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2626
3DHS / Democrat Congressman Changes Stance On Iraq After Iraq Visit
« on: August 28, 2007, 04:51:01 PM »
Baird defends new position on Iraq

Monday, August 27, 2007
By MICHAEL ANDERSEN Columbian Staff Writer

Two weeks after deciding to oppose a timeline for withdrawal from Iraq, Rep. Brian Baird said he thinks that most of the country agrees with him.

"I have to believe that there is a quiet majority of people out there who think the war has been a terrible mistake, but they sure don't want to see us lose," he told The Columbian's editorial board Monday morning.

Even so, Baird said he expects a verbal beating from anti-war constituents at public forums tonight and Tuesday night.

In May, Baird supported a bill that would have required troop levels to start falling by Oct. 1. But his perspective changed after a visit to Iraq in early August.

"One of the colonels over there said, 'Sir, we're going to need time,' " he recalled. "And I said, 'I'm going to try and get you some.' "

Whatever Congress may do, Baird said, a simple shortage of troops will likely force generals to order a drawdown by April.

But that's a military issue, he said. Politicians in both parties should avoid mandated withdrawals.

"Crocker and Petraeus -- they're the people I respect in this," Baird said, referring to the U.S. ambassador to Iraq and the top military general in the war.

If the military finds a way to extend troop levels beyond April, Baird said he'd support that, barring other major developments.

Anti-war group moveon.org says it expects 100 local activists at tonight's town hall meeting at Fort Vancouver High School, including veterans who have served in Iraq.

The 7 p.m. meeting is in the high school auditorium at 5700 E. 18th St. in Vancouver.

Tuesday, a similar meeting will take place at 7 p.m. in the Cowlitz County Expo Center at 1900 Seventh Avenue in Longview.

"Somebody said to me, 'Oh man, you're going to get killed tonight,' " Baird said Monday. "I said, 'No, they get killed in Iraq. I'm going to get criticized.' "

Criticism will also come from Democratic colleagues, he said. He's swimming against a current of politicians in both parties calling increasingly for withdrawals.

Baird said he based his decision on private discussions with Iraqi, Iranian and Jordanian leaders and on two observations that he said had been infrequently debated:

* The chance of regional chaos, should neighboring nations' troops be drawn into the conflict.

* The notion that talk of a U.S. pullout has Iraqi political players "retrenching" to maintain their power rather than seeking the common ground that would be needed for a stable government.

To succeed, Baird said, Iraqis must agree on how to share oil revenue and must finish re-hiring the former Baath party members removed by U.S. officials in the occupation's early days.

Baird voted in 2002 against the use of military force. He has never been more certain that the invasion should never have happened, he said Monday.

Nuclear inspections and flight restrictions on Saddam Hussein's government would have kept his regime from harming the U.S., Baird believes.

"We had him contained," he said.

http://www.columbian.com/news/localNews/08272007news189511.cfm


2627
3DHS / take the Iraq War protest test
« on: August 25, 2007, 09:01:54 AM »
take the test that was passed to me via an e-mail

Questions: 

1.  True or False?   The Anti-Iraq War Protests are spontaneous eruptions of true American discontent with the War -- its objectives, its means, and its results so far.


FALSE.


These Anti-War protests are carefully planned by professional organizers to maximize press coverage, and to give the "illusion" that they are "spontaneous eruptions of true American discontent".  Soldiers now in Iraq need to be the most concerned with this; their lives may actually depend on it.


In fact, organization for "the wave" of protests set for next week has been in the planning stage for months.  The operational phase begins August 28, (right around the corner from the probable positive Petraeus surge report ) and it will receive massive press coverage. 


2.  True or False?  The protesters you see on television are just ordinary Americans, making huge, personal sacrifices of time and money just to let the Country know how much discontent there is over the Iraq War.


FALSE.



Many of these protestors are just doing the jobs they were paid to do - nothing more.  The only difference between "them" and honest Americans working in factories and offices, in civil service and schools, is that their job will get them on the network news - and yours will not.  Their job is to convince individuals in our American Congress that they will "face political extinction" if they do not "help end the War" - NOW.


Some of these protestors you will see on your televisions and in your newspapers have been "on the payroll" of a massively funded group of 527 organizations all summer.  They are being paid $400 cash per week PLUS "free" housing PLUS "free" gasoline.  For the past 3 months, they have been in the "professional demonstrator" training program that includes the following:  "training in political messaging, earned media, legislative tracking, grassroots organizing, visibilities and other campaign tools."   


Do your own Google search:  Americans Against Escalation in Iraq.  The above quotes were taken from the "Iraq Campaign" website, and are the remarks of Tom Matzzie, the director of the Washington, D.C. office of MoveOn.org.


3.  The signs carried by the protestors are original sentiments, and represent the true feelings of the vast majority of American citizens regarding the War in Iraq, and the current Surge, in particular. 


FALSE.


The signs carried by the protestors were designed by professional advertising gurus, at substantial expense to the "backers," and should be considered with the same skepticism one uses when viewing a commercial for Budweiser or Cheerios. Corporate commercials are actually much safer, because Americans already know they are biased to sell more beer. These protest signs, on the other hand, are very dangerous, because they are professionally engineered to appear to represent the true and original convictions of the persons carrying them for free media advertising.

4.  True or False?   "Americans Against Escalation in Iraq" is in reality a "multi-faceted, multi-million dollar effort," designed specifically to "target" more than 60 members of the American Congress who are blocking end-the-War-NOW legislation.  They are essentially paid lobbyists.


TRUE.


The group uses those precise words to describe itself right on its very own website.  The only reason that the networks and newspapers will not tell you about this when they report on the "demonstrations" is that - they feel no "truth-in-reporting" obligation to more fully inform you.  If you indeed get most of your "news" from the mainstream media, you should be so warned now.

5.  True or False?   Most of the financial backers of this professional "wave of demonstrations" (that are professionally designed at great expense to appear unrehearsed, unprompted, unorganized and honest) have the best interests of all Americans at heart, and truly want to see our forces win a decisive victory in Iraq, thereby substantially weakening the resolve of our enemies and ensuring greater safety and security for all Americans.


FALSE.


The primary financial backing for these demonstrations is provided, through a highly deceptive network of 527 tax-exempt organizations, by a multi-billionaire, naturalized American citizen, whose stated aim in life is to destroy the entire concept of Nation States and establish a one-world oligarchy.  His name is George Soros.


MoveOn.org


Center for American Progress


Center for American Progress Action Fund


Media Matters


Independent Media Institute


Center for Investigative Reporting


Center for Public Integrity


TruthOut.org


Independent Media Center


This deceptive web that makes one voice - Soros' voice - appear to be a majority of voices, and represents  an act of psychological warfare.  Many prominent media figures sit on the Boards of these various "Soros Voice Machines."  Bill Moyers, for instance, sits on the board of Soros' Open Society Institute.


2628
3DHS / Enough said.
« on: August 22, 2007, 03:27:54 PM »
"We hear the same arguments now as we heard years ago, when some said democracy would not work in Japan".
Today Japan is one of the world?s free societies and has transformed from enemy to America?s ally in the ideological struggle of the 20th century.

The same applies to the South Korea. Sometimes the experts get things wrong, said the US president and went on to attack critics of the Vietnam War. Vietnamese people paid the price for US troop withdrawal.

Both Osama bin Laden and Zawahiri invoke Vietnam. Bin Laden said: It is for us or you to win.
If you lose, it will be your disgrace forever.

To withdraw from Iraq without getting the job done would be devastating, Bush said raising his voice. "Our troops will get everyting they need." Abandoning the Iraqi people would embolden the terrorists and they would raise more recruits. This enemy would follow us home. For America?s security we must defeat them overseas so that we don?t face them in the United States. Like Japan, a free Iraqi will be a friend to the US and an ally."


President George Bush - August 22, 2007


2629
3DHS / i think this guy is going to win in 2008
« on: August 21, 2007, 11:29:52 PM »

i think this guy is going to win in 2008
it's early, but i see an uplifting message very similar to Reagan
is he perfect? no. but who is?
i was skeptical we could win in '08
but this guy is going to beat hillary

http://mitt-tv.mittromney.com/?showid=210791



2630
3DHS / Obama wife attacks Hillary private life?
« on: August 21, 2007, 12:04:17 PM »
is obama's wife going for a hillary knockout punch?
this is getting nasty.

Michelle Obama:
"IF YOU CAN'T RUN YOUR OWN HOUSE, YOU CAN'T RUN THE WHITE HOUSE"


2631
3DHS / now lets see how michael vick likes it
« on: August 21, 2007, 11:19:31 AM »

now, lets see how michael vick likes it





2632
3DHS / speaking of knocking on your door
« on: August 18, 2007, 12:35:55 PM »

2633
3DHS / The Ugly Truth About Canadian Health Care
« on: August 18, 2007, 12:45:41 AM »


The Ugly Truth About Canadian Health Care
David Gratzer

Socialized medicine has meant rationed care and lack of innovation. Small wonder Canadians are looking to the market.

Mountain-bike enthusiast Suzanne Aucoin had to fight more than her Stage IV colon cancer. Her doctor suggested Erbitux?a proven cancer drug that targets cancer cells exclusively, unlike conventional chemotherapies that more crudely kill all fast-growing cells in the body?and Aucoin went to a clinic to begin treatment. But if Erbitux offered hope, Aucoin?s insurance didn?t: she received one inscrutable form letter after another, rejecting her claim for reimbursement. Yet another example of the callous hand of managed care, depriving someone of needed medical help, right? Guess again. Erbitux is standard treatment, covered by insurance companies?in the United States. Aucoin lives in Ontario, Canada.

When Aucoin appealed to an official ombudsman, the Ontario government claimed that her treatment was unproven and that she had gone to an unaccredited clinic. But the FDA in the U.S. had approved Erbitux, and her clinic was a cancer center affiliated with a prominent Catholic hospital in Buffalo. This January, the ombudsman ruled in Aucoin?s favor, awarding her the cost of treatment. She represents a dramatic new trend in Canadian health-care advocacy: finding the treatment you need in another country, and then fighting Canadian bureaucrats (and often suing) to get them to pick up the tab.

But if Canadians are looking to the United States for the care they need, Americans, ironically, are increasingly looking north for a viable health-care model. There?s no question that American health care, a mixture of private insurance and public programs, is a mess. Over the last five years, health-insurance premiums have more than doubled, leaving firms like General Motors on the brink of bankruptcy. Expensive health care has also hit workers in the pocketbook: it?s one of the reasons that median family income fell between 2000 and 2005 (despite a rise in overall labor costs). Health spending has surged past 16 percent of GDP. The number of uninsured Americans has risen, and even the insured seem dissatisfied. So it?s not surprising that some Americans think that solving the nation?s health-care woes may require adopting a Canadian-style single-payer system, in which the government finances and provides the care. Canadians, the seductive single-payer tune goes, not only spend less on health care; their health outcomes are better, too?life expectancy is longer, infant mortality lower.

Thus, Paul Krugman in the New York Times: ?Does this mean that the American way is wrong, and that we should switch to a Canadian-style single-payer system? Well, yes.? Politicians like Hillary Clinton are on board; Michael Moore?s new documentary Sicko celebrates the virtues of Canada?s socialized health care; the National Coalition on Health Care, which includes big businesses like AT&T, recently endorsed a scheme to centralize major health decisions to a government committee; and big unions are questioning the tenets of employer-sponsored health insurance. Some are tempted. Not me.

I was once a believer in socialized medicine. I don?t want to overstate my case: growing up in Canada, I didn?t spend much time contemplating the nuances of health economics. I wanted to get into medical school?my mind brimmed with statistics on MCAT scores and admissions rates, not health spending. But as a Canadian, I had soaked up three things from my environment: a love of ice hockey; an ability to convert Celsius into Fahrenheit in my head; and the belief that government-run health care was truly compassionate. What I knew about American health care was unappealing: high expenses and lots of uninsured people. When HillaryCare shook Washington, I remember thinking that the Clintonistas were right.

My health-care prejudices crumbled not in the classroom but on the way to one. On a subzero Winnipeg morning in 1997, I cut across the hospital emergency room to shave a few minutes off my frigid commute. Swinging open the door, I stepped into a nightmare: the ER overflowed with elderly people on stretchers, waiting for admission. Some, it turned out, had waited five days. The air stank with sweat and urine. Right then, I began to reconsider everything that I thought I knew about Canadian health care. I soon discovered that the problems went well beyond overcrowded ERs. Patients had to wait for practically any diagnostic test or procedure, such as the man with persistent pain from a hernia operation whom we referred to a pain clinic?with a three-year wait list; or the woman needing a sleep study to diagnose what seemed like sleep apnea, who faced a two-year delay; or the woman with breast cancer who needed to wait four months for radiation therapy, when the standard of care was four weeks.

I decided to write about what I saw. By day, I attended classes and visited patients; at night, I worked on a book. Unfortunately, statistics on Canadian health care?s weaknesses were hard to come by, and even finding people willing to criticize the system was difficult, such was the emotional support that it then enjoyed. One family friend, diagnosed with cancer, was told to wait for potentially lifesaving chemotherapy. I called to see if I could write about his plight. Worried about repercussions, he asked me to change his name. A bit later, he asked if I could change his sex in the story, and maybe his town. Finally, he asked if I could change the illness, too.

My book?s thesis was simple: to contain rising costs, government-run health-care systems invariably restrict the health-care supply. Thus, at a time when Canada?s population was aging and needed more care, not less, cost-crunching bureaucrats had reduced the size of medical school classes, shuttered hospitals, and capped physician fees, resulting in hundreds of thousands of patients waiting for needed treatment?patients who suffered and, in some cases, died from the delays. The only solution, I concluded, was to move away from government command-and-control structures and toward a more market-oriented system. To capture Canadian health care?s growing crisis, I called my book Code Blue, the term used when a patient?s heart stops and hospital staff must leap into action to save him. Though I had a hard time finding a Canadian publisher, the book eventually came out in 1999 from a small imprint; it struck a nerve, going through five printings.

Nor were the problems I identified unique to Canada?they characterized all government-run health-care systems. Consider the recent British controversy over a cancer patient who tried to get an appointment with a specialist, only to have it canceled?48 times.
More than 1 million Britons must wait for some type of care, with 200,000 in line for longer than six months. A while back, I toured a public hospital in Washington, D.C., with Tim Evans, a senior fellow at the Centre for the New Europe. The hospital was dark and dingy, but Evans observed that it was cleaner than anything in his native England. In France, the supply of doctors is so limited that during an August 2003 heat wave?when many doctors were on vacation and hospitals were stretched beyond capacity?15,000 elderly citizens died. Across Europe, state-of-the-art drugs aren?t available. And so on.

But single-payer systems?confronting dirty hospitals, long waiting lists, and substandard treatment?are starting to crack. Today my book wouldn?t seem so provocative to Canadians, whose views on public health care are much less rosy than they were even a few years ago. Canadian newspapers are now filled with stories of people frustrated by long delays for care:

As if a taboo had lifted, government statistics on the health-care system?s problems are suddenly available. In fact, government researchers have provided the best data on the doctor shortage, noting, for example, that more than 1.5 million Ontarians (or 12 percent of that province?s population) can?t find family physicians. Health officials in one Nova Scotia community actually resorted to a lottery to determine who?d get a doctor?s appointment.

Dr. Jacques Chaoulli is at the center of this changing health-care scene. Standing at about five and a half feet and soft-spoken, he doesn?t seem imposing. But this accidental revolutionary has turned Canadian health care on its head. In the 1990s, recognizing the growing crisis of socialized care, Chaoulli organized a private Quebec practice?patients called him, he made house calls, and then he directly billed his patients. The local health board cried foul and began fining him. The legal status of private practice in Canada remained murky, but billing patients, rather than the government, was certainly illegal, and so was private insurance.

Chaoulli gave up his private practice but not the fight for private medicine. Trying to draw attention to Canada?s need for an alternative to government care, he began a hunger strike but quit after a month, famished but not famous. He wrote a couple of books on the topic, which sold dismally. He then came up with the idea of challenging the government in court. Because the lawyers whom he consulted dismissed the idea, he decided to make the legal case himself and enrolled in law school. He flunked out after a term. Undeterred, he found a sponsor for his legal fight (his father-in-law, who lives in Japan) and a patient to represent. Chaoulli went to court and lost. He appealed and lost again. He appealed all the way to the Supreme Court. And there?amazingly?he won.

Chaoulli was representing George Zeliotis, an elderly Montrealer forced to wait almost a year for a hip replacement. Zeliotis was in agony and taking high doses of opiates. Chaoulli maintained that the patient should have the right to pay for private health insurance and get treatment sooner. He based his argument on the Canadian equivalent of the Bill of Rights, as well as on the equivalent Quebec charter. The court hedged on the national question, but a majority agreed that Quebec?s charter did implicitly recognize such a right.

It?s hard to overstate the shock of the ruling. It caught the government completely off guard?officials had considered Chaoulli?s case so weak that they hadn?t bothered to prepare briefing notes for the prime minister in the event of his victory. The ruling wasn?t just shocking, moreover; it was potentially monumental, opening the way to more private medicine in Quebec. Though the prohibition against private insurance holds in the rest of the country for now, at least two people outside Quebec, armed with Chaoulli?s case as precedent, are taking their demand for private insurance to court.

Rick Baker helps people, and sometimes even saves lives. He describes a man who had a seizure and received a diagnosis of epilepsy. Dissatisfied with the opinion?he had no family history of epilepsy, but he did have constant headaches and nausea, which aren?t usually seen in the disorder?the man requested an MRI. The government told him that the wait would be four and a half months. So he went to Baker, who arranged to have the MRI done within 24 hours?and who, after the test discovered a brain tumor, arranged surgery within a few weeks.

Baker isn?t a neurosurgeon or even a doctor. He?s a medical broker, one member of a private sector that is rushing in to address the inadequacies of Canada?s government care. Canadians pay him to set up surgical procedures, diagnostic tests, and specialist consultations, privately and quickly. ?I don?t have a medical background. I just have some common sense,? he explains. ?I don?t need to be a doctor for what I do. I?m just expediting care.?

He tells me stories of other people whom his British Columbia?based company, Timely Medical Alternatives, has helped?people like the elderly woman who needed vascular surgery for a major artery in her abdomen and was promised prompt care by one of the most senior bureaucrats in the government, who never called back. ?Her doctor told her she?s going to die,? Baker remembers. So Timely got her surgery in a couple of days, in Washington State. Then there was the eight-year-old badly in need of a procedure to help correct her deafness. After watching her surgery get bumped three times, her parents called Timely. She?s now back at school, her hearing partly restored. ?The father said, ?Mr. Baker, my wife and I are in agreement that your star shines the brightest in our heaven,? ? Baker recalls. ?I told that story to a government official. He shrugged. He couldn?t fucking care less.?

Not everyone has kind words for Baker. A woman from a union-sponsored health coalition, writing in a local paper, denounced him for ?profiting from people?s misery.? When I bring up the comment, he snaps: ?I?m profiting from relieving misery.? Some of the services that Baker brokers almost certainly contravene Canadian law, but governments are loath to stop him. ?What I am doing could be construed as civil disobedience,? he says. ?There comes a time when people need to lead the government.?

Baker isn?t alone: other private-sector health options are blossoming across Canada, and the government is increasingly turning a blind eye to them, too, despite their often uncertain legal status. Private clinics are opening at a rate of about one a week. Companies like MedCan now offer ?corporate medicals? that include an array of diagnostic tests and a referral to Johns Hopkins, if necessary. Insurance firms sell critical-illness insurance, giving policyholders a lump-sum payment in the event of a major diagnosis; since such policyholders could, in theory, spend the money on anything they wanted, medical or not, the system doesn?t count as health insurance and is therefore legal. Testifying to the changing nature of Canadian health care, Baker observes that securing prompt care used to mean a trip south. These days, he says, he?s able to get 80 percent of his clients care in Canada, via the private sector.

Another sign of transformation: Canadian doctors, long silent on the health-care system?s problems, are starting to speak up. Last August, they voted Brian Day president of their national association. A former socialist who counts Fidel Castro as a personal acquaintance, Day has nevertheless become perhaps the most vocal critic of Canadian public health care, having opened his own private surgery center as a remedy for long waiting lists and then challenged the government to shut him down. ?This is a country in which dogs can get a hip replacement in under a week,? he fumed to the New York Times, ?and in which humans can wait two to three years.?

And now even Canadian governments are looking to the private sector to shrink the waiting lists. Day?s clinic, for instance, handles workers?-compensation cases for employees of both public and private corporations. In British Columbia, private clinics perform roughly 80 percent of government-funded diagnostic testing. In Ontario, where fealty to socialized medicine has always been strong, the government recently hired a private firm to staff a rural hospital?s emergency room.

This privatizing trend is reaching Europe, too. Britain?s government-run health care dates back to the 1940s. Yet the Labour Party?which originally created the National Health Service and used to bristle at the suggestion of private medicine, dismissing it as ?Americanization??now openly favors privatization. Sir William Wells, a senior British health official, recently said: ?The big trouble with a state monopoly is that it builds in massive inefficiencies and inward-looking culture.? Last year, the private sector provided about 5 percent of Britain?s nonemergency procedures; Labour aims to triple that percentage by 2008. The Labour government also works to voucherize certain surgeries, offering patients a choice of four providers, at least one private. And in a recent move, the government will contract out some primary care services, perhaps to American firms such as UnitedHealth Group and Kaiser Permanente.

Sweden?s government, after the completion of the latest round of privatizations, will be contracting out some 80 percent of Stockholm?s primary care and 40 percent of its total health services, including one of the city?s largest hospitals. Since the fall of Communism, Slovakia has looked to liberalize its state-run system, introducing co-payments and privatizations. And modest market reforms have begun in Germany: increasing co-pays, enhancing insurance competition, and turning state enterprises over to the private sector (within a decade, only a minority of German hospitals will remain under state control). It?s important to note that change in these countries is slow and gradual?market reforms remain controversial. But if the United States was once the exception for viewing a vibrant private sector in health care as essential, it is so no longer.

Yet even as Stockholm and Saskatoon are percolating with the ideas of Adam Smith, a growing number of prominent Americans are arguing that socialized health care still provides better results for less money. ?Americans tend to believe that we have the best health care system in the world,? writes Krugman in the New York Times. ?But it isn?t true. We spend far more per person on health care . . . yet rank near the bottom among industrial countries in indicators from life expectancy to infant mortality.?

One often hears variations on Krugman?s argument?that America lags behind other countries in crude health outcomes. But such outcomes reflect a mosaic of factors, such as diet, lifestyle, drug use, and cultural values. It pains me as a doctor to say this, but health care is just one factor in health. Americans live 75.3 years on average, fewer than Canadians (77.3) or the French (76.6) or the citizens of any Western European nation save Portugal. Health care influences life expectancy, of course. But a life can end because of a murder, a fall, or a car accident. Such factors aren?t academic?homicide rates in the United States are much higher than in other countries (eight times higher than in France, for instance). In The Business of Health, Robert Ohsfeldt and John Schneider factor out intentional and unintentional injuries from life-expectancy statistics and find that Americans who don?t die in car crashes or homicides outlive people in any other Western country.

And if we measure a health-care system by how well it serves its sick citizens, American medicine excels. Five-year cancer survival rates bear this out. For leukemia, the American survival rate is almost 50 percent; the European rate is just 35 percent. Esophageal carcinoma: 12 percent in the United States, 6 percent in Europe. The survival rate for prostate cancer is 81.2 percent here, yet 61.7 percent in France and down to 44.3 percent in England?a striking variation.

Like many critics of American health care, though, Krugman argues that the costs are just too high: ?In 2002 . . . the United States spent $5,267 on health care for each man, woman, and child.? Health-care spending in Canada and Britain, he notes, is a small fraction of that. Again, the picture isn?t quite as clear as he suggests; because the U.S. is so much wealthier than other countries, it isn?t unreasonable for it to spend more on health care. Take America?s high spending on research and development. M. D. Anderson in Texas, a prominent cancer center, spends more on research than Canada does.

That said, American health care is expensive. And Americans aren?t always getting a good deal. In the coming years, with health expenses spiraling up, it will be easy for some?like the zealous legislators in California?to give in to the temptation of socialized medicine. In Washington, there are plenty of old pieces of legislation that like-minded politicians could take off the shelf, dust off, and promote: expanding Medicare to Americans 55 and older, say, or covering all children in Medicaid.

But such initiatives would push the United States further down the path to a government-run system and make things much, much worse. True, government bureaucrats would be able to cut costs?but only by shrinking access to health care, as in Canada, and engendering a Canadian-style nightmare of overflowing emergency rooms and yearlong waits for treatment. America is right to seek a model for delivering good health care at good prices, but we should be looking not to Canada, but close to home?in the other four-fifths or so of our economy. From telecommunications to retail, deregulation and market competition have driven prices down and quality and productivity up. Health care is long overdue for the same prescription.

http://www.city-journal.org/html/17_3_canadian_healthcare.html

2634
3DHS / Sunni Insurgents battle Al Qaeda In Iraq
« on: August 17, 2007, 07:58:28 PM »
Iraq Report: Sunni insurgents vs. al Qaeda in Diyala

August 16, 2007
By Bill Roggio

Al Qaeda in Iraq continues to face opposition from Sunni insurgent groups. In the Buhriz district in Diyala province, the 1920s Revolution Brigades assisted Iraqi police in fending off an attack of upwards of 60 al Qaeda fighters. Multinational Forces Iraq identified the Sunni insurgents as the "Baqubah Guardians," however IraqSlogger reported the al-Ishreen Revolution Brigades (1920s Revolution Brigades) engaged in the fight. Multinational Forces Iraq described the fighting, and notes the coordination between the insurgent group, the local police, and US attack helicopters:

In an unprecedented combined action in Diyala Province, Iraqi police and citizen volunteers defeated a coordinated attack of approximately 40-60 al-Qaeda terrorists in the southern Burhitz area of Baqubah, Wednesday, and killed an estimated 21 insurgents, wounding more.

As the terrorists entered the city of Burhitz, a group of concerned local citizens, called ?Baqubah Guardians,? and IPs stationed in Burhitz engaged the first wave of attackers, killing seven. At least two suicide bombers were killed before they reached their intended targets, with the bomb vests detonating prematurely.

The IP notified the Provincial Joint Coordination Center and requested Coalition Force attack helicopter support after the first engagement. Attack helicopters arrived and engaged another large group of heavily armed fighters staging near the first attack site, killing or wounding an estimated 14 terrorists.

The 1920s Revolution Brigades previous drove al Qaeda in Iraq out of Buhriz, with the help of US forces. The battles between the 1920s Revolution Brigades and al Qaeda began in April. The Anbar Salvation Council, through its ties in the 1920s Revolution Brigades, helped organize the anti-al Qaeda resistance in Buhriz. As these groups work with the US and Iraqi security forces, they are being integrated as local police or as provincial security forces.

The degree to which Sunni insurgent groups have turned against al Qaeda and are working with US troops and Iraqi security forces is an underreported story in the war. Approximately 25,000 Sunni insurgents from groups such as the 1920s Revolution Brigades, the Jaysh Mohammed, and the Islamic Army of Iraq have turned against al Qaeda at the behest of their tribal leaders. "Tribe members and others who agree to support Iraq's government have to sign a pledge form and consent to biometric scans of their fingerprints and retinas so their data can be kept on file," USA Today reported on August 6. "They are also vetted by the Iraqi government."

The strategy of turning the tribes and insurgent groups has been successful in Anbar, and is being applied inside Baghdad, Diyala, Salahadin, Ninewa, and Babil province. This is reconciliation at the micro level. Al Qaeda is threatened by this development and is actively targeting members of groups that have turned on them.

Al Qaeda in Iraq's heinous multiple suicide on the Yazidi villages near Singar in Ninewa province on Tuesday is the single greatest mass casualty strike since the war began. The initial reports of 175 killed have climbed to at least 400 killed, with the Kuwaiti News Agency reporting over 500 killed and 375 wounded.

Col. Stephen Twitty, commander of the 4th Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, warns that it is too soon to know the death toll. ?So far the accounting of casualties has been very speculative,? said Col .Twitty. ?The villagers and rescue workers are still trying to find those missing; and their efforts, and those of the local, provincial and central government leadership, along with the ISF here, have been tremendous." Multinational Forces Iraq estimates are 275 killed and 400 wounded.

The Kurdish Regional Government has stepped in and deployed about two companies, numbering about 340 troops total, of the Kurdish Regional Guards to provide additional security in the region. US troops and Iraqi Army soldiers from the 3rd Division are providing assistance to the recovery effort, and US air assets are providing air transportation to the wounded.

Elsewhere in the North, two civilians were killed and 33 wounded in a simultaneous, dual roadside bombing strike in the city of Kirkuk. The attacks bear the hallmark of al Qaeda in Iraq, which has been working to stir up sectarian tensions since Iraqi and Coalition launched major offensives against the terror group starting June 15.

US and Iraqi security forces have launched two sweeps against al Qaeda in the North since the bombings in the Yazidi villages. Iraqi soldiers from the 3rd Brigade, 3rd Division, which is based in northern Ninewa province, captured seven suspected terrorists in the village of Abu Bareyj on August 14. Iraqi security forces captured eight terrorists during raids in Mosul and the Hamrin Ridge region. A sniper cell leader in Mosul and the leader of an Al Qaeda in Iraq terrorist smuggling cell in the Hamrin Ridge region were among those captured during the raids. Further south in Balad, US forces killed six al Qaeda operatives and captured 26 during a series of operations from August 9-14.

On the Shia terror group front, Coalition forces captured "a highly sought Special Groups weapons facilitator before dawn Thursday northeast of Baghdad." Three Special Groups operatives were killed and five others were captured during the raid. "The captured high priority individual was responsible for smuggling explosively formed penetrators (EFP), Katusha rockets and other weapons from Iran into Iraq," Multinational Forces Iraq reported. "The target was also responsible for the distribution of those weapons to Special Groups and extremist militants operating throughout Baghdad. The weapons smuggler had direct ties to senior militant leaders and the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps-Qods Force." The Special Groups are essential Iraqi-born Qods force operatives.

http://billroggio.com/dailyiraqreport/2007/08/iraq_report_sunni_insurgents_v.php

2635
3DHS / Padilla Guilty - Victory for Bush Administration
« on: August 16, 2007, 07:20:02 PM »
Jose Padilla Convicted by U.S. Jury in Terror Case
By Mort Lucoff and Jeff St.Onge


 
Aug. 16 (Bloomberg) --

Jose Padilla was convicted of terrorism-conspiracy charges in a victory for the Bush administration, which held him in a military prison as an enemy combatant for more than three years.

Padilla, 36, a U.S. citizen, and two co-defendants were found guilty today by a federal jury in Miami of conspiring to commit murder in a foreign country, conspiring to provide support to terrorist groups and providing such support. They could be sentenced to as much as life in prison. An earlier accusation that Padilla plotted to explode a radioactive "dirty bomb'' wasn't included in the charges.

"We can appeal,'' Padilla's mother, Estela Lebron, told reporters. "I don't know how they could find him guilty. There were 300,000 calls and there's no evidence he spoke in code'' in the phone calls recorded by investigators. "George Bush won today,'' she said.

Padilla's conviction after a three-month trial gives a boost to President George W. Bush's war on terrorism following a series of setbacks in U.S. courts. In three cases since the Sept. 11 attacks, the Supreme Court has put limits on presidential power to determine the fate of suspected terrorists held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The high court will hear another case later this year.

Padilla's two co-defendants, Adham Amin Hassoun and Kifah Wael Jayyousi, were convicted of the same charges. The seven-man, five-woman jury deliberated for a day and a half. U.S. District Judge Marcia Cooke scheduled sentencing for Dec. 5.

Padilla's conviction "is a significant victory in our efforts to fight the threat posed by terrorists and their supporters,'' Attorney General Alberto Gonzales said in a statement. "As this trial demonstrated, we will use our authority as prosecutors to dismantle terrorist networks and those who support them in the United States and abroad.''

Jayyousi's lawyer, William Swor, said he will appeal Cooke's decision to let prosecutors show the jury a videotape of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.

"With Osama bin Laden in the case, why would I be surprised'' that Jayyousi was convicted, Swor said.

"This was all a reaction to 9/11,'' said Jeanne Baker, a lawyer for Hassoun. "The government was determined to send a message to the nation that we are safer. We definitely are not safer.''

The convictions show that the civilian criminal justice system "can handle'' terrorism charges in some cases, Acting Deputy Attorney General Craig Morford told reporters at the Justice Department in Washington. "These particular charges did work.''

Padilla, a former Chicago gang member, was the "star recruit of a terrorism support cell,'' prosecutor Brian Frazier told the jury in closing arguments Aug. 13. "Padilla was a mujahedeen recruit and an al-Qaeda terrorist trainee.''

His defense lawyer, Michael Caruso, said the government failed to prove its case. When Padilla went overseas, he had "an intent to study, not an intent to murder,'' the lawyer told the jury in his closing argument.

Padilla was arrested May 8, 2002, at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport after arriving from Pakistan. Then-Attorney General John Ashcroft touted the arrest as a key success in the war on terrorism. Citing the dirty-bomb accusation, Bush ordered Padilla held as an enemy combatant in military custody, where he remained for the next 3 1/2 years.

Padilla was charged in criminal court in November 2005 and transferred to civilian custody as the government sought to avoid a Supreme Court hearing on his challenge to his detention.

"There's a lot of lawyering still to be done'' in the case, which eventually could go to the U.S. Supreme Court, said Eugene Fidell, a national security law expert at Feldesman Tucker Leifer Fidell in Washington.

"The backdrop of this case -- holding a U.S. citizen arrested in the U.S. in military custody for more than three years -- is a troubling proposition,'' Fidell said. "It's the type of thing that can put judges or justices in a very grumpy mood.''

Prosecutors said Padilla, Hassoun and Jayyousi supported the al-Qaeda network and terrorist activities from 1993 to 2001. They weren't accused of committing violent acts or being involved in the Sept. 11 attacks.

Padilla attended an al-Qaeda terrorism-training camp in Afghanistan in 2000, prosecutors said. The central piece of evidence against him was what prosecutors described as a "mujahedeen data form'' bearing his fingerprints that they said he filled out to attend the training facility.

Other prosecution evidence included court-approved wiretaps of telephone conversations among the men, as well as bank checks and faxes. Padilla's defense lawyer said his voice appeared on only seven of 200,000 calls recorded, and those calls showed that his only goal in going overseas was to study Islam and the Arabic language.

The trial opened on May 14. Padilla's lawyers rested their case without presenting any witnesses or evidence.

The case is U.S. v. Hassoun et al., 04cr60001, U.S. District Court in Miami.

To contact the reporters on this story: Mort Lucoff in U.S. District Court in Miami; Jeff St.Onge in Washington jstonge@bloomberg.net

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aaipUEUn.aUE&refer=home

2636
3DHS / US Troops Kill 3 Iranian Revolutionary Guards in Iraq
« on: August 16, 2007, 01:32:40 PM »
  Top News 
 

Iranians killed by U.S. troops in Iraq
BAGHDAD, Aug. 16 (UPI) --

Three gunmen killed by U.S. troops in Iraq this week were members of Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards Corps, a U.S. military statement said in Baghdad.

The U.S. Army statement said that in several anti-insurgency attacks this week, a total of nine gunmen were killed. However, in one raid in northeastern Baghdad targeting a leader of the Iranian Guards' foreign fighters known as Al-Quds, three of his aides were killed by U.S. forces, Kuwait's KUNA news agency reported.

The unidentified leader was arrested on suspicion of supplying arms to Iraqi insurgents, the statement said.

Iran has repeatedly denied coalition allegations it provided training and weapons to Iraqi rebels. Wednesday, the U.S. Department of Defense said it was planning to designate the Revolutionary Guard a terrorist operation, which would disrupt the group's considerable foreign business transactions.

In another security operation, the military statement said six terrorists were killed in northern Baghdad. The raid also netted machine gun rounds and components used to make explosive devices, the report said.

http://www.upi.com/NewsTrack/Top_News/2007/08/16/iranians_killed_by_us_troops_in_iraq/9327/

2637
3DHS / Good Morning Tehran
« on: August 15, 2007, 11:32:01 AM »


Iranian Unit to Be Labeled 'Terrorist'
U.S. Moving Against Revolutionary Guard


By Robin Wright
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, August 15, 2007; A01

The United States has decided to designate Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps, the country's 125,000-strong elite military branch, as a "specially designated global terrorist," according to U.S. officials, a move that allows Washington to target the group's business operations and finances.

The Bush administration has chosen to move against the Revolutionary Guard Corps because of what U.S. officials have described as its growing involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan as well as its support for extremists throughout the Middle East, the sources said. The decision follows congressional pressure on the administration to toughen its stance against Tehran, as well as U.S. frustration with the ineffectiveness of U.N. resolutions against Iran's nuclear program, officials said.

The designation of the Revolutionary Guard will be made under Executive Order 13224, which President Bush signed two weeks after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks to obstruct terrorist funding. It authorizes the United States to identify individuals, businesses, charities and extremist groups engaged in terrorist activities. The Revolutionary Guard would be the first national military branch included on the list, U.S. officials said -- a highly unusual move because it is part of a government, rather than a typical non-state terrorist organization.

The order allows the United States to block the assets of terrorists and to disrupt operations by foreign businesses that "provide support, services or assistance to, or otherwise associate with, terrorists."

The move reflects escalating tensions between Washington and Tehran over issues including Iraq and Iran's nuclear ambitions. Iran has been on the State Department's list of state sponsors of terrorism since 1984, but in May the two countries began their first formal one-on-one dialogue in 28 years with a meeting of diplomats in Baghdad.

The main goal of the new designation is to clamp down on the Revolutionary Guard's vast business network, as well as on foreign companies conducting business linked to the military unit and its personnel. The administration plans to list many of the Revolutionary Guard's financial operations.

"Anyone doing business with these people will have to reevaluate their actions immediately," said a U.S. official familiar with the plan who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the decision has not been announced. "It increases the risks of people who have until now ignored the growing list of sanctions against the Iranians. It makes clear to everyone who the IRGC and their related businesses really are. It removes the excuses for doing business with these people."

For weeks, the Bush administration has been debating whether to target the Revolutionary Guard Corps in full, or only its Quds Force wing, which U.S. officials have linked to the growing flow of explosives, roadside bombs, rockets and other arms to Shiite militias in Iraq and the Taliban in Afghanistan. The Quds Force also lends support to Shiite allies such as Lebanon's Hezbollah and to Sunni movements such as Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

Although administration discussions continue, the initial decision is to target the entire Guard Corps, U.S. officials said. The administration has not yet decided when to announce the new measure, but officials said they would prefer to do so before the meeting of the U.N. General Assembly next month, when the United States intends to increase international pressure against Iran.

Formed in 1979 and originally tasked with protecting the world's only modern theocracy, the Revolutionary Guard took the lead in battling Iraq during the bloody Iran-Iraq war waged from 1980 to 1988. The Guard, also known as the Pasdaran, has since become a powerful political and economic force in Iran. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad rose through the ranks of the Revolutionary Guard and came to power with support from its network of veterans. Its leaders are linked to many mainstream businesses in Iran.

"They are heavily involved in everything from pharmaceuticals to telecommunications and pipelines -- even the new Imam Khomeini Airport and a great deal of smuggling," said Ray Takeyh of the Council on Foreign Relations. "Many of the front companies engaged in procuring nuclear technology are owned and run by the Revolutionary Guards. They're developing along the lines of the Chinese military, which is involved in many business enterprises. It's a huge business conglomeration."

The Revolutionary Guard Corps -- with its own navy, air force, ground forces and special forces units -- is a rival to Iran's conventional troops. Its naval forces abducted 15 British sailors and marines this spring, sparking an international crisis, and its special forces armed Lebanon's Hezbollah with missiles used against Israel in the 2006 war. The corps also plays a key role in Iran's military industries, including the attempted acquisition of nuclear weapons and surface-to-surface missiles, according to Anthony H. Cordesman of the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

The United States took punitive action against Iran after the November 1979 takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, including the breaking of diplomatic ties and the freezing of Iranian assets in the United States. More recently, dozens of international banks and financial institutions reduced or eliminated their business with Iran after a quiet campaign by the Treasury Department and State Department aimed at limiting Tehran's access to the international financial system. Over the past year, two U.N. resolutions have targeted the assets and movements of 28 people -- including some Revolutionary Guard members -- linked to Iran's nuclear program.

The key obstacle to stronger international pressure against Tehran has been China, Iran's largest trading partner. After the Iranian government refused to comply with two U.N. Security Council resolutions dealing with its nuclear program, Beijing balked at a U.S. proposal for a resolution that would have sanctioned the Revolutionary Guard, U.S. officials said.

China's actions reverse a cycle during which Russia was the most reluctant among the veto-wielding members of the Security Council. "China used to hide behind Russia, but Russia is now hiding behind China," said a U.S. official familiar with negotiations.

The administration's move comes amid growing support in Congress for the Iran Counter-Proliferation Act, which was introduced in the Senate by Gordon Smith (R-Ore.) and in the House by Tom Lantos (D-Calif.). The bill already has the support of 323 House members.

The administration's move could hurt diplomatic efforts, some analysts said. "It would greatly complicate our efforts to solve the nuclear issue," said Joseph Cirincione, a nuclear proliferation expert at the Center for American Progress. "It would tie an end to Iran's nuclear program to an end to its support of allies in Hezbollah and Hamas. The only way you could get a nuclear deal is as part of a grand bargain, which at this point is completely out of reach."

Such sanctions can work only alongside diplomatic efforts, Cirincione added.

"Sanctions can serve as a prod, but they have very rarely forced a country to capitulate or collapse," he said. "All of us want to back Iran into a corner, but we want to give them a way out, too. [The designation] will convince many in Iran's elite that there's no point in talking with us and that the only thing that will satisfy us is regime change."

Staff researcher Madonna Lebling contributed to this report.


2638
3DHS / Democrats' 180 on Bush's Secret Wiretapping Program
« on: August 07, 2007, 01:00:33 AM »
Democrats' 180 on Bush's Secret Wiretapping Program
Monday, August 06, 2007

Remember the impeach Bush movement?

John Conyers, the Democrat from Michigan, was going to open hearings into a basket-load of Bush offenses. Principle among them was that Bush had violated the Constitution by secretly establishing the terrorist security program. This was the secret mission of the National Security Agency to listen to phone conversations between America and certain foreign countries where certain terrorists are known to be from.

Oh my lord, the hue and cry that went up about that. It was the foundation for all Bush offenses, even topping the war. After all, wars are things that presidents do get involved in, and even though Democrats and leftists ? and later independents and even Republicans ? blamed Bush for the reasons for going to war and the way it was conducted, it hardly seemed an impeachable offense.

On the other hand, violating the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution when the president had sworn to protect and defend the Constitution, well, now we were in the very wheelhouse of an impeachment prosecutor. Leading Democrats railed against Bush, called him the worst ever, stopped short of suggesting he resign only because they feared Cheney more.

So now, what happens last Friday and Saturday?

The Democrats in the U.S. Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives voted to make legal everything Bush's secret NSA program was up to and more. Every bit of the so-called violation of Americans' constitutional rights was made legal by a vote of Democrats, the very people who got elected decrying and condemning Bush's so-called trampling of the Constitution.

Where's that impeachment talk now? Where are the people demanding he live up to an antiquated FISA law?

They just voted to let this president ignore all that red tape of the FISA system.

Boom! What was illegal is now legal. And the very people who condemned Bush for doing it have now, with their vote, admitted wiretapping keeps Americans safe, just as Bush said.

Did I mention that sometimes politicians are truly despicable?

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,292333,00.html







 

2639
3DHS / Latest poll shows growing support for Bush Iraq war policy
« on: August 06, 2007, 09:17:32 PM »


Latest poll shows growing support for Iraq war policy

USA TODAY's Susan Page reports that President Bush is making some headway in arguing that the increase in U.S. troops in Iraq is showing military progress.

In the latest USA TODAY/Gallup Poll, taken Friday through Sunday, the proportion of those who said the additional troops are "making the situation better" rose to 31% from 22% a month ago. Those who said it was "not making much difference" dropped to 41% from 51%.

About the same number said it was making things worse: 24% now, 25% a month ago.

[http://blogs.usatoday.com/ondeadline/2007/08/latest-poll-sho.html

2640
3DHS / Some Guantanamo inmates say they'd rather stay
« on: August 06, 2007, 09:09:11 PM »
Some Guantanamo inmates say they'd rather stay than be sent home to N. Africa to face torture
The Associated Press
August 6, 2007

ALGIERS, Algeria: This was supposed to be the moment Ahmed Bel Bacha was waiting for ? the end of his five years in prison at Guantanamo Bay. Instead, the Algerian is fighting to stay put rather than return home.

Bel Bacha, reportedly slated to leave Guantanamo Bay soon along with three of his countrymen, fears he will be tortured back in Algeria, a country he had already fled once before to seek asylum in Britain, his lawyers say.

And so lawyers for the 38-year-old former hotel cleaner have been waging an 11th-hour attempt to keep him temporarily at Guantanamo while looking for another country to give him political asylum.

Bel Bacha is not alone in his fears: Human rights groups say at least two dozen Guantanamo detainees ? including many from the North African countries of Libya, Algeria and Tunisia ? are afraid they will face abuse on returning home.

"How many times is the U.S. willing to take the risk with someone's life and send them back to regimes with terrible human rights records?" said Zachary Katznelson, an attorney for the rights group Reprieve, which represents Bel Bacha and three dozen other detainees. Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International are among other groups that are worried.

About 80 detainees have been declared eligible for release. Navy Cmdr. Jeffrey Gordon, a Pentagon spokesman, said detainees at the U.S. Navy base in Cuba can leave only "once humane treatment and continuing threat concerns have been satisfactorily addressed by the receiving country."

"I reiterate that detainees are not repatriated to countries where it is more likely than not that they will be tortured," he said.

Algeria's presidential office told The AP that Algeria had U.S. concerns about the prisoners covered, both through the country's "constant and incontestable commitment to the struggle against international terrorism," and by having signed "numerous international conventions for the protection of human rights."

But rights groups say countries' promises are not enough.

With U.S. President George W. Bush facing international pressure to close the military prison camp down, and with the U.S. administration struggling over what to do with roughly 360 remaining prisoners, rights groups fear U.S. officials may overlook the torture records of inmates' home countries.

In at least one other case already in North Africa, a former Guantanamo detainee says he was mistreated on returning to Tunisia.

Abdullah bin Omar's lawyer and wife say the 49-year-old father of eight was struck while in Tunisian custody, and that security services also threatened to rape bin Omar's female family members.

Bin Omar's wife said in an interview that his physical and mental state has improved since his return, though his prison conditions are "appalling."

"If he had known he was going to be treated that way, he wouldn't have accepted to come home" and would have sought asylum elsewhere instead, Khadija Bousaidi told The Associated Press.

Tunisia's Justice Ministry has dismissed the allegations he was mistreated as "baseless."

Another Tunisian who was recently returned home and jailed, Lofti Lagha, has still never seen a lawyer, either before or after leaving Guantanamo, Reprieve says. Two representatives from the rights group left Tunisia on Sunday after trying unsuccessfully to see Lagha and bin Omar.

"We were basically given the run-around the entire week," Cori Crider of Reprieve said.

One North African country, Morocco, seems to be treating former Guantanamo prisoners "relatively fairly," Reprieve's Katznelson said. Ten prisoners have gone back, and all are free except two.

In the case of Algeria, Amnesty International said this weekend that U.S. authorities planned to send Bel Bacha and three other Algerians home imminently. Lawyers for Reprieve have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to halt Bel Bacha's transfer to Algeria, and the court ordered the U.S. government to respond by Wednesday afternoon.

Algeria is still trying to turn the page on an Islamic insurgency that has killed as many as 200,000 people since 1992, and anyone suspected of terrorist activities or knowledge of Islamist groups there "faces a real risk of secret detention and torture in Algeria," Amnesty says.

Beatings and electric shock treatments are often reported in Algeria, as is a method of tying victims down and forcing them to ingest dirty water, urine or chemicals through a rag stuffed in their mouths, Amnesty has said.

Bel Bacha lived for a time in Britain where he worked as a hotel cleaner before his capture in Pakistan, where he had gone to study the Quran, his family said. His brother, Mohammed Bel Bacha, complained that Algerian authorities gave the family little information on the case and that his lawyers had not been allowed to visit the country.

If authorities are afraid to let the lawyers in, who can guarantee that my brother is going to come back to Algeria safe and sound?" he asked.

The Pentagon alleged Bel Bacha had weapons training in Afghanistan and met Osama bin Laden twice, declaring him an "enemy combatant." A later review, however, found he no longer posed a threat to the United States and could be released.

Bel Bacha has been held at Guantanamo since February 2002 and is held in a solid-wall cell by himself for as many as 22 hours a day. Twenty-four Algerians are being held there, according to the New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights.

"If anyone comes back to Algeria it's a golden opportunity for Algeria to show that they have changed, that there is a new page in Algeria," said Katznelson of Reprieve. "Because the world will be watching".

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/08/06/africa/AF-GEN-Africa-Leaving-Guantanamo.php?page=1

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