Sunday, November 18, 2007

Morning Papers - continued...

American Tax Dollars at work...are they really working?

The latest in war gaming - Mine Resistant Ambush Protected


Basically it has the potential for a safer ride, but, the 'workability' of the vehicle once outside of it is impossible to accommodate the needs of battle. It's like a tank with a back door. It still has tires and is very vulnerable. It's just the next hurdle for any opposition forces to figure out. What works on any armored vehicle will work on this unworkable new Super-Humvee.


What soldiers don’t like (click here)
-Difficult to fit an injured soldier on a stretcher in the smaller models.
-Lack of exterior lighting.
-Height makes it difficult to load and unload equipment out the back.
-Difficult to tie down equipment that may move around.
-There are more blind spots for drivers.


The cost is one half million US dollars 'each.'

The cost of acquiring a MRAP vehicle fleet will be significant. However, it is militarily and financially less expensive to acquire MRAP vehicles than to continue to suffer casualties in excess of Vietnam's historical loss rates. Protecting people is cheaper than replacing them in an all-volunteer service. Research by the Math and Statistics branch of the Naval Safety Center incicates that the financial costs associated to casualties should be adjusted upward no less than 250% from its current 1988 baseline to account for the real dollar costs of care and replacement. Adjusted enlisted casualties average $500,000 dollars while officers, depending upon their military occupation range from one to two million dollars each. This means the average light tactical vehicle with one officer and four enlisted personnel is protecting 2.5 million dollars of the DOD's budget. This $2.5 million is real O&M dollars. The argument that "we can't afford armored vehicles" is specious. The opposite is true, at 2.5 million dollars of precious cargo each, the Corps cannot afford UN-armored vehicles.


BAE Systems is the major contractor for this vehicle and I don't know if it's been "Rat Claw" tested. (click here)


The Arab News

Global Oil Market Needs Fundamental Reforms
Giacomo Luciani
GENEVA, 17 November 2007 — OPEC heads of state gather in Riyadh today for the third summit meeting of the organization, at a time when oil prices are close to the psychologically important threshold of $100 per barrel. The summit is a political, not a technical meeting — and as such is unlikely to make specific decisions on prices or production — but a strategic statement on oil markets and prices seems a certainty.
OPEC heads of state are likely to disagree on the desirable level of prices. Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates are of the opinion that the present level is too high, but other member countries with less abundant reserves might be quite happy with current circumstances.
That said, all OPEC members should be wary of volatility, because the latter is a threat to rational policy making for all — producers, companies and importers alike. The price of oil was $50 per barrel in January this year and is now double that — a 100 percent increase in a span of just 10 months.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=6&section=0&article=103651&d=17&m=11&y=2007



Delinking Oil From Dollar ‘Sensitive’
Raid Qusti, Arab News
RIYADH, 17 November 2007 — Ministers openly debated yesterday whether oil should continue to be valued in US dollars considering the weakening currency. The topic was raised by the Iranian and Venezuelan delegations to the third OPEC summit beginning in the Saudi capital today.
The foreign ministers left the closed-door session after almost three hours of debate. Sources close to the discussions told Arab News that the currency proposal would not be added to the final communiqué.
Calling the topic “sensitive” and cautioning against hasty decisions, Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal warned of the “consequences” of officially tabling such a proposal. He said that such speculation at an OPEC summit could itself further weaken the US currency and hurt the interests of OPEC member states.
“The very announcement to put this case for study could make the dollar descend even further,” said the minister. “Hence, it would add to the problems for our countries.”

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=6&section=0&article=103653&d=17&m=11&y=2007



Global Refining Capacity Shortage: One Way Out
Ibrahim A. Al-Mutrif, tariqmutrif@hotmail.com
Global energy needs are likely to grow steadily for at least the next 25 years. The International Energy Agency (IEA) reports that if the world continues with the current energy-related policies, its energy needs would be more than 50 percent higher in 2030 than now. Over 60 percent of that increase would be in the form of oil and natural gas; much of this demand would be centered on gasoline and distillates.
Despite this ever-rising demand, the global refining capacity has been steadily shrinking. The capacity has decreased to 103 percent of the total oil demand in 2004, down from 109 percent in 1990 and 107 percent in 2000. Prime reasons for this trend are traditionally low profit margins and stiff regulations.
The soaring demand and the resulting spiraling higher prices of oil products prompt for huge investments. A global investment of $3 trillion has been projected by the IEA for the period 2001-2030, mostly to maintain current production levels.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=7&section=0&article=103677&d=17&m=11&y=2007



Criminals Exploit Expat’s Fear of Authority

Badea Abu Al-Naja & Muhammad Al-Juaid, Arab News
MAKKAH, 17 November 2007 — The scam works like this: An Arab man (not always a Saudi) will approach an expatriate, claim to be an undercover police officer and then, in the process of a fake interrogation that exploits common fears harbored by foreign workers, shake his victim down for cash.
The ruse is quite common in Saudi Arabia, often because expatriates are unaware of their rights to demand that these crooks prove the authority they claim. Few victims of this scam seem to be aware that, for example, they are not compelled to show their iqamas (work/residency visas) to any official who does not positively identify himself.
An inventory of recent reports illustrates the ubiquitous nature of this crime, including several arrests recently of men posing as police officers. In Taif, police arrested two Saudi men posing as cops who had set up a fake checkpoint to stop drivers and attempt to extract bribes from them. Two Yemeni nationals with perfect Saudi accents were also arrested recently in Jeddah posing as undercover cops hoping to get money from their victims.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1&section=0&article=103654&d=17&m=11&y=2007



Jordan’s Poll Drive in Full Swing
Abdul Jalil Mustafa, Arab News
AMMAN, 17 November 2007 — The campaign for Jordan’s parliamentary elections peaked yesterday, the last weekend before the polling day on Tuesday, as King Abdallah issued strict directives to the government to ensure fairness of the ballot process.
During a visit to the Prime Ministry, the monarch reaffirmed the government’s “commitment to ensure that the polls are conducted in an atmosphere of freedom, fairness and transparency,” according to a royal court statement.
“These elections should reflect our vision to bolster democracy and produce a Parliament capable of dealing with all challenges in the forthcoming stage,” he said.
The king made the remarks as main streets, public gathering areas, road tunnels, even hospitals and schools turned into billboards with flashy posters of smiling candidates and slogans worded to grab attention and support.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4&section=0&article=103661&d=17&m=11&y=2007



Swiss Group to Clear Mindanao of Land Mines Under Manila-MILF Deal
Arab News
MANILA, 17 November 2007 — The Philippines and the country’s largest Muslim rebel group have agreed to allow a team of Swiss demining experts to recover tons of unexploded ordnance in conflict areas in the south, officials said yesterday.
Rodolfo Garcia, a retired general and the government’s chief peace negotiator, told Reuters the recovery of unexploded rounds of mortar, howitzer and aerial bombs was among issues the two sides had agreed in two days of talks in Malaysia this week.
“Both sides agreed that these unexploded ordnance pose real dangers to civilians in Muslim communities in the south,” Garcia said, adding the government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) would also draft an agreement on the demining activities.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4&section=0&article=103649&d=17&m=11&y=2007&pix=world.jpg&category=World



Sree Chitra Institute Develops Oral Insulin

Mohammed Ashraf, Arab News
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, 17 November 2007 — The city-based Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute of Medical Sciences and Technology is getting ready to conduct clinical trials on an oral insulin preparation that it has developed and successfully experimented on mice.
Though insulin injections have been around for eighty years, an alternative method failed to emerge as insulin digests like other proteins in the food and proteins are quickly denatured.
Some of the Type 2 diabetics take medication to enhance their body’s limited ability to produce insulin and in many cases, the ability deteriorates over the time, eventually making injecting insulin necessary. The oral insulin is expected to limit further deterioration.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4&section=0&article=103667&d=17&m=11&y=2007&pix=world.jpg&category=World



More Space for Women at Prophet’s Mosque
Fatima Sidiya, Arab News

JEDDAH, 17 November 2007 — Madinah officials are gearing up for the forthcoming Haj, where pilgrims visit the Prophet’s Mosque on their way to the pilgrimage.
Abdul Wahid Hattab, spokesman at the Presidency of the Prophet’s Mosque Affairs, said that new arrangements are being drawn up to accommodate women in Al-Rawda area after night prayers.
Al-Rawda is a very special area in the heart of the Prophet’s Mosque, which extends from the tomb of the Prophet (peace be upon him) to his pulpit.
“During peak time women are getting a wider area in Al-Rawda,” Hattab said. “We have also added a night period to make it easy for women to go in at night. The night period starts after Isha prayer until 12 a.m. This is beside the morning period and the noon period.” The morning period is from 7 a.m. to 11 a.m. while the noon period is from 1.30 p.m. to 3 p.m.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1&section=0&article=103656&d=17&m=11&y=2007



Editorial: Nuke Worries
17 November 2007
Iran continues to challenge the international community over its nuclear program. Yesterday’s update from the International Atomic Energy Agency states that while Tehran was finally being more cooperative on the history of its nuclear drive, it continues to withhold information on its current uranium-enrichment activities while defying the UN Security Council by pressing on with the construction of a heavy water reactor.
Iran’s failure to allow fuller inspection of its nuclear facilities comes despite assurances it would. The IAEA nevertheless reports that the Iranians now have almost 3,000 centrifuges, the key number that atomic experts say is necessary to enrich enough uranium to make a nuclear weapon within one or two years.
Yet the Iranians continue to protest that their nuclear program is for power generation alone. They are not trying to acquire atomic weaponry. As King Abdullah observed on his European tour, if that is indeed the case, then Iran has no reason to fail to comply with the IAEA inspection rules, to which as an IAEA member it is clearly subject.

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=7&section=0&article=103647&d=17&m=11&y=2007



Iran and Iraq - In realizing Iran and Iraq are now allies, there won't ever be another Iran-Iraq War. It's called stabilizing the Middle East.


Deaths
As of Saturday, 3,867 U.S. troops have died in Iraq. Identifications as reported by the U.S. military and not previously published:



-Army Sgt. Derek R. Banks, 24, Newport News, Va.; explosion Oct. 25 in Baghdad, died Wednesday in San Antonio, Texas.
-Army Spc. Jermaine D. Franklin, 22, Arlington, Texas; explosion Nov. 9; Jisr Naft.
-Army Sgt. Christopher R. Kruse, 23, Emporia, Kan.; explosion Tuesday; Mukhisa.
-Army Pfc. Casey P. Mason, 22, Lake, Mich., small-arms fire Tuesday; Mosul.
-Army Spc. Peter W. Schmidt, 30, Eureka, Calif.; explosion Tuesday; Mukhisa.
-Army Spc. Ashley Sietsema, 20, Melrose Park, Ill.; vehicle accident Monday; Kuwait City.
-Army Sgt. Joseph M. Vanek, 22, Elmhurst, Ill.; small-arms fire Monday; Baghdad.
[Last modified November 18, 2007, 02:14:58]

http://www.sptimes.com/2007/11/18/Worldandnation/Last_week_in_Iraq.shtml



Iran unlikely to threaten U.S. territory in next 10 years
15:13
08/ 11/ 2007
MOSCOW, November 8 (RIA Novosti) - Iran has no capability to build nuclear weapons that could reach U.S. territory within the next seven to 10 years, a Russian military expert said on Thursday.
"Iran may develop primitive nuclear weapons, but not weapons capable of reaching the United States in the next seven to 10 years," said Col. Gen. Varfolomei Korobushin, first vice president of the Russian Academy of Military Sciences.
He said the Iranian threat cannot be used to justify U.S. plans to deploy a missile defense system in Central Europe.
Iran has been under international scrutiny over its nuclear research, which Tehran says is aimed at generating energy, but Western nations suspect the Islamic Republic of pursuing a clandestine weapons program.
The U.S. announced its Central European missile defense plans earlier this year, claiming the facilities were needed to counter possible threats from so called rogue states such as Iran and North Korea. Moscow considers the plans a threat to national security.
Russian President Vladimir Putin earlier warned that if Washington ignores Russia's concerns and deploys interceptor missiles in Poland and a radar in the Czech Republic, Moscow could be forced to adopt countermeasures.
Speaking at a news conference following the October Russia-EU summit in Portugal, President Putin said the plans were reminiscent of the political crisis caused by the Soviet Union's nuclear missile bases in Cuba in 1962.

http://en.rian.ru/world/20071108/87175363.html



Ahmadinejad says U.S. remains Iran's enemy

15:44
12/ 11/ 2007
TEHRAN, November 12 (RIA Novosti) - Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Monday that the resumption of talks with Washington on security issues in Iraq did not reflect any changes in Tehran's attitude toward the U.S.
Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini earlier said that Tehran was ready to continue talks with the U.S. on Iraq security after the successful completion of negotiations last summer.
"The talks with the Americans are related to security in Iraq and are being held at the request of the Iraqi people and government," Ahmadinejad said, addressing a group of students at the Science and Industry University in Tehran.
"Our position toward the United States remains unchanged, however - the U.S. is conducting a vengeful and hostile policy against the interests of the Iranian people," he said.
The first round of official negotiations between Tehran and Washington took place in Baghdad in late May, and were the first direct talks between the two countries for 27 years. The main issues discussed were the situation in Iraq and the release of Iranian diplomats seized by the U.S. in January in Iraq on suspicion of aiding Iraqi militants.
The second round was held in July, also in Baghdad, and the three sides agreed to set up a trilateral committee on Iraqi security.
Iran's Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said at the time that Tehran might consider consultations between the countries deputy foreign ministers "if the United States files an official request".
However, Iran remains the subject of international concern over its controversial nuclear program. The U.S. and Europe suspect Iran of pursuing a clandestine weapons program. Tehran says it needs the program for energy.
Two sets of UN Security Council sanctions are currently in place against Iran over its refusal to halt uranium enrichment that could be used in both electricity generation and weapons production. A further round of more stringent sanctions has been blocked by China and Russia so far.
Ahmadinejad, who has recently faced growing domestic criticism over his no compromise attitude, largely seen as to blame for subsequent U.N. Security Council sanctions, called on Monday his critics "traitors," and pledged to expose them if they continued to apply pressure over Tehran's nuclear enrichment.
"We are not exposing them right now because of some sensitive issues, but upon closure of the nuclear issue, we will reveal everything," Ahmadinejad said.
"These people are traitors," he said without specifying any names.

http://en.rian.ru/world/20071112/87659421.html



Iraq Credits Iran for Helping to Curb Attacks by Militias
By ALISSA J. RUBIN
Published: November 18, 2007
BAGHDAD, Nov. 17 — The Iraqi government on Saturday credited
Iran with helping to rein in Shiite militias and stemming the flow of weapons into Iraq, helping to improve the security situation noticeably.
Reach of War
The Iraqi government’s spokesman, Ali al-Dabbagh, speaking at a lunch for reporters, also said that the Shiite-dominated government was making renewed efforts to bring back Sunni Arab ministers who have been boycotting the government for more than four months.
Speaking about Iran, he said that that government had helped to persuade the Shiite cleric
Moktada al-Sadr to ask his Mahdi militia to halt attacks. Mr. Sadr ordered his militia to stop using weapons in early September, and officials say that the militia’s relative restraint has helped improve stability. They say it also seems to have helped decrease the frequency of attacks with explosively formed penetrators, a powerful type of bomb that can pierce heavy armor.
Mr. Dabbagh’s comments echoed those of the American military here, who in recent days have gone out of their way to publicly acknowledge Iran’s role in helping to slow the flow of weapons into the country.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/18/world/middleeast/18iraq.html



Iraqi gov't: Teheran showing 'more restraint' in support for militants
By
ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Iraqi government said Saturday that Iran has shown increasing restraint in its alleged support for militants and urged Teheran and the US to take advantage of the situation to hold a new round of talks on stabilizing Iraq.
The comments by government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh came on the heels of similar assertions by US officials who seem to be softening their stance against Teheran in Iraq amid a decline in violence.
"Iran is showing more restraint in sending people and weapons to destabilize Iraq," al-Dabbagh said during a wide-ranging discussion with reporters at his compound in the heavily guarded Green Zone in central Baghdad.

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1195127526388&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull



Iraqi President vows to halt PKK threat
Thursday, November 15, 2007 09:09 GMT
As tension rose again on Iraqi-Turkish borders reaching its peak with the Turkish air raid against military targets in Northern Iraq, visiting Iraqi President Jalal Talabani vowed from Cairo to deploy all efforts possible to halt the threat of Kurdistan Workers party, saying that terrorism poses threat to both Iraq and Turkey. In a meeting with Egyptian Newspapers Chief editors, Talabani revealed that special Turkish Forces are present in Iraq to track PKK activities with the support of Kurdish authorities in Northern Iraq. He added that any PKK action against Turkey from Iraqi territories is "hostile" against the Iraqi people. Iraqi President’s statements have coincided with reports about a Kurdish delegation heading to Ankara for talks with Turkish leaders in order to reach a peaceful and diplomatic solution to the PKK issue. Kurdistan Alliance MP Abdul Khaleq Zankana clarified that a Kurdish delegation including Secretary-General of Kurdistan Islamic Union and official of Kurdistan Democratic Socialist Party headed to Turkey with a series of proposals and notes to solve the crisis. Zankana reiterated Kurds’ rejection of a Turkish incursion into North Iraq in order to attack PKK bases. He explained that Kurds refuse as well PKK activities that would threaten Turkey’s security. Meanwhile, the Iraqi government reiterated its commitment to vows taken in Istanbul Conference. In this context, Prime Minister Nuri Al Maliki’s advisor Yassin Majid confirmed that some measures announced by Al Maliki in Istanbul Conference have begun to be implemented as the Iraqi Government shut down many PKK offices in addition to offices of parties in cooperation with Kurdistan Workers Party.
On the other hand, Othman Ojlan, the party’s leader brother in Turkey said that thousands of PKK fighters stationed in Northern Iraq have moved to Iran in fear of an expanded attack by the Turkish Army on their bases.

http://www.alsumaria.tv/en/Iraq-News/1-10202-Iraqi-President-vows-to-halt-PKK-threat.html



PKK's Violent Struggle for Kurdish Independence Approaches 24 Years
By Margaret Besheer
Washington
16 November 2007
Tensions continue along the Turkish-Iraqi border as Turkish security forces pursue rebels from the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) who have used safe havens in northern Iraq to launch attacks inside Turkey. VOA's Margaret Besheer has more on the rise of the group considered a terrorist organization by Turkey, the United States and Europe.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-11-16-voa60.cfm



Kurds in remote village fear Turkish attack on elusive rebels
2 days ago
KHIZAVA, Iraq (AFP) — Nervous Iraqi Kurds in the impoverished village of Khizava along the border with Turkey are awaiting a Turkish attack on Kurdish rebels, although many believe the guerrillas will prove elusive.
In Khizava, anxiety was palpable when the humming of a US drone filled the sky above, prompting residents to strain their ears and look up.
"I'm sure the PKK (Kurdistan Workers' Party) fighters are not up there. They have left. They will not wait to be bombed," said Khaled Hassan, 32.
Hassan and two of his cousins crouched by the side of the main road leading out of Khizava and onto the mountain summits, which the PKK use as hideouts because they are difficult to penetrate.
Iraqi Kurdish policemen and soldiers manned checkpoints nearby, allowing only villagers to drive through.

http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5iAIhhgAfn1xWhB5iw3ch-Osi4ybA



Goading Ankara to overreach
Nov 15th 2007
From The Economist
AFP
Come and get me
SINCE the late 19th century Turkey's Kurds have rebelled repeatedly against their Turkish masters. But no uprising has been as violent or long-lasting as that launched in 1984 by the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in its bid to unite the 25m Kurds scattered across Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Syria. Turkey's latest threat to clobber the rebels in their haven in northern Iraq has again raised the spectre of regional war. It has also concentrated attention on the PKK: who are these indomitable fighters and what is their true goal?
“Blood and Belief” offers unusual insight into the rebels' shadowy universe and, by extension, into Turkey's festering Kurdish problem. Aliza Marcus, an American journalist who was put on trial in Turkey for her reporting on the Turkish army's abuses against ordinary Kurds, charts the origins and evolution of the movement. Her scholarly, gripping account is based on interviews with, and the unpublished diaries of, former PKK militants.

http://www.economist.com/books/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10130690



Democrats' bill to fund war in Iraq is rejected
Minnesota's senators were in opposition as the Senate blocked military spending linked to a deadline for troop withdrawal.
By
Kevin Diaz, Star Tribune
Last update: November 16, 2007 – 11:07 PM
WASHINGTON - The latest spending skirmish over the Iraq war ended in stalemate Friday, dividing Minnesotans in Congress along party lines.
As they returned home for Thanksgiving, Sens. Norm Coleman and Amy Klobuchar cast opposing votes on an ill-fated Democratic proposal to provide $50 billion linked to the start of troop withdrawals.
Coleman, a Republican who has voiced muted criticism of President Bush's war strategy, voted against the proposal, underscoring his consistent opposition to a congressionally mandated pullout date.
Klobuchar, elected last year as an anti-war Democrat, voted for the measure, which would require U.S. troops to begin withdrawing from Iraq within 30 days. It set a goal of Dec. 15, 2008, for most troops to leave Iraq.
The House approved a similar plan on Wednesday by a vote of 218-203.
All three Minnesota Republicans voted against it, including Rep. Jim Ramstad, who had been among 17 Republicans supporting a resolution last February opposing Bush's troop surge.
Coleman, facing reelection next year, accused Democrats of "political theater" in staging a vote on a bill that would have no chance of being signed by the president.
The Democratic proposal got 53 votes, seven short of the 60 needed to proceed to final passage.
Coleman instead supported a Republican effort to allocate $70 billion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan with no troop withdrawal requirement.
Democrats, calling that a "blank check," voted it down.

http://www.startribune.com/10223/story/1556995.html



Head of British army says Iraq and Afghan conflicts are damaging his forces
3 hours ago
LONDON - The head of the British army believes conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan are damaging Britain's armed forces, a newspaper reported Saturday.
Years of underfunding and excess demand have left British troops feeling "devalued, angry and suffering from Iraq fatigue," the Sunday Telegraph newspaper quoted Gen. Sir Richard Dannatt as saying in an official report.
The newspaper said it had received a copy of an official report in which Dannatt wrote that current trooping levels are unsustainable and increasing numbers of troops are disillusioned.
Simultaneous operations in Iraq and Afghanistan are damaging and "mortgaging the goodwill of our people," Dannatt allegedly said.
Dannatt rose to prominence in Oct. 2006, when he told a British newspaper that his forces' continued presence in Iraq "exacerbates the security problems" for Britain worldwide.

http://canadianpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5iiUCcFkhbmHoBbfdK4MpiXbygO-Q



Poland to withdraw Iraq troops
The new Polish government has said it is to withdraw all of its 900 troops from Iraq next year. It is one of the first announcements made by the ruling liberal party which was voted to power last month and sworn in yesterday. Poland deployed a total of 2,600 soldiers to Iraq following the US-led invasion in 2003. That number was reduced to 1,500 in 2005, then to 900 a year later.
Polish troops lead a multi-national division in Central South Iraq, where they are primarily involved in training local security forces. Since their deployment 22 of Poland's soldiers have been killed in action. Prime minister Donald Tusk made troop withdrawal a pledge of his electoral campaign. A study in June suggested that 80 percent of Poles were against a national military presence in Iraq.

http://www.euronews.net/index.php?page=info&article=454412&lng=1



Iraqi MPs debate fate of oil hub
11 hours ago
BAGHDAD (AFP) — Iraqi lawmakers on Saturday hotly debated the issue of Kirkuk, with some warning that a deadlock on a stipulated referendum concerning the northern oil hub could lead to new civil strife.
"If the issue of Kirkuk is not solved, it will lead to hell," Hadi al-Ameri, a parliamentarian from the powerful Shiite party the Supreme Iraqi Islamic Council (SIIC) told AFP.
Kirkuk, an ethnically volatile city, is claimed by both Arabs and Kurds.
In 1988, then Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein launched a brutal campaign against Iraqi Kurds living in northern Iraq, evicting large number of Kurds from Kirkuk and handing their homes and jobs to Arabs.
The Kurds, who hold a strong sense of identity, now want Kirkuk to be incorporated into their autonomous northern regional government.
The Iraqi constitution, however, stipulates that the fate of the city, which houses vast oil reserves, must be decided by a public referendum before the end of 2007.
But with Iraq still battling a sectarian strife and insurgency, it seems highly unlikely that a referendum would be held by the deadline.

http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5j9oA2TSeHVnN3Xq9_F7-wK47lgGA



Reliance’s problems in Iraq are just the tip of the iceberg
D.Murali
Chennai: The latest difficulties confronting Reliance Industries in Iraq are just the tip of the iceberg for any foreign contractor hoping to enter Iraq’s oil sector, says Mr Roger Howard, author of ‘Iran Oil’ (
www.vivagroupindia.com).
As reported earlier, Iraqi Oil Minister said on November 15 that Reliance’s deals with Kurdish Region have no standing. And also that the companies which have signed the contracts with the Kurdish Region may compromise their chances of getting future contracts in Iraq. Reliance has said that the two exploration blocks in the Kurdish Region for which it has signed the agreements are within the legal framework.
“There will be numerous more obstacles – political and legal – rather than just technical ones lying ahead,” foresees Mr Howard, in an e-mail interaction with Business Line.
Excerpts from the interview.
What is the core problem?
Ethnic tensions in Iraq. The country has of course always been a very artificial amalgam of different cultures and religions. As a result, the questions of who owns the northern oil-bearing regions around Kirkuk and Mosul, and who has rights to the revenue the fields generate, have been extremely complex and controversial. Both the Arabs and the Kurds have been staking their claims, and Saddam Hussein tried hard to alter the local demographic balance in favour of the Arabs.

http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/006200711171377.htm



U.S. accused of killing Sunni allies in battle
ARMY CAN'T CONFIRM ACCOUNT OF TRIBAL LEADER
By Tina Susman
Los Angeles Times
Article Launched: 11/17/2007 01:38:55 AM PST
BAGHDAD, Iraq - The frantic phone call came late at night to the Sunni tribal sheik. It was his brother, shouting that he was under attack from the U.S. forces he was trying to help.
Hours later, Sheik Shadhir Abid Salim Assaf says, his brother was dead, along with dozens of other men the sheik had recruited to bolster U.S. troops fighting insurgents around Tarmiya, 25 miles north of Baghdad.
U.S. military officials said Friday they could not confirm what Assaf and other Iraqis allege was a mistake in which U.S. troops attacked friendly fighters.
The violence, which began late Tuesday and ended early Wednesday, left at least 25 people dead. The military says they were suspected insurgents who attacked U.S. forces pursuing members of the group Al-Qaida in Iraq.
Asked Friday about the allegations that friendly Iraqi forces were hit, Maj. Winfield Danielson III, an American military spokesman, said the military had no confirmation of this.
"I can only say that we had personnel on the ground who engaged a hostile force that fired on them and whom they suspected of being terrorist affiliates," Danielson said.
Lt. Gen. Raymond Odierno, the No. 2 U.S. military commander in Iraq, said officials were continuing their investigation.

http://www.mercurynews.com/nationworld/ci_7490471



Mass Grave Found in Southern Baghdad
By ROBERT H. REID – 10 hours ago
BAGHDAD (AP) — Remains of possibly dozens of people believed slain in sectarian violence were unearthed Saturday from a mass grave in a former al-Qaida stronghold in southern Baghdad — the third such find in Iraq this month.
Also Saturday, an Iraqi television station reported one of its reporters had been kidnapped — the latest in a grim series of attacks that has made Iraq among the world's most dangerous countries for journalists.
The badly decomposed remains were found in Baghdad's mostly Sunni Dora neighborhood by Sunnis who have turned against al-Qaida in Iraq, police said. They were discovered in an area overlooking the main highway leading to Shiite shrine cities in the south.
Sunni extremists would often waylay travelers along that road, kidnapping and killing Shiites.
The remains were placed in black plastic bags and transferred to a Shiite mosque in Dora, according to a police officer at the mosque. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release information.

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5gkx-3oYeFwuWKCusr2jrojs98w8wD8SVJQLG2

continued...

Morning Papers - continued...


According to United Auto Workers Union president Ron Gettelfinger, he is not expecting a disagreement with Ford Motor Corp.

Detroit Free Press


Early presidential primary on brink of death
State loses in a higher court
November 17, 2007
BY DAWSON BELL
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER
LANSING -- A divided Michigan Court of Appeals refused Friday to overturn a lower court ruling that effectively bars the state from holding its presidential primary on Jan. 15.
By a 2-1 decision, the appeals panel sided with an Ingham County Circuit Court judge who ruled last week that the presidential primary law illegally restricted access to the lists of voters who participated in the election to the two major political parties.
It was not immediately clear whether Friday's decision is the final nail in the primary's coffin or not.
Minutes after its release, Michigan Republican Party Chairman Saul Anuzis called on the Legislature to approve a bill pending in the state House designed to restore the primary. Lawmakers are tentatively scheduled to convene Tuesday, but may not act.

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071117/NEWS06/711170373/1001/NEWS



Student admits to hanging nooses at CMU
November 17, 2007
By Emilia Askari
Free Press staff writer
A male Central Michigan University has admitted to hanging some nooses in a university classroom earlier this week, campus police said Saturday.
The student called police late Saturday morning to confess to fashioning the hate symbols from flexible compressed gas line used for laboratory work.
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Another student found the nooses in the university’s Engineering and Technology Building on Nov. 12. The nooses were made from flexible compressed gas lines that are used for laboratory work.
“Whether it was meant as a prank or not, it was still the type of action that we find deplorable,” CMU spokesman Steve Smith said Saturday. “We will use this as an opportunity to continue discussions about diversity and inclusion of everybody in America.”

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071117/NEWS06/71117037/1001/NEWS



Station owner killed in gas war
Dispute over price brings out handgun
November 17, 2007
BY AMBER HUNT
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER
The two gas stations had rivaled for years. They stood across an intersection from each other on Fort Street in Detroit, where even a penny's difference was enough to lure customers.
And so came the price war: One station dropped a cent or two, and the other grudgingly followed.
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But the seemingly petty back-and-forth escalated Friday, ending with a fatal bullet in BP station owner Jawad Bazzi's head over what police say was a 3-cent difference in the cost of regular gas.
"It's crazy," said a red-eyed Hafed Bazzi, the victim's nephew. "There had been conflicts before but never like this."
Here's what police said happened:
The Marathon station on Fort near Springwells dropped its price to $2.93. That angered Jawad Bazzi, whose regular gas was priced at $2.96.
Bazzi walked across the street with a couple of employees to confront the Marathon owner and his posse.
The groups argued, then began throwing punches. One of Bazzi's employees hit a Marathon employee with a baseball bat, injuring him.
That's when the Marathon owner grabbed a handgun and fired three or four times. Bazzi, 45, of Dearborn Heights was shot in the head.
The Marathon owner, whose name wasn't released Friday, was arrested. He's identified as a 51-year-old Warren man.

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071117/NEWS01/711170338/1001/NEWS




IN OUR OPINION
How were FBI and CIA deceived?
November 16, 2007
It doesn't exactly inspire confidence in the war on terror when an illegal immigrant from a family suspected of having terrorist ties can get a job at the FBI and the CIA, one that includes reviewing government files and doing covert work overseas. Covert from whom?
OK, she got caught, and the U.S. attorney's office in Detroit and federal law enforcement agencies here deserve credit for bringing this case to light and getting Nada Nadim Prouty to plead guilty to marriage fraud and illegally accessing an FBI computer system. But that cannot be the end of it. Federal authorities need to establish how she got into such sensitive positions, how much information she got out, and where it went.
Authorities say Prouty, 37, a resident of suburban Washington, was trying to find out if she and family members were being investigated by the FBI and to learn details of a Detroit-based investigation of Hizballah, which the federal government lists as a terrorist group.
A former waitress at the Dearborn-based La Shish restaurant chain who later obtained advanced degrees, Prouty went from FBI agent to covert CIA operative in a span of about eight years with no one in either agency realizing that her U.S. citizenship was based on a fraudulent marriage for which she never made an agreed-upon payment to a downriver man. Through a sister's marriage, Prouty became sister-in-law to La Shish owner Talal Chahine, who is currently a fugitive under indictment on tax charges.
The worst fear is that Prouty's years in government service in Washington were part of a plot to plant someone in highly secret federal operations. Equally important is learning how government agents did not, in routine background checks, discover the sham marriage to a man who never had a relationship with Prouty. Shouldn't he have been interviewed?
For the sake of their future integrity, the FBI and CIA need to know what happened. For the sake of national security, they also need to determine how much damage has been done.

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071116/OPINION01/711160334/1069



QUICK HIT: Editorial
November 17, 2007
DON'T FALL: Mild weather has kept leaves on trees weeks longer than usual. There ought to be a rule that if you're not on the ground by Thanksgiving, you have to stay up all winter.

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071117/OPINION01/711170330/1069



More than 140 nations agree on warming plan
Guide due out at climate conference
November 17, 2007
BY ARTHUR MAX
ASSOCIATED PRESS
VALENCIA, Spain -- Delegates from more than 140 nations, including the United States, agreed Friday on a scientific guide for policy-makers, stating more forcefully than ever that climate change has begun and threatens to irreversibly alter the planet.
"Warming of the climate system is unequivocal," a summary begins in a statement meant to dispel any skepticism about climate change, said participants in the meeting.
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In a startling and much-debated conclusion, the document warns that human activity risks causing "abrupt or irreversible changes" on Earth, including the widespread extinction of species and a dramatic rise in sea levels before the end of this century, they said on condition of anonymity because the details are supposed to remain confidential until today.

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071117/NEWS07/711170389/1009




GROWING GREEN: Christmas tree farm's environmentally friendly ways lauded
November 17, 2007
BY L.L. BRASIER
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER
The Genovese family of Oxford has been growing Christmas trees on their 18-acre farm for 32 years.
But they are not just raising evergreens -- these are very green evergreens.
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Their Candy Cane CHRISTmas Tree Farm is gaining state recognition for its environmentally friendly practices and received a prestigious ecology award this week from the Michigan Farm Bureau.
"We decided early on that we have to live in concert with the Earth," said Cathy Genovese, who owns the farm with her husband, Frank. "We want to leave it a better place; to farm so that we do no harm."
Among their green practices, they plant each tree by hand -- there are thousands -- using an electric auger, rather than the large tractors found on most farms. The Genovese farm, among the first of the 780 Christmas tree farms in the state, uses a precise drip irrigation method that saves water and energy compared with overhead sprinkler systems.

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071117/NEWS03/711170380/1001/NEWS




Japan Fleet Sets Off to Hunt Humpbacks
By HIROKO TABUCHI
Associated Press Writer
SHIMONOSEKI, Japan (AP) -- Japanese whalers set off into the South Pacific on Sunday with orders to kill humpback whales for the first time in decades. The hunt is certain to inflame tensions in the standoff between anti-whaling forces and Japan.
Angry environmental activists have pledged to chase Japan's whalers to the Antarctic.
"The Japanese government's scientific whaling program is a sham," said Karli Thomas, expedition leader aboard the Greenpeace boat Esperanza, waiting outside Japanese territorial waters to confront the fleet. "Whaling has no place in Antarctica - it's a place of peace and science, and this is not science."
International Whaling Commission, or IWC, allows Japan's annual research whaling mission, but anti-whaling activists call it a cover-up for a commercial hunt. Meat from Japan's scientific catch is sold commercially.
The large-scale hunt for up to 50 humpbacks is believed to be the first for the species since a 1963 moratorium that put the whales under international protection.
Scientists say the knobby-headed humpback whales - a favorite among whale-watchers - are intelligent creatures that communicate through lengthy "songs."

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/J/JAPAN_HUNTING_HUMPBACKS?SITE=MIDTF&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT



'Heroes' star Hayden Panettiere took a stab at being a real-life hero when she and some animal rights activists tried to prevent a dolphin hunt in Japan. (Nov. 2)

http://video.ap.org/v/Legacy.aspx?f=MIDTF&g=e792ddf6-c259-427e-81cf-8c4385de6643&p=ENAPentertainment_ENAPentertainment&t=s201&rf=http%3a%2f%2fhosted.ap.org%2fdynamic%2fstories%2fJ%2fJAPAN_HUNTING_HUMPBACKS%3fSITE%3dMIDTF&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&fg=tool&partner=en-ap



US Envoy: Pakistan Must End Emergency
By MATTHEW ROSENBERG
Associated Press Writer
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) -- Washington's No. 2 diplomat delivered a blunt message to Pakistan's military ruler, telling him that emergency rule must be lifted and his opponents freed ahead of elections.
Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte's visit was seen as a last best chance to avoid political turmoil in Pakistan. He met for more than two hours Saturday with President Gen. Pervez Musharraf and Pakistan's deputy army commander, Gen. Ashfaq Kayani.
"I urged the government to stop such actions, lift the state of emergency and release all political detainees," Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte told a news conference at the U.S. embassy Sunday at the end of his trip. "Emergency rule is not compatible with free, fair and credible elections."
But there was no immediate sign that Musharraf would heed that advice. An official in the president's office, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk with the media, said Musharraf told Negroponte the emergency was needed to hold a successful vote.

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/P/PAKISTAN?SITE=MIDTF&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT



Strong Cyclone Kills 1,784 in Bangladesh
By PARVEEN AHMED
Associated Press Writer
DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) -- Hundreds of thousands of survivors were stuck Saturday behind roads blocked by fallen trees, iron roofs and thick sludge as rescue workers fought to reach towns along Bangladesh's coast that were ravaged by a powerful cyclone that killed at least 1,784 people.
Tropical Cyclone Sidr, the deadliest storm to hit the country in a decade, destroyed tens of thousands of homes in southwest Bangladesh on Thursday and ruined much-needed crops just before harvest season in this impoverished, low-lying South Asian country. More than a million coastal villagers were forced to evacuate to government shelters.
The official death toll rose to 1,784, and authorities feared the figure could rise further as the country works to recover.
The government scrambled Saturday to join international agencies and local officials in the rescue mission, deploying military helicopters, thousands of troops and naval ships.

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/B/BANGLADESH_CYCLONE?SITE=MIDTF&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT



Ca. Fire Documents Conflict With Reports
By AARON C. DAVIS
Associated Press Writer
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- Several aircraft were able to fly in strong winds on the first full day of last month's Southern California firestorms, contradicting officials' earlier claims that the weather had grounded virtually all aircraft, according to documents released Saturday.
Twenty-eight of 52 aircraft the state was tracking for firefighting efforts remained grounded that day, and high winds were not listed in the documents as the reason.
The documents attempt to answer charges by federal lawmakers, military officials and others that the state did not effectively marshal all its available air resources as a series of blazes began roaring out of control, eventually destroying more than 2,000 homes and killing at least 10 people.
An earlier Associated Press investigation revealed that military helicopters sat grounded for days, in part because of a shortage of state fire "spotters" who are required to be on board military aircraft used for firefighting.

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/W/WILDFIRES_GROUNDED_AIRCRAFT?SITE=MIDTF&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT



McCain Says He'll Respect Clinton
By PHILIP ELLIOTT
Associated Press Writer
COLEBROOK, N.H. (AP) -- Republican presidential hopeful John McCain on Saturday said he won't follow his rivals' lead in taking personal shots at Democratic front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton, and that voters seeking a candidate who will do that should look elsewhere.
"I think people want a respectful debate and a respectful discussion. And if they don't, then obviously, I'm not the person to be their candidate," McCain told reporters in response to questions about criticism of Clinton by Republican rivals Rudy Giuliani and Mitt Romney.
"Legitimate policy differences, those should be debated and discussed," McCain said. "But I don't think you should take shots at people, like imitating her voice. I'm serious, I'm not sure what you gain by doing that."

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/M/MCCAIN_CLINTON?SITE=MIDTF&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT



Michigan's Band of Brothers

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=999961113001&template=theme&theme=BANDBROS112006



Today, they'll be home
April 29, 2007
BY BEN SCHMITT
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER
Sandy Leshinsky has the 13-pound turkey thawing in the refrigerator, presents around a small tree and cookies and ice cream in the freezer.
Her husband, Joseph, a sergeant major in the Marines, is coming home from Iraq.
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"He doesn't know it yet, but we're going to have Christmas in May," Leshinsky said Friday. "I feel excited, anxious, nervous and relieved.
"My rock is returning."
Julie Kolomjec's hometown of Grosse Pointe Farms is planning a surprise welcome home -- complete with a police and fire escort -- when her husband, Maj. Christopher Kolomjec, rolls into town.
"All of this is so overwhelming," she said. " I didn't know that so many people cared."
For nine months, the Free Press has chronicled the journey of the more than 900 members of the 1st Battalion of the 24th Marine Regiment, their families and the impact of their service in Iraq. The regiment includes about 700 Michigan Marine reservists.
Each of the 1/24th's five companies returns to Michigan today. Many will land at Selfridge Air National Guard Base in Macomb County.

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070429/NEWS06/704290608&theme=BANDBROS112006



Around the world
November 17, 2007
TEHRAN, IRAN: Leader demands apology from Bush
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Friday that an International Atomic Energy Agency report disproved U.S. allegations that Iran is pursuing nuclear weapons, and he called on the Bush administration to apologize for making false accusations.
The United Nations agency said in its report Thursday that Iran had been generally truthful about its past uranium enrichment, which Iran says is intended to generate only fuel for nuclear reactors.
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The nuclear watchdog also said restrictions Iran placed on inspectors mean the agency can't eliminate the possibility of a weapons program.

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071117/NEWS07/711170337/1009



Across the nation
November 17, 2007
ATLANTA: Plan aims to help parched South
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service agreed Friday to reduce the flow of water from Lake Lanier, the main water source for Atlanta and the focal point of a three-state water fight during a serious drought in the Southeast.
After the agency decided that federally protected mussels can live with less water from Lanier, the Army Corps of Engineers cut the flow of water to Florida by 5%.
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Florida and Alabama have said that reducing the flows downstream could cripple their economies. Federal officials said the states have promised to collaborate on a long-term water pact.

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071117/NEWS07/711170360/1009



Suit follows Gipp's exhumation
November 17, 2007
ASSOCIATED PRESS
TRAVERSE CITY -- Relatives of George Gipp filed a lawsuit against another family member, ESPN and a sports writer over the exhumation of the football legend's body to determine whether he fathered a child out of wedlock.
The lawsuit, officially filed Friday, also targets the medical examiner who authorized the Oct. 4 removal of Gipp's remains from a grave near his Upper Peninsula hometown for DNA testing. An ESPN crew filmed the exhumation for a planned program.
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Test results made public last week showed the Notre Dame star was not the father of his former girlfriend's daughter, born five days after Gipp's death in 1920 from pneumonia and a strep infection.
The suit -- filed on behalf of Karl Gipp, who says he and George Gipp are first cousins once removed, and another cousin, Ronald Gipp -- contends remains of the sister, Bertha Isabelle Gipp Martin, were disturbed because workers initially dug in the wrong spot.

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071117/NEWS05/711170339/1001/NEWS




Abuse Risk Seen Worse As Families Change
By DAVID CRARY
AP National Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -- Six-year-old Oscar Jimenez Jr. was beaten to death in California, then buried under fertilizer and cement. Two-year-old Devon Shackleford was drowned in an Arizona swimming pool. Jayden Cangro, also 2, died after being thrown across a room in Utah.
In each case, as in many others every year, the alleged or convicted perpetrator had been the boyfriend of the child's mother - men thrust into father-like roles which they tragically failed to embrace.
Every case is different, every family is different. Some single mothers bring men into their lives who lovingly help raise children when the biological father is gone for good.
Nonetheless, many scholars and front-line caseworkers interviewed by The Associated Press see the abusive-boyfriend syndrome as part of a broader trend that deeply worries them. They note an ever-increasing share of America's children grow up in homes without both biological parents, and say the risk of child abuse is markedly higher in the nontraditional family structures.

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/C/CHILD_ABUSE?SITE=MIDTF&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT



Sex offender sweep nets 397 arrests statewide
November 17, 2007
DETROIT -- Law enforcement officers have arrested 397 people during a recent sweep of the state for violators of Michigan's sex-offender registry law.
The Michigan State Police says the effort also resulted in 658 additional arrest warrant requests.
Offenders must register with the state and notify police when they move. The Lansing State Journal says more than 130 law enforcement agencies took part in the 40-day sweep that ended November 9th.
The Ann Arbor News reports the effort was the state's fourth coordinated sex-offender sweep.
There were 41,942 names on the Michigan Sex Offender Registry as of November 1st.

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071117/NEWS06/71117028/1001/NEWS



Mom offered child for sex to others, cops say
November 17, 2007
BY ZACHARY GORCHOW
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER
A Taylor mother shopped her 7-year-old daughter for sex not just once, but three times, police say.
The twist in the case was revealed Friday when law enforcement announced the arrest of Chad Gorzela, 32, of Saginaw on five child-sex felonies after uncovering evidence in the investigation of the Taylor mother earlier this year showing e-mail conversations between the woman and Gorzela to allegedly arrange sex between Gorzela and the 7-year-old.
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"The chats are very graphic," said Sheriff Warren Evans.

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071117/NEWS02/711170302/1001/NEWS



SATURDAY STARTERS: Some points you can raise to get a conversation flowing this weekend
November 17, 2007
Beat the clock on state tax rate
The State of Michigan took in $587.1 million in income taxes in October, a 4.4% jump from October 2006. The tax rate increased Oct. 1 from 3.9% to 4.35%, but the state Treasury wasn't sure how many employers had made the switch, since the boost wasn't enacted until the month was a few hours old. Enough, apparently.
The opportunity and résumé gap
For all those folks trying to earn an income in Michigan so they can pay taxes, the state Department of Labor and Economic Growth has revamped its Web site that contains information for job-seekers and a central repository for online resumes. Check out the improved Michigan Jobs & Career Portal at
www.michigan.gov/careers to learn about employment and training opportunities, advanced education, job and career fairs, even starting your own business. A sign of the times: As state unemployment hit 7.7% in October, the Michigan Talent Bank part of the Web site, where applicants and prospective employers can both search, had 675,228 résumés posted last week but just 36,561 jobs.
Farmers not so awash with water
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We all know what a disaster Michigan has been economically for the past few years, but this week the federal government made it official, at least for farmers. All 83 counties in the state were declared disaster
areas by the U.S. Department of Agriculture because of drought conditions since April. The decision enables farmers to qualify for low-interest emergency loans -- and it also ought to send a message to those folks from the southern and western states who think places like Michigan have water to burn, so to speak.
And the rich get ... farm subsidies
Speaking of farming and the federal government, the Grand Rapids Press reported this week that Dick DeVos, the multimillionaire west Michigan business owner who waged the most expensive run for governor in Michigan history last year, received about $6,000 in farm subsidies from 2003-05 for growing corn. The issue appears to have more to do with ridiculous federal farm policies than with DeVos, since subsidies also went to the likes of David Rockefeller and Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen, both of whom are loaded even by DeVos standards. A DeVos spokesman told the Press the former candidate bought the cornfield to protect it from development and was not even aware the farm was getting federal subsidies. Still, a guy who wanted to get rid of the waste in state government shouldn't be on the receiving end of it from the feds.
Expect billions more to go to war
While the White House, predictably, dismisses the report as "partisan and political," it also seems entirely plausible that the cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan really is $1.6 trillion, about double the $804 billion the Bush administration has run through Congress to date. The estimate came from Democrats on the Joint Economic Committee in Congress, who said they figured in "hidden costs" such as interest payments on borrowing for war bills, disruptions in the oil market and long-term health care for injured veterans. The report figured Michigan's share of the cost at $77.1 billion. And while the news from Iraq has of late been encouraging, with murders and mayhem on the decline, there are surely billions more American dollars to be spent there before the country is stabilized.

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071117/OPINION01/711170331/1069

continued...

UN Panel Gives Dire Warming Forecast


In this photo supplied by Greenpeace, Greenpeace activists on a rubber boat buzz the 'Front Driver', cargo ship, some 15 miles off the coast of Valencia on the closing day of the 27th Plenary of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in Valencia, Saturday Nov. 17, 2007. Greenpeace claims the ship is carrying 153,000 tonnes of coal destined for the Spanish port of Tarragona. Greenpeace banner reads "burning coal destroys the climate". (AP Photo/Greenpeace, Pedro Armestre)


By ARTHUR MAX – 1 hour ago
VALENCIA, Spain (AP) — Global warming is "unequivocal" and carbon dioxide already in the atmosphere commits the world to an eventual rise in sea levels of up to 4.6 feet, the world's top climate experts warned Saturday in their most authoritative report to date.
"Only urgent, global action will do," said U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, calling on the United States and China — the world's two biggest polluters — to do more to slow global climate change.
"I look forward to seeing the U.S. and China playing a more constructive role," Ban told reporters. "Both countries can lead in their own way."
Ban, however, advised against assigning blame.
Climate change imperils "the most precious treasures of our planet," he said, and the effects are "so severe and so sweeping that only urgent global action will do. We are all in this together. We must work together."
According to the U.N. panel of scientists, whose latest report is a synthesis of three previous ones, enough carbon dioxide already has built up that it imperils islands, coastlines and a fifth to two-thirds of the world's species.
As early as 2020, 75 million to 250 million people in Africa will suffer water shortages, residents of Asia's large cities will be at great risk of river and coastal flooding, according to the report.
Europeans can expect extensive species loss, and North Americans will experience longer and hotter heat waves and greater competition for water, says the report from the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which shared the Nobel Prize with Al Gore this year.
The panel portrays the Earth hurtling toward a warmer climate at a quickening pace and warns of inevitable human suffering. It says emissions of carbon, mainly from fossil fuels, must stabilize by 2015 and go down after that.
In the best-case scenario, temperatures will keep rising from carbon already in the atmosphere, the report said. Even if factories were shut down today and cars taken off the roads, the average sea level will gradually rise over the next 1,000 years to reach as high as 4.6 feet above that in the preindustrial period, or about 1850.
"We have already committed the world to sea level rise," the panel's chairman, Rajendra Pachauri, said. But if the Greenland ice sheet melts, the scientists said, they could not predict by how many feet the seas will rise, drowning coastal cities.
Climate change is here, they said, as witnessed by melting snow and glaciers, higher average temperatures and rising sea levels. If unchecked, global warming will spread hunger and disease, put further stress on water resources, cause fiercer storms and more frequent droughts, and could drive up to 70 percent of plant and animal species to extinction, according to the panel's report.
The report was adopted after five days of sometimes tense negotiations among 140 national delegations. It lays out blueprints for avoiding the worst catastrophes — and various possible outcomes, depending on how quickly and decisively action is taken.
"The world's scientists have spoken clearly and with one voice," Ban said, looking ahead to an important climate conference in Bali, Indonesia, next month. "I expect the world's policy makers to do the same."
The report is intended to both set the stage and serve as a guide for the conference, at which world leaders will begin discussing a global climate change treaty to succeed the 1997 Kyoto Protocol.
That treaty, which expires in 2012, required industrial nations to reduce greenhouse gases and a smooth transition to a new treaty is needed to avoid upsetting the fledgling carbon markets.
"This report will have an incredible political impact," Yvo de Boer, the U.N.'s top climate change official, told The Associated Press. "It's a signal that politicians cannot afford to ignore."
The United States opted out of Kyoto in 2001, arguing that the science was unproven and that the burden of mandatory emission cuts was unfair since it excluded fast-growing China and India.
Chief U.S. delegate Sharon Hays said doubts have been dispelled. "What's changed since 2001 is the scientific certainty that this is happening," she said in a conference call late Friday. She did not indicate that Washington would abandon its policy of voluntary emission cuts.
China and India have said any measures impinging on their development and efforts to lift their people from poverty were unacceptable — a point likely to be heeded at the Bali talks.
The report offered dozens of measures for avoiding the worst catastrophes if taken together — at a cost of less than 0.12 percent of the global economy annually until 2050. They ranged from switching to nuclear and gas-fired power stations, developing hybrid cars, using more efficient electrical appliances and managing cropland to store more carbon.
Ban said a new agreement should provide funding to help poor countries develop clean energy resources, adapt to climate conditions and give them the technology to help themselves.
He said he witnessed the devastation of climate change in disappearing glaciers of Antarctica, the deforested Amazon and under the ozone hole in Chile.
"These scenes are as frightening as a science fiction movie," said Ban. "But they are even more terrifying because they are real."


Michael Moore Today

http://www.michaelmoore.com/


Listen to Democracy for America's 'SiCKO' conference call with Michael Moore

November 14th, 2007 - Sicko House Parties

http://democracyforamerica.com/sicko


"I saw the hose double looped around his neck."
-- Jeff's dad


Suicide Epidemic Among Veterans
A CBS News Investigation Uncovers A Suicide Rate For Veterans Twice That Of Other Americans
(CBS) They are the casualties of wars you don’t often hear about - soldiers who die of self-inflicted wounds. Little is known about the true scope of suicides among those who have served in the military.
But a five-month CBS News investigation discovered data that shows a startling rate of suicide, what some call a hidden epidemic, Chief Investigative Reporter Armen Keteyian reports exclusively.
“I just felt like this silent scream inside of me,” said Jessica Harrell, the sister of a soldier who took his own life.
"I opened up the door and there he was," recalled Mike Bowman, the father of an Army reservist.
"I saw the hose double looped around his neck,” said Kevin Lucey, another military father.
"He was gone,” said Mia Sagahon, whose soldier boyfriend committed suicide.
Keteyian spoke with the families of five former soldiers who each served in Iraq - only to die battling an enemy they could not conquer. Their loved ones are now speaking out in their names.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/11/13/cbsnews_investigates/main3496471.shtml


KVMR's Program Director Steve Baker speaks with Oscar winning director Michael Moore
Oscar winning director Michael Moore helped kick off KVMR’s "Autumn of Love" with an exclusive interview Oct. 29th, Mon. with KVMR's Program Director Steve Baker. Michael spoke passionately about the value and need for independent media like KVMR as well as his new film SiCKO and some of the 80 extra minutes in the DVD release.
Click here to listen to KVMR's exclusive interview with Oscar winning Michael Moore

http://kvmr.org/programs/talkies.html


November 16th, 2007 2:35 am
Anti-Bush Sign Has Bridge World in an Uproar
By Stephanie Strom /
New York Times
In the genteel world of bridge, disputes are usually handled quietly and rarely involve issues of national policy. But in a fight reminiscent of the brouhaha over an anti-Bush statement by Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks in 2003, a team of women who represented the United States at the world bridge championships in Shanghai last month is facing sanctions, including a yearlong ban from competition, for a spur-of-the-moment protest.
At issue is a crudely lettered sign, scribbled on the back of a menu, that was held up at an awards dinner and read, “We did not vote for Bush.”

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/index.php?id=10522



Big Brother Spying on Americans' Internet Data?
AT&T Whistleblower Describes Secret Room That Sends Internet Data to Government
By Z. BYRON WOLF
Nov. 7, 2007 —
It would be difficult to say whose e-mail, text messages or Internet phone calls the government is monitoring at any given time, but according to a former AT&T employee, the government has warrantless access to a great deal of Internet traffic should they care to take a peek.
As information is traded between users it flows also into a locked, secret room on the sixth floor of AT&T's San Francisco offices and other rooms around the country -- where the U.S. government can sift through and find the information it wants, former AT&T employee Mark Klein alleged Wednesday at a press conference on Capitol Hill.
"An exact copy of all Internet traffic that flowed through critical AT&T cables -- e-mails, documents, pictures, Web browsing, voice-over-Internet phone conversations, everything -- was being diverted to equipment inside the secret room," he said.

http://abcnews.go.com/print?id=3833172



AT&T whistleblower: I was forced to connect 'big brother machine'
David Edwards and Jason Rhyne
Published: Wednesday November 7, 2007
A former technician at AT&T, who
alleges that the telecom forwards virtually all of its internet traffic into a "secret room" to facilitate government spying, says the whole operation reminds him of something out of Orwell's 1984.
Appearing on MSNBC's Countdown program, whistleblower Mark Klein told Keith Olbermann that a copy of all internet traffic passing over AT&T lines was copied into a locked room at the company's San Francisco office -- to which only employees with National Security Agency clearance had access -- via a cable splitting device.

http://rawstory.com/news/2007/Countdown_Telcom_whistleblower_describes_secret_room_1107.html



Michael Moore Talks SiCKO & Tobacco on Keith Olbermann

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nhG92MI8Z5Y&eurl=http://www.michaelmoore.com/



Artist on Artist: Tom Morello & Michael Moore

http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=8272191



Is America getting serious about health insurance?

Clinton strikes back at rivals in debate
Sounds a caution on 'throwing mud'
By Susan Milligan
Globe Staff / November 16, 2007
Hillary Clinton swung back at her two main rivals for the Democratic presidential nomination last night, rebuking them for changing their positions on healthcare and portraying herself as the most experienced and qualified candidate for her party's nomination.
The New York senator's pointed criticisms of her opponents - unusual for a front-runner seeking to remain above the fray - followed two shaky weeks for her campaign. She had been forced to defend herself against charges that she had changed positions on key issues, that she had played the gender card, and that her staff had planted friendly questions at campaign events.

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2007/11/16/clinton_strikes_back_at_rivals_in_debate/



That’ll Cost a Kidney: How a Little-Noticed Vote in Congress Could Raise Workers’ Healthcare Costs Even Higher
By
Juan Basile, AlterNet. Posted November 17, 2007.
Congress is on the verge of letting corporate lobbyists change how a critical treatment is delivered, reducing access to affordable care just so two corporations can boost their bottom line.
For the past eight years, three times a week, I've had to go to a clinic for four and a half hours after work to get connected to a kidney dialysis machine to get my blood cleaned.
Like hundreds of thousands of Americans who are dealing with my kind of kidney disease, I rely on dialysis to keep my body functioning.
Thanks to a smart decision Congress made a generation ago, most kidney patients can count on affordable access to dialysis care when the need is most dire.
But now Congress is thinking about undoing that progress. Amazingly, Congress could be on the verge of letting corporate lobbyists change how kidney care is delivered, reducing access to affordable care so two corporations that dominate kidney dialysis can boost their bottom line.
Obviously, this change would affect kidney patients like me directly. But it would also ripple across the healthcare system and drive up costs for ordinary consumers like you. What Congress decides on this issue will say a lot about which way our healthcare system is headed.

http://www.alternet.org/healthwellness/68187/




WHAT'S OBAMA'S HEALTH CARE POSITION?

From NBC/NJ's Aswini Anburajan
Obama regularly reminds supporters on the stump, the plans of the three major Democratic candidates running for party’s nomination for president are “95 percent” the same. Which makes Hillary Clinton's attacks all that more pointed. The difference, Obama stresses, is who can unite the country and stand up to the drug and health insurance industry to actually get it passed.
So what is the real difference between Obama and Clinton's health care plans? Like Clinton and Edwards, Obama would subsidize care for those Americans who cannot afford it; unlike the Clinton and Edwards plan, Obama would only require mandatory health coverage for children.
Obama has pledged, repeatedly, on the stump to pass universal healthcare by the end of his first term in office. He promises to do so through a mixture of bravado, “If Harry and Louise get up on TV, I’ll dip into my campaign fund and run my own ads saying Harry and Louise are wrong;” and by running an open process in which every party will have a seat at the table.
However, Obama knows though that the health care and pharma companies are an integral part of the American health care system. He stresses that Americans will have individual choice when it comes to choosing either a private plan or buying into the government plan and that instituting a government plan is not a move towards “socialized medicine.” He also warns his audiences that passing universal health care will be an “eked out” victory, similar to the slim margin of votes that allowed Lyndon Johnson to pass Medicare and FDR to pass Social Security.

http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2007/11/15/469203.aspx



(BPRW) Overhauling American Healthcare
( BLACK PR WIRE)( November 14, 2007) Every candidate in the coming year’s presidential race is sure to have a “health care plan.” A well thought out strategy for overhauling the failing and flailing American health care conundrum that gives too little too late to sick people and simply ignores millions of uninsured individuals every year. Yet how did we get here and why is healthcare now so sub-par in the “richest” nation on earth?
It has been common over the past five or six decades for Americans of working age to receive their health insurance from employers. Prior to World War II, however, according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI) few Americans had health insurance and most policies covered only hospital room and board. In the midst of World War II employers began to offer workers healthcare benefits to maneuver around government wage controls. Furthermore, worker’s health benefits were not subject to income tax or Social Security payroll taxes, as were cash wages.
The statistics vary on the number of African Americans and other ethnicities living without health insurance at any point in time throughout the year. Numbers taken from the year 2000 onwards, however, indicate a downward spiral. The number of uninsured grows larger each year. What follows is common sense, the more Americans in general living without health insurance, the higher the premiums for those companies and employees receiving health benefits.
So what is the solution? Lawmakers and candidates on both sides of the bipartisan divide intend to overhaul the current system to ensure that all American citizens have health insurance. Many are even lobbying to allow tax breaks to individuals purchasing their own healthcare plans for themselves and family members.
The question remains which system will provide the best care for the majority of people? If benefits are taken out of the employers hands will that make it easier for employees to manage and monitor their own benefits and to switch jobs while maintaining the same insurance plan? Will employers have an easier time as well? This is an issue we’ll all need to become involved with in the coming year to insure that the healthcare system is improved for all people, especially children.

http://www.blackprwire.com/display-news.asp?id=3626



Local examines racism in health care
The seeds of national change to combat racism may be growing in a cozy dwelling on Pendleton Street.
While racism has been, and continues to be, a pressing issue in New Haven and beyond, local documentary filmmaker Crystal Emery said there are underlying elements of racism in everyday life. Emery is currently filming “Disparities in American Health Care: The Audacity of Hope” — a firsthand look into the realities of racism in health care.
The issue is of national importance, but it has effects on a local level here on Yale’s campus, especially given the diversity of the student population, Emery said.
Emery set out to create the documentary in respone to her own experiences, she said. As a black woman confined to a wheelchair, Emery said people make assumptions about her even before she has a chance to speak.
“I face disparities in health care everyday,” she said. “I’m a black woman in a wheelchair with a chronic disease. I have to fight for my Medicare prescriptions. I have to fight for the right to exist.”

http://www.yaledailynews.com/articles/view/22454



Readers Write: John Edwards' Plan to Get Serious About Healthcare
AlterNet readers had much to say about Edwards' threat to strip health coverage from Congress if its members didn't pass his plan.
AlterNet readers had an animated discussion following a recent piece looking at Democratic presidential hopeful John Edwards' new campaign ads, airing in Iowa, that promise to take away the health insurance members of Congress enjoy unless they enact his proposal for universal healthcare ("
Edwards: If Members of Congress Won't Give Americans a Healthcare Plan, I'll Take Away Theirs.")
Vox Persona, while approving of Edwards' strategy for bringing about universal coverage, also had some words of caution: "Being from N.C., I can give you the heads up on our former illustrious senator. Serving in his one term, he spent most of his time running for president. How would you feel? The word opportunism comes to mind. He seems to say some of the right things, and I want to give him the benefit of the doubt, but his kind of raw ambition makes me uneasy."
Jefferson's Guardian, disagreeing, replied: "It has to start with someone, Vox Persona, doesn't it?
"Quite possibly what you view as "raw ambition" in John Edwards might also be interpreted as someone who sees that time is running out for the American people.
"Someone has to take the bull by the horns. Aside Kucinich, who else is out there speaking for the American people?
"None."

http://www.alternet.org/healthwellness/68178/

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