Ivo Skoric on Sat, 13 Oct 2001 20:22:02 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Media Watch 4 |
Reuters now puts civilian death toll in Afghanistan at 76 and injured at about 100. Mohamed Heikal, the former foreign minister of Egypt, and former editor and chariman of Egyptian dail Al Ahram, sees no logic in the attack on Afghanistan: "I have seen Afghanistan, and there is not one target deserving the $1m that a cruise missile costs, not even the royal palace. If I took it at face value, I would think this is madness, so I assume they have a plan and this is only the first stage." He also questions whether Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaida network were solely responsible for the September 11 attacks, arguing that the limited evidence so far presented is far from convincing. "Bin Laden does not have the capabilities for an operation of this magnitude. When I hear Bush talking about al- Qaida as if it was Nazi Germany or the communist party of the Soviet Union, I laugh because I know what is there. Bin Laden has been under surveillance for years: every telephone call was monitored and al-Qaida has been penetrated by American intelligence, Pakistani intelligence, Saudi intelligence, Egyptian intelligence. They could not have kept secret an operation that required such a degree of organisation and sophistication." Indeed, it does make sense to believe that the US was preparing to strike against Al Qaeda for some time - after all Al Qaeda has been striking against the US for about 8 years so far, if not longer. If we take into the account the $43 million bribe to Taliban this Spring and the larger police presence in New York that I observed this Summer, it is conceivable that both sides were preparing the strike at the same time. The U.S., however, for political considerations, could not strike without a pretext. So, they had to wait for Al Qaeda to strike first. Still, it is improbable that the US government would allow destruction of WTC to provide for the reason to strike against Al Qaeda and its host country (Afghanistan). This is highly uneconomical proposition: the costs highly outweigh the benefits. They probably expected a truck bomb type of attack - not something of this scale in human atrocities and economic damage. The fourth plane would not be allowed to hit anything (even if the passengers did not manage to wrestle down attackers), because F- 16s were already over DC waiting for it. Plus, there is no guarantees that September 11 attack would not happen even if the US stroke Afghanistan during the summer - and US would be without global support for its action in that case. As Bush was speaking to the youth, looking like he is slowly waking up from a rather bad nightmare, and hoping that when he opens his eyes the "evil one" would be gone, yesterday, the anthrax scare came to New York city. It came, conveniently, after it was officially admited that the 3 cases of it in Florida *were* the enemy act. Just as in Florida, here in New York anthrax bacterium happened to be found among journalists - not among farm workers or wool sorters - where it is more commonly found under circumstances without terrorist intervention. Here, it happened at NBC. And suspicious, but later declared clean, packages were received by CBS and New York Times as well. Anthrax targets media. The objective is to hit the media with the anthrax scare, so journalists become scared of their own offices. This is a pre-emptive strike. It is as if Al Qaeda anticipated the next move of the US government - that would at this point try everything to keep Al Qaeda's side of the story out of media. The US would like to paint Osama to look like a loser, hoping that this is how he shall lose. But, even if we never see or hear anything from him, with anthrax repeatedly being discovered in buildings of the U.S. news media, Osama will make sure to stay in the news as a winner - keeping his enemy on tippy-toes and guessing about his new move. Here are some useful sites on anthrax baccilum: http://www.hopkins-biodefense.org/pages/agents/agentanthrax.html http://www.bt.cdc.gov/Agent/Anthrax/Anthrax.asp http://www.bact.wisc.edu/microtextbook/disease/anthrax.html The cure for anthrax - antibiotic Ciprofloxacin - has to be administered in early stages of the disease, practically before the symptoms occur - otherwise the fatality rate is about 90% - that's what makes it such a good bio-terrorist weapon. Unfortunately, for the terrorists, the disease is not highly contagious (nothing like smallpox or plague or ebola for example), and both the cure and the vaccine exist. However, there is not enough of vaccine available and Cipro has side-effects: insomnia, diarrhea and rashes. The anthrax spores are actually a good analogy for Al Qaeda terrorist cells - they work on the same principles. The 'societal Cipro' of course also has nasty side effects - certain loss of freedoms, militarization of society, general insomnia of population and general logorrhea of political leaders. And it also works best only if administered before symptoms occur. For example, if Bush tried to create the office of Homeland Security before September 11, i.e. at the time the government started to expect the onset of 'the terrorist disease', the towers might still stand out there, but we would all passionately hate Bush by now, people on streets in New York would walk with his pictures in Nazi uniform and his approval rating would (at best) be a half of what it is now. Here is the recent Chinese Civil Aviation Association memo - a vivid example of advantages that a totalitarian state posses in fighting terrorism: "The Chinese memo said tickets should not be issued to holders of the following passports: Afghanistan, Israel, Egypt, Syria,Jordan, Lebanon, Iran, Iraq, United Arab Emirates, Oman, Bahrain, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Kuwait, Sudan, Libya,Algeria and Pakistan. Holders of Palestinian passports were also barred. " Of course, none of us would want the US to do the same. My impression Osama is a rich, intelligent, spoiled kid. He is used to be able to control the situation. He plans well in advance and thinks about his opponent moves and about ways how to block them. This is fun for him. He, perhaps, may be defeated only by a move that he could not possibly envision the U.S. could make. Something that runs completely astray of the rules, guidelines and policy. Fatwahs against Osama: You are asking "How much it would cost to get Al Khamenei to issue a fatwah against Osama? May be an easy answer is to let Iranian pistachios come freely to the US market , without added taxes as is today the case. I mean that offering opening for business, especially small enterprise, will 'pull the rug" (if i may use the expression) under Bin Laden. For existing anti-Osama fatwas, check out: http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/americas/newsid_1591000/1 591024.stm PULLQUOTE: A leading Muslim scholar, Yusuf al-Qaradawi, issued a fatwa - which is an opinion of an Islamic scholar, based on Islamic law - immediately after the attacks, saying Osama Bin Laden could not call himself a Muslim. Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi is an Egyptian-born cleric living in Qatar and a leader of the Muslim Brotherhood. He has a broad following throughout the Muslim world, particularly among the militant youth. Qaradawi's fatwa condemning Bin Laden as "not a Muslim" and the WTC attacks as a violation of Islamic law, was broadcast on Al Jazeera TV. Curious we didn't see it on the US networks ... US networks act even less inspiring than the US government. Very self- absorbed. See: http://www.qaradawi.net/xml/topics/index.xml http://www.islam-online.net/English/News/2001- 09/12/article25.shtml Prosecuting Osama: VIENNA, Friday -- The Hague Tribunal Prosecutor said this morning that she has proof that the Taleban and Osama Bin Laden's terrorist organisation Al-Qaida are active in Bosnia- Herzegovina. Carla Del Ponte told Austria daily Die Presse that proof of this had been established in the course of tribunal investigations. The tribunal is at present attempting to establish whether Bin Laden's terrorists had been smuggled into Macedonia in order to destabilise the situation in the country. Del Ponte added that the tribunal could indict Bin Laden if it could obtain a mandate for this from the United Nations. (comment) --> We know that Del Ponte loves to prosecute. But doesn't she already have a backlog of cases? Besides, I don't think that THe Hague should broaden its mandate. I do think, though, that Osama should be tried in international court (if possible) and I would like to see UN establish such a tribunal for global terrorism at the most appropriate place - in NY city where the largest act of global terrorism was committed; besides, that's the only way we'll get rid off Giuliani as a mayor - to let him prosecute Bin Laden. Ivo Skoric _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold