NEW DELHI: As dawn broke Thursday, hundreds of Sikhs across India thronged Children celebrate 539th birth anniversary of Guru Nanak Dev in Amritsar.

Gurudwaras for morning prayers to mark the 539th birth anniversary Children celebrate 539th birth anniversary of Guru Nanak Dev in Amritsar.
of Guru Nanak Dev, the founder of the world’s youngest religion that also has followers among the vast Indian diaspora worldwide.

Taking the lead from the Golden Temple, the temporal seat of the Sikhs in Amritsar in Punjab, most Gurudwaras marked Gurupurab, as the day is observed with the singing of Asa-di-var and hymns from Guru Granth Sahib, the Sikh holy book.

This was followed by religious discourses, historical lectures, recitation of poems in praise of Guru Nanak and the distribution of “Karah Parshad (sweet pudding)” and “Langar (food cooked in a community kitchen)”.

In many cities across the country, processions led by young children dressed as the Panj Pyaras, or five beloved disciples of the Guru, were taken out even as groups of youths staged martial arts displays.

This year’s Gurupurab was particularly auspicious as the 300th anniversary of the writing of the Guru Granth Sahib has just been observed.

In keeping with the spirit of the occasion, Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal cleaned shoes and utensils at the Harmandar Sahib, as the Golden Temple is also known to pay obeisance to the Sikh guru.

Badal, accompanied by his wife, Surinder Kaur, reached the Golden Temple complex to pay obeisance. They first went to the shoes counter of the shrine and cleaned footwear of devotees who had come to the shrine.

Later, both went to the “Langar (community feast)” hall where they partook of the food and then washed the utensils used by the devotees.

Gurudwaras across Punjab as well as in neighbouring Haryana and Himachal Pradesh were decorated with lights to celebrate the occasion.

Langars were also organised by the devout along highways in Punjab for those travelling Thursday.

In New Delhi, early morning prayers, bathing in holy ponds and distribution of food marked Gurupurab.

Devotees in large numbers offered prayers at Bangla Sahib gurudwara, Rakabganj gurudwara and Sisganj gurudwara. All the Sikh shrines were beautifully lit and decorated to mark the occasion.

“I offered prayers at Bangla Sahab gurudwara early Thursday. There was a long queue of devotees paying obeisance at the shrine,” said Gurpreet Kaur, a devotee.

Delhi Sikh Gurudwara Mangement Committee (DSGMC) had made special arrangements at major Gurudwaras to manage the large crowd of devotees.

“Several sewadars (helpers) have been deployed inside and around Gurudwaras to manage the rush,” said DSGMC president Paramjit Singh Sarna.

To mark the occasion, a US-based Sikh organization has prepared letters for diaspora Sikh parents, which will be sent along with their children to the schools, so that they can read and share the Sikh guru’s message of universal brotherhood.

On the lines of the American Church, the Sikh Council on Religion and Education (SCORE) wants the teachings of the first Sikh guru to be propagated in school classrooms in the US.

“SCORE, through various mass media, is urging parents, especially of the diaspora, to take an off (on Nov 13) and spend the 539th birth anniversary of Guru Nanak with their children and narrate them stories about the life and teachings of Guru Nanak,” Rajwant Singh, the Washington-based chairman of SCORE told IANS.

The organisation is requesting Sikh parents to send with their children a note that their teachers can read in the class for the benefit of other students.

“This will definitely create a sense of pride in Sikh children and help in creating more understanding about our faith and tradition,” Singh said.

Guru Nanak Dev was born in 1469 at Nankana Sahib, a town near Lahore, now in Pakistan.

A 2,500-strong group of devotees had left for Pakistan Tuesday to take part in the Gurpurab celebrations at Nankana Sahib.

obama
Obama addresses jubilant crowds in Chicago

Democratic Senator Barack Obama has been elected the first black president of the United States.

“It’s been a long time coming, but tonight… change has come to America,” the president-elect told a jubilant crowd at a victory rally in Chicago.

His rival John McCain accepted defeat, saying “I deeply admire and commend” Mr Obama. He called on his supporters to lend the next president their goodwill.

The BBC’s Justin Webb said the result would have a profound impact on the US.

“On every level America will be changed by this result… [it] will never be the same,” he said.

McCain: ‘We must work together’

Mr Obama appeared with his family, and his running mate Joe Biden, before a crowd of tens of thousands in Grant Park, Chicago.

Many people in the vast crowd, which stretched back far into the Chicago night, wept as Mr Obama spoke.

“If there is anyone out there who still doubts that America is a place where all things are possible, who still wonders if the dream of our founders is alive in our time, who still questions the power of our democracy, tonight is your answer,” he said.

He said he had received an “extraordinarily gracious” call from Mr McCain.

He praised the former Vietnam prisoner of war as a “brave and selfless leader”.
OBAMA GAINS
Ohio
New Mexico
Iowa
Virginia
Florida
Colorado
Nevada

“He has endured sacrifices for America that most of us cannot begin to imagine,” the victor said.

He had warm words for his family, announcing to his daughters: “Sasha and Malia, I love you both more than you can imagine, and you have earned the new puppy that’s coming with us to the White House.”

But he added: “Even as we celebrate tonight, we know the challenges that tomorrow will bring are the greatest of our lifetime – two wars, a planet in peril, the worst financial crisis in a century.

“The road ahead will be long. Our climb will be steep. But America – I have never been more hopeful than I am tonight that we will get there.”

Hours after Mr Obama’s victory was announced, crowds were still celebrating in Chicago and on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington DC.

From red to blue

Mr Obama captured the key battleground states of Pennsylvania and Ohio, before breaking through the winning threshold of 270 electoral college votes at 0400 GMT, when projections showed he had also taken California and a slew of other states.

I find myself strangely emotional about this. I want to go wake up my neighbours and hug them
Amy Scullane, Boston

Then came the news that he had also seized Florida, Virginia and Colorado – all of which voted Republican in 2004 – turning swathes of the map from red to blue.

Several other key swing states are hanging in the balance.

In Indiana and North Carolina, with most of the vote counted, there was less than 0.5% between the two candidates.

However, the popular vote remains close. At 0600 GMT it stood at 51.3% for the Democratic Senator from Illinois, against 47.4% for Arizona Senator Mr McCain.

The main developments include:
Mr Obama is projected to have seized Ohio, New Mexico, Iowa, Virginia, Florida, Colorado and Nevada – all Republican wins in 2004.
He is also projected to have won: Vermont, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Delaware, Massachusetts, District of Columbia, Maryland, Connecticut, Maine, New Jersey, Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, New York, Rhode Island, California, Hawaii, Washington, Oregon.
Mr McCain is projected to have won: Alaska, Kentucky, South Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Arkansas, Alabama, Kansas, North Dakota, Wyoming, Georgia, Louisiana, West Virginia, Texas, Mississippi, Utah, Arizona, Idaho, South Dakota.
Turnout was reported to be extremely high – in some places “unprecedented”.
The Democrats made gains in the Senate race, seizing seats from the Republicans in Virginia, North Carolina, New Hampshire, New Mexico and Colorado. They also increased their majority of the House of Representatives.
Exit polls suggest the economy was the major deciding factor for six out of 10 voters.
Nine out of 10 said the candidates’ race was not important to their vote, the Associated Press reported. Almost as many said age did not matter.

Several states reported very high turnout. It was predicted 130 million Americans, or more, would vote – more than for any election since 1960.

Many people said they felt they had voted in a historic election – and for many African-Americans the moment was especially poignant.

Congratulations… You are about to go on one of the great journeys of life

President George W Bush

John Lewis, an activist in the civil rights era who was left beaten on an Alabama bridge 40 years ago, told Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church: “This is a great night. It is an unbelievable night. It is a night of thanksgiving.”

Besides winning the presidency, the Democrats tightened their grip on Congress.

The entire US House of Representatives and a third of US Senate seats were up for grabs.

Democrats won several Senate seats from the Republicans, but seemed unlikely to gain the nine extra they wanted to reach the 60-seat “super-majority” that could prevent Republicans blocking legislation.

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ओबामा की ऐतिहासिक जीत

अमरीका के राष्ट्रपति चुनावों में इतिहास रचते हुए डेमोक्रेटिक पार्टी के उम्मीदवार बराक ओबामा अमरीका के पहले अश्वेत राष्ट्रपति बनने जा रहे हैं. रिपब्लिकन उम्मीदवार जॉन मक्कैन ने हार मान ली है.

अमरीकी राष्ट्रपति चुनने के लिए 538 इलेक्टॉरल कॉलेज मतों में से 270 की आवश्यकता होती है. चुनावों के ताज़ा रुझानों के मुताबिक ओबामा को इससे ज़्यादा मत मिलेंगे. इस बारे में आधिकारिक घोषणा में कुछ समय लगेगा.

मैक्केन के हार स्वीकार कर लेने के बाद, अपने भावुक समर्थकों को संबोधित करते हुए ओबामा ने कहा, “अमरीकी लोगों ने घोषणा की है कि बदलाव का समय आ गया है. अमरीका एक शताब्दी में सबसे गंभीर समस्याओं से जूझ रहा है मैं सभी अमरीकियों को साथ लेकर चलना चाहता हूँ – उनकों भी जिन्होंने मेरे लिए वोट नहीं डाला….ये नेतृत्व का एक नया सवेरा है. जो लोग दुनिया को ध्वस्त करना चाहते हैं, उन्हें मैं कहना चाहता हूँ कि हम तुम्हें हराएँगे. जो लोग सुरक्षा और शांति चाहते हैं, हम उनकी मदद करेंगे…”
अमरीकी लोगों ने घोषणा की है कि बदलाव का समय आ गया है. अमरीका एक शताब्दी में सबसे गंभीर समस्याओं से जूझ रहा है. मैं सभी अमरीकियों को साथ लेकर चलना चाहता हूँ – उनकों भी जिन्होंने मेरे लिए वोट नहीं डाला….ये नेतृत्व का एक नया सवेरा है. जो लोग दुनिया को ध्वस्त करना चाहते हैं, उन्हें मैं कहना चाहता हूँ कि हम तुम्हें हराएँगे. जो लोग सुरक्षा और शांति चाहते हैं, हम उनकी मदद करेंगे…”

डेमोक्रेट बराक ओबामा

रिपब्लिकन पार्टी के उम्मीदवार जॉन मैक्केन ने रुझानों के आधार पर ही अपनी हार स्वीकार कर ली थी और इसे ‘अमरीका के इतिहास में अश्वेत अमरीकियों के लिए इसे एक महत्वपूर्ण क्षण’ बताया था.

उनका कहना था, “मैं सीनेटर ओबामा का प्रशंसक हूँ. मैं आप से अपील करता हूँ कि अगले चार साल आप उन्हें सहयोग दें. लाखों अफ़्रीकी अमरीकियों के लिए एक नया दौर शुरु हुआ है. अमरीका दुनिया का सबसे महान देश है. ओबामा ने ये साबित कर दिया है कि अमरीका सभी लोगों को अपने सपने साकार करने का बराबर का अवसर प्रदान करता है.”

कई राज्यों में पछाड़ा

ओबामा ने ओहायो, न्यू मेक्सिको और पेन्नसिलवेनिया जैसे महत्वपूर्ण राज्यों में अपने रिपब्लिपन जॉन मैक्केन को करारा झटका देते हुए पछाड़ दिया. दक्षिणी राज्यों में मैक्केन को कुछ सफलता मिली लेकिन ये पर्याप्त नहीं था.

अमरीका में चुनाव: बीबीसी हिंदी विशेष

महत्वपूर्ण है कि केलिफ़ोर्निया में अभी मतदान ख़त्म ही हुआ था कि मैक्केन ने अपनी हार स्वीकार कर ली.
मैं सीनेटर ओबामा का प्रशंसक हूँ. मैं आप से अपील करता हूँ कि अगले चार साल आप उन्हें सहयोग दें. लाखों अफ़्रीकी अमरीकियों के लिए एक नया दौर शुरु हुआ है. अमरीका दुनिया का सबसे महान देश है. ओबामा ने ये साबित कर दिया है कि अमरीका सभी लोगों को अपने सपने साकार करने का बराबर का अवसर प्रदान करता है

रिपब्लिकन जॉन मैक्केन

इससे पहले अनेक प्रांतों में मतदान केंद्रों पर लंबी कतारें देखी गईं. अनुमान लगाया जा रहा है कि 1960 के बाद रिकॉर्ड वोटिंग हुई.

अमरीका में मुख्य पार्टियों का इतिहास

राष्ट्रपति पद के लिए इस बार चुनाव अभियान लगभग दो साल तक चला और इस प्रचार को अमरीका के इतिहास में अब तक का सबसे महँगा चुनाव प्रचार कहा जा रहा है, जिसमें लगभग लगभग 2.4 अरब डॉलर ख़र्च हुए है.

मैक्केन दक्षिणी में सफल

बीबीसी संवाददाता निक ब्रयांट के अनुसार पेन्नसिलवेनिया और न्यू हेंपशायर को रिपब्लिकन मैक्केन ने निशाना बनाया था लेकिन ये प्रांत डेमोक्रेटिक पार्टी के पाले में गए.

लेकिन मैक्केन को सबसे करारा झटका ओहायो में लगा क्योंकि पिछले कई दशकों में कोई भी रिपब्लिकन उम्मीदवार बिना ओहायो जीते व्हाइट हाउस में नहीं पहुँच पाया है. लेकिन यहाँ भी रुझान ओबामा के पक्ष में रहा.

वर्ष 2004 के अमरीकी चुनाव

वर्ष 2000 में ख़ासे विवाद का केंद्र रहे फ़्लोरिडा में भी ओबामा ही आगे रहे.

ओहायो, पेन्नसिलवेनिया और कई अन्य राज्यों में मैकेन ने ख़ासी महनत की लेकिन कामयाबी नहीं मिली

उधर रिपब्लिकन जॉन मैक्केन ने दक्षिणी राज्यों में ख़ासी सफलता पाई और जॉर्जिया जैसे प्रांत में भी आगे निकल गए लेकिन वे लगातार पिछड़ते ही चले गए.

उम्मीद के अनुसार केंटकी में जॉन मैक्केन आगे रहे, वहीं वरमोंट में बराक ओबामा ने बढ़त हासिल की है.

कई जगह उथल-पुथल

चुनाव में लगभग तीन करोड़ वोटरों ने ‘अर्ली वोटिंग’ के तहत अपना वोट दर्ज कराया था जो कि एक रिकॉर्ड है.

जहाँ ओबामा ने अपने गृह प्रांत इलिनॉय ने परिवार सहित वोट डाला वहीं मैक्केन ने एरिज़ोना में वोट डाला.

न्यू हैम्पशायर में सबसे पहले मंगलवार को वोट डाला गया जहाँ बराक ओबामा ने अपने प्रतिद्वंदी को पछाड़ दिया. वर्ष 1968 के बाद यह पहला मौका है जब रुझानों के मुताबिक यह शहर डेमोक्रेट के पाले में गया.

US missile defence

The United States has signed a deal with Poland allowing it to install missiles at a base on the Baltic Sea. It already has an agreement to build a radar station in the Czech Republic.

The deals form part of US plans for a European missile defence shield to counter what it describes as the threat from “rogue states” such as Iran.

Iran recently carried out new tests of its Shahab-3 ballistic missile, which is said to have a range of 2,000km (1,240 miles).

But Russia says the US plan is unnecessary and has threatened to retaliate militarily if the missile defence system is built.


What is the US proposing to do?

Iranian test of Shahab-2 missile, November 2006

Iran has held regular tests of its long-range missiles

The US says its missile defence system is intended to destroy incoming ballistic missiles potentially coming from North Korea and Iran.

This involves using radars in Alaska and California in the US and at Fylingdales in the UK. Another radar is planned for Greenland.

Anti-missile missiles, or interceptors, are being based in Alaska (40 of them) and California (four).

There would also be 130 interceptors based on ships. The interceptors work by physically hitting the ballistic missile in mid-flight. There would also be missiles to try to destroy incoming rockets in the final stages.

However, the US plans to install 10 more interceptors in silos in Poland, and build a radar station in the Czech Republic.

It hopes that construction of the Czech facility – using a radar currently located at Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands – could begin next year, with the first interceptors in place in Poland by 2011 and the system fully operational by 2012.


Why in Eastern Europe?

The US says there is a gap in its anti-missile defences.

A threat from North Korea could be countered with the US and sea-based systems.

But European allies or US forces in Europe could be threatened by Iran one day, Washington says, or indeed some other country, so there needs to be a system based in Europe as well.

Will it work?

The theory is that the interceptor missile homes in on and destroys its target in the air by physically hitting the incoming warhead.

However, the closing speed of interceptor and target will be 24,000kph (14,900mph), or 6.5km (4 miles) per second – so the task is more difficult than hitting a bullet with another bullet.

The system’s supporters say that not only does it work, but it is even more accurate than that.

But critics say that, despite having spent over $100bn (£54bn), the Pentagon still has not proved the system can work in realistic conditions.

Independent scientific bodies in the US have said that tests of the system’s intercept capabilities have been highly scripted, with the defence being given detailed information about the attack beforehand.

They also argue that the defence system could be easily circumvented by potential attackers.

Why does Russia object?

Former Soviet military base at Brdy in the Czech Republic

The US wants to place radar at this old base in the Czech Republic

Moscow says that the missiles in Poland and the radar in the Czech Republic could threaten its own defences. The system might be small to start with, it says, but could expand. The radar could be used to spy on Russia.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev warned that “we will not be hysterical about this, but we will think of retaliatory steps”.

The Pentagon says this is just “bellicose rhetoric” from Russia “designed to make Europeans nervous”.

Russian objections to the US missile shield grew more strident after the US signed its preliminary deal with Poland in August 2008, at a time when Moscow and the West were already at loggerheads over Russian troops involvement in fighting in Georgia.

A top Russian general said the Poland move would be punished. Moscow’s envoy to Nato was quoted as saying that the timing of the deal revealed that Moscow, rather than Iran, was the target of the missile shield plans.

Has Russian proposed any alternatives?

Moscow suggested that the US could use a Russian-rented radar site in Azerbaijan, which shares a border with Iran.

Former President Putin also offered use of a radar site in southern Russia and proposed working with the US and other European countries on a joint defence system.

But the US showed little interest in either idea.

How serious in the threat to Europe?

The Iranian military says its Shahab-3 missiles have a range of 2,000km (1,240 miles).

This means that they could reach south-eastern Europe, hitting targets in Nato members Greece, Bulgaria or Romania.

Russia says that this limited range means that the US missile defence plan is unnecessary, with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov saying that negotiations, not threats, were the best way to deal with concerns about Iranian intentions.

The White House said the latest Iranian tests of its Shahab-3 missile do not change the US position on building a European defence shield.

Have Poland and the Czech Republic agreed to the deployment?

It’s not yet a done deal.

NUCLEAR WARHEADS

Russia
Land-launched: 2,146
Sea-launched: 1,392
Air-launched: 624

US
Land-launched: 1,600

Sea-launched: 3,168
Air-launched: 1,098

Source: Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) data 2007

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has signed an agreement with the Czech government to build the radar station at Brdy, south-west of Prague, but this has to be ratified by parliament.

The Czech government will need the support of some opposition parties to see the measure through. Meanwhile, there is significant public resistance to the plan, with 100,000 people signing a petition calling for a referendum on the issue. Opinion polls indicate that about two-thirds of Czechs do not want the project to go ahead.

Poland signed a preliminary agreement with the US over siting missiles at a Baltic Sea base in August 2008. In exchange, the US agreed to help upgrade Poland’s armed forces.

The deal needs further ratification and the centre-left government of Prime Minister Donald Tusk has been considerably cooler on the issue than the previous government, which lost power in October 2007.

What international agreements cover these moves?

None. The US withdrew from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in 2001.

Ranges of Russian Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles

This treaty limited US and Soviet anti-missile defences to one site each. The Russians still operate theirs, around Moscow.

The US chose to defend its strategic rockets in North Dakota but this defence has been deactivated.

Part of the Russian unhappiness about the Europe sector of the anti-missile system is that it results from the US withdrawal from the ABM treaty and Russia is worried about where it might go next.

Russia has announced the testing of a new multiple-warhead missile, the RS-24, which it says is designed to overcome missile defences. It is also developing new cruise missiles.

The US says it should not be worried.

Is this the start of a new Cold War?

It is certainly a difficult period where mistrust and antagonism are prevalent.

The hopes that Russia and the United States could be friendly allies have not been realised so far.

Instead there is suspicion and this is likely to continue, though to call it a new Cold War is probably going too far.

In May 2008, President Medvedev took over from Vladimir Putin in the Kremlin, and so far he has continued his predecessor vehement disapproval of the US project.

President George W Bush will leave office in January 2009, and the incoming president could take a different line on the issue.

However, both candidates in November’s presidential election – Republican Sen John McCain and Democrat Sen Barack Obama – have spoken of the threat posed by Iran.

What ballistic missiles do the US and Russia have?

They have dramatically reduced their arsenals from the Cold War days but still retain substantial forces of several thousand missiles and nuclear warheads each.

Under the Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty (SORT) signed by presidents Bush and Putin in 2002, each side has to reduce its deployed warheads to a maximum of 2,200 by 2012.



US missile defences

Russia has its own radar early warning system, short-range interceptor missiles in bases around Moscow and a number of land-based Intercontinental Ballistic Missile launch sites across the country.

Russian missile sites

US marks seventh 9/11 anniversary

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US flag is unfurled on the site of the 9/11 attacks in New York


US President George W Bush has led commemorations of the seventh anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, which left nearly 3,000 people dead.

Moments of silence were held at the times four hijacked passenger planes hit the Twin Towers in New York, the Pentagon and a Pennsylvania field.

In Washington, Mr Bush dedicated a new memorial at the Department of Defense to 184 people killed there.

“The worst day in America’s history saw some of the bravest acts,” he said.

“Since 9/11 our troops have taken the fight to the terrorists abroad so we do not have to face them here at home,” he added.

“Thanks to the brave men and women and all those who work to keep us safe there has not been another attack on our soil in 2,557 days.”

Names of those who died in the attacks were read out in New York

The attacks, which triggered the US-led invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, and the Bush administration’s “war on terror”, are regarded as the defining moment of the president’s time in office.

In downtown Manhattan, thousands of people gathered as relatives of victims from more than 90 countries read out a roll call of the 2,751 people killed in New York.

City Mayor Michael Bloomberg opened the memorial event, describing 9/11 as a “day that began like any other and ended as none ever has”.

Silences were observed at the moments each of the Twin Towers was struck and fell.

Rivals’ unity

Barack Obama and John McCain, the Democratic and Republican nominees in November’s presidential election, are due to attend a ceremony at Ground Zero in New York to lay wreathes in honour of the victims.

9/11: THE NEW FRONTIER
More coverage throughout the day on BBC World News and BBC World Service

In a joint statement, the two men vowed to come together “as Americans” and suspend their political campaigns for 24 hours.

Mr McCain earlier attended a ceremony at Shanksville, Pennsylvania, where he paid tribute to the bravery of the United Flight 93 passengers who took on the hijackers.

He said: “The only means we possess to thank them is to try to be as good an American as they were. We might fall well short of their standard, but there is honour in the effort.”

The presidential rivals’ joint appearance is to be followed by another in the evening at a Columbia University forum to discuss their views on public service.

Passenger plane hits second tower of World Trade Center on 11 September 2001
11 September 2001 is a day many around the world will never forget

For Mr Bush, however, it is the last time he marks the anniversary as president.

“The president thinks about 9/11 every single day when he wakes up and before he goes to bed,” White House press secretary Dana Perino said on the eve of the anniversary.

Seven years after the attacks which shocked the world, Ground Zero is a construction site.

After years of delays and disagreements over how to commemorate the dead, work has finally begun on a memorial and a new skyscraper – the Freedom Tower – which is due to be completed by 2012.

On the eve of the anniversary, a top US military commander warned new tactics were needed to win the conflict in Afghanistan, which the US and its allies invaded three months after 9/11.

They aimed to topple the Taleban and hunt down Osama Bin Laden, who the US believes masterminded the attacks.

Admiral Mike Mullen believes insurgents are launching attacks from neighbouring Pakistan, and US-led forces must target their “safe havens” in that country.

US marks seventh 9/11 anniversary

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US flag is unfurled on the site of the 9/11 attacks in New York


US President George W Bush has led commemorations of the seventh anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, which left nearly 3,000 people dead.

Moments of silence were held at the times four hijacked passenger planes hit the Twin Towers in New York, the Pentagon and a Pennsylvania field.

In Washington, Mr Bush dedicated a new memorial at the Department of Defense to 184 people killed there.

“The worst day in America’s history saw some of the bravest acts,” he said.

“Since 9/11 our troops have taken the fight to the terrorists abroad so we do not have to face them here at home,” he added.

“Thanks to the brave men and women and all those who work to keep us safe there has not been another attack on our soil in 2,557 days.”

Names of those who died in the attacks were read out in New York

The attacks, which triggered the US-led invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, and the Bush administration’s “war on terror”, are regarded as the defining moment of the president’s time in office.

In downtown Manhattan, thousands of people gathered as relatives of victims from more than 90 countries read out a roll call of the 2,751 people killed in New York.

City Mayor Michael Bloomberg opened the memorial event, describing 9/11 as a “day that began like any other and ended as none ever has”.

Silences were observed at the moments each of the Twin Towers was struck and fell.

Rivals’ unity

Barack Obama and John McCain, the Democratic and Republican nominees in November’s presidential election, are due to attend a ceremony at Ground Zero in New York to lay wreathes in honour of the victims.

9/11: THE NEW FRONTIER
More coverage throughout the day on BBC World News and BBC World Service

In a joint statement, the two men vowed to come together “as Americans” and suspend their political campaigns for 24 hours.

Mr McCain earlier attended a ceremony at Shanksville, Pennsylvania, where he paid tribute to the bravery of the United Flight 93 passengers who took on the hijackers.

He said: “The only means we possess to thank them is to try to be as good an American as they were. We might fall well short of their standard, but there is honour in the effort.”

The presidential rivals’ joint appearance is to be followed by another in the evening at a Columbia University forum to discuss their views on public service.

Passenger plane hits second tower of World Trade Center on 11 September 2001
11 September 2001 is a day many around the world will never forget

For Mr Bush, however, it is the last time he marks the anniversary as president.

“The president thinks about 9/11 every single day when he wakes up and before he goes to bed,” White House press secretary Dana Perino said on the eve of the anniversary.

Seven years after the attacks which shocked the world, Ground Zero is a construction site.

After years of delays and disagreements over how to commemorate the dead, work has finally begun on a memorial and a new skyscraper – the Freedom Tower – which is due to be completed by 2012.

On the eve of the anniversary, a top US military commander warned new tactics were needed to win the conflict in Afghanistan, which the US and its allies invaded three months after 9/11.

They aimed to topple the Taleban and hunt down Osama Bin Laden, who the US believes masterminded the attacks.

Admiral Mike Mullen believes insurgents are launching attacks from neighbouring Pakistan, and US-led forces must target their “safe havens” in that country.


US wary of punishing Russia for conflict with Georgia

New York, Sep 4 (ANI): The Bush administration does not plan to draw up a “mindless list” of penalties that could alienate Russia because of its recent conflict with Georgia.

Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs Daniel Fried said Washington is keen to know how much Russia would like to isolate itself from the world.

We don’t want to have a bad relationship with Russia. We’ve never wanted that,” the New York Times quoted Fried, as saying.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has asked her advisers to “think this (stand-off with Russia) through in a serious way,” as the Bush Administration is nearing its end.

With the European Union failing to reach an agreement Monday on imposing sanctions for Moscow’s invasion of Georgia, Fried has been consulting with EU officials on “next steps,” to be taken, if any, against Moscow.

Meanwhile, Vice-President Dick Cheney is on a visit to Georgia, Ukraine and Azerbaijan to assess the fall out of the conflict.

Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates has ordered a review of military cooperation agreements with Russia as part of a wider evaluation of relations in response to the continued presence of Russian troops in parts of Georgia.

The review, a Pentagon spokesman said, encompasses the Pentagon’s Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA), a program to combat the proliferation of nuclear, biological, chemical and other weapons of mass destruction.

However, the most prominent program administered by the agency – known as Nunn-Lugar – will not be affected, said Mark Hayes, a spokesman for Sen. Richard G. Lugar of Indiana, the senior Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Georgia sent troops into the enclave of South Ossetia on Aug. 7 in an attempt to regain control of the republic, which had declared independence from Georgia on several occasions. Russia retaliated by sending troops into South Ossetia; another disputed enclave, Abkhazia; and Georgia.

Despite agreeing to a cease-fire brokered by France last month, Russian troops remain in parts of Georgia.

Before the Russian incursion, Gates said, the United States thought it could have a “long-term strategic dialogue” with Russia. But the invasion has called into question the entire premise of U.S.-Russia talks, he said, adding that ties could be negatively affected for years.

Other activities subject to review include: Partnership for Peace exercises, several bilateral military exercises, several naval exercises and tabletop exercises, in which participants study strategy around a table or in a classroom.

The Bush administration also is putting off implementation of an Agreement for Peaceful Nuclear Cooperation, or the so-called “123 Agreement,” which was approved in May.

A senior U.S. official said there should have been “a clear high-level warning to the Russians,” but the Bush administration did not issue one because it “didn’t think they would invade Georgia proper.”

Mr. Fried echoed other U.S. and European calls on Moscow to fully respect a cease-fire and to pull all its troops out of Georgia, and said the West is struggling to figure out how to “make clear that [the Russians’] acts against Georgia and threats against other neighbors are unacceptable” without antagonizing the Russian people. (ANI)


Currently situation in Kashmir is very worse. Only and only Indian government is responsible for this position. India deployed a huge number of army personel in Kashmir. Worsen condition in kashmir is only due to Indian Army as well as J&K Police. Last 30 days Jammu caught is fire on amarnath agitation but Indian government did not took any desition how to stop current agitation.
The psudo Secular parties are responcible for these agitaion. mainly congress and Communist are responcible for these angry agitation.

THE TWO month long Amarnath agitation has not lost momentum in Jammu region and despite life remaining paralysed for the last 50 days, the enthusiasm and support to the agitation has not withered. Continuing their strong protests against the Amarnath land transfer order, around two-lakh people on Monday (August 18) responded to the Jail Bharo call of the Shree Amarnath Yatra Sangarsh Samiti (SAYSS).

People from all across the region came out of their homes in the morning in overwhelming numbers and courted arrest as a mark of protest against the land order.

According to reports, large number of people gathered in Jammu city, Udhampur, Kathua, Hiranagar and Reasi and other major towns and villages on the call of the SAYSS, which is spearheading the agitation.

In the morning today, around 10 000 people gathered at City Chowk in Jammu city and took out a procession. Chanting ’Bum Bum Bole’ the protesters passed through main roads of the city and reached the city chowk police station and asked the cops to arrest them.

This was carried out in all the 16 police stations of Jammu city, with thousands of protesters shouting slogans against the state administration and governor N N Vohra. The protesters were later taken to MAM stadium and other schools and colleges, which were turned into jails for the time being.

Udhampur city witnessed a huge turnout and the situation turned violent after protesters clashed with security personnel. Police resorted to lathi charge and tear gas shells were fired to control the protesters, who were demanding the ouster of governor N N Vohra and return of the Amarnath land.

A large turnout was also reported in Samba and Kathua districts, but the protests remained largely peaceful and there was no report of any untoward incident.

Meanwhile, Shree Amarnath Sangarsh Samiti (SASS) termed the response to the Jail Bharo andolan as overwhelming and said it was a historic day for the people of Jammu. Brigadier Suchet Singh, speaking to merinews, claimed that more than three lakh people had participated in today’s Jail Bharo andolan.

Singh also criticised the state administration for failing to provide even basic facilities in the makeshift prisons. “The state did not even provide water to the agitating people,” he said, adding that the people of Jammu have entered into a do or die mode and will not stop till their goal is achieved.

This agitation has the support of the rich and poor and cuts across religious and regional lines, Singh asserted, “Abhi nahi to Kabhi nahi” this is the war cry of the people.

Criticising the Union government for its appeasement policy, Singh alleged that government is delaying a decision in the hope that this agitation will peter off. “This is a people’s movement and will achieve its goal,” he said. India is concerned only about the Hurriyat and Kashmiris and it will not be tolerated at any cost.

Warning that the agitation could further intensify and mode of action could change, Singh asked the Union government to realise its mistakes and take corrective action otherwise there could be more unrest and trouble.

The Samiti leaders also registered their strong resentment against certain sections of the national media, which they said were portraying the agitation as communal and sectarian.

There is deep concern among leading South Asia watchers in Washington over the volatile situation in Kashmir and the renewed cry for independence by the separatists which they fear could revert to the Intifada-like agitation of the 1990s.

These experts also acknowledged that the situation may also provide elements in Pakistan, especially the ISI, more so in the wake of the upheaval brought on by President Pervez Musharraf’s resignation and the dysfunctional government in Islamabad , an opportunity to foment yet another insurgency in the Valley and ramp up a proxy war reminiscent of old against India.

Former diplomat Howard B Schaffer, who served for 36 years in the US Foreign Service, of which a total of eight were spent in New Delhi during which time he was the US government’s principal expert on Kashmir, said, “I am very much discouraged by this situation in Kashmir. It really reflects the ultimate inability of the Indian government to reconcile the people of Kashmir to their connection with India.”

Schaffer, who while at the State Department, served two terms as the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South Asian Affairs, at the time the senior-most position in the Administration dealing with the subcontinent, said, “It was very badly handled,” by the government of India, and while acknowledging that like the uprising in 1989-1990 “it was home generated,” warned that “as happened then, the Pakistanis are very likely to fish in troubled waters, even though God knows, they’ve got enough problems on their hands.”

Currently, the Director of Studies at the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, which is part of Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service, he said it was indeed ironic that the Indian National Security Adviser M K Narayanan was on Thursday lamenting the exit of Musharraf and talking about a ‘political demise,’ in Pakistan following his departure.

Schaffer, who is completing one of the most comprehensive books on US foreign policy vis-�-vis Kashmir, titled America’s Role in Kashmir: The Limits of Influence, said, “For sure, Musharraf was devoted to this peace process — he got it started in 2004 — but before that, you remember, he was very much in the bad books of the Indian government and the Indian public.”

“He was the Kargil man, his government was behind the attack on (the Indian) Parliament and so on and so forth, so that we got to remember that there was a considerable reversal (from the earlier moves at rapprochement with New Delhi initiated by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif whom Musharraf deposed). But, not only did he get the peace process restarted, but he also made proposals that were unprecedented for Pakistan, such as finding a solution outside the framework of the UN resolutions.”

Schaffer said if was also Musharraf, who accepted ‘the Line of Control as a permanent boundary and these things will now not continue because whatever government is in power in Islamabad — whether it is dominated by the Pakistan People’s Party or whether Nawaz (Sharif) comes in — they won’t be able to make concessions of this sort that Musharraf was able to make when he was strongly, firmly in power.”

“And, so there will be a temptation as there already has been to play for the audience and that can only continue to have a bad reaction in India,” he said, and added, “But you never thought did you that India would be longing for the good old days with General Musharraf.”

Schaffer acknowledged that it has always been the case for Pakistani civilian government’s when it is beset by domestic problems to rake up the Kashmir issue and even though the current situation in Jammu and Kashmir began with a domestic conflagration over land allocation for Amarnath pilgrims, Pakistan was trying to get mileage out of it and internationalize it, even as it could give ideas to rogue elements in the ISI and the Army to exacerbate the agitation of the separatists and militants.

He hoped that Pakistan’s Army Chief, ‘General (Ashfaq) Kiyani will be sensible enough to recognize the stakes involved and to understand where Pakistan’s priorities now rest. As I said before, the last thing it should want to do is to get itself into a tiff with India.’

Schaffer acknowledged, “I don’t see that as a way of, even in the middle term, developing its popularity, but it may feel so and I think if it does, it will be a major mistake.”

The other half of this Washington ‘power couple,’ when it comes to foreign policy on South Asia, his wife, Teresita Schaffer, who also served in South Asia and has nearly three decades of experience as a diplomat, and succeeded her husband as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South Asia, echoed similar sentiments.

Teresita said she believed the current government in Islamabad “wants to keep things on an even keel and eventually to pursue the peace dialogue. But the disturbances in Kashmir will put pressure on that whole situation — and will tempt those who don’t want peace to meddle. So, I am worried.”

“It is certainly an opportunity for trouble,” she added, and noted, “There are both similarities and differences with the 1990s. One interesting difference is the role of the Amarnath land issue and of the Jammu Hindu community.”

Schaffer, now the head of the South Asia program at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, said, “The Amarnath land grant got a lot of people stirred up, but when the new governor, N N Vohra, resolved that, it was people from Jammu who expanded the protest. So, far more than the previous episodes, this one has local roots.”

Sumit Ganguly, professor of political science and Director of the India Studies Program at Indiana University in Bloomington, however, did not believe it could become another Intifada like in the 1990s, “especially if the Indian State, however, belatedly, manages to demonstrate a degree of dexterity in defusing the crisis.”

“It has already shown, after one or two initial missteps, that it is capable of showing restraint even in the face of grave provocation,” he said. “It needs to keep doing more of the same despite pressures from within elements of the national security establishment to adopt a harder line.”

Ganguly argued that “it also needs to douse the flames in Jammu as they tend to generate their own fires in the Valley.”

But, he warned that “the wild card in all of this, remains both the Islamists and the Hindu zealots, who thrive on each other follies and short-sighted goals and actions.”

Former Assistant Secretary of State for South Asian Affairs Karl F Inderfurth, now a professor of international relations at George Washington University and foreign policy adviser to the Obama presidential campaign, said, “There have been a lot of reasons that go back several weeks as to how this thing flared up.”

But, he too agreed that “there are those who do want to reverse the (peace) process,” between India and Pakistan, “and with the distracted political leadership in Pakistan, I believe that some of these forces are beginning to assert themselves again.”

Robert Hathaway, director of the Asia Program at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and a former Congressional staffer on South Asia on the Foreign Affairs Committee, also expressed concern and said, “It is something for the US and the international community to watch,” and make clear to Pakistan it would not tolerate any meddling by the ISI or elements within the Army.

“I am very concerned and clearly it has the potential to unravel and the situation is far more worrisome than it was earlier, because American intelligence has conclusive evidence that elements associated with the ISI were involved in planning and perhaps even carrying out the bombing of the Indian embassy in Kabul,” he said.

Hathaway acknowledged that “the current upsurge in violence and in agitation is the result of conditions within both Jammu and the Valley itself and the increased violence and the increased tension in the Valley was largely the result of developments within the Valley. So, I could believe that I am not going to point the finger at Pakistan because of that.”

“But neither can we rule out that they are not involved because we all know that Pakistan has a long history of fishing in troubled waters in Kashmir. It has a long history of supporting insurgent groups of various sorts,” he added.


Currently situation in Kashmir is very worse. Only and only Indian government is responsible for this position. India deployed a huge number of army personel in Kashmir. Worsen condition in kashmir is only due to Indian Army as well as J&K Police. Last 30 days Jammu caught is fire on amarnath agitation but Indian government did not took any desition how to stop current agitation.
The psudo Secular parties are responcible for these agitaion. mainly congress and Communist are responcible for these angry agitation.

THE TWO month long Amarnath agitation has not lost momentum in Jammu region and despite life remaining paralysed for the last 50 days, the enthusiasm and support to the agitation has not withered. Continuing their strong protests against the Amarnath land transfer order, around two-lakh people on Monday (August 18) responded to the Jail Bharo call of the Shree Amarnath Yatra Sangarsh Samiti (SAYSS).

People from all across the region came out of their homes in the morning in overwhelming numbers and courted arrest as a mark of protest against the land order.

According to reports, large number of people gathered in Jammu city, Udhampur, Kathua, Hiranagar and Reasi and other major towns and villages on the call of the SAYSS, which is spearheading the agitation.

In the morning today, around 10 000 people gathered at City Chowk in Jammu city and took out a procession. Chanting ’Bum Bum Bole’ the protesters passed through main roads of the city and reached the city chowk police station and asked the cops to arrest them.

This was carried out in all the 16 police stations of Jammu city, with thousands of protesters shouting slogans against the state administration and governor N N Vohra. The protesters were later taken to MAM stadium and other schools and colleges, which were turned into jails for the time being.

Udhampur city witnessed a huge turnout and the situation turned violent after protesters clashed with security personnel. Police resorted to lathi charge and tear gas shells were fired to control the protesters, who were demanding the ouster of governor N N Vohra and return of the Amarnath land.

A large turnout was also reported in Samba and Kathua districts, but the protests remained largely peaceful and there was no report of any untoward incident.

Meanwhile, Shree Amarnath Sangarsh Samiti (SASS) termed the response to the Jail Bharo andolan as overwhelming and said it was a historic day for the people of Jammu. Brigadier Suchet Singh, speaking to merinews, claimed that more than three lakh people had participated in today’s Jail Bharo andolan.

Singh also criticised the state administration for failing to provide even basic facilities in the makeshift prisons. “The state did not even provide water to the agitating people,” he said, adding that the people of Jammu have entered into a do or die mode and will not stop till their goal is achieved.

This agitation has the support of the rich and poor and cuts across religious and regional lines, Singh asserted, “Abhi nahi to Kabhi nahi” this is the war cry of the people.

Criticising the Union government for its appeasement policy, Singh alleged that government is delaying a decision in the hope that this agitation will peter off. “This is a people’s movement and will achieve its goal,” he said. India is concerned only about the Hurriyat and Kashmiris and it will not be tolerated at any cost.

Warning that the agitation could further intensify and mode of action could change, Singh asked the Union government to realise its mistakes and take corrective action otherwise there could be more unrest and trouble.

The Samiti leaders also registered their strong resentment against certain sections of the national media, which they said were portraying the agitation as communal and sectarian.

There is deep concern among leading South Asia watchers in Washington over the volatile situation in Kashmir and the renewed cry for independence by the separatists which they fear could revert to the Intifada-like agitation of the 1990s.

These experts also acknowledged that the situation may also provide elements in Pakistan, especially the ISI, more so in the wake of the upheaval brought on by President Pervez Musharraf’s resignation and the dysfunctional government in Islamabad , an opportunity to foment yet another insurgency in the Valley and ramp up a proxy war reminiscent of old against India.

Former diplomat Howard B Schaffer, who served for 36 years in the US Foreign Service, of which a total of eight were spent in New Delhi during which time he was the US government’s principal expert on Kashmir, said, “I am very much discouraged by this situation in Kashmir. It really reflects the ultimate inability of the Indian government to reconcile the people of Kashmir to their connection with India.”

Schaffer, who while at the State Department, served two terms as the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South Asian Affairs, at the time the senior-most position in the Administration dealing with the subcontinent, said, “It was very badly handled,” by the government of India, and while acknowledging that like the uprising in 1989-1990 “it was home generated,” warned that “as happened then, the Pakistanis are very likely to fish in troubled waters, even though God knows, they’ve got enough problems on their hands.”

Currently, the Director of Studies at the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, which is part of Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service, he said it was indeed ironic that the Indian National Security Adviser M K Narayanan was on Thursday lamenting the exit of Musharraf and talking about a ‘political demise,’ in Pakistan following his departure.

Schaffer, who is completing one of the most comprehensive books on US foreign policy vis-�-vis Kashmir, titled America’s Role in Kashmir: The Limits of Influence, said, “For sure, Musharraf was devoted to this peace process — he got it started in 2004 — but before that, you remember, he was very much in the bad books of the Indian government and the Indian public.”

“He was the Kargil man, his government was behind the attack on (the Indian) Parliament and so on and so forth, so that we got to remember that there was a considerable reversal (from the earlier moves at rapprochement with New Delhi initiated by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif whom Musharraf deposed). But, not only did he get the peace process restarted, but he also made proposals that were unprecedented for Pakistan, such as finding a solution outside the framework of the UN resolutions.”

Schaffer said if was also Musharraf, who accepted ‘the Line of Control as a permanent boundary and these things will now not continue because whatever government is in power in Islamabad — whether it is dominated by the Pakistan People’s Party or whether Nawaz (Sharif) comes in — they won’t be able to make concessions of this sort that Musharraf was able to make when he was strongly, firmly in power.”

“And, so there will be a temptation as there already has been to play for the audience and that can only continue to have a bad reaction in India,” he said, and added, “But you never thought did you that India would be longing for the good old days with General Musharraf.”

Schaffer acknowledged that it has always been the case for Pakistani civilian government’s when it is beset by domestic problems to rake up the Kashmir issue and even though the current situation in Jammu and Kashmir began with a domestic conflagration over land allocation for Amarnath pilgrims, Pakistan was trying to get mileage out of it and internationalize it, even as it could give ideas to rogue elements in the ISI and the Army to exacerbate the agitation of the separatists and militants.

He hoped that Pakistan’s Army Chief, ‘General (Ashfaq) Kiyani will be sensible enough to recognize the stakes involved and to understand where Pakistan’s priorities now rest. As I said before, the last thing it should want to do is to get itself into a tiff with India.’

Schaffer acknowledged, “I don’t see that as a way of, even in the middle term, developing its popularity, but it may feel so and I think if it does, it will be a major mistake.”

The other half of this Washington ‘power couple,’ when it comes to foreign policy on South Asia, his wife, Teresita Schaffer, who also served in South Asia and has nearly three decades of experience as a diplomat, and succeeded her husband as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South Asia, echoed similar sentiments.

Teresita said she believed the current government in Islamabad “wants to keep things on an even keel and eventually to pursue the peace dialogue. But the disturbances in Kashmir will put pressure on that whole situation — and will tempt those who don’t want peace to meddle. So, I am worried.”

“It is certainly an opportunity for trouble,” she added, and noted, “There are both similarities and differences with the 1990s. One interesting difference is the role of the Amarnath land issue and of the Jammu Hindu community.”

Schaffer, now the head of the South Asia program at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, said, “The Amarnath land grant got a lot of people stirred up, but when the new governor, N N Vohra, resolved that, it was people from Jammu who expanded the protest. So, far more than the previous episodes, this one has local roots.”

Sumit Ganguly, professor of political science and Director of the India Studies Program at Indiana University in Bloomington, however, did not believe it could become another Intifada like in the 1990s, “especially if the Indian State, however, belatedly, manages to demonstrate a degree of dexterity in defusing the crisis.”

“It has already shown, after one or two initial missteps, that it is capable of showing restraint even in the face of grave provocation,” he said. “It needs to keep doing more of the same despite pressures from within elements of the national security establishment to adopt a harder line.”

Ganguly argued that “it also needs to douse the flames in Jammu as they tend to generate their own fires in the Valley.”

But, he warned that “the wild card in all of this, remains both the Islamists and the Hindu zealots, who thrive on each other follies and short-sighted goals and actions.”

Former Assistant Secretary of State for South Asian Affairs Karl F Inderfurth, now a professor of international relations at George Washington University and foreign policy adviser to the Obama presidential campaign, said, “There have been a lot of reasons that go back several weeks as to how this thing flared up.”

But, he too agreed that “there are those who do want to reverse the (peace) process,” between India and Pakistan, “and with the distracted political leadership in Pakistan, I believe that some of these forces are beginning to assert themselves again.”

Robert Hathaway, director of the Asia Program at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and a former Congressional staffer on South Asia on the Foreign Affairs Committee, also expressed concern and said, “It is something for the US and the international community to watch,” and make clear to Pakistan it would not tolerate any meddling by the ISI or elements within the Army.

“I am very concerned and clearly it has the potential to unravel and the situation is far more worrisome than it was earlier, because American intelligence has conclusive evidence that elements associated with the ISI were involved in planning and perhaps even carrying out the bombing of the Indian embassy in Kabul,” he said.

Hathaway acknowledged that “the current upsurge in violence and in agitation is the result of conditions within both Jammu and the Valley itself and the increased violence and the increased tension in the Valley was largely the result of developments within the Valley. So, I could believe that I am not going to point the finger at Pakistan because of that.”

“But neither can we rule out that they are not involved because we all know that Pakistan has a long history of fishing in troubled waters in Kashmir. It has a long history of supporting insurgent groups of various sorts,” he added.

 

US warns Russia of lasting impact
 

The US defence chief has warned relations with Russia could be damaged for years if Moscow does not step back from “aggressive” actions in Georgia.

Russian troops have begun handing back the town of Gori to the Georgians
 

But Robert Gates said he did not see a need for US military force in Georgia.

His words came as Moscow said the idea of Georgian territorial integrity was an irrelevance.

Georgia’s breakaway regions – Abkhazia and South Ossetia – would never agree to being part of Georgia again, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said.

Earlier, Russia said it had began handing back the town of Gori to Georgian police but insisted its troops would stay in the area.

A Russian general said his forces were there to remove weaponry and help restore law and order in Gori, which lies some 15km (10 miles) from South Ossetia and on a key route to the Georgian capital, Tbilisi.

Elsewhere, eyewitnesses in the Georgian Black Sea port of Poti said that Russian troops had entered the town in armoured vehicles.

Moscow had earlier denied the reports but Russia’s deputy chief of staff, Gen Anatoly Nogovitsyn, told a televised news conference it was legitimate for Russians to be in Poti as part of intelligence-gathering operations.

Meanwhile, Reuters reported that more than 100 Russian vehicles, some of them armoured, had gathered outside the major western Georgian town of Zugdidi.

Despite concerns that Moscow may not be keen quickly to leave Georgian territory, Mr Gates said the Russians did seem to be pulling back.

“They appear to be withdrawing their forces back towards Abkhazia and to the zone of conflict… towards South Ossetia,” he said.

Gen James Cartwright, vice-chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, also said he believed Russia was “generally complying” with the terms of the truce, which called for its withdrawal from hostilities.

But, Mr Gates warned: “If Russia does not step back from its aggressive posture and actions in Georgia, the US-Russian relationship could be adversely affected for years to come.”

The Russians were trying to redress what they regarded as the many concessions forced on them after the breakup of the Soviet Union and were trying to “reassert their international status”, Mr Gates said.

Georgia was also being punished for its efforts to integrate with the West and in particular to join Nato, the defence secretary went on.

The BBC’s Justin Webb in Washington says Mr Gates’s address was the first effort by a senior member of the Bush administration to set out what the Americans believe is happening in Russia.

But while Mr Gates said Russia’s aggressive posture was not acceptable, our correspondent says, he took an unusual step for the Bush administration in ruling out the use of US force. This is not a fight that America wants to have.

Withdrawal

Georgia attacked the rebel region of South Ossetia from Gori a week ago, prompting Russian retaliation. The Georgians say it followed continuous provocation.

Both sides agreed to a French-brokered ceasefire on Tuesday, amid international concern, but it has seemed fragile so far.

Earlier on Thursday in Moscow, Russia’s President Dmitry Medvedev said Russia would respect any decision South Ossetia and Abkhazia made about their future status.

His words followed warnings from the US that Russia had to respect Georgia’s territorial sovereignty and withdraw its forces.

Meanwhile, the US has sent its second shipment of humanitarian aid into Georgia.

Russia has questioned whether the deliveries contain only humanitarian supplies.

 

Russia has questioned what is in US aid deliveries to Georgia
 
The US economy may have avoided a major decline, US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has said.

Mr Bernanke said the risk of a substantial downturn had “diminished over the past month or so”.

Playing down recent unemployment rises, he said a series of interest rate reductions combined with tax cuts was helping the US offset its difficulties. Earlier, Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama attacked his rival John McCain’s economic policies. In his first speech since Hillary Clinton left the presidential race, Mr Obama accused Mr McCain, the Republican party’s candidate, of “a full-throated endorsement” of President George W Bush’s economic policies.

The McCain camp responded by saying that measures Mr Obama was proposing would weaken the US economy. Inflation fears Mr Bernanke gave his assessment of how the US economy was faring at a bankers’ conference in Chatham, Massachusetts. He said that “the risk that the economy has entered a substantial downturn appears to have diminished over the past month or so”. He added that despite a recent rise in unemployment, which last month saw its biggest jump in 20 years, a series of reductions in interests rates in the last nine months combined with tax cuts had helped to offset the risks threatening the economy. Mr Bernanke did say, however, that rising energy prices – which saw the cost of oil hit a record high on Friday – risked pushing up inflation. Mr Bernanke said recent rate reductions and tax cuts had helped “The latest round of increases in energy prices has added to the upside risks to inflation and inflation expectations,” he said. If consumers and businesses believe the record oil prices will continue to rise, they could change their spending habits to make inflation a self-fulfilling prophecy, says the BBC’s Jane O’Brien in Washington. That, and a weak dollar, our correspondent added, could force the Fed to raise rates later this year or next, though Mr Bernanke said that the Fed would be robust in dealing with this issue. “The Federal Open Market Committee will strongly resist an erosion of longer-term inflation expectations, as an unanchoring of those expectations would be destabilising for growth as well as for inflation,” Mr Bernanke said. Our correspondent says that there has been progress in repairing the credit markets that sparked the US housing slump, the Fed has made swingeing interest rate cuts and the government is spending $168bn on top of tax rebates to help stimulate recovery. But last week’s jump in unemployment rates and record fuel prices rocked already jittery markets, our correspondent says, and for the average American, Mr Bernanke’s soothing words may seem hard to believe. ‘Different vision’ Polls indicate that the economy has surpassed the war in Iraq as the biggest concern for American voters. Mr Obama pledged immediate relief for the hardest hit Mr Obama hopes that focusing on the economy will persuade undecided voters to support him, correspondents say. Speaking in Raleigh, North Carolina, Mr Obama launched his Change That Works for You tour – a nationwide schedule of speeches focusing on the economy. “When it comes to the economy, John McCain and I have a fundamentally different vision of where to take the country, because for all of his talk about independence, the centrepiece of John McCain’s economic plan amounts to a full-throated endorsement of George Bush’s policies. “I have a different vision for the future. Instead of spending $12bn a month rebuilding Iraq, I think it’s time we invested in our roads and schools and bridges.” Mr Obama pledged “an immediate $50bn” to those hardest hit by the US “downturn”. He also accused Mr McCain of doing nothing to help 1.5m people facing foreclosures across America, “even as he [Mr McCain] supported spending billions to bail out Wall Street”. He promised to introduce a windfall tax on the profits of American oil companies. The McCain camp hit back by portraying Mr Obama as a tax-and-spend liberal. “While hardworking families are hurting and employers are vulnerable, Barack Obama has promised higher income taxes, social security taxes, capital gains taxes, dividend taxes, and tax hikes on job creating businesses,” campaign spokesman Tucker Bounds said. On Monday, Mr McCain was holding fundraising events in Virginia and in the capital, Washington.

Source: BBC