The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, February 13, 2007 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS BEIJING Tentative accord reached on North Korea nukes Atentative agreement announced earlier today on initial steps toward North Korea's nuclear disarmament could set the stage for the first con- crete progress after more than three years of talks marked by delays, deadlock and the communist coun- try's first nuclear test explosion. The U.S. envoyto the talks,Assis- tant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, emerged in the early morning hours today looking weary after a marathon 16-hour negotiating ses- sion and announced that a tentative deal had been struck at the latest round of six-nation talks on the North's nuclear program. The draft agreement contained commitments on disarmament and energy assistance along with "initial actions" to be taken by cer- tain deadlines, Hill said. Working groups will be set up, hopefully in a month, laying out a framework for dealing with regional tensions, he added. BAGHDAD 78 killed in a series of car bomb attacks at Shiite market Thunderous car bombs shattered a crowded marketplace in the heart of Baghdad yesterday, triggering secondary explosions, engulfing an eight-story building in flames and killing atleast78 people inthe latest in a series of similar attacks aimed at the country's Shiite majority. The blasts in three parked cars obliterated shops and stalls and left bodies scattered among man- nequins and other debris in pools of blood. Dense smoke blackened the area and rose hundreds of feet from the market district on the east bankofthe Tigris River. Small fires, fueled by clothing and other goods, burned for hours in the rubble- strewn street as firefighters battled blazes in two buildings. "Where is the government? Where is the security plan?" sur- vivors screamed. "We have had enough. We have lost our money and goods and our source of living." DETROIT Production workers fear Chrysler cuts Auto workers are bracing them- selves as they wait to find out whether their job with Diam- lerChrysler will be cut. Some analysts are predicting the company will close two plants, cut- ting up to 10,000 hourly positions. Another 1,000 to 1,500 white-collar jobs could also be eliminated. DiamlerChrsysler is expected to announce its restructuring tomor- row, the same day the company will release its 2006 earnings. Union workers are calling the announcement "The Valentine's Day Massacre." Chrysler recorded $1.5 billion in third quarter loses in 2006, and its sales were down 7 percent last year. Analysts say the company has too much manufacturing capacity and needs to bring production in line with demand. WASHINGTON Romney draws fire from Jewish Dems for choosing Henry Ford Museum Republican Mitt Romney's choice of a museum honoring auto pioneer Henry Ford as the site of his presidential announcement was strongly criticized yesterday by Jewish Democrats, who noted Ford's history of anti-Semitism. The former Massachusetts gov- ernor, who is scheduled to formally launch his presidential candidacy from The Henry Ford museum in Dearborn, Mich., today, was taken to task by The National Jewish Democratic Council. The council "is deeply troubled by Governor Romney's choice of locations to announce his Presiden- tial campaign," executive director Ira Forman said in a statement. - Compiled from Daily wire reports GAMES FOR GROCERIES Bush Administration's Iran claims met with skepticism By HELENE COOPER and MARK MAZZETTI The New York Times WASHINGTON - Three weeks after promising it would show proof of Iranian meddling in Iraq, the Bush administration has laid out its evidence - and received in return a healthy dose of skepticism. The response from congressional and other critics speaks volumes about the current state of U.S. cred- ibility, four years after the intelli- gence controversy leading up to the Iraq war. To pre-empt accusations that the charges against Iran were politically motivated, the adminis- tration rejected the idea of a high- level presentation, relying instead on military and intelligence officers to make its case in a background briefing in Baghdad. «< w Even so, critics have been quick to voice doubts. Rep. Silvestre Reyes (D-Texas), the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, sug- ANGE A CESERE/Daily gested that the White House was LSA sophomore Alex Dopp (right) and School of Music sophomoreJonathan more interested in sending a mes- Konopinski dab their bingo sheets during a round of "survival bingo" yesterday night at sage to Tehran than in backing up Pierpont Commons. Survival bingo prizes included college staples like popcorn. cereal. serious allegations with proof detergent and candy. The event was sponsored by North Campus student govern- And David Kay, who once led the ment and University Unions Arts and Programs. hunt for weapons of mass destrue- tion in Iraq, said the grave situation in Iraq should have taught the Bush 1 Ccu rity 111ss1 jfl administration to put more of a pre- k C miumontransparencywhenitcomes to intelligence. "If you want to avoid the perception that you've cooked SOubtfbl lthe books, you come out and make so ld iers dthe charges publicly," Kay said. Administration officials say their Military hopes to be patient and have cautioned that approach was carefully calibratedto the new security operation could focus on concerns that Iran is pro- improve intelligence take months to show results. That's viding potent weapons used against a hard message to swallow for Iraqis U.S. troops in Iraq, not to ignite a in next round of raids who have endured years of violence wider war. "We're trying to strike - including a triple car-bombing the right tone here," a senior admin- BAGHDAD (AP) - Soldiers yesterday that killed at least 78 peo- istration official said yesterday. "It spearheading the increase in U.S. ple in the heart of the capital. would have raised the rhetoric to major decibel levels If we had had a briefing in Washington." At the State Department, the Pen- tagon and the office of the Director of National Intelligence, officials had anticipated resistance to their claims. They settled on an approach that sidelined senior officials, including Zalmay Khalilzad, the U.S. ambassador to Iraq, and John D. Negroponte, who until last week was the director of national intel- ligence. By doing so, they avoided the inevitable comparisons to the, since-discredited presentation that Secretary of State Colin L. Powell made to the U.N. Security Council in 2003 assertingthat Iraqhad illic- it weapons. The White House and the State Department both made clear on Monday thatthey endorsed the find- ings presented in Baghdad. Asked for direct evidence linking Iran's lead- ership to the weapons, Tony Snow, the White House spokesman, said, "Let me put it this way. There's not a whole lot of freelancing in the Irani- an government, especially when its comes to something like that." Sean McCormack, the State Department spokesman, said: "While they presented a circum- stantial case, I would put to you that it was a very strong circumstantial case. The Iranians are up to their eyeballs inthis activity, Ithink,very clearly based on the information that was provided over the weekend in Baghdad." In Australia, however, Gen. Peter Pace, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters that he "would not say" that Iran's lead- ership was aware of or condoned the attacks. "It is clear that Irani- ans are involved, and it's clear that materials from Iran are involved, but I would not say by what I know that the Iranian government clearly knows or is complicit," according to an account posted on the Voice of America Web site. An Iranian government spokes- man, Mohammad Ali Hosseini, has sought in denying the charges to exploit the lingering doubts about U.S. credibility. "The United States has a long history of fabricating evi- dence,"Hosseini,aForeignMinistry official, told reporters in Tehran. The administration's scramble over how to present its evidence started in January, after President Bush accused Iran of meddling in Iraq. Iran's ambassador to Iraq demanded that the United States present its evidence, and Khalil- zad, the U.S. ambassador in Bagh- dad, responded that America would "oblige him by having something done in the coming days." That set Bush administration offi- cials racingto produce a briefing that would hold up to scrutiny. Military officials in Baghdad developed the first briefing, a wide-ranging dossier that contained dozens of slides about Iranian activities inside Iraq, which was then sent to Washington for review, administration officials said. But after a careful vetting by intelligence officials, senior administration officials, including National Security Adviser Stephen J. Hadley and Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, concluded that there were aspects of the briefing that could not be supported by solid intelligence. They sent the briefing back to Baghdad to be shored up, a senior official said. The evidence that military officials presented Sunday was a stripped-down version of the origi- nal presentation, focusing almost entirely on the weapons, called "explosively formed penetrators," and the evidence that Iran is supply- ing the weapons to Shiite groups. forces in Baghdad are papering car windows and storefronts with pur- ple stickers listing telephone num- bers and an e-mail address where Iraqis can send intelligence tips to help stop the violence. But if a recent sweep in search of car bomb makers is an indica- tion, they have a long way to go to improve intelligence. Soldiers from the Army's 1st Bat- talion, 23rd Infantry Regiment con- verged this week on a religiously mixed northBaghdadneighborhood of auto parts stores and "chop shops" that Iraqi commandersbelieved was used to rig deadly car bombs. Moving door to door, Iraqi and U.S. soldiers smashed padlocks with sledge hammers, clipped through wire gates and rifled through hundreds of buildings as Iraqi mechanics, their hands slick with grease and motor oil, peered from nearby shops. Instead of discovering a network of clandestine car bomb factories, the soldiers instead found only a few Kalashnikov rifles, eight gre- nades and some wire. "We're told this new surge is going to be more intelligence-based instead of just hitting random sites," said Staff Sgt. Jamie Slagle, 31, of Morrisville, Mo., as he flipped through a stack of unused stickers. "But that's what seems to me to still be going on." U.S. officials have urged Iraqis to The U.S. military has advertised some successes, including the dis- covery of 14 weapons caches during a series of raids and patrols in Bagh- dad during the week that ended last Friday. On Thursday, U.S. and Iraqi troops arrested two members of a car bomb-making cell in Amiriyah, a Sunni neighborhood near Bagh- dad airport, the command said. But for the soldiers of the 23rd Regiment, the results of the new phase have been disappointing so far. Some of them fear that the delays in kicking off the new secu- rity operation may have given Sunni and Shiite extremists time to flee the capital or hide their weapons. "Why are they sending us ground pounding?" asked Spc. KevinGibson, 26, of Shiloh, Ohio, as he slumped on a dusty couch in an abandoned office after a day of futile searches. Whatstill seems lacking, soldiers say, is good intelligence - and coop- eration from Iraqis themselves. "It's like a 50-50 game. Fifty percent is good intelligence and 50 percent is just plain bull," said Spc. Brett Rochon, 22, of Ansonia, Conn. "You've got a better chance of walking around the street." Since the collapse of Saddam Hussein's regime in 2003, U.S. mil- itary officers have been courting tribal leaders, repairing schools, clearing streets and making con- tacts. .. PAWVII STS Flight Finder"M e RVCaoIZF.S Save Hundreds oneSpringBreak Pckages!!! Saires t Meicod h5eCibbean ad saeup t M pr ro. stBeaaanteCedf 74Ly d [&U , 6..., :,-c;' T H E O R 1 G 1 N A L 006im-1 (734)66-3379 Michigan Classics Ad1t Summer Please cal 734.764.05: informatio 5oftba1' ,x 1 l a 15 n To olav: Comolete the arid so that every row, column' NO A y' MBE 5 Themaximum Body Mass Index2 18' TemxmmBdMasndx r l aspemoecahaeioretoeat for free at Bumpkin, an upscale London restaurant, Reuters report- A-._ ed. In coordination with London A Fashion Week, Bumpkin is offering the models hearty meals like lamb burgers because the "sub-zero" models are often criticized for pro- moting an unhealthy body image. 4 V Last year the city of Madrid - banned models with BMI's below 18 from walking in runway shows. To have a BMI of less than 18, a 5 foot 8 inch model would have to weigh less than 120 pounds. 9 4 7 8 8 4 9j 2 31e Competitive and Recreational Leagues for Men's, Women's and Co-Rec Teams $650 - 10 games plus playoffs $1300 - Men's doubleheader - 20 games plus playoffs HALF SEASON CO-REC LEAGUE. 5 GAMES for $300! Call for details. Registration and Manager's Meeting vj will be held on SMonday,February 26th at 6:00 PM sPOs MoIntramural Sports Building - 606 East Hoover, Ann Arbor I$ 96 3 22a 4