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Yemeni president warns of civil war

Sana’a protests agitate for Ali Abdullah Saleh to resign as he accuses defecting generals of trying to stage a coup Yemen’s president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, has accused defecting generals of trying to stage a coup against him, saying the country would descend into a bloody civil war if he were forced to step down. “Those trying to wrest power through coups should know that this is impossible,” Saleh said in a defiant speech on television on Tuesday. “The fatherland will be made unstable, there will be war, a bloody civil war. They should carefully reflect on this.” Saleh, who has been president of Yemen for 32 years, is under mounting pressure to step down following seven weeks of anti-government protests and defections among the ruling elite. He announced on Tuesday that he would accept a proposal for an early departure from office, in January 2012, though it remained unclear when or how a transfer of power would take place. Previously he had offered to leave only by 2013. The Joint Meeting Parties (JMP), Yemen’s opposition coalition, said they would accept nothing short of immediate resignation. “The opposition rejects the offer, as the coming hours will be decisive,” said opposition spokesman Mohammed al-Sabri. Scenes of jubilation among protesters at Sana’a University quickly dissolved into anger and frustration as news of Saleh’s speech spread. Demonstrators have been living in tents on the campus for the past five weeks demanding the president’s resignation. Tribesmen from Yemen’s eastern desert province of Marib set fire to a towering pile of placards bearing pictures of the president on hearing that he would not be stepping down. “Like our brothers in Egypt, Tunisia and Libya, we have one simple request – that the president steps down now. If he doesn’t I think there will bloodshed,” said Mahmud Saeed, 21, who was dousing the smouldering heap of wood with petrol. Saleh’s defiance was unexpected. The fate of the embattled president now looks to be sealed as high-level officials, including senior army commander Major General Ali Mohsen al-Ahmar, abandon him and throw their support behind the protesters. Seventeen foreign diplomats, including the Yemeni ambassador to the UK, also resigned on Monday. Saleh suffered a further setback when Abdel-Malik Mansour, Yemen’s representative to the Arab League, told Al Arabiya television he was backing the protesters. Abdul-Rahman al-Iryani, the minister of water and environment, who was dismissed with the remainder of the cabinet on Sunday, also said he was joining “the revolutionaries”. In his letter of resignation on Tuesday, Iryani said: “It is becoming ridiculous that every member of the regime is now joining the revolution, when in fact they should surrender themselves to the revolution for trial for crimes that they committed against the people or looked the other way while these crimes were perpetrated on the people. Also, they should pledge not to occupy any public office in the future.” Military units appeared to have taken sides in the capital, with the Republican Guard protecting the palace of the president and soldiers from the 1st Armored Division under Ali Mohsen protecting the throngs of protesters in Sana’a. Late on Monday Yemen’s defence minister, Mohammad Nasser Ali, set the scene for possible military confrontation between the two, saying the army would back Saleh against any coup attempt. Analysts are worried that if a political agreement is not reached soon a violent military showdown will ensue. “The situation we face at the moment is untenable,” said Abdulghani Iryani, a political analyst. “With two army factions facing off in the capital the risk of a spark is huge. “Saleh has started waving the threat of a civil war in the hope that it will buy him enough time to make an honourable exit. In reality, he has days left before things turn very violent here.” Clashes broke out on Tuesday between the Republican Guard, an elite force led by the president’s son, Ahmed, and Yemen’s regular army, in the southern city of Mukalla. Two soldiers died. Yemen is under a 30-day state of emergency called by Saleh following a sniper attack by plain-clothed government loyalists last Friday, which left 52 protesters dead in the capital and caused even the president’s own tribe to demand his resignation. The United States has long viewed Yemen as a key partner in the fight against al-Qaida, yet Barack Obama has called for a “peaceful transition” in the country; it is not exactly clear what that would entail given that there is no obvious successor to Saleh. Analysts warn that the important issues in Yemen go far beyond that of Saleh’s departure from the presidency. “What’s at stake in Yemen is not just the risk that the country’s unity could disintegrate, but the very real danger that Islamist extremists, like al-Qaida, will take advantage of Yemen’s divisions to turn it into a veritable sanctuary for international terrorists,” said Harry Sterling, a former Canadian diplomat, who worked in Yemen. Yemen Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Tom Finn guardian.co.uk

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SNP underdogs in election – Salmond

Party leader tells candidates they have ‘everything to gain’ in the six weeks before elections which polls suggest Labour will win Alex Salmond has admitted the Scottish National party is still short of achieving a winning position in the race to triumph at the Holyrood elections in May, as the campaign jumped into gear. Speaking just after Holyrood was formally dissolved, Salmond appeared to hint that the SNP was starting as underdog when he told his party’s candidates that they had “nothing to fear” but had “everything to gain” in this campaign. He said the SNP were still three points off achieving the 40% of the votes they needed on 5 May to secure a second term in office. As the Weber Shandwick “poll of polls” showed Labour eight points clear of the SNP, Salmond acknowledged that a sufficient number of voters still had to be persuaded that his party was best able to govern Scotland. Referring to that 40% target, he said: “The recent polls show us within touching distance of achieving that objective, still a few points behind but I think we can go into this campaign with confidence. Because as the choice becomes clear, [as] the contrast between the SNP team and the Labour team becomes starkly obvious and as the message of a 100 brilliant commitments by this SNP government becomes clear, then we’ve nothing to fear from this campaign. “On the contrary, we’ve everything to gain in this next six weeks. Can we take our vote from 37% to 40% over the next six weeks, you bet we can.” Salmond’s cautious assessment is confirmed by senior party figures, who admit privately that its private polling puts the SNP three to four points behind Labour. Asked whether he did see himself as the underdog, Salmond said: “It’s a neck and neck race, and I’m taking nothing for granted. That’s your word, not mine. I’m quite happy with the position we’re in … It’s going to be a close finish.” That contrasts strongly with the SNP’s consistent lead in the polls at this point during the 2007 campaign, when the party won its first term of government. By the start of that campaign, the nationalists had established a lead in the polls for several months. The next Scottish parliament is expected to sit for a five-year term, after Westminster passed legislation fixing its current parliament at five years which would have clashed with the original May 2015 date for the following Holyrood election. Holyrood now has new powers to hold its election a year later. Weber Shandwick and its politics website ScotlandVotes.com said analysis of all the recent polls put Labour on course to win 60 of Holyrood’s 129 seats – five short of majority – against the SNP’s 46 seats. Moray Macdonald, Weber Shandwick’s deputy managing director in Scotland, said Labour was taking votes chiefly at the expense of the Liberal Democrats, who are down to 9% and are expected to suffer heavily with public anger over the Lib Dem-Tory coalition in Westminster. The main parties are expected to unveil their manifestos in early April and formally launch their campaigns from next week. Labour began its effort with a 48-hour tour of “battleground” seats in Edinburgh, Fife and central Scotland by its Scottish leader, Iain Gray. Speaking during the last first minister’s questions in Holyrood before the parliament was dissolved, Gray accused Salmond of holding back crucial announcements until the last four weeks for “partisan party advantage”. He said: “Well, it doesn’t make up for four years of promises broken, schools unbuilt, projects cancelled, criminals released and thousands extra on the dole. Times up. Hasn’t the first minister failed on all the big issues that really matter?” Scottish National Party (SNP) Scottish politics Alex Salmond Scotland Labour Liberal Democrats Conservatives Severin Carrell guardian.co.uk

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Joel Cheatwood Caught In ‘Dangerous Game’ Between Beck Inc. <![CDATA[&]]> Fox News

Fox News Senior Vice President Joel Cheatwood is reportedly set to leave the network to join Glenn Beck’s media company, but a source close to the situation says that the executive has been reduced to little more than Beck’s “babysitter.” Mediaite reported Monday that Cheatwood was set to join Beck’s Mercury Radio Arts in a move that suggests Beck may have “much bigger and more innovative plans [around his TV future] than anyone had previously thought.” The report comes as Beck’s future with Fox News remains in doubt, and is one major indication that he and the network may part ways. But despite Mediaite’s characterization of Cheatwood as a “Fox News bigwig,” a source close to the situation claims that Cheatwood has been marginalized at Fox News, saying that he already spends most of his time at Mercury and is only seen at Fox News HQ when Beck’s show is taping. The source also told the Huffington Post that Cheatwood’s contract with Fox News expires in the next few weeks, and that the network was not planning to renew it. Cheatwood has been a close associate of Beck’s since the two were both at HLN, CNN’s sister station, where Cheatwood helped create Beck’s first, pre-Fox News show. He has also become one of Fox News’ primary spokesmen for Beck in the media. The source also speculated that the report came originally from Chris Balfe, the head of Mercury. “Chris Balfe is playing a dangerous game with Roger Ailes,” the source said.

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Why the NHS needs to be reformed

Changing the way the health service operates is essential, argues former minister Lord Warner in a new book At a time when Labour may think it has the government on the ropes over its planned NHS shakeup, the party’s leadership is unlikely to welcome a book being launched next week by Lord Warner, the former health minister under Tony Blair, on why the health service should embrace market-based reform. But Warner has never been one to hold back on speaking his mind. In 2009, when Gordon Brown was pushing through policy of free personal care at home, Warner branded it a “cruel deception”. Last month, as a member of the Dilnot commission on long-term care funding, he appeared to jump the gun on the commission’s conclusions by declaring that any compulsory form of care insurance would not “fit the public mood music”. Now the former civil servant, social services director and Youth Justice Board chair is returning to the NHS debate with some typically trenchant reflections on what he thinks should be done to secure the service for the future. While the government could succeed where Labour lost its nerve on reform, he thinks, the plans before parliament need some serious underpinning to work. “Simply increasing the influence of clinicians without changing the way the NHS does its business will not deliver desired change,” Warner concludes in the book, A Suitable Case for Treatment – the NHS and Reform. “Without a more robust financial, economic and performance architecture, greater devolution and clinician power could produce financial meltdown …” It is clear from the book that Warner was frustrated by much of his ministerial experience, from 2003 to 2006, particularly after becoming minister of state in 2005 and taking responsibility for NHS delivery and subsequently reform. He acknowledges that Labour “saved” the service, but laments the “serious mistakes” he believes it made in failing to achieve effective commissioning of healthcare, allowing an excessive expansion of the workforce, thus worsening productivity, and ducking the challenge of replacing seriously underperforming and unsustainable hospitals and other care providers. It is the latter that he regards as the acid test of the coalition’s plans, much of which he admits he supports. “Having given people a reasonable chance to remedy their defects,” he says, “you have to be able then to remove them and let some new players come in. Whether they are from the NHS, social enterprise or the private sector, I don’t think I care. “But one of the things I do care about, which is one of the reasons for writing the book, is just allowing failure to carry on, taking taxpayers’ money and giving lousy services to the public. And many of those lousy services are in the poorer areas: the sharp-elbowed middle classes usually find some way to cope with the problem.” He wants to see evidence that the coalition is serious about penalising failure. He wants also a tougher financial management regime for the new-look NHS and intends to table an amendment to the reform legislation in the Lords, proposing a financial management standards board sitting within the NHS commissioning board and drawing on outside expertise. Appalling management “No one else in the world would be running an £80bn or £100bn business based on the kind of appalling financial management we have in the NHS,” he says. “It’s a very curious state of affairs to be expending that amount of public money on something where, on the whole, we don’t know the costs of goods and services and we certainly don’t know the different costs between different providers. “I find it difficult to see how you can have any kind of market of proper competition if you don’t have, in the public arena, a financial management system which delivers more and better information about the costs of goods and services.” Warner thinks the jury is out on whether GP-led commissioning will work as the coalition hopes. To do so, he says, it will need far better data collection and analysis than primary care trusts ever had and, above all, a willingness and capacity to “reign in” the acute hospital sector and switch resources into community health services and social care. The acute sector, he argues, is clinging to a model of care that is wholly outdated for the ageing population. “Stacking significant numbers of 85- to 90-year-olds, largely women, in the medical wards of acute hospitals doesn’t seem to me an appropriate clinical business response for this day and age,” he says. Urging a big shift towards more care of older people in nursing homes, which is far cheaper and away from the threat of hospital-acquired infections, he adds: “Many more could be in single rooms in nursing homes, being nursed and managed more safely than on bayed wards in hospitals.” Among other items on the Warner wish-list are a fresh and strategic approach to managing the NHS estate, making far better use of its land, buildings and facilities, and an end to national pay bargaining to allow flexibility in local labour markets. Such ideas, he accepts, clash with what he sees as the innately introspective nature of the NHS – “a major problem” – and an unwillingness among much of its leadership to approach it as a business. He likens the NHS mindset to that of local government leaders in the 1970s and early 1980s. “They were forced, brutally, by Thatcher to start looking outside for some of the solutions to their problems. It’s not about handing stuff over lock, stock and barrel to the private sector; it’s actually getting on your bike and going to look at how other businesses do their business.” As a minister, he recalls, he was repeatedly told that things he was suggesting were “not the NHS way”. “Well,” he says, “it’s about time they were.” But Warner is not confident. “Bringing about NHS change,” he reflects in the conclusion to his book, “becomes like a first world war battle, capturing a few yards at a time – often with casualties – and then along comes a new general who beats a retreat. As the coalition government tries to take the Blair reforms to their logical conclusion, history suggests they may have the same experience.” • A Suitable Case for Treatment, by Lord [Norman] Warner, is published by Grosvenor House at £16. NHS Health Doctors Nursing David Brindle guardian.co.uk

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BBC may axe overnight programmes

Mark Thompson says ‘Delivering Quality First’ initiative is looking at several cost-saving ideas put forward by staff Dan Sabbagh: Mark Thompson’s BBC cuts splurge Overnight programmes on BBC1 and BBC2 could be axed, and natural history shows and BBC1 dramas repeated more often, as part of a series of cost-saving ideas being considered by the BBC. According to the BBC director general, Mark Thompson, about £150m a year could be saved if output between 10.35pm and 6am was cut on the BBC’s main television channels. Programmes currently occupying those slots range from arts series Imagine to The Graham Norton Show, and from films to late night sport. In addition, BBC2 could lose its original daytime shows, BBC1 could be made “the home of regional and national programmes with BBC2 network only” and the corporation could “re-show BBC1 dramas and natural history programmes more often”, potentially in peak time. The ideas are some of many being discussed as part of Thompson’s “Delivering Quality First” (DQF) initiative, which aims to work out how the BBC can manage with a six-year licence fee freeze and taking on additional obligations such as BBC World Service after 2014-15 . Thompson unveiled 21 different proposals that have so far been put forward by staff but admitted there is chaff among the wheat, saying: “Some, frankly, are ideas that aren’t going to fly.” He would not be drawn on which ones he thought were, saying the BBC is still “engaging” with staff and the corporation’s policy will not be finalised until the summer. Thompson suggested that slots used by overnight programming could be taken up by HD shows. “What you could potentially do in a world where we are struggling to get [more] HD distribution, we could use early hours of the morning to broadcast some HD programmes,” he said. Broadcasting HD shows overnight could also potentially reduce the “download pressure” of viewers trying to watch them on the BBC iPlayer via broadband connections. However, key late night shows such as BBC2′s Newsnight are unlikely to be affected after Thompson said it was “one of our most important programmes”. Looking at the reasons behind DQF, he said the goal is to “improve the quality and value of the BBC’s services and maintain or increase their reach within the licence fee settlement”. Thompson said that “as a rule of thumb” although the licence fee will be frozen at £145.50 per household until the end of 2016, the “total amount of money available to the BBC will rise in nominal terms” due to the predicted increase in the number of households, existing savings, reduced collection costs and evasion and a drive to increase commercial revenue. He also said that taken together these factors amount to about a 10% increase in licence fee money by 2016, “around 1 or 2% a year” and that they are “roughly equivalent to the increase in [funding] obligations” the BBC is taking on, such as the World Service, S4C, and local news content. He explained: “If commercial revenue is strong it will more than help pay for the additional obligations and some of inflation.” Thompson said inflation was the main problem for the BBC, citing long-term strategic contracts and staff costs as key issues. He added that while many ideas have been put forward about how to change programming, he is looking for more ideas about how the BBC can “make things more decisive and quicker” and “issues around employment”. He reiterated that service “closures are unlikely”. He said the BBC is going to “over-deliver” on its current savings programme by about 2% of the licence fee. BBC staff will meet on 7 April to discuss the first stage of DQF, with policy finalised by July, when proposals will be put to executives and the BBC Trust. •

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Chaytor seeks cut in prison sentence

Ex-Bury North MP, who was jailed for 18 months after pleading guilty to falsely claiming expenses, in bid to reduce sentence The former Labour MP David Chaytor has launched a high court bid to reduce his 18-month prison sentence for fiddling his parliamentary expenses. A panel of three judges was told that the 61-year-old former lecturer, who represented Bury North, should have received a more “appropriate” sentence of 12 months because if he had claimed the money in a “legitimate way”, he would have been entitled to “all of it”. Chaytor, of Todmorden, west Yorkshire, was jailed in January after pleading guilty to forging tenancy documents and invoices to claim false expenses for rent and IT work. He received £18,350 of the amount he claimed. He is in Spring Hill open prison in Buckinghamshire, but could be released with a tag as early as the end of May. But the lord chief justice, Lord Judge, sitting with Mr Justice Henriques and Mr Justice Foskett, were told by Chaytor’s lawyer that the sentencing judge, Mr Justice Saunders, had been “too simplistic” in imposing an 18-month jail term. James Sturman QC said if his client had designated his home in Todmorden, on which he had a mortgage, as his second home, he would have been entitled to more than he actually claimed for. Instead, between 2005 and 2008 Chaytor had submitted bogus documents to claim rent for a London flat, which he actually owned, and a Bury cottage, which was owned by his mother who had moved into a care home with dementia. It was “regrettable” and a “stupid thing to do”, said Sturman. “It can only be explained by the truism that decent people sometimes do stupid things.” At the time Chaytor had a “complex” and “challenging” family situation, with both an ill mother and mother-in-law, which made it difficult for him to know which property was best to stay in. The judge had failed to assess what money Chaytor would have been entitled to when handing down the 18-month sentence, said Sturman. Sturman also argued that his client was not given “full credit” for pleading guilty at the earliest opportunity. The former MP had initially denied the charges but changed his plea after failing to have the case thrown out, citing parliamentary privilege and arguing that he could not receive a fair trial because of media scrutiny. Saunders had reduced the sentence by a quarter for the guilty plea and not one third, which the MP should have been entitled to, said Sturman. The sentence also failed to take into account the public vilification Chaytor had been subjected to in some quarters of the media, and particularly in the blogosphere. “Calls for his death, pictures of him mocked up being hung – it really was quite a horrendous time,” said Sturman. The judge’s panel will give their decision on Wednesday. David Chaytor MPs’ expenses House of Commons Caroline Davies guardian.co.uk

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Gaddafi forces keep up offensive despite air strikes

Latest onslaught on Libyan rebel strongholds comes amid growing signs of splits in international community Muammar Gaddafi’s armed forces are continuing to attack Libyan towns and cities despite three nights of western air strikes and another day of missile strikes. Gaddafi’s troops shelled rebels regrouping in the desert dunes outside the strategic eastern town of Ajdabiya, as well as civilians in the rebel-held western city of Misurata. The onslaught came amid further wrangling over who should spearhead the western air campaign and the news that a US fighter jet had crashed in Libya , apparently because of mechanical failure. People in Misurata said four children had been killed when the car they were travelling in was hit, bringing the death toll in the city to at least 44 in the last two days. Residents painted a grim picture of the situation in the city, which Gaddafi loyalists have besieged for weeks , saying doctors were operating on people with bullet and shrapnel wounds in hospital corridors, and tanks were in the city centre. “The situation here is very bad. Tanks started shelling the town this morning,” a resident called Muhammad told Reuters by telephone from outside the city’s hospital, adding: “Snipers are taking part in the operation, too. A civilian car was destroyed, killing four children on board. The oldest is aged 13 years.” Al-Jazeera reported that Gaddafi’s forces were trying to seize the western rebel-held town of Zintan, near the Tunisian border, in an attack using heavy weapons. Residents had already fled the town centre to seek shelter in mountain caves. Rebels in eastern Libya were positioned just outside Ajdabiya, making no further advance on the town despite the continuing air strikes. At the frontline, in desert scrub about three miles outside the town, which marks the gateway to the rebel-held east, rebels said air strikes were helping cripple Gaddafi’s heavy armour. But there was no sign of a swift drive forward. When asked why rebel units had not advanced towards their objective – which is, eventually, Tripoli – Ahmed al-Aroufi, a rebel fighter at the frontline, told Reuters: “Gaddafi has tanks and trucks with missiles.” Meanwhile, two US airmen were forced to eject from their F-15E fighter jet over Libya on Monday night after an apparent mechanical failure, the US military said. The wreckage of their F-15E Strike Eagle jet was found near Benghazi, and both men were safely retrieved. A Marine Corps Osprey search-and-rescue aircraft picked up the pilot, while the second crew member, a weapons officer, was recovered by rebel forces and is now in US hands. Vince Crawley, a spokesman for the Africa Command, said the crash was likely to have been caused by mechanical failure rather than hostile fire. It has also emerged that US and British submarines have launched 24 Tomahawk cruise missiles at Libyan command-and-control sites in the last 24 hours, bringing to 160 the total number of Tomahawk strikes. With anti-Gaddafi rebels struggling to create a command structure that can capitalise on the air strikes, western nations have still to decide who will take over command once Washington pulls back. The US will cede control within days, President Obama said, even as divisions in Europe fuelled speculation that Washington would be forced to retain leadership of air patrols that will replace the initial bombardment. “We anticipate this transition to take place in a matter of days and not in a matter of weeks,” Obama told a news conference while on a visit to Chile. The British prime minister, David Cameron, said the intention was to transfer command to Nato, but France said Arab countries did not want the US-led alliance in charge of the operation . Nato officials resumed talks in Brussels after failing to reach agreement at heated talks yesterday. Underlining the differences in the anti-Gaddafi coalition, Italy’s foreign minister, Franco Frattini, said if agreement were not reached on a Nato command, Italy would resume control of the seven airbases it has made available to allied air forces. A Nato role would require political support from all the 28 states. The Turkish prime minister, Tayyip Erdogan, whose country is a Nato member, said today the UN should be the umbrella for a solely humanitarian operation in Libya. In a speech in parliament, Erdogan said: “Turkey will never, ever be a side pointing weapons at the Libyan people.” Rifts are also growing in the world community over the UN resolution, with the Russian prime minister, Vladimir Putin, comparing the mandate to a call for “medieval crusades”. China and Brazil have also urged a ceasefire amid fears of civilian casualties, while the Algerian foreign minister, Mourad Medelci, described the western military intervention as “disproportionate” and called for “an immediate cessation of hostilities and foreign intervention”. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest United Nations Middle East Sam Jones guardian.co.uk

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Gaddafi forces keep up offensive despite air strikes

Latest onslaught on Libyan rebel strongholds comes amid growing signs of splits in international community Muammar Gaddafi’s armed forces are continuing to attack Libyan towns and cities despite three nights of western air strikes and another day of missile strikes. Gaddafi’s troops shelled rebels regrouping in the desert dunes outside the strategic eastern town of Ajdabiya, as well as civilians in the rebel-held western city of Misurata. The onslaught came amid further wrangling over who should spearhead the western air campaign and the news that a US fighter jet had crashed in Libya , apparently because of mechanical failure. People in Misurata said four children had been killed when the car they were travelling in was hit, bringing the death toll in the city to at least 44 in the last two days. Residents painted a grim picture of the situation in the city, which Gaddafi loyalists have besieged for weeks , saying doctors were operating on people with bullet and shrapnel wounds in hospital corridors, and tanks were in the city centre. “The situation here is very bad. Tanks started shelling the town this morning,” a resident called Muhammad told Reuters by telephone from outside the city’s hospital, adding: “Snipers are taking part in the operation, too. A civilian car was destroyed, killing four children on board. The oldest is aged 13 years.” Al-Jazeera reported that Gaddafi’s forces were trying to seize the western rebel-held town of Zintan, near the Tunisian border, in an attack using heavy weapons. Residents had already fled the town centre to seek shelter in mountain caves. Rebels in eastern Libya were positioned just outside Ajdabiya, making no further advance on the town despite the continuing air strikes. At the frontline, in desert scrub about three miles outside the town, which marks the gateway to the rebel-held east, rebels said air strikes were helping cripple Gaddafi’s heavy armour. But there was no sign of a swift drive forward. When asked why rebel units had not advanced towards their objective – which is, eventually, Tripoli – Ahmed al-Aroufi, a rebel fighter at the frontline, told Reuters: “Gaddafi has tanks and trucks with missiles.” Meanwhile, two US airmen were forced to eject from their F-15E fighter jet over Libya on Monday night after an apparent mechanical failure, the US military said. The wreckage of their F-15E Strike Eagle jet was found near Benghazi, and both men were safely retrieved. A Marine Corps Osprey search-and-rescue aircraft picked up the pilot, while the second crew member, a weapons officer, was recovered by rebel forces and is now in US hands. Vince Crawley, a spokesman for the Africa Command, said the crash was likely to have been caused by mechanical failure rather than hostile fire. It has also emerged that US and British submarines have launched 24 Tomahawk cruise missiles at Libyan command-and-control sites in the last 24 hours, bringing to 160 the total number of Tomahawk strikes. With anti-Gaddafi rebels struggling to create a command structure that can capitalise on the air strikes, western nations have still to decide who will take over command once Washington pulls back. The US will cede control within days, President Obama said, even as divisions in Europe fuelled speculation that Washington would be forced to retain leadership of air patrols that will replace the initial bombardment. “We anticipate this transition to take place in a matter of days and not in a matter of weeks,” Obama told a news conference while on a visit to Chile. The British prime minister, David Cameron, said the intention was to transfer command to Nato, but France said Arab countries did not want the US-led alliance in charge of the operation . Nato officials resumed talks in Brussels after failing to reach agreement at heated talks yesterday. Underlining the differences in the anti-Gaddafi coalition, Italy’s foreign minister, Franco Frattini, said if agreement were not reached on a Nato command, Italy would resume control of the seven airbases it has made available to allied air forces. A Nato role would require political support from all the 28 states. The Turkish prime minister, Tayyip Erdogan, whose country is a Nato member, said today the UN should be the umbrella for a solely humanitarian operation in Libya. In a speech in parliament, Erdogan said: “Turkey will never, ever be a side pointing weapons at the Libyan people.” Rifts are also growing in the world community over the UN resolution, with the Russian prime minister, Vladimir Putin, comparing the mandate to a call for “medieval crusades”. China and Brazil have also urged a ceasefire amid fears of civilian casualties, while the Algerian foreign minister, Mourad Medelci, described the western military intervention as “disproportionate” and called for “an immediate cessation of hostilities and foreign intervention”. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest United Nations Middle East Sam Jones guardian.co.uk

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War on Pensions California Edition: Costa Mesa Lays off Employees, Citing Pension Costs

Click here to view this media Uber-conservative Costa Mesa politicians have laid off half their public workers, citing pension costs as a “crisis”. They’re not. Costa Mesa is one of the most affluent communities in Orange County, but it is a deep Republican stronghold where politicians feel free to advance the national conservative wars on employees and their benefits whenever possible. Jim Righeimer appeared on Fox News this morning to assure their viewers of the depth of the pension crisis and how absolutely necessary it is to make the shift from defined benefit plans for public employees to 401k/defined contribution models. This is, of course, a Republican favorite theme from the days of Reagan until now. OC Progressive at Calitics has the counternarrative : As documented at Pacific Progressive and in local Costa Mesa blog, A Bubbling Cauldron , Costa Mesa is at the bloody tip of the spear in California Republicans’ war against public employees. Newly-elected Council Member Jim Righeimer and recently-appointed Council Member Steve Mensinger are leading the ideologically-driven jihad, with an agenda item to give notice to 250 Costa Mesa employees that their jobs will be outsourced. This represents a third of the city’s public employees in a wide range of departments. Without any study of the problem, Righeimer has also used local columnist Frank Mickadeit, to float an ill-conceived idea to privatize paramedic service in this column. Their notice fails to take into account the opinion of Costa Mesa’s City Attorney, which required that notice be given after a decision has been made to outsource, not based on a vague idea to study outsourcing. But, in a move that some see as directly related to the direction of the new City Council, the City Attorney has resigned and the City Manager abruptly retired. As in Wisconsin, Republicans are battling a phantom “budget crisis” which is disappearing after Costa Mesa residents approved an increase in the hotel tax in November to protect public services and as revenues from sales taxes return. A massive phantom gap in future pension costs for public employees is forecast, although the cost to the city has been flat for years as public employee unions have picked up part of the cost. Oh, in case you don’t know who Jim Righeimer is, here’s an intro: You may not recognize Jim Righeimer’s name, but he has been one of the movers of Republican politics in Orange County for decades, managing Dana Rohrabacher’s Congressional campaign in 2008, as a founding member of the Education Alliance, and as a co-author of prop 226. Righeimer and his brother-in-law Mark Bucher have led movement conservatives through groups like the Family Action PAC. Support by Riggy and his regressive allies helped elect wacky movement conservative Don Wagner (R-Irvine), Assembly leader of the Taxpayer Caucus. Remember the name. He has no remorse for this man , who committed suicide after receiving one of those layoff notices. Let’s count Huy Pham as the first death in the Republican war on pensions. I’m certain there will be others, since part of the layoffs may include either paramedics or the fire department. Evidently Righeimer and Co. think they can outsource the fire department and save money. Lives don’t really matter to these idiots. Just money. It’s always about money.

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Networks Stressed Importance of Congressional Approval Before Iraq War; Now Barely Notice Obama’s Bypassing of Congress

The Obama administration launched its air war against Moammar Qaddafi’s Libya after a vote of the UN Security Council, but without any congressional authorization — and apparently not even very much consultation with congressional leaders. A review of the ABC, CBS and NBC evening newscasts from Friday night through Monday night finds virtually no network interest in Obama’s bypassing of Congress — an attitude in stark contrast to their approach to the Bush administration during the run-up to the Iraq war in late 2002. (Video montage below jump.) With Libya, only the NBC Nightly News has even mentioned the controversy over the Obama administration’s decision to cut Congress out of the decision-making. On the March 20 Nightly News, White House correspondent Chuck Todd offered one sentence taking note of John Boehner’s objections in a laundry list of other congressional complaints: You've seen a lot of members of Congress go out today and the President's been criticized, both left and right, some because — arguing that he's taken too long. Speaker Boehner is upset that he hasn't done enough consultation with Congress. And, of course, some of the liberal members of the president's own party are upset that he's started yet another military campaign. Todd revisited the issue on Monday’s Nightly News, relaying the White House line that the real problem was that Obama was on foreign trip and could not easily meet one-on-one with members of Congress. “Yes, they [White House officials] were able to let them [congressional leaders] know on the Friday before they left what they were going to do,” Todd argued before admitting, “but there wasn’t real consultation.” On Monday’s World News, ABC’s Jake Tapper offered a story summarizing the White House response to several congressional criticisms, but not the lack of consultation/authorization. (Tapper did emphasize the lack of consultation question on Tuesday’s Good Morning America, however.) Eight years ago, MRC’s Geoff Dickens discovered in a review, the networks were deeply concerned over whether the Bush administration might launch military action against Saddam Hussein’s dictatorship without congressional approval (a much higher threshold than mere consultation). ABC’s Peter Jennings opened the August 29, 2002 World News Tonight by wondering, “ Could the President, would the President go ahead without Congressional approval? ” Three days later on CBS’s Face the Nation, fill-in host John Roberts hit Democratic moneyman Terry McAuliffe with the same question: “House Minority Leader Gephardt said last week that ‘It's got to come to a vote, some kind of a vote.’ Do you believe that the President needs to go to Congress? ” McAuliffe was emphatic: “ Well, I think the President should. I think he needs to get a mandate from the American public and from Congress. ” That same day, on ABC’s This Week (then co-hosted by Sam Donaldson and Cokie Roberts), ABC correspondent Claire Shipman made the same point during the roundtable: “ Obviously the White House will go to Congress. They would be crazy not to. “ Bush administration officials at the time made public statements indicating that congressional approval was not necessary, strictly speaking, because Saddam Hussein's regime was in violation of the 1991 resolutions that certified the first Iraq war. But both the media and congressional Democrats insisted that such a major new commitment of U.S. military resources needed its own approval, which was forthcoming in October 2002 (by lopsided votes in both the House and the Senate). In this case, the Obama administration seems to be resting its legal authorization solely on the United Nations, a point NBC’s Todd alluded to on Saturday’s Nightly News: “He’s [President Obama is] always going to want these multilateral coalitions; and not just a group of countries, but getting it legally, basically getting the legal justification from institutions like the United Nations and the Arab League, both of which we saw today.” It’s unclear if the United Nations, let alone the Arab League, can “legally” authorize any activity by the U.S. military. The President can certainly take pre-emptive action without immediate congressional approval to protect U.S. lives and interests, but Obama refused to harshly condemn the Qaddafi regime until U.S. citizens had been evacuated from Libya. A news story in today’s New York Times (page A12) does, however, include a graph noting candidate Obama’s rhetoric from 2007: “‘The President does not have power under the Constitution to unilaterally authorize a military attack in a situation that does not involve stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation,’ Mr. Obama told the Boston Globe in 2007.’”

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