Up to 20 insurgents assaulted the base from several sides, blowing up sensitive aircraft including a US-manufactured surveillance plane Pakistani commandos continued to battle with heavily armed militants at a naval airbase in Karachi early on Monday after ten hours of fighting triggered by a Taliban assault to avenge the death of Osama bin Laden. Blasts rang out after dawn as the military stepped up its counter-attack on insurgents inside the PNS Mehran base, just off one of the Karachi’s busiest roads. Late Sunday night up to 20 insurgents assaulted the base from several sides, blowing up sensitive aircraft including a US-manufactured surveillance plane and killing at least five people. Television images showed flames and a plume of thick smoke billowing from the base as aircraft took fire, while bursts of gunfire and explosions rang out across the city, frightening residents. A Pakistani Taliban spokesman claimed responsibility. “It was the revenge of martyrdom of Osama bin Laden. It was the proof that we are still united and powerful,” Ehsanullah Ehsan told Reuters by telephone from an undisclosed location. The daring assault was a fresh embarrassment for the Pakistani military, three weeks after US Navy Seals travelling on five helicopters breached the country’s air defences to carry out the raid that killed Osama bin Laden. The Taliban have not attacked such a sensitive facility since the February 2009 Taliban assault on army headquarters in Rawalpindi. The interior minister, Rehman Malik, said the militants attacked from the rear of the base at around 10.30 on Sunday night. The headed immediately for the aircraft hangers, where they destroyed two planes and a helicopter including an American Orion P-3C maritime surveillance plane, which Pakistan had received just last year. A jet fuel tanker also exploded. “They were carrying guns, rocket-propelled grenades (RPG) and hand grenades. They hit the aircraft with an RPG,” Navy spokesman Commander Salman Ali said. Pakistani Special Services Group (SSG) commandos were dispatched to the base, supported by helicopters, triggering intense exchanges of gunfire that rang out across the city. Fighting continued through the night with a fresh round of explosions in the early morning – eight in the space of thirty minutes – as commandos reportedly flung grenades tried to storm a hanger where the Taliban were holed up. Four people were killed including three firefighters and one naval officer. Reports were unclear but up to five militants are thought to have been killed. There were unconfirmed reports that a foreigner, possibly a Chinese national, had been taken hostage. The US embassy said no Americans were present. “We have been able to confine them to one building and an operation is underway either to kill or capture them,” said Malik. Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani condemned the attack as a “cowardly act of terror”. Ehsanullah, the Taliban spokesman, said the attackers had plentiful stocks of ammunition and food. “They can fight and survive for three days,” he said. Pakistan Taliban Osama bin Laden Declan Walsh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Up to 20 insurgents assaulted the base from several sides, blowing up sensitive aircraft including a US-manufactured surveillance plane Pakistani commandos continued to battle with heavily armed militants at a naval airbase in Karachi early on Monday after ten hours of fighting triggered by a Taliban assault to avenge the death of Osama bin Laden. Blasts rang out after dawn as the military stepped up its counter-attack on insurgents inside the PNS Mehran base, just off one of the Karachi’s busiest roads. Late Sunday night up to 20 insurgents assaulted the base from several sides, blowing up sensitive aircraft including a US-manufactured surveillance plane and killing at least five people. Television images showed flames and a plume of thick smoke billowing from the base as aircraft took fire, while bursts of gunfire and explosions rang out across the city, frightening residents. A Pakistani Taliban spokesman claimed responsibility. “It was the revenge of martyrdom of Osama bin Laden. It was the proof that we are still united and powerful,” Ehsanullah Ehsan told Reuters by telephone from an undisclosed location. The daring assault was a fresh embarrassment for the Pakistani military, three weeks after US Navy Seals travelling on five helicopters breached the country’s air defences to carry out the raid that killed Osama bin Laden. The Taliban have not attacked such a sensitive facility since the February 2009 Taliban assault on army headquarters in Rawalpindi. The interior minister, Rehman Malik, said the militants attacked from the rear of the base at around 10.30 on Sunday night. The headed immediately for the aircraft hangers, where they destroyed two planes and a helicopter including an American Orion P-3C maritime surveillance plane, which Pakistan had received just last year. A jet fuel tanker also exploded. “They were carrying guns, rocket-propelled grenades (RPG) and hand grenades. They hit the aircraft with an RPG,” Navy spokesman Commander Salman Ali said. Pakistani Special Services Group (SSG) commandos were dispatched to the base, supported by helicopters, triggering intense exchanges of gunfire that rang out across the city. Fighting continued through the night with a fresh round of explosions in the early morning – eight in the space of thirty minutes – as commandos reportedly flung grenades tried to storm a hanger where the Taliban were holed up. Four people were killed including three firefighters and one naval officer. Reports were unclear but up to five militants are thought to have been killed. There were unconfirmed reports that a foreigner, possibly a Chinese national, had been taken hostage. The US embassy said no Americans were present. “We have been able to confine them to one building and an operation is underway either to kill or capture them,” said Malik. Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani condemned the attack as a “cowardly act of terror”. Ehsanullah, the Taliban spokesman, said the attackers had plentiful stocks of ammunition and food. “They can fight and survive for three days,” he said. Pakistan Taliban Osama bin Laden Declan Walsh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …You've heard the paranoid, anti-Semitic claim that Jews control the press in this country? Well, the Daily Beast's Andrew Sullivan believes the Israelis got United States media representatives to spin President Obama's Middle East speech as an attack on the Jewish state: The verbal formula that essentially repeats the standard position of every recent US administration on the two-state solution did not strike me as anything new; in fact, it struck me as a minimalist response to Israel's continued aggressive settlement of the West Bank and East Jerusalem. And yet instantly Drudge, Fox, Romney et al. blasted the “stunning” news that Israel had somehow been thrown under the bus. None of this makes sense until you realize that Netanyahu had been given a heads-up by the administration. So it's pretty obvious that it was the Israelis who immediately got their US media mouthpieces to spin the speech as some sort of attack. So those of you who think Jeffrey Goldberg and Walter Russell Mead and Victor Davis Hanson are a foreign government's favored outlets should think again. These leftist radicals are far too unreliable a channel. You got that? Honestly, how can anyone publishing such paranoid conspiracy theories be taken seriously? Then again, it won't surpise me in the slightest if one or more of MSNBC's prime time drones takes on this same theme Monday. Stay tuned. (H/T Doug Ross via @justkarl )
Continue reading …In this web-only exclusive from David Gregory (complete with butler serving food in the background), we can see that Gregory clearly has his finger on the pulse not of the concerns of Americans, but of the Republican agenda. It’s all in the framing. Pointing out that Ryan is standing firm with his budget is not all that admirable, especially when Mitch McConnell refuses to whip his party for support of the budget , congressman are being confronted by town hall participants demanding that the Republicans leave Medicare the hell alone and individual Republicans back away from the plan . So what we have is not an instance of political courage, but of willful ignorance. With unemployment high , one in seven Americans receiving food stamps , is it political courage for Ryan to try to strip even more of the safety net away from Americans? Does his plan actually do anything that he claims (address the deficit, give seniors more choice, and put us on the right fiscal trajectory)? No and hell no. What Americans want right now is JOBS, by more than a two to one margin . Americans don’t think the very wealthy need more tax cuts . And by the way, the Democrats do have a plan , not that you’d know it from listening to Ryan or his enabling mouthpiece in Gregory. So why, David Gregory, is the Ryan budget the defining issue of this election? Seems to me that the defining issue of this election is how much attention the Republicans will give the real concerns of American voters. But David Gregory has never met a Republican meme he didn’t like. Look how he frames Obama’s speech at AIPAC today and wondering if he’ll get a “rough ride” there and if his position on the Middle East peace process will “hurt” him. Never mind that Obama has said nothing ostensibly different than previous presidents , nor will anything he says have as much effect as the immediate players in the peace deal , so why does Gregory frame it as assuming failure and/or political cost? Could it be because that’s what his buddies in the GOP are doing ?
Continue reading …Click here to view this media After right-wing distortions of the President’s speech last week on the Middle East and his meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu on Friday, he came back this morning to speak to AIPAC to clarify his remarks on returning to 1967 borders with mutually agreed swaps as the basis for negotiating a two-state solution. Here’s the excerpt: But the march to isolate Israel internationally – and the impulse of the Palestinians to abandon negotiations – will continue to gain momentum in the absence of a credible peace process and alternative. For us to have leverage with the Palestinians, with the Arab States, and with the international community, the basis for negotiations has to hold out the prospect of success. So, in advance of a five day trip to Europe in which the Middle East will be a topic of acute interest, I chose to speak about what peace will require. There was nothing particularly original in my proposal; this basic framework for negotiations has long been the basis for discussions among the parties, including previous U.S. Administrations. But since questions have been raised, let me repeat what I actually said on Thursday. I said that the United States believes that negotiations should result in two states, with permanent Palestinian borders with Israel, Jordan, and Egypt, and permanent Israeli borders with Palestine. The borders of Israel and Palestine should be based on the 1967 lines with mutually agreed swaps, so that secure and recognized borders are established for both states. The Palestinian people must have the right to govern themselves, and reach their potential, in a sovereign and contiguous state. As for security, every state has the right to self-defense, and Israel must be able to defend itself – by itself – against any threat. Provisions must also be robust enough to prevent a resurgence of terrorism; to stop the infiltration of weapons; and to provide effective border security. The full and phased withdrawal of Israeli military forces should be coordinated with the assumption of Palestinian security responsibility in a sovereign, non-militarized state. The duration of this transition period must be agreed, and the effectiveness of security arrangements must be demonstrated. That is what I said. Now, it was my reference to the 1967 lines with mutually agreed swaps that received the lion’s share of the attention. And since my position has been misrepresented several times, let me reaffirm what “1967 lines with mutually agreed swaps” means. By definition, it means that the parties themselves – Israelis and Palestinians – will negotiate a border that is different than the one that existed on June 4, 1967. It is a well known formula to all who have worked on this issue for a generation. It allows the parties themselves to account for the changes that have taken place over the last forty-four years, including the new demographic realities on the ground and the needs of both sides. The ultimate goal is two states for two peoples. Israel as a Jewish state and the homeland for the Jewish people, and the state of Palestine as the homeland for the Palestinian people; each state enjoying self-determination, mutual recognition, and peace. If there’s a controversy, then, it’s not based in substance. What I did on Thursday was to say publicly what has long been acknowledged privately. I have done so because we cannot afford to wait another decade, or another two decades, or another three decades, to achieve peace. The world is moving too fast. The extraordinary challenges facing Israel would only grow. Delay will undermine Israel’s security and the peace that the Israeli people deserve. It was the strongest public statement I’ve heard on this question. Let’s hope it puts pressure on the parties to step up and negotiate a peaceful settlement. (Nicole:) Now note the fairly positive reception that Obama’s speech drew. Leave it to RWNJs over at Gateway Pundit to start the intertoobz rumor that Obama was booed . Wait for it to be on Drudge in 5…4….3…2… and then carried on Politico, Fox News and CNN. Because that’s how the echo machine works.
Continue reading …Fareed Zakaria said Sunday the speech President Obama gave last week about conditions in the Middle East was “fair” and “balanced.” As the host of CNN's “Fareed Zakaria GPS” might have advised the current White House resident on its contents, this came as no surprise (video follows with transcript and commentary): FAREED ZAKARIA: The president's speech was remarkably comprehensive. It described the events that we now call the Arab spring, explained their causes and consequences. He placed the United States squarely behind the democratic wave everywhere, though he didn't specifically mention one country — Saudi Arabia, the place where America's interests and values most obviously clash. I don't blame him. Street protests in Saudi Arabia might warm our hearts, but they could easily lead to $250 a barrel oil and a global recession. That's a tough one. Obama outlined specific policies to help the Arab revolutions get consolidated. All good stuff. And he also talked about the need for a resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, two states based on 1967 borders, with land swaps that both parties agreed to, and the Palestinian partner that renounced terror — a blow at Hamas. In other words, it was a comprehensive, fair, balanced speech. Readers are reminded that earlier this month, it was revealed Zakaria has met with Obama to advise him on foreign policy matters. Makes you wonder if the CNN host had any input to this “fair, balanced” speech which is precisely why NewsBusters publisher Brent Bozell asked for Zakaria to “recuse himself immediately from covering foreign policy that affects the United States” Any report he gives concerning such matters now has a bias taint that includes a potential conflict of interest thereby negating the possibility of any perceived impartiality. Apparently Zakaria and the self-described “Most trusted name in news” don't see it that way. How unfortunate.
Continue reading …I do love my pizza, but there are some things that a good slice can’t help. How desperate is FOX News over the lack of GOP candidates that they devote an entire segment to a fringe candidate like Cain? Yes, he won a Frank Luntz focus group on Hannity after their GOP Debate Game Show on FOX, but does that warrant a full segment? “The Pizza Godfather” was embarrassing on FNS on a host of issues , but maybe he believes his pizza will help enlighten him. He won’t disclose his Afghanistan policy until he’s elected President because he doesn’t have any Intel. Or something along those lines because he’ll implement his plan only when he’s sworn in and won’t tell you what it is either. Wallace: We have been at war in Afghanistan for almost ten years and yet you say, and you say it quite proudly that you have no plan for what to do in Afghanistan, you’d have to wait until you got into office, until you met with the experts, the military officials and then you’d decide it. Don’t you owe it to the people who are thinking of voting for you to give them some idea about what you would do about a major US military involvement in Afghanistan? Cain: I do and here’s what I owe them the right approach to make the right decisions such as we’re not there for another ten years. Wallace: So what is the right approach? The right approach is the day I’m elected President I will start on that plan the day I’m sworn in, I’ll emplement that plan Wallace: But that doesn’t tell anybody what you, do you support counter insurgency or counter terrorism? Most of the interview went on like that. Cain proposes a flat tax of 23%, but Wallace told him that the Bushies looked at a flat tax plan in 2005 and said it would take something like 34% to ease budgetary concerns and Bush rejected it, but Cain responded by disputing their numbers. Wallace asked him why he’s only got thirteen dollars in the bank for his campaign after fundraising 13K last quarter and he disputed those numbers as well, but wouldn’t reveal what he has. As David noted earlier: Cain also seemed stumped when Wallace asked him about principle that Palestinians and their decedents have a right to return to land vacated as a result of the 1948 Palestine War and 1967 Six-Day war. “Where do you stand on the right of return?” Wallace asked. “The right of return? The right of return?” Cain stammered. “The Palestinian right of return,” Wallace clarified. The beltway media must be sad today since their new favorite, Mitch Daniels decided not to run . Will Herman Cain take his place in their hearts? Somehow I doubt it.
Continue reading …I do love my pizza, but there are some things that a good slice can’t help. How desperate is FOX News over the lack of GOP candidates that they devote an entire segment to a fringe candidate like Cain? Yes, he won a Frank Luntz focus group on Hannity after their GOP Debate Game Show on FOX, but does that warrant a full segment? “The Pizza Godfather” was embarrassing on FNS on a host of issues , but maybe he believes his pizza will help enlighten him. He won’t disclose his Afghanistan policy until he’s elected President because he doesn’t have any Intel. Or something along those lines because he’ll implement his plan only when he’s sworn in and won’t tell you what it is either. Wallace: We have been at war in Afghanistan for almost ten years and yet you say, and you say it quite proudly that you have no plan for what to do in Afghanistan, you’d have to wait until you got into office, until you met with the experts, the military officials and then you’d decide it. Don’t you owe it to the people who are thinking of voting for you to give them some idea about what you would do about a major US military involvement in Afghanistan? Cain: I do and here’s what I owe them the right approach to make the right decisions such as we’re not there for another ten years. Wallace: So what is the right approach? The right approach is the day I’m elected President I will start on that plan the day I’m sworn in, I’ll emplement that plan Wallace: But that doesn’t tell anybody what you, do you support counter insurgency or counter terrorism? Most of the interview went on like that. Cain proposes a flat tax of 23%, but Wallace told him that the Bushies looked at a flat tax plan in 2005 and said it would take something like 34% to ease budgetary concerns and Bush rejected it, but Cain responded by disputing their numbers. Wallace asked him why he’s only got thirteen dollars in the bank for his campaign after fundraising 13K last quarter and he disputed those numbers as well, but wouldn’t reveal what he has. As David noted earlier: Cain also seemed stumped when Wallace asked him about principle that Palestinians and their decedents have a right to return to land vacated as a result of the 1948 Palestine War and 1967 Six-Day war. “Where do you stand on the right of return?” Wallace asked. “The right of return? The right of return?” Cain stammered. “The Palestinian right of return,” Wallace clarified. The beltway media must be sad today since their new favorite, Mitch Daniels decided not to run . Will Herman Cain take his place in their hearts? Somehow I doubt it.
Continue reading …I do love my pizza, but there are some things that a good slice can’t help. How desperate is FOX News over the lack of GOP candidates that they devote an entire segment to a fringe candidate like Cain? Yes, he won a Frank Luntz focus group on Hannity after their GOP Debate Game Show on FOX, but does that warrant a full segment? “The Pizza Godfather” was embarrassing on FNS on a host of issues , but maybe he believes his pizza will help enlighten him. He won’t disclose his Afghanistan policy until he’s elected President because he doesn’t have any Intel. Or something along those lines because he’ll implement his plan only when he’s sworn in and won’t tell you what it is either. Wallace: We have been at war in Afghanistan for almost ten years and yet you say, and you say it quite proudly that you have no plan for what to do in Afghanistan, you’d have to wait until you got into office, until you met with the experts, the military officials and then you’d decide it. Don’t you owe it to the people who are thinking of voting for you to give them some idea about what you would do about a major US military involvement in Afghanistan? Cain: I do and here’s what I owe them the right approach to make the right decisions such as we’re not there for another ten years. Wallace: So what is the right approach? The right approach is the day I’m elected President I will start on that plan the day I’m sworn in, I’ll emplement that plan Wallace: But that doesn’t tell anybody what you, do you support counter insurgency or counter terrorism? Most of the interview went on like that. Cain proposes a flat tax of 23%, but Wallace told him that the Bushies looked at a flat tax plan in 2005 and said it would take something like 34% to ease budgetary concerns and Bush rejected it, but Cain responded by disputing their numbers. Wallace asked him why he’s only got thirteen dollars in the bank for his campaign after fundraising 13K last quarter and he disputed those numbers as well, but wouldn’t reveal what he has. As David noted earlier: Cain also seemed stumped when Wallace asked him about principle that Palestinians and their decedents have a right to return to land vacated as a result of the 1948 Palestine War and 1967 Six-Day war. “Where do you stand on the right of return?” Wallace asked. “The right of return? The right of return?” Cain stammered. “The Palestinian right of return,” Wallace clarified. The beltway media must be sad today since their new favorite, Mitch Daniels decided not to run . Will Herman Cain take his place in their hearts? Somehow I doubt it.
Continue reading …An analysis of the New York Times' response (a May 19, 2011 editorial ) to the Vatican's recent clergy abuse guidelines reveals yet another ill-informed and skewed attack on the Catholic Church. 1. The Times writes that bishops once oversaw “hush payments to victims and relocation of abusive priests.” “Hush payments” are yet another popular falsehood in the reporting of the narrative of the clergy abuse scandals. They have become somewhat of an urban legend that the media continues to propagate. The Honorable Patrick J. Schiltz , now a U.S. District Judge in Minnesota, has had as much experience as any individual with clergy abuse cases. Discussing the issue of settlements with victims, Judge Schiltz has said, “I have been involved in hundreds of settlements, and I literally cannot recall one that required the victim not to talk about his or her abuse.” In the uncommon instances that there were secrecy components, Schiltz has noted that it was usually the victim who requested secrecy. “There is a reason why victims often sue as 'Jane Doe' or 'John Doe' and often seek protective orders from courts,” wrote the jurist. “Victims are understandably concerned to protect their privacy.” As far as the issue of bishops relocating abusive priests: Yes, bishops indeed did not always remove abusive priests. That is a sad, undeniable fact. Yet there is another side to this truth that the media has not reported. Here is Judge Schiltz once again: These stories were horrible because what the bishops did was often horrible. It should be noted, however, that something rather important was usually left out
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