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February 2006 - Posts

Here's a roundup of the port related political bullcrap that's going on. It's shameful that people've waited until now to talk about port security and doubly shameful that it's directly interfering with America's economic feasabilty in favor of... in favor of what? "Security"? No, in favor of Congressional grandstanding.  Congressional midterm elections are fast approaching and the free-for-all 2008 Presidential gladitorial events, even faster.  Everyone wants to grab the low-hanging fruit of looking like they're strong on security via calling on less foreign-government owned companies managing our ports regardless of how it effects our position in the global economy or, for that matter, actual port security.

It seems to me that our inability to come to terms with an Arab nation, domestically, almost five years after 9/11, and where American companies don't even manage most port berths in this country speaks volumes about the level of sophistication we bring to understanding the situation in Arab countries, themselves. AQ's now attacking Saudi areas and able to foment really deep discontent in Iraq, playing off our evident dunderheadedness and what appears to be racially-motivated fear mongering.

Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States - CFIUS was created in 1988, as concerns about Japanese investment in the US rose when Mitsubishi purchased the Rockefeller Center in New York. Since then, the interagency group, led by the Treasury Department, reviews and has the potential to block foreign acquisitions of US assets if they are deemed to have the potential to harm national security.


Coast Guard Saw 'Intelligence Gaps' on Ports, Washington Post, 02/28/2006

"Security measures were thoroughly reviewed, including intelligence matters," White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said. She did not know whether the White House was briefed on the Coast Guard assessment, but, she said, "I do know that at the end of the day, when the process was completed and the transaction was approved, homeland security questions were resolved."

Clay Lowry, the Treasury Department's assistant secretary for international affairs, told Homeland Security Committee members the Coast Guard's concerns "were addressed and resolved."

The Coast Guard document, completed about one month before the ports deal received government approval Jan. 17, was the strongest indication that members of the administration had expressed security concerns over the transaction. Officials from the departments of Treasury, Defense and Homeland Security told the Senate Armed Services Committee last week that the secretive interagency Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, which reviewed the DP World deal, was unanimous in its position that no concerns had emerged to trigger the 45-day national security review required by the law that established the panel.

Later, the Coast Guard said in a statement that the excerpts of its preliminary evaluation "when taken out of context, do not reflect the full, classified analysis" that eventually concluded "that DP World's acquisition of P&O, in and of itself, does not pose a significant threat to U.S. assets in ports" in the continental United States.

  • "Given the red-flag questions that the Coast Guard raised, very serious questions about operations, personnel and foreign influence, how could there not have been the 45-day investigation that's clearly required by law?" asked Senate Homeland Security Committee Chairman Susan Collins (R-Maine).
  • "This report suggests there were significant and troubling intelligence gaps," Collins said. "That language is very troubling to me."
  • Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) said, "Since the president won't act to keep our ports safe, we will."
  • Rep. Mark Foley (R-Fla.) said he will introduce legislation today mandating that security reviews by the homeland security and intelligence committees run concurrently with administration security reviews of company purchases. "We have tried our best to support this administration at every turn, but to be blindsided by an issue of this magnitude demonstrates we have a lot of work to do," he said.
  • A bill introduced yesterday by Coburn, Menendez, Collins, and Sens. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), Rick Santorum (R-Pa.), Norm Coleman (R-Minn.), Olympia J. Snowe (R-Maine), Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.), Jack Reed (D-R.I.) and Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.) would halt the sale of P&O pending the 45-day review and would give Congress the authority to reject the deal after the investigation.
  • A bill by Menendez, Clinton, Lautenberg and Sens. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) and Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) would block the sale and ban companies owned by foreign governments from controlling U.S. port operations.
  • "Congress has a right and responsibility in this case to conduct aggressive oversight and block a deal that could seriously undermine our national security," said Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.). "This deal should not go through without an open investigation and congressional input."
But in a Dec. 13 intelligence assessment of the company and its owners in the United Arab Emirates, the Coast Guard warned: "There are many intelligence gaps, concerning the potential for DPW or P&O assets to support terrorist operations, that preclude" the completion of a thorough threat assessment of the merger.

"The breadth of the intelligence gaps also infer potential unknown threats against a large number of potential vulnerabilities," says the document, released by the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.

Excerpt of Coast Guard statement
Most U.S. Port Terminals Are Foreign-Run, NPR 02/26/2006

Security issues go beyond ports flap, USA Today, 02/23/2006
At the massive Port of Los Angeles alone, 80% of the terminals are run by foreign firms. And the U.S. Department of Transportation says the United Kingdom, Denmark, Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, China and Taiwan have interests in U.S. port terminals.

Allowing Dubai Ports World to control up to 30% of the port terminals in New York, New Jersey, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New Orleans and Miami shouldn't really be a cause for concern, says James Loy, former deputy secretary for the Department of Homeland Security and a retired commandant of the Coast Guard. "We're making a mountain out of a mole hill here."

He and other analysts say that instead, politicians should focus on gaps in port-security programs that have left the global shipping system and the nation's 360 ports vulnerable to terrorism. The vulnerabilities extend from companies that load cargo containers abroad and the inspection process at overseas ports, to the need to install radiation detectors at most U.S. ports.

Stephen Flynn of the Council on Foreign Relations estimates that most port terminals across the nation are run by foreign interests.

In Los Angeles, port spokeswoman Theresa Adams Lopez says, foreign operations include Yusen Terminals Inc., a subsidiary of Japanese shipping giant NYK Line, established in 1885.

The Port of Seattle has five container terminals. Three are run by U.S. companies, one is managed by a South Korean company, and the fifth is managed by a company partly owned by the Singapore government.

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey owns five primary cargo terminals, three of which are run by foreign firms. The terminal that would be run by the Dubai-based company is operated in conjunction with a Danish firm. The terminal is leased to the two companies and is five years into the 30-year lease, port authority spokesman Steve Coleman says. The other two main cargo terminals in New York and New Jersey are run by the same Danish firm and by a Hong Kong-based company.
Securing Americas Ports, PBS, 02/23/2006
Deputy Treasury Secretary Robert Kimmitt, "We're not aware of a single national security concern raised recently that was not part of the CFIUS staff review."

SEN. HILLARY CLINTON: The process used to review this transaction appears to be cursory at best.

ROBERT KIMMITT: It doesn't suggest the security concerns were not raised; they were raised, they were resolved. We moved on.

Margaret Warner, NewsHour: Mr. Dinsmore, this Dubai Ports World, that's commonly referred to as a port operator, what does a company like that actually do?

M.R. Dinsmore, CEO, Port of Seattle: Margaret, thank you. Terminal operators really run the terminal. They lease the terminal from the Port Authority -- in our behalf, the Port of Seattle. And if they're a terminal operator and stevedore, they actually load and unload the containers from the vessel.

MARGARET WARNER: So what you're saying is the port is really the geographic area and you may have many terminals within a port, say, New York.

M.R. DINSMORE: I am. Many times I've listened to the news and talking about they bought six ports. They clearly haven't bought six ports. They bought terminals within a port authority.

STEPHEN FLYNN, CFR:The people are actually in the port picking up the containers, working the cranes, moving the carts around and so forth. These are all longshoremen, and they're American citizens, and they don't change no matter who is in charge - who is the owner of the lease in the port.

STEPHEN FLYNN: Basically the terminal operator often has an office that looks like an industrial park kind of office that you might imagine inside the port, and they're doing a lot of the paper shuffling and call making and other kinds of things to facilitate -- It's an incredibly complex activity of moving containers from all over the world and getting them to the customers that ultimately end up in our shelves or in our manufacturing plants. Now virtually all those folks are Americans as well.

Typically if it's a foreign-owned company who leases this terminal, there will be a few senior managers who report from the home office but they're not having any contact physically with the box. That is done by only the longshoremen. So on the West Coast, those are members of the ILWU, the International Longshore and Warehouse Union. On the East Coast it's the International Longshore Association. These are pretty red-blooded Americans who get these jobs; they're in the cranes, they're driving the carts and basically anything that happens in that terminal is in the union's hands largely.

M.R. DINSMORE: Margaret, let me start by saying I concur with Stephen's comments and in answer to your question, I believe strongly that the U.S. government, this administration needs to do a good job of due diligence in making sure there isn't any loopholes on behalf of any company coming in to be a terminal operator.

Now, that being said, in our port, there's three major terminal operators. One is SSA Marine, a very large U.S. corporation, very large customer. Another is American President Lines, NOL, Singaporean company and part of that company is owned by the government. And another is HanJin Shipping, and they're a terminal operator, and that is a South Korean company. I think after we do our due diligence, we need to move on and make sure that issues like this do indeed go forward and ultimately get approved.
At ports, security vs. trade, Christian Science Monitor, 02/27/2006
"The current CFIUS process was designed to deal with this on a case-by-case basis because outright prohibitions would not be good for the US," says Nancy McLernon, senior vice president of the Organization for International Investment, which represents US operations of foreign companies. "If an American company had acquired P&O, there wouldn't be any security review at all. Let's remember that just because it's a US-owned company doesn't mean there are no security concerns with them at all."
Ports, UAE and The Addiction to Foreign Dependence, New Civilization Magazine

A Ship Already Sailed, New York Times 02/24/2006
American companies began withdrawing decades ago from the unglamorous business of stevedoring, ceding the now-booming industry to enterprises in Asia and the Middle East.

So it is no accident that American companies are not in the top ranks of global terminal operators, who have ridden the coattails of the explosion in world trade. That shift has transferred growing financial clout to a handful of seafaring centers in Hong Kong, Singapore and now the emirate of Dubai.

Though two American companies now rank eighth and ninth among the world's top 10 operators, it would not be easy for other American companies to get into the business. The retreat began decades ago amid rising labor costs and slow growth, while foreign companies spotted opportunities.

P&O earned $383 million on revenues of $2.4 billion in the first six months of 2005. The company itself grew in the United States through an earlier wave of industry consolidation, taking over local companies like Gulf Service of New Orleans in 2000 and International Terminal Operating Company of Jersey City in 1999. Similarly, Neptune Orient Lines of Singapore in 1997 acquired one of the oldest American terminal operating and shipping companies, American President Lines, which originated in the Gold Rush of 1848.

A terminal operator is now expected to manage where and when a ship will berth, the use of gantry cranes, relations with unionized stevedores and arrangements with trucks or rail cars to take goods to market. This is all done with specialized software intended to minimize the amount of time a ship stays in port, allowing owners to use the vessels as much as possible.

Even with assurances from DP World and its supporters that it would hew to American security requirements, analysts, regulators and bankers have been scratching their heads at demands by politicians to review the deal, in part because the deal is already completed under British law.

"God knows how you'd reverse it," said one London-based executive involved in the sale, who did not want to be identified because of client confidentiality agreements. British regulators have approved the deal, and shareholders have already voted for it, he said.

"The Arabs own it, what are you going to do? Force them to sell it? Revoke their licenses for United States ports?" he asked.

Either of those measures might spark some sort of retaliation from Dubai in the form of legal action, he said, or even something as extreme as some sort of a restrictions on American-bound shipments passing through the port of Dubai.
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Bloomberg reports Saudi authorities killed 2 of their most wanted in a shootout in Riyadh as they hunt for the people who drove Aramco-labled cars up to the Abqaiq oil processing facility. Mohammed Saleh al-Ghaith, 23 years old, and Abdullah Abdulaziz al-Tuaijri, 21 years old, were killed along with 3 others.

Reuters reports that Al Qaeda issued a statement naming the two as martyrs and pledging to carry out more operations against oil facilities in Saudi Arabia:

The statement, signed by Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, said: "We renew our vow to crush the forces of the crusaders and the tyrants and to stop the theft of the wealth of the Muslims."

In Iran's Khuzestan province, a southwestern province which borders Iraq and the Persian Gulf and is a center of Iran's oil production (90% of their oil production), two percussion grenades went off in the bathrooms of the governor's offices in Abadan and Dezful within ten minutes of each other. (IRNA, BBC) No injuries were reported.

And, here's something I haven't been following - on January 24, in Ahvaz, the capital of the Khuzestan province, twin blasts hit a bank and a government building leaving six people dead and dozens injured. Responsibility for the Ahvaz blast was claimed by a group called "Arab Struggle Movement for the Liberation of Ahvaz."  That's not the latest or the only terror that's been going on there. On 02/20 a "noise bomb" exploded, blowing out windows, but injuring no one.  On 10/15/2005 two bombs exploded an IT center, killing 6, wounding 50.  06/12/2005 three bombs exploded concurrently near public facilities, killing 8, wounding dozens.  Seems like Iran's got it's own problems with retroactive Arabs going after oil-rich areas.  Coordinated explosions is an identifying hallmark of al Qaeda.  The Iranian government has implied that the British forces staged nearby in Iraq are harboring and possibly aiding the terrorists that attacked Ahvaz.  They're either playing politics, seeing that as having more traction than an al Qaeda link, the resistance group is al Qaeda copycats, or there is an al Qaeda presence in Iran.  The last speculation would cast some doubt on the Iran-AQ link.

Iranian cities of Dezful, Abadan, and Ahvaz of the Khuzestan province

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I recently dug up a Venn diagram I made a few years ago to explain the nuances of the Iraqi insurgency, lost as a broken link during a blog software change:

Iraqi players

"IIG" refers to the Iraqi Interim Government, previous secularly oriented, government.  I thought it would be good to pull this old analysis image out of rememberances of things past just to get an idea of where and how the players have moved, if at all.  Since the situation in Iraq continues to be tense, it's nice to try to put a perspective on what some of the groups and their representatives say.

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or
Buqayq, Saudi Arabia, the location of the Abqaiq (Abqayq) oil-processing facility

Two or three cars approached the gates of the Saudi oil facility that processes 2/3 of the Kingdom's oil and were blown up by guards during a gunfight while they were stopped at about 3p local time.  Oil production and export from Saudi continues, unabated.  Oil prices (delivery of crude, April) went up $1.36/barrel as of this writing. This attack recalls Zawahiri's 12/2005 call to attack Arabian oil facilities.

“I call on the holy warriors to concentrate their campaigns on the stolen oil of the Muslims, most of the revenues of which go to the enemies of Islam"
bloomberg, financial times

25.9356, 49.6683
Other names for Buqayq: Abaqaiq, Abqaik, Abkayk, Abqayq, Bukayk, Madinat Abqaiq, Abqaiq


Buqayq, centered, in relation to the Persian Gulf, Bahrain, and Qatar, LandSat 7 Visible

Buqayq, close up, LandSat 7 Pseudo Color

Buqayq, close up, LandSat 7 Visible

Imagery from NASA World Wind.

Update: Stratfor: Saudi Arabia: Anatomy of the Abqaiq Bombing Attempt, A Shift in Al Qaeda's Thinking

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The Askariya shrine, one of the holiest Shia sites in Iraq, was severely damaged by a large explosion in Samarra, 60 miles (95km) north of Baghdad (AP/Hameed Rasheed)

Al-Askariya shrine: 'Not just a major cathedral', Times Online UK, 02/22/2006

Today, men dressed as Iraqi police officers entered the Askariya shrine in Samarra and set off bombs ruining the dome.

But the continued and intense religious importance of the site is connected to the 12th imam, the so-called "Hidden Imam" who Shias believe went into hiding in 878 under the al-Askariya shrine to prepare for his eventual return among men. According to Shia tradition, the Mahdi will reappear one day to punish the sinful and "separate truth from falsehood". For many years, a saddled horse and soldiers would be brought to the shrine in Samarra every day to be ready for his return, a ritual that was repeated in Hilla, about 100 miles to the south, where it was also thought that Mahdi might reappear.

Here's the deal with this shrine: It's a representative of a lynchpin in Shi'a belief, the Mahdi. In this way, it's very "non-Sunni," in other words it's definitely a place to attack that would immediately cause sectarian tension. Attacking the shrines at Karbala (Hussain, the prophet's grandson) or Najaf (Ali, the prophet's son-in-law and the stem of the division between Shi'a "party of Ali" and Sunni muslims) would be undeniably serious, but both Hussain and Ali are related to the Prophet. The concept of the Mahdi, on the other hand, is a pointedly Shi'a thing that can only mean those who dressed up as Iraqi Police and set off bombs in the shrine are trying to cause a civil war. That virulently anti-Shi'i MO is very Wahhabi and therefore it points directly to Al Qaeda and our good friend Zarqawi, not necessarily Sunni Iraqi nationalists.

Professor Northedge [Alastair Northedge, a Professor of Islamic Art and Architecture at the Sorbonne in Paris], who last met Samarra's director of antiquities at a conference in Paris in September, believes the attack to be the work of al-Qaeda related militants from outside the town. In September, Sunni rebels in Samarra joined an unprecedented condemnation of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's al-Qaeda in Iraq after the execution of a leading cleric in nearby Ramadi. "It is really quite surprising that something like that has happened in Samarra," he says. "The people there have a a very, very powerful sense of community identity, they know how to act in their best interests." "If you look at the resistance situation in Samarra, there are two general sorts: there are local fighters and there are al-Qaeda fighters and foreign jihadis," said Professor Northedge. "I'm absolutely certain that this is not the local people from Samarra, they would not have blown it up."

Muslims have widely condemed the bombing, Sunni and Shi'a alike. Iraq's Ayatollah Sistani has called for restraint and protests, but no violence. I haven't seen any reaction from Moqtada al Sadr or his party, but I bet he's flying off the handle.

Al-Forat television, run by a Shi'ite political party, showed the ageing and reclusive Sistani flanked by his three most senior colleagues in the holy city of Najaf after Sistani called for protests but restraint following the attack in Samarra.

Earlier Sistani, a key force for Shi'ite restraint in the face of Sunni insurgent attacks, called for protests and declared seven days of mourning. He insisted in a statement, however, that there must be no violence and in particular no reprisals against Sunni mosques.

Update: Sadr, who continues to show that he should be marginalized, but gets people's blood going, reacted to this by calling for violence and blaming what can only be an Al Qaeda attack on Iraqi cohesion on America on Israel. Good going. Thanks for proving, once again, that you're not your father and not even your brother. Woe is us.

Sistani in rare TV appearance, Kurdish Media/Reuters, 02/22/2006

Here's a "before" picture of the mosque, from GlobalSecurity.org:

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When a reported 90% of the West Coast's ports are managed by foreign companies and the jobs at these ports are all American jobs (no foreign nationals), it strikes me as overtly polticial and, yes, racist for Nancy Pelosi, Charles Schumer, and now, Joesep Biden, to talk about how a sale to the Arab Dubai Ports World (owned by Dubai, UAE) of a British port management company would effect national security.

Questions here include:

  • Why isn't the objection to having non-US companies running the management of US ports in a "post 9/11 world"?
  • What exactly do they think's going to happen? Will there suddenly be Arab nationals replacing American security workers at the ports? Are there British workers there, now?
  • Why're the Democrats scare mongering?
  • Why're these people racially profiling? I thought Democrats, of all people, just hated that?

I'll be the first to say that it's beneficial to have a public discussion of interactions with Arab countries and about Arabs (and the implied Muslims) in America, but if this is the way the Democrats choose to sidle up to the issue, it's sadly disingenuous (ie, they've no desire to actually talk about it) and pointless (ie, they've no desire to actually block it). If this is the way the issue's going to be brought up in public because there are prominent Democrats and some Republicans that are isolationists and racists, then that's further a sad commentary on how they view the US. Taking clues from these talking heads, not only will our domestic reactionaries take a clue, but anti-Americans in other countries will as well. It further proves to them that Americans are are anti-Arab racists. Do I think we're that way? No (even though Morgan Spurlock's contrivied "30 Days" on-the-street interviews sure do make us out to be), but I do think that politicians really, really push our image that way for their own short-term gains. The fact that potential Democratic presidential nominees come out and say things like this, that a west-coast Senator can say this when her coasts are managed by Chinese companies, and various Republicans can be just as politically tone deaf as shrieking Democrats.

More questions:

  • Is wrapping a much needed discussion on US port security in a crunchy racially-directive invective good eating for the American public?
  • How do liberal politicians back out of a stance that puts them in a pro-racialprofiling, potential anti-american job corner? Unions, who work at these ports, must love that they're with Bush on this potential veto of his, and against Democrats who want to scuttle, via legislation, their paychecks.

"And I want those who are questioning it to step up and explain why all of a sudden a Middle Eastern company is held to a different standard than a Great British [sic] company. I'm trying to conduct foreign policy now by saying to people of the world, we'll treat you fairly. And after careful scrutiny, we believe this deal is a legitimate deal that will not jeopardize the security of the country, and at the same time, send that signal that we're willing to treat people fairly." President George Bush, 02/21/2006

The other bidder in the purchase of the British P&O (Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation Company) was a Singapore company (PSA International). That'd probably go right under the racist radar.

U.S.-based private intelligence firm Stratfor noted that "the government of the UAE is about as pro-American as you can get" in the region. "If the United States can't do business with the UAE, then the United States cannot do business anywhere in the Islamic world," it said.

Stratfor also said "a British company previously was managing the (American) ports, and there are plenty of jihadists traveling on British passports these days who are at least as dangerous as anyone in the UAE."
- Seattle Times/AP

Duh. Sexing it up for the political midterm elections of 2006 is detrimental to trust domestically and abroad.

Arab investors who pulled their capital out of the United States after the Sept. 11 attacks — fearing asset seizures under the Patriot Act — want to reinvest, Alani [Mustafa Alani, a security analyst with the Dubai-based Gulf Research Center] said. But anti-Arab sentiment in Congress will push those funds to friendlier markets in Asia and Europe.

"This is a major long-term investment," Alani said. "If it's going to be undermined for unjustified reasons, that will tell Arab investors and governments to keep away from the United States."

P&O agrees bid from Dubai Ports, BBC 11/29/2005
Dubai finishes buying P&O, Baltimore Sun 02/14/2006
Bush Backs U.A.E. Company's Administration of Six U.S. Ports, State Department, 02/21/2006
Port Security Is Still a House of Cards Far Eastern Economic Review, CFR, January/February 2006
To Arabs, port-deal backlash looks like bias Seattle Times/AP, 02/22/2006
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A One Act Play

Guy: "I don't know the meaning of irony. Oh, and by the way, I can't tell you the evil due to my belief in Security Clearances."
Press: "OMG GUY SAYS HE CAN'T SAY! AFOULNESS AFOOT!"
NYT Readers: "heheh, they used 'alliteration'. Oh, and by the way, Bush is bad!"
FIN
(hippies, off stage left: !B4O)

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Ashura ("the tenth day," Arabic) commemorates the death of the Prophet's 2nd grandson, Hussain, in Karbala at the culimination of the 10 day seige of Hussain and his 72 followers by the Ummayid Caliph's 30,000 strong army. Islam was undergoing a sectarian moment in 61 AH (680 AD), just about 40 years after the Prophet Mohammed's death. Yazid required the family of the Prophet to pledge fealty to him in order to solidify his rule. The martyrdom only solidified the basis for the schism between Sunnis and Shia (followers of the descendants of the Prophet). Modern commemoration during the Islamic month of Moharram lasts ten days with a passion play and the mourning of the death of most of the prophet's family.

Ashura (asor in Hebrew, also "the tenth") corresponds to the Jewish festival of Yom Kippur and is also the traditional date in Islamic theology when Noah's Ark came to rest. Due to the closeness of the Jewish and Islamic communities back in the day, the 10th day of the 7th month is a recommended day of fasting as per the Quran (2:183-187): "[keeping] the fast as it was prescribed for those before you". Here the Prophet is seen as encouraging muslims to adopt fasting on the Day of Atonement. Numerous sayings attributed to the Prophet(called hadith, via Bukhari) mention the event when the Prophet came to Medina and found the Jews fasting and ordered his followers to do the same. Many Sunnis observe this fast.

More Info: The Fast of Ashura (ummah.net), Ashura (google), Viewpoint: Ashura (BBC)

Also, unfortunately, Moharram's become a time when Sunnis and Shia clash.

Hangu, North-West Frontier Province, Pakistan 33.5533, 71.060 (33.5327778, 71.06) 2690 ft., pop. 22974

A suspected suicide bombing on minority Shi'ite Muslims in Pakistan killed at least 23 people, wounded dozens and triggered violence on an important holy day that killed at least four more, police said.
The attack targeted a procession in the town of Hangu in North West Frontier Province to mark Ashura, the holiest day for Shi'ites. Officials reported several blasts. (Reuters)
Violence Mars Ashura Festival, CNN

Herat, Afghanistan 34.345, 62.200 (34.345, 62.1997222) 3064 ft., pop. 4159

Hundreds of Shiite Muslims and Sunnis clashed in a western Afghan city Thursday during an important Shiite festival, hurling grenades and burning mosques, officials and witnesses said. At least four people were killed and 51 injured. (ABC/AP)

Previously, I'd posted a list of violence against Shia, powerlessness.

Incidentally (and somewhat related due to him being not only Jewish but also requiring punches to the facionekal region), today's Jack's birthday.

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Along with one of the Cole bomber masterminds, Jaber Elbaneh is one of the escapees from the Sanaa, Yemen jail last Friday.  Elbaneh is an American of Yemeni descent, and one of the "Lackawanna Six," as profiled in "Chasing the Sleeper Cell" on PBS:

photo of elbaneh

In May 2003, the U.S. government unsealed an indictment charging Jaber Elbaneh, 37, with providing material support to Al Qaeda.

According to Sahim Alwan, Elbaneh admired Kamal Derwish who encouraged the young Lackwanna men to become more religious. Derwish, who is believed to have been an Al Qaeda recruiter, organized the summer 2001 trip into Afghanistan.

Elbaneh traveled to Afghanistan with al-Bakri, Alwan and Yahya Goba. At the camp, Elbaneh told Alwan that he wanted to fight with the Taliban and was willing to become a martyr.

Elbaneh never returned to the U.S. after his trip to Afghanistan and in September 2003, the FBI announced a $5 million reward for information leading to his arrest. He was believed to be living in Yemen.

January 2004 Update: According to U.S. and Yemeni officials familiar with the case, Elbaneh has been taken into custody in Yemen. These officials gave no details of his arrest, but U.S. officials say that negotiations concerning Elbaneh's possible extradition are under way between the U.S. and Yemeni governments.


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Proclaiming "I am al Qaeda," Zacarias Moussaoui was escorted from a federal courtroom in Alexandria on Monday at the outset of jury selection in his terrorist conspiracy trial. As he was removed by federal marshals, he shouted, "This trial is a circus."
CBS News, today
Why oh why can't we see this stuff on TV?  We miss out on Moussaaoui's insane ramblings just like we do Mr. Saddam's trial.  There must be TV executives who are squirming for rights to broadcast this great, great stuff.

Here're some other nuggets from Moussaoui (in no way definitive):
  • I don't want you to have the time to manipulate the system again against me
  • Do you think that I am crazy to see your Doctor Frankeinstein.
  • Do you think that every month I am going to put up with your insanity
  • Leonie Brinkema your mentally sick.
Wikipedia on Moussaoui
Moussaoui Letter 1, Letter 2, Appeal Transcript, The Smoking Gun
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Friday, 02/03/2006
Yemen

23 members of Al Qaeda escape from a prison in Sanaa, Yemen, the capital. The prison was at the central headquarters of Yemen's military intelligence services building (Political Security Organization of Yemen) in the center of the capital. Checkpoints were set up around the city to prevent the escapees from fleeing into the mountain tribal areas around the city.

Escaped inmates included those accused of bombing the USS Cole, 10/2000, and those accused of attacking French supertanker Limburg, 2002.  At least 13 of 23 of the escapees were convicted Al Qaeda members.

Escapees:
  • Abu Asim Al-Ahdal (Abu 'A'sim Al-Ahdal) #2 Al Qaeda in Yemen, escaped
  • Jamal al-Badawi (Jamal Badawi) - convicted of plotting, preparing, and helping the Cole bombings; sentenced to death in 09/2004
  • Fawaz Yahya al-Rabeiee (al-Rabe'ie, al-Rabahi), whom Interpol considers one of the people responsible for the Limburg attack, convicted for an attack on a helicopter carrying Hunt Oil Co employees a month after the Limburg attack, plus  explosions at a civil aviation authority building

Escape coincides with the trial of another group of suspected Al Qaeda members, 15 people who were charged in involvement of terror operations in Yemen, including Mohammed Hamdi al-Ahdal, another Cole and Limburg bombing suspect; the trial was posponed indefinately

Escape occured via a 140 meter (460 feet) tunnel connecting the prison to a mosque in Sanaa.

"Al-Badawi broke out of jail in 2003 and his escape had been facilitated by prison guards," Neal Quillian of the London firm, Control Risks, says. "So this isn’t the first incidence where Al-Qaeda members have escaped from a Yemeni jail." (globalsecurity)

After he escaped from the prison in Aden and was recaptured, he was sent to the headquarters, the most secure prison, in Sanaa'

It's a big blow to Yemen's truthiness in the war on terror, since the Yemeni authorities will be scrutinized for any complicity in this escape.

Under anonymity a security official said:

"It couldn't have happened without the coordination of high ranking officers in the intelligence," said one official. He pointed to possible infiltration of the intelligence agency by militants, saying hundreds of Yemenis who fought in Afghanistan in the 1980s against Russian occupation were given jobs with the security forces when they returned home.

"It is no surprise that many of these former fighters are sympathetic to al-Qaida," he said. (AP, 02/06/2006)

Additionally, in July 2005, 4 Al Qaeda members broke out of Bagram airbase in Afghanistan. Among them was Omar al-Farouq, a top leader of al Qaeda in Southeast Asia. (BBC, AP)

In Afghanistan, a search for the four al-Qaida members who escaped in July is still continuing, said U.S. military spokesman Lt. Mike Cody said. Military officials declined to say how they broke out of the high-security facility at Bagram.

The four boasted about their breakout on a video believed filmed in Afghanistan and broadcast in October on Dubai-based TV station Al-Arabiya. They claimed they picked a lock and timed the escape for a Sunday when many of the Americans on the base were off duty.

Escapees, according to district chief of Bagram, Kabir Ahmed (Times Online,  07/2005):

  • Abdullah Hashimi, from Syria
  • Mehmood Ahmed Mohammed, from Kuwait
  • Mehmood Alfathani, from Saudi Arabia (Mohammed al-Qahtani)
  • Mohammed Hassan, from Libya (aka Sheikh Abu Yahia al-Lybi)

"God willing, they (the Taliban) will slaughter you," he screamed into the camera during the alleged attack, pointing to Taliban fighters who were seen collecting spoils of weapons from the deserted post.

"Every time we attack you, you run away like women," he said wagging his finger angrily.
- Mohammed al-Qahtani, escaped militant, on an al-Arabia videotape. (Al Bahhar, 01/2006)

Abdul Latif Hakimi, a spokesman of the Taliban movement, had told AFP the four men were being looked after at a Taliban hideout.

Omar al Farouq, an Iraqi Kuwati national, one of Osama bin Laden's top lieutenants in Southeast Asia until Indonesian authorities captured him in the summer of 2002 and turned him over to the United States, was reported to have escaped in this breakout, but he's not mentioned in some of the later reports.  This guy's interesting because he was supposed to be a star witness for US prisoner abuse in Afghanistan and Iraq.  See Confessions of an al-Qaeda Terrorist, Time, 12/15/2005.  Bagram air base was one of the places mentioned to have a CIA "black site."

Rumors on the blogosphere put Farouq alternatively in Iraq in the jihadi movement, turned or "let go" for CIA use, or "disappeared" by the military to keep him from testifying.


Interpol:
An Interpol "Orange Notice"was issued, which is a global security alert indicating that the escapees were "clear and present danger to all countries"
Interpol is seeking the names, photographs, and fingerprints of the escapees so that they can issue a "Red Notice" Interpol, 02/05/2006

Sources:
Al Ayyam, Yemen
Washington Post reprinting AP report
News Yemen
Telegraph (Limburg bombing, 7/2002)

"How did Al Qaeda operatives escape Afghan jail?" Al Jazeera (be noted this is from their "conspiracy" section)
"Suspected al-Qaeda leader escapes U.S. military prison," USA Today 11/2005

History:

USS Cole bombing, 10/12/2000
17 US soldiers killed in a suicide bombing attack at the port of Aden, Yemen
two suicide bombers blew up a boat full of explosives next to the ship

French supertanker Limburg, 2002
Euronav owned tanker, 2 Bulgarian crew members were killed, 90k barrels of oil spilled into the Gulf of Aden

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CAIRO An Egyptian passenger ship carrying about 1,300 people sank in the Red Sea during bad weather, and rescue ships arriving at the scene pulled dozens of bodies from the water, an official said Friday. At least 30 people were rescued, some in lifeboats.

Ayman al-Kaffas, a spokesman for the Egyptian Embassy in London, told the British Broadcasting Corp. that "dozens of bodies of victims" had been pulled from the choppy waters between Saudi Arabia and Egypt.

The 35-year-old ship, Al-Salaam Boccaccio 98, went down 40 miles off the Egyptian port of Hurghada

The cause of the disaster was not immediately known, but there were high winds and a sandstorm overnight on Saudi Arabia's west coast, where the ship departed from. The ship sailed from Dubah, Saudi Arabia, at 7 p.m. Thursday and was scheduled to arrive eight hours later at Safaga, Egypt, about 190 kilometers, or 120 miles, away.

The ship disappeared from radar screens shortly after sailing, maritime officials in Suez said on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the press.

The agent for the ship in Saudi Arabia, Farid al-Douadi, said the vessel was in good condition. The passengers were mostly Egyptians but included Saudis, Sudanese and others.

Marzouk said the ship - built in 1971 and renovated in 1990 in an Egyptian shipyard - was carrying 1,318 people, including a crew of 96. The ship is owned by an Egyptian firm, El-Salaam Maritime Transport.

Ship sinks in Red Sea; 1,300 passengers missing, IHT/AP
Egyptian ferry sinks in Red Sea, BBC

Google Earth Locations: ferry path, origin, destination, rescue launch locations.

NASA World Wind: Duba, Saudi Arabia, Safaga, Egypt

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On the heels of a poll where everybody but the Israelis thinks Americans are crap (BBC "What the World Thinks of America", Pew Global Attitudes Project), Turkey's new blockbuster "Valley of the Wolves Iraq," opening tomorrow, portrays American soldiers as butchers:
"In the most expensive Turkish movie ever made, American soldiers in Iraq crash a wedding and pump a little boy full of lead in front of his mother.

They kill dozens of innocent people with random machine gun fire, shoot the groom in the head, and drag those left alive to Abu Ghraib prison - where a Jewish doctor cuts out their organs, which he sells to rich people in New York, London and Tel Aviv."

Neat, huh?  Billy Zane stars as the lead, rogue American soldier, and Gary Busey as the Jewish-American doctor.  This, apparently, after the popularity of a fiction book published in Turkey, Metal Storm (nyt, aljazeera), which portrays a bloody war between the US and Turkey in 2007.

Talk about a failure of "hearts and minds" - and these are our allies.  Meanwhile, US tv audiences are glued forcefully to their navels (no offense to the "heros," you know who you are) with A&E's "Flight 93".
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