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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JustTradeEm who wrote (89078)4/2/2003 7:35:56 AM
From: kumar  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
waiting for Islamic religious leaders to clean up THEIR religion

The religion is fine, and does not need cleaning up. Its the people that abuse the religion that need cleaning up.



To: JustTradeEm who wrote (89078)4/2/2003 11:48:52 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 281500
 
FRONTLINE
pbs.org

- This Week: "Blair's War,"
Thursday, Apr. 03 at 9pm on PBS (check local listings)
- Live Discussion: Producer Eamonn Matthews, Fri. at 11am ET

+ This Week ...

Almost exactly a year ago, in early April of 2002, British Prime
Minister Tony Blair traveled to Crawford, Texas, to meet with President
Bush. Blair, who knew that Iraq had been at or near the top of the
administration's agenda since Sept. 11, 2001, wanted to know Bush's true
intentions toward Saddam Hussein.

"I was told by a Cabinet minister who is very close to Blair," Matthew
D'Ancona, deputy editor of the Sunday Telegraph, tells FRONTLINE, "that
Blair looked Bush in the eyes and realized that America was going to war
with Iraq, come what may. ... Blair came away from Crawford thinking at
a very deep level about what he could do to ensure that this conflict
did not do irreparable damage to the international community."

In "Blair's War," this Thursday, Apr. 03 at 9pm on PBS (check local listings),
FRONTLINE tells the story of how and why the United States and Britain
find themselves fighting a war in Iraq without the help of their most
important allies, and the story of the man at the center of it all, Tony
Blair, who risked everything in a failed effort to bridge the gap
between the U.S. and the key players of Western Europe. Through
interviews with insiders in London, Paris, Berlin, New York, and
Washington, the report examines the failure of diplomacy in the months
leading up to war and what that failure may cost, not only for Tony
Blair but for the United States and the international order.

We hope you'll join us on Thursday night. On our Web site following the
broadcast, we'll feature a Web-exclusive email debate between the
influential foreign-policy analyst Robert Kagan, who sees the
U.S.-Europe rift as deeply rooted and perhaps irreversible, and one of
his most prominent detractors, the British journalist Will Hutton. We'll
also have Web-exclusive interviews with leading British and American
intellectuals about Tony Blair and the liberal divide over the war in
Iraq. This and much more, including a chance for you to join the
discussion, will be found at pbs.org

Wen Stephenson
Website Managing Editor
FRONTLINE