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Ivan
Posted on Tuesday, February 06, 2007 - 09:58 am:   

War Handicaps Reason- 2: War IS Handicapped Reason.

Sin-political-religion:

This is a continuation of War handicaps Reason, which has run long, but still open. On this continued thread, the emphasis is less on how war is cause for failed reason, as much as war being the effect of failed reason.

We are all reasonable beings, to a greater or lesser degree, and if we were only reasonable, one could make the argument that we could always find a way to agreement, and thus avoid war. However, we are not always reasonable, or not reasonable enough to find agreement, so that in the failed reason context, there will be those who will pose to force their will on others, which is war. As had been explored on the predecessor thread, war has many examples of imposed will on others, against their agreement. Coercion demands response, however, so war results when reason fails and coercion is forced. That's war.

I would like to propose it one step further, in this discussion on war. That we leave out the political religious aspect of war, or using Spanish preposition for 'without', I call it "Sin-political-religion" approach to war. Religion, as stated many times here, is a personal thing. But when politicized, then it becomes an evil thing. As the founding fathers of this great free nation, Jefferson, Adams, Madison, so wisely concluded, there must be a separation of church and state, or religion and governance, to prevent the tyrannical abuses of dogma in human affairs, if we are to enjoy our newly found freedoms. Any belief system that will force individuals into a political act against other individuals in the name of God is a failed system where it degrades God by making man act for God. This then becomes an admission that God is incapable of running the universe, and human affairs in it, and must default to its lesser species of man to force other men and women to do as He needs. To me this idea is profane, since it belittles God to becoming man's servant in the world, which is an absurdity. So to force political action against others in the name of God is blasphemy against God, even a rape of God's Love for humanity, to serve the intents and ambitions of men. That makes these ambitions and intents of such men evil, by this definition, because it subordinates God to man. And that subordination is failed reason, the cause of so much strife and suffering in the world at the hands of men.

So in this discussion, let us turn our attention to 'sin-political-religion' causes for war, those that force human beings into conflict with one another, not involving God but man. As free human beings, we have no business acting for God, because God does not need us to act for Him, but rather we have an obligation to each other to act in ways that are reasonable to enhance our ability to find agreement, as opposed to acting in ways that coerce us into conflict with one another. A prime example is Iraq. Here we imposed, by deposing an evil dictator, a form of democratic government on a people who had not freedom and democratic principles in their cultural history; rather they had only known oppression at the hands of dictators. Granted there are progressively thinking Iraqis who do want freedom and democracy, but they are badly outnumbered by those who are regressive and only understand the use of force, the politicized force of religious dogma of man against man. The results are self evident. Once democracy is introduced, without sufficient force to stop those who coerce for their political ambitions, the process fails. What happens then is what we see, increasingly violent and vile behavior of man against man, killing and suicide bombings, citizens of Iraq turned against each other en masse in a sectarian war. Sin-political-religion, this would not have happened, but we did not foresee the power of religious dogma on the political structures of the region, and thus stepped into a hornets nest from which we will need to withdraw. War is the currency in present day Iraq, to the distress of those who would see a successful nation as a member of the world, and now will be isolated to its religious and regional sectarian conflicts. Such a thing would not have been foreseen by the founding fathers of our nation, though it too forged its freedoms out of war. Can the Iraqi conflicts result in the same freedoms for the Iraqi people, or all the people of the Middle East? That will be left to them, and to God, sin-political-religious meddling on the part of God.

The threat of war today, just as posed by political Islamic Jihad, all around the world (about 80% of all world conflicts have Islamic Jihad on either one or both sides of the conflict), and especially as it applies to safeguarding our hard earned freedoms at home, is in large part a conflict against the politically motivated forces of using God to force others against their will, against their freedoms. As failed reason, war is a failure of humanity to respect each other's divinity before God, that each human being is born free to be who God made them to be, and thus use violence to impose political ambitions on others. Iraq is a best case test of such failure, and the violence that results, what had been violence for 1400 years in the imposition of a political dogma on others, is what we have to fight against. We are fighting war itself, and failed reason handicapped by political-religious motivations is what we must overcome. Can it be done? Let us see if there can be a way out of this mess created by ignorant, and ill believing, human beings who do not believe God is powerful enough to run the universe, and our world, but must act politically on His behalf. That sin-political-religion solution to war may be one way to bring a sustainable historical peace to our world. This we must believe, that without political-religious coercions, without politicizing individuals to force others in the name of God, truly a failed reason, we can have peace.

So let us bring back power to the people, as a freedom loving people, and find a way to peace, a lasting world peace for all humanity. Was is failed reason. So let us find a true path to peace, a reason for peace to win over war.


Ivan

Also see: Not religion but culture
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Tuesday, February 06, 2007 - 10:57 am:   

So let us find a true path to peace, a reason for peace to win over war.
Posted on Tuesday, February 06, 2007 - 09:58 am: Ivan


Why fight? Take the case of Iraq itself. There are refugees - internal refugees. Yes some have gone to neighboring countries. What is their status? Are they integrated with the population of the host country? They are kept in refugee camps in such a pathetic condition that they would love to return to their homeland as soon as possible.

My question: Can the nations assimilate the refugees who come to them? Are there limitations that need to be overcome so that one who was driven out from own country could settle where he / she reached for safe haven?

As regards the other thread I have no difficulty in closing it if other posters agree. Do we explore ways to avert the impending war on Iran in this thread?
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Ivan
Posted on Tuesday, February 06, 2007 - 06:23 pm:   


quote:

As regards the other thread I have no difficulty in closing it if other posters agree. Do we explore ways to avert the impending war on Iran in this thread? --Mohideen



Not planned to close other thread, unless there's call for it.

As far as "impending war on Iran" is concerned, none is impending that anyone knows of. What is impending is a strategic strike against deep bunkered nuclear facility installations, not a full invasion war of Iran. Really, what would such an invasion gain? Would it benefit the Iranian people? Not very likely, seeing how deposing a dictator in Iraq did not benefit the people there. The only concern is Iran's clerics hankering for the atomic bomb to boost their power and prestige. That will not be allowed to happen by the world community, in my opinion.

Ivan
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Anon
Posted on Tuesday, February 06, 2007 - 07:28 pm:   

A very well thought out and articulate statement Ivan.

As to Mohideen's statement, I concur that we should close the other thread and put it to rest.

It is my belief that we are witnessing the birth of a new age. One where the people are gaining a new ability to influence events and make their voices and opinions heard on the world stage. Linked via the Internet, modern communications capability and common shared beliefs people can organize themselves to take back control of their destiny from groups of elites who hold the reigns of power.

In this new age, command of information, access to the media and power of the internet has allowed the people of the United States of America to regain control of their government. This is despite the power of the republicans, which manifested itself in congressional redistricting, appointment of government officials, and determining who gets hired and fired from federal service. This power was challenged by people, organized and linked by the Internet, who coupled their genius to a network of organizations in a grand alliance to bring and end to single party rule in this country.

Al Qeada has done a similar thing within the world of Islam but has turned its collective human resources, genius and technological capability to destructive ends.

At the height of the battle to bring down single party rule, my allies and I had to use every resource at our disposal to bring out the hidden truths and misdeeds and failures of the republicans for the people to judge. In doing so many men and women sacrificed careers, jobs, homes and prospects for further service to this nation on behalf of the federal government. Posted on these web pages are lists of some of those people. Common to them were some characteristics that bound them together in an alliance. Some became vocal advocates in public; others used the Internet to provide guidance and command and control; while others still remained silent in the government but leaked information of illegal or moral activities that the government wanted to keep secret. Common traits shared by these men and women were, faith in god and the people of the United States; faith in Science and technology; and a deep reverence for the constitution of the United States, freedom of speech and religion.

In earlier decades similar events involved much bloodshed, loss of life and the destruction of property. We can look back to the Great Civil Rights Movement, the Protests over Vietnam and see an evolution occurring within the advanced nations of the world. Were people wake up and say enough is enough we will accept no more dictators and end the rule of state for the state by the state and not of the people for people by the people.

Within Iran the seeds of change have been sown. Networks of people seeking change are beginning to be established. Hindered by the organs of state security the growth of these networks is slow but gaining momentum. To bring peaceful change to Iran will take a combination of skilled diplomacy, tailored sanctions, use of the media and well thought out covert operations.

As I sit here, I note I have just come from a counseling session with my readjustment counselor. She tells me it is time to let go and move on with my life. That my days of briefing general officers, influencing national policy and engaging in intelligence operations are over. That I need to turn my predictive skills and talents to other tasks and seek to contribute to society in other ways. I agreed and though it pains me I must let go of my predictions of terrorist attacks and the rest.

I told her that I have recently reviewed the evaluations of Intelligence Officer performance at our National Training Center on the Global Security Website and found them to be shocking. They indicate that our intelligence officers lack the ability to fully develop and use the tools of predictive analysis to project enemy courses of action. Because of this many are dying that might yet live. I told my counselor that from my time in the Middle East I found the Islamic people to be very intelligent. Many could recite verse after verse of the Koran from memory, perform complex calculations without the aid of calculators, and remember where every item was in a jumbled store. This ability coupled to years and decades of fighting the Soviets in Afghanistan, and the Egyptian security services is what these S2/Intelligence officers are up against. These men communicate via code speak and share a common vision they are trying to bring about. A vision of which we have only fragments of data to work with in terms of rebuilding what they are up too. These are the same men that killed Sadat for making peace with Isreal.

On this site I have demonstrated my ability to take fragments of data and link them to form a coherent whole picture of what is to come. That one man can do such things is possible. That Osama could do it is understood. That there are men and women that oppose him with the same abilities is also understood. That our president lacks this ability is a given. At the height of the battle I predicted the effects of storms, earthquakes, the crisis in Sudan, terrorist attacks, survived poisoning, CNS, spinal cord and nervous system damage then went on to achieve dean’s list at university while working 70 plus hours a week. I also solved the Billiard Problem with compass and ruler. All of this despite being 80 percent disabled. It was my intent to set a mark by which future intelligence officers would be measured. I believe I have done so. I have just finished watching the movie the Guardian and I am still waiting for an intelligence officer to take my place and exceed what I have done. When that day comes I will rest easy.

As to where we go from here. That is something we will have to explore in future posts. I have some tasks to work on and leave the rest for now up to you.

My Best

Ed
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Naive
Posted on Wednesday, February 07, 2007 - 12:19 am:   

Children like to resolve their conflicts through brute force. I have often wondered if people have a disposition toward violence. Is the reaction within us, that demands violent response, a chemical process within the brain? Take for example sleep. We must sleeep to dream. Dreams help the brain release various chemicals which keep restores balance to the imbalances of the earlier day. Without sleep, we perish. In essence we are addicted to sleep.

Are we addicted to violence as well? Is this why we jump to rash decision making when we are angry? Is it a needed chemical process, that quells some internal imbalance caused by our initial reaction to an unfavorable event? Why in the world do we want to lash out? Is it a complex version of fight or flight?

Whatever the case, the propensity for violence is indeed related to a specific chemical response to some perceived stimulus. The real question is not how it happens, but why don't we spend more time and money researching the process and ways to stop it? On the other hand, the fact that a large number of people are required to wage war is a far more complex version of the afore mentioned process. I don't think you can exclude the internal workings of a governing body in its ability to manipulate the personal feelings of its citizens (in essence the government stokes the fire of the public's individual brain processes). Conformity, religious fervor, whatever you choose to use, becomes the uniting factor that can turn an individual desire for war into a public spectacle.

Really its pretty sad.


Naive
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Anon
Posted on Wednesday, February 07, 2007 - 04:49 pm:   

http://www.persecution.org/suffering/newsdetail.php?newscode=4534

The link above goes to a Christian Site that has a copy of a statement made by the Leader of Al Qeada in Iraq.

The Statement confirms Al Qeada desires to expand the current conflict to include Iran and confirms my previous assessment of Al Qeada operations designed to inflame tensions between the United States and Iran as well as attack United States forces in Iraq.

I would recommend reading the statement from AL Qeada and then commenting upon it as part of our discussion of the nature of the conflict we find ourselves in and what the Al Qeada organization and its allies are capable of doing to expand the conflict by attempting to cause an over reaction by ourselves and our allies.

Ed
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Ivan
Posted on Thursday, February 08, 2007 - 09:15 am:   

Fight or flight?... of something else?

We humans are complex animals. From the millions of impulses that are input into the brain continually, maybe only a few thousand are statistically relevant to our thoughts and actions, of which perhaps a few hundred dominate a given choice at any one time; all of which may be distilled further down to only two or three choices that really matter, and finally one: the one that was done.

Now, as Naive pointed out above, there is some instinct in us that makes us fight, or not, like a force of nature, like sleep or hunger. Multiply this with the above impulses driving decision, and multiply by it by the numbers of humans in community, and you can appreciate the immense complexity of when any society is forced into war. It boggles the mind, but it happens. It is almost as if we are the butts of some mad cosmic joke of infinite proportions, one where we are prodded into action by forces unseen, only to watch what will be our response: will they fight, or flight, or something else?

:-) The gods must be laughing.

Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Thursday, February 08, 2007 - 09:38 am:   

We find no blood sweeter..

quote:

http://www.persecution.org/suffering/newsdetail.php?newscode=4534

The link above goes to a Christian Site that has a copy of a statement made by the Leader of Al Qeada in Iraq. --Ed



These butchers are living in the past, disconnected from any relevant reality but their own war hatred filled madness. They can all go to hell, where they all came from to start.

The relevance of making right decisions, especially when faced with threats of war, or destruction, of safeguarding ourselves and loved ones, of saving our community from disaster; of saving our freedoms; all these decisions takes strength of intellect and leadership. Why is it so few possess such strengths to lead, while so many fall victim to bad leadership?

The al Qaeda character in the link above is a failed leader of failed men who lash out with anger and hatred against the world. Let them live in the hell of failure they have created themselves. Tighten the noose, not in fight or flight, but in good decisions, with clinical precision, to let them die inside their own hatreds, inside their own waste. It is their hell, not ours. Religiously motivated or whatever is irrelevant. Their all consuming hate eats them from the inside.

Sad human condition, but there it is. :-(

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, February 08, 2007 - 10:53 am:   

http://www.searchtruth.com/chapter_display_all.php?chapter=2&from_verse=178&to_v erse=179&mac=&translation_setting=1&show_transliteration=1&show_yusufali=1&show_ shakir=1&show_pickthal=1&show_mkhan=1

The Law of Equality [2:178 and 2:179] permits the punishment of a crime to be no more than the crime itself. Even then God encourages forgiveness and acceptance of 'blood money' and sparing the life of the guilty.

Such forgiveness would be possible only when crimes cease; not when those who are to protect the population commit crimes against the population.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/iraq/article1353577.ece
===
It also follows months of allegations that the Health Ministry, its facilities and hospitals, have become de facto outposts for Shia militias, above all members of the al-Mahdi Army, the largest and most-feared Shia armed group in the country. Sunni MPs have complained of dozens of cases of Sunni Muslims being refused treatment in hospital and even being shot in their beds.
===

How could a hospital become a place to be executed instead of getting treatment?

Under the circumstances it would be better for us to withdraw from Iraq and let the Iraqis fight among themselves.

The US army is possibly doing the right thing in disarming the militias. Unfortunately the timing is wrong. Any action against the Shia inside Iraq by the Americans now would be misconstrued as an indirect attack against Iran.

We must support our troops. What is true support? Is it permitting a flawed policy that was and is rejected by the population to continue? True service is to reverse the flawed policies. If the Democrats do not have the courage to stop the surge by using whatever powers the people have given them, let them know that they run the risk of getting labeled as 'cowards' and they might lose their chance of getting back the WH.

We believed those who ran away from Iraq; who had their personal agenda and not the welfare of Iraq; we attacked Iraq for wrong reasons; we were at fault. True courage is to accept the mistakes and try and help the population of Iraq to get back on its feet.

We have no brief to decide between the Sunni, Shia, Kurd tussles. We did not create their age old enmity. We should walk out because the Iraq government does not govern.

Once we withdraw the Christian blood from Iraq, the so called leader seeking Christian blood must first and foremost survive the internal hostilities. Let us bring our boys and girls home. Then we wait and watch the rivalries inside Iraq to settle and then that population that survives the orgy of violence could be helped by us.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, February 08, 2007 - 11:06 am:   

Are we repeating the blunder now in Palestine?

http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/abbass-jittery-forces-have-little-stomach-for-f ighting/2007/02/08/1170524236677.html
===
These signs of collapsing Fatah unity and self-belief come despite, or perhaps because of, the White House's recent announcement that it will provide $US86 million ($110 million) to strengthen Mr Abbas's Presidential Guard for any showdown with Hamas.

In the West Bank town of Jericho US military personnel have been training members of this revamped force, increased from 300 men under the late Yasser Arafat to 4000 so far.
===

http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/abbass-jittery-forces-have-little-stomach-for-f ighting/2007/02/08/1170524236677.html?page=2
===
For all the money, guns and training it is doubtful that the new Presidential Guards - any more than the other 60,000-odd members of the authority's ramshackle network of rival security forces - are up for a showdown with Hamas's devout Islamic warriors.

... All sides agree that there will almost certainly be a further escalation in violence should this week's Mecca peace talks fail to clinch a long-sought but elusive power-sharing deal.

A Hamas intelligence chief - known as Abu al Abd - in northern Gaza's Jabaliya refugee camp, said that if the talks break down Hamas, which claims to have 15,000 trained fighters in its armed wing, the Al-Qassam Brigades, would have no difficultly in over-running the remaining Fatah bases in Gaza, including the Muntada.
===

After all Hamas won the election. Why not respect the population of Palestine and negotiate with Hamas? Agreed Israel would not and could not negotiate with any group calling for its destruction. But what about us? Hamas is not calling for our destruction.

It is well known that parties announce extreme positions before the start of negotiations so that they have some face-saving outcome.

Should we support Fatah against Hamas?
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Anon
Posted on Thursday, February 08, 2007 - 05:45 pm:   

Could Cold War-type campaign beat terrorism?
Some in West push for information, propaganda campaign for Muslim minds
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17044878/

I posted the link above as part of our discussion of what we need to do to win the war against the Islamic Extremists.

Around the globe our conversation has been monitored and along with my regrowth and healing has hope in some small way been born. To the thousands of Muslim lives I have tried to save by prediction, it is in small repayment for those I helped kill over the years in service to my nation.

That I hold strong christian beliefs makes me what I am. I am not a Muslim, but I respect the learned kind men of that faith and wish only to live in peace with them.

It is my hope that our discussions here and the networks of contact, friends, doctors and scientists we have touched in our lives will serve to provide us a vision and example of what can be done to aid us through the dark days of the future battles that are to come against the forces of darkness and hate. Where men and women of different faiths and cultures can work together for the bennefit of all mankind in opposition to such forces.

Ed
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Naive
Posted on Thursday, February 08, 2007 - 11:51 pm:   

Perhaps we resort to war because historically it has produced the most results. Early humans didn't "reason of their grievances" to borrow from Shakespeare. Indeed, when the decision making of entire nations was in the hands of a single monarch or dictator, the move to war was based upon that single impulse. Perhaps the general populace of any nation is still too dull to question leadership (like an ingrained cultural pattern).

Or . . .

Perhaps as we have seen, some humans feel cultural and political differences are so irreconcilable that it is simply more convenient to resolve the issue with brute force. Afterall we all know brute force doesn't prove who is right, only who is more organized and efficient. Indeed perhaps the sign of our success and other successful nations (like ancient Egypt) lies in the contentedness of the populace. Leadership which has a pulse on the desires of it subjects , will also be able to galvanize them into action. In other words, we may chose to follow our leaders into war because the current state of our nation/lifestyle suits us quite well.

So what will be stronger - the desire to fight for social ideals and comforts, or the momentum of blind devotion?


The answer will serve as a measuring stick for the maturation and progress of humanity!


Naive
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Anon
Posted on Friday, February 09, 2007 - 05:17 am:   

WASHINGTON - A "very damning" report by the Defense Department's inspector general depicts a Pentagon that purposely manipulated intelligence in an effort to link Saddam Hussein to al-Qaida in the runup to the U.S. invasion of.......

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070209/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/iraq_pentagon_intelligence

In our society trust in the institutions of Government is what keeps our society functioning. The link posted above is to an article about how a few men and women in the Pentagon maninpulated intelligence in order to justify the War in Iraq. These men and women purged anyone who disagreed with their assessment from the intelligence community and used the power of the government to silence, discredit and bankrupt anyone that disagreed with their assessment.

In doing so these men and women used blind devotion to a cause to justify our intervention in Iraq. In response to this men and women with long history of service to the government rebelled and leaked the truth out to the people and the people spoke at the ballot box.

The people are angry at being decieved by the agencies of the government that are supposed to tell them the truth, no matter how unpleasent the truth is.

Like Naive discusses above when the decision making process of entire nations is in the hands of a single monarch or dictator the move to war is based upon a single impluse. In this case we had a president and single party rule that amounted to a dictatorship imposing its will on the freemen and women of the United States. The end result was that freedom and a desire to know the truth prevailed and a government fell at the hands of the people via the ballot boxes.

Ed
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Ivan
Posted on Friday, February 09, 2007 - 09:45 am:   

Beware the enemy within.

Self criticism in our society and governmental departments is healthy. Such as the article mentioned by Ed above on the 'leaked' Pentagon intelligence linking Saddam and al Qaeda.

Where this 'self criticism' fails, however, and becomes seditious is when it is presented to us by the other side, in effect, when it is the enemy guiding us into self criticism. They, the enemy, do not have our best interests at heart, so not to be trusted. Trust is earned, and not a given right. This is true of individuals as well as governments. But beware of that 'trust' being given to you by your enemy, for war is deceit, especially with an enemy within.

Ivan
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Anon
Posted on Friday, February 09, 2007 - 07:32 pm:   

Your point is well taken Ivan,

What we have learned over time is that cover-ups are far worse than honest mistakes and that the investigation of a cover-up and the disclosure of a cover-up have long been part of the American tradition.

In the end the people are presented with the truth and make a decision. As was proven in our last election. What you decribe about an enemy guiding us into self criticism is known by the term disinformation. A tactic the Soviets used against us throughout the Cold War. Doing much to undermine support for our government and culture.

The line between the two scenarios you discuss in your posting is a fine one that many have trouble seeing. Remember Watergate, the Iran-contra affair and a number of other such events that color our history and the long tradition of leaking information to the press about acts by our leaders that violated the principles of our nation, tarnished its reputation and which in the end when presented to the people lead to major changes in the body politic that is the United States of America.

That Al Qeada and militant Islamics are a threat to our society and the millions of peaceful Muslims is without a doubt. What we are currently debating is whether or not by way of dubious intelligence that we have been drawn into a battle that we may only be able to win at great cost if at all. This is in contrast to being able to pick and choose the time and place of battle, retaining what is termed the initiative in military terms, rather being bogged down in a conflict in Iraq that is bleeding away our military capability. That is what we need to debate in a meaningful way in Congress. Sometime on the battlefield you have to disengage in order to go on the offensive in other areas.

More food for thought

Ed
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Anon
Posted on Friday, February 09, 2007 - 09:19 pm:   

Bloggers grow in Mideast; police watch
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070209/ap_on_re_mi_ea/mideast_blogging

The link above is to a good article on the rise of bloggers in the Middleeast who are acting as agents of change within Middleeast society.

These young men and women are at the forfront of the battle to oppose coercion and the terrorists that kill innocents in the name of Islam.

To them and the thousands that visit this website from around the globe. Understand that my skills as a code breaker, analyst and geometrist, along with my heritage of being descended from the founding families of the United States is what made me what I am, a fighter in defense of freedom, civilization and the christian faith. My religous faith is personal and not one I would force on another.

That I survived and healed from damage in a way that science is only begining to understand, I ascribe to both Darwin and God. I see no great reason that both Darwin and the Churches can not be right and both held in equal esteem.

IN my recovery from a chemically induced near death experience as a result of toxic exposure I said many things as my neurological connections reforged themselves. Through this healing I experienced many levels of conciousness that I shared here as a way of understanding the evolution of a conciousness. Throught it I have progressed back to my pre-exposure levels with deficiets in several areas. It was an internal journey from near death, to maddness back to rationality that I would not wish on my worse enemy but is I think enlightening.

With appropriate medication my dopamine balance has been restored and I function normally. With the exception of some minor side effects of the medication I take I am healthy and can lead a normal productive life.

I offer this as a illustration of what can be achieved with modern medicine and faith in god, science and the kindness of people.

To the bloggers in the Middle East. I salute you and know that nothing is impossible. You are at the forefront of a movement that spans the globe and touches the heart and soul of the Islamic people, by saying what they feel but are to affraid of to say themselves.

Ed
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Ivan
Posted on Saturday, February 10, 2007 - 11:03 am:   

Freedom of speech is always a pain to controlling authorities.

Ed, in your post above, the linked article says:

quote:

Many of the blogs are just personal musings. But many others strive to tackle political and social issues, and their authors are increasingly getting into trouble, with governments blocking their sites and throwing them in jail.

"I firmly believe that blogs now with normal people using them have become the fifth estate. They watch the watchers, especially in this area of the world, because there are no controls over them," said Mahmood al-Yousif, a Bahraini blogger.


Watching the watchers is a balancing act between governmental use of authority and responsible criticism of such authority. We in our Constitutional government have that leisure, where our individual rights are protected from persecution because of what we said. But this is not a universal right in many countries, especially those of the Middle East Islamic rights countries, where personal freedoms are almost non-existent. So even 'progressive' states like Bahrain will forbid free expression of thoughts. And because it is forbidden, so is it feared and despised. Controlling forces hate freedom, almost by definition. But by example of our freedoms, imperfect as they are, and the global village of the internet, a western technological creation, those freedoms are spreading world wide, and they just hate it.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Sunday, February 11, 2007 - 06:31 am:   

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070209/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/iraq_pentagon_intelligence
===
Gimble said that while the actions of the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy "were not illegal or unauthorized," they "did not provide the most accurate analysis of intelligence to senior decision makers" at a time when the White House was moving toward war with Iraq.
===

The above is an attempt to insulate Bush from the follies that led to the Iraq war. The above is also an attempt to deflect any move - however feeble it might be - of impeaching Cheney by the Democrats and honest Republicans who might desire to protect our sons and daughters by bringing them home soon.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Sunday, February 11, 2007 - 07:11 am:   

http://www.forbes.com/business/feeds/afx/2007/02/11/afx3415822.html
===
'From now until April 9 you will hear frequently about the great progress of the Iranian people and unique developments in the domains of industry, agriculture, and especially nuclear energy,' Ahmadinejad told the rally in Tehran.

He also insisted that Iran would continue cooperating with the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna, despite a parliament law that gave the government the power to reduce its cooperation with the UN watchdog.
===

Is this a master stroke from the politician? From http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20070209.wiran10/BNStory/Inte rnational/?pageRequested=all we find:
===
So it is surprising that Mr. Ahmadinejad now finds himself in the awkward position of needing to persuade the ayatollahs, who have become openly critical, to let him stay in power.

... “Our research shows that more than 80 per cent of the young generation of Qom want to leave, ideally for Tehran, as soon as they're married, and that the overwhelming majority of them do not support the revolution any more,” says an Iranian sociologist who has just completed a major survey of Qom's youth. The study will be published in France, because its authors fear government reprisals in Iran.

... The United States or Israel may attack, but even a total mobilization of Iran's already heavily militarized society is unlikely to distract people from their deepening troubles. The fissures are widening beneath Mr. Ahmadinejad's feet, and his anti-American tub-thumping only widens them.

“He talked about class struggle and all that, and he said he was going to bring a lot of money into people's houses,” says Daryush Shayegan, Iran's most prominent secular philosopher. “He made a lot of promises, and those promises didn't work out. The only thing we've had so far is inflation.”

Mr. Ahmadinejad, begging for his political life while making fire-and-brimstone proclamations, is learning the ultimate political lesson: Your foreign accomplishments, no matter how grandiose, will never fully distract from an unhappy situation at home.

“After all, economic things are very stubborn,” Mr. Shayegan says. “You can't just manage an economy by fatwas.”
===

Who make the Fatwas? Not Ahmadinehad! The fatwas are made by the Mullahs.

It looks like the best we could hope for is the survival of Ahmadinejad and his delivering on his promise of distributing the oil income to the population of Iran away from the Mullahs.

Any attack on Iran would simply make the Mullahs unassailable under a war when the population would turn to religion.
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Ivan
Posted on Sunday, February 11, 2007 - 11:01 am:   


quote:

Any attack on Iran would simply make the Mullahs unassailable under a war when the population would turn to religion. --Mohideen



Hard to say the population en masse would turn to religion, if Iran attacked. Did they turn to religion during the Iraqi war? Some did, such as sending their children to become 'martyred' by walking into minefields in order to clear a path for their soldiers. But what part of the population would respond to this? The educated Iranians of the cities, or the uneducated ones of the poor rural areas? Is there a socio-cultural difference between these two populations? Which would support the Mullahs, which not? All difficult question that would need to be understood if Iran was to be invaded. But that is no one's plan I'm aware of, to invade. Rather, the only strategic use of force is to take out the nuclear facilities where bombs could be made. Keep it simple. We do not need another Iraq in Iran.

Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Sunday, February 11, 2007 - 11:37 am:   

Iran keeps denying their involvement in Iraq, but...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6351257.stm

There seems to be intelligence that Iran is behind the manufacturing of bombs used by Shia insurgents in Iraq. If so, then Iran must be held accountable by the world community for being involved in Iraqi efforts at rebuilding their nation. Deposing Saddam was only the first step, a viable Iraq as part of the world community is the second and much larger step. But this is for the Iraqis to do, not the world community. All the world can do here is stop Iran from fanning the flames of hatred and killing. To date, they had not succeeded. Also, any regime change counter to their Islamic fundamentalism revolution must come from the people of Iran. World pressure may help them in their cause, but it is not directly our problem. Our problem with Iran for now is nuclear weapons. How can that be addressed without another Iraqi styled war? This is the question. And if the power structure of Iran perpetually lies, what is the world to do? Whom do you trust? If they lie, is diplomacy a realistic option? Anybody in Iran telling the truth? Seek the truth, and perhaps there is hope for peaceful solution in both Iran and Iraq.

Ivan
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Anon
Posted on Sunday, February 11, 2007 - 03:46 pm:   

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17086418/site/newsweek/
Rumors of War

The link posted above is to a good assessment of the ups and downs of the United States Iranian relationship and the shift towards a footing of confrontation between the United States and Iran.

The current president of Iran is supporting the fielding of IED technology to Iraq as part of a proxy war against us. He is also pursuing the development of Nuclear weapons. Our president and his administration have misread the situation in Iran and engaged in behavior that resulted in the current president of Iran being choosen by the religous leadership of Iran as a frontman in a conflict with the United States.

In his mind our president sees the world in black and white terms shaped by his religous worldview in doing so he failed to engage in the dialog necessary to show the Iranians that reformists in Iran could win concessions for the Iranian people from the West. With the ascendency of George Bush, all efforts to establish a relationship with Iran were rejected. In reaction the religious leaders in Iran put into power the current president who is pursuing a different approach towards winning concessions from the West. This time thru the use of terrorism, military power, threats and blackmail.

Regardless of how we reached this point and who in the governments of Iran and the United States were responsible for this downturn in relations, we need to manage the situation correctly in order to avoid a disasterous military confrontation.

Our current SECDEF gates at a recent NATO meeting made a number of statements in a speach. Among them he reminded NATO and the world that its combined forces are the most potent military force on the face of the earth and its combined armies include 2 million soldiers. A subtle message should the world of Islam and the West be driven to general war.

Following this statement by Gates, which also included a rejection of Rumsfield's worldview, the Iranian president toned down his retoric regarding Tehran's nuclear program and did not escalate the tension over it at a planned public announcement.

Behind the scenes in the United States, Europe and Iran. Serious technocrats who wish to avoid war are engaging in manuevers to defuse the crisis. While showing the Iranians that we have the ability to strike back in a variety of ways.

Ed
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Sunday, February 11, 2007 - 07:38 pm:   

http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/02/11/news/putin.php?page=2
===
If the United States and its partners fail in Iraq, and chaos tears the nation apart, Gates warned, "every member of this alliance will feel the consequences" of regional turmoil and terrorism.
===

The above scenario evolves when we allow Bush to surge troops and continue to subdue Iraq. If we fail trying to subdue Iraq then even those who have hatred against us but were afraid of our military capability would get courageous and start hurting us. However if we engage in diplomacy and withdraw informing the world that the US administration has heard its population's verdict and respecting the people the withdrawal is made. If 'the US and her allies are ready to help the government that would emerge after the next general election in Iraq' is the message conveyed, the Iraqi population would support a peaceful resolution to the conflict.

The Sunnis and Shis in Iraq have many inter marriages and thus left to themselves the chance of their uniting is much more than the chances of disintegration.

Of course at this point in time no person can say with authority what would happen. In my view withdrawal from Iraq is a safe option.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Monday, February 12, 2007 - 03:02 pm:   

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6353489.stm
===
For a start, the fear among some is that the US is softening up world opinion for an attack on Iran. Such an attack would be aimed at Iran's nuclear facilities.
===

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/02/12/ap/world/mainD8N88TD80.shtml
===
(AP) Iran on Monday rejected U.S. accusations that the highest levels of Iranian leadership have armed Shiite militants in Iraq with armor-piercing roadside bombs.

... The Bush administration is confident the report about the weapons flow from Iran into Iraq is accurate, spokesman Tony Snow said Monday.
===

http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewFlash.asp?Page=/ThisHour/Archive/NTH20070212a.html
===
February 12, 2007
12:57 pm
The House is expected to vote this week on a nonbinding resolution expressing disapproval of President Bush's decision to deploy 20,000 more U.S. troops to Iraq. Debate on the measure begins Tuesday and will mark the first debate in Congress on the war since Democrats won control of Congress last year.
===

How convenient? Do we need to impeach this administration soon to save our boys and girls?
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Ivan
Posted on Monday, February 12, 2007 - 09:13 pm:   

Isolation and pressure on Iran?

From the BBC link above, it says:

quote:

On the wider front, the Bush administration is engaged in a campaign against the Iranian government in order to isolate it and eventually maybe see its end under internal pressure from the Iranian people.


Is this the strategy, to show that as Feb. 21 passes by, and nothing is resolved on the Iranian nuclear issue, the heat gets upped a notch with the EFPs news? I think the Iran theocratic power elites had better sit up and pay attention. This president means business, whether anyone likes it or not. Congress will hold him back as best they can, but I would put Iran on notice here. Will the democratically inclined reformers in Iran pick up the ball?

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Wednesday, February 14, 2007 - 09:09 am:   

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6360469.stm
===
The US presented evidence this week it said proved the "highest levels" of Iran's government were supplying arms used by Shia militants in Iraq.

Gen Pace said all it proved was "things made in Iran" are being used in Iraq.

"We know that the explosively formed projectiles are manufactured in Iran," Gen Pace said while visiting Australia.

"But I would not say by what I know that the Iranian government clearly knows or is complicit."
===

It is indeed possible that the Iraqi government is complicit. A large number of Iraqis visit Iran for treatment and other purposes. These Iraqis while on their return could smuggle the projectiles to be given to their armed sons to protect them from Sunni insurgents. It is possible that these projectiles change hands - voluntarily or under duress - and the insurgents might use them!

We are told the borders with Iran and Syria are getting closed. Does that mean no person crosses the border through manned checkpoints? Or just that the borders are under satellite cover so that any illegal crossing is to be attacked?

The one way we could stop these projectiles entering Iraq would be for our boys and girls to man the checkpoints. Would that be agreed to by the Iraqi government?

The best option is to withdraw our boys and girls and let the Iraqis settle their scores.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Wednesday, February 14, 2007 - 09:26 am:   

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6360817.stm
===
The EU parliament voted to accept a resolution condemning member states who accepted or ignored the practice.

The EU report said the US had operated 1,200 flights, flying suspects on to states where they could face torture.

The report was adopted by a large majority, with 382 MEPs voting in favour, 256 against and 74 abstaining.
===

How would this affect the US - Euro relations? Could we expect a turnaround under the new SecDef?

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/5322646.stm
===
Thursday, 7 September 2006, 08:32 GMT 09:32 UK

In fact, Mr Bush issued a robust defence of those secret prisons: necessary and effective tools - as he sees them - in the struggle to get information from the most dangerous, best-informed terrorist suspects, such as Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, alleged mastermind of the 11 September attacks.

To emphasise his point, the president went into some detail about several potential terrorist plots, both at home and abroad, which, according to him, were foiled, thanks to intelligence gathered through "tough", but legal questioning by CIA interrogators.
===

Or would the new SecDef simply defend his boss?
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anony
Posted on Wednesday, February 14, 2007 - 09:43 am:   

The soulution to Iraq-Iran is...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6360759.stm

"Feng Shui guru aids zoo's quest to make monkeys feel at home."

Why it's so simple, of course! Hire 100,000 Feng Shui masters to guide the Shiis and Sunnis on to peace.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Wednesday, February 14, 2007 - 03:09 pm:   

http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/0214shadegg0214-ON.html
===
"We urge you to instead broaden the debate to the threat posed to Americans, the world, and all 'unbelievers' by radical Islamists," the letter states.
===

Won't it be nice if they look at our discussions on 2:256 and other Verses of the Holy Quran? If some of our arguments become part of the debate it might help awaken the sleeping peace-loving Muslims.
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Ivan
Posted on Thursday, February 15, 2007 - 10:12 am:   

Victory in understanding.

Good point, Mohideen. If only the world focussed less on being 'right' and instead more on finding 'agreement' in a noncoercive manner, then perhaps the explorations and conclusions that manifest from our discussions would make an imprint upon their thoughts and actions. To awaken the mind, Muslim mind and universal mind, Akashik mind, is what raising consciousness is all about. Once people understand how they stand in their own way of becoming better human beings, by forcing their way of what they think is 'right' onto the world stage, then things fall apart. The only right thing to do is to respect all human beings as equals before God, and to make sure this same respect is reciprocated in return equally. That is how we gain peace and civilization. But if that fails, then force is the only recourse, as we have seen. And if it means force, then this is what must be used.

To echo the recent words of Gen. Petraeus, where he spoke to the brave American men and women in uniform in Iraq, these words are by another general more than two thousand years ago. Alexander said to his troops when at Punjab, India:
"For a man who is a man, work, in my belief, if it is directed to noble ends, has no object beyond itself; none the less, if any of you wish to know what limit may be set to this particular camapaign, let me tell you that the area of country still ahead of us, from here to the Ganges and the Eastern ocean, is comparatively small. You will undoubtedly find that this ocean is connected with the Hyrcanian Sea, for the great Stream of Ocean encircles the earth. Moreover I shall prove to you, my friends, that the Indian and Persian Gulfs and the Hyrcanian Sea are all three connected and continuous. Our ships will sail round from the Persian Gulf to Libya as far as the Pillars of Hercules, whence all Libya to the eastward will soon be ours, and all Asia too, and to this empire there will be no boundaries but what God Himself has made for the whole world.

But if you turn back now, there will remain unconquered many warlike peoples between the Hyphasis and the Eastern Ocean, and many more to the northward and the Hyrcanian Sea, with the Scythians, too, not far away; so that if we withdraw now there is a danger that the territory which we do not yet securely hold may be stirred to revolt by some nation or other we have not yet forced into submission. Should that happen, all that we have done and suffered will have proved fruitless--or we shall be faced with the task of doing it over again from the beginning. Gentlemen of Macedon, and you, my friends and allies, this must not be. Stand firm; for well you know that hardship and danger are the price of glory, and that sweet is the savour of a life of courage and of deathless renown beyond the grave."


For more on Gen. Petraeus, news briefing: http://www.defenselink.mil/transcripts/2005/tr20051005-4021.html

As Alexander said, "Stand firm, for well you kow that hardship and danger are the price of glory, and that sweet is the savour of a life of courage and of deathless renown beyond the grave." It is not glory we seek today, but clarity of understanding and freedom for all human beings. We will prevail with our men and women serving those freedoms. The glory comes from our success in raising human consciousness to where all humanity is made free. For that we must also thank our brave troops, serving in Iraq and other fronts in the world, because it is they who stand firm against aggression and barbarisms of today.

Ivan
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Anon
Posted on Thursday, February 15, 2007 - 04:03 pm:   

A very good posting Ivan,

It is ironic that it took a rebellion at the ballot boxes to bring the change in leadership we needed to fight the war in Iraq with a chance of winning.

Gen Patreaus notes a need of raising human consciousness to where all humanity is made free.

His statements are a message intened for many autdiences and seeks to resonate in many populations. He cites Alexander who is revered in the Muslim and Persian world. He also intended his words to reach the ears of the Alliance of Patriots to signal an end to the rebellion against Georged Bush and a need to focus on winning the war we are engaged in.

To that end I and the other decendents of the founding families; these include Franklin, Jefferson, Handcock and a number of others rich and poor that worked behind the scenes bound by blood the constitution our forefoathers created; have layed down the sowrd of truth we used to bring down the Bush government's hold on power via a single party government.

We now focus our efforts on Iran and note the recent bombing in Iran was not the work of the supporters of the Alliance of Patriots but those in league with Al Qeada. Al Qeada sees the same conditions for revolution in Iran that we do and is moving like us to helping shape it. In this battle for the hearts and minds of the Iranian people we are in a race with the Militant Islamics allied with Al Qeada.


Ed
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Ivan
Posted on Thursday, February 15, 2007 - 07:04 pm:   

Post Script to Alexander's speech to his troops in India.

General Patraeus’ remarks following Command-change at Camp Victory, February 10, 2007; here is the main thrust of his speech:


quote:

The enemies of Iraq will shrink at no act, however barbaric. They will do all that they can to shake the confidence of the people and to convince the world that this effort is doomed. We must not underestimate them.

Together with our Iraqi partners, we must defeat those who oppose the new Iraq. We cannot allow mass murderers to hold the initiative. We must strike them relentlessly. We and our Iraqi partners must set the terms of the struggle, not our enemies. And together we must prevail.

The way ahead will not be easy. There will be difficult times in the months to come. But hard is not hopeless, and we must remain steadfast in our effort to help improve security for the Iraqi people. I am confident that each of you will fight with skill and courage, and that you will remain loyal to your comrades-in-arms and to the values our nations hold so dear.

In the end, Iraqis will decide the outcome of this struggle. Our task is to help them gain the time they need to save their country. To do that, many of us will live and fight alongside them. Together, we will face down the terrorists, insurgents, and criminals who slaughter the innocent. Success will require discipline, fortitude, and initiative - qualities that you have in abundance.

I appreciate your sacrifices and those of your families. Now, more than ever, your commitment to service and your skill can make the difference between victory and defeat in a very tough mission.



http://bamapachyderm.com/archives/2007/02/11/general-patraeus-remarks-following- command-change-at-camp-victory-this-morning/

Our troops are spoken to from centuries of our history, and our freedom based civilization with roots millennia ago, for victory against barabarism and hideous crimes against humanity, by those who would have the gall to speak to us for God with their heinous violence. American service men and women, we salute you.


Ed, and all veterans, thanks for your service to our country.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Saturday, February 17, 2007 - 06:10 pm:   

For more on Gen. Petraeus, news briefing: http://www.defenselink.mil/transcripts/2005/tr20051005-4021.html
Posted on Thursday, February 15, 2007 - 10:12 am: Ivan


I read the above document more than once. I just couldn’t help wonder at the stupidity of some of our leaders. We have trained an army of about 200,000 Iraqis mostly Shiite to reach level two and three capabilities teaching them all our code and commands so that they operate properly along with us.

Now there is talk of initiating a war with Iran, a Shiite country. Don’t our leaders understand that these 200,000 mainly Shiite Iraqis would pounce upon our boys and girls inside Iraq once there is hostility with Iran?

The Congress might do well to pass a resolution constraining this administration from starting any hostilities with Iran.
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Naive
Posted on Saturday, February 17, 2007 - 09:50 pm:   

Proactive stupidity leads to retroactive chicanery! That's the hallmark of U.S. foreign policy :-(.


Naive
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Anon
Posted on Sunday, February 18, 2007 - 06:20 am:   

Both Naive and Mohideen raise valid points over the training and equiping of the Iraqi army.

I note the Iranian's are claiming that the United States is behind the recent bombing in Iran and says it has evidence that the explosives used in the blasts were American made.

In the great game of international politics the truth is very often hard to find.

With regards to Iran the history of Iranian invovlement in terrorism is a long one. Almost 18 years ago the Iranians paid the Palestinians 11 million dollars to destroy comercial airliners in Europe while in flight. This was following the downing of an Iranian Airliner by the United States in the Gulf.

The Palestinians were chosen because they had networks of supporters in Europe and had contacts with the East German Stasi and Soviets who provided them with inteligence and technical support to conduct these operations. The West Germans detected the Palestinian operation and disrupted it, however, not all members of the cell were captured. For a variety of reasons the Stasi and Soviets wanted the mission to go forward and in turn provided the remaining cell members with a bomb that was placed on Pan Am 103.

The rest is history.

I posted the above to show that the truth is often hidden and for a number of reasons and sometimes manipulated to shape public opinion. Often times scapegoats are used to satisfy the need to appease a people that have been stired to anger. Long afterwards the truth comes out many times too late to prevent many lives being lost.

At present he Libyian intelligence officer convicted of the bombing of PAN AM 103 is appealing his case to the international court. much doubt about his conviction has been raised. It is likely the court will recommend a new trial or his release. The Arab media has latched onto this and is already using it as proof that the West and CIA manufactured the evidence to convict him. In the highly charged environment that is the middle east today this case is likely to reinforece anti-American sentiment in the minds of the Islamic people and further fuel the notion that the United States manipulated the intelligence to get us into the war in Iraq and will likely do it again in Iran.

On a side note I post the following about Libyia today and oil and the republicans

"09-02-05 The shift of Libya by the Bush administration from terrorist state to poster boy was ratified in January by an important announcement.

On the last weekend of January, the Libyan National Oil Co. announced that 11 of 15 new oil and gas exploration concessions would go to American oil companies. Primary among them was Occidental Petroleum of Los Angeles, a big donor to Republican campaign finances, including to the inauguration."

http://www.gasandoil.com/goc/company/cna50862.htm

In the world of oil power and wealth the truth is often the first to be lost.

I also note that following the sanctions against Lybia the price of oil rose and the Soviets and Iranians made substantial profits.

Just some more food for thought.

Ed
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Sunday, February 18, 2007 - 10:03 am:   

In the world of oil power and wealth the truth is often the first to be lost.
Ed
Posted on Sunday, February 18, 2007 - 06:20 am: Anon


Here is a recent example. Read the whole article to see how the truth gets sidelined. We quote a few words of importance to us.
http://www.mees.com/postedarticles/oped/v50n08-5OD01.htm
===
4.3 IOCs, in my view, should aim for the urgently needed rehabilitation of infrastructure, the expansion of capacity at partially developed fields, improved reservoir performance and the development of the many discovered but as yet undelineated oil fields in partnerships with INOC, rather than opting for extensive exploration for unnecessary new oil. A stampede for exploration and development contracts at this particular juncture of Iraq’s political and economic development would be viewed as mortgaging the reserves of future generations. It would also fuel the view that the war was about oil.
===

The above comment is from Mr. Tariq Shafiq, a principal drafter of the Petroleum Law of Iraq. Would the International Oil giants heed his request? We don’t expect it.

http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/newstex/AFX-0013-14562894.htm
===
Analysts typically say a company's reserves replacement should average more than 100 percent over a three-to-five-year period to indicate growth. Proved reserves are a key asset of oil companies.

… Houston-based ConocoPhillips (NYSE:COP) said last month it added three times as much oil and gas to its reserves as it produced in 2006, but the announcement did little to impress Wall Street analysts because the gains occurred largely through acquisitions.
===

Mr. Shafiq hopes the damaged oil fields would be restored by the IOCs instead of bidding new areas in Iraq. Unfortunately the damaged oil fields are already counted in the world oil reserves and thus they would be treated as acquisitions and not as discoveries. In our opinion, the damaged oil fields need to be restored by the Iraqi government only. No IOC would sink its wealth and see the stock suffer.

Why are we looking at this aspect? It affects our boys and girls inside Iraq. Until and unless the standard of living of an average Iraqi is restored to pre-invasion levels the insurgency would not die. Selling of new exploration contracts does not lead to increases in living standards. This is because the companies would pay Iraq for the oil that they sell and not for the expected oil.

Our boys and girls currently pacify the Iraqi population. The current Iraqi government of expatriates might collapse the day our boys and girls leave.

If this Iraqi government collapses does it mean democracy in Iraq has failed? Not at all.

Democracy has already taken root while the current government was formed. We do not lose anything with respect to fostering democracy if one elected government fails. Thus we should withdraw our boys and girls even if there is a possibility that the current Iraqi government might collapse.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Sunday, February 18, 2007 - 10:35 am:   

http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewPolitics.asp?Page=/Politics/archive/200702/POL2007021 5a.html
===
February 15, 2007

Securing Iraq is a lost cause for U.S. forces, and President Bush should begin withdrawing troops to avoid "floundering ineffectually" and further damaging U.S. credibility, a report issued by the Council on Foreign Relations concludes.
===

For information and use.
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Ivan
Posted on Sunday, February 18, 2007 - 10:41 am:   

Alternative fuel is the grandest solution to the political instabilities of the Middle East.

If money does not flow to the Arab states with their particular 'post European colonization' agendas; that evil done to them by commercial interests, an evil they now feel they must do a crusade against, an ever so convenient scapegoat for their own social and economic failings; then the bite of their evil agendas against the powers of the West would become toothless. They can rave all they want how we 'raped' their oil, an oil for which we pay dearly, but once our dependence on their oil is removed, then all they will have left is their seething hatreds of our way of life, where freedom is successful, against their failed way of life, where freedoms, even democracy, are elusive. Stop empowering their undemocratic governments with oil revenue, and stop treating their non-oil Arab states like our welfare states, and they will have to turn their attention inward to solve their own social and political and economic problems, including their medieval jihad problems. Let them rail against 'colonialism' all they want, or Zionism or American conspiracies, or whatever, but dump the problem back into their laps, and stop spending our hard earned money on them. Then, with alternative fuels driving a cleaner economic engine in our world, let the Arabs figure it out that it is not 'colonialism' that is their problem, but their own internal social and political dysfunctions. Stop buying Arab oil now.

As far as Iran is concerned, all talk about attacks against them are 'trial balloon' rhetoric, which will go nowhere. If there is any military strike, it will be against their deeply buried bunkers for nuclear bomb development, which will not be allowed to happen in the theocratic controlled country spewing hatred towards us, Israel, our freedoms, democracy, the 'crusaders' and so forth. We cannot see 21st century lethal technology in the hands of these primitives, so they cannot have the bomb. If the Shias and Sunnis can work it out between themselves, more power to them, but the record is poor. Iran and Iraq are test cases for how Saudi and Syria, Egypt and Turkey, etc., will play out their 'Great game' for their regions. That is not our affair if we develop alternative fuel technologies. No need to war on Iran, and none is forthcoming, if they stop their nuclear bomb ambitions. Any calls for war in Iran, or fears of war, are Cassandras to be ignored. The real solution to the Middle East is to stop buying their oil, develop alternative energy to run our industries and machines, SUVs running on hybrid hydrogen technology, and tap into our own domestic natural gas, coal, and oil resources while in transition. Do not empower the Arabs any more. The rest is up to them.

If I were CEO of multinational oil companies, I'd be spending less on advertising and more on alternative fuel research, and get in the game early, or be left out in the cold.


Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Sunday, February 18, 2007 - 11:07 am:   

Cassandra war news alert.

US 'ready to strike' Iran
Gulf News Report
http://www.gulfnews.com/world/U.S.A/10105218.html

Iran can develop nuclear electric energy without having to hide deep inside their bunkers. Russia offered to refine nuclear fissionalbe uranium for them, but Iran refused. What does that tell you of their intentions? Electricity or bombs? Why believe anything they say, if in their modus operandi 'war is deceit'? We may strike their military targets of uranium enrichment, but we will not go to war with any full scale invasions. And certainly no 'nation building' for Iran. Let their own people work it out, if they want to shake off their medieval theocracy and join the rest of the modern world. It is not up to us to lift them out of their backwardness, but it is up to us to make sure lethal nuclear weapons do not fall into the power of regressive medieval primitive theocracies. We are very clear on this, regardless of who is in the Oval Office, and they should pay attention. If not sooner, than later, but later may be too late.

Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Sunday, February 18, 2007 - 12:21 pm:   

Report: Iraq a Lost Cause, US Should Withdraw

By Nathan Burchfiel (from link provided by Mohideen above):
http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewPolitics.asp?Page=/Politics/archive/200702/POL2007021 5a.html

From the article:

quote:

"The American intervention in Iraq unseated a murderous despot in April 2003," Steven Simon, a senior fellow at CFR, acknowledges in the report, originally published last week but presented Wednesday in a teleconference.

"It also triggered the collapse of the Iraqi state, plunged the country into a civil war that brought about the deaths of tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians, wrecked the country's already debilitated infrastructure, and spurred violent sectarian rivalries that threatened to spill over into the broader Middle East," Simon added.



I think Iraq is a 'lost cause' for US interests in the region because Iran's ayatollah regime will call the brutal shots going forward. Here is how Richard Engel, who spent four years in Iraq, sees it: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/10/25/AR2006102501982. html

quote:

Earlier this month he interviewed a woman whose 13-year-old son was kidnapped. After she paid the $12,000 ransom, the boy was tortured and killed anyway.

"It's horrible," Engel says. "I've seen hundreds of dead bodies -- rotting bodies, bodies buried in shallow graves. One time I watched a dog carry a severed human head in its mouth. You're smelling bodies, you're seeing people who are so angry and insanely distraught. The people who are being killed are too old, too stupid, too poor, too young or too weak, socially or otherwise, to leave."


How does peace come to Iraq, if their barbarity is so openly displayed by fellow Iraqis? Does Iraq even exist? In his book "A Fist in the Hornet's Nest: On the Ground in Baghdad Before, During, and After the War", Engel describes the situation from the ground. He is also critical of Iraq in this article: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11843652/ , where he says:

quote:

History repeating?
These are just a few of the factors from Iraq’s perspective. Others can, and are, asking if the war was worth it from America’s perspective; it certainly was expensive in terms of lives, dollars and prestige.

And on that note, I was struck by a book I just read written in 1919. It’s a two-volume account of the British war in Mesopotamia entitled, “The Long Road to Baghdad.” It was written by Edmund Candler, the British military’s official “eye-witness” to the WWI campaigns in Mesopotamia; he was effectively an embedded reporter, and gave a fascinating account of trench warfare. (Mesopotamia is the ancient cradle of civilization lying between the Tigris and Euphrates, and forms the heart of modern-day Iraq.)

He vividly described hand-to-hand battles and infirmaries with wounded “unfed, untended, with bedsores, some in a dying state, their first field dressings eight days old unchanged, maggots in the wounds, gangrene, filth indescribable, abominations too revolting to print.”

Candler also offered this warning to great powers such as his own government, which he believed rushed to war without sufficient resources or a clear plan: “Mesopotamia is a sinister, pestilential land. Not only has she devoured her own empires and kingdoms born of the soil, Ur of the Chaldees, the Assyrian Niveneh, three dynasties of Babylon, Ctesiphon of the Chosres; she has laid her blight on the greatest Empires of the West. It was in the malarious swamps of the Euphrates that Alexander caught the fever that cut short his life; it was at Ctesiphon that Julian and his Roman legions lost the Empire in the East.”



Was it worth it, for Americans to go into Iraq? Very tough question, one which history will answer decades from now. As Alexander found out more than two millennia ago, this is not a place to enter with grandiose visions, but a seat of death.

Ivan
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Naive
Posted on Sunday, February 18, 2007 - 05:04 pm:   

Iraq is a lesson we are learning as little more than an historical conundrum. Unfortunately, for the Iraqi people, the lesson has been lethal. Our country owes Iraq the greatest of debts. Yet there is no way to repay it without soaking our hands in more blood . . . including our own.

I think our leadership should hire a team of writers to mull out all possible scenarios before they take actions designed to capitalize or exploit public sentiment. Just as Ivan says alternative fuel is the ultimate answer to the middle-East crisis, so too is revolutionary public education is the answer to the internal U.S. political crisis (and by that I mean the exploitation of the masses by our corrupt government).


Naive
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Monday, February 19, 2007 - 02:36 pm:   

It is not up to us to lift them out of their backwardness, but it is up to us to make sure lethal nuclear weapons do not fall into the power of regressive medieval primitive theocracies.
Posted on Sunday, February 18, 2007 - 11:07 am: Ivan


http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/world/4564264.html
===
Putin's increasingly defiant posture toward the United States would make it highly unlikely that the Kremlin could opt out of the agreement, particularly now that U.S. concerns have been eased by an agreement obliging Iran to return spent fuel — which could potentially be used for a nuclear weapons program — to Russia.

... Russia has signed a deal with Iran obliging it to return all spent fuel from Bushehr for reprocessing — a move intended to assuage global concerns that the fuel could be diverted to make nuclear weapons.

... The Kremlin had proposed that Iran move its enrichment work to Russian territory, where it could be better monitored, to alleviate international suspicions. Iranian leaders had said they were interested in the idea, but nothing came of it as Tehran insisted on keeping some uranium enrichment activities on its soil.
===

The above development of returning the spent nuclear fuel back to Russia opens up a new model for the whole world. The nuclear powers could now build nuclear power plants all over the world thus avoiding the CO2 trap.

Further there should be no more reason for attacking Iran as without the spent fuel rods to accumulate reprocessed fission material there is no way Iran could ever manufacture a nuclear bomb.
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Ivan
Posted on Monday, February 19, 2007 - 06:32 pm:   

Not 'if' but 'when' for Iran?

BBC News: US 'Iran attack plans' revealed
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6376639.stm

quote:

It is understood that any such attack - if ordered - would target Iranian air bases, naval bases, missile facilities and command-and-control centres.

The US insists it is not planning to attack, and is trying to persuade Tehran to stop uranium enrichment.

The UN has urged Iran to stop the programme or face economic sanctions.

But diplomatic sources have told the BBC that as a fallback plan, senior officials at Central Command in Florida have already selected their target sets inside Iran.


If targets had been selected, that is tough talk, but will they really strike? I say we let Russian and Iran work it out over enriched uranium, though I also sense Russia is having second thoughts about dealing with the ayatollah regime. Interesting... something about that 21 February date that is intriguing... can't put my finger on it. Not trigger happy, but the message to Tehran should be clear.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Tuesday, February 20, 2007 - 08:58 am:   

Not trigger happy, but the message to Tehran should be clear.
Posted on Monday, February 19, 2007 - 06:32 pm: Ivan


Sure we are not trigger happy, but someone else might be. The Iraq war was started without explicit sanction from the UN. Could history repeat now?

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/world/4565738.html
===
"That ... we shut down our nuclear fuel cycle program to let talks begin. It's no problem. But justice demands that those who want to hold talks with us shut down their nuclear fuel cycle program too. Then, we can hold dialogue under a fair atmosphere," Ahmadinejad said.
===

On the face of it the above demand seems reasonable. However it is not practical. The advanced countries have innumerable nuclear power plants producing toxic nuclear waste. If these nuclear wastes cannot be removed their power plants need to be shut down, which is impossible. The case with Iran is different: it has no nuclear power plant in operation and thus there would be no disruption to life inside Iran by suspending the research and development. A suspended research can be restarted if the negotiations drag.

In Islam the time and place of death of every individual is pre-decided but not the manner of death. By his intranscience Ahmadinejad might share in the sin of the innumerable deaths due to war - even if it be unjust from his point of view.

As a Muslim I appeal to the Iranians to please suspend the nuclear activity before 11:59 pm February 20, 2007 at New York, USA.
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anony
Posted on Tuesday, February 20, 2007 - 09:52 am:   

Amedinehad- "They tell us 'come and negotiate on Iran's nuclear issue but the condition is to stop your activities'.

"We have said that we want negotiations and talks, but negotiations under just conditions."

Mr Ahmadinejad also called on Western nations to stop their own nuclear enrichment programmes if they want Iran to do the same.


-BBC News- http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6378289.stm

Says who? Says what? He reminds me of Peter Ustinov in the movie: The Mouse that Roared.
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Ivan
Posted on Tuesday, February 20, 2007 - 10:31 am:   

RE http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/world/4565806.html post by Mohideen, I suspect the Iranian people have no access to this news, which means they are unable to comment on it themselves. So if Mr. A. wants to negotiate a "just and fair" agreement, while the people of Iran are kept ignorant of the facts of what all this is all about, there can be nothing fair or just about it. A dictatorial power is unfair by definition, so using such terminology is oxymoronic of him.

Let's see what happens a 2359 hours tonight, or a second later.

Ivan
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Naive
Posted on Tuesday, February 20, 2007 - 06:33 pm:   

Interesting dialogue above.

I can see the double standard the Iranian government is trying to expose. It is indeed not fair for us to demand terms that we would not abide to ourselves. I suppose we look like bullies, arrogantly proclaiming we stand on a higher moral ground.

Is it fair that we can bomb the world into oblivion, and other countries must live in fear of it? The answer is a resounding NO! On the otherhand, is it safe to trust a fanatical government with the potential to develop weapons of mass destruction?

Many such tests of the "chink" in our armor will be forthcoming. And ultimately, whether they die for God or country, the oblivious will be the victims.


Naive


P.S. We know it has been the historical tendency of almost all U.S. Presidents to take the hardline stance in Global Policy. I'm sure our leadership will make another foolish decision, soon. :-(
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Ivan
Posted on Tuesday, February 20, 2007 - 11:35 pm:   

Regional Sunni - Shia secterianism, front and center in nuclear debate?

Sunni and Shia: Spectre of sectarianism
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6378553.stm

This BBC article hints that there is an Iranian inspired campaign to convert Sunnis in the Arab world to Shia-Islam. This is inspired by 16th century Persian dynasty's introduction of Shia-Islam to Iran, the Safavids, who then also ruled large parts of Iraq. This is history repeating itself? The campaign for nuclear power in Iran may go deeper than their usual dislike of the democratic principles of the West, or rabid hatred of Israel, or venting their death culture against the great Satan, etc., but may in fact go right to the heart of their main issue: the Sunni -Shia divide, placing it front and center for their nuclear ambitions as well. So the posturing, denials, delays, endlessly fruitless negotiations over nuclear issues on the part of Iran may have a deeper cause, which is to institute a Hezbollah like presence in Iraq as proxy for its Mid East policy, a religiously inspired policy, or Shia-Iran secterian dominance.

From the article:

quote:

The sectarian card

The Sudanese writer Abdelwahab el-Affendi, a well-known Sunni Islamist, thinks Arab perceptions of Iran are changing.

At the time of the Iranian revolution in 1979, he says, Sunni and Shia Muslims alike were attracted by its pan-Islamic activism and support for the mustazafin, the dispossessed.

Now, he argues, Iran has a less progressive and more narrowly Shia image.

"They have played the sectarian card [by their support for Shias] in Afghanistan. They have played the sectarian card in Iraq. I think they have been short-sighted."


Have they overplayed their secterian hand, I wonder, with their nuclear card as well?

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Wednesday, February 21, 2007 - 04:15 am:   

http://content.msn.co.in/News/International/InternationalPTI_210207_1018.htm
===
London: Iran has mastered crucial nuclear technology since August and could be as little as six months away from being able to enrich uranium on an industrial scale, the United Nations' chief nuclear watchdog has warned.

... ElBaradei said Iran had now acquired important technical know-how from running its pilot nuclear programme, and that there was no going back. "You cannot bomb knowledge," he said.
===

It is wrong to assume that 'knowledge cannot be bombed.' What happened in Iraq? What happened to the 'nuclear experts of Baghdad?'

Under a war, one could target the educated as well. The Iranian educated elite have a risk to their lives and they would be better off by pressing for the suspension of enrichment now.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Wednesday, February 21, 2007 - 04:30 am:   

http://www.nysun.com/article/48978
===
February 21, 2007

The head of the ground forces of Iran's Revolutionary Guards, Nur Ali Shushkari, told Iranian government news agencies earlier this week that one of its commando units had engraved its emblem into the side panel of an American warship stationed in the Persian Gulf. The point of Mr. Shushkari's bold statement was to make it clear that the Iranian military is watching every move made by American troops in the region.
===

Is this a counter poser?
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Wednesday, February 21, 2007 - 08:40 am:   

Iran controls – sort of – the Strait of Hormuz. She can block the strait and cause an oil shock. However that oil shock would hurt her alone as discussed below.

United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait, Iraq, and Bahrain depend on the Strait of Hormuz to export their oil. The oil reserves of these countries are reported below.

For Qatar, we take the value of 15.2 billion bbl from https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/print/qa.html . Iraq reserves are 112.5 billion bbl from https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/print/iz.html . The reserves for UAE from http://www.uae.gov.ae/Government/oil_gas.htm are 98.2 billion barrels. https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/print/ku.html gives the oil reserves of Kuwait at 96.5 billion bbl. Bahrain has a reserve of 0.121 billion bbl. The total oil reserves is 322.52 billion bbl. All of these could be transported by surface across Saudi Arabia. At the worst the oil could be transported by road in oil tankers as Iraq did before the invasion. Any oil crisis would only accelerate the extraction of oil from the tar sands of Canada and make the Middle East oil worthless in future.

Thus a closure of the Strait of Hormuz by Iran would possibly result in a temporary oil crisis which could be overcome without much harm to the rest of the world. All that it would achieve is push Iran into object poverty.

We hope the Iranian government would not hurt itself.
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Ivan
Posted on Thursday, February 22, 2007 - 12:00 am:   

Viewpoint: Iranians speak out
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/talking_point/6377021.stm

This is a rather frank reportage from Iran, though a very small sample. It's hard to know how much they know inside Iran, since news is strictly censored, and outside access via internet or satellite is blocked for the average person. However, there is a divergent point of view here, where some support the Ahmed government, while others clearly oppose it, something dangerous to do in a dictatorship. One commentator said:

quote:

Shirin Soltani: Iran went through a lot of difficulties during the war against Iraq and it is highly unlikely people want to go through that again.

Everything has changed; people are more aware of what is going on politically.

Iran itself is interested in negotiation but if the US or western countries want to trigger war, that is unacceptable.

I think Iran will continue with its nuclear programme until it is threatened, and then it will eventually back off.


While another:

quote:

Ali Reza: Yes. But unfortunately this war will have no winners and the people of Iran will be the biggest losers.

The US and its allies should think of better ways of trying to achieve their goal. They could lift economic sanctions and give people easy access to free information, for example through satellite TV. This would be the best way of fighting this regime.


Right thinking, give better access to information. Those who have reason and can think will be supported. But those whose ideology is frozen in some ancient time, it will make no difference. For them, use of force is all they will respect, not reason.

21 Feb is come and gone, so now what?

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, February 22, 2007 - 08:08 am:   

21 Feb is come and gone, so now what?
Posted on Thursday, February 22, 2007 - 12:00 am: Ivan


http://english.people.com.cn/200702/22/eng20070222_351758.html
===
"In the current setting, the use of talks as a way of resolving the problem has no reasonable alternative. Russia is against the use of any force," Lavrov told the Arab weekly Al-Watan Al-Arabi in an interview, the transcript of which was posted on the Foreign Ministry's website.

Although the Iranian nuclear issue is complicated, "it is not hopeless," Lavrov said.

"Therefore, a pause must be taken in Iran's uranium enrichment program in exchange for a freeze on UN Security Council Resolution 1737," he said.
===

http://www2.irna.ir/en/news/view/menu-236/0702227995114908.htm
===
During a meeting with an Iranian parliamentary delegation headed by Majlis Foreign Policy and National Security Commission Chairman Alaeddin Boroujerdi, he acknowledged the Islamic Republic of Iran's legal right to develop nuclear energy for peaceful purposes.

Describing the current atmosphere surrounding Iran's nuclear case as "sensitive," he called for continued efforts to settle the dispute through negotiation.

He said Madrid was opposed to any confrontational approach to the Iran nuclear issue.
===

http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20070301faessay86202/ray-takeyh/time-for-detente-w ith-iran.html
===
An offer by the United States to normalize relations and start talks on all outstanding issues between the two states would give Iran a chance to choose whether it wants to be a nation defending legitimate imperatives or one guided by self-defeating delusions. And for the first time in decades, there is an indication that Iran may opt for the former.
===

The last quote is the concluding part of an article published in Foreign Affairs, a journal of the Council of Foreign Relations. It is generally believed that the President listens to the Council of Foreign Relations. Just because an article gets published in Foreign Affairs does not imply that the Council of Foreign Relations supports the conclusions. Yet we could hope that the Council of Foreign Relations would opt for normalization with Iran. After all it is well known that China is a competitor in International arena. However the economic link between USA and China indeed moderates China. The same could happen with Iran.
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Ivan
Posted on Thursday, February 22, 2007 - 09:47 am:   

Laser warfare on horizon?

Record power for military laser, BBC News:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6380789.stm

"The Solid State Heat Capacity Laser (SSHCL) has achieved 67 kilowatts (kW) of average power in the laboratory.

It could take only a further six to eight months to break the "magic" 100kW mark required for the battlefield, the project's chief scientist told the BBC.

Potentially, lasers could destroy rockets, mortars or roadside bombs."


This technology applied on the battlefield is still sci-fi, but perhaps not for long? What else don't we know about hi-tech warfare?

Ivan
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Anon
Posted on Thursday, February 22, 2007 - 05:23 pm:   

Straying From the Script
A U.S. briefer overstates Iran's meddling in Iraq, setting off a Washington tempest.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17265231/site/newsweek/

A good article about the inability of the Intelligence Corps to penetrate Iran's nuclear program or get hard intelligence out of Iran.

I note that beside penetrating the secrecy of the indightment of Scooter Libby, and the President's and Putins travel plans the Alliance of Patriots working with Allies has penetrated Iran and gotten classified documents out and posted by a news agency run and managed by members of the Old French Resistance from WW II.

As such we are engaged with our allies in getting the information on conditions in Iran out for the world to see. I recently recieved a message via the internet from internal Iranian opposition members that rejects the current aims and goals of the Iranian government and seeks to overthrough it from within peacefully.

More will follow as I get the information.

Ed
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, February 22, 2007 - 09:34 pm:   

2019235%2C00.html,http://www.guardian.co.uk/iran/story/0,,2019235,00.html
===
One of the "outstanding issues" listed in yesterday's report involves a 15-page document that appears to have been handed to IAEA inspectors by mistake with a batch of unrelated paperwork in October 2005.

That document roughly describes how to make hemispheres of enriched uranium, for which the only known use is in nuclear warheads. Iran has yet to present a satisfactory explanation of how and why it has the document.
===

First of all making hemispheres of uranium does not imply that the Iranians are bent on making nuclear bombs.

A hemisphere is bomb material only if a single hemisphere is subcritical and a sphere when two hemispheres are joined becomes super critical. An important parameter that decides the above property is the radius.

A hemisphere of smaller radius might result in sub critical spheres only. These sub critical spheres could be joined or separated to control the power of a nuclear power plant.

We should always give the benefit of doubt and draw the conclusion that the Iranians are bent on producing nuclear bombs only when no other explanation is possible.

[I do not understand why the URL gets garbled. To access the web page cut and paste the part starting with http to the right only.]
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Ivan
Posted on Thursday, February 22, 2007 - 10:35 pm:   


quote:

A western counter-proliferation official accepted that intelligence on Iran had sometimes been patchy, but argued that the essential point was Tehran's failure to live up to its obligations under the non-proliferation treaty.

"I take on board on what they're saying, but the bottom line is that for nearly 20 years [the Iranians] were violating safeguards agreements," the official said. "There is a confidence deficit here about the regime's true intentions."


This is from the Guardian article referenced above, thanks to Mohideen. It appears the 'credibility factor' for Iran is damaged, over a very long period of time, with violations of past agreements. What are the mullah's regime's true intentions? Do we know? More importantly, do they know? War is handicapped reason, especially if trust is broken and agreements are meaningless, or unreasonable. This will be a major test for Iran, whether or not the West will trust its leadership and clerics. So far, nothing happened... but this could change momentarily.

Ivan
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Anon
Posted on Friday, February 23, 2007 - 05:19 am:   

The following letter was forwarded to me from inside Iran via the Internet.

It is from the Iranian Student underground. It comes from the heart of Iran and was posted in Tehran from Tehran University.

Ed

http://www.ishallvote.org/eDefault.asp

Impeach the president
At this point, the leadership, the Majless, pragmatic and traditional conservatives, fundamentalist hard liners, the Grand Ayatollahs, reformists, and the whole country agree that the current course of international policies implemented by Mr. Ahmadinejad has put the country in an extremely dangerous position.

We and many others warned that Mr. Ahmadinejad to be more diplomatic, to look after our national interests in these difficult times, and to fulfill his promises of fighting poverty, improving the economy, and provide more employment opportunities. Yet he continues to promote his aggressive and extreme views without realizing the cost to the nation as whole.

Our large banks are being boycotted and our assets are being frozen. The EU which once offered highly beneficial market and technology opportunities is now helping to toughen U.N. sanction against us. Instead of acknowledging the hardships these place on Iranian citizens, the president’s team is speaking of and taking yet harder measures as if they do not have any idea about political negotiation and diplomacy.

Lawmakers in the conservative-dominated parliament assailed Ahmadinejad on January 21 over signs of runaway inflation. One lawmaker cited a threefold increase in the price of fruit, vegetables and food staples, prompting the president to tell him to "come and do your shopping in my neighborhood" rather than patronize "expensive places." Isn’t this a good indication of the fact that he is not aware of what it means to be a president of a nation?

His pattern of denial seems to be present all of the time as he directs the blame, after two years, on the previous administration and is asking for their prosecution as if there is no shame and everyone is ignorant of the reality and the irresponsible direction that he has set.

Here and now we praise the noble and responsible actions of legislative lawmakers for initiating impeachment proceedings against the president before it is too late. We ask the nation to rise to the occasion and to ask your representative and the country leadership to remove this irresponsible man from a position that requires far more thoughtfulness than he is capable of.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

One step forward
We would like to congratulate the entire voting population that did make the difference and showed the rest of the world we are not about extreme views. Our Vote counts and we will place people closer to our way of life. Which reflects our national economic prosperity, justice and freedom?

Now it is time to get ready for the presidential election. Let’s hope the early election bill will be passed by “Majless”. Let’s hope there will be a greater realization that people we elect do make a difference. A simple view of the current administration extreme views, empty economic promises and interferences with our social freedom is a good proof of such a fact.

Nobody is going to save us but ourselves. The situation requires a step by step move forward, no matter how little or how slow. We took many steps backward by boycotting the pervious election and allowing the current administration to be elected. Yet this one step forward is great indication of wonderful future ahead.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Iranian government censorship purge
Thousands of books from different writers with different agendas and purposes have been banned from publishing. These include writers such as Shadegg Hedayat that are the foundation of contemporary Iranian literature and are a part of contemporary international community literature.

It reminded me of an earlier time when in many massive campaigns, Arab intruders burned any book that they could have put their hands on. It also reminded me of the time at the beginning of revolution where the fundamentalist gang questioned Ferdousi’s contribution to the Iranian nation as whole.

What are we without the Persian literature and exposure to international literature We told you the kind of change they will bring to our lives. Ever since the new administrations took over, overwhelming numbers of illegal arrests have taken place. From all sides of life, teachers, students, the lawyers of political prisoner, bus drivers and similar innocent individual have been arrested. Political prisoners are dying for lack of proper medical care. Newspapers and magazines are being shut down.

We told you about their empty promises to fight against poverty and corruption. No other Islamic republic’s elected government has awarded billion of dollars in contracts or has replaced more high income earning employees with their associates than the current government.

Please wake up out of this nightmare, go and vote this December, prepare everyone for the next presidential election. Having some one better than them does make a difference.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


President population control plan.
The current government policies are pointing to disasters in all directions. It seems they are outside of the world view of things. Population control is an essential part of any national planning, whether economically advanced or, like Iran, in economic struggle.

While shortages of roads, schools, hospitals, and other basic services, as well as other significant issues like high unemployment, are unsolved for the present population, the current President proposed population increases. Does he have any idea about economic planning and availability of resources? Does he know anything about Iranian family’s economic circumstances? Almost everyone beside the Iran-economic-Mafia is struggling economically. It is being said Mr. Ahmadinejad's latest stance was just a way of grabbing the headlines and distracting attention from his government's economic failures.

BBC: The UN Family Planning Association describes Iran's population control program as a textbook example of how fertility rates can be reduced if the environment is right. With the help of high literacy rates, rural health clinics, counseling before marriage and free family planning services, Iran has achieved what some call a population control revolution.

BBC: But President Ahmadinejad is questioning that achievement. He says he is against the idea that two children are enough. His view is that Western countries are just scared about Iran's population growing and overtaking theirs.

We told you these people will cause us nothing but problems. As long as we can remember, every elected Iranian government tried to avoid the international boycott, yet this one is walking all of us to it. Everyone is trying to build faster and more advanced informational infrastructures, this one is reducing the technology capabilities of its own people. This is another rare and backward policy undoing years of internal success and rising international regard. What is next?

Please use all means you have to show your opposition to the current administration. Go and vote this December, elect people that do not belong to this camp. Remember, we have to keep all possible fronts open in order to succeed in this struggle.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Iran cuts Internet speeds

At a time when literally every one in the rest of the world is trying to improve the speed of information delivery, the current government of Iran has decided to reduce the internet speed for all Iranian households.

Before the election we pointed to the backwards mentality of the fundamentalist gang and their never ending dogmatic solutions. This one is so rare, though, that we have to recognize them for the single most backwards act, without contest.

They do not have to run our country, we do have some choice. Although it is not extremely effective, every ocean begins with a few drops of a rain. Please prepare yourself to vote in this December election. There are reformist and other caring and qualified candidates that you can vote for, it would also be enough not to let fundamentalist candidates be elected.

http://news.com.com/Iran+cuts+Internet+speeds+to+homes,+cafes/2100-1034_3-612707 7.html
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Time to make our move

When the opposition to the current government boycotted the pervious presidential election we, by all possible means, pointed to the advantage that this action gave to the fundamentalists.

Now they are making their next move, by taking control over Municipal and Assembly of Experts elections. The president has appointed Hashemi Samareh as the deputy interior minister for political affairs. Few men are closer to the president than Hashemi Samareh. This is a tactical move that underlines the importance of the December 15 municipal and Assembly of Experts elections.

The evolutionary process of gaining some choice was a product of electing the better of the two evils, which brought us some social and political freedom. That allowed us to breathe for a while. If the current administration and fundamentalist body gain greater representation in the “Assembly of Experts” and municipal offices our social and economic rights will be compromised.

Note that the current administration failed to fulfill their campaign promises to fight poverty and gave false promises to provide economic opportunity. The only noticeable economic act of this administration was to replace many thousands of high paying (income) positions at many governmental levels with their allies and close associates. The majority of them have neither the educational background nor the necessary experience in the field. Lavish contracts valued at billions of dollars have been directed toward their partners, while unemployment and poverty are rising. This occurs at a time when Iran brings in a record income from its oil revenues. If this is not corruption, what is?

Ever since the new administrations took over, overwhelming numbers of illegal arrests have taken place. From all sides of life, teachers, students, the lawyers of political prisoner, bus drivers and similar innocent individual have been arrested. Political prisoners are dying for lack of proper medical care. Newspapers and magazines are being shut down.

It is time to show that our vote counts by electing individuals who are more moderate, ones that do not belong to the current administration camp. The peacefulness and receptiveness of the ground that we stand on does make a difference in our political, social and economical struggle. By participating in this election and choosing people who are more moderate and do not belong to the current administration camp we can let this administration know that they will not be elected for the next term.

We have to employ all appropriate means to change. Nothing is more powerful then the right to vote. Denying it will benefit the oppressing fundamentalist camp. Life is a voyage in which we choose neither the vessel nor the weather, but much can be done in the management of the sails and the guidance of the helm.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

We are against nuclear weapons, no matter which nation owns them.

The United States, Russia , China and most European states, even with their advance knowledge in nuclear technology, have slowed down the process of implementing nuclear energy-based electric plants, because they recognize that nuclear energy manipulation is a potentially dangerous technology.

While Iranian-owed Russian and Ukrainian-built air planes are crashing more then usual for lack of proper maintenance and safety precautions, we continue to try to buy and create the fuel for running a nuclear energy plant. Moreover we have rejected the European offer for a more advanced and safer, heavy water technology. For a nation that turned the management of a chemical train accident in Neyshabur into a disaster, assuming the responsibility of running a nuclear plant is alarming.

The lack of awareness and know-how in diplomacy and negotiations on the part of the current Iranian government under President Ahamadi Nejad puts the country at great risk. While we have greater national issues and agendas, the government is using propaganda to redirect the nation's focus from more significant problems.

The Iranian people have a right to economic growth and prosperity. Yet the current administration is critically endangering the nation's economic well being by allowing its case to go to the United Nations security consul and ignoring the danger of a U. N. economic boycott. The current government diplomatic strategies fail to recognize others involved in the negotiations. This is bi-product of a fundamentalist mentality that is oblivious to the rights of others, including our own citizens.

Our oil and gas reserves are among the richest in the world. Yet we are importing 40 percent of our processed fuel. Our national and economic agenda must focus on investing in more oil refineries and other petrochemical industries that offer unlimited economic possibilities, employment and growth.

We are in need of greater communication infrastructure and business incentives to become self-sufficient in a number of areas. We are importers of modern technology rather than manufacturers and exporters. Moreover, we are in desperate need of roads and highways throughout the country. Our roads are among the most dangerous in the world and thousands of Iranians are dying every year of automobile accidents.

While the Iranian stock market value has dropped substantially, money is leaving the country, unemployment is sky rocketing, there are many clear areas where the high oil revenue could be well spent and provide job and economic growth, the current government has forgotten its promises to fight poverty and corruption and its propaganda machine has blindfolded the nation to the reality of their intentions.

Any kind of economic boycott will cause such a devastating result that anybody in their right mind would want to prevent rather then encourage it. The government's strategy has clearly have put us in the current compromising state. The rest of the world is in a state of fear, asking the Iranian government to be more responsible; meanwhile, the government nonsense propaganda machine proposes nuclear technology transfer to the Sudan criminal government that was the safe haven for Al Qaeda; while their daily tactics mock the United Nations, other international organizations and countries.

It is time to have them hear our voice. It is time to ask them to become more responsible toward our nation's economic well being. It is time to become wiser and use this event as an opportunity for gaining international market presence, special business privileges, a safe nuclear technology and the world respect.

It is time to change direction. The rights we seek are achievable in the right time with the right people that portray a responsible image, language and policies, not only to their own citizens, but also to the world.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



What a surprise.
We may have insulted some of you by calling Dr. AhamdiNejad a disaster. We are all human beings and do have opinions. We are not after all a bunch of imitator baboons. Our God given gift gives us the power of distinction, compassion and logic to have choices and position with regard and respect to others.

Please go to the email removal at the end of this page and remove your name if you do not wish to receive our emails any more. Or send us an email. We however think of you as a dear citizen of our beautiful land. You may want to learn more about diversity of opinions and gain tolerance against opposing views.

The next four years are going to be crucial to Iran’s economic future and movement towards democracy. The means and choices we make will determine future events. Extremes have never provided balance. They have no such capabilities. In today’s economic and world affairs, having stability and certainty in the social and economical environment is of outmost importance. We do not think Dr. AhamdiNejad's gang has such a recognition.

We can only hope his war against corruption and poverty is real, yet we do not believe so. His few years as mayor of Tehran are a great indication of his intentions. All he did was to reorganize the city hall toward having direct benefit to his power gang, like many other power broker and corrupt politicians in the current system.

We do not want to point to his dark side because we do not know how to describe it.
There are so many more indications of darkness. Dr. Ahamdnjad's gang cheated to a great extent more in our online voting system then any other candidates. In the next four years the people of Iran will see the true picture of the newly elected president.

We know any action will cause an opposite reaction with equal magnitude, and reverse direction that will naturally bring equilibrium. This might be a shot in the arm for all of us to see how organized and deceiving the fundamentalist and extremes are. We may gain some sense that this was a wrong time and strategy for boycott. But we will prevail since righteousness is on our side. This is just the beginning.

We are claiming this as a significant beginning toward our movement. Hence in a few weeks “IShallvote” will be pointing to a new site called “nonviolentmovement.org”.
We will watch Dr. AhmadiNejad's every move. We hope he realizes the diversity of thoughts and beliefs are all the work of God, like infinite possibilities of forms and verities. We hope God to be with him, since this is the only way he may save himself and us from stormy disasters ahead of us.










http://www.ishallvote.org/Remove.asp
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Friday, February 23, 2007 - 07:00 am:   

Here and now we praise the noble and responsible actions of legislative lawmakers for initiating impeachment proceedings against the president before it is too late.
Ed
Posted on Friday, February 23, 2007 - 05:19 am: Anon


Here is external confirmation.
http://www.resourceinvestor.com/pebble.asp?relid=29093
===
Before Ahmadinejad returned from a visit to Latin America in January, the political atmosphere in Iran had shifted abruptly. Khamenei abandoned him and unleashed a chorus of criticism. The parliament began impeachment proceedings against four of Ahmadinejad’s ministers for incompetence and is moving to impeach the president.

The Supreme Leader charged him with endangering the very survival of the Islamic Republic. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei accused the president of stirring up international conflict by turning the nuclear issue into his personal cause that could result in war or severe sanctions.
===
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Friday, February 23, 2007 - 09:47 am:   

Hence in a few weeks “IShallvote” will be pointing to a new site called “nonviolentmovement.org”.
Posted on Friday, February 23, 2007 - 05:19 am: Anon


http://www.justdropped.com/drops/032806org.html

http://www.bizprolink-internet.com/0603/060328-2.htm

The domain name nonviolentmovement.org got dropped on 28 March 2006 as per the links given above. Was this domain reactivated?
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Friday, February 23, 2007 - 09:51 am:   

We need more energy to bring peace!

http://www.resourceinvestor.com/pebble.asp?relid=29093
===
Whether Mahmoud Ahmadinejad stays in office or is removed, the problems that plague the society will remain. …

The long-term solution is to diversify the economy and to construct additional refining facilities, but it has been the failure of the government to invest in the petroleum industry that is at the core of economic stagnation. Over the thirty years of the Islamic Republic, oil production has declined from 6.1 million bpd to the current 3.7 million bpd.

According to a study by Roger Stern of the Department of Geography and Environmental Engineering at John Hopkins’s University, the production will fall by half again in five years.

Only through a massive infusion of capital will the process be reversed, but the Iranian constitution poses an obstacle to development by prohibiting foreign ownership of natural resources or production sharing. At best, foreign investors can arrange buy-back agreements with fixed rates of return. The system discourages foreign investment; and the Iranians lack the domestic capital or technology to develop the resource without foreign assistance.
===

This is bad news all around. The oil companies need to increase their proven reserves to attract capital. The only route is to get more areas for exploration. Even though Iran has more oil to be tapped, the current constitution does not encourage oil companies. So the constitution has to be changed! Here Iraq is the right model.

We have Ahmadinejad under threat of impeachment. Of course once Iran is under attack all such democratic moves would be shelved. He has a willing counter part in Bush. Bush is under threat of impeachment. So it would suit both the leaders to launch a war. Would they succeed? Inaction on the part of Congress would let Bush launch the war any time.

As regards Iran in view of the above oil situation it just does not matter whether Ahmadinejad survives or falls by the wayside. So where are we to put our efforts? Looks like USA needs more of our energy.

How I wish the powers that be would permit the sealed nuclear power plants to be made available for public instead of just nuclear submarines alone.

I agree the sealed nuclear power plant might be costlier than the conventional one. But giving sealed nuclear power plants to all countries would roll back the ‘global warming’ without any risk of nuclear bombs. Can the oil cartel that talks about solar power be persuaded to get the sealed nuclear power plants into the market?

We the peace lovers have to work with one more lobby – the oil lobby.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Friday, February 23, 2007 - 03:24 pm:   

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,21279082-5005961,00.html
===
He has endorsed Republican senator John McCain's proposition that the only thing worse than a military confrontation with Iran would be a nuclear-armed Iran.
===

A nuclear armed Iran is years away. Do we then understand that Sen. John McCain recommends patience for a few years? It would be great to get a confirmation from the Senator.

Incidentally in a few years all our boys and girls should be out of Iraq.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Saturday, February 24, 2007 - 10:05 am:   

Iraqi sovereignty in totters!

http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=19736
===
An Israeli officer involved in the military planning told The Daily Telegraph: "One of the last issues we have to sort out is how we actually get to the targets in Iran. The only way to do this is to fly through US-controlled air space in Iraq."
===

Notice the “US-controlled air space in Iraq.” If Iraq is sovereign the air space is controlled by Iraq ably assisted by US and not “US-controlled.”

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/829673.html
===
Israel is negotiating with the United States over permission for an "air corridor" over Iraq should an attack on that country's nuclear facilities become necessary, the British newspaper The Daily Telegraph reported Saturday.

Military authorities would need permission from the U.S. Department of Defense for any such operation, the report said.

Deputy Defense Minister Ephraim Sneh (Labor) denied Saturday that Israel was in negotiations with U.S. authorities on the issue.
===

The above is an act of ‘constructive ambiguity.’ At the operational level the permission is sought and granted: the Commander-in-Chief does not micro manage the Iraq war and thus the US Generals in Iraq could decide the operational details. However the politicians issue the denial as they have not – they need not – contact Bush.

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-02/24/content_5767597.htm
===
The UK's Daily Telegraph reported on Saturday morning that Israel is negotiating with the United States for permission to fly over Iraq, in case the Jewish nation is to conduct surgical air strikes against Iran's nuclear facilities.

The newspaper quoted a senior Israeli defense official as saying that "the only way to do this is to fly through U.S.-controlled air space." Meanwhile, the official said that negotiations were underway between the two countries.

However, Israeli Deputy Defense Minister Ephraim Sneh denied the report on Saturday, saying that any talk of an Israeli offensive against Iran was speculative only, the Yedioth Ahronoth daily said.

Sneh said that the report apparently came from sources that did not want to take responsibility for diplomatic inaction regarding Iran's possible nuclear armament.
===

Observe the insinuation: diplomatic inaction. How could Sneh comment on diplomatic inaction even before a meeting of the UN Security Council?

Is there no other way to reach Iran but to fly over Iraq? Look at the world map there are at least two ways – one north of Iraq and another south of Iraq.
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Ivan
Posted on Saturday, February 24, 2007 - 11:52 am:   

More Power to the Valiant Young Men and Women for Progressive Change in Iran!

Thanks Ed, for that excellent letter by the progressive voice of reason and freedom for a new government in the choleric fundamentalist regime of Iran. May the Student underground find the strength and wisdom to lead their call for freedom and justice to victory.

Their current Ahmadinejad led government is violently and unjustly purging their opposition by all means possible, arrests and imprisonment, torture and intimidation, restricted access to information and the outside world, and fear and coercions, such as had been practiced by the Arab led campaigns of history against the great civilization of Persia. From the letter:

quote:

It reminded me of an earlier time when in many massive campaigns, Arab intruders burned any book that they could have put their hands on. It also reminded me of the time at the beginning of revolution where the fundamentalist gang questioned Ferdousi’s contribution to the Iranian nation as whole.

What are we without the Persian literature and exposure to international literature We told you the kind of change they will bring to our lives. Ever since the new administrations took over, overwhelming numbers of illegal arrests have taken place. From all sides of life, teachers, students, the lawyers of political prisoner, bus drivers and similar innocent individual have been arrested. Political prisoners are dying for lack of proper medical care. Newspapers and magazines are being shut down.


This is a typical Stalinist-Hitleric tactic against any reasonable opposition, to shut down and punish reason. The ayatollah's government is guilty here as well.

quote:

While shortages of roads, schools, hospitals, and other basic services, as well as other significant issues like high unemployment, are unsolved for the present population, the current President proposed population increases. Does he have any idea about economic planning and availability of resources? Does he know anything about Iranian family’s economic circumstances? Almost everyone beside the Iran-economic-Mafia is struggling economically. It is being said Mr. Ahmadinejad's latest stance was just a way of grabbing the headlines and distracting attention from his government's economic failures.


Failure of reason leads to regressive government policies, those which hinder human development and burden families with economic failures. When the world is already over populated for sustainable resources, the call for more children per family is insane.

quote:

We are against nuclear weapons, no matter which nation owns them.

The United States, Russia , China and most European states, even with their advance knowledge in nuclear technology, have slowed down the process of implementing nuclear energy-based electric plants, because they recognize that nuclear energy manipulation is a potentially dangerous technology.

While Iranian-owed Russian and Ukrainian-built air planes are crashing more then usual for lack of proper maintenance and safety precautions, we continue to try to buy and create the fuel for running a nuclear energy plant. Moreover we have rejected the European offer for a more advanced and safer, heavy water technology. For a nation that turned the management of a chemical train accident in Neyshabur into a disaster, assuming the responsibility of running a nuclear plant is alarming.

The lack of awareness and know-how in diplomacy and negotiations on the part of the current Iranian government under President Ahamadi Nejad puts the country at great risk. While we have greater national issues and agendas, the government is using propaganda to redirect the nation's focus from more significant problems.

The Iranian people have a right to economic growth and prosperity. Yet the current administration is critically endangering the nation's economic well being by allowing its case to go to the United Nations security consul and ignoring the danger of a U. N. economic boycott. The current government diplomatic strategies fail to recognize others involved in the negotiations. This is bi-product of a fundamentalist mentality that is oblivious to the rights of others, including our own citizens.

Our oil and gas reserves are among the richest in the world. Yet we are importing 40 percent of our processed fuel. Our national and economic agenda must focus on investing in more oil refineries and other petrochemical industries that offer unlimited economic possibilities, employment and growth.


As Mohideen pointed out in a post above, Iran has immense resources potential in energy, and doubtless in other fields, including intellectual property, but these are being neglected. Why? And since when is the U.N. the enemy, as per Mr. A's comments in response to the U.N. imposed sanctions against Iran's nuclear defiance, from the BBC:

quote:

"If we show weakness in front of the enemy the expectations will increase but if we stand firm against them, because of this resistance they will retreat."


(bold mine)... since when is the consortium of a world body of nations the 'enemy'? Iran's Mr. A. is badly out of step with reality.

Iran has isolated itself from the rest of humanity's advancements towards economic and social progress, and from freedoms enjoyed by all rational beings, in their repressive tyrannical power structure based upon some ancient war-politic theocratic ideology no longer applicable to the sensibilities of the modern world. If their 'God' is dictating this to them, then they should perhaps consult this 'god' a little more intensely, to understand why they are failing on every front, and why they are courting serious disasters for themselves. Perhaps their 'god' will give them an answer of reason: "Set your people free."

Victory goes to the valiant. More power to the students of Iran.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Sunday, February 25, 2007 - 08:10 am:   

http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/IraqCoverage/story?id=2901692&page=2
===
ABC News: Being a religious and political symbol, do you think that what happened is an infringement and a violation of Iraqi sovereignty?

Al-Hakim: No doubt about that — when there is no sanctity to any Iraqi figure, and when a U.S. soldier on the ground is allowed to treat everyone the way they like regardless of controls or limitations. This humiliation lasted 11 hours, and then I was told, "Go; the matter is over."

Certainly this kind of conduct is a violation of the Iraqi border rules. How can we say that we have an Iraqi government? What does it mean that there are Iraqi authorities overseeing the process? What does it mean that there are respectable Iraqi national figures pursuing their work legally?

All these matters are being damaged — which means that the national sovereignty is at stake.
===

We understand the nervousness of an American soldier without the company of an Iraqi in attacking an Iraqi without knowing the ID of the other person. However to arrest a person allowed to enter Iraq by the Iraqi guards indicates provocation. The American soldiers involved need to be investigated. May be they are desparate to leave Iraq and hope to precipitate a crisis between the US and Iraqi authorities so that the mission could be wound up.

The Commander-in-Chief would be wise to withdraw the US forces as contemplated by the US Congress from activities unrelated to their own safety.
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Ivan
Posted on Sunday, February 25, 2007 - 10:36 am:   

Al-Hakim issue, "'Humiliation' at U.S. Hands", posted above by Mohideen: http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/IraqCoverage/story?id=2901692&page=1 where he posts: "We understand the nervousness of an American soldier without the company of an Iraqi in attacking an Iraqi without knowing the ID of the other person. However to arrest a person allowed to enter Iraq by the Iraqi guards indicates provocation. The American soldiers involved need to be investigated." The article starts with:

quote:

Feb. 24, 2007 — Thousands of Shiites rallied in Najaf, Iraq, on Saturday to protest the nearly 12-hour detention by U.S. troops of Amar al-Hakim, 35, the oldest son of Iraq's most influential Shiite politician, Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, who heads the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq.

Troops detained Amar al-Hakim on Friday as he crossed back into the country from Iran. The U.S. military called the detention "unfortunate."


Are you refering here to the fact that this man detained was a 'religious figure'? Does this allow him to be treated in any special way different from all other human beings involved here, held at the border? Are we talkiing special privilege here? Why should the soldiers be investigated for doing their duty in a dangerous war zone? Tough luck on the poor chap for being caught up where perhaps he should not have been. His treatment by American soldiers was no doubt more coddly than by his fellow Iraqis, though I digress. The real issue is 'special treatment' for a 'religious figure'. There are no grounds for this. Your other suggestion of some alterior motive for the soldier doing their duty is demeaning to their professionalism in military service to their country. They are not some mujahedeen rabble, but professionals. For you to suggest otherwise is misplaced here, and should be condemnable.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Sunday, February 25, 2007 - 09:49 pm:   

For you to suggest otherwise is misplaced here, and should be condemnable.
Posted on Sunday, February 25, 2007 - 10:36 am: Ivan


I touched upon a human behavior possibility. Under stress people do act in ways other than normal. It does not reflect on any individuals commitment or patriotism.

I never meant to demean any individual. If inadvertantly I ended up doing that I apologize. I saw the above post just now after returning home. Sorry for any offence taken; it was not intended.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Sunday, February 25, 2007 - 09:53 pm:   

Are you refering here to the fact that this man detained was a 'religious figure'?
Posted on Sunday, February 25, 2007 - 10:36 am: Ivan


The question is that of joint responsibility. When the Iraqi guards allow a person to enter their country the accompanying US soldier should have no authority to stop such persons who are permitted by Iraqis.

There is no special treatment expected. Indeed in Islam every person gets the same respect.
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Ivan
Posted on Sunday, February 25, 2007 - 11:33 pm:   


quote:

I never meant to demean any individual. If inadvertantly I ended up doing that I apologize. I saw the above post just now after returning home. Sorry for any offence taken; it was not intended.


Understood, Mohideen, and not offense meant in return either. I never wish to assume disparaging things against any commentary here, but thought it important enough to point out obvious error, that the soldiers are not to be assumed deviant in their line of duty. Surely, if there was deviation from their orders, they would be called to answer. But that is their affair, not ours.

Ivan
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NAive
Posted on Monday, February 26, 2007 - 12:34 am:   

As an insight taken from the posts above, I believe citizens of disputing countries should engage in this kind of dialogue before leadership is given any authority to declare states of war.


Ah, imagine how that would rankle the powers that be.



Naive
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Monday, February 26, 2007 - 10:46 am:   

Are the Iraqis friends of America?

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070226/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq
===
The U.S. military has said elite Iranian corps are funneling EFPs to Shiite militias in Iraq for use against American troops.
===

How can the Iraqi government run by the Shiites allow such a thing? Are the Shiites friends or are they enemies in waiting?

Don't forget that as with smuggling, for every weapon cache that gets located there could be ten more in hiding.
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Ivan
Posted on Tuesday, February 27, 2007 - 10:22 am:   


quote:

How can the Iraqi government run by the Shiites allow such a thing? Are the Shiites friends or are they enemies in waiting?


Good question, Mohideen. Fighting war coercions is never a clean business, and fighting unsolicited coercion is the nature of all resistance. Every human being has in the soul the will to be free of unsolicited coercions, as do all living things. But resistance can be as complex as the coercions faced, such as proves in Iraq. In Iran, there is a fear that freedom, that which is in the human soul universally, will undermine the powers that coerce the people into pure submission. This is a much greater conflict, spilling over into Iraq's 'great game' for the region, authored by America's involvement in 'nation building', but seized as opportunity by those who would oppse and fear our natural freedoms. So when caches of weapons get smuggled from Iran to Iraq, it is a natural process of power resisting freedom, with no clean and easy solution. Sometimes, it just takes brute force to stop coercion.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Tuesday, February 27, 2007 - 01:55 pm:   

http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,468963,00.html
===
The details of the attack bespeak a new, hitherto unknown logistical skill on the part of the Taliban. Cheney's visit was shrouded in secrecy from the beginning with reporters travelling with him being asked to observe embargoes on revealing the Vice President's whereabouts. The fact that Cheney had to cancel a meeting with Afghan President Hamid Karzai -- originally scheduled for Monday evening -- because of strong snowfall and spend the night in Bagram only became known on Monday evening.

Observers see a clear sign that the Taliban now dispose of a well-organized information network that allows them to track the movements of prominent political decision-makers like Cheney. "Of course plenty of information is available via the Internet," the NATO officer said, "but you need to be able to use that tool." This was apparently what happened in the case of the attack on Bagram Air Base, the officer added, claiming there is no other way of "explaining the exact timing." It's hardly appropriate to continue characterizing the Taliban as simple guerrilla soldiers, in the officer's view.
===

Are we to believe that the fact that VP stayed overnight at the airbase could be deduced from the Internet? The obvious source of leak should be found in the persons who knew of the cancellation of the meeting with President of Afghanistan. The leak must be located in the Afghan side of the security equation.
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Alliance of Patriots
Posted on Tuesday, February 27, 2007 - 03:17 pm:   

A very good posting Mohideen,

As the Alliance of Patriots has proven, use of the Internet as an intelligence and offensive information warfare weapon is a reality. In the hands of a master intelligence officer such as Major Edward A. Chesky Jr, it is capable of penetrating the most secure of environments such as Tehran University.

Al Qeada and the Taliban have progressed to the point of fusing intelligence data from sources around the globe via the internet into a coherent picture of the movements of key personnel.

This capability was demonstrated by our Chief of Intelligence, Major Edward A. Chesky Jr, from his home computer.

This decentralized Alliance of Patriots was born out of discrimination by the President of the United States against those that spoke out at his violations of our most cherished beliefs reguarding human rights, the right to be free of torture and the right to due process before the law. To combat this we made use of the Internet for intelligence development and information warfare to peacefully bring down the Bush Administration's control of government.

Our success at this application of the internet has now been replicated by Al Qeada and added to their capabilites.

In this battle against the forces of terrorism, Al Qeada has risen to a new level of capability. Only one man was able to match this organization in terms of predictive intelligence skill and he currently serves as our Chief of Intelligence and Information Warfare. That man honored by some of the most powerful military men and women on the face of the earth was thrown to the wolves by the Bush Administration. He went on via the internet to bring it down with nothing but his mind and access to the Internet.

Such is the nature of the man that George Bush decided to throw out and what he is capable of doing. We the Alliance of Patriots honor him and his work.

As to Al Qeada, only one man locked out of government service is capable of matching them and predicting their actions. We hope the Federal Government of George Bush will one day find a way to employ him and use him to his full potential once again in this war we face. But until that day we respect and back his right to fight this war on terror his own way.

Alliance of Patriots
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Wednesday, February 28, 2007 - 11:39 am:   

We hope the Federal Government of George Bush will one day find a way to employ him and use him to his full potential once again in this war we face.
Posted on Tuesday, February 27, 2007 - 03:17 pm: Alliance of Patriots


A slight modification: We hope the Federal Government takes advantage of persons of the calibre of Ed.

Given the nature of democracy and given the demand for impeachment I do not desire to hope on a single individual sitting at the top today.

My hope is with the people of America and a responsive federal government, not necessarily the current one.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, March 01, 2007 - 01:39 pm:   

How stupid could we become?

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/huff-wires/20070227/afghan-explosion
===
The guerrillas, according to NATO officials, have the flexibility to organize an attack quickly and may have been able to plan a bombing at the base while Cheney was there after hearing news reports on Monday that he was delayed by bad weather.
===

Was not the visit supposed to be a surprise visit? Since when do we have news reports about delays in surprise visits?
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, March 01, 2007 - 06:30 pm:   

In an earlier post we were informed that the Iranian Mullahs were having many sex-slaves otherwise called temporary wives. As it is a complex issue it took time to analyze the institution of temporary marriage. We have posted our analysis in http://deentech.com/MI_IC_No_Sex_Slaves_Now.aspx

Some highlights are:
===
The relaxation that a man and woman could marry secretly leads to confusion in society. This could be misused by a prostitute. We believe no society agrees to the plying of the trade of prostitution. A prostitute when challenged has to simply state that the man had married her secretly. …

If the woman entering a ‘temporary marriage’ may not employ the formula ‘I have rented to you’ how does she become a rented woman? If she is not a rented woman the notion of a specific period for the marriage does not apply. The Shi’i need to clarify this basic incompatibility between the formula of one pillar and another pillar of ‘temporary marriage’ as instituted by them.

… In which case it seems the institution of ‘temporary marriage’ exploits destitute women: either divorcees, widows, or from destitute families. The Shi’i need to look into the acceptability of such exploitation. In particular, the Shi’i women should evaluate the institution of ‘temporary marriage’ in that light. …

It is possible that a substantial part of the society would look upon a woman contracting temporary marriage as a potential prostitute. Should women degrade themselves unless they cannot avoid such a fate?


One could ask: If Islam allows ‘sex slaves’ why not consider a ‘temporary wife’ as a sex slave? When a man has to look after 50 women he would naturally select the most pious 4 as his wives and the rest would be his sex slaves by necessity. In the case of a temporary wife there is no such necessity at least from the part of the women as she could as well become a permanent wife.

In conclusion, we state that sex slaves are allowed sometime in the future when the Y-chromosome becomes so weak that for every 50 female children just one male child is born. We are nowhere near that situation and thus ‘temporary marriage’ has no place in contemporary society.
===
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Ivan
Posted on Thursday, March 01, 2007 - 10:58 pm:   

Taliban official: Bin Laden is alive
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070301/ap_on_re_eu/britain_bin_laden_2

This is an 'on again, off again' piece of news from AQ on OBL, in the battle of 'war is deceit' camp. The article says:

quote:

"He's not yet martyred. Such information would be easy to get — his comrades stand shoulder to shoulder with us. They keep us informed,"


Well, where is he? Why no video, only audio? Is he in so bad shape, too hideous for camera? Or has he fled the 'martyrs' who died for him, and disappeared? It says further:

quote:

"Only his comrades see him; we exchange messages with each other to share plans," Dadullah said. "We also go to the battlefield together. We actually meet very rarely, just for important consultations. It's hard for anyone to meet Bin Laden himself now, but we know he's still alive."


This is beginning to look an awful lot like the myth of the 12th Imam, the one hiding in a well for a thousand years. Maybe in one more 1000 years, Ossama bin Laden too will make his magical reappearance? But in the end, deceit is deceit, no matter what. He's dead.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Friday, March 02, 2007 - 07:12 am:   

This is beginning to look an awful lot like the myth of the 12th Imam, the one hiding in a well for a thousand years. Maybe in one more 1000 years, Ossama bin Laden too will make his magical reappearance? But in the end, deceit is deceit, no matter what. He's dead.
Posted on Thursday, March 01, 2007 - 10:58 pm: Ivan


Who benefits? As regards the 12th Imam the benefit is to the Shias. As long as the Mullahs would benefit, the 12th Imam is alive and would appear soon. Is the Taliban in need of a living OBL? Or is it the CIA? Why is it that the CIA is silent? If we agree that OBL is dead we have to locate a master strategist who planned the recent attempted attack on Cheney. To have OBL in limbo benefits many.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Friday, March 02, 2007 - 07:40 am:   

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/03/02/europe/EU-GEN-EU-Missile-Defense.php
===
The U.S. has formally requested to place a radar base in the Czech Republic and 10 interceptor missiles in Poland as part of its plans for a missile defense shield that Washington says would protect against a potential threat from Iran or North Korea.
===

By this post I might be broadcasting my ignorance. The very first objects to be attacked in Iraq were the radars. If Iran or North Korea or any other enemy is determined to attack us, is it not logical that the radar base in the Czech Republic is destroyed or inactivated first? Once that radar is taken off the 10 interceptor missiles are just show pieces.

To defend the radar in the Czech Republic from missile attack we need an early warning system for the Czech Republic. Where would we place that early warning system? Would that be land based or satellite based? If it is land based we need to protect that site. If it is satellite based why do we need the Czech Republic based radar at all?

The best defense from enemies is not to have any enemy at all. Let there be no coercion from our end; then it is up to God to protect us. Eventually there would be no coercion and thus we do not need any war industry. That is where the rub lies?

Would the war industry agree to be replaced by a peace industry? I am sure the workers of the war industry would not object to getting re-employed by the peace industry. What about the owners?
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Ivan
Posted on Friday, March 02, 2007 - 09:16 am:   


quote:

To have OBL in limbo benefits many.


Very good point, Mohideen. Who benefits indeed? Not all hands come clean on this one, from all sides. In philosophy you can't prove a negative proposition; in real life you can't bring back the dead. As long as the dead body is hidden, the myths of OBL will continue to fuel in death what he began in life: more killing. What a legacy!

Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Sunday, March 04, 2007 - 10:47 am:   

Can Mandaeans survive war torn modern Iraq?

quote:

In the country as it is without law and in the grip of religious extremism, he fears they will be destroyed.

"We are small in numbers, we ask all the governments of the world to extend a hand of help," Kanzfra Sattar says.


They are a small population, only 5 thousand left in their original homeland of Iraq, from the days of John the Baptist, but their numbers are shrinking rapidly due to persecution.

BBC News: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6412453.stm

About the Mandaeans: "Beliefs and prophets:
Mandaean Sabians believe in God and His Monotheism. God is called in their holy book and other religious sources, The Great Life or The Eternal Life. Also, they believe that Adam (God bless his name) was their first prophet and teacher. Their second prophet was sheet who is named "shetel" in Mandaiac; followed by Sam bin Noah and Yahya bin Zekaria (God bless their names)"


This will be a test for modern Iraq, if it is to be modern with religious tolerance and freedom. If not, why the sacrifice of lives and treasure, what was it all for? How can a small peaceful religious group survive in war?

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Monday, March 05, 2007 - 01:40 pm:   

They are a small population, only 5 thousand left in their original homeland of Iraq, from the days of John the Baptist, but their numbers are shrinking rapidly due to persecution.

… Mandaean Sabians believe in God and His Monotheism.

… This will be a test for modern Iraq, if it is to be modern with religious tolerance and freedom.
Posted on Sunday, March 04, 2007 - 10:47 am: Ivan


If the Sabians vanish it is not modern Iraq that failed but humanity itself. These ‘endangered species’ must be granted asylum in different countries of the world so that they survive. It is not necessary for them to live inside an unsafe Iraq. The following Verses are noteworthy.

http://www.searchtruth.com/search.php?keyword=sabians+righteousness&chapter=&tra nslator=2&search=1&start=&records_display=10&search_word=all [2:62, and 5:69]

http://www.searchtruth.com/search.php?keyword=oppressed+men+evil&chapter=&transl ator=2&search=1&start=&records_display=10&search_word=all
===
When angels take the souls of those who die in sin against their souls, they say: "In what (plight) Were ye?" They reply: "Weak and oppressed Were we in the earth." They say: "Was not the earth of Allah spacious enough for you to move yourselves away (From evil)?" Such men will find their abode in Hell,- What an evil refuge! -
( An-Nisa, Chapter #4, Verse #97)
===

In the current circumstances when every inch of the world is under the control of a government, people under oppression have indeed no space to move on their own free will.

http://www.searchtruth.com/search.php?keyword=oppressed+men+except&chapter=&tran slator=2&search=1&start=&records_display=10&search_word=all
===
except those who are (really) weak and oppressed - men, women, and children - who have no means in their power, nor (a guide-post) to their way.
( An-Nisa, Chapter #4, Verse #98)
===

By 4:98 by denying immigration to these Sabians we of course give them refuge from Hell. In the process the whole of mankind – at least the rulers of the nations – would be held accountable for not having permitted them to move away from evil.

Whether the UN and all the nations would save these Sabians is the question not whether an emerging Iraq would protect them. So in my opinion the whole of mankind is under test.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Wednesday, March 07, 2007 - 09:02 am:   

Let us seal the Bushehr reactor under IAEA control so that the fuel rods stay inside.

http://www.oxfordresearchgroup.org.uk/publications/briefings/wouldairstrikeswork .pdf
===
The Bushehr reactor will use low enriched uranium (about 3.5% in uranium-235) as fuel. The core of the reactor will hold about 103 tonnes of uranium contained in 193 fuel assemblies. If operated to generate electricity, the Bushehr reactor will produce about 250 kg of plutonium per year. If diverted for military use, this amount of plutonium would be enough to build between 40 and 50 nuclear weapons a year. There would be enough plutonium in four irradiated fuel assemblies to produce a nuclear weapon.
===

The nuclear fuel has 3.5% of uranium-235 and the rest is possibly uranium-238. From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plutonium we get:
===
Pu-239
Main article: Plutonium 239
Plutonium-239 is one of the three fissile materials used for the production of nuclear weapons and in some nuclear reactors as a source of energy. The other fissile materials are uranium-235 and uranium-233. Plutonium-239 is virtually nonexistent in nature. It is made by bombarding uranium-238 with neutrons in a nuclear reactor. Uranium-238 is present in quantity in most reactor fuel; hence plutonium-239 is continuously made in these reactors. Since plutonium-239 can itself be split by neutrons to release energy, plutonium-239 provides a portion of the energy generation in a nuclear reactor.

Pu-238
Main article: Plutonium-238
There are small amounts of Pu-238 in the plutonium of usual plutonium-producing reactors. However, isotopic separation would be quite expensive compared to another method: when a U-235 atom captures a neutron, it is converted to an excited state of U-236. Some of the excited U-236 nuclei undergo fission, but some decay to the ground state of U-236 by emitting gamma radiation. Further neutron capture creates U-237 which has a half-life of 7 days and thus quickly decays to Np-237. Since nearly all neptunium is produced in this way or consists of isotopes which decay quickly, one gets nearly pure Np-237 by chemical separation of neptunium. After this chemical separation, Np-237 is again irradiated by reactor neutrons to be converted to Np-238 which decays to Pu-238 with a half-life of 2 days.
===

From the above we infer that the nuclear power plant does not lose uranium-235 in operation but converts the uranium-238 to plutonium-239 which is bomb material. Of course plutonium-239 could as well be used as nuclear fuel.

What happens if the Bushehr plant’s nuclear fuel rods are not reprocessed? The core has 3.5% of useful material at the start. There are 103,000 kg of fuel with 3,605 kg of U-235 and 99,395 kg of U-238. In one year 250 kg of U-238 becomes Pu-239. Ignoring second order effects, in 14 years and 5 months this reactor would have produced 3,605 kg of Pu-239. Now the concentration is 7.0%. We retrieve the fuel rods and make two fuel rods from one by adding U-238 of equal weight. That is, by sealing the Bushehr reactor for 14 years and 5 months, we create one more Bushehr reactor at the end of 14 years and 5 months. We need not extract the Pu-239 but just dilute the same with more U-238.

We can have enough energy and no bombs by doubling nuclear power every 15 years. Further we could convert 50 nuclear bombs to one Bushehr power plant by diluting the bomb material.

Do we seek a memorandum to eliminate all Pu-239 extraction plants and create dilution plants?

Looks like mankind need not vanish in a mushroom cloud!
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Anon Anon
Posted on Wednesday, March 07, 2007 - 11:10 pm:   

U.S. confirms possible poisoning of Americans
Embassy in Moscow says pair hospitalized for possible thallium ingestion
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17502067/

It appears that poisoning of Americans and Russians that oppose the KGB and its operatives is now back in vogue. Ex-KGB types settling scores with those that helped bring them down during the Cold War and again oppose them as they take control of Russian industry and Russia's economy.

With this spread of poisoning no one is safe. Know we know why Ed returned home and his family with its money and connections with state and local police are protecting him since the federal government threw him out.

One wonders what the Feds think of a descendent of the founding families that has the backing of local EMS, Police and current and retired National Guard Troops protecting him. Kind of like a stand off between the state and federal government. With a descendent of the founding families with a network of contacts that reaches into the White House and a founding family with a serious grudge against a White House Administration. Connecticut was ground zero during the elections that decided control of the Senate. One would say some of the founding familes flexed a little muscle and put the current occupant of the White House on notice that when it comes to playing dirty, a street fighter backed by the founding families and 24 years of intellgience training is nothing to laugh at and is capable of bring down a government using dirty tricks, disclosure of dirty secrets and pyschological warfare to make a point.

Anon Anon
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Ivan
Posted on Friday, March 09, 2007 - 06:18 pm:   

Towards a Safer World with Nuclear Energy, not Bombs.

Mohideen, in yours:

quote:

We can have enough energy and no bombs by doubling nuclear power every 15 years. Further we could convert 50 nuclear bombs to one Bushehr power plant by diluting the bomb material.

Do we seek a memorandum to eliminate all Pu-239 extraction plants and create dilution plants?


If only it were so. It seems appealing at first sight, but the technology behind your proposal may not agree with the laws of physics. The IAEA Director General Dr. Mohammed ElBaradei writes in "Towards a Safer World":
"In Too Many Hands

Countries with nuclear industries have set up elaborate accounting and protection measures to ensure strong national oversight of their nuclear material. The IAEA inspects regularly to verify the accuracy of what countries report. Export controls restrict the transfer of sensitive technologies that could be misused for nuclear-weapons production.
...
In pre-1992 Iraq, for example, scientists were simultaneously pursuing no fewer than six different technologies to enrich uranium for eventual weapons use, shopping for essential equipment and specialised materials in more than ten countries.
...
While high-enriched uranium is easier to use in nuclear weapons, most advanced nuclear arsenals favour plutonium, which can be tailored for use in smaller, lighter weapons more suited for missile warheads. Plutonium is a by-product of nuclear-reactor operation, and separation technology ("reprocessing"), also not proscribed under the NPT, can be applied to extract the plutonium from spent fuel for re-use in electricity production." (italics mine)
However, the technology behind extracting plutonium, PU239, for electricity production has not yet been done. The science behind it, though math shows it can be done in theory, has not yet produced this power generating use of PU239 because of the extreme conditions necessary to contain its highly toxic radioactive conditions. As of now, per Dr. W. F. Libby's statement:
" In a speech on the tasks of chemists and metallurgists in atomic energy, he claimed that “no country has yet developed the technology of ‘burning’ plutonium.”"
There is a scientific reason for this, which I will pursue further, later. At the moment, heading out the door. :-)

(This discussion continues on Global Warming Paradigm thread, for the science part of 'burning' plutonium.)

However, the real problem is further complicated by politics, where the Iranian Mullahs want to develop nuclear weapons, of which there is no doubt. Such mega weapons in their hands is suicidal, more for them than for us, so like bad children who are not allowed to play with guns, they may not have them under any circumstances. Dr. ElBaradei is well aware of this as well, and the Russian built Bushehr plant is especially suspect. Even if they could contain the plutonium in the nuclear reactions, which is doubtful, they would only succeed in breeding far greater quantities for their bombs, which is unacceptable.

What we do not want, Mohideen, in applying any future plutonium 'burn' technology is to generate even far greater amounts of this highly poisonous material for more bombs, especially in the hands of those irresponsible rogue states, like Iran.

Ivan
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Anon
Posted on Friday, March 09, 2007 - 08:18 pm:   

Thanks Anon Anon

As to my poisoning, well its now a matter of international knowledge.

As to my accurate predictions, they are also a matter of international knowledge that spans the globe.

The fact that the current administration threw me out to the wolves and left me to die is known around the globe from this site and its readers to sites visited by Mohideen Ibramsha.

The names of those in the federal government that failed to follow-up on my predictions, and the corporations that abused and exploited me are also known to the world.

That is the power of a distributed network. A posting here and a posting there linked to predictions and geometric work passed from one site to another and it spans the globe. Like ripples in a pond driven by search engines the truth keeps spreading across the worldwide web in ever greater circles.

This was a lesson I wanted to teach the federal government in how one man could use the power of the internet to circle the globe and reach into the inner most circles of power.

Crippled and left for dead, I wanted to prove what could be done.

I did and a government fell.

As an aside I just got back the results of my liver tests and blood work-ups. With low doses of medication, improved diet and increased exercise my levels are all within normal limits. Save for spinal damage and mild secondary nerve damge I am fine.

My GPA is 3.48 in masters level classes and I will complete a masters degree and another bachelor degree within 20 months. That added to one bachelor degree I already have and 90 percent completion of a masters degree in education will give me 190 credit hours of college education. Within 24 months I will have completed two masters degrees and will hold two bachelor degrees with a GPA average of well over 3.0.

At work I created an entire sustainment and refresher training program from scratch for the security staff of a fortune 500 company within 3 months. With minimal support and assistance I have just integrated a web-based training and testing program in into the refresher training program I developed and will have it up and completely operational within 60 days of installation of the software on our computer systems.

I did all of this while working 60 plus hours a week, taking a concurent masters and bachelor degree program, recovering from poisoning, a rupured spinal cord and rebuilding a 110 year old home. This is in addition to predicting earthquakes, huricane katrina's damage, trisecting the angle and solving the billiard problem with compass and ruler.

Some people laughed at me and the federal government threatened me. I decided to teach the federal government a lesson it would never forget.

If I wanted to I could plan a nuclear strike that would leave this nation broken, cities smashed, and leadership wiped from the face of the earth. I could do the same to China, Russia or Iran.

That is what the government of the United States trained me to do for over 24 years. Now consider what capabilites in war, terrorism and guerilla warfare I have with 24 years of service it I can achieve the above despite being 80% disabled. The federal government should be thankful I found Christ and put down the sword.

Edward A, Chesky Jr
Major, United States Army
RET
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Friday, March 09, 2007 - 11:12 pm:   

The federal government should be thankful I found Christ and put down the sword.
Edward A, Chesky Jr
Posted on Friday, March 09, 2007 - 08:18 pm: Anon


Governments change. Please do take the sword to eliminate war. Coercion can be used to fight coercion.

It might sound impossible to hurt the war-monger and not the innocent among whom he / she mingles. Hopefully remote sensing (of intentions which are sensed today under PET scan)and self-delivery ammunition might indeed help attacking the war-mongers alone even if they are in a crowd. Why not start thinking on these lines?
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Friday, March 09, 2007 - 11:19 pm:   

What we do not want, Mohideen, in applying any future plutonium 'burn' technology ...

I am not even agreeing to extraction of the Pu-239. There is no question of burning Pu-239.

IAEA has the authority to ensure that a sealed nuclear power plant remains sealed.

I am not suggesting that we work within the existing standards. I am seeking an international agreement that there would be no enrichment but just dilution so that more power plants are generated and no bomb whatsoever.

Look upon the sealed operation of Bushehr plant as a separate option to the current Iran problem. We might yet succeed in a peaceful regime change there. We hope the new regime would eshew weapons; we hope!
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Monday, March 12, 2007 - 11:14 am:   

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/article1496223.ece
===
Inspired by the legendary leader, key Washington adviser David Kilcullen tells Christina Lamb how he is reshaping strategy in Afghanistan and Iraq
===

On the basis of the above statement we believe David Kilcullen approves of – if not initiated – the troop surge of Commander-in-Chief Bush. Quoting from the above URL again, we get:
===
His 28 principles start with “diagnose the problem”.
===

An earlier version of these 28 principles are found in http://www.smallwarsjournal.com/documents/28articles.pdf
===
1. Know your turf. Know the people, the topography, economy, history, religion and culture. Know every village, road, field, population group, tribal leader and ancient grievance. Your task is to become the world expert on your district. If you don’t know precisely where you will be operating, study the general area. Read the map like a book: study it every night before sleep, and re-draw it from memory every morning, until you understand its patterns intuitively. Develop a mental model of your area - a framework in which to fit every new piece of knowledge you acquire. Study handover notes from predecessors; better still, get in touch with the unit in theater and pick their brains. In an ideal world, intelligence officers and area experts would brief you. This rarely happens: and even if it does, there is no substitute for personal mastery. Understand the broader area of influence: this can be a wide area, particularly when insurgents draw on global grievances. Share out aspects of the operational area among platoon leaders and non-commissioned officers: have each individual develop a personal specialization and brief the others. Neglect this knowledge, and it will kill you.
===

This first article is crucial for success. Since these 28 articles are inspired by the experience of “Lawrence of Arabia” let us look at his case. From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T._E._Lawrence
===
Subsequently, in the summer of 1909, he set out alone on a three month walking tour of crusader castles in Syria during which he traveled 1,000 miles on foot. The knowledge he gained of the local peoples, their language, and customs was to serve him well when he returned to this area later as an archaeologist and soldier.

On completing his degree in 1910, he commenced postgraduate research in medieval pottery with a Senior Demy at Magdalen College, Oxford, which he abandoned after he was offered the opportunity to become a practising archaeologist in the Middle East. In December 1910, he sailed for Beirut, and on arrival, went to Jbail (Byblos), where he studied Arabic. He then went to work on the excavations at Carchemish, near Jerablus in northern Syria, where he worked under D.G. Hogarth and R. Campbell-Thompson of the British Museum. He would later state that everything that he had accomplished, he owed to Hogarth. While excavating ancient Mesopotamian sites, Lawrence met Gertrude Bell, who was to influence him for much of his time in the Middle East.

In late summer 1911, Lawrence returned for a brief sojourn to England. By November, he was en route to Beirut for a second season at Carchemish, where he was to work with Leonard Woolley. Prior to resuming work there, however, he briefly worked with William Flinders Petrie at Kafr Ammar, in Egypt.

Lawrence continued making trips to the Middle East as a field archaeologist until the outbreak of World War I. His extensive travels through Arabia, his excursions, often on foot, living with the Arabs, wearing their clothes, learning their culture, language and local dialects, were to prove invaluable in the coming war.

In January 1914, Woolley and Lawrence were co-opted by the British military as an archaeological smokescreen for a British military survey of the Negev Desert.
===

From the above we notice that the legendary Lawrence of Arabia has virtually lived among the Arabs from 1909 till 1914 when he joined the army. He was an accepted member of the Arabic community.

Let us consider the Iraq war. We started the war after imposing sanctions on the population from 1991; we antagonized Saddam who was the darling of the population after the first Gulf war. Thus we had none who could be accepted as a member of the group in Iraq. From 2003 we had adapted a course of action against article 25 which includes:
===
Instead, attack the enemy’s strategy: if he is seeking to recapture the allegiance of a segment of the local population, then co-opt them against him.
===

Did we go after the enemy’s strategy? We went after storming the houses and antagonized the population.

Now we have gone so far down the wrong road, it would be impossible to win the population. Any amount of troop surge would not result in ‘winning the hearts and minds’ of the population.

What should we do? Possibly beyond our control, Iraq is sliding into a civil war. As we do not know which side would emerge the winner, it would be prudent to stay out of the civil war and reengage once there is stability in Iraq.

We know there are ‘oil interests.’ Should we stay until our companies get permission for oil exploration from the current government? That is risky. If the current government succeeds then we have done well. If the current government fails, getting the contracts under this government wouldn’t be worth the paper on which it is signed. It would be better to negotiate with the next government.

Would the next government negotiate? With the oil infrastructure in shambles, which ever government emerges needs to get finance and thus they of necessity would invite foreign companies. Instead of buying the crude cheap and refining it elsewhere and reaping windfall profits, the next government would be very happy to have the oil extraction and refinement done on their soil provided the profits are shared 50/50 between the private companies and the Iraqi government. We state this because ‘share cropping’ is approved in Islam and thus equal share for the Iraqi population in the profits of the operation would be agreed to by a future government whatever be its composition.

Under the above proposal, we should withdraw our boys and girls from Iraq and let the Iraqis settle their internal disputes. Troop surge would be counter productive. Congress and the Senate need to reverse gear (of the misguided Commander-in-Chief) and get our children out of Iraq soon.

Getting them out of Iraq now is helping them, not sanctioning funds to retain them there to suffer in the crossfire between different Iraq groups battling for supremacy.
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Ivan
Posted on Tuesday, March 13, 2007 - 10:07 am:   


quote:

From the above we notice that the legendary Lawrence of Arabia has virtually lived among the Arabs from 1909 till 1914 when he joined the army. He was an accepted member of the Arabic community.


We must not lose sight of the fact that Lawrence lived in a different time. Back then Islam was not vying for political supremacy with a neo-jjhad ambition, such as witnessed in the 21st century. When I traveled in Sudan, mid 1980s, it was a different world from today's highly charged atmosphere of Islamic fundamentalism. Though I traveled with the common people across the desert from Khartoum to Egypt, I did not sense hostility, except of the banditry kind, but not religious hostility. Today, that would not be the same, as many foreginers are kidnapped and held for ransom, or killed, in similar circumstances, only two decades later. So Lawrence traveled during a 'calm' time of Islamic Jihad, not the same today.

To win the hearts and minds of Iraqi people means for them to transcend their religious hostility to outsiders. This is a common problem whenever approaching an inbred insular group of people who are more tribal than worldly, even if they are only mountain clans in Appalachia, where one must approach them with great caution. In Afghanistan this would be magnified by centuries of hostility towards the outside world. So winning their hearts and minds must be seen through that prism of innate hostility. Had the Taleban, a strict fundamentalism Islamic tradition, not taken over the country, and had Al Qaeda not attacked the United States of America, both 1993 and 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center, both of which had casualties but the latter was horriffic, then we would have never entered Afghannistan. But they did attack us, so they were invaded, the Taleban stripped of power, and Al Qaeda is still being hunted down, and killed. That is war. And until the mission is won, there is no winning of hearts and minds, because in their lexicon, they are not to be subdued, but to subdue us. It will not happen, so their aggressions against us will be subdued, and they subdued in turn. We do not have to feel obligated in any manner towards the aggressors, nor to pay them any special tax of appeasement, nor to bow to their threats and violence. Once Afghanistan stands solid as a nation that is able to control its neo-jihadic fundamentalists, then we can call it a day, and leave.

For Iraq, that is more complicated because of the Sunni-Shia secterian, medieval religious wars that go back centuries. Once we deposed Saddam Hussein and a government of the Iraqi people is found functioning, so that it does not slide into a Somalia, then troops should be out. The other option is to get out now, leave it to the pursuant blood bath and let them fight it out like dogs. Our humanitarian side balks at the latter, though it may in the end be the better solution. History will judge. I am quite certain that Lawrence, knowing well the Arab mind, would have agreed. We live in different, and far more dangerous to us, times than a hundred years ago. Force against Muslim fundamentalism-jihad must be used now, as it was many centuries ago, until the Gates of Vienna, when it was turned back.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Tuesday, March 13, 2007 - 06:39 pm:   

Our humanitarian side balks at the latter, though it may in the end be the better solution.
Posted on Tuesday, March 13, 2007 - 10:07 am: Ivan


We do risk our lives in saving another life. But that happens in situations where we perceive and feel the possibility of success. This is an extreme example. Supposing a person has fallen inside a burning volcano, do we attempt to retrieve from the magma? The answer would be no.

Coming to Iraq, we were fed motivated and false intelligence by some of expatriats of Iraq and we believed them, went in and destroyed Saddam. Yes we made a mistake, and the population is in uproar.

Do we have the army in such a strength to not only subdue the insurgents but also to stay put and carry out the reconstruction? I believe the answer is no.

Under the circumstances leaving our sons and daughters inside Iraq where their blood is shed is unwise. Even if history would blame us for having launched a war on faulty intelligence, persisting in the folly and sacrificing more and more young Americans would induce history to call us stupid as well.

It is hoped that Congress and the Senate display the required magnonimity to own up our mistakes and take corrective actions by withdrawing our sons and daughters.

As regards Shia - Sunni tussles as they are historical, we do not have to feel that we facilitated the civil war. We liberated the Shia and if they do not know how to use liberation and commit foolish acts, we don't have to shed blood there.
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C.c.
Posted on Wednesday, March 14, 2007 - 09:31 pm:   

Release Daniele Mastrogiacomo, international petition to Free him.

arabo_big.jpg

"We kindly ask you to sign our appeal for Mastrogiacomo's release. We also ask for your help to make this appeal known to as many people as possible. You may help us by sending Daniele's picture, together with the message, to your friends and acquaintances all over the world, and also to public authorities, government and international media."

Please sign the petition at: http://www.repubblica.it/speciale/2007/appelli/mastrogiacomo/index.html

Thank you, grazie
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, March 15, 2007 - 06:50 am:   

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20070315.wterrconfess0315/BNS tory/International/home
===
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed cemented his position as al-Qaeda's most ambitious operational planner when he confessed in a U.S. military tribunal to planning and supporting 31 terrorist attacks, topped by 9/11, that killed thousands since the early 1990s.
===

Now we know why there was no attack on the US soil after 9/11. After all the only 'attack-planner' KSM was behind the bars! That also explains why innumerable planned attacks were foiled by the authorities. Poor KSM has not trained anyone else in the art of planning successful attacks!

As a corollary can we assume that withdrawing our boys and girls from Iraq before pacifying that wretched land would not cause the war on terror to visit our land? After all the enemy has no master mind to plan successful attacks!!!

So we repeat our appeal to Congress and the Senate to forthwith force the fumbling C-in-C to withdraw our boys and girls from Iraq immediately.
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Ivan
Posted on Thursday, March 15, 2007 - 06:18 pm:   

Continued on Taliban kidnap, from above:

This is the video released by the Taliban on captured Italian journalist Mastrogiacomo:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZqwB1-C4AOE&feature=RecentlyWatched&page=1&t=t&f= b

What do they hope to achieve? We are dealing with medieval barbarians here, nothing to do with religion or war, just cheap bandits.

Safe face, let the journalist go.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Friday, March 16, 2007 - 10:36 am:   

Could the stock market fail us in the 'war on terror?' What happens if our economy collapses? Should we continue with our current policies in the mortgage industry? Are the fears expressed in http://www.humancafe.com/discus/messages/88/221.html?1174005855#POST3439 and the subsequent posts realistic? Should we look into this aspect at all?
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Naive
Posted on Saturday, March 17, 2007 - 01:12 am:   

The U.S. will bleed the world dry before letting its economy collapse. Look at the self-protective, and self-servingly corrupt record of previous administrations. When terror groups seek to wage an economic war with our government, these groups are in reality cutting their own wrists. We invented this cold war tactic, and our government knows how to use the media to agitate the populace. The rest is simply procedure.

I think Ivan is right. These are cheap bandits, who like to feel powerful by showing their buddies what a nuisance they can be to the world. They should be ignored by the media worldwide! Then how impotent they would feel. Our media gives them a forum to feel powerful. Since our policy is one of non-negotiation, we should apply this to the exposure we give them in the media as well.



Naive
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Saturday, March 17, 2007 - 11:18 am:   

They should be ignored by the media worldwide!
Posted on Saturday, March 17, 2007 - 01:12 am: Naive


It is a very good suggestion. Whose media are we talking about? Would Al Jazeera ignore them?
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Sunday, March 18, 2007 - 07:29 am:   

2036446%2C00.html,http://observer.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,,2036446,00.html
===
A failed state is one that can no longer provide security and social requirements for its citizens; that has descended into factionalism and warlordism; that cannot guarantee the integrity of its own borders, and lacks the ability to sustain itself. All of which perfectly describes large areas of today's Iraq.
===
(To access the article copy the part of the URL after the ',' to the browser.)

Who caused this failure? Did we or the expat Iraqis who took charge of the country? It is our opinion that the expat Iraqis are mostly responsible.

After the last elections there were calls for a national unity government. What got formed was a national unity government in form and not in spirit. If there would be a true national unity government, surely the population would not support the insurgents.

Can there be a true national unity government? Possibly! If we put pressure on the Iraqis with a conditional phase-out they might see the light of the day. We could devise a metric to decide whether a locality inside Iraq is worth pacifying. Our sons and daughters would be moved out of those localities decided by our metric to be beyond redemption. We would keep only those many of our children in those localities - pacifyable localities - required for the major reconstruction efforts to be carried out of course under due protection by our troops. Rest of our children would be brought home.

By such a move we are not abandoning our expat Iraqi friends, we just want them to perform. We are not withdrawing support to our troops. We are not giving any specific timetable to the enemy. We are specifying a blue print for recovering Iraq and let true democracy bloom there.

In my opinion as long as those who deserted Iraq for decades when the common person suffered under Saddam could not aspire to the highest offices of the land. That has failed. It is time for the expat Iraqis to take second tier positions and those Iraqis who remained in Iraq all through to take the leadership.

We hope there would be bipartisan agreement in both Congress and Senate to formulate a 'improvement-cum-exit' strategy.
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Anonym
Posted on Sunday, March 18, 2007 - 04:52 pm:   

The other St. Petersburg Declaration: http://www.icrc.org/ihl.nsf/INTRO/130?OpenDocument

Anoym
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Ivan
Posted on Monday, March 19, 2007 - 09:43 am:   

From Guardian on Iraq:

quote:

A failed state is one that can no longer provide security and social requirements for its citizens; that has descended into factionalism and warlordism; that cannot guarantee the integrity of its own borders, and lacks the ability to sustain itself. All of which perfectly describes large areas of today's Iraq.



The Iraq solution can be summed up as simply as this:
Will a small sectarian violent population beat the much larger democratic majority of Iraqis into submission?
The answer lies with the people, the Iraqi people, and not with us, not our troops. As Mohideen suggests above, begin a 'conditional phase-out' to pressure the Iraqi people's government to take over the hard job of fighting those hardened criminals.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Monday, March 19, 2007 - 09:54 am:   

The answer lies with the people, the Iraqi people, and not with us, not our troops.
Posted on Monday, March 19, 2007 - 09:43 am: Ivan


What do the Iraqi people feel?

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/PAR942558.htm
===
In Baghdad, the epicentre of violence, 100 percent said U.S. and other foreign forces had done a bad job in Iraq, opposed the presence of U.S.-led forces and said the presence of U.S. forces was making security in the country worse.
===

It looks like 'troop surge' is simply a waste of the lives of our sons and daughters. As the Iraqis themselves feel that the presence of US troops makes their security worse we need not feel any remorse in withdrawing from Iraq.

The earlier this misadventure is wound up the better for all.
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Ivan
Posted on Monday, March 19, 2007 - 09:59 am:   

Good news on Afghanistan's kidnap victim from BBC News: "Italian reporter 'will be freed'"

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6465773.stm

Thank God, that it be so.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Monday, March 19, 2007 - 10:20 am:   

"Italian reporter 'will be freed'"
Posted on Monday, March 19, 2007 - 09:59 am: Ivan


Let us hope so. He seems to be still vulnerable.
http://www.bruneitimes.com.bn/details.php?shape_ID=24340
===
KANDAHAR, AFGHANISTAN: Afghanistan's Taliban yesterday said they had handed an Italian journalist captured two weeks ago to tribal elders after two Taliban members were freed, but would take him back if a third was not released. The Italian news agency Ansa reported that veteran correspondent Daniele Mastrogiacomo, 52, had been freed but his employer, Rome-based La Repubblica newspaper, said it did not have confirmation. Italian and Afghan officials also could not confirm the report. "We'll consider him free when he's safely in Italian hands," an Italian foreign ministry spokesman in Rome said. The ambassador in Kabul, Ettore Francesco Sequi, also said he had no evidence of his release. Taliban spokesman Yousuf Ahmadi told AFP that Mastrogiacomo and his Afghan translator were handed to elders in Helmand province after the government freed two members of the group, Latif Hakimi and Ustad Yasar.
===

We do not know about the release of the third member demanded by the Taliban. Until and unless the journalist is on Italian soil, I would keep my fingers crossed. Our prayers for his release need to be continued.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Monday, March 19, 2007 - 11:34 am:   

http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/asiapcf/03/19/italy.afghan/
===
He was taken to an Italian-run hospital and has been in touch with Italy's ambassador to Afghanistan, according to the ministry and the newspaper.
===

Yes, one step closer to freedom.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Monday, March 19, 2007 - 07:40 pm:   

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/03/13/africa/ME-GEN-Iraq-Oil.php?page=1

The above offers interesting possibilities, in particular the following:
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/03/13/africa/ME-GEN-Iraq-Oil.php?page=2
===
Al-Maliki is committed to meeting the deadline because he is convinced he would not survive in power without U.S. support," one of the associates said.

But standing in the way of forward movement is a recalcitrant Cabinet which al-Maliki has promised to reshuffle by the end of this week. So far, however, he is at loggerheads with the political groupings in parliament which are threatening to withdraw their support for the prime minister if he does not allow the blocs to name replacements for Cabinet positions.

The impasse amounts effectively to a threat to bring down the government if it does what the Americans reportedly are telling al-Maliki he must do to win continued U.S. backing.
===
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Tuesday, March 20, 2007 - 09:32 am:   

http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=51&ItemID=12374
===
Right now, the common refrain is that cutting funds for the war is abandoning the troops. The Democrats must proclaim, loudly and clearly, that the best way to support the troops is get them out of harm’s way and back into the arms of their loved ones. As a group of military families and veterans wrote in an open letter to Congress, “Voting more funds for this war would be abandoning our troops. It would leave them with the possibility of joining the over 3,160 who have died, or the tens of thousands who have been wounded, physically, psychologically, or both.”
===
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Wednesday, March 21, 2007 - 05:18 pm:   

http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/03/21/news/mideast.php
===
... a senior U.S. official said the cut would amount to about $36 million, leaving only $50 million of the original package.

... Also Wednesday, the United States and its three partners in Middle East peace efforts — the United Nations, the European Union and Russia — called on all parties in the Palestinian government to commit fully to peace.

The group endorsed a three-month extension of a system that allows European nations to send money to the Palestinians without benefiting Hamas.
===

Put in other words, the international community is opening its purse for the Palestinians. True the mechanisms developed to deny money to Hamas would work. However this does not mean the Palestinians would move away from Hamas.

No Muslim would eat well while his neighbor starves; they do share their meagre food. If in the past the Hamas member helped his Fatah neighbor, now a Fatah member would help his Hamas neighbor. There is bound to be mutual help among the families.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 08:56 am:   

http://www.amin.org/look/amin/en.tpl?IdLanguage=1&IdPublication=7&NrArticle=3976 2&NrIssue=1&NrSection=3
===
There are already many in Iran talking loudly about advantages of an agreement with the US. But this can only come about if all sides are willing to sit, negotiate and compromise. Today the best way out for the Middle East is a negotiated settlement between US and Iran. If that doesn’t take place, then war is inevitable.
===

Let us hope that there is a negotiated settlement between the US and Iran, if necessary after a peaceful regime change in Iran.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 09:17 am:   

http://www.humancafe.com/discus/messages/88/90.html?1174515498#POST3482
===
Of course, but how can a movie set in ancient history 2 1/2 millennia ago make anybody bomb anybody else?
===

I talk about the motivation for releasing such a movie now. Let us not forget that after 9/11 the media has behaved more as a partner than a watchdog of the current US administration.

Now the apprehension I state below could be ridiculed but could not be ruled out. We know that subliminal messages were used by the current occupants of the White House. See
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_depth/americas/2000/us_elections/election_news/921 830.stm
===
The Republican presidential candidate, George W Bush, has denied that his team planted the word "Rats" as a subliminal message in a television advertisement criticising his Democrat opponent Al Gore.

Mr Gore's aides seized on the 30-second ad, giving a slowed-down version of it to the New York Times. They said a Democrat in Seattle had spotted the apparently subliminal message after a close inspection.
===

Are we sure that the movie does not carry a subliminal message? A subliminal message could be slipped in just a single frame anywhere in the movie and that would do the trick.

I have responded here to the point made in the evolution track as this topic connected with Iran might divert that topic away from evolution. I hope others agree.
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Ivan
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 09:27 am:   


quote:

No Muslim would eat well while his neighbor starves; they do share their meagre food. If in the past the Hamas member helped his Fatah neighbor, now a Fatah member would help his Hamas neighbor.


Of course, no human being should feel comfortable eating while another is starving, not just a Muslim thing. God made no distinction between human beings, except in the Muslim mind.

As far as your "Are we sure that the movie does not carry a subliminal message? A subliminal message could be slipped in just a single frame anywhere in the movie and that would do the trick" is concerned, that is one more conspiracy paranoia for which you had better give proof, or you are accusing the makers of "300" of illegal activities. Cease and desist, unless you want to condemn with proof, not sly off hand remarks.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 09:58 am:   

http://www.nybooks.com/articles/20030
===
More recently, it was among the pressure groups that prevailed upon the Democratic House leadership to drop the requirement that the President obtain congressional approval before taking military action against Iran.
===

If the above statement is true, it is truly unfortunate. We hope that Congress and the Senate stop further unjustified exposure of our sons and daughters to harm by this administration.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 10:12 am:   

Cease and desist, unless you want to condemn with proof
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 09:27 am: Ivan


I hope someone with the necessary equipment would perform the verification and either 'condemn with proof' or exonerate. I do not have the required equipment.

I searched for a DVD version and am confused about this information.
http://www.bestprices.com/cgi-bin/vlink/024543115557
===
300 Spartans
New DVD Movie -
... 20 In Stock! Release: 05/11/2004
===

If the DVD version of the movie was released on May 11, 2004 why the sudden outcry now?
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Ivan
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 06:15 pm:   

You present an accusation, your provide the proof:

quote:

I hope someone with the necessary equipment would perform the verification and either 'condemn with proof' or exonerate.


Remember in our western culture we have something called "innocent until proven guilty", so any presumption of "condemn with proof or exonerate" is entirely on your shoulders. You accuse, you are responsible, no one else. :-)

Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 06:33 pm:   

Is it time for war against 'political' Islam?

The issues we discussed above have more to do with Iran and Iraq, or the Palestinian jihad, not against Islam. But here is an author who feels differently, that it is a war against 'political' Islam. That this is what colors all conflicts today, or most of them around the world, and that we need a "Mind of War" mentality to fight this resurfacing scourge against humanity and its modern freedoms. I for one do not think this a primary issue, since today is very different from what happend a thousand years ago. We are in the 21st century, not the 11th century where Islam dominated through warfare and conquest all of the Middle East and North Africa, slaving all over Africa, slaving in southern Europe and Asia. Times are different now. We have communications, travel, tecchnology, legal precedents, and philosophical developments absent during the Byzantine Empire times. In fact, I am comforted to have Muslims living in the West for two reasons: we can better observe them, and we can learn from them. In fact, I think they are just where they should be, not as an enemy within, but as a potential tool for further reformations of Islam towards peace rather than their historical recidivism towards war. The Gates of Vienna shut down modern imperialism for 'political' Islamic jihad. It's over, they cannot win.

There is something today called Freedom and the rights of the individual, for the first time in history. That is far more durable than the 'dualistic' philosophy of ancient Islam, or any of their threats against our western culture. Rather, I am quite certain what we are witnessing today is in fact the 'death throes' of ancient Islam as it is forced into adapting for the modern age of Freedom. So we will win, not a problem at all. "War is deceit" cannot win against "our inalienable right to be free", which is the power behind our modern Truth.

Here is the article by Bill Warner: Thge Dhimmi Revolution
http://www.newenglishreview.org/custpage.cfm?frm=5794&sec_id=5794

On another issue, can there ever be a truthful dialogue with 'political' Islam? That is a topic for another thread, on religious dialogue, on which I have some thoughts. To be continued...

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 09:00 pm:   

If the DVD version of the movie was released on May 11, 2004 why the sudden outcry now?

I continue from my earlier post.

A movie that was released during 2004 when there was no talk of any trouble with Iran was not even mentioned. Now that movie has become a point of debate. At the least the resurrection of that movie implies an attempt at 'perception management.'

Why manage perception now? Is it because all the options continue to remain on the table?
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 09:03 pm:   

Remember in our western culture we have something called "innocent until proven guilty", ...
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 06:15 pm: Ivan


Where did that 'innocent until proven guilty' go when the Iraq war was launched?
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 09:10 pm:   

So we will win, not a problem at all.
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 06:33 pm: Ivan


True, the real Islam of Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, and the first four Caliphs, Allah be pleased with them would surely win and establish Chapter 109 of the Holy Quran: to you your faith and to me my faith.

Unfortunately wars do interfere in that process of the 'peaceful Islam' nudging out the 'global conquest' of some misguided Muslims. From that perspective as well we need a peaceful change in regime in Iran than a war that might simply strengthen the hands of the war mongers.
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Ivan
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 10:04 pm:   

The Romans had a saying: "In war the law ends."


quote:

Where did that 'innocent until proven guilty' go when the Iraq war was launched?


Mohideen, are we to presume you harbor a secret love for Saddam Hussein and lament his departure? For that matter, why did we go into Somalia, Kosovo, or Afghanistan? Why do we have wars? Why were we attacked on 9/11? Why are they still plotting today, though with less success, such as the transantlantic flights foiled bombings, or foiled Morocco tourism bombings, or the German train bombings, all foiled by security investigations and quick arrests. It must be so frustrating to be plotting, even wearing a suicide belt in the internet cafe in Morocco, only to be foiled, once again. That fellow blew himself up. How ridiculously infantile, stupid and what a waste of humanity. Now Iran wants to be the big boy with the bomb, so they swerve and stall, and talk and deceive, like slippery eels, and cry and claim they are victimized by the world community, the UN, IEAE, 'death to America and Israel' speeches, and what have we got? A prospect for peace in Iran? Hmmm? Peace? Think about it.

Yeah, Saddam is gone, and good riddence to human garbage. Why, you want to cry for him? He was a wholesale murderer. No WMDs found? How do you know? What about the chlorine gas bombs used by jihadists in Iraq now? What about declassified info showing they did find WMDs, but were classified top secret. Why do you think the military will tell you, or me , or the press, everything? Think about it. It's a war. Don't lament for the losers.

"Innocent until proven guilty" in war? Go tell it to the people of Darfur.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 10:56 pm:   

Here is the article by Bill Warner: The Dhimmi Revolution
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 06:33 pm: Ivan


Thanks for the link. I enjoyed reading the article. The Dhimmi Revolution is sure to benefit mankind. The meaning of Verse 256 of Chapter 2 of the Holy Quran would become clear during the Dhimmi Revolution. If the doctrine of Islam is good, it would win. If it is bad it would lose. After all that is what God wants: His prescriptions for His creation is to be read by His creation. That is all. Whether you read the Quran as a believing Muslim or as a non-believing non-Muslim it is enough if you read it. I welcome the Dhimmi revolution.

The architects of the Dhimmi revolution are welcome to post their questions to me. Simply visit my web - http://www.deentech.com/ and use the email facility in the home page. I hope to contribute my little part.

I do not believe in history: his story. I believe in the Holy Quran and the authentic Traditions of Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him. So any question regarding the so called historic aspects would be ignored.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 10:59 pm:   

"Innocent until proven guilty" in war?
Posted on Thursday, March 22, 2007 - 10:04 pm: Ivan


What about the period when a population is 'perception managed' in preparation for the next war? Should we treat this period also as a 'period of war?'
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Friday, March 23, 2007 - 10:00 am:   

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070323/ap_on_re_eu/british_seized_iran
===
Iran nabs British sailors in Iraq waters
===
The above is the headline of the news item.

===
LONDON - Iranian naval vessels seized 15 British sailors who had boarded a ship suspected of smuggling cars in the Persian Gulf off the Iraqi coast on Friday, officials said.
===
The above is the first sentence.

===
"Two boats, each with a crew of six to eight multinational forces, were searching Iraqi and Iranian boats Friday morning in Ras al-Beesha area in the northern entrance of the Arab Gulf, but big Iranian boats came and took the two boats with their crews to the Iranian waters."
===

Either the British entered the Iranian waters to check the Iranian boat or the Iranian boats were in Iraqi waters. It would be difficult to know as there are no marked boundaries in water.

===
In June 2004, six British marines and two sailors were seized by Iran in the Shatt al-Arab between Iran and Iraq. They were presented blindfolded on Iranian television and admitted entering Iranian waters illegally, then released unharmed after three days.
===

Is history repeating? Or is this a ploy to increase the temperature so that on Saturday the Security Council gives unanimous support to the second resolution on Iran?
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Ivan
Posted on Friday, March 23, 2007 - 10:23 am:   


quote:


I do not believe in history: his story. I believe in the Holy Quran and the authentic Traditions of Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him. So any question regarding the so called historic aspects would be ignored. --Mohideen



Probe in Darfur slavery -- is this 'his' story in the making?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6468097.stm

Denial of wrongs committed by one group against another does not dismiss them. History is a real event that took place, and Muslim history is violently bloody and full of slavery and war booty, rape, torture, ransom, etc. A very ugly history. So, to deny it is to dismiss the wrongs done, which is inexcusable, no matter what your prophet said. In fact, the opinion of most Koranic experts is that Mohammed dictated such behavior for his god.

Cash for past slavery?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/wales/6476675.stm

How about cashing in on all the Arab Muslim slavery for 1400 years? ' His' story? No, it's 'our' story as the human race, and history cannot be forgotten, nor denied. Do NOT DENY others' sufferings caused by your history of Islam.


Ivan

Ps: Forget films, Mohideen, talking about 'perception management' from your point of view, is to ignore and deny history! What hipocricy! We don't care what you claim to believe, if you act the hypocrite. What 'takkya' hypocrisy! Come clean, man.
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Ivan
Posted on Friday, March 23, 2007 - 06:21 pm:   

Is Iran's president 'turning tail' on the UN?

Iran president cancels UN visit
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6489293.stm

This is hard on the heels of: UK sailors captured by Iran at gunpoint
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6484279.stm

What is Iran doing here? Anybody in control? Or is this out of control? Looks ugly, not optomistic.
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Ivan
Posted on Friday, March 23, 2007 - 09:35 pm:   


quote:

would be difficult to know as there are no marked boundaries in water.

===
In June 2004, six British marines and two sailors were seized by Iran in the Shatt al-Arab between Iran and Iraq. They were presented blindfolded on Iranian television and admitted entering Iranian waters illegally, then released unharmed after three days.
===

Is history repeating? Or is this a ploy to increase the temperature so that on Saturday the Security Council gives unanimous support to the second resolution on Iran?


History may be repeating again, same as the capture of Israeli soldiers by Hamas and Hezbollah, or the Gulf of Tonkin.

I hope the Iranians heard of something called GPS. Mine in my car is accurate within a couple of meters anywhere, even over water. So much for tech solutions to international affairs. Bah, Iran made a mistake, once again, and once again will live in denial... 1979 all over again? Hostage taking seems to be their forte.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Saturday, March 24, 2007 - 07:19 am:   

History is a real event that took place, and Muslim history is violently bloody and full of slavery and war booty, rape, torture, ransom, etc.
Posted on Friday, March 23, 2007 - 10:23 am: Ivan


I might have stated this earlier. Let me repeat it.

History is normally written by the winner and the events and justifications of the loser are either destroyed or left to decay.

As a Tamil, I have interacted with two groups inside Tamilnadu: one claiming that Lord Rama was right and another claiming that Lord Ravana is right. The more popular version - the Ramayana - blames Ravana as a womanizer for having abducted Sita, Rama's wife. The other version goes a little back in the events. Ravana's sister proposed marriage to Rama and instead of simply refusing the proposal Rama cut off her nose. This humiliation was revenged by Ravana by abducting Sita. Don't forget that Ravana did not even attempt to molest Sita; he simply improisoned her in his land.

Which story are we to believe? Muslims had ruled large parts of the earth. There is a quite a clamor that Islam came to India through the sword. The fact is otherwise. The king of Cherans - the area currently known as the State of Kerala - visited Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, and became a Muslim. They built the first Masjid on the Indian soil after the reversion of their king. A picture of that Masjid adorns my PC during 'screen saving.' What are we to believe? The existing hard evidence of the Masjid or a story that Islam came to India through the sword?

After the destruction of the Ottaman Empire the literature was presdominantly controlled by the Christian and Jewish victors. Even in the second world war, the victors were Christians and Jews. Yes, Jews notwithstanding the Holocast. In the second world war the Jews in Europe suffered but the Jews in America succeeded. After the second world war the Muslim lands were either occupied or were put under the control of the lackeys of the winners.

During the first Gulf War Arabic literature claiming that about 20,000 American soldiers would be captured by Muslims were systematically seized and burnt inside the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. So what history that my generation has is history conditioned by the winners. That to me is a one sided version. Hence history for me is 'his story.'

I do not practice deception. I don't need to. I strongly believe that God being all powerful nothing happens unless it is sanctioned by Him. Whether an event is seen as good or bad is just our perception. The Muslim believers look at an event as either good or 'apparent bad.' An event is 'apparent bad' if it seems to be bad from a world perspective to the people of that time, but it might be perceived as good by people of later times. In later times Muslims include the life in Hereafter.

I agree that a section of the Muslim population does practice deception. I do not belong to them.

I re-iterate: I respect the Holy Quran and the authentic Traditions. The Islamic history of plunder and conquest of the Muslims after the fourth Caliph, Ali, Allah be pleased with him, is not sanctioned in Islam. Why should a Muslim defend the actions of some criminals? At least I don't intend to.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Saturday, March 24, 2007 - 07:22 am:   

I hope the Iranians heard of something called GPS.
Posted on Friday, March 23, 2007 - 09:35 pm: Ivan


What if their GPS showed that they captured the British on the Iranian waters?
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Saturday, March 24, 2007 - 07:33 am:   

http://www.dailybreeze.com/news/nationworld/articles/6671187.html
===
"The stakes in Iraq are too high and the sacrifices made by our military personnel and their families too great to be content with anything but success," said Republican Whip Roy Blunt, R-Mo.
===

Let us see what is the opinion of DefSec Gates?
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N22393622.htm
===
WASHINGTON, March 22 (Reuters) - U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates cautioned on Thursday the Army would face problems without emergency funds but insisted U.S. forces could fight a third war despite being stretched in Iraq and Afghanistan.
===

In the same URL with the statement of DefSec we also find:
===
Also, in another signal of stress, the military said on Thursday that 1,200 Marines and sailors would stay in Okinawa, Japan, for an additional five months so other Marines scheduled to move into Iraq can stay home and train for the mission. That allows the Marine Corps to maintain its target for "dwell time" -- the time a Marine is home between deployments.
===

To me at least withdrawing from Iraq and making the Iraqis fight their civil war makes sense. To claim that the sacrifices already made calls for continued exposure of our sons and daughters in a hostile land to die in crossfire in the war between Sunnis and Shiites of Iraq does not portray wisdom.

Those who voted to demand that the C-in-C who invaded Iraq and lost the momentum in the 'War on Terror' at least now stop the misadventure in Iraq so that our resources could be concentrated on the more important 'War on Terror' had shown courage and true love for our sons and daughters.

We hope the Senate has more than 60 true lovers of our children.
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Ivan
Posted on Saturday, March 24, 2007 - 10:24 am:   


quote:

The Islamic history of plunder and conquest of the Muslims after the fourth Caliph, Ali, Allah be pleased with him, is not sanctioned in Islam. Why should a Muslim defend the actions of some criminals? At least I don't intend to.


Right you are Mohideen, that you should not need to defend the past crimes against humanity of Islamic history. My point is that to deny them is to injure humanity further with falsehood. No matter who writes the history, the atrocities against conquered peoples did happen, with slave booty prominent as injury for those not killed. Those were barbaric times, and the barbarism must be acknowledged if we are not to further ourselves into a deception, that somehow the reality of 'political' Islam was, and still is, not barbaric. To paint the picture any other way than truthfully is then 'perception management', or in a less glamarous term, propaganda. As you know, jihad type propaganda is not allowed here.

Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Saturday, March 24, 2007 - 08:11 pm:   

Iran is put on notice.

UN backs fresh sanctions on Iran
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6492139.stm

This is the strongest worded resolution yet, and it was approved unanimously. Iran is now officially on notice. Taking 15 British sailors as 'human shields' will not help them now. This is the whole world talking, telling them to cease and desist.

Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Sunday, March 25, 2007 - 12:04 pm:   

Iran seizure unjustified - Blair
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6493391.stm

quote:

"It simply is not true that they went into Iranian territorial waters and I hope the Iranian government understands how fundamental an issue this is for us," Mr Blair said.


And they will do what? This is modern day 'piracy' on the high seas. Held for ransom? Bargaining chips for exchange of prisoners? Neo-Barbary coast pirates? Jefferson had a firm response two centuries ago. What will Blair do?

Iran is pushing the envelope to shreds. Piracy on the high seas with hostage taking is an international crime.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Monday, March 26, 2007 - 07:22 am:   

No matter who writes the history, the atrocities against conquered peoples did happen, with slave booty prominent as injury for those not killed.
Posted on Saturday, March 24, 2007 - 10:24 am: Ivan


Agreed. Who should pay for a crime: the criminal or his descendant?

How about cashing in on all the Arab Muslim slavery for 1400 years?
Posted on Friday, March 23, 2007 - 10:23 am: Ivan


I am scared of even accepting the above as a proposition. It was not too long that the neocon cashed on the 'sex abuse' issue and brought shame on the Catholics and - I believe - indirectly used it to gain in politics and further caused indirectly economic hardships on the Catholic masses.

From the link given in the above post by Ivan,
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/wales/6476675.stm
===
"Slavery was one of the greatest crimes that ever happened in history. It was far worse than what happened in Germany in the 1930s and 1940s."

Mr Pennant said there was a moral duty to make reparations.

He said: "Morally there is a debt, but practically on economic lines, you can't do it because so many generations have gone by."
===

There are two persons involved in the debate quoted: Clarendon Mayor Milton Brown and Douglas Pennant a descendant of Richard Pennant. It is wrong on Brown to demand 'some form of restoration' by the descendants. It is magnonimous on the part of Douglas Pennant to have formed a charitable society and to have offered to help in education. This exchange cannot be - indeed should not be - a precedent.

A crime must be paid for by the criminal and not his or her descendants.

Further to open up the issue of 'global conquest' by the wrongly exploiting Muslim rulers now is to associate or attempt to associate a 'guilt-complex' on the current Muslim population, which is wrong.

I agree the misguided 'global conquest' by some war-mongers among Muslims needs to be fought. I would like to fight it without creating any complexes, in particular without creating a 'guilt-complex.'

Indeed one of the major achievements of Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, was to abolish the notion of revenge across generations that was prevalent in his time. I do not wish to be a part of a process of reviving that tribalism now. So any misdeed done by an earlier generation is not part of my current efforts, nor of our current intellectual pursuits.

Let us look forward to a brighter future rather than wasting time on 'pointing fingers' on a bad past. By this statement I do not approve of slavery today.

As regards Darfur and the current information about slavery in Darfur I attach very little credibility about the reports we receive in the mainstream media after the WMD fiasco. These reports could have a hidden agenda.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Monday, March 26, 2007 - 07:41 am:   

Piracy on the high seas with hostage taking is an international crime.
Posted on Sunday, March 25, 2007 - 12:04 pm: Ivan


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6491577.stm
===
Royal Navy personnel seized at gunpoint by Iran in the Gulf have admitted being in the country's waters, an Iranian general has claimed.
Gen Ali Reza Afshar told Iranian media the 15 personnel were being interrogated, but were in good health.
===

Now that the sailors have 'admitted' to being in Iranian waters, all that Iran has done is to capture unlawful entrants and it is not piracy.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Monday, March 26, 2007 - 08:41 am:   

What if the Iraqi boat entered the Iranian waters while under inspection?

The above possibility needs to be considered. In that case Iran is justified in its action. After all the British sailors were in Iranian waters when they exited the Iraqi boat.

England is also justified in her claim that the sailors did not cross into Iranian territory. The sailors were in Iraqi territory when they boarded the Iraqi boat but might have exited the boat in Iranian territory.

Could we claim that the British boats which followed the Iraqi boat under inspection should not have crossed into Iranian waters but have stayed behind in Iraqi waters abandoning the personnel who were conducting the inspection?

Don't forget that some believe Blair withdrew the British troops from Iraq not because Basrah is peaceful but because of the inability of the British troops to pacify that region.

It is normal that an Iraqi boat operating from Basrah would have Shite sailors. What if those sailors decided to teach the British a lesson by allowing the inspection team to board in Iraqi waters but let them off in Iranian waters? Has Iran confisticated the Iraqi boat? No.

I have written the above just to show that the legal issues are extremely complex. This complexity could be used to strengthen diplomacy or could as well be misused for military action.

If the Mullahs need military action by the West against Iran it would be wise on the part of the West to resort to diplomacy only. Let the Mullah regime collapse of its internal conflict.
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Ivan
Posted on Monday, March 26, 2007 - 09:35 am:   


quote:

Now that the sailors have 'admitted' to being in Iranian waters, all that Iran has done is to capture unlawful entrants and it is not piracy.


Then why not an explanation, an 'apology' for misunderstanding, and then RETURN the 15 sailors? That's how it's done if there is NO agenda. Iran has one, obviously, since they moved the hostages to 'undisclosed' positions, possibly to Tehran. They lie, as their mullahs believe they are supposed to lie, per their 'war is deceit'. I say their action is an international crime of piracy, so response must be with force. Jefferson understood it, Thatcher understood it, so why is Blair having a problem here? Cut and dry case, they took hostages on the high seas, so Iran's action is piracy, and their mullahs criminials. The only acceptable confession here is the Iranian mullahs admit they are wrong, and return the 14 British sailors and 1 woman to their units and loved ones. There is no conversation here.

I think this is clear enough provocation by Iran to warrant military response, same as Israel responded to Hezbollah/Hamas capture of their soldiers. Clear and cut, and fire on command.


Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Monday, March 26, 2007 - 01:43 pm:   

I think this is clear enough provocation by Iran to warrant military response ...
Posted on Monday, March 26, 2007 - 09:35 am: Ivan


Even if there is evidence of provocation, military action is not advisable. Just because a thief stole and then brags about that we - civilians - do not enter his house and retrieve our property. We lodge a complaint with the authorities and we regain our property after due process of law.

With the UN as guard of all nations the right course of action would be to convene an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council and decide the future course of action.

The Mullahs seem to want a military attack to divert attention from their failures. Launching a military action would result in untold misery all around while the Mullahs would make merry.

We recommend patience. Once military action is initiated by Blair it is possible that there would be extensive avoidable loss of life. Without military action but with appropriate diplomacy, the 15 UK citizens could be freed. Yes diplomacy does cause inconvenience to the 15 UK citizens. We hope mankind would consider the inconvenience to 15 UK citizens the lesser evil than the expected loss of life that would ensue with a military strike.

With the following news item the world conflict landscape has changed.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6494121.stm
===
Sri Lanka's Tamil Tigers have carried out their first aerial attack, bombing a military base by the international airport north of the capital, Colombo.
Three air force personnel were killed, officials say, and 16 people injured when the bombs hit a parking area for planes and helicopter gunships.
===

The above development is scary. Let us not forget that suicide bombings were carried out first by the Tamil Tigers. Diplomacy, we believe, reduces tension and hopefully avoids war.
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Ivan
Posted on Monday, March 26, 2007 - 06:11 pm:   


quote:

We recommend patience. Once military action is initiated by Blair it is possible that there would be extensive avoidable loss of life. Without military action but with appropriate diplomacy, the 15 UK citizens could be freed. Yes diplomacy does cause inconvenience to the 15 UK citizens. We hope mankind would consider the inconvenience to 15 UK citizens the lesser evil than the expected loss of life that would ensue with a military strike.


Alas, your good intentions Mohideen would reward the Iranian mullahs for their acts of piracy and hostage taking. Tsk tsk, but such fragrant international crimes cannot go unanswered, whether through diplomacy or force. There is no room for bargaining here. The world must hold these mullahs to account, and Briatin has everyright to use force to rescue the hostages, if that is what it takes, even extreme force. The guilty party here is Iran.

OTOH, it is surprising that the actual coordinates of where this hostage taking took place had not been released by either Iran or the UK authorities. So for now, it is their word against each other. Until this is clarified, there remains a standoff. I pray it is resolved peaceably, but if not, the use of force is the right course. Here is one article adressing this issue, as to how Britain will handle this: Seized Britons face prosecution after Iran claims 'confession'. How will they handle it indeed...

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Monday, March 26, 2007 - 09:04 pm:   

Alas, your good intentions Mohideen would reward the Iranian mullahs for their acts of piracy and hostage taking.
Posted on Monday, March 26, 2007 - 06:11 pm: Ivan


No, military action would reward the Mullahs, not diplomacy.

From the link given by Ivan, http://joshuapundit.blogspot.com/2007/03/seized-britons-face-prosecution-after.h tml
===
theres an eyewitness account from an Iraqi fisherman who told Reuters that he saw the capture of the servicemen, and that they were taken captive on the Iraqi side of the mouth of the Shatt al-Arab waterway.
===

This eye witness confirms that the British Navy personnel had moved out of the area of operations of the HMS Cornwall as found from the map given in http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6491577.stm cited by me in my above post. The Shatt Al-Arab waterway is outside the dotted red boundary shown in the map.

Further, we support the analysis given in http://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2007/03/27/do2702.xml
===
Blair said last week how he now admired Mrs Thatcher's policy during the Falklands conflict.

... But that war, like so many, constituted a depressing failure of diplomacy, and it is that part of the equation that Blair should heed.

... The important thing is to get those sailors out of Iran, and for Britain to remain similarly out of Iran for good.
===
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Tuesday, March 27, 2007 - 06:05 am:   

Now the Senate could go ahead with the Iraq vote. Here is indirect indication:

2043635%2C00.html,http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,,2043635,00.html
===
The outgoing US ambassador to Iraq yesterday delivered a blunt farewell message to Iraq's leadership, saying the Bush administration's patience was wearing thin and urging them to stem the bloodshed.
===
[to access the article copy the URL and paste ignoring all until the ',' and before.]

Since a open warning is already given, the GOP could as well join the Democrats in sponsoring the bill suggesting a set of conditions - not timetable - which would trigger the withdrawal from Iraq if they are not met.

Withdrawal from Iraq need not be partisan it could as well be bi-partisan.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/politics/4664029.html
===
WASHINGTON — An upcoming Senate vote on the Iraq war could come down to just one or two votes, testing Democratic unity on a proposal to begin bringing combat troops home.

Democratic Sens. Mark Pryor and Ben Nelson are expected to deliver the critical votes this week, when members decide whether to uphold legislation that orders some troops home right away, with the goal of ending combat missions by March 31, 2008.
===

It would be a wire-vote as a partisan vote. As a bi-partisan measure - without the dates - it could as well be unanimous!
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Ivan
Posted on Tuesday, March 27, 2007 - 09:23 am:   


quote:

Blair said last week how he now admired Mrs Thatcher's policy during the Falklands conflict.

... But that war, like so many, constituted a depressing failure of diplomacy, and it is that part of the equation that Blair should heed. --Telegraph


Diplomatic failure with the Iranian mullahs is a given. There can be no conversation with piracy and hostage taking. British servicemen and women are professionals who know the risks in their duty to country and Queen. They were not released when asked, so they are now held hostage, an illegal act and an international crime. I find your insistence to support this criminal act by the mullahs and their Revolutionary Guard puzzling, and supportive of their piracy. I do not understand where this is coming from, certainly not in the interest of peace to support piracy at sea. I don't have an easy solution for this problem either, but if I were Blair, I'd be consulting with my military experts and all the allies, including Washington, to come up with a plan of action. The UN is another avenue, though the mullahs have demostrated over and over again they do not respect this world body, nor public opinion at large, except perhaps Arab Street and their religious jihad sympathizers. Iran will be taught a lesson here, unlike under Carter's 1979 hostage circus, and made to pay for their coercive actions. I expect there will be action if the hostages are not released promptly. The English are slow to anger, but once action is begun, it will be seriously carried out.

i agree with the Telegraph's assessement of the Iran hostage taking situation, there is no conversation here:

quote:

Tony Blair is therefore right to speak of this Iranian matter in the strongest of terms. He must send the message that kidnapping cannot be tolerated, no matter what the kidnappers' fears or grievances. Teheran might prefer the notion that Western servicemen are guilty by their very nature, and subhuman, but Blair would be failing in his duty if he were not to oppose with the utmost vigour all actions based on that view.

The great trial for Blair is to get those sailors safely back on board HMS Cornwall without the matter becoming an international incident, though the Iranians, thus far, would appear to be inviting one.


Return the British servicemen or else face the consequences.

Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Wednesday, March 28, 2007 - 09:52 am:   

'War is deceit' per Iranian response.

UK reveals GPS data
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6501555.stm

quote:

Satellite data proves 15 navy personnel being held in Iran were 1.7 nautical miles inside Iraqi waters when they were seized, UK defence officials say.



_42737627_iraq_iran_waters203.gif

For greater detailed map of events, go here: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/6502805.stm

Once they were shown wrong, Iran quickly changed their story. For God's sake, just release the hostages and stop being such inernational assholes.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Wednesday, March 28, 2007 - 01:23 pm:   

I find your insistence to support this criminal act by the mullahs and their Revolutionary Guard puzzling, and supportive of their piracy.
Posted on Tuesday, March 27, 2007 - 09:23 am: Ivan


I don't support any misdeed. However when there are more than one interpretation of the events, I like to look at the different possibilities and come to the conclusion regarding guilt only when there is no other possible explanation.

Even if there is one possibility that the event could be explained without evil intent, I like to take that position as the desirable explanation.

In that spirit, without taking any side, I give the following analysis.

From the picture of the Shatt Al-Arab in http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/middle_east_and_asia/basrah_2003.jpg we estimate the width of the Shatt Al-Arab to be about 14 miles.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shatt_al-Arab_(Arvandrud)
===
Conflicting territorial claims and disputes over navigation rights between Iran and Iraq were among the main factors for the Iraq-Iran War that lasted from 1980 to 1988, when the pre-1980 status quo was restored.
===

The water boundary between Iraq and Iran has shifted as reported in the UK papers from Saturday 24 March 2007 (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6491577.stm ) to Wednesday 28 March 2007 (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6501555.stm - map given by Ivan and http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/6502805.stm - link given by Ivan ) by a couple of miles at least. The shift increases the area under Iraqi boundary. Without this expansion of the Iraqi boundary the positions could be in different countries: the point claimed to be inside Iraqi waters could fall under Iranian waters.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/6502805.stm
===
The Ministry of Defence says the merchant ship boarded by a crew from HMS Cornwall on 23 March was 1.7 nautical miles (3.1km) inside Iraqi territorial waters. It says the master of the vessel has confirmed this.

… When the UK pointed out to the Iranians that the location they had given was within Iraqi waters, the Iranians provided a "corrected" location, nearly 1 nautical mile away (1.9km) from its first position but within Iranian waters.

… HMS Cornwall's Lynx helicopter had been monitoring the initial stages of the boarding of the Indian-flagged merchant ship, at 0739 local time on 23 March.

… Communications with the boarding team were lost at the time the boarding ended - at 0910.
===

There is no dispute that the Indian ship has moved from 0739 hours to 0910 hours. The issue is how much could that movement be? If the Indian ship was trying to run away from Iraqi waters it is natural that the captain would have steered the vessel towards Iranian coast rather than away into the sea. The two positions given by Iran could be due to plotting the movement in a wrong direction first and in the right direction after the error was pointed by UK.

There is no statement about whether the Indian ship floated or was anchored at the time of the capture of the British personnel. Chances are the ship was moving towards Iran. After the capture, the ship could have resumed its normal movement towards Iraq. The position is at best confusing.
We do not question the fact that the Indian ship was in the Iraqi waters when boarded. The dispute is regarding the position of the ship when the British left the ship. It is crucial that the actual location of the Indian ship when the British left that ship be decided without any ambiguity.

As it turns out both UK and Iran claim different positions supporting their own versions.

Under the circumstances, it would be right to give the benefit of doubt to both the parties: UK and Iran. Let us agree that there was no hostile intent from Iran which simply responded to a call for help by the Indian ship. There is no hostile intent on the part of the British personnel.

May we suggest that both UK and Iran agree that mistakes were done by personnel of both the countries and that the British personnel are returned to freedom immediately without casting any aspersions on Iran for her conduct in this episode?

Let me repeat avoiding military action would hurt the Mullahs most.
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Ivan
Posted on Wednesday, March 28, 2007 - 05:54 pm:   

DEBKAfile reports on Iran hostage situation, and military maneuvres in the area.

I'm not really sure of this, since in the past their 'predictions' often proved wrong, but it is noteworthy that the Russians are evacuating their personnel out of Iran. The 'intelligence' report seems to indicate a concerted airstrike against Iran on April 6th, 0400 hr, for a 12 hour period. Here's the DEBKA report, FYI, though I have my doubts: http://www.debka.com/headline_print.php?hid=3980


Mohideen, in your comment above, I understand what you're saying, but the level of 'credibility' here rests more with Britain than with Iran, by a very wide margin. So giving equal fair treatment to both is sheer nonsense. Nor do I agree a military strike on Iran would help the mullahs, or a lack of response would hurt them. In the Faulkland response, the Argentinian government was toppled by their failure. I expect the same to happen to Iran's mullah government. Matt Frei reporting from Iran thinks so too, that there is a resistance building up: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6501459.stm .

So why do you keep excusing the mullahs there? Would it be some sort of 'bias' on your part? I'm genuinely puzzled.


Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Wednesday, March 28, 2007 - 09:12 pm:   

We receive – in Washington, DC – CNN as part of the Comcast Digital Cable service. I was alarmed to see an advertisement of a book recommending the division of Pakistan into a number of smaller countries. On investigation we found the following.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1755706.cms
===
WASHINGTON: CNN has disowned an advertisement that calls for disintegration of Pakistan into several smaller countries being shown in the Washington DC area saying ''some local cable operators may have accepted the advert to run in their own airtime.''
===

The book – ‘Divide Pakistan to Eliminate Terrorism’ by Syed Jamaluddin – sells for $15.95 as per the URL http://www.amazon.com/Divide-Pakistan-Eliminate-Syed-Jamaluddin/dp/0595417663/re f=pd_bbs_sr_1/103-7331154-6159019?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1174913136&sr=1-1

One poster has commented as below:
http://www.teeth.com.pk/blog/2007/03/12/divide-pakistan-tv-commercial-on-cnn/
===
The promo is for a book being sold on Amazon for $15.95 called Divide Pakistan to Eliminate Terrorism, the surprising thing is this unknown author has the spare change to run an advertisement which can run upwards of US$20,000 per slot, surely not spare change for any, let alone an unknown author.
===

Does it cost $20,000 per slot to run this advertisement in Comcast? From http://www.metrokc.gov/PROCUREMENT/rfpdocs/2006/October/Consultants/157-06/157-0 6_ad1.pdf we get:
===
… $16,500 for 400 15- and 30- second ads on Comcast cable TV.
===

Since we do not have the break between 15- and 30- second slots, let us – to be safe – treat all as 15- second slots. The cost per slot is $41.25. Can the author whose details are found in http://www.dividepakistan.blogspot.com/ spend $41.25 per 15- second slot to promote his book? It depends on the number of copies sold due to the advertisement. Assuming that the author has a net profit of $5 per copy, the author benefits even if 9 copies are sold per exposure of the advertisement.

Or could there be some other reason? One of the sticking points between Pakistan and USA was the permission to perform ‘hot pursuit’ of the Taliban from Afghanistan into Waziristan. The Pakistan government has denied such permission. Still the Afghan government accuses Pakistan of facilitating the Taliban to have a safehaven inside Pakistan. A map of Waziristan in http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/com mons/thumb/8/8f/Pakistan_Dive.png/400px-Pakistan_Dive.png&imgrefurl=http://en.wi kipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_Emirate_of_Waziristan&h=334&w=400&sz=78&hl=en&start=5&t bnid=y0C0h7g8jCVI3M:&tbnh=104&tbnw=124&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dwaziristan%26svnum%3D1 0%26hl%3Den indicates the possibility that with the break-up of Pakistan the small states that emerge might agree to cooperate with the Afghan government. Could there be a possibility that a part of the secret funds of the CIA is used to finance the advertisements?
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Wednesday, March 28, 2007 - 11:13 pm:   

Mohideen, in your comment above, I understand what you're saying, but the level of 'credibility' here rests more with Britain than with Iran, by a very wide margin.
Posted on Wednesday, March 28, 2007 - 05:54 pm: Ivan


The issue of credibility depends on the audience. For the West Britain has more credibility, while the East would have different perceptions.

From the Debka file, http://www.debka.com/headline_print.php?hid=3980 we have:
===
Intelligence sources in Moscow claim to have information that a US strike against Iranian nuclear installations has been scheduled for April 6 at 0040 hours. The Russian sources say the US operation, code-named “Bite,” will last no more than 12 hours and consist of missile and aerial strikes devastating enough to set Tehran’s nuclear program several years back.
===

The above statement could be a very clever psychological ploy from Debka. However it looks as though both Iran and Britain believe the above intel. Britain possibly demands consular access so that the 15 do not become human sheilds; and Iran might have captured them just for that purpose.

Matt Frei reporting from Iran thinks so too ... Ivan

It does not look so to me. He is advocating what I do. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6501459.stm
===
I am saying that Iran is far less monolithic than many in Washington like to think. The trick is to sweat out the differences.
===

Once a bomb falls on the Iranian soil there would be no chance to sweat out the differences. That is possible only under diplomacy wherein the Mullahs are isolated and the Iranians start feeling that the stupidity of the Mullahs is making their life unbearable. So I think the correct reading is - no military action; let the Iranian government collapse due to internal conflicts; just encourage the different groups to settle their scores. I hope I am right.
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Ivan
Posted on Thursday, March 29, 2007 - 12:16 am:   


quote:

The issue of credibility depends on the audience. For the West Britain has more credibility, while the East would have different perceptions.


Mohideen, is there a double standard for TRUTH in your thinking? One truth for the West, another for the East? That is sheer stupidity! For God's sake man, you have no credibility here. Either the Iranians are telling the truth or they are lying. I say they lie, their mullahs lie, and their whole bloody hostage taking and piracy is based on lies. You want to believe this 'eastern' biased lying? Fine, but then you are not credible as a rational and intelligent person on this board. I am sorry, but I have no respect for either liars, or believers of lies.

Obviously, the stupid cupidity of those medievally backwards Iranian mullahs has not had the positive effect on Iran's population, has it? They still believe in their ignorant mullahs. There is only one way out of this Iranian ativistic mess. Get rid of that damned mullah ayatollah religious theocracy, and then maybe they might have a chance. Reading your responses to this Iran hostage piracy deal makes me lean towards the ideas expressed here on 'Islam needs to reform', where there really is no hope for it to do so. Think about it. Either Islam reforms into a private and personal faith, or it gets chewed up in its own demise as a political faith. You choose.

Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Thursday, March 29, 2007 - 09:25 am:   

Religious 'dualism' in Iran hostage taking and the reality of truth?

In Mohideen's explanations above, where he tactfully takes the position "Even if there is one possibility that the event could be explained without evil intent, I like to take that position as the desirable explanation." So his explanation that is desirable to him without "evil intent" is apparently this one:

quote:

The water boundary between Iraq and Iran has shifted as reported in the UK papers from Saturday 24 March 2007 (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6491577.stm ) to Wednesday 28 March 2007 (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6501555.stm - map given by Ivan and http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/6502805.stm - link given by Ivan ) by a couple of miles at least. The shift increases the area under Iraqi boundary. Without this expansion of the Iraqi boundary the positions could be in different countries: the point claimed to be inside Iraqi waters could fall under Iranian waters.



However, nowhere did I say that Iraq-Iran border moved "by a couple of miles at least", nor did it ever say that in the Wiki article he linked, nor in the BBC articles linked. So as far as I can tell, this is simply Mohideen's opinion on the matter, not a real fact. Given that his intellectual orientation had proven in the past to favor religious dualism to reality and hard facts, I suppose we might have to excuse this 'misrepresentation' of facts by Mo' because it is part of his belief system, though he is not necessarily exercising his right to 'war is deceit' at this time. On the other hand, this misrepresentation of the truth then means that his mind, and he expects same of us, must accept that both borders are right for the Iraq-Iran conflict, and for Iran's right to take hostages in disputed waters. But this does not absolve Iran of the fact that they are taking hostages, have committed piracy on the high seas, and refused to return the British personnel taken hostage. So where is the truth in this religious 'dualism' scenario? How can there be any truth when denying the law of contradiction? I never said, nor anyone ever said, the boundaries shifted by two miles. This is plain stupidity, once again. His aim for peace ends up with what we see most of all in the Muslim world, more violence and war.

Mohideen, you might reconsider how you explain things in a non-dualistic manner, and try not to sleeze through with calm sounding explanations when they in fact offend reason and truth, and reward lies. Try harder become a modern man in your thinking. Stop being a 'political' Muslim, if you want to continue to report your ideas here. The only supportable idea on Human Cafe, in support of world peace, is that Iran let the hostages go.

Your religious 'dualism' is handicapped reason, and it does not lead to peace, but to war.

Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Thursday, March 29, 2007 - 09:46 am:   

Here is how religious 'dualism' by the Iranian mullahs obfuscates the truth:

quote:

Britain went public with coordinates to try to prove that its naval party had not gone into Iranian waters and ridiculing Iranian claims to the contrary.

_42740893_faye203afp.jpg
Faye Turney on Iranian TV

Iran hit back by showing the prisoners on television, having a meal, and interviewing the only woman in the group Faye Turney, who made admissions about being in Iranian waters.



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6502947.stm

So a 'confession' by any of the captured hostages is supposed to override the truth of their location? This is pure stupidity. The GPS data is the truth, the 'confessions' under duress is meaningless. The propaganda 'war' is sure to escalate further if Iran keeps obscuscating the truth. They have placed themselves on target with their lies, and inexcusable hostage taking. Britain and its allies will know the right response here, and it will not look good for the mullahs.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, March 29, 2007 - 02:21 pm:   

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/29/washington/29cnd-congress.html?_r=1&pagewanted =2&hp&oref=slogin
===
“We have a constitutional republic that says the commander in chief of our forces is the president,” said Senator Mel Martinez, the Florida Republican who is also chairman of the Republican National Committee. “It gives the power of the purse to Congress; it doesn’t give the power of moving troops around to Congress.”
===

Come again, please. The Constitution says that the democratically elected President who shares the Governance with the Congress, Senate and the Judiciary is the Commander-in-Chief and not the other way.

Are we to accept that if there is a coup - God forbid - tomorrow and someone declares himself the Commander-in-Chief he or she becomes President? Are we making a Pakistan out of America?
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, March 29, 2007 - 03:01 pm:   

The GPS data is the truth ...
Posted on Thursday, March 29, 2007 - 09:46 am: Ivan


http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601102&sid=a73Ym2vC0MrE&refer=uk
===
The U.K. government has said the British crew's two boats were 1.7 nautical miles (3.1 kilometers) inside Iraqi waters at the time of the seizure. Iran says the boats were half a kilometer inside its territorial waters.

Iran said the Britons entered its waters at six different points before they were detained, Agence France-Presse reported, citing the official Islamic Republic News Agency. An Iranian army officer, identified as General Setareh, commander of coastal border controls in the Shatt al-Arab waterway, later appeared on state TV. Setareh used maritime charts and a GPS device, which he said was seized from the Britons, to demonstrate the six violations, AFP said.
===
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, March 29, 2007 - 03:11 pm:   

So as far as I can tell, this is simply Mohideen's opinion on the matter, not a real fact.
Posted on Thursday, March 29, 2007 - 09:25 am: Ivan


It is not Mohideen's opinion; it is his deduction. Please see the dotted red lines in the different pictures. In one the line is a continuation of the land line; in the other two released later, the red line is shifted away from the land line.

I am constrained by my inability to post pictures on this forum. (My ignorance!) Kindly give instructions to post pictures and I could show the calculations and establish the shift in the border between the different pictures we are talking about.

I do not use deception; I believe what I say.
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Ivan, Humancafe
Posted on Thursday, March 29, 2007 - 09:29 pm:   

Taqiyya on taqiyya? ... not on HumanCafe.

Please be advised that lying or otherwise twisting facts to cover up for lies will not be tolerated on these boards. The Iranian mullahs's Revolutionary Guard stole 15 British subjects from Iraqi waters and are refusing to return their human booty. This is then covered up with lying about their position where captured. This lying is further supported on these boards with additional twisting of the truth to justify what is in fact an act of piracy on the high seas, an international crime. Such cover up of the truth will NOT be tolerated here. So BE WARNED here, that henceforth any further support of this international theft of human beings on the high seas, until they are returned safely and unharmed, will be forbidden, as it represent a type of psychological 'jihad' - which is not allowed here. The answer from HumanCafe will be an automatic DELETE.

Deceit has no place on a philosophy forum dedicated to raising human consciousness with human truths.

Ivan, Editors, Humancafe
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Friday, March 30, 2007 - 07:29 am:   

Taqiyya on taqiyya? ... not on HumanCafe.
Posted on Thursday, March 29, 2007 - 09:29 pm: Ivan, Humancafe


I fully agree with Dr. Robert Spencer. Aren't our forces trained to evade or even give incorrect information under captivity? Am I under any such situation? Context is important. I am free and I don't need to deceive.

Well, if I have no freedom to present the opinion from the otherside on this specific issue of '15 British Personnel' well I accept and there would be no more posts from me on this episode. But remember one sided reporting is not good to uncover truth. I leave it to God. This forum is after all under your control and I must abide by your rules. I agree and abide.
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Anon
Posted on Friday, March 30, 2007 - 05:12 pm:   

To Ivan and the Editors of the Human Cafe.

A very good decision posting information on the situation regarding the captured UK nationals.

Iran likely captured them in an effort to use them to force the release of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard members taken into American custody in Iraq. That the capture of the UK personnel was driven by other Iranian motives as well is also highly likely.

The taking of hostages for trade has long been a tradition in the Middle East. I point out that the recent War between Israel and Lebenon was prompted by a similiar capture of military personnel. I also note that Hizbolla which captured the Israeli military personnel is backed by Iran.

The statements made the UK sailors must be viewed as being made under duress. Using isolation, threats and pyschological pressure the Iranians have been able to get two young immature sailors to make statements. Given their age and the circumstances they find themselves in, it is often the case that personnel like them will seek to blame the system that put them in harms way for their problem. Isloated from media and contact with diplomats they are fed a diet of taylored information designed to inflame their feelings of betrayal by the very system they are part of.

These techniques are standard practice in terms of interrogating and manipulating prisoners in time of war. As such all statements made by prisoners in circumstances such as this must be viewed in this light and given little credibility.

I for one pray that diplomacy will work in getting these young people released but suspect that such efforts will run into many obstacles.

Ed Chesky
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Anon
Posted on Friday, March 30, 2007 - 07:11 pm:   

Bishops Warn of Zimbabwe Uprising as African Leaders Do Little
Jeffrey Allen
OneWorld US
Fri., Mar. 30, 2007
http://us.oneworld.net/article/view/147771/1/3319

While I was in South Africa on vacation, I was performing a social-political-military-cultural assessment of the situation in South Africa and Zimbabwe.

I read media reports, spoke to the people and observed the situation in the country. While there I traveled as part of a Tour Group. During my stay I made contact with a number of white and black Christian South Africans.

From this I was provided the following information. The current government of South Africa will be replaced likely with one headed by an ethnic Zulu. This man will take a much more hard line towards Zimbabwe as the leadership of Zimbabwe has been persecuting ethnic Zulu's. In terms of the current situation the people feel that if Nelson Mandela was still in power he would have moved to support the opposition in Zimbabwe and done more to bring about social change. However, all agree conditions in Zimbabwe have deteriorated to the point that the likelihood of a uprising in the near future is high.

The south African's black and white want nothing to do with more military advantures and I saw large amounts of military equipment mouldering in vehicle bone yards around the country. South Africa is maintaining its high tech military capability and I saw a state of the art Guided Missile Frigate with anti-submarine capability underway. Its patrol area was the southern waters of the country with the mission to ensure the transit lines for shipping remained free.

The primary focus of South African society today is on building up the economy, integrating its society and reducing poverty. One third of the population is infected with HIV/AIDS and projections show that south Africa will undergo a significant population reduction before the disease is brought under control.

South Africa is moving foraward with plans to exploit its large reserves of uranium and plans to expand its nuclear power generating capability to offset its reliance on foreign oil.
South Africa is also looking at selling uranium on the international market to help expand its economy.

On the social religious front, all religous groups in the country including the Muslim population lived in peace with one another.

Most saw the current conflict in the Middle East to not be their business and that it was up tot he Muslims to solve the problem for themselves.

Ed
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Saturday, March 31, 2007 - 08:58 am:   

http://www.atlanticfreepress.com/content/view/51/81/
===
Preaching the noble deeds yet hiding or disguising the evil ingrained in empire building serves only to alter history and manipulate the young, eroding our future in the process.
===

The above is possibly the root cause of war-mongering. The article is rather long. It is worth reading and contemplating.
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Ivan
Posted on Saturday, March 31, 2007 - 09:31 am:   

"Taking hostages since 1979... Welcome to Iran!"


quote:

The statements made the UK sailors must be viewed as being made under duress. Using isolation, threats and pyschological pressure the Iranians have been able to get two young immature sailors to make statements. Given their age and the circumstances they find themselves in, it is often the case that personnel like them will seek to blame the system that put them in harms way for their problem. Isloated from media and contact with diplomats they are fed a diet of taylored information designed to inflame their feelings of betrayal by the very system they are part of. --Ed


Even if that, those 'confessions' may have been dictated to them. Now the propaganda war is moving into a show trial, where the hostages will be put under Quranic law by the mullahs. A thousand years before Jesus and Mohammed, Moses said "let my people go." So much for "progressive" revelation, since Jesus was also against slavery, but Mohammed reintroduced it as Allah's will. The Iranian mullahs are just following their old tradition of taking slaves and hostages, so they can see nothing wrong with it. Meanwhile, the whole world is turning against them, showing what a ridiculous show trial of propaganda this had become, and a travesty of justice and right human behavior. Let the 15 hostages go.

Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Saturday, March 31, 2007 - 10:04 am:   


quote:

It is through the dumbing down of America , the methodical destruction and purposeful elimination of the means by which a society educates and enlightens itself. The evisceration of a system that extols accountability and dialogue, opens up the gates of opportunity with the keys of ability, questions authority and seeks debate, creates a wealth of knowledge and illuminates talent and that births an informed citizenry and creates free thinking, analytical minds has been slowly implemented for the last several decades. The dumbing down of America continues into the present, unrelenting and unhindered, squashing the masses for the benefit of the elite. --from Atlantic Free Press posted by Mohideen



This 'dumbing down' of education began when I was still in school. I went to a test-admission technical school in Brooklyn preparing young men (it was an all boys school then) for colleges of engineering and sciences. One of the great debates at the time was whether or not we should still be taught history, since what purpose would it serve for young men going into the sciences? A few years later, the debate was how to dumb down math, so even simple minded, or culturally disadvantaged, children could learn it. There was also the question of whether testing of any kind was even necessary, since we all learn differently and it would be unfair to make everyone achieve the same goals. What is excellence anyway, since it might be relative? The 'dumbing down' of America began back then in the 1960s, and it had not yet reversed. Is this done on purpose by some 'elite' of power? Perhaps the consumer society does not need producers, just consumers? Or what kind of things will such a society produce without intellectual excellence? Would you drive over a bridge builty by engineers who knew little math and had been tested on a relative curve in their achieved skills of construction design? Eventually, reality wins out, and we have to teach our children excellence and right thinking, or it all begins to fall apart. When civilization is threated both from without, such as the now resurgence of Islamic imperialist jihad, and from within, by dumbing down our education, one wonders if we are not about to take some very giant steps backwards in our civilization, and return to those good old days of the slavery of the many in the hands of the few? Is this what the masses want, to be herded into a slavelike consumerism devoid of intellectual ability to reason, to question, and to stand up for our rights as free human beings? It's not that imperialism leads to our downfall as much as our lack of awareness, especially an awareness of who we are as free and excellent human beings, that leads to our downfall. The Iran hostages situation, along with all the other ills visited upon our civilization by the newly acquired Arab oil money and their spread 7th century ideology, is what will try to take our civilization of freedom away from us. However, as history had proven cassandras wrong before, it will do so again.

Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Saturday, March 31, 2007 - 10:26 am:   

Ed, glad to have you back. I trust you had an excellent trip to southern Africa. Wish I were there. :-)

In yours above:

quote:

On the social religious front, all religous groups in the country including the Muslim population lived in peace with one another.

Most saw the current conflict in the Middle East to not be their business and that it was up tot he Muslims to solve the problem for themselves.


I agree with their view, that the problems of the Middle East is an internal Islamic problem. The real war, and why their Islamic civilization is now is such a steep decline, is between those educated and fine human beings who happen to be Muslims but want to bring about change and more modern liberal achievements, and those who long for some idealic ancient times by forcing everyone to once again adhere to a literal translation of their prophet's Quranic teachings. Which will win out? That is for their own to sort out. Unfortunately, history has shown over the past 1400 years that they have a way of making their problem our problem too, since the literalists feel it their duty to convert the whole world for Allah, to their 7th century ideology. In the end, the liberal modernism must win, even in the Middle East and its conquered territories from north Africa to Indonesia, but the question will be: how long will this take? Can they reform and give up coercing humanity in a matter of decades, or will it take centuries? As a coercive ideological force, the literalists will give it their best shot, though they run totally against the grain of where a newly freed humanity is going in its collective consciousness. In all likelyhood, if we fight back hard enough, they will collapse internally much sooner than anyone expects, perhaps within two decades. When the Muslim people take away the power from their mullahs, the political power, and turn their attention to freedom of conscience and religion for all humanity, where religion is a personal connection with God, and not a mullah dictated connection politically, then the world will be finally free of their 1400 year old curse of Islamic imperialism, death fatwas, gender discrimination, hostage taking, slavery, forced religious belief, stoning deaths, etc. War is the inevitable result of their coercive ideology. The world can be free of war much sooner, even in all of Africa, through embracing mutual respect for free human beings, who are free of coercion.

Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Saturday, March 31, 2007 - 11:05 am:   


quote:

It is through the awakening of the masses that mountains are moved and canyons crossed. It is through the slumber of the masses that evil awakens. It is through our collective energy that those in power have no future and no place left to hide. The future of America is in our hands: either the dumbing down continues or the awakening commences. --from Atlantic Free Press article, referenced above my Mohideen



The author yearns for a populist movement, an old fashioned 'power to the people', but his article is short on content, while rich in hyperbole of the ills America's policy visits on the world. This is a simple bias, one practiced for decades by Marxists, on how the West had 'oppressed' the less developed world. Now he is applying this bias to America itself, that the people are living under oppression. Strange that the less developed nations keep losing their populations to this 'evil empire' of a nation, since they often come here at great risk to themselves illegally and through great hazards. Has this author considered why? Why do people vote with their feet, to come to El Dorado in both the USA and Europe? His reasoning is impassioned, but devoid of rational argument, more propaganda rhetoric than justifiable facts. The only evil I see here is just bad ideology trying to subvert our rights to freedom through a call for freedom, which is oxymoronic. Therefore, M. Valenzuela 'dumbs down' this article to a meaningless rant.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Tuesday, April 03, 2007 - 08:44 am:   

Strange that the less developed nations keep losing their populations to this 'evil empire' of a nation, since they often come here at great risk to themselves illegally and through great hazards.
Posted on Saturday, March 31, 2007 - 11:05 am: Ivan


It is not strange to me. Why does a doting mother gives away her child to be adopted? It is precisely because the mother hopes that her child might live away from her while she has no hope of bringing up her child.

Every nation has inequalities among her population. There is a spread. If I could give numbers - imaginary numbers just to illustrate - if the 'survivability index' is say between 20% and 50% in the poorest country, and the survivability index is say between 80% and 99.99% in USA, every mother would love her child to move to USA. It is the 'selfish gene' at work.

Then something else takesover. When I studied in IIT Kanpur from 1968 to 1972, the travel from Chennai to Kanpur involved an 'unreserved journey' from Jansi to Kanpur in a local passenger train. The train would be packed. We need to somehow squeeze-in. We would enter through the windows opened to buy food, as the door would be locked. We would be very angry with the passengers for not opening the door and letting us in. We are in. The train reaches the next station. There is a crowd outside. We - who in the last station yearned for the door to be opened - would not open the door for the passengers in the platform. Our attitude has changed. I used to call it 'the third class mentality.' You like to preserve what you have and seek to improve upon it.

Coming to immigration: The lowest survivability index of 80% of USA is decidedly better than the 50% elsewhere. So people come to USA - even illegally - to survive. Once inside USA they see that 99.99% survivability is better than 80% and they seek the same. It is human nature.

We don't have to accept the 'dumbing down' of USA just because there are nations worse than the 'dumbed down USA.' Let us not fall prey to the labels of 'Left' and 'Right' but work for the uplift of all.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Tuesday, April 03, 2007 - 08:50 am:   

http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/47149.html
===
Jerusalem - Christian church leaders in the Holy Land on Tuesday called for the abolition of the international boycott against the Palestinian Authority. Because the economy, medical care and education in some areas had clearly worsened in the last year as a result of sanctions, a resumption of financial assistance was necessary, the 13 Jerusalem- based church patriarchs wrote in a joint Easter message.
===

A demonstration of the "Message of Love" preached by Prophet Jesus, son of Mary, peace be upon them.

Continuing the quote:
===
These nations have set the recognition of the state of Israel and the renouncement of violence as a precondition for their support.
===

We cannot - indeed should not - assume that the 13 leaders agree for the abolition of Israel. All that the above request by the 13 leaders indicates is that 'survival' is more important than 'politics.'
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Tuesday, April 03, 2007 - 09:46 am:   

http://www.military.com/opinion/0,15202,130955,00.html
===
The Iranians are threatening to block oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz, the Persian Gulf chokepoint, though which twenty percent of the world's oil supply passes. If that occurs, oil is likely to spike in excess of $100 a barrel and gasoline prices above $5 a gallon. The economic repercussions will be dire. The American economy could be plunged into recession.
===

Fear is the worst enemy of progress and peace.

Could we survive the threatened ‘oil blockade’ and maintain our oil supplies? If the Strait of Hormuz gets blocked we could use the Saudi road network to haul the oil in trucks to Jeddah and load the oil tankers there. What are the numbers?

http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0922041.html
The above link gives the import of oil in 2004. The sum adds up to 32.4 million barrels per day. Let us work with a figure of 40 million barrels per day. Twenty percent, that is, about 8 million barrels per day passes through the Strait of Hormuz.

From http://www.lloydminsterheavyoil.com/transporthistory.htm we find that oil trucks with capacity of 220 barrels exist. It is possible that there are trucks with larger capacities. We work with 220 barrels per truck. We need about 36,354 trucks to deliver oil every day to Jeddah to load an additional 8 million barrels of oil to the oil tankers bypassing the Strait of Hormuz.

Can the strategy planners look at this option? These trucks could be airlifted and be ready to transport oil across Saudi Arabia. The transport by trucks is a temporary measure. We could build pipelines across Saudi Arabia to remove this threat from Iran forever. If there is no future threat, the additional capacity could be used to regulate the oil prices.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Tuesday, April 03, 2007 - 10:07 am:   

What is this?

http://wkbt.com/Global/story.asp?S=6317181
===
Walker questioned what pilots would do if they suffered weapons failure as they pursued terrorists attempting to fly an aircraft into a British city, or as they chased ground vehicles carrying militants to a target. He said "Would you think it unreasonable if I ordered you to fly your aircraft into the ground in order to destroy a vehicle carrying a Taliban or al-Qaida commander?"

Britain's defense ministry says Walker did not say he would order crews on kamikaze missions. No word on pilot responses.
===

Pilots as 'suicide bombers?'
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Ivan
Posted on Tuesday, April 03, 2007 - 07:38 pm:   


quote:

Could we survive the threatened ‘oil blockade’ and maintain our oil supplies? If the Strait of Hormuz gets blocked we could use the Saudi road network to haul the oil in trucks to Jeddah and load the oil tankers there. What are the numbers? -Mohideen



Interesting idea, Mohideen, if it comes down to that, that Iran blockades the Straits of Hormuz. Your proposal reminds us of the Berlin Wall blockade, where we airlifted food and supplies to West Berlin when Stalin's Soviet Union (now deceased) tried to blockade the people there into submission. The West did not stand idly, and nor would we do so again. Iran, if it tried to do this, which would be suicidal for its economy, would not only further alienate the world, but in fact put itself into a state of war from which it could not survive as a state. Shipping the oil, even if only temporarily, through alternate routes could work, though the pipeline running from Baku to Turkey (not through either Iran or Russia, but through Georgia and Turkey) is now complete and could take up some of the flow with it's 1 million barrel per day flow capacity. The balance would be made up with both tightening our oil consuming belts, fuel rationing, and alternative delivery as you suggested. Good idea, but let's hope they can settle this whole Iran business in some diplomatic way first. But if not, then it is war, and we will come through it stronger than we were before. I also think this could be one hell of an incentive for other fuels to take off, from clean nuclear energy to biofuels and efficient hybrid engines. Necessity is the mother of invention, they say, and in past wars we had seen this true. It will be no different if Iran separates from the rest of humanity and puts itself in a state of war. Personally, I think we're there.

Ivan
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Anon
Posted on Wednesday, April 04, 2007 - 05:39 am:   

It is wise to remember that at the end of all conflicts there is a cost to be born. That societies have the right to defend themselves from aggression is understood. However, we must be mindful of the cost.

I attended a state conference regarding the issues facing us as soldiers begin returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The conference included members of the VA, local police chiefs, EMS personnel, the State Attorney Generals Office and representatives from Senator Lieberman's office.

The conference was held in part in preparation for the return of a CT National Guard Unit from Afghanistan. The people hosting the conference wanted to make all of the agencies in the state aware of the issues they would be facing with regards to these returning soldiers.

At present research shows 30-40 percent of returning veteran's will be suffering from some form of mental disorder induced as a result of stress and will be addicted to alcohol. The impact of this at the state and local level will be vast. We are projecting a rise in domestic violence cases, DUIs, suicides and a surge in the homeless veteran population.

Such is the cost of war. Is it worth it? That is for society to decide. When we go to war we fight for our right to exist as a free people and to free others. But the cost remains high.

Whether or not this current war was worth the cost remains to be seen. At present we are projecting 450,000 to 650,000 soldiers needig services for mental issues. Of that group 30 to 40 percent will likely be at risk of becoming homeless veterans. When we add in the relatives of those services members we are looking at up to 10 million people in this country being directly affected by the cost of the war.

Ed
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Wednesday, April 04, 2007 - 07:26 am:   

http://scienceblogs.com/authority/2007/04/a_sadly_necessary_introduction.php
===
The President is, it would appear, fully prepared to hold the American military hostage until he gets his way. He is willing to do this because he thinks that he can convince the public that he's not the guy holding the gun to the troops head. But he will be.

Congress, under the Constitution, is the branch of government that has the power to raise an army. Congress, under the Constitution, is the branch of government that has the power to declare war. Congress, under the Constitution, is the branch of government that has the power to decide how money should be spent. The President, under the Constitution, has none of those powers.

If Congress sends him a military funding bill that the President does not believe he can live with, he can veto the bill. If Congress cannot override the veto, the funding bill does not become law. Congress is not, however, then obliged to send him another funding bill that doesn't have the things he found objectionable. Congress can send him the same damn bill again, with the same strings attached, and that is exactly what they should do if that happens.
===

We hope that the Pentagon has better priorities and gives the President a plan to withdraw forces from Iraq thus reducing the cost of the war rather than yield to the ego of one man and sacrifice our sons and daughters. Let the officers in the Pentagon recognize that contrary to the present occupant of the WH their commitment to the Constitution is for life and not for just a few more months.

There are occasions when the people in uniform must act. If this President vetoes the bill to be given to him, the Pentagon should give the correct advice to him so that he signs the bill presented again.

May we hope that in the event the President vetoes the bill the first time enough Representatives and Senators demonstrate their love for our sons and daughters by enacting the same bill with a 'veto-overriding majority?'
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Wednesday, April 04, 2007 - 03:27 pm:   

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070404/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iran_britain
===
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in a surprise move that defused escalating tension in the Middle East, announced the release of 15 captive British sailors and marines Wednesday in what he called an Easter gift to the British people.
===
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Ivan
Posted on Wednesday, April 04, 2007 - 06:13 pm:   


quote:

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in a surprise move that defused escalating tension in the Middle East, announced the release of 15 captive British sailors and marines Wednesday in what he called an Easter gift to the British people.


Good move, now he looks the 'hero', though if they hadn't taken captives in that dubious way in the first place, none of this would have been an issue. Glad when they'll be back in safe hands. Thanks Mohideen for link.



quote:

Such is the cost of war. Is it worth it? That is for society to decide. When we go to war we fight for our right to exist as a free people and to free others. But the cost remains high.


Well said Ed, there is a high price for our freedoms. Even the decision to war is costly, as often politically for those who choose it, not only in terms of human lives and materiele, but the cost of the loss of freedom is incalculable. The warrior can be hero, or he can be despised, but loss of freedom is unacceptable. Until the world is rid of those who would coerce for their own ends, such is our planet's reality. One hopes that someday, perhaps in a far distant future, those who truly want peace, like our friend Mohideen, yourself, Naive, and others who had visited these boards, that such a day will dawn where the very idea of war will be unthinkable. One can dream...

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Thursday, April 05, 2007 - 07:56 pm:   

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/world/4691880.html
===
The U.S. military reported Thursday that eight U.S. soldiers were killed in the Baghdad area over the past three days as militants fought back against a security plan in its eighth week.
===

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-ex-gates5apr05,0,3642800.story ?coll=la-home-nation
===
In January, Gates adjusted Pentagon deployment policies to allow for more frequent call-ups of National Guard units in order to relieve some of the stress on the active-duty Army. But he acknowledged that even with the new policy, more combat brigades may be forced to have their deployments extended in Iraq for more than the normal one-year tours, and others may find their "dwell time" at home shortened as well.
===

Are we right in assuming that the militants are fighting back against the 'troop surge?' If so, our suggestion that it is none of our business to avoid the 'civil war' in Iraq is correct.

Under the circumstances it would be prudent for the C-in-C to accept the law authorizing funds with troop withdrawal included and use that to start really withdrawing the troops.

It is our belief that once the law including troop withdrawal is passed and signed, the Generals would be happy to implement the same.
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Ivan
Posted on Friday, April 06, 2007 - 07:34 pm:   


quote:

Are we right in assuming that the militants are fighting back against the 'troop surge?' If so, our suggestion that it is none of our business to avoid the 'civil war' in Iraq is correct.


I think you're correct, Mohideen, that this is a power play between militant factions within Iraq, and let them fight it out. Our only stake is in who wins. Will it be the 'moderates' who are progressive in their thinking about government and democracy, or will it be religious 'fundamentalists' in their thinking, who do not care for these things but want to continue some crazy ragged 1400 year old jihad? That's a lot to consider, given that we're spending a lot of money on a place that isn't worth the investment. Wouldn't it be better to let them bulldoze themselves into the dark ages of history, and then reconcquer them as colonials? Then we could have the oil and have less resistance from the badly weakened population. Hate to be so cold blooded about it, but this strategy to let them go at it, to exhaustion, has a certain appeal. Except for our humanitarian awareness of helping all humanity, why should we care? Let's get out.

Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Friday, April 06, 2007 - 07:40 pm:   

Lest we forget who we're dealing with... Did any expect different?

Freed Britons say `confessions' coerced
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070406/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iran_britain;_ylt=AlHx1IN6pw6 wxMmv1Up_6ut0bBAF

Why am I not surprised? It must be something about their nature... I'll go see "300" to find out more about Iranian thinking.

[sarcasm off]
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Saturday, April 07, 2007 - 07:55 am:   

Wouldn't it be better to let them bulldoze themselves into the dark ages of history ...
Posted on Friday, April 06, 2007 - 07:34 pm: Ivan


Yes we should. The only problem I forsee is the temporary loss of oil supplies to the tune of 8 million barrels per day. How long would it take for Canada to increase her oil production to compensate that possible loss of Middle East oil?

We need to accelerate the oil production in Canada on a war footing. Congress might consider a bill to offer credit to Canada - if necessary - for this purpose.
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Saturday, April 07, 2007 - 09:18 am:   

Did Israel really lose the war with Hezbollah?

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/fisk/article1935945.ece
===
Did Israel use a secret new uranium-based weapon in southern Lebanon this summer in the 34-day assault that cost more than 1,300 Lebanese lives, most of them civilians?

... Much international law does not cover modern uranium weapons because they were not invented when humanitarian rules such as the Geneva Conventions were drawn up and because Western governments still refuse to believe that their use can cause long-term damage to the health of thousands of civilians living in the area of the explosions.

... Yet why would Israel use such a weapon when its targets - in the case of Khiam, for example - were only two miles from the Israeli border? The dust ignited by DU munitions can be blown across international borders, just as the chlorine gas used in attacks by both sides in the First World War often blew back on its perpetrators.

... Many Lebanese, however, long ago concluded that the latest Lebanon war was a weapons testing ground for the Americans and Iranians, who respectively supply Israel and Hizbollah with munitions. Just as Israel used hitherto-unproven US missiles in its attacks, so the Iranians were able to test-fire a rocket which hit an Israeli corvette off the Lebanese coast, killing four Israeli sailors and almost sinking the vessel after it suffered a 15-hour on-board fire.

What the weapons manufacturers make of the latest scientific findings of potential uranium weapons use in southern Lebanon is not yet known. Nor is their effect on civilians.
===

If we really want peace, we need to banish not only war but also the armament industries.
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Ivan
Posted on Saturday, April 07, 2007 - 12:43 pm:   

Very interesting, Mohideen, on the use of 'uranium-plutonium' tipped bombs in the Israel war against Lebanon's Hezbollah, in retaliation for the capturing of Israeli soldiers inside Israel's territory. It says, per your link:

quote:

Dr Busby's initial report states that there are two possible reasons for the contamination. "The first is that the weapon was some novel small experimental nuclear fission device or other experimental weapon (eg, a thermobaric weapon) based on the high temperature of a uranium oxidation flash ... The second is that the weapon was a bunker-busting conventional uranium penetrator weapon employing enriched uranium rather than depleted uranium." A photograph of the explosion of the first bomb shows large clouds of black smoke that might result from burning uranium.


By this I presume it means these are 'dirty' weapons leaving behind radioactive materials, not nuclear fission bombs of the type dropped on Japan in WW II. I believe the same was accussed of the UN forces fighting in Kosovo, that the plutonium tipped arsenal, which is very effective to pierce armor, left behind a radioactive residue. I suspect we will see this more in future wars, and they may have been used in the initial Iraq invasion as well. Some of our soldiers may be experiencing health effects from this today, as is the population of Lebanon in the affected areas, and also Kosovo.

I don't think dismantling 'armament industries' is the right answer, however, not while there are hostiles out there who would use their war to subdue us to their regressive ways of thinking, to enslave us to their disgusting ways of life filled with coercions in the name of their God-forsaken war-deity. Alas, the reality of the world is still such that armaments are needed, if only to police the unrully and coercive elements of regressive societies. Freedom is slow to come to that part of the world, and until then, we had better be prepared militarily. However, the trafficking of small arms and mobile missiles, RPGs, roadside bombs, etc. should definitely be put to a stop, along with land mines. There is not excuse for anyone getting rich off of feeding the fighting frenzies of socially regressive elements in any society. That armament industry must definitely be banished from the world.

Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Saturday, April 07, 2007 - 02:14 pm:   

A 'dirty' little war? or a 'tsunami' coming our way?

This was sent to me in an email by a friend, urging to not keep this being secret. We must know.

The Coming War with...
http://frontpagemag.com/Articles/Printable.asp?ID=27385

Here's a clip:

quote:

“The Americans, the Europeans, and even you Israelis really don’t know what it is all about, do you? During the last generation hundreds of thousands of children have been taught all over the Moslem world in Madrass schools to become martyrs for Allah in order to kill the infidels. These youngsters not only are ready to do it, but are actually in the process of doing it. Bombs are going off all over the world killing and maiming thousands of people, not only on 9/11 in the US, in London Madrid and Bali, but in Africa, India, Bengladesh, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and many other places. The first signs of the Islamic Tsunami is already here, but the West doesn’t understand, or doesn’t want to understand what is coming."

“The Americans, instead of realizing that this is as bad as World War Two, or even worse, are going to pull out of Iraq, handing it over to Iran on a silver platter. Next may come the Saudis and the rest of the Gulf states. When dirty bombs go off all over Western towns, who is going to stop the Iranians?"



Well, what will the West do if this is true? Stay tuned, it could be a dirty little war, or worse... Strange, but Iran keeps popping up in these 'armageddon' scenarios.

We're kept in the 'dark' in this dirty little war... by Iran again? http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/6533987.stm

Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Sunday, April 08, 2007 - 10:21 am:   

EASTER, a Message of Hope for the World.

Pope Benedict XVI has lamented that "nothing positive comes from Iraq", in his Easter message in St Peter's Square at the Vatican. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6536773.stm

quote:

'Faces of violence'

The pontiff spoke of the faith of Christians in the risen Christ but he also painted a very sombre picture of a world disfigured by war and terrorism.

He condemned terrorism and the use of religion to justify a "thousand faces of violence".

"Peace is sorely needed," he said.



We all pray on this day Peace will come, as He is risen.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Sunday, April 08, 2007 - 11:40 am:   

This was sent to me in an email by a friend, urging to not keep this being secret. We must know.
Posted on Saturday, April 07, 2007 - 02:14 pm: Ivan


http://frontpagemag.com/Articles/Printable.asp?ID=27385
===
The Coming War with Islam
By Solly Ganor
FrontPageMagazine.com | March 15, 2007
===

The quote by Ivan is from the above article. The author claims to know about the happenings in innumerable orphanages run by the Muslims. Let us see the nature of one Muslim act.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/6533987.stm
===
So when President Ahmadinejad's dramatic announcement came, the British government was it seems, as stunned as everyone else.
===

If the Iranians could keep their motives secret from the British government how come Mr. Solly Ganor knows?

We have paid and still pay a heavy price in Iraq believing people with their own agenda. Is it possible that Mr. Solly Ganor has an agenda? To know more about Mr. Solly Ganor, I performed a Google search on – Solly Gonar – with the most popular two links being:
===
Solly Ganor -- Remembrance
For many years after my liberation, I remained silent about my Holocaust experiences. I now want to speak out to the younger generation about this horrible ...
www.rongreene.com/solly.html - 19k - Cached - Similar pages


The Other Solly Ganor: The Solly Ganor Case of Credibility and Deceit
Solly Ganor Case of Credibility and Deceit, questioning the veracity of his alleged autobiographical book Light One Candle.
isurvived.org/SollyGanor_Case.html - 13k - Cached - Similar pages

===

I quote from a URL from the second link given by Google.
http://isurvived.org/4Debates/SollyGanor/006-SollyGanor.html
===
As far as we are concerned, we shall remain focus, as a laser beam, to the issues raised herein on Mr. Ganor's case of credibility and deceit as the preservation of an accurate and honest Holocaust record is to us of utmost importance. And because of this importance, a vigorous scrutiny is essential in this pursuit. We owe this attent and diligent scrutiny because we are the very last generation that can undertake such a task. As the Holocaust survivor Zvi Gill put it before Yad Vashem,

"The Age of the Survivors is drawing to a close.
Before long no one will be left to say, 'I was there, I saw, I remember what happened'.
All that will be left will be books of literature and research, pictures and films, and multitudinous testimony."

Thus, before those grand open "books" of History will be closed forever, we need to make every effort in seeing that the Holocaust information included in there is accurate and honest as much as it can be determined.

… Editor's Notice of Closure
Our open invitation for a response to the issues reported in here have been ignored by Messrs. Solly Ganor and Eric Saul and as such, this matter is being closed herein without the benefit of their responses.

Mr. Ganor's "response" to our concerns and issues brought herein was based exclusively on the old adage: if you cannot discredit the message, attempt to discredit the messenger! It is unfortunate, but not surprising, that Mr. Ganor has chosen that pitiful path.

May God have mercy on his troubled soul.
Dated: May 12, 2004
===

Interested are requested to read the full details in the second link given by the Google search.

There are some who would not mind shedding American blood for their agenda. Should we support them?

War against Iran is not advisable unless and until the Iranians commit an act of war. The episode of the 15 sailors and marines has the possibility of mistake on both sides due to the undefined boundary between Iran and Iraq and cannot be treated as an act of war.
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Ivan
Posted on Sunday, April 08, 2007 - 12:44 pm:   

Holocaust survivors today have a voice, unlike the millions who died in past 'holocausts' at the hands of religion maddened zealots who killed to enslave and gain booty. Today the world is quickly made aware when danger calls, such as Iran's nuclear bomb (for 'peaceful' purposes) enrichment program.

Europe: Majority supports strike on Iran
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1173879271095&pagename=JPost%2FJPArti cle%2FShowFull

There is nowhere to hide one's intentions anymore, especially after showing one's hand by taking 15 British subjects hostage, an act condemned by the whole world, which brought us to the brink of war.

Even if Mr. Ganor's story is flawed, he is a survivor, and as such he has a voice that must be heard, if we are to not be caught unawares by the forces of evil. Holocausts happened before, they can happen again, where innocents are trapped or killed en masse. This is no longer excusable, and when threatened with such 'acts of war' against humanity, we have a right to defend ourselves, preemptively if necessary, when there is sufficient cause.

On this Easter Sunday we must remember that Jesus taught to 'forgive' one's enemies. While this is not desirable to do in advance, it is right to do so after the enemy is vanquished. Then, we do forgive those who were beaten, and not take them as slaves or raped booty. We must remember that we are better than those who followed the teachings of one who did. Today Japan and Germany are great nations who enjoy the fruits of liberty, forgiven for past wars, and examplary members of the world community. Others, such Iran and their 'suicidal' ilk, are not yet free, for theirs are behaviors that incite 'acts of war'. They remain 'unforgiven', until they are vanquished.

Ivan
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anonymous
Posted on Sunday, April 08, 2007 - 01:54 pm:   

What Hizbullah did to civilians who 'protested'


He then said that 18 days after the start of the war a large group of civilians decided it was time to leave Ein Ebel and flee to the north. They were no longer willing to stay while Israel fired back at Hizbullah's rocket launchers. It was too dangerous, and Hizbullah insisted on staying and endangering those who lived there.

So they fled the area in a convoy of civilian vehicles. It was safer, they figured, to travel in a group than alone.

On their way out of the village, Hizbullah fighters stood on the side of the road and opened fire with machine guns on the fleeing civilians.

I was shocked, and I asked Alan to confirm this. Was it really true? Hizbullah opened fire on Lebanese civilians with machine guns? Alan confirmed this was true.

"Why?" I had an idea, but I wanted a local person to say it.

Because, Alan said, Hizbullah wanted to use the civilians of Ein Ebel as "human shields." I did not use the phrase "human shields." These were Alan's own words.




Read it all

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?apage=1&cid=1173879252089&pagename=JPost% 2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Sunday, April 08, 2007 - 04:13 pm:   

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article2432474.ece
===
Aware that Mr Ahmadinejad's gracious pardoning of the 15 was a propaganda coup beamed live around the world, and a humiliation for British diplomacy, officials went on the offensive, explaining that the release had been a vindication of Britain's "dual track" strategy: dialogue plus consolidating international and regional support.

... One senior source said ruefully: "They caught us on the hop when they seized our guys, and now they have caught us on the hop the way they have been freed."
===
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Sunday, April 08, 2007 - 04:19 pm:   

Today Japan and Germany are great nations who enjoy the fruits of liberty, forgiven for past wars, and examplary members of the world community.
Posted on Sunday, April 08, 2007 - 12:44 pm: Ivan


Were they allowed raise an army? Do they have an army that can launch a war? Muslims treated their so called slaves as they treated themselves with the same kind of clothes and they shared their food. All that the slave was denied was to carry weapons. I don't see any difference in the way Germany and Japan was treated by the victors.

Let us keep this thread with the purpose of avoiding war rather than scoring religious points.
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Ivan
Posted on Sunday, April 08, 2007 - 09:35 pm:   


quote:

Let us keep this thread with the purpose of avoiding war rather than scoring religious points.


You keep the score, while we are focussed on the truths of war and peace. Religious points count for nothing here. But where the religious apocalyptic zealous fanatics are aggressive in their regressive behaviors against free humanity, we will call them on it.

Once again, you mix modern states with your primitive regressives as if they are equals. They are not. Nor is your 'equality' under slavery of any value, if you are only speaking as a slave of... You make your choices in life. We gave you a lot to choose from, now it's up to you.

Ivan
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Mohideen Ibramsha
Posted on Sunday, April 08, 2007 - 10:05 pm:   

We gave you a lot to choose from, now it's up to you.
Posted on Sunday, April 08, 2007 - 09:35 pm: Ivan


I cannot remain idle when my religion is criticized - directly or indirectly. May be it is time for me to be an observer. Let me try. I might post on other threads as long as my religion does not get attacked.

Enjoy your freedom.
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Ivan
Posted on Monday, April 09, 2007 - 01:42 am:   

Do not misunderstand me, Mohideen. Coercion will not be victorious in this world, not anymore. Coercion will be conquered, whether or not with your compliance of old time religions, and their prophets, or not. The age of human universal freedoms will be victorious, whether or not you, or your antiquated old time prophecies political belief system approves. This is the reality you face in this world, as well as on this discussion board. If you disagree with coercion being conquered, then you have no voice here as a free human being. A slave's voice is meaningless, since he doesn't possess his voice and thoughts freely of his own free will.

So in yours above:

quote:

I cannot remain idle when my religion is criticized - directly or indirectly. May be it is time for me to be an observer. Let me try. I might post on other threads as long as my religion does not get attacked.

Enjoy your freedom.


Thank you, we will enjoy our freedoms, with or without your approval. That is the future of our world as free and conscious human beings.

You are dismissed, if you cannot abide by having your ancient political religious coercion conquered by our freedom. And if that is so, please find another discussion board more to your liking to push your ideas of coecive religious victories over our free way of life. You have failed repeatedly to understand the difference between a personal faith and a political faith. Consequently, you have proven yourself unable and unwilling to be a free person. As a slave, one is unworthy of being called a free human being. If so, your future contributions on this matter are unwelcome. We are a community of freedom loving human beings, not political prisoners held hostage to some ancient slaving coercive cult-political system parading itself as religion. Your ideas in defense of such coercions are not welcome here. Good bye, sir.

Ivan
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Naive
Posted on Monday, April 09, 2007 - 08:44 am:   

Clearly organized religion is the bane of humanity. I would have thrown the baby out with the bathwater long ago. How many lives lost to religion, slave taken or made? Faith should be personal and never allowed in group atmosphere . . . ever! Some might argue that group faith can save an individual in trouble. Well what about personal introspection? What about equipping members of society with proper insights into human psychology and sociology. That was the old function of religion, but now that's lost and replaced with a "We're better than them" mentality.

We always scream about learning from history's mistakes. Well the biggest, most primitive example exists right here. People are just too damn PC when it comes to religion. Really, world governments would impress me if they all adopted a separation of church and state stance. Until then, the arguments on this website demonstrate in microcosm the folly of continuing organized religion. It is time to realize the redeeming qualities are far outweighed by the negative. Furthermore we have laws to guide our behavior. If only ethics were addressed world wide, religion would become an outdated thing of the past. But alas, the primitive mind holds on, maybe out of fear or nostalgia or just ignorance. Every religion of the past has eventually faltered and faded. Why do we hold on? Can't we escape the mindless sheep pattern of our ancestors and move forward?

It is unfathomable that our world stands on the brink due to this primitive thought process, and we stare cow-eyed at the problem. If you can present a strong case for the preservation of any of this organized nonsense vs. faith being private please let me know. Until then, I'll look upon the current state of affairs as similar to the Black Plague era in Europe: people ran in search of their God for an answer, others blamed organized religion, yet none were equipped (due to their foolish preconceptions) to handle the reality of the situation . . . and they almost perished. This is the new plague, where children are taught to hate, and seek martyrdom. What utter stupidity - stupidity that could only be inspired by religious zeal. The backlash from this type of behavior will have genocidal qualities. There will be no victory for humanity, except a preemptive strike upon the heart of the matter: organized "We are better than them" thinking.

It is not War or religion that handicaps reason, but rather our refusal to educate globally, while we instead mindlessly pass ritual to our progeny. You want to teach real faith? Instruct man about his own learning process, feed him history, educate him in sciences, then let him introspect his own way to the salvation of his choice! Only then will man acquire real faith: faith in humanity and faith in himself! Set up an opposing belief system, predicated upon some outside influence holding all of the answers, and you handicap humanity forever!


Naive
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Ivan
Posted on Wednesday, May 16, 2007 - 09:11 pm:   

I hear the drums of war... but not optimistic.

We must attack Iran before it gets the bomb

Bolton:

quote:

A nuclear Iran would be as dangerous as “Hitler marching into the Rhineland” in 1936 and should be prevented by Western military strikes if necessary... Iran has "clearly mastered the enrichment technology now...they're not stopping, they're making progress and our time is limited", he said. Economic sanctions "with pain" had to be the next step, followed by attempting to overthrow the theocratic regime and, ultimately, military action to destroy nuclear sites.



I personally think Iran will make the bomb they're after. It will then hold the West 'hostage' trying to cow it into inaction. The oil weapon will be held over us, as well as missiles pointed in our direction (with help of North Korean missile technology). Best case, Europe is cowed into Sharia law; worst case, all out war. As Naive says above:

quote:

This is the new plague, where children are taught to hate, and seek martyrdom. What utter stupidity - stupidity that could only be inspired by religious zeal. The backlash from this type of behavior will have genocidal qualities. There will be no victory for humanity, except a preemptive strike upon the heart of the matter: organized "We are better than them" thinking.


If we do not address the problem now, head it off at the pass, the resulting war with these insane religious martyrdom fanatics will be genocidal. Will Europe live under Sharia? I seriously doubt it, they are beginning to stir against it already. Their freedoms are at stake, and they understand this. Can they stop Iran? That will be the very big question in the next couple of years. But I am not optimistic.

Ivan
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Ivan
Posted on Wednesday, May 23, 2007 - 09:59 am:   

Turkey's PM Erdogan on Secularism:
http://memri.org/bin/latestnews.cgi?ID=SD159607


quote:

"But the fact is that 99% of the people of this country are Muslims. You cannot be both secular and a Muslim! You will either be a Muslim, or secular! When both are together, they create reverse magnetism [i.e. they repel one another]. For them to exist together is not a possibility! Therefore, it is not possible for a person who says 'I am a Muslim' to go on and say 'I am secular too.' And why is that? Because Allah, the creator of the Muslim, has absolute power and rule!"


This is a followup on this question, discussion now closed on 'Religious Dialogue'. No wonder Mohideen could not answer the question: Do you believe in a separation of church (mosque) and state? Turkey's PM gave the answer clearly for him, and he is not free to counter that, for he must obey. Reason has no place in dogma, so separation of religion and government is impossible under religious dogma. Can Turkey survive into the future as a secular state? Europe should pay attention here.

Ivan
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anonimous
Posted on Wednesday, May 23, 2007 - 10:41 am:   

the grim images of war on Serbian civilians and children by Albanian Muslims

http://real-srebrenica-genocide.blogspot.com/

why?
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U.S.
Posted on Sunday, May 27, 2007 - 02:13 pm:   

Memorial Day - remembering the fallen-

If we must fight a war, how will it be? To fight for peace? or to fight for victory?

On this Memorial day, a day honoring our soldiers who fought and died to preserve our freedoms, let it be this, "No Substitute for Victory", http://www.theobjectivestandard.com/issues/2006-winter/no-substitute-for-victory .asp

This?
"Following these principles, we will have to determine our policies and strategies on a case-by-case basis. Our actions must be pragmatic and adaptable, contingent on local circumstances and the consensus of others. The right amount of force is that which does not upset the enemy too much; if we use too much of our power, we will cause hard feelings and a desire for vengeance in the enemy, which will breed a new generation of enemy soldiers. We should, in this view, respond with compassion and understanding, engaging in “dialogue” with him, building power plants and digging toilets in his land rather than attacking him. This, we are told, will “win hearts and minds.” Based on these practical and moral considerations, the first option, the all-out offense, must be rejected; the restrained response is best."

Or this?
"A strong offense does not create new enemies; it defeats existing foes. Were this not so, we would be fighting German and Japanese suicide bombers today, while North Korea—undefeated by America—would be peaceful, prosperous, and free.
* Poverty is not the “root cause” of wars. If it were, poor Mexicans would be attacking America, not begging for jobs at Wal-Mart.
* Democracy is not a route to freedom—not for the Greeks who voted to kill Socrates, nor for the Romans who acclaimed Caesar, nor for the Germans who elected Hitler.
* A culture of slavery and suicide is not equal to a culture of freedom and prosperity—not for those who value life.
* The world is not a flux of contradictions, in which principles do not work. If it were, gravity would not hold, vaccinations would not work, and one would not have a right to one’s life.
* Being moral does not mean sacrificing for others. It means accepting the American principle of “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness”—and living for one’s own sake."


Which will win the war? Let it be victory.


U.S. Memorial Day. http://www.usmemorialday.org/backgrnd.html

information@savethe911memorial.com
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Ivan/test
Posted on Monday, June 11, 2007 - 10:19 pm:   

Kosovo Test Case: Stopping the spread of "radical Islamist extremists" into Europe, and beyond.

A brief history of Kosovo:

Kosovo offers a unique test case for containing, and ultimately reversing, the spread of violent Jihad into the West. This is not to be understood as being anti peaceful-Islam, nor derogatory towards Kosovo Albanians in any way, but rather as a review of how Kosovo got to where it is today, and what it means for the future Kosovo independence. Kosovo was chosen for this examination because it has the most turbulent history, while at the same time because it has become 98% Albanian Muslim homogenous, it offers a unique characteristic that it has the fewest moving parts which could be observed in action. We can see from the map below that Kosovo is on the frontier edge of Islamic expansionism into Europe, in effect, it is where Europe and Islam touch at present. (see map, interactive)

Islam-by-country-smooth.jpg

In fact, the goal here is to see a gradual transition of this hotly contentious part of the world towards a more viable and safe region, where all peoples and religions are respected equally.

Taking Kosovo's history, slavic Serbs had been moving into Kosovo since the early centuries of the first millennium, converted to Christianity in the latter part of the millennium, and had undergone many transitions of power from Bulgarian kingdoms to the Ottoman empire in mid second millennium, and held by Ottoman Turks, despite wars with Russia and Greece, until they were defeated by the Western powers at the end of World War I. This defeat of the Ottomans also became the foundation of the kingdom of Yugoslavia, at least in the southern part, of which Kosovo became a part. By the end of the 19th century, during Ottoman occupation, Kosovo had already become a Muslim Albanian majority. Kosovar movements for an indeptendent state go back to those early years of the last century, which by the latter part had manifest into violent agitation, though harshly contained by the Yugoslav government. By the time of these agitations, Kosovo had gone from 75% Albanian after WW I to 90%, so there was a clear Muslim dominance in this region once more, and today after more bloody persecutions it is nearly 98% Albanian Muslims. In effect, Kosovo represents a clear case of a major demographic conquest into what it is today, which may be a good test case for what is happening in other parts of Europe now.

Economically, Kosovo's economy is also one of the poorest of Europe, while demographically it is largely Albanian, with small minorities remaining of Serbs, Roma, and Turks and Croats. The prior Serbian administration has virtually no control over its Kosovo province, administered at present by the UN since 1999, though largely lawless, more a narco-smuggler economy, with little prospects of economic improvement as it now stands, since investments into such an uncertain environment is less than desirable. The Albanian Muslim population was terrorized by Serbian forces prior to this last war, with many atrocities committed on both sides, though the rationale for Western involvement was a false pretense of genocide with inflated numbers to commit NATO's intervention into the region. These atrocities did happen, especially under the failed attempt of Serbia's Slobodan Miloševic to regain control of the Kosovo region after decades of persecution by Albanians against the Serbs. Albanian Muslim atrocities by milita were also cited by Human Rights Watch in recent Kosovo. The end product of all this violence over the centuries, and in particular in the recent past, is that the Serbian province of Kosovo is now essentially a 'no man's land' for outsiders, whether in terms of Christian migrations or investments, so that it has become an isolated region within greater Europe as a small impoverished enclave of Albanian Muslims. And this is why Kosovo is an interesting test case for the future.

Future prospects for Kosovo:

To start, Kosovo should be separated from Serbia and allowed to form itself into a separate country. This should be done with full cooperation and support from both Russia and Serbia. It's a done deal, they lost Kosovo to the Albanians, and Christians had been forcibly removed so only a tiny minority remain. This is fact, and there is no way to reverse this historical event. The demographics for Kosovo are too overwhelmingly pro Muslim and anti-Christian, or anti-secular, for this to reverse in any way feasible. Consequently, Russia and Serbia must accept their losses, and proceed from there. The rest of former Yugoslavia need not be affected by this decision, and it should be a UN brokered separation. Serbia already has no control on this province, and though perhaps the 1999 NATO led bombings of Serbia were misplaced, the event is done, and it cannot be undone. So it is better, and more practical, to accept this defeat and move on. If so, then there is a constructive way to proceed on Kosovo, which makes it an important frontier against Jihad.

With this assumption, that Kosovo is now an independent state, what should be the conditions for its continued existence, and perhaps to reverse its economic decline? There are two dominant possibilities: one, more Arab money flows in from the Middle East oil states and further radicalize the population through Wahabi mosque building and cleric exhortations; or two, this flow of funds is stopped. In the first, the likely of greater internal agitation and radicalization of Kosovar youth will lead to greater violence; in the second, the cessation of radicalized funding would give room for Kosovo to begin to court outside investments and guidance towards economic reconstruction. If Kosovo is to lift itself from being the poorest state in Europe, it will need to do this. With the help of Western and American interests, these investments can help rebuild a society into a more modern functioning system, where more opportunities for personal advancement can exist. However, there must be imposed an absolute condition for these investments, that the government of the new Kosovo state reigns in its radicalized elements and stops funding from the Jihad interests in the Middle East oil states. This is the absolutely necessary test, that they turn in Jihadis, and prevent their influences from coming into the new state, or else any new investments would carry too high a risk. The trade off is between Jihad and modern economic development, which must be addressed not only at the governmental levels, but also at the academic, local and village levels as well. All strata of society must be made to understand that this is their test, and which of these two trade offs they choose, that will be their future. In this manner, we have a control situation, a kind of social 'double-blind' test for the outcome of their choices. If they choose Jihad, then it is a stern warning to the rest of Europe as to what demographic conquest means for them; if they choose investments and modernity, even if under the guise of Islamic law, then there is a new set of possibilities that unfold for Kosovo.

If they choose to reject Jihad, but accept modern development and investment, meaning they are not isolating themselves as Europe's enemies but rather are facing towards Europe with hopes for the future; then these are the two dominant possibilities: one, at the educational level, the madrassas type schooling is discontinued while secular education is emphasized; two, democratic reforms gives equal human rights to all members of society regardless of gender. These are important developments that will need intense observation, because without these internal reforms, the first part of investments cannot work, and society would become victim once again to Islamic dogmas that discourage any economic advancements. Europe should monitor these developments with intense interest, as a test case, because failure on these two parts will have immense ramifications for their own future. Islam can be contained, if it is in their interest to do so, but it must not be viewed as a permanent solution, because Koranic dogmas can, and likely will, try to reassert themselves again at some point in the future, to conquer the infidel nations of the West. There is no pleasant way around this, that the underlying current with ramifications for both Serbia and Russia, as well as for all Europe, is that Islamism has been spreading, as per the map shown above. Russia's involvement in the Caucasus regions, especially Chechnya, should be fair warning here. France's growing rebelliousness of its Islamic youth with Jihad ramifications is now well established with riots and violence. The same is true for most other European states who have had Jihad attacks against them, especially Spain and England. Imagine if instead of having been defeated, the Spanish Inquisition had been victorious? This is what Europe is up against, and the frontier of this socio-religio-political force is now centered at its underbelly in Kosovo. So an independent Kosovo's future is most important for all of Europe's future.

Now, if they reject both parts, and turn to Islamic Jihad instead, then the thesis of a "radical Islamist extremists" is in full force, and Europe is faced with a clear and present danger. But if Kosovo can adapt itself, especially as an independent nation free of Jihad sponsorship from either Iran or Saudi interests, then the test case of this possible future for this newly independent state becomes an indicator of what works, and what does not work. This is why Kosovo is so important, not because of its history, but because of its potential future. How this future unfolds for the people of Kosovo is therefore a test case for all future involvements in Islamic states. What makes it most interesting is the purity of its conditions: extreme poverty, years of neglect, a homogenous Albanian population, a homogenous religious base, and its close proximity to the United Europe. This can either work for them, or against them, and Europe and the world will be watching.

Conclusion:

I present this 'test case' for Kosovo with a special interest for the Western alliance states, because here is a pure state of conditions that can be lifted up, much as many of the former Soviet Bloc states have been lifted up, of their own choosing. How will Kosovo choose? It is not comparable to foreign aid to states like Egypt, where there is an Israel angle to conserve, nor is it comparable to Afghanistan or Pakistan, which are far removed from the European theater. Nor does it have any semblance to the Middle Eastern states such as Saudi Arabia, or Iraq, or even Iran, Arab Gulf states, because these are within the influence of oil. The rest of Islam's world, from Mali to Indonesia have their own dynamics to contend with, and these must be dealt with separately, either with aid or with force. Other Islamic states of Africa, or even Turkey which is nominally secular, all have different dynamics from Kosovo. But in the development of Kosovo, with special attention to how this development unfolds, right down to their school infrastructures, is one that deserves intense scrutiny because from its lessons we will better understand how to deal with all the other Islamic states, for better or for worse. The goal for all Muslims worldwide should be the same: a just government, a functioning economy, respect for the individual human rights of all human beings, and religious freedom to worship God as each person will in their heart and soul. These are not mysterious things, whether or not they live in a democratic state or not, or whether or not good Muslims, but they are endemic to all humanity, that we have these rights same as we have clean air to breathe and clean water to drink. In conclusion, Kosovo may yet be the most important test case for the future of Europe, and the world, for whether or not they will be successful and free, or decimated with more violence and wars, what had plagued them all through history. On this point, we should watch.


Ivan
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Preacher
Posted on Friday, June 22, 2007 - 06:55 pm:   

Ivan,

You posted a very good summary of the discussion held on this board over the last two years. I found your summary posted on the table of contents to be an excellent distillation of the thoughts expressed here.

From this conversation we have be provided insight into the workings of some of the most brillient minds on the planet. We have also seen into the minds of men of faith. One a Celtic Christian and the other a Muslim.

In this discussion we have glimpsed the maddness and grandure of religous passion and the heights of achievement it can propel men to. In the case of the Muslim it lead to a professorship as a computer scientist. In the case of the Christian it lead him to the hieghts of predictive analysis and recognition as one of the best cryptographer, pyschological warfare expert and intelligence officer in the United States military.

IN the fury of the debate between these points of view and your carefully crafted arguements of logic, we have been given insight into the nature of the conflict that currently engulfs the Middle East and World of Islam.

As we sit here the next hurricaine season approaches, tensions in the earth's crust build and a scientist has discovered a way using math and science to better predict solar flares. In the embrase of his religious passion the Celtic Christian on this site predicted storms and their effects; solar flares and earthquakes by integrating data from many sources. He then used those predictions like a lance to joust with the Muslim.

Like Saint George and the knights of old he fought a clean fight free of the blood of innocents in a battle to win over the heart and mind of a Muslim. A task he failed to accomplish.

Now in his footsteps come scientists like the one who with math and science replicate the predictive skill of the Christian with regards to solar flares.

I suspect the Christian, unlike Osama and his ilk, has opened doors to many places we have yet to go.

As compared to accomplishments of Osama and the Muslim world the accomplishments of this Celtic Christian and the scientists that are unraveling the processes that he had insight into pale in comparrison.
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ANON
Posted on Wednesday, October 03, 2007 - 08:54 pm:   

Lockerbie evidence withheld from defence
MICHAEL HOWIE
HOME AFFAIRS CORRESPODNENT

FRESH doubt has been cast over the conviction of the Lockerbie bomber after it emerged a document containing vital evidence about the bomb timer has never been shown to the defence.

The Scotsman has learned that the failure to disclose the classified document, which concerns the supply of timers identical to the one said to have been used to blow up Pan Am Flight 103, led a review body that examined the case against Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi to conclude a miscarriage of justice may have occurred.

http://news.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?tid=184&id=1571662007

They called him names and barred him from government service. Yet in the end he was right about Lockerbie and the link to the STASI

Verified by the highest court body in Scotland.

So much for the government and its lies and so much for the truth.

In the end the truth comes out.
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A-Anon
Posted on Saturday, October 06, 2007 - 03:12 pm:   

Yes ANON it appears the assumptions that pointed the finger at Lybia in the bombing of PANAM 103 were wrong. In terms of what occured I believe it was an arrogence of power and group think on the part of the leadership rather than a deliberate attempt to frame Lybia.

If we look at the case the evidence for Lybian complicity it overlapped that of the Iranians and PFLP-GC. The information and evidence on the PFLP-GC was fragmented and distributed accross Europe. The evidence against the Lybian's was the product of collection and analysis by entities that shared a common worldview and were part of the same system. That system being the American intelligence community. Information developed outside the community was not viewed as being credible and as such looked upon with skeptisim. As a result an entire intelligence and security apparatus bought into a common interpretation of the facts. Evidence that ran counter to that interpretation was seen as being false or not being credible.

Then end result being a mistake of justice. This is not to say that Lybia was totally innocent. It was engaged in terrorist operations, blew up a facility frequented U.S. service members and a host of other actions that violated international laws and norms.

That one analyst who is clearly brillient, but suffers from a chemically induced brain disorder, was able to see the pattern in the events leading up to PANAM 103, is remarkable.

The fact that this ability to reconstruct disseperate bits of data into a whole is worth studying. That it is related to a high IQ is typical. I note the performance of this analyst in question is on par with that of Dr. Nash and both share similiar characteristics. I have watched the evolution of this analyst's thoughts on this board as he has responded to medication and therapy and find it has opened my eyes to what modern medicine can do.

I have attached some information regarding schizophrenia, it must be noted that this disease can be organic or chemically induced. This does not change the fact though on how it is treated and the effect that medication has on the disease/illness. Amphetamines and Nerve agents are both known to induce psychosis and schizophrenia in humans. Fortunately both forms of induced disease can be treated. The resulting disorder stems from an imbalance in the dopamine levels in the central nervous system.

The following lecture describes the types of medications used to treat schizophrenia. In terms of the analyst in question he is currently on a entirely new class of medication. One that is lightyears beyond those described in the lecture below.

When looking at this analyst I am reminded of an old Japanese saying about creating a work of art. Each master craftsman in ancient Japan worked a tiny almost insignificant flaw into each work of art they created. They did this for they had a saying, Only God can creat perfection, for a man to attempt it is an affront to god and no good will come of it.

It is a sad fact that the greatest minds in history that have looked upon the vastness of creation and proved something to be possible that was thought not to be have been have each been afflicted with some form of mental illness. The cost I suppose of genus or the price for looking on the face of God and his creation.

Fortunately medicine has progressed to the point where we can treat if not cure the illness that afflicts these great minds.

I wish the analyst that used to frequent these pages, and who displayed a brillience at analysis that was as astonding as it was terrifying to look upon, well.

I know that he has responded well to his medication and is doing well. He served his nation with honor and distinction and proved that nothing is impossible.

I am a graduate student that knows him and have seen his progress and brillience first hand.

He is kind, caring and gentle.

As a tibute and post script I have added at the end of this message a list of the military operations he has participated in. I took this from a briefing he did on disabled veteran's issues and PTSD. That one man did all of this in a few short years boggles my mind.

ANTIPSYCHOTICS

Objectives: After this lecture has been presented, the student should be able to:
1. Describe some of the hallmark symptoms of schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders.
2. Describe the mechanism of action for the various types of antipsychotic medications.
3. Describe a potential rationale for the therapeutic choice of a particular antipsychotic.
4. Describe the similarities and differences in the side effects for the different antipsychotics, and which medications are most likely to result in Tardive Dyskinesia or Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome.


I. Antipsychotics are prescribed specifically for several different types of psychoses, all of which are described in detail in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV)
· schizophrenia (chemically-induced or organic in nature)
· mania
· organic mental disorder (OMD)

In general, the symptoms of the different types of psychoses are relatively wide-ranging and include disorders of perception, thought patterns, consciousness, social interactions and affect (cf. DSM-IV). Frequently, the symptoms of schizophrenia are divided into two major types, positive and negative, and the type of symptoms can dictate the choice of antipsychotic.

II. The etiology of various psychoses has generally been deemed to be the result of excessive dopamine (DA) activity in the central nervous system. This has been called the dopamine hypothesis of schizophrenia (1963) and was largely determined from the knowledge that:
A. drugs that block dopamine receptors (i.e., dopamine antagonists) are therapeutically effective in alleviating psychotic symptoms.
B. sympathomimetic drugs such as amphetamine, which release dopamine, can induce psychosis.

III. As a class of drugs, the antipychotics are generally:
· orally administered (i.m. administration an option with certain drugs)
· 95-98% bound to plasma proteins
· subject to extensive “first-pass” hepatic metabolism
· drugs with long “half-lives” (e.g., chlorpromazine - t½=30 hours)
· 70% of patients respond to conventional drugs

IV. Administration of these drugs leads to characteristic physical and psychological effects known as a “neuroleptic syndrome”. This syndrome includes effects such as:
· sedation
· emotional quieting
· psychomotor slowing
· affective indifference


V. There are at least eight classes of antipsychotic drugs, five of the most prominent are:
A. Phenothiazines: these drugs are predominantly dopamine type-2 (D2) antagonists, with varying degrees of selectivity



1. Aliphatics – low affinity D2 antagonists that pose an increased risk for autonomic side effects
a. chlorpromazine (“Thorazine”)
b. promazine (“Sparine” - least effective of the aliphatics)
c. trifluopromazine (“Vesprin”)
2. Piperdines – have comparatively high affinity for the D2 receptor
a. mesoridazine (“Serentil”)
b. thioridazine (“Mellaril”)
3. Piperazines – high affinity D2 antagonists that pose an increased risk for extrapyramidal side effects; least sedating
a. fluphenazine (“Prolixin” - decanoate formulation available)
b. perphenazine (“Trilafon”)
c. trifluoperazine (“Stelazine”)
B. Butyrophenone - haloperidol (“Haldol” – has high to intermediate affinity for the D2 receptor, and therefore, poses increased risk of extrapyramidal side effects; decanoate formulation available)
C. Thioxanthenes – also have potent D2 antagonist properties:
1. chlorprothixene (“Taractan”)
2. thiothixene (“Navane”)

VI. Atypical Antipsychotics – these antipsychotics are atypical in that they do not have prominent D2 antagonist profiles, which substantially reduces the potential for tardive dyskinesia and drug-induced parkinsonism
A. Dibenzodiazepines – heterocyclic compounds that have extraordinarily mixed receptor-binding profiles:
1. clozapine (“Clozaril” – approved by the FDA in 1989, it seems to help those with negative antipsychotic symptoms. This drug poses a risk for agranulocytosis, a potentially life-threatening blood disorder. In addition, a recent retrospective study revealed cardiovascular complications such as myocarditis and cardiomyopathy resulting from chronic treatment with clozapine)
2. loxapine (“Loxitane”)
3. olanzapine (“Zyprexa” – approved within the last 5 years or so, it does not pose the same risk of agranulocytosis as clozapine; case reports have described incidents of olanzapine-induced sleepwalking)
B. Benzisoxazole – risperidone (“Risperdal” – this drug is relatively selective 5-HT2A receptor antagonist, but at higher doses (>10 mg) has haloperidol-like effects)
C. Other heterocyclic antipsychotics
1. molindone (“Moban”)
2. pimozide (“Orap” – also indicated for the treatment of severe tics and involuntary vocalizations that occur with Tourette’s syndrome)
3. quetiapine (“Seroquel”)

VI. The side effects that can result from taking antipsychotic medications are also wide-ranging and potentially lethal in the case of Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome (NMS). The broad spectrum of effects frequently associated with the antipsychotics results from their relative selectivities as receptor antagonists.
A. Many antipsychotics can block peripheral muscarinic receptors, alpha-adrenergic receptors, and histamine-1 receptors – frequently resulting in sedation and weight gain.



B. DA is a ubiquitous neurotransmitter that plays a substantial role in many brain areas including the pituitary, hypothalamus, chemoreceptor trigger zone, and the extrapyramidal system.
C. Some of the most common side effects:
1. akathisias - unpleasant, subjective responses often characterized as “nervous energy” (strongly contribute to noncompliance)
2. Parkinsonism (drug-induced or “pseudoparkinsonism”)
3. dystonias, dyskinesias and akinesias - disorders of muscle tonicity and movement, with the distinct absence of movement (akinesias) also being a problem.
4. tardive dyskinesias - probably the most serious of the drug-induced extrapyramidal side effects; the symptoms develop late during antipsychotic drug therapy.
5. Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome - occurs in 1% of the patients taking antipsychotic drug therapy. However, 20-30% of these may die from it. This syndrome is particularly problematic since:
a. can occur at therapeutic doses
b. can be seen within hours of starting treatment, or after months of treatment
c. the symptoms include:
1. muscular rigidity
2. impaired breathing or ventilation
3. autonomic hyperactivity
4. extremely high temperatures
6. blood abnormalities - a host of hematological problems can arise during antipsychotic therapy, including a fatal agranulocytosis.
7. endocrine abnormalities - leads to increased serum prolactin, which can lead to amenorrhea, gynecomastia and false-positive pregnancy tests.
8. cardiovascular effects - orthostatic hypotension
D. Drug interactions can also be a problem during antipsychotic therapy. Two of the most common examples are:
1. the potentiation of other CNS depressants such as alcohol
2. an interaction with OTC medications such as antihistamines.

VI. Examples of contraindications for “typical” antipsychotic therapy:
1. blood dyscrasias
2. Parkinsonism
3. chronic alcoholism
4. liver disease

The following is a tribute to a disabled Veteran. One who served his nation with honor and distinction. He helped guide us in peace and war. I wish him well and hope one day his dreams will not be haunted by the trauma's from the events he participated in. The following is a list of his battles and the crisis's he helped manage. The world is a better place because of it. For over 20 years he has seen great acts of heroism and the worst of war. Such things break even the hardest of men. May God Bless and keep him

A-Anon

Operation Iraqi Freedom, 2003-4

Modernization of Saudi Arabian National Guard, 2000

First PACOM Information Warfare Exercise, 1996

Operation Desert Strike, 1996

Operation Pacific Haven, 1996

Response to North Korean Kangnung Submarine Infiltration, 1996

Response to Taiwan Strait Missile Incident, also known as, The Third Taiwan Strait Crisis, 1995-96

Response to the Indonesian Mapnduna Hostage and Mercenary Crisis, 1995

Response to the Tokyo Subway Sarin Gas Attack, 1995

Desert Hammer VI, Advanced War-Fighting Experiment, 1994

Operation Desert Shield and Storm, 1990-91

REFORGER Exercises, 1987-88

Cheorwon Valley Demilitarized Zone Shooting Incident, 1986

Team Spirit Exercise, 1986

Operation Urgent Fury, Post Conflict Support, 1983
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Anon Anon
Posted on Friday, December 07, 2007 - 05:26 am:   

U.S. intel on weapons again found lacking
Analysis: NIE reports that Iran quit nuclear arms program in 2003

WASHINGTON - First Iraq, now Iran. The United States has operated under a cloud of faulty intelligence in both countries.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22097013/

While Iran does pose a threat and must be countered the use of intelligence to justify a military response once again appears to be faulty.

As I look back upon these posting I note that the entire nation of Saudi Arabia was destablized by bombings that included the Compound of the Vinnell Arabia Corp. These bombing set in motion the forced withdrawl of AMerican forces from Suadi Arabia where they were assisting stability by providing a moderating influence on the Saudi Military.

I note that one man walked into a Department of Defense Security briefing and told the man doing the routine background update that, "The Vinnell Arabia Compound had been penetrated and the Saudi's had a network in it" He was laughed at and the information was thrown in the trash by the DSS agent. This occured on the second floor of the Lockheed Martin Information Management Facility in Orlando Florida. Following this the Ryhad Bombings occured.

While in Saudi Arabia this analyst observed that Corporate America and the Military Industrial Complex was staffing the Vinnell COntract with 2nd rate personnel, had cut salaries and out sourced much of the work. The savings was poured back into the pockets of managers in the form of bonuses.

The moderate Saudi's being trained by the Vinnell Arabia Corp were appalled because with the reduction in quality of the trainers came increases in violations of Saudi customs such as prohibition against drinking and relations with unmarried women within the country. The moderate Saudis told the intelligence officer that spoke to the DSS agent that this was bad because it just gave credence to the statements and view of weterners that the militants were promulgating adding fuel to the fire.

Beacuse the DSS agent refuse to listen or attempt to get the Intelligence Officer during the briefing to explain what he saw that concerned him, the whole of Saudi Arabia was destablized, U.S. military efforts to moderate Saudi Behavior were set back enormously and U.S. forces were forced to relocate from Saudi Arabia at the cost of hundreds of millions of dollars.

Such is what occured in a room in Orlando Florida. ALl of this information is documented in an Intelligence Officers DSS background investigation.

What is the price of failure? In this case one DSS agent's failure cost the United States hundreds of millions of dollars and set back United States efforts to moderate Saudi Arabia decades.
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Crimes Against Humaity
Posted on Monday, March 24, 2008 - 09:01 pm:   

As the War in Iraq reaches its fifth year, I note that Dafur is still in flames, Iran remains a threat and Afghanistan is wracked by conflict.

American forces have withdrawn, under pressure, from Saudi Arabia at the cost of hundreds of millions of dollars. With this withdrawl of forces the United States lost a significant moderating capability upon Saudi Society.

One senior intelligence analyst saw what Dafur was becoming and saw early indications of its slide into the fires thrown into the waste basket of information at the Joint Analysis Center (JAC) Molesworth England by the Senior Military Analyst assigned there. This occured within the confines of building 100 on the JAC under the supervision of the JAC Molesworth Commander at the time.

This event followed the same Senior Intelligence Officer/Analyst informing the DSS agent conducting his background investigation of the penetration of the Vinnel Arabia compound in Saudi Arabia by Al Qeada. This information was noted but not acted upon and the entire United States Military Mission to Suadi Arabia was forced to leave the country. This forced withdrawl, discussed above, disrupted Saudi American Relations and boosted the fortunes of Al Qeada in Saudi Arabia for a significant period of time. This also resulted in much loss of life.

This particular event occured, as stated earlier, at the Lockheed Martin Information Management Facility in Orlando Florida on the Second Floor Conference Room in the Veridian Corporation Spaces.

This same analyst went on to solve the Billiard Problem, which was proved geometrically and sent by friends around the globe. He then went on to push the Circle Squaring Problem to a level of accuracy never seen before. This solution was again proven this time mathmatically and sent by friends to major universities around the globe.

As thousands die in Dafur in pain and misery, and as scores of others are maimed and injured, a large measure of the fault for not recognizing the gravity of this problem came be laid at the doors of JAC Molesworth and the men and women who used to work in building 100. Housed within this facility were also those charged with exploiting and monitoring the information from the early interrogations at GITMO that have now been found to have exceeded the moral limits set by our society and elected representatives.

I have had the oportunity to speak with this senior analyst at Eastern CT State Univerisity and have been able to confirm most of what he has said.

JAC Molesworth has realigned itself following his departure and building 100 had been reduced to a administrative space. Veridan Corporation has left its spaces in Orlando Florida and its conference room no longer exists. That space is now an office used by another corporation.

The Vinnel Arabia Compound was abandoned following the bombings and lays empty.

Most records dealing with this senior analyst have been destroyed or lost by the federal government. Except for the copies of his records he showed me, which I have been able to verify parts of using the freedom of information act.

I have also been able to develop a from this officer's records and cross referencing this information to periodicals, journals and websites a list which includes the personnel referenced at JAC Molesworth, in the DSS Office in Orlando Florida, the Army Rating Board that sat on this officer's disability rating and denied his exposure to toxic agents, along with the men and women within the federal government health care system that have handled his medical treatment.

The fact that I can do so in this information age means also that this officer's friends around the globe can as well. As the thousands of cars drive on the highway past JAC Molesworth in the UK many look at it, and building 100, and now know what went on in it during that time. The same goes for the Lockheed Martin Information Facility in Orlando Florida under the leadership of the Veridian Corporation.

After compiling the list of names I destroyed it, for I felt it was far to dangerous.

On the great game board of national security, one man dared to speak the truth and was brutalized by the system for it. Stuck with needles and pins through his tongue, eyelids and every major nerve in his body the federal government and its agents in the Boston VA ran electricity through his nerves as they twisted the needles transfixing them. Not content with the findings they did it again. Taking needles as his wife watched they pierced his tongue and twisted the needle as they poured electricity through it. She could not bear to watch and broke down in tears as they electrified and pierced every major nerve in his body in a systemic fashion.

Is it no wonder that this analsyst, expert in irregular warfare, improvised weapons and explosives, and trained in covert communications and encryption is angry with the system and authority in general.

Having spent much time with him I know he is a gentle soul cruely used by the Federal Government of the United States and DOD one who only sought to save lives. For this he was subjected to horrors by the Boston VA and Walter Reed in the Neurology Wing that mirror those performed by the NAZI's of WWII.

As I sit here I shudder to think of what this man was put through. I have looked at his medical records and seen the test results with my own eyes. I know the EMG process and wince at the pain he endured at the hands of the Boston VA.

I go to sleep knowing full well the horror he was put through.

God forgive us for what we as a nation have done for I am sure we will answer for it in the next life.
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Al Qeada Inflitration
Posted on Tuesday, March 25, 2008 - 05:23 pm:   

Fears Saudi bombing an inside job

May 17 2003

Al-Qaeda has infiltrated Saudi Arabia's military and security forces at the highest level, including those entrusted with the protection of Western residential compounds, American intelligence officials believe.

They are convinced that Tuesday's suicide bombers depended on a significant level of insider knowledge of the compounds involved and that al-Qaeda even infiltrated the elite National Guard, which is involved in compound security.

Intelligence sources said several bombers had been wearing National Guard uniforms to help them get into the three residential complexes.

"The only area where there is no evidence of a significant al-Qaeda presence is in the Saudi air force," one intelligence official said. "The police, army, navy, National Guard have all been infiltrated."

American military and intelligence officers say the attack on the residential quarters of the Vinnell corporation, where ex-US army officers train the National Guard, must have had detailed knowledge.

The suicide bombers detonated their vehicle inside the company's strongly walled compound right outside the main housing block.

"It took them 30 seconds to a minute to get from the gate to the housing block. They had to know where the switches were to operate the gates after attacking the guards," one military official said. "They then drove at breakneck speed with a bomb weighing nearly 200 kilograms to the most intensely populated location in the complex and blew it up."

A security specialist at Jamal Jaroudi Est, a leading Riyadh security firm which provides security for more than 150 compounds, including one of those attacked by the bombers, said that security at most of them is inadequate.

The Telegraph, London

This story was found at: http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/05/16/1052885398366.html

Saudi royal guards `aided al-Qa'ida' in Riyadh bombings that left 35 Independent on Sunday, The, May 16, 2004 by Mark Hollingsworth

Information developed after the bombing of the Vinnell Arabia Corporation confirms that Al Qeada militants infiltrated the Vinnell Arabia Compound prior to the bombing.

One Intelligence Officer and Spy Master of the Cold War detected the inflitration and reported the same to the DSS Office in Orlando Florida prior to the bombings.

This information was noted but not acted upon by the DSS agent responsible for conducting the routine background investigation of this spy Master's Security Clearance.

As a result of this failure to follow-up or fully explore the information reported to the DSS office in Orlando Florida many lives were lost and U.S. Forces were subsequently forced to withdraw from Saudi Arabia.

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4159/is_20040516/ai_n12755922

The Defense Security Office, Orlando, FL had this information in their possession prior to the bombings. Why was this not acted upon? Who in the office knew it? What were their motivations?

The personnel who were in this particular office at the time failed to do their duty and as a result U.S. lives were lost and U.S. Military Forces in Saudi Arabia were forced to withdraw.

This failure is only second to that of the intelligence community prior to 911.
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Surrender not option
Posted on Monday, April 28, 2008 - 10:24 am:   

House of war, and house of 'peace'?


Bruce Bawer: "We need to recognize that the cultural jihadists hate our freedoms because those freedoms defy sharia, which they’re determined to impose on us"

Here is how the world is divided in the Islamic mind, and the reason they hate our freedoms is because they go contrary to the Islamic idea of Sharia law. So any resistance to this ideal puts us automatically into the 'house of war' though we desire peace. By this Islamic reasoning, only Sharia states are in the 'house of peace', though in reality their world is always at war, while we have found peace. The exception to our peace, and no part of Europe is warring on any other part, and this is true of Western civilization in general world wide, while the Islamic war is today the major portion of world wide wars, especially in places like North Africa, and various inter ethnic and inter religious wars of Asia. Here is from the article:

quote:

Islam divides the world into two parts. The part governed by sharia, or Islamic law, is called the Dar al-Islam, or House of Submission. Everything else is the Dar al-Harb, or House of War, so called because it will take war—holy war, jihad—to bring it into the House of Submission. Over the centuries, this jihad has taken a variety of forms. Two centuries ago, for instance, Muslim pirates from North Africa captured ships and enslaved their crews, leading the U.S. to fight the Barbary Wars of 1801–05 and 1815. In recent decades, the jihadists’ weapon of choice has usually been the terrorist’s bomb; the use of planes as missiles on 9/11 was a variant of this method.
What has not been widely recognized is that the Ayatollah Khomeini’s 1989 fatwa against Satanic Verses author Salman Rushdie introduced a new kind of jihad. Instead of assaulting Western ships or buildings, Kho­meini took aim at a fundamental Western freedom: freedom of speech. In recent years, other Islamists have joined this crusade, seeking to undermine Western societies’ basic liberties and extend sharia within those societies.
The cultural jihadists have enjoyed disturbing success. Two events in particular—the 2004 assassination in Amsterdam of Theo van Gogh in retaliation for his film about Islam’s oppression of women, and the global wave of riots, murders, and vandalism that followed a Danish newspaper’s 2005 publication of cartoons satirizing Mohammed—have had a massive ripple effect throughout the West. Motivated variously, and doubtless sometimes simultaneously, by fear, misguided sympathy, and multicultural ideology—which teaches us to belittle our freedoms and to genuflect to non-Western cultures, however repressive—people at every level of Western society, but especially elites, have allowed concerns about what fundamentalist Muslims will feel, think, or do to influence their actions and expressions. These Westerners have begun, in other words, to internalize the strictures of sharia, and thus implicitly to accept the deferential status of dhimmis—infidels living in Muslim societies.
Call it a cultural surrender. The House of War is slowly—or not so slowly, in Europe’s case—being absorbed into the House of Submission.
The Western media are in the driver’s seat on this road to sharia. Often their approach is to argue that we’re the bad guys. After the late Dutch sociologist-turned-politician Pim Fortuyn sounded the alarm about the danger that Europe’s Islamization posed to democracy, elite journalists labeled him a threat. A New York Times headline described him as marching the dutch to the right. Dutch newspapers Het Parool and De Volkskrant compared him with Mussolini; Trouw likened him to Hitler. The man (a multiculturalist, not a Muslim) who murdered him in May 2002 seemed to echo such verdicts when explaining his motive: Fortuyn’s views on Islam, the killer insisted, were “dangerous.”
Perhaps no Western media outlet has exhibited this habit of moral inversion more regularly than the BBC. In 2006, to take a typical example, Manchester’s top imam told psychotherapist John Casson that he supported the death penalty for homosexuality. Casson expressed shock—and the BBC, in a dispatch headlined imam accused of “gay death” slur, spun the controversy as an effort by Casson to discredit Islam. The BBC concluded its story with comments from an Islamic Human Rights Commission spokesman, who equated Muslim attitudes toward homosexuality with those of “other orthodox religions, such as Catholicism” and complained that focusing on the issue was “part of demonizing Muslims.”
In June 2005, the BBC aired the documentary Don’t Panic, I’m Islamic, which sought to portray concerns about Islamic radicalism as overblown. This “stunning whitewash of radical Islam,” as Little Green Footballs blogger Charles Johnson put it, “helped keep the British public fast asleep, a few weeks before the bombs went off in London subways and buses” in July 2005. In December 2007, it emerged that five of the documentary’s subjects, served up on the show as examples of innocuous Muslims-next-door, had been charged in those terrorist attacks—and that BBC producers, though aware of their involvement after the attacks took place, had not reported important information about them to the police.


Read it all.

Here is original City Journal article: An Anatomy of Surrender

Surrender is not an option.

Also see: THE ISLAMIST TERRORIST AS PSYCHOPATH
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Iran's 'Great Game'
Posted on Saturday, May 10, 2008 - 02:03 pm:   

Is Iran playing the 'Great Game' in North Africa and the Middle East?


BEI017_hh.jpg
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3541272,00.html
Lebanese minister: Hizbullah believes way to Tel Aviv passes through Beirut - Roee Nahmias, Israel News


quote:

"Iran is responsible for what is happening in Lebanon. The subject now is the Iranian attack on Lebanon. They want us to surrender totally without any compensation," Lebanese Sports Minister Ahmed Fatfat said Friday during an interview with the Al-Arabiya television network Friday amid reports that Hizbullah gunmen seized control of large parts of Beirut.
"Hizbullah has turned from an opposition party into a militia attempting to impose its control.



Is this part of a great Great Game plan of Iran's strategy to make itself the dominant force in the Middle East, North Africa, and perhaps revive the old Persian Empire dreams of world domination from Europe to Asia? This is not an idle question. As recently as last month, there already were signs of Iran's intentions in Sudan. On the DEBKAfile analysis page, Iran Gains African Foothold up to Chad through Pacts with Sudan, it says:

quote:

Iran jumped in with gusto to meet Sudan president Omar al-Bashir’s application for a military package including arms and training of his army. The application was received after the horrendous Darfur tragedy and Khartoum’s backing for Chad rebels finally convinced Sudan’s traditional arms suppliers, Russia, China and Libya, to back away from arming Sudan’s 120,000-strong army.
Beijing came last, sensitized to its international image by the approaching Olympic Games in August. Libya has a major beef with Khartoum for backing the rebels fighting to overthrow Chad president Idriss Debby.


That was on April 21, 2008.

By May 2, 2008, the news shifted to Jordan and Egypt: Palestinian Hamas takes over Jordan's Muslim Brotherhood looms over Egyptian Delta:

quote:

DEBKAfile’s Middle East sources disclose a signal victory in Hamas’ expansionist drive Friday, May 2, when its members scooped up 28 of the 50 seats of Jordan’s Muslim Brotherhood Shura Council in a secret ballot.
Hamam Said, 64, a Palestinian Hamas operative from the West Bank town of Jenin, was elected the movement’s General Guide by a single vote. Until 2005, Said, a trusted follower of Damascus-based hard-line Hamas chief, Khaled Meshaal, was a leader of the Jordanian Sawailah crime gang, which doubles as an extremist Islamist militia.
Jordan’s King Abdullah II sent his secret services to prevent Hamas sweeping the Muslim  Brotherhood, which like its Egyptian branch is banned, but they failed.


So the Muslim Brotherhood, the force majeure behind the renewed World Jihad, is backing Hamas in Jordan. The pattern is the same: a 'state within a state'. Sudan, Egypt, now Jordan, are all on board, maneuvered by Iran into position. The remaining pieces of the war board are Syria and Lebanon. This comes within a few days.

By May 6, 2008, we see Iran's first move: Explosive situation in Lebanon as government confronts Hizballah:

quote:

Lebanon’s pro-Western Siniora government has declared illegal Hizballah’s private telecommunications network installed in southern and eastern Lebanon and the southern Shiite suburbs of Beirut. DEBKAfile reported some weeks ago that the network is military and was installed by Iran to prepare its Lebanese proxy for war with Israel. Beirut airport security chief Brig. Gen. Wafiq Shqeir, a suspected pro-Hizballah sympathizer was removed for permitting the installation of spy cameras alleged by the government to “monitor the arrival of Lebanese and foreign leaders, to kidnap or assassinate people on the airport road.”



By May 7, 2008, Iran's proxy Hizbollah makes its move: Lebanon slides towards a new civil war:

quote:

Hizballah fighters clad in national army and police uniforms are infiltrating government party strongholds in the capital to seize control. In the north and the western Beqaa Valley region of Kharoub, government forces are mobilizing. First units have been sighted heading for Beirut.
During the day, Hizballah blocked the roads leading to the airport and vowed to keep it under siege until the Siniora government goes back on the decision announced Tuesday, May 6, to shut down the private telecommunications network Iran installed for the group and reinstate the pro-Hizballah airport director Gen. Wafiq Shuqeir. To pile up anti-government pressure, Hizballah called labor unions out on strike.
General Shuqeir was removed after Druze Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid  Jumblatt accused Hizballah of installing spy cameras at the airport to monitor the movements of Lebanese and foreign leaders. Jumblatt said incoming flights were bringing the Shiite militia supplies of weapons from Iran.



Now with Lebanon on board, the Great Game thickens, but real target is Israel, as Iran's mullahs and president have always stated clearly.

By May 9, 2008, Syria enters Lebanon, on the side of Iran's Hizballah: Lebanese army chief defies government:

quote:

At least 11 people were killed Friday, May 9, Day 3 of fierce clashes between Hizballah and pro-government forces, the worst since the 1975-90 civil war. At noon, Syrian Social Nationalist Party’s units entered Beirut to support Hizballah’s advancing occupation of Sunni West Beirut districts.



See today's Jihadwatch.org page for further commentary: Iran backing Hizballah jihadists in Lebanon: "It is a new chapter of the battle led by Iran to control all of the Middle East". From the Telegraph:

quote:

Hizbollah fighters spread virtually unopposed across west Beirut districts loyal to the pro-Western government.
After a night of firefights, the mainly Sunni Muslim residents of the capital's west woke to find Shia Hizbollah fighters patrolling the streets.
The main compounds of country's two senior political leaders were besieged in a dramatic demonstration of the shift in power.


Does Lebanon understand how it had been played a pawn in Iran's Great Game? Fait accomplie? By next year Iran is expected to have completed its ability to make nuclear weapons. But all the pieces are already falling into place for their Great Game, though once they are rightly placed on the war board, they will declare hudna, or a temporary peace, possibly even make deceitful conciliatory moves to throw off the West from concern over their maneuvering. It is all part of their strategy to control the entire region as they prepare their great coup de grace against Israel. Do Israel and the world understand?

Iraq is another story, but ultimately also part of Iran's Great Game, as is the United States of America. Iran's strategy fits into their pattern of watching American election politics, and making moves when the country's attention is diverted by the elections dominating the media. This creates a 'blind spot' for Iran's maneuvers, which the mullahs exploit for their advantage. By the time a new president is in the White House, all their moves will have already taken place. All that remains is the bomb for Iran... But their Mahdi may not save them.

The Great Game... to be continued
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Igor who knows
Posted on Saturday, September 27, 2008 - 09:29 am:   

More Jihad hysteria...

Satellite.jpeg
'Palestine must be returned to Arabs' (Jerusalem Post)
Hizbullah's Nassrallah (btw, his name in Russian means 'she shitted')


quote:

"Palestine, from the sea to the river, is the property of Arabs and Palestinians and no one has the right to give up even a single grain of earth or one stone, because every grain of the land is holy. The entire land must be returned to its rightful owners," Nasrallah said on a day commemorating Muslim claims to the holy city of Jerusalem.



Not even "a singble grain of earth or one stone" is the Arab supremacist Islamic theory that once land is conquered for their god Allah it can never 'revert' back to its natural state of earth for all humanity, but must now forever reside in the camp of Islam. This is what Jihad is all about, to conquer the whole world for their god Allah, and they become hysterical if any piece of it is taken back by humanity. All land belongs to all humanity. It should all be taken back for human freedom and peace. Yes "every grain is holy" but not because of Arab supremacist primitive 7th cent. religion. The land is like the sky, it belongs to all of us, and no primitive Arab theory of land is able to take it away from us. We who are free will fight for this land and sky until the Arab's last days on earth.

Islam=slavery for Allah=submission to Mohammad's god=slavery=peace.

This is the nefarious formula of Islam's socalled 'religion of peace'.


Igor who knows the real meaning of Islam

Also see: The Religion of Peace
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Igor who knows
Posted on Sunday, September 28, 2008 - 08:07 am:   

More on Jihad hysteria, part 2... If you understand this, it makes the Mohammadans stark raving mad.


Mohammad's Allah has all the characteristics of a tantrum filled infant demanding negative attention, part autistic narcissism, part school yard bully. This is not how a God of the universe acts in the 21st century, though Allah as god of the 7th century may be fully justified in his caprice. Our modern moral moorings are built up on centuries of culture and civilization developments, where today human liberties and individual rights are respected above the dictates of some authority over them. Our modern moral world is one of reciprocal respect for those rights of individuals, and not punishments rained down from above by religious dogmas and their cleric tyrants who take the law into their own hands. Back in the days of Mohammad, punishments were the way people dealt with errant behaviors, whereas today we try to remedy social error through education and therapy, not just punishments. Mohammad's Allah did not understand modern values of helping an individual adjust to social norms, so he oppressed anyone who disobeyed his tyrannical rule, or threatened him both in this life with death, or the next after death with hell. Either way, obey in total submission or perish in horrible ways.

Mohammad's Allah is a whimsical pagan god who can abrogate himself whenever he likes, so his 'laws' are silly nonsense made up on the spot to fulfill Mohammad's needs at the time. There are no guiding principles except those 'that please Allah' which is a surrogate for 'that please Mohammad.' As a 7th century pagan god, Allah makes sense, but as a modern 'God of the universe' he makes no sense at all, devoid of human compassion except for those who kill in his name, which is totally against modern values of morality. For a simple people who believed in whimsical pagan gods, Allah fits in very well, and therefore is feared as well as revered. Mohammad saw the potential of ruling his caravan raiding members by using this primitive philosophy, so he transplanted one of the Arab pantheon of gods into the 'one god' which all had to obey: Read that as 'all obey Mohammad.' That is to obey the pagan Arab god which demands human sacrifice at all levels, from personal sacrifices to blow them up sacrifices, including suicide bombings and killings, such as witnessed of late.

Modern 21st century warfare is largely oriented around Muslims and their attacks on the values of the West. In India the same values are attacked in market place bombings as are the train bombings in Madrid or London. Nearly all terrorism today is dominated by followers of Mohammad's Allah. Jihads all around the world have the same objective, to make Mohammad's Allah rule supreme over the laws of society with Sharia. But that means to rule over the people with a whimsical god that terrorises, is devoid of compassion, and can change his mind at any time. Rule of law is nonsense in the Arab mindset, because his world rules by submission cowing to the power of the sheik or mullah in charge, and not ruled by principles but by personality, and often tyrannical personality disorders. So to attack those values in the West that have elevated humanity to individual rights and reciprocity is contrary to the Arab mindset, and in fact threatening to him, because it takes away his power to cow others into submission. But this does not work for a pagan god that wants to rule whimsically, since it puts constraints on his capricious behavior, his personality disorder behaviors, so makes nonsense of his whimsical rules. That is what Sharia is opposed to, any restrictions on its Mohammad's Allah rules, because it is a power play where those who rule by Sharia are deposed, on principles of modern governance. This is the real Jihad, not Israel.

Islam is not really a modern religion of the Abrahamic faiths, but is an Arab paganism repackaged into an Abrahamic context to give it appearance of a legitimate moral base. In fact, it is a regressively primitive attempt to control human lives by a pagan fear imperative, which tries to dominate all aspects of one's life, right down to its barbaric ideas on hygiene and copulation. As a total philosophy of government and punishments, Islam is not a religion but a political system trying to abrogate modern governance with its whimsical pagan god Allah. The Koran is the war manual of this dysfunctional whimsical god of Mohammad, raised to the 'one god' tyranny by him unilaterally, so he can rule his caravan raiders with a firm hand. This is not an Abrahamic religion, but a codified rule for a band of thieves. Observe any of the wars around the globe, and you will see the world Islam's conflict at hand, that the codes of thievery embodied in Muslim Sharia is in conflict with rule of law based on principles of civilization of our human rights and reciprocal respect for each other. We rule by reason and have the better way, theirs is barbaric and rules by whimsy of a primitive god. A resolution must be found, or the world will never know peace. There is no dialogue or reciprocity with Islam, because it is perpetual war with its pagan Arab god Allah, an immoral 'failure of reason' in perpetual conflict with our modern moral values. For those who believe in religion, Mohammad's Allah is in perpetually in conflict with our 'God of the universe.'

Yes, war is a failure of reason, because pagan gods were unreasonable.

Igor who knows
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Ivan/peace
Posted on Monday, September 29, 2008 - 10:24 pm:   


quote:

Islam=slavery for Allah=submission to Mohammad's god=slavery=peace.

This is the nefarious formula of Islam's socalled 'religion of peace'.



-- by Igor

Interesting equation Igor, and thanks for posting your ideas.

But where does the 'peace' come in? A slave is never at peace unless it is the peace of 'submission' to the master's will. Wars are fought because the enemy is he who would enslave us. To institutionalize slavery in religious form does not absolve it from the freedoms all human beings crave, so its religious format is a priori wrong for humanity. The evolution of human history is away from slavery, not towards it, so any ideology that seeks to enslave is on the wrong path for humanity. Wars and more wars result... Not peace. So where does 'peace' fit in in the above formula? Rather, it is a formula for war, eternal war, and an absolute failure of reason.

In Mel Gibson film "Braveheart" there is a line, father to son:
Your heart is free. Have the courage to follow it.

The slavers will never win. And until they are vanquished, there cannot be peace. Peace will come when they are beaten not by force, but by our wits, because we are men.

Ivan
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Igor who asks
Posted on Tuesday, September 30, 2008 - 01:10 am:   


quote:

Peace will come when they are beaten not by force, but by our wits, because we are men.




But what does using "our wits" mean in this fight?

Igor who asks
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Ivan/true peace
Posted on Tuesday, September 30, 2008 - 09:41 am:   


quote:

But what does using "our wits" mean in this fight?


- Igor asks

We are the beloveds of God, which is why we are free men, and in this blessing is the beauty and success of our free world. They the slavers are the cursed of God, which is why their world is a perpetual hell, a failure in this world. Remember that at all times, that we are the beloveds of God, and your freedom is God's blessing of love for us. The rest is easy. Eliminate their power in all possible ways:
1) restrict their wealth of oil by which they spread their slavery jihad, and become independent of it; 2) restrict their Sharia at every pass, and weaken their power legally, prosecute them when their 'laws' are against our constitutional laws; 3) screen them for their sedition sentiments, and deport those who are against the state, or exclude their coming here if their allegiance is to a foreign power, including the Umma's Sharia; 4) release their women from oppression; 5) educate their children, all children, in the meaning of rule of law and democracy, including the principles of human freedom and constitutional laws protecting these freedoms; 6) make alliances with like minded men to stop the spread of weapons of mass destruction to be used against us; and 7) tell the world with pride, and without 'political correctness' prejudice, that we are free men.

Do these things, and all things of necessity will fall into place to have God's love bless our world with the beauty of peace. Remember the 'separation of church and state' is how God's peace has come into the world. This is the blessing of our freedoms. The rest happens of its own, and religion is not an object. We are all free men and women, the future of our beautiful world, with true peace.

Happy Eid, with best wishes.


Ivan
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Igor
Posted on Wednesday, October 01, 2008 - 12:19 am:   

Aye, it is the way. I understand, that to rule by the sword is not the strength to rule by law.

The law is the sword, the sword of freedom. We will not be ruled as slaves, but as free men. Let all slavers beware.

We are free men. Our hearts are free.

Igor

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