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  • BAUAW NEWSLETTER
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    Friday, December 17, 2004
     

    BAUAW NEWSLETTER-THURSDAY-FRIDAY, DEC. 16-17, 2004

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    STOP THE WAR ON IRAQ! BRING OUR TROOPS HOME NOW!
    ALL OUT JANUARY 20TH, 5:00 P.M., CIVIC CENTER, S.F.

    ************BREAKING NEWS**************

    According to the A.N.S.W.E.R. Washington, DC news conference
    covered live on CSPAN this morning, the U.S. government is not
    allowing antiwar/anti-Bush protestors onto Pennsylvania Ave.
    along the inauguration route.

    A.N.S.W.E.R. reported, there are three types of tickets available
    for the inauguration, Group A, is for personally invited guests;
    Group B, is for contributors to the Bush campaign (for both of
    these groups a list is carefully checked before tickets are sold;)
    tickets for Group C, for the general public, are not available.
    None. They are simply not sold.

    The Government, in a stalling move, has not denied permits to
    ANSWER for space for counter demonstrators, rather they are
    delaying as long as possible with the knowledge that the longer
    the permits are denied, the harder it will be for people to make
    arrangements to come to DC to protest. If and when permits
    are officially denied, A.N.S.W.E.R. declared they would challenge
    the government legally as they did in the last presidential
    inauguration "celebration."

    We have a constitutional right to protest the inauguration.
    BAUAW encourages all to show up in DC and come to Pennsylvania
    Avenue with your signs and banners and express your opposition
    to Bush and to the War.

    We demand, along with A.N.S.W.E.R., equal access along the rout
    for all. We have a right to protest our government or any of its
    official representatives. Nothing gives the government the right
    to disallow legal and peaceful protest. We say all out to
    Washington, DC if you can make it.

    If you can't go to DC, come out Jan. 20, 5pm, Civic Center, SF. in
    solidarity with all protestors in Washington and everywhere who
    oppose this war.

    We are encouraging everyone to participate somehow by wearing
    buttons and signs at work, at school and on the bus; hold banners
    at freeway entrances, and crowded shopping areas etc. on
    Jan. 20. Students should hold rallies and march to the Civic Center.

    Come to our next meeting and pick a place to flyer or table
    for Jan. 20 or hold a sign during the day, on Jan. 20 if you can.

    NEXT BAY AREA UNITED AGAINST WAR MEETING:

    SATURDAY, JANUARY 8, 11AM
    CENTRO DEL PUEBLO
    474 VALENCIA STREET
    (NEAR 16TH STREET IN SAN FRANCISCO)

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    The only moral virtue of war is that it compels the capitalist system
    to look itself in the face and admit it is a fraud.
    HELEN KELLER, "The Menace of Militarism."

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    Where you can still see the "must-see" film, WMD: Weapons of
    Mass Deception.

    This film is being downplayed by the mass media. It must have
    something to do with the searing criticism of that very media that
    is the content of the film. Go and see it.

    WMD will play in the following theatres in the
    Bay Area on FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2004:

    San Francisco, CA
    Landmark Opera Plaza Cinema
    601 Van Ness Avenue
    San Francisco, CA 94102
    (415) 267-4893

    Berkeley, CA (currently playing)
    The Oaks Theater
    1875 Solano Ave.
    Berkeley, CA 94707
    (510) 526-1836

    Orinda, CA
    Orinda Theater
    2 Orinda Theater Square
    Orinda, CA 94563
    (925) 254-906

    Richard Castro
    Outreach & Special Distribution
    Cinema Libre Studio
    818.349.8822 Ph.
    818.349.9922 Fax
    www.cinemalibrestudio.com

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    Hey Peace Activists...
    Sorry for the massive crossposting, but I had to share this with you.
    In case anyone needed a reminder as to why we are doing this,
    please take a moment to watch Ian Rhett'"(Didn't know I was) UnAmerican"
    http://unamerican.haightfreetv.com/unamerican.56m041011.swf


    It's wonderful.
    Charles Shaw

    Publisher/Editor-in-Chief

    Newtopia Magazine

    www.newtopiamagazine.net

    --------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    1) Holiday Benefit Sale
    at the Middle East Children's Alliance
    Saturday, December 18th, 10 AM to 6 PM at
    901 Parker Street, Berkeley (corner of 7th and Parker)

    2) HUMOR: Iraqi leader to be announced at Jan. 16 Golden Globe Awards

    3) Cuba, Venezuela Defy U.S. and Announce
    Their Own Plan To Create A FairTrade
    Alternative to FTAA!
    ----- Original Message -----
    From: < nytr@olm.blythe-systems.com >
    " Castro, Chavez Defy US Trade Pact "

    4) New Gallup Poll Raises Questions About Media Focus on 'Values'
    By E&P Staff
    NEW YORK
    Published: December 14, 2004 10:00 AM ET
    http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content
    _id=1000736658

    5) War Funding Request May Hit $100 Billion
    By Bryan Bender
    WASHINGTON
    Published on Wednesday, December 15, 2004 by the Boston Globe
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/1215-03.htm

    6) Details of Marines Mistreating
    Prisoners in Iraq Are Revealed
    By Richard A. Serrano
    WASHINGTON
    Published on Wednesday, December 15, 2004 by the Los Angeles Times
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/1215-01.htm

    7) Eskimos Seek to Recast Global Warming
    as a Rights Issue
    By ANDREW C. REVKIN
    December 15, 2004
    http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/15/international/americas/15climate.html?oref
    =login&oref=login

    8) The Thought Police - Cops Investigate Anti-American Statements
    of 11-Year-Old
    The Washington Post reports two police officers recently
    visited the home of an 11-year-old and questioned his parents
    for three hours about anti-American comments their son made in
    school The student had refused to participate in a Veterans Day
    exercise and criticized the Marines. The school claimed he had
    said, "I wish all Americans were dead and that American soldiers
    should die." The Police questioned his parents about their views
    on Sept. 11, the military and if they knew any foreigners who
    criticized US policy. They also inquired whether the parents might
    be teaching "anti-American values" at home. The mother, Pamela
    Allbaugh, told the Washington Post "It was intimidating.
    I told them it's like a George Orwell novel, that it felt like
    they were the thought police." She went on to say "If someone
    would have asked me five years ago if this was something my
    government would do, I would have said never."
    http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=04/12/16/1444215

    9) World War 3 Report, issue 93, December 2003
    http://www.ww3report.com/93.html#palestine6
    Remote-control Machine Guns to Be Mounted on the Wall

    10) Mark your calendar: Saturday, December 18, 6:00-8:00
    (18th & CASTRO)

    11) Chuck D keynotes "State of the Black Youth" convention
    By Diane Bukowski
    DETROIT
    The Michigan Citizen
    http://www.michigancitizen.com/default.asp?sourceid=&smenu=73&twindow=Defaul
    t&mad=No&sdetail=1308&wpage=1&skeyword=&sidate=&ccat=&ccatm=&restate=&restat
    us=&reoption=&retype=&repmin=&repmax=&rebed=&rebath=&subname=

    12) Israeli Army Raid Into Gaza Kills 5 Palestinians
    By Nidal al-Mughrabi
    GAZA (Reuters)
    Fri Dec 17, 2004 08:29 AM ET
    http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=7125113&src=eD
    ialog/GetContent§ion=news

    13) Hungry and homeless ranks swell in US cities
    By Rick Kelly
    World Socialist Web Site
    www.wsws.org
    17 December 2004
    http://www.wsws.org/articles/2004/dec2004/hung-d17.shtml

    14) Joma Sison issued this statement in the wake of the deaths
    of over 1000 people due to typhoon-related mudslides and
    the government's request for 600 U.S. Marines to engage
    in "relief operations" near areas controlled by the NPA
    and National Democratic Front of the Philippines. --dp
    PS. CARHRIHL is an important human rights declaration signed
    by the Philippine government and the NDFP.
    Press Statement
    16 December 2004
    CARHRIHL DOES NOT ALLOW US COMBAT TROOPS TO INTRUDE
    INTO PHILIPPINE--GRP OR NDFP--TERRITORY
    UNDER PRETEXT OF RELIEF OPERATIONS
    By Prof. Jose Maria Sison
    Chief Political Consultant
    National Democratic Front of the Philippines

    15) On Sunday December, 12, 2004, an Israeli sniper in Khan
    Younis refugee camp killed Rana Syiam, 7 years old, while
    she was sitting at home, eating supper with her family.
    The Israeli army gave no explanation for the attack.

    16) COMMUNITY SPEAK OUT FOR IMMIGRANT RIGHTS
    Sat, Dec. 18th, 1:00 pm
    24th & Mission St. (24th St. BART), San Francisco
    Call to Action for Immigrant Rights:

    17) NEWS & COMMENTARY: Soldier has himself shot to avoid
    returning to Iraq

    18) Days of Protest Jan. 20 Inauguration Day and
    Jan.22, 32nd Anniversary of Roe vs. Wade:

    19) Guard Reports Serious Drop in Enlistment
    By ERIC SCHMITT
    WASHINGTON
    December 17, 2004
    http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/17/politics/17reserves.html?oref=login


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    1) Holiday Benefit Sale
    at the Middle East Children's Alliance
    Saturday, December 18th, 10 AM to 6 PM at
    901 Parker Street, Berkeley (corner of 7th and Parker)

    The subject of this email is Project Censored's #1 story for 2005
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1118425,00.html

    In reality, every very "tax reform" since President Kennedy, federal,
    state, and local governments have been transfering taxes from the
    rich and to the poor, the working class, and small businesses. This
    process has been bipartisan and even occurred during the last
    Presidential Election. The overwhelming majority of us are being
    robbed by the government and deprived of essential services at
    the same time.

    FYI: The following is from the "PREFACE TO THE SIXTH EDITION"
    to the Media Monopoly: With a New Preface on the Internet and
    Telecommunications Cartels, by Ben H. Bagdikian. (2000) Beacon
    Press, 25 Beacon St., Boston Mass 02108-2892:

    "AS THE UNITED STATES ENTERS the twenty-first century, power
    over the American mass media is flowing to the top with such
    devouring speed that it exceeds even the accelerated consolidations
    of the last twenty years. For the first time in U.S. history, the country's
    most widespread news, commentary, and daily entertainment
    are controlled by six firms that are among the world's largest
    corporations, two of them foreign.

    "Even with the dramatic entry of the Internet and the cyber world
    with their uncounted hundreds of new firms, the controlling handful
    of American and foreign corporations now exceed in their size and
    communications power anything the world has seen before. Their
    intricate global interlocks create the force of an international cartel.

    "There are pernicious consequences. While excessive bigness itself
    is cause for economic anxieties, the worst problems are political
    and social. The country's largest media giants have achieved alarming
    success in writing the media laws and regulations in favor of their
    own corporations and against the interests of the general public.
    Their concentrated power permits them to become a larger factor
    than ever before in socializing each generation with entertainment
    models of behavior and personal values.

    "The impact on the national political agenda has been devastating,
    For years, the mainstream news has over dramatized its reporting
    of congressional and White House debate on the national debt and
    deficit beyond their intrinsic importance. Politicians raised the issue,
    but it was seized upon and overblown by the major media--
    media that politicians use as a bellwether on what issues will
    get them the most public attention and partisan advantage.
    During these crucial years, the American economy was undergoing
    an astonishing phenomenon that the mainstream news left largely
    unreported or actually glamorized in its infrequent references: the
    largest transfer of the national wealth in American history from
    a majority of the population to a small percentage of the country's
    wealthiest families."

    http://www.projectcensored.org/publications/2005/1.html
    Wealth Inequality in 21st Century Threatens Economy and
    Democracy

    MULTINATIONAL MONITOR, May 2003, Vol. 24, No. 5
    Title: "The Wealth Divide" (An interview with Edward Wolff)
    Author: Robert Weissman
    BUZZFLASH, March 26 and 29, 2004
    Title: "A Buzzflash Interview, Parts I & II" (with David Cay Johnston)
    Author: Buzzflash Staff
    http://www.projectcensored.org/publications/2005/1.html
    LONDON GUARDIAN, October 4, 2003
    Title: "Every third person will be a slum dweller within 30 years, UN agency
    warns"
    Author: John Vidal
    MULTINATIONAL MONITOR, July/August, 2003
    Title: "Grotesque Inequality"
    Author: Robert Weissman
    Faculty Evaluators: Greg Storino, Phil Beard Ph.D.
    Student Researchers: Caitlyn Pardue, David Sonnenberg, Sita Khalsa

    THE DOMESTIC TREND
    In the late 1700s, issues of fairness and
    equality were topics of great debate-
    equality under the law, equality of opportunity,
    etc. Considered by the framers of the
    Constitution to be one of the most
    important aspects of a democratic
    system, the word "equality" is featured
    prominently throughout the document.
    In the 200+ years since, most
    industrialized nations have succeeded
    in decreasing the gap between rich and poor.

    However, since the late 1970s wealth
    inequality, while stabilizing or increasing
    slightly in other industrialized nations,
    has increased sharply and dramatically
    in the United States. While it is no secret
    that such a trend is taking place, it is rare
    to see a TV news program announce that
    the top 1% of the U.S. population now owns
    about a third of the wealth in the country.
    Discussion of this trend takes place, for
    the most part, behind closed doors.

    During the short boom of the late 1990s,
    conservative analysts asserted that, yes,
    the gap between rich and poor was growing,
    but that incomes for the poor were still
    increasing over previous levels. Today most
    economists, regardless of their political
    persuasion, agree that the data over the
    last 25 to 30 years is unequivocal. The
    top 5% is capturing an increasingly greater
    portion of the pie while the bottom 95% is
    clearly losing ground, and the highly touted
    American middle class is fast disappearing.
    According to economic journalist, David
    Cay Johnston, author of "Perfectly Legal,"
    this trend is not the result of some naturally
    occurring, social Darwinist "survival of the
    fittest." It is the product of legislative policies
    carefully crafted and lobbied for by
    corporations and the super-rich over
    the past 25 years.

    New tax shelters in the 1980s shifted
    the tax burden off capital and onto labor.
    As tax shelters rose, the amount of federal
    revenue coming from corporations fell
    (from 35% during the Eisenhower years
    to 10% in 2002). During the deregulation
    wave of the '80s and the '90s, members
    of Congress passed legislation (often
    without reading it) that deregulated
    much of the financial industry. These
    laws took away, for example, the powerful
    incentives for accountants to behave with
    integrity or for companies to put away
    a reasonable amount in pension plans
    for their employees-resulting in the well
    -publicized (too late) scandals involving
    Enron, Global Crossing, and others.

    THE GLOBAL IMPACT

    As always, America's economic trends
    have a global footprint-and this time,
    it is a crater. Today the top 400 income
    earners in the U.S. make as much in
    a year as the entire population of the
    20 poorest countries in Africa (over
    300 million people). But in America,
    national leaders and mainstream media
    tell us that the only way out of our own
    economic hole is through increasing
    and endless growth-fueled by the
    resources of other countries.

    A series of reports released in 2003 by
    the UN and other global economy
    analysis groups warn that further increases
    in the imbalance in wealth throughout the
    world will have catastrophic effects if left
    unchecked. UN-habitat reports that unless
    governments work to control the current
    unprecedented spread in urban growth,
    a third of the world's population will be
    slum dwellers within 30 years. Currently,
    almost one-sixth of the world's population
    lives in slum-like conditions. The UN warns
    that unplanned, unsanitary settlements
    threaten both political and fiscal stability
    within third world countries, where urban
    slums are growing faster than expected. The
    balance of poverty is shifting quickly from
    rural to urban areas as the world's population
    moves from the countryside to the city.

    As rich countries, strip poorer countries of
    their natural resources in an attempt to re-
    stabilize their own, the people of poor countries
    become increasingly desperate. This deteriorating
    situation, besides pressuring rich countries
    to allow increased immigration, further
    exacerbates already stretched political
    tensions and threatens global political
    and economic security.

    UN economists blame "free-trade" practices
    and the neo-liberal policies of international
    lending institutions like the IMF and WTO,
    and the industrialized countries that lead
    them, for much of the damage caused to
    Third World countries over the past 20 years.
    Many of these policies are now being
    implemented in the U.S., allowing for an
    acceleration of wealth consolidation. And
    even the IMF has issued a report warning
    the U.S. about the consequences for its
    appetite for excess and overspending.

    In developing countries, the concentration
    of key industries profitable to foreign investors
    requires that people move to cities while forced
    privatization of public services strip them of the
    ability to become stable or move up financially
    once they arrive. Meanwhile, the strict repayment
    schedules mandated by the global institutions
    make it virtually impossible for poor countries
    to move out from under their burden of debt.
    "In a form of colonialisation that is probably
    more stringent than the original, many developing
    countries have become suppliers of raw commodities
    to the world, and fall further and further behind,"
    says one UN analyst. World economists conclude
    that if enough of the world's nations reach
    a point of economic failure, such a situation
    could collapse the entire global economy.

    For further information on this story, please
    check out the following excellent websites:
    www.inequality.org

    http://www.dollarsandsense.org/
    http://www.pbs.org/now/politics/income.html
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1118425,00.html
    David Cay Johnston interview also found on
    Democracy Now!, May 18, 2004.

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    2) HUMOR: Iraqi leader to be announced at Jan. 16 Golden Globe Awards

    [The Borowitz Report scooped other
    media sources Wednesday with its
    announcement that the new president
    of Iraq will be chosen by the Hollywood
    Foreign Press Association and announced
    Jan. 16 at the 62nd annual awards
    ceremony. -- Secretary of State Donald
    Rumsfeld said he foresaw criticism,
    but commented: "You choose a new Iraqi
    president with the awards ceremony you
    have, not the awards ceremony you might
    want." -- Thanks to Karen Havnaer
    for sending this piece. --Mark]

    http://www.ufppc.org/content/view/1913/

    The Borowitz Report

    HOLLYWOOD FOREIGN PRESS ASSOCIATION TO
    CHOOSE NEW IRAQI PRESIDENT

    ** Awards Ceremony to Replace January Elections **

    Borowitz Report
    December 15, 2004

    http://www.borowitzreport.com/default.asp

    With prospects for Iraq’s January 30
    elections appearing increasingly dim, the
    White House announced today that the
    new president of Iraq would be chosen by
    the Hollywood Foreign Press Association,
    best known for organizing the
    star-studded Golden Globe Awards.

    Under an unorthodox arrangement, the
    new Iraqi leader will be announced two
    weeks earlier than scheduled, on January
    16, at the 62nd Annual Golden Globe
    Awards in Hollywood.

    “By allowing the Hollywood Foreign
    Press Association to choose Iraq’s new
    leader, we will accomplish the most
    important thing: sticking to our
    arbitrary January deadline,” said
    Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld.

    Mr. Rumsfeld added that handing over
    authority to the Hollywood Foreign Press
    Association was the most practical way
    to choose a new Iraqi president in a
    timely fashion, since the security
    situation in Hollywood is “considerably
    better” than that in Iraq.

    And while the credibility of the Golden
    Globes has come into question in
    recent years, Mr. Rumsfeld argued, “
    You choose a new Iraqi president with the
    awards ceremony you have, not the
    awards ceremony you might want.

    The Golden Globes decision could
    spell trouble for interim Iraqi president
    Ghazi al-Yawar, who now faces a
    crowded field of Hollywood favorites including
    Johnny Depp and Leonardo DiCaprio.

    Buddy Schlantz, a veteran Hollywood
    talent agent, said that Mr. al-Yawar must
    begin aggressively courting the members
    of the Hollywood Foreign Press
    Association if he expects to prevail: “
    If I were al-Yawar, I’d start ordering
    the fruit baskets now.

    Elsewhere, Bernard Kerik’s nanny resigned
    today, saying that she wanted to
    spend less time with his family.

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    3) Cuba, Venezuela Defy U.S. and Announce
    Their Own Plan To Create A FairTrade
    Alternative to FTAA!
    ----- Original Message -----
    From: < nytr@olm.blythe-systems.com >
    " Castro, Chavez Defy US Trade Pact "

    Agencia Cubana de Noticias (AIN)
    http://www.ain.cubaweb.cu

    Cuba and Venezuela will Support
    Alternative Initiative to the FTAA


    Havana, Dec 14 (AIN) Presidents Fidel Castro Ruz,
    of Cuba, and Hugo Chavez Frías, of Venezuela,
    signed a joint declaration and an accord on Tuesday
    in Havana to implement the Bolivarian Alternative
    of the Americas.


    The joint declaration strongly rejects the content
    and intentions of the Free Trade Zone of the
    Americas (FTAA), considered the clearest
    _expression of the imperialist desires to dominate
    the Latin American region.

    With the recent accord both governments expand
    and modify their Comprehensive Bilateral
    Cooperation Agreement, signed on October 30,
    2000.

    They also take concrete steps towards integration
    of the Bolivarian Initiative for The Americas,
    known as ALBA by its Spanish acronyms and
    which is an alternative project to the FTAA.

    The document stipulates that both nations will
    draw up a strategic plan that guarantees the most
    beneficial productive complementation on the
    basis of rationality, the optimum use of advantages
    existing in both countries, the saving of resources,
    and others. Both nations will also exchange
    locally-developed integral technology packages
    for mutual benefit.

    Presidents Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez also
    agreed to subscribing a Reciprocal Credit
    Accord, the development of a two-way balanced
    trade and joint cultural initiatives. According to
    the document, Venezuela and Cuba are
    committed to undertake a series of actions
    including the immediate lifting of any kind of
    non-tariff barrier on all imports in both ways.

    In the context of Tuesday's agreement, Havana
    offers 2,000 scholarships annually to
    Venezuelan youths to take higher education
    courses in the fields of interest of Caracas,
    which will transfer technology in the energy
    sector.

    AFP via al Jazeera - Dec 15, 2004
    http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/70FAE354-7832-4AC8-A714-604F65F6C78E.
    htm

    Castro, Chavez Defy US Trade
    Pact

    Cuban President Fidel Castro and Venezuelan
    President Hugo Chavez have announced an
    alternative trade bloc to the one proposed by
    the US for a free-trade area of the Americas.

    The alternative was conceived as "a battle
    fought with the same rules and regulations as
    those imposed by the [US] empire to divide
    the people," Castro said on Tuesday.

    Naming the new pact the Bolivarian Alternative
    for the Americas (ALBA), the presidents said it
    would eliminate trade barriers and tax obstacles,
    provide incentives for investment, increase
    banking relations and tourism cooperation.

    Venezuela promised financing for Cuban
    industrial and infrastructure projects, while
    Cuba agreed to pay a minimum price of $27
    per barrel of Venezuelan oil, as part of the
    accord "to apply the Bolivarian Alternative
    for the Americas".

    FTAA dead

    Before the signing of the agreement, Castro
    and Chavez addressed a rally in Havana
    where both presidents declared the
    US-proposed Latin American Free Trade
    Zone dead.

    "It is an alternative to the perverse FTAA,
    which they have been trying to impose on
    us for years," Chavez said. "FTAA is dead."

    Chavez also accused Washington of pursuing
    imperialist intentions in free trade talks with
    Andean countries.

    Venezuela is one of the biggest suppliers
    of crude oil to the US, but their relations
    have been strained by disputes between
    Chavez and the White House.

    Washington has expressed concern over
    Chavez's close ties to Castro since Chavez
    won the presidency in 1998. And US
    President George Bush says the FTAA is
    the solution to the region's deepening
    poverty.

    Chavez visit

    Chavez is on a two-day visit to
    commemorate his first encounter in Havana
    with Castro 10 years ago when he was an
    army officer recently released from prison
    for leading a failed coup.

    At the time, Castro proclaimed him
    Venezuela's future leader.

    Venezuela currently provides Cuba with
    53,000 barrels of oil a day at preferential
    prices, while Cuba has 13,000 doctors in
    Venezuela, is helping the country stamp
    out illiteracy and has treated thousands
    of Venezuelans in its hospitals. -AFP

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    Carlos Rovira - "Carlito"

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    4) New Gallup Poll Raises Questions About Media Focus on 'Values'
    By E&P Staff
    NEW YORK
    Published: December 14, 2004 10:00 AM ET
    http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content
    _id=1000736658

    NEW YORK In the aftermath of the Nov. 2 election, the press and
    various political partisans jumped on exit polls that seemed to
    suggest "moral values" was the top issue in voters' minds as they
    re-elected President George W. Bush. Some analysts have questioned
    that notion, but a new nationwide Gallup Poll, released Tuesday
    morning, could deal a death blow to the whole idea.

    Asked what they consider "the most important problem facing this
    country today" the issue of values was tied for fourth place with
    unemployment/jobs, with only one in ten of the Gallup sample
    choosing it. Far ahead, with 23%, was the war in Iraq, followed by
    terrorism and the economy in general, both at 12%, only then
    followed by unemployment and values.

    The modest vote for values is all the more surprising because it
    was broadly define to include a wide range of concerns including
    "ethics," "moral," "religious/family decline," "dishonesty," and
    "lack of integrity."

    This 10% total could also be compared to the 29% who named
    some aspect of the economy as the top issue, along with the
    35% who mentioned Iraq or terrorism.

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    5) War Funding Request May Hit $100 Billion
    By Bryan Bender
    WASHINGTON
    Published on Wednesday, December 15, 2004 by the Boston Globe
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/1215-03.htm

    WASHINGTON -- The Bush administration plans to ask for between
    $80 billion and $100 billion to fund military operations in Iraq and
    Afghanistan next year, rather than the $70 billion to $75 billion
    the White House privately told members of Congress before the
    election, according to Pentagon and White House officials.

    Administration officials said yesterday they have not concluded
    how much money they will request in a "supplemental" spending
    package that is scheduled to go to Congress in January.

    "There's work going on inside the department to understand
    what's needed, and there's work going on with the Office of
    Management and Budget," the Defense Department's chief
    spokesman, Lawrence Di Rita, told reporters yesterday.

    But some analysts and government officials said the request is
    expected to run as high as $100 billion, bringing the total cost
    of operations in Iraq alone to well over $200 billion since the
    March 2003 invasion.

    Earlier this fall, members of Congress said the Defense Department
    told them in private briefings the supplemental package would be
    between $70 billion and $75 billion. The budget request will be
    higher, sources said, because of the greater number of soldiers --
    temporarily boosted to 150,000 -- needed to provide security
    around the time of the Jan. 30 Iraqi elections, and the loss of
    equipment due to the vigorous insurgency there.

    In June, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated
    that the 2005 supplemental to be submitted this January for
    Iraq and Afghanistan would be between $55 billion and $60 billion.

    The January supplemental will be the third special budget request
    to cover the military costs of Iraq. The administration asked for
    $55.8 billion in April 2003 and $71.8 billion in November 2003.
    In May of this year, Congress added $25 billion in war costs to
    the fiscal 2005 defense budget. In total, $152.6 billion in military
    funding for Iraq has been provided through the end of this year.

    Those statistics do not include emergency money to support the
    20,000 US troops in Afghanistan, which brings the total bill to
    $162.3 billion.

    In addition, the military has been spending more than was
    approved for 2004, in anticipation of a fresh infusion of funds
    in early 2005.

    "They ran out of the 2004 budget a month early [and] had to
    borrow [from] 2005," said John Pike, a defense specialist at the
    military think tank GlobalSecurity.org, a military think tank in
    Alexandria, Va. "They're already starting to suggest that the
    2005 budget is going to be $100 billion for one year alone."

    The Iraq operation, he said, has "been running over a billion
    a week thus far. I think we're probably getting up to $2 billion
    a week fairly soon."

    Few analysts expect the Iraq mission to be wrapped up in
    a year, and many question why the Bush administration is
    continuing to budget its war costs through supplementals
    -- usually reserved for one-time, emergency expenses --
    rather than include them in the annual budget request that
    is sent to Capitol Hill every February.

    Democrats and some fiscally conservative Republicans
    believe the administration is trying to hide the effects of
    rising war costs on the federal deficit, thereby justifying
    President Bush's calls for making some tax cuts permanent
    and spending more on education and other domestic priorities.

    Although war costs ultimately get added to the deficit, keeping
    them off the annual budget creates a false picture of the
    government's commitments at a time when Congress is making
    funding decisions, critics said.

    Brian Reidl, an economist with the conservative-leaning Heritage
    Foundation, said the Iraq funding should be put in the defense
    budget, because the Pentagon knows it will need money to pay
    for the operation. Leaving it out masks the true size of the
    deficit, he said.

    "There's an argument to be made that [early in the year] you
    don't know what you'll need" for Iraq funding, Reidl said. But
    "there's no reason why you can't put in a place-holder to at
    least estimate the cost."

    The administration separates the Iraq funding because "it's
    easier to sell the budget resolution with a smaller deficit and
    a smaller spending total because Iraq is excluded," Reidl said.

    Steve Kosiak, a defense budget specialist at the Center for
    Strategic and Budgetary Assessments in Washington, added
    that "the idea is [supplementals] are supposed to be used
    when there is a surprise. This is no longer a surprise that we
    are in Iraq."

    The actual cost of the military operations in Iraq is higher
    than any of the supplementals suggest, analysts said, because
    the wartime wear and tear on people and equipment will
    require expenditures long after the war ends.

    A soon-to-be-completed classified study by the Government
    Accountability Office requested by Democrats on the Senate
    Budget Committee concludes that the cost of "resetting" the
    worn-out armed forces for peacetime will require billions
    more than the money needed simply to maintain combat
    operations, according to congressional officials.

    "They will need new training and the sense is that the longer
    this thing goes on the deeper the problems get," said
    a congressional staff member who has been briefed on
    the GAO study.

    Meanwhile, the Pentagon yesterday alerted more units to
    be ready for duty in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Tens of thousands of Army soldiers from Alaska, Florida,
    Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, New York, and Texas -- including
    a brigade of the Army's 10th Mountain Division based at Fort
    Drum in New York -- will prepare to deploy overseas by the
    middle of 2005. The planned rotations, and others to be
    announced in the coming weeks, would maintain a force
    of 138,000 US troops in Iraq well into 2006.

    However, Di Rita called the notifications "prudent planning"
    and cautioned that it does not necessarily mean the United
    States will need all those forces.

    "It would be wrong to say that, as far as the eye can see, this
    is the number," Di Rita said. "It may very well be less than this.
    It may be the same amount. It may be more."

    Copyright (c) 2004 the Boston Globe

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    6) Details of Marines Mistreating
    Prisoners in Iraq Are Revealed
    By Richard A. Serrano
    WASHINGTON
    Published on Wednesday, December 15, 2004 by the Los
    Angeles Times
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/1215-01.htm

    WASHINGTON - Marines in Iraq conducted mock executions of
    juvenile prisoners last year, burned and tortured other detainees
    with electrical shocks, and warned a Navy corpsman they would
    kill him if he treated any injured Iraqis, according to military
    documents made public Tuesday.

    The latest revelations of prisoner abuse cases, obtained by the
    American Civil Liberties Union in a lawsuit against the government,
    involved previously unknown incidents in which 11 Marines were
    punished for abusing detainees. Military officials indicated that
    they had investigated 13 other cases, but deemed them
    unsubstantiated. Four investigations are pending.

    Military superiors handed down sentences of up to a year in
    confinement after finding Marines guilty of offenses ranging
    from assault to "cruelty and mistreatment," the documents show.

    The new documents are the latest in a series of reports, e-mails
    and other records that the ACLU has obtained to bolster its
    contention that the abuse of prisoners goes far beyond the
    handful of soldiers charged with abusing detainees at the Abu
    Ghraib prison in Iraq.

    The photographs of naked Iraqi prisoners being tortured by
    American troops at the prison shocked the world in April. The
    scandal involved abuse by reservists and members of the Army
    and National Guard; the latest cases elaborated for the first time
    on numerous allegations of abuse by Marines.

    The mistreatment occurred as early as May 2003, months before
    the first allegations of abuse at Abu Ghraib were recorded. And
    the most recent case involving prisoner abuse by the Marines
    occurred in June, two months after the Abu Ghraib scandal broke.

    Anthony D. Romero, executive director of the ACLU in New York,
    placed responsibility for the abuse on the Pentagon. "This kind of
    widespread abuse could not have taken place without a leadership
    failure of the highest order," he said.

    Lawrence Di Rita, the chief Pentagon spokesman, said he could
    not comment on the latest cases because he was unfamiliar with them.

    The documents described Navy criminal investigators scrambling
    to keep pace in June with an "exploding" number of abuse cases.

    "Heads up," an assistant special agent in charge of the Navy's
    investigative field office in the Middle East wrote to his superiors
    in a 6 a.m. e-mail June 14, pleading for more investigators. "Case
    load is exploding, high visibility cases are on the rise," he warned.
    "We have scrubbed all of our personnel and have no other trained
    personnel available to deploy."

    Cases involving prisoner abuse continue to tarnish the U.S. military's
    involvement in Iraq. Since the Abu Ghraib scandal, revelations have
    surfaced of other detainee abuse in Iraq, Afghanistan and at the
    prison for terrorism suspects at the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo
    Bay, Cuba.

    Authorities have charged eight prison guards for beating and
    sexually humiliating prisoners at the Abu Ghraib prison near
    Baghdad last fall. At least two prisoners at Abu Ghraib died in
    custody.

    In all, about three dozen prisoners in Iraq and Afghanistan are
    believed to have died in U.S. custody.

    The cases are in various stages of investigation or prosecution.
    The Pentagon confirmed this week that four soldiers were accused
    of killing a prisoner in Afghanistan in 2002, but charges against
    three of them were dropped.

    In the case that drew the stiffest punishment, a one-year prison
    sentence for the Marine, a detainee at Mahmoudiya was shocked
    with an electric transformer. Wires were held against his shoulders,
    and "the detainee danced as he was shocked," the documents state.

    The new records - which blacked out the names of soldiers - also
    show that a Marine was convicted of ordering four juvenile Iraqi
    looters to kneel down beside two shallow holes in Diwaniya. Then,
    "a pistol was discharged to conduct a mock execution." The
    Marine was sentenced to 30 days imprisonment with hard labor.


    Other Marines were punished for physically abusing prisoners.
    In Karbala, a Marine held a 9-millimeter pistol to the back of
    a detainee's head while another Marine snapped a picture. A glass
    of water then was poured on the prisoner's head, and he was
    photographed with an American flag draped over his body.

    Navy investigators found other allegations unsubstantiated,
    including sexual abuse cases alleging that a detainee's testicles
    had been squeezed and another prisoner had been sodomized
    with a rifle muzzle.

    Navy investigators also interviewed a group of corpsmen from
    Washington state who were dispatched to Iraq last year. Two of
    them spoke about being intimidated by Marines there.

    One corpsman said he was cautioned not to talk to others about
    prisoner abuse. "There was a lot of peer pressure to keep one's
    mouth shut," he said.

    Another corpsman said, "We were told not to exhaust our resources
    on the Iraqis. Several Marines told me that if I provided medical
    services to any Iraqi military or civilian personnel, that they
    [the Marines] would kill me."

    However, the corpsman later said that "there was a wounded
    Iraqi POW who needed his dressings changed" and that some
    Marines "actually called my attention to him to make sure he
    received treatment."

    He also recalled seeing Marines force detainees' heads into
    the dirt, "which was a cultural insult to them," and said that
    he saw a Marine striking a prisoner with an empty, 5-gallon
    plastic water jug.

    The records discuss the deaths of several detainees, but they
    do not identify them or say how the cases were resolved.

    One prisoner, who had attempted 20 escapes, reportedly died
    after breaking free of his restraints and jumping from a window,
    "landing on his head," the documents state. The examining Marine
    officer "surmised that the detainee died from internal cranial
    bleeding from the fall that was slow to kill him."

    Another prisoner was "ziplocked" - a military term for being
    handcuffed - and then died in custody. "Preliminary information
    is that the detainee died from an apparent heart attack," the
    reports state.

    In other cases, there was spirited debate, in reports and e-mails,
    about the corpses of prisoners. One dead Iraqi could not be found,
    and an e-mail ordered, "Try to find that body; we'll exhume
    if possible."

    In another e-mail exchange, military officials discussed whether
    autopsies should be conducted in Iraq, at military bases in
    Germany or in the United States.

    "Personally," responded one military officer, "I suspect that remains
    should probably NOT be brought to the U.S. for legal reasons."
    He did not elaborate.

    Two Marines were disciplined for claiming to have done things
    they didn't do. One was convicted of lying to a Las Vegas
    newspaper that he "personally executed two Iraqis." He forfeited
    a month's pay.

    The other Marine told a military surgeon that he broke his hand
    "punching an EPW [enemy prisoner of war] in the face" and told an
    officer that he broke it "punching an EPW in the back of the head."
    Back in the U.S., "he recanted, stating he punched the ground,"
    the reports said. He lost two months' pay.

    Times staff writer Mark Mazzetti contributed to this report.

    (c) Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    7) Eskimos Seek to Recast Global Warming
    as a Rights Issue
    By ANDREW C. REVKIN
    December 15, 2004
    http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/15/international/americas/15climate.html?oref
    =login&oref=login

    The Eskimos, or Inuit, about 155,000 seal-hunting peoples scattered
    around the Arctic, plan to seek a ruling from the Inter-American
    Commission on Human Rights that the United States, by contributing
    substantially to global warming, is threatening their existence.

    The Inuit plan is part of a broader shift in the debate over human-
    caused climate change evident among participants in the 10th round
    of international talks taking place in Buenos Aires aimed at averting
    dangerous human interference with the climate system.

    Inuit leaders said they planned to announce the effort at the
    climate meeting today.

    Representatives of poor countries and communities - from the
    Arctic fringes to the atolls of the tropics to the flanks of the Himalayas
    - say they are imperiled by rising temperatures and seas through
    no fault of their own. They are casting the issue as no longer simply
    an environmental problem but as an assault on their basic human
    rights.

    The commission, an investigative arm of the Organization of
    American States, has no enforcement powers. But a declaration
    that the United States has violated the Inuit's rights could create
    the foundation for an eventual lawsuit, either against the United
    States in an international court or against American companies in
    federal court, said a number of legal experts, including some
    aligned with industry.

    Such a petition could have decent prospects now that industrial
    countries, including the United States, have concluded in recent
    reports and studies that warming linked to heat-trapping
    smokestack and tailpipe emissions is contributing to big
    environmental changes in the Arctic, a number of experts said.

    Last month, an assessment of Arctic climate change by 300
    scientists for the eight countries with Arctic territory, including
    the United States, concluded that "human influences" are now the
    dominant factor.

    Inuit representatives attending the conference said in telephone
    interviews that after studying the matter for several years with
    the help of environmental lawyers they would this spring begin
    the lengthy process of filing a petition by collecting videotaped
    statements from elders and hunters about the effects they were
    experiencing from the shrinking northern icescape.

    The lawyers, at EarthJustice, a nonprofit San Francisco law firm,
    and the Center for International Environmental Law, in Washington,
    said the Inter-American Commission, which has a record of treating
    environmental degradation as a human rights matter, provides the
    best chance of success. The Inuit have standing in the Organization
    of American States through Canada.

    Sheila Watt-Cloutier, the elected chairwoman of the Inuit
    Circumpolar Conference, the quasi-governmental group recognized
    by the United Nations as representing the Inuit, said the biggest
    fear was not that warming would kill individuals but that it would
    be the final blow to a sturdy but suffering culture.

    "We've had to struggle as a people to keep afloat, to keep our
    indigenous wisdom and traditions," she said. "We're an adaptable
    people, but adaptability has its limits.

    "Something is bound to give, and it's starting to give in the Arctic,
    and we're giving that early warning signal to the rest of the world."

    If the Inuit effort succeeds, it could lead to an eventual stream of
    litigation, somewhat akin to lawsuits against tobacco companies,
    legal experts said.

    The two-week convention, which ends Friday, is the latest session
    on two climate treaties: the 1992 framework convention on climate
    change and the Kyoto Protocol, an addendum that takes effect in
    February and for the first time requires most industrialized countries
    to curb such emissions.

    The United States has signed both pacts and is bound by the
    1992 treaty, which requires no emissions cuts. But the Bush
    administration opposes the mandatory Kyoto treaty, saying it
    could harm the economy and unfairly excuses big developing
    countries from obligations.

    That situation makes the United States particularly vulnerable
    to such suits, environmental lawyers said.

    By embracing the first treaty and signing the second, it has
    acknowledged that climate change is a problem to be avoided; but
    by subsequently rejecting the Kyoto pact, the lawyers said, it has
    not shown a commitment to stemming its emissions, which constitute
    a fourth of the global total.

    The American delegation at the Buenos Aires conference declined to
    comment on Tuesday on the petition or the arguments behind it.
    "Until the Inuit have presented a complaint, we are not responding
    to that issue," a State Department official said. "When they do, we
    will look at what they have to say, consider it and then respond."

    Christopher C. Horner, a lawyer for the Cooler Heads Coalition,
    an industry-financed group opposed to cutting the emissions,
    said the chances of success of such lawsuits had risen lately.

    From his standpoint, he said, "The planets are aligned very poorly."

    Delegates who flew to the conference from the Arctic's far-flung
    communities, where retreating sea ice imperils traditional seal
    hunts, said they planned to meet in Buenos Aires with representatives
    from small-island nations that could eventually be swamped by rising
    seas, swelled by meltwater from shrinking glaciers and Arctic ice sheets.

    Enele S. Sopoaga, the ambassador to the United Nations from Tuvalu,
    a 15-foot-high nation of wave-pounded atolls halfway between
    Australia and Hawaii, said he still saw legal efforts as a last resort.

    Tuvalu had threatened to sue the United States two years ago in the
    International Court of Justice, but held off for a variety of reasons.

    Larry Rohter contributed reporting from Buenos Aires for this article.

    Copyright 2004 The New York Times

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    8) The Thought Police - Cops Investigate Anti-American Statements
    of 11-Year-Old
    The Washington Post reports two police officers recently
    visited the home of an 11-year-old and questioned his parents
    for three hours about anti-American comments their son made in
    school The student had refused to participate in a Veterans Day
    exercise and criticized the Marines. The school claimed he had
    said, "I wish all Americans were dead and that American soldiers
    should die." The Police questioned his parents about their views
    on Sept. 11, the military and if they knew any foreigners who
    criticized US policy. They also inquired whether the parents might
    be teaching "anti-American values" at home. The mother, Pamela
    Allbaugh, told the Washington Post "It was intimidating.
    I told them it's like a George Orwell novel, that it felt like
    they were the thought police." She went on to say "If someone
    would have asked me five years ago if this was something my
    government would do, I would have said never."
    http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=04/12/16/1444215

    Va. Boy's Defiant Words Draw Police Response
    Investigators Visit Home After Student Allegedly Wishes
    Harm on Americans
    By Rosalind S. Helderman
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Wednesday, December 15, 2004; Page B01
    Original Washington Post story:
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A64726-2004Dec14.html?sub=AR

    When the two plainclothes Loudoun County sheriff's investigators
    showed up on her Leesburg doorstep, Pamela Albaugh got nervous.
    But when they told her why they were there, she got angry:
    A complaint had been filed alleging that her 11-year old son
    had made "anti-American and violent" statements in school.

    She was aware of an incident at Belmont Ridge Middle School in
    which her son, Yishai Asido, was assigned to write a letter to U.S.
    Marines and responded, according to his teacher, by saying, "I wish
    all Americans were dead and that American soldiers should die."
    Yishai and Albaugh deny that the boy wished his countrymen dead.

    Albaugh, a U.S. citizen, and her husband, an Israeli citizen who
    manages a Leesburg moving company, say the investigators' visit
    and the school's response were a paranoid overreaction in
    a charged post-9/11 environment. But law enforcement officials
    say the terrorist attacks and the Columbine school shootings
    require them to consider whether children who make threats
    might post a danger to their classmates. The case illustrates the
    balancing act that schools and law enforcement must find between
    the free speech of minors and community safety.

    Albaugh described her son as a rambunctious student who has long
    opposed armies of any kind. He refused the Veterans Day assignment
    and told his teacher that the Marines "might as well die, as much
    as I care." Whatever was said, the words had been the source of anguished
    conferences, phone calls and, ultimately, a day of in-school suspension.

    Albaugh thought the whole thing was resolved in school until
    Investigators Robert LeBlanc and Kelly Poland showed up last
    week. What followed, she said, was two hours of polite but intense
    and personal questioning.

    They asked how she felt about 9/11 and the military. They asked
    whether she knows any foreigners who have trouble with American
    policy. They mentioned a German friend who had been staying with
    the family and asked whether the friend sympathized with the Taliban.
    They also inquired whether she might be teaching her children "anti-
    American values," she said.

    Toward the end of the conversation, Albaugh's husband, Alon Asido,
    arrived home. Asido said the pair then spent another hour talking
    to him, mostly about his life in Israel and his more than four years
    in an elite combat unit there.

    Before the investigators left, one deputy said their "concerns had
    been put to rest," Albaugh said.

    "It was intimidating," she said. "I told them it's like a George Orwell
    novel, that it felt like they were the thought police. If someone
    would have asked me five years ago if this was something my
    government would do, I would have said never."

    Loudoun County Sheriff Stephen O. Simpson confirmed that
    investigators visited the house. "Whenever there is a complaint
    that a child in a school is using language that is threatening or with
    violent overtones, we have an obligation to look into it," he said.
    "We can't ignore something like that and have something tragic
    happen down the road that we could have prevented."

    Simpson declined to comment on details of the complaint or the
    kinds of questions investigators asked. "If you're looking at what
    [the school] said he said, I have to think you'd see where we came
    up with those questions," he said.

    A schools spokesman declined to comment, other than to release,
    at Albaugh's request, a one-page letter from Yishai's file that
    explained his suspension.

    His parents said the boy's words were those of a confused adolescent,
    whose views of the world are still being formed. They believe that
    authorities were called partly because he has a foreign-sounding
    name and accented English from years of living abroad. The family
    lived in India, Europe and Israel before moving to the United States
    in 2000. The couple have four children, with both U.S. and Israeli
    citizenship, enrolled in Loudoun schools.

    Albaugh said that Yishai is not violent and that the school could
    have used the classroom incident as a "teachable moment," helping
    him learn to say what he was feeling in a less offensive manner.

    Instead, Yishai said he has learned that it is not worth challenging
    authority. "At the end of the day, you lose," he said, adding: "All
    of these freedoms and things they're supposed to uphold, they
    bash them."

    The Columbine shootings, in which a teacher and 12 students
    were killed by two other students in Colorado in 1999, has
    changed the way schools view violent words uttered by their
    students, said Ronald D. Stephens, executive director of the
    National School Safety Center. In this case, he noted, no one
    was arrested, no charges were filed and the case was closed.

    "Sometimes the questions might be somewhat uncomfortable.
    But the final outcome was that [the investigators] got there and
    realized there was no 'there' there," he said. "We should give
    credit where credit is due."

    Georgetown law professor David Cole said Yishai's statement
    in class is protected by the Constitution.

    "There's no indication from the student making an anti-American
    statement that violence to the school would follow," he said.
    "The FBI and government officials should be investigating real
    terrorists, not children who criticize the United States."

    Charles Shaw
    Publisher/Editor-in-Chief
    Newtopia Magazine
    www.newtopiamagazine.net

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    9) World War 3 Report, issue 93, December 2003
    http://www.ww3report.com/93.html#palestine6
    Remote-control Machine Guns to Be Mounted on the Wall

    According to Haaretz reporter Amira Hass, a Sept. 21 [2003] article
    on the Israeli paper Yediot Ahronoth's Web site, Ynet, states that
    "the separation fence to be built in the Gilboa region will include
    remote-control machine guns that will be operated by female
    soldiers from their command posts and will shoot at those
    suspected of being terrorists." According to Ynet's reporter, the
    system is be installed in the coming months in the mountainous
    Gilboa region, along the path of the "Separation Wall." The army's
    purpose in installing the system is to compensate for the small
    amount of troops and the difficulties of moving in the area--"and
    to shoot at terrorists who try to cross the fence." In a concession
    to humanitarian considerations, rather than making the guns fire
    automatically at anything that moves they will be fired "by the
    female soldier who manages the lookout post and has been
    trained for this."

    Hass adds: "The report did not say how she would be trained to
    tell whether the figure who appears on her video screen is
    a terrorist or an innocent man." (Ha'aretz, Sept. 24) There is
    no explanation why the soldiers used will be female, but perhaps
    the Israeli army considers it a combat role that would be safe
    enough for a woman soldier. (Ha'aretz, Sept. 24) (David Bloom)

    7. Remote-control Helicopter Stolen
    Industrial espionage is believed to be the explanation for the
    theft of a state-of-the-art remote-control pilotless helicoter
    under developoment by an Israeli company. The unit was stolen
    from Steadicopter's Kefar Maccabi plant, after it had finished
    it's final test flights. The BBC notes that Israel has "long been
    a world leader in developing pilotless reconnaissance aircraft
    and its Pioneer drone is currently in service with US forces in
    Iraq." (BBC, Nov. 12) (David Bloom)

    8. Next: Remote-control Bulldozers
    The fearsome armor-plated D-9 Israeli army bulldozer, used
    to demolish Palestinian buildings and orchards as well as
    international activists, is being modified to be operated by
    remote control, a move the army insists will "save lives." An
    unnamed Israeli officer was quoted by the Israel Technion I
    nstitute of Technology, which designed the remote-control
    version, as saying, "today the bulldozer drivers are exposed
    to great danger when they knock down buildings that have
    militants hiding in them." Palestinian spokesmen Saeb Erakat
    denounced the move. "The whole idea is despicable," said Erekat.
    "If an unmanned bulldozer is used, human life is in much
    greater danger." As of the Oct. 31 press time of this BBC
    report, the robot dozer was to go "into service in the next
    few weeks. " (BBC, Oct. 31)

    According to the Israeli Committee of Housing Demolitions
    (ICAHD), 8,000 Palestinian houses have been destroyed by
    the Israeli occupation forces since 1967. (ICHAD:figure as
    of Spring, 2002)

    The D-9 bulldozer is a product of the US-based Catepillar
    Corporation. (See also:
    http://www.sustaincampaign.org/cat_actionkit.html) (David Bloom)

    - Modern "war" is state terrorism directed against civilians.

    - The purpose of u.s. actions toward Iraq over the last
    14 years (2 horrific illegal bombing invasions, and 12
    years of illegal, immoral sanctions) is to destroy Iraq as
    a nation, the fulfillment of the neo-con dream of "ending
    nations" that defy usrael. Forget what bush, klinton and
    others say, forget stated intentions, just look at what they
    do, and what they have done.

    - If my men could think, they would not fight.
    - Napoleon

    - The most outlandish conspiracy theory of them all (and
    the most widely accepted): 19 hijackers from a third world
    terrorist group armed with boxcutters forced 3 planes into
    3 of the nation's most important and symbolic structures
    with no assistance from US government / intelligence insiders.
    -http://www.oilempire.us/conspiracy.html

    - It's too late for religions to fight over market share.
    Adopting a particular religion is not the way. It's no good
    for us to "become" Jews, or Christians, or Buddhists. Rather,
    we must be like Jesus, without necessarily being a Christian,
    be like Buddha, without necessarily being a Buddhist. In order
    to do this, we need to study these religions a little, not use
    them for political ends..

    - paraphrase of Robert Thurman (author of Anger) being
    interviewed by Chris Welch
    on Living Room, KPFA-FM Radio, 11-18-04

    Daniel Stone
    justice_freedom@earthlink.net

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    10) Mark your calendar: Saturday, December 18, 6:00-8:00
    (18th & CASTRO)

    As anyone with a pulse knows, BADlands owner Les Natali has
    been veeeeery NAUGHTY this year. (THE CITY HUMAN RIGHTS
    COMMISSION HAS RECEIVED A TON OF COMPLAINTS ABOUT
    HIS BAD BEHAVIOR.)


    SO, this Saturday at 6PM, 18th & And Castro for All are TAKING
    ACTION FOR KINDNESS! After all, it's not very *nice* to violate
    city and state civil rights laws, ignore human rights investigations, etc.

    It is very nice, though, that on Saturday along with Grinch-spotting,
    And Castro For All will launch its new anti-discrimination hotline .
    We hope it's one gift that keeps on giving.

    Wear your Santa Hat, your favorite red outfit or elf shoes, and bring
    along your ho-ho-hos.


    Meet at Harvey Milk Plaza at 6:00 PM -Call 415.850.8580 if you're
    late and need to find us.

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    11) Chuck D keynotes "State of the Black Youth" convention
    By Diane Bukowski
    DETROIT
    The Michigan Citizen
    http://www.michigancitizen.com/default.asp?sourceid=&smenu=73&twindow=Defaul
    t&mad=No&sdetail=1308&wpage=1&skeyword=&sidate=&ccat=&ccatm=&restate=&restat
    us=&reoption=&retype=&repmin=&repmax=&rebed=&rebath=&subname=

    DETROIT - Chuck D of the seminal rap group Public Enemy blasted
    the U.S. entertainment industry for perverting hip-hop music and
    culture during his keynote address Nov. 19 at the Third Annual
    State of the Black Youth in the New Millennium convention.

    Held at Wayne State University's General Lectures auditorium by
    the National Black Operations Business Association, the convention
    drew hundreds of high-school and college youth.

    "Hip hop is not drug culture, gun culture, thug culture or dumb culture,"
    Chuck D said. "It comes out of the legacy and musicianship of Black
    people. It's an expression of our soul in vocalization. But the industry
    has substituted the style of a people for the soul of a people."

    The musician noted that the hip-hop phenomenon has established
    roots worldwide, including a thriving community in Brazil that has
    remained true to the original purpose of the genre. He said that
    community refused to have Snoop Dog and Ja Rule perform there,
    because they did not "represent the people."

    Chuck D also condemned the Bush administration and the prison-
    industrial complex in the United States.

    "The only gangsters that get away with anything are the gangsters
    in government," he said. "There are no Black gangsters."

    Noting that the same corporations are purchasing prisons and
    cemeteries, he said the only options being given Black youth are
    to go to prison or to war.

    "If they cared about rehabilitation in prison, they would make
    computers available there. Let three brothers in prison have
    laptops, and they'll be running their lives and the world," he said.

    Rico Hoye, ranked the number one light heavyweight boxer in
    the country, struck a similar chord, talking about the 10 years
    he spent in Michigan prisons after being sentenced at 16 for
    second-degree murder.

    "I watched the cells in adult prison filling up with our youth,"
    Hoye said, "and they were getting younger and younger, 13
    and 14 years old, going in and never going home, or going
    home and coming back again."

    Hoye said he got the opportunity to rewrite his life from the
    political education he received from the "positive brothers" he
    met while incarcerated. He called on the community to address
    conditions inside the prison, including the need to reinstitute
    college-level education there, and to provide support, including
    jobs for ex-prisoners coming home.

    "It's hard to get a job," he said. "I'm on TV, but I'm still putting
    in job applications and still getting turned down."

    Karinda Washington, a candidate for the Detroit City Council,
    called on young Black women to develop themselves, and to
    allow themselves the opportunity to develop deep, mutually
    respectful relationships rather than engaging in casual sex.

    "If you're not whole within yourself, Black woman, he cannot
    make you whole," she said. "Create opportunities for courtship.
    There are some good, qualified Black men available here in
    the city of Detroit."

    NBOBA president Mohammed Luwemba echoed Washington's
    plea for wholesome relationships.

    "The state of the women is the state of the race," he said.
    "If women are not respected and protected, then the men
    cannot be respected and protected."

    He announced a new NBOBA initiative, Operation Race
    Restoration, aimed at creating positive, dedicated young
    men and women who will devote themselves to confronting
    and overthrowing the Bush regime.

    "They get up every morning at the crack of dawn with one
    thing on their mind, 100-percent world domination," Luwemba
    said. "But we will get up every single morning with nothing but
    overthrowing these people on our minds."

    E-mail: dbukowski@michigancitizen.com

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    12) Israeli Army Raid Into Gaza Kills 5 Palestinians
    By Nidal al-Mughrabi
    GAZA (Reuters)
    Fri Dec 17, 2004 08:29 AM ET
    http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=7125113&src=eD
    ialog/GetContent§ion=news

    GAZA (Reuters) - Israeli tanks and troops raided southern Gaza on
    Friday in response to increasing Palestinian mortar attacks, killing
    at least five Palestinians and prompting hundreds to flee their homes,
    witnesses and medics said.

    At least five other Palestinians were trapped in an arms- smuggling
    tunnel that collapsed as it was being dug under an army-controlled
    security strip between the Gaza town of Rafah and nearby Egypt,
    witnesses from Rafah said.

    Palestinian ambulances and rescue crews given clearance by Israeli
    forces rushed to the scene. Palestinian officials said earlier accounts
    that two men had been extracted from the tunnel were incorrect,
    citing poor communications in the area.

    "We are still digging, we cannot yet determine their fate," a security
    official said by telephone from Rafah.

    Israeli troops have raided Rafah many times to battle militants waging
    a four-year-old revolt, killing hundreds of Palestinians and leaving
    thousands homeless from demolitions of homes suspected of hiding
    tunnels.

    At least five Palestinians were killed and 22 wounded in Friday's army
    raid into Khan Younis, Gaza's second largest city and a hotbed of
    militants who frequently pepper nearby Jewish settlements with
    mortar and rocket fire.

    Four of the dead were militants and the other a civilian, local medics
    and witnesses said.

    NEW CHANCE FOR PEACE?

    The incursion unfolded hours after Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
    told a high-profile security conference that there was a unique chance
    for Middle East peacemaking with new Palestinian leaders following
    the death of Yasser Arafat.

    Sharon said he was ready to coordinate a planned pullout from Gaza
    with a moderate post-Arafat leader, likely to be Mahmoud Abbas.
    He is favored to win a Jan. 9 presidential election and advocates
    a halt to violence and fresh talks.

    About 600 people, many carrying small children in freezing pre-dawn
    darkness, fled homes in neighborhoods bearing the brunt of the raid
    and were given shelter in a U.N.-run school.

    They said a number of homes were demolished.

    "What peace and what pullout? We only feel fear and cold. I do not
    know even if my house was still standing or if it was demolished,"
    Kamilia Attobji, 36, a mother of 10, told Reuters.

    Israeli forces say buildings they raze in such raids are used as cover
    for militants targeting settlements. Residents uprooted by demolitions
    complain of collective punishment.

    An Israeli army commander in the Khan Younis area told Reuters that
    the raid would continue as long as was required.

    "We will carry on and I can say we will do all we can to reduce the
    threat to the local communities who should not have to live like this,
    " Lieutenant Colonel Dotan, who declined to give his surname, said in
    reference to mortar barrages.

    The incursion was only the second serious army sweep into
    Palestinian territory since a short period of calm following
    Arafat's death on Nov. 11.

    Rocket and mortar fire by militants has since restarted with some
    30 attacks this month. A Thai farm labourer was killed and 17
    settlers wounded in one attack.

    (Additional reporting by Ori Lewis)

    (c) Reuters 2004

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    13) Hungry and homeless ranks swell in US cities
    By Rick Kelly
    World Socialist Web Site
    www.wsws.org
    17 December 2004
    http://www.wsws.org/articles/2004/dec2004/hung-d17.shtml

    The demand for emergency shelter and food in US cities has risen
    significantly over the past year, straining a tattered social safety net
    beyond the breaking point, according to a report released Tuesday
    by the US Conference of Mayors. The "Hunger and Homeless Survey"
    covering America's 27 largest cities showed that requests for food
    aid increased by 14 percent in 2004, while the demand for shelter
    rose by 6 percent.

    The most striking conclusion of the survey was that working families
    now constitute one of the largest groups in need of regular emergency
    assistance. Contrary to the image portrayed by the mass media, those
    going homeless and hungry in America are not just the "down and
    out," the alcohol or drug-dependent, mentally ill or people otherwise
    unable to earn a living. They include many people who are working,
    but earn so little that they cannot make ends meet.

    Chronic poverty afflicts wide sections of the working class,
    particularly those employed in the predominantly low-paid and
    casual service industry. Of all adults requesting food assistance,
    34 percent were employed. Children and their parents accounted
    for fifty-six percent of all recipients of food aid. Families now make
    up 40 percent of the total homeless population in the United States.

    These stark figures are another indication of the economic and
    social catastrophe confronting millions of Americans. While Bush
    boasted of an economic recovery during the presidential campaign,
    the reality is that only a small layer at the top has seen significant
    income gains in 2004. For millions of Americans, mass layoffs and
    the spiraling cost of living-particularly food, housing and fuel
    expenses-have made it increasingly difficult to get by.

    "Working poor, unemployed, multi-generational, single and traditional
    parent families have to make difficult decisions as whether to pay for
    utilities, rent, medicine, gas, health or car insurance," city authorities
    in Louisville reported. "Food is being pushed further down the list
    of priorities."

    "The time when households used food assistance facilities primarily
    for emergency situations is long over," noted officials in Philadelphia.
    "At least 86 percent of the people receiving assistance from the food
    cupboards return every month. The network is used to sustain families
    every month so they can use their limited resources on rent, heat,
    medical bills, and transportation."

    The report included a number of case studies. In Phoenix, the
    Robertsons, a married couple and their three children, became
    homeless after the father lost his job at a telemarketing company.
    He struggled to develop his own landscaping business, while his
    wife worked day labor jobs. "The family has no money and is having
    trouble accessing services because they do not have appropriate
    documentation, and do not have the money to pay for new birth
    certificates... Currently the Robertsons are on a waiting list of
    a large family shelter, but will need appropriate identification to
    enter the program."

    In St. Paul, a 24-year-old woman, Tara, her husband Martin, and
    their three young children became homeless after she lost her job
    as a home healthcare worker, which paid $6.20 per hour. The family
    was forced to move into a shelter run by the local Catholic church.

    Assistance for the poor remains grossly inadequate. Charity
    organizations are overwhelmed by the demand, and both the
    federal and state governments have gutted the budgets for social
    programs over a number of years.

    The survey reported that in the past 12 months, one in five requests
    for food assistance went unmet-nearly a 50-percent increase over
    the previous year. Twenty-three percent of requests for emergency
    shelter were turned down, and this rejection rate rose to 32 percent
    for homeless families.

    In many cities, the shortfalls are far higher than these averages. In
    New Orleans, 66 percent of food requests were rejected, and in San
    Francisco 50 percent. In Los Angeles, 66 percent of all shelter requests
    made by families were turned down, and in Boston 50 percent.

    The report provides a glimpse into some of the innumerable
    hardships and indignities suffered by those who seek assistance.
    More than half of the responding cities routinely forced homeless
    families to be broken up in order to be accommodated in emergency
    shelter.

    Food pantries forced to cut portions

    Two-thirds of all cities surveyed reported that emergency food
    assistance facilities, in a desperate attempt to meet demand, were
    forced to cut back on the quantity of food they provided. Restrictions
    are also enforced on the number of times people are permitted to
    receive food.

    Punitive government welfare cutbacks and restrictions, introduced
    by both the Clinton and Bush administrations, have only added to
    the hardship. "According to the Boston Medical Center Pediatric
    Emergency Department," the report noted, "25 percent of homeless
    families interviewed in their clinic had been cut off of welfare benefits
    within the past year (compared to 11 percent of non-homeless families)
    due to failure to comply with behavioral or procedural requirements,
    such as not being able to provide a mailing address to the welfare office."

    The swelling of the ranks of the working poor has seen a parallel
    increase in the demand for subsidized housing. Requests for such
    housing by low-income families and individuals increased in 68
    percent in the surveyed cities. Applicants for public housing now
    wait an average of 20 months before they receive any assistance.
    Fifty-nine percent of the surveyed cities are refusing to accept any
    new applications because they already have long waiting lists.

    City authorities reported that they expect no improvement in hunger
    and homelessness in 2005. Eighty-eight percent said that they
    anticipate another increase in the demand for food assistance, and
    92 percent expect a rise in requests for emergency shelter.

    The Conference of Mayors made a somewhat bizarre attempt to put
    a positive spin on the survey's findings. Bill Purcell, mayor of Nashville
    and chair of the conference's task force on hunger and homelessness,
    admitted that the "bad news is that the increased demand [for
    assistance] is all over the country." He then added: "The good news
    here is that the increase in demand overall has slowed somewhat."

    In other words, the "good news" is that things are getting worse but-
    at least for the moment- at a slower rate. Every year the survey, first
    conducted 20 years ago, has registered an increase in the demand
    food and shelter assistance.

    Over the last year, the demand for food aid increased 17 percent,
    while requests for emergency shelter rose by 13 percent. In 2003,
    the demand for both food and shelter increased by 19 percent. As
    the survey demonstrates, the continued growth in the numbers of
    working people who are unable to earn enough to house and feed
    themselves has already overwhelmed the limited assistance programs
    that exist in America.

    To focus on a decline in the rate at which hunger and homelessness
    is growing only confirms that the government and the corporate-
    controlled two-party system are unwilling and unable to take any
    action to alleviate the suffering.

    What emerges from the survey is a devastating portrait of the human
    cost of American society's unprecedented level of social inequality.
    While the wealthiest strata are anticipating a lucrative new year (see
    "America's super-rich look forward to a merry Christmas" ), millions
    of people will spend the holiday season in desperation and destitution.

    Copyright 1998-2004
    World Socialist Web Site
    All rights reserved

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    14) Joma Sison issued this statement in the wake of the deaths
    of over 1000 people due to typhoon-related mudslides and
    the government's request for 600 U.S. Marines to engage
    in "relief operations" near areas controlled by the NPA
    and National Democratic Front of the Philippines. --dp
    PS. CARHRIHL is an important human rights declaration signed
    by the Philippine government and the NDFP.
    Press Statement
    16 December 2004
    CARHRIHL DOES NOT ALLOW US COMBAT TROOPS TO INTRUDE
    INTO PHILIPPINE--GRP OR NDFP--TERRITORY
    UNDER PRETEXT OF RELIEF OPERATIONS
    By Prof. Jose Maria Sison
    Chief Political Consultant
    National Democratic Front of the Philippines

    The entire Filipino people must condemn all pronouncements and actions of
    the US government and the Government of the Republic of the Philippines
    (GRP) to justify and push the entry of US combat troops in the Philippines
    under such pretexts as joint military exercises, training, civic action, and
    relief operations. All these are violative of the national sovereignty of
    the Filipino people and territorial integrity of the Philippines.

    In this regard, the GRP and Foreign Secretary Alberto Romulo are betraying
    the national sovereignty of the Filipino people and territorial integrity of
    the Philippines by allowing US combat troops to enter the country under the
    pretext of relief operations.

    Civilian agencies of foreign governments can offer civilian relief personnel
    and aid very properly and easily. There are also more than enough Filipinos
    who can do the relief work. Why should the GRP and Romulo allow US combat
    troops to enter the country under the pretext of relief operations,
    provocatively show off their military weapons and vehicles and conduct
    psywar and intelligence operations on Philippine territory? Is relief work
    really the objective or is it to make the escalation of US military
    intervention in the Philippines acceptable to the public?

    According to the CPP Information Department, the New People's Army is
    magnanimously not targeting the intrusive and marauding US combat troops
    and is giving them the chance to get out of the country as quickly as
    possible. But such magnanimity should not be linked to the wrong notion that
    the Comprehensive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and International
    Humanitarian Law (CARHRIHL) permits US combat troops to enter the
    Philippines under the pretext of relief operations.

    The GRP and the US government are in the first place condemnable for
    violating the national sovereignty of the Filipino people and the
    territorial integrity of the Philippines. It is erroneous for anyone to
    claim that CARHRIHL permits US combat troops to enter Philippine, GRP or
    NDFP territory for any length of time under the guise of relief operations
    and that the GRP can decide unilaterally the scope of operations and types
    of arms and equipment which the US combat troops can bring for their
    supposed security.

    1. CARHRIHL does not allow the entry of US combat troops into the
    Philippines but allows only timely limited agreements between the GRP and
    NDFP as co-belligerents in a civil war to grant safe passage on certain
    humanitarian grounds to the Filipino troops of one side or the other or the
    International Committee of the Red Cross and other permitted civilian
    agencies.

    2. Under CARHRIHL, the GRP and NDFP are contracting parties on an equal
    footing, with their respective political integrity. The GRP cannot
    unilaterally decide the scope of operations and types of arms and
    equipment of even GRP troops and police when they seek on certain
    humanitarian grounds to enter the territory of the NDFP or people's
    revolutionary government or contested areas.

    As NDFP chief political consultant, I advice all forces and personnel of the
    CPP, NDFP and NPA to study carefully the CARHRIHL and other agreements
    entered into by the NDFP with the GRP and appreciate how the NDFP has
    upheld revolutionary principles and made policy agreements, without leaving
    any ground for capitulation or submission to GRP authority by any
    revolutionary force or element. ###


    THE MACAPAGAL-ARROYO REGIME SPEWS OUT LIES LIKE GOEBBELS DID

    Vainly believing that by spewing out and repeating even the most outrageous
    lies it can deceive the people, the Macapagal-Arroyo regime has declared the
    New People's Army as the worst human rights violator and accused it of
    illegal logging and causing the death of many hundreds. The same tactic was
    used by Goebbels, Hitler's propaganda chief, who claimed that by
    continuously repeating lies, the lies would ultimately be accepted as truth.

    But the people cannot be deceived by the regime's lies. The experience of
    the people in the countrysides and in the cities proves that it is the
    regime's military and police that kill, maim and injure the people, destroy
    their properties, and violate their basic human and democratic rights in
    order to serve the interests of the foreign mining companies, the logging
    companies, the rest of the big comprador bourgeoisie, big landlords and
    bureaucrat capitalists.

    The brutal massacre at Hacienda Luisita on November 16, 2004 and the summary
    execution of the key witness of the massacre, Marcelino Beltran, on December
    8, 2004 are stark examples of such atrocities against the people. The
    Arroyo regime, including the President herself as Commander-in-Chief of the
    Armed Forces of the Philippines, Secretary of Labor Patricia Sto. Tomas, the
    Cojuangcos and Aquinos, the military and police officers who carried out the
    massacre, these are the worst human rights violators. The killers of the
    regime, such as General Jovito Palparan, are the big violators of human
    rights. No amount of spewing out lies that the NPA are the worst human
    rights violators can erase the truth of the bitter experience of the
    people.

    The records prove that the Macapagal-Arroyo regime, as did its predecessors,
    approved and allowed foreign and local logging firms to denude our forests
    as to cause the massive floods and landslides that have resulted in so many
    deaths. This is true not only in the areas of the latest catastrophe. It
    is true of so many other areas in our country. This regime and the cronies
    whose logging concessions it has approved are criminally liable for all the
    death and destruction they cause.

    On the other hand, it is also the experience of the people in the rural
    areas, wherever the New People's Army is active, that the NPA and other
    revolutionary forces protect the people against logging companies, foreign
    mining companies and other destroyers of the environment.

    On a related matter, President Macapagal-Arroyo has hailed the recent
    Supreme Court reversal of its earlier decision to declare unconstitutional
    the Mining Act of 1995. This means that Financial and Technical Assistance
    agreements (FTAAs) allowing foreign mining companies to plunder up to
    100,000 hectares of land are to be promoted, causing not only the
    displacement of numerous indigenous people but further destruction of the
    environment and even more disastrous floods and landslides. This regime is
    surrendering our country's economic sovereignty, promoting the unbridled
    plunder of our country and in effect agreeing to the death and destruction
    that results from these. It is indeed a deceitful and murderous regime. It
    must be militantly opposed and isolated.

    Luis G. Jalandoni
    Chairperson, NDFP Negotiating Panel

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    15) On Sunday December, 12, 2004, an Israeli sniper in Khan
    Younis refugee camp killed Rana Syiam, 7 years old, while
    she was sitting at home, eating supper with her family.
    The Israeli army gave no explanation for the attack.

    [This week in Palestine: a service of the International Middle East
    Media Center imemc.org, for the week of December 10 - 17, 2004]


    Rana is just one of 231 Palestinians, mostly children and women,
    killed in the Khan Younis refugee camp over the four years of the
    current intifada.

    Khan Younis camp, one of the most crowded places on earth, shares a
    border with the illegal Israeli settlement of Gush Katif -- the
    largest Israeli settlement in the Gaza Strip. Population density in
    Gaza averages 65,800 persons per square mile, compared with 1,700
    people per square mile in the illegal Israeli settlements that now
    control over 20% of Gaza.

    According to the Palestinian Red Crescent Society, 3,478 Palestinians
    have been killed since September 2000, and 28,248 have been injured.
    (During the same time period, 694 Israeli civilians have been killed)
    The Health and Development Information Policy Center (HDIP) reports
    that 82% of the Palestinians killed by the army were civilians, 18.5%
    of them under the age of 18.

    84% (699) of the Palestinians killed were shot in the head and neck,
    like Rana.

    Rana Syiam was one of six Palestinians killed this past week. Twenty
    four Palestinians were wounded, including a three year old child in
    Rafah.

    64 palestinians were arrested this week, 26 homes were demolished,
    major checkpoints were closed at least six times, and Palestinian
    towns and villages were invaded at least 38 times by the Israeli
    military.

    Some examples of this week's violence:

    Nine Palestinian schoolchildren aged 8-12 were wounded as an army tank
    shell landed close to their classroom at Tareq Ben Ziad School in Khan
    Yunis on Sunday morning.

    In Nablus on Sunday, armed settlers barred residents from picking
    their olives, hurled stones at the residents and their cars, and
    forced them out of their fields. The Israeli army did not intervene
    in the settler's unprovoked attacks on the Palestinian farmers.

    Ateyya Mustafa Yassin, 15, was hospitalized Wednesday after being
    severely beaten by Israeli soldiers in Nablus. Soldiers claim that
    Yassin was among a group of youth who were throwing stones at armored
    military vehicles.

    In the West Bank town of Jayyous, 117 olive trees were uprooted on
    Saturday December 11. Residents of the town managed to obtain, with
    the help of their lawyer, a plan by Israeli contractors to build a new
    Israeli settlement on their land -- in violation of the "road map to
    peace", in which Israel pledged 'disengagement' from the Palestinian
    territories. All Israeli settlements on occupied Palestinian land are
    against the Geneva Convention, which Israel agreed to in 1951.

    Sharif Omar of Jayyous village is one of those whose homes are
    scheduled to be demolished and land confiscated for the building of
    this new settlement:

    If the wall is completed as planned by Israel, Palestinians will be
    left with ten percent of their original land, divided into a number of
    isolated islands with complete Israeli control of entrance and exit.
    This week the Wall's construction continued throughout the West Bank.
    On Tuesday a non-violent protest against the Wall in Bil'in, northwest
    of Jerusalem met with a violent military reaction. Four people were
    wounded, and Seven peace activists were arrested, including 4
    Israelis, when they tried to intervene in the beating of a child by
    Israeli soldiers.

    in southern gaza on sunday, 4 israeli soldiers and 2 palestinian
    resistance fighters were killed in an attack on an israeli army base.

    Hamas and a group known as the Fatah Hawks claimed responsibility for
    Sunday's attack. The Fatah group said it was avenging the
    assassination" of Yasir Arafat, referring to rumours widespread among
    Palestinians that their veteran leader was poisoned.

    Fuad Kokali, a local secretary general of the fatah party, comments on
    the attack:
    <20>

    The Israeli army responded to Sunday's bombing by firing six missiles
    into various populated areas in Gaza and conducting daily incursions
    throughout the week with Apache helicopters, tanks and armored
    vehicles, killing at least four people.

    The attack came just two days after the Israeli army attempted to
    assassinate a Palestinian resistance leader by shooting a missile at
    his car.

    Abu Samhadana, who survived the attack, stated that, "Assassination
    attempts, even if they succeed, won't weaken the resistance, but
    will only strengthen it. We will continue fighting until we liberate
    all Palestinian land,".

    Meanwhile, on the Palestinian presidential campaign, jailed Fatah
    leader Marwan Barghouti, the leading candidate, has dropped out of the
    race.

    Five candidates for the municipal elections, scheduled for December
    23, have been arrested by Israeli forces and remain in jail.

    Palestinian Local governing minister Jamal Shubaki this week urged the
    international community to immediately intervene to end Israeli
    actions that hinder the ability of Palestinians to run free and
    democratic elections, including the release of these five candidates.

    And palestinian administrative detainees reported that they will
    boycott Israeli courts starting from December 19, until the Israeli
    authorities releases all detainees whose detention period has ended.
    Palestinians are routinely held without charges in administrative
    detention -- the boycotting prisoners demand that they either be
    charged, or released. At least 760 palestinians are currently held in
    administrative detention, according to the israeli organization
    b'tselem. they are among the over 5000 palestinians currently
    imprisoned in Israel.

    And finally, 24-year-old peace activist Brian Avery from Albuquerque,
    New Mexico, petitioned the Israeli High Court of Justice for a police
    investigation of his shooting. Avery was shot in the face last year
    by a tank mounted machine gun in Jenin while volunteering with the
    International Solidarity Movement. The petition challenges the
    Israeli army's account of events, which contradict the accounts of
    numerous eyewitnesses, and states "the duty to investigate is part
    of the rule of law."

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    16) COMMUNITY SPEAK OUT FOR IMMIGRANT RIGHTS
    Sat, Dec. 18th, 1:00 pm
    24th & Mission St. (24th St. BART), San Francisco
    Call to Action for Immigrant Rights:

    The immigrant community has become one of the main targets inside
    the country as part of the well-known “war at home,” which is no
    different from the war against Iraq. After the result of the elections,
    immigrant communities face critical moments and should be ready
    for the next four years. The racism, discrimination, hostility,
    harassment, police brutality, the raids, among others, keep on growing.

    Today, more than ever, all immigrant communities are ONE COMMUNITY,
    that includes Latinos, Asians, Arabs, Philippines, and others, because
    we all are part of the same struggle and face the same problems. Let’s
    be out on the street once more to talk about issues that concern us
    and only we can solve.

    Changes, historically, have not been gained because of the mercy or
    sympathy of any politician, whether he or she was a Democrat or a
    Republican, but because of the hard struggle people fought to gain
    their rights.

    Only a people’s movement is capable of stopping this brutal war
    against our communities.

    That’s why this Saturday December 18th we will be in the streets.
    We will utilize one of our basic rights, the right to speak, and gather
    in the streets to listen to each other and take action.

    EVERYONE WHO WANTS TO FIGHT FOR IMMIGRANT RIGHTS, JOIN
    US ON SATURDAY! For Unity, Peace and Justice!

    Sponsored by A.N.S.W.E.R. (Act Now to Stop War and End Racism)
    For more information or flyers to distribute please call: Silvia or
    Alicia at (415) 821-6545 or Jess at the Arab-American Anti
    Discrimination Committee at (415) 726-3951.

    Sat, Dec. 18th, 11 am
    POSTERING FOR JANUARY 20th PROTEST
    Meet at ANSWER office – 2489 Mission St,
    Rm. 24 (near 21st), San Francisco

    Before going to the Immigrant Rights Speak-Out, join other
    activists going out in teams around San Francisco to get the
    word out about the upcoming Counter-Inaugural protest on
    January 20. Or come by and pick up posters and leaflets for later.

    There will be no ANSWER Activist Meeting this Tuesday, Dec. 21st.
    Please join us throughout the week for postering, flyering and
    phonebanking to build the January 20 Counter-Inaugural Protest.
    Call 415-821-6545 for more details.

    MARK YOUR CALENDAR: On Tuesday, December 28, we will have
    a mass mailing for Jan. 20th a potluck dinner at the ANSWER office
    at 2489 Mission St, Rm 30 in San Franciso. The mailing will start at
    1pm; we will eat at 6pm and continue the mailing through the evening.

    To subscribe to the list, send a message to:


    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    17) NEWS & COMMENTARY: Soldier has himself shot to avoid
    returning to Iraq

    [Marquise Roberts of the Cedarbrook section of North Philadelphia didn't
    want
    to go back to Iraq. -- He'd already conquered Baghdad once, and thought
    that
    ought to be enough. -- So he had his cousin shoot him in the leg, and then
    drive him to Philadelphia's Albert Einstein Medical Center. -- But the two
    men's stories didn't jibe, and when the police found out he was due to
    report
    back to Fort Stewart, Georgia, the next day, they grew suspicious... --
    Jay
    Ruskin of UFPPC looks beyond the headlines and asks: what does Marquise
    Roberts's act really mean?


    SOLDIER HAS HIMSELF SHOT TO AVOID RETURNING TO IRAQ
    By Jay Ruskin

    United for Peace of Pierce County (WA)
    December 17, 2004

    http://www.ufppc.org/content/view/1931/

    Marquise Roberts thought that seven months in the Middle East were enough
    for
    him.

    The supply specialist's two-week leave was about to end, and he was supposed
    to be back the next day at Fort Stewart, Georgia, to rejoin the Army's 3rd
    Infantry Division. With the 3rd Roberts had fought his way to Baghdad in
    the
    2003 invasion of Iraq, and then returned to the U.S. in the summer of 2003.
    Now he was scheduled to be redeployed to Iraq once again.

    It seemed to Marquise Roberts that conquering Iraq once ought to suffice.
    So
    around 2:00 p.m. on Tuesday, a cloudy day with temperatures hovering in the
    low 30s, police say he had his wife's cousin shoot him in the leg with a
    .22-caliber pistol, then headed for the Albert Einstein Medical Center not
    far
    away.

    Unfortunately, the two men didn't get their stories straight. The four news
    reports below tell the sorry tale. Roberts has now been charged by police
    with filing a false report, and the cousin has been charged with aggravated
    assault, the Associated Press reported.[1]

    Local press gave more details. The *Philadelphia Daily News* identified the
    place where the incident was supposed to have occurred: Somerville Avenue
    near
    15th in Olney.[2] The *Philadelphia Inquirer*, which gave the most
    detailed
    account of the plan, said that Marquise Roberts lived on Williams Ave. in
    the
    Cedarbrook section of Philadelphia.[3]

    Williams Avenue is near the City of Brotherly Love's northern border --
    "heavily black North Philadelphia" near "the neighborhood where the various
    *Rockys* were filmed and the original Philadelphia cheesesteaks are sold,"
    and
    where about one quarter of the population lives in poverty (*Almanac of
    American Politics 2004*, pp. 1363-66).

    None of the news reports really raised the issue of why Marquise Roberts was
    in the army in the first place. But critics like Charles Rangel (D-NY 15th)
    see people like Roberts as victims of an "economic draft," whereby
    low-income
    people with few job prospects sign up for military service.

    Activist Sam Anderson puts it this way: "For Black, Latino, Native
    American,
    Asian and poor white youth, there is a powerful economic draft that forces
    our
    children into the military with promises of discounted higher education,
    benefits, job skills development and traveling the world. The shrinking
    civilian job market with sweatshop labor conditions helps create this
    economic
    draft." (http://www.sfbayview.com/092904/draftingeveryone092904.shtml)

    Roberts's act also comes at a time of growing restiveness and resistance
    within the ranks of the military.

    The *Los Angeles Times* summarized the other forms of resistance and made
    clear the fact that Robert's self-inflicted wound is the expression of a
    widespread sentiment:

    "More than 5,000 soldiers have been charged with desertion from bases in the
    U.S. and overseas since the invasion of Iraq in early 2003. . . . Two
    soldiers
    have received publicity for resisting their return to duty in Iraq while on
    home leave. . . . More than 800 former soldiers have failed to comply with
    orders to report for duty in Iraq or Afghanistan, the Army reported in
    October. Those ex-soldiers [were] called back to duty under the military's
    Individual Ready Reserve program."[4]

    As for Marquise Roberts, at least his plan was not a total failure, since he
    won't be returning to Iraq. The *L.A. Times* reported he's sitting in a
    Philadelphia jail, "held under $50,000 bail pending a court hearing."

    1.

    Nation/World

    SOLDIER CHARGED WITH HAVING HIMSELF SHOT
    By Randy Pennell

    Associated Press
    December 17, 2004

    http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apus_story.asp?category=1110&slug=Sol
    dier%20Charged

    PHILADELPHIA -- A soldier who allegedly had a relative shoot him so he
    wouldn't have to return to Iraq could face military discipline.

    Army Spc. Marquise J. Roberts, of Hinesville, Ga., suffered a minor wound
    Tuesday to his left leg from a .22-caliber pistol, police said. He was
    treated at a hospital, then arrested after he and a relative allegedly
    admitted making up a story about the shooting.

    After giving differing accounts, "they just broke down and confessed that
    they
    concocted the whole story so he didn't have to go back to the war," police
    Lt.
    James Clark said Thursday.

    Police charged Roberts with filing a false report and charged a cousin,
    Roland
    Fuller, with aggravated assault and other charges.

    Roberts could face military discipline if the charges prove true, said Lt.
    Col. Cliff Kent, a spokesman for the Army's 3rd Infantry Division, but the
    civilian case probably would proceed first.

    Roberts, who was visiting family in Philadelphia, initially claimed he was
    shot during an attempted robbery, but Fuller had said the incident occurred
    at
    another location during an argument, according to Clark.

    Roberts, 23, was on a two-week leave from the 3rd Infantry Division, which
    led
    the assault on Baghdad in 2003. He had been scheduled to return this week
    to
    Fort Stewart, Ga., and to return to Iraq within the next few months. The
    division has been home since the summer of 2003.

    Police said Roberts, a supply specialist who had spent seven months in Iraq,
    was distraught about having to return to combat duty and wanted to stay with
    his family.

    2.

    City and Local News

    COPS: SOLDIER HAD PAL SHOOT HIM TO AVOID IRAQ
    By Gloria Campisi

    Philadelphia Daily News
    December 17, 2004

    http://www.philly.com/mld/dailynews/news/local/10437106.htm


    A soldier who police said was distraught at having to return to Iraq
    allegedly
    had another man shoot him in the leg so he wouldn't have to go back.

    Army Spc. Marquise J. Roberts, 23, stationed at Fort Stewart, Ga., was in
    Philadelphia on a two-week leave from the Army's 3rd Infantry Division,
    which
    led the assault on Baghdad in 2003, according to an Army spokesman.

    Lt. Col. Cliff Kent, a 3rd Infantry spokesman, said Roberts had been
    scheduled
    to return from leave this week. The 3rd Infantry is scheduled to return to
    Iraq within the next few months.

    Lt. James Clark of the Northwest Detective Division said Roberts, of
    Hinesville, Ga., admitted under questioning that "he did seven months there
    [Iraq] and he didn't want to go back."

    Clark said Roberts and Ronald Fuller, who police identified as Roberts'
    cousin, "concocted the whole story" that Roberts was shot in the left leg
    when
    two men tried to rob them Tuesday on Somerville Avenue near 15th in Olney.
    He
    was treated at Einstein Medical Center for a wound described as minor.

    A woman who answered the phone at a Cedarbrook address listed to Roberts
    said
    Fuller was not Roberts' cousin, but that the family didn't want to make any
    immediate statement. Fuller was identified as Roberts' cousin by marriage
    in
    a televised report.

    Clark said the deception was uncovered when the two men gave different
    accounts of the shooting.

    Roberts was charged with filing a false police report and obstruction of
    justice and Fuller with aggravated and simple assault.

    --campisg@phillynews.com

    3.

    Local & Regional

    FACING IRAQ, SOLDIER GOT HIMSELF SHOT, POLICE SAY
    By Thomas J. Gibbons Jr.

    ** Rather than be redeployed, Marquise Roberts plotted with relatives to be
    hurt in a bogus robbery, officials said. **

    Philadelphia Inquirer
    December 17, 2004

    http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/local/states/pennsylvania/10435471.h
    tm


    Marquise Roberts absolutely did not want to return to Iraq, where he
    previously served a seven-month Army tour, police said yesterday.

    So Roberts, they said, who lives on Williams Avenue in the Cedarbrook
    section
    of Philadelphia, concocted a plan to have a relative shoot him during a
    purported robbery.

    But detectives said they unraveled the plot after Roberts, 23, went to a
    city
    hospital for treatment of a bullet wound to one of his legs. Now, Roberts
    and
    his wife's cousin are charged with a series of offenses.

    In addition, Roberts missed his date Wednesday to return to Fort Stewart,
    Ga.,
    where he probably will be extradited to face further action.

    "They are extremely interested," Philadelphia Police Lt. James Clark said
    yesterday, referring to inquiries from military officials. "He didn't want
    to
    go back."

    Police said Roberts' plan to desert the Army came to their attention about 2
    p.m. Tuesday, when officers were notified that Roberts had arrived at Albert
    Einstein Medical Center with a gunshot wound. Roberts told police he was
    shot
    while walking in the 1500 block of Somerville Avenue in Logan.

    Roberts said he was walking with his wife's cousin, Roland Fuller, 28, when
    they passed two men arguing.

    Suddenly, Roberts said, shots rang out and he was shot in the back of the
    leg.

    Roberts went to the hospital for treatment and was released.

    However, detectives from the Special Investigations Unit of the Northwest
    Detective Division weren't through with Roberts.

    They drove him to the spot where Roberts said the shooting had occurred. No
    evidence of gunfire was found.

    Other investigators tracked down Fuller, whose account contradicted
    Roberts',
    police said. Fuller told investigators the shooting occurred in the 1500
    block of Duncannon Avenue, several blocks from Somerville Avenue.

    Investigators later tracked down Roberts' wife, Donna Roberts, who gave yet
    a
    third version of events. Clark said the conflicting versions piqued
    detectives' interest.

    The victim and his two family members were kept separated and questioned at
    length. During that time, Fuller tried to escape but was caught, police
    said.

    Later, a different story began to emerge.

    Detectives said they discovered that Roberts was in the Army, assigned to
    Fort
    Stewart, and due to return there the next day.

    They said they found that Roberts, his wife, and Fuller concocted a plan in
    which Fuller would shoot Roberts, and all three family members would report
    that that the shooting was committed by two men during a robbery.

    The motive was to prevent Roberts from being redeployed to Iraq, detectives
    said.

    Roberts later told police he had served seven months in the war zone and did
    not want to return.

    Police said they recovered the gun used to shoot Roberts, who also lists an
    address in Hinesville, Ga.

    Fuller was charged with aggravated assault, weapons offenses, and filing a
    false police report. Roberts was charged with recklessly endangering
    another
    person and filing a false police report.

    Detectives said they were not ruling out charges against Donna Roberts.

    --Contact staff writer Thomas J. Gibbons Jr. at 215-854-2642 or
    tgibbons@phillynews.com.

    4.

    The Nation

    SHOOTING ALLEGEDLY STAGED TO AVOID RETURNING TO IRAQ
    By David Zucchino

    ** Philadelphia police say a soldier whose unit has been ordered back to the
    war had his wife's cousin wound him in the leg as part of the scheme. **

    Los Angeles Times
    December 17, 2004

    PHILADELPHIA -- A U.S. Army combat veteran on leave from a unit headed back
    to
    Iraq arranged for a friend to shoot him in the leg in an attempt to avoid
    returning to the war zone, Philadelphia police said Thursday.

    Spc. Marquise Roberts, 23, told police he had been shot Tuesday afternoon as
    he walked past two men arguing on a North Philadelphia street. But police
    said their investigation found that Roberts actually was shot once in the
    leg
    by a friend as part of a scheme to avoid returning to Iraq.

    Roberts, who served seven months in Iraq during the U.S. invasion in 2003,
    was
    due to report back to Ft. Stewart, Ga., on Wednesday, police said. He is a
    supply specialist with the Army's 3rd Infantry Division (Mechanized),
    according to commanders at Ft. Stewart. They said Roberts, who has been in
    the Army since 2001, was on a two-week holiday leave to his home in
    Philadelphia.

    The division, which helped topple the Saddam Hussein regime in Baghdad in
    April 2003, has been ordered to begin heading back to Iraq next month.
    Roberts had returned from Iraq in midsummer 2003.

    Philadelphia Police Inspector William Colarulo said Roberts was shot by his
    wife's cousin, Roland Fuller, 28, in North Philadelphia on Tuesday
    afternoon.
    Hospital officials called police after Roberts sought medical treatment --
    standard policy for gunshot wounds, Colarulo said.

    Roberts told police he heard a gunshot as he walked past the men arguing in
    the street and realized he had been shot in the leg. But Fuller told
    detectives that Roberts had been shot during an attempted robbery, Colarulo
    said.

    Detectives who searched the scene where Roberts said he was shot found no
    bullet casings, blood or witnesses who recalled seeing or hearing gunshots.

    "The investigation determined that he didn't want to go back to Iraq and
    staged the shooting to avoid having to return," Colarulo said.

    Police Lt. James Clark, who directed the investigation, said Roberts "said
    he
    had done seven months there and he didn't want to go back. He wanted to
    stay
    with his family."

    Roberts was treated for the wound and handed over to police Wednesday.
    Roberts and Fuller were charged with conspiracy, recklessly endangering
    another person and filing a false police report. Fuller also was charged
    with
    aggravated assault and weapons offenses.

    Roberts was shot with a handgun, police said.

    Pentagon officials said they could recall no other instance in which a
    soldier
    on leave from Iraq or Afghanistan had been accused of deliberately harming
    himself or herself to avoid returning to duty.

    Of the 136,000 soldiers and Army civilians who took home leaves as of early
    November, they said, only one soldier had been classified as AWOL. An Army
    program entitles soldiers to two weeks at home midway through their
    deployment.

    More than 5,000 soldiers have been charged with desertion from bases in the
    U.S. and overseas since the invasion of Iraq in early 2003, according to
    Pentagon statistics.

    But the number of desertions in the fiscal year that ended in September was
    half the number for the fiscal year that ended the month of the Sept. 11,
    2001, terrorist attacks, before troops were sent to fight in Afghanistan and
    Iraq.

    The military defines desertion as more than 30 consecutive days absent
    without
    leave.

    Two soldiers have received publicity for resisting their return to duty in
    Iraq while on home leave.

    Staff Sgt. Camilo Mejia, 28, a National Guardsman from Florida, refused to
    return to Iraq after home leave in October 2003. He asked to be declared a
    conscientious objector.

    This month, Spc. David Qualls filed a lawsuit challenging the Army's
    authority
    to extend his service and threatened not to return to Iraq from home leave
    in
    Arkansas. A federal judge denied Qualls' request to remain in the U.S.
    until
    his case was heard, and his lawyer said he would return to Iraq.

    More than 800 former soldiers have failed to comply with orders to report
    for
    duty in Iraq or Afghanistan, the Army reported in October. Those
    ex-soldiers,
    called back to duty under the military's Individual Ready Reserve program,
    were not charged with desertion. Most had requested delays or exemptions
    for
    school, medical emergencies or family hardships.

    In Roberts' case, his return to duty is delayed indefinitely. He was being
    held under $50,000 bail pending a court hearing, police said.

    Army officials said Roberts also could face punishment under the military
    justice system. They said the Army normally waited until civilian courts
    had
    ruled before deciding whether to charge soldiers in military court.

    UNITED FOR PEACE & JUSTICE | 212-868-5545

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    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    18) Days of Protest Jan. 20 Inauguration Day and
    Jan.22, 32nd Anniversary of Roe vs. Wade:

    OK We all know at this point that January 20 is going
    to be a national day of protest against the
    re-crowning of the Emperor thief. Yes.
    ANSWER will be having a permitted march at 5pm that
    evening. It's a Thursday, unfortunately. The NLG
    will prepare for break-aways, as they tend to follow
    ANSWER or NION marches.

    Interestingly enough, the anniversary of Roe vs. Wade
    (turning 32 Jan. 22, 2004) occurs Sat. A group called
    Walk for Life West Coast will be having a permitted
    march through the embarcadero etc. that day. They are
    pro-life. There has been a call for action for
    counter protests that day. And so Jan. 21 has been
    called a day of teach-ins and awareness of issues
    related to abortion rights. Check out more on
    Indymedia: http://sfbay.indymedia.org/womyn/
    http://www.indybay.org/news/2004/12/1708701.php Time to take to the streets
    my friends.
    In resistance,
    carey

    "Art begins with resistance-at the point where resistance is overcome.
    No human masterpiece has ever been created without great labor."-Andre
    Gide

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    19) Guard Reports Serious Drop in Enlistment
    By ERIC SCHMITT
    WASHINGTON
    December 17, 2004
    http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/17/politics/17reserves.html?oref=login

    WASHINGTON, Dec. 16 - In the latest signs of strains on the military
    from the war in Iraq, the Army National Guard announced on Thursday
    that it had fallen 30 percent below its recruiting goals in the last two
    months and would offer new incentives, including enlistment bonuses
    of up to $15,000.

    In addition, the head of the National Guard Bureau, Lt. Gen. H Steven
    Blum, said on Thursday that he needed $20 billion to replace arms and
    equipment destroyed in Iraq and Afghanistan or left there for other Army
    and Air Guard units to use, so that returning reservists will have enough
    equipment to deal with emergencies at home.

    The sharp decline in recruiting is significant because National Guard
    and Army Reserve soldiers now make up nearly 40 percent of the
    148,000 troops in Iraq, and are a vital source for filling the ranks,
    particularly those who perform essential support tasks, like truck drivers
    and military police.

    General Blum said the main reason for the Army National Guard's
    recruiting shortfall was a sharp reduction in the number of recruits
    joining the Guard and Reserve when they leave active duty. In
    peacetime the commitment means maintaining their ties to the
    military with a weekend of service a month and two weeks in the
    summer.

    Over the last 30 years, General Blum said, the Guard has counted
    on these soldiers with prior military service for about half of its
    recruits. Since the Sept. 11 attacks, however, many of these soldiers
    have been hesitant to join the Guard because of the increasing
    likelihood that America's citizen-soldiers will be activated and sent
    to Iraq or Afghanistan for up to 12 months. Indeed, many of the
    active-duty soldiers the Army would like to enlist in the Reserves
    have recently fought in Afghanistan or Iraq, and some have no
    inclination to do so again.

    In an effort to halt the slide, the Army National Guard this week
    approved recruiting incentives that triple the enlistment bonuses
    to $15,000 for soldiers with prior military experience who sign up
    for six years (tax-free if soldiers enlist overseas), Guard officials
    said. Bonuses for new enlistees will increased to $10,000 from
    $6,000.

    The Guard has already said it intends to increase the number of
    recruiters to 4,100 from 2,700 over the next three months, the
    first large increase since 1989.

    "We're in a more difficult recruiting environment, period," General
    Blum told reporters in disclosing the new figures and the new
    incentives. "There's no question that when you have a sustained
    ground combat operation going that the Guard's participating in,
    that makes recruiting more difficult."

    There are 42,000 Army National Guard soldiers serving in Iraq and
    Kuwait, and 8,200 serving in Afghanistan. Since Sept. 11, General
    Blum said, there have been about 100,000 Army National Guard
    troops activated for duty at home or abroad at any given time.

    General Blum's remarks come just a few days after the chief of the
    Army Reserve, Lt. Gen. James R. Helmly, told The Dallas Morning
    News that the Army Reserve recruiting was in a "precipitous decline"
    that if unchecked could inspire renewed debate over the draft. General
    Helmly told the newspaper that he personally opposed reviving the draft.

    For the first two months of the fiscal year 2005, which started
    Oct. 1, the Army Reserve has also stumbled, falling 315 recruits
    short of its goal of 3,170 soldiers, a drop of 10 percent.

    In November, the Guard recruited 2,902 enlistees, about 26 percent
    below its target of 3,925 recruits. In October and November combined,
    the Guard recruited 5,448 enlistees, nearly 30 percent below its goal
    of 7,600. At full strength, the Guard has 350,000 soldiers.

    In the 2004 fiscal year, which ended Sept. 30, the Guard missed its
    overall recruiting target of 56,000 soldiers by more than 5,000, the
    first time it had missed its yearly goal since 1994. The active-duty
    branches of the armed services all met their recruiting goals last year.

    As a result, General Blum said, the Guard has lowered its reliance on
    recruits with military experience to just 35 percent of its overall total
    and will seek a much larger pool of recruits with no military experience.

    "We are correcting, frankly, some of our recruiting themes and slogans
    to reflect a reality of today," he said. "We're not talking about one
    weekend a month and two weeks a year and college tuition. We're
    talking about service to the nation."

    General Blum expressed confidence that the nearly $300 million in
    recruiting bonuses in this year's budget and the increase in the number
    of recruiters would propel the Guard to meet its yearly goal but said
    that probably would not happen until August or so. "I think we'll
    recover," he said.

    Some military personnel specialists offered a much more pessimistic
    forecast and said the lower recruiting numbers were the harbingers
    of tougher times to come.

    "I don't think this is an aberration," said David R. Segal, a military
    sociologist who directs the Center for Research on Military
    Organization at the University of Maryland. "I think we're going
    to see significant shortfalls in recruitment, and I think we're to
    begin to see retention problems. We're also going to see increasing
    concerns at the state level about how the Guard will man itself and
    perform its state missions."

    The Guard's woes do not end with recruiting. General Blum said the
    Army National Guard needed $20 billion over the next three years
    to buy additional radios, trucks, aircraft, engineering equipment
    and other materiel that have been wrecked or left behind in Iraq
    or Afghanistan..

    "Otherwise, the Guard will be broken and not ready for the next
    time it's needed, either here at home or for war," General Blum said.

    A spokesman for the Florida National Guard, Lt. Col. Ron Tittle,
    said Guard units in the state, which mobilized some 5,000 troops
    to deal with the three hurricanes in August and September, were
    already experiencing some shortages.

    "It could hinder us to some degree," Colonel Tittle said. "But we
    adapt and make do. We'll accomplish the mission."

    Soldier Accused of Asking to Be Shot

    PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 16 (AP) - A soldier on leave has been accused
    of having his cousin shoot him so he would not have to return to
    Iraq, the police say.

    The soldier, Specialist Marquise J. Roberts, 23, of Hinesville, Ga.,
    suffered a minor wound to his left leg from a .22-caliber pistol on
    Tuesday, the police said. Specialist Roberts was treated at a hospital,
    then arrested after he and his cousin admitted having made up
    a story about the shooting, the authorities said.

    After giving differing accounts of the incident, "they just broke
    down and confessed that they concocted the whole story so he
    didn't have to go back to the war," Lt. James Clark of the Philadelphia
    police department said on Thursday.

    Specialist Roberts, who was visiting family members in Philadelphia,
    was charged with filing a false report. His cousin, Ronald Fuller, was
    charged with aggravated assault and other charges.


    Copyright 2004 The New York Times


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