O fruto proibido é o mais apetecido
O fruto proibido é o mais apetecido
Na semana passada os media noticiam que um relatório confidencial norte americano se diz que a invasão do iraque aumentou o radicalismo islâmico.
Essa noticia corre mundo.
Acontece porém que um relatório público da câmara dos representantes divulgado dias antes faz alegações quase iguais , porém é ignorado pelos media.
Porquê essa diferença de tratamento ?
Para ler a continuação do texto clique aqui
Na semana passada os media noticiam que um relatório confidencial norte americano se diz que a invasão do iraque aumentou o radicalismo islâmico.
Essa noticia corre mundo.
Acontece porém que um relatório público da câmara dos representantes divulgado dias antes faz alegações quase iguais , porém é ignorado pelos media.
Porquê essa diferença de tratamento ?
Para ler a continuação do texto clique aqui
2 Comments:
Este comentário foi removido por um gestor do blogue.
Num relatorio da camara dos representantes e em outro relatorio da ONU refere-se o mesmo.
Um é noticia e outro não.
Porquê?
No relatorio camara rep pode ler-se.
Bin laden continues to capitalize on the popularity of the insurgency in Iraq to muster further support for Al Qaeda and the defeat of the Coalition.
In adition Usama Bin Laden may use extremists fighting in Iraq to launch attacks outside the country. A memo from Bin Laden to Zarkawi in 2005 indicates that bin laden was encouraging Zaeqawi and his group to consider plotting terrorist attacks against the united states and its allies
Relatorio camara representantes.
Não é noticia
Relatorio ONU
É noticia
Al Qaeda gains recruits from Iraq war: U.N. study
By Irwin ArieffWed Sep 27, 5:50 PM ET
A U.N. report released on Wednesday said the Iraq war provided al Qaeda with a training center and recruits, reinforcing a U.S. intelligence study blaming the conflict for a surge in Islamic extremism.
The report by terrorism experts working for the U.N. Security Council said al Qaeda was playing a central role in the fighting in Iraq as well as inspiring a Taliban resurgence in Afghanistan, several hundred miles (km) away.
"New explosive devices are now used in Afghanistan within a month of their first appearing in Iraq," said the report. "And while the Taliban have not been found fighting outside Afghanistan/Pakistan, there have been reports of them training in both Iraq and Somalia."
Al Qaeda, it said, "has gained by continuing to play a central role in the fighting (in Iraq) and in encouraging the growth of sectarian violence, and Iraq has provided many recruits and an excellent training ground," it said.
The report said that al Qaeda's influence may soon wane in Iraq, citing some fighters' complaints that they were unhappy to learn upon arriving in the country that they would have to kill fellow Muslims rather than foreign fighters or could serve their cause only as suicide bombers.
The report was prepared by a team of experts set up to monitor the effectiveness of Security Council sanctions imposed on the Taliban and al Qaeda shortly after the September 11 attacks on the United States.
A 2001 council resolution requires all 192 U.N. member-nations to freeze the assets and travel of any person or group suspected of ties to al Qaeda or Afghanistan's former Taliban rulers, and bars arms deals with them.
President Bush faced heavy criticism from political foes after parts of the U.S. National Intelligence Estimate leaked out this week, revealing intelligence experts' conclusion that Islamic extremists were "increasing in both number and geographic dispersion" due to the Iraq war.
The study, prepared in April, said the war had become a "cause celebre for jihadists, breeding a deep resentment of U.S. involvement in the Muslim world and cultivating supporters for the global jihadist movement."
U.S. Ambassador John Bolton said it was natural that war would lead to more violence, citing as an example Japan's World War II attack on Pearl Harbor and the U.S. response.
"If you said after the attack on Pearl Harbor that the American response had increased the violence in the Pacific, you would be right, wouldn't you? Because violence did increase after the attack and after our response," he told reporters.
"We are in conflict with international terrorism and the nature of that conflict is playing out in Iraq," he said.
Copyright © 2006 Reuters Limited.
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