Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Irvine plays down Lions link

Andy Irvine (left) and Gerald Davies (right) with new Lions boss Ian McGeechan (centre), British & Irish Lions press conference, Landmark Hotel, London, England, May 14, 2008
Andy Irvine (left) and Gerald Davies (right) with last summer's Lions boss Ian McGeechan (centre) © Getty Images
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Players/Officials Andy Irvine
Andy Irvine is remaining coy on speculation linking with the role of British & Irish Lions team manager for the 2013 tour of Australia.
It has been widely rumoured that Irivine, who is currently the chairman of the Lions committee, will imminently be confirmed as Gerald Davies' successor in the position. However, the former tourist insists that nothing has been decided as of yet.
"It is a possibility but early days yet," he is quoted as saying by The Scotsman. When pressed on the reports that the job is there for him if he wants it, he replied: "It is just somebody putting two and two together and they might get four or they might get seven. We've (the Lions committee) not even had our first meeting of the season yet."
A pacy goal-kicking fullback, Andy Irvine earned 51 caps for Scotland during a stellar international career in which he toured three times with the Lions, to South Africa in 1974 and 1980, and New Zealand in 1977. 

Colombia, Venezuela re-establish ties

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos announce renewed ties at a joint press conference in Santa Marta, Colombia, Tuesday.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos announce renewed ties at a joint press conference in Santa Marta, Colombia, Tuesday.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Juan Manuel Santos and Hugo Chavez met in Santa Marta, Colombia
  • Colombia has accused Venezuela of protecting rebels in its territory
  • Venezuela denies the allegations
  • Venezuela cut off diplomatic relations with Colombia last month

RELATED TOPICS
Santa Marta, Colombia (CNN) -- Venezuela and Colombia renewed diplomatic relations after a meeting between their heads of state in Santa Marta, Colombia.
Newly elected Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also agreed on Tuesday to form five bi-national commissions to address issues such as commerce and security.
"I think we've taken a step forward in re-establishing confidence, which is one of the basic tenets of any relationship," Santos said. He described the meeting at Santa Marta, Colombia, as frank, direct and sincere.
The two countries were in a dispute over accusations that Venezuela is harboring Marxist guerrillas who want to overthrow the Colombian government.
Former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe said his country had evidence that there were rebel camps in Venezuela. Venezuela has denied the allegations.
Any accusations made in the past will not affect Venezuela's relationship going forward with the new Colombian president, Santos said, adding that relations between the two nations was "starting at zero."
"I came here to turn the page," Chavez said.
The two nations will open lines of communication to diffuse rumors or intelligence reports before they create tensions, Chavez said.
"Let's not allow that tomorrow rumors, reports, coordinates and I don't know what else make us fight again, because everything would fall down," Chavez said.
Chavez emphatically stated that he would not allow illegal groups, whether they be guerrillas or narcotraffickers, to operate in Venezuela.
The Colombian delegation arrived wearing white, including Santos, who wore a white shirt with khaki pants. When the Colombian presidential plane landed, a Colombian flag and a Venezuelan flag were waved from the cockpit.
For his part, Chavez arrived with red flowers to hand to the Colombians.
It was at least the third time in three years that relations between Venezuela and Colombia have been strained.
Chavez froze relations last year when Colombia signed a military agreement with the United States and in 2008 when Colombia conducted a raid against leftist guerrillas into Ecuadorian territory.
Santos was sworn in Saturday, vowing to unify his country around the goals of prosperity for all and of thwarting the nation's leftist rebels.
In an early test of Santos' diplomatic skills, his inauguration was attended by Venezuelan Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro.
Maduro held talks with his Colombian counterpart, Maria Angela Holguin, on Sunday and said he wanted to deliver a positive message from Chavez.
"We would like to deliver -- that's what President Hugo Chavez specifically indicated -- a message of love and solidarity to all of the people of Colombia; a message for the future and for hope," Maduro said.
"We would like to reach out with our loving hand of friendship and of fraternity to all of the people of Colombia."
Chavez also said on Saturday that he wanted to meet with Santos.
"I invited Santos to go to Caracas," Chavez said. "If he can't come, I'll go to Bogota."
"But I am telling you," Chavez said at another point in the speech, "the first disrespect to Venezuela, the first false accusation, and everything will be over."
Santos was elected president of Colombia in June with the highest vote total in his country's history, garnering more than 9 million ballots -- roughly 70 percent of the electorate. He ran as a conservative promising to improve Colombia's security.
During Santos' tenure as defense minister under former President Alvaro Uribe, the Colombian army scored important victories against Colombian guerrillas, including the liberation of a former presidential candidate, Ingrid Betancourt.
Chavez has said that under Uribe's eight-year presidency, Colombia had isolated itself and become "aggressive and violent."
Tensions between the South American neighbors have affected cross-border trade, which was worth a record $7.3 billion in 2008 but has fallen since then, according to the Venezuela-Colombia Integration Chamber.

Sri Lankan war inquiry commission opens


Tamil Tiger (file image) The Tamil Tigers were surrounded and eventually defeated by government forces
An eight-member commission set up to look into the last years of the civil war in Sri Lanka is holding its first public sitting.
Human rights groups say government forces as well as the defeated Tamil Tiger rebels may have committed war crimes before the war ended last year.
The Sri Lankan government, dominated by the island's Sinhalese majority, denies its forces committed war crimes.
It says this commission will bear witness to the facts.
Sri Lanka has traditionally been a friend of Western countries, but its conduct in the final months of the war created considerable unease in Washington, London and elsewhere.
The International Crisis Group - a think-tank - alleges that the military may have killed tens of thousands of Tamil civilians during the final onslaught against the Tamil Tigers.
Colombo rubbishes such claims.
It has hit out against foreign suggestions that an international inquiry on the war is needed.
Instead it has set up this internal panel - the Commission on Lessons Learned and Reconciliation - which started public hearings on Wednesday.
It has called for submissions from ordinary people, although reports say it is to start with hearings from Sri Lankan officials, diplomats and intellectuals.
The government says it is partly inspired by South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
However, its remit does not mention a search for truth and also appears to be centred around one main event, the breakdown of a 2002 ceasefire which led to a resumption of all-out war.


BBCBBC

Monday, August 9, 2010

Daren Brown wins 1st game as M's manager




 Last-place Seattle welcomed new interim manager Daren Brown by getting its first triple play in 15 years in a 3-1 win over the Oakland Athletics on Monday night.
Brown moved up from Triple-A Tacoma earlier Monday when Seattle fired first-time manager Don Wakamatsu after 1 1/2 seasons.
Brown became the 10th of Seattle's 17 managers to win their first game.
Only one of the other 16 finished their Mariners tenure with a winning record: Lou Piniella. The only manager to take Seattle to the postseason left after the 2002 season with a year left on his contract.
Brown, a 10-year veteran of Seattle's system, is the team's sixth manager in the eight seasons since. He said he got word the Mariners were promoting him at 11:30 Central time Sunday night, following Tacoma's 12-inning win at Omaha. He boarded a plane there at 6:30 Monday morning and arrived in Seattle hours before the Mariners' game.
He looked tired while hanging on the padded dugout railing early in the game. But he and the rest of the 19,943 attended were awakened in the top of the fourth by Seattle's first triple play since July 13, 1995, against Toronto.
Jose Lopez took a chopper by Oakland's Mark Ellis and immediately stepped on third base for a forceout. Lopez then threw to second base for a forceout there and Chone Figgins' throw to first baseman Casey Kotchman appeared to arrive at the same time as Ellis' foot hit the bag, but first base umpire Cory Blaser called Ellis out.
Ellis argued the call to no avail. Seattle's lead remained 2-0.
The 5-4-3 play was the 10th triple putout for the Mariners, who began play in 1977.
RBI singles by Lopez and Franklin Gutierrez with two out in the first off Vin Mazzaro gave Doug Fister (4-8) and relievers Sean White, Brandon League and David Aardsma all the runs they needed.
Aardsma was perfect in the ninth for his 21st save in 25 chances — and sent Oakland back to eight games behind idle and first-place Texas in the AL West.
Seattle's insurance run came after Mazzaro walked Gutierrez leading off the fourth. Gutierrez came around and scored on Josh Wilson's sacrifice fly.
Fister won for the first time in eight decisions and 12 starts, since May 14. He allowed seven hits and one run in six innings. He walked one and struck out five. Oakland's only damage off him was a single by Coco Crisp and a double by Rajai Davis to begin the sixth.
Seattle pitchers retired the final 12 A's batters to end it.
Mazzaro (6-4) allowed only three other hits and two early runs in his seven innings.
Touted outfielder Chris Carter became the last of Oakland's haul of six prospects received in the Dan Haren trade a couple of years ago to reach the major leagues. Carter went 0 for 3 with two strikeouts in his debut.
NOTES: Aardsma has allowed just one run over his last 10 games and is 5-for-5 in saves since July 11. ... The A's placed OF Matt Watson on the 15-day disabled list and optioned OF Matt Carson to Triple-A Sacramento. Besides Carter, Oakland also recalled 1B Jeff Larish from Sacramento in time to start the game. Manager Bob Geren said Watson had a procedure Monday morning to remove a kidney stone.

YAHOO NEWS

Death rate doubles in Moscow as heatwave continues

An ambulance crosses a smog-bound Red Square, 9 August The full health impact of the heatwave nationwide has not been reported
Moscow's health chief has confirmed the mortality rate has doubled as a heatwave and wildfire smog continue to grip the Russian capital.
There were twice the usual number of bodies in the city's morgues, Andrei Seltsovsky told reporters.
Meanwhile, a state of emergency has been declared around a nuclear reprocessing plant in the southern Urals because of nearby wildfires.
And there was a new warning over shortfalls in Russia's grain harvest.
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said this year's harvest, hit by fire and drought, would be worse than previously forecast.
Currently expected to be 65m tonnes, it could be as low as 60 million tonnes, Mr Putin said.
Mr Putin also said that a ban on grain exports could be extended beyond the end of 2010 because of shortages for domestic markets.
Russia is the world's third largest wheat exporter. Its biggest customers include Egypt, Turkey and Syria.
As of Monday morning, 557 wildfires continued to burn in Russia, 25 of them peat fires, the emergencies ministry said.
While 239 fires were extinguished on Sunday, 247 new ones were discovered.
The head of the state weather service, Alexander Frolov, said on Monday that the heatwave of 2010 was the worst in 1,000 years of recorded Russian history.
"It's an absolutely unique phenomenon - nothing like it can be seen in the archives," he was quoted by Interfax news agency as saying.
How peat bog fires spread
How peat bog fires spread
  1. Peat is formed from decayed vegetation in bogs, moors or swamps.
  2. Deliberate drainage or drought can expose peat to air.
  3. Peat can then be ignited by wildfires or spontaneously combust. The air flow allows the peat to continue burning.
  4. Once alight, the smouldering fire spreads slowly through the peat and can cause the ground above to collapse.
'Puzzling' death data Recent death rates for parts of central Russia other than Moscow, which are seeing similar droughts and wildfires for more than a month, have not been released.
Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

On normal days, between 360 and 380 die - now it's around 700”
End Quote Andrei Seltsovsky Head of Moscow city health department
Soon after Mr Seltsovsky gave his information, Russia's Health Minister, Tatyana Golikova, demanded a formal clarification of his data.
Her ministry said it was "puzzled by the unofficial figures quoted at the briefing".
Mr Seltsovsky did not give a time frame but earlier reports had spoken of the death rate in Moscow for July rising by up to 50% compared with the same period last year.
"On normal days, between 360 and 380 die - now it's around 700," Mr Seltsovsky told reporters.
Moscow, he said, had 1,500 places in its morgues and 1,300 of these were currently occupied.
While stressing there was still capacity, he added that about 30% of bereaved people were asking to have the body kept in a morgue for more than three days, "which slightly complicates the situation".
The concentration of carbon monoxide in Moscow was still more than double acceptable safety norms on Monday as smog from peat and forest wildfires continued to blanket the city.
Temperatures of more than 35C (95F) are forecast for the city until Thursday.
Since the second half of July, at least 52 deaths in Russia as a whole have been attributed directly to fires, which have destroyed hundreds of rural homes.
Mr Seltsovsky did not attribute the rise in the mortality rate to the heatwave or smog but doctors, speaking off the record, have talked of morgues filling with victims of heat stroke and smoke ailments.
Nuclear plant alert A nuclear plant in the Urals being threatened by the wildfires was the site of Russia's worst nuclear disaster in 1957.
A man watches as a helicopter dumps water on a blaze in Russian's Ryazan region, 9 August Fires are still burning across central Russia
Some of the land around the Mayak plant in the town of Ozersk (known in Soviet times as Chelyabinsk-40) is believed to be still contaminated from the disaster, in which a tank of radioactive waste exploded.
Several leaks of radioactive waste have been reported from the plant in recent years.
Ozersk's administration announced on the town's website that residents were forbidden from entering the region's abundant, picturesque woodlands until further notice, and ordered urgent, unspecified fire safety measures.
According to Russia's Itar-Tass news agency, Moscow airports were working normally on Monday after last week's disruptions due to smog.
Sunday saw more than 104,000 air travellers leaving the capital - a record number, according to Russian news agencies.
Those who remain in the city of 10.5m people were being urged to wear face masks if they ventured outdoors, and to hang wet towels indoors to attract dust and cool the airflow.
Most apartments in the city lack air conditioning and there are media reports of wealthier citizens moving out of their homes into hotels, shopping malls, offices and private cars.

U.N. to open inquiry into Israeli flotilla raid

Tuesday into Israel's interception of a humanitarian aid flotilla, in which nine people were killed. The investigation begins a day after Israel opened its commission to investigate the incident that left one Turkish-American and eight Turkish activists dead in the altercation.
Israeli commandos intercepted the flotilla at sea and stormed the largest vessel, the Turkish-flagged Mavi Marmara.
Israel has maintained its troops used force on the activists after they were attacked by those on board. Soldiers were attacked with knives, metal poles and other objects, Israeli officials have said. But passengers on board the boat insist they were fired upon without provocation.
The incident left a wide-ranging military and diplomatic alliance between the Jewish state and Turkey, its powerful regional ally, badly shaken and drew international outrage.
The ships were carrying humanitarian aid to Gaza, organizers said. The Palestinian territory has been blockaded by Israel since its takeover by the Islamic movement Hamas in 2007.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon announced the inquiry last week.




"For the past two months, I have engaged in intensive consultation with the leaders of Israel and Turkey on the setting-up of a panel of inquiry on the flotilla incident," Ban said in a statement. "This is an unprecedented development. I thank the leaders of the two countries with whom I have engaged in last-minute consultations over the weekend, for their spirit of compromise and forward-looking cooperation."
The panel will be led by Geoffrey Palmer, former prime minister of New Zealand, as chairman and Alvaro Uribe, former Colombian president, as vice-chair, Ban said. Representatives from Israel and Turkey will be the panel's other two members.
The panel will begin its work Tuesday and submit its first progress report by mid-September, the statement said. Ban said he hopes the panel's work will "give me recommendations for the prevention of similar incidents in the future."
He said he also hopes the agreement will "impact positively on the relationship between Turkey and Israel as well as the overall situation in the Middle East."
On the opening day of Israel's inquiry, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel operated within international law when it stopped the flotilla and raided the Mavi Marmara on May 31.
"I'm convinced that at the end of your investigation, it will be clear that the state of Israel ... operated in accordance with international law and that ... soldiers on the Marmara showed great courage in fulfilling their mission and acting in self-defense against real-life dangers," Netanyahu said Monday.
On Tuesday, Israel Defense Minister Ehud Barak is expected to testify in the Israeli investigation.

CNN

Warrington 54-12 Catalans Dragons

Warrington 54-12 Catalans Dragons

CHALLENGE CUP SEMI-FINAL
Warrington (24) 54
Tries: Harrison, L Anderson 3, King, Riley, Briers, Myler, Clarke Goals: Westwood 7, Briers, Myler

Catalans Dragons (6) 12
Tries: Greenshields 2 Goals: Bosc 2

Louis Anderson
Louis Anderson dives over to complete his hat-trick in Warrington's 54-12 Challenge Cup semi-final demolition of Catalans Dragons

By Ged Scott
Holders Warrington booked a return to Wembley on 28 August after storming to a dazzling nine-try Challenge Cup semi-final win over Catalans Dragons.
The French side, beaten finalists in 2007, had beaten Warrington 29-28 in Perpignan just a fortnight ago.
But there was no chance of another upset, forward Louis Anderson leading the way with three of his side's tries.
Ben Harrison, Matt King, Chris Riley, Lee Briers, Richie Myler and Jon Clarke also got in on the try-scoring act.
Warrington had been given a real scare in the quarter-finals at Odsal more than two months ago when they squeezed past Bradford 26-22.
But, after earning the advantage of having to travel a mere eight miles to Widnes for this semi-final, it rapidly became clear that the Wolves would find things a bit easier almost on their own doorstep.
Tony Smith's men struck twice inside the first 12 minutes and, from then on, there was no looking back as they booked a return to Wembley - to face last year's Super League champions Leeds.
They added two more tries before the break, Catalans' only response being a solo effort by Clint Greenshields two minutes from half-time.


But the Wolves added five more after the interval, Catalans' only consolation coming in the dying seconds when Greenshields sneaked over for his second.
Warrington had already suffered one near miss when loose forward Ben Harrison overpowered the efforts of four Dragons tacklers to crash over for the opening score on six minutes.
And, inside five minutes, Smith's men added a second when, from stand-off Briers' high kick, centre Ryan Atkins was allowed to make a catch which he transferred back for second row Louis Anderson to cross.
It was an Atkins break that led to Warrington's third try on 28 minutes when King finished off a sweeping move down the line with a lovely dummy.
And they had just three minutes to wait for another one, the try of the match involving both wingers.
From Briers' kick, Chris Hicks broke inside, released to Michael Monaghan and the scrum-half kicked for the left corner, Riley timing his run just right.
Having opened up a 24-0 lead, thanks to Ben Westwood converting all his kicks, Catalans briefly stemmed the blue and yellow tide when, after Briers was penalised for pushing, Dragons top try scorer Greenshields sneaked over.
But Briers took just five second-half minutes to make amends when he too got in on the scoring act, snaking out an arm to score just to the right of the posts.
And the introduction of Myler just before the hour mark immediately brought two more tries.
It was Myler's blindside run which took the Dragons defence away, allowing Anderson to cruise through the gap and latch onto Monaghan's kick from dummy-half.
Briers' break then opened the door for Myler to score himself.
And rampant Warrington then made it three tries in four minutes when Anderson - who had scored just twice in 25 previous appearances - latched onto a superb offload from David Solomona before racing 70 yards to complete his hat-trick.
But possibly the most popular scorer of the afternoon was hooker Clarke, who marked his first start after a 12-month injury nightmare with try number nine 11 minutes from time.
Catalans at least showed character by ending the second half just as they had closed the first, by scoring the final try. But that was far too little to prevent Warrington booking a repeat of their first Challenge Cup final meeting at Wembley against Leeds since 1936.
Warrington lost that game 74 years ago, 18-2, in front of 51,350. But, in front of a crowd not far short of double that in three weeks' time, of more relevance to former Leeds coach Smith when his team do battle with his old side will be this season's Super League results.
And, in that department, despite trailing second-placed Warrington by five points in the table, fifth-placed Leeds hold the upper hand, having twice beaten Smith's men.
A 26-16 defeat at Headingley in mid-May was followed by a 37-30 win at the Halliwell Jones in late June when Kevin Sinfield's kicking proved the difference between the two sides.
The authorities were forced to make a late switch after video referee Steve Ganson was forced to miss the game.
Ganson had to be replaced by Oldham's Ian Smith, after being arrested on suspicion of assault.
The 40-year-old from St Helens was held by police in the early hours following an altercation outside the Holiday Inn hotel in Haydock which left an 87-year-old woman seriously injured in hospital.
Rugby Football League media manager John Ledger confirmed that Ganson was being held in police custody.
"We're aware of the incident and are monitoring the situation," he said.

BBC

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Indonesian Muslim preacher Bashir in terror arrest

Abu Bakar Bashir exiting Cipinang Jail on 14 June 2006 after 26 months in jail, Indonesia Abu Bakar Bashir last left jail in June 2006 where he had been held for links to the Bali bomb attacks
Indonesian police have arrested the controversial Muslim preacher Abu Bakir Bashir on terror charges.
Officials said they had proof he was linked to a training camp recently discovered in Aceh, West Sumatra.
Mr Bashir is known for fiery anti-Western rhetoric but proof of direct engagement in attacks has been elusive.
The United States and Australia had complained when Mr Bashir was freed from jail in 2006 and had called for more stringent measures against him.
The discovery in February of training camps in Aceh showed the opening of a new front in the country's often successful campaign against extremism.

The anti-terror police unit Detachment 88 detained Mr Bashir because of links to those Islamic militant training camps, a government official said.
'Muslim duty' Ansyaad Mbai, the head of Indonesia's anti-terror desk, told the BBC that Mr Bashir was detained on terrorism charges.
The authorities say more details about the arrest will be revealed in a news conference later in the day.
"He had been involved in terror network in Aceh. As we know, that terror group in Aceh is linked with Jemaah Islamiyah and many other extremist groups in our country," Mr Mbai told reporters.
Continue reading the main story

He is innocent, he was just carrying out his obligations as a Muslim”
End Quote Abdul Rohim Abu Bakir Bashir's son
"One of the allegations is that he provided funding to the Aceh military training. It's one of many allegations weighed against him," he said.
Mr Bashir, who is 71, is believed to be the head of a hardline Islamist group, the Jema'ah Ansharut Tauhid.
Mr Bashir's lawyer, Muhammad Ali, said his client was arrested in the Ciamis district of West Java.
His son, Abdul Rohim, appealed for fair treatment and said his mother had ben detained as well.
"We appeal police to treat my parents well... He is innocent, he was just carrying out his obligations as a Muslim," the son said.
Long history Founder of the Ngruki boarding school in East Java, he was the spiritual adviser to young men who went on to mount the Bali bomb attacks of 2002 which killed 202 people.
Mr Bashir was released from prison in 2006 after serving several years for involvement with Jemaah Islamiah, the group responsible for the Bali bombings.
His history of activism goes back to the 1970s when then-President Suharto imprisoned him for advocating that Indonesia should be an Islamic state.
He was jailed from 1978 to 1982 with his close ally Abdullah Sungkar, a Malaysian ideologue.
The Brussels-based International Crisis Group has reported a general decline in violent extremism across Indonesia but has stressed the ability of the remaining small groups to commit terrorist acts.
It said in a report last month that some members of JAT were involved in violent plots foiled by police.
This weekend, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said he had been saved from an attack on his life by anti-terror police.
Last July, simultaneous suicide bomb attacks on two five-star hotels in Jakarta killed nine people.


BBC

U.S. to Sell F-15s to Saudis Fighter Jets in Proposed $30 Billion Deal Won't Include Features Israel Opposes

[saudi0808]  
Associated Press
In this photo taken Jan. 25, 2009, F-15 warplanes of the Saudi Air Force fly over Riyadh during a graduation ceremony at King Faisal Air Force University.
WASHINGTON—The Obama administration plans to sell advanced F-15 fighter jets to Saudi Arabia but won't equip them with long-range weapons systems and other arms whose inclusion was strongly opposed by Israel, diplomats and officials said.
The proposed $30 billion, 10-year arms package, which would be one of the biggest single deals of its kind, has been a source of behind-the-scenes tension during months of negotiations. Israeli officials have repeatedly conveyed their concerns in private that the U.S. risks undermining its military advantage by equipping regional rivals with top-flight technologies.
U.S. officials say they provided "clarifications" in recent weeks about the deal to help damp Israel's qualms. Two officials close to the negotiations said Israel still had some reservations, but that the country isn't expected to challenge the sale by lobbying Congress, which can hold up the deal or push for assurances of its own. The administration is expected to formally notify Congress of its plans as early as next month.
The information-sharing with Israel is part of a longstanding commitment by successive U.S. administrations to maintain its military edge in the region. Congress has the power to block any weapons sales deemed detrimental to Israel's military advantage.
The tussle is a window into the White House's delicate balancing act in the Middle East. The administration has championed advanced weapons sales to Gulf states as a way to check Iranian power. In addition to Saudi Arabia, the U.S. has moved to sell arms to the United Arab Emirates and other Gulf states, as well as support on a smaller scale the Lebanese army and Palestinian security forces in the West Bank.
Iran is far from the only security challenge facing Saudi Arabia, which has considerably beefed up its standing army since Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, when the ruling Saud family began to see potential border troubles as a more serious threat.
Earlier this year, Saudi armed forces sustained heavy losses during extended skirmishes with Yemeni rebels on the southern border, the kind of flare-up a new crop of fighter jets would seemingly be ideal to fight.
[SAUDI-jump]
But the scope and size of the Saudi deal has unnerved Israel and its allies in Congress at a time when U.S.-Israeli relations are particularly unsteady.
Under the proposed sale, the 84 Boeing Co. F-15s for Saudi Arabia will have onboard targeting systems similar to those offered to other foreign governments, officials say. They aren't as technologically advanced as F-15s flown by the U.S. military.
More critically for Israel, an official in the region said, was the Obama administration's decision to not offer Saudi Arabia certain weapons components. Top among them: so-called standoff systems, which are advanced long-range weapons that can be attached to F-15s for use in offensive operations against land- and sea-based targets.
Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell declined to comment on the details of the negotiations, but said: "We have been working very closely with the Israeli government at the highest levels to address their concerns on this and other issues."
He added: "Israel is not the only one with security concerns in the region and we have responsibilities to other allies as well."
The Saudi Embassy in Washington said it had no comment on any arms sales. The Israeli Embassy in Washington declined to comment on any assurances Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak may have received. An Israeli official described the talks in the U.S. on the Saudi package as "constructive."
It isn't uncommon for the U.S. to sell top-end equipment with less-advanced weapons systems and armor. In previous deals, the Saudis provided special assurances to the U.S. that they wouldn't base F-15s near the Israeli border, but those restrictions have lapsed.
"We have to plan for shifting sands," a senior Israeli official said, pointing to the 1979 Iranian revolution and gains by Islamists in Turkey and Lebanon as justification for being wary of a heavily armed Saudi military.
After a round of talks in Washington late last month between Mr. Barak and top U.S. officials, including Defense Secretary Robert Gates, Israeli officials said they felt more comfortable about how the F-15s would be equipped. The U.S. argued to Mr. Barak that the proposed sale would strengthen moderates in the Gulf, ultimately bolstering Israel's security.
U.S. officials say the F-15s in the package will be "very capable" aircraft, comparable to the F-15s flown by South Korea and Singapore, which are among Asia's most advanced militaries, said a senior U.S. defense official.
Officials also were adamant the U.S. didn't make changes to appease Israel. "It's not that [Defense Minister] Barak swoops into town, we suddenly make a bunch of concessions that the Israelis never knew about before, and they're assuaged," the official said. "There were no refinements, no changes." The official said Israeli anxiety diminished "the more they've understood what the configuration looks like."
Nonetheless, the initial push-back from Israel frustrated some U.S. officials at a time when President Barack Obama has sought to smooth differences with Israel's government over Jewish settlement building and stalled peacemaking with the Palestinians.
The concept of large-scale arms sales for Arab allies was spearheaded by the George W. Bush administration as a bulwark against Iranian expansionism, and the Obama administration has expanded the effort. The Saudi deal has grown in size and scope, and it is also expected to include dozens of UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters made by United Technologies Corp.'s Sikorsky Aircraft unit.
Washington coupled its message about the Saudi configuration with a prod for Israel to commit to buying the planned F-35, also known as the Joint Strike Fighter, which Lockheed Martin Corp. says it could start delivering as early as 2015, around the same time the Saudis would begin to get new F-15s. The Joint Strike Fighter is a far more sophisticated plane than the F-15.
Saudi officials view the country's military relationship with the U.S. as important as oil in bilateral relations. Saudis have been among the top purchasers of U.S.-made arms for much of the past two decades. Because of this, Saudi officials privately chafe about the leverage Israel has had over its weapons purchases from U.S. suppliers, from its purchases of its first AWACs planes in the 1980s to the F-15 fighter-jet purchases in the early 1990s.
As a way to counter Israeli pressure against such purchases, the Saudis in recent years have broadened their acquisitions to include more European- and Russian-made weaponry. That thinking was partially behind the 2007 deal to purchase dozens of Eurofighter fighter planes from BAE Systems PLC, Saudi officials said.
Mark Heller, an analyst at the Institute for National Security Studies in Israel, affiliated with Tel Aviv University, said U.S. assurances are "partially reassuring as long as the regimes controlling those weapons are interested in maintaining good relations with the United States." But occasionally, "you get a fly in the ointment," he said.
Flush with oil cash, Saudi Arabia has become a top weapons buyer. It spent a $36.7 billion world-wide on arms between 2001 and 2008, according to a Congressional Research Service report.
—Nathan Hodge in Washington, Charles Levinson in Jerusalem and Margaret Coker in Abu Dhabi contributed to this article.

 Continue reading at The Wall Street Journal

Rwandans hit the polls in presidential election

Rwandans hit the polls in presidential election


Rwanda electoral agents carry ballot boxes to Kakiro polling station in Kigali, on the eve of the country's presidential election, on Sunday in Kigali.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Monday's vote is the second presidential election since the 1994 genocide in Rwanda
  • The country's GDP doubled during incumbent Paul Kagame's presidency
  • Questionable shootings and deaths have clouded Kagame's tenure
  • Some say Kagame lacks any real opposition
Kigali, Rwanda (CNN) -- Voters in Rwanda went to the polls Monday in the country's second presidential election since the 1994 genocide.
Polls opened at 12 a.m. ET and will close at 12 p.m. ET. While results aren't expected until Wednesday, President Paul Kagame is expected to retain power.
Under Kagame, who became president of Rwanda in 2000, the country's gross domestic product has doubled in the past decade. The country is experiencing a construction boom, especially in Rwanda's capital of Kigali, which is steadily turning it into a modern city. The organization Transparency International recently ranked Rwanda as the least corrupt nation in the region.
Rwanda also boasts of the highest number of female members of parliament in the world, as school attendance increases and child mortality declines.

But even with the impressive record, there are issues that cloud Kagame's presidency.
Earlier this year there were several unexplained grenade attacks in the country. Army Lt. General Faustin Kayumba Nyamwasa, who fell out with Kagame and went into exile in South Africa, was shot in the stomach outside his home.
He survived, with media reports quoting the general's family as saying it was an attempt on his life sanctioned by Rwanda's government. A few days later, Jean Leonard Rugambage, a journalist who claimed to have evidence linking the government to the failed assassination, was shot and killed outside his house.
A few weeks later, a day after he was reported missing, the body of Andre Kagwa, deputy president of the opposition Democratic Green Party, was found at a river bank with his head almost completely severed.
Meanwhile, human rights groups and other critics are already calling Monday's elections a sham, saying Kagame lacks real opposition. There are three opposition parties in the race for the presidency but critics say that they are allied to the ruling party and are just props to show democracy in the country.
Victoire Ingabire, a leading opposition personality who came back to the country after years abroad, was barred from registering her United Democratic Forces party and is currently awaiting trial for -- among other charges -- denying the 1994 genocide.
In the run-up to the election, the Rwanda media high council de-registered about 30 media outlets, saying they did not meet the standard operating requirements laid out by the the commission. The action was a further limiting of the media in Rwanda.
Kagame criss-crossed the country on the campaign trail, meeting with thousands of jubilant citizens. But in a country where freedom of expression is almost non-existent, it is difficult to gauge if the discontent among the critics is also growing among the masses -- a situation that could potentially plunge the country back into chaos.

Obama Plays Hoops With NBA Superstars

President Obama was joined on the court today for a pick-up game of basketball by about a dozen professional basketball greats past and present.

Among the remarkable list of athletes playing at Ft. McNair in Washington, D.C., were LeBron James, Carmelo Anthony, Dwyane Wade, Derek Fisher, Chris Paul, Earvin “Magic” Johnson, Chauncey Billups, Grant Hill, Derrick Rose and Bill Russell. Kobe Bryant was on hand but did not play.
A few of the president's buddies from Chicago and Hawaii, in town for a week-long birthday celebration, also took part.
The group played in front of “wounded warriors,” U.S. troops injured in the line of duty and participants in the White House mentoring program.
With his wife and two daughters away, the president has done a lot of hanging out this weekend. And the activities have been pretty macho.  He played golf Saturday with buddies at Andrews Air Force Base and he’ll enjoy a cookout on the south lawn of the White House late Sunday. 
-- Tahman Bradley


ABC News' Tahman Bradley reports:

Asia flooding plunges millions into misery

BEIJING – Rescuers searched Monday for an estimated 1,300 people left missing after rubble-strewn floodwaters tore through a remote corner of northwestern China
BEIJING – Rescuers searched Monday for an estimated 1,300 people left missing after rubble-strewn floodwaters tore through a remote corner of northwestern China, just one of a series of flood disasters across Asia that have plunged millions into misery.
In neighboring Pakistan, an estimated 4 million people faced food shortages amid their country's worst-ever flooding, while rescuers in Indian-controlled Kashmir raced to find 500 people still missing in flash floods that have killed 132. North Korea's state media said high waters destroyed thousands of homes and damaged crops.
Sunday's disaster in China's Gansu province killed at least 127 people and covered entire villages in water, mud, and rocks.
Crews were working to restore power, water and communications in affected areas in the southern part of the province, and it was not known how many of the missing were in danger or simply out of contact.
Hoping to prevent further disasters, demolitions experts set off charges to clear debris blocking the Bailong River upstream from the ravaged town of Zhouqu, which remained largely submerged following Sunday's disaster.
The blockage had formed a 2-mile (3-kilometer)-long artificial lake on the river that overflowed in the pre-dawn hours, sending deadly torrents crashing down onto the town. Houses were ripped from their foundations, apartment buildings shattered, and streets covered with a layer of mud and water more than a yard (meter) deep.
Authorities were rushing in water, tents, blankets and other emergency supplies and Premier Wen Jiabao flew to the area on Sunday to oversee relief efforts.
Wen visited hard hit areas including the Sanyan valley, where a village of 300 households was completely buried in mudslides, the official Xinhua News Agency said. It said more than 680 villagers have been rescued, but gave no word on numbers believed to still be trapped.
Around China, the country's worst flooding in a decade has killed more than 1,100 people this year, with more than 600 still missing. The floods have caused tens of billions of dollars in damage across 28 provinces and regions.
In Pakistan, more than 1,500 people have been killed and millions more left begging for help following the worst floods in the country's history. Prices of fruit and vegetable skyrocketed Sunday, with more than 1 million acres (405,000 hectares) of crops destroyed and at least 4 million people in need of food assistance in the coming months.
The latest deaths included at least 53 people killed on Saturday when landslides buried two villages in the northern Gilgit-Baltistan, senior government official Ali Mohamamd Sikandar said.
Pakistan has worked with international partners to rescue more than 100,000 people and provide food and shelter to thousands more. But the government has struggled to cope with the scale of a disaster that it estimates has affected 13 million people and could get worse as heavy rains lashed Pakistan again on Sunday.
Many flood victims have complained they have not received aid quickly enough or at all. The number of people needing assistance could increase as heavy rains continued to hit many areas of the country. The swollen Indus River overflowed near the city of Sukkur in southern Sindh province on Sunday, submerging the nearby village of Mor Khan Jatoi with chest-high water and destroying many of its 1,500 mud homes.
"We are sitting on the bank with nothing in our hands; no shelter, no food," said a flood victim in Sukkur, Allah Bux. "We are helpless and in pain."
In India, rescuers dug through crushed homes and piles of mud searching for 500 people still missing after flash floods sent massive mudslides down remote desert mountainsides in Indian-administered Kashmir, officials said. The death toll rose to 132 with about 500 others injured.
The dead included at least five foreign tourists whose nationalities were not immediately known.
Thousands of army, police and paramilitary soldiers were also clearing roads to reach isolated villages in the Ladakh region cut off by Friday's powerful thunderstorms, state police Chief Kuldeep Khoda said.
About 2,000 foreign tourists were in the area, a popular destination for adventure sports enthusiasts, when the storm hit, burying homes and toppling power and telecommunication towers.
North Korea's state media said 36,700 acres (14,850 hectares) of farmland were submerged and 5,500 homes destroyed or flooded after recent heavy rains.
However, South Korean Unification Ministry spokesman Chun Hae-sung said the damage did not appear to be serious compared to previous years. Flooding in North Korea in 2007 killed about 600 people, left another 100,000 homeless, and destroyed more than 11 percent of the country's crops.
Floods this year in the neighboring Chinese province of Jilin have left 85 people dead and caused an estimated 45 billion yuan ($6.6 billion) in economic losses.

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