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To: TheOtherOne
Special Summary Of The War On Terrorism

13:01 ET
Dow Jones International News
(Copyright (c) 2001, Dow Jones & Company, Inc.)

US Rumsfeld Says No American Military Forces Captured 
   
U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld Monday suggested that three weeks of air strikes against Taliban and al Qaida forces inside Afghanistan has produced a foundation for the next and "sustained" phase of the war against terrorism.

Rumsfeld, during a regular media briefing, also expressed regret at the incidence of civilian casualties from U.S. bombing while saying that such casualities are inevitable in any conflict.

He also dismissed suggestions that American military personnel has been captured in Afghanistan.

 
Federal Judge OKs Entry Of LNG Tanker Into Boston Harbor 
   
A federal judge cleared the way Monday for a liquefied natural gas tanker to enter Boston Harbor, ruling that the city didn't show enough proof that the tanker could be a threat.

Mayor Thomas M. Menino asked a federal judge to ban the tanker from entering the harbor, because of fears of a possible terrorist attack.

But Distrigas of Massachusetts, whose affiliate owns the tanker, insisted that the company, working with state, local and federal officials, had put strong security measures in place.

 
NYC Giuliani: FBI Must Share Data With Local Cops 
   
The FBI should be required to share information on counter-terrorism with local law enforcement in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks, New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said Monday.

Testifying in City Hall at a field hearing of the House terrorism subcommittee, Giuliani proposed that Congress pass a law requiring the FBI and other federal authorities to share their intelligence with local police and government officials, especially in a crisis.

 
White House: Can't Reveal All it Knows On  Anthrax  
   
The Bush administration Monday said it couldn't reveal all it has learned about the anthrax that was mailed to the New York Post and Senate Majority Leader Thomas Daschle, D-S.D., because to do so could help the perpetrators.

White House spokesman Ari Fleischer gave the warning after telling reporters that tests had revealed that the Daschle anthrax had no aluminum in it. This proves, Fleischer said, that bentonite wasn't used to make the anthrax more deadly. U.N. weapons inspectors have reported that Iraq used bentonite in its biological-weapons program.

 
NYC Postal Worker Who Died Oct 10 Didn't Have  Anthrax  
   
A Manhattan postal employee who died Oct. 10 did not have anthrax , the medical examiner's office said Monday.

Spokeswoman Ellen Borakove said a review of the death of Laura Jones, prompted by the discovery of anthrax spores on four mail-sorting machines in Manhattan, confirmed that she died of hypertensive cardiovascular disease.

 
Pentagon: Bombing Campaign Pushes North, Targets Caves 
   
The U.S. military has extended its bombing of Afghanistan northward toward the border area with Tajikistan and is also trying to hit cave hide-outs of Taliban and al-Qaida forces, a Pentagon spokeswoman said Monday.

Speaking as the U.S.-led effort enters its fourth week, spokeswoman Victoria Clark told reporters the objectives for Monday's bombing included the Taliban military's armor and troop concentrations.

Clark said bombers are trying to work systematically through the complex system of caves.

 
White House To Target Aliens Who Back Terrorism 
   
President George W. Bush on Monday will announce the creation of a inter-agency task force that will work to prevent aliens who back terrorism from entering the U.S., White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said.

"The president will announce the creation of a task force to help agencies of the government work together to prevent aliens who support terror from entering the United States, and the president will also direct these agencies to work together to locate, detain, prosecute and deport any alien who is already here and may be engaging in terrorism," Fleischer said.

 
White House Pins Aviation-Security Hopes On Conference 
   
The Bush administration indicated Monday that it now hopes to work out differences it has with the Senate Democrats on the aviation-security bill when the bill goes to a conference committee.

At the moment, the bill, which would boost the security of the nation's airlines, is stalled in the House by partisan bickering over the issue of whether the people who screen baggage and passengers should be federal employees. Republicans are against the federalizing the screeners but Democrats favor it.

 
Rumsfeld: US Giving Air-Ground Aid To Taliban Opposition 
   
As U.S. fighter jets dropped bombs behind Taliban lines Monday afternoon, Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld dismissed criticism the U.S. campaign hasn't done enough to help the opposition forces.

He said the earlier phase of bombing was aimed at creating an atmosphere where U.S.-led forces could provide "effective air-ground support for the opposition forces....We are now doing that.

 
White House Says No Bentonite Found In Daschle  Anthrax  
   
The Bush administration said Monday that it has found no evidence that bentonite was added to the anthrax mailed to Senate Majority Leader Thomas Daschle, D.-S.D.

The statement is significant because U.N. weapons inspectors reported that Iraq had experimented with coating anthrax spores with bentonite to make the spores more easily airborne.

 
Saudi Denies Claims It Isn't Cooperating In Terror Fight 
   
A Saudi official says accusations the kingdom is not co-operating in the battle against terrorism are "fabrications."

Deputy Interior Minister Prince Ahmed bin Abdul Aziz told a news conference on Sunday that "the kingdom has not hesitated regarding anything that would benefit security or in cooperation with any other country," the official Saudi Press Agency reported Monday.

 
US O'Neill Urges Fin Action Task Force To Act Globally 
   
U.S. Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill Monday urged an international task force to reach out to "every country in the world" as it strives to set standards for rooting out terrorist financing.

Addressing the opening of special meetings of the Financial Action Task Force in Washington, O'Neill said the group should adopt "special recommendations that will set the international standard for terrorist financing." It also should take steps to spread use of these standards for all countries, not just the 29 which belong to the task force.

 
US Military Commander Meets With Pakistani President 
   
The commander of American forces in the Afghanistan campaign met with Pakistan's leader Monday to discuss the U.S. military strike as it entered its fourth week.

Gen. Tommy Franks, commander-in-chief of the U.S. Central Command, met with President Gen. Pervez Musharraf during the afternoon. Also attending the meeting were top Pakistani military officials and Wendy Chamberlin, the U.S. ambassador to Pakistan.

 
US Jets Bomb Taliban Front Line Positions North Of Kabul 
   
U.S. fighter jets roared high over the front line where Taliban forces face opposition fighters north of the Afghan capital Monday, dropping bombs behind the Taliban's lines.

The scream of the jets could be heard over the Shomali plain, north of Kabul, intermittently throughout the afternoon. In addition to Monday's raids, U.S. jets bombarded the Taliban front lines overnight, said Mir Rahman, the deputy brigade commander of northern alliance forces based at the Bagram airport, about 50 kilometers north of Kabul.

 
Pakistan Detains Nuclear Scientist Again - Family 
   
A top nuclear scientist being questioned by the government about his ties to Afghanistan's Taliban was released briefly, then detained again, family members said Monday.

Sultan Bashiru-Din Mehmood was told he was wanted for further interrogation, a family member said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

"We were happy, and we thought he has been released," the relative said Monday. "But the authorities took him away last night."

 
Saudi Arrested Leaving Afghanistan; Al-Qaida Links Probed 
   
A Saudi and his Afghan companion were arrested leaving Afghanistan and held for investigation of possible links to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida organization, police said Monday.

Musa bin Mazhan bin Salman al-Saifi was carrying no passport or other travel documents when he was detained Sunday at the Torkham crossing point, police said.

 
  
 
   
(END) Dow Jones Newswires 29-10-01

1801GMT


2 posted on 10/29/2001 9:19:17 AM PST by TheOtherOne
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To: Travis McGee; SamAdams76
I note that a federal judge has ruled that the LNG tanker deliveries to Boston can resume. memo to judge can you say Boom?

Memo to all Boston area Freepers - Perhaps that long awaited move to New hampshire could be put on the fast track along with the transfer to the offices outside Route 128.

Stay well - Stay safe - Stay armed - Yorktown

9 posted on 10/29/2001 9:41:27 AM PST by harpseal
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To: TheOtherOne
That Daschle letter sure has legs.
15 posted on 10/29/2001 10:02:03 AM PST by Semper Paratus
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To: TheOtherOne
Republicans are against the federalizing the screeners but Democrats favor it.

So what else is new? The democraps answer to everything is to throw money and political power at it. If Gore had won, we'd be paying Bin Ladin millions to stop him from being so "mean spirited."

I think any building tested with a Q-tip would show anthrax. It's a natural in nature. Animals die from it every year.

22 posted on 10/29/2001 10:22:47 AM PST by concerned about politics
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