Author: Gunner

  • Carnival of Liberty XXXI

    This week’s installment of the Life, Liberty, Property community’s Carnival of Liberty is up over at Louisiana Libertarian. Go read another fine collection of posts from a libertarian slant.

  • Of Mohammed Cartoons and Moslem Carnage

    Apparently, while I was incommunicado this past weekend in an obscure and isolated Oklahoma state park, the story of the reaction by the Islamic global community to a dozen generally-inoffensive cartoon representations of the supposed prophet Mohammed exploded. As I’m still trying to play catch up, here’s a link dump on the brouhaha.

    How cartoons sparked violence

    The violent and now deadly protests rippling through Asia and the Middle East over the publication of caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad reflects a larger schism and lack of understanding between traditional Western cultures and Islam, experts said Monday.

    In the secular world, the debate is about freedom of the press, but to Muslims worldwide, the images are offensive not only because they depict Muhammad as a promoter of terrorism but also because their very existence violates the Islamic tradition forbidding visual depictions of the Prophet.

    As European diplomats urged calm and restraint, the violence that already led to the burning of Danish and Norwegian embassies over the weekend turned fatal Monday. Afghan troops killed four protesters, including two outside the U.S. military base near Bagram, and a teenage boy was trampled in Somalia.

    […]

    The anger, according to experts, stems from long-held and deep beliefs. The Koran, Islam’s sacred book, does not contain an explicit ban on images of Allah or Muhammad. But visual depictions of Muhammad or other prophets such as Moses or Abraham are traditionally eschewed in order to discourage idolatry, or worship of an object as a god.

    “It’s very offensive on many levels and for many reasons, but mainly because it’s an attack on the sense of what is most sacred and which cannot be ridiculed,” said Inamul Haq, adjunct professor of Islam at Benedictine University in Lisle.

    That the cartoons also portray the prophet as a terrorist only increases that anger, the experts said.

    Unfortunately, such portrayals would seem to be an accurate reflection, according to the objective history I’ve read of the man.

    Cleric calls on Mohammed cartoonist to be executed

    Omar Bakri Mohammed, the radical Muslim cleric, has said the cartoonist behind caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed that have sparked outrage across the Arab world should be tried and executed under Islamic law.

    The cleric said the cartoonist had insulted Islam and must pay the price, as three people were killed during protests against the cartoons in Afghanistan.

    “The insult has been established now by everybody, Muslim and non-Muslim, and everybody condemns the cartoonist and condemns the cartoon,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

    “However, in Islam, God said, and the messenger Mohammed said, whoever insults a prophet, he must be punished and executed.

    “This man should be put on trial and if it is proven to be executed.”

    The cleric said Muslims in Britain were not allowed to kill people who insulted Islam because it was against the law of the country.

    “We are not saying ourselves to go there and start to look to him and kill him, we are not talking about that. We are talking about Islamic rules. If anybody insults the prophet, he will have to take a punishment.”

    He said if countries refused to put people on trial for insulting Mohammed they must “face the consequences”.

    Sounds rather blackmailish and unpeaceful to me. Yeah, the guy seems like a worthy student of Mohammed (hat tip LGF).

    No let-up in sight for cartoon fury

    After a weekend that saw Denmark’s embassies torched in Lebanon and Syria, fury over the images continued to spread with protests held across Afghanistan as well as in Indian-held Kashmir, Indonesia, Lebanon, Iran and Thailand.

    French Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy called for calm as the Arab world seethes over the cartoons which first appeared in a Danish daily and have been reprinted by several publications in Europe, Australia and Malaysia.

    “Let us calm things down. We have had enough hate and intolerance,” he said on French radio. “There is not a religion in the world that condones killing, or the burning of flags.” [Editor’s note: well, there does appear to be one on the killing thing, though I’m not certain of any mention of flag-burning in the Koran]

    […]

    In Kabul about 300 people marched on Denmark’s embassy, where they torched a Danish flag and threw stones at the embassy, shouting “Death to Denmark, death to Norway, death to America, death to Bush.” [Editor’s note: Death to Bush? Did some of his doodles get published?]

    Around 1,000 protestors also gathered in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif and burnt the flags of France, Denmark and Norway. Hundreds protested in Kandahar, while more than 5,000 marched in Parwan province near Kabul.

    In Lebanon, one person died and almost 50 people were wounded during rioting in the capital Beirut which saw the Danish consulate set ablaze, police said yesterday.

    […]

    In Indonesia’s second-largest city of Surabaya, police fired warning shots outside the US consulate to disperse 200 protesters from the hardline Front of the Defenders of Islam, who earlier smashed windows at the Danish consulate.

    […]

    In the Indonesian capital Jakarta, hundreds of people demonstrated outside the Danish embassy, which was closed, calling for an apology from the Danish government over the offending images.

    Widespread. Radical. Islam. Oh yeah, it’s a threat, folks.

    Danish lawyer shot as fury of Muslims sweeps world

    A Danish lawyer was shot and several Muslim demonstrators died as protests against the publication of cartoons showing the Prophet Muhammad continued around the world yesterday.

    The lawyer was wounded in an incident in a Moscow cafe by a man from the Muslim Caucasus region of southern Russia.

    Meanwhile, the prime minister of Chechnya announced that Danish humanitarian organisations would be expelled. [Editor’s note: way to shoot yourself in your foot, idiot]

    Danish troops also came under fire in southern Iraq. Shots were fired at a patrol as it helped children who had been hit by a car near Qurnah. None of the soldiers was injured. [Editor’s note: way to shoot your children in their feet, idiots]

    The worst trouble yesterday came in Afghanistan, where hundreds of demonstrators clashed with police and soldiers. Four people were killed and at least 19 wounded, officials said.

    The worst violence was outside Bagram, the main US base in Afghanistan, although the US has not been involved in the controversy over the publication of the cartoons. Afghan police fired on some 2,000 protesters as they tried to break into the heavily guarded facility.

    Kabir Ahmed, the local government chief, said two of the demonstrators were killed and five wounded, while eight police were hurt. The protesters threw stones at the base and smashed a guard post.

    Some of those in the crowd then shot at the base with assault rifles, prompting the police to return fire, he said. [Editor’s note: way to shoot at people who can shoot you in your foot and elsewhere, idiots]

    […]

    Iran said it was cutting all trade ties with Denmark.

    Danish flags, however, remain in demand. An enterprising shopkeeper in Gaza, Ahmed Abu Dayya, said he had ordered 100 Danish and Norwegian flags when he heard that the cartoons were being reprinted.

    “I knew there would be a demand for the flags because of the angry reaction of people over the offence to the Prophet Muhammad,” he said.

    Angry Muslims have been setting the flags ablaze or tearing them to pieces

    I left the last in as an investment tip — flags are a good investment in Islamic lands, as they seem to be lit as often as cigarettes. Inventory management would be difficult, though; obviously a huge chunk would have to be devoted to the U.S. and Israel, but trying to predict the enemy o’ the day for the always-victimized ain’t easy. Trust me, there was some planning behind coming up with all of these Danish flags to torch.

    Iranian paper launches Holocaust cartoon competition

    Iran’s biggest-selling newspaper has waded into the Muhammad controversy by launching a competition to find the 12 “best” cartoons about the Holocaust.

    Farid Mortazavi, graphics editor for Tehran’s Hamshahri newspaper, said that the deliberately inflammatory contest would test out how committed Europeans were to the concept freedom of expression.

    “The Western papers printed these sacrilegious cartoons on the pretext of freedom of expression, so let’s see if they mean what they say and also print these Holocaust cartoons,” he said.

    Karen Pollock, chief executive of the Holocaust Educational Trust, said that victims of the Holocaust and their families were growing used to insults from Iran. “It’s just very sad,” she told Times Online.

    Iran’s regime is supportive of Holocaust revisionist historians, who maintain that the slaughter of Europe’s Jews during the Second World War was invented or exaggerated to justify the creation of Israel on Palestinian territory.

    As usual for the Moslems, it’s got to be the Jews. Hat tip to John Little at Blogs of War, who points out that, while trying to shift blame and anguish down the Jewish route, the Islamists miss the mark.

    And finally, there’s the usually remarkably-astute Victor Davis Hanson:

    A European Awakening Against Islamic Fascism?

    Over the last four years Americans have played a sort of parlor game wondering when—or if—the Europeans might awake to the danger of Islamic fascism and choose a more muscular role in the war on terrorism.

    But after the acrimony over the invasion of Iraq, Abu Ghraib, and Guantanamo, pessimists scoffed that the Atlantic alliance was essentially over. Only the postmortem was in dispute: did the bad chemistry between the Texan George Bush and the Green European leadership who came of age in the street theater of 1968 explain the falling out?

    Or was the return of the old anti-Americanism natural after the end of the Cold War—once American forces were no longer needed for the security of Europe?

    Or again, was Europe’s third way a realistic consideration of its own unassimilated and growing Muslim population, at a time of creeping pacifism, and radically scaled down defense budgets after the fall of the Berlin Wall?

    Yet suddenly in 2006, the Europeans seem to have collectively resuscitated. The Madrid bombings, the murder of Theo van Gogh, the London subway attacks, and the French rioting in October and November seem to have prompted at least some Europeans at last to question their once hallowed sense of multiculturalism in which Muslim minorities were not asked to assimilate at home and Islamic terrorists abroad were seen as mere militants or extremists rather than enemies bent on destroying the West.

    Please go read it in its entirety, as it is rare I find myself so often in disagreement with the man. His whole piece strikes me as too optimistic, supported by bits and pieces scattered over several years in a hope of showing a European strengthening only anecdotally supported. Hanson does, towards the end, seem to recognize the difficulties I have with his point.

    So is Europe now finally at the front or will they retreat Madrid-like in the face of the inevitable second round of terrorist bombings and threats to come?

    Americans are not confident, but we should remember at least one simple fact: Europe is the embryo of the entire Western military tradition. The new European Union encompasses a population greater than the United States and spans a continent larger than our own territory. It has a greater gross domestic product than that of America and could, in theory, field military forces as disciplined and as well equipped as our own.

    It is not the capability but the will power of the Europeans that has been missing in this war so far.

    Yes, overwhelmingly, I still question whether that will power is present, and even if it can be resurrected before it is too late for the continent.

  • Al Qaeda Jail Escape Seen as Blow to Yemen

    Once again, Islamist terrorists have made use of the shelter of a mosque, this time to rescue a captive with American blood on his hands.

    The escape of 13 al Qaeda inmates, including two convicted for deadly attacks on a U.S. warship and a French supertanker, was a serious blow to Yemen’s fight against the Osama bin Laden network, diplomats said on Monday.

    Yemeni security forces scoured mountainous provinces for the fugitives, who included the mastermind of the 2000 bombing of the U.S. warship Cole and the leader of a group that bombed the French oil tanker Limburg two years later.

    The United States said it was disappointed at the jailbreak and vowed to pursue the militants with its allies.

    “It’s a disappointing development that al Qaeda operatives escaped, particularly one who targeted and killed Americans. We will be working with Yemeni officials and our international partners to actively go after these dangerous terrorists,” said White House spokesman Scott McClellan.

    U.S. ally Yemen, bin Laden’s ancestral homeland, has shed its image as a haven for militants by cracking down on al Qaeda. Analysts and opposition politicians said the jailbreak was a serious embarrassment for the government as well as a blow to its security efforts.

    “This unravels all the work that the Yemeni government has done over the past couple of years (against al Qaeda),” said a senior Western diplomat. “It is a very serious error.”

    […]

    Mohamed al-Sabri of the opposition Nasserite Party told Reuters the escape was “a serious setback for Yemen’s security that puts the country in a very embarrassing position”.

    “This has implications not only for Yemen but for all countries in the region,” he added.

    Security sources said the militants were among a group of 23 inmates who escaped through a 140-metre (460-feet) long tunnel that appeared to have been dug from a nearby mosque.

    The entrance of the tunnel was in the less frequented women’s section of the mosque and the inmates probably fled on Thursday night, the sources added.

    […]

    The escapees include prominent al Qaeda members Jamal Badawi and Fawaz al-Rabe’ie.

    Badawi masterminded the October 2000 attack on the Cole that killed 17 U.S. sailors. His death sentence was commuted last February to 15 years in prison. Rabe’ie was sentenced to death for the Limburg bombing.

    Badawi should have already been dead. Here’s hoping he reaches that destination soon without taking any innocents with him. The memory of seventeen American sailors demands it.

    Yemen should be embarrassed. That these dangerous, murderous swine were able to be let loose is a disgrace to the nation and its security system and an added threat in our efforts against Islamist terror. The question remains: where will that threat surface?

  • Quote of the Week, 6 FEB 06

    The lamps are going out all over Europe; we shall not see them lit again in our lifetime.

    —Sir Edward Grey, on the eve of World War I

  • Dropping off the Net

    I’d hoped to get more blogging in tonight but you know what they say about the best-laid plans.

    Anyway, I’m out of here in the morning for a weekend retreat with my fiancee and her family. I will not have internet access, so if you must find out my opinion on something, track me down in a cabin at Beavers Bend State Park in Middle-of-Freakin’-Nowhere, Oklahoma.

    Meanwhile, I’ll be doing some light hiking, keeping an eye out for bald eagles and probably a large amount of napping and reading. For reading materials, I’m taking Thunder Run: The Armored Strike to Capture Baghdad, Hard America, Soft America: Competition vs. Coddling and the Battle for the Nation’s Future, and Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001 (the latter with a small sense of obligation to In the Bullpen‘s Chad Evans). Which one I actually crack will depend on my mood at the time.

    Blogging will resume probably Sunday or Monday, depending on the Super Bowl and my energy level. ‘Til then …

    Out.

  • Dutch MPs Back Sending Troops to Afghanistan

    Ah, some good news out of the Netherlands.

    An overwhelming majority of the Dutch parliament yesterday supported sending troops on a controversial mission to southern Afghanistan, ending months of political indecision in the Netherlands that had threatened to embarrass Nato and stall peacekeeping efforts.

    One hundred and thirty one of the 150 MPs – many representing the three largest political factions – said they backed the centre-right Dutch government’s proposal to commit up to 1,400 soldiers to the Nato mission.

    Nato officials had expressed concern that a No vote by the Dutch would slow down the roll-out of the operation, which is set to take place during the first six months of the year.

    It could also have embarrassed Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, Nato secretary-general and former Dutch foreign minister, who has identified Afghanistan as Nato’s most important mission.

    “Of course we welcome this decision,” said a Nato spokesman. “We are glad that the Dutch parliament has confirmed the government’s decision to go forward. What we have done in Afghanistan up to now is a success. This decision will help us reinforce the success.”

    The expansion to the south of the country will be spearheaded by 3,300 British troops, as well as 2,200 Canadians, but the Dutch contingent was seen as a key part of the operation, for both symbolic and practical reasons. The breakthrough came as Wouter Bos, leader of PvdA, the Labour opposition, told parliament all but one of his 42-member parliamentary party supported the mission, which also had the support of the Christian Democrats and liberal VVD, the main parties of the centre-right government.

    I was concerned. Perhaps there’s still a touch of life in NATO yet.

  • Hamas-in-Charge Link Dump

    Bush: Hamas Jeopardizes Palestinian State

    In an interview with The Associated Press, Bush also addressed oil’s future, offering a more ambitious hope than in his State of the Union speech for cutting imports from the volatile Mideast.

    However, he said his oft-stated goal of a Palestinian state in the region cannot be realized if a Hamas-led government refuses to renounce its desire to destroy Israel.

    […]

    On the international front, Bush talked about trouble in Iran and in the Palestinian territory.

    He said it was too early to tell what path Hamas would choose in dealing with Israel. “The conditions for peace and the conditions for a settlement will be up to Hamas to make the right decisions,” he said.

    Bush was the first U.S. president to espouse a Palestinian state living side by side in peace with Israel. Those prospects have dimmed with the triumph of Hamas in Palestinian parliamentary elections last week.

    “I made the position of this government very clear,” Bush said. “Hamas must renounce its desire to destroy Israel; it must recognize Israel’s right to exist and it must get rid of the armed wing of its party.”

    “In order for there to be democracy and in order for there to be two states living side by side with peace, you can’t have the party of one state intending to destroy the other state,” he said.

    Hamas rejects Bush’s call to disarm

    Hamas rejected on Wednesday U.S. President George W. Bush’s latest call to disarm following the Islamic militant group’s crushing victory over the long-dominant Fatah faction in last week’s Palestinian parliamentary election.

    “Our resistance is legitimate self-defence in the face of aggression,” said Sami Abu Zuhri, a Hamas leader in Gaza, referring to Israeli military action.

    In Washington, Bush demanded in his State of the Union address on Tuesday that Hamas “recognise Israel, disarm, reject terrorism and work for lasting peace”.

    Hamas is sworn to Israel’s destruction and has carried out nearly 60 suicide bombings since a Palestinian uprising began in 2000.

    Arabs pressure Hamas to renounce violence

    Egypt and Jordan joined the West in pressuring the militant group Hamas Wednesday, declaring it must recognize Israel and renounce violence if it wants to lead the Palestinians. Hamas held fast to its militant platform but suggested it might extend its cease-fire with the Israelis.

    The message from the two key American allies in the Arab world – both nations have signed peace treaties with Israel – was the strongest yet to the militant group, which calls for Israel’s destruction, opposes peace talks, refuses to lay down its arms and had carried out dozens of deadly suicide bombings against Israelis.

    Rumors had swirled through the Arab world over the past several days that moderate Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, whose Fatah faction was defeated in the vote, would meet by week’s end with Hamas leaders in Gaza to talk about forming a government.

    But all sides have subsequently played down that possibility, with Fatah members saying Abbas was in no hurry, viewing the passage of time as a tool for winning concessions from Hamas.

    In Cairo, however, Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit spoke bluntly as he emerging from separate talks between President Hosni Mubarak with Abbas and Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni.

    “When you (Hamas) sit in the (Palestinian) parliament, you talk with your tongue and not with a gun. …(Hamas) should not run away from the reality,” he said.

    Omar Suleiman, Egypt’s intelligence chief and point man on Palestinian issues, was even more emphatic: “Nobody will talk to them before they stop violence, recognize Israel and accept (peace) agreements.”

    Egypt predicts Iran will fill Palestinian cash gap

    Egypt predicted on Wednesday that Iran would step in to fill the finance gap if the United States and Europe stop their aid to the Palestinian Authority.

    “Iran will give them the money, I think,” intelligence chief Omar Suleiman told reporters after talks between Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

    Suleiman was answering a question on what would happen if the Palestinians lose financial support from the West after the militant Hamas movement won parliamentary elections.

    The United States and the European Union, main donors to the Palestinian Authority, have threatened to suspend aid to a Hamas government unless it recognizes Israel and renounces violence.

    Hamas says Israel has opened ‘gates of hell’

    The first step towards a major financial crisis came yesterday when Israel made good on a threat to suspend the transfer of about £30 million in customs payments which it collects every month on behalf of the authority. The money is used to pay many of the authority’s 135,000 employees. Saudi Arabia and Qatar promised to give £18.5 million to help keep up payments.

    Farhat As’ad, a Hamas spokesman in the West Bank, said Israel was “opening the gates of hell” by suspending the money transfers and that it would lead to greater extremism and fuel violence.

    […]

    Hamas has consistently rejected the Oslo Agreement as a sell-out of Palestinian rights.

    It is thought that both the failure of Oslo and Mr Abbas’s path of negotiations to bring tangible improvements to Palestinian life contributed greatly to Hamas’s electoral rout of Mr Abbas’s Fatah movement last week.

    Hamas’s electoral platform specifies that it continues to claim rights not only to all of the West Bank and Gaza Strip but also to the territory that comprises Israel within its 1967 borders.

    Fun times ahead, y’all. Note: definition of fun may vary.

  • Tonight’s Reading: Taranto on Today’s Media

    In a lengthy opinion piece, James Taranto takes on the mainstream media for their biased and disingenuous coverage of the Iraqi theater, Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan and the supposed blown cover of Valerie Plame.

    While I agree with Taranto that the media have worked themselves into a growing credibility problem through poor journalistic practices — indeed, I have stated often that my opinion of today’s media was a driving factor in my starting this site — and have been afflicted with an internal rotting since the 1968 Tet Offensive, I find myself far less optimistic than Taranto about the current ability of our media to cost us victory in the present conflict. Taranto’s stance is as follows:

    It would be fatuous to deny that this dour drumbeat of defeatism has some effect on public opinion, which after all is driven by the most fickle members of the public. By last fall, polls consistently showed that a majority of Americans thought it had been a mistake to liberate Iraq, though some 70% had favored the war when the shooting began in March 2003. But a majority continue to oppose a precipitous withdrawal. Most Americans, it seems, do not want another Vietnam, which they understand to mean a self-inflicted American defeat.

    The media’s one-sided coverage may actually undermine the antiwar cause. It does a disservice to antiwar politicians by giving them the impression that the public is fully behind them–an echo-chamber effect similar to that which helped John Kerry lose the election of 2004 (see “Kerry’s Quagmire,” July 20, 2005). Thus in December, when Democratic National Committee chairman Howard Dean responded to the media panic by declaring that “the idea that we’re going to win this war is an idea that, unfortunately, it’s just plain wrong,” fellow Democrats scrambled to distance themselves from him.

    And the media’s adversarial approach has proved costly in public trust. In a Pew Center survey conducted in early November, just after the indictment of Scooter Libby, only half of those polled said the press was fair to the Bush administration. The president’s approval rating in the same poll was just 36%, so this was far from a pro-Bush poll.

    […]

    With the mainstream media facing a skeptical public and competition from those with other viewpoints, it seems unlikely that Iraq will turn out to be another Vietnam–a war lost in large part because of the media’s opposition.

    I feel differently, believing very strongly that the media still have sufficient power to seize defeat from the jaws of victory but need more bad news and American blood upon which to base their efforts. As it is, their are forced to steadily beat the drum of quagmire and despair, scantily covering success and heroism while carefully restraining from providing historical perspective that may reflect well on our current endeavors.

    Taranto does provide himself a giant caveat — the wild card of another terrorist strike in the American homeland. Hat tip to In the Bullpen‘s Chad Evans, who gives his thoughts on the possible fallout of Taranto’s wildcard situation.

  • Narcs Nab Drug-smuggling Puppies

    Okay, this is simply disturbing.

    A two-year investigation into a Colombian heroin ring netted more than 65 pounds of drugs, resulted in the arrests of more than 20 people and saved the lives of some drug-smuggling Labrador retrievers, the Drug Enforcement Agency said Wednesday.

    Ten wayward pups were found during a raid on a Colombian farm in 2005, and six of them were carrying more than 3 kilograms (6.6 pounds) of liquid heroin in their stomachs, said DEA spokesman Rusty Payne.

    Puppy smugglers are another take on the human “mule,” or “swallower” in DEA parlance — someone who ingests packets of drugs and transports them in their stomachs.

    The puppies, however, had little say in the matter.

    In the case of the puppies found during the 2005 raid, the dogs’ bellies had been cut open, and heroin packets were stitched into their stomachs, Payne said. The pups, mostly purebred Labrador retrievers, were sewn back up and prepared for shipment to the United States, he added.

  • Iran Threatens to Lock out UN

    Long-delayed move.

    Immediate Iraninan counter.

    Iran yesterday threatened to halt snap UN inspections of its nuclear sites and resume uranium enrichment if it is reported to the Security Council as agreed by the council’s five permanent members.

    In an angry response to the move by Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States in the early hours of yesterday, Iran also warned it would hit back in the region if put under severe international pressure.

    […]

    The agreement by the five permanent members of the Security Council to call for the IAEA to refer Iran to the full council, where it could face sanctions, was hailed by Tony Blair.

    “I hope it’s sending a message that the international community is united,” the Prime Minister said.

    But Ali Larijani, Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator, responded angrily, amid signs that Russia and China are stalling over the issue.

    He said: “We consider any referral or report of Iran to the Security Council as the end of diplomacy. If these countries use all their means … to put pressure on Iran, Iran will use its capacity in the region.”

    It was not clear what regional capacities he meant. Analysts and diplomats say Iran, with its links to Islamist parties and militants, has the means to create trouble for the West in Iraq, Lebanon, the Palestinian territories and elsewhere.

    You know, this is a rather tiring dance.

    Tucked into the story is this little tidbit.

    It also emerged yesterday that Iran has given the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) a sensitive document that appears linked to nuclear warhead designs in a show of apparent openness designed to stave off being reported to the Security Council.

    Diplomats said the one and a half page document, which described how to cast fissile uranium into the hemispherical shape of warheads, was given to IAEA inspectors last week.

    This is good news, assuming that Iran’s thirst for thermonuclear warfare technology took precedent over their acquiring the copying machine.