NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 31, 2002 - 5A I a Karzai asks U.N. for increased global support Bush singles out three countries as future threats The Washington Post "Time is not on our UNITED NATIONS (AP) - Afghanistan's interim leader asked the United Nations yesterday to expand the international force pro- tecting his fledgling government, say- ing it would signal a global commitment to a country brutalized by 23 years of war and neglect. The appeal by Hamid Karzai rep- resented an about-face for the new government, which had insisted before it took power five weeks ago that the force be restricted to the cap- ital, Kabul, and the surrounding area. Karzai told the U.N. Security Council that Afghans from across the country want an expansion of the force to ensure security following the rout of the former Taliban rulers by U.S. led-forces. "Security is the foundation for peace, stability and economic recon- struction," he stressed. The new government's desire to get multinational troops to other Afghan cities has been spurred by continuing instability, lawlessness, and a resurgence of activity by local warlords. This has hampered distrib- ution of desperately needed humani- tarian relief in many areas. Karzai, on the first visit to the United States by an Afghan leader in nearly 30 years, had previously said in Kabul and Washington that many Afghans .feel the force should be expanded and operate nationwide. But until yesterday, he had stopped short of directly calling for an enlargement. The 15-member council authorized deployment of the current, British-led force. If the Afghans want to expand the force's operations outside the Kabul area, a new Security Council resolution would be needed. Karzai told the council his govern- ment is committed to creating a national police force and a national army, "however, it will require some time." "The extension of the presence of AP PHOTO .0 Afghanistan's interim President Hamid Karzai urges the United Nations t protect his new government by expanding their international peace force multinational forces in Kabul and expanding their presence to other major cities will signal the ongoing commitment of the international community to peace and security in Afghanistan," he said. Council president Foreign Minister Anil Gayan of Mauritius told Karzai he had the council's "unqualified and unreserved support," and expressed concern about the lawlessness in Afghanistan. However, he did not mention Karzai's request for an expanded force. British diplomat Alistair Harrison said afterward that Karzai "makes a very important and a very interesting point that we are considering careful- ly along with all the other members of the council." Privately, some council members oppose a major expansion of the force, arguing it would require deployment of a much larger number of troops for a long period. The council authorized the multina- tional force on Dec. 20 for six months to help protect Karzai's government as it was about to take power under a U.N.-brokered agreement. WASHINGTON - By singling out Iran, Iraq and North Korea as an "axis of evil" whose efforts to acquire and export weapons of mass destruction could no longer be tolerated, Presi- dent Bush on Tuesday night appeared to sharply increase both the immedia- cy and the gravity of the threat they pose, along with his own determina- tion to do something about it sooner rather than later. "We will be deliberate," Bush said, "yet time is not on our side. I will not wait on events, while dangers gather." Bush's sober rhetoric, and the fact that he devoted a major portion of Tuesday night's speech to three coun- tries whose development of chemical, biological and nuclear weapons has been repeatedly cited by the adminis- tration, underscored his pledge that the war against terrorism is not limit- ed to rogue groups such as al-Qaida. As described by Bush on Tuesday night, the United States has a long- term commitment to rid the world of those states who give terrorists "the means to match their hatred." The president's State of the Union address also highlighted another side of the post-Sept. 11 foreign policy strategy - the extension of support to those nations that share the U.S. commitment to the anti-terrorism fight and to what he described as the U.S. system of values. "America will always stand firm for the non-negotiable demands of human dignity: the rule of law, limits on the power of the state, respect for women, private property, free speech, equal justice and religious tolerance," Bush said. "America will take the side of brave men and women who advocate these values around the world - including the Islamic world - because we have a greater objec- tive than eliminating threats and con- taining resentment. We seek a just side. I will not wait on events, while dangers gather. " - President Bush and peaceful world beyond 'the war on terror." Bush provided little detail beyond a call to double the size of the Peace Corps from its current level of about 7,000 volunteers. But White House and State Department officials have been at work in recent weeks on a package of foreign aid proposals that will emphasize expanded U.S. out- reach in the fields of communications and education. International in scope, but with a particular focus on the Islamic world, the effort is designed to counter a negative image of the West, and the United States in particular, that offi- cials believe is often spread by mili- tant Muslim clerics in religious schools. A senior official who provided guidance on Tuesday night's speech cautioned that "by no means is the United States trying to impose its will or its culture" on other countries. Instead, the official described the pro- gram as a kind of global mentoring campaign, which would provide teacher training and textbooks among other things for those countries inter- ested in the offer. U.S. , reconstruction aid in Afghanistan, officials noted, is already concentrated on educational initiatives, as is a significant portion of the $1 billion in assistance promised to Pakistan. "We see this as partnerships with countries seeking to modernize" their education systems, said one senior White House official. Airports strugglng to provide security DENVER (AP) - Airports around the coun- try are hiring design consultants and trying to find the room - and the money -- to install the bulky bomb-detection machines that must be in place by an end-of-the-year government deadline. Although the deadline is months away, many industry officials and consultants believe that because of the logistical.challenges, the costs - and the possibility there will not be enough of the $1 million X-ray machines to go around -- the nation's 453 commercial airports will have a hard time complying. "It's not humanly possible to get the equipment to run those bags through by the date they estab- OTO lished," said Larry Salyers, general manager of Tri-State Airport near Huntington, W.Va. The machines represent the second, more chal- lenging phase in a government effort to tighten airport security. On Jan. 18, airlines were ordered to begin screening all checked baggage for explosives, whether by hand searches, bomb detection machines, dogs or the matching of every piece of luggage to a passenger. Most airlines are meeting the requirement by matching bags, and few glitches have been reported. But by the end of the year, machines with 3-D medical X-ray technolo- gy must be used in all cases. The largest of the machines are as big as a van - nearly 16 feet long, 8 feet wide and 7 feet high - and weigh 8 1/2 tons. And major airports will need dozens of them. The Los Angeles air- port, for example, will have to accommodate at least 100 of the machines. Airports around the nation are ordering bomb-detection devices to fulfill new Congressional security requirements. New al-Qaida diagrams hint at potential attack on U.S. REA T'"Dn QLH WwwMfHGNDIf.O f RING BREAK Cancun, Adapulca, Mazatlan, I. .i.n QnL . 9r g. C Dnrivn I - ramal. ~ n!.11 r I ww-suenexs s com Nuclear plants, Wa WASHINGTON (AP) - Diagrams of American nuclear power plants found by U.S. forces in Afghanistan show al- Qaida's interest in striking them, but it's unclear how far along those plans were, a defense official says. Military officials are unaware of any finds noting specific times or operatives who would conduct an attack. Instead, the documents seem to be part of al-Qaida's research, and they provide insight to the terrorist group's thought process in planning possible attacks, said the official, speaking on the condition of anonymity. Some of the material recovered appears to be from public sources such as magazines. It is not known how al-Qaida came by the rest. In his State of the Union address, President Bush pointed to the discoveries to highlight the dangers posed by the ter- rorist network. "The depth of their hatred is equaled by the madness of the destruction they design," Bush said Tuesday night. "We have found diagrams of American nuclear power plants and public water facilities, detailed instructions for making chemical weapons, surveillance maps of American cities, and thorough descriptions of landmarks in America and throughout the world." The discoveries prompted an FBI warning to law enforce- ment agencies earlier this month, telling them to be vigilant around utilities, nuclear plants and water facilities, said homeland security spokesman Gordon Johndroe. A White House spokesman would not elaborate on the president's statements. A Nuclear Regulatory Commission Sender of d " No cover with $,5 pitchers anti rabpins tech e-mai "" darts, video ga punished ont DETROIT (AP) - A California a man who sent an e-mail to an Arab- American organization calling for the M killing of all Arabs will spend a week working with the people he threatened A and learning about their culture. Douglas Snyder, 46, of Lemoore, Calif., sent the message Sept. 11, the same day the World Trade Center was reduced to rubble and a plane slammed into the side of the Pentagon. Yesterday, Snyder pleaded guilty and was sen- tenced for attempted ethnic intimidation. h er faciltes targeted spokesman also declined to comment on Bush's mention of nuclear power plant diagrams. Since Sept. 11, the NRC has advised plants to be on alert, and some states have sent National Guard troops to aug- ment the security forces at a handful of plants. Paul Leventhal, president of the nonproliferation advoca- cy Nuclear Control Institute, said Bush's statements raise questions about the government's preparations for terrorist attacks on nuclear power plants. "It would suggest they received specific diagrams of spe- cific plants," Leventhal said. "And it raises the question of whether the plants have been alerted ... and what the Nuclear Regulatory Commission is planning to do about it." Bush's statements are the latest product of the ongoing effort by U.S. military and intelligence officials to sort through documents, computers and other items found at former al-Qaida caves, camps and safehouses in Afghanistan. Otlhr materials found in Afghanistan have detailed plans for at least one attack. Officials learned the details of an operation planned against U.S. naval facilities in Singapore from items recovered following the rout of the Taliban. In addition, evidence obtained in Afghanistan shows al- Qaida operatives have fallen for a number of scams in their attempts to acquire nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction, a senior government terrorism analyst said. "That's good news for us," said Gary Richter, a terrorism expert with the Energy Department's Sandia National Labo- ratories. University of Michigan students and faculty - you are the first in America to receive COMET, the REAL MOTION two-way video chat that doesn't require either side of the conversation to have a fast COMET connection. Even with 28K dial-up, you'll enjoy eye-to-eye, ear-to-ear, full audio, real motion - with anyone, anywhere on earth. And because you're the first, uuzrageuu run, ueaus E