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NOVANEWS NYT KABUL, Afghanistan — For the second time in three days, a night raid in eastern Afghanistan by NATOforces resulted in ...Read more

NOVANEWS   ‘Either we get the home and land peacefully, or we will make sacrifices until we return,’ Fatah says ...Read more

NOVANEWS   Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon says that Israel will have to convince General Assembly members to change stance, ...Read more

NOVANEWS Pakistan’s intelligence services are refusing to share details of suspects or plots with their American counterparts in protest at ...Read more

NOVANEWS   Hamas PM in Gaza tells thousands of worshipers that Palestinians have ‘right to resist’ Israeli occupation, reiterates that ...Read more

FORWARDED AS RECEIVED   Please do forward this email so we can get as many hits as possible on youtube.  ...Read more

NOVANEWS   Four people were reportedly shot dead by Zio-Nazi Gestapo Sunday as they opened fire on large numbers of ...Read more

NOVANEWS     In spite of Jewish 'anti Zionists' bragging about themselves being the force behind Ghada Karmi's 'pullout' from ...Read more

USA
NOVANEWS CHANGING OSAMA STORIES 'BIZARRE': RAMADAN GILAD ATZMON   ...Read more

NOVANEWS GILAD ATZMON     http://juneterpstra.com On May, 6, 2011, embattled Jazz musician and philosopher Gilad Atzmon gave a talk ...Read more

USA
NOVANEWS   Bloomberg   Even in death, Osama bin Laden will be taking revenge on American taxpayers for years to come. ...Read more

NOVANEWS     63 Years of Bastard's Zio-Nazi in Palestine     ...Read more

For Second Time in 3 Days, NATO Raid Kills Afghan Child

NOVANEWS

NYT

KABUL, Afghanistan — For the second time in three days, a night raid in eastern Afghanistan by NATOforces resulted in the death of a child, setting off protests on Saturday that turned violent and ended in the death of a second boy.
A NATO spokesman apologized for the child’s death, which took place early Saturday in western Nangahar Province in the Hesarek District, a remote poppy-growing area close to Kabul Province and Logar Province. There has been almost no NATO presence there throughout the war, and the area is thought to be heavily penetrated by the Taliban.
The district governor, Abdul Khalid, said he had feared a Taliban attack on the government center and had called for help from local Afghan security forces. At the same time, there was a raid, he said. “American forces did an operation and mistakenly killed a fourth-grade student; he had gone to sleep in his field and had a shotgun next to him,” he said.
“People keep shotguns with them for hunting, not for any other purposes,” Mr. Khalid said.
The boy was the son of an Afghan National Army soldier, according to Noor Alam, the headmaster of the school the student attended. Although the boy was 15, like many rural Afghans, he was in a lower grade because he had not been able to go to school regularly, local residents said.
When morning came, an angry crowd gathered in Narra, the boy’s village, and more than 200 people marched with his body to the district center. Some of the men were armed and confronted the police, shouting anti-American slogans and throwing rocks at police vehicles and the Hesarek government center, according to the district governor and the headmaster.
The police opened fire in an effort to push back the crowd to stop its advance to the district center. A 14-year-old boy was killed, and at least one other person was wounded, Mr. Khalid said.
“The police had to defend themselves; therefore, they fired some warning shots,” he said.
On Thursday, a night raid by international forces in Nangahar Province resulted in the death of a 12-year-old girl and her uncle, who was a member of the Afghan National Police.
Elsewhere in eastern Afghanistan, there was a car bombing directed at a joint Afghan and coalition patrol on Saturday. The explosion, in Yaqoubi District, injured eight civilians, including six children, according to Faisal Mohammed, a doctor at the hospital in Khost City.

Ab-A$$: Palestinians will never neglect ‘right of return’

NOVANEWS

 

‘Either we get the home and land peacefully, or we will make sacrifices until we return,’ Fatah says ahead of Nakba events.

Jpost.com

The Palestinian Authority leadership will never neglect the “right of return” for Palestinians to their original homes inside Israel, PA President Mahmoud Abbas declared on Saturday.

His declaration came as Palestinians prepared to mark Nakba (“catastrophe”) Day on Sunday in protest against the creation of Israel 63 years ago.

The PA would continue to take “practical steps” toward achieving the “right of return,” Abbas said.

Every Palestinian “has the right to see Palestine and return to the homeland, because the homeland is our final destination,” he said When the Palestinians signed the Oslo Accords, the case of the refugees was the basic final-status issue, Abbas said.

“Of course, the other side [Israel] does not want to discuss the issues of refugees, Jerusalem and water, and that’s their business,” he said. “Does this mean that we should surrender to what they want? Of course not.”

Abbas stressed that the Palestinians would not accept a Palestinian state that did not include Jerusalem as its capital.

“Our message to the world is that we want a Palestinian state on the 1967 borders and a just solution on the basis of the [2002] Arab Peace Initiative,” he continued. “But we won’t accept at all a Palestinian state that does not have Jerusalem as its capital.”

He claimed that while the Palestinians had accepted the two-state solution, Israel remains opposed to the idea.

“We believe in the principle of a two-state solution and we have recognized it for the past 17 years,” Abbas said. “But they [Israel] don’t agree to the two-state solution.”

With regard to the reconciliation between his Fatah faction and Hamas, the PA president said that the two sides were now working toward establishing a government of technocrats that would have no political affiliations.

The Palestinians’ dream of establishing a state could not be achieved unless the “two parts of the homeland are reunited,” he said – a reference to the split between the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

Also marking the occasion of Nakba Day, the Fatah leadership issued a statement in which it said that the “right of return” was a “sacred” right that does not disappear with the elapsing of time.

The Palestinians were determined to achieve the right of return because it was a natural and historic right, Fatah said.

It also called on the international community to assume legal and moral responsibility and consider the Nakba commemoration an international event.

“The right of return will remain sacred for every Palestinian who was forced by the Zionist war machine to leave his or her home and land in Palestine,” the statement said. “The Palestinians won’t succumb to extortion; either we get the home and land peacefully, or we will make sacrifices until we return.”

Deputy Zio-Nazi FM: At least 60 UN states back unilateral Palestinian statehood

NOVANEWS
 

Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon says that Israel will have to convince General Assembly members to change stance, but that ultimately, it is up to Security Council to decide on recognizing Palestinian state.

Ed note–Before September arrives, and with it the recognition by the UN of a Palestinian state within the ’48 borders, Israel will have done something spectacular to change the mind of the world body, such as a terrorist attack in Israel with a massive loss of Jewish lives. Until the rest of the world begins to realize that Israel–founded as it is upon the principles laid down within the religion of Judaism, follows thngs to the letter of the law, and by that we mean the Old Testament and how “God” gave the Jews all the territory between the Nile and Euphrates rivers, the world will never get anywhere in dealing with this momentous problem.

Haaretz

Israel will need to convince about 60 to 70 member states at the United Nations to oppose a unilateral declaration of a Palestinian state in September, according to comment made by Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon.

In an interview with Israel Radio, Ayalon declared that there is an automatic majority against Israel at the UN General Assembly, which Israel cannot change. But, he added,  UN Security Council and not the General Assembly is the ultimately deciding body on the matter.

According to Ayalon, the Fatah-Hamas reconciliation has limited the range of diplomatic possibilities for Israel, and as such Israel will have to wait and see what the Palestinians will do.

Opposition leader Tzipi Livni called upon the government coalition not to sit back, for peace with the Palestinians is in Israel’s interest. According to Livni, the Netanyahu government was not willing to pay a small price in return for negotiations and now the price demanded is far greater.

Livni said that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is sticking to his chair in the hope that the rest of the world will be convinced that the Palestinians are to blame.

Palestinian factions Fatah and Hamas met in Cairo on May 4 to sign a reconciliation agreement that ended four years of bitter strife. The Palestinians say that if a peace treaty with Israel isn’t reached by September their first choice is to go to the UN Security Council with such strong support and arguments that it would recommend admission of Palestine as a new member of the United Nations.

Osama bin Laden dead: angry Pakistan drops intelligence sharing with West

NOVANEWS
Osama bin Laden's family is a wealthy dynasty with old business links with Saudi royalty.

Pakistan’s intelligence services are refusing to share details of suspects or plots with their American counterparts in protest at the US operation to kill Osama bin Laden, raising the potential threat of attacks on Western cities.

Telegraph.co.uk

In the past, Pakistani agents have been credited with helping identify targets for drone strikes and providing data to the CIA on plans being hatched in its lawless tribal areas.

Now buffeted and embarrassed by being kept in the dark for months as the US closed in on the al-Qaeda leader’s bolthole, little more than 30 miles from the Pakistani capital Islamabad, agents with the Inter-Services Intelligence directorate have begun to withhold crucial operational details about militants on its territory.
At the same time, new details have emerged about bin Laden’s extensive support network insidePakistan, reaching all the way to the sprawling port city of Karachi.
The revelations will heap more pressure on to an administration already accused of helping shelter the world’s most wanted man.
The Sunday Telegraph has learned that the ISI, which prides itself on arresting a series of key terrorists including the 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, has now broken off relations with the Central Intelligence Agency.

“They are furious. They handed over telephone intercepts in 2009 that were crucial in leading to bin Laden’s courier – the key breakthrough in the hunt,” said a source briefed on relations between the two countries.
“Then four months ago they were told there was nothing in it, it was what the Americans called a ‘cold lead’. Since then they have been left out completely out of the loop.”
Senior officials in the US have briefed journalists to say they stopped sharing information because they feared Islamist sympathisers within Pakistani security forces would tip-off bin Laden – ruining the best lead they had ever had.
Lieutenant General Talat Masood, a military analyst, said the stand-off would raise the threat to American cities and to Nato-led troops from plots hatched in Pakistan’s tribal regions, headquarters of al-Qaeda linked militant groups.
“There are implications for both the US and international forces in Afghanistan, so the Americans will be very interested in getting the relationship back on track,” he said.
However, politicians in Pakistan are intent on making the US pay for an apparently unauthorised raid on its soil.
The past fortnight has been deeply embarrassing for Pakistan’s previously admired military and intelligence apparatus.
The generals face tough questions over how the US was able to launch a raid on its territory without anyone noticing.
They must also explain how the world’s most wanted man could live for at least five years right under their noses, less than a mile from the country’s officer training academy in Abbottabad.
Last week, President Barack Obama said bin Laden had a “support network” within Pakistan and demanded to know whether government officials or military officers knew of his presence.
US suspicions of collusion have frozen relations between the two countries, which were already frosty following the arrest of CIA agent in Lahore earlier this year after he shot dead two men.
On Friday night, with intelligence officials already suspending intelligence sharing, Pakistan’s parliament also called for a review of the country’s relationship with the US.
During a 10-hour joint session held to debate the American raid, MPs demanded an independent investigation to replace a planned military inquiry.
And they also unanimously passed a resolution urging a ban on Nato transit convoys taking supplies from the port of Karachi to Afghanistan unless the US ends its controversial programme drone attacks.
Politicians who stayed late into the night said the head of the ISI admitted intelligence failures and said he was prepared to resign if he no longer had their support, an offer refused by the head of Army.
However, documents recently released by WikiLeaks will only deepen their embarrassment. Testimony from prisoners held at Guantanamo Bay describes elements of bin Laden’s support network deep inside Pakistan, tasked with helping the fugitive evade justice, and also describe a meeting between the Taliban’s one-eyed leader Mullah Omar and ISI agents.
Shortly before 9/11, bin Laden began his preparations to elude US reprisals and begin his life on the run.
Mohammed Ahmad Rabbani, “who had the full trust and confidence of al-Qaeda leadership” according to leaked detainee files, told interrogators that he ran a series of al-Qaeda safe houses in Karachi, the economic heart of Pakistan. About two months before airliners crashed into the World Trade Centre, he was ordered to procure supplies and construction materials in Karachi and send them to Afghanistan.
There they were used to extend an existing network of caves and tunnels at Tora Bora deep into the mountains that separate Afghanistan from Pakistan.
Bin Laden and his lieutenants disappeared into the caves in December 2001 – the last known sighting before Navy Seals shot him dead two weeks ago – as US warplanes bombed the area.
Other detainees said bin Laden had lived there with three wives, 25 bodyguards and dozens more al-Qaeda operatives including his deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri.
The documents also show further evidence of how ISI operatives liaised with and senior Taliban figures. In one example, Pakistani intelligence officers met Mullah Omar, the one-eyed head of the Afghan Taliban, along with other militia commanders in Quetta, south-western Pakistan.

Hamas leader on Nakba Day: The Zionist project must end

NOVANEWS
 

Hamas PM in Gaza tells thousands of worshipers that Palestinians have ‘right to resist’ Israeli occupation, reiterates that the Islamic movement will not recognize Israel.

Associated Press

Hamas’ leader in the Gaza Strip on Sunday affirmed the Islamist movement’s hard-line principles in a speech to thousands of Muslim worshippers Sunday, as they commemorated the uprooting of Palestinians during the 1948 Independence Day War.

“Palestinians mark the occasion this year with great hope of bringing to an end the Zionist project in Palestine,” Ismail Haniyeh, the prime minister of the Hamas government in Gaza, told about 10,000 people at a Gaza City mosque.

Haniyeh’s apparent call for Israel’s destruction comes just weeks after Hamas reconciled with Western-backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas after a four-year split. Abbas has been trying to market the Islamic militants to the international community as an acceptable political partner.

Marches commemorating the 1948 events, known in Arabic as nakba (catastrophe), were also planned in the Abbas-ruled West Bank and in Arab towns in Israel.

Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians fled or were driven out during the fighting more than six decades ago. The dispute over the fate of the refugees and their descendants, now several million people, remains at the core of the Middle East conflict.

Israeli security forces were on high alert Sunday, and the Israeli military sealed the West Bank for a day, barring Palestinians from entering Israel.

Haniyeh launched the Nakba Day events with a dawn sermon at Gaza City’s al-Omari Mosque.

“Palestinians have the right to resist Israeli occupation and will one day return to property they lost in 1948,” Haniyeh told worshipers. “To achieve our goals in the liberation of our occupied land, we should have one leadership,” he added, praising the recent unity deal.

As part of the reconciliation agreement, Hamas and Abbas’ Fatah movement are to share power in a transitional government until elections are held next year. The U.S. and Europe consider Hamas a terrorist group and have said they will only deal with it if it renounces violence, recognizes Israel and honors previous peace commitments made by the Palestinians.

Haniyeh reiterated Sunday that his movement would not recognize Israel at the outset.

However, Hamas leaders are often vague or issue contradictory statements about the group’s political aims.

In recent weeks, some in the group have spoken of reconciliation with the West and a halt to armed hostilities with Israel, and even hinted at some sort of political accommodation.

While Israel is not convinced, there are hopes in some Palestinian circles that the Iran-backed group could become a more accepted part of the Middle East diplomatic equation.

Zio-Nazi Holocaust in Palestine

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Please do forward this email so we can get as many hits as possible on youtube. 
Spreading awareness is key to help the victims that cannot be heard.
The more times people click on the link the higher number of hits , and maybe it can get on the top watched list.
Please. watch it and forward it to many people
Thank you .
P.S.
(  ISRAELI  RECIPIENTS  ARE OF COURSE  EXEMPTED SINCE THEY ONLY BELIEVE IN THEIR OWN HOLOCAUST, AN EXPERIENCE OF WHICH THEY ARE INFLICTING ON THE PALESTINIANS )
CLICK HERE TO SEE THE VIDEO 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b4gymxY2zM8

 

Zio-Nazi commemorates the establishment of apartheid 63 years ago with massacre

NOVANEWS

 

Four people were reportedly shot dead by Zio-Nazi Gestapo Sunday as they opened fire on large numbers of infiltrators trying to breach

Dozens of Palestinians crossed the Israeli border and entered the village of Majdal Shams in a Nakba Day protest, May 15, 2011.

Syria’s southern border with Palestine. Another four people were said to have been killed on the Lebanese side of its shared frontier with Palestine, as Palestinian protests for the annual Nakba Day, which mourns the creation of the Zio-Nazi State of IsraHell, took hold across the region.

In Majdal Shams, which runs along the Palestine-Syria border, scores of Palestinian refugees from Syria spilled into the town. The Magen David Adom rescue service said about a dozen others had been wounded. The Israel Defense Forces confirmed opening fire on infiltrators.(Haaretz)

Zio-Nazi soldiers respond to unarmed civil protest in the only way IsraHell knows, deadly violence. This coordinated protest by Palestinians refugees happened on four borders. But the Egyptian border was apparently quiet thanks to Zionist Mu-Barak clones who still rule Egypt. The Egyptian military government, still eager to serve the US and its unhinged mini-me, IsraHell, blocked the roads to Sinai, because “the timing was inappropriate.”  But the time is always appropriate for sucking up to the empire.

The Zionist press called the protesters “infiltrators,” reviving a term used in the fifties for the thousands of Palestinians refugees who tried to get back to their homes after the expulsion. Between 1949 and 1954, Zio-Nazi army, with shoot to kill rules, murdered about 5,000 Palestinians caught near the borders.

The term was offensive already then, declaring people “infiltrators” in their own houses, fields, and country. But today the term is also misleading. Those murdered in the fifties were mostly trying to be invisible and to get home. The eight murdered today were involved in a direct action commemorating the Nakba, inspired by the massive Arab awakening that has swept the region from Tunisia to Yemen. Like Assad, Qaddafi, and the kings of the Gulf, Nazi generals believe that if they kill enough people the protests will peter out. One cannot say that this strategy never works. It is a double-down strategy. Like every double-down strategy, whether it works or not depends on the quality of credit possessed by the player. If the defiance of the people remains steadfast, or, as often happens when people are martyred, grows stronger, sooner or later the carnage is too much for key allies and constituencies, and then it is over for the regime. But the Nazi Junta believes it has enough credit to withstand any bloodbath. Given Nazi’s dependence on the good grace of its Western supporters, we all have a role to play in seeing that it doesn’t.

Apartheid is Murder. The time for ending it is yesterday.

Ghada Karmi’s Pullout Update

NOVANEWS

 

 

In spite of Jewish ‘anti Zionists’ bragging about themselves being the force behind Ghada Karmi’s ‘pullout’ from a panel event with me this Tuesday,  Ghada just wrote to me and asked me to quote her.

“I’m delayed here (in Jordan) and will not be back in time for the event, and that is the reason for my not attending.”

I guess that Tony Greenstein and his Jewish political allies may want to consider  being  slightly more gentle with the Palestinians whom they claim to support.

It may as well be important to mention that John Rose also made it clear that he would attend a panel discussion with me anytime. His reason to pullout was due to a disagreement with organizers of the panel event regarding the title of the event.  I guess that he may have a point. Though, I am very happy with the title (Zionism, Jewishness and Israel), I agree that other panellists should have been consulted.

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=160038250722935

Panel Event: Zionism, Jewishness and Israel

Time:            Tuesday, May 3 · 6:30pm – 8:30pm

Location: University Of Westminster – Cavendish Campus

A panel discussion examining Israeli Criminality in the wake of the Goldstone Retract.

Alan Hart, Gilad Atzmon and others


DR. JUNE C. TERPSTRA: IDENTITY WITHOUT SUPREMACY

NOVANEWS

GILAD ATZMON

 



 

http://juneterpstra.com

On May, 6, 2011, embattled Jazz musician and philosopher Gilad Atzmon gave a talk at Columbia College Chicago about his intellectual and musical journey of liberation from identity supremacy and the shame of living in an oppressor state.  In tones intense and dissonant he provided definitions for Zionism, Judaism, Jewish supremacy, Israel and Palestine while contextualizing with both the saxophone and reflections on being raised in a culture where one group’s hunger for superiority, power and properties concludes with the oppression of the indigenous “other”.   Gilad gave witness to the horrific methods the Israeli states goes to attain their supremacy.
While his story takes place in the land of Palestine with a state called Israel similar stories are simultaneously being played out in Iraq, Afghanistan, with Libya and Pakistan next on the list, by what is called the United States and the United Kingdom and other European competitors.   The groups doing the aggressive killings and plundering believe that by eradicating some and controlling all of the indigenous groups they will gain both power and domination of the lands and resources.  The Israelis, Americans and British stop at nothing and do everything to gain and maintain their supremacy.  The committing of such heinous crimes against other human beings requires the blocking of the heart of the human connection between the two groups. By disconnecting one’s self from the reality of the crime, the imposing group is able to carry out their atrocities while naming any indigenous resistance that does not benefit them, terrorism.
Gilad also described the very personal attacks by Jewish groups and individuals whose intentions are to essentially silence him from giving his testimony.  The most common cause of the well-organized gatekeeping stems from the strategy that in order to achieve dominance, they need to put fear into those who dare to act as witness.  The gatekeeper and lobbyist believe that if they are feared, then they have power and control of a situation to spin it in their favor.  This dominance is necessary for the attacker to get what they want out of a situation while at the same time standing at the mirror on the wall telling the world they are the most victimized of them all.
Gilad’s voice is an important one to hear.  He is the courageous everyman on a classic heroes’ journey who dares to tell the truth about an oppressor who admittedly is his grandfather, cousin, and brother.  What is truly brave is that he does not tell the truth as the victim but as a product of the oppressor’s deliberately constructed Zionist agenda and Jewish culture.   The story of his shame is our collective shame and resonated in the faces of the American audience and could be heard by the discerning ear in the silences in between their questions.  We too are ashamed of our American assassinations, illegal wars, tortures, and the hypocrisy of our so called democracy.  As we listen to Gilad we wonder about our own identity as Americans.  We cannot even claim a healing bowl chicken soup like Gilad as we have only genetically modified burgers for our cultural icon.
The philosopher’s questions here are critical.  With what will we choose to identify?  American myths?  Cultural imperialism?  Ideological dogmatism? Ethnocentrisms?  As we listen to Gilad Atzmon we are compelled to accept his call to us to be ethical human beings and take the heroes’ journey away from identities of supremacy into the core of our common humanity for the sake of the nothing less than the entire world.
The message is: I am the other.

Bin Laden’s Death Won’t End His Toll on American Taxpayers, Poll Shows

NOVANEWS
 

Osama Bin Laden, al-Qaeda Terrorist Who Oversaw 9/11 Attac
Bloomberg
 

Even in death, Osama bin Laden will be taking revenge on American taxpayers for years to come.

The U.S. government spent $2 trillion combating Osama Bin Laden over the past decade, more than 20 percent of the nation’s $9.68 trillion public debt. That money paid for wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as additional military, intelligence and homeland security spending above pre-Sept. 11 trends, according to a Bloomberg analysis. This year alone, taxpayers are spending more than $45 billion in interest on the money borrowed to battle al-Qaeda, the analysis shows. Megan Hughes reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

Even in death, Osama bin Laden will be taking revenge on American taxpayers for years to come.

The U.S. government spent $2 trillion combating bin Laden over the past decade, more than 20 percent of the nation’s $9.68 trillion public debt. That money paid for wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as additional military, intelligence and homeland security spending above pre-Sept. 11 trends, according to a Bloomberg analysis.
This year alone, taxpayers are spending more than $45 billion in interest on the money borrowed to battle al-Qaeda, the analysis shows.
The financial bleeding won’t stop with bin Laden’s demise. One of every four dollars in red ink the U.S. expects to incur in the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1 will result from $285 billion in annual spending triggered by the terrorist scion of a wealthy Saudi family.
Without bin Laden, “we would have accumulated less debt, be spending less on interest and we would be on a lower spending path going forward,” said Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, a research organization in Washington.
Along with the dollars-and-cents toll, bin Laden has left behind a less quantifiable imprint on American life. Thousands of families have suffered grievous loss from the Sept. 11 attacks and the two wars. U.S. government buildings in Washington and around the world have grown to resemble fortified bunkers. And the line between government power and individual liberty was redrawn as agencies gained new powers to combat a novel threat.

Costs ‘Ad Infinitum’

The complete figure may be higher than the Bloomberg analysis. Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics Inc., said bin Laden cost the U.S. government and businesses $2.5 trillion, or $250 billion each year. “I think a prudent planner would anticipate these costs continuing ad infinitum into the future,” he said in an e-mail.
Indeed, the meter didn’t stop running May 2 when bin Laden’s corpse slipped into the Arabian Sea. Next year alone, the U.S. plans to spend an additional $118 billion on military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. Additional fiscal 2012 spending that can be attributed to bin Laden includes an extra $14 billion for homeland security, about $125 billion for the Pentagon excluding the two wars, expanded intelligence spending and increased aid to Pakistan, according to the Bloomberg analysis.
“There are a lot of legacy costs,” said Jon Meacham, editor of “Beyond Bin Laden,” an instant book fromRandom House.

Pentagon Budget

As the U.S. celebrates the demise of the number-one figure on the FBI’s “Most Wanted Terrorists” list, the future spending that can be attributed to bin Laden far exceeds direct war costs. Gordon Adams, who oversaw national security budgeting at the Office of Management and Budget during the Clinton administration, said roughly $125 billion of the Pentagon’s $553 billion fiscal 2012 budget request represents unnecessary spending justified by claims of war-time need.
“That’s a tax which would not have happened without Osama bin Laden,” Adams, a professor at American University’s School of International Service, said in a telephone interview.
The bin Laden tax has been levied every year for the past decade. Pentagon spending — excluding the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan — between fiscal 2002 and today was $742 billion higher than theCongressional Budget Office’s January 2001 baseline forecast.
Amid a wartime atmosphere, military spending requests faced less scrutiny both within the Pentagon and in Congress, Adams said. Programs launched with modest initial funding often live on, their costs ballooning with the years.

Nigeria Surveillance

A Pentagon counterterrorism training and equipment initiative known as the Section 1206 program, which has funneled aid to 53 countries, swelled from $100 million in fiscal 2006 to $500 million in the Obama administration’s request for fiscal year 2012, which starts Oct. 1.
Under the program, Nigeria got maritime surveillance gear to monitor traffic in the Gulf of Guinea and Lebanon obtained parts for UH-1H helicopters, which it used to quash an uprising in the Nahr al-Barid refugee camp. “It’s used for every purpose you can imagine,” Adams said.
The U.S. added 92,000 soldiers to its ground forces in the decade following the Sept. 11 attacks. Each 10,000 people added to the military’s ranks means an extra $1 billion in annual spending, according to Adams. So the ground force expansion inspired by bin Laden will impose an additional $9 billion annually, he said.

Intelligence Tripled

The military wasn’t alone in securing expanded financial resources because of bin Laden. The budget for U.S. intelligence agencies tripled over the past 12 years, representing an average annual increase of 9.6 percent.
While it is difficult to determine how much of the incremental increase in can be directly linked to bin Laden, the amount is undoubtedly sizable. In October 2010, the director of national intelligence, James Clapper, said the intelligence budget for fiscal 2009 was $80.1 billion, including $27 billion for military intelligence. Michael O’Hanlon, a Brookings Institution defense expert, estimated that $25 billion to $30 billion of annual intelligence spending can be laid at bin Laden’s feet.
“A large portion of that cost growth is from 9/11,” said O’Hanlon, a former national security analyst with the Congressional Budget Office.
Homeland Security
The government’s finances also will groan beneath the weight of the Department of Homeland Security, the 216,000- employee bureaucracy created to protect Americans from additional terrorist attacks. Over the past nine years, the department spent about $123 billion more than if the 22 component agencies’ pre-Sept. 11 spending trends had continued, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
That is an extra $14 billion annually U.S. taxpayers can attribute to bin Laden — or 24 percent of the $57 billion the department is seeking for the 2012 fiscal year.
Some enduring costs will amount to no more than inconvenience. Less than six months before the Sept. 11 attacks, a House committee held a hearing to consider reopening Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the White House. The street closure, instituted as a temporary measure after the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, was made permanent after al-Qaeda’s attacks, and Washington drivers have adjusted.

Airport Lines

Likewise, though travelers fume in airport security lines while stripping off shoes and belts and fumbling with three- ounce cosmetics containers, the economic consequences are negligible, according to Nariman Behravesh, chief economist of IHS Insight, an economic and financial analysis and forecasting company. “This is a huge, diversified economy which can absorb this stuff without too much pain,” he said.
Bin Laden’s imprint on American society, however, extends beyond finances. Through May 2, 11,191 members of the U.S. military have been wounded in the war in Afghanistan, including 35 percent so severely as to preclude their return to combat.
In coming years, those who saw loved ones injured or killed in the Sept. 11 attacks, or in the wars that followed, will still bear daily pain.
Public buildings, which before the rise of al-Qaeda were designed as artistic statements, will continue to resemble bunkers. And small erosions of personal liberty, conceded in the interests of security, may yet deepen.

Duct Tape

Not since the early days of the Cold War, when the Soviet Union threatened, has an enemy so bedeviled Americans and their leaders. Where once children prepared for nuclear war with “duck and cover” drills, Americans after Sept. 11 stockpiled duct tape and canned food.
The post-Sept. 11 drive for security changed the look of the U.S. capital, transforming it into a garrison city bristling with metal barriers, stone bollards and closed-circuit cameras. To enter even the most unimportant office building, people grew accustomed to handing over photo identification and signing their names.
If these requirements seemed longer on ritual than reward, they nonetheless spread. Likewise, the government expanded its powers in response to the threat conjured by bin Laden.
In 2010, federal officials filed 1,579 requests with the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court — or six requests each working day and 50 percent more than in 2001 — for electronic surveillance or physical searches. The 11-judge federal court, established to adjudicate surveillance requests regarding suspected foreign agents, approved every one of the government’s requests, according to an April 29 Justice Department report to Congress.

‘Pre-Emptive’ Surveillance

Julian Sanchez, a research analyst at the Cato Institute, a libertarian-oriented policy center in Washington, said the proliferation of wiretap requests represented a break with practices in place before the Sept. 11 attacks. “We’ve seen a shift from the traditional American model of surveillance of particular individuals on the basis of individualized suspicion to a broader pre-emptive model,” he said.
Separately, the FBI issued so-called national security letters, which require businesses to provide federal investigators with an individual’s records, including telecommunications and financial data.
Investigators last year sought the records of 14,212 Americans, more than in the previous two years combined. Civil liberties advocates see the national security letters, which don’t require a judge’s approval, as a dangerously broad power. “We would be in pretty serious trouble if there were 14,000 terrorists in the United States,” said Sanchez.
For all bin Laden’s financial and human impact, however, the al-Qaeda leader failed in his ultimate goal of humbling the world’s lone superpower. Today’s $15 trillion U.S. economy, for example, is 18 percent larger than in 2001, after adjusting for inflation.

Economy Survives

Indeed, said Meacham, the genius of the American experiment lies in the country’s ability to withstand sharp blows without fracturing. He noted that President Barack Obama, who as a candidate criticized the national security policies of his predecessor, George W. Bush, largely embraced them once he took office.
That development, akin to President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s acceptance of the New Deal in the 1950s, has helped steady the country amid turbulent times.
“We’re on this new road that’s been created. We’ll veer a little left. We’ll veer a little right,” Meacham said. “But the road has been laid out.”

Video: The On-Going Nakba of Palestine … 63 Years Later

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