About Me

Name:Darko Trifunovic - Counter Terrorism Strategy
Location: NYC, NY
Biography
Loading...

Create Your Own Blog Find Other Townhall Blogs

Comments

Archives

Blog Search

Blog Roll

 

Dr Darko Trifunovic - EU tightens laws on inciting terror via Internet; German police raid Islamist homes.

EU tightens laws on inciting terror via Internet; German police raid Islamist homes.

Synopsis: In Azerbaijan on 22 Apr border guards killed 2 Iranian smugglers. In France on 23 Apr handed over 2 ETA members to Spanish officials, both suspects in the 2006 Madrid bombing. In Germany on 23 Apr police raided Islamic centers, detaining 9 on terror charges. In Greece on 18 Apr arsonists bombed 2 diplomatic vehicles belonging to Turkey and Bosnia-Herzegovina. On 23 Apr arsonists bombed 3 foreign car dealerships. In Israel on 18 Apr a pair of Qassam rockets exploded on Israeli soil. On 20 Apr the IDF stopped a terror attack at the Kerem Shalom crossing. On 22 Apr Qassam rockets hit a house in Sderot. In Lebanon on 20 Apr a firefight between political factions killed 2 gunmen. On 22 Apr Hezbollah gunmen scattered UNIFIL inspectors in the nation's south after discovering an arms cache. In Macedonia on 22 Apr a bomb exploded outside the former deputy defense chief's house. In Palestine on 18 Apr the IDF killed 1 terrorist in Nablus , while elsewhere the IDF killed 1 militant and arrested 1. On 19 Apr suicide bombers drove 3 car bombs into the Kerem Shalom crossing, killing 13, while the IAF killed 3 militants and injured 2 in an air strike. Also, the IAF killed 2 and wounded 3 members of a Qassam cell. On 20 Apr the IAF destroyed a Qassam cell. On 22 Apr the IDF killed 3 militants near a border crossing. On 24 Apr the IDF arrested 13 Palestinians, killing 1 and injuring 5. In Russia on 18 Apr a police chief was killed. On 22 Apr gunmen attacked a police post in Ingushetia, while a soldier was injured by a roadside bomb in Grozny . On 23 Apr gunmen attacked a FSB helicopter, while a grenade attack injured 1 policeman in Daghestan. Also, 2 FSB officers were critically wounded in Ingushetia by gunmen. In Spain on 18 Apr police arrested 10 ETA members. On 20 Apr a bomb severely damaged a political office in the Basque region. In Turkey on 23 Apr air strikes hit PKK targets. In the UK on 18 Apr courts jailed 6 for terror offences, while on 22 Apr police arrested 2 at Heathrow Airport under anti-terrorism laws.

Analysis/Road Ahead: European Union Justice Ministers agreed to tighten laws concerning incitement to terrorism via the Internet and using the Internet to publish bomb recipes or call for acts of terrorism to be committed. EU’s redefined stance to counter-terror groups usage of the internet which serves as a virtual training camp, is a positive step forward, however the bureaucracy in a number of EU states will take time to enact changes to current laws and while the new law would demand cooperation from Internet providers to identify those inciting terror acts, the process itself and the terrorist’s technological expertise will encumber actual success in halting terror incitement on the Internet. German police conducted raids on Islamists suspected of trying to radicalize Muslims and non-Muslims; these raids indicate Germany ’s recognition of the problem and intensified actions to halt the instigators. Algeria , Gaza , southeastern Turkey , Russia ’s Chechen regions are EUCOM’s highest terrorist threat areas.

Sources: RIA Novosti, Xinhua, B92, DPA, IHT, FOCUS News Agency, Haaretz, Jerusalem Post, AFP, UPI, Washington Post, NYT, Reuters, KUNA, Itar-Tass, AP

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Dr Darko Trifunovic - Chinese Hacktivists Prepare To Defend The Motherland

Chinese Hacktivists Prepare To Defend The Motherland

Excerpt(s): “Fuelled by anti-Western nationalism, China ’s new red army is a band of patriotic hackers [who] have come to the defence of the motherland in response criticism of Beijing ’s handling of recent pro-independence riots by ethnic Tibetans. The hackers are believed to be behind recent attacks on several US websites and a Chinese website run by the French supermarket chain Carrefour. Scott Henderson, a former US Army intelligence analyst who wrote a book about Chinese hackers called The Dark Visitor, has been tracking developments on his blog and says that what’s happened over the past week may be the opening salvo in new cyber war. The hackers, he says, are working independently from the government but with its tacit support. ‘Once they [the hackers] get started, it’s very hard to put the genie back in the bottle,’ he said in a telephone interview. ‘It does seem to be escalating and it’s feeding on itself.’”

Context/Analysis:American news network CNN was struck by a denial-of-service cyber attack last week, which many believe was orchestrated by Chinese hackers angered over the network’s coverage of Olympic protests and Chinese security operations in Tibet . Additionally, U.S. Department of Defense officials have indicated that they think that China was behind a cyber attack against Pentagon computer systems in June 2007.

http://www.smh.com.au/news/security/chinese-hacktivists-prepare-to-defend-the­motherland/2008/04/23/1208743025691.htm
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Dr Darko Trifunovic - As Olympics near, jittery China clamps down on foreigners, concerts

As Olympics near, jittery China clamps down on foreigners, concerts

By Tim Johnson, McClatchy NewspapersThu Apr 24, 3:52 PM ET

BEIJING — Nervous that troublemakers may slip across the border before the Olympic Games, China is making it harder for foreigners to obtain entry visas and halting public gatherings where embarrassing protests over Tibet might take place.

Authorities suspended a May 1-4 rock festival that's the biggest annual outdoor music event in China , saying the event could be dangerous, an organizer said Thursday.

Other commercial events also have been canceled in recent weeks, including a Celine Dion concert in Beijing and a pillow fight aimed at drawing shoppers to a mall.

Chinese authorities are in no mood for such parties. Unrest in Tibetan regions last month marked the biggest wave of ethnic disturbances in nearly two decades, sparking protests worldwide as the Olympic torch made its way around the globe this month.

On Thursday, the torch passed through Canberra, Australia , where police made seven arrests, and then it headed to Nagano, Japan , under heavy security.

Many Chinese watched angrily as protests bedeviled the torch relay earlier this month in England and France , seeing them as an attempt to humiliate China . With government approval, some Chinese have launched protests outside Chinese branches of French retailer Carrefour , voicing often-irate anti-Western sentiments.

Tightened entry rules into China began a week or so ago and are to last through the Aug. 8-24 Summer Games . The new visa requirements have distressed foreign business owners and executives with operations on the mainland.

Chinese consulates abroad commonly granted multiple-entry visas but now are limiting most applicants to single- or double-entry visas, and only if travelers have air tickets and hotel bookings in hand.

"Business people need stability to operate, and the Hong Kong business community has been thrown into great turmoil as a result of the new and largely misunderstood visa policies," said Richard R. Vuylsteke , president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong , in a letter to a Chinese Foreign Ministry official. The letter was posted on the chamber's Web site.

A scholar in Hong Kong said the visa restrictions and the sudden cancellations of public events reveal China's nervousness in the run-up to the Olympic Games.

"The whole idea is, 'Make sure that nothing goes wrong.' This is a paramount consideration, and they are willing to pay the price," said Joseph Cheng , a political scientist at City University of Hong Kong .

The founder and organizer of the Midi Festival, the suspended four-day rock event, said he'd invited 30 bands from the United States , Europe and Australia to perform along with 100 Chinese bands on six different stages at the Beijing festival.

"I think it's good for the Olympics and for China , but the government doesn't think so," said Zhang Fan , the organizer. "They think it's dangerous."

He said officials were particularly unhappy that Bjork, the Icelandic singer, shouted "Tibet! Tibet!" at the end of a concert in Shanghai on March 2 .

Asked the reasons for the Midi cancellation, Zhang said: "First, it's Bjork. Second, it's Tibet, and third, it's the torch. Fourth, it's that a lot of Chinese people are angry."

The Foreign Ministry , meanwhile, declared that authorities would guarantee "the physical safety and legal rights" of foreigners coming to China , and it rejected reports that a throng of protesters had tried to harm an American volunteer teacher in Hunan province.

James Galvin , a 22-year-old Boston College graduate, was taunted outside a Carrefour market in Zhuzhou Sunday night. He later sent an email to an English-language Web site in Shanghai saying that while chanting protesters had surrounded his taxi, they didn't break any windows or harm him.

"I was not in fact attacked by a mob," Galvin told the Shanghaiist.com Web site. He couldn't be reached directly.

Steven Parker , the China field director for WorldTeach, a Cambridge, Mass. -based program that sends volunteers around the world, warned volunteers in a letter Monday to stay away from protests, saying a mob had tried to smash the windows of Galvin's taxi and tip it over, making him feel "extremely unsafe."

A McClatchy story reported Parker's initial version. The Foreign Ministry sent a fax to the Beijing bureau saying his version "misrepresented" what Galvin later clarified had occurred.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Dr Darko Trifunovic - The final Olympics venue is ready

The final Olympics venue is ready

Posted by Tim Johnson

Thu Apr 17, 11:50 PM ET

Birdsnest Journalists were allowed into the just completed “Bird’s Nest” National Stadium, and here are some photos to show what it looks like.

ADVERTISEMENT

This is the landmark venue for the Summer Games, a $450 million beauty. The opening and closing ceremonies will occur here, and such events as the marathon will terminate here.

Img_4715 It is a striking facility, especially from a distance. The interlaced beams look randomly but stably intertwined. Once inside, the color red predominates. It is not a covered stadium. But if one looks overhead, multiple cables crisscross the open-air roof. Clearly, the designers plan for some acrobatic displays.

In the center of the playing field, there are four huge platforms on hydraulic lifts, just as in a large theater. So the opening ceremony will clearly include scenes of performers rising from underground into the air.

On another note, the Foreign Correspondents Club of Beijing had a session yesterday with Stefano Baldini, the reigning Olympic gold medalist marathoner from the 2004 Athens Games. Baldini had some interesting things to say. For one, he thinks the smog will be less of a factor in the upcoming Games then heat and humidity, at least for his event.

“The hotter it is and the more humid it is, the more the gap shrinks with the strongest runners,” he said, meaning that the race may be wide open.

Air quality has not been good this week, and Baldini remarked on it.

“I haven’t seen such a polluted sky anywhere else,” he said. “I think it’s very psychological because you see it. You sense it.”

But he said air quality is likely to get better by summer time.

He also snorted at the idea of wearing a mask when coming to Beijing, breaking into English from his native Italian. Some teams, including the U.S. squad, will be providing masks to athletes.

“No mask,” he said. “I don’t see any advantage in wearing a mask, neither for everyday use nor for training.”

Img_4704_2

Img_4712

Img_4723

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Dr Darko Trifunovic - Interpol chief warns of Olympic terror threat

 

Interpol chief warns of Olympic terror threat

Interpol warned on Friday that China must be prepared for a possible Al-Qaeda attack on the Beijing Olympics, as well as potentially violent disruption from pro-Tibet protestors.

"We must be prepared for the possibility that Al-Qaeda or some other terrorist group will attempt to launch a deadly terrorist attack at these Olympics," Interpol chief Ronald Noble told an international conference on security for the Games in Beijing, according to a copy of his speech.

"The threat is compounded by the very nature of the 2008 Summer Olympics," the head of the international police organisation, based in the French city of Lyon, told the gathering.

"China will open its doors to hundreds of thousands of foreign visitors and journalists and an audience of billions watching on television. This could provide easy cover for terrorists and ensure any attack during the Olympics would have an immediate global impact."

"There is no doubt that the biggest threat facing the Beijing Olympics is terrorism," China's Minister of Public Security Meng Jianzhu said, according to a translation of his speech at the conference.

"I hope that all parties will adopt practical and effective measures, strengthen border controls...to jointly prevent and suppress international terrorist activities targeting the Beijing Olympic Games," he said.

Noble told delegates the security "situation has clearly changed" since September 2007, when Interpol reported it had no specific information from its 186 member countries on direct terrorist threats to the Beijing Olympics.

He cited a string of Chinese reports of failed plots to disrupt the Games which the authorities claimed were linked to separatist groups.

Chinese police announced this month they had cracked two terrorist gangs, including one planning to kidnap Olympic athletes, journalists and tourists, in northwest China's Xinjiang region, which has a strong Muslim population of ethnic Uighurs.

In January, China announced the dismantling of an Islamist terror cell in Xinjiang, and also claimed to have foiled an attempt by a Uighur woman to blow up a Chinese airliner on March 7.

Rights groups and exiled Uighurs regularly accuse Beijing of inflating a terror threat in Xinjiang to tighten its control over the restive and oil-rich region, and one exiled leader has accused China of fabricating plots.

The Interpol chief also pointed to the arrest in Indonesia in December of several suspected Al-Qaeda members believed to have been plotting an attack during the Games, and who were reportedly in possession of a map of Beijing and data on various sports venues.

Noble also said the wave of protests over China's crackdown in Tibet during the global Olympic torch relay had "introduced significant additional complications to the normal security considerations" for the Games.

"In light of recent events, all countries whose athletes will participate and whose citizens will attend the Beijing Olympics must be prepared for the possibility that the groups and individuals responsible for the violence during the global torch relay could carry out their protests at the actual Games."

He said that Interpol had been working with Beijing to assess the threat of a terrorist attack at the Games, with an Interpol team to travel to China ahead of the Games to train Chinese officers in crisis operations.

The Interpol chief said his organisation was working with China to help it detect lost and stolen travel documents at Beijing airport and other major border entry points.

"This is absolutely crucial if we want to prevent terrorists or dangerous criminals from entering China," he said.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Dr Darko Trifunovic - China Claims It Smashed Muslim Plot To Disrupt Olympics

China Claims It Smashed Muslim Plot To Disrupt Olympics

Source: McClatchy Newspapers, 10 April

The International Olympics chief said Thursday that the Summer Games scheduled for August in China are in "crisis" amid protests following the Olympic torch, and the sense of emergency surrounding the games grew Thursday when China declared that it had smashed a Muslim terrorist ring that was plotting to kidnap Olympic athletes.  The Ministry of Public Security said it broke up a terror ring of 35 members of the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM) in this predominantly Muslim city in far west China .

It said the group planned a variety of action to disrupt the Aug. 8-24 games, including setting off bombs in Beijing and Shanghai .  The arrests occurred March 26 to April 6 , Public Security Ministry spokesman Wu Heping said, adding that police also seized 21 pounds of explosives, eight detonators and two explosive devices.  "The violent terrorist group plotted to kidnap foreign journalists, tourists and athletes during the Beijing Olympics and, by creating an international impact, achieve the goal of wrecking the Beijing Olympics," Wu told a news conference in Beijing .  "We are facing a real threat from terrorism," Wu said, declining to take questions.

            At the same time, International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge acknowledged that protests of the Olympic torch during the past week have been tough on the Olympic movement.  "It is a crisis, no doubt about it," Rogge told other Olympics representatives meeting in Beijing as he urged them to reassure athletes that the games "will be very well-organized."  The Olympic torch moved from San Francisco to Buenos Aires , Argentina , where some 1,200 police were on hand to stop the kind of disruptions that marred the relay earlier in the week in London and Paris amid protests over China 's rights record.  A sense of crisis surrounding the Beijing Olympics intensified on other fronts. In Brussels , Belgium , the European Parliament voted 580-24 to urge European Union leaders to consider a mass boycott of the Olympics opening ceremony unless China enters direct negotiations with the Dalai Lama.  The Dalai Lama, the exiled spiritual leader of Tibetans, said he supports the Beijing Olympics and opposes violence around the torch relay, but he warned China that pro-Tibetan activists are entitled to speak out.

            "Nobody has the right to say 'shut up,' " the Dalai Lama said in Japan , where he was on a stopover on the way to a speaking tour in the United States .

            Both the United States and the United Nations have designated the East Turkestan Islamic Movement a terrorist organization. But some experts believe that the group has dwindled markedly since the 1990s, when it was held responsible for a series of bombings, and that China may be inflating a terrorism threat to increase repression in this oil and mineral-rich area.  Wu said authorities broke up another Muslim ring in January whose leaders were "sent from abroad" to carry out attacks with poisoned food and explosives on "hotels, government buildings, military bases and other establishments."

            Last month, officials said they thwarted an attempt by two Uighurs carrying Pakistani passports to set a fire aboard a Chinese airliner. Some counterterrorism experts doubted the claim and called on China to be more forthcoming with information.  Departing from past reticence to criticize the Olympic host nation, Rogge also broached the matter of China 's expressed commitment to improve human rights in the country before it won the right in 2001 to host the 2008 games, noting that China didn't sign a legal agreement but has a moral commitment.  "The representatives of the bid have said, and I quote freely because I do not know it by heart, that awarding the games to China would advance the social agenda of China , including human rights," Rogge said. "We definitely ask China to respect this moral engagement."   Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu later urged the International Olympic Committee not to introduce "any irrelevant political factors" before the games begin.

 

Is There A Terror Threat Hanging Over Beijing?

Source: Le Figaro, in French, 10 Apr 08 – Translated by Cubic Translation Services
Chinese authorities report dismantled a terror group in Xinjiang set to kidnap athletes and tourists.

            Is it a Chinese attempt to pull Western media attention away from human rights or is it a worrisome truth?  Chinese authorities confirmed on 10 April that they had dismantled two terror groups in the autonomous Muslim region of Xinjiang, in the country's northwest.  The first network was reportedly composed on 35 people and was planning to kidnap athletes, journalists and foreigners who had come for the Olympic Games.  Their goal was to 'incite international outcry and sabotage the Games,' Beijing says.  During the raids carried out in Xinjiang's capital, Urumqi , on 26 March and 06 April, arms, explosives and 'propaganda discussing holy war' were found, according to a spokesman for the police.  According to investigators, the group was planning suicide attacks in Urumqi and other Chinese cities.  Authorities also said that a second network was doing similar planning.  The second group had come from abroad at the beckoning of the Islamist Movement of Eastern Turkistan and planned to carry out operations in Beijing and Shanghai using explosives, poisoned meat and toxic gas.  The 10 members of this second group were charged with casing hotels, official buildings and military installations in the two cities.  The leader of the network and his accomplices, according to police, admitted that China 'is facing a real terror threat.'

            This fear is far from finding unanimity among the international community.  The Islamist terror threat that China is pointing to seems exaggerated, according to analysts and human rights activists who see this revelation as a way for Beijing to advertise its unceasing control during the Games.  The Islamic Movement of Eastern Turkistan has ties to al-Qaeda and has regularly been reported as a threat by Beijing .  Reports say it has about a thousand fighters, but it also suffered heavy casualties in the Afghan conflict after 11 September 2001.  Security experts highlight that China has offered few details on the networks it regularly announces having dismantled, and this lack of detail is detrimental to effective international counter-terror efforts.  Access to Xinjiang is strictly controlled, and independent information sources do not exist.  Nearly 10 million Muslims - mainly Turkic speaking Uighers - live in the autonomous region, and some groups continue to fight for an independent ' Eastern Turkistan ,' which had a de facto existence between 1930 and 1949.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Dr Darko Trifunovic - Olympics Games as political propaganda

Olympics issue emerges as flashpoint

Carrie Budoff BrownSat Apr 12, 6:39 AM ET

In an election year debate crowded with weighty foreign policy issues and marked by a sharp focus on the diplomatic approaches that Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton would bring to the White House, an unusual flashpoint is beginning to emerge: the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.

What began as something of a peripheral campaign issue has quickly turned into something different, with Obama and Clinton seizing on the issue of boycotting the opening Olympic ceremonies as prima facie evidence of the other’s central flaws.

Clinton was first off the mark to call for a boycott Monday, just days after Obama passed up the opportunity by voicing a reluctance to politicize the games. By Wednesday, Obama had edged closer to Clinton’s position, saying a boycott should be considered, but not until closer to the August opening of the Olympics.

To the Obama campaign, Clinton’s position smacks of something other than a thoughtful approach to human rights issues.

“That was the triumph of politics over sound diplomacy,” said a top Obama foreign policy adviser, Susan Rice, in an interview Friday. “The issue – and this is what Sen. Clinton completely missed in her approach – is how do we maximize leverage on the Chinese to achieve the outcomes we want on Tibet, on Darfur and other human rights concerns.

“If President Bush were to say today that he is not going to the opening ceremonies – done, final – then we have squandered every ounce of leverage we possibly have to work with the Chinese to get them to do what we need them to do,” she said.

A Clinton spokesman dismissed the criticism as “curious.”

“As is too often the case, they have failed to take a position and instead chosen words that try to satisfy everyone, but actually do very little,” Clinton spokesman Jay Carson said. “Some may disagree with it, but Sen. Clinton has taken a clear stand, while his position is essentially the Olympic equivalent of the ‘present’ vote.”

For an issue newly-injected into the Democratic primary, the individual campaign responses have a strikingly familiar feel to them: Clinton colored as ever eager to find political advantage, Obama framed as a talker who dodges tough issues.

Indeed, both camps see much in the current Olympic debate that underscores their long-running criticisms of the opposition.

While Clinton casts China's failure to deal peacefully with Tibet or pressure Sudan to end genocide in Darfur as “opportunities for presidential leadership,” it did not go unnoticed that her position might have a political component to it, surfacing as it did during the midst of her well-publicized campaign shakeup, on the heels of the widely-televised Paris torch relay chaos.

As for Obama, his initial reaction when asked about the controversy was circumspect even by campaign trail standards.

“I'm of two minds about this,” Obama initially told CBS News, when asked for his reaction to the decision by a few world leaders, but not Bush, to stay away from the opening ceremonies. “On the one hand, I think that what's happened in Tibet, China's support of the Sudanese government in Darfur, is a real problem. I'm hesitant to make the Olympics a site of political protest, because I think it's partly about bringing the world together.'”

And as Obama declined several opportunities to embrace a boycott, his refusal to take a hard line position was second-guessed not just on its foreign policy merits, but for what looked to some critics as a parochial-minded response.

Blogs pointed out that Chicago, his home base, is competing for the 2016 Summer Games and that one of his closest friends and advisors, Valerie Jarrett, is assisting in the city’s bid effort.

By Wednesday night, Obama offered his strongest statement to date, but it was still equivocal.

“If the Chinese do not take steps to help stop the genocide in Darfur and to respect the dignity, security, and human rights of the Tibetan people, then the President should boycott the opening ceremonies,” he said in a statement. A boycott of the opening ceremony “should be firmly on the table, but this decision should be made closer to the Games.”

Rice said Obama reached a “different endpoint” than Clinton.

“Obama is saying, ‘Let’s wait and use it as leverage,’” Rice said. “Sen. Clinton’s failing is to make a politically inspired leap that is politically unsound.”

Sen. John McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee, also said this week he would go only if China improved its human rights rhetoric.

It shouldn’t be surprising to see the campaigns battle over the Olympic boycott issue, several political experts said, because the issues involved may speak to working-class voters with long-held antipathy toward China on trade and economic issues.

“Blue collar workers and union members, in particular, are focusing on China as the bad guy,” said Larry Sabato, a political science professor at the University of Virginia. “It is NAFTA. It is China. And it is easy. It is a political winner, especially in the Democratic primaries. It may be a winner in the fall."

Public opinion, at least at this point, is split. A Rasmussen Reports survey released Thursday found 31 percent of voters support Bush boycotting the opening ceremonies, 45 percent opposed and 25 percent undecided.

The escalating debate on the Beijing Olympics follows a tendency of American politicians, starting with the Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989, to “gain political capital by trashing China,” said Richard Baum, a political science professor and former director of the University of California-Los Angeles Center for Chinese Studies.

“It is tapping into an emotional undercurrent,” Baum said. “Most Americans still have that photo in their minds of the lone civilian holding off the column of tanks and I think this is intended to jar those images” of Tiananmen Square.

“It is an understandable attempt to mobilize votes for the taking,” he said of the campaign rhetoric, “but it has diplomatic ramifications.”

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Dr Darko Trifunovic - Bush unlikely to boycott Olympics

Bush unlikely to boycott Olympics

By FOSTER KLUG, Associated Press Writer2 hours, 18 minutes ago

For President Bush, it would seem a small gesture to make a big point: Staying away from the opening ceremonies of the Beijing Summer Olympics would send a clear signal of U.S. anger over China's crackdown against anti-Beijing Tibetan protesters.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and German Chancellor Angela Merkel will not attend the opening ceremonies. John McCain, the Republican senator Bush has endorsed as his successor, says he would go only if China improved its rights record. And the two Democratic presidential candidates, Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton, are urging Bush to miss the ceremonies.

Yet Bush is giving no indication he will skip the event. Too much may be at stake for him to do so.

Any Olympic protest by the United States would deeply offend a proud Beijing leadership that hopes the games will show China's emergence as a new world power. It also would run the risk of hindering a host of international efforts the Bush administration needs China's help to solve, including efforts to confront Myanmar's military junta and North Korean and apparently Iranian nuclear programs. China holds a veto on the U.N. Security Council, and the U.S. and Chinese economies, as well as many of the countries' political efforts around the world, are increasingly intertwined.

Pressed repeatedly by reporters this week, the White House said Bush is attending the Olympics but would not announce his specific schedule so far ahead of the games, which begin Aug. 8. The administration did not rule out the possibility of Bush missing the opening ceremonies.

On Friday, Bush repeated his position that the Olympics are for sports, not politics. He told ABC News that his decision to attend the games is not affected by pleas from activists who want world leaders to skip the opening ceremony to protest violence in Tibet. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice says the United States will "press the Chinese on human rights issues before, during and after these upcoming Olympic Games."

Bush maintains his presence at the games will allow him to raise human rights problems directly with Chinese President Hu Jintao while watching the best athletes in the world compete.

That position could change if Beijing were to stage a crackdown reminiscent of the one against pro-democracy protesters at Tiananmen Square in 1989.

But Michael Green, Bush's former Asia adviser, says the president probably will attend the opening ceremonies.

"The problem with a boycott is you end up taking 1.3 billion Chinese — who have different views of democracy, of the U.S., of human rights, but all want the Olympics to be successful — and you turn them all against the U.S.," said Green, an analyst with the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank. "It's a crude and blunt instrument to just boycott."

Bush, he added, is "stubborn when he thinks he's got the right decision."

Green said he thinks the administration is using decisions by world leaders to skip the opening ceremonies to push Beijing to work with the Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader who Beijing accuses of pushing for independence from China.

On Friday, Rice again urged China to talk with the Dalai Lama. "China would really do itself a great service, and not to mention the people of Tibet, if it were willing to have a more open attitude toward responsible Tibetan cultural and religious authorities," she said.

Bush has been outspoken in his support of the Dalai Lama and presented the monk with a Congressional Gold Medal last year over strong Chinese protests.

But U.S. lawmakers are urging Bush to take a stand on Tibet at the Olympics.

Clinton and two other Democratic senators sent Bush a letter this week saying the crackdown in Tibet "should be unacceptable to anyone who believes in basic human freedoms."

Bush's attendance of the opening ceremonies, they wrote, "would send the implicit message to the world that the United State condones the intolerance that has been demonstrated by these actions of the Chinese government."

China is working hard to contain violence in Tibet ahead of the games. It has sent thousands of police and army troops to the region to maintain an edgy peace, hunt down protest leaders and cordon off Buddhist monasteries whose monks led protests that began peacefully on March 10 before turning violent four days later.

Victor Cha, director of Asian studies at Georgetown University and another former White House adviser, said Bush is a "sports purist" who sees "the games as sport only, not politics."

"He will go and will not call for a boycott," Cha said in an e-mail.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Dr Darko Trifunovic - Bosnian White Al Qaeda

l

Bosnia and Al Qaeda
Consequences

 

The gunman, Sulejman Talovic, was an eighteen-year-old Bosniak immigrant.
The Trolley Square shooting was a shooting rampage that occurred on February 12, 2007, at Trolley Square Mall in Salt Lake City, Utah. The shooting resulted in the deaths of five bystanders and the shooter himself, as well as the wounding of at least four others. The killer's massacre was fatally halted by five police officers, including one off-duty officer who had been at a restaurant with his wife prior to the shooting.

And KSL-Radio reported Friday that Talovic violated school rules when he looked up AK-47s on the Internet in November 2004, after which he dropped out of school and went to work to help support his family.

 
Amir Omerovic, who was convicted of sending a jihadist note to then-Governor John Rowland of Connecticut

 
Sead Jakup, Racist young Muslim (22) from Bosnia tries to burn down synagogue in Brooklyn, New York  http://www.factsofisrael.com/blog/archives/000584.html

 Bosnia jails 4 in plot to blow up European landmark

Mirsad Bektasevic, 19, stands in the Bosnian State Court in Sarajevo, where he was sentenced to 15 years in jail for planning a terrorist attack against an unidentified target in Europe.

Mirsad Bektasevic

 

Mirsad Bektasevic, 19, stands in the Bosnian State Court in Sarajevo, where he was sentenced to 15 years in jail for planning a terrorist attack against an unidentified target in Europe.

 

Mirsad Bektaševic (born July 30, 1987), alias Maximus, is a Swedish citizen of Bosnian descent who in 2005 was arrested in Sarajevo charged with planning a terrorist attack against an unnamed target. Bektaševic was convicted in 2007 alongside three other men and sentenced to 15 years and 4 months of imprisonment. Bektaševic frequently attended the Bellevue Mosque in central Gothenburg. Bektaševic allegedly was an Internet recruiter, under the alias Maximus, for young Muslims to join the insurgency in Iraq. According to the British newspaper The Times, citing police and intelligence sources, Bektaševic had visited the former leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, and run one of his web sites. Bektaševic also went by the alias Abu Imaad As-Sandzaki on various internet forums.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Dr Darko Trifunovic - Olympic Games Security 2008 - Security Strategy

hina Reveals Security Strategy For 2008 Olympic Games

The Security Industry Association (SIA) has released its China Olympic Security Update, a comprehensive analysis of China's investment in security products and services for the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing. Created in collaboration with SINOTRUST, SIA's Olympic Update examines the myriad security challenges and the technologies being deployed to safeguard both Beijing and the many Olympic venues

"This report underscores that the Olympic Games not only showcase world-class athletes, they showcase world-class security technologies and services from our industry," says Richard Chace, SIA executive director and CEO. "People across the globe will be wondering how one of the world's premier events will deal with security threats and issues. SIA's China Olympic Security Update goes a long way toward answering those questions."

The Olympic Update is a companion piece to SIA's China Security Market Report, the definitive analysis of China's electronic security market. That report provides an in-depth analysis of the social and economic factors driving demand; the size and growth of the Chinese security industry, including a forecast through 2010; and the size and growth of 11 vertical markets. In December 2007, SIA will release an additional update on the 2010 World Expo in Shanghai.

Olympic Update highlights include:

* Total investment for the Beijing Olympic Games is $36.3 billion. Investors include the central government, local governments of host cities, Beijing Organizing Committee for the Games of the 29th Olympiad and social groups.

* Based on the security investment for the Athens and Sydney Olympic Games, Beijing expects to invest $300 million for security of the Olympic venues. In terms of purchasing power parity, it is equivalent to $720 million.

* State of the art RFID technology, used in many of the SP systems for the Games, will be integrated with building intelligence systems for seamless interoperability. Signals from security devices, such as electronic ticketing systems, will be transmitted to monitoring centers where ticket-holders' whereabouts are tracked. Meanwhile, extensive video monitoring systems will be relied upon heavily to capture and record any breach in security.

* According to data from the Beijing Municipal Public Security Bureau, the Olympic Security Protection investment totals $300-400 million, covering the cost of personnel protection, physical protection and technical protection.

* The five major security systems are the video monitoring system, the burglar-alarm system, the access control system, the electronic ticketing system and the security detection system, totaling an investment of about $115 million.

* Investment in video monitoring systems is $28.5 million. The video monitoring systems ranked first, accounting for 33 percent of the total. The reason for this is that a large number of spy/CCTV cameras are installed in and around the venues.

* Olympic sponsors that will provide security protection products include GE Security, Honeywell, Panasonic, Pelco and Siemens.

* Between 2001 and 2008, the security investment in the Grand Beijing Safeguard Sphere is estimated at $6.5 billion, predominantly for construction of the Beijing video monitoring system. Chief investors are social forces and organizations, such as financial organizations, universities, large-scale shopping malls, hotels, internal enterprises and residential communities.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Dr Darko Trifunovic - Olympic Games Security 2008 San Francisco

San Francisco mayor wants successful Beijing Olympic Games
San Francisco Mayor Garvin Newsom said he expected the Beijing Olympics to be "a very successful event that can be examples for the world".

"I am very confident that the Beijing Olympics will be a very successful event that can be examples for the world," the mayor said in an interview with Xinhua days before the Olympic Torch Relay is held in San Francisco, the only stop in North America.

About 80 torch bearers from across North America will carry the Beijing Olympic torch through San Francisco streets in a 6-mile route along the city's bay waterfront on April 9. The city is the sixth leg of torch's around-the-world tour called "Journey of Harmony". The tour covers a total length of 85,000 miles.

With iconic landmarks like the Golden Gate Bridge, the Fishermen's Wharf, the Transamerican Building and the famous Victorian houses, San Francisco is an ideal backdrop as the world looks on to the extraordinary event, according to the mayor.

The mayor also congratulated the Chinese people on a successful launch of Beijing Olympic torch relay on March 31, 2008.

"San Francisco has always been proud of our strong cultural ties to China and Beijing," the mayor said.

He said 39 percent of San Francisco's residents were born in another country with 28 percent of these foreign born residents coming from China and the Chinese community in San Francisco became the largest and most vibrant in America.

Olympic flame arrives in San Francisco for its sixth stop


www.chinaview.cn 2008-04-09 00:04:11   Print

Special report:   2008 Olympic Games

 

Jiang Xiaoyu (C), the vice president of the Beijing Organizing Committee of Olympic Games (BOCOG), and Zhou Wenzhong (L), Chinese Ambassador to the United States, pose for photos together with the lantern which holds the Olympic flame in San Francisco, the United States, April 8, 2008. San Francisco is the sixth stop of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games torch relay outside the Chinese mainland.

Jiang Xiaoyu (C), the vice president of the Beijing Organizing Committee of Olympic Games (BOCOG), and Zhou Wenzhong (L), Chinese Ambassador to the United States, pose for photos together with the lantern which holds the Olympic flame in San Francisco, the United States, April 8, 2008. San Francisco is the sixth stop of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games torch relay outside the Chinese mainland. (Xinhua Photo)
Photo Gallery>>>

    SAN FRANCISCO, April 8 (Xinhua) -- The Olympic flame landed at San Francisco airport at 3:40 am in the morning for its sixth stopover of global journey on Tuesday.

    The sacred flame just wrapped up its relay in Paris and set up for carrying through San Francisco, which has witnessed the coming of Olympic flame for four times before, namely the 1984 Los Angeles Summer Games, the 1996 Atlanta Summer Games, 1960 Winter Squaw Valley and 2002 Salt Lake City Winter Games

    The route in San Francisco is set to pass AT&T Stadium, the home court for San Francisco baseball team of Giants, Bay Bridge, Ferry Building, Golden Gate Bridge, Palace of Fine Arts, China Town, Lombard Street and Civic center, Ciot Tower, Fishermen's Wharf, according to the released itinerary.

    High-profiled torchbearers are Lang Ping, the U.S. women's volleyball team coach, who captained Chinese team to a couple of world champions, former San Francisco mayor Willie Brown and a retired firefighter Rick Doran, who is part of the crew going through the September 11 terrorist attacks.


Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Dr Darko Trifunovic - Olympic Games Security 2008 San Francisco

San Francisco mayor wants successful Beijing Olympic Games
San Francisco Mayor Garvin Newsom said he expected the Beijing Olympics to be "a very successful event that can be examples for the world".

"I am very confident that the Beijing Olympics will be a very successful event that can be examples for the world," the mayor said in an interview with Xinhua days before the Olympic Torch Relay is held in San Francisco, the only stop in North America.

About 80 torch bearers from across North America will carry the Beijing Olympic torch through San Francisco streets in a 6-mile route along the city's bay waterfront on April 9. The city is the sixth leg of torch's around-the-world tour called "Journey of Harmony". The tour covers a total length of 85,000 miles.

With iconic landmarks like the Golden Gate Bridge, the Fishermen's Wharf, the Transamerican Building and the famous Victorian houses, San Francisco is an ideal backdrop as the world looks on to the extraordinary event, according to the mayor.

The mayor also congratulated the Chinese people on a successful launch of Beijing Olympic torch relay on March 31, 2008.

"San Francisco has always been proud of our strong cultural ties to China and Beijing," the mayor said.

He said 39 percent of San Francisco's residents were born in another country with 28 percent of these foreign born residents coming from China and the Chinese community in San Francisco became the largest and most vibrant in America.

Olympic flame arrives in San Francisco for its sixth stop


www.chinaview.cn 2008-04-09 00:04:11   Print

Special report:   2008 Olympic Games

 

Jiang Xiaoyu (C), the vice president of the Beijing Organizing Committee of Olympic Games (BOCOG), and Zhou Wenzhong (L), Chinese Ambassador to the United States, pose for photos together with the lantern which holds the Olympic flame in San Francisco, the United States, April 8, 2008. San Francisco is the sixth stop of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games torch relay outside the Chinese mainland.

Jiang Xiaoyu (C), the vice president of the Beijing Organizing Committee of Olympic Games (BOCOG), and Zhou Wenzhong (L), Chinese Ambassador to the United States, pose for photos together with the lantern which holds the Olympic flame in San Francisco, the United States, April 8, 2008. San Francisco is the sixth stop of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games torch relay outside the Chinese mainland. (Xinhua Photo)
Photo Gallery>>>

    SAN FRANCISCO, April 8 (Xinhua) -- The Olympic flame landed at San Francisco airport at 3:40 am in the morning for its sixth stopover of global journey on Tuesday.

    The sacred flame just wrapped up its relay in Paris and set up for carrying through San Francisco, which has witnessed the coming of Olympic flame for four times before, namely the 1984 Los Angeles Summer Games, the 1996 Atlanta Summer Games, 1960 Winter Squaw Valley and 2002 Salt Lake City Winter Games

    The route in San Francisco is set to pass AT&T Stadium, the home court for San Francisco baseball team of Giants, Bay Bridge, Ferry Building, Golden Gate Bridge, Palace of Fine Arts, China Town, Lombard Street and Civic center, Ciot Tower, Fishermen's Wharf, according to the released itinerary.

    High-profiled torchbearers are Lang Ping, the U.S. women's volleyball team coach, who captained Chinese team to a couple of world champions, former San Francisco mayor Willie Brown and a retired firefighter Rick Doran, who is part of the crew going through the September 11 terrorist attacks.


Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Dr Darko Trifunovic - Olympic Games Security 2008 -Political manipulation with OG

China condemns torch relay disruption
Beijing Olympic organizers have condemned the torch disruptions. BOCOC Director of Media and communications Wang Hui, said the actions of separatists were a serious violation of the Olympic spirit, as the Olympic flame belongs to the world.

Wang Hui said, "We strongly condemn the disgusting behaviour of a handful of Tibetan separatists who have tried to sabotage the Olympic torch relay. The Olympic flame belongs to people of the whole world. The public will not look favourably at a few people who are trying to challenge the Olympic spirit. These acts will surely arouse the resentment of the peace-loving people, and are bound to fail."

Beijing Olympic official strongly condemns disruption of torch relay in Paris
A Beijing Olympic official has strongly condemned the disruption of the Olympic torch relay in Paris by a very small number of "Tibet independence" secessionists and a handful of so-called human rights-minded NGO activists.

A spokesman of the Beijing Olympics Organizing Committee said on Monday that the serious incident clearly showed that "Tibet independence" secessionists have been disrupting and sabotaging the Beijing Olympic Games in a planned, premeditate and organized way.

What the separatists have been doing are far from "peaceful" demonstrations, but attempts to foil the smooth relay of the Beijing Olympic torch through violent means, and has thus blasphemed the Olympic spirit, he said.

France is the hometown of Pierre De Coubertin, founder of the modern Olympic Games, said the spokesman. The large number of Paris residents turning out to welcome the Olympic sacred flame showed that the flame belongs to the people of the whole world.

The "Tibet independence" separatists' malicious and open challenge of the Olympic spirit and the Olympic Charter has proved unpopular and is bound to fail, he said.

The Beijing Olympic Games is not only a grand event for the Chinese people, but also for people all over the world. It bears great significance for glorifying the Olympic spirit, spreading the Olympic culture and promoting the development of the Olympic Games, said the official, adding that the Beijing Olympic torch relay will surely win wide support from all peace-loving people across the world, and will not be thwarted by any force.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Dr Darko Trifunovic - Olympic Games Security 2008 20, 000 journalists will cover Olympics 2008

20,000 journalists will cover Beijing Olympics
There will be 20,000 journalists covering reports on the Beijing Olympics, according to a statement by Gao Dianmin, a member of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Press Commission and vice president of the China Sports Press Association (CSPA), on April 7.

Among the journalists, half of them will be TV reporters and assistants; and there will be approximately 300 journalists from the Chinese mainland, Gao added.

In the first modern Olympic Games in 1896, Pierre De Coubertin, the founder of the International Olympic Committee and Modern Olympics hired 12 reporters with his own money to cover the event, explained Gao.

Before the