Jimmy Carter’s Peace Prize, Part II

Okay, Carter’s winning of the Nobel Peace Prize makes sense in light of the fact that the two other U.S. presidents who won the award are Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson.

Hey, maybe if the Iraqi invasion leads to 300,000+ U.S. casualties — as U.S. involvement in World War I did — do you think maybe George W. Bush will have a shot at the prize, too? Or maybe Bush should follow Roosevelt’s model and attack Cuba!

(You have to wonder if these folks in Norway have a different definition of “peace” than the rest of the known world.)

Tom’s Hardware Reviews Western Digital 200gb Drive

Tom’s Hardware has a review of Western Digital’s 200gb, 7200 RPM IDE drive.

At $399, the cost per gigabyte is a rather expensive $2/gig. As Tom’s Hardware notes, you could buy two 120 gigabyte hard drives for the same price (but then, of course, you have two drive bays devoted to just 20 percent more space).

Were There Plans for a Fifth Hijacked Plane

Henry Hanks links to this New York Times article that suggests the planning for the 9/11 attacks may have originally included five planes, with the fifth plane targeting the White House.

Ramzi Muhammad Abdullah bin al-Shibh, who is now in custody in Pakistan, applied to enter the United States to obtain training at a Florida flight school but was denied entry into this country. While living i n Germany, bin al-Shibh shared an apartment with Mohammed Atta.

According to The Times,

But investigators said suspicions were growing that Mr. bin al-Shibh may have intended to lead a fifth hijacking group. Their belief is based on other information, including interviews of other Qaeda detainees and Mr. Lindh, the American who was sentenced on Friday to 20 years in prison for fighting with the Taliban in Afghanistan and whose credibility is still being weighed. Mr. Lindh told the authorities that he had heard that five attacks were planned.

. . .

In addition, investigators have examined more closely Mr. bin al-Shibh’s unsuccessful efforts to obtain a visa to enter the United States, where he had signed up for flying lessons at a Florida aviation academy. In August 2000, he paid $2,200 as a deposit for flight training, an amount officials said was enough to convince them that Mr. al-Shibh seriously intended to learn to fly.

Source:

9/11 Inquiry Eyes Possible 5th Pilot. David Johnsont on and Don Van Natta Jr. The New York Times, October 11, 2002.

Jimmy Carter’s Nobel Prize

Let me see if I’ve got this straight? A Noble committee featuring a woman who aided the Nazi war effort decided to give the Peace Prize to a man who is good friend of former Peace Prize winner Yasser Arafat and who in the past praised Niocale Ceausescu’s committment to human rights and more recently complained that U.S. criticism of China’s human rights record was too trenchant.

Sounds about right.