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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It?

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To: grusum who wrote (102355)4/5/2011 7:47:10 AM
From: lorne1 Recommendation   of 224724
 
obama seems to always show support for moslum leaders?

? Understanding the Origin of the Ivorian Crisis, M. FrindéthiéRawlings Calls For Peaceful Approach To Cote D’Ivoire Crisis ?
décembre 25, 2010
frindethie.wordpress.com

Is Alassane Ouattara to Obama what Ahmed Chalabi was to Bush? M. Frindéthié
par frindethie Laisser un commentaire

In an interview accorded to CNN on December 23, Mr. Lanny Davis, retained as adviser by the Gbagbo government, made some striking revelations: the US’s position on Cote d’Ivoire might be misinformed. The US government admitted that it never read the Ivorian Supreme Court’s decision that clearly cites massive abuses, intimidations and frauds in the North. The US’s decision was based on recommendations by the United Nations Organization whose officials also admitted to have never read the Ivorian Supreme Court’s written decision before taking side for Mr. Ouattara. Is Mr. Ouattara’s media machine, in collusion with France and the United Nations, dragging President Obama into a protracted war in Cote d’Ivoire, just as Mr. Ahmad Chalabi, the leader of the Iraqi National Congress, had dragged President Bush into Iraq by way of lies, and fabrication of false evidence? It all seems likely, especially when one sees Mr. Ouattara’s repetitive calls for a precipitous forced intervention where President Gbagbo’s multiple hints for dialogue and levelheaded verification of the election reports could clarify things. In several places, I have argued that the UN and France have lost all credibility. The UN and President Sarkozy should not drag the United States into a quagmire; but above all the fate of the Ivorian people should not be sacrificed on the stage Ouattara’s personal ambitions and Sarkozy’s irrational rancorous approach. Today, in a ubuesque gesture, it is Mr. Ouattara, whose rebels have committed the most outrageous human abuses in Cote d’Ivoire, who plays the victimology card and who is adulated by the United Nations
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