<html><head><meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html charset=windows-1252"></head><body style="word-wrap: break-word; -webkit-nbsp-mode: space; -webkit-line-break: after-white-space;"><div id="wrap">
<div id="pageWrapper">
<div id="masthead">
<a href="http://vcnv.org/" title="Home"><img src="http://vcnv.org/themes/vcnv/VoicesForCreativeNonviolence.png" alt="Home"></a>
</div>
<div id="topnav">
<div class="topnavlink"><a href="http://vcnv.org/contact">VCNV Contact Information</a> </div><div class="topnavlinksearch"></div>
</div>
<div id="outerColumnContainer">
<div id="innerColumnContainer">
<div id="SOWrap">
<div id="middleColumn">
<table style="margin:0; padding:0;" width="100%"><tbody><tr style="margin:0; padding:0;"><td style="margin:0; padding:0;">
<div id="topnavbottom">
</div>
<div class="inside">
<div id="main">
<div class="breadcrumb"><a href="http://vcnv.org/frontpage2">Home</a></div> <h1 class="title">After Vowing to End Combat Mission in Afghanistan, Obama Secretly Extends America’s Longest War</h1>
<div class="tabs"></div>
<div class="node sticky">
<div class="content">
<div class="rightfloat-box-content">
<div class="project">
<div class="rightfloat-box-taxonomy">Categories: <a href="http://vcnv.org/category/afghanistan" rel="tag" title="">Afghanistan</a><a href="http://vcnv.org/category/drone-warfare" rel="tag" title="">drone warfare</a><a href="http://vcnv.org/category/drones" rel="tag" title="">drones</a><a href="http://vcnv.org/categories/troop-draw-down" rel="tag" title="">troop draw-down</a></div>
</div>
</div><p><em>Aired on 11-24-14 on <a href="http://www.democracynow.org/2014/11/24/after_vowing_to_end_combat_mission">Democracy Now</a>. Transcript from <a href="http://democracynow.org">democracynow.org</a>.</em></p><p><strong>AMY GOODMAN:</strong> …To talk about President Obama’s secret
order to extend the war in Afghanistan, we’re joined by two guests. Dr.
Hakim, is a medical doctor who has provided humanitarian relief in
Afghanistan for the last decade. He works with Afghan Peace Volunteers,
an inter-ethnic group of young Afghans dedicated to building non-violent
alternatives to war. Dr. Hakim is the 2012 recipient of the
International Pfeffer Peace Prize. And in Chicago, is Kathy Kelly. She’s
just back from Kabul, Afghanistan. She is Co-Coordinator for Voices for
Creative Nonviolence, a campaign to end U.S. military and economic
warfare. Her recent article is headlined, “Obama Extends War in
Afghanistan: The implications for U.S. democracy are not reassuring.” We
begin with Dr. Hakim who asked us not to show his face. Dr. Hakim, why
don’t you want people to see your face?</p><p><strong>DR. HAKIM:</strong> Well, security and Afghanistan has been
deteriorating over the past few years in the face of the ongoing
U.S.-NATO military strategy and for safety reasons I’d rather remain
unrecognized.</p><p><strong>AMY GOODMAN:</strong> So your concerns about the secret order
that was just revealed in The New York Times that President Obama has
signed onto, what has been the effect of the U.S. war in Afghanistan and
what do you think about this latest development?</p><p><strong>DR. HAKIM:</strong> Well, I think it is good to look at some
of the databases that are available in the states itself, a global
terrorism database done by the U.S. government and the University of
Maryland has shown that since the beginning of the war against terror in
2001, the number of terrorist attacks in Afghanistan and in the rest of
the world, in Iraq, etc., has increased. And so, if we looked at the
graph of that increase and thought of terrorism, or the war against
terrorism, as a cancer that needs to be treated — as a medical doctor I
would say the graph shows that the war against terror in Afghanistan —
[NO AUDIO]</p><p><strong>AMY GOODMAN:</strong> We have just lost Dr. Hakim’s voice.
We’re going to go back to him when we can. He is speaking to us from
Kabul. Again he is not showing his face out of concern for his safety.
Kathy Kelly, you’re just back from Kabul. Talk about your response to
this latest news. We just played the clip of President Obama in May
saying that the troops would be pulling out, and now the secret order.</p><p><strong>KATHY KELLY:</strong> Thank you, Amy. I think probably Hakim
wanted to continue by saying the war on terror has been a failure. And I
think the U.S. public knows that. We learned about heated debate
between the advisors to President Obama, but at what point does the
court of public opinion consulted in any way? The news released on a
Friday night, and was a leak that was disclosed to The New York Times,
but apparently the decision was made weeks before the most recent
elections. Is it possible that because the Obama administration knows
how popular this war is? A CNN poll that had been released in 2013 said
82% of the U.S. public disapproved of continued war in Afghanistan. So
in spite of the pledge that the war was going to end, we now find out
that, in fact, the war is going to continue. In the Saturday issue of
The New York Times, we then learn that, quietly, the new administration
in Kabul, under President Ashraf Ghani, has decided to resume the night
raids. They want to call them night operations instead of night raids.
This is a tactic that doesn’t require big sprawling military bases, it
requires joint special operations forces, drone support, the capacity to
use helicopters. And this is, of course, what the United States is now
promising. The night raids are despised tactic. I think it is import for
people in the United States, just to try and imagine if people break
into your home while helicopters are hovering overhead and suddenly the
women in the household are locked up and the men are subjected to
brutality, and maybe a crossfire does break out, maybe there are Taliban
people that are going to attack while the forces are there and
civilians are killed, and you can’t get them to the hospital, and this
utter nightmare is taking place. Your home is being torn apart. Some
people are going to be taken away and disappeared for months and months
under interrogation and possible torture. Of course, nobody would want
this to resume in their country, and it is sure to prolong and
exacerbate the war.</p><p><strong>AMY GOODMAN:</strong> Dr. Hakim, I think we have your audio
back. I expect it is going to go in and out as we speak to you in Kabul.
But, your new president, Ghani, has called for this extension,
apparently. What is your response to him?</p><p><strong>DR. HAKIM:</strong> Well, the news reports in Kabul in the
past 54, 56 days since President Ashraf Ghani’s inauguration has shown
that there have been about 41 street-side bombing attacks across the
country and 24 of those in Kabul. So, I think President Ashraf Ghani is
caught in the same military madness that the entire U.S.-NATO coalition,
and the world, is caught up in. I tried to say earlier and my voice was
lost in transmission that a global terrorism database by the U.S.
government and the University of Maryland showed that the number of
terrorist attacks in Afghanistan and across the world has increased
since the war against terror began in 2001. So, as a medical
humanitarian person, I would say that the world’s strategy in treating
terrorism has failed and we ought to re-examine and so does President
Ashraf Ghani.</p><p><strong>AMY GOODMAN:</strong> And the effects on the ground, Dr.
Hakim, of this war. Can you tell us what’s happening? When we were
trying to communicate with you by e-mail, you said, sorry, today is a no
electricity day in my house. Explain the conditions on the ground.</p><p><strong>DR. HAKIM:</strong> I think it would be good to give
listeners a sense of what is happening in this country, devastated by
four decades of war and a continued military strategy. By looking at
what the World Health Organization announced in September as the suicide
rate among Afghans. Afghans on the ground in the daily living are not
coping. In this year, up to September, there have been more than 4000
Afghans, both men and women, who have set themselves on fire — self
immolation. And another 4000 that have tried to poison themselves and
kill themselves through drugs and poison. So we are in a situation where
the people have problems with their basic human needs of food and
water, chronic malnutrition has always been a problem, certainly not
helped by war. And then the other basic services that ought to be
available for Afghans —- health care, work. Unemployment is officially
at 36%, probably more. Some figures by local afghan labor organizations
put it as high as 80%. So you have hungry, angry people who are
unemployed and who are killing themselves. So, on the ground, we know
that this war against terror in Afghanistan has been failing from year
to year. The number of civilian casualties reported -—</p><p><strong>AMY GOODMAN:</strong> We’ve just lost Dr. Hakim again in
Kabul. But I think it is worth continually going back when we get him.
Kathy Kelly, if you could continue his thought.</p><p><strong>KATHY KELLY:</strong> Well, along with the concern for
civilian casualties and the mothers who weep and say, I can’t feed my
children, and the thousands of children that are on the streets as child
laborers — 6000 children in Kabul alone — I mean, Amnesty International
had reported that the war was displacing 400 people every day. And
there are squalid, retched refugee camps as people are facing a very,
very cold winter. The Pentagon has requested $58.3 billion for fiscal
year 2015 alone for war in Afghanistan. These resources go to the hands
of war profiteers and weapons makers and enormous expenditures by the
Pentagon. I just read about November 23 request and the Pentagon for
$7,800,000 to beef up the Kandahar and Kabul airports which will, of
course, allow them to engage in the night raids and the drone attacks
and the air attacks. The suffering that this causes for the people in
Afghanistan is lost on the U.S. public. There was an August Amnesty
International report that details ten case studies that are just
gruesome and chilling, horrific, telling about the situations of
civilians who have been killed by United States forces. Of course, this
should be entered into the U.S. media. It should be something U.S.
people are talking about, and not a war that gets continued because of
furtive movements on a Friday night.</p><p><strong>AMY GOODMAN:</strong> Kathy, I wanted to ask you about a new
analysis of corporate TV news that’s found there’s almost no debate
about whether the United States — in this case it was go to war in Iraq
and Syria, but I think you could certainly extend that to Afghanistan.
The group Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting, or FAIR, found of that the
more than 200 guests that appeared on network shows to discuss the
topics, just six voiced opposition to military action. On the
high-profile Sunday talk shows, out of 89 guests, there was just one
antiwar voice. It was Katrina vanden Heuvel of The Nation. I just want
to go to a snippet of the clips of voices that appear in corporate media
outlets.</p><p>[FAIR Clip]</p><p><strong>AMY GOODMAN:</strong> So, that was Jay Carney, the former
spokesperson for Obama and before that the Bill Kristol and Henry
Kissinger, Bob Schieffer the CBS news anchor, the former governor of
Pennsylvania Ed Rendell and Lindsey Graham, the U.S. Senator. Just some
of the voices. But, again, the overwhelming majority of voices on
television, the range of the debate is boots on the ground or just bomb.
Rarely, almost never do you hear someone say do not attack. And yet,
clearly even within the White House, the debate that went on according
to The New York Times, because this was revealed by The New York Times
in this late revelation of a secret order signed by President Obama to
continue the war in Afghanistan, there was a debate within the White
House that sounds like much more than we hear on television. Kathy,
you’ve been going back and forth to Iraq and Afghanistan. I’m sure it is
well over 100 times. Your thoughts on what this public debate would
mean and what that sounds like in Afghanistan? We’ll ask Dr. Hakim that
question.</p><p><strong>KATHY KELLY:</strong> Well, isn’t it amazing that in spite of
what is such a vice like grip on education of the U.S. public that’s
maintained by the military and by the very cooperative media, that you
do get these huge percentages of the U.S. public who nevertheless
believe that these wars have been failures, who don’t want to see the
wars continue. You know, 94% of the U.S. public reportedly knew about
the beheadings of men whose names I know by heart, and I was living in
Afghanistan with barely any electricity or news coverage but I knew that
Steven Sotloff and David Haines and James Foley had been killed. But
people in the United States don’t know the names or the circumstances of
children whose bodies were torn apart by drone attacks. They will
never, ever know the names of the half-million children in Iraq who were
starved to death because of economic sanctions. We need to be literate
in those realities as well and the conditions endured by people who
can’t escape our wars. And not to be made aware of that, is dangerous
for the security of people in the United States. Because other people in
other parts of the world are furious, they’re enraged, and they don’t
want to continue subjecting themselves to the United States menace of
our military.</p><p><strong>AMY GOODMAN:</strong> Kathy, how many times have you been in Iraq and Afghanistan?</p><p><strong>KATHY KELLY:</strong> Well, I traveled to Iraq 27 times
during the period of economic sanctions. And you know, NPR, at one
point, told us, we will never give you or you organization a platform.
Well we weren’t looking to call attention to ourselves. We just wanted
them to go inside the hospitals and be with mothers and children who
would never emerge with a healthy baby leaving the hospital. I guess
I’ve been to Afghanistan about 16 times. Sometimes that was because you
could only get a one-month visa, so I might go out and go back in. But
I’ve been so fortunate to live with Afghan peace volunteers and with
Hakim who’s steady guidance and translation is always available to us.
And with some very fine people from other parts of the world who’ve also
gone over there. And by being with them, you get an entirely different
perspective on the effects of the war, on the realities of poverty and
displacement, and also your living with young people who themselves have
lost immediate members of their family, who themselves spent time in
refugee camps, and yet there they are like young social workers fanning
out trying to find who are the neediest people for distribution of 3,000
duvets that they’ve enlisted widows and impoverished women to make. And
they’re trying really, really hard to overcome.</p><p><strong>AMY GOODMAN:</strong> Kathy, you have been nominated for
Nobel Peace Prize several times. You have into Iraq and Afghanistan
scores of times. How many times have you been invited on the
high-profile Sunday talk shows on television?</p><p><strong>KATHY KELLY:</strong> Zero.</p><p><strong>AMY GOODMAN:</strong> I wanted to go to Dr. Hakim for a
moment, as you described working with him in Afghanistan. Dr. Hakim,
what is the alternative to war in your country?</p><p><strong>DR. HAKIM:</strong> Well, I think that young people
everywhere, not just young Afghans, have got to wake up every day and
build those viable alternatives to war, which means ban wars and weapons
within their homes, communities, religious workplaces, farms,
restaurants, shop houses. And there are places in Afghanistan in the
midst of this war that have banned wars, like emergency hospital and the
Border-free Nonviolence Center of the Afghan Peace Volunteers. That is
one thing that they can do practically. There are many other related
issues that young people can take action on. They can refrain from using
fossil fuel energy. Because a lot of the wars in the Middle East and in
this part of the world is really a war over resources like fossil
fuels, gas and oil. If we do our daily part, that would help. And then
in the area of learning, people have got to realize that the lack of
debate we have just talked about shows that we are learning the wrong
things. We only hear the war and military narrative. We need to be more
curious, imaginative. We need to learn ways in which we can serve
humanity, not get the profit. There many other practical things that
people can do a daily basis, both in Kabul, Afghanistan, and in the rest
of the world. And I would like to encourage everybody to do it. I’ve
seen the Afghan Peace Volunteers try, despite the difficulties, so can
American youth.</p><p><strong>AMY GOODMAN:</strong> I’m looking at a piece from Common
Dreams that is responding to the piece in The Times that made it clear
what President Obama did, quoting him in the Rose Garden, saying
“American personnel will be in an advisory role after this year, we will
no longer patrol Afghan cities, towns, mountains, or valleys. That’s
the task for the Afghan people.” That he said in May. And then, Common
Dreams staff writes, “never mind, the president has now quietly
authorized and expanded role for the U.S. military in Afghanistan. The
New York Times reported last night that Obama’s decision is a result of a
lengthy and heated debate between the promise Mr. Obama made to end the
war in Afghanistan versus the demands of the Pentagon. The Pentagon
won. An official told The Times that the military pretty much got what
it wanted. Obama has also given the war in Afghanistan a new name,
operation Resolute Support.” Dr. Hakim, your response to operation
Resolute Support?</p><p><strong>DR. HAKIM:</strong> Well, before this was called operation
Enduring Freedom, and the change of name doesn’t change the basic
predominant strategy, which is kill, kill, kill. That hasn’t been a
change in the strategy. There hasn’t been any other options. This
decision to expand the mission here is not even a new decision. In 2009,
there was another decision that Obama had to make and that was whether
to increase the number of troops by 30,000 American soldiers. And in the
account by Bob Woodworth in the book “Obama’s Wars,” Bob Woodworth
described how that process happen for Obama in the White House. Obama
had to tell his war cabinet, had to ask them, why is there no other
option? There was only one option, and that is the military option. So
Resolute Support is just a rehash of the same military option, the same
war against terrorism which has failed. And so it is going to fail.</p><p><strong>AMY GOODMAN:</strong> Well, I want to thank you both for being with us…</p><p><a href="http://www.democracynow.org/2014/11/24/after_vowing_to_end_combat_mission">Watch the video</a></p>
</div>
</div><div class="block block-block" id="block-block-41">
<div class="title"><h3></h3></div>
<div class="content"><span id="sharethis_0"><a st_page="home" title="ShareThis via email, AIM, social bookmarking and networking sites, etc." class="stbutton stico_default">ShareThis</a></span>
</div>
</div> </div>
</div>
</td></tr></tbody></table>
</div>
<div class="clear"></div>
</div>
<div id="rightColumn">
<div id="topnavbottom-blue">
</div>
<div class="inside">
<div class="block block-block" id="block-block-56">
<div class="title"><h3></h3></div>
<div class="content"><p><a href="http://www.twitter.com/info_from_vcnv"><img src="http://twitter-badges.s3.amazonaws.com/twitter-b.png" alt="Follow info_from_vcnv on Twitter"></a></p>
</div>
</div><div class="block block-block" id="block-block-14">
<div class="title"><h3></h3></div>
<div class="content"><a href="http://eepurl.com/bU3J"><img src="http://vcnv.org/images/signup-newsletter.jpg" alt="Sign Up for the e-newsletter"></a></div>
</div><div class="block block-block" id="block-block-61">
<div class="title"><h3> </h3></div>
<div class="content"><div style="padding-top: 0px; padding-bottom: 0px;" id="wagbox" class="projectbox"><b class="niftycorners" style="margin-left: -10px; margin-right: -10px; background: none repeat scroll 0% 0% rgb(194, 216, 255); margin-bottom: 10px;"><b style="background-color: rgb(255, 240, 167); border-color: rgb(224, 228, 211);" class="r1"></b><b style="background-color: rgb(255, 240, 167); border-color: rgb(224, 228, 211);" class="r2"></b><b style="background-color: rgb(255, 240, 167); border-color: rgb(224, 228, 211);" class="r3"></b><b style="background-color: rgb(255, 240, 167); border-color: rgb(224, 228, 211);" class="r4"></b></b>
<h3><a href="http://vcnv.org/the-duvet-project">Duvet Project</a></h3>
<span class="inline center" style="width: 125px;"><img src="http://vcnv.org/files/images/the%20first%20duvets.preview.jpg" alt="" title="" class="image preview" height="100" width="130"></span><b class="niftycorners" style="margin-left: -10px; margin-right: -10px; background: none repeat scroll 0% 0% rgb(194, 216, 255); margin-top: 10px;"><b style="background-color: rgb(255, 240, 167); border-color: rgb(224, 228, 211);" class="r4"></b><b style="background-color: rgb(255, 240, 167); border-color: rgb(224, 228, 211);" class="r3"></b><b style="background-color: rgb(255, 240, 167); border-color: rgb(224, 228, 211);" class="r2"></b><b style="background-color: rgb(255, 240, 167); border-color: rgb(224, 228, 211);" class="r1"></b></b></div>
</div>
</div><div class="block block-block" id="block-block-50">
<div class="title"><h3></h3></div>
<div class="content"><div id="wagbox" class="projectbox">
<h3><a href="http://vcnv.org/drones-0">Drone Page </a></h3>
<span class="inline center" style="width: 200px;"><a href="http://vcnv.org/drones-0"><img src="http://vcnv.org/files/images/drone2-Predator%20logo_0.thumbnail.jpg" alt="" title="" class="image thumbnail" height="63" width="200"></a></span>
<a href="http://vcnv.org/drones-0">Education and Action</a></div>
</div>
</div><div class="block block-block" id="block-block-53">
<div class="title"><h3></h3></div>
<div class="content"><div id="wagbox" class="projectbox">
<h3><a href="http://vcnv.org/atrocities-in-afghanistan-a-troubling-timetable-updated-1">Atrocities in Afghanistan</a></h3>
<span class="inline none"><img src="http://vcnv.org/files/images/afghanistan_0.thumbnail.jpg" alt="" title="" class="image thumbnail" height="75" width="95"></span>
</div>
</div>
</div><div class="block block-block" id="block-block-68">
<div class="title"><h3></h3></div>
<div class="content"><div id="wagbox" class="projectbox">
<h3><a href="http://vcnv.org/upcoming-events-for-vcnv">Upcoming Events Calendar</a></h3>
<span class="inline none"><img src="http://vcnv.org/files/images/closegitmo.jpeg" alt="" title="" class="image thumbnail" height="75" width="95"></span>
</div>
</div>
</div><div class="block block-block" id="block-block-65">
<div class="title"><h3></h3></div>
<div class="content"><div id="wagbox" class="projectbox">
<h3><a href="http://vcnv.org/videos-from-the-afghan-peace-volunteers"> Videos from Afghanistan - An Educational Resource</a></h3>
</div>
</div>
</div><div class="block block-block" id="block-block-63">
<div class="title"><h3></h3></div>
<div class="content"><div id="wagbox" class="projectbox">
<h3><a href="http://vcnvuk.wordpress.com/">Voices for Creative Nonviolence UK</a></h3>
<span class="inline none"><img src="http://vcnv.org/files/images/vcnv%20UK%20logo_0.jpg" alt="" title="" class="image preview" height="39" width="75"></span>
</div>
</div>
</div><div class="block block-block" id="block-block-52">
<div class="title"><h3></h3></div>
<div class="content"><div id="wagbox" class="projectbox">
<h3><a href="http://vcnv.org/speakers-bureau">Speakers Bureau</a></h3>
<span class="inline none"><img src="http://vcnv.org/files/images/peace%20dove%2075%20x%2075.jpg" alt="" title="" class="image preview" height="75" width="75"></span>
<href="http: vcnv.org="" speakers-bureau"="">
<br>Bring a VCNV Speaker to Your Event</href="http:></div>
</div>
</div><div class="block block-block" id="block-block-57">
<div class="title"><h3></h3></div>
<div class="content"><div id="wagbox" class="projectbox">
<h3><a href="http://GlobalDaysOfListening.org/">Next Global Day of Listening</a></h3>
<span class="inline center" style="width: 200px;"><a href="http://GlobalDaysOfListening.org/"><img src="http://vcnv.org/files/images/global%20day%20of%20listening_web.jpg" alt="" title="" class="image preview" height="160" width="120"></a></span>
<a href="http://GlobalDaysOfListening.org/">Talk with ordinary people from Afghanistan, Iraq, Palestine, Israel, Egypt, Yemen, and other countries.</a></div>
</div>
</div> <div id="vcnv-nav">
<div class="block block-block" id="block-block-31">
<div class="title"><h3></h3></div>
<div class="content"><div id="writings" class="writings">
<h3><div style="text-align:center;border-top:2px dotted #BBBBAA;"><a href="http://vcnv.org/voices-campaigns" style="font-size: 1em;">Voices Campaigns</a></div></h3>
</div>
</div>
</div><div class="block block-block" id="block-block-27">
<div class="title"><h3></h3></div>
<div class="content"><div id="writings" class="writings">
<h3><div style="text-align:center;border-top:2px dotted #BBBBAA;"><a href="http://vcnv.org/writings-by-members-of-voices-for-creative-nonviolence" style="font-size: 1em;">Writings by Voices</a></div></h3>
</div>
</div>
</div><div class="block block-block" id="block-block-35">
<div class="title"><h3></h3></div>
<div class="content"><div id="writings" class="writings">
<h3><div style="text-align:center;border-top:2px dotted #BBBBAA;"><a href="http://vcnv.org/category/nonviolent-resistance-acts" style="font-size: 1em;">Nonviolent Resistance</a></div></h3>
</div>
</div>
</div><div class="block block-block" id="block-block-33">
<div class="title"><h3></h3></div>
<div class="content"><div id="writings" class="writings">
<h3><div style="text-align:center;border-top:2px dotted #BBBBAA;"><a href="http://vcnv.org/voices-newsletters" style="font-size: 1em;">Voices Newsletters</a></div></h3>
</div>
</div>
</div><div class="block block-block" id="block-block-32">
<div class="title"><h3></h3></div>
<div class="content"><div id="writings" class="writings">
<h3><div style="text-align:center;border-top:2px dotted #BBBBAA;"><a href="http://vcnv.org/books-dvds" style="font-size: 1em;">Books/DVDS</a></div></h3>
</div>
</div>
</div> </div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="clear"></div>
</div>
</div>
<div id="prefoot">
</div>
<div id="footer" class="inside"><div style="margin: 0px;">Voices for Creative Nonviolence | 1249 W Argyle Street #2 - Chicago, IL 60640 | Phone: (773) 878-3815 | email: <a href="mailto:info@vcnv.org">info@vcnv.org</a> </div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div style="visibility: hidden; top: -999px; left: -999px;" class="stwrapper" id="stwrapper"><div class="stclose"></div><iframe src="http://edge.sharethis.com/share4x/index.b8526bf93cdc9508fab400c056192111.html" style="top: 0px; left: 0px; visibility: hidden;" scrolling="no" name="stframe" class="stframe" id="stframe" allowtransparency="true" frameborder="0" height="450px" width="350px"></iframe></div><div id="activemenuContainer"></div></body></html>