GO GET THE NEOCONS TO PUT SOME DEAD CHINESE STUDENTS IN A REMOTE
PILOTED PLANES FLOWN INTO THE NEW WTC OWNED BY LARRY SILVERSTEIN WITH
HEFTY INSURANCE BY SOME JAPANESE COMPANIES AND THEN DECLARE A WAR ON
CHINESE TERROR ......... LAUGHING OUT LOUD

3027 Dead wrote:
> http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,,1994236,00.html
>
>
> China hails satellite killer - and stuns its rivals in space
>
>
> · International outcry over first such test since 1985
> · Scientists have warned of dangers of debris in orbit
>
> Suzanne Goldenberg in Washington
> Friday January 19, 2007
> The Guardian
>
> China has given notice of its increasing power in space - and provoked
> widespread international concern - with a successful test of an
> anti-satellite weapon that could be used to knock out enemy
> surveillance and communications craft.
>
> In the first such test since the cold war era, the White House
> confirmed that China had used a medium-range ballistic missile,
> launched from the ground, to destroy an ageing weather satellite more
> than 500 miles into space. "We are aware of it and we are concerned,
> and we made it known," the White House spokesman, Tony Snow, told
> reporters.
>
> Article continues
> The test, on January 11, was the first of its kind since 1985 when
> Washington halted such exercises because of fears of damaging military
> and civilian satellites with large clouds of debris.
>
> The test was especially troubling because it exposed the vulnerability
> of America's dependence on low-orbiting satellites, which are used for
> military communications, smart bombs and surveillance. In theory, last
> week's exercise could give Beijing the capability to knock out such
> satellites - a realisation that underlay the protests from Washington.
>
> Australia and Canada also voiced concerns; Britain, South Korea and
> Japan were expected to follow. "The US believes China's development
> and testing of such weapons is inconsistent with the spirit of
> cooperation that both countries aspire to in the civil space area,"
> Gordon Johndroe, a White House spokesman, said. "We and other
> countries have expressed our concern regarding this action to the
> Chinese."
>
> Scientists have long warned of the dangers of space debris - which can
> remain in orbit for many hundreds of years - on existing space
> programmes. Among the items lost in space are lens caps, tools and
> nuts and bolts. Some former Soviet satellites leak fuel which
> solidifies into balls up to 3cm in diameter. Tiny pieces, including
> flecks of paint from eroding satellites, can travel at 17,000mph, and
> gain enough momentum to damage a medium-sized spacecraft.
>
> Despite yesterday's protests, the Bush administration has opposed a
> global ban on such tests, arguing that America needs to reserve its
> freedom of action in space. Arms control experts said it was not
> immediately clear whether the Chinese test was a ploy to try to press
> the Bush administration into a global weapons treaty, or whether China
> was asserting its own interests in space.
>
> News of the test, first reported by the magazine Aviation Week and
> Space Technology, comes months after the Bush administration unveiled
> a doctrine asserting America's right to take action against any
> perceived threat in space. The missile relied on the force of impact
> rather than an exploding warhead to shatter the satellite.
>
> Estimates said the destroyed Chinese satellite could have shattered
> into tens of thousands of fragments that would remain in orbit for
> more than a decade.
>
> The magazine said on its website: "Details emerging from space sources
> indicate that the Chinese Feng Yun 1C (FY-1C) polar orbit weather
> satellite launched in 1999 was attacked by an asat (anti-satellite)
> system launched from or near the Xichang space centre."
>
> Last August, Mr Bush laid out an even more robust vision of America's
> role in space, asserting Washington's right to deny access to any
> adversary hostile to US interests, and some arms control experts have
> accused the administration of conducting secret research on laser
> weapons to disable and destroy enemy satellites.
>
> In public, Mr Bush has sought to revive the national interest in space
> by calling for Americans to return to the moon in 15 years, and even
> use bases there as a launchpad for Mars. However, almost all of those
> costly military space programmes are over budget and behind schedule.
>
>
> --
> "Now, by the way, any time you hear the United States government
> talking
> about wiretap, it requires -- a wiretap requires a court order.
> Nothing has
> changed, by the way. When we're talking about chasing down terrorists,
> we're
> talking about getting a court order before we do so"
> -George W. Bush, April 20, 2004
>
> Not dead, in jail, or a slave?  Thank a liberal!
> Pay your taxes so the rich don't have to.
>
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>
>
>
> --
>
> "Keeping us up here eats away at families.  The Democrats could care less 
> about families -- that's what this says."
>
> -- Rep. Jack Kingston (R-GA), quoted by the Washington Post, in response to 
> incoming-Majority Leader Steny Hoyer's (D-MD) plan to increase the House's 
> work schedule from three days a week to five.
>
> Putsch: leading America to asymetric warfare since 2001
>
> Not dead, in jail, or a slave?  Thank a liberal!
> Pay your taxes so the rich don't have to.
> For the finest in liberal/leftist commentary,
> http://www.zeppscommentaries.com
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> a.a. #2211 -- Bryan Zepp Jamieson

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