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Arab Alert
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Arab newspapers are now
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warning their readers that the current escalation of United States airstrikes
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on Iraq could culminate in a major military offensive aimed at bringing down
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President Saddam Hussein. The Pan-Arab Al-Quds Al-Arabi said Tuesday
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that the U.S. and British bombings were virtually a repeat of Operation Desert
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Storm except that they were conducted in slow motion so as to deflect media
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attention and thus avoid an Arab backlash like the one that followed last
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December's campaign. In the Bahrain daily Akhbar al-Khaleej , the
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Egyptian columnist Assayed Zahra wrote that the United States was now carrying
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out its intention to carve up Iraq along ethnic and sectarian lines and to
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trigger a civil war that would unseat Saddam.
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Zahra referred to an
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interview Monday in the Turkish daily Milliyet in which Frank Ricciardone, the American
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diplomat in charge of "transition" in Iraq, said that the division of Iraq
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imposed by the no-fly zones was intended to be permanent. Ricciardone also
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intimated that Iraq has no future as a united country in Washington's plans.
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Ricciardone's interview with Milliyet was also discussed Tuesday in the
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Saudi Arabian daily Asharq al-Aswat , which highlighted his remark that Saddam was
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most likely to be deposed suddenly in a military coup. But, in sharp contrast
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to what Zahra wrote, the Saudi paper stressed that Ricciardone said that he
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thought the chances of Iraq breaking up after the overthrow of Saddam were
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minimal.
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Meanwhile, in Edinburgh, the daily Scotsman quoted "Washington
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insiders" Wednesday saying there was now a clear U.S. policy to oust Saddam's
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regime in six months to a year through small-scale but continuous air attacks.
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The paper also quoted a Pentagon official saying that the United States has so
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far been highly successful in keeping up public awareness levels. "Scale is
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important," the unnamed official went on. "Too much bombing will raise Arab
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hackles, but a continuous campaign will achieve what Britain and its allies,
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including those in the Middle East, crave--the end of Saddam Hussein."
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The massacre of eight
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Western tourists in Uganda this week was the subject of much editorial comment
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in the British press, with the Times of London seeing it as a kind of karmic revenge for the
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West's refusal five years ago to act against, or at first even acknowledge,
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"the extraordinary genocide in Rwanda--the worst action of its kind since the
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second world war." It said, "Those who died in the Bwindi Park have been, in a
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sense, the victims of past indifference of outsiders." The Daily Telegraph , in
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an unfortunate play on words, declared Wednesday in its main editorial: "The party in
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Bwindi set out in search of mountain gorillas. They met instead murderous
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guerillas."
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The Telegraph also said that "the prosecution of
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those suspected of war crimes in the 1994 massacre should be pursued with much
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greater vigour in the court set up for that purpose in Arusha, Tanzania." The
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London Evening
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Standard led Wednesday with a report that Rwandan rebels threatened
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to kill U.S. and British tourists two weeks before the murders, but the Ugandan
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authorities failed to pass on the warnings. The Guardian of London listed
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27 countries or areas of the world that the British Foreign Office described as
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dangerous to visit.
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The daily New Vision of Uganda led its front page Wednesday with
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a report not mentioning the murders but stressing that 17 of the 32 abducted
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tourists had escaped, and it placed this next to an account of a 19-year-old
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Namibian woman winning the 1999 Face-of-Africa modeling contest at the Windhoek
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Country Club.
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The link-up between Pat
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Robertson, the TV evangelist, and the Bank of Scotland to launch a new
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telephone banking service in the United States was the subject of a two page
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feature in the Guardian , which said questions might
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be raised over "why a bank presumably looking for long-term deposits might team
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up with a man who believes the world as we know it might be about to end." The
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Bank of Scotland "must just hope that it can recoup its investment before
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Armageddon looms," the article concluded.
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Wednesday's Monica Lewinsky event in Europe was an
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interview with Corriere della Sera of Milan in which she said that she
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doesn't believe having oral sex was vulgar: "Some people like pizza for lunch;
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others prefer a dessert." She also said she would never again fall in love with
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a married man.
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The Prague Post reported
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Wednesday that Russia had sought to reduce its $1.3 billion debt to Slovakia by
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selling it a place on its latest mission to the space station Mir for $20
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million. According to the paper, a Slovak defense ministry spokesman said that
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since the debt would probably never be collectible, Slovakia had decided
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instead to take advantage of this opportunity to send the first Slovak citizen
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into space.
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