GreenTechSupport GTS 井上創学館 IESSGK

GreenTechSupport News from IESSGK

news20090810bil

2009-08-10 22:29:02 | Weblog
[Biography of the Day] from [Britannica]
August 10
Joaquín Sorolla y Bastida
Joaquín Sorolla y Bastida—a Spanish painter whose style was a variant of Impressionism and whose best works, painted in the open air, vividly portray the sunny seacoast of Valencia—died this day in 1923.


[On This Day] from [Britannica]
August 10
1792: Louis XVI of France imprisoned
As the French Revolution (1787–99) continued, the country's monarchy was effectively overthrown on this day in 1792 when King Louis XVI and his wife, Marie-Antoinette, were imprisoned (they were eventually guillotined).


1914: France declared war on Austria-Hungary in World War I.

1846: The Smithsonian Institution was founded in Washington, D.C., by the U.S. Congress with funds bequeathed by English scientist James Smithson.

1815: Ganioda'yo, Seneca chief and founder of the Longhouse Religion, died in Onondaga, New York.

1729: William Howe, 5th Viscount Howe, commander in chief of the British Army in North America (1776–78) who failed to destroy the Continental Army and stem the American Revolution, was born.


[Today's Word] from [Dr. Kazuo Iwata]
August 10
    With proud thanksgiving,
a mother for her children,
    England mourns for her dead
across the sea
    Laurence Binyon: For the Fallen (born this day in 1869)

母の子に対するごとく
Haha-no ko-ni taisuru-gotoku
誇らかな感謝とともに
Horakana kansya-to-tomo-ni
われら今悼み悲しむ
Warera ima itami kanashimu
外国に死せるもののふ
Totsukuni-ni shiseru mononofu



[日英混文稿]

news20090810jt1

2009-08-10 21:57:45 | Weblog
[TODAY'S TOP STORIES] from [The Japan Times]

[NATIONAL NEWS]
Monday, Aug. 10, 2009
Nagasaki seeks world ban on nukes
64 years after A-bomb, mayor says alternative is annihilation Nagasaki

Kyodo News

Nagasaki Mayor Tomihisa Taue, echoing a call by U.S. President Barack Obama, urged people around the globe on Sunday to choose a path toward a world free of nuclear weapons as the city commemorated the 64th anniversary of the atomic bombing.

A moment of silence was observed at 11:02 a.m., the time on Aug. 9, 1945, when a U.S. bomber dropped the atomic bomb that killed an estimated 74,000 people by the end of that year.

Another 3,304 people were recognized this past year as fatal victims of the Nagasaki bombing, bringing the total of those who have died to 149,266, according to city officials.

"We, as human beings, now have two paths before us," Taue said in his Peace Declaration during the annual memorial ceremony at Nagasaki Peace Park. "While one can lead us to a world without nuclear weapons, the other will carry us toward annihilation."

Obama said in April that the United States will seek a world without nuclear weapons, creating a wave of optimism among people petitioning for the abolishment of nuclear arms around the world.

"President Obama's speech was a watershed event, in that the United States, a superpower possessing nuclear weapons, finally took a step toward the elimination of nuclear armaments," Taue said, adding that people in Nagasaki are circulating petitions urging the U.S. leader to visit their city.

As for Japan, Taue said the country must take a leading role in disseminating around the world the "ideals of peace and renunciation of war" as stipulated in the Constitution.

Taue urged the central government to turn into law Japan's stated three nonnuclear principles of not producing, possessing or allowing nuclear weapons on Japanese territory. He also said the government should work on creating a nuclear weapons-free zone in Northeast Asia, including North Korea.

Taue touched on Pyongyang's nuclear test in May, saying, "As long as the world continues to rely on nuclear deterrence and nuclear weapons continue to exist, the possibility always exists that dangerous nations like North Korea and terrorists will emerge."

He urged the international community to make North Korea destroy its nuclear arsenal and said the five major nuclear powers — Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States — must "fulfill their responsibility to reduce nuclear arms."

In support of Taue, Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann, president of the U.N. General Assembly and a Roman Catholic priest, spoke at the ceremony, saying, "The only certain way to assure that nuclear weapons will never be used again is to eliminate them outright."

Prime Minister Taro Aso pledged at the ceremony to stick to the three nonnuclear principles as he gave a speech similar to the one he delivered in Hiroshima three days earlier.

Aso mentioned an agreement reached Thursday under which 306 plaintiffs will be granted certification as suffering from atomic bomb-related illnesses and get the accompanying benefits.

The move came after the government lost 19 straight lawsuits filed across the country over the certification issue, putting an end to their six-year-long legal battle.

Japan surrendered on Aug. 15, 1945, six days after Nagasaki was bombed.


[NATIONAL NEWS]
Monday, Aug. 10, 2009
Sakai blames her husband
Actress reportedly tells police her drug use started last summer

Kyodo News

Actress Noriko Sakai has reportedly told Tokyo police she started inhaling illegal stimulants last summer at the urging of her husband, sources said Sunday.

Sakai inhaled the drugs with her husband, Yukichi Takaso, after heating them or by using a pipe, the sources quoted her as telling investigators.

Sakai was arrested Saturday on suspicion of possessing an illegal stimulant and allegedly admitted to the charge.

She had been missing since Aug. 3, when her husband, a 41-year-old self-described professional surfer, was arrested after a police officer found a plastic bag containing stimulants in his underwear in Shibuya Ward.

Police had continued trying Sunday to confirm her admission to possessing illegal stimulants because the statements she made Saturday had been somewhat ambiguous.

"I don't remember in detail about stimulants being in my room. But if they were in my room, it must be true," Sakai, 38, reportedly told investigators after she turned herself in at a police station Saturday.

Sakai and Takaso were both arrested on suspicion of breaking the law prohibiting production, possession or use of amphetamines, methamphetamines and similar drugs. These drugs produce hyperactivity and can induce euphoria. Regular use can eventually produce such disorders as severe depression and paranoia.

A urine test Sunday on Sakai turned out negative for drugs, the sources said.

Inhaled amphetamines or methamphetamines usually become undetectable in about a week, experts said.

The Metropolitan Police Department arrested Sakai after she turned herself in at a police station in Bunkyo Ward at around 8 p.m. Saturday.

She decided to surrender to police after learning through TV news programs that an arrest warrant had been issued for her, the sources quoted her as saying.

The police obtained the warrant Friday after searching her Minato Ward apartment, where she lives separately from Takaso.

The search allegedly turned up 0.008 gram of a stimulant drug wrapped in aluminum foil, leading investigators to suspect it was residue because a normal dose is usually about 0.03 gram.

Dozens of straws apparently used to inhale fumes after heating the drug were also found and seized.

A sample taken from the straws matched Sakai's DNA, according to the sources.

Victor Entertainment Inc. announced Sunday it has canceled plans to sell a greatest hits CD of Sakai's songs that had been scheduled to come out Sept. 16.

The company also suspended sales of other products related to Sakai, including online distribution of her songs.

"The arrest is very regrettable. An antisocial act like this should never be acceptable," the company said in a statement. "We will keep taking severe actions" against this type of behavior.

Masahisa Aizawa, president of Sakai's talent agency, Tokyo-based Sun Music Production Inc., said at a news conference Sunday he might have to release her.

"If she is indicted, we must naturally come to (a decision), including dismissal," he said.

Aizawa said he was not aware of any drug use by Sakai, although he thought she looked thinner when he met with her last month. Continuous use of stimulants can lead to weight loss.

"I was worried when I met her in mid-July because she had lost some weight. I thought she was mentally tired from taking care of her kid or other things," he said.

Aizawa apologized on Sakai's behalf and expressed relief that she decided to turn herself in. The agency had said during her disappearance it was unable to contact her.

Sakai was summoned early last week to the site where her husband was arrested but refused to appear at a police station for a voluntary urine test. She then disappeared with her 10-year-old son, who was found safe Thursday at an acquaintance's home in Tokyo.

The police said Sakai called the acquaintance from a public phone Wednesday and asked to hear her son's voice.

Sakai, also known by the nickname "Nori-P," married Takaso in 1998 and she gave birth to her son in 1999.


[NATIONAL NEWS]
Monday, Aug. 10, 2009
Temblor shakes Tokyo vicinity
Kyodo News

An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 6.9 jolted Tokyo and wide areas of eastern Japan on Sunday evening, the Meteorological Agency said.

There were no immediate reports of injuries or damage from the 7:56 p.m. quake that originated some 340 km under the surface of the sea off the Tokaido area and lasted an unusually long time, the agency said.

There was no fear of tsunami following the earthquake, it said.

The temblor measured 4 on the Japanese seismic scale of 7 in central Tokyo as well as several parts of Miyagi, Fukushima, Ibaraki, Tochigi, Saitama and Chiba prefectures.


[NATIONAL NEWS]
Monday, Aug. 10, 2009
Aso suffers another kanji gaffe
Kyodo News

Prime Minister Taro Aso made another mistake Sunday regarding kanji, immediately drawing criticism from some opposition lawmakers.

Aso said "shoseki" when he should have said "kizuato" (scars) while reading a speech in Nagasaki about the 1945 atomic bombing.

He was trying to say the bombing has left "scars (on the survivors) that will never be healed."

Kizuato is not a particularly difficult word to read, but Aso apparently read it in the "on-yomi" style, which is based on the ancient Chinese sounds of the characters.

"I don't think it is appropriate to read (the word) in the wrong way on a day of prayer, when everybody in Nagasaki is feeling pain," said Mizuho Fukushima, president of the Social Democratic Party.

Since taking office as prime minister last September, Aso has made numerous kanji mistakes while reading prepared speeches in public.

news20090810jt2

2009-08-10 21:41:34 | Weblog
[TODAY'S TOP STORIES] from [The Japan Times]

[NATIONAL NEWS]
Monday, Aug. 10, 2009
DPJ vows civilian Afghanistan aid
Kyodo News

The Democratic Party of Japan has decided that if it wins the election it will focus on contributing personnel in Afghanistan after letting the refueling mission in the Indian Ocean run out in January, DPJ sources said Sunday.

If he becomes prime minister, party leader Yukio Hatoyama is planning to visit the United States to attend the U.N. General Assembly in September, where he would also meet with President Barack Obama to explain the new policy.

Hatoyama said last month the party would end the refueling mission by the Maritime Self-Defense Force in January, when the law for the mission expires.

The envisioned personnel contributions to Afghanistan would primarily consist of government and private-sector officials, with party policy chief Masayuki Naoshima saying, "While it will be difficult to have the Self-Defense Forces operate on the ground, we could provide support centering on civilian sectors."

Meanwhile, Hatoyama suggested Sunday the DPJ will consider turning Japan's stated three nonnuclear principles into law. These are not producing, possessing or allowing nuclear weapons on Japanese territory.

"It is important to follow the three principles, and I think legislation is one option," Hatoyama said during a meeting with hibakusha on the 64th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki. "I promise that our party will consider it."


[NATIONAL NEWS]
Monday, Aug. 10, 2009
Court errors unavoidable, ex-judges tell poll
Kyodo News

More than 80 percent of former professional judges believe that miscarriages of justice are unavoidable, according to a survey by Forum 90, a group opposed to capital punishment.

The survey, conducted in July, also found that more than 60 percent of the former judges oppose the new lay judge system.

The group tried to poll 900 former judges who are now lawyers, college professors and notary publics, but only 106 responded.

Among those who did, 82.1 percent said they believe a miscarriage of justice is unavoidable. Many of them propose introducing audio and visual recordings of the interrogation process as a way to prevent such problems, as demanded by the Japan Federation of Bar Associations. The former judges also stressed the need to end the overdependence on confessions.

"Criminal court judges seem to have a strong belief that they should not be cheated by the defendants," one respondent said. "Thus they are likely to follow the arguments of the prosecutors. It is necessary to promote change in their thinking."

On the lay judge system, in which six citizen judges and three professionals hear trials dealing with serious crimes, 61.3 percent of the respondents are against it, while 30.2 percent are for it.

"While judges are sometimes required to be involved in serious and heated discussions, it would be difficult for nonprofessionals to deliberate in a reasonable manner," one respondent said.

Another said the new system should be maintained "as it may curb the self-righteousness of professional judges."


[NATIONAL NEWS]
Monday, Aug. 10, 2009
Hanford cleanup chief has Nagasaki roots
By DAVID JEFFRIES
Kyodo News

HANFORD, Wash. (Kyodo) For Shirley Olinger, managing the cleanup of the Hanford nuclear site — where the plutonium was generated for the atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki in 1945 — is personal.

Nagasaki is her mother's hometown.

Established in 1943, the government-run Hanford Nuclear Reservation is in south-central Washington state along the Columbia River. Water from the river was used to cool the plutonium-producing nuclear reactors.

The facility was part of the Manhattan Project to develop nuclear weapons during World War II. Once the plutonium was extracted from the uranium, chemical processes left large amounts of highly toxic waste at the site.

According to the Hanford Challenge, a Seattle-based watchdog group, the 1,517-sq.-km reservation is the most contaminated toxic waste site in the United States and among the top 10 in the world.

The Department of Energy, where Olinger, 52, works as manager at the Office of River Protection, is the lead federal agency in charge of physical cleanup at Hanford.

"The good news is we are all in it together," Olinger said of the department working alongside the Environmental Protection Agency and the Washington state Ecology Department. "We all want to clean up Hanford in the most sustainable and best-quality way."

Many of the toxic chemicals from the contained nuclear waste at Hanford have now leaked into soil or the nearby Columbia, releasing several harmful chemicals such as carbon tetrachloride.

According to Dennis Faulk, EPA program manager for Hanford, about 96,000 kg of carbon tetrachloride has already been removed from the soil in Hanford since 1989, when the cleanup initiative began. In addition, 13,100 kg of carbon tetrachloride has been removed from the water.

Olinger pointed to the emptying of a large container of nuclear fuel known as the K-basin, and the stopping of the nine nuclear reactors at Hanford as evidence that the agencies together have made some headway in the cleanup.

Despite these signs of progress, Tom Carpenter, executive director of the Hanford Challenge, warns that the bulk of the work has yet to be done.

"I call this 'stopping the bleeding' because it was damaging the environment," Carpenter said. "But what can we really say about tank waste? Ninety percent of the Hanford cleanup is this waste. And I think they are stuck."

Tank waste refers to the 200 million liters of high-level toxic waste stored in 177 underground tanks at Hanford. Unable to be held any longer without leakage or decay, the waste must be transported to a new storage unit with as little impact on the environment and residents as possible.

Olinger, whose office specifically manages tank waste retrieval, is optimistic about the progress so far despite the concerns of the Hanford Challenge.

"There have been technical issues that we have been dealing with in the past," she said. "At this moment we are down to one. I'm hoping that the last technical issue . . . will be resolved by (September)."

The project is scheduled to be completed in 2019.

Liz Mattson of the Hanford Challenge said Olinger requested face-to-face meetings with activists starting last November. Mattson now refers to Olinger as the Hanford Challenge's "biggest advocate for reform."

With her Japanese mother and relatives surviving the impact of the Nagasaki bomb, Olinger's family history speaks to the legacy and trauma of nuclear warfare.

Olinger said that during a family trip last year to Nagasaki, she heard stories of relatives and other people who were not recognized as victims of the bomb's radioactive fallout by the Japanese government.

Members of Olinger's family had suffered from thyroid problems, infertility and cancer.

"I got to talk to a few of these people and today they are taken well care of," said Olinger, "but for decades they weren't. . . . The government didn't know how to deal with them."

Now representing the U.S. government and managing perhaps the largest nuclear cleanup in the Western Hemisphere, Olinger charges herself with both personal and professional responsibility to remember those affected by the cleanup as much as those relatives who were so negatively impacted by the dropping of the atomic bomb on Nagasaki during World War II.

"We want to do this cleanup in a robust way that's sustainable and respectful of stakeholders and the workers. If we don't do that on our watch, then who is going to? I have a lot of passion toward the health and safety of the workers."

One of Hanford's most vital community stakeholders, the Hanford Advisory Board, is another proponent of Olinger's mission to have a robust and sustainable clean up.

The board creates consensus-based, policy-level advice to the Department of Energy, the EPA and Washington state offices to consider the safety of the local community while making technical decisions about the cleanup.

Susan Leckband, chair of the board and a fourth-generation resident of the Hanford area, said the cleanup is important to Americans and Japanese alike.

"Not only is this (cleanup) honoring those Americans," Leckband said of the people who went to Hanford to help out with the war effort more than 50 years ago. "It is also honoring the lives of those people who were lost (in Japan). Something positive is coming out of this. There won't be any more bombs built here."


[SPORTS]
Monday, Aug. 10, 2009
Japan spikers rally to beat Russia

OSAKA (Kyodo) Japan rallied from a set down to beat Russia 3-1 Sunday in the World Grand Prix women's volleyball tournament.

Japan improved its record to 3-3 with a 20-25, 25-19, 25-15, 25-21 win at Osaka Municipal Gymnasium. Russia fell to 3-3.

After dropping the first set, the host went on a fierce blitz with the addition of 21-year-old Maiko Kano, who penetrated the Russian defense with back row spikes.

The Japanese women also did well in serving and blocking.

"The blocks that we have been going over in practice worked the best yet in this tournament today," said Japan coach Masayoshi Manabe. "We want to continue with this same level of intensity."

In the day's other Pool F match in Osaka, South Korea (1-5) defeated Puerto Rico (1-5) 25-18, 25-18, 24-26, 22-25, 15-13

news20090810lat

2009-08-10 20:06:49 | Weblog
[Today's Newspaper] from [Los Angeles Times]

[California]
Lawsuits are the latest roadblock for California budget
Litigators go to court to undo cuts made by legislators and the governor. The state is spending billions of dollars fighting the lawsuits and dealing with increasingly unfavorable rulings.

By Evan Halper
August 10, 2009

Reporting from Sacramento -- Well-connected lobbyists, political pressure and a good turnout at committee hearings used to be the special interest recipe for protecting turf in the state budget. Now, a potent new ingredient is being increasingly thrown into the mix: top-shelf litigators.

Lawyers are being drafted in droves to unravel spending plans passed by the Legislature and signed by the governor. The goal of these litigators is to get back money their clients lost in the budget process. They are havingconsiderable success, winning one lawsuit after another, costing the state billions of dollars and throwing California's budget process into further tumult.

In the last few months alone, the courts added more than a billion dollars to the state's deficit by declaring illegal reductions in healthcare services, redevelopment agency funds and transportation spending. Another ruling threatens to deprive California of all its federal stimulus money if the state does not rescind a cut to the salaries of home healthcare workers.

Lawyers are scrambling to prepare additional suits related to the budget plan the governor signed last month. On Friday, Senate Leader Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento) -- who negotiated the budget -- announced that even he plans to sue. Steinberg said the governor illegally made more than $500 million worth of cuts in the budget plan passed by lawmakers.

"We are seeing more lawsuits and more victories by the groups filing them," said Bob Hertzberg, a former Assembly speaker who now is chairman of California Forward, a think tank focused on reforming the budget process. "They don't want to compromise. . . . It's easier to hire lawyers than lobbyists, and you probably get better outcomes."

The attorneys are seizing on state laws that were drafted in sunnier economic times, some of which were put in place by citizen initiative. They created new programs or expanded existing ones and contained language intended to solidify the place of those programs in state government. Now, the state is broke, and lawmakers and the governor are finding their attempts to take money from the programs rebuffed by the courts. Just the lawsuits themselves cost the state millions of dollars in attorney salaries and other legal fees.

"It's the nature of trying to navigate a budget that has become more and more complicated and more and more difficult to make changes in," said Michael Cohen, a budget expert at the nonpartisan Legislative Analyst's Office, to which lawmakers look for advice on fiscal matters.

He said ironclad assurances that programs will be funded have been etched into the law by lawmakers and voters who "can't always see the future in terms of changing priorities or different circumstances that might come along later."

Lawsuits are one reason most in Sacramento expect a quick collapse of the spending plan the governor signed last month to wipe out a deficit of about $24 billion. There is talk of the governor needing to call an emergency session in the fall so lawmakers can get back to work keeping the state solvent.

Even before last month's signing, multiple groups announced their intention to sue. No sooner was the ink on the budget dry than the California Redevelopment Assn. posted an alert on its website calling for members to sign on as plaintiffs in a lawsuit that was being drafted by the law firm of McDonough, Holland & Allen.

The suit would challenge, among other things, a shuffling of state funds away from redevelopment and into school districts. If the association's litigation succeeded, it would throw the budget out of balance by as much as $2 billion.

That suit would join more than a dozen other big ones pending against the state.

Among them is one in which a court ruled in June that several past raids of public transit money were illegal. The decision did not force the state to return funds, but it blocked taking any more.

Josh Shaw, executive director of the nonprofit California Transit Assn. and a lead plaintiff, said the suit "strikes at the heart of the gimmicks that have been employed year after year in putting together the state budget."

The ruling left lawmakers and the governor scrambling to find a replacement for up to $1 billion of the money they had hoped to use to wipe out the deficit.

The alternative they came up with was to take other transportation funds. But the new pot of money lawmakers wanted to raid was sacred to local governments. They use the funds for road maintenance, street sweeping and other services. The proposal died under the weight of city and county opposition during the all-night legislative session last month when lawmakers passed the budget, leaving a billion-dollar hole in their spending plan.

Medi-Cal doctors, meanwhile, this year have managed to roll back a $1.1-billion cut in their reimbursements. A federal appeals court declared illegal a 10% cut in what physicians are paid by Medi-Cal, the government healthcare program for the poor, that was implemented in July 2008. The court ruled the cut would drive doctors out of the program, endangering the ability of patients to get care and thereby violating minimum federal standards for the program.

Some analysts say that although interest groups have become savvier in their use of litigation, state officials have also invited the suits through their desperate and often sloppy budgeting.

The lawsuits are "a product of the desperation of the people trying to forge budget agreements," said Jean Ross, executive director of the California Budget Project, a think tank that analyzes the effects of spending policies on low-income Californians. "All of the easy solutions are gone. The choices are hard, the gap is wide. People look to riskier and riskier options to come up with savings."

It is hardly a secret in the Capitol that lawmakers sometimes approve budget measures despite their dubious legality because it buys them time. The hope is that by the time the appeals process is finally exhausted -- which can take years -- the economy will have rebounded, filling the gap with new revenue. It's a kind of borrowing.

Such was the case with a plan a few years ago to put off some payments into the pension fund for government workers.

The plan was passed in 2004, on the tail end of the last budget crisis. It stayed on the books for several years. By the time it wound its way through the litigation process, state revenues were on the rebound and there was enough cash to take the plan off the books.

"These cases can go on for a while," said Daniel J.B. Mitchell, a professor of public policy at UCLA. "It's a way of pushing liabilities into the future."

news20090810nyt

2009-08-10 19:50:06 | Weblog
[Today's Newspaper] from [The New York Times]

[Asia Pacific]
U.S. to Hunt Down Afghan Drug Lords Tied to Taliban
By JAMES RISEN
Published: August 9, 2009

WASHINGTON — Fifty Afghans believed to be drug traffickers with ties to the Taliban have been placed on a Pentagon target list to be captured or killed, reflecting a major shift in American counternarcotics strategy in Afghanistan, according to a Congressional study to be released this week.

United States military commanders have told Congress that they are convinced that the policy is legal under the military’s rules of engagement and international law. They also said the move is an essential part of their new plan to disrupt the flow of drug money that is helping finance the Taliban insurgency.

In interviews with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which is releasing the report, two American generals serving in Afghanistan said that major traffickers with proven links to the insurgency have been put on the “joint integrated prioritized target list.” That means they have been given the same target status as insurgent leaders, and can be captured or killed at any time.

The generals told Senate staff members that two credible sources and substantial additional evidence were required before a trafficker was placed on the list, and only those providing support to the insurgency would be made targets.

Currently, they said, there are about 50 major traffickers who contribute money to the Taliban on the list.

“We have a list of 367 ‘kill or capture’ targets, including 50 nexus targets who link drugs and the insurgency,” one of the generals told the committee staff. The generals were not identified in the Senate report, which was obtained by The New York Times.

The shift in policy comes as the Obama administration, deep into the war in Afghanistan, makes significant changes to its strategy for dealing with that country’s lucrative drug trade, which provides 90 percent of the world’s heroin and has led to substantial government corruption.

The Senate report’s disclosure of a hit list for drug traffickers may lead to criticism in the United States over the expansion of the military’s mission, and NATO allies have already raised questions about the strategy of killing individuals who are not traditional military targets.

For years the American-led mission in Afghanistan had focused on destroying poppy crops. Pentagon officials have said their new emphasis is on weaning local farmers off the drug trade — including the possibility of paying them to grow nothing — and going after the drug runners and drug lords. But the Senate report is the first account of a policy to actually place drug chieftains aligned with the Taliban on a “kill or capture” list.

Lt. Col. Patrick Ryder, a Pentagon spokesman, would not comment on the Senate report, but said that “there is a positive, well-known connection between the drug trade and financing for the insurgency and terrorism.” Without directly addressing the existence of the target list, he said that it was “important to clarify that we are targeting terrorists with links to the drug trade, rather than targeting drug traffickers with links to terrorism.”

Several individuals suspected of ties to drug trafficking have already been apprehended and others have been killed by the United States military since the new policy went into effect earlier this year, a senior military official with direct knowledge of the matter said in an interview. Most of the targets are in southern and eastern Afghanistan, where both the drug trade and the insurgency are the most intense.

One American military officer serving in Afghanistan described the purpose of the target list for the Senate committee. “Our long-term approach is to identify the regional drug figures,” the unidentified officer is quoted as saying in the Senate report. The goal, he said, is to “persuade them to choose legitimacy, or remove them from the battlefield.”

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were discussing delicate policy matters.

When Donald H. Rumsfeld was defense secretary, the Pentagon fiercely resisted efforts to draw the United States military into supporting counternarcotics efforts. Top military commanders feared that trying to prevent drug trafficking would only antagonize corrupt regional warlords whose support they needed, and might turn more of the populace against American troops.

It was only in the last year or two of the Bush administration that the United States began to recognize that the Taliban insurgency was being revived with the help of drug money.

The policy of going after drug lords is likely to raise legal concerns from some NATO countries that have troops in Afghanistan. Several NATO countries initially questioned whether the new policy would comply with international law.

“This was a hard sell in NATO,” said retired Gen. John Craddock, who was supreme allied commander of NATO forces until he retired in July.

Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, the secretary general of NATO until last month, told the Senate committee staff that to deal with the concerns of other nations with troops in Afghanistan, safeguards had been put in place to make sure the alliance remained within legal bounds while pursuing drug traffickers. Afghanistan’s president, Hamid Karzai, is also informed before a mission takes place, according to a senior military official.

General Craddock said that some NATO countries were also concerned that the new policy would draw the drug lords closer to the Taliban, because they would turn to them for more protection. “But the opposite is the case, since it weakens the Taliban, so they can’t provide that protection,” General Craddock said. “If we continue to push on this, we will see progress,” he added. “It’s causing them problems.”

In a surprise, the Senate report reveals that the United States intelligence community believes that the Taliban has been getting less money from the drug trade than previous public studies have suggested. The Central Intelligence Agency and the Defense Intelligence Agency both estimate that the Taliban obtains about $70 million a year from drugs.

The Senate report found that American officials did not believe that Afghan drug money was fueling Al Qaeda, which instead relies on contributions from wealthy individuals and charities in Persian Gulf countries, as well as aid organizations working inside Afghanistan.

But even with the new, more cautious estimates, the Taliban has plenty of drug money to finance its relatively inexpensive insurgency. Taliban foot soldiers are paid just $10 a day — more if they plant an improvised explosive device.

Not all those suspected of drug trafficking will end up on the Pentagon’s list. Intelligence gathered by the United States and Afghanistan will more often be used for prosecutions, although American officials are frustrated that they still have not been able to negotiate an extradition treaty with the Afghan government.

A major unresolved problem in the counternarcotics strategy is the fact that the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan remains wide open, and the Pakistanis are doing little to close down drug smuggling routes.

A senior American law enforcement official in the region is quoted in the report as saying that cooperation with Pakistan on counternarcotics is so poor that traffickers cross the border with impunity.

“We give them leads on targets,” the official said in describing the Pakistani government’s counternarcotics tactics, adding, “We get smiles, a decent cup of tea, occasional reheated sandwiches and assertions of progress, and we all leave with smiles on our faces.”

news20090810wp1

2009-08-10 18:56:23 | Weblog
[Today's Newspaper] fom [The Washington Post]

[Health]
Preparing for Swine Flu's Return
New Wave Expected After Virus Flourished in Southern Hemisphere

By Rob Stein
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, August 10, 2009

As the first influenza pandemic in 41 years has spread during the Southern Hemisphere's winter over the past few months, the United States and other northern countries have been racing to prepare for a second wave of swine flu virus.

At the same time, international health authorities have become increasingly alarmed about the new virus's arrival in the poorest, least-prepared parts of the world.

While flu viruses are notoriously capricious, making any firm predictions impossible, a new round could hit the Northern Hemisphere within weeks and lead to major disruptions in schools, workplaces and hospitals, according to U.S. and international health officials.

"The virus is still around and ready to explode," said William Schaffner, an influenza expert at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine who advises federal health officials. "We're potentially looking at a very big mess."

President Obama arrived in Mexico on Sunday for a two-day summit that will include discussions on swine flu, along with Mexico's drug wars, border security, immigration reform and economic recovery.

"Everyone recognizes that H1N1 is going to be a challenge for all of us, and there are people who are going to be getting sick in the fall and die," said John O. Brennan, the U.S. deputy national security adviser for counterterrorism and homeland security. "The strategy and the effort on the part of the governments is to make sure we . . . collaborate to minimize the impact."

Since emerging last spring in Mexico, the virus, known as H1N1, has spread to at least 168 countries, causing more than 162,000 confirmed cases and playing a role in at least 1,154 deaths, including 436 in the United States.
Scientists have been closely monitoring the flu's spread for clues to how much of a threat it might pose this fall. So far, no signs have emerged that the virus has mutated into a more dangerous form. Most people who become infected seem to experience relatively mild illness.

Still, the virus has caused major outbreaks involving a disproportionate number of younger people in Australia, New Zealand, Argentina and other countries, prompting schools to close, causing theaters to shut down, and straining some emergency rooms and intensive care units, sometimes forcing doctors to postpone other care, such as elective surgeries.

Swine flu has also begun to spread in South Africa, where at least two deaths have been reported; the national laboratory, meanwhile, was overwhelmed last week with samples that needed testing. In India, a 14-year-old girl became the first person to die from the disease in that densely populated nation.

In Britain, meanwhile, where anxiety was increasing because of high-profile cases including "Harry Potter" films actor Rupert Grint, health officials were trying to determine the cause of a sharp rise in reported cases in recent weeks.

"This is something that we could see here soon," said Arnold S. Monto, a University of Michigan infectious-disease expert who advises the World Health Organization, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other federal health agencies. He noted that some emergency rooms were overwhelmed by last spring's outbreak in New York City. "We have to be worried about our ability to handle a surge of severe cases."

Concern about a second wave has prompted a flurry of activity by federal, state and local officials, including intensifying flu virus monitoring and making plans to distribute vaccine and antiviral drugs and other treatments if necessary.

"There's a lot of moving parts to this," said Joseph S. Bresee, who heads the CDC's influenza epidemiology and prevention branch. "Hopefully we won't have a panic, but instead we'll have the appropriate level of concern and response."

The Obama administration has been updating recommendations for when to close schools, what parents should do if their children get sick, how doctors should care for patients and how businesses should respond to large-scale absences. Officials are hoping to navigate a fine line, urging precautions to minimize spread, serious illness and deaths while avoiding undue alarm and misinformation.

"The last time we had anything similar to this was prior to the Internet," said one senior official who spoke on the condition of anonymity last week during one of a series of background briefings for reporters.

A Gathering Storm

The virus could cause nothing more than a typical flu season for the Northern Hemisphere this winter. But many experts suspect the second wave could be more severe than an average flu season, which hospitalizes an estimated 200,000 Americans and contributes to 36,000 deaths. Because the virus is new, most people are not immune to it.

"This epidemic will transmit faster than usual, because the population is more susceptible," said Marc Lipsitch, a professor of epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health who has been helping the CDC project the severity of the upcoming wave. "It's fair to say there will be tens of millions of illnesses and hundreds of thousands of hospitalizations, and tens of thousands of deaths. That's not atypical. It just depends on how many tens of thousands."

Perhaps more important, in every country where the virus has spread, it has continued to affect children and young adults much more commonly than typical flu viruses.

"In a pandemic where a greater fraction of illness and deaths occur in kids and young adults, that will be clearly noticeable to the public. There will be a sense that this is a greater severity of illness even if fewer people die overall," the CDC's Bresee said.

Most of those who have developed serious illness and died have had other health problems. But those include many common conditions, such as diabetes, asthma and obesity. Pregnant women appear to be especially at risk. And the virus can cause severe illness and death in otherwise healthy people in perhaps a third of cases.

The virus continued to simmer in the United States over the summer, causing more than 80 outbreaks in camps in more than 40 states. Officials estimate that more than 1 million Americans have been infected.

The number of cases could increase rapidly as soon as schools begin to reopen in the next few weeks and could accelerate further as cooler, drier temperatures return, possibly peaking in October.

That is much earlier than the usual flu season, and it could create confusion. People could start becoming sick with the swine flu before a vaccine is widely available and nonetheless be urged to get the regular seasonal flu vaccine, which will be available first. Because different groups are being given priority for the different vaccines, officials are concerned it could be difficult to make sure the right people get the vaccine at the right time to provide optimal protection. The elderly are a top priority for the seasonal vaccine, but not for the swine flu vaccine.

The first batches of swine flu vaccine are not expected to become available until mid-October, assuming studies indicate it is safe and effective. And officials have yet to answer many key questions, including how many doses will be needed. If it is two, as many suspect, it could take at least five weeks after the first shot before vaccinated people are fully protected.

Southern Hemisphere

In the Southern Hemisphere, which experiences winter during the Northern Hemisphere's summer, the swine flu virus caused a more intense and somewhat earlier flu season in some places. In Argentina, which was hit particularly hard, school breaks were extended and the economy suffered as people avoided restaurants, clubs and other public places.

"There was panic and I felt it, too," said Cristina Malaga, a maid in Buenos Aires who stayed home for a week in July out of fear. "I was scared. It is three buses to get to work and there were many people on those buses who are coughing."

At the Gutiérrez Children's Hospital, officials set up a trailer with specially outfitted examination rooms to help deal with the influx of sick people.

"The system did not collapse, because we prepared special units for outpatients and for inpatients," said Eduardo López, who heads the hospital's medical department.

Paula Morey, a housewife who lives in an affluent neighborhood in Buenos Aires, said she and friends stopped sharing the national tea, which is served in a communal gourd. Now, she said, they bring their own gourd. Morey also began cleaning her 4-year-old daughter's hands constantly and carrying a tube of disinfectant to dab on the moment she touches anything like a doorknob.

"She had to learn to take care of herself," Morey said.

Greater Concerns

The appearance of the virus in countries such as South Africa and India is raising concern that the pandemic could be devastating if it begins to sicken large numbers of people in places with fewer resources.

"These are countries with vulnerable populations and fragile health-care systems," said Nikki Shindo, acting head of the WHO's influenza program.

Indian doctors and health officials were scrambling last week to prepare for a sharp increase in cases. Despite well-run clinics for the wealthy, many of India's government health services are overcrowded, understaffed, chaotic and antiquated.

CONTINUED ON newswp2

news20090810wp2

2009-08-10 18:41:20 | Weblog
[Today's Newspaper] fom [The Washington Post]

[Health]
Preparing for Swine Flu's Return
New Wave Expected After Virus Flourished in Southern Hemisphere

By Rob Stein
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, August 10, 2009

CONTINUED FROM newswp1

"If we start investigating every case of H1N1 virus, I think the government facility will not be able to cope with the rush," said Dharam Prakash, the Indian Medical Association's secretary general.

In Kenya, white-coated health workers have been passing out questionnaires at the Nairobi airport and putting up glossy posters about the virus on the walls of downtown cafes. False alarms about the virus have spawned a sense of panic in some places. When a health clinic in a Nairobi mall recently suspected a patient of being infected, word leaked out and soon shoppers were sending out text messages across the city warning people to stay away. The clinic was shut down for a day.

Northern Hemisphere

In Britain, chief medical officer Liam Donaldson said there were several possible explanations for that country's recent increase in cases, including London's role as an international transport hub. In an effort to relieve intense pressure on doctors, the government recently launched the National Pandemic Flu Service, a phone and Internet hotline that allows patients to diagnose themselves and prescribe their own drugs.

"It's changing the way people are responding," said Alan Hay, who directs the WHO's World Influenza Centre in London.

Meanwhile, health officials in Virginia, Maryland, the District and other localities said they have been preparing all summer for the swine flu's return, including making plans to set up special clinics to treat and vaccinate patients if necessary.

"We're doing a tremendous amount of contingency planning," said Frances Phillips, Maryland's deputy secretary for public health.

Although strains of the virus have emerged that are resistant to Tamiflu, one of two antiviral drugs effective in treating it, scientists say both drugs generally appear to continue to be effective. The U.S. government shipped 11 million doses of the drugs to states to add to the 23 million they already had on hand and bought an additional 13 million doses to replenish its supplies.

"There's only so much that can be done to get ready. Flu, like a hurricane, is a force of nature. You can't stop it. You can't make it less severe than it would be otherwise," said Eric Toner of the University of Pittsburgh's Center for Biosecurity. "All you can do is try to be prepared to deal with the consequences."

The last flu pandemic, the 1968-69 Hong Kong flu, was the mildest of the 20th century, contributing to perhaps 1 million deaths worldwide, including about 34,000 in the United States. After emerging, many flu viruses continue to circulate for years, while others disappear or combine with other viruses.

news20090810wsj

2009-08-10 17:32:26 | Weblog
[Today's Paper] from [The Wall Street Journal]

[Asia News]
ASIA NEWS AUGUST 10, 2009
Taliban Now Winning
U.S. Commander in Afghanistan Warns of Rising Casualties

By YOCHI J. DREAZEN in Kabul and PETER SPIEGEL in Washington

The Taliban have gained the upper hand in Afghanistan, the top American commander there said, forcing the U.S. to change its strategy in the eight-year-old conflict by increasing the number of troops in heavily populated areas like the volatile southern city of Kandahar, the insurgency's spiritual home.

Gen. Stanley McChrystal warned that means U.S. casualties, already running at record levels, will remain high for months to come.

In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, the commander offered a preview of the strategic assessment he is to deliver to Washington later this month, saying the troop shifts are designed to better protect Afghan civilians from rising levels of Taliban violence and intimidation. The coming redeployments are the clearest manifestation to date of Gen. McChrystal's strategy for Afghanistan, which puts a premium on safeguarding the Afghan population rather than hunting down militants.

Gen. McChrystal said the Taliban are moving beyond their traditional strongholds in southern Afghanistan to threaten formerly stable areas in the north and west.

The militants are mounting sophisticated attacks that combine roadside bombs with ambushes by small teams of heavily armed militants, causing significant numbers of U.S. fatalities, he said. July was the bloodiest month of the war for American and British forces, and 12 more American troops have already been killed in August.

"It's a very aggressive enemy right now," Gen. McChrystal said in the interview Saturday at his office in a fortified NATO compound in Kabul. "We've got to stop their momentum, stop their initiative. It's hard work."

In an effort to regain the upper hand, Gen. McChrystal said he will redeploy some troops currently in sparsely populated areas to areas with larger concentrations of Afghan civilians, while some of the 4,000 American troops still to arrive will be deployed to Kandahar.

The Obama administration is in the midst of an Afghan buildup that will push U.S. troop levels here to a record 68,000 by year end. There are roughly an additional 30,000 troops from North Atlantic Treaty Organization countries and other allies.

Gen. McChrystal's predecessor, Gen. David McKiernan, had a request outstanding for 10,000 more troops. Gen. McChrystal said he hadn't decided whether to request additional U.S. forces. "We're still working it," he said.

Several officials who have taken part in Gen. McChrystal's 60-day review of the war effort said they expect him to ultimately request as many as 10,000 more troops -- a request many observers say will be a tough sell at the White House, where several senior administration officials have said publicly that they want to hold off on sending more troops until the impact of the initial influx of 21,000 reinforcements can be gauged.

The U.S. war effort in Afghanistan is costing American taxpayers about $4 billion a month.

Gen. McChrystal also said he would direct a "very significant" expansion of the Afghan army and national police -- which would double in size under the plans being finalized by senior U.S. military officers here -- and import a tactic first used in Iraq by moving U.S. troops onto small outposts in individual Afghan neighborhoods and villages.

One person briefed on the assessment said it will call for boosting the Afghan army to 240,000 from 135,000 and the Afghan police to 160,000 from 82,000.

One official noted the emerging plans to double the size of the Afghan army and police will require thousands of additional U.S. trainers. The U.S. will also need more troops if security conditions in north and west Afghanistan continue to deteriorate, the official said. "At the end of the day, it's all about the math," he said. "The demand and the supply don't line up, even with the new troops that are coming in."

In earlier phases of the assessment process, Gen. McChrystal's staff conducted a "troop-to-task" analysis that weighed increasing U.S. troop levels by two brigades -- each such unit has 3,500 to 5,000 troops -- or by as many as eight brigades, according to officials familiar with the matter. A middle option of four to six brigades was also considered, these people said.

The prospect of more troops rankles some of Gen. McChrystal's advisers, who worry the American military footprint in Afghanistan is already too large.

"How many people do you bring in before the Afghans say, 'You're acting like the Russians'?" said one senior military official, referring to the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s. "That's the big debate going on in the headquarters right now."

Afghan President Hamid Karzai has said publicly during his campaign for the approaching Aug. 20 elections that he wants to negotiate new agreements giving the Afghan government more control over the conduct of the foreign troops currently in the country.

Gen. McChrystal, however, says too many troops aren't a concern. "I think it's what you do, not how many you are. It's how the force conducts itself."

Regardless of how he resolves the internal debate on troop numbers, Gen. McChrystal's coming report won't include any specific requests for more U.S. troops. Those numbers would instead be detailed in a follow-on document that is set to be delivered to Washington a few weeks after the assessment.

The timing of Gen. McChrystal's primary assessment remains in flux. It was initially due in mid-August, but the commander was summoned to a secret meeting in Belgium last week with Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and told to take more time. Military officials say the assessment will now be released sometime after the Aug. 20 vote.

The shift came amid signs of growing U.S. unease about the direction of the war effort. Initial assessments delivered to Gen. McChrystal last month warned that the Taliban were strengthening their control over Kandahar, the largest city in southern Afghanistan.

American forces have been waging a major offensive in the neighboring southern province of Helmand, the center of Afghanistan's drug trade. Some U.S. military officials believe the Taliban have taken advantage of the American preoccupation with Helmand to infiltrate Kandahar and set up shadow local governments and courts throughout the city.

"Helmand is a sideshow," said the senior military official briefed on the analysis. "Kandahar is the capital of the south [and] that's why they want it."

Gen. McChrystal said in the interview that he planned to shift more U.S. troops to Kandahar to bolster the Canadian forces that currently have primary security responsibility for the region. Hundreds of American troops equipped with mobile armored vehicles known as Strykers are already in the province.

"It's important and so we're going to do whatever we got to do to ensure that Kandahar is secure," he said. "With the arrival of the new U.S. forces we'll have the ability to put some more combat power in the area."

Despite the mounting concern about the Taliban's infiltration of Kandahar, there are clear limits to how soon additional U.S. forces can be sent to the city.

Moving forces from neighboring Helmand is nearly impossible, because those troops have already set up forward bases and recruited help from local tribal leaders, who have been promised American backing. As a result, the additional American troop deployments to Kandahar have only begun in recent days, with the arrival of new reinforcements that will continue into the fall.

Gen. McChrystal defended the decision to focus first on Helmand. The current operation, one of the largest since the start of the war in 2001, was meant to disrupt the Taliban's lucrative drug operations there, he said.

The armed group reaps tens of millions of dollars annually from the sale of opium from Helmand, and the commander said he wants to have troops on the ground before local farmers start to plant their next batch of poppies in November. The U.S. is working to persuade Helmand's farmers to replace their poppy fields with wheat and fruit.

The roughly 4,000 Marines in Helmand have been charged with putting Gen. McChrystal's thinking about counterinsurgency into practice. They are trying to build local relationships by launching small development and reconstruction projects.

Gen. McChrystal said his new strategy had to show clear results within roughly 12 months to prevent public support for the war from evaporating in both the U.S. and Afghanistan.

"This is a period where people are really looking to see which way this is going to go," he said. "It's the critical and decisive moment."

news20090810usat

2009-08-10 16:44:35 | Weblog
[Today's Paper] from [USA TODAY]

[Top News]
Poll: Americans divided on health care overhaul
By Susan Page, USA TODAY

WASHINGTON — As supporters and opponents of overhauling the health care system try to shape public opinion at congressional town-hall-style meetings, both sides face a big complication: Public opinion on the issue is complex in ways that defy an easy Republican-Democratic divide.

Analysis of a recent USA TODAY/Gallup Poll finds views on what priority to emphasize, how fast to act and what's important to protect vary and sometimes conflict depending on a person's age and region of the country, whether he or she has insurance, and is healthy or ailing.

Seniors are by far the most resistant to the idea of changing the current system — an opening for opponents who have focused on proposed cuts in Medicare spending and accusations about planning for "end-of-life" care. The idea of controlling insurance costs has broader support overall than expanding coverage for the uninsured, which has prompted the White House to begin describing its goal as "insurance reform."

Meanwhile, in an op-ed article in today's USA TODAY, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, both Democrats, decry what they call "un-American" tactics used to disrupt some congressional forums.

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell on Fox News Sunday accused Democrats of trying "to demonize citizens who are energetic about this."

An analysis of results from a USA TODAY survey July 10-12 illustrates some of the crosscurrents in public opinion. The poll of 3,026 adults has a margin of error of +/—2 percentage points. The poll found:
[Illustration(Health Care Survey) to be deleted]

•Significant differences on what the key goal of a health care overhaul should be. Two-thirds of blacks and six in 10 Hispanics say it should be expanding coverage to the uninsured, but six in 10 whites say controlling costs. Westerners are inclined to say expanding coverage is more important; Southerners say it's controlling costs.

•Challenges in convincing most Americans that it is urgent to act this year, as Obama argues. There's less urgency among those who have insurance and whose health is excellent or good — groups that make up the majority of those polled.

•Resistance among seniors. Fewer than half of seniors polled want an overhaul enacted this year.

news20090810slt

2009-08-10 15:44:24 | Weblog
[Today's Paper: A summary of what's in the major U.S. newspapers] from [Slate Magazine]

Return of the Swine Flu
By Daniel Politi
Posted Monday, Aug. 10, 2009, at 6:38 AM ET

The New York Times (NYT) leads with word that the Pentagon has placed 50 major Afghan drug traffickers with ties to the Taliban on a list of targets to be captured or killed. The paper got an early look at a congressional study set to be released this week and notes that by putting drug traffickers on the same list as insurgent leaders, the United States is drastically changing its counternarcotics strategy in Afghanistan. The Washington Post (WP) leads with a look at how the United States, along with other countries in the Northern Hemisphere, is preparing for a second wave of swine flu, which could start hitting with a vengeance in the next few weeks. Several countries in the Southern Hemisphere have been hit particularly hard during their winter, and everyone expects it to continue spreading. Britain has reported a recent increase in swine flu cases and set up a system to distribute drugs. Meanwhile, there are growing concerns the H1N1 virus could cause a huge number of fatalities if it begins to infect many people in some of the world's poorest countries.

USA Today (USAT) leads with a poll on health care that shows how people's opinions are all over the map and sometimes conflict. Seniors are certainly the most resistant to change, and with the exception of the youngest age group, the idea of controlling costs is seen as a higher priority than expanding coverage to the uninsured. Those with insurance and no significant health problems don't think the issue is so urgent that something must be done this year. The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) leads its world-wide newsbox with an interview with Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top American commander in Afghanistan, who warned U.S. casualties would remain high in the coming months as more soldiers are sent to population centers. Several officials say they expect McChrystal to ask for as many as 10,000 more troops. The Los Angeles Times (LAT) leads locally with a look at how lawyers are having considerable success at getting courts to declare that certain budget cuts passed by the legislature are illegal. These lawsuits are one reason why most expect the recently approved spending plan that closes California's massive budget gap will end up collapsing.

Military commanders have told lawmakers the new policy to go after major drug traffickers with the same level of intensity as militant leaders is perfectly legal and essential to making it more difficult for Taliban fighters to operate in Afghanistan. And they emphasized that only drug traffickers who helped finance the Taliban were put on the list. NATO allies were skeptical at first, but now say that there are sufficient safeguards in place to make sure everything remains legal. The report to be released by Congress this week also states that previous studies may have overestimated the amount of money the Taliban receives from the drug trade.


As conservative groups and other opponents of health care reform launch efforts to disrupt Democratic town hall meetings many have been wondering where in the world are the foot soldiers that were so instrumental to President Obama's victory in November. The LAT takes a look at how the Organizing for America network has been slow to get started because it is still trying to figure out how to best operate, and there have apparently been disagreements on what tactics should be pursued. The troubles the network now has to deal with illustrate how it's not so easy to take a campaign operation and turn it into a network of supporters who can persuade their neighbors to support specific policies. Part of the problem is that many who joined the network during the campaign lean heavily to the left and have found themselves disenchanted by Obama since he moved into the White House. For those still confused about what the battle is all about, the NYT publishes a useful summary.

USAT fronts a look at how China's reaction to the ethnic riots that killed almost 200 people in the country's far western province of Xinjiang has followed a familiar script that shows how the country's leaders have become good at short-term damage control. After rounding up at least 1,600 people, the government has launched a propaganda campaign that included unfurling numerous red cloth banners that proclaim, among other slogans, "Ethnic unity is good!" Almost 2,000 volunteers are handing out 100,000 smiley-face stickers that have the slogan, "A smile is the common language of all nationalities" in both Mandarin Chinese and Arabic. Government officials have also identified a common enemy by blaming unrest on Rebiya Kadeer, the Uighur leader who lives in the United States. And, finally, there has been a surge in public spending in the area. Experts say that all these tactics do is cover up tensions that are bound to blow up again in the future.

The LAT fronts claims by the Pakistani military that the Taliban recruited and kidnapped young boys in the Swat Valley and took them to one of their training camps in the area. Four boys met with reporters and told of their experience being kidnapped, emphasizing that while some busily planned their escape from day one, others had volunteered and were happy to join the militants. Those the Taliban recruited were overwhelmingly poor and were convinced to join the militants with promises of a comfortable future. Some of the boys who have escaped claim boys as young as 7 or 8 were at the camps, but military officials say they can't confirm that.

The expatriate playground of Dubai has turned dangerous, reports the Post. Western expatriates who went to the city in search of the good life are now often increasingly fearful of getting arrested now that the economy is on the decline and the government is looking for someone to blame. As stock and property prices plummet, there have been more arrests for business-related crimes, such as a bounced check. Foreigners are often kept in jail for weeks or months before they're charged with anything. As a result, a growing number of foreigners have decided to leave, or escape, the United Arab Emirates.

The NYT reports that the Seattle Times is thriving. Or at least not dying. Just yet. When the paper's rival, Post-Intelligencer, folded in March, many predicted it would only be a matter of time before the Seattle Times followed suit. But the paper managed to pick up most of the subscribers from the Post-Intelligencer and is actually making a profit, although it won't reveal how much. And perhaps even more surprising, SeattlePI.com is also doing quite well with a bare-bones staff that relies heavily on content produced by unpaid bloggers.

The NYT takes a look at how technology has added "an extra layer of chaos to the already discombobulating morning scramble" in households across the country. While mornings used to be a time to quickly have breakfast and maybe read a bit of the paper before rushing out the door, now going online is the first thing many people do, even before going to the bathroom. One Michigan couple sends their sons text messages, which they apparently use as "an in-houe intercom," to wake them up. "Things that I thought were unacceptable a few years ago are now commonplace in my house," the mom said, "like all four of us starting the day on four computers in four separate rooms."

news20090810gcu1

2009-08-10 14:51:03 | Weblog
[Environment] from [guardian.co.uk]

[Natural Disasters and Extreme Weather]
Deadly typhoon Morakot and tropical storm Etau pummel south-east Asia
Dozens killed and millions evacuated as storms devastate China, Taiwan, the Philippines and Japan

Tania Branigan in Beijing and Justin McCurry in Tokyo
guardian.co.uk, Monday 10 August 2009 09.23 BST
Article history

At least 34 people have died and millions of others been affected in the Asia-Pacific region after a typhoon and a tropical storm battered China, Taiwan, the Philippines and Japan.

At least one child was killed as typhoon Morakot pummelled east China yesterday, with winds of up to 75mph destroying houses and flooding farmlands.

Authorities had evacuated around 500,000 people from Fujian province – where Morakot made landfall in late afternoon, bringing waves up to 8 metres (26ft) high – and the same number from neighbouring Zhejiang.

Tens of thousands of ships were called back from sea. But disaster relief officials said more than 3.4 million people were affected in Zhejiang alone as hundreds of villages were flooded and more than 1,800 houses collapsed.

In one city, Wenzhou, a four-year-old boy died when winds and torrential rain brought down his home.

Morakot claimed the lives of 11 people in the Philippines and another 12 in Taiwan, where 52 people remain missing.

In Japan, 10 people died as an approaching tropical storm triggered floods and landslides in the west of the country.

More than 47,000 people in western Japan have been told to leave their homes, NHK television reported.

The meteorological office warned that tropical storm Etau could bring "extremely heavy rain" to many parts of Honshu – Japan's main island – as it moved northwards later today. The agency said the storm, which is expected to strike Tokyo tomorrow, was forecast to produce winds of up to 78mph, heavy rain and stormy seas.

At least nine people died and eight others were missing in Hyogo prefecture in western Japan. Local reports said a 68-year-old woman was killed in a landslide while a nine-year-old boy was reported missing.

"Cars that were parked on the road got all washed away all the way to the station," one resident told NHK. Another said: "Everything toppled over in the house. It's a complete mess. Even the floor got pushed up by the water."

Parts of Taiwan saw the worst flooding for half a century. China's Xinhua state news agency said it had caused 2.2bn yuan (£193m) damage as 143,000 hectares (357,400 acres) of farmland was damaged and nearly 9,000 businesses stopped work.

The typhoon dumped 2.5 metres of rain on the island, causing at least 3.4bn Taiwan dollars (£62m) in agricultural damage.

Officials said 110,000 houses were left without power and 850,000 homes had no water.

In Kaohsiung county, a bridge collapse cut off access to a remote village of 1,300 residents. Local television reported 200 homes there had been buried in a mudslide.

"It is not clear what the residents' situation is, but we are sure that Hsiaolin elementary school has been fully destroyed," Kaohsiung county magistrate, Yang Chiu-hsin, told reporters.


[Peter Mandelson]
Climate change campaigners stage protest at Mandelson's home
Activists gather outside business secretary's London home in 'act of solidarity' for 625 workers set to lose their jobs at the Vestas wind turbine factory on the Isle of Wight

Press Association
guardian.co.uk, Monday 10 August 2009 12.09 BST
Article history

Protesters against the closure of a wind turbine factory chained themselves to Lord Mandelson's home today as the business secretary jetted back from Corfu to take control of the day-to-day business of government.

Members of the Climate Rush campaign group gathered outside Mandelson's two-storey property in Regent's Park, north London, in an "act of solidarity" with 625 workers who are set to lose their jobs at the Vestas factory in Newport, Isle of Wight.

Ellie Robson, 21, a history undergraduate at Cambridge University, said she wanted to expose the government's hypocrisy over climate change as she chained herself to railings outside the business secretary's house.

She said: "Less than two weeks after announcing the government's plans for a low-carbon Britain, Vestas shut down because there's no demand for wind turbines in this country.

"Mandelson, the man in charge of the nation's purse strings, jets off to Corfu and ignores the Vestas workers' occupation.

"If we're going to have a low-carbon Britain then we need our government to support these workers, rather than forcing the closure of their factory and the loss of their jobs."

No one minister has officially been deputising for Gordon Brown over the weekend after Harriet Harman's foreign holiday overlapped with the business secretary's.

Downing Street was forced to issue a swift insistence that the PM remained "in charge" amid speculation that Mandelson would be running the show via mobile phone from the Greek island.

But a spokesman for Mandelson, who was flying back from the Greek island today, insisted it had been pre-agreed that he would be stand-in from his return today until 16 August, when he is expected to hand over to the chancellor, Alistair Darling.

The occupation of the Danish-owned Vestas factory ended last week when workers left the building after an 18-day protest.

One of the workers jumped 20 feet from a balcony before being led away by security guards, waving and smiling at the climate change activists and trade unionists who have been outside giving support during the protest.

The factory's owner, Vestas Wind Systems, had obtained a court order after six workers barricaded themselves into the plant, on an industrial estate on the outskirts of Newport, for more than two weeks in a bid to delay its closure and the loss of 625 jobs.

Mandelson was pictured at the weekend enjoying the hospitality of Nathaniel Rothschild, but appeared to have avoided the political furore sparked by his Corfu break last year.

In an interview published today by the Guardian, Lord Mandelson described himself more of a "kindly pussycat" than a "big beast" of politics.

"I don't really see myself as a big beast. More as a kindly pussycat. Yes, a kindly pussycat. I'm a kindly pussycat, with strong views about what we need to do," he said.

"I think 10 years ago, and also 15 years ago, I was a very hard-nosed, uncompromising figure who was manning the barricades of change in the Labour party, and prepared to take down anything or anyone who stood in the way," he said.

"I don't feel in that mode now. And secondly, I've learned from experience that you can defeat people without killing them."

Brown is expected to swap his constituency in Scotland for the Lake District this week as he opts for a so-called "staycation" – keeping up a record of always holidaying in the UK as prime minister.

Downing Street confirmed that Mandelson would be resuming work in London later today and would be dividing his time between his offices in the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills, and the Cabinet Office.

news20090810gcu2

2009-08-10 14:43:06 | Weblog
[Environment] from [guardian.co.uk]

[Environment > Food]
Environment secretary calls for 'radical rethink' of UK food production
Britain must address climate change's threat to global food supplies and reduce consumption and waste, says Hilary Benn

Press Association
guardian.co.uk, Monday 10 August 2009 11.57 BST
Article history

A "radical rethink" of the way the UK produces and consumes food is needed, environment secretary Hilary Benn warned today as the government published an assessment outlining the threats to the security of what we eat.

The assessment showed that future global food supplies could be threatened by the impacts of climate change on where crops can grow, increases in the incidence of animal diseases and water shortages.

It also issued a warning over the depletion of fish stocks around the world, as well as the impacts on the natural world of expansion of crops grown for fuels and a growing population eating more.

But with rising yields in cereals and uncropped land that can be brought into production, the UK can contribute to global food security, the assessment said.

Across the world, it has been estimated that production will have to rise by 70% by 2050 to feed a global population of 9 billion.

The government has committed almost £1bn to ensuring food security for poor countries and funding research into sustainable agriculture in the developing world, according to the study.

Benn said he wanted British farmers to produce as much as possible, but they needed to do so in such a way that took account of a changing climate and the need to tackle global warming emissions — to which agriculture is a significant contributor.

He said: "Last year the world had a wake-up call with the sudden oil and food price rises. While we know the price of our food, the full environmental costs and the costs to our health are significant and hidden.

"We need a radical rethink of how we produce and consume our food," he said. "Globally we need to cut emissions and adapt to the changing climate that will alter what we can grow and where we can grow it. We must maintain the natural resources - soils, water, and biodiversity - on which food production depends. And we need to tackle diet-related ill health that already costs the NHS and the wider economy billions of pounds each year."

Today's assessment is published alongside an update on last year's Food Matters report from the Cabinet Office on rising food prices, the problems of unhealthy eating and the environmental impacts of what we eat.

The environment department said a number of steps had been taken including a voluntary scheme for restaurants to put calorie counts on their meals and £10m for anaerobic digestion projects to turn waste into energy.

Benn has held talks with industry on how to boost production and consumption of fruit and vegetables in the UK, according to the update.

Further action needs to be taken on areas such as reducing waste from food, which costs each household an average of £420 a year in the UK, and even more — £610 — for families with children.

Eliminating food waste would cut carbon emissions equivalent to taking a fifth of the UK's cars off the roads, according to the environment department.

Ways to cut food waste could include replacing the "bogof" — buy one get one free — offers with half price offers, along with hints, tips and recipes to help consumers make the most of the cheap food.

Clear advice on best before dates and making sure a range of pack sizes is available could also help.

The government is also keen to cut packaging from food by 2020 to as little as is needed "to do the job" and to promote reuse and recycling.


[Copenhagen Climate Change Summit 2009]
UN climate change deal needs more sacrifices by West, John Prescott warns
Patrick Wintour, political editor
The Guardian, Saturday 8 August 2009
Article history

Vital UN climate change talks in Copenhagen are likely to collapse unless rich nations agree a "social justice deal" built around equalising emissions per head in each country, according to the former deputy prime minister John Prescott.

Speaking to the Guardian, Prescott admitted that the formula would require far greater sacrifices by rich nations, especially the US. Prescott, one of three politicians to broker the original UN climate change deal in December 1997, is to become deeply involved in trying to ensure there is a successor to Kyoto.

He met leaders of Barack Obama's climate change team in Washington a fortnight ago, and is due to travel to China on 8 September at the same time as Lord Mandelson, the business secretary. He will be given an honorary professorship at Xiamen University for his work on climate change.

Prescott will also stage an international conference from 28 September on the principles of a deal for Copenhagen, to be opened by Rajendra Pachauri, the chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and addressed by Al Gore. The conference, organised by the Council of Europe, will have 65 states present.

Prescott is also going to lead a Gore-style campaign in schools in October showing the film The Age of Stupid, starring Pete Postlethwaite, portraying a devastated planet in 2050 owing to world leaders' failure to act on climate change.

Prescott says: "What I fear is that Copenhagen is a much more difficult nut to crack than Kyoto, far more countries are involved, and we nearly did not succeed at Kyoto. It took a last-minute fix. There are going to be real difficulties, even among the rich countries themselves."

He is doubtful that the EU member states will even stick to the commitments they make. "For a deal to work it has to have a formula that has an element of equity and social justice in it that reflects the state of each country's industrial development and its emissions per capita."

China now emits more carbon than America in absolute terms, owing to the size of its population, but in per capita terms the US emits four or five times as much. Prescott warns: "Rich countries are showing great reluctance to face up to the reality of what rationing carbon means for levels of growth and prosperity in their countries. It is going to be a fundamental change."

The EU has committed itself to an 80% cut by 2050 and a 20% cut by 2020. The US Senate is due to pass a cap-and-trade bill to cut greenhouse gas emissions by only 17% from 2005 levels by 2020. But even this proposal, regarded as far too little by China and India, is meeting fierce resistance from the US coal industry, which is pouring cash into a lobbying campaign to weaken the resolve of Democrat senators. Prescott says: "From speaking to the Americans I can already see it is clear that they are going to have difficulties even meeting the European target. The steel and coal companies are financing the same kind of campaigns against Copenhagen as they financed against Kyoto.

"What is vital is that America and China come to an agreement, and at the heart of that will be an arrangement on the coal industry. China depends for 70% of its energy on coal, and the US still has a massive coal industry. Coal is still going to remain at the heart of global energy. A realistic agreement will have to recognise coal. You cannot shut it down.

"The west is going to come up with big money on how to finance alternative energy in the developing countries, including clean coal. We have got to crack clean coal technology. China and India are going to want to know how many billions the rich countries are going to put aside to help them make their carbon contributions. That will be one of the big tests at Copenhagen. The fact is that the west has poisoned the world and left continents like Africa in poverty. The west will have up to stump up the cash for clean technology."

Both Chinese and Indian climate negotiators have recently again refused to offer any targets to cut their emissions. They are insisting that the EU and the US commit themselves to 40% cuts in emissions by 2020 against 1990 baselines. Neither the US nor the EU are anywhere near this position.

Prescott says any agreement cannot be based on 1990 levels for developing countries. "They did not have industrial development at that stage, so we are fighting for the principle of an objective based on carbon tonnes per capita. That is the fairest way forward."

Copenhagen, he argues, will represent a major infringement on free market economies, even though it will use market mechanisms such as cap and trade to set a price for carbon through rationing.

"What we are beginning to witness is a whole new set of rules for economics, based on rationing resources."

news20090810snc

2009-08-10 12:06:17 | Weblog
[Science News for KIDS] from [Science News]

FOR KIDS: Brain cells take a break
As you fall into deep sleep, some neurons pause their electrical activity

By Stephen Ornes
Web edition : Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Scientists have long wanted to know what happens inside the human brain when deep asleep. You may be unconscious, but your brain cells are busy with activity. Neurons, brain cells that conduct electricity, keep your mind humming even while your body is resting.

In a new study, a team of scientists found that neurons take breaks periodically as a person heads into deep sleep. These pauses in neuron activity help keep people asleep, even if they hear noises or are touched. Sydney Cash, a neurologist at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, and his team found a way to study electricity in the brain, inside and out.

Scientists use different tools to study electrical currents in the brain. One of the most useful is the EEG, or electroencephalogram. An EEG represents the brain’s activity as a graph that looks like a long series of differently shaped waves. The height, width and closeness of those waves give scientists a peek at what’s happening in a person’s head. Even though they can study the patterns, however, scientists don’t know what causes the waves to form.

In the study led by Cash, the researchers were interested in a particular type of EEG squiggle called a K-complex. To people who don’t understand EEG patterns, a K-complex just looks like a squiggle that’s larger than the lines around it. To a trained scientist, a K-complex shows a significant change in the electrical activity in the brain.

A K-complex may show up on an EEG when the sleeping person hears a noise or has his or her sleep disturbed. Or these squiggles may show up for other reasons.

EEGs can’t see everything, however. They only measure electric signals — including K-complexes — on the outside of the brain. In the new study, the scientists found a way to see even deeper into the brain. They studied patients with epilepsy, a medical condition that can cause a person to suffer from serious seizures. Epilepsy is believed to be caused by overactive neurons.

In previous surgeries, the people with epilepsy had had tiny electrodes implanted deeper inside their brains. Electrodes are also used to study electrical currents, and doctors had hoped that these devices would help them identify the source of the epileptic seizures.

Cash, who studies epilepsy, realized that those same electrodes could be used to study electrical activity deeper inside the brain while at the same time an EEG told the scientists what was happening on the surface. By comparing the two sets of information, the scientists thought they could better understand brain activity.

They were right. While the patients slept, Cash and his team collected data from both the EEG and from the electrodes. They found that whenever the EEG showed a K-complex, there was a dip in activity inside the brain. In other words, the K-complex was a sign on the outside that neurons on the inside were taking a break. These breaks help keep people asleep. Cash’s research also shows that K-complexes don’t spread to the entire brain, which means that only some neurons take a break at any given time.

The brain has long been one of the most mysterious parts of the human body. Studies like this one help scientists open a window onto the inner workings of our heads — and possibly figure out how the circuitry works. Understanding how neurons behave is important, but scientists also need to know what these cells do when they're not at work. As this study shows, neurons take a break so you can too.

Power words:

Neuron: Any of the impulse-conducting cells that constitute the brain, spinal column and nerves.

K-complex: The largest event in healthy human EEGs; occurs in deep sleep.

Neuroscientist: A scientist who studies the brain and the nervous system.

EEG: A graphic record of the electrical activity of the brain as recorded by an electroencephalograph

Epilepsy: Any of various neurological disorders characterized by sudden recurring attacks of motor, sensory or psychic malfunction with or without loss of consciousness or convulsive seizures.


FOR KIDS: New eyes to scan the skies
Two new telescopes will watch for asteroids, map the galaxy

By Stephen Ornes
Web edition : Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

Four hundred years ago, an Italian scientist named Galileo Galilei became the first person to see the craters on the moon. Galileo, who also observed four of Jupiter’s moons and the rings of Saturn, was one of the first people to use a telescope to study the sky. Since then, telescopes have become the most important tool used by astronomers.

All over the world — from the mountains of Hawaii to the icy plains of Antarctica — astronomers use telescopes to study the stars, galaxies and planets of outer space. Today, telescopes come in all shapes and sizes. Scientists are constantly finding new ways to make these instruments more powerful. In the next couple years, two new telescopes with different purposes are scheduled to see “first light.” (This is the phrase used by astronomers to talk about the first images produced by a telescope.)

One of the telescopes, called Pan-STARRS, could save humans from extinction. Nick Kaiser, a scientist who works on the project, says the Pan-STARRS telescope has been designed to find “90 percent of all killer asteroids, near-Earth asteroids bigger than 300 meters.” Smaller asteroids often crash into Earth, but if a giant “killer” asteroid were to strike our planet, it could mean the end of human civilization.

Pan-STARRS, like most telescopes, uses mirrors and lenses to provide pictures of outer space. Giant mirrors are used to “gather” light. They reflect the light onto the lens of a camera, which can then record the image.

When completed, Pan-STARRS will include four telescopes perched atop a mountain on the Hawaiian island of Maui. Only one telescope is in place and working now. Each telescope will take pictures of one patch of sky for about 30 seconds, and then move on to another patch. Every night, each telescope will take pictures of about 1,000 patches. Every week, each telescope will have photographed the whole sky.

Each of the four telescopes will take pictures of the same patches of sky. One telescope, working alone, may occasionally malfunction and incorrectly detect an asteroid. If there are three other telescopes working, astronomers can use them to see if there really is an asteroid coming our way. By using four telescopes instead of one, scientists hope to get a more accurate picture of space. If a giant asteroid were identified, astronomers would plot ways to deflect it or break it up long before it reached Earth.

Another telescope, called Gaia, is being designed by astronomers in Europe — and it couldn’t be more different from Pan-STARRS. While Pan-STARRS will be looking for asteroids and comets headed for Earth, Gaia will be looking at our entire galaxy.

Gaia is designed to draw a map of the Milky Way, our home galaxy. Just as a map of your town gives you a picture of where things are located, Gaia’s map of the galaxy will tell astronomers where the stars reside. Over five years, Gaia will observe about a billion stars and other objects in our galaxy. Each object will be observed about 70 times.

Unlike Pan-STARRS, which will be constructed on firm Earth, Gaia will be launched into space strapped to a rocket. It consists of two telescopes, each focused at a different angle. These two telescopes act like Gaia’s “eyes.” The reason humans can see things in 3-D is that we have two eyes focused on the same object, at slightly different angles. (If you want to see a two-dimensional version of your world, try using just one eye.) By using two telescopes like eyes, Gaia can produce the first 3-D map of the positions of the stars it views.

Gaia, which is scheduled to blast off in 2011, will be a powerful telescope. If you were to use it on Earth, for example, you could stand 600 miles away from your best friends and still get a crisp and clear picture of their hair.

Gaia and Pan-STARRS are two of more than a dozen telescopes being designed by scientists right now. The next generation of telescopes will reveal new parts of our universe that will seem surprising, just as the moon’s craters must have seemed when observed 400 years ago. The universe, with all its planets, stars and other strange objects, is a complicated puzzle with pieces that we can see by using powerful telescopes. Astronomers of the future will gaze deep into space, gather more pieces, try to put them together and ask new questions. The big question, however, will always be the same: “What’s out there?”

Power words:

Telescope: An arrangement of lenses or mirrors, or both, that gathers visible light, permitting direct observation or photographic recording of distant objects.

Galaxy: A collection of stars, gas and dust that make up the universe. A galaxy contains an average of 100 billion solar masses (or 100 billion times the weight of the sun) and ranges in diameter from 1,500 to 300,000 light-years.

news20090810ntc1

2009-08-10 11:51:50 | Weblog
[naturenews] from [nature.com]

Published online 9 August 2009 | Nature | doi:10.1038/news.2009.809
News
Immortality improves cell reprogramming
Knocking out genes with a role in in cancer prevention helps produce stem cells.

Elie Dolgin

Switching off the p53 pathway helped researchers to make stem-like cells.Wikimedia CommonsSpecialized adult cells made 'immortal' through the blockade of an antitumour pathway can be turned into stem-like cells quickly and efficiently.

The findings — which should make it easier to generate patient-specific cells from any tissue type, including certain diseased cells that have proved difficult to transform — suggest that cellular reprogramming and cancer formation are inextricably linked.

Since 2006, when Shinya Yamanaka of Japan's Kyoto University first created induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells1 — which can develop into any cell type — many scientists have devised ways to make cells pluripotent. But the success rates of these techniques have remained frustratingly low — usually much fewer than 1% of adult cells are successfully reprogrammed to become iPS cells.

{“Anything that we can do to increase the efficiency of reprogramming is a big step forward.”
George Daley
Children's Hospital Boston}

Now, five research teams, including Yamanaka's, have boosted their success rates by around a 100-fold by silencing the p53 pathway, which prevents mutations and preserves the sequence of the genome. After knocking out several genes to wipe out the p53 pathway, the teams successfully turned up to 10% of skin cells into bona fide iPS cells using viruses carrying the four commonly used reprogramming factors. What's more, disabling the p53 pathway improved success rates for techniques besides this four-factor method that are potentially safer but often much less efficient, including the use of viral vectors with only two or three factors, or plasmid vectors that don't modify the genome.

"Anything that we can do to increase the efficiency of reprogramming is a big step forward," says George Daley, a stem-cell expert at the Children's Hospital Boston in Massachusetts who was not involved with the new work.

Cancer link

The deluge of simultaneous publications in Nature today2,3,4,5,6 shows that there is "a consensus that this pathway plays an important role in reprogramming", says Konrad Hochedlinger, a stem-cell biologist at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston who headed one of the research teams. "By manipulating this pathway we can significantly enhance the efficiency and kinetics of the [reprogramming] process."

The studies also shed light on the mechanism of tumour formation, says study author Juan Carlos Izpisúa Belmonte, a developmental biologist at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, California, and at the Center of Regenerative Medicine in Barcelona, Spain. Because it's now clear that p53 has a key role in both nuclear reprogramming and cancer development, Izpisúa Belmonte says, tumours can be thought of as cells that acquire more and more stem-cell-like characteristics — such as the ability to keep reproducing themselves forever. "If you connect the dots, you can say that cancer is really a de-differentiation problem," he says.

Quality control

Although the findings will make reprogramming easier — an important step for reliably generating iPS cells from diseased or older patients — the methods still involve genetic manipulation of genes associated with cancer, which would rule out their use in therapies, cautions Jacob Hanna, a stem-cell researcher at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research in Cambridge, Massachusetts, who was not involved in the studies. "It's important, but it still does not eliminate concerns," he says. Izpisúa Belmonte says he is now screening chemicals that only transiently silence p53 to make iPS cells that are potentially safer.

Molecular biologist Maria Blasco of the Spanish National Cancer Research Center in Madrid who worked on two of the papers also warns against wiping out p53 when generating therapeutic iPS cells.

A working p53 pathway prevents the propagation of cells with heavy DNA damage, she says. With the p53 pathway intact, "the cells that are reprogrammed are cells that are healthy and do not carry any DNA damage". Nevertheless, stifling p53 to make DNA-damaged iPS cells could provide useful cellular models to aid the understanding of many diseases, she adds.

References
1. Takahashi, K. & Yamanaka, S. Cell 126, 663-676 (2006).
2. Hong, H. et al. Nature advance online publication doi:10.1038/nature08235 (2009).
3. Utikal, J. et al. Nature advance online publication doi:10.1038/nature08285 (2009).
4. Marión, R. M. et al. Nature advance online publication doi:10.1038/nature08287 (2009).
5. Li, H. et al. Nature advance online publication doi:10.1038/nature08290 (2009).
6. Kawamura, T. et al. Nature advance online publication doi:10.1038/nature08311 (2009).

news20090810ntc2

2009-08-10 11:43:19 | Weblog
[naturenews] from [nature.com]

[naturenews]
Published online 7 August 2009 | Nature | doi:10.1038/news.2009.810
News
Geoengineering schemes under scrutiny
Researchers divided over the wisdom of climate manipulation.

Alexandra Witze

The cooling aerosols pumped into the atmosphere by the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo inspire one proposed approach to fight global warming.NASAGeoengineering — the deliberate manipulation of climate to counteract global warming — might not be taking off just yet, but the push to fund more research into it is increasing.

This week, Novim, a think tank based in Santa Barbara, California, released a report that investigated the feasibility of one of the wilder-sounding geoengineering schemes: pumping tiny particles into the upper atmosphere to block sunlight and trigger global cooling.

"It's the most serious technical report to date," says David Keith of the University of Calgary in Alberta, Canada, who has been researching geoengineering for two decades. Keith was an author on the report, which was led by Steve Koonin, now chief scientist for the US Department of Energy, and Jason Blackstock of the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Laxenburg, Austria.

{“It's the most serious technical report to date.”
David Keith}

Among other things, it concludes that spraying sulphate aerosols — to mimic the cooling effects of a major volcanic eruption — is technically feasible. But the political and ethical challenges facing such a worldwide intervention remain virtually unknown, as do its unintentional side effects.

Those potential side effects could include irrevocably altering precipitation patterns, argue Gabriele Hegerl, of the Grant Institute in Edinburgh, UK, and Susan Solomon, of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Boulder, Colorado, in a paper published online on 6 August in Science1.

They cite the instance of the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo on Luzon island in the Philippines, which injected sulphur particles high into the stratosphere, causing global precipitation and river flow to drop dramatically. "Geoengineering schemes optimized to cancel greenhouse warming will lead to a less intense global hydrological cycle and major regional changes," agrees Philip Duffy, a researcher at Climate Central in Palo Alto, California.

Outlandish schemes

Duffy and Keith both spoke in Albuquerque, New Mexico, at the annual conference of the Ecological Society of America. They participated in a symposium on 6 August that aimed to make ecologists more aware of the field, which, until now, has mainly been dominated by experts in climate, the atmosphere or the ocean.

Geoengineering schemes are often notable for their sheer outlandishness. The sulphate scheme studied in the Novim report would require giant hoses or cannons to constantly blast particles into the air. Other plans call for installing tens of thousands of reflective sunshades in orbit to block incoming sunlight, or for seeding vast swathes of the ocean with iron in an effort to trigger plankton blooms that would suck down carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

Keith notes that both the public and researchers often confuse the two main approaches to geoengineering: solar radiation management, which aims to block incoming light using techniques such as aerosols or sunshades, and carbon cycle engineering, which uses techniques such as ocean fertilization. Solar management is relatively cheap and fast, but comes with unknown effects on the climate system; engineering of the carbon cycle is slow and expensive "but gets the carbon out", he says.

Humble beginnings?

Keith and the other authors of the Novim report argue that research should begin into the effects of small-scale geoengineering experiments. "You don't have to do it on a large scale," he says. The report recommends, for instance, preliminary work on determining the best way to deliver and disperse sulphur aerosols, and on wind-field and other modelling to work out how the particles might spread throughout the stratosphere. It also lays out what sort of field tests might be needed to validate this work, including "a non-trivial stratospheric aerosol loading to be maintained for several years".

It does not put numbers on the cost of such research, nor does it identify which country should take the lead on it. It calls for "international processes" to be put in place to develop guidelines for coordinating potential responses from various countries.

In another report issued today, the Copenhagen Consensus Center — a Denmark-based group founded by Bjørn Lomborg, author of the book The Skeptical Environmentalist — tackles the potential costs of several geoengineering schemes. It argues for spending US$750 million every year for the next decade on geoengineering research, particularly on solar radiation management and the study of its side effects.

Meanwhile, the UK Royal Society is expected to release a detailed report on geoengineering options in September, the first major scientific academy to do so.

References
1. Hegerl, G. C. and Solomon, S. Science advance online publication doi:10.1126/science.1178530 (2009).