalition of the willing] [thus is prescense there has been to foster peace, ensure Russian interests, so on] [*****] [use psci 469]
MOSCOW, June 28 — President Vladimir V. Putin on Wednesday ordered Russia's secret services to find and kill those who kidnapped and killed four Russian Embassy employees in Iraq, [******]the Kremlin announced in a statement.
The bluntness of the statement reflected the deep shock and anger — much directed at the United States — that have unfolded in Russia after the kidnapping on June 3 in an attack that killed a fifth Russian. [*********]
The Foreign Ministry confirmed Monday that the kidnapped employees had been killed. The confirmation was made after the release of a short video on an Islamic Web site that showed the beheading of one man, the shooting of another and the body of a third.
"The president gave instructions to the Russian special services to take all measures for finding and destroying the criminals who committed this atrocity," the Kremlin said, [*********]the official Russian Information Agency reported.
Neither news agencies nor state television quoted Mr. Putin making the remark. Interfax quoted only remarks he had made appealing for help in finding those involved during a meeting Wednesday with Prince Salman bin Abdul Aziz of Saudi Arabia.
Mr. Putin has made similarly pointed threats against Chechnya's separatist fighters and those who have carried out terrorist attacks in Russia. Early in the second war in Chechnya, Mr. Putin vowed to destroy the separatists in their outhouses. Four Chechen separatist leaders have been killed in strikes or raids since the second war began in 1999, most recently on June 17, when Russian forces killed Abdul Khalim Saidullayev, then the Chechen leader. [*****] How Russian agents might carry out Mr. Putin's order in Iraq remains unclear, given how little is known about the group that claimed responsibility for the kidnapping and killings: the Mujahedeen Shura, [*****]or Council of Holy Warriors, which says it represents Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia and other insurgent groups in Iraq.
The only known instance of Russian special forces carrying out an attack abroad occurred in February 2003, when a bomb destroyed a car being driven in Qatar by Zelimkhan Yandarbiev, another Chechen leader. Although Russia denied involvement, a court in Qatar convicted two Russian secret agents that year and said there was evidence that Mr. Yandarbiev's assassination had been ordered by "the Russian leadership."
Nikolai P. Patrushev, the director of the Federal Security Service, said later on Wednesday that no effort would be spared in carrying out Mr. Putin's order "no matter how much time and effort will be needed."
"We should be working so that not a single terrorist responsible for the crime would escape responsibility," Mr. Patrushev said in remarks cited by Russian agencies that stopped short of a direct threat to kill those responsible.
The United States, with many other countries, has denounced the killings of the five embassy workers — a member of the diplomatic corps whose title was third secretary, a maintenance worker, a driver, a guard and a cook — as acts of terrorism. [*****]American military commanders in Iraq had pledged to help find the hostages and, after their deaths, to help find those who killed them. But far from finding common cause over the killings, many Russian officials,[***] clerics, politicians and commentators have placed blame for the killings on the United States and the failure of the American-led forces to provide security. [********]
On Wednesday, the lower house of Parliament voted to adopt a statement that referred only to the "occupying countries" in Iraq, but blamed them for the deaths. "We believe they could have prevented the tragedy," the statement said.
At the United Nations, the Security Council postponed consideration of a statement condemning the killings after the United States asked for the removal of language that appeared to fault lax security by Baghdad and the coalition forces.
The statement, which said the council was "appalled by the horrific death" of the embassy employees, called upon the government of Iraq and "multinational forces" to undertake measures to enhance the security of foreign diplomatic missions.
Warren Hoge contributed reporting from the United Nations for this article.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Russia: Bill Widening Definition of Extremism Moves Toward Approval

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/europe/29briefs-001.html
June 29, 2006
World Briefing | Europe
Russia: Bill Widening Definition of Extremism Moves Toward Approval
STEVEN LEE MYERS (NYT) [Russia] [former ussr] [onne step forward, 2 steps back] [******]
Parliament's lower house gave preliminary approval to amendments that would expand the definition of extremism, a measure critics say is so broadly worded that it could allow the authorities to quash political and public protests. The amendments, if adopted in two additional votes, would label as extremist those who "impede the activities of state bodies" or organize or take part in public disturbances, according to news reports. It would also apply to "public slander" of state officials. [*****]The measures would allow the authorities to disqualify political parties or, in extreme cases, prosecute violators.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/europe/29briefs-001.html
June 29, 2006
World Briefing | Europe
Russia: Bill Widening Definition of Extremism Moves Toward Approval
STEVEN LEE MYERS (NYT) [Russia] [former ussr] [onne step forward, 2 steps back] [******]
Parliament's lower house gave preliminary approval to amendments that would expand the definition of extremism, a measure critics say is so broadly worded that it could allow the authorities to quash political and public protests. The amendments, if adopted in two additional votes, would label as extremist those who "impede the activities of state bodies" or organize or take part in public disturbances, according to news reports. It would also apply to "public slander" of state officials. [*****]The measures would allow the authorities to disqualify political parties or, in extreme cases, prosecute violators.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

British Court Rejects Tactic Used in Cases of Terrorism.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/europe/29britain.html
June 29, 2006
British Court Rejects Tactic Used in Cases of Terrorism.
By ALAN COWELL [uk] [eu] [us principal ally] [challenges to UK’s newly enacted anti-terrorism laws] [*****] [use psci 469]
LONDON, June 28 — Throwing down a new challenge to the government's tactics against terrorism, a High Court judge ruled Wednesday that so-called control orders — a form of house arrest without trial — were incompatible with European human rights laws. [************]

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/europe/29britain.html
June 29, 2006
British Court Rejects Tactic Used in Cases of Terrorism.
By ALAN COWELL [uk] [eu] [us principal ally] [challenges to UK’s newly enacted anti-terrorism laws] [*****] [use psci 469]
LONDON, June 28 — Throwing down a new challenge to the government's tactics against terrorism, a High Court judge ruled Wednesday that so-called control orders — a form of house arrest without trial — were incompatible with European human rights laws. [************]
The government is expected to appeal the ruling, [*****]issued by Justice Jeremy Sullivan, while civil rights groups depicted it as a victory in a sharpening duel over the state's efforts to amass ever greater powers, ostensibly to combat terrorism.
The debate, mirroring similar concerns in the United States, began after the Sept. 11 attacks on New York and the Pentagon. But it has become more intense here following last July's bomb attacks in London. [********]
If the government's appeal fails, the authorities will have to seek some other mechanism to continue holding the six suspects — a Briton and five Iraqis — whose cases prompted the ruling.
In his decision, Justice Sullivan said control orders conflict with the right to liberty under the European Convention on Human Rights. The authorities, thus, had no power to make the orders, he ruled.
Control orders provide for the electronic tagging of terrorism suspects who have not been charged with a crime, and for their confinement to their homes for most of the day. So-called controlees may be forced to relinquish their passports and permit unrestricted searches of their homes.
The government of Prime Minister Tony Blair has displayed increasing irritation with the European human rights legislation, which was drawn up in 1950 and written into British law in 1998. [***********]
Last month, Mr. Blair criticized a judge who cited human rights considerations as an argument to prevent nine Afghan airplane hijackers from being deported to Afghanistan. [********] Mr. Blair called the decision "an abuse of common sense."
Earlier this week, David Cameron, the leader of the opposition Conservatives, called for replacing the European code with a British bill of rights. [****]
Control orders were introduced after Britain's highest court, the Law Lords, ruled in 2004 that indefinite detention of foreign terrorism suspects in prisons also contravened the European Convention. [******]Control orders can be used against both Britons and foreigners.
Natalia Garcia, a lawyer representing people held under control orders, said her clients were "prisoners without rights who have not been charged with an offense and who, it is now clear, are denied their liberty for political reasons."
The government, for its part, argues that protecting the public against terrorist attacks and controlling the movements of people it considers dangerous outweigh such arguments.
"Public safety is our top priority," John Reid, the home secretary, said in a statement in response to Wednesday's ruling.
In a separate case last April, Justice Sullivan found that the 2005 Prevention of Terrorism Act, which authorized control orders, was also incompatible with the European Convention because people held under control orders had not received a fair hearing.
Both of Justice Sullivan's rulings are likely to be scrutinized at the Court of Appeal, possibly on Monday. The six men will remain under the control orders during the appeal.
The details of the six cases have not been made public, but they highlight the difficulties the authorities have faced in marrying their security concerns to human rights strictures championed by lawmakers and upheld by the courts. [*****]
The British man held under a control order was accused by the authorities of planning to go to Iraq to fight British and United States forces.
Beyond the six men, another six people previously held under control orders have appealed government plans to deport them, and are now being held on a form of bail that restricts their movements in much the same way as control orders, according to lawyers acting for them. The newest ruling does not apply to their cases.
After the July 7 bombings, Mr. Blair threatened a series of new measures to combat terrorism but did not put some of them into effect, like closing mosques used for firebrand sermons and outlawing one Islamic group called Hizb ut Tahrir. [*****]
But in a series of parliamentary contests, he has secured legislation extending the period during which suspects may be held without charge, to 28 days from 14 days.
The law has also been changed to criminalize the glorification of terrorism, raising worries that freedom of expression could be restricted.
The police have also been accused of using broader powers to stop and search people on the street.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Denmark: Pakistani Gets Life Sentence for 'Honor Killing' of Daughter

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/europe/29briefs-004.html
June 29, 2006
World Briefing | Europe
Denmark: Pakistani Gets Life Sentence for 'Honor Killing' of Daughter
(AP) [denmark] [followup to yesterday’s external] [life sentences] [*****] [use psci 469]
The father of a 19-year-old woman shot to death two days after her wedding last September because her Pakistani family disapproved of her choice of a husband was sentenced to life imprisonment as the mastermind of the killing. The woman's older brother, who had admitted pulling the trigger, was handed a 16-year term. Two uncles who helped the father were also sentenced to 16 years. [*****]Another uncle and an aunt were given 14 years, and three family friends who helped track the newlyweds were sentenced to terms ranging from 8 to 10 years. The trial, which began in May, had been widely followed in the Danish news media. At least nine other honor killings are known to have taken place in Denmark since the late 1980's.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/europe/29briefs-004.html
June 29, 2006
World Briefing | Europe
Denmark: Pakistani Gets Life Sentence for 'Honor Killing' of Daughter
(AP) [denmark] [followup to yesterday’s external] [life sentences] [*****] [use psci 469]
The father of a 19-year-old woman shot to death two days after her wedding last September because her Pakistani family disapproved of her choice of a husband was sentenced to life imprisonment as the mastermind of the killing. The woman's older brother, who had admitted pulling the trigger, was handed a 16-year term. Two uncles who helped the father were also sentenced to 16 years. [*****]Another uncle and an aunt were given 14 years, and three family friends who helped track the newlyweds were sentenced to terms ranging from 8 to 10 years. The trial, which began in May, had been widely followed in the Danish news media. At least nine other honor killings are known to have taken place in Denmark since the late 1980's.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

With Autopsy Still Pending, Saudis Bury a Guantánamo Detainee

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/middleeast/29saudi.html
June 29, 2006
With Autopsy Still Pending, Saudis Bury a Guantánamo Detainee
By HASSAN M. FATTAH [Saudi] [hanged himself at gitmo] [returned to Saudi] [where buried, as customary under Islamic law] [but before autopsy results released] [******] [use psci 469] [c.f. with today’s supremes ruling on hamdan, govt]] [**********]
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia, June 28 — Hundreds of Saudis descended on a suburban cemetery here in the Saudi capital late Wednesday to bury Mani Shaman al-Utaybi, 30, one of three prisoners who committed suicide this month [****]at the American detention center at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/29/world/middleeast/29saudi.html
June 29, 2006
With Autopsy Still Pending, Saudis Bury a Guantánamo Detainee
By HASSAN M. FATTAH [Saudi] [hanged himself at gitmo] [returned to Saudi] [where buried, as customary under Islamic law] [but before autopsy results released] [******] [use psci 469] [c.f. with today’s supremes ruling on hamdan, govt]] [**********]
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia, June 28 — Hundreds of Saudis descended on a suburban cemetery here in the Saudi capital late Wednesday to bury Mani Shaman al-Utaybi, 30, one of three prisoners who committed suicide this month [****]at the American detention center at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.
Mr. Utaybi was laid to rest in a nondescript grave, in keeping with Saudi tradition, at the Nassim Cemetery on the outskirts of Riyadh in a ceremony marked by displays of rare public emotion. [********]
The mourners, some of whom expressed anger over the detentions or disputed the Americans' version of the deaths, included some former Guantánamo detainees. [******]
Early on Wednesday, Saudi authorities released the bodies of Mr. Utaybi and Yasser Talal al-Zahrani, the other Saudi involved in the suicide, but a family lawyer said results of an eagerly awaited autopsy by a Saudi coroner would not be available for some time, [*********] pending further results from both American and Saudi investigations.
Mr. Zahrani's family planned to fly his body to Medina for burial in the holy city on Thursday.
The body of the third prisoner involved in the June 10 suicide, Ali Abdullah Ahmed, a Yemeni, was transferred to his family on Monday, and buried in his home village shortly afterward. [******]
"Theirs is a dignified death," said one relative of Mr. Utaybi, who gave his name only as Abu Osama. "We should all desire a death like theirs."
The suicides were the first at Guantánamo since the United States began holding terrorism suspects there in 2002, setting off widespread criticism over the prison.
American officials said the three hanged themselves with clothes and bedsheets in their cells.
A doctor at the camp's hospital told Reuters on Wednesday that weeks before the suicides, many of the detainees were found to have pills stuffed into the waistbands of their pants and in one case inside a prosthetic leg.
Guards also found nooses in other prisoners' cells, suggesting further that other prisoners planned to take part in coordinated suicides, [*****]Rear Adm. Harry Harris, who oversees detention operations, was quoted as saying.
But mourners on Wednesday continued to cast doubt on the American version of the deaths, insisting that they were more likely a result of foul play. [******]
Faris al-Utaybi, Mr. Utaybi's cousin, who said he had been the family member in charge of receiving Mr. Utaybi's body, insisted that the suicide had been a cover-up.
"The body had a bruise on its head and on its arms," Mr. Utaybi said.
Mr. Utaybi said his cousin had gone to Afghanistan about three months before the Sept. 11 attacks in the United States to volunteer for an aid group but then was taken into custody.
In letters he sent home while in Guantánamo, Mr. Utaybi appeared to be in good spirits, his cousin said.
Mourners said they doubted that the men would have taken their own lives, a grave sin in Islam that they differentiated from suicide attacks. [***********]
“Anyone who wants to get to heaven wouldn’t do something like this,” insisted Ahmed al-Qahtani, who stood among the crowd paying his respects at the cemetery. “These guys were going to heaven.” [*******]
"And they thought they were going to be released soon anyway," [****]Mr. Qahtani said.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Diplomats Want Iran's Answer by July 5

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062900315.html
Diplomats Want Iran's Answer by July 5
By ANNE GEARAN
The Associated Press
Thursday, June 29, 2006; 9:36 AM [iran] [wmd] [pas de deux] [bush admin gives in to eu allies on approach] [new incentive pakage created] [offered] [iran considering it while making regular annoucments about what it shall not give up, so on] [bush suggests iran has weeks not months] [iran says it shall need month to decide] [uk weighs in supporting bush effectively] [iran say it may need longer] [now G-8 diplomats addressing iran and set a deadline of sorts] [**************]
MOSCOW -- The United States, Russia and other industrial democracies said Thursday they expect Iran to answer "yes" or "no" next week [*****]to an international offer to bargain over Tehran's disputed nuclear program.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062900315.html
Diplomats Want Iran's Answer by July 5
By ANNE GEARAN
The Associated Press
Thursday, June 29, 2006; 9:36 AM [iran] [wmd] [pas de deux] [bush admin gives in to eu allies on approach] [new incentive pakage created] [offered] [iran considering it while making regular annoucments about what it shall not give up, so on] [bush suggests iran has weeks not months] [iran says it shall need month to decide] [uk weighs in supporting bush effectively] [iran say it may need longer] [now G-8 diplomats addressing iran and set a deadline of sorts] [**************]
MOSCOW -- The United States, Russia and other industrial democracies said Thursday they expect Iran to answer "yes" or "no" next week [*****]to an international offer to bargain over Tehran's disputed nuclear program.
"We are disappointed in the absence of an official Iranian response to this positive proposal," [******]said a statement from foreign ministers of the Group of Eight industrial nations. "We expect to hear a clear and substantive Iranian response to these proposals" at a meeting scheduled for July 5 [***] between the European Union's foreign minister and Iran's nuclear negotiator. [******]
The statement said the international coalition that made the offer to Iran "will assess the situation before mid-July." That would be just before leaders of the G-8 nations meet July 15-17 in Russia, where they are expected to consider the Iran situation.
The G-8 diplomats also discussed a range of pressing issues. They condemned the abduction of an Israeli soldier in the Gaza Strip and asked the Palestinian government to "take immediate measures" to free him. And the group asked Israel "to exercise utmost restraint in the current crisis. [***]The detention of elected members of the Palestinian government and Legislature raises particular concern."
Israeli troops arrested dozens of ministers and lawmakers from the Palestinians' elected Hamas leadership Thursday. [******]
The United States has not issued its own separate response, but Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice signed on to the joint statement, which is a coded criticism of Israel. [*******]
At a news conference following lengthy meetings with the diplomats from Russia, Germany, the United Kingdom, the United States, Italy, France, Canada and Japan, Rice noted the call for restraint from Israel. [*****]
"With restraint, perhaps, we can get back to a place where there are hopes again for a peace process," [*****]Rice said.
On Iran, the G-8 diplomats called Tehran's nuclear program "a source of international concern," and endorsed the offer to Iran to accept economic incentives in return for swearing off disputed aspects of the program, [****]which Tehran claims is peaceful.
"An agreement of this sort would allow the Iranian people to enjoy the benefits of modern civil nuclear power and would bring Iran many other long-term political and economic advantages," [*****]the G-8 ministers' statement said.
"We are disappointed in the absence of an official Iranian response to this positive proposal," the statement said.
The ministers also discussed world hotspots including North Korea, Iraq, Afghanistan and the Balkans. And they issued a call to international donors for new aid. [****]
On Iraq, they offered support to the new permanent Iraqi government and commended its new national reconciliation initiative, [*****]which some U.S. politicians have criticized as too accommodating toward insurgents.
Russian Prime Minster Sergey Lavrov did not directly respond to a question about whether United Nations economic sanctions would follow if Iran fails to reply or rejects the proposed bargain. [****]Russian and China, permanent veto-holding members of the U.N. Security Council, have opposed harsh measures for their commercial partner Tehran in the past, but U.S. diplomats say those nations are expected cooperate if the Iran case gets that far.
Lavrov said sanctions were not a part of Thursday's talks
"We did not discuss anything beyond the offer," he told reporters.
The meeting between the European Union's Javier Solana and Iran's Ali Larijani on July 5 will be the first since the EU official presented the incentive package to the Iranian negotiator in Tehran on June 6. Larijani said then that the proposals contained "positive steps" but talks were needed to clear up ambiguities.
Iran has not replied formally to a U.S. offer for the first high-level direct talks in more than a quarter of a century. [*****]The talks would be aimed at shuttering disputed nuclear activities that the West fears could lead to a bomb while rewarding Iran with economic incentives and help developing civilian nuclear power.
Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Tuesday that Iran does not need negotiations with the United States over its nuclear program. Khamenei, who has the final word on all state matters, did not give his position on the proposals presented to Iran earlier this month.[*****]
Associated Press Writer Edith Lederer at the United Nations contributed to this report.
© 2006 The Associated Press

Beijing and Seoul Weigh In on Missile Standoff

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-briefs29jun29,1,6265306.story?coll=la-headlines-world
From the Los Angeles Times
IN BRIEF / NORTH KOREA
Beijing and Seoul Weigh In on Missile Standoff
From Times Wire Reports
June 29, 2006 [dprk] [wmd] [imminent missile launch?] [PRC and ROK weigh in] [**************]
China's premier urged North Korea not to test-fire a long-range missile, and South Korea called on the United States to speak directly with North Korea to forestall a launch. [*****]

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-briefs29jun29,1,6265306.story?coll=la-headlines-world
From the Los Angeles Times
IN BRIEF / NORTH KOREA
Beijing and Seoul Weigh In on Missile Standoff
From Times Wire Reports
June 29, 2006 [dprk] [wmd] [imminent missile launch?] [PRC and ROK weigh in] [**************]
China's premier urged North Korea not to test-fire a long-range missile, and South Korea called on the United States to speak directly with North Korea to forestall a launch. [*****]

Premier Wen Jiabao said in Shenzhen that China was paying close attention to information that North Korea might be preparing a launch and urged the Pyongyang regime to avoid any actions that would aggravate regional tensions. [*****]

Kyodo News agency said Japan had ordered an advanced destroyer home early from multinational war games over concerns about a possible launch. [*****]

June 28, 2006

White House to Lose A Top Mouthpiece

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/27/AR2006062701514.html
White House to Lose A Top Mouthpiece
Communications Director Wallace Encouraged Bush to Be More Candid
By Michael Abramowitz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 28, 2006; A03 [nicolle dervish Wallace] [one of the young cubs who were attempting to open the bush admin up a bit] [apparently feels she has failed] [I always liked her—she seemed like a normal person for Washington D.C. and particularly for a White House spokesperson] [**********]
White House communications director Nicolle Wallace, a voice for more openness with reporters in an often tight-lipped administration, will step down Friday.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/27/AR2006062701514.html
White House to Lose A Top Mouthpiece
Communications Director Wallace Encouraged Bush to Be More Candid
By Michael Abramowitz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 28, 2006; A03 [nicolle dervish Wallace] [one of the young cubs who were attempting to open the bush admin up a bit] [apparently feels she has failed] [I always liked her—she seemed like a normal person for Washington D.C. and particularly for a White House spokesperson] [**********]
White House communications director Nicolle Wallace, a voice for more openness with reporters in an often tight-lipped administration, will step down Friday.
The move, announced by the White House yesterday, was not part of the shake-up by new Chief of Staff Joshua B. Bolten, but it has been anticipated since President Bush tapped her husband, [*****]Mark Wallace, in January to join the U.S. delegation at the United Nations. Nicolle Wallace has made no secret in recent months about her desire to join her husband in New York, although she said yesterday that she has not decided what she is going to do next professionally. [*********]
"I have been so fortunate to have been a spokesman for a man I believe in wholeheartedly," Wallace said. "It makes you choosy about" what to do next.
Press secretary Tony Snow said the White House had yet to choose a replacement for Wallace.
Although little known outside the White House, Wallace, 34, emerged in the second Bush term as part of a circle of younger advisers who pushed the administration to be less secretive and more aggressive in explaining its positions to the public. Along with White House counselor Dan Bartlett, Wallace urged the president to be more candid in acknowledging setbacks in Iraq as part of a new communications strategy aimed at regaining credibility with the public, [****]Bush advisers have said.
“She injected a tremendous amount of realism” into the White House, said Wayne Berman, a longtime GOP strategist and Bush supporter. “Nicolle is someone who always saw very clearly what challenges the administration faced. She made those very clear and unambiguous. That made the deliberations and the communications strategy better.” [*****]
Said Bartlett: “I sad day for me, and I know it’s a sad day for the president. She’s somebody who has the confidence and the moxie that the president wants in a top adviser. . . . She’s been very persuasive in the halls of the West Wing.” [I’m sort of surprised Bartlett has survived josh bolten’s housecleaning] [*********]
Wallace has been with Bush from the beginning of his first term. She met many of her colleagues -- including her future husband -- during the 2000 election recount in Florida, where she served as press secretary to Gov. Jeb Bush (R). She oversaw regional media strategy in President Bush's first term before joining his reelection campaign as communications director. After the election, she was named assistant to the president for communications, which involved her in longer-term planning. [*******]
Despite criticism from outsiders that Bush brooks little dissent, Wallace said yesterday that the president has always insisted on an "honest assessment" from her and other members of his staff. "It's very hard to leave a president like this and a place like this," [******] she said. "There was a feeling in some of the more challenging times that we were in it together, and I always sort of relished those sentiments."
She also challenged the common assessment that Bush has a poor relationship with the media, saying that despite "passionate disagreements" on certain issues, the basic relationship is cordial and productive. "There's a perception that there's more tension between the White House and the press than there really is," she said.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

House Panel Backs U.S.-India Nuclear Plan

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/27/AR2006062701347.html
WASHINGTON IN BRIEF
Wednesday, June 28, 2006; A09
House Panel Backs U.S.-India Nuclear Plan [usfp] [nuke deal with India] [**********]
A House panel endorsed a Bush administration plan yesterday to share civilian nuclear technology with India, a first step toward approval of the unprecedented deal.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/27/AR2006062701347.html
WASHINGTON IN BRIEF
Wednesday, June 28, 2006; A09
House Panel Backs U.S.-India Nuclear Plan [usfp] [nuke deal with India] [**********]
A House panel endorsed a Bush administration plan yesterday to share civilian nuclear technology with India, a first step toward approval of the unprecedented deal.
The House International Relations Committee voted 37 to 5 in favor of exempting India from U.S. laws that restrict nuclear trade with countries that have not submitted to full nuclear inspections. India developed its nuclear weapons program outside the treaty, which it has refused to sign.
Under the deal, India would allow international inspections and safeguards to 14 nuclear reactors it has designated as civilian; India's eight military facilities would remain off-limits. In return, the United States would agree to ship nuclear technology and fuel to India.
The Senate Foreign Relations Committee is to consider separate legislation on the deal tomorrow.
Senate Bill Would Raise DHS Funding by 4.9%
The Senate Appropriations Committee approved $31.7 billion in funding for the Homeland Security Department next year as it works to tighten the country's borders. The total is 4.9 percent more than this year's budget and 2.3 percent greater than President Bush's request.
The increased spending may benefit government contractors such as Raytheon Co. and Lockheed Martin Corp., which develop border-protection technology. The committee wants to increase spending on immigration and customs enforcement by $718 million next year. The amount approved for border protection was $65 million more than Bush's request.
Under the Senate measure, the Transportation Security Administration would receive $2.6 billion for baggage and passenger screeners, $699 million for federal air marshals and $172 million to install airport bomb detectors.
The House favors a $32.1 billion version of the bill.
Sen. Grassley Wants IRS To Battle Sex Traffickers
Pimps and sex traffickers could soon find themselves being chased by tax collectors.
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa) wants the Internal Revenue Service to pursue them with the same intensity it used to track down gangster Al Capone for tax evasion.
Grassley wants pimps to face fines and long prison terms for not filing employment forms and not withholding taxes for the women and girls under their command. The proposal would make certain tax crimes a felony when the money comes from a criminal activity.
Nuclear Waste Sites Proposed in Senate Bill
The government would store civilian nuclear waste for up to 25 years at federal sites nationwide under a Senate proposal to deal with growing volumes of used reactor fuel at power plants.
The waste sites could be built to accommodate plants in a region or individual state, said Sen. Pete V. Domenici (R-N.M.), who included the provision in a $30.7 billion spending bill that advanced out of his Appropriations subcommittee yesterday.
-- From News Services
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

With Caveats, U.S. Backs Session at U.N. on Curtailing Illegal Arms

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/28/world/28nations.html
June 28, 2006
With Caveats, U.S. Backs Session at U.N. on Curtailing Illegal Arms
By WARREN HOGE [US employing the UN yet again] [apparently it is less irrelevant than neocons thought] [even the neocon Bolton who represents the Bush admin there] [c.f. holbrook’s oped today’s societal]
UNITED NATIONS, June 27 — The Bush administration gave its backing on Tuesday to a United Nations conference on curtailing the international flow of illegal arms, but warned delegates against adopting measures that would restrict individual possession of weapons.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/28/world/28nations.html
June 28, 2006
With Caveats, U.S. Backs Session at U.N. on Curtailing Illegal Arms
By WARREN HOGE [US employing the UN yet again] [apparently it is less irrelevant than neocons thought] [even the neocon Bolton who represents the Bush admin there] [c.f. holbrook’s oped today’s societal]
UNITED NATIONS, June 27 — The Bush administration gave its backing on Tuesday to a United Nations conference on curtailing the international flow of illegal arms, but warned delegates against adopting measures that would restrict individual possession of weapons.
"The U.S. Constitution guarantees the rights of our citizens to keep and bear arms, and there will be no infringement of those rights," Robert G. Joseph, under secretary of state for arms control and international security affairs, told the General Assembly. "Many millions of American citizens enjoy hunting and the full range of firearms sports, and our work will not affect their rights," he said.
He also said Washington would object to any steps to establish international regulation of ammunition or to ban governments from selling arms to rebel groups, known in diplomatic jargon as "nonstate actors."
"While we will of course continue to oppose the acquisition of arms by terrorist groups," he said, "we recognize the rights of the oppressed to defend themselves against tyrannical and genocidal regimes and oppose a blanket ban on nonstate actors."
The two-week conference, which began Monday, is intended to improve ways of curbing the $1 billion black market in the manufacture and distribution of small arms and light weapons that supply brutal civil wars and organized crime networks and end up killing an estimated 1,000 people every day worldwide.
Secretary General Kofi Annan reminded the gathering that "these weapons may be small, but they cause mass destruction." He urged member countries to toughen existing laws governing arms deals.
Steps that Mr. Joseph said the United States would support included the marking and tracing of weapons, controls on transfers, certification of the ultimate recipients, effective management of national stockpiles and destruction of illicit and government-declared surplus weapons.
Mr. Annan said the conference was not contemplating a global ban on gun ownership. "Nor do we wish to deny law-abiding citizens their right to bear arms in accordance with their national laws," he said.
He seemed to be referring to a campaign by the National Rifle Association, which has charged in mass mailings that the United Nations is plotting to take away Americans' guns through a treaty banning ownership.
John R. Bolton, the United States ambassador to the United Nations, confirmed that he had received hundreds of the form letters. Asked why all three citizen delegates from the United States to the conference were prominent members of the gun lobby group, he said he made it a practice not to comment on the activities of nongovernmental organizations.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Senator Says North Korean Missile Firing May Not Be Imminent

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/28/washington/28korea.html
June 28, 2006
Senator Says North Korean Missile Firing May Not Be Imminent
By THOM SHANKER and DAVID E. SANGER [senator warner (R-VA) chair of armed services committee] [presumably got his info from military intelligence, and probably specifically via NSA and/or DIA] [I like warner a lot] [he’s a moderate fellow who seeks comity in all his efforts] [nonetheless, this announcement did every bit as much to warn our enemies—dprk in this case—about US intelligence abilites as the NYTs leak about SWIFT, the banking consortium in Belgium] [if the white house nad other GOP flacks don’t rebuke warner in coming days it will show how hollow their cries of outrage were against the NYTs, if that hasn’t already been demonstrated by their failure to go after Wall Street Journal as well] [WSJ published same info] [not a peep from white house] [*********]
WASHINGTON, June 27 — The chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee said Tuesday that while North Korea showed clear signs of preparing a missile for a test launching, it remained uncertain whether it was fully fueled for an imminent firing.
The chairman, Senator John W. Warner, a Virginia Republican, spoke on Capitol Hill after committee members received a closed-door briefing from officials of the Missile Defense Agency, the Defense Intelligence Agency and the defense secretary's office.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/28/washington/28korea.html
June 28, 2006
Senator Says North Korean Missile Firing May Not Be Imminent
By THOM SHANKER and DAVID E. SANGER [senator warner (R-VA) chair of armed services committee] [presumably got his info from military intelligence, and probably specifically via NSA and/or DIA] [I like warner a lot] [he’s a moderate fellow who seeks comity in all his efforts] [nonetheless, this announcement did every bit as much to warn our enemies—dprk in this case—about US intelligence abilites as the NYTs leak about SWIFT, the banking consortium in Belgium] [if the white house nad other GOP flacks don’t rebuke warner in coming days it will show how hollow their cries of outrage were against the NYTs, if that hasn’t already been demonstrated by their failure to go after Wall Street Journal as well] [WSJ published same info] [not a peep from white house] [*********]
WASHINGTON, June 27 — The chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee said Tuesday that while North Korea showed clear signs of preparing a missile for a test launching, it remained uncertain whether it was fully fueled for an imminent firing.
The chairman, Senator John W. Warner, a Virginia Republican, spoke on Capitol Hill after committee members received a closed-door briefing from officials of the Missile Defense Agency, the Defense Intelligence Agency and the defense secretary's office.
The briefing came as American officials said Chinese and South Korean diplomats were putting pressure on North Korea not to launch the missile. But the Americans said they had gotten little indication about what the North Koreans may have said in response.
At the White House on Tuesday, Tony Snow, the president's spokesman, said the Chinese and South Koreans "can assert considerable influence."
"What we are hoping," Mr. Snow said, "is real simple — that they will use it constructively to say to the North Koreans: 'Come on, you don't want to do this. Let's abide by your moratorium. Come back to the six-party talks.' " He added that North Korea had "a lot to gain by coming back to the table." [*****]
American intelligence officials say they believe that the missile is a Taepodong 2 and that a three-stage version could strike the United States. One administration official said the missile at the launching pad was a two-stage version. [outrageous! Why is no bush admin person screaming about this] [?] [c.f. today’s NYTs editorial] [******]
Details like that have not been clearly spelled out, either because administration officials are uncertain of the facts or because the details are classified. Several officials would discuss recent intelligence reports on the situation only on condition of anonymity, because the situation is diplomatically delicate and the intelligence is secret.
The New York Times reported Monday that North Korea appeared to some officials to have completed fueling the missile, citing American officials who warned that the move greatly increased the probability that the North would go ahead with its first important test launching in eight years.
A senior American official said Sunday that data from satellite photographs suggested that booster rockets had been loaded onto a launching pad, and liquid-fuel tanks fitted to the missile at a site on North Korea's remote east coast.
Roughly 10 days ago, American intelligence agencies reported to the administration that fueling trucks had been spotted around the missile.
On Monday and Tuesday, two officials said the intelligence could, at best, be interpreted as offering only a prudent assumption that the missile was fueled, and that intelligence analysts had described an already fueled missile as a worst-case scenario.
"It is impossible to know for certain whether or how much fuel is moving between a closed container through a closed line to another closed container," one official said.
Citing intelligence gathered by "overhead systems" photographing the missile, Senator Warner said, "We are not certain if it's fueled."
He also said the surveillance images indicated that "certain infrastructure" remained around the missile and would have to be removed in advance of a launching.
"They could be launching a satellite, a weather satellite or any type of satellite that might be launched by this system," Mr. Warner said. But he said the United States must "prepare for the possibility of a hostile strike," though he termed it a "probably remote possibility."
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Rice Promises Not to Abandon Efforts in Afghanistan

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/28/AR2006062800263.html
Rice Promises Not to Abandon Efforts in Afghanistan
By Glenn Kessler
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 28, 2006; 9:16 AM [state] [rice] [dog and pony show in Afghanistan and Pakistan] [may work] [it’s probably better than ignoring the growing problem] [hydra operated nearly with impunity in paki territory] [*******] [ditto, above by 2—both]
KABUL, Afghanistan, June 28 -- Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice Wednesday made a lightning visit here under heavy security to demonstrate support for embattled President Hamid Karzai, saying that she didn't "know of anyone more admired in the international community."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/28/AR2006062800263.html
Rice Promises Not to Abandon Efforts in Afghanistan
By Glenn Kessler
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 28, 2006; 9:16 AM [state] [rice] [dog and pony show in Afghanistan and Pakistan] [may work] [it’s probably better than ignoring the growing problem] [hydra operated nearly with impunity in paki territory] [*******] [ditto, above by 2—both]
KABUL, Afghanistan, June 28 -- Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice Wednesday made a lightning visit here under heavy security to demonstrate support for embattled President Hamid Karzai, saying that she didn't "know of anyone more admired in the international community."
Popular support here for Karzai is falling as he appears unable to battle a rising insurgency, flourishing drug trade and endemic corruption. Rice had a series of meetings here Wednesday morning with top Afghan officials, in part to determine budget requests for reconstruction projects that would have tangible effect on the moral of the Afghan people.
Rice said that the United States had made a mistake once before of ignoring Afghanistan -- after Soviet forces withdrew, allowing the Taliban to emerge and "rape and pillage" the country. But she said the United States would not repeat that mistake. "We are not going to tire, we are not going to leave," she said.
"That Afghanistan has enemies is not a surprise to anyone," Rice said, calling it a "thinking enemy" that must be challenged on all fronts.
Rice arrived here from Islamabad, where on Tuesday she tried to heal a growing rift between Afghanistan and Pakistan, two Muslim allies of the United States, but tensions spilled over during a news conference in which Pakistani Foreign Minister Khursheed Kasuri angrily accused the Afghan government of making false charges.
Rice smiled tightly during Kasuri's emotional, five-minute outburst, which was prompted by a question about Afghan claims that Pakistan is allowing its largely lawless border areas to shelter insurgents who are mounting their biggest offensive in Afghanistan since the Taliban was ousted in 2001.
With close to 10,000 international troops conducting sweeps in rugged southern Afghanistan, Rice's trip here was organized on short notice in an effort to end feuding that many analysts say is undermining efforts to stabilize the Karzai's government.
Kasuri said Pakistan would add 10,000 troops to the 80,000 now operating in areas bordering Afghanistan. He noted that already "we have 650-plus martyred soldiers." Officials offered few other details of the content of the talks.
Rice's visit comes as Karzai is straining to hold his country together but is losing popular support. A failure of the Karzai government would undermine Bush administration claims that Afghanistan has become a symbol of rising freedom and democracy in the world.
It is a sensitive time in Pakistan, too. With elections scheduled for next year, there are signs that Gen. Pervez Musharraf -- whose military efforts in the border areas are not popular in Pakistan -- is maneuvering to extend his presidential term. He seized power in a bloodless coup nearly seven years ago, and Rice reiterated her belief that the 2007 elections would be "free and fair."
But U.S. officials have been wary about pressing Musharraf too hard, seeking to balance demands for action against extremist groups with tangible U.S. rewards, such as sales of F-16 fighter jets, many analysts say.
In the news conference, Kasuri said he had recently met with Afghan Foreign Minister Rangin Dadfar Spanta. They had pledged not to debate each other through the media, he said, but he told reporters he could not remain silent. He said he told Spanta, "Excellency, brother, you are a scholar and professor, give me a motive why we would willingly destabilize you."
Kasuri pointedly said Pakistan could not be blamed for recent riots in Kabul, which were sparked when a U.S. military truck crashed into a crowd. He said that Afghanistan, for all its complaints about terrorists taking sanctuary in Pakistan, has provided little intelligence that was useful.
"Tell me, brother, have you ever given us actionable intelligence?" he said he asked Spanta, noting that intelligence that Karzai personally gave President Bush was later deemed "out of date" by the CIA.
"Tell us where they are hiding," Kasuri demanded. "We promise to investigate and take action."
Pakistan is eager for oil and gas deals and greater trade with Central Asia, which would be dependent on a secure Afghanistan, Kasuri said, asking, "Which country has a greater stake in peace and stability in Afghanistan?"
After Kasuri's statement, Rice minimized the dispute, saying that "our view is that we have two good friends and two fierce fighters in the war on terror." She said the key to success was greater unity, not division.
"We, Afghanistan and Pakistan are going to unify all our efforts, as we have done over the last several years, towards the goal of eliminating the threat of al-Qaeda and the Taliban," Rice said.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

Rice Seeks to Bolster Karzai in Visit

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/28/washington/28cnd-diplo.html
June 28, 2006
Rice Seeks to Bolster Karzai in Visit
By HELENE COOPER [state] [rice] [dog and pony show in Afghanistan and Pakistan] [may work] [it’s probably better than ignoring the growing problem] [hydra operated nearly with impunity in paki territory] [*******] [similar to above]
KABUL, Afghanistan, June 28 — Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice sought to bolster the besieged Afghanistan president, Hamid Karzai, in a visit here today. She promised continued American support for his government and said that the Taliban forces that have mounted a string of renewed attacks in the country will eventually be defeated.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/28/washington/28cnd-diplo.html
June 28, 2006
Rice Seeks to Bolster Karzai in Visit
By HELENE COOPER [state] [rice] [dog and pony show in Afghanistan and Pakistan] [may work] [it’s probably better than ignoring the growing problem] [hydra operated nearly with impunity in paki territory] [*******] [similar to above]
KABUL, Afghanistan, June 28 — Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice sought to bolster the besieged Afghanistan president, Hamid Karzai, in a visit here today. She promised continued American support for his government and said that the Taliban forces that have mounted a string of renewed attacks in the country will eventually be defeated.
Ms. Rice flew to Kabul this morning from Islamabad aboard a C-17 military jet. She met with Mr. Karzai at the presidential palace, where they discussed the Taliban's spring offensive, the strongest show of force by the insurgents since American forces chased the Taliban from power in late 2001.
"That Afghanistan has brutal enemies is no surprise to anyone," Ms. Rice said. "These are people who tried to destroy this country over a long period of time."
But, she said, "they will not succeed in undermining or rolling back the democratic gains of the Afghan people."
The United States has about 25,000 troops in Afghanistan, and is in the process of turning control of some areas over to NATO forces. Afghan and foreign officials and local villagers say that the absence of United States-led coalition forces on the ground in some areas is responsible for the Taliban's resurgence.
Mr. Karzai disputed reports that he has been largely confined to Kabul in recent months as the violence increased, particularly in the southern part of the country.
But he was expected to ask the United States for additional aid, particularly in helping to train Afghanistan's weak security forces and federal bureaucracy.
Ms. Rice tried to mediate a dispute between Pakistan and Afghanistan over which country is doing more to root out terrorism on their lawless common border. Afghan officials, including Mr. Karzai, have accused the Pakistanis of failing to do enough to rein in the recent surge in Taliban-fueled violence.
That is clearly a touchy subject with the Pakistanis. After Ms. Rice's meetings in Islamabad yesterday, when a reporter asked Pakistani Foreign Minister Khurshid Mahmood Kasuri about the Afghans' complaints during a press conference, he became very animated.
"We agreed we will not talk to the media" about bilateral discussions on the issue, Mr. Kasuri said, but apparently that promise was one he could not keep. "Silence is acquiescence," he said, "and I cannot be silent in such a time."
With Ms. Rice standing next to him and looking straight ahead, Mr. Kasuri offered a lengthy list of things he said Pakistan had given to the counterterrorist effort. He said the country had deployed 80,000 troops on the border, and was adding another 10,000 soon. He cited a suicide bombing in North Waziristan on Monday, which he said had killed seven Pakistani paramilitary troops. "We have had 650 martyred soldiers" since the border effort began, he said. "We have more troops than Afghanistan and the U.S. put together."
Pakistani officials Tuesday also had criticism for the United States's nuclear agreement with Pakistan's arch-rival, India. The deal, which still must be approved by Congress, calls for the United States to share civilian nuclear technology with India even though India has not signed the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
Pakistan, which like India has tested nuclear weapons but has not signed the treaty, wants the same deal. Bush administration officials have said they will not get it, because the architect of Pakistan's nuclear program, A. Q. Khan, is believed to have shared nuclear knowledge and materials with North Korea and other countries.
Waiting outside the hall at the presidential palace while Ms. Rice was meeting with senior leaders, Tasmin Aslam, the spokeswoman for the Pakistani Foreign Ministry, displayed almost as much irritation as her boss had, when a reporter mentioned Mr. Khan's alleged proliferation activities as a stumbling block to an agreement.
"Who has not proliferated?" she said. "What about all those U.S. scientists who proliferated? Where do you think the Manhattan Project came from?"
She said that Pakistanis believe that the house arrest imposed on Mr. Khan, a national hero, is punishment enough for him.
Salman Masood contributed reporting from Islamabad for this article
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Rice Strives to Close Afghan-Pakistani Rift

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/27/AR2006062701271.html
Rice Strives to Close Afghan-Pakistani Rift
By Glenn Kessler
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 28, 2006; A21[state] [rice] [dog and pony show in Afghanistan and Pakistan] [may work] [it’s probably better than ignoring the growing problem] [hydra operated nearly with impunity in paki territory] [*******]
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, June 27 -- Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice sought Tuesday to heal a rift between Pakistan and Afghanistan, two Muslim allies of the United States, but tensions spilled over during a news conference in which Pakistani Foreign Minister Khursheed Kasuri angrily accused the Afghan government of making false charges.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/27/AR2006062701271.html
Rice Strives to Close Afghan-Pakistani Rift
By Glenn Kessler
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 28, 2006; A21[state] [rice] [dog and pony show in Afghanistan and Pakistan] [may work] [it’s probably better than ignoring the growing problem] [hydra operated nearly with impunity in paki territory] [*******]
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, June 27 -- Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice sought Tuesday to heal a rift between Pakistan and Afghanistan, two Muslim allies of the United States, but tensions spilled over during a news conference in which Pakistani Foreign Minister Khursheed Kasuri angrily accused the Afghan government of making false charges.
Rice smiled tightly during Kasuri's emotional, five-minute outburst, which was prompted by a question about Afghan claims that Pakistan is allowing its largely lawless border areas to shelter insurgents who are mounting their biggest offensive in Afghanistan since the Taliban was ousted in 2001.
With close to 10,000 international troops conducting sweeps in rugged southern Afghanistan, Rice's trip here was organized on short notice in an effort to end feuding that many analysts say is undermining efforts to stabilize the government of President Hamid Karzai.
Kasuri said Pakistan would add 10,000 troops to the 80,000 now operating in areas bordering Afghanistan. He noted that already "we have 650-plus martyred soldiers." Officials offered few other details of the content of the talks.
Rice flew Wednesday to Kabul to meet with Karzai, who is facing mounting international criticism over his performance. As she traveled to Islamabad on Monday, Rice hailed Karzai as "an extraordinary leader" and said the United States would "back him fully."
Rice's visit comes as Karzai is straining to hold his country together but is losing popular support because of increasing violence, corruption, drug trafficking and an inability to demonstrate tangible progress since the fall of the Taliban. A failure of the Karzai government would undermine Bush administration claims that Afghanistan has become a symbol of rising freedom and democracy in the world.
It is a sensitive time in Pakistan, too. With elections scheduled for next year, there are signs that Gen. Pervez Musharraf -- whose military efforts in the border areas are not popular in Pakistan -- is maneuvering to extend his presidential term. He seized power in a bloodless coup nearly seven years ago, and Rice reiterated her belief that the 2007 elections would be "free and fair."
But U.S. officials have been wary about pressing Musharraf too hard, seeking to balance demands for action against extremist groups with tangible U.S. rewards, such as sales of F-16 fighter jets, many analysts say.
In the news conference, Kasuri said he had recently met with Afghan Foreign Minister Rangin Dadfar Spanta. They had pledged not to debate each other through the media, he said, but he told reporters he could not remain silent. He said he told Spanta, "Excellency, brother, you are a scholar and professor, give me a motive why we would willingly destabilize you."
Kasuri pointedly said Pakistan could not be blamed for recent riots in Kabul, which were sparked when a U.S. military truck crashed into a crowd. He said that Afghanistan, for all its complaints about terrorists taking sanctuary in Pakistan, has provided little intelligence that was useful.
"Tell me, brother, have you ever given us actionable intelligence?" he said he asked Spanta, noting that intelligence that Karzai personally gave President Bush was later deemed "out of date" by the CIA.
"Tell us where they are hiding," Kasuri demanded. "We promise to investigate and take action."
Pakistan is eager for oil and gas deals and greater trade with Central Asia, which would be dependent on a secure Afghanistan, Kasuri said, asking, "Which country has a greater stake in peace and stability in Afghanistan?"
After Kasuri's statement, Rice minimized the dispute, saying that "our view is that we have two good friends and two fierce fighters in the war on terror." She said the key to success was greater unity, not division.
"We, Afghanistan and Pakistan are going to unify all our efforts, as we have done over the last several years, towards the goal of eliminating the threat of al-Qaeda and the Taliban," Rice said.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

Damage Study Urged on Surveillance Reports

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/28/world/europe/28secure.html
June 28, 2006
Damage Study Urged on Surveillance Reports
By SCOTT SHANE [NYTs Swift story] [SSCI chair Pat Roberts] [admin gasps as the evince being appauled] [see, however, today’s NYTs editorial on same and today’s govt, below, where a good guy senator warner effectively signaled dprk what us intelligence capabilities are] [********] [look for how DNI Negroponte handles this] [use nsc ms] [************************]
WASHINGTON, June 27 — Senator Pat Roberts, the chairman of the Senate intelligence committee, asked the director of national intelligence on Tuesday to assess any damage to American counterterrorism efforts caused by the disclosure of secret programs to monitor telephone calls and financial transactions.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/28/world/europe/28secure.html
June 28, 2006
Damage Study Urged on Surveillance Reports
By SCOTT SHANE [NYTs Swift story] [SSCI chair Pat Roberts] [admin gasps as the evince being appauled] [see, however, today’s NYTs editorial on same and today’s govt, below, where a good guy senator warner effectively signaled dprk what us intelligence capabilities are] [********] [look for how DNI Negroponte handles this] [use nsc ms] [************************]
WASHINGTON, June 27 — Senator Pat Roberts, the chairman of the Senate intelligence committee, asked the director of national intelligence on Tuesday to assess any damage to American counterterrorism efforts caused by the disclosure of secret programs to monitor telephone calls and financial transactions.
Mr. Roberts, Republican of Kansas, singled out The New York Times for an article last week that reported that the government was tracking money transfers handled by a banking consortium based in Belgium. The targeting of the financial data, which includes some Americans' transactions, was also reported Thursday by The Los Angeles Times and The Wall Street Journal.
In his letter to John D. Negroponte, director of national intelligence, Mr. Roberts wrote that "we have been unable to persuade the media to act responsibly and to protect the means by which we protect this nation."
He asked for a formal evaluation of damage to intelligence collection resulting from the revelation of the secret financial monitoring as well as The Times's disclosure in December of the National Security Agency's monitoring of phone calls and e-mail messages of Americans suspected of having links to Al Qaeda.
In London, meanwhile, a human rights group said Tuesday that it had filed complaints in 32 countries alleging that the banking consortium, known as Swift, violated European and Asian privacy laws by giving the United States access to its data.
Simon Davies, director of the group, Privacy International, said the scale of the American monitoring, involving millions of records, "places this disclosure in the realm of a fishing exercise rather than a legally authorized investigation."
The Belgian prime minister, Guy Verhofstadt, has asked the Justice Ministry to investigate whether Swift violated Belgian law by allowing the United States government access to its data.
The American Civil Liberties Union has condemned the program, and a Chicago lawyer, Steven E. Schwarz, filed a federal class-action lawsuit against Swift on Friday alleging that it had violated United States financial privacy statutes.
President Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, Treasury Secretary John W. Snow and numerous Republicans in Congress have vigorously defended the financial tracking program as legal and valuable and condemned its public disclosure. They have suggested that the articles might tip off terrorists that their money transfers could be detected. Representative J. D. Hayworth, Republican of Arizona, circulated a letter to colleagues on Tuesday asking that The Times's Congressional press credentials be suspended.
Tony Snow, the White House spokesman, said any effort to measure damage to intelligence collection would take some time.
"It's not as if the terrorists are going to say, 'Oops! Going to stop doing that,' " Mr. Snow said at a briefing. "But I think it is safe to say that once you provide a piece of intelligence, people on the other side act on it."
The electronic messaging system operated by Swift, the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, routes nearly $6 trillion a day in transfers among nearly 8,000 financial institutions.
At a confirmation hearing on Tuesday for Henry M. Paulson Jr., the nominee for Treasury secretary, Senator Max Baucus, Democrat of Montana, asked whether the monitoring might violate the Fourth Amendment's protection against unreasonable searches. "I think you'll agree that we could fight terrorism properly and adequately without having a police state in America," Mr. Baucus said.
Mr. Paulson did not express an opinion on the propriety of the Swift monitoring but pledged to study it. "I am going to, if confirmed, be all over it, make sure I learn everything there is to learn, make sure I understand the law thoroughly," he said.
Democratic staff members said they had pressed Treasury officials in recent days for a fuller accounting of which members of Congress were briefed on the program and whether notification requirements under the International Economic Emergency Powers Act, invoked by President Bush days after Sept. 11, were met.
Treasury officials have told Congressional staff members that they briefed the full intelligence committees of both houses about a month ago, after inquiries by The Times, according to one Democratic aide who spoke on condition of anonymity. Some members were told of the program several years ago, but the Treasury Department has not provided a list of who was informed when, the aide said.
Democrats said they hoped to get a clearer idea of the legal foundations for the program, how it was monitored, and how long it will be allowed to continue under the president's invocation of emergency powers.
Representative Carolyn B. Maloney, a New York Democrat who serves on the House financial services committee, said Tuesday: "The administration is basing its actions on a 1970's law that never envisioned a state of perpetual emergency. It wasn't meant to become the status quo. That is why Congress needs to look at its current use."
Victor Comras, a former State Department official who served on a United Nations counterterrorism advisory group, pointed out on The Counterterrorism Blog that a 2002 United Nations report had noted with approval that the United States was monitoring international financial systems.
While providing no details, the report mentioned Swift and similar organizations, saying "the United States has begun to apply new monitoring techniques to spot and verify suspicious transactions."
Dan Bilefsky contributed reporting from Brussels for this article, andCarl Hulse and Eric Lichtblau from Washington.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Bush's Use of Authority Riles Senator

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/28/washington/28sign.html
June 28, 2006
Bush's Use of Authority Riles Senator
By KATE ZERNIKE [bush] [new authorities carved out by bush admin] [signing documents] [unitary theory of executive power] [us nsc ms] [************]
WASHINGTON, June 27 — Senators on the Judiciary Committee accused President Bush of an "unprecedented" and "astonishing" power grab on Tuesday for making use of a device that gave him the authority to revise or ignore more than 750 laws enacted since he became president.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/28/washington/28sign.html
June 28, 2006
Bush's Use of Authority Riles Senator
By KATE ZERNIKE [bush] [new authorities carved out by bush admin] [signing documents] [unitary theory of executive power] [us nsc ms] [************]
WASHINGTON, June 27 — Senators on the Judiciary Committee accused President Bush of an "unprecedented" and "astonishing" power grab on Tuesday for making use of a device that gave him the authority to revise or ignore more than 750 laws enacted since he became president.
By using what are known as signing statements, memorandums issued with legislation as he signs it, the president has reserved the right to not enforce any laws he thinks violate the Constitution or national security, or that impair foreign relations.
A lawyer for the White House said that Mr. Bush was only doing his duty to uphold the Constitution. But Senator Arlen Specter, Republican of Pennsylvania and chairman of the Judiciary Committee, characterized the president's actions as a declaration that he "will do as he pleases," without regard to the laws passed by Congress.
"There's a real issue here as to whether the president may, in effect, cherry-pick the provisions he likes and exclude the ones he doesn't like," Mr. Specter said at a hearing.
"Wouldn't it be better, as a matter of comity," he said, "for the president to have come to the Congress and said, 'I'd like to have this in the bill; I'd like to have these exceptions in the bill,' so that we could have considered that?"
Mr. Specter and others are particularly upset that Mr. Bush reserved the right to interpret the torture ban passed overwhelmingly by Congress, as well as Congressional oversight powers in the renewal of the Patriot Act.
Michelle Boardman, a deputy assistant attorney general, said the statements were "not an abuse of power."
Rather, Ms. Boardman said, the president has the responsibility to make sure the Constitution is upheld. He uses signing statements, she argued, to "save" statutes from being found unconstitutional. And he reserves the right, she said, only to raise questions about a law "that could in some unknown future application" be declared unconstitutional.
"It is often not at all the situation that the president doesn't intend to enact the bill," Ms. Boardman said.
The fight over signing statements is part of a continuing battle between Congress and the White House. Mr. Specter and many Democrats have raised objections to the administration's wiretapping of phones without warrants from the court set up to oversee surveillance.
Last month, Mr. Specter accused Vice President Dick Cheney of going behind his back to avoid the Judiciary Committee's oversight of surveillance programs.
"Where will it end?" asked Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Democrat of Massachusetts. "Where does it stop?"
The bills Mr. Bush has reserved the right to revise or ignore include provisions that govern affirmative action programs, protect corporate whistle-blowers, require executive agencies to collect certain statistics, and establish qualifications for executive appointees.
Senators and two law professors before the panel said that if the president objected to a bill, he should use his power to veto it — something he has not done in his six years in office.
Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California, said the expansion of executive power would be the "lasting legacy" of the Bush administration. "This new use of signing statements is a means to undermine and weaken the law," she said.
What the president is saying, she added, is "Congress, what you do isn't really important; I'm going to do what I want to do."
Ms. Boardman said the president had inserted 110 statements, which senators said applied to 750 statutes, compared with 30 by President Jimmy Carter. The number has increased, she said, but only marginally, and only because national security concerns have increased since the attacks of Sept. 11 and more laws have been passed. She acknowledged that the increase might be construed as "a lack of good communication" with Congress.
But Senator John Cornyn, Republican of Texas, said the committee was making too much of the statements. "It is precedented," he said, "and it's not new."
Senators said they had been expecting a higher-ranking official from the office of legal policy, and Senator Patrick J. Leahy of Vermont, the senior Democrat on the committee, chastised the White House for not sending "anybody who would have authority to speak on this."
"But then, considering the fact that they're using basically an extra-constitutional, extra-judicial step to enhance the power of the president, it's not unusual," he said.
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Bush's Challenges of Laws He Signed Is Criticized

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/27/AR2006062700145.html
Bush's Challenges of Laws He Signed Is Criticized
By Jonathan Weisman
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 28, 2006; A09 [bush] [signing documents] [unitary theory of executive power] [us nsc ms] [************]
A bipartisan group of senators and scholars denounced President Bush yesterday for using scores of "signing statements" to reserve the right to ignore or reinterpret provisions of measures that he has signed into law.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/27/AR2006062700145.html
Bush's Challenges of Laws He Signed Is Criticized
By Jonathan Weisman
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 28, 2006; A09 [bush] [signing documents] [unitary theory of executive power] [us nsc ms] [************]
A bipartisan group of senators and scholars denounced President Bush yesterday for using scores of "signing statements" to reserve the right to ignore or reinterpret provisions of measures that he has signed into law.
Bush's statements have challenged, for instance, a congressional ban on torture, a request for data on the administration of the USA Patriot Act and even a legislative demand for suggestions on the digital mapping of coastal resources.
The Senate Judiciary Committee's hearing marked the latest effort by Chairman Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) and panel Democrats to reclaim authority that they say the president has usurped as he has expanded the power of the executive branch. It came on the same day Bush gave a speech pushing for a line-item veto that would allow him to strike spending and tax provisions from legislation without vetoing the bill.
Other presidents have used signing statements to clarify their interpretation of laws, but no president has used such statements instead of ever using the veto authority spelled out in the Constitution, said Harvard University law professor Charles J. Ogletree Jr., who is serving on a new American Bar Association task force examining Bush's signing statements. Bush has never used his veto power in his presidency.
"There is a sense that the president has taken the signing statements far beyond the customary purviews," Specter told the administration's representative, Michelle E. Boardman, deputy assistant attorney general in the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel. "There's a real issue here as to whether the president may, in effect, cherry-pick the provisions he likes and exclude the ones he doesn't like."
Democrats were more blunt, blasting such statements, which are estimated to number more than 750 on 110 laws -- more than all the statements issued by other presidents.
"I've never seen anything like it," said Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (Vt.), the committee's ranking Democrat, calling the practice "a grave threat to our constitutional system of checks and balances."
Specter has been more aggressive than any other Republican in challenging Bush's expanding authority. He has pushed the president to reshape his warrantless wiretapping efforts to comply with existing law; threatened to summon telecommunications executives who have given the government access to customer phone records; and challenged the White House's legal arguments for indefinite detentions at the U.S. military base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
But yesterday, Judiciary Committee members appealed to their fellow lawmakers, who Sen. Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.) said have been "complicit as so many of our precious rights under the Constitution have been ceded away."
Boardman countered that presidents since James Monroe have issued statements of interpretation to accompany laws, and that every president since Dwight D. Eisenhower has issued statements reserving the right not to execute sections of laws that may contradict the Constitution. By her accounting, Bush has issued such statements on 110 laws, compared with 80 from Bill Clinton, as many as 105 from Ronald Reagan and 147 from George H.W. Bush in a single term. But President Bush issued multiple statements on many of those laws for a total of 750, and it is unclear how many statements the other presidents issued.
"Even if there has been a modest increase, let me just suggest that it be viewed in light of current events and Congress's response to those events," she said. "The significance of legislation affecting national security has increased markedly since September 11."
The statements related to national security have caused the most controversy.
Last year, after months of difficult negotiations, Bush withdrew a veto threat and signed a defense policy bill that included a provision by Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) banning cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment of prisoners at U.S. detention centers. But Bush's signing statement on Dec. 30, 2005, reserved the right to waive the torture ban if he concluded that some harsh interrogation techniques could advance anti-terrorism efforts.
This year, after Congress reached a hard-fought agreement to extend the USA Patriot Act, expanding the power of federal law enforcement, the president questioned a provision calling for the administration to furnish Congress with detailed audits on the issuance of secret business-record searches and "national security letters."
"He's crossing his fingers behind his back," Leahy said.
White House officials and their allies tried to reassure lawmakers that they have nothing to fear from such statements.
"There's this notion that the president is committing acts of civil disobedience, and he's not," White House spokesman Tony Snow said.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

Staying the wrong course in Iraq

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-boot28jun28,0,2289513.column?coll=la-news-comment-opinions
From the Los Angeles Times
Staying the wrong course in Iraq
A troop drawdown would lead to less security and further the perception that the U.S. is losing.
Max Boot
June 28, 2006 [oped] [neocon boot on bush’s “staying the course”] [**********]

FOR THE LAST three years, the Bush administration has pursued a policy of wishful thinking in Iraq, operating under the hope that some deus ex machina — either elections or the capture of insurgent leaders — would salvage a deteriorating situation. [****]Well, Iraq has now had three successful nationwide ballots. Saddam Hussein has been captured. Abu Musab Zarqawi has been killed. And still violence continues to intensify in Baghdad and the Sunni provinces to the west and north.

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-boot28jun28,0,2289513.column?coll=la-news-comment-opinions
From the Los Angeles Times
Staying the wrong course in Iraq
A troop drawdown would lead to less security and further the perception that the U.S. is losing.
Max Boot
June 28, 2006 [oped] [neocon boot on bush’s “staying the course”] [**********]

FOR THE LAST three years, the Bush administration has pursued a policy of wishful thinking in Iraq, operating under the hope that some deus ex machina — either elections or the capture of insurgent leaders — would salvage a deteriorating situation. [****]Well, Iraq has now had three successful nationwide ballots. Saddam Hussein has been captured. Abu Musab Zarqawi has been killed. And still violence continues to intensify in Baghdad and the Sunni provinces to the west and north.

The situation is particularly dire in Iraq's capital. In May, according to the Los Angeles Times, 2,155 homicides occurred in Baghdad, 85% of the national total. "The situation has worsened considerably in the last couple of months," blogger Alaa wrote at messopotamian.blogspot.com on June 16. A week later, the New York Times reported that the chaos was spreading even to the Mansour district, Baghdad's Beverly Hills. "It's falling to the terrorists," said one resident. "They are coming nearer to us now. No one is stopping them."

This dire assessment cannot be dismissed as knee-jerk negativity from media naysayers because it matches the picture painted by U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad. In a June 6 cable reprinted in the Washington Post, he reported that local embassy employees were finding it difficult to function outside the Green Zone amid rampant crime, fundamentalism and sectarianism. [********]

Prime Minister Nouri Maliki has launched Operation Forward Together in an attempt to regain control of his own capital. This crackdown is in only its second week, and it is too soon to tell if it will work, but there have been several terrorist atrocities since it started. The problem is that Forward Together relies heavily on police officers who are so sectarian and corrupt that they are part of the problem, [*****]not the solution.

No extra American (or Iraqi) soldiers have been sent into Baghdad. Former viceroy L. Paul Bremer reported that Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez told him in 2004 that with two extra divisions, "I'd control Baghdad," but those extra divisions — 35,000 to 40,000 soldiers — have never been forthcoming.

Instead, news leaked out this weekend that a drawdown of U.S. forces may take place starting in the fall. It is possible that this withdrawal plan, like earlier ones, will be shelved, but this announcement sends the wrong message at a critical time. [*****]The message is that the Pentagon is more concerned with finding an exit strategy than a winning strategy: precisely the charge that Republicans level at Democrats.

IHAVE NEVER been a dogmatist on the issue of troop levels. I was not one of those who criticized the original invasion force in 2003 for being too small. There were enough troops to take Baghdad, and there were legitimate reasons to fear that sending too many Americans would cause a backlash. [***]Better to have focused on supporting Iraqi security forces — except there were none to support. The Iraqi army was dissolved by the U.S., and no serious effort was made for a whole year to field a replacement force, creating a security vacuum that has never been filled.

By now it should be obvious that the "light footprint" approach has not worked. [*****]It has increased, not decreased, resentment of the United States because Iraqis are aggrieved by the breakdown of law and order. Yet there appears to be no serious rethinking of this flawed strategy at either the Pentagon or the White House. [poor rummy, another neocon suggested rummy’s theory hollow] [*****]

The administration may think it doesn't have any more troops to send. It's true that the armed forces are overstretched and need to be enlarged, but there are still just 150,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan and Iraq out of 2.6 million in the active-duty ranks, reserves and National Guard. More soldiers could be found to police Baghdad if this were deemed a top priority.

Some in the administration may think that increasing troop numbers, which may bring more casualties, would be political poison. But what's really hurting Republicans politically is not the number of troops in Iraq, or even the continuing casualties. It's the perception that we're not winning. If a heightened troop presence could establish security in Baghdad, the president and his party would reap a reward at the polls. [*********]

The fact that the administration continues to "stay the course" with a losing strategy suggests the need for a change of strategists. The president needs a new secretary of Defense — and possibly new generals — who would be more focused on finding a way to win rather than to withdraw. [*********] [wow, boot calling for rummy and military uniformed brass to step aside] [************]

Staying on Message -- Nixon's Message

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/27/AR2006062701546.html
Staying on Message -- Nixon's Message
By Harold Meyerson
Wednesday, June 28, 2006; A25
Let's give credit where credit is due: Nobody knows how to take the worst political hand imaginable -- responsibility for a failing war -- and turn it to their own advantage like the Republicans. That was the defining political accomplishment of Richard Nixon in Vietnam. It may yet be the defining political achievement of George W. Bush in Iraq.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/27/AR2006062701546.html
Staying on Message -- Nixon's Message
By Harold Meyerson
Wednesday, June 28, 2006; A25
Let's give credit where credit is due: Nobody knows how to take the worst political hand imaginable -- responsibility for a failing war -- and turn it to their own advantage like the Republicans. That was the defining political accomplishment of Richard Nixon in Vietnam. It may yet be the defining political achievement of George W. Bush in Iraq.
Nixon, of course, had an easier time of it. When he took office in 1969, he inherited a war that his Democratic predecessors had made and that had long since descended into a blood-drenched, stalemated disaster. He could have opted to end the war early in his term, particularly since neither he nor his national security adviser, Henry Kissinger, believed it was winnable. But by continuing the conflict, and even expanding it into Cambodia, he enraged the 40 percent of the nation that wanted us out of Vietnam. Millions of demonstrators took to the streets; some of the student movement embraced a wacky, self-marginalizing anti-Americanism; and mainstream Democrats grew steadily more antiwar.
And by nurturing such deep divisions in the body politic, Nixon created the very kind of political landscape on which he was a master at maneuvering. Just 10 months into his presidency, Nixon was championing what he termed the "silent majority" of his countrymen against the protesting hordes. Democrats railed against the war in Vietnam; Nixon railed against the demonstrators and Democrats, whom he gleefully conflated, at home. It was an asymmetric conflict, and Nixon won it going away, defeating George McGovern in 1972 by more than 20 percentage points.
Today Republicans in general and Karl Rove in particular have resurrected the Nixon game plan. They are not mounting a point-by-point defense of the administration's plan for Iraq, not least because the administration doesn't really have a plan for Iraq. When Senate Democrats brought two resolutions to the floor last week, each calling for a change in our policy, the Republicans defeated them both, but they pointedly failed to introduce a resolution of their own affirming the administration's conduct of the war. That, they understood, would have been a loser in the court of public opinion. Instead, they walked a tightrope: not really defending the war per se but attacking the Democrats for seeking to end it. This was Nixonism of the highest order. [********]
But Bush Republicans face a tougher challenge than their Nixonian forebears. There aren’t really demonstrators in the streets. No one is being rude or disorderly. Most congressional Democrats advocate nothing more than a phased redeployment of our troops, though polling shows the public is split on the more radical alternative of setting a hard deadline for withdrawal.
In the face of such raging moderation, the Republicans have nonetheless opened a two-pronged attack on the Democrats. First, they argue, the Dems are defeatists, calling for a withdrawal of our forces that would dishonor the men and women in the military who’ve given their lives in the course of the war. But the selectivity with which Republicans invoke this equation of withdrawal with dishonor undermines the equation altogether. After all, who among them argues that Ronald Reagan’s withdrawal of our forces from Lebanon, or Nixon’s withdrawal from Vietnam, disgraced our dead?
The more serious, and innovative, Republican claim isn’t that Democrats are defeatists, however; it’s that the Democrats are ditherers. “I believe [the Democrats’] real challenge is that they have no common unified position on Iraq as a party,” Oklahoma Republican Rep. Tom Cole said recently. “Whether we are right or wrong on our side of the aisle, we do have a common position.”[**********]
Repeatedly, Republicans have accused the Democrats of having what the president termed an "interesting internal debate" on the war. The implication is that the Democrats are all talk (or, worse, all thought) but no action, and in a post-Sept. 11 world, what really matters is resolve. That the president's war of choice has created a disaster in Iraq so profound that no course of action is likely to result in a safe, livable nation, then, may perversely work in the president's favor. Of course, the Democrats are conflicted about what to do in Iraq. They think about it (at least, some of them do) and can't totally agree on how best to mitigate the catastrophe.
The Democrats think too much, say the Republicans; such men are dangerous. Vote for us; we're dumb but tough. This may not be a surefire prescription for electoral success, but given the hole the Republicans have dug themselves into, I think Nixon would be proud.
meyersonh@washpost.com
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

A Road Map Home

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/27/AR2006062701547.html
A Road Map Home
From Khalilzad, Realism on the Iraqi Insurgency
By David Ignatius
Wednesday, June 28, 2006; A25 [oped] [how to get out of iraq] [*********]
"Every war must end," says Zalmay Khalilzad, America's ambassador to Baghdad. And while termination of the brutal conflict in Iraq is hard to imagine right now, top U.S. officials are sketching a road map to begin stabilizing the conflict and withdrawing American troops.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/27/AR2006062701547.html
A Road Map Home
From Khalilzad, Realism on the Iraqi Insurgency
By David Ignatius
Wednesday, June 28, 2006; A25 [oped] [how to get out of iraq] [*********]
"Every war must end," says Zalmay Khalilzad, America's ambassador to Baghdad. And while termination of the brutal conflict in Iraq is hard to imagine right now, top U.S. officials are sketching a road map to begin stabilizing the conflict and withdrawing American troops.
Khalilzad outlined the Bush administration's current thinking about Iraq in a telephone interview from Baghdad on Monday. The items on his agenda include a joint U.S.-Iraqi committee to discuss the details for a gradual withdrawal of American troops over the next several years, a conditional amnesty for Iraqi insurgents as part of a broader reconciliation effort, and negotiations with insurgent groups about terms and conditions for ending the fighting. [*********]
What was clear in Khalilzad's comments (but is rarely so in the partisan Washington debate about Iraq) is how badly the Bush administration wants to find a way out of the Iraq morass. Last week was an example of this disconnect, with Republican legislators blasting Democrats for advocating phased troop withdrawals, even as Gen. George Casey, the U.S. military commander in Iraq, was quietly discussing just such a withdrawal timetable at the Pentagon. [*****]As is usually the case with Iraq, the Baghdad version of what's going on is far more useful than the Washington version, so it's worth paying careful attention to Khalilzad's account.
Reconciliation sounds fine in principle, but in practice it can be agonizing. [****]I asked Khalilzad how he would answer members of Congress who are indignant that insurgents who opposed the U.S. occupation might be pardoned by the Iraqi government. "They need to understand that we want this conflict to end," he said, and stressed that Iraqi and American hopes of reducing U.S. forces can be achieved only if the insurgents agree to stop fighting and recognize the Iraqi government's authority. "The biggest thing we can do to honor those who sacrificed here is to achieve the cause they fought for" by creating a peaceful and democratic Iraq, he said.
"Ending a war is as difficult as fighting a war," Khalilzad went on. He noted that many conflicts in American history have ended with a general or partial amnesty -- from the Whiskey Rebellion to the Civil War to the U.S. Army's battle against insurgents in the Philippines. "To end a war, you must balance the requirements of reconciliation with the requirements of justice," he explained. Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki seemed to be trying to strike such a balance yesterday when he said any amnesty shouldn't apply to insurgents who had actually killed Americans or Iraqis. [*******]
A key part of the Bush administration's strategy is to involve Maliki's government in discussions about withdrawal of U.S. troops. Gen. Casey briefed the Pentagon last week on his hopes to cut the number of U.S. combat brigades in Iraq by more than half by the end of 2007, according to a story in Sunday's New York Times. Casey will soon meet with Maliki to form the joint U.S.-Iraqi committee that can oversee the buildup of Iraqi security forces and the corresponding drawdown of U.S. troops.
"When we establish that committee," Khalilzad explained, "the subject will be the withdrawal of U.S. forces, and the conditions related to a road map for an ultimate withdrawal of U.S. troops." He stressed, however, that there was no automatic timetable for withdrawal and that he expected Maliki "will be on the cautious side."
The political-military strategy embraced by Khalilzad and Casey over the past year has combined aggressive military operations against die-hard insurgent groups with outreach to elements of the Sunni insurgency that (in theory) can be co-opted. After killing the worst of the worst, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, U.S. and Iraqi forces have pushed hard on both fronts -- taking down Zarqawi's networks and simultaneously talking with Sunni groups. Khalilzad said Monday that this outreach effort had made significant progress in the past few days.
"Contacts have been made with the Iraqi government and the coalition, by people who say they are associated with the insurgency, about reaching an agreement," he said. Among the issues under discussion, he said, is whether some of the Sunni insurgent groups can be melded into the Iraqi security forces, as is being done with Shiite and Kurdish militias. "I would not rule it out," Khalilzad said.
Listening to America's ultra-realist ambassador, it's obvious that the buzzwords of the Washington political debate -- "cut and run," "troops out now" -- don't have much relevance for what the generals and diplomats are trying to achieve. This messy war won't end with a victory parade but with a process that is messy itself -- slow, precarious, ambiguous. But the alternative is an open-ended U.S. military occupation of Iraq that nobody wants. As Khalilzad put it: "If you don't want reconciliation, it means you must fight on." [*********]
davidignatius@washpost.com
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

Turning to the U.N., Again

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/27/AR2006062701543.html
Turning to the U.N., Again
By Richard Holbrooke
Wednesday, June 28, 2006; A25 [oped] [the bush administration—anti UN] [using it time and again]
In a little-noticed announcement in President Bush’s news conference on June 14, the day he returned from Iraq, he said that he would send two personal emiss