Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Extra Extra Read all about it!



Libby Trial Exposes Neocon Shadow Government


Day by day, witness by witness, exhibit by exhibit, Patrick Fitzgerald, the prosecutor in the trial of Dick Cheney’s man, I. Lewis (Scooter) Libby, is accomplishing what no one else in Washington has been able to: He has impeached the Presidency of George W. Bush.

Of course, it’s an unofficial impeachment, but it will also, through its documentation, be inerasable. The trial record...testimony, exhibits, the lot...will be there, in one place, for investigators, scholars, reporters and Congress to pore over. It goes far beyond the charges against Mr. Libby. It is, instead, a road map to the abuses of power that Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney and their shadow government of neoconservatives have committed as the neocons carried out what they had been planning for years: an invasion of Iraq,and other military excursions,for the purpose of expanding American dominion.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Wow...I didn't know about this newspaper. It is very refreshing to see a comprehensive report on a subject that has been on many peoples minds since 911. In this artical they bring up references to the PNAC, which many of us have been studying and contains damning evidence that this whole thing with Afghanistan and Iraq was planned even before George W Bush went into office. Dubya appointed members of the PNAC into most of the high positions of this devious administration, and their names are shown on documents that are on the PNAC web site (Project For The New American Century).

~LINK~

~PNAC~

Tuesday, February 27, 2007



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Run Al Run~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
.
.
.

Stock market dropped 500 points today



Update




US STOCKS-Stocks sink on fears about China and growth

Tue Feb 27, 2007 6:30pm ET


By Ellis Mnyandu

NEW YORK, Feb 27 (Reuters) - U.S. stocks tumbled on Tuesday, driving the Dow Jones industrial average down in its worst slide since the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks, as a sell-off in China's stock market raised concerns that equity valuations may be too high.

A U.S. government report showing a bigger-than-expected drop in January's new orders for U.S.-made durable goods added to investors' concerns about the outlook for economic growth and corporate profits. Those worries added more fuel to the sell-off and helped contribute to a loss of about $600 billion in market value for the day.

The New York Stock Exchange's closing bell was greeted with a chorus of "boos" from the trading floor. A surge in trading volume triggered a technical glitch in late afternoon, contributing to an abrupt swing in the Dow average, which briefly fell 500 points. A Dow Jones Indexes spokeswoman said the glitch did not affect stock prices.

Here's some interesting things that went on in different parts of the world. Some countries like Venesuela and Russia had signifigent gains.

WORLD INDEXES


++++++++++++++++++++++++++

GENERAL IDX Venezuela 51,021.09 +1,404.84 +2.83%

MIB 30 Italy 42,821.00 +364.00 +0.86%

BRSP BOVESPA IDX Brazil 46,207.40 +191.61 +0.42%

WEIGHTED Taiwan 7,900.20 +90.75 +1.16%

MUMBAI BSE SENSEX India 13,649.52 +16.99 +0.12%


While others like the USA, Japan, and Hongkong had signifigent losses.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

NIKKEI 225 Japan 17,464.73 -655.19 -3.62%

HANG SENG Hong Kong 19,512.41 -635.46 -3.10%

DOW JONES IND. USA 12,216.24 -416.02 -3.29%

DAX 30 Germany 6,819.65 -207.94 -2.96%

I don't know what all this means, but it looks like Venesuela is making out OK.
What if they cash in their chips in the morning? Can they do that? $$$

Cheney seems pleased with foreign troop withdrawal


The Strange World of Dick Cheney


First published 2007-02-23


While insisting on the "surge" of thousands more American troops into Iraq, vice president Cheney sounds gratefully satisfied that other members of the "coalition of the willing" - the Japanese, the Dutch, the British - continue to depart from Iraq., says John Nichols.



Vice president Dick Cheney, keeping as far from federal prosecutors as possible these days, arrived in Japan Wednesday to officially thank that country for supporting the Bush-Cheney administration's invasion and occupation of Iraq.


What made the trip even more comic than Cheney's usual campaigning on behalf of the war - that he, more than any other member of the administration, wanted, plotted and defends with a disregard not just for the laws of the land but for reality - was the fact that he was thanking an ally that is not exactly in the alliance.


Japan was a part of the original "coalition of the willing" - more precisely referred to as the "coalition of the coerced" – that signed on for the quagmire run.


But Japan pulled its troops out of Iraq last year.


The Japanese still provide a minimal number of airlifts in support of US operations in the Middle East, but even that mission is set to end in July.


So Cheney was thanking a country that is essentially, and quite happily, out of the coalition.


If the Japan Appreciation Day mission was bizarre, the vice president's speech in a hangar bay at the Yokosuka Naval Base near Tokyo was downright delusional. "The American people will not support a policy of retreat," Cheney chirped. "We want to complete the mission, we want to get it done right, and then we want to come home, with honor."


Exactly who are these "American people" the vice president is communing with?


Not the overwhelming majority of Americans who tell pollsters they want the United States to exit Iraq.


Not the clear majority of Americans who voted last November for a Democratic Congress charged with the task of bringing the troops home.


And not the American president who cheerfully accepted the decision of British prime Minister Tony Blair to substantially reduce that country's boots on the ground in Iraq – as well as the decision of the Danes to withdraw from the endeavor.


When the Danish prime minister called this week to inform Bush that the country's 460 troops would be leaving Iraq, the president had no objection to the decision to cut and run. According to Denmark's Anders Fogh Rasmussen, Bush expressed "both understanding and satisfaction that the situation in Iraq makes it possible for Denmark and Britain to reduce their numbers of troops."


If this war gets much more "satisfying," the United States will be fighting it alone.


But don't expect to hear Bush or Cheney complaining about the inability of the Brits, the Danes, the Japanese or the Tongans to understand the importance of Iraq to the "war on terror." That silly spin is reserved for domestic consumption. It's a political hammer used to attack Democrats who fail to rubberstamp the administration's misguided strategies - not a serious concern on the part of the administration.


For all the "stay-the-course" rhetoric from Bush and Cheney, this administration has been more than willing to accept the retreats of allies from Iraq. Why? Because the president and vice president don't want Americans to pay attention to the fact that the "coalition of the willing" has crumbled.


In addition to Japan - which, like most countries, had a largely symbolic presence in the Middle East - the following countries have joined the coalition of the unwilling to remain in Iraq: the Dominican Republic, Honduras, Hungary, Italy, New Zealand, the Netherlands, Norway, the philippines, portugal, Nicaragua, Norway, Singapore, Spain, Slovakia, Thailand, Tonga and the Ukraine.


Along with Denmark's exiting troops, Lithuania's contingent will likely leave this summer. Armenia's 46 troops are expected to be out at year end, as are poland's 900. And, while Moldova is technically still in the coalition, its 11 bomb-defusing experts quietly exited Iraq last December and have yet to be replaced.


Aside from Great Britain, which is dramatically downsizing its presence, only Australia - where prime Minister John Howard appears to be channeling Cheney - and South Korea now have more than 1,000 troops stationed in Iraq. And South Korea, which will extract 1,100 of its troops this spring, may not be around for much longer; the country's parliament has called for total withdrawal by December 31.


According to the www.globalsecurity.org website, which tracks military involvement in Iraq, Kazakhstan, with 29 troops, remains committed to the mission, as does Macedonia, with 33 troops; Estonia, with 34 troops; Bosnia and Herzegovina, with 37 troops and another ten countries, with between 100 and 865 troops each.


Here's a sobering fact to ponder: Add together all the troops from all the foreign countries that are still in Iraq as committed members of the "coalition of the willing" and you will get a figure that is substantially lower than the 21,500 US troops that are now surging into the country on president Bush's orders.


But, despite the fact that the real surge is the one taking US allies out of Iraq, Cheney will keep preaching about America's refusal to accept retreat - even as he continues to thank countries, like Japan, that have had the wisdom to abandon a sorely misguided mission.



John Nichols is the Washington correspondent for The Nation magazine.

Saturday, February 24, 2007

UPDATE: Whitehouse alters historical "60 Minutes" video of Bush & Scott Pelley at Camp David


(CBS) On Jan. 12, 2007, two days after President George W. Bush told the country that he would send 21,000 more troops into Iraq, the president sat down with 60 Minutes correspondent Scott Pelley for a candid conversation. The two met in Camp David's Laurel Cabin, where, in 2001, the president and his cabinet debated plans for the invasion of Afghanistan and thus launched the war on terror.



I did a post on this on Jan. 15, 2007, and later noticed that the video had been altered, so later did another post to try to explain this. Since that time the video on the original post does not match at all, allthough the text version has not been altered. I suppose that most people will watch the video and not bother with the text version, or just not notice the difference, but on the original video Bush mentioned 911, so that portion was deleted from the video...kinda like declassification?...

Near the end of the video these are the parts that were deleted...

And I gotta keep explaining, one, the consequences of failure, that failure in Iraq will affect the security of the people here in the United States. And secondly, that we can succeed. And the best way to succeed at this point in time is to increase troops in Baghdad to stop the sectarian violence so that a political process, an economic process so that the will of the 12 million people that voted in Iraq can be realized.


And I've just gotta continue to take my message to the people and to explain to them this is a well-thought-out decision that is in the interests of the today's generation of Americans and tomorrow's generation of Americans. What happens in the Middle East matters to the security of this country. We learned that lesson on September the 11th. The stakes are very high, and we have got not only to stay engaged diplomatically, but we've gotta succeed in chasing down terrorists as well as helping young democracies survive. What's interesting is that you got a young democracy in Lebanon being challenged. I believe there ought to be a Palestinian democracy. It is being challenged by militants. A young democracy in Afghanistan and a young democracy in Iraq, all being challenged by radicals and extremists. And they may seem like disparate elements, but they share the same vision and same philosophy, and they have the same desire to inflict damage, particularly on the United States of America. I think it's interesting that in the midst of all the troubles, that there are people who are actively fighting a form of government which is beneficial to people, and that's democracy.

They were deleted out of this paragraph at the end of the video...

BUSH: I'm gonna have to keep explaining. That's why I'm doing this interview with you. And I gotta keep explaining, one, the consequences of failure, that failure in Iraq will affect the security of the people here in the United States. And secondly, that we can succeed. And the best way to succeed at this point in time is to increase troops in Baghdad to stop the sectarian violence so that a political process, an economic process . . . so that the will of the 12 million people that voted in Iraq can be realized. Scott, sometimes you're the commander-in-chief, sometimes you're the educator-in-chief, and a lot of times you're both when it comes to war. And I've just gotta continue to take my message to the people and to explain to them this is a well-thought-out decision that is in the interests of the today's generation of Americans and tomorrow's generation of Americans. What happens in the Middle East matters to the security of this country. We learned that lesson on September the 11th. The stakes are very high, and we have got not only to stay engaged diplomatically, but we've gotta succeed in chasing down terrorists as well as helping young democracies survive. What's interesting is that you got a young democracy in Lebanon being challenged. I believe there ought to be a Palestinian democracy. It is being challenged by militants. A young democracy in Afghanistan and a young democracy in Iraq, all being challenged by radicals and extremists. And they may seem like disparate elements, but they share the same vision and same philosophy, and they have the same desire to inflict damage, particularly on the United States of America. I think it's interesting that in the midst of all the troubles, that there are people who are actively fighting a form of government which is beneficial to people, and that's democracy. We are in an ideological struggle, and it's a really classic ideological struggle, and Iraq is part of it. And it's very important for me to not only continue to explain why I believe we can be successful in Iraq but explain to people that what happens in the Middle East will affect the future of this country.

Which became this on the video...

BUSH: I'm gonna have to keep explaining. That's why I'm doing this interview with you. Scott, sometimes you're the commander-in-chief, sometimes you're the educator-in-chief, and a lot of times you're both when it comes to war. We are in an ideological struggle, and it's a really classic ideological struggle, and Iraq is part of it. And it's very important for me to not only continue to explain why I believe we can be successful in Iraq but explain to people that what happens in the Middle East will affect the future of this country.


This is the video as it exists now. I couldn't find an unaltered version...

Pres. Bush Candid About Iraq

Scott Pelley interviews President Bush after he delivered a major speech to the nation on his new Iraq strategy. Bush traveled from the White House to Fort Benning and to Camp David,

~VIDEO~

Friday, February 23, 2007

Brzezinski predicts provoking war with Iran.
















"Make no mistake about it, I understand how tough it is, sir. I talk to families who die." --George W. Bush, Washington, D.C., Dec. 7, 2006

~VIDEO~


From the Democratic Underground blog

Brzezinski's Damning Indictment

"Historic, Strategic and Moral Calamity"
Brzezinski's Damning Indictment
By PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS

Most Americans are probably unaware of former National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski's damning indictment of the Bush Regime in his testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on February 1, 2007, as the United States no longer has a media--only a government propaganda ministry.

Brzezinski damned the Bush Regime's war in Iraq as "a historic, strategic, and moral calamity." Brzezinski damned the war as "driven by Manichean impulses and imperial hubris." He damned the war for "intensifying regional instability" and for "undermining America's global legitimacy."

Finally, a voice with weight speaks. Brzezinski is a real intellect, a real expert, unlike the political hacks who have followed him in the office.

Brzezinski told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that "the final destination on this downhill track is likely to be a head-on conflict with Iran and with much of the world of Islam." Brzezinski predicts "some provocation in Iraq or a terrorist act in the U.S. blamed on Iran; culminating in a 'defensive' U.S. military action against Iran that plunges a lonely America into a spreading and deepening quagmire eventually ranging across Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, and Pakistan."

Brzezinski predicts provoking war with Iran.

~VIDEO~
.
.
.

Sam Donaldson KO's Dubya

Donaldson, retired and in his 70's told Bush off like many of the main stream media can only wish to do as they cower in the shadow of corporate controlled government.
On August 2nd, 2006, during what would be the last White House Press conference in the briefing room before it underwent major renovations, Sam Donaldson shouted, "Mr. President, should Mel Gibson be forgiven" – referencing reports of the actor/producer's alleged anti-Semitic remarks. Mr. Bush laughed and looked up to see who had asked the question. Bush joked, "Is that Sam Donaldson? Forget it...you're a has been! We don't have to answer has beens' questions." To which the famously outspoken and aggressive reporter retorted: "Better to have been a has-been than a never was Mr. President!"

Iran talks should include Ayatollah Ali Khamenei



It's high time to talk to Iran about nuclear enrichment.
This stand off has been going on for a long time, and why? The Bush administration wants Iran to suspend enrichment as a precondition.

The Bush administration has urged Iran to stop uranium work and begin negotiations with the United States and five other countries: Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China. Iran has said it wants to talk but will not suspend enrichment as a precondition.

It sure looks like Iran want's to negotiate, but obviously would like to talk to all interested parties. According to the main stream media Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is a wise ass. His latest proposition, that he would stop nuclear enrichment, if everybody else does, is of course ridiculouse, but I'm sure it was meant to be, and was aimed at a 12 year old intellect. Like...All the nuclear reacters on the planet must eventually shut down...Mahmoud is almost as ridiculouse as George W Bush, all though he seems pretty intelligent, and probably actually earned his engineering degree.

At any rate we should consider that he is not the sole leader of Iran, and hopefully doesn't have the military, industrial,corporate, media, etc. control that Bush does. Ahmadinejad is the president of the country. but the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has the final say on any issue including Uranium enrichment.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has issued a fatwa saying the production, stockpiling and use of nuclear weapons was forbidden under Islam. The fatwa was cited in an official statement by the Iranian government at an August 2005 meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna.

So...when we decide to get serious about negotiations...?
What in the hell am I saying? This is seriously serious and involves the wellfare of everybody on planet Earth.
Isn't it the Ayatollah that should be included in these talks, as well as members of other countries, rather than the chosen few?

The sanctions on Iran were negotiated on 23 December 23, 2006, and gave 60 days to comply, which I believe comes to Feb. 21, 2007, which means that this sanction is finished,
so...?



RE: Sanctions

23 December 2006


SECURITY COUNCIL IMPOSES SANCTIONS ON IRAN FOR FAILURE TO HALT

URANIUM ENRICHMENT, UNANIMOUSLY ADOPTING RESOLUTION 1737 (2006)

Measures Will Be Lifted if Iran Suspends Suspect Activities;

Report Due from Atomic Energy Agency on Compliance within 60 Days
31 July

Determined to give effect to its unmet demand that Iran suspend all uranium enrichment-related and reprocessing activities, the Security Council today imposed sanctions on that country, blocking the import or export of sensitive nuclear materiel and equipment and freezing the financial assets of persons or entities supporting its proliferation sensitive nuclear activities or the development of nuclear-weapon delivery systems.

Unanimously adopting resolution 1737 (2006) under Article 41 of the Charter’s Chapter VII, the Council decided that Iran should, without further delay, suspend the following proliferation sensitive nuclear activities: all enrichment-related and reprocessing activities, including research and development; and work on all heavy-water related projects, including the construction of a research reactor moderated by heavy water. The halt to those activities would be verified by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

It didn't happen, just like everything else that the Bush administration is involved in. It has been evident and is becoming more and more evident that Bush & Co. can't keep pushing the agenda that they have pursued since the day George W Bush came into office. They think that this great country is theirs rule and that the agenda is to take control of the whole Middle East. Israel not included because they are part of it, and are joined at the hip with the present Neoconservative administration of the US.

Israel is a very big player in this whole thing yet they are not even a member of the UN, let alone a member of the council. How in the world can there be any negotiation with Iran without Israel being present? Can the rest of the world let the 3rd. largest nuclear power set back while they use the US as a buffer between them and Iran? I'm not a politician or a diplomat, but I am way over being 12 years old, and I for one say that it is way past time for a serious talk about nuclear sanctions on Iran and that these sanctions should be considered in regard to the needs of all countries.
















US intelligence on Iran proves 'unfounded'


Julian Borger, Vienna
February 24, 2007

MUCH of the intelligence on Iran's nuclear facilities provided to UN inspectors by American spy agencies has turned out to be unfounded, according to diplomatic sources in Vienna.

The claims come as the five permanent members of the UN Security Council, plus Germany, prepare to draft a second sanctions resolution on Iran.

They are reminiscent of the intelligence fiasco surrounding the Iraq war and coincide with a sharp increase in international tension as the International Atomic Energy Agency reported yesterday that Iran was defying a Security Council ultimatum to freeze its nuclear program.

The report sets the stage for debate on the imposition of stricter sanctions on Iran and raises the possibility that the US might resort

Thursday, February 22, 2007

Voices from the past~Patrick J. Fitzgerald

We can't hear anything that was said at the trial, but we can hear what Patrick J. Fitzgerald said when he revealed the Indictement charges brought by the federal grand jury in August 2005, thanks to Talk Radio News Service




Fitzgerald reveals the indictment charges brought by a federal grand jury charged that Libby gave misleading information to the grand jury, allegedly lying about information he discussed with three news reporters. It alleged that he committed perjury before the grand jury in March 2004 and that he also lied to FBI agents investigating the case. (9:58)
Friday, October 28, 2005

Part 1



Fitzgerald illustrates how Libby's initial statement to the FBI regarding his knowledge of Valerie Plame's CIA status was false, and questions Libby's motivation to leak Plame's top secret information. (10:49)
Friday, October 28, 2005

Part 2

Parts 1 through 6 are on... Talk Radio News Service