Daily Report
"National Strategy for Combatting Terrorism" released
The White House has just released its 2006 National Strategy for Combatting Terrorism. The page on "Today's Terrorist Enemy" again acknowledges that al-Qaeda has only transformed over the past five years from a tight cadre organization around Osama bin Laden to a "transnational movement". Yet it says this while avoiding overt recognition of the obvious implication that this constitutes a massive expansion of al-Qaeda's numbers, power and reach (if not of Osama bin Laden's direct control), and that the Global War on Terrorism has only backfired horribly (if we are to accept its apparent aims as the intended ones.)
WHY WE FIGHT
From New York's WNBC, Sept. 7:
Woman Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run
NEW YORK -- Police on Wednesday were searching for two men wanted in connection with a hit-and-run crash in Queens that left a woman dead. Yon S. Chong, 67, was hit by a pickup truck at 23rd Avenue and Northern Boulevard in Bayside around 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, investigators said. She was pronounced dead at the scene.
Iraq: more Shi'ite pilgrims massacred; Pentagon foresees "civil war"
Six bomb attacks in Baghdad killed at least 17 people and wounded more than 50 Sept. 8, hours before a much-touted ceremony in which the US-led international coalition officially handed over control of the country’s armed forces command to Iraqi authorities. The bombs, including three suicide car attacks, all targeted police patrols and occurred within about three hours of each other. Meanwhile, the nephew of Iraq’s parliament speaker, Mahmoud al-Mashhadani, was kidnapped from his home in the Hurriyah neighborhood of north Baghdad. (IOL, Sept. 7)
US rebukes Iraqi Kurds, PKK operative arrested
Far from pursuing ultra-ambitious neocon agendas to dismantle Iraq, Washington appears terrified of a unified Iraqi state under at least some degree of US control breaking down, and sparking a crisis that could engulf the entire Middle East. On Sept. 5, the US harshly criticized the decree by Masoud Barzani, president of Iraq's northern Kurdish region, banning the Iraqi national flag. "Unilateral steps by regions or parties on this issue are inappropriate and do not have the support of the United States," envoy Zalmay Khalilzad said, adding Washington was committed to "Iraq's unity and territorial integrity".
9-11 health impact dispute: "We never lied," Christine Whitman lies
It is a truly appalling spectacle to watch former EPA administrator Christine Todd Whitman and New York City officials pass the buck for the deadly 9-11 health fallout back and forth like a shuttlecock. Whitman said in a "60 Minutes" interview to be aired this weekend that the EPA did not have authority over the Ground Zero site, and claimed she provided an accurate assessment of the air quality following the attacks. She distinguished between the air in lower Manhattan, which was considered safe, and the air at Ground Zero, which was not. "The readings [in lower Manhattan] were showing us that there was nothing that gave us any concern about long-term health implications," she said. "That was different from on the pile itself, at ground zero. There, we always said consistently, 'You've got to wear protective gear.'" (AP, Sept. 8)
"America safer": Bush contradicts State Department
Unable to keep himself from milking 9-11 for all it's worth, Bush is treading, once again, into the realm of Doublethink. At his most recent in a spate of 9-11-themed speeches, in Atlanta Sept. 7, he said:
"Many Americans look at these events and ask the same question: Five years after 9/11, are we safer? The answer is, yes, America is safer. We are safer because we've taken action to protect the homeland. We are safer because we are on offense against our enemies overseas. We are safer because of the skill and sacrifice of the brave Americans who defend our people."
Euro-imperialist aggression against the Moon
Under the happy headline "Space Probe Slams Into Moon," the shameless techno-boosters at Space.com note Sept. 4:
A European lunar orbiter was purposely slammed into the Moon today.
Colombia: paramilitary patriarch killed on brother's orders
Carlos Castaño, patriarch of Colombia's far-right paramilitary movement, is confirmed dead at the age of 39. Mario Iguaran, Colombia's chief prosecutor, said a skeleton unearthed from a shallow grave was that of Castaño, the long-missing leader of the feared Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC). The government "has the full identification that this is Castaño," Iguaran said, pointing to a 99.99% match between Castaño's DNA and that of the skeleton.

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