August 2009

Israeli PM to discuss peace in 'emotional' Berlin visit (AFP)

BERLIN (AFP) –
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu weighed fresh Middle East peace efforts with German leaders Thursday ahead of an emotional visit to the lakeside villa where top Nazis plotted the Holocaust.

The hawkish Israeli leader sat down to talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel focused on the latest US-backed drive to revive the Middle East peace talks as well as attempts to halt Iran's disputed nuclear programme.

Netanyahu warned of the threat posed by Tehran as he earlier accepted a gift of original blueprints of the Nazi death camp Auschwitz for Jerusalem's Holocaust memorial from a German publisher.

"We cannot allow those who call for the destruction of the Jewish state to go unchallenged," he said in a clear reference to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who has repeatedly said that Israel is doomed to be "wiped off the map" and that the Nazi genocide of European Jewry was a "myth."

"We cannot allow evil to prepare the mass deaths of innocents. It should be nipped in the bud."

The blueprints, which date from 1941-42 and include plans drawn with cool technical precision of a gas chamber and a crematorium, were discovered in a Berlin apartment last year and then bought by the Bild newspaper.

More than one million Jews, Roma and others deemed "subhuman" by Adolf Hitler's regime were killed at Auschwitz, near the Polish city of Krakow, out of a total six million slaughtered by the end of World War II in 1945.

Netanyahu earlier met Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier, Merkel's challenger in September 27 elections in Germany, on the second and final leg of a four-day European tour -- his first since taking office in March.

"Minister Steinmeier stressed the importance of a resumption of substantial Israel-Palestinian negotiations," his ministry said. "Both sides must undertake concrete steps in this context."

After meeting Merkel, Netanyahu will visit a villa on the Wannsee lake on the outskirts of Berlin where senior Nazis adopted in January 1942 the "final solution" -- plans to exterminate all Jews in Nazi-occupied Europe.

Netanyahu, who has described the upcoming visit to Wannsee as "emotional," will be the first Israeli prime minister to visit the site's museum which was opened in 1992 on the 50th anniversary of the "final solution" conference.

He lauded the Jewish state's close ties with Germany, which were officially established in 1965 following a fraught debate in Israel, a country deeply scarred by the Holocaust.

Germany now is considered Israel's strongest ally in Europe.

"Every time I am in Germany I bless the relationship we have with the German government. Not only because of the present and the future, but also because of the past," he told reporters shortly after arriving Wednesday.

Netanyahu came to Berlin from London where he met British counterpart Gordon Brown and US Middle East envoy George Mitchell, who has been pressing him to freeze Jewish settlement construction in the occupied West Bank in order to jumpstart peace talks.

Although Netanyahu seemed cool to the request, he expressed optimism that a deal could be clinched in the coming weeks, with direct Israeli-Palestinian peace talks launched by the end of September.

The settlements were set to figure in talks with Merkel, as well as Israeli calls for tougher economic sanctions against Iran and reported German mediation in efforts to free Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit from Palestinian militants.

Berlin has declined to comment on any involvement in such talks.

Remembering the Real Deal (Robert Scheer)

Creators Syndicate –
The light has gone out, and with it that infectious warm laugh and intensely progressive commitment of the best of the Kennedys. Not, at this point, to take anything away from the memory of his siblings — Bobby, whom I also got to know, was pretty terrific in his last years — but Sen. Ted Kennedy was the real deal.

Unable to move with his brothers' intellectual alacrity, sometimes plodding in impromptu expression but smooth and skillful while reading from a script, the youngest Kennedy made up for his shortcomings early in his Senate career by resolutely working the substance of issues. His principled determination, plus his capacity to truly care about the real-world outcomes of legislation for ordinary people rather than its impact on his or anyone else's election, became his signature qualities as a lawmaker.

But for those same reasons, he also wanted legislation passed, and his ability to work with the opposition, as he did three years ago with John McCain on immigration reform, now grants him a legacy as one of the nation's great senators.

Oddly enough, for one born into such immense familial expectations, he was a surprisingly accessible and down-to-earth politician in the eyes of most journalists who covered him. I think of him as always authentic and never oily. As opposed to most politicians, the offstage Ted Kennedy was the more appealing one.

Although he excelled as an orator, never more so than delivering the speech that Bob Shrum crafted for him at the 1980 Democratic Convention but which was informed by Kennedy's own deeply felt passion, it was in his less choreographed moments that he was at his best. I spent quite a few hours over the years interviewing him on subjects ranging from health care to nuclear arms control, mostly as a reporter for the Los Angeles Times, and while his grammar could be troubling, his sentiments never were.

Not once in those interviews did I find Kennedy to equivocate or slide into the amoral triangulation that defines almost all successful politicians. They position themselves, but he took positions, and as in the case of health care reform, he would end his life fighting for those causes with his last breath.

I would put Kennedy alongside my other hero, George McGovern, as the two most trusted standard-bearers of the Democratic Party's too-often-sabotaged liberalism. I just could never imagine either of them ever selling us out. Indeed, I haven't felt quite so sad about the passing of a political leader since the day when people started bawling all over the Bronx with the news that FDR had died. In a political world dominated by bipartisan cynicism, there are few touchstones of integrity for the common folk, and Kennedy was one of them.

Lest I be accused of surrendering to the emotions of the moment, let me quote from a column I wrote in January of 2008 when the Democratic presidential primary battle hung in the balance:

"It should mean a great deal to progressives that in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination Sen. Ted Kennedy favors Sen. Barack Obama over two other colleagues he has worked with in the Senate. No one in the history of that institution has been a more consistent and effective fighter than Kennedy for an enlightened agenda, be it civil rights and liberty, gender equality, labor and immigrant justice, environmental protection, educational opportunity or opposing military adventures.

"Kennedy was a rare sane voice among the Democrats in strongly opposing the Iraq war, and it is no small tribute when he states: 'We know the record of Barack Obama. There is the courage he showed when so many others were silent or simply went along. From the beginning, he opposed the war in Iraq. And let no one deny that truth.'"

Hopefully, it will be added to Ted Kennedy's legacy that he was right about Obama just as he was consistently right on every major issue that he dealt with as a senator. Indeed, Kennedy's endorsement of Obama was critical to our current president's historic nomination and election, and it is therefore fitting that the favor of that all-important endorsement be returned with a significant reform of the ailing U.S. health care system.

In the first year of the George W. Bush presidency, I wrote a column for the Los Angeles Times titled "Bush Could Really Use a Fireside Chat with FDR," stating, "This is a president who never learned that it is possible to be a leader born of privilege and yet be absorbed with the fate of those in need. ... Not so Roosevelt, a true aristocrat whose genuine love of the common man united this country to save it during its most severe time of economic turmoil and devastating war." Kennedy wrote me a note thanking me for the column and adding, "I can think of at least 50 on the Senate side of Capitol Hill that could benefit from a good fireside chat as well."

That's also a worthy epitaph for Ted Kennedy: Born of privilege, and yet absorbed with the fate of those in need.

E-mail Robert Scheer at rscheer@truthdig.com. To find out more about Robert Scheer, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Webpage at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS.COM

Futures point to Wall Street edging up (Reuters)

(Reuters) –
Stock index futures pointed to a slightly higher open for U.S. shares on Thursday, ahead of data expected to show that the world's biggest economy shrank at an annualized rate of 1.5 percent in the second quarter.

At 4:55 a.m. EDT, futures for the Dow Jones, S&P 500 and Nasdaq were up between 0.1 and 0.2 percent.

The FTSEurofirst 300 (.FTEU3) index of top European shares was flat at 973.93 points.

The second reading of U.S. Q2 GDP is expected to result in a downward revision to minus 1.5 percent on an inflation-adjusted annualized basis, compared with an original reading of minus 1.0 percent.

Initial claims for state unemployment benefits are expected to have dropped to 565,000 for the week to August 22, down from 576,000 the previous week. Last week's unexpected rise added to concerns that any economic recovery will be anemic at best.

Dell (DELL.O) will report its quarterly results, and is being counted on to shed some light on whether corporate spending on computers has begun to recover.

U.S. investors stayed cautious on Wednesday after a rally that has taken the market to 10-month highs, leaving stocks little changed despite solid reports on new home sales and durable goods orders.

Shares in American International Group (AIG.N) rose 2 percent to $38.45 in extended trade on Wednesday following a Reuters interview with new Chief Executive Officer Robert Benmosche.

He said he did not favor a fire sale of the bailed-out insurer's assets and that in a year people will say AIG is performing well.

Apparel retailer Guess Inc (GES.N) rose 2.3 percent to $32.90 after the closing bell on Wednesday after the company released second-quarter results and provided earnings guidance for the third quarter.

Genworth Financial Inc (GNW.N) fell 0.8 percent to $8.70 in extended trade after the financial services company filed a stock shelf, allowing it to issue shares in the future, but did not say how many shares it might issue.

Northrop Grumman Corp (NOC.N) rose 1.9 percent after the closing bell after it said it was awarded a $2.4 billion contract related to the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt.

(Reporting by Brian Gorman; editing by John Stonestreet)

Kennedy to have Boston funeral, Arlington burial (AP)

BOSTON – Massachusetts Sen. Edward Kennedy's body will travel for at least two hours from his Cape Cod home to Boston, where it will lie in repose for two days before his funeral at the Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.
A family spokesman said Wednesday that Kennedy's body will pass through sites that were significant to him as the hearse heads to the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum on Thursday.
Kennedy will lie in repose at Smith Hall, ringed by an honor guard including representatives from each of the four military branches. A memorial service will be held there Friday.
President Barack Obama will deliver a eulogy at a funeral Mass at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Basilica on Saturday.
Kennedy died Tuesday at age 77. He will be buried Saturday near his slain brothers, John and Robert.
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Associated Press writers Laurie Kellman and Pauline Jelinek in Washington and Philip Elliott in Oak Bluffs, Mass., contributed to this story.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Edward M. Kennedy will lie in repose Thursday and Friday at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston, followed by his funeral Saturday at a city church and burial later that day near his slain brothers at Arlington National Cemetery.
Kennedy's family plans to travel by motorcade with his body from their compound on Cape Cod, Mass., to the library in Boston on Thursday. The facility will be open to the public for certain periods on both days while Kennedy lies in repose. The Kennedys have planned a private memorial service at the library for Friday night, according to a schedule of events released by Kennedy's Senate office.
On Saturday morning, a funeral Mass for the late senator will take place at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Basilica — commonly known as the Mission Church — in the Mission Hill neighborhood of Boston. The cavernous basilica on Tremont Street, built in the 1870s, was where Kennedy prayed daily while his daughter, Kara, successfully battled her own cancer.
"Over time, the Basilica took on special meaning for him as a place of hope and optimism," the family statement said.
Kennedy died late Tuesday after a yearlong struggle with brain cancer. He was 77.
A burial service at Arlington was scheduled for Saturday afternoon.
Kennedy, who served in the Senate for nearly half a century, will be laid to rest near his brothers, former President John F. Kennedy and former Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, on the famous Virginia hillside that serves as the burial sites of others from the storied clan, including former first lady Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis.
At the site of the eternal flame rest four Kennedy family members: the former president and his wife; their baby son, Patrick, who died after two days; and a stillborn child. Robert Kennedy's grave is a short distance away and somewhere near it is the most likely site for Edward Kennedy's burial.
"Senator Kennedy spent more days than most at Arlington visiting the graves of his beloved brothers and paying tribute to the fallen men and women of Massachusetts who gave their lives for our country," the statement said.
A senior defense official said the Kennedy family some time ago approached the Army to explore the possibility of burying the senator at Arlington, the nation's most celebrated burial ground of fallen military and the resting place of astronauts, Supreme Court justices and other giants in American history.

Kennedy is eligible for burial at Arlington by virtue of his service in Congress as well as his two years in the Army, 1951 to 1953. He was a private first class and served in the military police at Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe, then located in Paris and now in Belgium.

The family met with Arlington officials again Wednesday to finalize the plans, said a second defense official.

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Associated Press writers Pauline Jelinek in Washington, Philip Elliott in Oak Bluffs, Mass., and Denise Lavoie in Boston contributed to this story.

Oops! Stimulus checks went to prison inmates (AP)

WASHINGTON – The federal government sent about 3,900 economic stimulus payments of $250 each this spring to people who were in no position to use the money to help stimulate the economy: prison inmates.
The checks were part of the massive economic recovery package approved by Congress and President Barack Obama in February. About 52 million Social Security recipients, railroad retirees and those receiving Supplemental Security Income were eligible for the one-time checks.
Prison inmates are generally ineligible for federal benefits. However, 2,200 of the inmates who received checks got to keep them because, under the law, they were eligible, said Mark Lassiter, a spokesman for the Social Security Administration. They were eligible because they weren't incarcerated in any one of the three months before the recovery package was enacted.
"The law specified that any beneficiary eligible for a Social Security benefit during one of those months was eligible for the recovery payment," Lassiter said.
The other 1,700 checks? That was a mistake.
Checks were sent to those inmates because government records didn't accurately show they were in prison, Lassiter said. He said most of those checks were returned by the prisons.
"We are currently reviewing each of those cases to determine whether or not the recovery payment was due," Social Security Commissioner Michael J. Astrue said in a statement issued Wednesday evening. "Where we determine payment was not due, we will take aggressive action to recover each of these erroneous payments."
The Boston Herald first reported that the checks were sent to inmates.
The inspector general for the Social Security Administration is performing an audit to make sure no checks went to ineligible recipients, spokesman George E. Penn said.
The audit, which had already been planned, will examine whether checks incorrectly went to inmates, dead people, fugitive felons or people living outside the U.S., Penn said.
The $787 billion economic recovery package included $2 million for the inspector general to oversee the provisions handled by the Social Security Administration. The audit is part of those efforts, Penn said. There is no timetable for its conclusion.
The federal government processed $13 billion in stimulus payments. About $425,000 was incorrectly sent to inmates.