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  1. #1
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    Default Sheehan`s Kook Brigade off to Syria (AP)

    Sad but true,the mediawhore rides on :

    US Activists, Iraqi Lawmakers Demand US Troop Withdrawal
    Saturday August 5th, 2006 / 19h00


    AMMAN (AP)--"Peace mom" Cindy Sheehan, Tom Hayden and 13 other U.S. activists on Saturday joined Iraqi lawmakers in demanding a timetable be fixed for withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq.

    "I'm optimistic that the majority of the American people want a withdrawal sooner, rather than later," Hayden, a former California state senator told reporters in the Jordanian capital after talks with seven Iraqi Shiite and Sunni lawmakers.

    "It's going to be an important issue in the Congressional elections and the (200 presidential campaign has already begun," he said.
    About half of the activists will head to Syria on Sunday and Lebanon on Monday to "assess the humanitarian crisis" caused by the fighting between Israel and Hezbollah over the past 25 days, killing hundreds and displacing hundreds of thousands. Neither Sheehan, who returned earlier Saturday to the U.S., nor Hayden would be part of the team.

    Hayden wondered whether the Lebanon conflict was "a desperate effort by the Israeli and U.S. neoconservatives to escalate their way out of defeat in Iraq before the November elections." "Are they trying to scramble and subdivide the whole Middle East? Do they hope this escalates into a conflict with Syria and Iran which some of them want," he said.

    The activists, representing the largest U.S. anti-war coalition, United for Peace and Justice; the national woman's peace group, CODEPINK; and Global Exchange, arrived in Jordan Thursday for two days of talks with the Iraqi members of parliament.

    Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki refused to meet the activists during last month's talks with U.S. President George W. Bush in Washington in which he asked for more U.S. troops and finance for his beleaguered government.

    Salman al-Jumaili who is the speaker of the largest Sunni coalition in the Iraqi parliament and his Shiite counterpart, Jabar Habib Jabar, joined the activists in issuing three demands: a fixed timetable for the withdrawal of U.S. troops; a commitment not to have permanent U.S. bases in Iraq; and a commitment by the U.S. government to "pay for rebuilding Iraq."
    "We have found a voice inside the U.S. that backs us. We told them that we in Iraq want to see the light at the end of the tunnel," al-Jumaili told reporters.

    On Thursday, two of the Pentagon's most senior generals, Gen. John Abizaid, the top U.S. commander in the Middle East, and Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, warned Congress that Iraq could move toward civil war if the violence raging in Baghdad between Sunni and Shiite Muslims continued.

    U.S. officials have been pressing Prime Minister al-Maliki, a Shiite, to disband the Shiite militias and make overtures to Sunni insurgent groups saying restoring security in Baghdad is essential if the government is to survive.
    Hayden called Iraq "a gradual shrinking space for the Bush administration."


    Saturday August 5th, 2006 / 19h00 httpwww.easybourse.com/Website/dynamic/News.php?NewsID=37510&lang=fra&NewsRubrique=2

    TITLE 18 > PART I > CHAPTER 45 > Sec. 953.

    Any citizen of the United States, wherever he may be, who, without authority of the United States, directly or indirectly commences or carries on any correspondence or intercourse with any foreign government or any officer or agent thereof, with intent to influence the measures or conduct of any foreign government or of any officer or agent thereof, in relation to any disputes or controversies with the United States, or to defeat the measures of the United States, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than three years, or both.



    Seen that act before :P
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  2. #2
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    How dare Cindy and those other radicals agree with the Iraqi lawmakers that we have brought freedom to...

    "Move towards civil war"...LMAO...we're seeing that act now...


    "I became insane, with long intervals of horrible sanity." - Poe

  3. #3
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    Ambassador claims shortly before invasion, Bush didn't know there were two sects of Islam

    Christian Avard
    Published: Friday August 4, 2006



    Former Ambassador to Croatia Peter Galbraith is claiming President George W. Bush was unaware that there were two major sects of Islam just two months before the President ordered troops to invade Iraq, RAW STORY has learned.

    In his new book, The End of Iraq: How American Incompetence Created A War Without End, Galbraith, the son of the late economist John Kenneth Galbraith, claims that American leadership knew very little about the nature of Iraqi society and the problems it would face after the overthrow of Saddam Hussein.

    A year after his “Axis of Evil” speech before the U.S. Congress, President Bush met with three Iraqi Americans, one of whom became postwar Iraq’s first representative to the United States. The three described what they thought would be the political situation after the fall of Saddam Hussein. During their conversation with the President, Galbraith claims, it became apparent to them that Bush was unfamiliar with the distinction between Sunnis and Shiites.

    Galbraith reports that the three of them spent some time explaining to Bush that there are two different sects in Islam--to which the President allegedly responded, “I thought the Iraqis were Muslims!”

    Research by RAW STORY has confirmed a surprising lack of public statements from the president regarding the branches of Islam, but did uncover at least one mention of their existence. A fact sheet released by the White House in December of 2001 does indeed use the term Sunni to describe a Lashkar-E-Tayyib, "the armed wing of the Pakistan-based religious organization, Markaz-ud-Dawa-wal-Irshad." Other mentions, not originating from the White House, were common in government documents and proceedings, as well as in media coverage of the middle east.

    Other reports also place Bush announcing newfound knowledge of the differences between Muslim groups shortly before entering the Iraq war.

    In an interview with RAW STORY, Ambassador Galbraith recounted this anecdote from his book to exemplify “a culture of arrogance that pervaded the whole administration.”

    “From the president and the vice president down through the neoconservatives at the Pentagon, there was a belief that Iraq was a blank slate on which the United States could impose its vision of a pluralistic democratic society,” said Galbraith. “The arrogance came in the form of a belief that this could be accomplished with minimal effort and planning by the United States and that it was not important to know something about Iraq.”

    The Bush Administration’s aims when it invaded Iraq in March 2003 were to bring it democracy and transform the Middle East. Instead, Iraq has reverted to its three constituent components: a pro-western Kurdistan, an Iran-dominated Shiite theocracy in the south, and a chaotic Sunni Arab region in the center.

    Galbraith argues that because the new Iraq was never a voluntary creation of its people--but rather held together by force--America’s ongoing attempt to preserve a unified nation is guaranteed to fail, especially since it’s divided into three different entities.

    “You can’t have a national unity government when there is no nation, no unity, and no government,” said Galbraith. “Rather than trying to preserve or hold together a unified Iraq, the U.S. must accept the reality of Iraq’s breakup and work with the Shiites, Kurds, and Sunni Arabs to strengthen the already semi-independent regions.”

    Galbraith further argues that the invasion of Iraq destabilized the Middle East while inadvertently strengthening Iran. One of the administration's intentions in invading Iraq was to undermine Iran, but instead, the Iraqi occupation has given Tehran one of its greatest strategic triumphs in the last four centuries.

    Once considered to be Iraq’s worst enemy, Iran has now created, financed and armed the Shiite Islamic movements within southern Iraq. Since the Iraqi Parliamentary elections of 2005, the Shiites have made considerable political gains and now have substantial influence over the country’s U.S.-created military, its police, and the central government in Baghdad. In addition, Iraq is developing economic ties with Iran that Galbraith believes could soon link the two countries’ strategic oil supplies.

    Galbraith says that, “thanks to George W. Bush, Iran today has no closer ally in the world than the Iraq of the Ayatollahs.” As a result, he argues, sending U.S. forces into Iraq, has in effect, made them hostage to Iran and its Iraqi Shiite allies and left the U.S. without a viable military option to halt Iran’s drive to obtain nuclear weapons.

    A seasoned diplomat, Galbraith served as the first U.S. ambassador to Croatia, where he negotiated the 1995 Erdut Agreement that ended the Croatian war.

    Galbraith fears the United States may have lost the war on the very day it took Baghdad. “The American servicemen and women who took Baghdad were professionals--disciplined, courteous, and task-oriented,” said Galbraith. “Unfortunately, their political masters were so focused on making the case for war, so keen to vanquish their political foes at home, felt certain that Iraqis would embrace American-style democracy, yet they were so blinded by their own ideology that they failed to plan for the most obvious tasks following military victory.”

    Galbraith believes that the Bush Administration’s effort will only leave the U.S. with an open-ended commitment in circumstances of uncontrollable turmoil. In the end, he believes, America’s most important objective is to avoid a worsening civil war.

    “There is no easy exit from Iraq,” said Galbraith. “The alternative, however is to continue the present strategy of trying to build national institutions-displaced in the 2003 invasion-but how can you do that where this now is no longer an existing nation?”

    this article and related links here-

    http://www.rawstory.com/news/2006/Am...Bush_0804.html


    "I became insane, with long intervals of horrible sanity." - Poe

  4. #4
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    The raw story ?

    Another left-wing neo marxist kook site.

    Left wing democrat pete,who`s pappa was jk,famous left wing kook economist, certainly knows about eastern europe. He and clinton helped creat a radical muslim state there.

    A calipahte foot-hold in europe,way to go boys :P

    Election year cycle kook books should be filling the shelves right about now.Soon to be in the discount bins for .99 cents apiece. :P



  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by chefmike
    How dare Cindy and those other radicals agree with the Iraqi lawmakers that we have brought freedom to...

    "Move towards civil war"...LMAO...we're seeing that act now...
    Lay off the sauce Mr. No dd214 to hisname.

    First you stated Maliki was a supporter of Hezbollah but now refused to meet with Sheehan,an obvious left leaning kook over there lending moral support to Syria,Lebanon and it`s guest, Hezbollah.

    So which is it,you`re off script again. Sober up and let us now.

    Maliki bad or Maliki ok



  6. #6
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    I couldn't care less who Cindy Sheehan meets with, she has proven herself to be a far better person than the swine that you grovel and shill for on a daily basis.
    But it appears that you are still confused about Maliki and his ilk, white canadian cracker....

    Maybe you neocon cocksuckers shouldn't start sucking each other's dicks just yet...

    It looks like the speech that Karl "the criminal" Rove scripted and provided for Maliki was a just another sloppy attempt at damage control by the neocon gang of stooges in the White House...

    Iraq breaks with U.S. and assails Israeli raids

    By EDWARD WONG and MICHAEL SLACKMAN
    Published: July 20, 2006


    BAGHDAD, Iraq, July 19 — Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki of Iraq on Wednesday forcefully denounced the Israeli attacks on Lebanon, marking a sharp break with President Bush’s position and highlighting the growing power of a Shiite Muslim identity across the Middle East.

    “The Israeli attacks and airstrikes are completely destroying Lebanon’s infrastructure,” Mr. Maliki said at an afternoon news conference inside the fortified Green Zone, which houses the American Embassy and the seat of the Iraqi government. “I condemn these aggressions and call on the Arab League foreign ministers’ meeting in Cairo to take quick action to stop these aggressions. We call on the world to take quick stands to stop the Israeli aggression.”

    The American Embassy did not provide an immediate response.

    The comments by Mr. Maliki, a Shiite Arab whose party has close ties to Iran, were noticeably stronger than those made by Sunni Arab governments in recent days. Those governments have refused to take an unequivocal stand on Lebanon, reflecting their concern about the growing influence of Iran, which has a Shiite majority and has been accused by Israel of providing weapons to Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite militant group.

    Top Shiite politicians in Iraq have myriad connections to Iran. Many officials in Maliki's political group, the Islamic Dawa Party, fled into exile there to escape persecution by Saddam Hussein.

    Maliki also has other ties to pro- Hezbollah leaders in the region.

    He spent most of his 23 years in exile in Syria, where he ran the Damascus branch of the Dawa Party. Syria supports Hezbollah and Hamas, the militant group that now leads the Palestinian government.


    http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/07/20/news/shiite.php

    And now the damage control from FAUX News, unfair and unbalanced, we distort, you decide...

    Fox Trashing Dean for Maliki Comments; Ignores Statements Made By Maliki

    During last night's (7/26) "Special Report with Brit Hume", Fox News Correspondent Major Garrett filed a flowery, shining report on Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and his appearance before Congress yesterday. The report rained praise on Maliki as well as the war in Iraq, but took a sharp turn to attack DNC Chair Dr. Howard Dean for his claim that Maliki is an "anti-Semite". Garrett did not, however, provide details to the viewers as to why Dean made the comment and simply attacked him.

    Garrett began the segment by giving this brief summation of why some were upset with Maliki: "Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, a symbol of Iraq's fledgling Democracy, strode into the well of the house hoping he had diffused the controversy over his government's condemnation of Israel, and his refusal to condemn Hezbollah." Garrett then diverted the course, discussing protestor Medea Benjamin and continuing to blanket Maliki in praise. Eventually, the segment turned vicious when the topic veered to Dr. Dean.

    MG: "But far away from the pomp of the House Chamber, Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean attacked Maliki as no Democrat had before."

    HD (Palm Beach, FL): "The Iraqi Prime Minister is an anti-Semite. We don't need to spend 200, 300 and 500 billion bringing Democracy to Iraq and turn it over to people who believe Israel doesn't have a right to defend itself and who refuse to condemn Hezbollah."

    MG: "Dean, who has clashed before with Hill Democrats over strategy and policy seemed oddly out of step with Democrats who attended Maliki's speech, and those who while still critical of Maliki and Hezbollah offered supportive appraisals of the risks he faces."

    Jack Reed (clip): "He's risked not just his political career, but his life, to try to bring stability to his country and progress to his people."

    MG: "Virginia Republican John Warner said Dean's anti Semite attack on Maliki didn't deserve a response."

    JW (clip): Dismiss Howard Dean. Really, he's a disappointment I hope to even some Democrats. I don't care to deal with that."

    While Dr. Dean may or may not be correct in his estimation of Maliki, a "fair and balanced" news source would find it appropriate to actually include the comments made by Maliki so viewers would be able to judge for themselves. Fox refused to do this, attempting to diffuse the situation - that after years of fighting and almost 2,600 American lives - we've simply installed another anti-Israel regime in Iraq. So, rather than confront the issue - Fox chooses the low road and attacks their favorite target, Dr. Dean.

    For those that watched this segment, and were left uninformed, here are the actual comments made by Maliki, so you can judge whether Dr. Dean was correct in his assessment or not:

    “The Israeli attacks and airstrikes are completely destroying Lebanon’s infrastructure."
    “I condemn these aggressions and call on the Arab League foreign ministers’ meeting in Cairo to take quick action to stop these aggressions. We call on the world to take quick stands to stop the Israeli aggression.” (Maliki outright states that he condemns Israel - which Garrett ignores and claims it's "his government".)

    The official release from Maliki's office included:

    "Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki denounces the Israeli raids on Lebanon and warns of the consequences of escalation in the region."

    "The prime minister calls on Arab foreign ministers to meet to take a clear stand that condemns the criminal acts in Lebanon and Gaza and affirms this assault will make Lebanon's people more united and cohesive in the face of the Israeli challenge."


    More revelations concerning the Hezbolloh sympathies of the neocon puppet regime in Iraq....while the death toll from the civil war in Iraq continues to grow alarmingly.


    Iraqi VP accuses Israel of 'massacres'

    By QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA, Associated Press Writer
    Mon Jul 31, 9:10 AM ET



    BAGHDAD, Iraq - Iraq's vice president on Monday accused Israel of carrying out "massacres" in Lebanon, the strongest criticism yet of the Jewish state by a top official of the U.S-backed Iraqi government.


    Vice President Adel Abdul-Mahdi, a Shiite, singled out Sunday's Israeli airstrike that killed at least 56 Lebanese, mostly women and children, in the village of Qana. The deadliest attack in nearly three weeks of fighting has triggered an international uproar.

    "What happened in Qana is a repetition to these crimes that happened to our nation decades ago. It's time for this nation to stand up and stop this aggression and all forms of aggression that could affect any of its parts," Abdul-Mahdi said.

    "These horrible massacres carried out by the Israeli aggression, incites in us the spirit of brotherhood and solidarity," he said in a speech attended by Iraq's president, the prime minister and other top government officials.

    The comments were harsher than the criticism leveled by Iraq's president and the deputy prime minister on Sunday. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, another Shiite, had also condemned Israel's offensive before traveling to Washington last week, provoking criticism from U.S. lawmakers.

    Several Democrats boycotted his speech to Congress on Wednesday and Democratic Party chairman Howard Dean called the Iraqi leader an "anti-Semite."

    On Sunday, Iraq's top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, demanded an immediate cease-fire in Lebanon, warning that "Islamic nations will not forgive the entities that hinder a cease-fire," al-Sistani said, in a clear reference to the United States.

    The latest remarks by Abdul-Mahdi and Sistani are likely to heighten Iraqi public anger against the United States and create political problems for the Iraqi government, which depends on the Americans for its security and survival.

    Abdul-Mahdi made the comments during a memorial at the headquarters of the influential Shiite party, the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, marking the third anniversary of the death of Ayatollah Mohammed Baqr al-Hakim.

    Al-Hakim, a revered cleric, died in an al-Qaida-linked car bomb attack in Najaf in 2003, and has since been considered a symbol of martyrdom.

    President Jalal Talabani, a Sunni Kurd, also addressed the gathering, expressing "sympathy and support to our brothers in Lebanon against the Israeli aggression."

    "We support them in getting rid of the effects of this aggression and imposing their sovereignty," Talabani said.

    Anger over the Israeli offensive has united Shiites and Sunnis at a time of sectarian divisions here that has triggered a series of attacks and reprisal killings.

    On Monday, about 200 people demonstrated in Sadr City in eastern Baghdad, waving Lebanese and Iraqi flags.

    "Allah, Allah, grant victory to Hassan Nasrullah," the demonstrators, including women and children, shouted, referring to Hezbollah leader.

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060731/...DltBHNlYwM3MTY
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    "I became insane, with long intervals of horrible sanity." - Poe

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