Re: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-24 Thread Ken Brown
This has now happened - Terry Lloyd one, of Britain's better-known
reporters,  seems to have been killed by US marines. According to the
cameraman he was picked up by Iraqi ambulance, so its a fair bet they
weren't embedded in the COW (thanks for the acronym, Tim)

http://www.itv.com/news/236548.html

Ken Brown wrote:
 
 Major Variola (ret) wrote:
 
  I'd think that the troops would explain this to the reporters tagging
  along  as they confiscate all their transmitters before an op.  I simply
  wouldn't trust the reporters, even though they're toast too if someone mis-IFFs.
 
  Its a lot more serious than not shutting off your cell phone on a
  plane.  Besides, I doubt  the reporters have Iraq's FCC's clearance to
  use those frequencies  there, until we extend
  the Little Powell's authority to that domain. :-)
 
 Kate Adie's broadcast (which I heard on the BBC) was in the context of a
 discussion of non-embedded reporters. She claimed that all the best
 news from Gulf War 2  had been from people who weren't bedding with the
 military. The ones who are being threatened are the ones with the
 temerity to travel independently rather than under military orders.
 
 There was also a comment by Robert Fisk to the effect that (I can't
 remember the exact words): There will be a war on. There is no law in a
 war, you can do whatever you can get away with.
 
 In an article I found online Fisk gives his rules of thumb for spotring
 compromised reporters:
 
 - Reporters who wear items of American or British military costume 
 helmets, camouflage jackets, weapons, etc.
 
 - Reporters who say we when they are referring to the US or British
 military unit in which they are embedded.
 
 - Those who use the words collateral damage instead of dead
 civilians.
 
 - Those who commence answering questions with the words: Well, of
 course, because of military security I can't divulge...
 
 - Those who, reporting from the Iraqi side, insist on referring to the
 Iraqi population as his (ie Saddam's) people.
 
 - Journalists in Baghdad who refer to what the Americans describe as
 Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses  rather than the plain and simple
 torture we all know Saddam practices.
 
 - Journalists reporting from either side who use the god-awful and
 creepy phrase officials say without naming, quite specifically, who
 these often lying officials are.



RE: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-24 Thread Trei, Peter
 Ken Brown[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
 This has now happened - Terry Lloyd one, of Britain's better-known
 reporters,  seems to have been killed by US marines. According to the
 cameraman he was picked up by Iraqi ambulance, so its a fair bet they
 weren't embedded in the COW (thanks for the acronym, Tim)
 
 http://www.itv.com/news/236548.html
 
 Ken Brown wrote:
[...]
  
  Kate Adie's broadcast (which I heard on the BBC) was in the context of a
  discussion of non-embedded reporters. She claimed that all the best
  news from Gulf War 2  had been from people who weren't bedding with the
  military. The ones who are being threatened are the ones with the
  temerity to travel independently rather than under military orders.
 
Let's not mix apples and oranges. Kate Adie's report
concerned the possibility that air-launched 
anti-radiation missiles might be directed against 
radar-band transmitters in enemy territory, without first 
checking to see if they were actually reporter's
microwave satellite uplinks.

Terry Lloyd was in a battle zone, on the Iraqi side.
I kind of doubt if he was wearing hunter orange, or
a big flashing neon sign saying Western Journalist:
Don't shoot me.

Without commenting on the legitimacy of the US
invasion, it looks to me like Mr Lloyd took a 
calculated risk to get the news from from the Iraqi
side of the front lines, and tragically lost.

Peter Trei



Re: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-24 Thread Ken Brown
This has now happened - Terry Lloyd one, of Britain's better-known
reporters,  seems to have been killed by US marines. According to the
cameraman he was picked up by Iraqi ambulance, so its a fair bet they
weren't embedded in the COW (thanks for the acronym, Tim)

http://www.itv.com/news/236548.html

Ken Brown wrote:
 
 Major Variola (ret) wrote:
 
  I'd think that the troops would explain this to the reporters tagging
  along  as they confiscate all their transmitters before an op.  I simply
  wouldn't trust the reporters, even though they're toast too if someone mis-IFFs.
 
  Its a lot more serious than not shutting off your cell phone on a
  plane.  Besides, I doubt  the reporters have Iraq's FCC's clearance to
  use those frequencies  there, until we extend
  the Little Powell's authority to that domain. :-)
 
 Kate Adie's broadcast (which I heard on the BBC) was in the context of a
 discussion of non-embedded reporters. She claimed that all the best
 news from Gulf War 2  had been from people who weren't bedding with the
 military. The ones who are being threatened are the ones with the
 temerity to travel independently rather than under military orders.
 
 There was also a comment by Robert Fisk to the effect that (I can't
 remember the exact words): There will be a war on. There is no law in a
 war, you can do whatever you can get away with.
 
 In an article I found online Fisk gives his rules of thumb for spotring
 compromised reporters:
 
 - Reporters who wear items of American or British military costume 
 helmets, camouflage jackets, weapons, etc.
 
 - Reporters who say we when they are referring to the US or British
 military unit in which they are embedded.
 
 - Those who use the words collateral damage instead of dead
 civilians.
 
 - Those who commence answering questions with the words: Well, of
 course, because of military security I can't divulge...
 
 - Those who, reporting from the Iraqi side, insist on referring to the
 Iraqi population as his (ie Saddam's) people.
 
 - Journalists in Baghdad who refer to what the Americans describe as
 Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses  rather than the plain and simple
 torture we all know Saddam practices.
 
 - Journalists reporting from either side who use the god-awful and
 creepy phrase officials say without naming, quite specifically, who
 these often lying officials are.



RE: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-24 Thread Trei, Peter
 Ken Brown[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
 This has now happened - Terry Lloyd one, of Britain's better-known
 reporters,  seems to have been killed by US marines. According to the
 cameraman he was picked up by Iraqi ambulance, so its a fair bet they
 weren't embedded in the COW (thanks for the acronym, Tim)
 
 http://www.itv.com/news/236548.html
 
 Ken Brown wrote:
[...]
  
  Kate Adie's broadcast (which I heard on the BBC) was in the context of a
  discussion of non-embedded reporters. She claimed that all the best
  news from Gulf War 2  had been from people who weren't bedding with the
  military. The ones who are being threatened are the ones with the
  temerity to travel independently rather than under military orders.
 
Let's not mix apples and oranges. Kate Adie's report
concerned the possibility that air-launched 
anti-radiation missiles might be directed against 
radar-band transmitters in enemy territory, without first 
checking to see if they were actually reporter's
microwave satellite uplinks.

Terry Lloyd was in a battle zone, on the Iraqi side.
I kind of doubt if he was wearing hunter orange, or
a big flashing neon sign saying Western Journalist:
Don't shoot me.

Without commenting on the legitimacy of the US
invasion, it looks to me like Mr Lloyd took a 
calculated risk to get the news from from the Iraqi
side of the front lines, and tragically lost.

Peter Trei



RE: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-15 Thread Bill Frantz
At 7:12 AM -0800 3/14/03, Trei, Peter wrote:
If the US military does Really Bad Things to Iraqi civilians with
any frequency,  I have little doubt we'll hear about it in time.
There are journalists 'embedded' in many units.

In the credit where credit's due department, this change in press relations
is one of the better things to come out of the G. W. Bush administration.
Compared with the way the press was handled during Gulf War I, this
approach is much more likely to bring incidents such as Mai Lai to the
light of day.  (It also should produce a much better version of, War, the
Latest Reality Show, coming to a TV network near you.)

Cheers - Bill


-
Bill Frantz   | Due process for all| Periwinkle -- Consulting
(408)356-8506 | used to be the | 16345 Englewood Ave.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | American way.  | Los Gatos, CA 95032, USA



Re: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-15 Thread Ken Brown
Major Variola (ret) wrote:
 
 I'd think that the troops would explain this to the reporters tagging
 along  as they confiscate all their transmitters before an op.  I simply
 wouldn't trust the reporters, even though they're toast too if someone mis-IFFs.
 
 Its a lot more serious than not shutting off your cell phone on a
 plane.  Besides, I doubt  the reporters have Iraq's FCC's clearance to
 use those frequencies  there, until we extend
 the Little Powell's authority to that domain. :-)

Kate Adie's broadcast (which I heard on the BBC) was in the context of a
discussion of non-embedded reporters. She claimed that all the best
news from Gulf War 2  had been from people who weren't bedding with the
military. The ones who are being threatened are the ones with the
temerity to travel independently rather than under military orders. 

There was also a comment by Robert Fisk to the effect that (I can't
remember the exact words): There will be a war on. There is no law in a
war, you can do whatever you can get away with.


In an article I found online Fisk gives his rules of thumb for spotring
compromised reporters:

- Reporters who wear items of American or British military costume 
helmets, camouflage jackets, weapons, etc.

- Reporters who say we when they are referring to the US or British
military unit in which they are embedded.

- Those who use the words collateral damage instead of dead
civilians.

- Those who commence answering questions with the words: Well, of
course, because of military security I can't divulge... 

- Those who, reporting from the Iraqi side, insist on referring to the
Iraqi population as his (ie Saddam's) people.

- Journalists in Baghdad who refer to what the Americans describe as
Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses  rather than the plain and simple
torture we all know Saddam practices.

- Journalists reporting from either side who use the god-awful and
creepy phrase officials say without naming, quite specifically, who
these often lying officials are.



RE: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-15 Thread Bill Frantz
At 7:12 AM -0800 3/14/03, Trei, Peter wrote:
If the US military does Really Bad Things to Iraqi civilians with
any frequency,  I have little doubt we'll hear about it in time.
There are journalists 'embedded' in many units.

In the credit where credit's due department, this change in press relations
is one of the better things to come out of the G. W. Bush administration.
Compared with the way the press was handled during Gulf War I, this
approach is much more likely to bring incidents such as Mai Lai to the
light of day.  (It also should produce a much better version of, War, the
Latest Reality Show, coming to a TV network near you.)

Cheers - Bill


-
Bill Frantz   | Due process for all| Periwinkle -- Consulting
(408)356-8506 | used to be the | 16345 Englewood Ave.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | American way.  | Los Gatos, CA 95032, USA



Re: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-15 Thread Ken Brown
Major Variola (ret) wrote:
 
 I'd think that the troops would explain this to the reporters tagging
 along  as they confiscate all their transmitters before an op.  I simply
 wouldn't trust the reporters, even though they're toast too if someone mis-IFFs.
 
 Its a lot more serious than not shutting off your cell phone on a
 plane.  Besides, I doubt  the reporters have Iraq's FCC's clearance to
 use those frequencies  there, until we extend
 the Little Powell's authority to that domain. :-)

Kate Adie's broadcast (which I heard on the BBC) was in the context of a
discussion of non-embedded reporters. She claimed that all the best
news from Gulf War 2  had been from people who weren't bedding with the
military. The ones who are being threatened are the ones with the
temerity to travel independently rather than under military orders. 

There was also a comment by Robert Fisk to the effect that (I can't
remember the exact words): There will be a war on. There is no law in a
war, you can do whatever you can get away with.


In an article I found online Fisk gives his rules of thumb for spotring
compromised reporters:

- Reporters who wear items of American or British military costume 
helmets, camouflage jackets, weapons, etc.

- Reporters who say we when they are referring to the US or British
military unit in which they are embedded.

- Those who use the words collateral damage instead of dead
civilians.

- Those who commence answering questions with the words: Well, of
course, because of military security I can't divulge... 

- Those who, reporting from the Iraqi side, insist on referring to the
Iraqi population as his (ie Saddam's) people.

- Journalists in Baghdad who refer to what the Americans describe as
Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses  rather than the plain and simple
torture we all know Saddam practices.

- Journalists reporting from either side who use the god-awful and
creepy phrase officials say without naming, quite specifically, who
these often lying officials are.



Re: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-15 Thread Bill Stewart
At 11:22 AM 03/13/2003 -0800, Eric Cordian wrote:
This is nothing new.  Radio and TV stations and other unauthorized
sources of information are always first on the target list whenever the US
starts a war.
At the beginning of Part I of this war they showed the smart bomb or cruise 
missile
or whatever blowing up the Baghdad phone company building.
As someone who works for the phone company, I have to say this pissed me 
off :-)

I think the Pentagon spokeshomo put it this way.
Propaganda outlets ARE military targets.
Propaganda being anything not released by the Pentagon, of course.
Peter Trei wrote:
 Stopping useful information on *ongoing* operations
 from reaching the enemy has been a normal, unremarkable part of
 waging war for over 150 years.
During the initial bombing campaign in Part I, Ramsay Clark and some
journalists did a week-long couple-thousand-mile drive around Iraq
filming the damage being done.  One of the important parts was
showing downtown Baghdad apartment buildings being bombed
because they were near bridges or the water system or other strategic targets
and interviewing the people who lived there.
In spite of all the commercials for smart bombs and cruise missiles,
most of the armament dropped on Iraq back then was dumb iron bombs;
one group of people were starting to think about blowing up their own bridge
so that the Yankees would stop bombing their apartments when they missed.
If this part of the war starts, civilian areas in downtown
are much more likely to be part of the target space than before,
because it's about Regime Change, not repelling invading armies.


RE: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-14 Thread Major Variola (ret)
At 10:12 AM 3/14/03 -0500, Trei, Peter wrote:
If the US military does Really Bad Things to Iraqi civilians with
any frequency,  I have little doubt we'll hear about it in time.
There are journalists 'embedded' in many units.

Ah, but they have an alibi!  Rummy et al. have already described
Iraqis in US attire, Iraqi plans to commit ground nasties wearing said
garb.

Or if you meant video-game atrocities, well, just today,
reports of .IQ buying thousands of GPS jammers from
(drum roll) the North Koreans.  Combine this with burning oil smoke
for the optics,  and you've got plenty of excuses to make Iraqi Toast (a
new dish
served in Congress' cafeteria) or even take out an embassy.

If you attribute same reliability to .IQ, .US sources then you enjoy
infinite recursion.
Most, rightly, don't, but the skeptical have to burn some stack on this.



Re: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-14 Thread Bill Stewart
At 11:22 AM 03/13/2003 -0800, Eric Cordian wrote:
This is nothing new.  Radio and TV stations and other unauthorized
sources of information are always first on the target list whenever the US
starts a war.
At the beginning of Part I of this war they showed the smart bomb or cruise 
missile
or whatever blowing up the Baghdad phone company building.
As someone who works for the phone company, I have to say this pissed me 
off :-)

I think the Pentagon spokeshomo put it this way.
Propaganda outlets ARE military targets.
Propaganda being anything not released by the Pentagon, of course.
Peter Trei wrote:
 Stopping useful information on *ongoing* operations
 from reaching the enemy has been a normal, unremarkable part of
 waging war for over 150 years.
During the initial bombing campaign in Part I, Ramsay Clark and some
journalists did a week-long couple-thousand-mile drive around Iraq
filming the damage being done.  One of the important parts was
showing downtown Baghdad apartment buildings being bombed
because they were near bridges or the water system or other strategic targets
and interviewing the people who lived there.
In spite of all the commercials for smart bombs and cruise missiles,
most of the armament dropped on Iraq back then was dumb iron bombs;
one group of people were starting to think about blowing up their own bridge
so that the Yankees would stop bombing their apartments when they missed.
If this part of the war starts, civilian areas in downtown
are much more likely to be part of the target space than before,
because it's about Regime Change, not repelling invading armies.


Re: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-14 Thread Steve Furlong
On Friday 14 March 2003 10:12, Trei, Peter wrote:

 If the US military does Really Bad Things to Iraqi civilians with
 any frequency,  I have little doubt we'll hear about it in time.
 There are journalists 'embedded' in many units.

Whether or not the US military does Really Bad Things to Iraqi 
civilians, I have little doubt we'll hear stories of atrocities. There 
are US-bashers (Noam Chomsky) and US-military-bashers (Marc Herold) 
embedded throughout the world.

-- 
Steve FurlongComputer Condottiere   Have GNU, Will Travel

Guns will get you through times of no duct tape better than duct tape
will get you through times of no guns. -- Ron Kuby



RE: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-14 Thread Trei, Peter
 Eugen Leitl[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 
 On Thu, 13 Mar 2003, Trei, Peter wrote:
 
  1. An journalist doing what he was specifically told not to do?
 
 Most probably. Those pesky civilians. No backbone, no way to gag them by
 extreme sanctioning after perfunctory tribunal.
 
If a journalist is hazy on the distinction between the 
Darwin Awards and the Pulitzer, I have limited sympathy. 
Think of it as evolution in action. Geraldo, anyone?

  2. An Iraqi or Al-Queda forward fire director, calling in coordinates
  for a VX loaded missile attack on your side.
 
 They don't have anything stronger than dirty sarin or crappy lost. Tipping
 bad SCUD clones.
 
I wouldn't want one landing in the vicinity. Would you? 
Or are you arguing that the military should let themselves 
be targeted, and just deal with it? Remember, one 
explosive-laden scud killed over a hundred US soldiers in
GW1.
  
  If you wait, and it's a bad guy, the signal will be lost, and you can't
 use
  your missiles. The attack will take place, and your friends will die.
 
 All they want is to blow up enough journalists to deter them from
 reporting from hot areas thus acting as a leak thus acting as bad PR 
 (Merkins don't do shredded meat by FAE, minimally invasive peachy-clean 
 strategical surgery strictly).
  
Ever since the mid-1800s, when telegraph networks started to get 
significant, the media has been restricted in reporting on-going 
military operations.

During the Napoleonic Wars (before 1815), it was common for 
British newspapers to report on the departure of troopships, 
with numbers of soldiers, and their destinations. French spies 
in London could read the papers, but the fastest means of 
getting the word to someone to whom it would be useful was 
no faster than those troopships.

By the Crimean War (1854-1856) telegraph networks allowed
such intelligence to outrun the troops, and the British had to
implement their first military press censorship laws.

Stopping useful information on *ongoing* operations from reaching
the enemy has been a normal, unremarkable part of waging war
for over 150 years. 

If the US military does Really Bad Things to Iraqi civilians with 
any frequency,  I have little doubt we'll hear about it in time.  
There are journalists 'embedded' in many units.

Peter Trei



Re: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-14 Thread Harmon Seaver
On Fri, Mar 14, 2003 at 04:57:42PM -0500, Steve Furlong wrote:
 On Friday 14 March 2003 10:12, Trei, Peter wrote:
 
  If the US military does Really Bad Things to Iraqi civilians with
  any frequency,  I have little doubt we'll hear about it in time.
  There are journalists 'embedded' in many units.
 
 Whether or not the US military does Really Bad Things to Iraqi 
 civilians, I have little doubt we'll hear stories of atrocities. There 
 are US-bashers (Noam Chomsky) and US-military-bashers (Marc Herold) 
 embedded throughout the world.
 

Whether or not It's pretty safe to assume it's a given the US military
will have little reqard for civilian life in Iraq. They certainly didn't in
Vietnam. Nor in Desert Stork One. Or since. And we just saw pretty conclusive
evidence that the US forces in Afghanistan are torturing prisoners, some to
death. 
   US-bashers  -- how about truth-tellers? Most people in this world have a
pretty clear idea what the US is all about at this point. 



-- 
Harmon Seaver   
CyberShamanix
http://www.cybershamanix.com



Re: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-14 Thread scum
Major Variola (ret) wrote:
At 10:12 AM 3/14/03 -0500, Trei, Peter wrote:

If the US military does Really Bad Things to Iraqi civilians with
any frequency,  I have little doubt we'll hear about it in time.
There are journalists 'embedded' in many units.


Ah, but they have an alibi!  Rummy et al. have already described
Iraqis in US attire, Iraqi plans to commit ground nasties wearing said
garb.
Or if you meant video-game atrocities, well, just today,
reports of .IQ buying thousands of GPS jammers from
(drum roll) the North Koreans.  Combine this with burning oil smoke
for the optics,  and you've got plenty of excuses to make Iraqi Toast (a
new dish
served in Congress' cafeteria) or even take out an embassy.
If you attribute same reliability to .IQ, .US sources then you enjoy
infinite recursion.
Most, rightly, don't, but the skeptical have to burn some stack on this.


While watching Die another day, I was wondering if the north koreans 
really have those hovercraft. I finally came to my senses.
I turned off the movie shortly after that.

--
* pgpkey http://scum.nailed.org:3215/key.txt


Re: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-13 Thread Eric Cordian
Sunder writes:

 Should war in the Gulf commence, the Pentagon proposes to take
 radical new steps in media relations - 'unauthorised' journalists will be
 shot at. Speaking on The Sunday Show on Ireland's RTE1 last sunday veteran
 war reporter Kate Adie said she had been warned by a senior Pentagon
 official that uplinks, i.e. TV broadcasts or satellite phones, that are
 detected by US aircraft are likely to be fired on.

This is nothing new.  Radio and TV stations and other unauthorized
sources of information are always first on the target list whenever the US
starts a war.

I think the Pentagon spokeshomo put it this way.  Propaganda outlets ARE
military targets.  Propaganda being anything not released by the
Pentagon, of course.

Have you seen this lovely new media room in Qatar that Hollywood is
building as a set for Iraq war briefings?

  In front of the stage, two 70-inch projection screens and five
   50-inch plasma screens will flash maps, graphics and crystal-clear
   video images of war-zone action. In the background will hang a
   soft-focus elongated map of the world, as if to imply that the
   entire globe is united behind the United States.

  I like to achieve a level of detail that makes it difficult to
   distinguish a set from reality, Mr. Allison recently told the
   Times Union newspaper in Albany, N.Y.


http://www.globetechnology.com/servlet/ArticleNews/gtnews/TGAM/20030312/UTVTVM

-- 
Eric Michael Cordian 0+
O:.T:.O:. Mathematical Munitions Division
Do What Thou Wilt Shall Be The Whole Of The Law


RE: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-13 Thread Trei, Peter
 Sunder[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/29750.html
 
 Airstrike! The Pentagon simplifies media relations
 By John Lettice
 Posted: 13/03/2003 at 17:10 GMT
 
 Should war in the Gulf commence, the Pentagon proposes to take
 radical new steps in media relations - 'unauthorised' journalists will be
 shot at. Speaking on The Sunday Show on Ireland's RTE1 last sunday veteran
 war reporter Kate Adie said she had been warned by a senior Pentagon
 official that uplinks, i.e. TV broadcasts or satellite phones, that are
 detected by US aircraft are likely to be fired on.
 
ok. A loitering US plane equipped with HARMs (High explosive 
Anti Radiation Missiles) detects a satellite uplink from within or 
just our side of the front line (or even out front). It lacks the 
correct IFF codes.

Is it:

1. An journalist doing what he was specifically told not to do?
2. An Iraqi or Al-Queda forward fire director, calling in coordinates
for a VX loaded missile attack on your side.

If you wait, and it's a bad guy, the signal will be lost, and you can't use
your missiles. The attack will take place, and your friends will die.

Make a decision.

Now.

Peter Trei



RE: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-13 Thread Major Variola (ret)
At 02:04 PM 3/13/03 -0500, Trei, Peter wrote:

Is it:

1. An journalist doing what he was specifically told not to do?
2. An Iraqi or Al-Queda forward fire director, calling in coordinates
for a VX loaded missile attack on your side.

I'd think that the troops would explain this to the reporters tagging
along
as they confiscate all their transmitters before an op.  I simply
wouldn't
trust the reporters, even though they're toast too if someone mis-IFFs.

Its a lot more serious than not shutting off your cell phone on a
plane.  Besides, I doubt
the reporters have Iraq's FCC's clearance to use those frequencies
there, until we extend
the Little Powell's authority to that domain. :-)



RE: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-13 Thread Eugen Leitl
On Thu, 13 Mar 2003, Trei, Peter wrote:

 1. An journalist doing what he was specifically told not to do?

Most probably. Those pesky civilians. No backbone, no way to gag them by
extreme sanctioning after perfunctory tribunal.

 2. An Iraqi or Al-Queda forward fire director, calling in coordinates
 for a VX loaded missile attack on your side.

They don't have anything stronger than dirty sarin or crappy lost. Tipping
bad SCUD clones.
 
 If you wait, and it's a bad guy, the signal will be lost, and you can't use
 your missiles. The attack will take place, and your friends will die.

All they want is to blow up enough journalists to deter them from
reporting from hot areas thus acting as a leak thus acting as bad PR 
(Merkins don't do shredded meat by FAE, minimally invasive peachy-clean 
strategical surgery strictly).
 
 Make a decision.

Nuke Washinton D.C.? Done.
 
 Now.

That one was easy.



Re: Unauthorized Journalists to be shot at

2003-03-13 Thread Major Variola (ret)
At 11:54 AM 3/13/03 -0500, Sunder wrote:

Hey, we're fighting for freedom after all, the freedom to suppress the
truth...  So how soon before France is on the Axis of Evil? :)


Well, if they're giving info to Mr. Hussein their embassy there could
be NIMA'd, as in oops, we hit the Chinese consulate in Yugoslavia,
but it was a mapping error.

Taking out Paris would probably require more explanation.

---
Would you like some Jewish Fries with that, Congressman. Moran?