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June 23, 2004
A few interesting items from this morning's news roundup: This is almost unbellievable: Congressional testimony by the president of the Association of Flight Attendants says that flight attendants on commercial airlines are still not being trained to resist hijackers. The Washington Times follows up on Vladimir Putin's statement that the Russians warned the U.S. about terrorist attacks on America by Saddam's Iraq, and finds that the story has been virtually ignored by the news media. And the Washington Post provides the documents that the White House declassified yesterday on the treatment of detainees. The documents seem to be as they were reported. President Bush, on the application of the Geneva Convention to Taliban and al Qaeda prisoners: I accept the legal conclusion of the Department of Justice and determine that none of the provisions of Geneva apply to our conflict with al Qaeda in Afghanistan or elsewhere throughout the world because, among other reasons, al Qaeda is not a High Contracting Party to Geneva. I didn't see anything especially noteworthy in a partial review of the documents. I did note, however, in a document that summarized interrogation techniques that had been used at Guantanamo Bay, that one of the more severe, Category II methods was "Serving MRE instead of hot rations." In other words, making them eat the same food that our own troops eat in the field. Only in America, folks. Posted by at 7:37 AM
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