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READY TO MOVE — Sgt. Adam D. Jamison gives the "thumbs up" for vehicles to be pulled up to his location at Camp Fallujah, Iraq, Nov. 16, 2005. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Bobby J. Segovia)


SUNSET WATCH — As the sun sets over the Persian Gulf, a U.S. Navy sailor remains watchful at a .50 caliber machine gun mount on the Khawr Al Arnaya Oil Terminal . The terminal, located off the coast of Iraq, is one of two major platforms that export the majority of the country's oil. (U.S. Navy photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Randall Damm)


Sun Nov 20, 3:49 PM ET - In this file picture, U.S. President George W. Bush and Chinese President Hu Jintao (not in picture) attend a welcoming ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing November 20, 2005. Bush will on November 21, 2005 become the first U.S. president to visit Mongolia, the last stop of a week-long Asia tour that gave him little respite from questions about the Iraq war. (Adrian Bradshaw/Pool/Reuters)

13 posted on 11/20/2005 5:19:55 PM PST by Gucho
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To: All


Osama is alive and active in Pak villages bordering Afghanistan



Date : 21/11/2005 , Mon

From M Rama Rao - Reporting for Asian Tribune from New Delhi

New Delhi, 21 November, (Asiantribune.com): The most wanted terrorist, Osama bin Laden is very much alive and is living in remote tribal villages of Pakistan on the borders with Afghanistan. This has been conclusively established giving a lie to the claims of Islamabad.

President Pervez Musharraf, while regularly denying Osama's existence in his country, and maintaining that he might have even died, has been saying that it is possible that he could be living in the remote tribal lands of Waziristan 'where the writ of Islamabad has no effect'.

Osama has not been seen in videos, issued by his Al Qaeda network, for over a year and western intelligence agencies believe he may be dead.

But the latest assertion on the whereabouts of Osama is based on the fact that he had evaded capture by Pakistani troops this spring by just 30 minutes as they zeroed in on him in a remote village close to the Afghan border.

A report in the News of the World, a London tabloid, said that Pak troops had pinpointed the hideout by tracking the mobile phone used by one of one of bin Laden's closest aides but by the time they could mount a raid, the al-Qaeda chief had slipped away.

The Pakistani diplomatic mission in London confirmed the report saying, "We think we missed him (bin Laden) by 30 minutes. It was the closest we have been since 2001".

"We acted on intelligence reports and were close. Such fleeting opportunities come and either you succeed in a moment or you fail and miss the opportunity for a long time," an American TV channel quoted Musharraf as saying in an interview.

-Asian Tribune-

14 posted on 11/20/2005 5:33:44 PM PST by Gucho
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Bush arrives in Mongolia

11/21/2005

ULAN BATOR (AFP) - US President George W. Bush became the first sitting US president to visit Mongolia, touching down for a lightning visit to show appreciation for the remote Asian country's help in Iraq.

Bush's presidential Air Force One airplane arrived around 12:15 pm (0415 GMT).

His visit capped a week-long trip to Asia that took him to Japan, South Korea and China before coming to Ulan Bator for a three-hour stay including talks with Mongolian President Nambaryn Enkhbayar.

Earlier on day two of his Beijing visit, Bush took his human rights pitch from a church service near Tiananmen Square to a public appearance with Chinese President Hu Jintao, a meeting with Premier Wen Jiabao, and finally to an impromptu exchange with reporters.

"I talked about both political and religious freedom," the US president told reporters, adding that he had raised the issue with Hu of political dissidents who "we believe are improperly imprisoned."

Bush also said he had urged Chinese leaders to discuss Tibet's fate with its exiled spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, and tried to convince them they should invite Vatican leaders to discuss religious freedom.

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said that Washington was complaining "quite vociferously" to Beijing after Chinese authorities took forceful steps to keep dissidents and activists out of sight during Bush's visit.

She also said that "one has to be concerned" over China's military buildup because "there's a question of intent" but that Washington was confident of keeping the region in balance.

Still, both Hu and Bush took pains to emphasize the importance of US-China relations, pledging after a 90-minute meeting at the Great Hall of the People to work through what Hu described as "inevitable" tensions.

As their talks got under way, Boeing signed a four-billion-dollar deal in Beijing to supply seventy 737 aircraft to China between 2006 and 2008 as part of a broader arrangement to eventually supply 150 of the 737s.

"Win-win cooperation is the mainstream of China-US relations," said Hu, who promised to work to reduce economic tensions on issues such as currency reform and China's massive trade surplus with the United States.

Hu said China was "continuously raising the level of human rights" enjoyed by its people but that progress must reflect "China's national conditions" and that the country would have "democratic politics with Chinese characteristics."

The two leaders said they would next meet in the United States in early 2006 -- a visit that will replace Hu's planned trip in September, which was indefinitely postponed because of Hurricane Katrina.

On the economic front, Hu said Beijing would "unswervingly press ahead" with currency reform and "gradually" cut its trade surplus with the United States, which was expected to run to about 200 billion dollars this year.

US officials, who have expressed frustration that similar pledges on economic reform in July and September have not borne fruit, said much more work remained to be done on all those issues.

The two leaders also agreed to pursue joint efforts to defuse the North Korean nuclear crisis through six-country talks, and to ramp up cooperation to battle the spread of deadly bird flu amid fears of a global pandemic.

The US side reported no breakthroughs on Sunday but pointed to less tangible signs of success, with one senior Bush aide insisting that Hu had been more specific in promising to crack down on rampant counterfeiting of US goods.

Tackling another perennial irritant in Sino-US relations, Taiwan, Hu said that Beijing was "committed to peace and stability in the Taiwan Straits" but warned that "we will by no means tolerate so-called Taiwan independence."

Beijing considers Taiwan a renegade province that will eventually be reunited with the mainland.

Earlier, Bush attended services at the government-approved Gangwashi church and suggested that China had made progress toward religious freedom, saying "it wasn't all that long ago that people were not allowed to worship openly."

"A healthy society is a society that welcomes all faiths and gives people a chance to express themselves through worship," said Bush, who accepted a Chinese Bible and wrote "May God Bless the Christians of China" in the guestbook.

On a light note, Bush, a fitness enthusiast, went mountain bike riding with Chinese athletes who are training for the 2008 Beijing Olympics -- and jokingly reported back later that he would not qualify to represent China at the Games.

http://www.afp.com/russian/news/stories/051121043536.9yp1mpzy.html


19 posted on 11/20/2005 8:51:50 PM PST by Gucho
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