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To: Lucretius who wrote (233150)4/3/2003 10:24:46 AM
From: GrillSgt  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 436258
 
Again,,from ealier.."DS on the S.p is currently 32 on the daily and 24 on the NQ. Appears we're in for another upcycle. Both are pointing up but of course that can cahnge on a dime. I would focus on those."

Once again once we get below 20, the new cycle begins.

Watch



To: Lucretius who wrote (233150)4/3/2003 10:30:36 AM
From: JohnG  Respond to of 436258
 
One in three French backs Saddam

timesonline.co.uk

By Charles Bremner and Alan Hamilton

ILL-FEELING between Britain and France over the invasion
of Iraq has plumbed new depths with
the desecration of that most sacred of memorials, a war
cemetery.
The defilement of Commonwealth war graves in northern
France coincided with a poll for The
Times which found that 54 per cent of Britons no longer
regarded France as a close ally because
of its opposition to the war.

Relations will be further rent by a second poll, in Le Monde,
showing that only a third of the French
felt that they were on the same side as the Americans and
British, and that another third desired
outright Iraqi victory over “les anglo-saxons”.

Eleven thousand Allied soldiers lie buried in well-tended
peace at Etaples, on the Channel coast
near Le Touquet, victims of the struggle by Anglo-Saxons
to liberate the French from the German
invaders during the First World War.

Last week the obelisk raised in their memory was defiled by
red-painted insults such as “Rosbeefs
go home”; “May Saddam prevail and spill your blood”; and,
in a reference to the long-dead
casualties beneath the manicured turf, “They are soiling our
land”.

Local gendarmerie have launched an inquiry, but have so
far found no clues. They say there had
been no significant demonstrations against the war in that
area of France.

The graffiti have been scrubbed off, but the incident has
provoked outrage among British
politicians, war graves staff and the few remaining relatives
of those buried at Etaples. French
politicians have joined the condemnation.

Bruce George, Labour chairman of the Commons Defence
Committee, said: “Remembering what
sacrifice these men made for the liberation of France, I
cannot believe any mature, sane person
would be so stupid as that.”

David Uffold, 63, a Shropshire farmer, is the only surviving
relative of Rifleman Frederick Uffold of
the London Regiment, who is buried at Etaples. “I find it
sickening that anyone would vandalise the
cemetery,” he said. “It is the last place they should be
protesting about Iraq. These fellows were
drafted in to fight for France. I can’t see any connection
between the men buried at Etaples and
the war in Iraq.”

Peter Francis, of the Commonwealth War Graves
Commission, said he was disgusted that a place
remembering those who died defending freedom in world
wars long ago should be dragged into a
current political debate.

French politicians did their best to portray the desecration as
an isolated act, but it nonetheless
underlined anti-American and anti-British emotions running
through France over what is seen there
as a bungled invasion rapidly turning into a humanitarian
disaster.

President Chirac’s spokesman said: “We are indignant and
shocked by the desecration of the
graves of soldiers who fought for our liberty.” Jean-Pierre
Raffarin, the Prime Minister, said: “The
Americans are not the enemy; just because we are against
this war, it does not mean that we
want the victory of dictatorship over democracy.”