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Wednesday, April 23, 2003

War Blog Updates
TV News Engineer Charged with Smuggling Paintings from Iraq: "[Fox News]
A television news engineer faces smuggling charges after attempting to bring into the United States 12 stolen Iraqi paintings, monetary bonds and other items, federal officials said Wednesday. A criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Va., charges that Benjamin James Johnson, 27, tried to bring the paintings into this country last Thursday. They were contained in a large cardboard box that was examined by Customs agents at Dulles International Airport outside Washington.


Read the full story....

UPDATE: Mr. Johnson worked for Fox News . He has been fired.
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In Command Post

France will Pay: "Obviously the US cabinet has been spending far too much time amongst Australians. First Rumsfeld (who is greatly appreciated here in Australia, even by those who don't agree with him). Now Colin Powell. From the Sydney Morning Herald
The US Secretary of State, Colin Powell, warned that France would face consequences for its opposition to the war in Iraq as Bush Administration aides met to consider ways to express Washington's anger.
Asked whether Paris would be punished for its anti-war stance, Mr Powell replied bluntly: "Yes."
Onya Col.
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In Command Post

Washington : No Role for UN Inspectors: "From the Sydney Morning Herald
The United States will not permit United Nations weapons inspectors to return to Iraq, saying the US military has taken over the role of searching for Saddam's weapons of mass destruction.
In simultaneous briefings in New York and Washington, both the White House and the US ambassador to the UN said they saw no role in postwar Iraq for the UN weapons inspection teams.
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In Command Post

US Bombing Policy shaped by Aussies: "From the Sydney Morning Herald
Australia had a key influence on the United States military strategy in Iraq in persuading it to take greater steps to minimise civilian casualties and damage during its bombing campaign, the Minister for Defence, Robert Hill, said yesterday.
Senator Hill and the chief of Defence Force, General Peter Cosgrove, on a tour of the Middle East, met the US commander, General Tommy Franks, in Qatar yesterday.
General Franks told them the targeting approach of the coalition was more conservative than it might have been largely because of the attitude of the Australian Defence Force, Senator Hill said.
" Our very conservatively drawn rules of engagement in that regard have been a lesson that have been taken up not only in this campaign but as a precedent for the future as well ." ... Australia's conservative approach to targeting has never been precisely defined due to "operational security", but it puts a great premium on the possibility of civilian deaths. The military advantage of an air strike had to significantly outweigh the prospect of "collateral damage".
As such, Australia's squadron of 14 F/A 18 Hornets rarely ventured into built-up areas to make strikes and, on occasion, pulled out of bombing raids at the last minute when it was realised civilians were in the target area.
Also in the same article was a brief explanation by General Cosgrove for Australia's luck in having no casualties:
General Cosgrove told the troops they could take great pride in their achievements, and that their contribution to deposing Saddam Hussein would be hailed for generations.
He also cautioned that Australian troops, who have yet to suffer any casualties or serious injuries, had to remain vigilant to ensure their continued safety.
" This is like a marathon runner running into the stadium," he told reporters.
"You don't turn around and wave to the crowd until you've crossed the finish line. I keep saying to our boys and girls: 'You stay with it. The harder you work, the luckier you get' ."
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In Command Post

As the axis turns: "An Australian newspaper reports that the U.S. has drawn up plans to bomb a nuclear fuel plant in North Korea if it reprocesses spent nuclear fuel rods. The plan also involves a U.S. strike against North Korean heavy artillery in the hills above the border with South Korea, threatening the capital Seoul and about 17,000 U.S. troops stationed nearby."
In Alternet: War On Iraq

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