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03-Mar-2005, 02:51 PM #46
U.S., Iran Face Off Over Nukes

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Explaining Tehran's decision to bar the United Nations from some sensitive sites, a senior Iranian envoy told a 35-nation meeting Wednesday that his country fears leaked information the inspectors gather could help those planning a possible military strike.

At the same meeting — of the board of the International Atomic Energy Agency — the United States, which has not ruled out such an attack, urged U.N. Security Council action against Tehran, saying it is "cynically" pursuing nuclear arms.

Jackie Sanders, chief U.S. delegate to the International Atomic Energy Agency board of governors, also urged North Korea to commit to a "verifiable and irreversible end" to its nuclear program and to return to six-party talks.

North Korea "needs to make a strategic choice to step off the dangerous path it has set for itself," Sanders said as the board sought agreement on a statement urging the Pyongyang to return to negotiations and to end nuclear threats.

IAEA head Mohamed ElBaradei refused to characterize Sanders' comments on Iran, which were in response to an IAEA update on Tehran's nuclear record after more than two years of examination by the agency.

But he said the "ball is very much in Iran's court to come clean" by cooperating to clear lingering suspicions about possible nuclear weapons ambitions.

Iran's refusal to grant IAEA inspectors renewed access to the Parchin military site after an initial severely restricted visit last month was one of the issues raised by the agency's review.

The United States alleges that Iran may be testing high-explosive components for nuclear weapons by using an inert core of depleted uranium at Parchin as a dry run for a bomb that would use fissile material.

Iran asserts that its military is not involved in nuclear activities, and the IAEA has no firm evidence to the contrary. The agency also has not been able to support U.S. assertions that nearly 20 years of covert nuclear programs discovered more than two years ago were aimed at making nuclear weapons — not generating electricity, as Tehran claims.

Iranian chief delegate Sirous Nasseri noted that his country was not obligated to allow any access to sites like Parchin, which are not part of the agency's purview.

Worries about "confidentiality of information" gathered on such visits "are more intense in view of potential threats of military strikes against ... facilities visited by (the) agency," he said.

While describing fears that America was getting ready for an attack as "ridiculous," U.S. President George W. Bush said last week that "all options are on the table."

Sanders called the IAEA report a "startling list of Iranian attempts to hide and mislead and delay the work" of agency experts. Tehran, she said, was guilty of "cynically" manipulating the Nonproliferation Treaty and related programs "in the pursuit of nuclear weapons."

She urged support for the U.S. drive to have Iran referred to U.N. Security Council, saying: "The board has a statutory obligation to so."

The IAEA review also focused on Iran's decision to block any further probing of possible dual use equipment at the Lavizan-Shian site near Tehran — a move that effectively shut down one area of the agency's inquiry.

The U.S. State Department last year said Lavizan-Shian's buildings had been completely dismantled and that topsoil had been removed from the site in attempts to hide nuclear-weapons related experiments.

The review also noted that Iran continues to build a heavy water reactor in the city of Arak that can produce plutonium, despite agency requests to cease construction on the facility.

As well, it mentioned delays by Iran in informing the agency it was building tunnels in the central city of Isfahan for nuclear storage, and blips in its commitment to totally freeze all activities related to uranium enrichment.

Iran has suspended work on its enrichment program pending negotiations with France, Germany and Britain. But it has repeatedly said the freeze is short-term, despite hopes that it will fully scrap its plans.

Sanders said Wednesday that nothing short of "full cessation and dismantling" of enrichment activities "can give us any confidence that Iran is no longer producing nuclear weapons.

But Iran insists on its right to enrichment.

"This is something that is not on the table and will not be on the table," Nasseri told reporters, saying his country had "gone through blood and sweat and tears" to develop the program.
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03-Mar-2005, 02:53 PM #47
Bush Demands Syria Vacate Lebanon

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ARNOLD, Md. - President Bush (news - web sites) on Wednesday demanded in blunt terms that Syria get out of Lebanon, saying the free world is in agreement that Damascus' authority over the political affairs of its neighbor must end now.

He applauded the strong message sent to Syria when Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice (news - web sites) and French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier held a joint news conference on London on Tuesday.


"Both of them stood up and said loud and clear to Syria, `You get your troops and your secret services out of Lebanon so that good democracy has a chance to flourish," Bush said during an appearance at a community college in Maryland to tout his job training programs.


The world, Bush said, "is speaking with one voice when it comes to making sure that democracy has a chance to flourish in Lebanon."


The president's words, taken with those from Rice and others in the Bush administration this week, amount to the strongest pressure to date on Syria from Washington.


"Syria knows the concerns of the international community, and they know what they need to do to change their behavior and become a constructive member of the region and the international community," White House press secretary Scott McClellan said earlier Wednesday.


Turkish ambassador Osman Faruk Logoglu urged the administration to offer trade and other economic and diplomatic incentives to Syria.


"The chances of Syria withdrawing are greater than ever before," Logoglu told reporters. "But it is obviously going to take a long time."


Rice, in London to attend an international conference on Palestinian security and government reform, had said Tuesday that Syria is "out of step" with a growing desire for democracy in the Middle East.


The Bush administration also on Tuesday blamed terrorists based in Syria for last week's deadly suicide attack in Israel.


McClellan said the White House has "firm evidence" that Syria was home base for the terrorist attack in Israel that rocked the latest efforts for peace between Israel and the Palestinians. Bush made a similar point during a White House meeting with congressional leaders, participants said, and so did Rice while in London.


On Wednesday, Rice returned to Washington and had lunch at the White House and an Oval Office meeting with Bush, McClellan said.


All key Lebanese political decisions are assumed to have a stamp of approval from the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad.


Huge street demonstrations and Monday's resignation of the pro-Syrian Lebanese government marked the most serious challenge to Syrian authority in Lebanon since the end of the civil war that killed 150,000 and crushed the Lebanese economy in the 1970s and 1980s.


The events also were an opening for the Bush administration to press its wider goal of democracy across the Middle East and to throw a spotlight on what the United States contends is long-standing Syrian support for terrorists who are trying to undermine progress toward Israeli-Palestinian peace.


At the news conference with Barnier, Rice said their two countries would support the scheduled election this spring in Lebanon, perhaps by sending observers and monitors.


She also suggested international peacekeepers might be needed eventually and could help secure democracy for the Lebanese if Syria were to withdraw.


Assad indicated in an interview with Time magazine that he would withdraw Syria's 15,000 troops from Lebanon "maybe in the next few months." Later, however, a Syrian official speaking on condition of anonymity in Damascus questioned whether it could occur within months.

U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State David Satterfield, on Capitol Hill after a trip to Lebanon, was dismissive of what he called the "rhetoric" out of Damascus.

"Neither this government nor the people of Lebanon will believe anything other than what we see with our eyes," Satterfield told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Separately, on the issue of Iran (news - web sites)'s nuclear program, Rice indicated that the administration was working with European leaders on a plan to offer Iran economic incentives in exchange for abandoning its nuclear ambitions. The United States has accused Iran of developing nuclear weapons, a charge Tehran denies.

"We are designing, I think, an important common strategy with Europe so that Iran knows there is no other way," Rice said in a brief interview aired Wednesday on NBC's "Today" show.

Until recently, the administration had opposed any rewards for Tehran's cooperation. But during the president's trip overseas last week, European leaders urged Bush to join them in offering incentives such as possible membership at some time for Iran in the World Trade Organization (news - web sites) and the White House suggested he would consider that route.
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03-Mar-2005, 02:57 PM #48
Hey, Firemat, Instead of posting all those articles, why not just post the headline, a pertinent exerpt and a link for those of us that want to read the whole thing?
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03-Mar-2005, 04:06 PM #49
Quote:
Originally Posted by fire_mat99
Bush Demands Syria Vacate Lebanon
.... and you know what? Syria had better listen, and listen good!
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05-Mar-2005, 12:32 AM #50
Quote:
.... and you know what? Syria had better listen, and listen good!

Syria is going to take over the world

Here some other news

Bank robber used sawed-off shotgun during CIBC holdup

http://www.northpeel.com/br/news/sto...-3024449c.html

Quote:
A man armed with a sawed-off shotgun robbed a Lisa Street CIBC bank Friday afternoon.

City wants cap on new homes
http://www.northpeel.com/br/news/sto...-3001680c.html

Liberal budget made many people happy
http://www.northpeel.com/br/news/sto...-3013009c.html

U.S. Snubs Canada Over Missile Defence
http://www.pulse24.com/News/Top_Stor...2-017/page.asp

Toronto cop shot
http://www.pulse24.com/News/Top_Stor...2-022/page.asp

India Launches Satellite
http://www.cndyorks.gn.apc.org/yspac...les/india4.htm
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12-Mar-2005, 05:59 PM #51
Senators Protest Bush Cuts to Neighborhood Program

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WASHINGTON — A bipartisan group of 55 senators Friday spelled out its opposition to President Bush (news - web sites)'s proposed cuts to a neighborhood improvement program, apparently dooming one of the White House's key deficit-reduction targets.


The letter from the lawmakers also underscored the fight Bush faces in persuading even members of his own party to accept some of the cost-cutting measures in his budget proposal for the new fiscal year.


Fourteen of the Senate's Republicans — including usually loyal Bush allies — joined 40 Democrats and one independent in expressing opposition to any cut to the Department of Housing and Urban Development (news - web sites)'s $4.7-billion community development block grant program.


The letter came as the Congressional Budget Office (news - web sites) estimated Friday that Bush's policies as outlined in his 2006 budget would add $1.6 trillion to the federal deficit over the next 10 years.


The figures did not include any spending for the military operations in Iraq (news - web sites) and Afghanistan (news - web sites) beyond the $82 billion that Bush is seeking from Congress, nor did they include any money to pay for transitioning to the private Social Security (news - web sites) accounts that the president favors. The cost of starting the accounts is estimated at $1 trillion or more over 10 years.


For the next five years, congressional budget estimators forecast deficits somewhat smaller than the administration's projections. For instance, the White House estimated a deficit of $390 billion for the 2006 fiscal year, while the CBO set the figure at $332 billion.


But the administration's projections stop after 2010. For the five years after that, the CBO estimated annual deficits of $200 billion to $300 billion.


The shortage would largely be the result of permanently extending many of Bush's temporary tax cuts, as he has proposed.


In their letter to the Senate Budget Committee, the 55 senators called the 30-year-old neighborhood improvement program the "centerpiece of the federal government's efforts to help states and localities meet the needs of low-income communities."


Those who signed the letter included Mel Martinez, a Florida Republican elected to the Senate in November after serving as Bush's secretary of Housing and Urban Development.


California's Democratic Sens. Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein also signed.


Several of Bush's other proposed cuts, including reductions in farm subsidies, have sparked opposition among Republicans and Democrats.


The proposed cuts to the community development program have been among the most loudly protested in Bush's 2006 budget.


His proposal calls for slashing the program by 40%, consolidating it with more than a dozen programs and shifting it from HUD to the Commerce Department (news - web sites).


The administration, in targeting the community development program, has been critical of the way it has been carried out.


A spokesman in the White House budget office said the president's proposal would create a "better and more efficient development program for America's communities" by focusing federal funds on "programs that need it most and show the most capacity to use the money to build stronger communities."


Supporting the administration's view was Keith Ashdown, vice president of policy for Taxpayers for Common Sense, a budget watchdog group. He called the proposed cut to the community development program a "necessary first step" toward reducing the federal budget deficit.


"While some lawmakers may not agree with proposed cuts … the onus is on them to find other ways to trim fat from the federal budget," he said.

Feinstein called the community development funds "vital to the communities they aid, providing funds for projects such as housing development, recreation centers, clinics, day-care facilities, and job creation and training."

California is expected to receive $526 million from the program this year.
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12-Mar-2005, 06:00 PM #52
Unusual Life Forms Found in the Atlantic

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WASHINGTON - A strange world of see-through shrimp, crabs and other life forms teems around a newly explored field of thermal vents near the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, scientists report.

Towering white mineral chimneys mark the field, named the Lost City, a sharp contrast to the better-known black smoker vents that have been studied in recent years.


The discovery shows "how little we know about the ocean," lead researcher Deborah S. Kelley of the University of Washington said.


"I have been working on black smokers for about 20 years, and you sort of think you have a good idea what's going on," she said in a telephone interview. "But the ocean is a big place and there are still important opportunities for discovery."


The Lost City was discovered by accident in 2000 as Kelley and others studied undersea areas near the midocean ridge.


They returned to the area in 2003 to analyze what they had found and were startled to learn how different the new vent environment and its residents were from the ones studied before.


Their findings are reported in Friday's issue of the journal Science.


Black smokers are chimney-like structures that form when very hot water — reaching 700 degrees Fahrenheit — breaks through the ocean floor and comes into contact with frigid ocean water. The minerals that crystallize during the process give the chimneys their black color.


At Lost City, on the other hand, the temperature of the escaping fluids is 150 degrees to 170 degrees. The environment is extremely alkaline, compared to the high acid levels at black smokers.


A variety of unusual creatures have been discovered around black smoker vents, including tubeworms that can grow as long as eight feet.


At first the scientists thought there were few animals in Lost City. Then they vacuumed the surface of the white vents and found large numbers of tiny shrimp and crabs, mostly transparent or translucent and less than a half-inch in size, that had been hiding in nooks and crannies, Kelley said.


The total mass of life around the Lost City vents is less than at the black smokers but there is just as much variety, she added.


Microbes found in the chimneys at Lost City — named for the research vessel Atlantis — appear to live off large amounts of methane and hydrogen. There is little or no carbon dioxide, the key energy source for life at black-smoker vents.


There is also little hydrogen sulfide and only very low traces of metals, on which many of the microbes at the black smokers depend.


The report offers the first detailed portrayal of a new type of ecosystem that may be widespread, said Antje Boetius of the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology in Bremen, Germany.


Boetius, who was not part of the research team, said in a commentary on the paper that the amount of living organisms found inside the chimneys at the city was astonishing.


While the black smokers, first discovered in 1979, form at volcanic areas along the oceanic ridges, the Lost City formation was found about nine miles to the side of the ridge. The formation is at latitude 30 degrees north, roughly the same as that of Jacksonville, Fla.


Also participating in the study were researchers from Duke University; ETH-Zentrum in Zurich, Switzerland; Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution; the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (news - web sites).

The work was funded by the National Science Foundation (news - web sites), the NASA (news - web sites) Astrobiology Institute and the Swiss National Science Foundation.
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12-Mar-2005, 06:04 PM #53
ADB to provide $300m for Aceh reconstruction
http://www.thejakartapost.com/detail...305.A09&irec=8

A Common Sense Approach to Religious Freedom
http://www.washingtondispatch.com/article_10745.shtml


More on this later


Bank robber used sawed-off shotgun during CIBC holdup
http://www.northpeel.com/br/news/sto...-3024449c.html


white supremacist
http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id=549482
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16-Mar-2005, 02:27 AM #54

America's plans for humans to explore space may cause it to relax its laws on weapons proliferation


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HERE'S a wizard idea. Spend $40 billion building a big tin can in orbit round the Earth, in order—at least in part—to keep the rocket scientists of your former enemy from going to work for your current enemies. Then find that a law intended to stop the current enemies getting their hands on such rocket scientists' knowledge means you can no longer use this expensive tin can. Confused? You are not the only one. Because that, in a nutshell, is what is about to happen to American space policy unless the law is amended. Indeed, it looks likely that if the law is not changed, America's entire manned-spaceflight effort, and another $50 billion of spending with it, could come to nothing.

The legislation in question is the Iran Nonproliferation Act (INA), which came into force in 2000. The orbiting tin can is the International Space Station (ISS), an American-led (and largely American financed) project which also involves Japan, Canada, Brazil, the EU and, most notably, Russia. To keep people on it requires regular servicing trips. In practice, that means visits from America's space shuttles (grounded at the moment) and Russia's Soyuz spacecraft. But after April next year, an agreement that committed Russia to supply the space-station programme with flights on Soyuz will expire. From then on, America's space agency, NASA, will not be able to pay for any more Soyuz flights because of the INA.


The act prevents NASA from buying such flights until the president certifies that the Russian government is demonstrating a “sustained commitment” to prevent the transfer of weapons of mass destruction and missile-delivery systems, and also that neither the Russian Space Agency nor any entity reporting to it has made any such transfers in the previous year. So even if the space agency were as clean as a whistle, Russia's government has to be behaving itself. And it isn't, so there is something of an impasse.

In the absence of the shuttle, visits to the station require two Soyuz vehicles: one docked as an emergency escape pod and one to transport astronauts to and from the station, an arrangement that NASA would not be allowed to benefit from after April 2006. But even if shuttles return to service this year, as is planned, they can only remain docked to the station for a few weeks at a time, which puts a limit on the span of any American stay there.

The implications are serious. Besides shutting off the flow of money to the impoverished Russian agency, it would, in the words of a report issued on March 2nd by the Congressional Research Service “significantly affect US utilisation of the ISS”. David Goldston, chief of staff at the House of Representatives' Committee on Science puts it more bluntly. He says the issue has the “potential to stop the space-station programme dead in its tracks. It is absolutely essential that Congress decide within the next six months how it is going to deal with this issue.”



Mir, Mk II?
For those who can remember the early 1990s, this may all seem a bit odd. The rationale for inviting Russia into the station partnership in the first place was to ensure that its scientists and engineers were involved in peaceful activities, and not inclined to sell their knowledge to rogue states. The trouble is that, by 1998, there was evidence not only that Russia was flouting the Missile Technology Control Regime but also that “entities” of the Russian Space Agency—in other words, Russian companies that produce material for the agency—were doing so, too.

So, when the INA was enacted to put pressure on Russia to stop transfers of weapon and missile technology to Iran, it also explicitly banned payments for the space station. Today, that leaves a difficult situation. It is likely that the president will be unable to certify that Russia is a non-proliferator. So what else could be done? Timothy Hughes, legal council for the House science committee, says that “given heightened concerns about proliferation, the conflict between non-proliferation law and the goal of fully utilising the ISS may be difficult to resolve. One scenario involves amending the INA.”

Such amendments would involve the science committee as well as the House Committee on International Relations. A spokesperson for its chairman, Henry Hyde, agrees that legislation will be needed. According to him, “It is our understanding that the administration will forward a proposal in the near future.”

Whether the Russian Space Agency itself is now implicated in proliferation is classified information. Sources point out optimistically that America has not yet chosen to apply sanctions to the agency. But that does not necessarily mean that the Americans are happy with it. The key question is spelled out in the Congressional Research Service report, which wonders whether “the non-proliferation benefits gained by linking the ISS to Russian proliferation are worth the costs to the US space programme at this point.”

These costs could be high. According to the president's new “vision” for space exploration, the station is needed to study the long-term effects of space travel on humans. How such long-term effects are to be studied if astronauts are allowed to visit only for a handful of two-week spells a year is unclear. Already, some people are asking questions about whether much of this research—into such things as “psychosocial” adaptation (not murdering your companions), bone loss, the effects of radiation, and the remote delivery of medical attention—could be done on the ground.

Given poor access to the station, it is also hard to see how NASA could justify spending another $30 billion on completing it by 2010. And if the station were not completed, then the shuttle would not be needed either. Together, they represent about $50 billion of planned expenditure over the next decade.

No wonder a kerfuffle is going on between the administration, Congress and NASA. What kind of legislation might emerge is unclear. One possibility might be to permit a discrete and limited allowance of payments for Soyuz. These, at least in principle, might be tracked.

Another possibility is for NASA to modify its shuttles so that they can dock with the station for longer. First, though, these shuttles must demonstrate that they can fly safely at all. Hopes are high for the first intended flight in May, but there are worries about the second. A panoply of new sensors, cameras and monitoring systems has been added, and nobody knows what nasty surprises about safety these may reveal after the first flight. Despite this, NASA is still saying, in public at least, that there will be another 28 shuttle flights to complete the space station. That implies a rate of five a year from 2006, which some experts regard as hopelessly optimistic—so NASA must also decide what it can build with fewer shuttle flights. This would mean further compromises on what the station could do.

All of which raises a question and an intriguing possibility. The question is just what NASA is for. Sherwood Boehlert, the chairman of the House science committee, has cautioned it against becoming a single-mission agency by viewing everything through a lens of manned exploration and putting science second. NASA has always tried to stretch itself too thinly, and if its whole vision is focused on manned exploration, then science will probably suffer. The agency has already trimmed its Glory mission, designed to answer crucial questions about climate change, as well as a mission intended to investigate the Jovian moon Europa. If NASA truly sees itself as a manned-exploration agency, and its plans for the next five years hinge on the intricacies of international politics, then not much is left if things go wrong.

The intriguing possibility, therefore, is that Russia, which was encouraged to destroy its ageing Mir space station when the ISS opened, could inherit sole use of the new station. Whether it would want such a dubious prize is a different matter.
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16-Mar-2005, 02:30 AM #55
'Theory of everything' tying researchers up in knots



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The most celebrated theory in modern physics faces increasing attacks from skeptics who fear it has lured a generation of researchers down an intellectual dead end.

In its original, simplified form, circa the mid-1980s, string theory held that reality consists of infinitesimally small, wiggling objects called strings, which vibrate in ways that yield the different subatomic particles that comprise the cosmos. An analogy is the vibrations on a violin string, which yield different musical notes.

Advocates claimed that string theory would smooth out the conflicts between Einsteinian relativity and quantum mechanics. The result, they said, would be a grand unifying "theory of everything," which could explain everything from the nature of matter to the Big Bang to the fate of the cosmos.

Over the years, string theory has simultaneously become more frustrating and fabulous. On the one hand, the original theory has become mind-bogglingly complex, one that posits an 11-dimensional universe (far more than the four- dimensional universe of Einstein). The modified theory is so mathematically dense that many Ph.D.-bearing physicists haven't a clue what their string- theorist colleagues are talking about.

On the other hand, new versions of the theory suggest our universe is just one of zillions of alternate, invisible -- perhaps even inhabited -- universes where the laws of physics are radically different. String buffs claim this bizarre hypothesis might help to explain various cosmic mysteries.

Untestable theory

But skeptics suggest it's the latest sign of how string theorists, sometimes called "superstringers," try to colorfully camouflage the theory's flaws, like "a 50-year-old woman wearing way too much lipstick," jokes Robert B. Laughlin, a Nobel Prize-winning physicist at Stanford. "People have been changing string theory in wild ways because it has never worked."

Already, the split over string theory has caused tensions at some of the nation's university physics departments. "The physics department at Stanford effectively fissioned over this issue," said Laughlin, now on sabbatical in South Korea. "I think string theory is textbook 'post-modernism' (and) fueled by irresponsible expenditures of money."

The dispute could become explosive this year, with the publication of contrarily minded books by two of the best-known and most eloquent scientific popularizers of physics, string theorist Michio Kaku of City University of New York and astrophysicist-particle theorist Lawrence Krauss of Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland.

Skeptics have long mocked string theory as untestable, because experimental studies of it would require machines of huge scale, perhaps even as big as the solar system. In his new book "Parallel Worlds" (Doubleday), Kaku disagrees and argues that the first experimental evidence for string theory might begin to emerge within several years from experiments with scientific instruments such as a new particle accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider, which opens for business near Geneva in 2007.

Wormhole travel

Kaku, whose previous books include the acclaimed "Hyperspace" and equation-packed textbooks on string theory, also suggests that humans might eventually travel to those alternate universes, perhaps via hypothetical portals in space called wormholes.

Such claims dismay Krauss, a leading expert on cosmic dark matter and dark energy who is popularly known as author of a best-seller, "The Physics of Star Trek." In his book "Hiding in the Mirror: The Mysterious Allure of Extra Dimensions," to be published by Viking in September, Krauss argues that string theorists have produced no satisfactory explanations for anything.

Krauss believes continued research is worthwhile just in case it pans out. But he said that so far, string theorists have promised far more than they have delivered and have fostered the false impression that string theory is the only feasible way to explain cosmic mysteries.

Those who dabble in alternate-universe speculations might be just modern versions of "16th century theologians (who) speculated that spirits and angels emerge from the extra-dimensional universe," says Krauss, who is also an outspoken foe of creationist teaching in schools.

A great deal is at stake. Over the last two decades, a generation of brilliant young physicists -- the kinds of proto-Einsteins who historically have led intellectual revolution after revolution -- has flocked to string theory because their professors told them that's where the action was. Now many of them are reaching middle age and have gained tenured posts on prestigious campuses. They're also educating a whole new generation of fresh- faced wannabe string theorists who are thrilled by the publicity that string theory attracts, which has included several best-selling books and a special effects-packed TV extravaganza on PBS.

The dispute has split partly along subdisciplinary lines, and mirrors a timeless squabble in the philosophy of science: Which is more important for scientific innovation -- theoretical daring or empirical observations and experiments?

"Superstringers have now created a culture in physics departments that is openly disdainful of experiments. ... There is an intellectual struggle going on for the very soul of theoretical physics, and for the hearts and minds of young scientists entering our field," says physicist Zlatko Tesanovic of Johns Hopkins University.

String theorists and their foes can't even agree on what constitutes success or failure. For example, the most unexpected and counterintuitive discovery of recent science occurred in the 1990s, when astrophysicists at Berkeley and elsewhere realized the universe is expanding faster with time. The apparent reason: a mysterious dark energy pervades space and drives the accelerated expansion.

Critics mock superstringers because their so-called theory of everything failed to predict this colossal discovery. String theorists fire back that no one else predicted it, either, and besides, "string theory is the only approach that has the potential for explaining dark energy" based on pure theory, says John Schwarz, a pioneering string theorist at Caltech.

That's because string theory is the only existing hypothesis that holds serious promise of merging the two grandest branches of physics -- the theory of gravity, the basis of cosmological theory; and quantum mechanics, the science of the subatomic realm, Schwarz says.

Even so, "it's my impression that more and more physicists are starting to join Krauss as 'skeptical agnostics' about string theory," said mathematician Peter Woit of Columbia University, who offers comments on string- theory developments at his blog: www.math.columbia.edu/~woit/blog/.

One possible reason for the sea change is that string theory's ambitions have radically changed since the 1980s. Back then, theorists hoped to develop a string theory that would predict the existence of one universe -- ours, of course -- with its given physical forces and constants, such as the known intensity of gravity and the known electrical charge on the electron.

In later years, though, string theorists realized their theory predicted innumerable possible universes with widely varying physical forces and constants. As usual, superstringers and their critics viewed this development differently.

To critics, like Woit, it is a disaster for string theory because the sheer number of estimated universes -- equal to the number one followed by 500 zeroes -- is unimaginably large.

If true, it means that string theory is so flexible that it can be used to predict almost any kind of universe you want, no matter how crazy, and hence it predicts nothing specific enough to be scientifically interesting.

"A theory that can't predict anything is not a scientific theory," Woit says.

But what if the universe is unimaginably complex and as jammed with diverse universes as the seas are jammed with diverse fish? That's the thesis of Kaku, who compares the history of string research to "wandering around the desert and then stumbling on a tiny pebble. But when we examine it carefully, we find that it's actually the tip of a gigantic pyramid."

"But just as we are about to open the door," Kaku says, "some critics say that it's taking too much time, that the writings are too hard to understand, that (it) is draining resources from other projects, that it's getting too much publicity, that the script seems to be mutating as we go from floor to floor, et cetera, et cetera."

Opinions on the theory

In an informal Chronicle e-mail survey, the world's physicists expressed widely differing, sometimes emotional, opinions on the dispute over string theory:

-- "String theory is anything but a futile effort," said an e-mail from David Gross of UC Santa Barbara, who shared the Nobel Prize in physics last year. Among other accomplishments, it has enabled physicists "to understand, finally, many of the mysteries of black holes. ... I am convinced that string theory, as presently understood, is on the right path, but that this path is quite long, and (perhaps many) further breakthroughs are required."

-- "I agree entirely with Larry Krauss," says Nobel Prize-winning physicist Philip Anderson of Princeton University. In academia, "we from outside the (string) field are disturbed by our colleagues' insistence that every new semi-adolescent who has done something in string theory is the greatest genius since Einstein and therefore must occupy yet another tenure track. ... Our sciences are becoming increasingly infected with quasi-theology, a tendency which needs to be openly debated."

-- "To the considerable extent that string theory has been developed, it has turned out to be a logically consistent quantum theory of gravity," says string theorist Raphael Bousso of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. "This is a very significant achievement utterly unmatched by any other approach to this problem -- and many have been tried over the past several decades."

-- "There has been, in recent years, a pernicious, uncritical hype of string theory," says Carlo Rovelli of the Centre de Physique Theorique in Marseille, France. While the theory is worth developing and is a "very interesting attempt to address the fundamental open problems of physics," he says, "so far it is only an attempt, (one) that has delivered less than what was expected some years ago," and "its uncritical promotion is damaging to science."

-- Krauss' charge that string theory "has probably been the least successful 'great' idea in physics" in a century is unfair and premature, replies string physicist Brian Greene of Columbia University, author of two acclaimed books on the topic, including "The Elegant Universe." "That's like someone going into Antonio Stradivari's workshop and complaining about the sound produced by one of his as yet unfinished violins."
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16-Mar-2005, 02:34 AM #56
China passes law allowing force against Taiwan


Quote:
Taiwan has condemned a new Chinese law giving Beijing the legal right to attack Taipei if it moves toward formal independence.

China's national legislature overwhelmingly approved the law on Monday, in a vote of 2,896 to zero. There were two abstentions.

China has repeatedly threatened to invade Taiwan, which split from the mainland in 1949

Members of the National People's Congress cheered the passing of the bill, which authorizes "non-peaceful means" if Taiwan chooses to move toward independence.

However, Premier Wen Jiabao said this was not a "war bill."

"This is a law to strengthen and promote cross-Strait relations, for peaceful reunification, not targeted at the people of Taiwan, nor is it a law of war," Wen told a news conference.

In Taiwan, President Chen Shui-bian has denounced the law, saying it "enables China to unilaterally decide Taiwan's future and ignore that Taiwanese have the right to choose a democratic and free lifestyle.''

The law was prompted in part by Taiwan's plans to hold a referendum on a new constitution for the island. Beijing worries the might lead to a declaration of independence.

It warns outside parties to stay out of the conflict, specifically the United States and Japan.

On Sunday, President Hu Jintao reportedly called on the 2.5-million member of the People's Liberation Army to be prepared for war.

"We must ... always place the task of defending national sovereignty, security and territorial integrity and safeguarding the interests of national development above anything else,'' Xinhua quoted Hu as telling military delegates to the congress.

Hu was appointed chairman of the government's Central Military Commission on Sunday, succeeding Jiang Zemin.

It was largely a symbolic move because he already heads a parallel party commission that runs China's military.

Hu replaced Jiang as Communist Party leader in 2002 and as president the next year.
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16-Mar-2005, 02:36 AM #57
China Prepares for Anti-Secession Law's OK

Quote:
BEIJING - China's President Hu Jintao was named chairman of a government military commission on Sunday, capping a generational transfer of power, and told the 2.5 million-member People's Liberation Army to be prepared for war on the eve of the expected passage of a law authorizing an attack if Taiwan declares formal independence



"We shall step up preparations for possible military struggle and enhance our capabilities to cope with crises, safeguard peace, prevent wars and win the wars if any," the official Xinhua News Agency quoted Hu as saying.


Hu's comments, made to military delegates at the national legislature, appeared aimed at underlining Beijing's determination to unify with democratically ruled Taiwan, which split from the Chinese mainland in 1949.


The appointment of Hu as the chairman of the government's Central Military Commission earlier Sunday was largely symbolic. He already heads a parallel party commission that runs China's military.


Hu, 62, has shown no sign of diverging from former President Jiang Zemin (news - web sites)'s hard-line stance toward Taiwan, a democratically ruled island that Beijing insists is part of the communist mainland.


The two sides split in a civil war more than 50 years ago, and Beijing has long threatened to invade if Taipei takes formal steps toward independence.


On Monday, the National People's Congress was expected to approve an anti-secession law aimed at discouraging self-ruled Taiwan, which Beijing claims as its territory, from making its de facto independence permanent.


"We must ... always place the task of defending national sovereignty, security and territorial integrity and safeguarding the interests of national development above anything else," Xinhua quoted Hu as telling military delegates to the congress.


Taiwan's government has condemned the law, saying it risks raising tensions.


Taiwanese President Chen Shui-bian has said it "enables China to unilaterally decide Taiwan's future and ignore that Taiwanese have the right to choose a democratic and free lifestyle."


The United States would be Taiwan's most likely defender if China attacked. Washington is lobbying strongly against European Union (news - web sites) plans to lift a 15-year-old arms embargo against China, arguing that high-tech European weapons might be used against Taiwanese or U.S. forces.


Hu replaced Jiang as Communist Party leader in 2002 and as president the next year, as power passed to a new generation of Chinese leaders. He succeeded Jiang as head of the party's military commission in September.


Analysts say Jiang, 78, still exerts influence, but not to the extent that his predecessor, Deng Xiaoping, did after retiring from his government posts. Deng was considered China's paramount leader until his death in 1997.


Unlike earlier Chinese leaders who were revered as heroes of the 1949 communist revolution, neither Hu nor Jiang has military experience.


The Communist Party newspaper People's Daily said Sunday that the anti-secession law "shows the Chinese people's common will and firm determination of safeguarding territorial integrity and sovereignty and absolutely does not allow Taiwan independence forces to separate Taiwan from China by any name or by any means."


Jiang, a former Shanghai mayor, was chosen to head the party in 1989 in the tumult that followed the military crackdown on pro-democracy protests centered on Tiananmen Square in Beijing.


He served as president from 1993-2003. During his leadership, China boomed economically even as it remained an authoritarian one-party political system.
 

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