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Tuesday, 4 November 2003
. .< 11:59:04 PM >
Draft boards revive memories of Vietnam
World: Pentagon begins recruiting for local draft boards, dredging up painful memories of Vietnam era conscription. [Guardian Unlimited] 'Thirty years have passed since the draft boards last exerted their hold on America, deciding which soldiers would be sent to Vietnam. After Congress ended the draft in 1973, they have become largely dormant.
However, recruitment for the boards suggests that in some parts of the Pentagon all options are being explored in response to concerns that the US military has been stretched too thin in its occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq.'
. .< 12:01:09 PM >
Cheney's hawks 'hijacking policy' - www.smh.com.au
[Daypop Top 40] 'A former Pentagon officer turned whistleblower says a group of hawks in the Bush Administration, including the Vice-President, Dick Cheney, is running a shadow foreign policy, contravening Washington's official line.
"What these people are doing now makes Iran-Contra [a Reagan administration national security scandal] look like amateur hour. . . it's worse than Iran-Contra, worse than what happened in Vietnam," said Karen Kwiatkowski, a former air force lieutenant-colonel.'
. .< 11:59:33 AM >
"Bush says God chose him to lead his nation"
[Daypop Top 40] 'The book, which depicts a President who prays each day and believes he is on a direct mission from God, will give ammunition to critics who claim Bush's administration is heavily influenced by extremist Christians.' Extremists of any flavour are dangerous.
. .< 11:48:26 AM >
"Windfalls of War - The Center for...
"Windfalls of War - The Center for Public Integrity" [Daypop Top 40] 'More than 70 American companies and individuals have won up to $8 billion in contracts for work in postwar Iraq and Afghanistan over the last two years, according to a new study by the Center for Public Integrity. Those companies donated more money to the presidential campaigns of George W. Bush—a little over $500,000—than to any other politician over the last dozen years, the Center found.'
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