Fracking activity risks not recognized, US energy dept. warns

Natural gas

Natural gas

Photograph by: Writer/editor, Vancouver Sun/Bloomberg

 

(Bloomberg) — Energy companies and government haven’t made enough progress reducing the environmental risks of shale-gas production, a U.S. Energy Department panel said.

Hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, that extracts natural gas from shale-rock formations by injecting water, sand and chemicals represents about a third of U.S. natural-gas output, according to the advisory panel led by former CIA Director John Deutch.

“If action is not taken to reduce the environmental impact accompanying the very considerable expansion of shale-gas production expected across the country — perhaps as many as 100,000 wells over the next several decades — there is a real risk of serious environmental consequences,” the panel said in a statement today. ” Some concerted and sustained action is needed to avoid excessive environmental impacts of shale-gas production and the consequent risk of public opposition to its continuation and expansion.”

The panel listed 20 recommendations for groundwater protection, air-pollution reduction and disclosure of the chemicals used to limit the environmental impacts in states such as Pennsylvania, New York, and Texas, where the use of fracking is increasing.

Companies that use the technology for natural-gas production include Exxon Mobil Corp., Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Chesapeake Energy Corp. and Anadarko Petroleum Corp.

‘Positive Actions’

“There have been many positive actions undertaken by the industry and state regulatory authorities,” Reid Porter, a spokesman for the Washington based American Petroleum Institute, said in an e-mailed statement. “The oil and natural gas industry is working with the regulators in states where shale energy development is occurring to share our knowledge and encourage them to help us raise the bar on performance.”

The institute is the largest U.S. energy trade group, representing more than 480 oil and natural-gas companies.

“Today’s announcement makes clear the inadequacies and problems within the natural-gas industry,” Deb Nardone, director of the Natural Gas Reform Campaign at the Sierra Club, a San Francisco-based environmental group, said today in a statement. “The Sierra Club urges the Obama administration to take these recommendations seriously, and push for their swift adoption. Without them, the natural-gas industry will continue to recklessly drill and further endanger our air, water and communities.”

EPA Rules Coming

The U.S. Interior Department is considering regulations for production of natural gas and oil from shale on federal lands, including required disclosure of chemicals used and standards for water and wells, David Hayes, the Interior Department’s deputy secretary, said on Oct. 31.

The Environmental Protection Agency will propose rules on water discharges from fracking in 2014, the agency said on Oct. 20.

The Energy Department report, the second from the advisory committee, is available for four days of public comment. The panel will submit its report to Energy Secretary Steven Chu, according to today’s statement, posted on an Energy Department website.

—Editors: Larry Liebert, Niamh Ring

© Copyright (c) Business Wire

Why Pak Taliban Rejected Islamabad’s Latest Offer of Peace Talks

Why Pak Taliban rejected Islamabad’s offer of peace talks

Pakistani Taliban chief Hakimullah Mehsud with other millitants in South Waziristan
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Amir Mir in Islamabad

The offer of peace talks came at a time when the Pakistani military operations in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas on the Pak-Afghan border had had little impact on the operational capabilities of the Tehrik-e-Taliban. Amir Mir reports.

Reiterating his pledge of loyalty to the fugitive Afghan Taliban, Mullah Mohammad Omar, the elusive chief of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan Commander Hakimullah Mehsud has rejected the Pakistan government’s most recent offer of peace talks by vowing to carry out more terrorist attacks on the state of Pakistan.

The fresh offer was made by Pakistan’s Interior Minister Rehman Malik in a special Eid message that was released on November 6 on the eve of the Islamic festival, calling upon the Pakistani Taliban and all other militants to shed their weapons and become part of the national mainstream.

However, while vigorously rejecting the offer of peace talks on the Eid day on November 7, the TTP chief Hakimullah Mehsud declared that the war with the state of Pakistan will continue primarily because it is siding with “the forces of the infidel”.

Mullah Omar
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In his special Eid day message released by the SITE Intelligence Group, Hakimullah accused the Pakistani military and the state of handing over Arab, Uzbek, and other Mujahideen to the kuffar (unbeliever of infidel) only to please their leaders.

The Arabs to whom the TTP chief has referred are in fact members of Al Qaeda while the Uzbeks are members of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) and other affiliated groups. “Our war with you will continue and soon you will be humiliated and disgraced in this very life, and kuffar too will turn its back on you. For they (kuffar) have used you and can no longer see any strength remaining in you.”

While blaming the oppression and injustices committed against the militants by selfish rulers whose loyalties lie with the Jews and the Christians, the TTP chief said uniting under the leadership of Mullah Mohammad Omar and waging jehad was the solution.

“I urge all Muslims to rise up against these agents of the kuffar (infidels) who have sold their consciences; to rise above their differences and unite under the banner of Ameer-ul-Momineen Mullah Mohammad Omar and work towards the revival of the Caliphate – a dream awaiting fulfillment,” Hakimullah said in his message.

Hakimullah also rejected the Durand Line, the border that divides Afghanistan and Pakistan, and said the bond with the Afghan Taliban will continue to strengthen. “There is no doubt that the Muslim Ummah (Mulsim community) is one body, and as Muslims we do not accept the divisions of the Durand Line or any borders,” Hakimullah said.

“We are all loyal soldiers of Ameer-ul-Momineen Mullah Mohammad Omar. He is our leader, guide and ameer. The services and sacrifices made by Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan for the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan have been proven over time and our association with them will only continue to strengthen.”

Hakimullah Mehsud urged Muslims to “display utmost unity” as the United States and the NATO forces prepare to withdraw from Afghanistan. “The armies of the kuffar (infidel) are well on their way to defeat, and as an exit strategy will make last ditch efforts to create rifts amongst the ummah (Mulsim community)”, Hakimullah added.

The latest offer of peace talks with the Taliban came at a time when the Pakistani military operations in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) on the Pak-Afghan border have had little impact on the operational capabilities of the Tehrik-e-Taliban, which is stepping up its terror activities across Pakistan. There are reports that the organisational strength and growth of the TTP has taken a quantum leap over the past years, both qualitatively and quantitatively.

While there are those in the Pakistani establishment who believe that the TTP has rejected the government’s offer of peace talks while taking it as a sign of weakness, others say the TTP was bound to reject Islamabad’s peace initiative because its leadership no more trusts the Pakistani establishment.

The Pakistani Taliban are clearly in no mood to hold peace talks with Islamabad despite Army Chief General Ashfaq Kayani’s October 18 statement that the Army won’t have any objection over the government in Islamabad having dialogues with the Taliban.

General Kayani had actually endorsed Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani’s October 2 statement that his government was ready to hold negotiations with all militant groups, including the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan.

Reacting to the peace offer on October 3, Maulvi Faqeer Mohammad, the deputy commander of TTP, welcomed the Prime Minister’s offer but not without setting out two unattainable preconditions for talks: one, the government should reconsider its relationship with the United States; and, two, enforce Islamic Shariah in the country.

 

Some Retired Taliban To Attend Bonn Afghan Conference

Waiting for the Taliban

BY MARK DECKER

mz-web.de - Mitteldeutsche Zeitung
Kampfeinsatz in Afghanistan
NATO soldiers in battle with Taliban. (PHOTO: DPA / ARCHIVE)

BERLIN / MZ. At the international conference on Afghanistan in Bonn in early December are expected to take part of the radical Islamic Taliban forces. Corresponding remarks now made by the Special Representative of the Federal government for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Michael Steiner, on Wednesday in the defense committee of the Bundestag. The organizers of the international conference had “no objection would be if this side here,” said Steiner is quoted as saying. This one had been able to conclude “that Taliban will come to Bonn,” said one participant.
However, there will be forces for moderation and not to those who are still currently involved in active combat operations, the report said. The Special Representative estimated the number of conference participants at 1000, 30 of the Afghan civil society.

The event will be clarified, as happened after 2014, the planned withdrawal of Western troops from the country in Afghanistan continues. Immediately after the fall of the Taliban regime in 2001 had taken place at the Petersberg in Bonn, the first international conference on Afghanistan. The goal of his time had been spent trying to create a democracy in the Hindu Kush. THURSDAY at the Western community will only build the Afghan security forces so still and toughen up, that they themselves can protect Afghanistan. Of course, the success of this project is also not as secure.

After the assassination of Afghan President Burhanuddin Rabbani, ex-a few weeks ago, negotiations with the Taliban had been placed on ice, and he had to act as mediator. The Afghan government accused Pakistan’s intelligence agency, the talks and a stabilization of the neighboring country to thwart targeted. This corresponds well to the impression of the West.Both could change it but so far nothing.

Early 2012 to decide the black-yellow government over the new Afghanistan mandate. The current mandate provides for a maximum of 5 350 soldiers are in fact about 5000 is currently in use. The SPD expects that the intention to initiate the return from Afghanistan, finds its expression in the new mandate. Otherwise they will not agree with him. Defense Minister Thomas de Maiziere (CDU) urged caution, however, has to have his exact plans but announced anything yet.

Jalaluddin Haqqani–Kings of the Mountains

Kings of the Mountains

By 

An obscure little mountain clan is quickly becoming the most powerful anti-government force in Afghanistan.

The rise to importance of the Haqqani is a story of over 35 years of struggle, first to grow from a minor Pashtun clan of the Zadran tribe to what it is today — the most powerful anti-government grouping in Afghanistan. It would be simple to place this network into the overall structure of the Taliban, but that would be an injustice to the Haqqani. They are at once a part of the Taliban and at the same time separate from Mullah Omar’s movement. This dichotomy has been explained by the philosophical motivation of the Haqqani that is focused primarily on ridding Afghanistan of foreign interference as opposed to the broader Islamic jihadicommitment of Omar’s Taliban. One does not rule out the other, but simply has precedence.

The Haqqani network, as it is often called, is suggested to have originated from its collaboration with and support by American intelligence during the Soviet/Afghan conflict of the 1980s. Upon the vigorous urging of the U.S. Congressman Charlie Wilson, Washington did give financial and material aid to Jalaluddin Haqqani’s fighting group, but that was after operatives of Pakistan’s intelligence service, ISI, paved the way. In fact, very little was done by the Americans with the mujahedin without initial ISI-related introduction and/or monitoring. If this activity is regarded from a Pakistani viewpoint, the Americans actually were ISI’s rich uncle who was allowed to think he was running unilateral operations with Afghan fighters, including those associated with the Haqqani clan and their Zadran tribal cousins. This history remains a point of contention.

The ambition of Mawlawi Jalaluddin Haqqani to be a part of the ruling group in Afghanistan actually began as a young man in his middle twenties when he was forced to flee Kabul for Miranshah in his home region of North Waziristan after reportedly being sought for arrest by President Daoud Khan’s central government forces. During 1975-1978 Jalaluddin joined the group Hezb-I-Islami of the fundamentalist Mohammad Yunis Khalis.

During the 1980s Haqqani gained (or created) a reputation as a skilled fighter. It was at this time that he came to understand the value of the use of political propaganda that later has come to serve the Haqqani so well. By 1992 Jalaluddin acted as Justice minister in the new government in Kabul. By 1996 he was named Minister for Tribal (aka Border) Affairs by the Taliban government.

The idea that Jalaluddin was an obscure tribal personality as characterized by the Western press is quite false — a fact well known by British and American intelligence and certainly Pakistan’s ISI. Known also, though not well understood, is that the Haqqani family never was interested in becoming just one element of Mullah Omar’s primarily Pashtun tribal confederacy known as the Taliban. Jalaluddin has held himself aloof from the Islamic jihadi theme of Omar’s governmental objectives, though since early on he had a good relationship with bin Laden and al Qaeda. The Haqqani have drawn closer to the Taliban leadership recently, but that was a political move from strength rather than an acceptance of Mullah Omar’s authority.

The head of the Haqqani clan is only in his early sixties, but is often referred to as “elderly” and even “sickly.” In Afghan political terms this suggests he no longer exerts the power he once did. In fact he may have more power than before, though his personal, hands-on, direction may be less. His sons Khalifa Seraj (Serajuddin) and Badruddin apparently have assumed operational leadership, though the Haqqani organization utilizes regional command structures coordinated by several dozen clan members and longtime Zadran tribal followers of the Haqqani family. It was some of these extended family representatives with whom the United States was in contact before the attack on the American Embassy in Kabul. This limited liaison did not stop the attack. In a fit of pique afterwards, the American Secretary of State decided she should divulge this highly classified intelligence contact. Why?

There is some dispute as to which of the two senior Haqqani brothers has greater operational command. Michael Semple, recognized as one of the few authorities on Pashtun tribal alignments and a 20-year veteran of Afghan politics, wrote inForeign Affairs in September that the eldest son, Sarajuddin, is the new “senior decision-maker” while Badruddin was “most closely involved in the embassy siege and seems to be more active and accessible.” This analysis is consistent with the broader perception that the Haqqani extended family now has expanded to become a major insurgent movement on its own.

The key to the Haqqani dominance is their ability to attract external fighters and material support. Former Joint Chiefs Chairman Mike Mullen was outraged to learn the ISI continued close contact with Jalaluddin and his sons, to say nothing of Pakistani Army operational relationship with Haqqani field units in the Pakistan tribal area of Waziristan. What else did he expect? This is South Asia after all. Afghanistan is part of Pakistan’s neighborhood. Obviously Admiral Mullen had no idea of how the great game is played in this neighborhood.

As part of a dose of reality, it would be worthwhile for the Obama Administration to recognize that Jalaluddin Haqqani is aimed at ousting Hamid Karzai and eventually setting up a new government in Kabul, perhaps with a Haqqani at the top. The ISI knows this and is prepared to deal with that eventuality. The only question is whether the Haqqani complex of affiliated Pashtun of Waziristan wants to expose itself by assuming central political responsibility. The alternative is to become an essentially autonomous power controlling both North and South Waziristan and neighboring provinces while maintaining a separate and special relationship with Pakistan.

For reasons still best known to the sheikhs of the Gulf, the Haqqani in general, and Jalaluddin specifically, have a long-term relationship with the Saudis and the Emirates. Perhaps it’s the mutual pragmatism; perhaps it’s left over from the war with the Soviets. In any case, the Haqqani, obscure little clan of the Zadran tribe of North Waziristan, looks like the best bet at the moment as the dominant force in Afghan politics — and war.

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

George H. Wittman writes a weekly column on international affairs for The American Spectator online. He was the founding chairman of the National Institute for Public Policy.

KUHNER: Radical Islam in the heart of Europe

KUHNER: Radical Islam in the heart of Europe

Wahhabis unsheath terror in campaign to impose Shariah

By Jeffrey T. Kuhner

The Washington Times

Illustration: Bosnian Wahhabis by Greg Groesch for The Washington Times

Illustration: Bosnian Wahhabis by Greg Groesch for The Washington Times

Is Bosnia-Herzegovina doomed? The small Balkan nation is being subverted by powerful internal forces that threaten its existence. The West must wake up before the former Yugoslav republic descends once again into sectarian bloodshed.

Last month, an Islamic terrorist from neighboring SerbiaMevlid Jasarevic, opened fire on the U.S. embassy in Bosnia’s capital, Sarajevo. The 23-year-old jihadist was armed with hand grenades and an automatic weapon. Fortunately, no one was killed. Mr. Jasarevic was protesting American policy toward the Muslim world. He was arrested and is awaiting trial.

Police also raided a northern Bosnian village, Gornja Maoca, which is a hotbed of Wahhabist activity and a place Mr. Jasarevic often visited. The terrorist attack shocked both Sarajevo’s political establishment and theU.S. State Department. It shouldn’t have. In Bosnia, radical Islam has been growing for years. In fact, America and the West have deliberately turned a blind eye to its dangerous rise.

From 1992 to 1995, Bosnia was ravaged by a war pitting Muslims (known as Bosniaks), Serbs and Croats against each other. Contrary to conventional wisdom, the conflict was not – and never was – a civil war driven by “ancient ethnic hatreds.” Instead, the country was a victim of outside aggression. Serbia’s late strongman, Slobodan Milosevic, waged a genocidal campaign to annex large chunks of Croatia first and thenBosnia in order to erect a Greater Serbian Empire. More than 200,000 were murdered and nearly 2 million ethnically cleansed. To counterSerbia’s expansionist ambitions, Islamic countries sought to help the besieged Bosniaks. In particular, Saudi Arabia and Iran offered extensive financial and military assistance. Thousands of foreign Mujahedeen guerrillas entered the country to battle rampaging Serb forces. The 1995 Dayton Peace Agreement ended the fighting. It also partitioned Bosnia along religious lines, creating two quasi-national entities – the Muslim-Croat Federation and the Bosnian Serb Republic.

Yet, after the war, many jihadists did not leave. The Saudi governmenthas spent millions funding the construction of mosques and religious education centers. More ominously, Saudi-backed clerics have vigorously promoted Wahhabism, an intolerant and extreme form of Islam. In pamphlets, books and sermons, Wahhabis demand an Islamist Bosnia where Orthodox Christian Serbs and Catholic Croats are subjugated under Shariah law. The goal is also to drive out Western, especially American, influence. It’s no accident that Mr. Jasarevic is a Wahhabi. Militant Islam has regained a foothold in the Balkans.

For the past decade, anti-American sentiment has intensified among segments of Bosniaks. Following the toppling of the Taliban regime inAfghanistan, U.S. troops found more than 1,000 dead jihadists on the battlefield possessing Bosnian passports. The Saudis have supported several Bosnian charities serving as front groups for al Qaeda cells. Radical organizations, such as the Young Muslims, have proliferated. During the Iraq war, some Bosnian Muslim fighters joined the insurgency against American forces. At one of Sarajevo’s main mosques, the second-highest-ranking cleric in the country, Ismet Spahic, publicly denounced the U.S.-led campaign in Iraq as “genocide.” Western intelligence reports say Bosnia has become fertile soil for recruiting “white al Qaeda” – Islamic extremists with Caucasian features, who could easily blend into American or European cities and commit heinous atrocities.

Western public officials, however, have refused even to acknowledge the Islamist problem. For example, from 2002 through 2006, the international high representative for BosniaPaddy Ashdown, repeatedly downplayed the rise of Wahhabism under his watch. Mr. Ashdown acted as the viceroy of Bosnia. He preferred to preside over pompous ceremonies, amass administrative power and gorge at elaborate banquets. He refused to speak out against incidents of Islamic extremism, such as vandalism against Catholic churches, the harassment of priests and nuns, and the growing persecution of Bosnian Croatians. He feared offending Muslim sensibilities.

The result is that Bosnia has become a safe haven for Islamic militants. They remain a minority but increasingly pose a mortal danger to a unified Bosnian state. The government in Sarajevo rightly condemned the terror attack. The majority of Bosniaks remain secular or moderate. For too long, however, they have tolerated the Wahhabis in their midst. This must change. Radical mosques must be shut down; fundamentalist clerics must be confronted and marginalized; videos sold on the streets of Sarajevo glorifying jihadists must be outlawed; and outside Saudi money must be banned.

Otherwise, Bosnia will disintegrate. The country’s ethnic Croatians are chafing under Sarajevo’s centralized rule. Yet the bigger danger is the Bosnian Serb Republic. It is led by a bellicose nationalist, Milorad Dodik. He is a vulgar liar. He has denied the 1995 massacre in Srebrenica, where about 8,000 Muslim men and boys were slaughtered by Bosnian Serb forces – the worst atrocity on European soil since the end of World War II.

More ominously, Mr. Dodik has called for secession. He wants the Bosnian Serbs to form a common homeland with Serbia. He is Milosevic’s ideological heir, championing a Greater Serbia. There is only one problem: The Bosnian Serb Republic is founded upon genocide and mass ethnic cleansing. It is morally illegitimate. To this day, the Bosnian Serbs have not allowed most of the Bosniaks and Croatians expelled during the war to return to their homes. An independence bid almost certainly would trigger another war with Sarajevo – drowning the Balkans in blood once again.

The irony is that it was American air power that finally brought the Bosnian Serbs to heel and saved countless Bosniak lives. And still, jihadists such as Mr. Jasarevic are eager to wage holy war. This reveals the moral depravity and spiritual darkness at the heart of Islamic fundamentalism. The fundamentalists cannot be appeased. The West – including the peoples of the Balkans – must awaken to this evil force lurking in the heart of Europe.

Jeffrey T. Kuhner is a columnist at The Washington Times and president of the Edmund Burke Institute.

AP Exclusive: NATO may face posible ICC probe

AP Exclusive: NATO may face posible ICC probe

File -- IN a Feb. 27, 2007 file photo the International Criminal Court's prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo reacts during a press conference in The Hague, Netherlands. In a briefing to the Security Council on Nov. 2, 2011, about Nato in Libya, Moreno-Ocampo said 'there are allegations of crimes committed by NATO forces (and) these allegations will be examined impartially and independently.' 
File — IN a Feb. 27, 2007 file photo the International Criminal Court’s prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo reacts during a press conference in The Hague, Netherlands. In a briefing to the Security Council on Nov. 2, 2011, about Nato in Libya, Moreno-Ocampo said “there are allegations of crimes committed by NATO forces (and) these allegations will be examined impartially and independently.” (AP Photo/Peter Dejong/file)
By Slobodan Lekic and Mike CorderAssociated Press / November 11, 2011

BRUSSELS—Some NATO members are worried that their organization may be investigated by the International Criminal Court after its prosecutor said allegations of crimes committed by NATO in Libya would be examined “impartially and independently,” according to diplomats accredited to NATO headquarters.

The diplomats said action to pre-empt a war crimes investigation would likely include an immediate internal legal review of all incidents in which NATO bombing or other actions caused civilian casualties.

They spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

The alliance has always maintained that its operations in Libya were carried out strictly in keeping with a U.N. Security Council resolution that authorized member states “to take all necessary measures to protect civilians and civilian populated areas under threat of attack” in the North African country.

NATO leaders have repeatedly hailed the precision with which the mission was carried out, citing the small number of civilian deaths caused by the bombing as evidence of its success.

Still, in a briefing to the Security Council on Nov. 2, International Criminal Court prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo said “there are allegations of crimes committed by NATO forces (and) these allegations will be examined impartially and independently.”

Moreno-Ocampo did not elaborate further on the accusations against NATO forces, or who was making them. His office is currently focusing on crimes committed by members of the ousted Gadhafi regime and is waiting for a report by a U.N. Commission of Inquiry in Libya, due in March, before deciding whether to proceed with a formal investigation into alleged crimes by NATO.

NATO has said it was confident its actions were in compliance with international law and that the alliance is not worried by the possibility of a war crimes probe. “In the event we receive a request for information, NATO is prepared to assist in any way it can,” said an official who could not be identified under standing rules.

Officials from the alliance say that between March and October NATO warplanes flew 26,000 sorties, including more than 9,600 strike missions, destroying more than 1,000 tanks, vehicles, and guns, as well as buildings claimed to have housed “command and control” centers. These included facilities such as Moammar Gadhafi’s heavily fortified compound in Tripoli, but also residential homes of his supporters — targets which could be considered outside the UN mandate.

NATO is already involved in a civil suit in Belgium that accuses the alliance of killing 13 civilians in the bombing of a residential compound near Libya’s capital, Tripoli. Attorneys for the plaintiffs say that, although NATO and other international organizations enjoy diplomatic immunity in criminal cases, they fall under Belgian jurisdiction in civil suits.

The immunity applies only to those holding diplomatic status.

The definition of war crimes, as described by international conventions on the laws of war, includes any destruction of civilian targets not justified by military necessity. It has been invoked in a number of trials dealing with conflicts in Bosnia, Croatia, Kosovo and elsewhere.

The possibility of an ICC probe is already causing friction within the alliance, officials said. At a meeting last week of NATO ambassadors and their counterparts from partner countries, the Russian ambassador, Dmitry Rogozin, noted a number of airstrikes could be considered potential war crimes. But envoys from some nations that participated in the bombing reacted angrily, describing the comment as “libel.”

A French Rafale fighter-bomber is said to have bombed a convoy of vehicles fleeing Gadhafi’s besieged hometown of Sirte last month, resulting in the capture and subsequent killing of the dictator by opposition forces.

The incident is particularly controversial because during the siege — characterized by massive shelling of Sirte’s downtown area by the former rebels — NATO warplanes never struck the attackers. Instead, they attacked a fleeing convoy of civilian vehicles.

Lt. Gen. Charles Bouchard, the Canadian who commanded the NATO operation, explained that commanders ordered the strikes because they believed the convoy would try to link up with other pockets of pro-Gadhafi resistance in the west.

While Moreno-Ocampo has said allegations of NATO crimes would be examined, that does not necessarily mean he will open a formal investigation. Depending on the U.N. commission’s findings, he could decide there is no need for further investigations or ask judges for authorization to open a formal probe. He could also determine that there are proceedings at the national level that would negate the need for a case to be brought before the ICC, a court of last resort.

“We are not talking about any specific incident. We are saying, ‘Yes, if there are allegations of crimes we will review that,'” Moreno-Ocampo told The Associated Press.

Currently, nearly 120 states are parties to the ICC. All European NATO members and Canada have accepted its jurisdiction.

Since NATO is not a signatory to the ICC treaty, it would appear likely that any violations of the conventions on the laws of war would require direct dealings between the court and its member states, and not with NATO as an institution.

The operation’s critics — including Russia, China and the African Union — have argued that NATO misused the limited U.N. resolution as a pretext to promote regime change in Libya. Its daily air raids were instrumental in enabling the ragtag rebel forces to advance on Tripoli and later capture the rest of the country.

The issue threatens to have far-reaching consequences for future U.N. interventions.

Russia and China have already vetoed a Security Council resolution that would have imposed sanctions on Syria for its violent crackdown on opposition demonstrators, arguing that NATO could again misuse a U.N. measure to justify months of air strikes.

“If there were to be evidence that NATO is also involved in activities illegal under international law, something should be done about that,” said Nicolas Beger, director of the Amnesty International European Institutions office. “Nobody should be allowed to commit war crimes, and nobody should be able to get away with it.”

He also said there needed to be an impartial probe into Gadhafi’s death.

“If he was captured alive and then killed, that’s a war crime. That’s clear.”

——

Corder reported from The Hague, Netherlands. Mike Corder can be followed athttp://www.twitter.com/mikecorder. Slobodan Lekic can be followed on Twitter at http://twitter.com/slekich

Night letters threaten Loya Jirga participants with death

Night letters threaten Loya Jirga participants with death

by Mirwais Himmat

GHAZNI CITY (PAN): The Taliban have warned residents of several districts in southern Ghazni province with death in “night letters” if they participated in the November 16 Loya Jirga on a strategic partnership agreement between Afghanistan and the US, residents said on Thursday.

But local officials say the letters were a propaganda aimed at creating fear among residents. They said the warning would have no impact on the Jirga which is scheduled to take place in Kabul, with attendees discussing the proposed US-Afghanistan strategic deal and a mechanism for peace talks with the rebels.

Ghazni council chief, Abdul Wali Khanzada, said he had not personally seen the letters, but people told him that the leaflets had been thrown in mosques in Gilan, Mugar, Ab Band, Qarabagh, Andar and Deh Yak districts.

Participants of the Jirga had been warned with death in the letters. However, he said the warning would not prevent people from attending the event. He said 27 people from Ghazni would take part in the Jirga.

A copy of the letters was received by Pajhwok correspondent in Qarabagh district. The letter condemns the establishment of the proposed permanent US military bases in Afghanistan, calling the bases a permanent occupation of the country.

It says the Jirga is being attended by supporters of the government, not real public representatives. It warns participants would risk their lives and the Taliban would make every efforts to find and punish them. It asks people to show their brotherhood with the Taliban by staying away from the Jirga.

Reports said the letters were distributed to people in some district in broad daylight.

A resident of Qarabagh district, Abdul Mateen, said two armed men riding a motorcycle arrived in the village and threw the letters in mosque two days before the Eid. He said the gunmen distributed the letters in all villages.

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Erbakan criticizes Israel, accuses Erdoğan of being part of Jewish conspiracy

Erbakan criticizes Israel, accuses Erdoğan of being part of Jewish conspiracy

ABDULLAH BOZKURT, ANKARA
Felicity Party leader Necmettin Erbakan
The soured relationship with Israel and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s tough line with the Jewish state are all part of a façade to deceive the Turkish public, former Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan has claimed.
In an exclusive interview with Today’s Zaman at his house in Balgat, Ankara, the 84-year-old leader of the Felicity Party (SP) criticized the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party), saying it is in the hands of the worldwide Zionist movement. He implied that the rise of the AK Party was helped by the international Jewish conspiracy and vowed that he will fight back to stem the Zionist grip on the neck of Turkey.

“Why on earth did the AK Party give a ‘go ahead’ to the membership of Israel in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development [OECD] and not block membership? Why did the government consent to multi-billion dollars worth of defense contracts with Israeli firms? He [Erdoğan] says ‘one-minute’ to [Israeli president Shimon] Peres during Davos but conducts business as usual with the Jewish state. This is hypocrisy,” Erbakan said.

Erbakan, who was ousted from the government on Feb. 28, 1997, under military pressure, was later banned from politics, and his Welfare Party (RP) was shut down by the Constitutional Court. He was later pardoned and took the helm of the new SP during an extraordinary party congress on Oct. 18. The SP was shaken by an intra-party conflict when the party’s former leader, Numan Kurtulmuş, emerged victorious in a dispute with Erbakan over the party administration list during the party’s fourth grand party congress in July. Kurtulmuş, who was placed under pressure to resign after July’s congress, parted ways with the SP to establish his own party.

Both Prime Minister Erdoğan and President Abdullah Gül served in Erbakan’s old RP before they, too, parted ways in 2000 and established the AK Party. During the interview Erbakan described both leaders as proxies in the hands of the Jewish conspiracy, though he said, “They [Erdoğan and Gül] do not know they have been serving Israeli interests.” Erbakan offered no proof of his allegations but touted Jewish conspiracy books written by Harun Yahya and Garry Allen located at the table on his left. Books were marked on many pages, and some sections were underlined and highlighted.

As for the recent WikiLeaks releases, Erbakan claimed the leaked information was planned to deceive average Turkish citizens. “But it did not work, and citizens will vote for our party in the upcoming elections,” he said.

The wheelchair-bound Erbakan vowed to bring the SP to power in next year’s general elections and claimed the Turkish people voted for the AK Party in the last two elections because they thought the AK Party mistakenly represented the National View, a hard-liner policy laced with religion and professed by Erbakan. “Now the average citizen will come home and vote for us,” he claimed, stressing the government has lost touch with the voter base and that the country is plunging into a debt trap.

Erbakan also reiterated his fierce opposition to the European Union membership process, saying the EU has been trying to enslave the Turkish people. “We will break the chains of the EU when we come to power and reverse the process,” he vowed. The former prime minister refused to label his party policies as part of politics, but instead offered an explanation of religious tenets that drive his ambitions. “This is like a jihad for us, and it is incumbent upon every Muslim to order ‘the good’ and avoid ‘the evil’,” he said.

Political dynasty

Asked whether he is preparing his son Fatih for his own place in the party, the 84-year-old politician said it is up to his son to lead the party and that he could not discourage him from seeking a political career for himself. He dismissed allegations of a political dynasty, but drawing an analogy to Ottoman sultans who passed on the throne to their sons, Erbakan said there is nothing wrong if his son takes over the party. “The Ottomans did a great job and conquered the world by using this system,” he underlined. Erbakan’s children, Fatih and Elif, who were excluded from Kurtulmuş’s party administration list in the party’s July congress, were also elected to senior posts in the party after Erbakan took over the helm.

As for political alliances on the eve of national elections, Erbakan did not dismiss the possibility of forming alliances with other parties. “We will look and talk about it with other political leaders and see what happens,” he said.

Vindication from Makovsky report

Erbakan took the gloves off when the military harshly criticized his government for doing away with the secular characteristics of the state during a National Security Council (MGK) meeting on Feb. 28, 1997. “I did not give in to military demands, which was later proved by [Senior Fellow at Washington Institute for Near East Policy] Alan O. Makovsky’s report. The junta in the military presented these as their own, but actually it was Zionist demands articulated by Makovsky. We did not know it then, but we know now,” he said.

“I was all alone at that MGK meeting. [Deputy Prime Minister Tansu] Çiller was silent, while President Süleyman Demirel was siding with the military. But I did not agree to military demands; instead, we decided to work on these demands by involving experts to study them in detail. I signed up for the study of the proposals only,” he explained. Recalling that about 50 deputies in junior coalition partner True Path Party (DYP) were persuaded by the military to withdraw support from the government, Erbakan said, “I had no choice but to ask the president to give the job of forming a new government to my partner Çiller until new elections. But Demirel instead gave the job to opposition leader Mesut Yilmaz.”

Asked why he did not fire the junta leaders, Erbakan said his was not a single-party government and he did not trust his coalition partner to back him up. “If I was leading a strong single-party government, I would never hesitate for a minute to remove these generals from duty,” he said.

Déjà Vu Over Iran A-Bomb Charges

Déjà Vu Over Iran A-Bomb Charges

Exclusive: The mainstream U.S. news media is again ratcheting up tensions with Iran over its alleged nuclear weapons program by hailing a new report on the topic. But the press is once more falling down on its duty to examine the allegations carefully, writes Robert Parry.

By Robert Parry

Consortiumnews

The New York Times is trotting out some of its favorite words – like “meticulous” – to praise the new report by United Nations weapons inspectors citing Iran’s supposed work on a nuclear bomb, and the Washington Post says the findings “ought to end serious debate” about Tehran’s nefarious intentions.

So, rather than undertake a careful examination of the report’s claims, America’s preeminent newspapers are once more putting on display their deep-seated biases regarding the Middle East. Any claim against a Muslim adversary must be true.

In the words of New York Yankees great Yogi Berra, “it’s déjà vu all over again.”

It seems every time an allegation is made against a “designated enemy” in the Middle East, the Post and Times editors cast aside professional skepticism, a pattern that has included Iraq’s WMD (oops!); a U.N.-sponsored report on Syria’s guilt in the Hariri assassination (“meticulous,” the Times said, though the report later fell apart); and the flat-fact claim of Libya’s role in the Lockerbie bombing (highly dubious in terms of evidence, but useful in justifying Muammar Gaddafi’s ouster and murder). [For more on these cases, click here.]

The Times editorial on Thursday was headlined, “The Truth About Iran” with the subhead: “A new report from weapons inspectors leaves little doubt about Tehran’s ambitions.” The editorial fully embraced the methodology of the International Atomic Energy Agency’s report, declaring:

“The report is chillingly comprehensive. … What gives the report particular credibility is its meticulous sourcing. The agency’s director, Yukiya Amano, built a case on more than a thousand pages of documents, the assistance of more than 10 agency member states and interviews with ‘a number of individuals who were involved in relevant activities in Iran.’”

Yukiya Amano, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency

The Washington Post’s neocon editors, in an editorial entitled “Running out of time,” were similarly enthusiastic about the report, writing: “The IAEA’s evidence, which includes 1,000 pages of documents, interviews with renegade scientists who helped Iran and material from 10 governments, ought to end serious debate about whether Tehran’s program is for peaceful purposes.”

It might be noted that on Feb. 6, 2003, the day after Secretary of State Colin Powell gave his infamous speech to the United Nations detailing Iraq’s WMD arsenal, the Post editors deemed Powell’s case “irrefutable” and added: “it is hard to imagine how anyone could doubt that Iraq possesses weapons of mass destruction.” [For details on Powell’s speech and its media reception, click here.]

Yet, instead of having learned any lessons and applying a skeptical eye to the IAEA report, the editors at the Post and the Times returned to their usual role as boosters for anything that puts adversaries of the United States and Israel in a negative light, regardless of  how thin the evidence.

‘May Still Be Ongoing’

If an objective observer did examine the IAEA report – and particularly its annex entitled “Possible Military Dimensions of Iran’s Nuclear Programme” – he or she would encounter a curious document that offers very little verifiable proof for its murky conclusion that Iran’s weapon project “may still be ongoing.”

Indeed, based on what’s been released to the public, it’s impossible to evaluate any of the allegations because the supporting details are not provided. There is only an assurance from the IAEA that all “information has been carefully and critically examined” and was determined “to be, overall, credible.”

But the credibility question persists, especially because the report doesn’t spell out where the new accusations are coming from – although it’s been widely reported that many of the charges emanated from Iran’s intense enemy, Israel.

While Israel clearly has an ax to grind with Iran – as Israeli leaders call Iran’s alleged nuclear ambitions an “existential threat” to Israel – the IAEA report says it considered “Member States,” which provided most of the evidence about Iran, to be “independent sources.”

Plus, to the degree any of the report’s details have become known, such as the identity of the supposed ex-Soviet nuclear bomb expert tutoring Iranian scientists on a detonation system, the facts haven’t withstood scrutiny.

As reporter Gareth Porter explained, the ex-Soviet scientist, who is not named in the report but has been identified in news reports as Vyacheslav Danilenko, “is not a nuclear weapons scientist but one of the top specialists in the world in the production of nanodiamonds by explosives.

“In fact, Danilenko, a Ukrainian, has worked solely on nanodiamonds from the beginning of his research career and is considered one of the pioneers in the development of nanodiamond technology, as published scientific papers confirm.” (Nanodiamonds have widespread commercial applications in manufacturing and medicine.)

The Danilenko angle was the most dramatic new allegation in the IAEA report because it stirred memories of the spy thriller, “Sum of All Fears,” in which disaffected ex-Soviet nuclear physicists help fashion a nuclear bomb for a terrorist attack. If that key part of the IAEA report can be debunked by a Google search, it doesn’t speak well for the rest of it.

Perhaps even more troubling, the IAEA was aware of Danilenko’s expertise in nanodiamonds, but chose to put a sinister spin on his work in Iran from 1996 to 2002 anyway. The report states:

“The Agency has strong indications that the development by Iran of the high explosives initiation system, and its development of the high speed diagnostic configuration used to monitor related experiments, were assisted by the work of a foreign expert who was not only knowledgeable in these technologies, but who, a Member State has informed the Agency, worked for much of his career with this technology in the nuclear weapon programme of the country of his origin.

“The Agency has reviewed publications by this foreign expert and has met with him. The Agency has been able to verify through three separate routes, including the expert himself, that this person was in Iran from about 1996 to about 2002, ostensibly to assist Iran in the development of a facility and techniques for making ultra-dispersed diamonds (‘UDDs’ or ‘nanodiamonds’), where he also lectured on explosion physics and its applications.”

Since the production of nanodiamonds involves explosions, it would be expected that Danilenko would lecture “on explosion physics and its applications,” but the IAEA report puts that fact in a particularly negative light. It also appears almost certain that the “Member State” pushing the Danilenko angle was Israel.

Pre-2003 Focus

Another surprising part of the IAEA report’s annex is that much of it – like the Danilenko section – focuses on the time frame before late 2003, when the U.S. intelligence community concluded that Iran stopped work on a nuclear bomb.

The IAEA report acknowledges as much, saying: “the Agency has been able to construct what it believes to be a good understanding of activities undertaken by Iran prior to the end of 2003. The Agency’s ability to construct an equally good understanding of activities in Iran after the end of 2003 is reduced, due to the more limited information available to the Agency.”

But the IAEA still leans toward accepting nearly every piece of disputed evidence against Iran. Regarding alleged Iranian scientific studies gleaned from a purloined laptop, Iran has denounced that material as a fabrication, but the IAEA chooses to accept the material, which was provided by “a Member State,” as genuine. The report states:

“The quantity of the documentation, and the scope and contents of the work covered in the documentation, are sufficiently comprehensive and complex that, in the Agency’s view, it is not likely to have been the result of forgery or fabrication.”

However, a professional intelligence agency would be expected to produce a convincing fabrication that would withstand at least superficial analysis, especially if the forgery was generated by a “Member State” with its own nuclear weapons expertise.

Clearly, today’s IAEA is not the same organization that stood up to falsehoods used in 2002-2003 by the United States and Great Britain to justify invading Iraq.

As former CIA analyst Ray McGovern wrote on Feb. 21, 2010, the new IAEA chief, Japanese diplomat Yukiya Amano, had “huge shoes to fill when he took over from the widely respected Mohamed ElBaradei, [who] had the courage to call a spade a spade and, when necessary, a forgery a forgery — like the documents alleging that Iraq had sought yellowcake uranium in Niger.”

Citing the contrast between ElBaradei’s expertise and reputation and that of the less known Amano, McGovern added, “lacking gravitas, one bends more easily. It is a fair assumption that Amano will prove more malleable than his predecessor — and surely more naïve.”

Now, it appears that Amano’s IAEA has accepted intelligence information from Israel and other enemies of Iran in preparing a report that is adding fuel to the fire for a possible military confrontation with Iran.

Spinning the Details

Major U.S. news outlets, like the Times and the Post, also have shorn off some of the nuances that remained in the IAEA’s report, which distinguished its more authoritative analysis regarding Iran’s pre-2003 nuclear experiments from a sketchier understanding of the post-2003 period when U.S. intelligence agencies concluded that the work had stopped.

The newspapers tended to merge the two periods, relying on interpretations from “experts” like former weapons inspector David Albright, who was the principal source for a front-page Washington Post news article on Monday about the IAEA’s impending report – and who was famously wrong about Iraq’s WMD in 2002-2003.

“The [Iranian nuclear bomb] program never really stopped,” Albright, president of the Washington-based Institute for Science and International Security, said, according to the Post. “After 2003, money [in Iran] was made available for research in areas that sure look like nuclear weapons work but were hidden within civilian institutions.”

The IAEA was more circumspect in its conclusions, although it is a truism that academic research on a wide variety of topics can, theoretically at least, be applied to building a nuclear bomb. Which is apparently one of the reasons why assassins have targeted Iranian physicists for murder in recent years.

In its Thursday editorial, the Post raised no objection to that strategy of killing Iranian scientists – except to indicate that it didn’t go far enough. The Post’s neocon editors wrote:

“The Obama administration and other Western governments must recognize that the sanctions [on Iran] that have so far been put in place, and covert operations aimed at sabotaging Iranian centrifuges and killing scientists, have not succeeded in changing the regime’s intentions or stopping its work.”

The Post’s editors seem to accept the fact (and the rationalization) for assassinating Iran’s scientists, but the practice, if done against scientists in Western countries or in Israel, would surely be denounced as terrorism.

Similarly, it almost goes without saying that the Post and the Times saw no reason to mention that Israel possesses a sophisticated nuclear arsenal and – unlike Iran – has refused to subject itself to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty or the scrutiny of the IAEA.

No one in the U.S. mainstream news media seems to find it the least bit hypocritical that Israel would be supplying evidence to the IAEA about the alleged secret nuclear ambitions of Iran when Israel itself is a rogue nuclear state.

[For more on related topics, see Robert Parry’s Lost History, Secrecy & Privilege and Neck Deep, now available in a three-book set for the discount price of only $29. For details, click here.]

Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, Neck Deep: The Disastrous Presidency of George W. Bush, was written with two of his sons, Sam and Nat, and can be ordered at neckdeepbook.com. His two previous books, Secrecy & Privilege: The Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq andLost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press & ‘Project Truth’ are also available there.

Alleged Russian Nuke Expert In Iran To Make Nanodiamonds

On “Nuclear Iran” Allegations: Nanodiamonds Ain’t Nuclear Bombs

Moon of Alabama


This is a detonation tank to create nanodiamonds, not a nuclear device.

The Washington Posts alleges that the IAEA says foreign expertise has brought Iran to threshold of nuclear capability. This is of course, well, a lie. The IAEA has said nothing like that. It is simply an assertion made by the reporter and some “nuclear Iran” scare propagandists based on misinterpreting some factual points in the IAEA “evidence”. What that “evidence” says is: Iran is working on nanodiamond production.

(read at MOON of ALABAMA)

U.S. State Department Urges Armed Syrians Not To Surrender their Weapons

Al-Moallem: The call of the U.S. State Department to armed persons not to surrender their weapons is a direct involvement in the events in Syria 

November 6, 2011

Damascus / M. Walid al-Moallem, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Emigrants, said that Syria considers that the appeal of the U.S. State Department to armed persons not to surrender their weapons is a direct involvement of the United States in the provocation of sedition and violence that had the people of coûtée Syire, army, police and citizens, many innocent victims.

It was in messages sent by Mr al-Moallem to foreign ministers of Russia, China, India, South Africa and Brazil, presidents and members of the Arab Ministerial Committee , the Secretaries-General of the Arab League and the United Nations and President of the Security Council, their meaning after the important step taken by Syria to end violence by inviting people to surrender their weapons armed assuring them that ‘they would be released immediately, she was surprised the 11/04/2011 calling the spokesman for the U.S. State Department to those people not to surrender their weapons to the Syrian authorities.

Mr al-Moallem said in his message that Syria is in the U.S. call an encouragement to armed groups to continue their crimes against the people and the state, a clear denial of the character says peaceful movements in Syria and an attempt ‘block the action of the Arab League initiative and to end the crisis in Syria.

Recalling that the Syrian government has positively dealt with the initiative of the Arab League and made ​​every effort to implement it, al-Moallem said: “We hope that you will learn because of the effective involvement of United States in the bloody events in Syria, you condemn the involvement and you will do what is necessary to stop and help the Syrian government to provide the climate for the execution of the agreement between Syria and the Arab League ” .

A. Chatta / Gh.H.