The Global Encirclement of America

Key areas that will be covered: US led global war on terror (BLUE) Ideology of the international islamist movement (GREEN) Economic and military rise of China (RED) Threats to democratic nations and institutions throughout the world (PURPLE) Transnational threats i.e. organized crime, proliferation of WMD, etc. (ORANGE)

Name:
Location: Washington, D.C.

I am a National Security specialists who currently works in Washington D.C. (insert your own joke here). For myself individual and national sovereignty is sacrosanct, populist, neo-marxist or fascist trends and ideologies despite espousing democratic rhetoric are anything but democratic and represent a threat that must be dealt with. – In addition, democracy must be modeled on the respect for individual liberty, personal sovereignty, with its accompanying political-rights, which when combined with free-market economic principles, represents a good for society. If you have stumbled across this blog and think that you are going to convert me to either respecting or accepting other systems as just different do not waste yours, or more importantly my time.

Saturday, March 26, 2005

SURVEY

China to be world’s top outsourcing destination

Our Bureau

Three-quarters of US companies outsourced some or all of their information technology activities in 2004. And that percentage is likely to increase this year, according to a special survey on outsourcing and offshoring, the Global Outsourcing Report, released by Horasis and Going Global Ventures said.

While a smaller percentage of companies are outsourcing those activities offshore (32%), half of them have cut full-time jobs as a result. India is the most competitive and popular technology outsourcing destination in the world in 2005, according to the report, and China will be the No. 1 technology outsourcing country in 10 years. The Global Outsourcing Report 2005 is

the first-of-its-kind report to rank countries based

on opportunities, costs and risks they present for IT outsourcing, both now and in the future.

Outsourcing has become a supercharged issue, thanks to fears of job loss, but despite the political difficulties, the strategy can provide huge corporate benefits in terms of productivity, prices, profits and wages. But companies need to be able to assess the risks and benefits of each country they are considering as an outsourcing destination.

The Report was compiled by Frank-Jrgen Richter, president of Horasis: The Global Visions Community, a Geneva-based strategic advisory firm that develops scenarios related to issues of globalisation, and Mark Minevich, an international strategic advisor and principal at Going Global Ventures, a US-based international consulting and venture advisory firm.

“The Report makes an important intellectual and practical contribution to addressing one of the most dramatic business trends in current history,” said Mr Richter. “This report is a catalyst for identifying the next wave of winners in technology outsourcing, even before trends and problems can emerge,” added Mr Minevich.

Twenty countries have emerged as the leading technology outsourcing destinations in 2005. China, Costa Rica, the Czech Republic and Hungary round out the top five countries. The Report predicts that in 2015 the top five outsourcing destination will be China, India, the US, Brazil and Russia.

Using two different indexes—the Global Out- sourcing Index (GOI) and the Future Outsourcing Rank (FOR)—the Global Outsourcing Report 2005 contains analytical country profile for each of the 20 economies in the study, providing a comprehensive summary of the overall IT outsourcing position. The GOI is a weighted index made up of three separate ratings: the cost of doing business in each country; seven risk factors (including geopolitical, human capital, IT competency, economics, legal, cultural and IT infrastructure); and market opportunities. The Future Outsourcing Index, which assesses the long-term (10 years) competitiveness of the top 30 future outsourcing countries, is determined from GDP growth, population growth, the quality of the labour pool and analysis from leading entrepreneurs, economists and other experts.

URL: http://www.financialexpress.com/fe_full_story.php?content_id=86284

Africans Vow to Strengthen Solidarity

BuaNews (Pretoria)
NEWS
March 20, 2005
Posted to the web March 21, 2005

By Matome Sebelebele
Pretoria

Curtains fell on the South Africa-Carribean diaspora conference in Kingston, Jamaica with delegates from the continent and the Caribbean islands pledging solidarity and reaffirming their commitment to unity amongst African descendants.

In a veiled reference to Haitian political crisis and several hotspots in Africa, Foreign Affairs Minister Nkosazana DlaminiZuma said Africans elsewhere had a "duty" to support and defend the rights of those who were still struggling for self-determination in the Carribean and in Africa.

The three-day summit, which was attended by politicians, academics, business and civil society organs, deliberated on a range of issues including debt cancellation, peace and security, culture gender equality in move to strengthen cultural and political ties amongst Africans.

"If we started seriously co-operating among ourselves and between ourselves, our partners will interpret us and understand that we are determined to develop our regions and that we need partners for development.

"Otherwise they will treat us as inferior and stick to the donor-beggar paradigm. We cannot afford for this to happen," said Dlamini Zuma.

"We have to be united and undertake united actions in a number of crucial areas. That in President Fidel Castro's words, we should globalise solidarity. Our strength is in our unity and through unity in action,"

For Africa Renaissance to become a reality, Dr Dlamini Zuma elaborated, Africans ought to do what needs to done.

"Nobody will do it for us," she warned.

"Accordingly, we are determined to send a message of hope to the African continent and the Caribbean that through unity in action, our historic mission must and will succeed," she said.

The conference was held under the theme: "Towards Unity and United Action by Africans and the African Diaspora in the Caribbean for a Better World". -

http://allafrica.com/stories/200503211207.html

China gives 20 million USD to ADB for poverty reduction fund

Beijing, March 26. KAZINFORM. China has set up a 20 million US dollar fund through the Asian Development Bank (ADB) to promote regional cooperation and reduce poverty in other developing Asian countries.
According to an agreement reached by visiting ADB president Haruhiko Kuroda and Chinese Minister of Finance Jin Renqing, here Thursday, China has contributed 20 million US dollars to the fund at ADB, Kazinform cites PTI.

The bank cited the fund as the first such fund to be established by a developing member nation of the bank and the first financed by China at any international institution.

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao announced in May last year at a global poverty reduction conference in Shanghai that his country would create a fund with 20 million US dollars in donation to the bank.

China's proposal on the fund, reputed as the Regional Cooperation and Poverty Reduction Fund, was approved by the Manila-based ADB, Xinhua news agency reported.

According to ADB, all its developing member nations will be eligible for grants in support of the regional cooperation under the fund, although priority will be given to members of the Greater Mekong sub-region and Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation programme.

Over the next five years to 2009, the fund will inspire greater sharing of knowledge and experience on regional cooperation and poverty reduction across developing Asia, the report said. It will assist countries in professionally managed, comprehensive benchmarking of their regional cooperation and poverty reduction efforts.
Kuroda and Jin also signed an agreement on ADB's loans for a road project in Gansu Province and a coalmine gas utilisation project in Shanxi Province.

http://www.inform.kz/txt/showarticle.php?lang=eng&id=116384

Sino-Pak friendship immune to global changes: China

BEIJING: Chinese President Hu Jintao said on Friday that nothing would affect the decades old Sino-Pak friendship despite changes in global and regional scenarios.

He said this to Pakistani Ambassador to China Salman Bashir, who presented him the ‘Letters of Credence’ at the Great Hall of the People. President Hu Jintao said the two countries had omni-dimensional co-operation in various fields of mutual interest.

He said that he was grateful to Pakistan for its support on the issue of Taiwan, adding that Pakistan was the first country to support the Anti-secession Law, the National People’s Congress passed this month. He also thanked Pakistan for its support to China on Tibet and human rights.

Chinese PM Wen Jiabao will be visiting Pakistan in April. The Chinese president said that the visit would be a success and would enhance traditional ties between the two countries. The ambassador conveyed the greetings of President General Pervez Musharraf to the Chinese president.

Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing said that PM Jiabao’s visit to Pakistan would boost bilateral relations. “We hope that the premier’s three-day visit in April will help strengthen the decades old partnership in political and economic fields between the two sides,” he told Ambassador Bashir.

The two sides were working towards a productive and results-oriented visit, said the Chinese foreign minister. He assured that his country would continue to work with Pakistan at all levels to promote regional peace and development. Mr Bashir said the government and people of Pakistan were eagerly awaiting the Chinese premier.

Minister Zhaoxing told the ambassador that he was glad to accept the invitation from Pakistan Foreign Minister Khurshid Mehmood Kasuri to address a seminar of the Asian Co-operation Dialogue (ACD), scheduled in Islamabad for April 5.

Ambassador Bashir, who recently arrived in Beijing as Pakistan’s new representative to China, also met other Chinese leaders, including Minister of Commerce Bo Xilai. They hoped that the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) between the two countries would be hammered out. Pakistani experts are currently in Beijing to negotiate the FTA. app

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_26-3-2005_pg7_45

China underlines plea to EU over lifting arms embargo

Fri 25 Mar 2005


AUDRA ANG IN BEIJING

CHINA yesterday stepped up its appeal to the European Union to lift its arms embargo - just one day after the bloc indicated it was leaning toward ending it - and indirectly criticised the United States for lobbying against the decision.

"I hope the European Union can demonstrate political wisdom and courage to lift the arms embargo as soon as possible," said Liu Jianchao, a spokesman for China’s foreign ministry .

European diplomats have been moving toward ending the embargo, but appeared to waver after China’s legislature passed a law authorising a military attack if Taiwan pursues formal independence.

France and Germany have been strong proponents for lifting the ban, while Britain, Sweden and others have been less enthusiastic.

The United States has aggressively opposed ending the embargo.



This article:

http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/international.cfm?id=317122005

Japan blasts China for carrying out undersea surveys


AP , TOKYO
Saturday, Mar 26, 2005,Page 1

Japan yesterday accused China of illegally conducting undersea surveys in its territory 22 times last year, including nine surveys near two Pacific Ocean islets at the center of a dispute between the two countries over resources.

Meanwhile, a delegation from a Japanese nongovernment group yesterday steamed toward the Okinotorishima islets to study the possibility of building a lighthouse it hopes would strengthen Japan's foothold there.

In a statement, Japan's Foreign Ministry said China had illegally conducted undersea surveys inside Japan's special economic zone 22 times last year, nine of them around the Okinotorishima outcroppings located 1,730km southeast of Tokyo.

The number of claimed incursions is nearly a threefold increase from eight in 2003.

"It is extremely regrettable to see the violations repeated," the statement said. "We strongly hope the Chinese government to instruct research vessels properly and prevent the problems."

Japan claims the Okinotorishima outcroppings, which are heavily fortified by cement embankments, are islands and therefore extend its exclusive economic zone far into the Pacific.

China does not dispute Japan's territorial claim to Okinotorishima, but argues that they're only rocks -- meaning Beijing is free to exploit the natural resources in some of the waters claimed by Japan.

Under international law, an island, which by definition is a naturally-formed land mass that stays above water during high tide -- can be used to determine the limits of a country's economic zone.

A 40-member team commissioned by the private Nippon Foundation was headed for Okinotorishima to do onsite research on Monday and Tuesday, foundation spokesman Hideo Fukuda said by telephone from their boat.

"The purpose of the trip is to seek ways to make better use of marine resources in the area, and it's not a political action targeting China," Fukuda said.

The team plans to survey coral, take sea water samples and assess the possibility of building a lighthouse and a power generation plant, he said.

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2005/03/26/2003247815

China starts work on cross-border oil pipeline to Kazakhstan

[China News] Beijing, Mar 25 : China has started construction on the 240-kilometre-long cross-border oil pipeline to Kazakhstan.

The Xinjiang section will form part of a 3,000-kilometre pipeline from the oil-rich Caspian shelf to energy-hungry China, which will carry oil across eastern Kazakhstan into the Xinjiang autonomous region, where it will be refined or sent directly to the country's booming east, officials with China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), China's biggest oil producer, told Xinhua news agency.

Construction of the pipeline, which will cost three billion US dollars, began last year. It will link Atasu in Kazakhstan to Dushanzi and is China's first major land oil import route.

A CNPC official said the cross-border oil pipeline, with 2,800 kilometres in Kazakhstan and 240 kilometres in China, is expected to be completed on December 16, 2005. It will be able to carry 20 million tonnes of oil per year.

Oil analysts say the pipeline can provide China stable and secure crude oil supply, while Kazakhstan will have a reliable oil market, Xinhua reported.

Construction on the Kazakhstan section of the oil pipeline began in September and will be completed in 2005. Kazakhstan is the world's third largest oil producer. The country plans to raise its annual crude production to 100 million tonnes by 2010.

Three Chinese factories are principally responsible for supplying the pipe. China-made pipes have been shipped to Kazakhstan since last winter.

China's imports of Kazakh oil now travel hundreds of kilometres by rail to Xinjiang. PTI

http://www.newkerala.com/news-daily/news/features.php?action=fullnews&id=90363



US 'kills key' Afghan militant

A suspected Taleban militant and at least five others have been killed by US-led coalition forces in Afghanistan.

Raz Mohammed, described by the US military as a "high-level Taleban" was killed in the province of Paktika, close to the border with Pakistan.

An Afghan woman and two children were also killed in the exchange, a US military statement said.

The US-led coalition has about 18,000 troops hunting Taleban and al-Qaeda militants in Afghanistan.

"Coalition forces were fired on by Raz Mohammed and other Taleban forces when they attempted to capture Mohammed," the US military statement said.

Two other suspected Taleban militants were also killed in the exchage.

The violence came even as a campaign to disarm tens of thousands of Afghan militiamen entered its final phase.

Suspected Taleban and al-Qaeda fighters continue to attack Afghan and US-led troops, government officials, aid workers and civilians four years after the fall of the Taleban regime.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/south_asia/4377981.stm

Manila foils Easter 'bombing plot'
By Sarah Toms
BBC News, Manila

The Philippine military has arrested a suspected Muslim militant and found explosives believed to have been stored away for attacks on Manila over Easter.

Soldiers and police stepped up security this week after Muslim group the Abu Sayyaf vowed revenge for the deaths of several rebels in a prison uprising.

The military arrested the suspect, Tyron Santos, who was a convert to Islam, on Tuesday.

He led soldiers to 10 sacks of explosives and 18 improvised bombs.

They were in an abandoned house in Metro Manila.

Security has been tightened at train and bus terminals, airports, shopping malls, parks and churches, as Filipinos in the mainly Roman Catholic country prepare to celebrate the religious holiday of Easter.

Failed jail break

The police warned of bombing plots after the Abu Sayyaf threatened to bring the war to Manila following a police assault on a prison in the capital.

The police killed 22 prisoners in the raid, including several suspected senior Abu Sayyaf commanders.

The Abu Sayyaf, which is allegedly linked to al-Qaeda, has claimed responsibility for three coordinated bombings on Valentine's Day, that killed 13 people and wounded 150.

The three blasts in February happened during a military offensive against Abu Sayyaf camps on the Philippine island of Jolo.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/asia-pacific/4375513.stm

Somali 'jihad' on foreign troops

A militant Somali Muslim cleric has warned of a Holy War or "Jihad" if foreign peacekeepers are deployed.

Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys is a senior member of the Islamic courts, which has a militia, and is accused by the United States of having links to al-Qaeda.

President Abdullahi Yusuf wants peacekeepers to protect his government when it relocates from Kenya.

Somalia has not had a functioning government for 14 years and has been divided by rival warlords.

'To the death'

Mr Aweys, who denies that any terror groups operate in Somalia, said it would be the religious duty of all Somalis to fight any peacekeeping force.

"We will fight fiercely to the death any intervention force that arrives in Somalia," he said.

He also urged foreign countries not to fund the proposed peace force.

East African countries have agreed to send some 6,800 Sudanese and Ugandan troops to Somalia.

Several Mogadishu-based warlords, named in Mr Yusuf's exiled government, have also opposed the use of foreign troops.

MPs were involved in a brawl during a debate on the issue last week.

Mr Yusuf does not have a strong support base in Mogadishu, where gunmen can be seen running roadblocks on behalf of the rival warlords.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/africa/4382311.stm

Peace can be attained through force, says Aziz

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz has said Pakistan to play key role for peace and stability in the region but the peace can be attained through force.

Addressing the passing out parade at PAF Academy Risalpur Aziz said Pakistan has no aggressive designs against any country though it will maintain minimum deterrence to protect its territorial integrity.

He said Pakistan will play crucial role for regional peace and stability but peace cannot be achieved without proper force.

Shaukat Aziz welcomed US decision of providing F-16 jetfighters to Pakistan saying that the fighter planes were extremely important for
http://www.hipakistan.com/en/detail.php?newsId=en77461&F_catID=&f_type=source

EU: Castro Shares Interest in Closer Ties

By VANESSA ARRINGTON
The Associated Press
Saturday, March 26, 2005; 10:24 AM

HAVANA - Cuban President Fidel Castro shares the European Union's interest in strengthening ties and tackling sensitive issues such as human rights and the island's political prisoners, EU commissioner Louis Michel said Saturday, the morning after four-hour talks with the Cuban leader.

Michel's visit comes as Cuba struggles with international criticism over political prisoners and an upcoming U.N. vote on the island's human rights record.

"We spoke together about all the issues, even about the difficult issues, and sensitive issues, and there is of course a common interest to relaunch a political dialogue," Michel said as he entered a meeting with Cardinal Jaime Ortega, the Roman Catholic Church's top prelate on the island.

Michel, who arrived to Havana late Thursday, met with Castro until 1 in the morning Saturday. He said the meeting was effective, and that the 78-year-old leader was in good shape.

"I had a very good impression (of him), he is very healthy and very strong," Michel said.

The EU has asked that Cuba release all political prisoners, particularly 61 dissidents who remain behind bars after a roundup of 75 government opponents two years ago. The other 14 activists were released on medical parole.

The issue of human rights has strained Cuba-EU relations for several years. The breaking point came with the crackdown two years ago, which prompted the EU to impose sanctions against the island.

But a new chapter was opened earlier this year when European nations lifted the sanctions, partly in response to Cuba's release of some prisoners.

The new EU policy is up for review this summer and likely will hinge on whether the remaining imprisoned dissidents stay behind bars.

While the new policy moves the EU closer to the Cuban government, it also calls for increased ties with dissidents.

Michel was expected to meet Saturday with several dissidents. On Friday, he also met with Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque and Parliament Speaker Ricardo Alarcon. Human rights and the issue of political prisoners also were discussed, but no agreements were reached, he said.

Michel's visit comes as the Cuban government campaigns to rally allies in its annual fight against a U.S.-backed U.N. resolution on the island's human rights record.

The resolution will be voted on in Geneva at the meeting of the U.N. Human Rights Commission, which runs through mid-April. Last year's resolution passed 22-21, with 10 abstentions.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A2984-2005Mar26.html?nav=headlines

US warns of ‘multiple’terror attacks in RP
By Jose Katigbak STAR Washington Bureau
The Philippine Star 03/27/2005
WASHINGTON — Al-Qaeda-linked groups and the radical arm of the largest Muslim separatist rebel organization in the Philippines are planning to stage "multiple" attacks throughout the archipelago, the United States has warned.

The warning issued by the US State Department on Wednesday (Thursday in Manila) advised Americans to "consider carefully the risks of travel to the Philippines."

The updated travel advisory named the "terrorist groups" as the Indonesia-based Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), the local extremist group Abu Sayyaf and renegade rebels of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) — both based in Mindanao.

After similar advisories from Britain and the US, Australia followed suit last week in cautioning its citizens against traveling to the Philippines.

A new public announcement issued by Canberra’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade also cited that "extremist groups" such as the Abu Sayyaf and MILF operate in the country, while persistent reports point to brewing terror acts.

"Reports suggest that terrorists may be in the final stages of planning an attack. Attacks could occur at any time, anywhere in the Philippines," said the advisory, which was similar to what the British Embassy in Manila had said earlier when warning its citizens of such assaults.

The MILF, for its part, was quick to deny it was plotting any terror attacks, and said it was actually looking forward to the resumption of peace talks with the Philippine government in Malaysia next month.

"There is a policy statement from the MILF leadership for all members to turn their backs on other groups" such as the Abu Sayyaf and JI, MILF spokesman Eid Kabalu told Agence France Presse by telephone from his base in Mindanao.

Kabalu pointed out there is an ongoing "ceasefire" with government forces.

"We don’t know what is the basis for this advisory," he said.

The US State Department travel advisory warned against "all but essential travel throughout the country in light of a heightened threat to westerners."

It said travelers should be aware that since security has increased at official US facilities, terrorists could seek softer targets.

"Such targets could include but are not limited to places where Americans and other westerners live, congregate, shop or visit, including hotels, clubs, restaurants, shopping centers, identifiably western businesses, housing compounds, transportation systems, places of worship, schools, or public recreation events," the advisory stated.

Britain highlighted the "high threat" of terrorism "throughout the Philippines" in its latest advisory.

"There continues to be threats against western interests and there is a danger of collateral damage from terrorist attacks targeted at others," it said.

Australia, on the other hand, also warned its nationals to be alert to the dangers of kidnapping in the Philippines, advising them to defer all travel to the Zamboanga Peninsula and the Sulu archipelago, including Basilan, Jolo and Tawi-Tawi.

Military sources in Manila said some 10 JI and Abu Sayyaf militants were on the loose and could hit targets across the Philippines after authorities uncovered a plot to bomb "soft targets" in the capital over Easter.

Philippine security forces have been bracing for retaliatory attacks by the Abu Sayyaf since a foiled jailbreak in Taguig City last March 14 that left 22 Muslim detainees dead, including three ranking Abu Sayyaf leaders.

Some 15,000 police officers were deployed across the metropolis to guard vital installations while personnel were on guard at churches around the predominantly Catholic country.

In Indonesia, where Easter is also a holiday although it is the world’s largest Muslim-populated country, police said they were hunting up to 20 Indonesian graduates of a JI training camp in the Philippines believed to have returned home to carry out attacks.

The JI has been blamed for the October 2002 Bali bombings in which 202 people died, in addition to deadly attacks on a Jakarta hotel in 2003 and a blast outside the Australian embassy in September last year.

Japan and Hong Kong, meanwhile, have also advised their citizens to exercise caution when traveling to the Philippines and Indonesia, or to stay away completely amid a heightened risk of attack and kidnapping.

Many US-based Filipinos were surprised at the extent of the area covered by the US travel warning – the entire Philippines.

Previous warnings had been careful to specify the risk of travel "in certain areas" due to kidnappings, bombings and other violence and criminal activity.

The travel warnings from different countries come after the arrest of two extremists from JI and the Abu Sayyaf earlier this week and the seizure of 10 sacks of explosives in Quezon City.

One of the detainees, an Indonesian alleged bomb maker identified as Rohmat, told reporters after his arrest that the Abu Sayyaf were plotting major attacks in the southern cities of Davao and Cagayan de Oro in addition to Manila.

Rohmat also confessed he was given shelter by the MILF when he was on the run from authorities.

Kabalu admitted this was possible, adding they were investigating the Indonesian’s revelation.

"We will try to get to some details from the negotiating panel," he said.

A recent US report said that despite repeated denials by the MILF, evidence shows it has strong links with JI and provides the Indonesian terror group training facilities in its area of control in Mindanao.

The MILF, however, stressed it is sincere about entering into peace talks with the government.

To further dispel suspicions of ties with the JI, Kabalu said MILF commanders had been told to "weed out and hold responsible" rogue members of the group who may shelter or provide sanctuary to foreign militants who may jeopardize the peace process.
http://www.philstar.com/philstar/News200503270401.htm

Iraqi Forces Seize 131 Suspected Insurgents in Raid
Sat Mar 26, 2005 7:19 AM ET

By Omar Anwar

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Iraqi soldiers backed by U.S. helicopters killed several suspected insurgents and seized 131 more in a dawn raid Saturday, capturing tons of explosives earmarked for attacks on the holy city of Kerbala, officials said.

"It was a surprise operation based on intensive surveillance by military intelligence," Defense Minister Hazim al-Shaalan told Reuters. "It was very successful."

Earlier this week Iraqi police commandos said they killed 85 militants in a raid on a suspected insurgent training camp near Baghdad, hailing it as a breakthrough against the insurgency.

Shaalan said several suspected militants were killed in the latest operation, which began late Friday and culminated in the dawn raid just outside Kerbala, about 100 km (60 miles) southwest of Baghdad.

The vast majority of the 131 captured were Iraqis, although officials said many faked Iraqi identification papers were also found. It was not clear how many people were killed.

"We carried out this operation so that visitors to Kerbala can go there in peace," Shaalan said.

Kerbala, an important Shi'ite Muslim holy city, has been targeted by militants several times in the past. Next week it will draw hundreds of thousands of pilgrims from throughout the region for Arbain, a major mourning ceremony.

Another defense ministry official said many of those detained were from Ansar al-Sunna, a militant group based in northern Iraq, near the border with Iran, that has carried out several high-profile attacks over the past 18 months.

"This group was intending to attack Kerbala," he said.

Seized along with the suspects were three tons of TNT explosive, at least three ready-made car bombs, hundreds of rocket-propelled grenades, several Katyusha rockets, more than 250,000 rounds of ammunition and other equipment.

In terms of the number of people detained and the amount of weaponry seized, it marks one of the most successful Iraqi-run operations in the past two years.

Iraqi officials say their intelligence network is improving, while Iraqi security forces are also growing stronger, giving them fresh impetus in the battle against the two-year-old insurgency.

http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2005-03-26T121857Z_01_BAK640689_RTRIDST_0_INTERNATIONAL-IRAQ-DC.XML

Many Germans Want Berlin Wall Back, Study Finds
Sat Mar 26, 2005 8:30 AM ET

BERLIN (Reuters) - Nearly a quarter of western Germans and 12 percent of easterners want the Berlin Wall back -- more than 15 years after the fall of the barrier that split Germany during the Cold War, according to a new survey.

The results of the poll, published Saturday, reflected die-hard animosities over high reunification costs lowering western standards of living and economic turmoil in the east.

The survey of 2,000 Germans by Berlin's Free University and pollsters Forsa found 24 percent of those living in western Germany want the Wall back -- double the eastern level.

In Berlin itself, 11 percent of westerners and 8 percent of easterners said "yes" when asked: "Would it be better if the Wall between East and West were still standing?."

The Berlin Wall was breached on Nov. 9, 1989, paving the way for the unification of Communist East Germany with the West on Oct. 3, 1990. But billions of euros (dollars) spent rebuilding the east have failed to prop up the depressed region, which is plagued by high unemployment and a shrinking population.

The poll also found that 47 percent of the easterners agree with the statement that the West "acquired the east like a colony," while 58 percent of the westerners back the statement that "easterners tend to wallow in self-pity."

http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2005-03-26T133001Z_01_L26474730_RTRIDST_0_INTERNATIONAL-GERMANY-WALL-DC.XML



Colombia's FARC spreads in Central America

By Jerry Seper
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Published March 26, 2005

Marxist guerrillas in Colombia have established cells in Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama in what U.S. intelligence and law-enforcement authorities say is an effort by the rebel organization to expand its arms- and drug-trafficking operations.
Honduran Security Minister Oscar Alvarez confirmed the presence of members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, in the three Central American countries last week, saying the organization was seeking to "infiltrate Central America to buy more weapons and destabilize the rule of law ...."
Mr. Alvarez told reporters in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, that arms traffickers in that country were trading automatic weapons, mostly AK-47 assault rifles, to the FARC in exchange for drugs, which were being sold to buyers in the United States. The weapons were identified as coming from Nicaragua, left over from that country's civil war in the 1980s.
Three Hondurans have been identified in the scheme, including one man who managed the operation from his Honduran prison cell, although Honduran authorities and U.S. officials have said that many more are involved.
U.S. intelligence and law-enforcement authorities yesterday said the FARC -- considered Latin America's oldest, largest, most capable and best-equipped insurgency -- has continued its high-profile terrorist attacks in Colombia and expanded its arms- and drug-trafficking operations into Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama.
The authorities said the FARC engaged in a concerted campaign to destabilize municipal governments in Colombia by killing local officials and threatening to execute others, and that it had kidnapped hundreds of civilians to help finance subversion and put political pressure on the Colombian government -- tactics that now have been exported to Central America.
They added, however, that the Colombian government's recent successes in combating the FARC -- aided by the United States -- may also have forced the organization to seek refuge elsewhere.
Earlier this month, a high-ranking FARC leader, Nayibe Rojas Valderrama, also known as "Comandante Sonia," was extradited to the United States to face prosecution on drug charges. Rojas Valderrama's capture last year by Colombian special-forces commandos was viewed as a major step in that government's ongoing U.S.-led effort to attack the FARC.
The FARC, with as many as 12,000 armed combatants, has been named in connection with numerous bombings, murders, mortar attacks, narcotrafficking, kidnappings, extortion and hijackings, as well as guerrilla and conventional military actions against Colombian political, military and economic targets.
Earlier this month, Gen. Bantz J. Craddock, commander of the U.S. Southern Command, told the Senate Armed Services Committee that many nations in Latin America and specifically the Andean Ridge were threatened by regional terrorist organizations supported and funded by illegal drug trafficking and other criminal ventures, including the FARC.
Gen. Craddock said 90 percent of the cocaine and 47 percent of the heroin that reaches the United States annually originates in or passes through Colombia.

http://washingtontimes.com/national/20050325-110524-1743r.htm

Thousands Head for Bishkek Against Kyrgyz Coup

Reuters

Mar. 26, 2005 - Kyrgyzstan's ousted interior minister led thousands of demonstrators toward the capital on Saturday to protest against the coup that overthrew President Askar Akayev, warning there was a risk of civil war.

The new leadership declared it was firmly in control of the mountainous ex-Soviet state, but acting President Kurmanbek Bakiev switched the venue of a news conference because officials said they had information of a possible plot to kill him.

Ignoring the exiled Akayev's refusal to resign in the face of what he called a coup, parliament set June 26 for a new presidential election in the central Asian nation.

Bakiev said he would run in the election.

About 3,000 people set off from Akayev's home region of Chym Korgon, some 90 km (55 miles) outside Bishkek, two days after the president was swept from power in mass protests.

"They may get there today. They may get there tomorrow, but the important thing is they will go there," Keneshbek Dushebayev, appointed interior minister by Akayev just before he was ousted, told Reuters.

Dushebayev, who is leading the protesters whom he predicted could eventually number 10,000, said: "The country is virtually split and everything is in place for a civil war."

But there was confusion over the aims of the protesters, some of whom expressed support for the new leadership.

Some carried posters saying "No to the coup!" and "The people of Kyrgyzstan are one nation!." Other placards read: "We support general Kulov," referring to opposition leader Felix Kulov.

One man in the crowd, Rustam Ibraimov, 24, said: "Our demand is to stop this lawlessness in Bishkek. The seizure of power is illegal. We do not support President Akayev, but the change of power should have been carried out according to the law."

Kulov, put in charge of security just days after crowds freed him from jail, insisted the country was now orderly after lawlessness followed the popular revolt.

"The situation is fully under control. We do not need a curfew," said Kulov, who was prominent in opposing Akayev.

Bishkek was quiet Saturday with little sign of the violence, looting and destruction that swept the city after Thursday's mass protests brought a sudden end to Akayev's 14-year rule of the mainly Muslim country of 5 million.

OPPOSITION SEEKS HELP

Crucially for the opposition, Russian President Vladimir Putin appears to have given his blessing to the new leadership.

"He was very interested in what sort of help is needed. We are very grateful to the Russian leadership," Bakiev told parliament after speaking to Putin by phone Friday.

Putin had earlier offered sanctuary to Akayev. Russian media reported he had already arrived in Moscow and Bakiev said he also believed this was the case.

Bakiev has criticized Akayev -- who has ruled since 1990 and said in a statement emailed to a news agency that he was still president -- for abandoning his country at such a difficult time but said he would try to ensure his safety if he returns.

"Akayev is a citizen of this country and has the right to return at any time," he said.

Bakiev said Kyrgyzstan, where most people have to manage on no more than a dollar a day, desperately needed assistance from the international community.

"We need help from the outside. Soon, we will have nothing to feed the people with," he said, adding that he hoped Russia would help with fuel supplies.

The United States said it supported "a peaceful outcome to the political future of Kyrgyzstan."

The overthrow of Akayev, a relative liberal in a region of mainly autocratic leaders, followed weeks of protest throughout the country, especially in the poorer south.

LOOSELY UNITED OPPOSITION

The new leadership is made up of a loosely united opposition that includes many former government officials who have been at odds with one another in the past.

Bakiev, an opposition leader who played a central role in the protests that brought down Akayev, has appointed key interim ministers.

One of his immediate challenges is how to operate in a country with two sets of members of parliament -- from an outgoing assembly, which says it is still in charge, and a second, more strongly pro-Akayev group elected in polls in February and March which the opposition said were fraudulent.

Kyrgyzstan, bordering China, lies in an energy-rich region where Washington and Moscow vie for influence. Each has a military base outside Bishkek.

"We need to resolve this issue, it cannot go on forever," she told a news conference. However, Ms. Rice repeatedly emphasized during her visit here that the U.S. doesn't intend to attack North Korea.

Rice Says that Nuclear Standoff With North Korea Has to End

Rice Says EU Weapons Sales to China Would Threaten Balance of Power in Pacific

Associated Press
March 20, 2005 3:15 a.m.

SEOUL, South Korea -- U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on Sunday warned that Washington won't let the international standoff over North Korea's nuclear weapons "go on forever," calling with South Korean leaders for Pyongyang to return to six-nation disarmament talks so it can get needed aid and international respect.

After meeting officials in the South Korean capital Seoul, Ms. Rice said both sides would devote "maximum efforts" to the six-nation talks.

The U.S., Russia, Japan, South Korea and China began a joint diplomatic effort with North Korea in 2003 aimed at persuading Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear program, but it has been stalled since North Korea refused to attend the last scheduled round of talks in September.

Last month, North Korea declared it had nuclear weapons and would indefinitely continue its boycott.

Ms. Rice also reiterated that Washington won't enter direct talks with North Korea as it has demanded. "This is not an issue of the United States and North Korea, this is an issue of the neighborhood and what kind of Korean Peninsula we are going to have," Ms. Rice said.

However, South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun told Ms. Rice that Seoul isn't sure how to lure the North back to the negotiations.

"This is a difficult problem. In fact, we don't see a clear key [to solve the issue] right now but if we try, I think we can resolve the problem," Mr. Roh said, according to his office.

Ahead of his meeting with Ms. Rice, South Korea's Foreign Minister Ban Ki-moon said he hoped a comment she made, that the U.S. recognizes North Korea as a sovereign country, would help "create an environment conducive to resuming talks."

Mr. Ban said he understood it would be difficult for her to directly respond to the North's demand she retract her statement labeling it as an "outpost of tyranny." Ms. Rice said the North's focus on her words were an attempt to "change the subject."

Ms. Rice also said Sunday that any European Union move to resume weapons sales to China threatens to upset the balance of power in the Pacific.

"We have managed over the last decades to maintain a stable environment" in the Pacific, Ms. Rice said in Seoul before flying to Beijing. "And obviously, anything that would appear to try and alter that balance would be a concern to us."

The U.S. has been calling on China, a key ally of North Korea, to play a larger role in resuming the stalled six-nation talks. Ms. Rice's visit to China follows the country's decision to codify a threat to attack Taiwan if the island declares independence.

European nations are considering resuming weapons sales to China that were suspended after the deadly 1989 crackdown on pro-democracy protesters at Tiananmen Square. The Bush administration opposes the move, citing a possible breakdown in the region's security balance.

"The European Union should do nothing to contribute to a circumstance in which Chinese military modernization draws on European Union technology," Ms. Rice said Sunday. "It is the United States, not Europe that has defended the Pacific."

Taiwan and China split in 1949, but Beijing considers the democratic, self-ruled island to be Chinese territory. Beijing has repeatedly threatened to attack if Taiwan tries to make its de facto independence permanent.

Earlier Sunday, Ms. Rice extolled the virtues of free and open societies at a news conference with Internet journalists. Prior to the conference, security guards wrestled a man to ground as he loudly called for American intervention to free the communist North.

"Miss Rice, the North Korean people are dying and they are crying for your help," yelled the activist, German physician and former aid worker Norbert Vollertsen. He held up a poster that read, "Freedom for North Korea: 50 Years Overdue," until an embassy employee ripped it in half.

As Ms. Rice took her seat for the conference, security officers muffled Mr. Vollertsen as they wrestled him to the floor. He had talked his way into the media gathering before Ms. Rice arrived, but an embassy public affairs officer recognized him at the last moment and demanded he be removed.

Speaking to that group, Ms. Rice described true democracy as the ability to "say what you wish, worship as you please and educate your children." In contrast to the closed society of North Korea, Ms. Rice said, "you can come here and think what you want and ask me anything -- the United States secretary of state -- and what a wonderful thing that is."

On Saturday, Ms. Rice became the most senior American official to tour a command center for U.S. and South Korean troops that would be the battle headquarters in the event of fighting with the communist North.

"I know that you face a close-in threat every day," Ms. Rice told troops at Command Post Tango, or Theater Air Naval Ground Operations, south of Seoul, late Saturday.

More than 32,000 U.S. troops are stationed in South Korea, with more at the ready nearby, five decades after active hostilities ended in the Korean War.

"In parts of the world, the Cold War has ended and we've been able to [produce] a continent like Europe, that is now whole and free," Ms. Rice told commanders and troops. "But of course, divisions remain here in Korea."

"The Republic of Korea, a great democracy now, faces a threat across the divide of a state that is not democratic, that is not free, and that does not have the best interests of its people at heart," Ms. Rice said, referring to South Korea by its official name.

North Korea has denounced the exercises as a rehearsal for a U.S.-led pre-emptive attack.

Copyright © 2005 Associated Press








Iran to set up secret nuclear faculty: intelligence source















21 March 2005 0337 hrs (SST)









VIENNA : Iran is to establish a secret nuclear engineering faculty within a year to provide engineers for what the United States claims is a covert project to develop atomic weapons, a Western intelligence source told AFP.

"This is a very significant step towards training an Iranian nuclear cadre," the source, who asked not to be named, said in a recent interview.

The Sunday Telegraph newspaper reported in London Sunday that Iran has approved a secret nuclear research center to train scientists in atomic technology.

Iranian officials, questioned by AFP recently, have so far declined to comment on this matter.

"The declared purpose for establishing the faculty is to create a source of skilled and professional manpower to promote Iran's military nuclear project, whose activity is increasing," the source told AFP.

"By setting up this installation, the Iranians are trying to make sure they have trained people whom the West doesn't even know about," the source said.

The allegation comes despite growing pressure on Iran from the United States and the European Union to guarantee that it will not use its atomic energy programme to acquire nuclear weapons.

Washington claims Iran is secretly developing nuclear weapons but says its nuclear programme is a peaceful project to generate electricity for civilian use.

"The Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran (AEOI) has received approval from the regime for the ministry of education to establish a secret faculty of applied nuclear engineering and materials engineering," the source said.

"The faculty will concentrate only on nuclear topics and will build and train a new generation of engineers, who will be able to immediately work on highly secret projects as soon as they complete their studies."

Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), said earlier this month that the IAEA has not found weapons work in Iran after two years of investigations but that "the jury is still out" on whether the Islamic Republic's nuclear intentions are peaceful.

The IAEA has discovered that Iran hid sensitive atomic activities for almost two decades until the agency investigation began.

AFP's source said Iran would seek to protect the faculty from IAEA scrutiny.

"Since it is new the faculty will be compartmentalised and undeclared. It will not be under IAEA inspection," the source said.

"In practice the faculty is to be set up within a year. It will operate as a branch of one of the leading universities in Iran in nuclear science and its activity will be mainly classified."

At present most Iranian students are required to travel abroad for advanced studies in nuclear technology, where they can be monitored by Western intelligence agencies, the sources said.

"Anyone abroad, someone is writing his name down, that this is an Iranian nuclear scientist," the source said.

The source said Iran does not have enough nuclear engineers for a programme which is seeking to mine uranium, convert it into a gas that can be processed and finally make enriched uranium.

Enriched uranium can be fuel for civilian nuclear reactors but also in highly refined form the explosive core of atom bombs.

The source said "universities in Iran, including the classified military universities" focus "mainly on theoretical nuclear education and only touch on the applied aspect of nuclear science."

The secret faculty would "operate as a branch of one of the leading universities in Iran" such as Sharif University of Technology or the University of Tehran, the source said.

"It will be situated on the site of the AEOI in Tehran since its activity will be mainly classified," the source said.

- AFP
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_world/view/138397/1/.html

Private Study Finds a Surge In Undocumented Immigrants

Associated Press
March 21, 2005 1:26 p.m.

WASHINGTON -- The nation's undocumented immigrant population surged to 10.3
million last year, spurred largely since 2000 by the arrivals of
unauthorized Mexicans in the U.S., a report being released Monday says.

The population of undocumented residents in the U.S. increased by about 23%
from 8.4 million in the four-year period ending last March, according to the
analysis of government data by the Pew Hispanic Center, a private research
group. That equates to a net increase of roughly 485,000 per year between
2000 and 2004. The estimate was derived by subtracting the number of
unauthorized immigrants who leave the U.S., die or acquire legal status from
the number of new undocumented immigrants that arrive each year.

The prospect of better job opportunities in the U.S. than in their native
countries remains a powerful lure for many immigrants, said Pew center
director Roberto Suro, pointing to a reason often cited by other
researchers. "The border has been the focus of federal efforts [to cut
illegal entry] and has not produced a reduction in flow. Certainly that's an
indication of ongoing demand," he said.

The population is growing at a similar pace as in the late 1990s although
the U.S. economy today isn't as robust, Mr. Suro said. Assuming the flow of
undocumented immigrants into the country hasn't abated since March 2004, the
population is likely near 11 million now.

The report considered "undocumented" immigrants primarily as those here
illegally; those in the U.S. on expired visas; or those who violated the
terms of their admission in other ways. Also included are a small percentage
of immigrants who may have legal authorization to be in the U.S., including
those with temporary protected status and those applying to seek asylum.

Mexicans by far remain the largest group of undocumented migrants at 5.9
million, or about 57% of the March 2004 estimate. Some 2.5 million others,
or 24%, are from other Latin American countries.

Overall, the U.S. foreign-born population, regardless of legal status, was
35.7 million last year. Those of Mexican descent again comprised the largest
subgroup -- more than 11 million, or 32%.

Controlling the flow of immigrants over the porous U.S.-Mexico border will
be a central topic of discussion when Mexican President Vicente Fox meets
with President Bush in Texas Wednesday. The number of U.S. residents with
Mexican backgrounds has increased by nearly 600,000 annually since 2000,
with more than 80% of the new arrivals here with proper documentation, the
Pew center estimated.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and other government officials have
raised concerns about border security amid recent intelligence that al Qaeda
terrorists have considered using the Southwest border to infiltrate the U.S.

Mr. Bush, meanwhile, has also promoted a guest-worker program that would
allow migrants to work in the U.S. for a limited time as long as they have a
job lined up. Critics of the plan argue that such workers drive down wages
because they often work for lower pay and fewer benefits that native-born
residents.

"The best way to approach this is attrition by enforcement -- better
enforcement of the borders and of worksites," said Steve Camorata of the
private Center for Immigration Studies.

The Pew report found undocumented immigrants increasingly fanning out beyond
longtime destination for foreign-born residents. In 1990, 88% of the
undocumented population lived in six states -- California, New York, Texas,
Illinois, Florida and New Jersey. By 2004, those states accounted for 61% of
the nation's undocumented population. The top state is California, where
nearly one-quarter of the undocumented reside, followed by Texas (14%) and
Florida (9%). Next on the list were New York (7%), Arizona (5%), Illinois
(4%), New Jersey (4%), and North Carolina (3%).

Arizona and North Carolina are two of the fastest-growing states in the
nation overall and have metropolitan areas booming with new construction,
restaurants and service-oriented businesses -- job sectors that often hire
undocumented workers.

Copyright © 2005 Associated Press
URL for this article:
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111142152387285169,00.html

Analysis: Seoul leaving U.S.-led alliance?


By Jong-Heon Lee
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL

Seoul, South Korea, Mar. 23 (UPI) -- Is South Korea distancing itself from
the U.S.-led alliance that has dominated Northeast Asia, counterbalancing
the communist bloc led by China?

This is the question of the moment as President Roh Moo-hyun has vowed to
seek a new role for the country on the balance of power among Pacific
powers, saying it will no longer be heavily dependent on the United States.

South Korea has largely relied on U.S protection for its national security
for more than half a century since the 1950-53 Korean War under the
trilateral alliance with Washington and Japan. The three-way democratic
partnership had played a key role in protecting the region from contagious
communist politics promoted by China, Russia and North Korea.

But Seoul officials said South Korea would no longer be locked in what they
called the Cold War security framework, vowing to seek a new role as a
"balancing power" in Northeast Asia. Roh has already pledged to help develop
his country's defenses independent of the United States within 10 years.

But critics say the maneuver is very risky to the country's 48 million
inhabitants. They also expressed alarm over the growing perception that
Tokyo has replaced Seoul as the top U.S. security ally in Northeast Asia.

In a speech at the Korea Third Military Academy on Tuesday, Roh said his
country will play a "balancing" role in maintaining peace and prosperity in
Northeast Asia.

South Korea's new role will dominate the security framework in Northeast
Asia where political orders "are still unclear," he said. "The power
structure in Northeast Asia will shift depending on what choices South Korea
makes," Roh said.

Roh said his government will both shoulder its responsibilities and assume
its authorized power as a sovereign state in discussing security issues with
its neighbors and allies.

South Korea's top security policymaker, Unification Minister Chung
Dong-young, defended Roh's remarks as part of efforts to turn the country's
fixed regional role into a more active one under changed situations.

"It is high time for South Korea to adopt new ways of thinking concerning
its foreign policy," he said in an interview with a local newspaper.

A senior government official said South Korea would extract itself from a
standoff centered on the Korean peninsula between a "southern alliance" of
South Korea, the United States and Japan and a "northern alliance" of North
Korea, China and Russia. Since 2003 those six nations are participating in
multilateral talks, now stalled, aimed at curbing North Korea's nuclear
weapons programs.

"South Korea should not involved in the war structure in the region," he
said. "We will seek to set up a regional security structure through close
cooperation with the United States."

Seoul's move toward a new regional security role comes in the wake of
worsening ties with Japan over its attempts to glorify past wrongdoings and
territorial claims to a South Korean island.

To cope with Japan's territorial claims, South Korea declared it would
discard a long-standing "policy of neglect." South Korea has maintained a
low-key stance to prevent the issue from escalating into a full-scale
territorial dispute.

President Roh has led the campaign against Japan. On Wednesday, Roh pledged
to take "stern responses" against Japan's territorial claims and attempts to
distort history.

"We will now have no choice but to deal sternly with Japan's attempt to
justify its history of aggression and colonialism and revive regional
hegemony," Roh said in a message posted on the presidential office's Web
site.

The Seoul government also reaffirmed its opposition to the Japanese effort
to win a permanent seat on the United Nation's Security Council. "It is a
prerequisite for Japan to win the trust of its neighbors to become a global
leader," said Chung, who chairs the presidential National Security Council.

But critics raise concerns that South Korea may be diplomatically isolated
in the region as the strained ties with Japan come at a time when Seoul's
ties with Washington were also frayed over how to deal with North Korea.

The concerns were boosted by suspicions that Japan's renewed claims to the
South Korean island were largely motivated by its stronger alliance with the
United States.

"Japan's territorial disputes with neighbors are backed by the United States
as part of strategic efforts to ward off China, which is raising tensions
across the Taiwan Strait," a Seoul-based diplomat said.

The United States officially stays away from the Seoul-Japan territorial
dispute, but its silence is widely considered as a sign that it backs
Japan's position.

During her visit over the weekend, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
avoided direct responses to the questions of South Korean journalists,
saying only that the United States maintains good relations with both Seoul
and Tokyo.

President Roh explained the flareup with Japan to Rice, asking that
Washington to side with Seoul, but she said nothing about the dispute. In
Tokyo, however, Rice praised Japan's role in international affairs, pledging
to support Tokyo's bid for a permanent seat on the U.N. Security Council.

Seoul officials had hoped that the United States would play a role in
persuading Japan to withdraw its territorial claims to Dokdo Island.

Opposition leader Park Geun-hye blamed Roh's move for fueling security
concerns in South Korea. "We feel worried about President Roh's move to
weaken the alliance with the United States," she said.

"Close coordination among Seoul, Washington and Tokyo is vital to end North
Korea's nuclear weapons ambitions," said Kim Tae-hyun, a professor at
Chung-Ang University in Seoul. "Stronger ties between Seoul and Washington
are also necessary to defuse the territorial dispute with Japan," he said.

http://www.washingtontimes.com/upi-breaking/20050323-054006-1584r.htm

Ex-Detroit Metro screener charged with hiding bin Laden sympathy
3/25/2005, 2:27 a.m. ET
The Associated Press

DETROIT (AP) — A Yemeni immigrant who was discharged from the U.S. Air Force
after expressing sympathy for Osama bin Laden following the Sept. 11 attacks
faces trial next week on accusations of lying to land a job as an airport
screener.


Sadeq Naji Ahmed, 25, of Dearborn faces up to 5 years in prison and a
$250,000 fine if convicted of making false statements on a questionnaire to
get a job with the Transportation Security Administration at Detroit
Metropolitan Airport.

"This is a case of vast government overkill," defense lawyer William Swor
said Thursday after U.S. District Judge Bernard Friedman declined to dismiss
the indictment. "My client is an absolutely loyal American."

Following his arraignment in July, Ahmed told reporters "people take things
out of context, that's not the right information."

Assistant U.S. Attorney Cathleen Corken declined to comment on the case.

Ahmed was born in Yemen and immigrated to the United States with his parents
in 1982. He now attends Wayne State University student and is married with
one child.

He was indicted in July on charges of lying when he said he had never left a
job under unfavorable circumstances and never had a security clearance or
had security access denied.

But the indictment said Ahmed was given an expedited honorable discharge
from the Air Force in September 2001 after superiors became alarmed about
statements he was said to have made at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla., between
1999 and September 2001, and began to question his loyalty.

The indictment said that Ahmed made statements in support of bin Laden, that
he was neither for or against the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, that the
United States deserved to be attacked, that he would not fight if the U.S.
military took action in Iraq and that U.S. aircraft flying over Iraq should
crash.

On Sept. 17, 2001, superiors suspended his access to classified information
and secure areas of the base, the indictment said. He was reassigned to
administrative duties and honorably discharged 11 days later, two months shy
of completing his 4-year tour.

He returned to Detroit and got a job in December 2001 as a baggage screener
for a private contractor at Detroit Metro. In October 2002, he was
conditionally appointed to the Transportation Security Administration
contingent upon passing a background check, which included filling out a
questionnaire.

He was dismissed in August 2003 after the government learned about his Air
Force discharge.

Swor said his client "was simply exercising his First Amendment right to
question and criticize the policies of the U.S. government. The military and
the government didn't like his point of view, and they've charged him with a
felony that could ruin the rest of his life."

Swor said Ahmed did not leave the military under unfavorable circumstances
because he was offered an honorable discharge and took it.

"Is the government saying people can't rely on official government
documents, that they don't mean what they say?" the defense lawyer asked.

Swor said Ahmed was a good baggage screener and had an excellent record in
the military. He said Ahmed was named 2000 Airman of the Year at Eglin and
1999 Airman of the Year for the 33rd Fighter Wing, where he served as an
information systems analyst.

Exile tells of secret nuclear site in Iran U.S. can't confirm claim on uranium for weapons

By JONATHAN S. LANDAY

Knight Ridder Newspapers

WASHINGTON — Iran has built a secret underground facility inside a tightly
guarded military complex to enrich uranium for nuclear weapons, an Iranian
exile said Thursday.

The allegation, which couldn't immediately be confirmed, was leveled by
Alireza Jafarzadeh, an exile whose previous claims helped reveal that Iran
has been conducting clandestine nuclear activities for about 20 years.

Iran doesn't have diplomatic relations with the United States, and the
Iranian mission to the United Nations didn't return two telephone calls
seeking a response to Jafarzadeh's latest allegation.

Iran has repeatedly said its nuclear program is for electricity production
and has denied U.S. allegations that it is secretly developing nuclear
weapons. A U.S. official said the claim could not be substantiated “at this
point.”

U.S. intelligence officials, who were burned by bogus intelligence provided
by Iraqi exiles trying to oust Saddam Hussein, have been more skeptical
about information provided by Jafarzadeh and other Iranian exiles. Some of
what they have provided, especially about Iran's nuclear programs, has
proved valuable, but other allegations remain unconfirmed or have proved
false, said one official.

Jafarzadeh, who runs a Washington-based consulting business, was the U.S.
spokesman for the National Coalition of Resistance of Iran until 2003, when
it was placed on the State Department's list of international terrorist
groups.

The coalition's military wing, the Mujahedeen Khalq, was based in Iraq and
armed by Hussein. It allegedly uses assassinations and other violence
against Iran's Islamic rulers.

Jafarzadeh said in a telephone interview that the secret underground uranium
enrichment facility is in Plan One, a southern sector of the huge Parchin
military complex, which produces chemicals 20 miles southeast of Tehran.

The International Atomic Energy Agency, the Vienna, Austria-based U.N.
nuclear watchdog group investigating Iran's nuclear program, declined to
comment on Jafarzadeh's latest charge.

But Corey Hilderstein of the Institute for Science and International
Security, a Washington policy institute that tracks nuclear proliferation,
said commercial satellite photos last August showed tunneling activity at
Parchin.

http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/news/11223661.htm


Report: China Faces Severe Water Shortages


SHANGHAI, China (AP) - China's already severe water shortages are worsening due to heavy pollution of lakes and aquifers and urban development projects with a big thirst for water, such as lawns and fountains, state media reported.

More than 100 cities have inadequate water supplies, with more than half ``seriously threatened,'' the official Xinhua News Agency cited Qiu Baoxing, a vice minister of construction, as saying.

``The uneven distribution of the limited resource and serious pollution further deteriorate the situation,'' Qiu said.

In Beijing, for example, each resident has access to only 10,593 cubic feet of water a year, compared with the world average of 35,310 cubic feet, Xinhua said in a separate report.

Recent urban greenery projects have only worsened the problem due to widespread planting of lawns and construction of fountains that consume large amounts of water, he said.

Meanwhile, experts warned that more than 300 million rural Chinese lack clean drinking water since most waterways are fouled by industrial effluent, untreated sewage and runoff of agricultural chemicals from fields.

A survey in January found that only 47 percent of water in major rivers is drinkable, while half of all lakes are heavily polluted. And 35 percent of ground water is undrinkable due to pollution, Xinhua reported.

``Hundreds of thousands (of) Chinese are afflicted with various diseases from drinking water that contains too much fluorine, arsenic, sodium sulfate or bitter salt,'' it cited Wang Shucheng, minister of Water Resources, as saying.

Wang said the government planned to boost spending on water treatment. He called for better enforcement of often-ignored environmental protection standards.

A five-year, 18 billion yuan ($2.1 billion) program to improve the drinking water supply in the countryside, home to three-quarters of China's 1.3 billion people, has already ensured safe water for 57 million people, Xinhua reported.

Rumseld Questions Venezuela on Rifles

Associated Press
March 23, 2005 9:28 p.m.

MANAUS, Brazil -- Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld on Wednesday criticized Venezuela's reported efforts to purchase 100,000 AK-47 assault rifles from Russia, suggesting that Venezuela's possession of so many weapons would threaten the hemisphere.

Harsh accusations and increasing animosity have marked the relationship between the U.S. and Venezuela. Venezuela's president, Hugo Chavez, has warned that he will cut off shipments of his country's oil to the U.S. if the Bush administration supports an attempt to force him from office.

Venezuela is the world's fifth largest oil exporter and provides about 13% of U.S. crude oil imports.

Mr. Rumsfeld, during a four-day trip to Latin America, raised concerns about the reports of Venezuela's rifle purchases. "I can't imagine what's going to happen to 100,000 AK-47s," Mr. Rumsfeld said at a news conference in Brasilia, the capital of Brazil, which shares a border with Venezuela.

"I can't understand why Venezuela needs 100,000 AK-47s. I personally hope it doesn't happen. I can't imagine if it did happen it would be good for the hemisphere," the defense secretary said.

Mr. Rumsfeld appeared with Brazil's vice president and defense minister, Jose Alencar, who declined to offer similar criticism of Mr. Chavez. Mr. Alencar would only say that Brazil respects the right of self-determination of other countries.

Venezuela says its military has about 100,000 troops, plus 30,000 reservists. The U.S. is concerned that the weapons are intended for domestic militias or foreign guerillas.

Venezuela had no immediate reaction to Mr. Rumsfeld's comments. Mr. Chavez has insisted that his government poses no threat to the region and top Venezuelan officials have defended the purchases as necessary replacements for existing weapons. Venezuelan officials also have said the weapons are solely for the military.

A senior U.S. defense official, speaking about Venezuela only on condition of anonymity, said weapons are expected to arrive in a few months. Venezuela also is negotiating for the purchase of at least 40 Russian MiG-29 Fulcrum fighters, at least 30 Russian attack helicopters, and possibly some Spanish naval vessels, the official said, citing public statements from Venezuelan officials and U.S. intelligence.

Some of the larger weapons systems, such as the helicopters, are useful in border patrol and other operations that the Pentagon regards as legitimate. But the small arms are harder to track and could more easily end up in criminal or guerrilla hands, even if Mr. Chavez does not intend for them to be transferred.

In addition, the U.S. official said Mr. Chavez is looking to build a small arms ammunition factory that can make the 7.62mm bullets that are in common use among guerillas and criminals, as well as some militaries. That deal is in negotiation.

The chief guerrilla group in neighboring Colombia, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Columbia, or FARC, has faced a shortage in such ammunition and is paying $1 a round or higher, in some cases, the official said. The State Department considers FARC a terrorist organization; Brazil does not.

Many of these groups are armed with weapons and ammunition from Nicaragua, a former Soviet client. That source has dried up with a pro-U.S. administration in power in Nicaragua.

Many Latin America nations has reduced the size of their militaries since the violence of the 1980s. Officials fear Mr. Chavez's actions could lead to a new arms race.

Also Wednesday, Mr. Rumsfeld met with Brazil's president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, before flying to the jungle city of Manaus to visit the headquarters of what the Brazilians call "SIVAM" -- a powerful array of radars and other sensors, networked to monitor both criminal activity and environmental conditions in the Amazon, the world's largest wilderness.

In English, it is called the Amazon Surveillance System, a $1.4 billion network of airborne and ground-based radars and computers. They can monitor illegal landing strips and climatic conditions to soil in some of the 2 million square miles of jungle that comprises the Amazon.

Drug flights over the area covered by the network have decreased by 30% since it went online, according to defense officials.

SIVAM was built by U.S. defense contractor Raytheon Corp. Critics have argued it focuses too much on security issues and not enough on regions where illegal logging and other environmental damage takes place.

Copyright © 2005 Associated Press

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