Nation & world briefing Oregon Daily Emerald - Friday, February 7,2003 - 3 Bush says ‘game is over’ with Hussein nuwdru win ana boo Kemper Chicago Tribune (KRT) WASHINGTON — Declaring “the game is over,” President Bush on Thursday said the United States would take “whatever action is nec essary” to disarm Iraq now that the world has seen Washington’s evi dence that Iraqi President Saddam Hussein has lied about possessing weapons of mass destruction. In his harshest terms yet about the crisis in the Persian Gulf, Bush rhetori cally took the world to the brink of war but stopped short of declaring it. Bush said Hussein is throwing away his last chance for peace and challenged the U.N. Security Council to approve a new resolution authorizing die use of force to disarm Iraq. “The United States, along with a growing coalition of nations, is re solved to take whatever action is nec essary to defend ourselves and disarm the Iraqi regime,” Bush said after meeting with Secretary of State Colin Powell, one day after Powell present ed the Security Council extensive U.S. evidence of Iraq’s efforts to hide its chemical, biological and nuclear weapons materials. “Saddam Hussein has the motive and the means and the recklessness and the hatred to threaten the Ameri can people,” Bush said. “Saddam Hus sein will be stopped.” Even as the president spoke, the De fense Department was ordering the Army’s storied 101st Airborne Divi sion to deploy to the gulf region to join an estimated 110,000 troops already in position for a possible war. The elite rapid deployment division played a key role in the ground phase of the 1991 gulf war. The Turkish parliament, mean while, voted Thursday to allow U.S. troops to renovate Turkish bases for use in a possible war. Turkish officials said they expected the parliament would also soon approve the station ing of tens of thousands of U.S. combat troops, which would permit the Pen tagon to open a crucial northern front in any war against Baghdad. With war preparations accelerating, the State Department issued a “world wide caution” to all Americans that they faced a growing danger of attacks from terrorist groups everywhere in the world. Bush dramatized the potential threat as he recounted Powell’s evi dence of Iraq’s continuing weapons programs. The president warned that a single unmanned Iraqi aircraft, rigged to spray biological agents, could be launched off the American coast and “reach hundreds of miles inland.” Bush did not specify a deadline for the Security Council to act, or for his own decision whether to launch a war. But White House officials noted that the president pointedly refrained from repeating his earlier timeline of “weeks, not months,” suggesting that further consultations might not last even that long. Nor did Bush repeat that Hussein still had time to come into compliance with U.N. disarmament demands. “Saddam Hussein was given a final chance. He is throwing that chance away,” Bush said. “The dictator of Iraq is making his choice. Now the nations of the Security Council must make their own.” Powell, testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said he was confident that Washington was be ginning to sway skeptical allies. After speaking with a dozen Securi ty Council foreign ministers following his U.N. presentation, Powell said, he sensed a “shift in attitude” that Iraq can no longer be permitted to defy the world body. “I think there might be perhaps more support for a second resolution than some might think,” Powell said. Publicly, however, the leading Se curity Council critics of the use of force —France, Russia and Ger many — did not back down from their opposition Thursday. “We refuse to think that war is in evitable,” French President Jacques Chirac said. But Washington’s closest ally, Britain, indicated that it was prepar ing to introduce a Security Council resolution authorizing force shortly after chief U.N. weapons inspectors Hans Blix and Mohamed ElBaradei make their next report to the coun cil Feb. 14. © 2003, Chicago Tribune. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. NAbA chief says damage at liftoff not ruled out Knight Ridder Newspapers (KRT) HOUSTON — In a seeming rebuke to one of his own top administrators, NASA chief Sean O’Keefe on Thursday kept open the possibility that falling debris on liftoff may have doomed the space shuttle Columbia. On Wednesday, shuttle program manager Ron Dittemore all but dis missed foam debris impact as the probable cause for the shuttle disaster. But on Thursday, O’Keefe said only an independent panel has the authority to draw any definitive conclusions. “We will not have competing posi tions on this,” O’Keefe said without making specific reference to debris or other theories about the catastrophe. vve wiu ue gumea cyme ooaras nna ings. The intention Is that they will reach conclusions, and the conclusions will come from them and only them.” O’Keefe said the independent Space Shuttle Mishap Interagency Investigation Board, which was cre ated a day after Saturday’s disaster, would be the final arbiter of what happened to Columbia. He said the board would likely add members and change Its charter to further assure its independence. O’Keefe made his brief declaration from Washington only moments be fore Dittemore announced from Hous ton that the agency had turned over leadership of the probe to the intera gency panel. Dittemore said members of the pan el, which is chaired by retired U.S. Navy Admiral Harold \V. Gehman, re ceived a daylong briefing Thursday from NASA officials in Houston. “We will follow (Gehman’s) leadership,” Dittemore said. Dittemore also appeared to step away from his earlier comments re garding the loss of foam debris 80 sec onds after liftoff. That debris fell from the vehicle's external fuel tank and struck the orbited left wing, leading to speculation that it could have caused the disaster, Dittemore said Wednesday that an earlier analysis by NASA technicians would seem to discount the debris im pact as a likely cause. On Thursday, he stressed that investigators had not ruled out any possibility. “It’s had to understand how a piece of foam falling off the tank could have been the root cause, but that is not stopping us from investi gating that particular event,” said Ditternore. Also Thursday, Ditternore raised more doubts that technicians would glean useful information from 32 seconds of corrupted data transmitted from Columbia mo ments before it disintegrated over North Texas, killing all seven astro nauts aboard. He said that technicians contin ue reviewing the transmission, but may end up reconstructing just two or three seconds of it. He also said the crew received an alarm message related to the loss of sensor data related to their left wheel well. He said the crew members were aware of the sensor reading—a crew member pushed a button that sent an electronic acknowledgment to mission control. “We were in the process of calling them (back) when we received loss of (communication),” said Ditte more. He said investigators may never know what happened to the wheel well. © 2003, Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. Lingering Venezuelan strike creates surreal, ironic life rrances KODies Knight Ridder Newspapers (KRT) CARACAS, Venezuela — Deep in the throes of a political crisis, Venezuela is a place of absurdities and ironies. There’s a strike, but most places are open. (Just because the lights are out, it doesn’t mean a business is closed.) There’s a severe gas shortage — and traffic jams, too. More than nine weeks into a nation wide strike aimed at toppling President Hugo Chavez, it’s increasingly clear that the opposition can’t win the quick victory it once expected. But it is Introduce your valentine to Ben! Ben Sherman, that is. Come into BOUX and check out our selection of Ben Sherman shirts and jeans for your valentine. 0156881 B □ U X 2827 Oak Street, Eugene (located in the Southtowne Shops) 541.485.4891 equally evident that while the strike persists, the president can’t govern. Meanwhile, the routine of civil socie ty has been transformed into a surreal drama of long lines, boisterous demon strations and daily confrontations. Predictions of mass chaos, looting and violence haven’t materialized. But there is very litde gasoline, and rarely a botde of beer. Life goes on, but it is not the life most Venezuelans are accustomed to. Nearly everyone talks politics, the na tional obsession, but no one seems ca pable of finding a political solution. And Chavez remains in power, so far refusing to capitulate to opposi tion demands for an early presiden tial election. The defining moment for Monica Martinez came in October, when her 9-year-old daughter asked: “What’s the difference between communism and dictatorship?” “Why’s a kid asking such ques tions?” Martinez wondered, recall ing that her own pressing issues at that age were roller-skating and hair ribbons. If little Mariana had known the result of her innocent inquiry beforehand, maybe she’d have switched subjects. 1 t \v i wk.. Armed with anger, Martinez de cided she was through with Hugo Chavez, and joined dissident mili tary officers protesting at Caracas’ Plaza Francia. That was on Oct. 22. More than three months ago. Martinez is still there. “Everyone does what they have to do in the place they have to do it,” Martinez said. “My place is here. I am a warrior. We are our country’s new soldiers.” Martinez lives in a tent city set up in Plaza Francia, headquarters for the opposition movement where a gunman shot down three people in December. She quit her job manag ing a restaurant to join what she considers a fight for freedom. She hasn’t stopped by her house since Dec. 16. The scariest part, she said, is the fear that hangs heavy in the dark of 3 a.m. “I spent Christmas here — talking to my kids on the telephone,” she re called. “What do my kids need a moth er for if they have no country?” © 2003, The Miami Herald. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services.