Gates: New US intelligence chief the right choice


By ANNE GEARAN, AP National Security Writer Anne Gearan, Ap National Security Writer – Sun Jun 6, 11:28 am ET


BAKU, Azerbaijan – U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Sunday that his Pentagon intelligence chief, in line to oversee all American spy agencies, has the ability to forge consensus among that sprawling network.


Retired Air Force Lt. Gen. James R. Clapper, nominated by President Barack Obama on Saturday to be national intelligence director, is "the consummate intelligence professional who has the respect of virtually everybody in the community," Gates told reporters traveling with him to Azerbaijan.


He described Clapper as having the proper temperament for "the kind of constructive, positive chemistry with the other leaders of the intelligence community."


Clapper was the only person Gates brought to the Defense Department after he was named defense secretary by President George W. Bush in 2006. Gates has known Clapper for 20 years and considers him a friend.


Pending Senate approval, Clapper would succeed retired Adm. Dennis Blair, who resigned last month after clashing with the White House and other intelligence officials during his 16 months in the position.


Although Obama is seeking a quick confirmation vote for Clapper, senators in both parties have questioned whether he should be in the post.


Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, who heads the Senate Intelligence Committee, has said it would be better to have a civilian. The committee's top Republican, Sen. Kit Bond of Missouri, has said he believes Clapper would be outmaneuvered because White House counterterrorism adviser John Brennan and CIA Director Leon Panetta have more access to Obama.


Clapper, 69, is known for being blunt and willing to argue a point with lawmakers as well as administration officials. He has been confirmed for administration positions four times.


Gates said that complaints on Capitol Hill that Clapper hasn't always been forthcoming reflect a jurisdictional tug-o-war "about who gets briefed on what."


"Jim has a strong, long record of not only adherence to congressional oversight but support of it and enthusiastic cooperation," he said.


If confirmed, Clapper would be the fourth intelligence director since the position was created in 2004 as an answer to post-Sept. 11 criticism that the nation's intelligence agencies lacked an overall manager.


"What is really key for success in leading the intelligence community and for the DNI, in my view, is not only long experience and familiarity with the intelligence world, but the temperament to have the kind of constructive, positive chemistry with the other leaders of the intelligence community," Gates said. "And Gen. Clapper has that kind of chemistry, has had it all along."


The top choice to replace Clapper as undersecretary of defense for intelligence is Mike Vickers, the assistant secretary of defense for special operations/low-intensity conflict, a former senior U.S. official said. A senior administration source said Vickers has Obama's trust and backing but that Obama is leaving the choice to Gates. Both sources spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss personnel matters.


___


Associated Press writer Kimberly Dozier in Washington contributed to this report.



article found at:


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/eu_gates_intelligence_director;_ylt=A0wNdP6V.wtMyMkA_l.yFz4D;_ylu=X3oDMTJ2MDc1aGhpBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTAwNjA2L2V1X2dhdGVzX2ludGVsbGlnZW5jZV9kaXJlY3RvcgRjcG9zAzEEcG9zAzIEc2VjA3luX3RvcF9zdG9yeQRzbGsDZ2F0ZXNuZXd1c2lu




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In gulf oil spill's long reach, ecological damage could last decades



By Joel Achenbach and David Brown


Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, June 6, 2010


Snorkeling along a coral reef near Veracruz, Mexico, in 2002, Texas biologist Wes Tunnell spotted what looked like a ledge of rock covered in sand, shells, algae and hermit crabs. He knew, from years of research at the reef, that it probably wasn't a rock at all. He stabbed it with his diving knife. His blade pulled up gunk.




"Sure enough, it was tar from the Ixtoc spill," Tunnell said.

Twenty-three years earlier, in 1979, an oil well named Ixtoc I had a blowout in 150 feet of water in the southern Gulf of Mexico. The Mexican national oil company Pemex tried to kill the well with drilling mud, and then with steel and lead balls dropped into the wellbore. It tried to contain the oil with a cap nicknamed The Sombrero. Finally, after 290 days, a relief well plugged the hole with cement and the spill came to an end -- but only after polluting the gulf with 138 million gallons of crude.


That remains the worst accidental oil spill in history -- but the Deepwater Horizon blowout off the Louisiana coast is rapidly gaining on it.


The spill has now been partially contained with the cap that BP engineers lowered onto the mile-deep geyser Thursday night. That means roughly a quarter to half of the flow is being piped to a surface ship, the national incident commander, Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, said Saturday. BP hopes to improve the rate captured in coming days. If official government estimates are correct, 23 million to 47 million gallons of oil have spewed so far.


Ecosystems can survive and eventually recover from very large oil spills, even ones that are Ixtoc-sized. In most spills, the volatile compounds evaporate. The sun breaks down others. Some compounds are dissolved in water. Microbes consume the simpler, "straight chain" hydrocarbons -- and the warmer it is, the more they eat. The gulf spill has climate in its favor. Scientists agree: Horrible as the spill may be, it's not going to turn the Gulf of Mexico into another Dead Sea.


But neither is this ecological crisis going to be over anytime soon. The spill will have ripple effects far into the future, scientists warn.


"This spill will be lasting for years if not decades," said Doug Inkley, senior scientist at the National Wildlife Federation.


Some of the immediate effects of a spill are obvious -- witness the gut-wrenching images of soaked and suffocating seabirds in the gulf. But some types of ecological damage are hard to measure and can take years to document. Many of the creatures that die will sink to the bottom, making mortality estimates difficult. Damage to the reproduction rate of sea turtles may take years to play out.


The Exxon Valdez spill of 11 million gallons killed as many as 700,000 sea birds and 5,000 sea otters initially, but even 21 years later, populations of sea otters in areas of Prince William Sound haven't recovered. The Pacific herring population collapsed after the spill for reasons that remain in dispute among scientists. Two intensely studied pods of killer whales in the sound suffered heavy losses in the spill and have struggled since. One of the two pods has no more reproductive females. It is doomed to extinction.


And the oil?


"It's still sitting there," said Stan Rice, program manager for habitat studies at the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration's Auke Bay Fisheries Lab. "It's still liquid, you can still smell it and touch it."


read more at:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/06/05/AR2010060503987.html?hpid=topnews





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NDP open to working with Ignatieff- Politics - Canoe.ca

NDP open to working with Ignatieff

By LAURA PAYTON, Parliamentary Bureau


OTTAWA ­- The NDP are responding cautiously to news that Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff said he was willing to consider forming a coalition following the next election.

A spokesman for Jack Layton said the NDP leader has worked with others his entire political life.

"That's the kind of leadership Canadians are looking for. We'll keep watching with interest as the Liberals try to figure out what is wrong with them. They obviously have a lot to talk about," Karl Belanger said.

Layton's chief of staff told CTV's Question Period the NDP has always been open to co-operating, although Ignatieff had previously closed the door to a coalition.

"I think it is positive that it is being seen as a legitimate formation, that this is not off the table, that we can discuss co-operation," Anne McGrath said Sunday.

In a press report, Ignatieff ruled out a party merger but said he was a unifier who could make "all kinds of electoral arrangements" work.

McGrath called Ignatieff's remarks "interesting."

A spokesman for Ignatieff said the Liberal goal in the next election is to win a majority.

Tory strategist Tim Powers said Ignatieff has "made himself half-pregnant."

"He had to take a position but this is the worst position he could take," he said.

"This is not dialogue that the NDP is driving ... Liberals are talking about it because they're weak and they're vulnerable and they're looking at different options," Powers said.



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NDP open to working with Ignatieff- Politics - Canoe.ca
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CBC News - Canada - Where the money could've gone


CBC News - Canada - Where the money could've gone


Where the money could've gone Last Updated: Thursday, May 27, 2010 12:32 PM ET

Police were on hand en masse for the April 2009 G20 summit in London. Total security bill: $30 million. (Tim Hales/Associated Press)It's no surprise, Public Safety Minister Vic Toews says, of the $930 million it will cost to make sure more than 20 world leaders — and their entourages — are safe when they come for three days in Ontario at the end of June.

Security costs at previous summits

  • G8 summit Japan October 2008: $381 million

  • G8 summit Gleneagles. Scotland July 2005: $110 million


  • G20 summit London April 2009: $30 million



  • G20 summit Pittsburgh, September 2009: $18 million

In fact, Toews says, the price tag may even go a little higher.


In an interview with CBC News, Toews insisted the estimate was not a cost overrun and said the G8 and G20 summits were actually moved closer together to save money.

"This has been budgeted for, and the money is released as it is required," Toews said.




The G8 leaders will meet in Huntsville, Ont., on June 25 and 26. The 12 other leaders who make up the G20 (along with other invited leaders) will be waiting 220 kilometres away in Toronto, for more meetings on June 26 and June 27.




The Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA) spent $477.2 million to ensure the safety and security of Canadians in the 2008-2009 fiscal year. The G8/G20 security bill could have paid the CBSA's budget for two years.




That $930 million is just for security and doesn't include meals, transportation or upgrades to local roads.




That works out to about $12,916,666.67 an hour for the three days of meetings. It would also pay for the entire 2010 Toronto police services budget — which covers 5,567 police officers and 2,056 full-time civilians and part-time or casual employees, including benefits and overtime.




New light rail streetcars are a main feature of Toronto's Transit City plan. One 15-kilometre line will cost $950 million - over four years. (Bombardier)Put that money in your hands, and you could buy a home security system with two-way voice communication and pay a security company to monitor and maintain it — for 2,583,333 years.




Part of the security plan will mean a large section of downtown Toronto will be enclosed by a security fence — shutting down some of the city's busiest streets to traffic, making it difficult to get around.




Toronto transit officials might like to get their hands on that security budget. It would've covered the cost of the Sheppard East Light Rail Transit line. But it would've taken the city four years to eat up that budget before the 15-kilometre long route opens in 2013.




Calgary could have used the cash to pay for a long-planned tunnel linking northeast communities and businesses to Calgary International Airport. The city says the estimated cost has gone from $287 million to around $900 million, so it won't likely be built this decade.




The $930-million security tab could have locked up former Blue Jay ace Roy Halliday for 46 years. (Evan Vucci/Associated Press)The security plan has forced the city to shut down one of Canada's most-recognizable tourist attractions — the CN Tower. It's also forced the Toronto Blue Jays to shift a key three-game series with the Philadelphia Phillies to Philadelphia. Baseball fans were looking forward to that series, since it would have marked the return one of baseball's best pitchers — Roy Halladay — to the city he left last year in a trade.




Blue Jays management were also looking forward to the series, as it would have meant large crowds at the Rogers Centre — something that's been lacking in a season of rebuilding.




That $930 million could have done wonders to boost Blue Jays attendance. It could have paid for a ticket in the 200 level of the stadium for every man, woman and child in the country — for a premium game, like one featuring the Phillies and Halladay.




The money also could've been used to keep Halladay pitching for the Blue Jays — for the next 46 years. It could also have covered the Blue Jays entire team payroll for the next 10 years — had it stayed at the opening day level of $78,689,357.




Or maybe the federal government could've bought the Washington Nationals, moved them back to Montreal and built them a decent stadium. The Nationals are a relative bargain, valued by Forbes at $387 million US this year.




Ottawa could have used the money it's spending on security to buy the Phoenix Coyotes, Colorado Avalanche and Atlanta Thrashers and move them to Winnipeg, Quebec City and southern Ontario, respectively. (Christian Petersen/Getty Images)Sticking with sports, Ottawa could have coughed up $140 million allowing the NHL to recoup what it paid for the Phoenix Coyotes, added $60 million to let the league claim a tidy profit and then move the team to Winnipeg. And for good measure, throw in $205 million for the Colorado Avalanche and $143 million for the Atlanta Thrashers moving the Avalanche back to Quebec City and the Thrashers to southern Ontario, marking the return of competitive professional hockey to Canada's biggest market. There'd be enough cash left over to help with the building of stadiums for each team.




Let the private sector pay?




The G8 and G20 leaders will tackle several economic issues at the summit. Banks may get some attention. The Bank of Montreal reported a much bigger than expected profit of $745 million on May 26 — and that's just for the second three months of 2010. That would cover most of the security cost and still keep the bank out of the red.




There may be some political theatre during the meetings, perhaps of cinematic proportion. The people behind the Shrek dynasty could be tapped for some of the production costs. Shrek the Third hauled in $798 million around the globe and Shrek 2 broke $900 million. Shrek Forever After — the final installment in the series — pulled in just over $70 million in its first weekend in the theatres.




Not a sports fan? There's plenty the money could have accomplished to keep Canada in the forefront of research and development. Think 19 top scholars for $200 million was a good deal? How about another 94 for $930 million?




We could've given the 500,000 Canadian college and university students a real edge next September. The money could have bought each of them a 64-gigabyte Wi-Fi-only iPad - and there would be enough money left over to load them with a year's supply of textbooks.




Or the federal government could have forgiven the student debt for:







  • 33,214 graduates in Atlantic Canada, where the debt at graduation is $28,000 (the highest in Canada).



  • Or 71,538 graduates in Quebec, where the average debt at graduation is $13,000 (the lowest in Canada).



None of that catch your eye? How about a year's supply (about three litres) of maple syrup for every man, woman and child in the country. There'd be enough money left over to mail souvenir containers of the stuff to the leaders and their entourages. And maybe even a T-shirt, too.






Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2010/05/26/f-g8-g20-security-where-the-money-could-have-gone.html#ixzz0q6EIBSfQ




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John Ivison: McGuinty still has 'God's work' to do

John Ivison: McGuinty still has 'God's work' to do
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About Me

Hi everyone, my name is Tharsan and I am in school. I am an active person, I love martial arts and volunteering. I volunteer 7 hours a day, 5 days a week every summer for school hours.