The questions being debated now, officials said, are whether to move against Hussein with overt military action and, if so, when and how.
The lack of answers to those questions is producing new stresses within the administration, some defense experts said. Two people involved in the debate -- one inside the Pentagon, one outside it -- said Cheney and others at the White House are growing concerned that the Joint Chiefs of Staff and other military leaders have fought Rumsfeld and other civilian hawks to a standstill. "I'm picking up a concern that people at the top of the Pentagon are overwhelmed," said one Republican foreign policy expert.
While Bush served on Harken Energy's board of directors in 1989, the company set up an offshore subsidiary in the Cayman Islands, the White House acknowledged. But spokesman Ari Fleischer denied it was a scheme to avoid paying taxes in the United States.
Lakhdar Brahimi, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan's special representative to Afghanistan, said that avoiding civilian casualties must be "paramount" and that the Pentagon must conduct the war so "that protection of civilian lives becomes a primary concern in the fight against terrorism."
Meanwhile, the world body scrapped plans to make public its assessment of the attack, in which an AC-130 gunship called in by U.S. ground forces killed 48 revelers and wounded at least 100 more. A final version of the report was given only to U.S. and Afghanistan officials, who are conducting their own formal investigation into the attack.
A draft version of the report that was leaked on the weekend casts doubts about U.S. claims of anti-aircraft fire and suggested an even higher death toll, but UN officials quickly disowned it as incomplete and "unsubstantiated."
... the US and other members of the Security Council pressed the teams to inspect sensitive areas, such as Iraq's ministry of defence when it was politically favourable for them to create a crisis situation. "They, [Security Council members] pressed the inspection leadership to carry out inspections which were controversial from the Iraqis' view, and thereby created a blockage that could be used as a justification for a direct military action," he said.
In a separate interview with Svenska Dagbladet, the Swedish newspaper, Mr Ekeus said that he had learnt after he left his position that the US had placed two of its own agents in the group of inspectors.
With the US determined to topple the Iraqi regime, officials in Baghdad argue that the return of inspectors at this time is certain to lead to intelligence gathering and to deliberate provocation on their part, thus giving legitimacy to a US attack.
. . . give me sustained $10-a-barrel oil and I'll give you revolutions from Iran to Saudi Arabia, and throw in Venezuela.
The pertinent question is whether the Times is a good newspaper, and the answer there is, all too often it isn't. Part of the reason the prose of Paul Krugman and Frank Rich seems so lively is that they shine amid darkness. The news pages are clogged with prose that is either pedestrian or arch, the latter being the besetting vice of journalists trying to turn in quality writing.
...The Times spent so many years through the 1990s printing stupid stories about the triumph of neoliberalism and of the free market that even if its foreign and economic correspondents had suspicions that all might be well, they prudently suppressed their doubts. So the Times missed what was actually happening in the former Soviet Union, or in Argentina, Brazil and the other kleptocracies of Latin America. The only reason more isn't made of the stupidity of the Times' editorial pages is that The Wall Street Journal's opinion pages are so violently demented that almost any other editorial voice sounds sane by comparison.
But by and large our opinion-writing classes are even stupider than they were 20 years ago. Take The New York Times' initial reaction to the attempted coup against President Hugo Chavez in Venezuela. If there was ever a coup urgently and publicly demanded by Washington, this was it. Chavez was up there on the Wanted List, just under Saddam. When the attempt on Chavez finally came in mid-April, the Times swiftly editorialized that Chavez's "resignation" meant that "Venezuelan democracy is no longer threatened by a would-be dictator." Eschewing the word "coup," the Times explained that Chavez "stepped down after the military intervened and handed power to a respected business leader." The editorial called Chavez "a ruinous demagogue," and proclaimed that "Venezuela urgently needs a leader with a strong democratic mandate," subsequently undercutting the majesty of this statement by having conceded that Chavez himself actually had a democratic mandate, having been "elected president in 1998."
Three days later, Chavez was back in power and the Times ran a second editorial half-apologizing for its earlier triumphalism. "In his three years in office, Mr. Chavez has been such a divisive and demagogic leader that his forced departure last week drew applause at home and in Washington. That reaction, which we shared, overlooked the undemocratic manner in which he was removed. Forcibly unseating a democratically elected leader, no matter how badly he has performed, is never something to cheer." Which of course is exactly what the Times had initially done, without raising any unpleasant questions as to what role the CIA had in the attempted coup.
What's going on? Is the USA planning a massive military conquest, or does it need to build more bombs first? Does the Bush administration have the backing of the 'civilised world' (as one US Senator calls it), or is it increasingly isolated in its plans to attack Iraq? According to one US journalist: 'The Bush administration knows it wants to bomb Iraq and it knows it wants to get rid of Saddam - it just doesn't know when, how or why to do it.'
... the main moral failure of CEOs - and US presidents - does not consist in the conscious venality of thinking one thing while saying another. The disorder is deeper than that, for it is far more likely that such leaders are convinced of the false justifications they offer. That the justifications are profoundly self-serving, of course, is part of why the leaders are convinced. When George W. Bush recently broke America's promise on the ABM treaty, that did not make us a nation of liars, he told us, but of realists. And, incidentally, his sole-power agenda was advanced.
The pattern is wide. Executives who want only to put the numbers ''in a better light'' end by cooking the books. Politicians who harmlessly aim to tell voters what they want to hear wind up having no core grasp of what is true. Religious leaders who maintain the appearance of virtue as an absolute value lose the capacity to recognize their own fallibility. But in all of this, such figures are behaving only like members of the human species, for the tendency toward grievous self-deception is universal.
Thus, lifetime partners can go years without realizing they have no intimacy. The overweight can fool themselves about their health problem. Drinkers can deny what their lives have become. Compulsive workers can enslave themselves to a false dream of success. Life-wrecking depression can pass itself off as selfless worry. Greed can seem like ambition. The pursuit of happiness is killing us. The most damaging lies are the ones we tell ourselves.

Tim LaHaye isn't merely a fringe figure like Hal Lindsey, the former king of the genre, whose 1970 Christian end-times book "The Late Great Planet Earth" was the bestseller of that decade. The former co-chairman of Jack Kemp's presidential campaign, LaHaye was a member of the original board of directors of the Moral Majority and an organizer of the Council for National Policy, which ABCNews.com has called "the most powerful conservative organization in America you've never heard of" and whose membership has included John Ashcroft, Tommy Thompson and Oliver North. George W. Bush is still refusing to release a tape of a speech he gave to the group in 1999.
The point isn't that all these leaders are part of some kind of right-wing Illuminati. It's simply that the seemingly wacky ideology promulgated in the Left Behind books is one that important people in America are quite comfortable with. The Left Behind series provides a narrative and a theological rationale for a whole host of perplexing conservative policies, from the White House's craven decision to cut off aid to the United Nations Family Planning Fund to America's surreally casual mobilization for an invasion of Baghdad -- a city that is, in the Left Behind books, Satan's headquarters.
Political attitudes and actions that make no practical or moral sense to secularists become comprehensible when viewed through Christian pop culture's eschatological looking glass. At a time when America is flagrantly flouting international law, spurning the U.N. and tacitly supporting the land grabs of Israeli maximalists, surely it's significant that the most popular fiction in the country creates a gripping narrative that pits American Christians against a conspiracy of Satan-worshipping, abortion-promoting, gun-controlling globalists -- all of it revolving around the sovereignty of Israel.

I am getting really sick of people who whine about "civilian casualties." Maybe I'm a hard-hearted guy, but when I see in the newspapers that civilians in Afghanistan or the West Bank were killed by American or Israeli troops, I don't really care. In fact, I would rather that the good guys use the Air Force to kill the bad guys, even if that means some civilians get killed along the way. One American soldier is worth far more than an Afghan civilian.
I don’t know if killing the military chief of Hamas, together with his family, is an effective military measure -- as surely someone will rise to replace him and it will make a lot more people angry, perhaps even angry enough to become suicide bombers. It may not bring Israel and the Palestinians any closer to peace or mutual security. But I don’t have a moral problem with it.
Hamas is clearly at war with Israel. Hamas feels empowered to strike Israeli civilians inside Israel proper and not just on the war zone of West Bank. Sheik Salah Shehada could have protected his family by keeping away from them. He didn’t and owing to his clear legitimacy as a military target, they are dead too.
So tough luck, fella.
War is hell.
Saudi Arabia is teetering on the brink of collapse, fuelling Foreign Office fears of an extremist takeover of one of the West's key allies in the war on terror.
Anti-government demonstrations have swept the desert kingdom in the past months in protest at the pro-American stance of the de facto ruler, Prince Abdullah.
At the same time, Whitehall officials are concerned that Abdullah could face a palace coup from elements within the royal family sympathetic to al-Qaeda.
Saudi sources said the Pentagon had recently sponsored a secret conference to look at options if the royal family fell.
Anti-Abdullah elements within the Saudi government are also thought to have colluded in a wave of bomb attacks on Western targets by Islamic terrorists.
The Western community is living in fear. It has become the target of a series of bomb attacks, carried out by al-Qaeda-linked terrorists who want to drive all non-Muslims out of the Arabian peninsula. But the terrified Westerners have received little help from the Saudi authorities. The secret police instead blame the Westerners for the attacks, locking up the innocent and forcing them to confess. Three have died. Seven are in jail. Others have been arrested, interrogated, tortured and released.
If Saudi Arabia is hit by revolution, then history will say that it started in a girls' school. On 11 March at Girls' Intermediate School No 31 in Mecca at just after 8am an accidental fire took hold. It quickly spread and the teenagers fled outside. But within minutes the religious police, or mutawwa'in, had also arrived. Incredibly, as some girls fled out of one gate the police forced them back in through another. Fourteen girls died in the blaze. Dozens more suffered horrific burns. Their mistake had been to flee the fire without first putting on their black robes and headscarves. Some were still in nightdresses. That was enough for the police effectively to condemn them to death. Some even beat rescue workers trying to save the children. 'Instead of extending a helping hand, they were using their hands to beat us,' one rescue worker said.
The deaths prompted an unprecedented wave of anti-government protest across the country that was hailed by some dissident elements as 'Saudi Arabia's Prague Spring'. Until now details of those protests have been kept secret. But The Observer has interviewed some of the marchers and seen photographs of the demonstrations. Thousands of people, the majority of them women, gathered in streets across the kingdom. Some women even cast off their veils.
The women were joined by a variety of groups, including reformists, pro-Palestinian demonstrators and those belonging to the minority Shia community. Protests swept across the Shia strongholds of the Eastern Province, including the towns of Safwa, Al Qarif, Sayhat and Al Awjam. From the coastal port of Jeddah in the west to the Gulf City of Dhahran in the east, people took to the streets.
The crackdown was brutal. Four days after the demonstrations, police made mass arrests. They picked up the ringleaders and beat female protesters. 'They attacked us with sticks and fired rubber bullets,' said a civil servant. 'They even beat women and the six-year-old child of my neighbour. They concentrated their attack on women.' In Jeddah police locked female students in their compounds and sealed off an area around the US Consulate in Dharan to prevent demonstrators gathering there.
Saudi Arabia is now being pulled violently in two directions. As King Fahd lies dying in a Swiss hospital, the government of the de facto ruler, Crown Prince Abdullah, is being split apart as it seeks to hold a middle ground. In the wake of the fire, Abdullah removed the running of girls' schools from the hands of religious scholars and gave it to the Ministry of Education. It was a bold move and it prompted outrage from Islamists, including those of his main rivals, the conservatives Prince Naif and Prince Sultan. Abdullah's status with the powerful Islamic clerics is already at a record low following the demise of his peace proposals between Israel and Palestinians. He is seen as a sell-out. 'His credibility is completely destroyed,' said Saad al-Fagih, a leading London-based Saudi opposition figure.
Observers believe the Islamists are preparing to strike.
The Afghan President, Hamid Karzai, has dismissed his bodyguards and is being protected by 46 American soldiers, in an extraordinary - and politically explosive - demonstration of how little he trusts his own government.
The Americans, who are believed to include members of the special forces, took up their new duties at the weekend.
The decision is likely to cause anger among Mr Karzai's nominal Afghan allies, many of whom already regard him as a tool of the US and other "infidel" nations.
When AOL bought Time Warner, the New York Times asked me to write a comment piece. "What does it all mean?" my assigning editor asked.
What I wrote was that AOL's purchase of Time Warner heralded the end of the dotcom bubble. AOL was cashing in its casino chips. And just like the gambler who trades in his coloured plastic disks for real cash, AOL's Steve Case understood that his run was over and that it was time to trade in his stock certificates for those of a company that had genuine assets.
The New York Times refused to run the piece. They told me I was misreading the landscape to such an extent that for them to publish such a view would be irresponsible.
At first, military headquarters in Ottawa gave three reasons for blanking out key passages, including the entire section of conclusions about "the nature and quality of the co-ordination between ground and air forces": privacy, operational security, and "so as not to prejudice any possible future activity the U.S. government might choose to take." On questioning, a military spokesman acknowledged that possible U.S. military justice issues were "only incidental."
Neither operational security (the Canadian battalion group has left Afghanistan) nor privacy (the Canadian inquiry, after all, fingered the pilots without naming them) make much more sense.
It was clear that the Pentagon wanted the pilots to bear most, if not, all of the blame. That finding was deliberately leaked to major U.S. newspapers just before President George W. Bush headed off to Kananaskis. In doing so, the whole issue of command and control and the supposedly seamless integration of Canadian and U.S. forces disappeared in the glare of publicity about errant pilots.
Any hint that the U.S. was putting less of a premium on safeguarding soldiers from other nations than its own would be hugely damaging as Washington struggles to hold together a military coalition in Afghanistan. Almost as bad would be an embarrassing revelation that senior commanders had dropped the ball on what is supposed to be their first priority -- safeguarding their own soldiers -- by failing to ensure that pilots knew where their own ground troops were located.
[Halliburton] under Cheney benefited from $3.8bn in government contracts or insured loans. Although Bill Clinton was in the White House, Capitol Hill - where the Appropriations Committee handles government contracts - was controlled by Cheney's Republican Party, to which Halliburton doubled its contributions to $1,212,000 after his arrival.
The most eye-catching contract was for the refurbishment of a Siberian oilfield, Samotlor, for the Tyumen oil company of Russia. The company was loaned $489m in credits by the US Export-Import Bank after lobbying by Halliburton; it was in return to receive $292m for the refurbishments.
The White House and State Department tried to veto the Russian deal. But after intense lobbying by Halliburton the objections were overruled on Capitol Hill. One of Halliburton's top lobbyists was David Gribben, who had been Cheney's chief of staff at the Pentagon.
The State Department's concerns were based on the fact that Tyumen was controlled by a holding conglomerate, the Alfa Group, that had been investigated in Russia for mafia connections.
The raid on July 1 was the sixth since January that the United States had carried out to hunt Taliban leaders in Southern Afghanistan. So far, they have not detained even a single important Taliban leader but have killed more than 80 people.
In Kakrak, five men were arrested. Among the homes hit there was that of Abdul Malik, who fought with Hamid Karzai, now Afghanistan's president, last fall when he launched a local campaign to oust the Taliban. Mr. Malik lost 25 family members.
"Every time they say that they will coordinate more," Mr. Muhammad said. "They killed my people in Oruzgan and they said they would not make a mistake again and that they would contact us first. Then they did it again."
What angered Afghans like Mr. Muhammad, and Westerners working in the area, is what they described as a trigger-happy American approach. No Americans entered the village before the planes opened fire. Once called in, the American AC-130 gunship, which employs heavy-caliber machine guns, and cannons, strafed four villages.
"Two questions remain," said a Western aid official working in southern Afghanistan. "Why they attacked with such force, and what precautionary moves do they take to differentiate between civilians and Al Qaeda and Taliban. They attacked quite a big area, four villages, and you cannot just assume that everyone there is the enemy."
The pattern of striking with maximum force on questionable targets began months before, when American planes attacked an ammunition dump in the village of Niazi Qala, 50 miles south of Kabul, and wiped out the entire village. A United Nations spokeswoman said 52 people died there.

Across Latin America, millions of others are also letting their voices be heard. A popular and political ground swell is building from the Andes to Argentina against the decade-old experiment with free-market capitalism. The reforms that have shrunk the state and opened markets to foreign competition, many believe, have enriched corrupt officials and faceless multinationals, and failed to better their lives.
Usamriid says that it rechecked this year and was able to account for virtually all of the missing specimens except one set that would have been irradiated to render it harmless. But a decade's delay in bothering to look for missing Ebola seems a bit much, and conversations with scientists who have worked at Usamriid do not inspire confidence (although, in fairness, many who talk publicly have lawsuits pending against the lab).
"When I was laid off, I walked out for three days in a row with boxes, and no one looked inside them," recalled Richard Crosland, who worked at Usamriid from 1986 to 1997. "I was there for 11 years, and never once did anyone ask, `Where is the substance you ordered?'
Air Force Brig. Gen. John W. Rosa Jr., the deputy director of operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters it was not clear to him that the AC-130 gunship that attacked the Afghan village had been fired upon first.
"I can't say unequivocally that the AC-130 was fired on. That will come out, hopefully, in the investigation," Rosa said.
. . . Asked about Rosa's comments, Air Force Col. Ray Shepherd, a spokesman at Central Command headquarters that is overseeing the war in Afghanistan, said there is no change in the U.S. version of events.
"there is simply no equivalence between anti-Muslim bigotry in the U.S. and anti-Western and anti-Semitic terrorism in the Arab world. One bigotry mouths off (often appallingly). The other murders thousands of civilians because of their religion and culture and glories in it. "
"So it would be better to "understand" why Islam treats women as poorly as it does? It would be more civilized to "understand" why Islamic societies have never ever treated members of other religions as civic equals? It would be more enlightened to "understand" why so many Muslims are so violent these days?"
"Islam will wear virtually any face as long as it takes to draw you into its insidious embrace. After that you'll be trapped in much the same way small animals are in carniverous plants, drawn in by the sweet smells, then digested at leisure."
"Christianity sees value in every person -- no matter what their station in life is.
There are those who claim to be Christians that are racist, violent hatemongers. They are a minority.
There are those who claim to be Muslims that are racist, violent hatemongers. They are a majority."

When someone expert in bio-warfare mailed anthrax last fall, it may not have been the first time he had struck.
So while the F.B.I. has been unbelievably lethargic in its investigation so far, any year now it will re-examine the package that arrived on April 24, 1997, at the B'nai B'rith headquarters in Washington D.C. The package contained a petri dish mislabeled "anthracks."
The dish did not contain anthrax. But a Navy lab determined that it was bacillus cereus, a very close, non-toxic cousin of anthrax used by the U.S. Defense Department.
Anybody able to obtain bacillus cereus knew how to spell "anthrax." An echo of that deliberate misspelling came last fall when the anthrax letters suggested taking "penacilin."
The choice of B'nai B'rith probably was meant to suggest Arab terrorists, because the building had once been the target of an assault by Muslim gunmen. In the same way, F.B.I. profilers are convinced that the real anthrax attacks last year were conducted by an American scientist trying to pin the blame on Arabs.
Three men once touted as Canadian operatives for Osama bin Laden appear to be far less sinister than officials initially thought.
In the weeks after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in the United States, the men -- Kuwaiti-born Nabil al-Marabh, Syrian-born Hassan Almrei and Somali-born Liban Hussein -- were accused separately of crimes that made front-page news.
Each was portrayed as a Canada-based component of the al-Qaeda network.
But today, law enforcers aren't as eager to accuse the men. Although remaining enveloped in secrecy, the cases against them appear to be less than ironclad, and critics noted that there is no evidence of the men's complicity that was made public.
Mass resignations in the Turkish government. Why should this worry us? Hyperinflation? No. The fact that this is the IMF's biggest creditor? Not particularly.The fact is that Turkey is "leading" the peacekeepers in Northern Afghanistan (not to be confused with those "hunting down Al Qaeda" in Southern Afghanistan). Bankrupt and divided, and our biggest allies.
With government ministers being assasinated how long before we are called back in?
***He said the Securities and Exchange Commission "should be able to punish corporate leaders who are convicted of abusing their powers by banning them from ever serving again as officers or directors of a public company." ...By limiting the suggestion to those convicted of crimes, he stopped well short of what the S.E.C. has sought.
***In some cases, as with his calling on the stock exchanges to require companies listed on them to have more independent directors and to give those outside directors more power, he endorsed proposals that are already sure to be adopted.
***The most important part of the Bush program could be the appointment of what he called a ``financial crimes swat team'' to oversee investigations and prosecutions of corporate officials. ...But administration officials said the creation of the task force did not necessarily mean that more F.B.I. agents or prosecutors would be assigned to such cases, and did not assure a bigger budget for such cases. So it remains to be seen if prosecutions will increase.
***Mr. Bush did not discuss a legislative proposal by Senator Patrick J. Leahy of Vermont, the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, to create a new felony that would prohibit any ``scheme or artifice'' to defraud shareholders. Advocates say that would make it easier to win convictions, but aides to the president declined to say if he would sign a bill containing that provision.
***Mr. Bush promised more financing for the S.E.C., ...but it is smaller than the increases proposed in both House and Senate.
***The president was silent on the important issue of financing for [the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants] and for the Financial Accounting Standards Board, which sets accounting rules. When the Public Accounting Board, a weak regulator of accountants, tried to get tough a couple of years ago, the industry responded by threatening to cut off its funds. It has since disbanded.
***Mr. Bush's soaring oratory yesterday was intended to keep him from being blamed, but he runs the risk of being held to the standard he set. Chief executives, he said, ``set a moral tone by showing their disapproval of other executives who bring discredit to the business world.'' ...Yet Mr. Bush has so far stood by Thomas E. White, the Army secretary, who as an Enron executive ran an operation whose accounting has been repudiated by the company and who held on to his Enron stock for many months after taking office, selling only after talking to former Enron colleagues.
Since 9/11, appalling hate speech about Islam has circulated in the U.S. on talk radio, on the Internet and in particular among conservative Christian pastors -- the modern echoes of Charles Coughlin, the "radio priest" who had a peak listening audience in the 1930's of one-third of America for his anti-Semitic diatribes.
...One problem with this prejudice (as with Osama bin Laden's) is that it blinds the bigots to any understanding of what they deride. If Islam were really just the caricature that it is often reduced to, then how would it be so appealing as to become the world's fastest-growing religion?
Islam already has 1.3 billion adherents and is spreading rapidly, particularly in Africa, partly because it also has admirable qualities that anyone who has lived in the Muslim world observes: a profound egalitarianism and a lack of hierarchy that confer dignity and self-respect among believers; greater hospitality than in other societies; an institutionalized system of charity, zakat, to provide for the poor. Many West Africans, for example, see Christianity as corrupt and hierarchical and flock to Islam, which they view as democratic and inclusive.
One can dispute that, and it's reasonable to worry about the implications of the spread of Islam for the status of women and for the genital mutilation of girls. But simply thundering that Islam is intrinsically violent does not help to understand it and picks up on racist and xenophobic threads that are some of the sorriest chapters in our history.
Last month, many of the delegates to Afghanistan's loya jirga (grand council), complained that Mr. Karzai was granting too much power to the warlords by appointing them or their close allies to positions of power.
However, the President gambled that the warlords were as sick of the violence, bloodshed and disorder as most of their fellow countrymen and were ready to play a peaceful political role.
"We have to put resentment behind us and look to the future of this country and build this country," he said last month.
However, there are few signs of that transformation.
Regional warlords still maintain small private armies and large caches of weapons, paid for chiefly through smuggling, extortion and drug dealing.
...Despite promises from time to time, none of the major warlords has been willing to hand over substantial stocks of weapons and ammunition to the Afghan national army.
Even Defence Minister Mohammed Fahim is believed by foreign diplomats and intelligence officers to be hoarding stockpiles of heavy weapons in the Panjshir Valley. Mr. Fahim is in charge of the national army.
Although Mr. Fahim and the others say they are not trying to undermine the national army, which the United States considers the cornerstone of a strategy for restoring internal security, there are indications that the warlords' main priority is to ensure that their own private forces remain well-stocked.
The Afghans had nothing to do with what happened to our country on September 11. But Saudi Arabia did. It seems like Osama is involved, but we don't really know. I mean, when we went into Afghanistan to take over the place and blow it up, our commanding general was asked how long it was going to take to find Osama bin Laden. And the commanding general looked rather surprised and said, well, that's not why we are here.
Oh no? So what was all this about? It was about the Taliban being very, very bad people and that they treated women very badly, you see. They're not really into women's rights, and we here are very strong on women's rights; and we should be with Bush on that one because he's taking those burlap sacks off of women's heads. Well, that's not what it was about.
What it was really about -- and you won't get this anywhere at the moment -- is that this is an imperial grab for energy resources. Until now, the Persian Gulf has been our main source for imported oil. We went there, to Afghanistan, not to get Osama and wreak our vengeance. We went to Afghanistan partly because the Taliban -- whom we had installed at the time of the Russian occupation -- were getting too flaky and because Unocal, the California corporation, had made a deal with the Taliban for a pipeline to get the Caspian-area oil, which is the richest oil reserve on Earth. They wanted to get that oil by pipeline through Afghanistan to Pakistan to Karachi and from there to ship it off to China, which would be enormously profitable. Whichever big company could cash in would make a fortune. And you'll see that all these companies go back to Bush or Cheney or to Rumsfeld or someone else on the Gas and Oil Junta, which, along with the Pentagon, governs the United States.
We had planned to occupy Afghanistan in October, and Osama, or whoever it was who hit us in September, launched a pre-emptory strike. They knew we were coming. And this was a warning to throw us off guard.
It is no accident that the current wave of costly corporate scandals followed the rise of modern conservatism to political power two decades ago. Ronald Reagan governed while denigrating government as "the problem, not the solution." He starved agencies of resources and placed committed ideological opponents in charge of them. Reagan's Commerce Department drew up a hit list of regulations resented by business ("the Terrible 20"). And of course Reagan signed the law that deregulated the savings and loans associations, while his appointee revoked requirements that any S&L have 400 shareholders. The resulting infamies cost taxpayers many billions.
The conservative assault on government reached fever pitch when Newt Gingrich led the "perfectionist" caucus of the Republican right to take over Congress. For Gingrich conservatives, government regulation was creeping Stalinism. House Majority leader Dick Armey said that in the New Deal and the Great Society, "you will find, with a difference only in power and nerve the same sort of person who gave the world its Five Year Plans and Great Leaps Forward -- the Soviet and Chinese counterparts."
And it wasn't just rhetoric. "Regulatory agencies have run amok and need to be reformed," said Rep. Tom DeLay of Texas, the House majority whip, as he invited business lobbyists to detail the regulations they wanted gutted.
A centerpiece of Gingrich's Contract With America was "securities reform." Passed in 1995 over President Clinton's veto, the bill shielded outside accountants and law firms from liability for false corporate reporting, and made it more difficult for shareholders to bring suit against fraudulent reporting. A flood of corporate misstatements has followed, with nearly 1,000 companies restating misleading reports in the past five years.

Each year, Americans spend as much on lawn maintenance as the government of India collects in federal tax revenue.
The use of lawn chemicals is dramatically increasing despite alarming reports of increasing rates of cancer and the perennial threat posed to children, pets, and wildlife. According to a recent study (U.S. News 4/3/1999) the number of Americans treating their lawns has risen from 55 percent to 67 percent just in the last decade . Although many factors affect people's vulnerability to cancer, increasing pesticide use may be partially responsible for the staggering one percent per year increase in cancer rates among children. The rise lawn chemical use is also problematic for the growing number of people who work with these chemicals; pesticide sprayers have been shown to have significantly higher incidence of lymphoma and possibly other immuno-response deficiencies. Even pets are at risk; the rates of lymphoma among pets of lawn chemical users is double that of non-chemical users.
Diazinon has been banned from use on golf courses and sod farms because it is responsible for deaths of large numbers of birds on turf and in agriculture. YET... it is still allowed to be used in our common lawn and garden products.
. . . Bird kills associated with diazinon use have been reported in every area of the country and at all times of the year. Diazinon is highly toxic to fish and bees.
Residues of diazinon have been found in the air of garden stores where it was being displayed and sold.
Lawn fertilizer . . . contains nitrogen compounds called nitrates. When fertilizer gets applied excessively or just prior to a rainstorm, it washes off the lawn and into the gutter, where it makes its way through the storm sewer system and into a river or lake. Once in the water, these nitrates have the same effect on algae as they do on lawns - they make it grow! Overgrown algae can have devastating effects on a lake or stream, consuming all the oxygen and suffocating fish and other aquatic wildlife. This is called eutrophication.

Given what is now the apparent blatant corporate disregard for the law, even in areas where executives are most closely watched, what should we expect is occurring elsewhere? What's happening with consumer rip-offs, sales of unsafe products, endangerment of workers, pollution of the environment?
Even with inadequate law enforcement, reporting requirements or organized countervailing institutions, we know enough to know that the epidemic of corporate crime, fraud and abuse is at least as severe outside of the financial arena as within.
..."Cracking down on corporate crime" -- the mantra of the moment -- cannot be limited just to financial crime, already the most policed form of corporate wrongdoing.
What has been revealed in corporate America over the past six months is a two-tier system of morality: Low-paid employees are required to be hard-working, law-abiding, rule-respecting straight arrows. More than that, they are often expected to exhibit a selfless generosity toward the company, readily "donating" chunks of their time free of charge. Meanwhile, as we have learned from the cases of Enron, Adelphia, ImClone, WorldCom and others, many top executives have apparently felt free to do whatever they want — conceal debts, lie about profits, engage in insider trading — to the dismay and sometimes ruin of their shareholders.
But investors are not the only victims of the corporate crime wave. Workers also suffer from management greed and dishonesty. In Wal-Mart's case, the moral gravity of its infractions is compounded by the poverty of its "associates," many of whom are paid less than $10 an hour. As workers discover that their problem is not just a rogue store manager or "bad apple" but management as a whole, we can expect at the very least widespread cynicism, and perhaps an epidemic of rule-breaking from below.
The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) provides a bare minimum of reproductive health care for women in developing countries -- or in cases like Afghanistan, completely destroyed countries. UNFPA runs maternity hospitals, provides family planning advice and dispenses sterile emergency birth kits for refugees. It is not involved in any way with abortion.
But this fact -- verified by several independent investigations, including one by U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell just last year -- cuts no ice with the bug-eyed fanatics that Bush and Cheney have empowered. They insist that UNFPA is in cahoots with China's forced abortion and sterilization programs, and thus not a cent of sacred American money -- doesn't it say "In God We Trust" on every precious greenback? -- should be spent on the devil's handiwork.
Although forced abortion and sterilization were once lauded by good Christian Rightists as a means of ridding the world of "inferior breeds" (indeed, the Bush family has a long history of involvement with the "eugenics" movement and its modern offspring), the "pro-life" battle now provides convenient cover for the Right's larger anti-woman (no, anti-human) agenda.
Bush has plucked extremists from several pseudo-religious culture-war factions to represent the United States in high-level UN negotiations on such controversial issues as protecting children, combating AIDS and the truly heinous Convention on Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women. The Bushvolk have aligned the U.S. with enlightened states like Sudan, Iran and Iraq to thwart even these extremely modest attempts to provide a few scraps of human dignity to the "insulted and injured," the weakest, most brutalized and vulnerable of our common species.
Bush's Bug-Eyes say such efforts are "unscriptural," and threaten the God-given order of slaveowning, childbeating, womanhating and ethnic cleansing enshrined in that rattle bag of Bronze Age texts called the Bible. And the polyp-less president agrees -- for hath not the Lord made His healing light to shine upon His exalted servant's pure and gleaming colon?

Listening to US leaders over the past six months, it seems that the unnameable, unknowable enemy in the war on terror is everywhere - and nowhere. The evil forces that would attack and undermine America are present in 'up to 60 nations' and everywhere from 'Brussels to Bagram' - but on the ground in Afghanistan, where an actual war is taking place, there is no sign of bin Laden, Muhammad Omar, or any of the other al-Qaeda and Taliban leaders that allied forces have spent nine months searching for. Indeed, many now question how coherent or big an organisation al-Qaeda actually is.
There seems to be a fantasy enemy, against whom Bush and co can make grand pronouncements and big bad threats - and a real enemy, which has continuously eluded American and British forces in Afghanistan. A fantasy war on terror, where America and its allies look strong and determined - and a real war in Afghanistan, where the war aims change on a weekly basis and where operation after operation ends in failure.
The United Nations has suspended its programme of returning refugees to northern Afghanistan because of the "extremely volatile" security situation.
Yussuf Hassan, the spokesman for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in Kabul, said on Tuesday that conditions were now too "precarious".
The Advantages and Limitations of Calmatives for Use as a Non-Lethal Technique, a 49 page report obtained last week by the Sunshine Project under US information freedom law, has revealed a shocking Pentagon program that is researching psychopharmacological weapons. Based on "extensive review conducted on the medical literature and new developments in the pharmaceutical industry", the report concludes that "the development and use of [psychopharmacological weapons] is achievable and desirable." These mind-altering weapons violate international agreements on chemical and biological warfare as well as human rights. Some of the techniques discussed in the report have already been used by the US in the "War on Terrorism".
The team, which is based at the Applied Research Laboratory of Pennsylvania State University, is assessing weaponization of a number of psychiatric and anesthetic pharmaceuticals as well as "club drugs" (such as the "date rape drug" GHB). According to the report, "the choice administration route, whether application to drinking water, topical administration to the skin, an aerosol spray inhalation route, or a drug filled rubber bullet, among others, will depend on the environment." The environments identified are specific military and civil situations, including "hungry refugees that are excited over the distribution of food", "a prison setting", an "agitated population" and "hostage situations". At times, the Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Directorate (JNLWD) team's report veers very close to defining dissent as a psychological disorder.
...Most of the JNLWD team's weapon candidates are controlled substances in most countries. Some are widely used legitimate pharmaceuticals that are also drugs of abuse, such as Valium and opiates. The Pentagon team advocates more research into the weapons potential of convulsants (which provoke seizures) and “club drugs”, the generally illegal substances used by some at "rave" and dance clubs. Among those in the military spotlight are ketamine ("Special K"), GHB (Gamma-hydroxybutrate, "liquid ecstasy"), and rohypnol ("Roofies"). The latter two in particular are called "date rape drugs" because of incidences of their use on victims of sexual and other crimes. Most are DEA Schedule I or II narcotics that provoke hallucinations and can carry a sentence of life imprisonment.
Senior officials in the [British] Prime Minister's office have launched an astonishing attack on America's handling of the hunt for Osama bin Laden and al-Qa'eda fugitives.
They have told The Telegraph that troops carrying out house-to-house searches in the remote tribal areas of Pakistan along the Afghanistan border were "blundering" with a "march-in-shooting" approach.
The US action was "backfiring", increasing support for terrorism and making it harder for bin Laden and his henchmen to be caught.
"The Americans think they and the Pakistanis can just march in shooting", said an official closely involved in the direction of the war.
"They don't understand the sensitivities. We have years of experience in the tribal areas and we know using force will just backfire and increase sympathy for al-Qa'eda."
For all British and U.S. leaders' grand pronouncements of solidarity in the face of terrorism, the "true friendship" between Bush and Blair seems to be in short supply -- at least between U.S. forces and Royal Marines in the hills of east Afghanistan. Indeed, while politicians at home talk about standing "shoulder to shoulder," their forces on the ground can barely see eye to eye.
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