Det danske Fredsakademi
Kronologi over fredssagen og international politik 11. April
2006 / Time Line April 11, 2006
Version 3.0
10. April 2006, 12. April 2006
04/11/2006
EU assists African peacekeeping
http://www.news24.com/News24/Africa/News/0,,2-11-1447_1915043,00.html
Luxembourg - The European Union has earmarked 300 million euros
(R24bn) to support peace in Africa from 2008 to 2010, European
Union development commissioner Louis Michel said on Tuesday.
He said the money will be made available at the beginning of 2008
and will be taken from the European Development Fund.
The fund has a pot of 22.7 billion euros set aside for the years
2008 to 2013.
In 2004, the 25-nation bloc set up the fund to finance peace
operations, led by African countries, in Africa.
The commissioner said the fund was allocated 250 million euros at
that time, but was now empty.
He said most of the money was used to help the African Union's
peacekeeping mission in Sudan's troubled Darfur region.
The AU's mission in Sudan cost the fund 162 million euros in
2004.
04/11/2006
SECRET AGREEMENT REVEALS COVERT PROGRAM TO HIDE RECLASSIFICATION
FROM PUBLIC
National Archives Signed Deal with Air Force to Disguise Re-review
of Open Files and Mislead Researchers on Reasons for Withdrawing
Previously Open Records.
March 2002 Memorandum of Understanding Released Through FOIA
Request, After Grilling of National Archivist During Congressional
Hearing March 16.
Washington, D.C., 11 April 2006 - The National Archives and Records
Administration secretly agreed to a covert effort, led by the Air
Force, the CIA, and other still-hidden intelligence entities, to
remove open-shelf archival records and reclassify them while
disguising the results so that researchers would not complain,
according to a previously secret Memorandum of Understanding (MOU).
The secret agreement, made between the Air Force and the National
Archives, was declassified pursuant to a Freedom of Information Act
request by the National Security Archive and posted on the NARA
website yesterday.
The heavily excised MOU, signed by assistant archivist Michael
Kurtz in March 2002, reveals that the National Archives agreed that
the existence of the program was to be kept secret as long as
possible: "it is in the interests of both [excised] and the
National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) to avoid the
attention and researcher complaints that may arise from removing
material that has already been publicly available," states the MOU.
NARA agreed that the withdrawal sheets indicating the removal of
documents would conceal any reference to the program and "any
reason for the withholding of documents."
NARA also agreed to conceal the identities of the intelligence
personnel who were reviewing and removing the documents, according
to the agreement, including from NARA's own staff. "NARA will not
disclose the true reason for the presence of [deleted agency] AFDO
[deleted] personnel at the Archives, to include disclosure to
persons within NARA who do not have a validated need-to-know."
The National Security Archive first learned of the existence of the
agreement, classified SECRET/[codeword deleted], earlier this year,
when Archive staff accompanied historian Matthew Aid to a meeting
at NARA to complain about absurd reclassifications such as
50-year-old documents that had been widely published. On February
1, Archive analyst William Burr filed a Freedom of Information Act
request for the document. NARA and Defense Department officials
acknowledged the existence of the MOU at the March 14, 2006 hearing
of a House Government Reform subcommittee chaired by Rep.
Christopher Shays (R-Ct), but refused to discuss the substance of
the MOU in public session.
During the hearing, Archivist of the United States Alan Weinstein
suffered persistent questioning about the MOU from Chairman Shays
and other members of the Committee, to which Dr. Weinstein could
only reply "it's classified."
"This secret agreement reveals nothing less than a covert operation
to white-out the nation's history, aided and abetted by the
National Archives," said National Security Archive executive
director Thomas Blanton.
The excised portions of the MOU released yesterday apparently still
hide other intelligence entities involved with the Air Force and
the CIA in reclassifying public records. The MOU was originally
classified at the codeword level, but the codeword itself remains
classified, according to the markings on the released MOU.
The reclassification activities at NARA began at the end of the
Clinton administration. So far, more than 55,000 pages of
declassified documents, dating back to the World War II era, have
been removed from the open files. During the March 14 hearing,
Congressman Shays noted that the reclassification program was not
in the national interest. "This absurd effort to put the toothpaste
back into the tube persists despite the growing consensus -
supported by testimony before this Subcommittee - that from fifty
to ninety percent of the material currently withheld should not be
classified at all," Shays stated in his opening statement.
According to National Security Archive historian William Burr,
concern over references in some declassified records to various
aerial reconnaissance systems that Air Force has used over the
years, such as the U-2 and the earlier GENETRIX balloon program,
may have triggered the reclassification project. Censored sections
of the MOU, he noted, could refer to operations of the National
Security Agency. If the NSA was involved, then perhaps the
re-review referenced in the MOU focused on specialized intelligence
activities.
In February 2002, a recruitment notice shows that the Raytheon
Corporation received a contract from the Air Force to conduct the
reclassification review and that the project team would include at
least 20 people.
04/11/2006
US corners Iraq wheat market
ABC News Online
Last Update: Tuesday, April 11, 2006. 1:44pm (AEST)
http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200604/s1613702.htm
As the oil-for-food inquiry drags on, new figures show US wheat
exports to Iraq over the past year have grown almost five-fold.
The US exported about 500,000 metric tonnes of wheat to Iraq last
marketing year, before the UN Volker report on alleged AWB
kickbacks to Iraq led to a cut-off of AWB shipments and a surge in
US exports.
"For the past year, we've captured almost three-quarters of the
Iraqi wheat market, which is quite large, which is well over 3
million tonnes, and we've gained a very large share of the Iraqi
rice market," Bob Riemenschneider, grain and feed director at the
US Foreign Agricultural Services, said.
04/11/2006
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