Aug 302011
 

The center of POST-TROPICAL CYCLONE IRENE will move over eastern Canada tonight and early Monday. Hot and humid weather expected over eastern NC for aftermath and recovery.

IRENE OVERVIEW : Irene , which made three landfalls in the US , departed Eastern NC as a category one hurricane and impacted the New England states as a tropical storm. Irene has lost its tropical characteristics as it moves over eastern Canada .

POST- IRENE IMPACTS … DEEP INLAND… INCLUDING GREENVILLE / KENANSVILLE / KINSTON / SNOW HILL / WILLIAMSTON / WILSON : Widespread power outages with damage mainly due to trees and power lines. Inland rivers will climb above flood stage such that low-lying areas near the river will flood. However, widespread massive or long-term river flooding is NOT expected.

POST- IRENE IMPACTS … HIGHWAY 17 CORRIDOR… INCLUDING EDENTON / JACKSONVILLE / NEW BERN / PLYMOUTH / TRENTON: Widespread damage with power outages. Storm surge waters for the Inner Banks including the Pamlico River and Lower Neuse River will lower to normal levels on Sunday.

POST- IRENE IMPACTS … CRYSTAL COAST… EASTERN SOUNDS AND OBX… INCLUDING ATLANTIC BEACH / CEDAR ISLAND / HATTERAS / MANTEO / SWANSBORO: Widespread damage with power outages continue. Soundside flooding on the western shore of the Outer Banks will cause flooding as west winds and the slosh of the Albemarle Sound and Pamlico Sound impact the western shores of the Outer Banks on the sound side.

OTHER TROPICAL INTERESTS: Storm Team 9 continues to monitor Tropical Storm Jose as it moves north towards Bermuda . The long-term track for Jose keeps this small and strong tropical cyclone in the Atlantic Ocean . Jose poses no threat for eastern NC.

Invest 92L African coast could develop into a tropical cyclone within the week. This strong tropical wave, 400 miles south of the southern Cape Verde Islands , is becoming better organized.

Aug 302011
 

Rewardposter

Is Al Qaeda finished?

As the 10th anniversary of 9/11 nears, it would certainly be welcome news that the organization that carried out those attacks has been defeated.

On Sunday, The Times reported that Al Qaeda’s reputed second in command, Atiyah Abdul Rahman, had been killed in Pakistan, probably in a strike by a U.S. drone:

A few weeks after [Osama] bin Laden was killed in Pakistan during a raid by U.S. Navy SEALs, some analysts suggested that Rahman, a Libyan, had emerged as Al Qaeda’s leader. That didn’t turn out to be the case – the leadership spot went to Egyptian Ayman Zawahiri – but it underscored how central a role Rahman has played.

And what’s the big picture? As the story says:

Rahman’s death is likely to lend credence to a view in some U.S. policymaking circles that Al Qaeda’s defeat is within reach.

Recent events “hold the prospect of a strategic defeat, if you will, a strategic dismantling of Al Qaeda,” incoming CIA Director David H. Petraeus said last month.

Also in July, Lt. Gen. Douglas E. Lute, who oversees Afghanistan and Pakistan strategy at the National Security Council, said the U.S. was “doubling down” on its strategy of covert targeted missile strikes in Pakistan since Bin Laden’s death, believing that Al Qaeda is susceptible to a decisive blow.

“I think there are three to five senior leaders that, if they’re removed from the battlefield, would jeopardize Al Qaeda’s capacity to regenerate,” Lute said. He declined to name them, other than Zawahiri. But clearly Rahman would have been on that list.

Of course, it’s been a hugely expensive effort to dismantle the terrorist organization, and to protect the United States.

For example, The Times also reported Sunday on spending for domestic antiterrorism efforts:

A decade after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, federal and state governments are spending about $75 billion a year on domestic security, setting up sophisticated radio networks, upgrading emergency medical response equipment, installing surveillance cameras and bombproof walls, and outfitting airport screeners to detect an ever-evolving list of mobile explosives.

Which has some questioning whether that is money well spent:

“The number of people worldwide who are killed by Muslim-type terrorists, Al Qaeda wannabes, is maybe a few hundred outside of war zones. It’s basically the same number of people who die drowning in the bathtub each year,” said John Mueller, an Ohio State University professor who has written extensively about the balance between threat and expenditures in fighting terrorism.

“So if your chance of being killed by a terrorist in the United States is 1 in 3.5 million, the question is, how much do you want to spend to get that down to 1 in 4.5 million?” he said.

On the other hand, just from an economic standpoint, the effort has been a plus:

One effect is certain: Homeland Security spending has been a pump-primer for local governments starved by the recession, and has dramatically improved emergency response networks across the country.

An entire industry has sprung up to sell an array of products, including high-tech motion sensors and fully outfitted emergency operations trailers. The market is expected to grow to $31 billion by 2014.

So, is Al Qaeda finished? Of course not. For example, on Saturday in Iraq a suicide bomber killed at least 28 worshipers at a mosque in Baghdad, and at least one official blamed the Iraqi affiliate of Al Qaeda.

But it’s also possible that Al Qaeda has been so crippled that it’s no longer capable of carrying out a spectacular attack on the U.S.

And the price for that?  Well, there are the permanent changes in the way Americans now live. As The Times story on domestic security spending says:

Like the military-industrial complex that became a permanent and powerful part of the American landscape during the Cold War, the vast network of Homeland Security spyware, concrete barricades and high-tech identity screening is here to stay. The Department of Homeland Security, a collection of agencies ranging from border control to airport security sewn quickly together after Sept. 11, is the third-largest Cabinet department and – with almost no lawmaker willing to render the U.S. less prepared for a terrorist attack – one of those least to fall victim to budget cuts.

But when I think of the cost, what I see are the faces of our soldiers. Go here, to The Times’ obituaries for California’s war dead and read their stories.

If we’re safer today — and if Al Qaeda is crippled –  we have these young men and women to thank.

Aug 302011
 

(Reuters) – World number one Novak Djokovic pronounced himself fit for the U.S. Open on Monday and eager to take the next step after a spirited run to last year’s final served as a springboard to his sensational 2011 season.

Djokovic, who suffered just his second defeat of the year eight days ago when he retired from the Cincinnati Open final because of pain in his right shoulder, said he feels fine even after hitting balls for about 90 minutes on Sunday.

“I have been serving in the last couple of days, playing 100 percent, so I’m ready for the tournament,” the 24-year-old Serbian told reporters. “Right now my shoulder is in really good condition. I didn’t feel any pain, I don’t have any inflammation right now.”

The Australian and Wimbledon champion said his rousing victory in last year’s U.S. Open semi-final against Roger Federer and his pulsating final against Rafa Nadal gave him the confidence to lift his game.

“I started to believe more that I can win big matches against top guys,” said Djokovic, who heads into the year’s final grand slam with a 57-2 record in 2011. “I got the necessary confidence in order to approach the next season.”

The top-seeded Djokovic, who plays his first-round match Tuesday against Conor Niland of Ireland, said psychology has played a pivotal role during his career.

“I was always coming to the later stages of a grand slam, semi-finals, but I wasn’t managing to make that extra step, because I didn’t get that positive mindset on the court when I played the big guys,” he said. “Now I changed.”

Djokovic at his 2008 Australian Open quarterfinal.

But while Djokovic said he felt on top of the world both on and off the court, he expected to have to keep fighting to hold onto his number one status in tennis.

He said Federer, who has a record 16 grand slam titles, and Nadal, who completed a career grand slam with his U.S. Open triumph in 2010, can never be counted out.

“The fact is that they have been the two most dominant players in the world,” said Djokovic, who on Monday was named a UNICEF goodwill ambassador promoting the rights of children in Serbia. “Even though I’m still number one, they are the two most successful players that there are active in today’s tennis.”

(Editing by Frank Pingue)

 

statue of Sam Bradford

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Aug 302011
 

A statue of Sam Bradford will be added to Oklahoma’s Heisman Park on Wednesday.

The statue, 10 feet tall and weighing 1,200 pounds, will join depictions of past Heisman Trophy winners Billy Vessels, Steve Owens, Billy Sims and Jason White in an area across the street from Owen Field.

Sam Bradford, quarterback for the Oklahoma Soo...

 

Athletic director Joe Castiglione said Monday that the top-ranked Sooners’ home schedule didn’t coincide with Bradford’s as quarterback of the St. Louis Rams, but his family has given the school its blessing to unveil the statue without him.

The university said another celebration will take place later when Bradford can attend.