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Showing posts with label Iraq. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iraq. Show all posts

Thursday, April 26, 2007

US Troops' Early Home-Coming

Whether April,1,2008 or October,1,2007, the date for 'withdrawing of troops from Iraq', issue should be weighed mainly by "The Message that is Echoed".

That the House is marginally divided by 218-208, speaks all in silence.

Be it what may,what matters the most is "Peace to Descend Unto Iraq", that can and only can be by the strong 'Will' and 'Proactive Action', by both the 'warring factions' and the 'moderates' along with the 'Govt.' there.

Posted here the indepth article from Seattle Times

Love and Peace.

BEST OF FUTURE

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WASHINGTON -- A sharply divided House brushed aside a veto threat Wednesday and passed legislation that would order President Bush to begin withdrawing troops from Iraq by Oct. 1.

The 218-208 vote came as the top U.S. commander in Iraq told lawmakers the country remained gripped by violence but was showing some signs of improvement.

Passage puts the bill on track to clear Congress by week's end and arrive on the president's desk in coming days as the first binding congressional challenge to Bush's handling of the conflict now in its fifth year.

"Our troops are mired in a civil war with no clear enemy and no clear strategy for success," said House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer.

Republicans promised to stand squarely behind the president in rejecting what they called a "surrender date" handed to the enemy.

"Al-Qaida will view this as the day the House of Representatives threw in the towel," said Rep. Jerry Lewis of California, ranking Republican on the House Appropriations Committee.

The $124.2 billion bill would fund the war, among other things, but demand troop withdrawals begin on Oct. 1 or sooner if the Iraqi government does not meet certain standards. The bill sets a nonbinding goal of completing the troop pull out by April 1, 2008, allowing for forces conducting certain noncombat missions, such as attacking terrorist networks or training Iraqi forces, to remain.

House and Senate appropriators agreed to the legislation earlier this week. The Senate was expected to clear the measure Thursday, sending it to the president.

While Bush was confident the bill would ultimately fail because Democrats lacked the two-thirds majority needed to override a veto, he kept up pressure on lawmakers. On the same day as the House vote, the president dispatched his Iraq commander, Gen. David Petraeus, and other senior defense officials to Capitol Hill to make his case: Additional forces recently sent to Iraq are yielding mixed results and the strategy needs more time to work.

Petraeus told reporters sectarian killings in Baghdad were only a third of what they were in January, before Bush began sending in additional U.S. forces. He added that progress in the troubled western Anbar province was "breathtaking," and that he thought Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki was "doing his best" at leading the country.

But "the ability of al-Qaida to conduct horrific, sensational attacks obviously has represented a setback and is an area in which we're focusing considerable attention," Petraeus said.

Petraeus said he would not touch on the "minefield of discussions about various legislative proposals," but he noted that the new strategy in Iraq was just beginning. He said he planned to provide more details in early September.

Petraeus briefed his findings to lawmakers in a private room, where protesters outside chanted "Troops home now!" Republicans and Democrats alike emerged to say Petraeus had only confirmed their positions.

"This briefing reinforced our view that the solution in Iraq is a political solution," Hoyer, D-Md., told reporters. Also confirmed, he said, was "our belief that we must hold the Iraqis accountable for achieving real progress."

Rep. John Boehner of Ohio, the House Republican leader, said Petraeus acknowledged there were challenges. "But considering where we are, I think the general feels good about the progress thus far," Boehner said.

Bush said he stands firm on his latest strategy for winning the war and dismisses as counterproductive the Democratic call for withdrawal.

"That means our commanders in the middle of a combat zone would have to take fighting directions from legislators 6,000 miles away on Capitol Hill," Bush said this week. "The result would be a marked advantage for our enemies and a greater danger for our troops."

Petraeus' comments Wednesday put a finer point on when the much-awaited decision about the length of the U.S. troop buildup may come, saying he will make an assessment of the conditions in Iraq in early September, and report back to Defense Secretary Robert Gates and other military leaders.

Gates has said he expects the assessment this summer, but this is the first time military leaders said it would not be until September.

Friday, February 23, 2007

Cheney rips China’s anti-satellite weapons test

China’s recent anti-satellite weapons test and its continued military buildup are “not consistent” with its stated aim of a peaceful rise as a global power, Vice President Dick Cheney said Friday.", reports Associated Press, Feb. 23, 2007, in an MSNBC News.
In a speech in Sydney, Cheney also expressed wariness about North Korea’s commitment to a landmark deal on ending its nuclear programs.........................
.....Cheney praised China for playing an “especially important” role in the negotiations that resulted in the North Korea deal, under which the North is to seal its main nuclear reactor and allow international inspections in exchange for fuel oil."
“Other actions by the Chinese government send a different message,” Cheney told the Australian-American Leadership Dialogue, a private organization that promotes ties between the two countries.
“Last month’s anti-satellite test, China’s continued fast-paced military buildup are less constructive and are not consistent with China’s stated goal of a peaceful rise,” he said.
.......The Chinese Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Cheney’s remarks. Many government offices were closed Friday for the weeklong Lunar New Year holiday.
Beijing previously said its Jan. 11 firing of a missile into a defunct weather satellite was for scientific purposes, but the test was widely criticized as a provocative demonstration of China’s growing military clout.
Washington said the test — which made China only the third nation after the United States and Russia to use weapons beyond the atmosphere — undermined efforts to keep weapons out of space. Beijing countered by saying the United States is blocking a possible global treaty that would ban weapons in space.
China’s military has grown rapidly along with its economy in recent years, prompting concern that the balance of military power in the Pacific could start to shift away from the United States.
China said in late December it was strengthening its military to thwart any attempt by Taiwan to push for independence, but vowed it was
committed to the peaceful development of its 2.3 million-strong military, the world’s largest.

Hope on North Korea?
Regarding the North Korea deal, Cheney said it represented “a first hopeful step” that would “bring us closer” to a nuclear-free Korean peninsula — but he also sounded a note of caution.
“We go into this deal with our eyes open,” he said. “In light of North Korea’s missile test last July, its nuclear test in October and its record of proliferation and human rights abuses, the regime in Pyongyang has much to prove.”

..............“The notion that free countries can turn our backs on what happens in places like Afghanistan or Iraq or any other possible safe haven for terrorists is an option that we simply cannot indulge,” he said.
Cheney, a key backer of the Iraq war, praised Prime Minister John Howard for sending troops to Iraq and Afghanistan, saying Australians had won the respect of the world through their support of the fight against terror.
He said that if the U.S.-led coalition leaves Iraq before domestic forces can handle security, violence among rival factions would spread throughout the country and beyond.
“Having tasted victory in Iraq, jihadists would look for new missions,” joining the Taliban fighting in Afghanistan and spreading “sorrow and discord” across the Middle East and further afield, he said.
“Such chaos and mounting danger does not have to occur. It is, however, the enemy’s objective,” Cheney said. “For the sake of our own long-term security, we have a duty to stand in their way.”

......[Courtesy MSNBC news ]

BEST OF FUTURE

Saturday, February 3, 2007

Truck bomb kills more than 120 in Baghdad market - CNN.com


The deadly proxy-war that has shaken the

world continues unabated, the latest being

today in Iraq.

Join me in condemning this cowardly act and

be on the side of the victims in praying for peace

to the lost souls and the devastated families.

May the victims souls rest in peace.

BEST OF FUTURE

Click the following to access the sent link:
Truck bomb kills more than 120 in Baghdad market - CNN.com*
*This article can also be accessed if you copy and paste the entire address below into your web browser. http://edition.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/meast/02/03/iraq.main/

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Digg Story: Iraqis Raid Insurgents-----: All you wanted to and must know on IRAQ

Read my digg story and look for a better future ! My thanks goes to washingtonpost for this marvellous indepth article.
BEST OF FUTURE.
digg user prelude07, would like to share this story with you:
"Iraqis Raid Insurgents Near Shiite Holy City:"
BAGHDAD, Jan. 29 -- Iraqi soldiers, backed by U.S. helicopters, stormed an encampment of hundreds of insurgents hiding among date palm orchards in southern Iraq in an operation Sunday that set off fierce, day-long gun battles during the holiest week for the country's Shiite Muslims.
"Read It To Know All About IRAQ and Judge 'The Journal'."

Monday, January 29, 2007

Iraq Govt. Soldiers Raid Insurgents

You have been sent this message from BDK, as a courtesy of washingtonpost.com.
Personal Message:
Just read the article and gain entire indepth knowledge about IRAQ.
My sincere thanks to washingtonpost.
BEST OF FUTURE.
Iraqis Raid Insurgents Near Shiite Holy City
By Joshua Partlow and Saad Sarhan
BAGHDAD, Jan. 29 -- Iraqi soldiers, backed by U.S. helicopters, stormed an encampment of hundreds of insurgents hiding among date palm orchards in southern Iraq in an operation Sunday that set off fierce, day-long gun battles during the holiest week for the country's Shiite Muslims.
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