Regime change has started

The Guardian reports that we’re ready to install a civil authority in southern Iraq without UN intereference. This puts Tony Blair in an uncomfortable spot, which is unfortunate, but the UN has a price to pay for lying to Colin Powell. Maybe not the whole UN, but certainly the Security Council.

The Guardian reports that we’re ready to install a civil authority in southern Iraq without UN intereference. This puts Tony Blair in an uncomfortable spot, which is unfortunate, but the UN has a price to pay for lying to Colin Powell. Maybe not the whole UN, but certainly the Security Council.

Another human shield bites it in Israel

ABCNEWS.com reports that another human shield was killed by the Israeli military after jumping in front of some Palestinian terrorists, and fellow shields are shocked that the soldiers fired even though the shield was well-marked. Apparently, the Israelis use Kryptonite bullets capable of penetrating moral certitude.

ABCNEWS.com reports that another human shield was killed by the Israeli military after jumping in front of some Palestinian terrorists, and fellow shields are shocked that the soldiers fired even though the shield was well-marked. Apparently, the Israelis use Kryptonite bullets capable of penetrating moral certitude.

Ali dead, Baathists surrender

MSNBC reports things are going well in Basra:

April 5 — U.S. officials told NBC News on Saturday that they believed an overnight airstrike killed the man known as “Chemical Ali,” a cousin of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and commander of Iraq’s southern front. Meanwhile, leaders of the ruling Baath Party in Iraq’s second city Basra reportedly fear public reprisals and were seeking to negotiate a surrender to British military forces besieging the city.

The people are helping coalition forces root out the Baathists now, so they’re toast. So much for “fierce resistance against foreign invaders.”

Saddam’s eco-terrorism

The Telegraph reports that toxics have been dumped into the Euphrates: Mustard gas and cyanide have been found in river water in the Iraqi city of Nasiriyah, coalition forces said yesterday. The poisonous substances are believed to have been dumped in the Euphrates either by Iraqi soldiers fleeing from American troops or local factories that … Continue reading “Saddam’s eco-terrorism”

The Telegraph reports that toxics have been dumped into the Euphrates:

Mustard gas and cyanide have been found in river water in the Iraqi city of Nasiriyah, coalition forces said yesterday.

The poisonous substances are believed to have been dumped in the Euphrates either by Iraqi soldiers fleeing from American troops or local factories that produced weapons of mass destruction.

…further proof that peacenik Dennis Kucinich had his head in a dark place when he declared on the House floor that Saddam didn’t have WMDs.

Link via Jarvis warblog.

Chemical weapons cache discovered

Remember how we’ve been told by the peaceniks that Iraq doesn’t have any banned WMDs? Oops: Fayetteville Online U.S. troops find chemicals By Kevin Maurer Staff writer SOUTH CENTRAL IRAQ – U.S. forces uncovered a huge weapons cache Thursday on the outskirts of Samawah. An 82nd Airborne Division chemical officer said missiles and chemical agents … Continue reading “Chemical weapons cache discovered”

Remember how we’ve been told by the peaceniks that Iraq doesn’t have any banned WMDs? Oops:

Fayetteville Online
U.S. troops find chemicals
By Kevin Maurer
Staff writer

SOUTH CENTRAL IRAQ – U.S. forces uncovered a huge weapons cache Thursday on the outskirts of Samawah.

An 82nd Airborne Division chemical officer said missiles and chemical agents that could be used as weapons were found nearby.

The find came as Fort Bragg troops, working with other units, continue to guard supply lines for the soldiers and Marines pushing their way into Baghdad. The 82nd is operating around Samawah, a city of 180,000 people in south central Iraq.

Soldiers from the 1st Battalion of the 41st Infantry Regiment were setting up a traffic checkpoint in the southwestern part of the city when they discovered the weapons.

“I walked up on it,” said Pfc. Eric Colvin. He was searching buildings in an industrial park on the side of the road. The 41st Infantry called in soldiers from the 82nd’s 325th Airborne Infantry Regiment to destroy the cache.

Soldiers said it contained about 1,300 mortar rounds, 450 rocket-propelled grenades and two RPG launchers. About 1,000 rounds of small arms ammunition and 700 grenades were also discovered.

Via Command Post.

Saddam’s police war

Blogger John J. Reilly explains the flaw in Saddam’s war plan: Back in the early 1980s, Americans who worked in the Japanese financial services industry often went through three stages in their assessment of it. When they arrived, they looked at those corporate balance-sheets that consisted mostly of debt and at the rigged securities markets. … Continue reading “Saddam’s police war”

Blogger John J. Reilly explains the flaw in Saddam’s war plan:

Back in the early 1980s, Americans who worked in the Japanese financial services industry often went through three stages in their assessment of it. When they arrived, they looked at those corporate balance-sheets that consisted mostly of debt and at the rigged securities markets. Their first impression was that the whole thing was lunacy. Then, after they had been in Japan for a while, they began to understand the Japanese way of doing things. They would decide that no, the financial system was not lunacy; it was just different. After they had been there long enough, however, they would finally conclude that, yes, the system was different, but it was still crazy.

I suspect that is going to be the sequence in which we will understand the Iraqi strategy as it has developed by the second week of the war

.

He says Saddam is trying to win a Mogadishu-style battle without Mogadishu-type popular support, which isn’t real bright.

How well did you sleep last night?

From a relative in Iraq, some (newswire) pictures of how the troops are catching a few winks here and there. His comment: “Look at these poor bastards!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! This is the reason we all sleep in a bed at night with no worries.”

From a relative in Iraq, some (newswire) pictures of how the troops are catching a few winks here and there. His comment: “Look at these poor bastards!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! This is the reason we all sleep in a bed at night with no worries.”

image001.jpg image001.jpgimage003.jpgimage004.jpg

Supporting the Iraqi opposition

…Michael Ignatieff, a longtime human rights investigator, wrote of “14,000 ‘writers, academics, and other intellectuals — many of them my friends — [who] published a petition against the war . . . condemning the Iraqi regime for its human rights violations and supporting ‘efforts by the Iraqi opposition to create a democratic, multi-ethnic, and multireligious … Continue reading “Supporting the Iraqi opposition”

…Michael Ignatieff, a longtime human rights investigator, wrote of “14,000 ‘writers, academics, and other intellectuals — many of them my friends — [who] published a petition against the war . . . condemning the Iraqi regime for its human rights violations and supporting ‘efforts by the Iraqi opposition to create a democratic, multi-ethnic, and multireligious Iraq.’ ” But they say, he adds, that waging war at this time is “morally unacceptable.”

“I wonder,” Ignatieff wrote — as I also wonder — “what their support for the Iraqi opposition amounts to.”

Why I Didn’t March This Time by Nat Hentoff

Christians fearing the afterlife?

Random Jottings has an interesting take on contemporary spirituality: One of the things that’s bugging me right now (There are a LOT of things bugging me right now) is how so many “Christians” seem to be saying that the most important thing is to avoid the risk of death. Isn’t it a bit…odd? I have … Continue reading “Christians fearing the afterlife?”

Random Jottings has an interesting take on contemporary spirituality:

One of the things that’s bugging me right now (There are a LOT of things bugging me right now) is how so many “Christians” seem to be saying that the most important thing is to avoid the risk of death. Isn’t it a bit…odd? I have little-enough faith myself, I’m not going to make any bold pronouncements here. But the dissonance is getting to me.

He’s right.

Cousteau attacks the oceans

This week’s Nova, Deep Sea Invasion, on PBS describes the spread of a heinous form of macroalgae in the Mediterranean, the California coast, and Australia. Caulerpa taxifolia, commonly known as Notched Caulerpa, was developed at the Wilhelmina Zoo in Stuttgart, Germany, and introduced into the Mediterranean at the Oceanographic Museum of Monaco while Jacques Cousteau … Continue reading “Cousteau attacks the oceans”

This week’s Nova, Deep Sea Invasion, on PBS describes the spread of a heinous form of macroalgae in the Mediterranean, the California coast, and Australia. Caulerpa taxifolia, commonly known as Notched Caulerpa, was developed at the Wilhelmina Zoo in Stuttgart, Germany, and introduced into the Mediterranean at the Oceanographic Museum of Monaco while Jacques Cousteau was director. This variety of caulerpa overwhelms indigenous plants and destroys the coastal ecosystem because it produces a toxin that prevents fish and other predators from eating it, and it thrives in the temperate waters of the most colorful marine ecosystems. caulerpa.jpg
Growing at the rate of an inch a day, and reproducing by cloning, at can’t be simply picked out of the oceans and removed: it has to be poisoned, at the expense of all the other flora and fauna in the area, or eaten by its one predator, a tropical sea slug that can’t live in all the waters where caulerpa grows.

The infestation of the Franco/German menace was first discovered in 1989 by Alexandre Meinesz when it only covered one small bed a few feet square, and had it been dealt with at the time he sounded the alarm, it would have been no big deal to eradicate, but French oceanographers connected with the Monaco Institute said it was no big deal, thinking it was simply an ordinary tropical plant like many others that have been seen in the Mediterranean since the Suez Canal was opened. Thing is, it’s not simply a wild plant, it was selectively bred for its hardiness by people looking for cool aquarium plants in Germany, and it’s really a killer weed outside your hobbyist’s tank.

You can buy the stuff today for $10 a bunch from a number of aquarium suppliers, and it’s in tanks all over the world already. This is one Franco-German bio-terror hazard that has to be stopped before it gets any worse. Write you congressman to get this stuff banned, and if you have any in your aquarium, kill it.

Here’s an aquarium-keepers’ discussion of the show.

UPDATE: More information here.

Another update: Caulerpa has been banned in California since Jan. 1, 2002 by AB 1334:

CALIFORNIA CODES
FISH AND GAME CODE
SECTION 2300

2300. (a) No person shall sell, possess, import, transport, transfer, release alive in the state, or give away without consideration the salt water algae of the Caulerpa species: taxifolia, cupressoides, mexicana, sertulariodes, floridana, ashmeadii, racemosa, verticillata, and scapelliformis.

(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), a person may possess, for bona fide scientific research, as determined by the department, upon authorization by the department, the salt water algae of the Caulerpa species: taxifolia, cupressoides, mexicana, sertulariodes, floridana, ashmeadii, racemosa, verticillata, and scapelliformis.

(c) In addition to any other penalty provided by law, any person who violates this section is subject to a civil penalty of not less than five hundred dollars ($500) and not more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each violation.

The ban extends beyond the taxifolia species because it’s difficult to distinguish it from the others enumerated in the law, in the opinion of Fish and Game’s scientists. The author of this bill was Tom Harman, an enviro-Republican from Huntington Beach, one of affected areas.