Saturday, January 29, 2005

anti-nuke groups bid to manage scandal-plagued weapons lab

A Slew of Safety, Security Weaknesses Found at Los Alamos
Sat Jan 29, 7:55 AM ET
Top Stories - Los Angeles Times
By Rebecca Trounson and Ralph Vartabedian
Times Staff Writers

...
In a report harshly critical of the University of California, which has managed Los Alamos for six decades, Energy Department officials said two classified computer disks believed to be missing from the lab last summer never actually existed.

But in what it called the largest financial penalty ever imposed on a national lab, the department announced that it had slashed UC's management fee for running the facility by $5.1 million, leaving the university with only about a third of the $8.7-million payment for 2004.
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Lab officials reported in July that two classified computer disks appeared to be missing, which, along with a laser accident that injured a student intern, triggered a shutdown of most of the lab's operations. The closure continued in large part through the rest of 2004, and one key area of the weapons directorate remains shuttered, although a lab spokesman said Friday that all sections should be restarted by next week.

In announcing the penalty, National Nuclear Security Administration chief Linton Brooks expressed concern about the weaknesses revealed by the incident, in which security bar codes were created for nonexistent disks.

Such lapses "are absolutely unacceptable, and the University of California must be held accountable for them," said Brooks, whose agency, a semiautonomous arm of the Energy Department, oversees the nation's nuclear weapons facilities.
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"We got walloped," UC spokesman Chris Harrington said. "Unfortunately, we deserve this, but what we have done now is correct the problems and put systems in place so we don't take this type of hit again."
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Last summer's lab work stoppage represented a $1-billion loss to taxpayers, according to the Project on Government Oversight, a Washington advocacy group that has pressed the Energy Department to take a tough stand against the lab's lapses in security and safety.

In November, the organization's executive director, Danielle Brian, wrote a letter to Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham (news - web sites), arguing that UC's fee should be sharply curtailed because it had failed to address broad management lapses. The letter cited 45 major nuclear safety violations at the Los Alamos lab in 2004.

The group also asked the DOE to investigate what it called exorbitant salaries paid to upper and middle management at the lab, including 60 people receiving salaries of more than $175,000. Harrington declined to discuss the salary structure of the lab's management, though he said the lab took action against employees who were involved in security breakdowns in 2004, including reducing their salaries.

Asked what the worst thing was that the lab did to deserve the fee cuts, Harrington said that it failed to have "necessary policies and procedures to ensure safety and security."

Sen. Pete V. Domenici (news, bio, voting record) (R-N.M.), chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, said Friday that UC had done a "good job" of running the lab and that the nuclear security agency's harsh penalty was simply a concession to critics.
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The management lapses and resulting scandals that have surrounded Los Alamos and UC over the last two years have prompted NNSA to put the contract for managing Los Alamos up for bid. A number of potential bidders have walked away, including the University of Texas and Lockheed Martin Corp.

With final Los Alamos contract specifications due to be released in a matter of weeks, UC leaders have yet to decide whether the university will bid, although they say it is preparing as if it will. The only organization that has indicated it will apply for the contract is an alliance of two antinuclear organizations, Nuclear Watch of New Mexico and Tri-Valley Citizens Against Radiation Exposure.

"We are the only announced bidders," said Jay Coghlan, director of Nuclear Watch.

Friday, January 21, 2005

will freedom spread to iceland?

Icelanders Take Anti Iraq War Campaign to U.S.
Fri Jan 21, 6:04 PM ET
By Vidir Sigurdsson

REYKJAVIK (Reuters) - A group of nationals from tiny Iceland slammed their government's support of the U.S.-led war in Iraq (news - web sites), apologizing to Iraqis in a full-page advertisement in The New York Times on Friday.

The advertisement, paid for with donations from more than 4,000 citizens which constitutes about 1.4 percent of the population, demanded "that Iceland be immediately removed from the list of invaders in the 'coalition of the willing."'

"We apologies to the Iraqi people for the Icelandic ministers' support for the invasion of Iraq," the ad said.

Four out of five Icelanders want their country off the list, according to a Gallup opinion poll published earlier this month.

But a foreign ministry official ruled out any policy change.
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Thursday, January 20, 2005

a cold day in january

Mock Coffins and Jeers as Bush Sworn In
2 hours, 29 minutes ago
Politics - Reuters
By Andy Sullivan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Flag-draped coffins and jeering anti-war protesters competed with pomp and circumstance on Thursday at the inauguration of President Bush (news - web sites) along the snow-dusted, barricaded streets of central Washington.

As the president's motorcade made its way down Pennsylvania Avenue from the Capitol to the White House amid the tightest security in inaugural history, thousands of protesters along the parade route and nearby downtown streets booed, chanted slogans and carried placards condemning Bush's policies at home and abroad.

Some turned their back as the president drove slowly past. Others yelled, "George Bush (news - web sites), you can't hide. We charge you with genocide." Among the forest of protest signs, some read "Blood is on your hands" and "Iraq (news - web sites) is Arabic for Vietnam." Others called for electoral reform, gay rights, abortion rights and the use of renewable energy.
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In one area, police briefly sought to disperse with pepper spray demonstrators who hurled bottles, trash and snowballs at officers while trying to break through a security fence holding them back from the parade.

At least one snowball hit Vice President Dick Cheney (news - web sites)'s limousine, and Bush's limousine sped up to get past the commotion.
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Tuesday, January 18, 2005

bush: support our troops by partying

Bush on defensive over $52m party
By Caren Bohan in Washington
January 18, 2005

US President George W. Bush is drawing heat over a $US40 million ($52.81m) splurge on inaugural balls, concerts and candlelight dinners while the country is in a sombre mood because of the Iraq war and Asian tsunami.
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"I just think that the sobriety of the times dictate that we be mindful of the imagery of these things," said Democratic Republican Anthony Weiner of New York.

In a letter, Mr Weiner urged Bush to ask donors to redirect their inaugural contributions to equipment for troops in Iraq, some of whom have complained of having to scrounge for scrap metal to protect their vehicles.

"Precedent suggests that inaugural festivities should be muted - if not cancelled - in wartime," his letter said.

He said the money saved could pay for 690 Humvees and a $US290 ($382.84) bonus for each soldier serving in Iraq.

Mr Weiner cited the example of President Franklin Roosevelt, who celebrated his trimmed-down 1945 inaugural with cold chicken salad and pound cake.

But Mr Bush rejected the criticism.

"It's important that we celebrate a peaceful transfer of power ... You can be equally concerned about our troops in Iraq and those who suffered at the tsunamis (and) with celebrating democracy," he said in a CBS News interview released today.

He said inauguration activities would include military-themed events such as a Commander-in-Chief Ball and a Salute to Service.

"There's ways for us to honour the soldier and, at the same time, celebrate," the president said.
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Friday, January 14, 2005

resolve, or foolish hubris?

Schwarzenegger visits slide scene

Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger toured the Californian hamlet devastated by a mudslide that killed at least 10.

He watched as rescue teams continued to search for survivors in La Conchita, 70 miles (110km) north of Los Angeles.

The bodies of a mother and three young children were the latest to be pulled from the rubble early on Wednesday.

The slide was triggered by storms that have brought chaos to western US states in the last few days, and claimed more than 20 lives.

During his visit to La Conchita, Mr Schwarzenegger expressed support for plans to rebuild Ventura County's coastal village.

"In the past few days, we have seen the power of nature to cause damage and despair, but we will match that power with our own resolve," he told reporters.
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Thursday, January 13, 2005

bushit citation dropped

Pioneer Press
twincities.com
City lifting citation for Iraq war sign
Jan. 13, 2005

A man says he will continue displaying his protest sign reading "This war is Bushit," after getting a message that the city is dropping its public obscenity citation against him.

Police cited Mike Wallschlaeger on Friday with the violation that carries a $102 penalty.

Wallschlaeger, 41, of Mosinee, had erected the sign in a public square near the Marathon County Courthouse. After police received a complaint from a passer-by, an officer asked Wallschlaeger to take down the sign.

The officer seized the sign and issued the citation after Wallschlaeger refused, according to police reports.

On Tuesday, City Attorney Bill Nagle left a voice-mail message with the Wausau Daily Herald saying Nagle was dismissing the citation and had no further comment.
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Wednesday, January 12, 2005

weapons hunters return empty-handed

two years, two hundred billion dollars, a thousand dead troops and ten thousand wounded --- and they found nothing that threatens us. not to mention tens of thousands of dead iraqis, and a shattered country.

Search for Banned Arms In Iraq Ended Last Month
Top Stories - washingtonpost.com
By Dafna Linzer, Washington Post Staff Writer

The hunt for biological, chemical and nuclear weapons in Iraq (news - web sites) has come to an end nearly two years after President Bush (news - web sites) ordered U.S. troops to disarm Saddam Hussein (news - web sites). The top CIA (news - web sites) weapons hunter is home, and analysts are back at Langley.

In interviews, officials who served with the Iraq Survey Group (ISG) said the violence in Iraq, coupled with a lack of new information, led them to fold up the effort shortly before Christmas.

Four months after Charles A. Duelfer, who led the weapons hunt in 2004, submitted an interim report to Congress that contradicted nearly every prewar assertion about Iraq made by top Bush administration officials, a senior intelligence official said the findings will stand as the ISG's final conclusions and will be published this spring.
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Tuesday, January 11, 2005

i don't think i'd want to build a house there

Yahoo! News - Top Stories Photos - AP
The scene of Monday's massive mudslide that buried homes in La Conchita, Calif., is shown in this aerial photo taken Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2005.

extremely critical flaw in msie

Extremely Critical' Flaw Threatens Internet Explorer Users
Mon Jan 10, 2:40 PM ET
Technology - NewsFactor
Ed Raymond, www.enterprise-security-today.com

Security experts are warning of a new and highly critical security flaw in Microsoft Internet Explorer, when running under Windows XP.

Simply visiting a malicious Web site could leave a user's computer vulnerable to malicious code.
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In an alert posted on its Web site, Secunia lists three problems in IE that, in combination, create the vulnerability:

"Insufficient validation of drag and drop events from the Internet zone to local resources for valid images or media files with embedded HTML code;

"A security site/zone restriction error, where an embedded HTML Help control on e.g. a malicious web site references a specially crafted index (.hhk) file, can execute local HTML documents or inject arbitrary script code in context of a previous loaded document using a malicious javascript URI handler;

"A security site/zone restriction error in the handling of the Related Topics command in an embedded HTML Help control can be exploited by e.g. a malicious website to execute arbitrary script code in the context of arbitrary sites or zones."

The exploit bypasses a key SP2 security feature, Zone Lock Down, which is designed to prevent an attacker from remotely executing script on a local system.
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that wasn't too difficult

i guess i'm ready to join the exciting world of blogging.