A 2A - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 3, 2002 NATION/WORLD Typhoon floods destroy S. Korea GANGNEUNG, South Korea - A powerful typhoon that lashed South Korea over the weekend killed at least 113 people and the toll will likely rise as officials check reports of others missing in floods and landslides, the government said today. Rusa was the deadliest typhoon to hit South Korea since 1959, when Typhoon Sara left more than 840 peo- ple dead or missing. This morning the government's anti- disaster center said that 113 people were confirmed killed and 71 others missing after Rusa swept through east- ern and southern parts of South Korea. All-news station YTN put the death toll at 138 killed and 77 missing. Earli- er, officials said 88 had been killed. Park Chung-ho, a center official, said the death toll could rise as com- munications with remote, isolated areas were restored. Rusa, the Malaysian word for deer, destroyed many sections of railways and roads, wiped out bridges, knocked out electricity and submerged thou- sands of homes. Property damage was tentatively put at $750 million. One of the hardest was Gangwon province on the country's east coast where 128 people were killed or miss- ing. Its seat, Gangneung, was swamped by waist-high floods after two steady days of torrential rains. "Nothing is more miserable than this," said Kim Bun-hee, a 61-year-old housewife, standing in a long line to get a ration of drinking water brought by firetrucks. Kim said the basement of her home was still filled with water. Power outages that had crippled the AP PHOTO Residents of Tonghae, South Korean look on at the destruction caused by Typhoon Rusa that has killed at least 88 people and left 70 missing. city of 220,000 for two days were eased as officials began repairing dam- aged power lines. But residents had difficulty getting drinking water. Hundreds of graves were washed away in a landslide that destroyed a large part of a public cemetery outside Gangneung. Television clips showed people shoveling the leveled ground to try to locate the missing tombs of their loved ones. Thousands of soldiers were helping residents clear mounds of broken fur- .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Books Michigan Book & Supply Michigan Union Bookstore Shaman Drum Uni Ulrich's Clothing/Apparel Bivouac Footprints Fourth Ave Birkenstock Steve and Barry's YCI Clothing AA 2; Sports 6 Sports 4; Arts 9; General News 11, 18,22 versity 10; General News 22 AA 10; Sports 7 AA 6; University 10 AA 5; Commentary 5 General News 9 Sports 10 Commentary 5 Advertiser :i:}j' ,j l:i hC,-; ii?/ :$.. C,- C } ::. 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Commentary GeneralINews Commentary 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10; 19 10 2; General News 11 University 6 Arts 3 Arts 10 Arts 6 General News 19 niture and damaged household goods that filled streets. The government ordered the mili- tary and police to help in the rehabili- tation work. Helicopters were used to drop relief goods in isolated villages in the country's southern areas. North Korea also reported heavy human losses and property damage. Its official media, the Korean Central News Agency, said "scores" of people were killed and large farmlands were destroyed. Doctrine' delineates new Bush policies Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - When George W. Bush arrived at the White House in January 2001, his foreign policy goals appeared modest. The main interna- tional plank of Bush's presidential campaign was a promise to restrain U.S. military intervention in conflicts overseas, not expand it. But 19 months and one terrorist attack later, Bush's response to the challenge of al-Qaida has expanded into an ambitious and controversial vision for a more assertive foreign pol- icy on a global scale. Already being called the "Bush Doc- trine," the new policy - to be outlined formally in a report to Congress this fall - declares the United States ready to launch pre-emptive attacks on hos- tile countries that deploy nuclear, bio- logical or chemical weapons, with Iraq the most likely target. Equally important, Bush aides say his "National Security Strategy" report will range far beyond Iraq to chart a broad global role for the Unit- ed States, including calls for more cooperation with Russia and China, more military aid to countries bat- tling terrorists, and more economic aid to poor nations in Africa, Asia and Latin America. Not surprisingly, the call for military strikes against Iraq has become a light- ning rod for controversy. But the administration's broader argument - that the fight against terrorism pro- vides the core of a new U.S. strategy for what Secretary of State Colin Pow- ell calls the "post-post Cold War era" - has also sparked debate. Some are ready to applaud. "It's a pretty sweeping set of ideas, but I think it's feasible," said John Lewis Gaddis, a foreign policy scholar at Yale Universi- ty. "There's a degree of coherence that we haven't seen for a long time. You didn't see it in the previous administra- tion, and you didn't see it in the first months of this administration." Others are less enthusiastic, warning that the new policy, far from sparking cooperation with other great powers, is causing unnecessary friction. "I don't think it works," said John Mearsheimer, a theorist of internation- al relations at the University of Chica- go. "Their point that dealing with terrorism becomes the focus of foreign policy for all the great powers, I don't believe that. It's not the focus for Rus- sia; it's not the focus for China. Even the Europeans think we're obsessed." But most analysts agree that the new doctrine reflects a major shift in thinking for a president who came to office with only a few foreign policy ambitions - mainly to reduce U.S. peacekeeping commit- ments abroad and deploy anti-mis- sile defenses at home. What changed Bush's focus? The terrorist attacks of Sept. 11. . Sept. 11 was "an earthquake," Con- doleezza Rice, Bush's national security adviser, said in an interview. "It was such an earthquake that it began almost immediately to move things around - to the point that you could say there are new dangers here, but there are also some new opportunities. Among the opportunities, she said, is the hope that the United States, Europe, Russia, China and Japan can find common ground in a joint strug- gle against terrorism. "For the first JOHANNESBURG, South Africa Summit to focus on African destitution With world leaders pushing for action, negotiators at the Earth Sum- mit agreed on a plan Monday to pro- tect the environment and fight poverty. "Humanity has a rendezvous with destiny," French President Jacques Chirac declared. Alarms are sounding across all the continents. We cannot say that we did not know!" U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan urged the more than 100 world leaders in Johannesburg to commit to firm action to solve problems identified a decade ago at the first Earth Summit in Rio. "The focus from now on must be on implementing the many agreements that have been reached," he said. Though President Bush declined to come - sending U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell in his place - U.S. officials say they are firmly committed to the summit's success. Russia opposes U.S. invasion of Iraq Russia added its voice Monday to a growing international chorus warning against a U.S. attack on Iraq, saying such action could undermine peace efforts in the Middle East and long- term security in the volatile Persian Gulf region. In talks with his visiting Iraqi counterpart, Russian Foreign Minis- ter Igor S. Ivanov also urged Bagh- dad, the Iraqi capital, to allow resumption of U.N. weapons inspec- tions so that the trade sanctions that have impoverished Iraq can be lifted. "The international community must have guarantees of nonresump- tion of Iraqi programs of develop- ment of weapons of mass destruction," Ivanov told journalists at a joint news conference with For- eign Minister Naji Sabri. .A RTA, Indonesia Shooting wounds 14, claims 3 in Indonesia Two Americans and an Indonesian were killed Saturday when an armed group ambushed a convoy of vehicles near a huge American-owned copper and gold mine in the troubled province of Papua, atfhorities said. As many as 14 other people were injured in the shooting, including at least six Americans, four of them seri- ously, officials said. Indonesian offi- cials said some of the victims were teachers at an international school near the Freeport Indonesia mine. The shooting took place on a road heavily patrolled by the Indonesian mil- itary. Soldiers responded quickly and pledged to track down the killers, said a spokesman for the U.S. Embassy here. Sunday morning, troops reported exchanging fire with a group of uniden- tified men near the site of the attack. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. NEWS IN BRIEF. HEDIE R M AROUND THE WORLD ..t. WASHINGTON Powell attends summit to discuss Iraq Colin Powell; whose rhetoric on Saddam Hussein has been more muted than that of President Bush and other administration leaders, is heading to an interna- tional economic and environmental summit where he will press U.S. concerns with leaders of Africa, Europe and Asia. Powell, who was departing late yesterday for Johannesburg to.represent the United States at a U.N. economic and environmental summit now under way, has had a lower profile than other administration leaders on Saddam. Now, he visits a country whose former president is harshly criticizing the U.S. war talk. "We are appalled by any country, whether a superpower or a small country, that goes outside the U.N. and attacks independent countries," former President Nel- son Mandela said yesterday. While Vice President Dick Cheney and other senior Bush advisers have been publicly vocal in arguing for Saddam's ouster, Powell is concentrating more on lay- ing out the case to world leaders in private settings, say intimates of the secretary. The secretary, in his consultations with foreign leaders, takes the position that even if Saddam reversed his refusal for 3 1/2 years to admit international inspec- tors to search for weapons of mass destruction, it would not end the administra- tion's dispute with Baghdad. JERUSALEM Investigations into Palestinian deaths begin Israel's defense minister has ordered a speedy investigation into the army's killing of 12 Palestinians, including at least eight civilians, by army fire, his office said yesterday. The minister, Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, appointed a general to head the inquiry. He asked the army chief, Lt. Gen. Moshe Yaalon, to present'by Friday "operative findings to prevent such unfortunate mishaps in the future." Palestinian Cabinet Minister Saeb Erekat demanded that soldiers responsible for killing civilians be brought to justice, but said that based on previous inquiries, he didn't believe the investigation would lead to soldiers being disciplined. An Israeli daily, meanwhile, reported that Prime Minister Ariel Sharon told his Cabinet that if Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat leaves the West Bank, he won't be allowed to return. Ben-Eliezer opposed the idea of blocking Arafat's return, the Yediot Ahronot daily said. Also yesterday, an Israeli source said Israeli and Western intelligence showed that between 150 and 200 al-Qaida operatives, including sever- al senior commanders, have settled in the Palestinian refugee camp of Ein el- Hilweh in Lebanon, with Syria's permission. 6 4 Dascola Barbers AA 9; Noggins Housing Ann Arbor Realty Oppenheimer Properties General News 9 Commentary 5 Commentary 5 AA 6 Commentary 10 AA 4; Arts 4 AA 5 Arts 5 University 10 Arts 5; University 10 AA9; Sports 6 AA 6 General News 24 Arts 6 Sports 2 Sports 7; Arts 4 Arts 4; University 6 Arts 5 AA 5 AA 6 General News 18 AA 5; Sports 5; ts 3; General News 5 University 10 General News 24 Arts 5 University 7 Sports 3 AA 9 General News 15 Sports 7 General News 6 University 10 General News 15 General News 10 4; General News 15 General News 14 AA 4 General News 18 Sports 9 Arts 7 A 6; General News 6 Arts 8 Arts 7 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. 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