Today, administration officials have briefed select Congressional
committees on an issue of great international concern. Until Sept. 6,
2007, the Syrian regime was building a covert nuclear reactor in its
eastern desert capable of producing plutonium. We are convinced, based
on a variety of information, that North Korea assisted Syria's covert
nuclear activities. We have good reason to believe that reactor, which
was damaged beyond repair on Sept. 6 of last year, was not intended for
peaceful purposes. Carefully hidden from view, the reactor was not
configured for such purposes. In defiance of its international
obligations, Syria did not inform the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) of the construction of the reactor, and, after it was
destroyed, the regime moved quickly to bury evidence of its existence.
This cover-up only served to reinforce our confidence that this reactor
was not intended for peaceful activities.
We are briefing the IAEA on this intelligence. The Syrian regime must
come clean before the world regarding its illicit nuclear activities.
The Syrian regime supports terrorism, takes action that destabilizes
Lebanon, allows the transit of some foreign fighters into Iraq, and
represses its own people. If Syria wants better relations with the
international community, it ... more »
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Saturday, April 26
by
Publisher
on Sat 26 Apr 2008 10:51 PM CDT
by
Publisher
on Sat 26 Apr 2008 10:49 PM CDT
The United States has the combat power to strike Teheran if needed,
Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff warned
Friday.
He alleged Iran was ratcheting up its support for militias in Iraq by providing them with newly manufactured weapons and bringing them across the border to receive training from members of Teheran's Republican Guard. Mullen said the military is preparing to roll out evidence, including date stamps on newly found weapons caches, to prove that recently made Iranian weapons are flowing into Iraq at a steadily increasing rate. He would not detail the evidence, which is expected to be revealed by military leaders in Iraq as early as next week. Another senior military official said it will include mortars, rockets, small arms, roadside bombs and armor-piercing explosives, known as explosively formed penetrators or EFPs that troops have discovered in caches in recent months. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the evidence has not yet been made public, said dates on some of the weapons were well after Teheran indicated late last year that it was scaling back aid to insurgents. In addition, the evidence will include information gleaned from detainees who were ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 26 Apr 2008 10:46 PM CDT
By Louis René Beres and Isaac Ben-Israel
April 26, 2008 Israel's Strategic Future, a special report of the Project Daniel Group, was presented to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon on January 16, 2003. Among other things, the report asserted that under no circumstances should Iran be allowed to “go nuclear.” This firm position stemmed from our understanding that stable deterrence could never exist with a nuclear Iran led by the current extreme regime, and that Iran's belligerent stance toward Israel had remained openly genocidal. Iran has advanced steadily with plans to build and deploy nuclear weapons. On April 8, 2008, Iran's “National Day of Nuclear Technology,” President Ahmadinejad announced his intent to install 6,000 additional centrifuges at the Natanz uranium enrichment facility. Now no serious observer could any longer accept the argument that Iran seeks nuclear power only for peaceful purposes. International law is not a suicide pact. Every state has not only the right, but also the obligation, to protect its citizens from aggression. This expectation is beyond any moral or legal question when a determined and possibly irrational enemy seeks nuclear weapons. Ideally, Israel could deter any Iranian WMD attack by maintaining a credible posture of nuclear deterrence. But ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 26 Apr 2008 04:19 PM AKDT
Brussels - The European Union (EU) has no plans to abolish England,
officials in Brussels insisted after two British newspapers accused the
EU of wanting to "wipe England off the map."
"There are no secret plans to carve up the continent in a way that makes England disappear. There is no goal of creating a United States of Europe," a European Commission spokeswoman said. The comments came after two popular British tabloids, the Sun and the Daily Mail, celebrated the day of England's national saint, St George, by revealing the existence of "EU plots to carve up Britain." "Secret plans" drawn up in Brussels included maps "wiping out" England and the English name of the body of water separating Britain from Europe, "the English Channel," in favour of the unpatriotic "Channel Sea," the papers claimed. Reproductions of the maps provided by the newspapers divided Britain into "North Sea," "Atlantic" and "Trans-Manche" regions - the latter referring to the French name for the Channel, "la Manche." "The words 'England' and 'Britain' are left off official maps of each area," the Daily Mail stormed, accusing the British government of being "fully behind the project" nevertheless. But EU officials denied absolutely the existence ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 26 Apr 2008 04:13 PM AKDT
CHICAGO, April 24, 2008 (LifeSiteNews.com) - The U.S. Court of Appeals
for the 7th Circuit reversed a lower court's ruling against an Illinois
student Wednesday, saying the district court must order a Naperville
high school to suspend its ban on a T-shirt that reads "Be Happy, Not
Gay" while the student's lawsuit proceeds. School officials prohibited
student Alex Nuxoll, who is represented by Alliance Defense Fund
attorneys, from wearing the clothing.
"Christian students shouldn't be discriminated against for expressing their beliefs," said ADF Senior Counsel Nate Kellum. "Public school officials cannot censor a message expressing one viewpoint on homosexual behavior and then at the same time allow messages that express another viewpoint. The court's ruling is a victory for all students seeking to protect their First Amendment rights on a school campus." Nuxoll, a student at Neuqua Valley High School, desires to express his perspective at various times throughout the year, including the next school day after the "Day of Silence." Other students at the school are permitted to wear shirts with messages supporting homosexual behavior as part of the "Day of Silence," which is sponsored by the Gay, Lesbian, Straight Education Network. The 7th Circuit ruling prevents school officials ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 26 Apr 2008 03:54 PM AKDT
By Ayesha Rascoe - Analysis
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Midwest has enjoyed nearly 20 years without a major drought but forecasters worry the corn belt's luck could dry up this year, further squeezing tight global supplies amid soaring food prices. With its last major drought in 1988, the Midwest has reached its average span of 18.6 years between droughts. Considering that statistic and current weather conditions, Iowa State University extension climatologist Elwynn Taylor said the corn belt has a one in three chance of drought this year. "We do have to be prepared," Taylor said. "A 33 percent chance is high, that's a risk." The Midwest's chances of drought are exacerbated by La Nina, an unusual cooling of Pacific Ocean surface temperatures that can trigger widespread changes in global weather patterns. If La Nina has not dissipated by July, Taylor saw a 70 percent chance for U.S. corn yields below the 30-year trend of 150.6 bushels per acre. "We don't have any reason to think La Nina causes drought, but it certainly does aggravate it," Taylor said. Drought is not a foregone conclusion for the Midwest, where excessive wetness has held up spring corn plantings. Crops may benefit from ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 26 Apr 2008 03:47 PM AKDT
BEIJING, April 24 (Xinhuanet) -- Mountain pine beetles that are
destroying forests along much of the Rocky Mountain range are doing so
much damage that they may affect climate change, Canadian researchers
reported on Wednesday.
The damage is nearly equivalent to the polluting effects of forest fires, they reported in the journal Nature. "In the worst year, the impacts resulting from the beetle outbreak in British Columbia were equivalent to 75 percent of the average annual direct forest fire emissions from all of Canada during 1959-1999," Werner Kurz of the Canadian Forest Service in Victoria, British Columbia and colleagues wrote. Usually, a forest is a carbon "sink," soaking up carbondioxide that would otherwise affect the atmosphere and help hold in heat. The beetle, namely Dendroctonus ponderosae, changed that. Dead trees release carbon as they rot, and of course fail to use carbon dioxide as they would if alive. The beetles lay eggs under the bark of lodge-pole pine and jack-pine trees, eventually killing them. Once beetles infest a tree, it cannot be saved. They have destroyed 50,000 square miles (130,000 square kilometers) of forest in western Canada alone. Hundreds of thousands of square ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 26 Apr 2008 03:42 PM AKDT
By Julie Steenhuysen
CHICAGO (Reuters) - A proposed solution to reverse the effects of global warming by spraying sulfate particles into Earth's stratosphere could make matters much worse, climate researchers said on Thursday. They said trying to cool off the planet by creating a kind of artificial sun block would delay the recovery of the Antarctic ozone hole by 30 to 70 years and create a new loss of Earth's protective ozone layer over the Arctic. "What our study shows is if you actually put a lot of sulfur into the atmosphere we get a larger ozone depletion than we had before," said Simone Tilmes of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, whose research appears in the journal Science. The sulfur injection idea has been proposed by a number of climate scientists as a potential solution to global warming. Tilmes said the idea was intended to mimic the effects of a major volcanic eruption. Such eruptions in the past sent plumes of sun-blocking sulfur into an upper layer of the atmosphere known as the stratosphere that cooled temperatures on Earth.Ozone in the stratosphere provides a protective layer high above Earth's surface that guards against harmful solar radiation.... more » |
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