AMERICA IN CRISIS The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 12, 2001 Rpisar total Cre Republicans call for total retaliation, justice -7 The Washington Post WASHINGTON - Branding the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon yesterday as acts of war, leading Republicans clled on the Bush administration to target foreign govern- ments that lend rhetorical and tangible aid to ter- rorist organizations. "We can find out who these people are and then we need to be relentless," said former Presi- dent Ronald Reagan's secretary of state George Shultz. "You can't mount a systematic attack like this unless you have a place to plan and train. That means a geographic space. So states that harbor terrorists, look out." Secretary of State Colin Powell, who cut short a visit to South America yesterday, said in Lima, Peru, "You can be sure that America will deal with this tragedy in a way that brings those responsible to justice." "I believe this will now be the catalyst that causes a significant change in our policy toward terrorism and that change should be to hold responsible governments that support terrorism," said Richard Perle, a Reagan Pentagon official and currently chairman of the Defense Policy Board that advises Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. "It's been our policy to hold individ- ual terrorists accountable rather than the govern- ments who support them and that policy has failed." But fighting this sort of war will be infinitely more complicated and more lonely than other wars fought by the United States, with elusive targets, ambiguous measures of success and potential civilian casualties abroad as well as at home. Unlike the Pearl Harbor attack, the enemy is hard to identify and locate. Even bringing a government terrorism sponsor to its knees- and there are many alleged govern- ment sponsors to choose from - might not end the threat. "You can be sure that America will deal with this tragedy in a way that brings those responsible to justice." - Colin Powell U.S. Secretary of State "In effect, the country's at war, but we don't have the coordinates of the enemy - yet," said Leon Fuerth, who was national security adviser to former Vice President Al Gore. If the culprits for the attack turn out to be linked to Osama bin Laden, the Saudi business- man accused of plotting terrorism against the United States from bases in Afghanistan, the war could pit the United States against much of the Arab world, put moderate Arab allies like Egypt and Jordan in tenuous positions, place Israel at greater risk and imperil vital oil supplies. Palestinians celebrate terronst devastation LONDON (AP) - Governments around the world offered condolences to an America that looked more vulnerable than ever after yesterday's terror attacks, but thousands of Palestinians celebrated in the West Bank and in Lebanese refugee camps. People on every continent watched in horror as astonishing images of terror in the United States filled their television screens. But in the West Bank town of Nablus, Palestinians cheered and distributed candy to passers-by, and Iraqi television played a patriotic song that began "Down with America!" as it showed the World Trade Center towers collapsing. Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat offered his sympa- thy to Americans and said he was horrified by the dev- astating attacks, which also hit the Pentagon,. Leaders around the world - including most in the Middle East - offered messages of support. Afghanistan's Taliban rulers condemned the attacks and rejected suggestions that suspected terrorist mas- termind Osama bin Laden, who has been given asy- lum in Afghanistan, could be behind them. "It is premature to level allegations against a person who is not in a position to carry out such attacks," said Abdul Salam Zaeef, the Taliban ambassador in Pak- AP PHOTO Palestinians in the West Bank celebrate in the streets after learning of the terrorism in the U.S. yesterday. AP PHOTO A state police canine unit patrols Bradley International Airport in Windsor Locks, Conn., yesterday after all planes in the U.S. were grounded. Mla deployed 0, P ovatrol the skes over Washington istan. "It was a well-organized plan and Osama has no such facilities." President Gen. Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan, one of three countries that recognize the Taliban's gov- ernment, condemned the attacks and called for coop- eration to combat the "modern-day evil" of terrorism. Key indexes sank on world stock markets and many European and Asian airlines canceled flights to the United States and recalled planes already in the air. Britain and Belgium banned commercial flights over their capitals, and Britain warned its citizens trav- eling in the United States to beware of possible further attacks. Israel closed its airspace to foreign flights and evacuated staff from diplomatic missions and Jewish institutions around the world. In the West Bank town of Nablus, about 3,000 peo- ple poured into the streets shortly after the attacks began, chanting "God is Great" and handing out candy in a traditional gesture of celebration. There were no reports of celebrations elsewhere in the West Bank and Gaza. Sheik Ahmed Yassin, whose Islamic militant Hamas group has carried out a series of suicide bomb- ings in Israel, said he was not interested in exporting such attacks to the United States. "We are not ready to move our struggle outside the occupied Palestinian land: We are not prepared to open international fronts, however much we criticize the unfair American position," Yassin told reporters in Gaza City. In Ein el-Hilweh, Lebanon's largest refugee camp, where about 75,000 Palestinians live, revelers fired weapons in the air, witnesses said. Similar celebratory gunfire was heard at the Rashidiyeh camp near the southern city of Tyre. Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, whom the Unit- ed States has accused of backing international terror- ism, called the attacks "horrifying" and urged Muslim aid groups to offer help "regardless of political con- siderations or differences between America and the peoples of the world." U - - WASHINGTON (AP) - Air Force F-16s patrolled the skies over Wash- ington, Navy warships were sent to Manhattan and military commanders ordered forces on highest alert after yesterday's terrorist attacks. President Bush, in an Oval Office address, vowed to find those responsi- ble. At a Pentagon briefing earlier, Joint Chiefs Chairman Henry H. Shelton said, "I have no intention of dis- cussing what comes next. But make' no mistake about it, your armed forces are ready." Some 10 hours before that briefing, a Boeing 757 plowed into the Penta- gon, after two hijacked airliners had struck the towers of New York's World Trade Center. But what would happen next - including potential retaliatory strikes - wasn't exactly clear. President Bush put U.S. forces around the globe on the highest possi- ble alert, "Threatcon Delta." Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld denied that U.S. forces were responsible for the explosions heard yesterday night near Kabul, the Emmys delayed, D 0 % Disney Closed LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Emmy awards ceremonies were indefinitely postponed, amusement parks closed and Hollywood studios locked their gates as yesterday's terrorist attacks darkened a stunned entertainment industry. All Broadway shows were canceled in New York and box offices at the the- aters were closed indefinitely, said Jed Bernstein, president of the League of American Theaters and Producers. Walt Disney World in Florida and Disneyland and Universal Studios in Southern California were shut down, while most resort hotels - many shel- tering those stranded by the nationwide airline shutdown - remained open. In Southern California, major movie capital of Afghanistan. "In no way is the U.S. government connected," he said at the Pentagon briefing. A senior defense official said the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise, which was due to come home from the Per- sian Gulf, was ordered to remain in the area indefinitely. A second carrier, the USS Carl Vinson, remains in the area as well, the official said. Officials at military sites across the country reported that only essential military personnel would be permit- ted on their bases. All unnecessary military flights were canceled, and the North American Aerospace Defense Command took steps to protect the military's computer systems from hackers, a spokesman said. NORAD - which also defends U.S. airspace from foreign invasion - was also on its highest alert. Around the country, fighters, airborne radars and refueling took the skies, officials said. NORAD controllers did track one of the hijacked planes, but it crashed into the World Trade Center even as fighters were scrambling, said Col. Mike Perini, NORAD spokesman. x -.(0NYC G e'tl V\o r with See something deep. , THE hotmath.com c i " rte . ,,,; E t ati 'C {iar {tee ooh a No After S Before Hotmath .. Hotmath Calculus MONOLOGU ,ES r"rl- Pre-Calculus Geometry Algebra 77- ... un-line, step-by-step solutions to the homework problems in = Your Math Textbook Math 24 a___of____ajor__ventspresentation II, For nearly a century, the name Andersen has been synonymous with integrity. But it's the people behind the name that guarantee the innovation and quality our clients have g g a.come to expect. What really sets us apart, though, lies not so much in what we do. But who we are. 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