Friday, April 27, 2007

EC Lockdowns and closings again!

Lockdowns, closings highlight school day in EC
By ZAC GOLDSTEIN
Staff Writer Daily Advance
Friday, April 27, 2007


School officials placed Pasquotank and P.W. Moore elementary schools on lockdown early this afternoon after gunshots were fired nearby. The lockdowns followed the closings of three schools earlier Friday after Superintendent Tony Stewart received an anonymous tip warning of school violence.Pasquotank and P.W. Moore were locked down as a precaution after reports of gunshots and a police chase in the Debry section of the city. The schools were locked down at 1 p.m. and Pasquotank County emergency management officials issued an ?all clear? at 1:38 p.m. Regardless of the all clear, the schools remained in lock-down until approximately 2:30 p.m. when students were released at their normally scheduled time as a precaution, school officials said.?People are paying attention,? said Amie Aydlett, the school district?s community schools director. ?They know they have to take safety seriously.?According to reports, police were searching for a suspect after Pasquotank Elementary personnel reported seeing someone run across the school?s playground toward the Meadowlands area of the city.Friday morning, Stewart ordered Elizabeth City Middle School, Pasquotank County High School and Northside Elementary closed for the day after he received an anonymous call Thursday that warned of a possible shooting Friday at ECMS.Also Friday, Central Elementary and Northeastern High School were locked down for less than an hour. Aydlett said school personnel heard what sounded like gunfire coming from the swamp area between the schools about 8:45 a.m. The schools were locked down while the sheriff?s department investigated and parents were notified at 9:30 a.m.After an investigation, the source of the shooting was revealed to be an unidentified local resident with a federal permit to rid her pond of surplus ducks and geese. No one was harmed and the schools resumed normal operations for the rest of the day.The shooting threat was the second Stewart has received in as many weeks. A call he received April 20 warned that a shooting would take place at 1 p.m. that day at ECMS and all three schools were locked down. No shooting took place and an investigation did not turn up a weapon at any school.The shooting threat that Stewart received Thursday is being investigated by the Pasquotank County Sheriff?s Department. The sheriff?s department is also offering a $2,000 reward for information related to the recent threats.

Lockdowns, closings highlight school day in EC

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2003 Jon Stewart Interview Bill Moyers

July 11, 2003In 2003 Jon Stewart appeared on NOW WITH BILL MOYERS. During that conversation they touched on matters from the state of politics and the state of comedy: MOYERS: I do not know whether you are practicing a old form of parody and satire. Or a new form of journalism. STEWART: Well then that either speaks to the sad state of comedy or the sad state of news. I can't figure out which one. I think, honestly, we're practicing a new form of desperation. Where we just are so inundated with mixed messages from the media and from politicians that we're just trying to sort it out for ourselves. To the role of the media: STEWART: The other news networks, you know, they have this idea that they're being objective. But news has never been objective. It's always… what does every newscast start with? "Our top stories tonight." That's a list. That's an object… that's a subjective… some editor made a decision: "Here's our top stories. #1: There's a fire in the Bronx. #2: They arrested Martha Stewart." Whatever… however you place those stories, is a subjective ranking as much as AFI's "100 Best Films in the World" is. So why not take advantage of that and actually analyze what you do think is important and make that… I will guarantee you, in the newsrooms across the country, they don't believe the Laci Petersen story is the most important story that they have to deal with. I guarantee it! These are topics Stewart and Moyers returned to in 2007. Watch the full 2003 interview with Jon Stewart and check back after broadcast for the full 2007 show online!

Bill Moyers Journal . Archive . Jon Stewart | PBS

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Bill Moyers Journal . Profile . Jon Stewart | PBS

April 27, 2007
 check back after broadcast for the full interview (check local listings).


The NEW YORK TIMES declared that when Jon Stewart took over as anchor of Comedy Central's THE DAILY SHOW, he "breathed new life into a show that hadn't even seemed to need it." In 2003, Stewart said of his role hosting the show, "Liberal and conservative have lost their meaning in America. I represent the distracted center." As declared on the show's site, "THE DAILY SHOW WITH JON STEWART is the most important television show ever, with the most important guests, hosts, and news - current event news, pop culture news, sports news, entertainment news - of all time."For the past eight years, Stewart and "The Daily Show" have received 18 Emmy Award nominations and won nine. Jon himself was nominated for Outstanding Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program in 2002, 2003, 2005 and again last year in 2006. In 2004, "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" was also honored by the Television Critics Association by winning for Outstanding Achievement in News and Information, beating out traditional news shows in the category. In 2003 and 2005, Jon won for Individual Achievement in Comedy and the show won in 2003 for Outstanding Achievement in Comedy. In 2001, "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" also received the prestigious Peabody Award for its "Indecision 2000" campaign coverage and again in 2005 for "Indecision 2004."Stewart is the author of NAKED PICTURES OF FAMOUS PEOPLE (written with the writers at "The Daily Show), and AMERICA (THE BOOK): A CITIZEN'S GUIDE TO DEMOCRACY INACTION. Prior to taking over THE DAILY SHOW, Stewart appeared on THE LARRY SANDERS SHOW as himself, and also served as a creative consultant on the series. On the feature film front, Stewart starred with Adam Sandler in BIG DADDY in 1999. He also starred in the romantic drama PLAYING BY HEART opposite Gillian Anderson, the horror-comedy THE FACULTY and the Danny De Vito-directed Warner Brothers Comedy DEATH TO SMOOCHY starring Edward Norton, Robin Williams, De Vito and Catherine Keener.

Bill Moyers Journal . Profile . Jon Stewart | PBS

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Schools mull closing

Schools mull closing after shooting is threatened
By ZAC GOLDSTEIN
Staff Writer Daily Advance
Friday, April 27, 2007

Elizabeth City-Pasquotank school officials were weighing Thursday whether to cancel classes today after the superintendent received, for the second week in a row, a phone call warning of a potential school shooting at Elizabeth City Middle School.Tony Stewart, superintendent of the Elizabeth City-Pasquotank Public Schools, said he received a call Thursday morning from an unidentified female warning that there would be a shooting at ECMS today.He said the latest call was similar to the one he received on April 20, but the caller's voice was not the same. He also said the most recent threat did not specify what time the shooting would occur. Last week's call indicated a shooting would take place at 1 p.m.After calling in law enforcement to investigate last Friday, Stewart locked down the middle school and nearby Pasquotank County High School and Northside Elementary. No weapons were discovered in any school and no one was injured in the incident.Stewart said parents were notified about the latest threat via the School Connects automated call system at 3:30 p.m. Thursday. He said a decision regarding the possible closing of schools will be made early this morning. Parents are advised to monitor local media and Channel 8 Television for an announcement.Pasquotank Sheriff Randy Cartwright confirmed Thursday that his department is investigating the latest threat.The department is also offering a $2,000 reward for information related to the recent threats to school safety. Anyone with information is asked to call Crimeline at 335-5555, the sheriff's department at 338-2191 or e-mail sheriff@co.pasquotank.nc.us.As of 4:30 p.m. Thursday, no threats to surrounding school districts had been reported.(Contact Zac Goldstein at zgoldstein@coxnc.com)

Schools mull closing after shooting is threatened

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Two more EC shootings

Two more EC shootings reported
Reward for Graham increased to $5K
By DAVID MACAULAY
Staff Writer Daily Advance
Friday, April 27, 2007

The rash of shootings that has plagued Elizabeth City neighborhoods continued Wednesday night and early Thursday, with two separate incidents of gunfire reported.Police say someone fired eight gunshots at a house and car on Queen Street around 10:30 p.m. on Wednesday. Four hours later, another 15 gunshots were fired at a mobile home at 108 Forrest Skipper Drive in the Meadowlands trailer park.No injuries were reported in either incident, but the two shootings, following on the heels of several others in the past week, have police worried."There has been a rash of these incidents over the last few nights. We are very concerned," Sgt. Mike Boone said Thursday.Police are still searching for Nathaniel Graham, an 18-year-old Zack Circle man who they believe has shot three men in the space of a week — two in Elizabeth City and one in Edenton. None of the shootings has resulted in a fatality as yet, but police are stepping up efforts to locate Graham. In addition to deploying additional manpower, they increased the local reward for information leading to his arrest from $2,000 to $5,000.Captain Frank Koch said police believe Graham is still in Elizabeth City. But it was not clear Thursday whether Graham had any connection to the two latest shooting incidents.Police also don't know yet what's caused the recent surge in shootings.Residents of neighborhoods where the shootings have occurred say they're frightened by the violence — but not enough to move elsewhere."I won't let them run me out of my house," said Tessie Banks, who lives at 108 Queen St.Banks, whose house and son's car were hit by bullets, said she has considered moving — but only because she's tired of the high utility bills in Elizabeth City.Banks believes those shooting at her house weren't aiming at anyone who lives there."It was nothing to do with anyone who lives at the house," she said. "There was a conflict between two people in the (nearby) church parking lot."Banks said her home had never been hit by gunfire in the eight years she's lived in it. But she and her daughter say they've heard gunfire every night this week."It's just crazy at the moment," she said.Ruby Blount is also new to the experience of having her house shot at. Tuesday night, Blount's house at 706 Walston Street was hit numerous times when Graham and two other men are believed to have fired at a fourth man on Southern Avenue.Drymont Spellman was hit by one of the five bullets fired at him, police said. He was treated for a gunshot wound to the shoulder.Blount's house and property were also hit in the gunfire. She showed a reporter Thursday where bullets entered both the side of her house and a garden fence, and where other bullets hit her garden and driveway."It sounded like a machine gun was going off," Blount said, recalling how she threw herself on the floor in an upstairs bedroom when the shooting started.Blount said she's lived in her home since 1970, but this is the first time it's ever been hit by gunfire."It's not the people in the neighborhood, but people coming into the area," she said.Anyone with any information about the whereabouts of Graham or those who took part in any of the recent shootings is asked to contact the Elizabeth City Police Department's Investigative Bureau at 335-9600 or Crime Line at 335-5555.

Two more EC shootings reported

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another shooting threat

EC schools weigh closing after another shooting threat
By ZAC GOLDSTEIN  
Staff Writer   Daily Advance 
Thursday, April 26, 2007
 
Elizabeth City-Pasquotank school officials were weighing Thursday whether to cancel classes on Friday after the superintendent received, for the second week in a row, a phone call warning of a potential school shooting at Elizabeth City Middle School.Tony Stewart, superintendent of the Elizabeth City-Pasquotank Public Schools, said he received a call Thursday morning from an unidentified female warning that there would be a shooting at ECMS on Friday.He said the latest call was similar to the one he received on April 20, but the caller?s voice was not the same. He also said the most recent threat did not specify what time the shooting would occur. Last week?s call indicated a shooting would take place at 1 p.m.After calling in law enforcement to investigate, Stewart locked down the middle school and nearby Pasquotank County High School and Northside Elementary. No weapons were discovered in any school and no one was injured in the incident.Stewart said parents were notified about the latest threat via the School Connects automated call system at 3:30 p.m. Thursday. He said a decision regarding the possible closing of schools will be made early Friday morning. Parents are advised to monitor local media and Channel 8 Television for an announcement.Pasquotank Sheriff Randy Cartwright confirmed Thursday that his department is investigating the latest threat.The department is also offering a $2,000 reward for information related to the recent threats to school safety. Anyone with information is asked to call Crimeline at 335-5555, the sheriff?s department at 338-2191 or e-mail sheriff@co.pasquotank.nc.us.As of 4:30 p.m. Thursday, no threats to surrounding school districts had been reported.

EC schools weigh closing after another shooting threat

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Thursday, April 26, 2007

Double Yellow Amazon Parrot

Yellow-headed ParrotFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to: navigation, searchHow to read a taxoboxYellow-headed ParrotConservation statusEndangered [1]Scientific classificationKingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ChordataClass: AvesOrder: PsittaciformesFamily: PsittacidaeGenus: AmazonaSpecies: A. oratrixBinomial nameAmazona oratrix(Ridgway, 1887)The Yellow-headed Parrot (Amazona oratrix), also known as the Double Yellow-headed Amazon, etc., is an endangered amazon parrot of tropical America. It is a popular pet and an excellent talker.Contents[hide] * 1 Taxonomy * 2 Description * 3 Range and habitat * 4 Conservation status * 5 Qualities as pets * 6 Trivia * 7 References[edit] TaxonomyThis species is part of a complex that also includes the Yellow-crowned Parrot (A. ochrocephala) and the Yellow-naped Parrot (A. auropalliata). The complex is considered one species by some authorities and divided in different ways by others—"a taxonomic headache".[2] However, oratrix usually includes,[2][3] and is often limited to,[1][4] the populations of Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, and northern Honduras.[edit] DescriptionThe Yellow-headed Parrot averages 38–43 cm (15–17 in) long. The shape is typical of amazons, with a robust build, rounded wings, and a square tail. The body is bright green, with yellow on the head, dark scallops on the neck, red at the bend of the wing, and yellow thighs. The flight feathers are blackish to bluish violet with a red patch on the outer secondaries. The base of the tail also has a red patch, which is usually hidden. The outer tail feathers have yellowish tips.[2]Yellow-headed parrot eating cantaloupeYellow-headed parrot eating cantaloupeA baby yellowheaded amazon (8 weeks old).A baby yellowheaded amazon (8 weeks old).The bill is horn-colored, darker in immatures of the Belizean and Honduran subspecies. The eye ring is whitish in Mexican birds and grayish in others. The most conspicuous geographical difference is the amount of yellow. In adults, the head and upper chest are yellow in the subspecies of the Tres Marías Islands in the Mexican state of Nayarit (tresmariae); just the head in the widespread subspecies of Mexico (oratrix); just the crown in Belize, Guatemala, and far northwestern Honduras (belizensis); and the crown and nape in the Sula Valley of Honduras (hondurensis, which thus resembles the Yellow-naped Parrot). Immatures have less yellow than adults; they attain adult plumage in 2 to 4 years.[2]The variety "Magna" (or "Magnum") is bred for more yellow and commands a premium price as a pet.[5] Some "extreme" Magnas have as much yellow as Tres Marías birds, but are distinguished from them by heavier barring on the chest and a less bluish tint to the green plumage.[6]Wild birds give low-pitched, sometimes human-sounding screams, but often fly silently (unlike many other parrots). Howell and Webb render some calls as "a rolled kyaa-aa-aaah and krra-aah-aa-ow, a deep, rolled ahrrrr or ahrhrrrr," etc. Young birds make a "clucking" sound to indicate that they are hungry.[edit] Range and habitatThis species lives in riparian forest and areas with scattered trees, as well as evergreen forest in Belize and mangroves in Guatemala. It occurs in ones and twos, in small groups, and occasionally in big flocks. The range formerly included both coastal slopes of Mexico from the Tres Marías Islands and Jalisco to Oaxaca and from Nuevo León to northern Chiapas and southwestern Tabasco, as well as a disjunct area including most of Belize, and another comprising a small part of northeastern Guatemala and northwestern Honduras.[2] However, their numbers have been reduced drastically—by 90 percent, to 7,000, from the mid 1970s to 1994,[4] and by 68 percent from 1994 to 2004[1]—because of capture for the pet trade and habitat destruction.[edit] Conservation statusThe Yellow-headed Parrot is on the CITES list Appendix I, which by international treaty, has made export, import and trade of wild-caught Yellow-headed Parrots illegal and the trade in birds bred in aviculture subject to controls in most of the world. Captive-bred Yellow-headed Parrots can be sold and owned legally subject to checks and regulations. Generally, throughout the world, sale of Appendix I species bred in aviculture must be accompanied with official certification which is provided by the breeder, and they must have a closed ring on one leg.The popularity of Yellow-headed Parrots as a pet continues to fuel poaching efforts, which have nearly driven it to extinction in the wild. Their wild population has declined from 70,000 to 7,000 in the past two decades alone. An estimated 90% of poached Yellow-headed Amazons die before they are sold. Yellow-headed Parrots nest in holes in tree trunks or fallen branches. Poachers usually hack at the nest site with a machete to steal parrots, which is especially destructive because habitat is lost at the same time that the wild parrot population is reduced.[citation needed][edit] Qualities as petsAlbeit it is only lawful to keep captive-bred Yellow-headed Amazons, these are widely available (if somewhat expensive) and their personalities make them highly desirable pets; they have been kept as such for centuries[3] because they are among the parrots that "talk" best.[7] Their vocal abilities are generally considered to be bested only by the African Grey Parrot and matched by similar species such as the Yellow-naped Parrot. They are also considered loud, active, intelligent, funny, and willful. They like to test their owners and to attract the attention of visitors.As in most amazons, nervous plucking of plumage is rare among this species. A generally recognized disadvantage of the Yellow-headed Amazon and its close relatives (such as the Yellow-naped Amazon) is hormonal aggressiveness, most notable among males in the breeding season.[citation needed][edit] TriviaThe "doubling" of the head due to the ruffling of feathersThe "doubling" of the head due to the ruffling of feathersThe origin of the common epithet "Double Yellow-headed" is obscure but, when excited, this species raises its neck and crown feathers, making the head seem to double in size.[3][edit] References 1. ^ a b c BirdLife International (2004). Amazona oratrix. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2006. Retrieved on 09 May 2006. Database entry includes a range map and justification for why this species is endangered 2. ^ a b c d e Steve N. G. Howell and Sophie Webb (1994). A Guide to the Birds of Mexico and Northern Central America. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-854012-4. 3. ^ a b c Yellow-headed Amazon Parrot. Hogle Zoo (2002–2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-23. 4. ^ a b Yellow-headed Parrot (Amazona oratrix) (pdf). Defenders of Wildlife. Retrieved on 2006-08-23. 5. ^ Double Yellow-Headed Amazon Parrot. Aves International. Retrieved on 2006-08-23. A commercial site. Shows many photographs including captive-bred young. 6. ^ Where are they now?. The Feather Tree (2003). Retrieved on 2006-08-23. A commercial site. Shows many photographs comparing "extreme Magna" to tresmariae 7. ^ Larry Lachman, Diane Grindol, and Frank Kocher (2003). Birds Off the Perch: Therapy and Training for Your Pet Bird. Simon and Schuster, p. 7. ISBN 0-7432-2704-2.

Yellow-headed Parrot - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Double Yellow Amazon Parrot

Yellow-headed ParrotFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to: navigation, searchHow to read a taxoboxYellow-headed ParrotConservation statusEndangered [1]Scientific classificationKingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ChordataClass: AvesOrder: PsittaciformesFamily: PsittacidaeGenus: AmazonaSpecies: A. oratrixBinomial nameAmazona oratrix(Ridgway, 1887)The Yellow-headed Parrot (Amazona oratrix), also known as the Double Yellow-headed Amazon, etc., is an endangered amazon parrot of tropical America. It is a popular pet and an excellent talker.Contents[hide] * 1 Taxonomy * 2 Description * 3 Range and habitat * 4 Conservation status * 5 Qualities as pets * 6 Trivia * 7 References[edit] TaxonomyThis species is part of a complex that also includes the Yellow-crowned Parrot (A. ochrocephala) and the Yellow-naped Parrot (A. auropalliata). The complex is considered one species by some authorities and divided in different ways by others—"a taxonomic headache".[2] However, oratrix usually includes,[2][3] and is often limited to,[1][4] the populations of Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, and northern Honduras.[edit] DescriptionThe Yellow-headed Parrot averages 38–43 cm (15–17 in) long. The shape is typical of amazons, with a robust build, rounded wings, and a square tail. The body is bright green, with yellow on the head, dark scallops on the neck, red at the bend of the wing, and yellow thighs. The flight feathers are blackish to bluish violet with a red patch on the outer secondaries. The base of the tail also has a red patch, which is usually hidden. The outer tail feathers have yellowish tips.[2]Yellow-headed parrot eating cantaloupeYellow-headed parrot eating cantaloupeA baby yellowheaded amazon (8 weeks old).A baby yellowheaded amazon (8 weeks old).The bill is horn-colored, darker in immatures of the Belizean and Honduran subspecies. The eye ring is whitish in Mexican birds and grayish in others. The most conspicuous geographical difference is the amount of yellow. In adults, the head and upper chest are yellow in the subspecies of the Tres Marías Islands in the Mexican state of Nayarit (tresmariae); just the head in the widespread subspecies of Mexico (oratrix); just the crown in Belize, Guatemala, and far northwestern Honduras (belizensis); and the crown and nape in the Sula Valley of Honduras (hondurensis, which thus resembles the Yellow-naped Parrot). Immatures have less yellow than adults; they attain adult plumage in 2 to 4 years.[2]The variety "Magna" (or "Magnum") is bred for more yellow and commands a premium price as a pet.[5] Some "extreme" Magnas have as much yellow as Tres Marías birds, but are distinguished from them by heavier barring on the chest and a less bluish tint to the green plumage.[6]Wild birds give low-pitched, sometimes human-sounding screams, but often fly silently (unlike many other parrots). Howell and Webb render some calls as "a rolled kyaa-aa-aaah and krra-aah-aa-ow, a deep, rolled ahrrrr or ahrhrrrr," etc. Young birds make a "clucking" sound to indicate that they are hungry.[edit] Range and habitatThis species lives in riparian forest and areas with scattered trees, as well as evergreen forest in Belize and mangroves in Guatemala. It occurs in ones and twos, in small groups, and occasionally in big flocks. The range formerly included both coastal slopes of Mexico from the Tres Marías Islands and Jalisco to Oaxaca and from Nuevo León to northern Chiapas and southwestern Tabasco, as well as a disjunct area including most of Belize, and another comprising a small part of northeastern Guatemala and northwestern Honduras.[2] However, their numbers have been reduced drastically—by 90 percent, to 7,000, from the mid 1970s to 1994,[4] and by 68 percent from 1994 to 2004[1]—because of capture for the pet trade and habitat destruction.[edit] Conservation statusThe Yellow-headed Parrot is on the CITES list Appendix I, which by international treaty, has made export, import and trade of wild-caught Yellow-headed Parrots illegal and the trade in birds bred in aviculture subject to controls in most of the world. Captive-bred Yellow-headed Parrots can be sold and owned legally subject to checks and regulations. Generally, throughout the world, sale of Appendix I species bred in aviculture must be accompanied with official certification which is provided by the breeder, and they must have a closed ring on one leg.The popularity of Yellow-headed Parrots as a pet continues to fuel poaching efforts, which have nearly driven it to extinction in the wild. Their wild population has declined from 70,000 to 7,000 in the past two decades alone. An estimated 90% of poached Yellow-headed Amazons die before they are sold. Yellow-headed Parrots nest in holes in tree trunks or fallen branches. Poachers usually hack at the nest site with a machete to steal parrots, which is especially destructive because habitat is lost at the same time that the wild parrot population is reduced.[citation needed][edit] Qualities as petsAlbeit it is only lawful to keep captive-bred Yellow-headed Amazons, these are widely available (if somewhat expensive) and their personalities make them highly desirable pets; they have been kept as such for centuries[3] because they are among the parrots that "talk" best.[7] Their vocal abilities are generally considered to be bested only by the African Grey Parrot and matched by similar species such as the Yellow-naped Parrot. They are also considered loud, active, intelligent, funny, and willful. They like to test their owners and to attract the attention of visitors.As in most amazons, nervous plucking of plumage is rare among this species. A generally recognized disadvantage of the Yellow-headed Amazon and its close relatives (such as the Yellow-naped Amazon) is hormonal aggressiveness, most notable among males in the breeding season.[citation needed][edit] TriviaThe "doubling" of the head due to the ruffling of feathersThe "doubling" of the head due to the ruffling of feathersThe origin of the common epithet "Double Yellow-headed" is obscure but, when excited, this species raises its neck and crown feathers, making the head seem to double in size.[3][edit] References 1. ^ a b c BirdLife International (2004). Amazona oratrix. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2006. Retrieved on 09 May 2006. Database entry includes a range map and justification for why this species is endangered 2. ^ a b c d e Steve N. G. Howell and Sophie Webb (1994). A Guide to the Birds of Mexico and Northern Central America. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-854012-4. 3. ^ a b c Yellow-headed Amazon Parrot. Hogle Zoo (2002–2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-23. 4. ^ a b Yellow-headed Parrot (Amazona oratrix) (pdf). Defenders of Wildlife. Retrieved on 2006-08-23. 5. ^ Double Yellow-Headed Amazon Parrot. Aves International. Retrieved on 2006-08-23. A commercial site. Shows many photographs including captive-bred young. 6. ^ Where are they now?. The Feather Tree (2003). Retrieved on 2006-08-23. A commercial site. Shows many photographs comparing "extreme Magna" to tresmariae 7. ^ Larry Lachman, Diane Grindol, and Frank Kocher (2003). Birds Off the Perch: Therapy and Training for Your Pet Bird. Simon and Schuster, p. 7. ISBN 0-7432-2704-2.

Yellow-headed Parrot - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Hobie Mirage Adventure Island

Hobie Mirage Adventure Island! Pretty cool. The Island can be configured as a kayak, sailboat, trimaran, and/or a fishing boat. It also incorporates Hobie's patented MirageDrive, which turns your kayak into a 21st c. paddle boat. Here are the features as described on the Hobie website: * A boomless, roller-furling sail rig similar to the rig on the Hobie Bravo with plenty of sail area for excellent performance, completely manageable from the cockpit with the pull of a line. * Two retractable amas that fold up against the side of the boat, again with the simple pull of a line, for easy docking, maneuverability, and transport. * The cockpit is the stable platform of the Hobie Mirage Adventure Kayak, offering full versatility as a pedaling kayak when conditions are not convenient for sailing. All 2007 model year Adventure Kayaks, including the Fish model, will have inserts molded into the hulls so that they may be upgraded to an Adventure Island with a kit available through the Parts Department. The ama colors will be limited, and the Adventure Island will cost more when purchased via an upgrade kit rather than purchased initially as a complete boat package. * The Hobie Mirage Drive allows the boat to be pedaled while under sail, or simply pedaled with the sail furled for versatility not found in any other sailboat. * The Adventure Island is loaded with additional standard features such as a daggerboard; oversized "Twist and Stow" rudder; Mast and Sail Cover; and an Ama/Daggerboard Bag. * The Adventure Island will be offered in two color packages: Golden Papaya and Red Hibiscus. Both options include beautifully color-coordinated sails.Available September 2006 for a retail price of $2,995.Posted by GetOutdoor

Get Outdoors - Hobie Mirage Adventure Island - Getoutdoors.com Outdoor Blog

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Island Adventure kayak

Obsentinel.com


New kayak hit at Windfest 2007

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Currituck History

Currituck County, established in 1668, was one of the original counties and also just one of five original ports in North Carolina.

Corolla and Currituck Beach Lighthouse are across the Currituck Sound, east of the mainland. Currituck Sound is shallow, 35 miles long and varies from four to 15 miles wide.

In the early 1700s, Currituck County's original Courthouse was constructed. This building was replaced in 1842 and is still in use today. A jail was built in 1776, and together with the Courthouse these are two of the oldest buildings in North Carolina.

The Albemarle Chesapeake Waterway, which opened in 1859 and became part of the Intracoastal Waterway from Maine to Florida, is today used by both commercial watermen and pleasure-boaters. Coinjock, on its banks near the center of the county, is a very popular stopover for the snowbirds --power cruisers and sailboats heading south.

By the late 1800s Currituck, an Indian name for Land of the Wild Goose, was known as the premiere duck hunting region of the East Coast. Wealthy visitors discovered the enormous numbers of ducks and geese wintering on the Sound. Sportsmen from all over the United States came to hunt, either in guided parties or as members or guests of the many hunt clubs --including the legendary Whalehead Club.

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Currituck Couty, North Carolina

Currituck County slips southward from the Virginia line like a long, narrow finger surrounded by water. The heavily traveled Highway 168 runs down the spine of the peninsula and is the gateway to the Outer Banks for millions of visitors every year.
However, on either side of this Highway lies a beautiful land and pristine waters.

On the east side lies the Currituck Sound. There are no inlets to the sea, and the Sound is noted for its populations of fish and waterfowl. In fact, the Sound is on a migration path for ducks, Canada geese, and other birds. Dozens of old hunt clubs still dot the tiny islands in the sound. The land of Currituck is just as fertile and fresh produce is abundant in the summer and fall. Homegrown produce stands line the highway, luring visitors in with fresh melons, corn, tomatoes, and fruits.

The mainland, on the western bank, has several small communities. Coinjock is familiar to current-day water travelers along the Atlantic IntraCoastal Waterway. Moyock, Point Harbor and others lie along the highway route to the famous Outer Banks --one of the nation's most popular vacation areas.

The eastern shore of the Currituck Sound is separated from the Atlantic Ocean by a portion of NC's natural barrier islands. "Currituck Banks," once only the province of hunt clubs for the wealthy and lonely lighthouse keepers, is now more popularly known as Corolla.

Between the Currituck Banks on the east and the mainland, Currituck hosts several island communities. The two most popular, Knotts Island and Bells Island (or Bell Island), were once remote communities sustained by the usual coastal mix of farming, fishing, and hunting. These activities are still very much evident as both occupation and hobby. However there are a number of residents that choose to live here and commute to the more urban areas of Chesapeake, Norfolk, and Virginia Beach located across the Virginia line, which forms the county's northern boundary.

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Monday, April 16, 2007

Shooting at Va Tech

32 dead 22 wounded


What a tragedy! What has happened to people?
28 paid a visit and we talked about the sad state of this world and our kids.

His BD tomorrow.

Paid 250, only half? how cane we survive like this. Can't even pay the bills.




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Saturday, April 14, 2007

Water Garden

I woke up this morning missing my water garden.
I guess springtime is when I first started my last one.
The trickle of the water and the beautiful pet Koi.
If I start now I could have one up and running by fall.
First thing is size... I had such good luck with 3 ft in the ground.
But I saw one made out of an OLD hot tub.
I hate to dig another hole.
Maybe I should just go to the BIG pond out back.
It will take a pile of cleaning out woods and pond trash.
But I think the results would bring good money on the price of the lot.
That is if I ever can sell at a GOOD price.
Just another thing to spend money on too.
Don't know if I'll have ANY of that this summer.
Oh know, that brings me to the thought of getting a job. YUCK!!
No pond if I go back to work.
Oh ME, Oh MY! THE QUESTION??

Friday, April 13, 2007

The High Holiday Approaches! The 411 On 420

High Holiday Approaches! The 411 On 420

NEW YORK, April 12 /PRNewswire/ -- April 20th has long been the High Holiday for marijuana smokers and this year will be no exception. As the concept of 4/20 spreads throughout the nation, more and more of the twenty- five million U.S. marijuana smokers are choosing April 20 to celebrate stoner culture or fight for marijuana law reform. Whether you want to change the world or simply chill out and enjoy a stoner friendly vibe, April 20, 2007 will have something for every smoker. High Times can help you put your coverage of the 420 phenomenon in context.

420 - A Brief History

The term '420,' once shrouded in mystery, began as a code for marijuana among a group of students known as 'The Waldos' at San Rafael High School in Marin County, California. Throughout the 70s and 80s the term spread through the relentless touring phenomenon that was the Grateful Dead. All the while, The Waldos held small ceremonies on April 20th at Mt. Tam in Marin.

When a flier urging participation in cannabis ceremonies on April 20th appeared at HIGH TIMES headquarters in 1990, the magazine began promoting the code. Since then 4:20pm has become the peak ceremonial moment for all HIGH TIMES events and April 20th has become the official cannabis holiday, recognized the world over as THE date to celebrate the sacred herb.

To launch the 2007 festivities HIGH TIMES will hold a press conference at the magazine's Park Avenue headquarters at High Noon on April 18. Miss HIGH TIMES 2007, Sara Newton, will be on hand as well as representatives from the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws and, of course, the editors and writers who produce the world's most notorious magazine.

The annual 420 POTcast and a trailer for the new HIGH TIMES reality show HIGH TIMES: The Office will be screened. A comprehensive list of 4/20 celebrations and activist events throughout the country will be announced. Milk and brownies will be served.

Where: HIGH TIMES, 419 Park Avenue South, 16th floor, New York, NY

When: April 18, 2007 High Noon

RSVP: (212) 387-0500 ex 227 or rcusick@hightimes.com


On April 20th HIGH TIMES editors will be available for interview on broadcast media throughout the day.

For more information or to schedule an interview contact: Richard Cusick at the above number.
Website: http:/www.hightimes.com

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Do we dare go to Chernobyl?

This trip is best left to a beautiful woman that has lived it!

Please follow her journey, and feel the soul.


http://www.angelfire.com/extreme4/kiddofspeed/index.html

http://www.angelfire.com/extreme4/kiddofspeed/cherlinks.html


Ghost Town - Introduction

My name is Elena. I run this website and I don't have anything to sell. What I do have is my motorbike and the absolute freedom to ride it wherever curiosity and the speed demon take me. This page is maintained by the author, but when internet traffic is heavy it may be down occasionally.


Elana Picture


Biking

I have ridden all my life and over the years I have owned several different motorbikes. I ended my search for a perfect bike with a big ninja, that boasts a mature 147 horse power, some serious bark, is fast as a bullet and comfortable for a long trips.

I travel a lot and one of my favorite destinations leads North from Kiev, towards so called Chernobyl "dead zone", which is 130kms from my home. Why my favorite? Because one can take long rides there on empty roads.

The people there all left and nature is blooming. There are beautiful woods and lakes.

In places where roads have not been travelled by trucks or army vehicles, they are in the same condition they were 20 years ago - except for an occasional blade of grass or some tree that discovered a crack to spring through. Time does not ruin roads, so they may stay this way until they can be opened to normal traffic again........ a few centuries from now.


Ghost Town Map


Roentgens

To begin our journey, we must learn a little something about radiation. It is really very simple, and the device we use for measuring radiation levels is called a geiger counter . If you flick it on in Kiev, it will measure about 12-16 microroentgen per hour. In a typical city of Russia and America, it will read 10-12 microroentgen per hour. In the center of many European cities are 20 microR per hour, the radioactivity of the stone.

1,000 microroentgens equal one milliroentgen and 1,000 milliroentgens equal 1 roentgen. So one roentgen is 100,000 times the average radiation of a typical city. A dose of 500 roentgens within 5 hours is fatal to humans. Interestingly, it takes about 2 1/2 times that dosage to kill a chicken and over 100 times that to kill a cockroach.

This sort of radiation level can not be found in Chernobyl now. In the first days after explosion, some places around the reactor were emitting 3,000-30,000 roentgens per hour. The firemen who were sent to put out the reactor fire were fried on the spot by gamma radiation. The remains of the reactor were entombed within an enormous steel and concrete sarcophagus, so it is now relatively safe to travel to the area - as long as one do not step off of the roadway and do not stick in a wrong places.......

The map above shows all our journey through the dead zone. Radiation went in soil and now in apples and mushrooms. It is not retained by asphalt, which makes rides through this area possible.

I have never had problems with the dosimeter guys, who man the checkpoints. They are experts, and if they find radiation on you vehicle, they gave it a chemical shower. I don't count those couple of times when "experts" tried to invent an excuse to give me a shower, because those had a lot more to do with physical biology than biological physics


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How Long do we have?

How Long Do We Have?

About the time our original thirteen states adopted their new constitution
in 1787, Alexander Tyler, a Scottish history professor at
the University of Edinburgh, had this to say about the fall of the Athenian
Republic some 2,000 years earlier:

"A democracy is always temporary in nature; it simply cannot exist as a
permanent form of government."

"A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover
they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public
treasury."

"From that moment on, the majority always vote for the candidates who
promise the most benefits from the public treasury, with
the result that every democracy will finally collapse due to loose fiscal
policy, which is always followed by a dictatorship."

"The average age of the world's greatest civilizations from the beginning of
history, has been about 200 years."

"During those 200 years, those nations always progressed through the
following sequence:

1. from bondage to spiritual faith;
2. from spiritual faith to great courage;
3. from courage to liberty;
4. from liberty to abundance;
5. from abundance to complacency;
6. from complacency to apathy;
7. from apathy to dependence;
8. From dependence back into bondage"

Professor Joseph Olson of Hemline University School of Law, St. Paul ,
Minnesota , points out some interesting facts concerning the 2000
Presidential election:

Olson believes the United States is now somewhere between the "complacency
and apathy" phase of Professor Tyler's definition of
democracy, with some forty percent of the nation's population already having
reached the "governmental dependency" phase.

If Congress grants amnesty and citizenship to twenty million criminal
invaders called illegals and they vote, then we can say
goodbye to the USA in fewer than five years.

Pass this along to help everyone realize just how much is at stake, knowing
that apathy is the greatest danger to our freedom.




How long do we have? We don't.

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WETHEPEOPLE_UNITED/message/89499

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High Treason?

Is it high treason or just a simple case of dereliction of duty?


January 11, 2007 -- All the available information indicates that at least one of these crimes was committed and the finger points squarely at the Bush administration.


On Dec. 13, 2001, the Pentagon released a tape of Bin Laden in which he confessed to his visitor, Khaled Al-Harbi, of prior knowledge of the 9/11 attacks.


The tape was billed as the smoking gun that proves Bin Laden’s guilt and in order to remove all suspicion of fowl play; the Pentagon released the tape in its entirety.


If Bin Laden, through his own words, implicated himself in the planning of the 9/11 operations that took 3,000 innocent lives, the rest of the tape, which is a Bin Laden family home video of a downed Special Forces helicopter, implicates the Bush administration in a premeditated act that resulted in the loss of thousands of innocent lives in Afghanistan, Iraq, and other corners of the world.


A detailed analysis of the tape, the only one of its kind, was summarized in an article published by counterpunch.com, “Osama’s Confession; Osama’s Reprieve”. The article shows that the tape was the result of a two-part sting operation run by U.S. intelligence with the help of Saudi intelligence. The first part of the sting was to tape Bin Laden.  The second part of the operation was to capture him.


The Bush administration was the closest ever to Bin Laden and could have captured him on September 26, 2001, the date of the taping; intelligence operatives were feet from him, had 4 days advance notice of the date of the meeting, 24 hours advance notice of the exact location, and knew that Bin Laden would be there for at least 3 hours if not longer since his family and his favorite son Hamza lived in that village and Bin Laden was very likely to stay overnight.


This scripted opportunity to capture him, barely two weeks after 9/11 and ten day prior to invading Afghanistan, was squandered in favor of taping him confessing; that can only be considered dereliction of duty in time of war.

There is no telling how the war on terror would have evolved with Bin Laden in custody, but, if captured on September 26, there would have been no justification to launch military operations against Afghanistan ten days later; the civilians who died in Afghanistan as a result are no longer unfortunate collateral damage, they were murdered.

The article also shows that Bin Laden’s capture was deferred to a future unknown date with little or no advance notice and little control over the capture operation parameters.


The technical analysis of the tape places a member of the sting team that did the taping, in the village up until November 5, 2001. Based on events and the variety of U.S. assets that converged on that little village on November 2, 2001, the sting team member's duty was to alert the Special Forces of when Bin Laden returned to visit his family.


On that date, a Special Forces helicopter crashed on a hill near the village. The Pentagon tells us that the helicopter was on a rescue mission to retrieve a wounded soldier and that it crashed in bad weather. A second helicopter on that mission rescued the crew while an F-14 destroyed the disabled helicopter shortly thereafter. The Pentagon gave 1:30 pm ET as the time of the helicopter crash, 11:00 pm local.


On that same date, the Pentagon reported that a Predator went missing at 2:15 pm ET, 11:45 pm local.



When the counterpunch article was published, I had not made a connection to the Predator.  However, there was one loose item in my analysis that I filed away thinking it did not effect my article's conclusions. This item was a four cylinder, air cooled reciprocating engine with a Garrett turbo charger. At the time, I knew it was not large enough to run the main rotor of a military helicopter and assumed it was an auxiliary power unit (APU) that a variety of aircrafts use.

Approximately two weeks ago, I decided to revisit that item.  I approached my investigation from a different angle and, after two days of work, was able to identify the engine as a Rotax 914.  The only aircraft that uses this engine is a modified Predator of which the Air Force had only two examples on the date of the crash.

 

The Bin Laden family home video tapes the Predator engine as part of the helicopter wreckage.  Further viewing of the video reveals that among other wreckage footage, the camera housing of a Predator was taped and erroneously identified as part of the helicopter. 



Such intermingling of wreckage parts can only indicate that the helicopter and the Predator collided in midair and crashed.


Bad weather might have been the cause but freezing rain did not cause equipment failure; both the Predator and the helicopter are equipped with sophisticated deicing systems. The Bad weather and low ceiling might have caused the air space to shrink and caused the aircraft to fly in closer proximity. While the helicopter is equipped with a collision avoidance system, the Predator is not.


Predator excluded, a university math professor had put the probability of Bin Laden being in that village at the same time as the helicopter at 5 in 1000 and much lower on a night with freezing rain. When an intelligence operative was added to his calculations, the probably got closer to a certainty that Bin Laden was the target.


Now that a Predator is also placed at the scene, one of only two examples in the Air Force’s arsenal, there is no doubt that Bin Laden was the target of either an elimination or capture operation.


One might think that sending those troops on such an operation, in such horrendous weather conditions, was tantamount to sending them on a suicide mission. On its own operational merits it might not have been.  The question is whether those sent on the mission were aware of the taping operation and the better opportunity to capture Bin Laden?


The "failure of the capture" part, the important and what should have been the primary part of the sting operation, makes the entire operation a failure and the confessional video, a by-product of a failed intelligence operation.


On December 13, 2001, the date the tape was released by the Pentagon with presidential approval, there was no real need to release it. All was going the way the Bush administration wanted except for sentiments in the Muslim world.


Ramadan had started on November 16 that year and Bush and Rumsfeld chose to continue military operations during that holy month regardless of the pleas from Muslim nations in the Middle East and Asia. The images that were reaching Muslim households through Al-Jazeera during that month infuriated them and was a strong call for proof that Bin Laden was responsible for the 9/11 attacks.


The only item in the possession of the Bush administration that could counterbalance the images of dead civilian Afghanis was the Bin Laden confessional tape.


By releasing the tape, a by-product of a sensitive intelligence operation to justify an illegal policy of aggression at the detriment of national security, the Bush administration committed high treason.


When Bin Laden saw himself on TV confessing his prior knowledge, he realized that the taping was done by a covert camera and realized how close intelligence was to capturing him; Bin Laden would never let anyone that close again.


The release of the tape undermined all future efforts to capture Bin Laden, whether it is conducted by the Bush administration or any future administration; again, it screams of high treason.

 

Other than this recent discovery of the predator that strongly supports the original findings, there was another item I was discouraged by veteran journalists from including, and was convinced the story was strong enough without it. Sine I have already shared it with Patrick Fitzgerald, I am going to use this opportunity to share it with you as I think the people are the better judge of what is of value.

 

The item is a memo sent on behalf of Leo Wanta to VP Dick Cheney regarding Khaled Al-Harbi, the visitor to whom Bin Laden confessed.


First, a bit of background on Mr. Al-Harbi. Khaled Al-Harbi is an old acquaintance of Bin Laden from the early eighties who later lost the use of his legs due to an injury in Bosnia. At one time, he shared with Bin Laden the wrath of the Saudi government who stripped them both of their Saudi nationality.


Late in the nineties, Al-Harbi, without explanation, regained his citizenship and was allowed back in Saudi to teach Islam in his native Makkah. The security services of Saudi Arabia describe him as harmless, a follower, and an Al-Qaida wannabe.


Al-Harbi became famous because of his appearance in the Bin Laden video. Even though shortly after the video was released it became clear that he left Saudi on September 21, 2001, and that he traveled through Iran, there were no attempts made to retrace his movements or to track him down; his handicap would have made him very easy to track.


On December 14, 2001, a day after the confession video aired, a memo was faxed by Thomas Henry on behalf of Leo Wanta to VP Dick Cheney. In the memo, Leo Wanta tells Mr. Cheney that Al-Harbi was seen in Manila around October 14, 2001, in the company of one CIA and one FBI agent and provided the names of the agents. The memo goes on to say that there was an exchange of money and financial assets (“u boxes”) between the agents and Al-Harbi.

The date of October 14, 2001 fits well with the date of the tape of September 26, 2001. My interpretation of the financial transactions is different from that of Leo Wanta; I see them as payments for a job well done.


Through the individuals running the websites where the memo appeared, Mr. Wanta was made aware of my findings and followed by several requests for comments or discussion. The go-between told me, after several emails and phone calls, which spanned two months, that Mr. Wanta was too afraid to deal with the issue.

In the memo, when associates of Mr. Wanta approached the named federal agents, the agents identified the person in the wheel chair, Khaled Al-Harbi, as Datu Bin Abu, a name that is not Arabic, a name I could not associate with any language or ethnicity, it is simply a fictitious name the agents made up on the fly to conceal his true identity.


A leading investigative reporter for The New Yorker criticized visual identifications as unreliable. I do agree with him if such visual identification is based on a glance by an average person. Wanta, a retired intelligence operative, and his associates, are not average persons. The memo identifies them as intel op and indicates that they had close contact with Al-Harbi, observed him over a period of time, and were planning future encounters with him.


After Manila, there were no reports of the whereabouts of Al-Harbi until he arrived in Saudi Arabia in July of 2004. Al-Harbi was one of just a handful of Saudis who took advantage of a failed amnesty program for Al-Qaida members. His surrender and his treatment by Saudi Authorities were highly publicized. The Saudi authorities never questioned him, provided him with the best medical treatment, and immediately awarded his foreign wife who arrived with him, Saudi citizenship and a monthly stipend. The whole affair reeked of propaganda designed to show the magnanimity of the Saudis and to encourage other Al-Qaida members to surrender.


If Mr. Cheney received such memo, it should have been shared with the various law enforcement agencies and the agents named in the memo should have been questioned. Other than its appearance on the various websites associated with Leo Wanta and described as the “explosive memo” there is no mention of it anywhere and certainly not in the 9/11 commission report.


The majority of the information I shared with you has been shared with major mainstream media outlets, selected senators and congressman, and Patrick Fitzgerald through his media contact Randall Samborn.

For good measure they will all be copied again.


Unlike other crimes that the Bush administration is suspected of, the evidence used to expose these is still available to the media, our elected representatives, and law enforcement to probe and independently analyze.

If they choose to investigate using their resources and access that are far superior to mine, they should quickly reach the same conclusions.


Again, they cannot plead ignorance. Their inaction can only be viewed as a failure in performing their primary duty, which is to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.  For those sworn to protect the Constitution, their failure to act is more like aiding and abetting.

A closing message to the reader: The material you just read has been shared with Congressmen Conyers, Kucinich, and Paul, and with Senator Finegold.  No action has been taken yet.  I will be sharing it with Congressman Shays. I encourage all to make your elected representatives aware of this material. In terms of law enforcement, Patrick Fitzgerald and Eliot Spitzer when he was still the NY Attorney General have been provided this information.   Regarding the corporate media, I am going to give a quick list of those that have been provided this information: Washington Post, LA Times, McClatchy News Organization, several Hearst newspapers, Boston Globe, Countdown with Keith Olbermann, 60 minutes, Al-Jazeera, Observer, Independent, Scotsman, and Guardian.

 

Of the independent media: counterpunch, Zmag, The Nation, Salon, CommonDreams, AlterNet, Antiwar, Rolling Stones Magazine, Project Censored, Village Voice, Mother Jones, Muckraker Report, The Lone Star Iconoclast, etc. were contacted and provided this information.  This is a short list from memory.  The point is I knocked on many doors.

 

When I say these entities were made aware of this information, I don't just mean via email.   There were several follow up calls to various reporters and editors and often-lengthy conversations. If you think a publication might be interested, please have them either contact myself, or the Muckraker Report directly.

 

Very few news sources have the courage to publish this sort of information, and special thanks goes to counterpunch for putting all the effort in editing and publishing the first article. I also tip my hat to The Muckraker Report and The Iconoclast for publishing follow up articles.

 

I was contacted by a producer at Al-Jazeera and asked to summarize the counterpunch article in 5 to 7 minutes. Unfortunately, it did not happen. If it had, about 50 million Arabic speaking individuals would have been made aware of this information.  Follow up conversations with the producer led me to believe that Al-Jazeera headquarters in Doha pulled the plug on my interview.

 

Recall that it was Al-Jazeera's coverage of Afghanistan that forced out the Bin Laden confession tape.

 

Thank you for reading this article.  Please make the effort to get this information to you Congressman and Senators.  Ask your associates and groups to do the same.

 

Remember, Speaker of the House Palosi took impeachment off the table in order to make Democrats more palatable to those on the political fence in the November 2006 elections.   In one sentence she put in the dumpster all the work that Conyers did. Not that Conyers really did much with the information I sent him; not even a call from a staff member to ask follow-up questions. I can only describe the offices of the officials I contacted as black holes.

If you enjoyed this article, please consider donating $1 or more to the MUCKRAKER REPORT.
Your donations keep the Muckraker Report subscription free!

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Take IT back!

'Public Diplomacy': a history of public deception

In 1983, a Memorandum entitled, "Public Affairs and Public Diplomacy Strategies for
Lebanon and the Middle East," was prepared for the Chair of the International Political
Committee. It was signed by Robert C McFarlane, as Chairman of the Special Planning
Group of the National Security Council. Its purpose was to mobilize public opinion in
support of U.S. policy in Lebanon. Its premise was that such support was lacking because
"many Americans have difficulty relating the complicated politics of Lebanon to U.S.
vital interests. Appealing to our regional interests, i.e., Israeli security or our hope
for democracy in Lebanon, is not likely by itself to convince the American people the
costs are worth it."[1]

To overcome such limitations, the same Memorandum argued for "an effective short-term
strategy which coherently argues why Lebanon is of strategic importance to the United
States, not merely because of its relationship to the Soviet and Syrian threat in the
Eastern Mediterranean, but also because of the linkage between what happens in Syria and
Lebanon and the future stability of the Persian Gulf." Conveying this information
properly required another kind of strategy, one that would "penetrate the twelve media
centers in the U.S." in addition to reaching out to business, labor, special interest
groups, as well as educational and religious institutions with the assistance of
reliable "heavy hitters."

The above memo was as applicable in 2006 as it when issued in 1983. Both periods
followed U.S.-supported Israeli invasions of Lebanon which were justified by the Reagan
and, later, by the G.W. Bush administrations, in similar terms. Then as now, the
administration claimed that its policies were critical to the protection of vital U.S.
national interests, which included the protection of Israel and the support of democracy
in Lebanon. In both instances, developments in Lebanon were linked to those in Damascus
and the Gulf. In both periods, radical Lebanese Shi'ites were suspected of harboring
Iranian connections. And then as now, public diplomacy was an instrument of public
deception designed to effectively mask Washington's policies and those of its allies in
the region.

Yet the above Memorandum remains useful. In summary form, it identifies elements of
continuity in U.S. policy in Beirut that remain relevant nearly a quarter of a century
after it was issued. By framing U.S. policy in terms of support for Israel and the
protection of U.S. interests in the Gulf, the authors of the Memorandum accurately
conveyed Washington's assessment of Beirut's place in its broader Middle East design. It
was one in which Lebanon was inextricably linked to the Israeli/Palestine struggle and
to the conflicting currents of the Arab world and the Gulf.

From the outset, U.S. policymakers were well aware of Lebanon's regional predicament and
its impact on local politics. They did not fail to recognize that some 200,000
Palestinian refugees entered Lebanon as a result of the 1948 war, and that the number
had roughly doubled by 1982.[2] But Washington's interest in Beirut rested elsewhere. It
was anchored in its commercial and strategic possibilities for U.S. oil. Under the
circumstances, Washington's prime objective in Beirut was identifying the segment of the
Lebanese elite that could be reliably counted on in an environment increasingly open to
the challenge of nationalist and radical forces. It was this context that shaped
Washington's permanently suspicious outlook on the Palestinian resistance in Beirut and
elsewhere, as it constituted a permanent risk of radicalization.

This was the basis of the congruence with Israeli policies in Lebanon. But after 1967,
it was but a portion of the far more ambitious role assigned by the U.S. to Israel in
the Middle East, Latin America and Africa. In the Lebanese context, U.S. officials
understood that Israel's courtship of Lebanon's Christians, which preceded 1948, was
premised on the proposition that like minded minorities shared a common heritage and a
common political outlook, notably, a hostility to Arab nationalism and Palestinian
resistance. The description by no means applied to all Lebanese Christians. Hence,
Israel's support was limited to those who qualified in its terms, such as the
Phalangists and their militias, which Tel Aviv supported with its 1982 invasion of
Lebanon.

The role played by the U.S. in that invasion and what followed, when U.S. Marines were
sent to Beirut as part of the Multinational peacekeeping force in Lebanon, was directly
relevant to the timing of the October 23, 1983, Memorandum identified above. Three days
earlier a truck bomb exploded at the headquarters of the U.S. Marines in Beirut, leaving
241 dead.

Public opinion polls in the United States in early 1984 demonstrated that there was
increasing "discontent with President Reagan's policy in Lebanon," and the desire to
"extricate marines from a country where 250 Americans have already died."[3] By then,
the estimated casualty toll of the Israeli invasion in Lebanon was between 17,000 and
20,000.

How much did the U.S. public know or recall of U.S. policy in Lebanon? Mainstream media
coverage among some of the major newspapers on the East Coast was shattering in its
images of war and glaring in what it chose to neglect. Washington had supported Israel's
policies in Lebanon prior to the 1982 invasion, and it supported Syrian intervention in
1976, as did Israel, when that was directed against the Lebanese left and the PLO. The
U.S. endorsed Israel's tactical alliance with right wing Lebanese parties and militias
bent on destroying the PLO, which was the justification for the 1982 invasion.

Accounts of the Israeli invasion, images of devastation, reports of prison camps,
testimony of foreign doctors working with Palestinians, evidence of the scale of
destruction of Beirut, the agony of the Lebanese Guernica,[4] were on record, even if it
sorely incomplete, as with respect to the impact of Israel's invasion on the south.
Nonetheless, Israel's use of U.S.-made cluster bombs and phosphorus bombs in densely
populated civilian areas, led then-President Reagan, who fully supported the invasion,
to call for an indefinite " suspension of shipments of such weapons to Israel," which,
in reality, "applied only to a single shipment then ready for transport."[5] In a
calculated effort to salvage U.S. interests, Washington called for an end to violence,
the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Beirut, and support for its initiatives to deal
with the Israeli Palestinian conflict. The invitation excluded the Palestinians, a
fraudulent and fateful omission given the nature of the conflict. but one overlooked by
those unaware of -- or unprepared to -- question Washington's 'honest broker' image.

The authors of the 1983 Memorandum were no doubt correct in assuming that many Americans
were not supporting U.S. policy. The origins and objectives of that policy remained
obscure. But they were hardly invisible.

Over the intervening years, U.S. presidential doctrines consistently reiterated their
support for a unified Lebanese state, which in translation meant a state governed by a
regime deemed sufficiently in harmony with U.S. interests to merit support. Chief among
such interests in the postwar decades, was protecting Lebanon's transit role in the
regional oil economy and promoting Beirut as a financial, trading and commercial center
in the Middle East. Assuring the status quo in keeping with policies compatible with
U.S. interests led to overt and covert interventions in Lebanon's internal political
struggles. It meant deliberately undermining those advocating reformist programs in
Lebanon's first civil war in 1958, and supporting Christian right-wing forces advocating
anti-Palestinian, anti-left and pro-American policies, in the second that broke out in
1975 and continued in different forms through 1990.

Washington's objective in Lebanon was to assure the elimination of radical forces, to
contain the Palestinian resistance, and, from the late 1970s on, to align Beirut with
Washington's allies, Riyadh, Amman and Cairo, following the 1978 signing of the
Israeli-Egyptian Camp David agreement, which Lebanon failed to join.

U.S. Policy in the 1950s

Following World War II, U.S. interests in Lebanon were defined primarily in commercial
terms whose strategic importance was clearly understood by U.S. policymakers and oil
executives alike. Lebanon was valued for its role as a transit state, one whose
indispensable function was to carry ARAMCO's oil through the related U.S.-built Tapline,
from Saudi Arabia to the Lebanese port of Sidon. Beirut oil-related enterprises, in
short, were part of the vast complex that was under the control of the Petroleum Cartel.
Its history is inseparable from that of U.S. oil and political interests in the decades
following World War II.

In 1958, at the time of the first Lebanese civil war and the Iraqi revolution, U.S.
officials in Lebanon had the responsibility of guaranteeing the protection of both the
U.S. and UK pipelines, the latter connecting the Iraq Petroleum Company's oil (which did
not belong to Iraq) to the Lebanese port of Tripoli.[6]

Long before 1958, Washington developed a network of relations with Lebanon's financial,
commercial and political elite, which reinforced its assessment of the considerable
value of this very small state in the protection and projection of its interests and
power across the region. In a period when Washington feared the sweep of radical change
that its officials viewed as inevitable in a region they described as overtaken by the
'struggle between defenders of the status quo and advocates of change,' Beirut
represented the pole of resistance against Egyptian President Nasser. Of incomparably
greater influence in the region, the Egyptian leader was consistently courted and
undermined by U.S. officials who suspected his role in every regional crisis, including
that which gripped Lebanon in the year of its first civil war. Hence, the sense of
increasing alarm that affected U.S. officials as they viewed the evidence of increasing
disaffection with the regime in Beirut.[7]

On 14 July, the British-supported Iraqi monarchy collapsed before the forces of the
Iraqi revolution. The news arrived as the U.S. was preparing for military intervention
in Beirut, a move designed to shore up its Lebanese allies. In London, however, British
Prime Minister Harold Macmillan urged U.S. President Eisenhower to drop the idea of
intervening in Lebanon and to turn, instead, to a joint intervention in Baghdad. The
idea had no appeal in Washington where the prospects of a diminished British presence in
the Gulf was hardly a threat. Eisenhower therefore rejected the invitation but added the
following in his 18 July, response to MacMillan:

"Whatever happens in Iraq and other parts of the area, we must, I think, not only try to
bolster up both the loyalties and the military and economic strength of Lebanon and
Jordan, we must also, and this seems to me even more important, see that the Persian
Gulf area stays within the Western orbit. The Kuwait-Dhahran-Abadan areas become
extremely important and Turkey and Iran have become more important. We shall seek ways
to help them be sturdy allies, first in quality and second in quantity, insofar as that
quantity can be usefully provided and maintained."[8]

The members of the U.S. Senate were not consulted on these questions, as their
complaints made clear. Members of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee that met
over the course of the summer of 1958 to consider the 'situation in the Middle East,'
with briefings on U.S. policy by administration officials, were privy to little of what
was actually going on in the region. Their prime concern was with U.S. intervention in
Lebanon, though they had numerous questions about Iraq and the failure of U.S.
Intelligence to anticipate the revolution. At the outset, Senate critics demanded to
know the legal basis for U.S. intervention in Lebanon, obviously irritated by the
evident disdain for Congressional opinion. Such questions led beyond Lebanon to Iraq,
and the more general question of U.S. oil interests in the region.[9]

Concerning Lebanon, senators were told that U.S. intervention was a necessary and just
response to the predicament facing the Lebanese President. They were made to understand
that its broader implications were justified by Washington's firm stance against radical
currents in a region open to Soviet penetration and local subversion. Questions
pertaining to Lebanon's civil war and the precise source of external danger to which the
Lebanese President and his U.S. ally consistently pointed went unanswered, save for
repetitive accusations against Egypt, Syria, and radio propaganda that was considered a
form of 'aggressive indirect aggression.'

As to Iraq, senators were told that U.S. officials, including those in the Intelligence
community, were unaware and unprepared for news of the Iraqi revolution. Some Senators,
however, took issue with the derogatory descriptions of the event, suggesting that
Iraqis might have exercised their legitimate rights in revolting against a corrupt and
unrepresentative government. Questions concerning U.S. oil interests in the Gulf,
including Kuwait, indicated more than a passing knowledge, but they were categorically
set aside. Indeed, the juxtaposition of Senate hearings with what the record shows of
parallel U.S. communiqués with Britain on the subject, offer striking evidence of the
profound dis-connect between public talk and inside policy.

At the same time as the Senate welcomed administration officials (with the illusory hope
of clarifying U.S. policy) the U.S. President assured Prime Minister Macmillan of the
U.S. commitment to the defense of Anglo-American interests in the Gulf. As Senate
hearings continued, U.S. officials offered their versions of the Iraqi 'coup,' while
Senate critics disputed a policy of intervention at the will of the executive,
repeatedly raising the question of Congressional authorization. Again, in virtually
parallel though secret exchanges, the U.S. Secretary of State assured British officials
that "we can put up sand bags around positions we must protect -- the first group being
Israel and Lebanon and the second being the oil positions around the Persian Gulf."[10]

The New Disorder in the Middle East

That was in 1958. In the two long decades that followed, the region was subjected to
unprecedented turmoil as civil wars, regional wars, and revolutions fundamentally
altered the political contours of the region. For the vast majority whose interests were
routinely ignored, the results involved loss and displacement and a chronic political
discontent. There was Israel's 1967 war and that of October 1973, the first of which
enhanced Israeli territorial acquisitions at the expense of Palestinians, as well as
Egyptians and Syrians, leading not only to renewed conflict but to the imposition of an
oil embargo that had entirely different repercussions. In 1975 the Lebanese civil war
exploded, a toxic mix of inseparable factors whose origins were to be found in Lebanese
as well as regional politics.

In the same year, Washington debated the possibilities of intervention to assure its
control over oil,[11] a preoccupation that was to be magnified by the Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan in 1979 that followed the 1979 Iranian revolution that forced the exile of
the U.S. backed Shah. On 18 July, 1979, The Guardian (UK) reported that "On 16 July 1979
Saddam Hussein came to power in Iraq."

Washington's response to developments in Iran was to promote attempts to foment a
military coup, to get arms to the Iranian military, and once the Iraq-Iran broke out, to
assure the defeat of Iran. The introduction of the Rapid Deployment Force into the Gulf
by then Pres Carter was another means of asserting American power, one whose capacity to
intervene was significantly expanded by President Reagan in 1988.[12]

Earlier, Washington considered its crafting of the Camp David Agreement, signed by Egypt
and Israel in 1978, a major achievement. At the regional level, Washington rewarded
Egypt and Israel, previously the recipient of generous support after its 1967 victory,
with arms sales and economic assistance. According to one report, "an Israeli official
who participated in the Blair House military talks with Egypt and the U.S. in 1979
described those sessions as outlining not formal alliances 'but a loose division of
labor,' in which the U.S. would supply the military assistance for Egypt to police the
Arab world and Israel to protect the Sadat regime against retaliation."[13] According to
the Newsweek 1980 account of this development, Washington was reported to have been
opposed to a "security partnership among Israel, Egypt and the United States," favored
by Israel. In practice, Israel's role was more extensive in the Middle East, where it
supplied arms to potential opponents of the Iranian regime with U.S. support, as well as
outside the region, in parts of Africa and Latin America and later extending to
Asia.[14]

In Lebanon, the 1967 war and the expulsion of Palestinians from Jordan three years
later, resulted in Lebanon becoming the principal base of the Palestinians outside of
occupied territory. helped result in Palestinians developing their principal base of
operations in its territory. The results deeply affected Lebanese domestic politics,
inciting opposition among those Christians and Muslims who shared a profound unease
about the presence of the Palestinian resistance movement and its potential
consequences. For some, as in the case of the right wing Christian Phalangist Party, the
result was an openness to Israeli support as well as that of the U.S.

Intertwined with this struggle in Lebanon was another whose class roots were to be found
in the aggravated consequences of the country's uneven socioeconomic development and its
transformation into an unproductive service economy. The Lebanese south was arguably the
most impoverished part of the country, with its predominantly Shi'ite population
increasingly radicalized as a result. But Lebanon's Shiite population was neither
exclusively southern, rural, nor monolithic in its socioeconomic and political status.
It was the disenfranchised of the south, however, who formed the supportive base of the
"Movement of the Dispossessed" and its military arm, Amal. And it was the forces of Amal
that, at a later stage, were locked in conflict with the Palestinian resistance and the
left, in the mid 1980s.

These separate but interrelated factors figured in the different phases of Lebanon's
second civil war, including the bitter Palestinian-Lebanese struggles that deepened
intra-Lebanese divisions which Israeli, Syria and the U.S. exploited and reinforced. The
principal coalition of opposition forces represented in the Lebanese National Movement
(LNM) was linked with the Palestinian resistance, a combination anathema to Israel and
to Washington, and, for a different set of reasons, to Syria that had initially
supported the left. In this context, the LNM's proposed reforms which should have been
welcome to Washington as a form of political modernization and secularization, were
depicted as endangering U.S. interests in the region with the result that Washington and
Tel Aviv supported Lebanese right wing forces with the assistance of Syria, as of 1976.

In 1976, the U.S. State Department issued a statement reaffirming its opposition to
partition and its support of measures "which will insure security and opportunity for
all individuals and communities in the country."[15] The civil war, however, was by no
means over. It would continue until 1990 and the Taif agreement of that year. However,
the U.S. Department of Defense justified its Security Assistance Program for Lebanon,
for 1978 and 1979, in terms of U.S. support for Lebanon's national integrity and the
urgency of reconstruction. Its proposal for assistance was couched in terms of the U.S.
objective of improving the capacity of the central government to promote the restoration
of a moderate and a democratic state that would be favorable for Lebanon's reintegration
into the international economy.[16] As the DOD program proposal acknowledged at the
time, fighting in the south continued among "contending armed factions" that required
effective intervention by the central government.

What the directives of the DOD formally ignored was the terrain of the "contending armed
factions." To a former Israeli conscript who had served in southern Lebanon as part of a
platoon, the Christian militia were "Israeli-paid gunmen [who] acted as informants,
interrogators, and enforcers. Israel's strategy was to disrupt Palestinian guerrillas by
punishing the surrounding Lebanese population; the result was deeply felt Lebanese
anger."[17]

The Israeli press offered its readers the views of then retired Gen. Mordechai Gur on
Israel's March 1978 invasion of parts of southern Lebanon, known as the 'Litany
Operation', which basically confirmed the above position with considerably more
instructive details as to the mode of operations of the Israeli military in occupied
territories, Jordan, Egypt as well as southern Lebanon. Reaching the Litani was the
objective, as Gur made clear. Then, an accord with a strengthened Lebanese government
was an option, followed by a role for the UN. If the former was lacking, Israel's
presence would be extended. He expressed no doubts as to Israel's course or his own,
when he ordered "the IDF to enter a populated area and sanction free-fire."[18]

Israeli forces were to remain in control of parts of the Lebanese south from 1978 to
2000, the year in which the Lebanese resistance, led primarily by the Hezbollah,
succeeded in forcing their ouster. It was to be the preface to Israel's 2006 invasion of
Lebanon, one in which the PLO was no longer the justification for Israeli action. This
time, the target was Hizbollah; the reason, its resistance to Israeli control, a
position supported by Washington policymakers who viewed it as a regional threat --
additionally allied to Washington's nemesis in Teheran.

And now for the past present

Considered in historical perspective, the latest example of U.S.-Israeli collaboration
in the invasion of Lebanon offered a perverted echo of past policies whose impact was
deepened by the transformations that occurred in the region and at the international
level since 1982. Among the results were those catalogued in the reports of Amnesty
International and Human Rights Watch that addressed the scale of destruction and the
evidence of war crimes in Lebanon, as well UN reports that bore witness to the dire
conditions affecting Gaza as a result of Israel's systematic dismantling of its social,
political and economic infrastructure.

The collapse of the former Soviet Union in 1989 and the subsequent advances of the U.S.
in Central Asia and the Caucuses, to which the first U.S. invasion of Iraq in 1991 must
be added, radically changed the environment in which the U.S. operated under its favored
cover of exporting democracy and the values of western civilization. Unprecedented oil
profits in the hands of well protected pro-American regimes in the oil producing states
of the Arab world minimized the risks to U.S. policy from this source. The new 'axis of
evil', was represented by Tehran, Damascus and the so-called non-state actor, the
Lebanese Hizbollah, that came to epitomize the newest form of international scourge to
the sovereignty of the state.

By contrast, the U.S.-Israeli relationship had been eminently strengthened since the
1982 war and the 1988 U.S.-Israeli 'memorandum of understanding,' that basically
confirmed past agreements while describing Israel as 'a major non-NATO ally.' Neither
Israel's invasion of Lebanon nor its steady denial of Palestinian rights in Gaza and the
West Bank, undermined the relationship.

Nevertheless resistance to Israeli policies persisted in occupied territories under
direct Israeli control. In very different circumstances, resistance to Israel's
continuing occupation of southern Lebanon continued until 2000. At that time, Israeli
forces withdrew, largely in response to Lebanese resistance mobilized primarily, though
not exclusively, by Hizbollah. The elimination of such resistance activities was both an
Israeli and a U.S. objective, as evidence of the joint U.S.-Israeli planning for the
2006 invasion of Lebanon suggests. Washington justified its policies not only in terms
of protecting the security of its special ally, but as firmly eliminating the threat
from 'extremists' in the region and bringing about the transformation of the 'new Middle
East.' Examples of the latter included what was, in effect, an entente cordiale among
states such as Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Jordan, along with the states of the Gulf, and
Israel, to which Washington hoped to eventually add a newly reconstituted Lebanon,
provided an appropriate regime was in place.

Washington justified its support of the Israeli invasion of 2006 in terms of Israel's
right of self-defense, and its role in the 'war against terror' in the Middle East, a
war waged in Lebanon against what the G.W. Bush administration claimed was Iran's proxy,
the Hizbollah. Both the U.S. and Israel claimed to be supporters of Lebanon, a state
whose near destruction, according to this logic, was to be considered a step on the path
of democratization.

The symbol of U.S-Israeli collaboration in 2006, as in 1982, was the evidence of
U.S.-made and -supplied cluster bombs. In 2006, as it had been earlier, Israel was
charged with using U.S.-made cluster bombs in violation of prior agreements.[19] This
time, the U.N. joined in the denunciation of Israel's use of such weapons, revealing
that clearance experts had thus far found 100.000 unexploded cluster bomblets at 359
separate sites. The map of Israeli landmines in Lebanon was one of the demands
previously made by Hizbollah to the Israeli government, as part of its prisoner
exchanges, without success.

On August 23, the Office of the Spokesman of the Department of State issued a statement
on the subject of "United States Emergency Aid to Lebanon to Clear Explosive Remnants of
War." In its first paragraph it revealed that "The Office of Weapons Removal and
Abatement in the U.S. Department of State's Bureau of Political-Military Affairs is
quickly expanding its nearly decade-long landmine and unexploded ordnance (UXO)
humanitarian clearance program in Lebanon in order to help remove the newest explosive
remnants of war that endanger the Lebanese who are returning to their homes in the
southern part of the country."[20]

The State Department was apparently far ahead of the U.S. Senate that, according to the
Associated Press, voted on Wednesday, September 6, 2006, to defeat by a margin of 70 to
30 an amendment calling on the Pentagon to halt the transfer or sale of cluster bombs to
those using them near civilian targets.

There were other tangible signs of U.S. support for Israel.[21] At the end of July 2006,
Washington accelerated delivery of 'High Technology Bombs' to the Israeli military. The
target was ostensibly Hizbollah. Arrangements for financing U.S. military assistance to
Israel had always been a lucrative business for U.S. corporations such as, Raytheon,
Lockheed Martin and Boeing, since according to U.S. law, 74 percent of such assistance
had to be spent on U.S. military materiel.[22] In 2004, according to a U.S.
Congressional Research Service report, Washington increased military aid to Israel to
$2.4 billion annually, from about $1.8 billion. Estimates of U.S. arms exports to Israel
between 1994-2003 were approximately $6.9 billion, with Israel in possession of "more
F-16s than any other country besides the U.S."[23] Washington did not entirely ignore
its favored Arab partners. Suffice it to recall the recent sale of more than $6 billion
worth of military equipment to Saudi Arabia.

On the ground in southern Lebanon, "Operation Peace for Galilee", the 1982 Israeli
invasion, continued until 2000. As Gen. Gur had predicted, Israel remained in place. It
expanded the 'security zone' it had defined for its operations in 1978, in spite of UN
Security Council Resolution 425 of March 1978 that, in addition to calling for respect
for Lebanon's sovereignty and integrity, called on Israel "immediately to cease its
military action against Lebanese territorial integrity and withdraw forthwith its forces
from all Lebanese territory." Instead, incursions, abductions and attacks followed, such
as those of 1993 and 1996 in Qana, the latter involving an Israeli attack on a UN post
in which an estimated 100 were killed and roughly the same number injured. Israeli
forces were involved in abductions of Sheikh Obeid on 28 July 1988 and Mustafa Dirani,
on 21 May 1994.

As Zeev Maoz recalled in Ha'aretz (24 July 2006), "During operations 'Accountability'
[in 1993] and 'Grapes of Wrath' [in 1996], Israel's mass bombardments of civilian
targets caused mass evacuations of Southern Lebanon, the estimated number of refugees in
each case exceeded 500,000 Lebanese. We do not have a good estimate of the number of
civilian fatalities in each of these incidents, but during the 'Grapes of Wrath'
operation, Israeli shells hit a civilian shelter killing 103 civilians including many
women and children."[21] After Israel's withdrawal from southern Lebanon in 2000, after
an 18-year occupation, largely as a result of Hizbollah's resistance, "Israel has
violated Lebanese airspace by carrying out aerial reconnaissance missions virtually
every day since its withdrawal from Southern Lebanon six years ago."[22]

Preparations for war began, it appears, after the 2000 withdrawal. Discussions of such
prospects with U.S. diplomats, journalists and various lobbying groups in Washington
additionally provide evidence of collaboration, which was later denied. Those less
reticent to confirm U.S.-Israeli consultations, if not collaboration on the Lebanon
invasion, indicated that "Israel had devised a plan for attacking Hezbollah -- and
shared it with Bush Administration officials -- well before the July 12th
kidnappings."[23]

At issue for Washington was the connection between Hizbollah and Iran, the commitment to
eliminate the former as a prerequisite to confronting Iran. In that guise, the conflict
that exploded in Lebanon risking the very existence of state and society, was but a
convenient rehearsal for a more drastic exercise.

In conjunction with the catastrophic results of its policies in Afghanistan and Iraq,
the U.S.-supported Israeli invasion of Lebanon merits high-level inquiry and
investigation as well as official denunciation and mourning. The increasing attention
paid to the consequences of official deception in the manufacture of the rationale for
war on Iraq, deserved to be applied to the US- Israel war on Lebanon and Gaza. In early
September 2006 no such plans were in evidence, but internal opposition to Washington's
claims had long been heard from the minority of well informed intellectuals, critics and
scholars prepared to challenge official claims, and it later became audible from defense
analysts who challenged the official view of Hizbollah and generals who took issue with
the notion that that organization was nothing more than an Iranian dependency.

It remains for the non-generals, the non-politicians, the vast majority of others, the
non-important people, the rest of us, in sum, to ask, as did journalist Amira Hass in
her eloquent address to Israelis and their studied indifference to the decimation of
Palestinian society and to the incarceration of Gaza, "Can you really not see?"[24]

The question is ours, as well.

Notes

1. 26 October 1983, Memorandum For the Honorable Lawrence S. Eagleburger, Chairman,
International Political Committee. Prepared for the Honorable Robert C. McFarlane,
Chairman, Special Planning Group. U.S. Department of State, Office of FOI, Privacy and
Classification Review. U.S. Propaganda Action in the Middle East, National Security
Archive.

2. Alexander Cockburn and James Ridgeway, "War in Lebanon," The Village Voice, vol..
XXV11, no.25, 22 June 1982.

3. Steven V. Roberts, "Support Waning for Beirut Role," The New York Times, 4 January
1984, p. A10.

4. Fawwaz Trabulsi, "Beirut-Guernica: A City and a Painting," Middle East Report,
September-October 1988.

5. Eleanor Randolph, "Reagan Suspends Indefinitely Sale of Cluster Bombs to Israel," The
Boston Globe, 28 July 1982, p. 8.

6. In discussion with Pres. Eisenhower, V.P. Nixon and Defense officials, Secretary of
State J.F. Dulles was reported to have argued that if Iraqi pipelines were destroyed,
the U.S. "should of course help them [the British] meet their shortages." Cited in Irene
L. Gendzier, Notes From the Minefield (New York: Columbia University Press, 1997), p.
300.

7. For further discussion on Lebanon and Iraq in 1958, see the Preface to the 2006
edition of Notes From the Minefield, United States Intervention in Lebanon and the
Middle East, 1945-1958 (New York: Columbia University Press, forthcoming 2006). I wish
to express my thanks to the editors of this work for allowing me to cite from its pages.

8. Preface, Notes From the Minefield (2006), pp. xxv-xxvi.

9. Ibid., pp. xxvi-xxvii. Further discussion of U.S. Senate hearings on the 1958 crisis
will find them in ch.13 of Notes From the Minefield. (2006).

10. Ibid., p. 355.

11. "Oil Fields as Military Objectives: a Feasibility Study," Prepared for the Special
Subcommittee on Investigations of the Committee on International Relations by the
Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress. 21 August 1975, U.S. Government
Printing Office, Washington, 1975.

12. John Cushman, Jr., "Reagan Consulted in Midst of Battle," The New York Times, 22
April 1988, p. A8.

13. "We Have Problems," by Steven Strasser with Kim WIllenson, Fred Coleman and David
Martin, William E Schmidt and Martin Kasindorf, Newsweek, 14 July 1980, cited in Joe
Stork, "The Carter Doctrine and U.S. Bases in the Middle East," MERIP Report, September
1980, p. 10.

14. Noam Chomsky, Pirates and Emperors, (Cambridge, MA, 1986), see Israeli sources cited
on p.113-114; and in Noam Chomsky, The Fateful Triangle (Cambridge, MA: South End Press,
1999), pp. 23-27; 457 and note, and 458.

15. Department of State Bulletin, "United States Reaffirms Commitment to Integrity and
Unity of Lebanon," 11 October 1976, p.459.

16. United States Department of Defense, Security Assistance Program, 1978, 1979.

17. James Ron, "The Next Step for Israel," The Boston Globe, 25 May 2000, p. A 25.

18. Interview by Alex Fishman with General (reserves) Mordechai Gur, Al Hamishmar, 10
May 1978 (trans. by I. Shahak).

19. Julian Borger, "US Investigates Whether Israel Violated Deal on Cluster Bombs," The
Guardian, 26 August 2006.

20. "United States Emergency Aid to Lebanon to Clear Explosive Remnants of War," Media
Note, Office of the Spokesman, U.S. Department of State, Washington, D.C., released 23
August 2006.

21. The following paragraph is taken from I. Gendzier, "The Secretary of State Prefers
Brahms," ZNet, 31 July 2006.

22. As cited in Thalif Deen, "Israel Violates U.S. Law With Attack on Lebanon,"
Antiwar.com, 18 July 2006.

23. Frida Berrigan and William D. Hartung, with Leslie Heffel, U.S. Weapons at War 2005:
Promoting Freedom or Fueling Conflict: U.S. Military Aid and Arms Transfers Since
September 11, Arms Trade Resource Center, June 2005, p.34.

23. Zeev Maoz, "The War of Double Standards," Ha'aretz, 24 July 2006.

24. Ibid.

25. Seymour M. Hersh: "Watching Lebanon," The New Yorker, 21 August 2006.

26. Amira Hass, "Can you really not see?" Ha'aretz, 30 August 2006.

Irene L. Gendzier is a professor of Political Science at Boston University. Note: This
essay was originally written for the special issue on Lebanon of the MIT Electronic
Journal of Middle East Studies, forthcoming Fall 2006. The present version includes some
minor changes.

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