4.25.2007

US Presidential Candidate Calls for Impeachment of VP Cheney



25 April 2007

Download

A House lawmaker, Dennis Kucinich, has introduced articles of impeachment against Vice President Dick Cheney, asserting that actions Mr. Cheney has taken have harmed U.S. national security and deceived Congress and Americans. VOA's Dan Robinson reports from Capitol Hill, the Ohio Democrat rejects suggestions his move, which is opposed by leaders in his own party, is designed to help his presidential campaign.

Dennis Kucinich announces Articles of Impeachment against Vice President Dick
Cheney, 24 Apr 2007
Kucinich, who ran unsuccessfully for president in 2004, represents the far left of the Democratic party and has been among the sharpest critics of the Bush administration since the U.S. invaded Iraq in 2003.

He appeared at a Capitol Hill news conference Tuesday to outline his 18-page document.

"These articles are about the conduct of the vice president of the United States, that he deceived the people of the U.S. to take this country into a war [in Iraq], that he continues to exhibit a pattern of conduct that could take this country into another war based on false pretenses," said Dennis Kucinich.

Kucinich's articles of impeachment focus on what he calls the vice president's manipulation of intelligence on weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, and his longstanding insistence on a connection between Iraq and al-Qaida.

But he also accuses Mr. Cheney of attempting to move the U.S. closer to an attack on Iran, despite what he says is the absence of evidence that Iran poses a threat to the U.S.

In the House of Representatives, a member's case for impeachment of an elected official must be reviewed by the judiciary committee which would decide whether to conduct an inquiry.

However, any go ahead for such an inquiry would have to come from the full House, and Kucinich faces formidable obstacles from leaders in his own party.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has long made it clear she will oppose any drive for impeachment proceedings, saying that to do so would divert energy from Democrat's most important agenda items, and play into the hands of Republicans.

Acknowledging he did not consult with Speaker Pelosi, Kucinich denies that political motivations underlie his move.

"As much as I admire the speaker, as much as I voted to support her, I feel that it is my obligation as a member of Congress to introduce these articles of impeachment, and I believe the American people will be the final arbiters as to whether or not these articles should go forward," he said.

A Cheney spokeswoman responded to Kucinich's move by saying the vice president is focused on the serious issues facing our nation pointing to what she called his 40 years of honorable service.

Vice President Cheney, right, speaks to the press about the war in Iraq on Capitol Hill, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 as Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., stands at left
In a surprise appearance before reporters on Capitol Hill, the vice president said nothing about Kucinich's impeachment drive, but did use the opportunity to sharply criticize congressional Democrats, specifically the Senate majority leader Harry Reid, over legislation to fund the war in Iraq.

"It is cynical to declare that the war is lost, because you believe it gives you political advantage," said Dick Cheney. "Leaders should make decisions based on the security interests of our country, not on the interests of their political party."

The House is scheduled to take up a House-Senate conference report on Iraq-Afghanistan military funding Wednesday, with the Senate to follow the next day.

Khalilzad Calls Middle East 'Defining Challenge'



24 April 2007

Download

Veteran U.S. diplomat Zalmay Khalilzad has taken over as ambassador to the United Nations, saying he sees the greater Middle East as the defining challenge of our times. From U.N. headquarters, VOA's Peter Heinlein reports Khalilzad left almost immediately on a Security Council fact-finding mission to Kosovo.

Departing U.S. ambassador to Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad gestures during a press conference in the heavily fortified Green Zone in Baghdad, 26 Mar 2007
The Afghan-born American ambassador comes to the United Nations directly after serving as Washington's envoy to Iraq. He earlier served as ambassador to his native Afghanistan.

Speaking to reporters on his second day at U.N. headquarters, Khalilzad said his priorities will include increasing the world body's engagement in Iraq, which has been limited since the 2003 terrorist attack on U.N. headquarters in Baghdad. He said a lot is at stake in Iraq, not only for Iraqis, but for the entire Middle East.

"What happens in Iraq is important for Iraqis, but its also important for the future of region," he said. "And future of the region, of the broader Middle East, is the defining challenge of our time, the way Europe was for a long time the source of many of the world's security problems. Unfortunately, many of the security problems of world emanates from that region."

Khalilzad said he would also be focusing on African issues, in particular persuading Sudan to accept the so-called 'hybrid force' of U.N. and African Union peacekeepers in Darfur.

We would like government of Sudan to cooperate with the hybrid force, not only to cooperate in words, but in reality on ground, in deed, and what will support engagement with the government in Sudan, but appropriate pressure as necessary to increase its incentive to do the right thing to allow strengthening of the forces that are there to improve the security situation as part of a comprehensive approach to deal with the problem of Darfur," he added.

Khalilzad succeeds former U.S. ambassador John Bolton, who earned a reputation for combativeness as he aggressively pursued U.S. interests. Khalilzad said he, too would speak out for American values, but suggested his style would be different.

"I for my part will do what I can, by engaging others, listening to them, being respectful, I believe that we don't have all the answers, and others have good ideas as well, and I will be thoughtfully listening to them," he noted. "I'm a problem solver, I will not posture, I will work to resolve together differences that we have so we can advance the agenda, which is to improve the situation for the people of the world."

Khalilzad, a Muslim who holds bachelor's and master's degrees from the American University in Beirut, said Lebanon would also be among his priorities. He pledged to work with his fellow ambassadors and Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on pushing Lebanon's government to establish a tribunal in the murder of former prime minister Rafik Hariri.

Khalilzad's first focus, however will be Kosovo. In only his second day of the job, he joined other Security Council ambassadors on a trip to the Balkans to determine whether to accept a U.N. envoy's recommendation that the Serbian province be granted independence. When a reporter asked if he had a message for the people of Kosovo, he replied, "The message is, it is time to bring this issue to closure."

Red Cross Warns of Thousands Fleeing Mogadishu



24 April 2007


Download

The International Committee of the Red Cross reports hundreds of civilians caught in fighting in Mogadishu, Somalia have been wounded in the past few days and thousands of people continue to flee. The ICRC warns the health situation in the city is deteriorating. Lisa Schlein reports for VOA from ICRC headquarters in Geneva.

Smoke hovers above the outskirts of Mogadishu, after heavy fighting, 21 Apr 2007
The International Committee of the Red Cross calls the fighting in Somalia just the latest in a series of catastrophes in the country.

ICRC spokesman, Florian Westphal, says the inhabitants of Mogadishu are caught up in the worst fighting in 15 years.

"We support a number of medical structures, hospitals and the like in Mogadishu and the structures we have supported told us that over this weekend alone, they received 300 people who were wounded in the fighting, the majority of them civilians," Westphal said.

"At the moment, they are still working with the medical supplies which we were able to provide them with a couple of weeks ago and at the moment, that still seems to be holding," he added.

Westphal says the ICRC has been providing drinking water for 50,000 people daily. It also has been supplying displaced people with essential household items.

He says the health situation in the city is worsening and lack of safe water and sanitation is increasing the health risks.

"There is also regular occurrence of cases of watery diarrhea in Mogadishu at the moment," he said. "Again the reports we are getting, I am speaking about an average of 1,000 cases a week. Our partners of the Somali Red Crescent Society are running five rehydration centers in the city with material provided by us to try and help deal with the problem."

Somali women with luggage leave Mogadishu, 01 Apr 2007
The U.N. refugee agency says more than 320,000 people have fled Mogadishu since the beginning of February.

UNHCR Spokeswoman Jennifer Pagonis says aid workers describe chaotic scenes as displaced people try to get into the small and overcrowded town of Afgooye, which is 30 kilometers west of the capital.

"The road linking the area to the capital reopened yesterday [Monday] morning and since then it has been filled with a continuous flow of displaced people," said Pagonis.

"One of our staff members in the area said the Afgooye area was jammed with more than 41,000 displaced Somalis. He said they were hungry and thirsty and the crowds were becoming increasingly difficult to control, making aid distribution difficult," she added.

Pagonis says many of the displaced lack food and there is a severe water shortage. She says about five Somali aid organizations are trying to truck relief supplies to Afgooye every day from Mogadishu, but deliveries are disrupted by the frequent closure of the road.

VOASE0424_Health Report

24 April 2007
Breast Cancer in US Stayed Down in '04 for Second Year

Download
Download

This is the VOA Special English Health Report.

Last year, researchers reported that breast cancer rates in the United States dropped in two thousand three. That was after about twenty years of rising. Many experts linked the drop to a sharp reduction in the use of hormone replacement therapy for older women.

The researchers found that breast cancer rates dropped by almost seven percent between two thousand two and two thousand three. Now, they have just reported that the decreased rates were also present in two thousand four.

Breast cancer rates were at their lowest level since about nineteen eighty-seven, they say. But they also say that in two thousand four there was little additional decrease.

The study found that the drop was mostly in women age fifty to sixty-nine. And it was mostly in the kind of breast cancer fed by estrogen. Estrogen is one of the hormones given to women in hormone replacement therapy, or HRT.

The use of HRT began to drop soon after a major study appeared in two thousand two. The Women's Health Initiative study found that the therapy did not protect against heart disease, as had been thought. Instead, it found that hormone replacement increased the risk for some kinds of cancer, as well as heart attacks and other problems.

The use of hormone replacement therapy dropped almost forty percent soon after that report appeared.

The latest findings about breast cancer rates appeared last week in the New England Journal of Medicine. The researchers used information gathered by the National Cancer Institute, one of the National Institutes of Health.

Peter Radvin and Donald Berry of the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center led the research. Doctor Radvin notes that the kind of study they did cannot prove that hormone replacement therapy causes breast cancer.

And both researchers say they are not suggesting that all women stop the therapy. Doctor Radvin says he will continue to advise his patients to use the lowest strength of hormones for the shortest time possible.

Critics of the study include Wyeth Pharmaceuticals, a maker of hormone replacements. One question, it says, is why breast cancer rates leveled off in two thousand four even though use of the therapy continued to drop. The company says the reduction in breast cancer rates could have been the result of something unrelated to the drugs.

And that’s the Special English Health Report, written by Caty Weaver. I’m Barbara Klein.

VOASE0424_Explorations

24 April 2007
The Tuskegee Airmen: First African-Americans Trained As Fighter Pilots

Download
Download

VOICE ONE:

I’m Steve Ember.

VOICE TWO:

And I’m Barbara Klein with Explorations in VOA Special English. Today, we tell about the Tuskegee Airmen who served in World War Two. They were the first group of

The first class of Tuskegee cadets
African-Americans ever trained as fighter pilots.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

It was July second, nineteen forty-three. It was foggy near the ground. But the sky was clear. The airplanes flew upward, over the Mediterranean Sea. The water was calm and very blue. The planes were part of the United States Army Air Forces, the Ninety-Ninth Pursuit Squadron. They were responsible for guarding bomber airplanes flying to Italy.

The pilots tested their guns. When they were satisfied that their weapons were in firing condition, they flew the planes into position to guard the bombers. The bombers began to unload their cargo at the target area. Clouds of smoke rose from the explosions on the ground.

VOICE TWO:

A group of enemy fighter planes immediately appeared. The pilots of the Ninety-Ninth attacked them. In the battle that followed, Lieutenant Charles Hall shot down a German plane. It was the first time a pilot from the Ninety-Ninth defeated an enemy aircraft. He was the first African-American fighter pilot in the United States armed forces to shoot down an enemy plane. Charles Hall and the other pilots of the Ninety-Ninth Pursuit Squadron had come a long way from Tuskegee, Alabama to fight for their country during World War Two.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

In nineteen forty, African-Americans made up about one and one-half percent of the United States army and navy. But they were not permitted to join the Army Air Forces and fly planes. They had begun campaigning for the right to be accepted into military pilot training during World War One. In nineteen seventeen, African-Americans who requested acceptance into military pilot training were told that black air groups were not being formed at the time.

Civil rights leaders denounced the belief expressed by many white people that black people could not fight. In nineteen thirty-one, Walter White and Robert Moton requested that the War Department accept blacks in the Army Air Corps for pilot training. Mister White was an official of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, a civil rights organization. Mister Moton was president of a respected college for black students, the Tuskegee Institute.

The War Department refused. It said the Air Corps chose men with technical experience. The department also said that blacks were not interested in flying. And it said that so many educated white men wanted to enter the Air Corps that many of them had to be refused acceptance.

VOICE TWO:

The War Department’s refusal led many to feel that blacks would only be guaranteed acceptance into the Air Corps through legislation by Congress. Black leaders used the United States’ preparation for entry into World War Two to pressure Congress. They criticized the unfair treatment of African-Americans in the armed services.

In nineteen thirty-nine, Congress approved a bill guaranteeing blacks the right to be trained as military air pilots. It was proposed that a pilot training camp for blacks be established in Tuskegee, Alabama.

VOICE ONE:

Black leaders praised the signs of change within the military. Yet they continued to work against the military policy of racial separation. The War Department answered these critics by making plans to form several new black fighting groups.

It also promoted a black colonel, Benjamin O. Davis, Senior, to Brigadier General. And the War Department appointed a black judge, William Hastie, as civilian aide on African-American affairs. Judge Hastie was the head of Howard University Law School in Washington, D.C.

Judge Hastie first opposed the establishment of a flight training school in Tuskegee. He wanted blacks to be trained along with whites, not separated from them. The Air Corps said there was no space in other programs. And it said establishing a school at Tuskegee would be the fastest way to start the training. So Judge Hastie withdrew his formal opposition, although he was not satisfied with the plan.

Fred Patterson was the president of the Tuskegee Institute. He also objected to separate training of black pilots. He said it was necessary to denounce forced racial separation. But he finally accepted the program at Tuskegee. He recognized that blacks would be trained separately from whites any place in the United States. He saw Tuskegee as a beginning. At least blacks would now become military pilots.

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:

The Civilian Pilot Training Program at Tuskegee trained black pilots for difficult and dangerous flying. The first group of African-Americans completed the training as fighter pilots in March, nineteen forty-two.

General Davis’s son, Benjamin O. Davis, Junior, was among the first graduates. Blacks finally had won the right to fly with the Army Air Corps, now known as the Army Air Forces. After the war, the Army Air Forces would become the United States Air Force.

Many of the men trained at Tuskegee served in Europe with the Ninety-Ninth Pursuit Squadron. It was organized in October, nineteen forty-two. Its commander was Lieutenant Colonel Benjamin O. Davis, Junior.

VOICE ONE:

The Ninety-Ninth was sent to the Mediterranean area in April, nineteen forty-three. The pilots gained fighting experience flying over Sicily and Italy. In June of that year, the fighter pilots successfully attacked the Sicilian island of Pantelleria. It was the first time air power alone completely destroyed all enemy resistance.

The Tuskegee Airmen took part in the most famous battles in Italy. These included the battles over the Monte Cassino monastery between Rome and Naples and the invasions of Salerno and Anzio. At Anzio, in the first months of nineteen forty-four, the pilots of the Ninety-Ninth shot down eighteen enemy airplanes. Later, in July, they shot down thirty-six enemy planes. Their record led the Army Air Forces to decide to use more black pilots in the war.

VOICE TWO:

Pilots with the 332nd Fighter Group in Ramitelli, Italy
In September, nineteen forty-three, Colonel Davis became commander of the Three Hundred Thirty-Second Fighter Group. The Ninety-Ninth Squadron became a part of that group. Four hundred fifty black pilots were in the group. They flew more than fifteen thousand five hundred flights in Europe.

The Tuskegee Airmen guarded bomber airplanes. They destroyed more than one hundred enemy airplanes in the air, including German fighter planes. And two of the Tuskegee Airmen each shot down four enemy planes.

VOICE ONE:

Nine hundred ninety-six black pilots were trained at Tuskegee Airfield before World War Two ended. For black Americans during World War Two, the Tuskegee Airmen represented both honor and inequality. Members of the group received almost one thousand military awards during the war. Yet their separation from white troops was a powerful sign of the military’s racial policy.

History experts say the Tuskegee airmen proved that black men could fly military airplanes in highly successful combat operations. And the group’s success helped end the separate racial policy of the American military. In nineteen forty-eight, President Harry Truman ordered the armed forces to provide equal treatment for black servicemen. The next year, the Air Force announced that black and white airmen no longer would be separated.

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:

In civilian life, many of the Tuskegee airmen became lawyers, doctors, judges, congressmen and mayors. Their fighting spirit had helped them survive battles and unequal treatment. At home, their spirit helped lead the way to civil rights progress in the United States.

In March, two thousand seven, the United States Congress honored the Tuskegee Airmen at a ceremony in Washington, D.C. The group received the country's highest civilian honor, the Congressional Gold Medal.

President Bush with Tuskegee airmen Roscoe Brown, center, and Alexander Jefferson during the Congressional Gold Medal ceremony
President Bush spoke to the surviving airmen and their families. He praised their bravery to fight in the face of the unequal treatment they suffered at home. Retired Army general and former Secretary of State Colin Powell also spoke to the group. He thanked them for leading the way to equal racial treatment in the United States. He said the Tuskegee Airmen showed America that there was nothing a black person could not do.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

This program was written by Nancy Steinbach. It was produced by Mario Ritter. I'm Steve Ember.

VOICE TWO:

And I'm Barbara Klein. You can read and listen to this program on our Web site, voaspecialenglish.com. Join us again next week for Explorations in VOA Special English.