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World War 3- Terrorism- WAKE UP!

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  • #16
    In looking up terrorism and the United Nations I found this article. Please understand the United Nations does have peacekeeping forces but rarely knows who the enemy really is.This article points out Israel's plight mainly.

    Among the many reasons to beware the United Nations as a vehicle for peace in Israel, Lebanon, or any other part of the globe now threatened by Islamic terrorists, there is one item so obvious that in the current debate over “ceasefires” and Security Council resolutions it has almost entirely escaped notice. Quite simply, while terrorism may be the defining security threat of our time, the U.N. has failed — literally — to define it.

    If that sounds like a minor semantic lapse, far removed from the bloody conflict in Israel and Lebanon, it is anything but. The free world faces a war in which victory — if one may be allowed such a blunt word these days — starts with understanding the real nature and tactics of our enemies. So, with top U.N. officials calling for instant peace that would effectively equate “both sides” in the war launched out of Lebanon last month by Hezbollah against Israel, I e-mailed the U.N. Secretary-General’s office recently to ask: Does the U.N. consider Hezbollah a terrorist group?

    Back from one of Kofi Annan’s spokesmen came the answer: “The designation of ‘terrorist’ would require a definition of what terrorism entails.”

    Let us note that in the case of Hezbollah, the group has entailed enough atrocities to have earned it the nickname, “the A-Team of Terrorism,” even before Hezbollah on July 12 launched its killing-kidnapping-and- rocket-firing assault on Israel. Hezbollah’s prior record entails well over two decades of kidnappings, hijackings, suicide bombings, massacres, and collateral carnage worldwide, in countries including Lebanon, Israel, Spain, Denmark, Germany, France, and Argentina. Created by the totalitarian ayatollahs of Iran just after their 1979 Islamic revolution; trained and bankrolled by Iran; supported by Syria; seasoned in extortion and smuggling operations reaching as far as South America, Canada, and the U.S.; open to alliances with other terrorist groups; peddling terrorist propaganda internationally on its Al-Manar TV station; dedicated to the destruction of Israel and seeking ultimately to supplant the workings of free societies with its Iran-spawned creed and practice of terror… Hezbollah among its butcheries to date has murdered more Americans than any other terrorist group except al Qaeda.

    But because the United Nations has not defined “terrorism,” the U.N. does not regard Hezbollah (or any group for that matter) as a terrorist group.

    The U.N. does, of course, have a stack of “counter-terrorism” resolutions, and bestrides a dozen or so “international counter-terrorism conventions.” But without a clear definition of what terrorism entails, U.N. member states — including the liveliest terror sponsors — pay no penalty for interpreting these measures in any warped way they might choose, or effectively ignoring them altogether. The result is that even the U.N. resolutions passed a few years ago sanctioning a highly abbreviated list of a few hundred Taliban and al Qaeda affiliates worldwide have been at best erratically enforced. Back in late 2003, a group of terrorism experts employed by the U.N. to monitor member-states’ compliance with these sanctions became bold enough to report publicly and in detail some of the gross delinquencies of specific nations. The U.N. dissolved the group of experts, and replaced it with one more easily muffled.

    A former member of the now-defunct, outspoken U.N. counterterrorism-monitoring group, Victor Comras, explained to me in a phone interview last week that achieving a serious international definition of terrorism is a “huge issue.” Once an objective criterion for terrorism exists, said Comras, “At least you have the foundation for asking that concrete actions be taken.”

    Without that definition, as Comras wrote this past March, “countries remain free to define for themselves which groups are terrorists and which are ‘freedom fighters.’” Comras observed that “Saudi Arabia uses this distinction, for example, to get away with funding Hamas, while Iran and Syria use it to provide funds and support to Hezbollah.” Beyond that, he noted, “Many other countries have also used it to avoid taking steps to freeze funds or take other civil or criminal action against those individuals or groups which they support.”

    The U.N. failure on this score is no accident. It is a direct result of what the U.N. is, and how it works — a collective, saddled with procedures that tend to favor despots over democrats. In the matter of coming up with a global definition of terrorism, the job falls to the General Assembly’s legal committee — the so-called Sixth Committee— which includes all 192 member states, and operates in practice by consensus. In that setting, the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) — whose 57 members include such terror-linked states as Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Iran — has for years insisted that any definition of terrorism exempt the OIC’s pet terrorists. These the OIC would prefer to define — notes Comras — as “engaged in so-called ‘struggles against colonial domination and foreign occupation.’”

    At the same time, the OIC and assorted “unaligned” states have been demanding that regular armed forces of sovereign states, already subject to other international rules of engagement, be subject to U.N. rules concerning terrorism. That would clear the way to officially invert reality to the extent that by U.N. lights, Islamic terrorists would qualify as liberators, and democratic states trying to defend themselves could be treated as terrorists.

    Wisely, the U.S. and some of our allies have refused to sign on to this Big Brother universe (though on some issues, such as the affable view of Palestinian terrorism, and chronic condemnations of democratic Israel, the U.N. seems to dwell there already). Under pressure from the U.S. last year, Kofi Annan departed from U.N. habit long enough to propose a genuine definition of terrorism — only to have it shot down by the U.N. committee-consensus process. And there the matter sits. While terrorism looms ever larger as an Islamic-fascist tactic and threat to the free world — which the U.N. was originally meant to protect — the task of defining terrorism remains bottled up in the U.N. legal committee.

    This gridlock goes far to explain why Annan, apparently forgetting his reform pitch of last year, has been calling with the regularity of a cuckoo clock for an immediate “ceasefire” in the current conflict. In doing so, he ignores the desperately lopsided setup of any deal in which Israel would be constrained by U.N. words on paper while the terrorists — by definition, if only the U.N. had one — can be reliably stopped only at gunpoint. That asymmetry is pretty much the arrangement that incubated this war in the first place. Israel complied with U.N. rules and withdrew six years ago from Lebanon. Hezbollah violated the rules, expanding its protection rackets and stockpiling illicit weapons under the terror-neutral gaze of U.N. “peacekeepers,” until it was ready to strike.

    The gap in the U.N. lexicon also helps explain why, when Annan’s deputy-secretary-general Mark Malloch Brown sat down for an interview last week with the Financial Times, he felt free to deliver the Orwellian line: “It is not helpful to couch this war in the language of international terrorism.”

    Wallowing instead in the jargon of peace in our time, Malloch Brown went on to suggest that for Israel’s attackers, Hezbollah, there must concessions, and eventually “a settlement which addresses the political issues of their cause as well as the military ones.” These bland words mask the terrorist nitty-gritty that Hezbollah’s “cause” includes the takeover of Lebanon and the extinction of Israel. Musing that Hezbollah does have its wayward aspects, and in its rocket assaults on Israel “is making no effort to hit military targets; it’s just a broadside against civilian targets,” Malloch Brown arrived at the I’m-O.K.-You’re-O.K. conclusion that “It’s all very challenging.”

    And as the Bush administration has increasingly turned to the United Nations in this crisis, the U.N. fog has been seeping into America’s political discourse. Instead of talking about killing, capturing, and defeating the terrorists of Hezbollah, or moving immediately to hold to account Hezbollah’s backers in Baathist Damascus and nuclear-bomb-building Teheran, our own political leaders are now maneuvering via the U.N. for a “cessation of hostilities.”

    This has produced a peculiar delicacy of phrase even from President Bush. The U.S. government, with good reason, includes Hezbollah in its list of “Foreign Terrorist Organizations.” But in a press conference Monday, Bush skirted this category, instead labeling Hezbollah “a political party with a militia that is armed by foreign nations.” Sorry, but Hezbollah is not at core a political party. It is an Iranian-Syrian-backed terrorist militia with a Lebanese political front.

    There is a deeply dangerous reluctance in the democratic world to face up to the extent of the war already declared and being waged against us — manifest in terrorist attacks on New York, Madrid, London, Bali, Bombay, and beyond, and especially against Israel, which is fighting right now on the front lines. These terrorists, and their sponsors, watch and learn from each other. In the battles ahead, if the U.S. takes its cues from a U.N. unable even to define terrorism, let alone defy it, the result will be that terrorists — protected by their patrons at the U.N. itself — will continue in graphic and ruinous terms to define it for us.
    Last edited by Spearit; 08-10-2006, 04:37 PM.
    "The range of what we think and do is limited by what we fail to notice.

    Comment


    • #17
      However- UN is waking up.

      Action by the General Assembly - United Nations

      Resolutions


      A/RES/60/158 Protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms while countering terrorism

      A/RES/60/78 Measures to prevent terrorists from acquiring weapons of mass destruction

      A/RES/60/73 Preventing the risk of radiological terrorism

      A/RES/60/43
      Measures to eliminate international terrorism

      A/RES/59/290
      International Convention for the Suppression of Acts of Nuclear Terrorism

      A/RES/59/195
      Human rights and terrorism

      A/RES/59/191
      Protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms while countering terrorism

      A/RES/59/80
      Measures to prevent terrorists from acquiring weapons of mass destruction

      A/RES/59/46
      Measures to eliminate international terrorism

      A/RES/58/187
      Protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms while countering terrorism

      A/RES/58/174
      Human rights and terrorism

      A/RES/58/81
      Measures to eliminate international terrorism

      A/RES/58/48
      Measures to prevent terrorists from acquiring weapons of mass destruction

      A/RES/57/220
      Hostage-taking

      A/RES/57/219
      Protecting human rights and fundamental freedoms while countering terrorism

      A/RES/57/83
      Measures to prevent terrorists from acquiring weapons of mass destruction

      A/RES/57/27
      Measures to eliminate international terrorism

      A/RES/56/160
      Human rights and terrorism

      A/RES/56/88
      Measures to eliminate international terrorism

      A/RES/56/1
      Condemnation of terrorist attacks in the United States of America

      A/RES/55/158 Measures to eliminate international terrorism

      A/RES/54/164 Human rights and terrorism

      A/RES/54/110 Measures to eliminate international terrorism

      A/RES/54/109 International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism

      A/RES/53/108 Measures to eliminate international terrorism

      A/RES/52/165 Measures to eliminate international terrorism

      A/RES/52/133 Human rights and terrorism

      A/RES/51/210 Measures to eliminate international terrorism

      A/RES/50/186 Human rights and terrorism

      A/RES/50/53 Measures to eliminate international terrorism

      A/RES/49/185 Human rights and terrorism

      A/RES/49/60 Measures to eliminate international terrorism

      A/RES/48/122 Human rights and terrorism

      A/RES/46/51 Measures to eliminate international terrorism

      A/RES/44/29 Measures to prevent international terrorism

      A/RES/42/159 Measures to prevent international terrorism

      A/RES/40/61 Measures to prevent international terrorism

      A/RES/39/159 Inadmissibility of the policy of State terrorism and any actions by States aimed at undermining the socio-political system in other sovereign States

      A/RES/38/130 Measures to prevent international terrorism

      A/RES/36/109 Measures to prevent international terrorism

      A/RES/34/145 Measures to prevent international terrorism

      A/RES/32/147 Measures to prevent international terrorism

      A/RES/31/102 Measures to prevent international terrorism

      A/RES/3034(XXVII) Measures to prevent international terrorism
      "The range of what we think and do is limited by what we fail to notice.

      Comment


      • #18
        Uniting Against Terrorism:
        Recommendations for a global counter-terrorism strategy

        Report of the Secretary-General
        Full report [pdf format]

        Contents:

        I. Introduction

        II. Dissuading groups from resorting to terrorism or supporting it

        A. Terrorism is unacceptable
        B. We must address conditions conducive to exploitation by terrorists

        III. Denying terrorists the means to carry out an attack
        A. Denying financial support
        B. Denying access to weapons, including weapons of mass destruction
        C. Denying access to recruits and communication by countering terrorist use of the Internet
        D. Denying terrorists access to travel
        E. Denying terrorists access to their targets and the desired impact of their attacks

        IV. Deterring States from supporting terrorist groups

        V. Developing State capacity to prevent terrorism
        A. Priority areas
        B. Providing proper resources to counter terrorism
        C. Promoting United Nations system-wide coherence in countering terrorism

        VI. Defending human rights in the context of terrorism and counter-terrorism

        VII. The road ahead

        Annex I. Inventory of United Nations counter-terrorism activities

        Annex II. Status of universal instruments related to the prevention and suppression of international terrorism
        "The range of what we think and do is limited by what we fail to notice.

        Comment


        • #19
          THE SECRETARY-GENERAL

          ADDRESS ON THE LAUNCH OF
          UNITING AGAINST TERRORISM:
          RECOMMENDATIONS FOR A GLOBAL
          COUNTER-TERRORISM STRATEGY
          New York, 2 May 2006
          Mr. President,

          Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen,

          I deeply regret that last week, in the 5th Committee, Member States were unable to reach consensus on the proposals I had put before you for management reform. In spite of this, I am convinced that all Member States remain committed to reform in principle, and I urge you to work together to rebuild the spirit of mutual trust that is essential to the smooth functioning of this Organization.

          I am, as always, ready to help you in your continued search for agreement on ways to pursue the agenda set out in the Outcome Document of the 2005 World Summit. In particular, you will recall that in that Document, your Heads of State and Government asked me to “submit proposals to strengthen the capacity of the United Nations system to assist States in combating terrorism and enhance coordination of United Nations activities in this regard”. And you will recall that they also urged you to develop without delay the elements I had identified, “with a view to adopting and implementing a strategy to promote comprehensive, coordinated and consistent responses, at the national, regional and international level, to counter terrorism”.

          Today, I have the privilege of presenting to you my vision on that matter, contained in the document Uniting against terrorism: Recommendations for a global counter-terrorism strategy.

          These recommendations stem from a fundamental conviction which we all share: that terrorism in all its forms and manifestations, committed by whomever, wherever and for whatever purposes, is unacceptable and can never be justified.

          Uniting around that conviction is the basis for what I hope will be a collective global effort to fight terrorism -- an effort bringing together Governments, the United Nations and other international organizations, civil society and the private sector -- each using their comparative advantage to supplement the others’ efforts.

          In formulating my recommendations, I have built further on the “five Ds”-- the fundamental components which I first outlined in Madrid last year. They are:

          dissuading people from resorting to terrorism or supporting it;

          denying terrorists the means to carry out an attack;

          deterring States from supporting terrorism;

          developing State capacity to defeat terrorism, and;

          defending human rights.
          I believe all five are interlinked conditions crucial to the success of any strategy against terrorism. To succed, we sill need to make progress on all these fronts.

          Implementing a global strategy requires us to dissuade people from resorting to terrorism or supporting it, by driving a wedge between terrorists and their potential constituencies. We need to launch a global campaign of Governments, the UN, civil society and the private sector, with the message that terrorism is unacceptable in any form, and that there are far better and more effective ways for those with genuine grievances to seek redress. One of the clearest and most powerful ways we can do that is by refocusing our attention on the victims. It is high time we took serious and concerted steps to build international solidarity with them, respecting their dignity as well as expressing our compassion.

          Denying terrorists the means to carry out an attack means denying them access both to conventional weapons and to weapons of mass destruction. That will require innovative thinking from all of us about today’s threats -- including those which States cannot address by themselves, such as bioterrorism. Similarly, it will mean working together to counter terrorists’ growing use of the Internet. We must find ways to make sure that this powerful tool becomes a weapon in our hands, not in theirs.

          Our work in deterring States from supporting terrorism must be rooted firmly in the international rule of law -- creating a solid legal basis for common actions, and holding States accountable for their performance in meeting their obligations. This work is intimately linked with the need to develop State capacity to defeat terrorism.

          In response to a request I received last December from the President of this Assembly, the document I am presenting today elaborates on steps to build state capacity, and to strengthen the Organization’s work in this field. The UN system has a vital contribution to make in all the relevant areas -- from promoting the rule of law and effective criminal justice systems to ensuring countries have the means to counter the financing of terrorism; from strengthening capacity to prevent nuclear, biological, chemical, or radiological materials from falling into the hands of terrorists, to improving the ability of countries to provide assistance and support for victims and their families.

          Finally, defending human rights runs like a scarlet thread through the report. It is a prerequisite to every aspect of any effective counter-terrorism strategy. It is the bond that brings the different components together. That means the human rights of all -- of the victims of terrorism, of those suspected of terrorism, of those affected by the consequences of terrorism.

          States must ensure that any measures taken to combat terrorism comply with their obligations under international law, in particular human rights law, refugee law and international humanitarian law. Any strategy that compromises human rights will play right into the hands of the terrorists.

          My dear friends,

          All States, in every region -- large or small, strong or weak -- are vulnerable to terrorism and its consequences. They all stand to benefit from a strategy to counter it. They all have a role to play in shaping such a strategy, in implementing it, and in ensuring that it is updated continuously to respond to challenges as they evolve.

          It is also essential that Member States conclude, as soon as possible, a Comprehensive Convention on International terrorism. However, lack of progress in building consensus on a Convention cannot be a reason for delay in agreeing on a strategy.

          By instructing you to adopt and implement a comprehensive counter-terrorism strategy, your Heads of State and Government have given you a momentous challenge, and a historic opportunity.

          By rising to that challenge, you will demonstrate the resolve of the international community, and lay the foundations of a truly global response to this vicious global scourge. I hope my recommendations will help you in that vital mission.

          Thank you very much.


          Just thought this helps to understand the position of the UN instead of name calling. Slow to react--no doubt about it!
          "The range of what we think and do is limited by what we fail to notice.

          Comment


          • #20
            UN has had their head in the sand for years. They state all this BS and have no balls and no substance behind what they say.
            2013 NCAA POD Record

            8-3ATS +3.80 units

            2013 NFL POD Record

            1-2 ATS -4.50 units

            Comment


            • #21
              It seems funny how you don't heard from the Liberal Dems in Washington or Mr. JACKASS (Howard Dean) all day about this plot being stop but you couldn't shut them up after the Conn. Primary the other night.

              Comment


              • #22
                THE world is run by 2 countries lets see if u can name them
                Last edited by hacker197; 08-11-2006, 01:25 AM.
                richer over the line
                spinnerz

                Comment


                • #23
                  Originally posted by hacker197
                  THE world is run by 2 countries lets see if u can name them
                  Hacker- The world is more than the two countries. China has to be considered as the other. But you have a lot of tunnel vision if you only see two teams on the field. You actually have to look at religious ideoligies, terrorist organizations, etc. to get a proper understanding of who the players are among the countries in play. Two countries is what an elementary school kid might say.
                  "The range of what we think and do is limited by what we fail to notice.

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Originally posted by hacker197
                    THE world is run by 2 countries lets see if u can name them
                    What is this a game? People are supposed to guess your opinion.

                    Hacker, if you have something to say, say it. You throw out these meaningless posts with no substance.

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Originally posted by CheechB03
                      What is this a game? People are supposed to guess your opinion.

                      Hacker, if you have something to say, say it. You throw out these meaningless posts with no substance.



                      Gig 'um Frank ....

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Originally posted by Spearit
                        Hacker- The world is more than the two countries. China has to be considered as the other. But you have a lot of tunnel vision if you only see two teams on the field. You actually have to look at religious ideoligies, terrorist organizations, etc. to get a proper understanding of who the players are among the countries in play. Two countries is what an elementary school kid might say.
                        ur kidding me right, I think we all know America's influence thats where I knock Bush for not doing his part still hasn't stopped al Quada after 5 years. Anyone can give the order to bomb someones weak military.
                        Last edited by hacker197; 08-11-2006, 02:24 PM.
                        richer over the line
                        spinnerz

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Originally posted by CheechB03
                          What is this a game? People are supposed to guess your opinion.

                          Hacker, if you have something to say, say it. You throw out these meaningless posts with no substance.
                          easy man don't get too riled up from a post
                          richer over the line
                          spinnerz

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Deal near as Israeli troops mass on border
                            The U.S. and France said Friday they have agreed on the text of a deal to end fighting between Israel and Hezbollah. As Israeli forces massed along its border with Lebanon, Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Mark Regev told AP that Israel was still open to a negotiated solution. CNN understands the deal would create a 400-square-mile zone from which Hezbollah militia would be excluded.
                            richer over the line
                            spinnerz

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