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Politics : THE 2004 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: GROUND ZERO™ who wrote (500)11/17/2003 10:55:44 PM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2164
 
Bush Says U.S. Forces Won't Leave Iraq

URL:http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=544&ncid=716&e=4&u=/ap/20031118/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_iraq

TERENCE HUNT, AP White House Correspondent

WASHINGTON - American forces won't leave Iraq (news - web sites) when a new interim government takes charge from the U.S. military occupation next year, President Bush (news - web sites) said Monday. "We're staying," he pledged.

AP Photo

AFP

Slideshow: Iraq

Bush: U.S. Won't Hasten Iraq Exit
(AP Video)





Pointing to the new plan to accelerate Iraq's political transition, Bush said terrorists will not achieve their goal of driving the United States out of Iraq before a new leadership takes hold and brings stability. "We will succeed," the president said.

Bush met in the Oval Office with five women who hold positions of influence in Iraq.

Songul Chapouk, founder of the Iraqi Women's Organization in Kirkuk, pleaded with him not to withdraw U.S. troops. "We need them because we have open borders and we don't have an army and we don't have trained policemen, so we need them at this time," she said.

Bush had an immediate answer. "I assured these five women that America wasn't leaving. When they hear me say we're staying, that means we're staying."

More than 400 U.S. troops have died since the beginning of military operations in Iraq. The rising casualties have put pressure on Bush to scale down U.S. forces as he heads into a re-election fight. Under a troop rotation plan announced last week, the overall number of American troops in Iraq will fall to 105,000 by May from the current 130,000.

Bush declined to say whether the U.S.-pushed establishment of an interim Iraqi government was part of a U.S. exit strategy. "The politics will go forward," he said. "The political process is moving on. The Iraqi people are plenty capable of governing themselves."

But he said there was good reason for U.S. troops to remain.

"We fully recognize that Iraq has become a new front on the war on terror, and that there are disgruntled Baathists as well as Fedayeen fighters and mujahedeen types and al-Qaida types that want to test the will of the civilized world there," the president said. "And we will work with Iraqis to bring people to justice."

He said there were many brave Iraqi soldiers and police who were "chasing down these terrorists, and they're paying a price for it."

Asked if a surge in terrorist incidents around the world pointed to a reconstitution of al-Qaida, Bush said, "We're seeing the nature of al-Qaida. They'll kill innocent people anywhere, anytime. That's just the way they are. They have no regard for human life. They claim they're religious people, but they're not."

The blueprint for an accelerated transition to Iraqi self-rule drew praise from German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer, whose government opposed the war to overthrow Saddam Hussein (news - web sites) and has refused any major commitment of financial or military involvement in postwar Iraq.

"This is a very important step forward," Fischer said after meeting with Secretary of State Colin Powell (news - web sites) at the State Department. "I think this could be very helpful."

He said Germany would do what it could to contribute "to these positive developments," and said it would be helpful if the United Nations (news - web sites) could play a role in Iraq.

Powell said he had conferred by telephone with U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan (news - web sites). "We want the U.N. to play a role, and it is a part of our plan for moving forward," he said.

Powell said he thought Annan was eager to follow through.



To: GROUND ZERO™ who wrote (500)11/17/2003 10:56:06 PM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2164
 
Battle of the Liebermans

By Binyamin L. Jolkovsky

jewishworldreview.com | It's not every day that a parochial school teacher receives e-mail from a presidential candidate's brother-in-law attempting to do damage control. Then again, it's not every day that both the politician and his critic not only share the same names, but their wives do as well.
When Joseph Lieberman, 32, of the Chassidic neighborhood of Boro Park in Brooklyn, opened his e-mail last week, he was surprised to find a message from Ary Freilich, who identified himself as Hadassah Lieberman's brother.

Freilich was angry.

Very angry.



Though one would expect Orthodox Jews to be the presidential candidate's biggest supporters — Lieberman was, after all, once known as the "conscience of the Senate" and refers to himself as "observant" — in actuality, while many hold the Connecticut pol in high regard as a person, they likewise view him as an opportunist who used his religion as a means to advance his career.

In fact, Lieberman, whose wife's name is Hadassah, actually wrote the book on the topic. Literally.

"Joseph Lieberman is a Pious Liberal and Other Observations" is the political flip-side of "Rush Limbaugh is a Big Fat Idiot and Other Observations" and the two books' covers actually closely resemble one another. (Click HERE to purchase. Sales help fund JWR. )

"The senator marketed himself as a man of morals, but when it came time for him to prove his mettle, he sold out," the author told JewishWorldReview.com.

Freilich warns in the missives, obtained by JewishWorldReview.com, that he does not authorize the publication of his correspondence. And he was unavailable for comment at deadline time Saturday night.

But JewishWorldReview.com can reveal much of the heated exchange dealt with Sen. Lieberman as a role model. More specifically, if a person of faith may advance an agenda that is at odds with his belief system in order to serve in the highest office in the land.

"Basically, the exchange boiled down to this: Is making history more important than making a chillul Hashem?," a desecration of the Creator's name, Lieberman told JewishWorldReview.com

Lieberman feels that as the senator's political ambitions soared, his values declined. As examples, he observes that in recent days, the would-be president spoke out against the ban on partial-birth abortion and re-affirmed his support of gay rights. Both of those positions, asserts the author, are in direct violation of the Seven Noahide Laws, the universal code of ethics that the Torah demands of all humanity.

In an effort to shore-up support in the black community as a vice presidential candidate, Lieberman embraced Nation of Islam Leader Louis Farrakhan, going so far as to say he "respected" the man who reportedly once described Judaism as a "gutter religion." He also attended a fundraising event at the home of a Hollywood honcho surrounded by many in the film industry he used to criticize when he and conservative moralist William J. Bennett worked together at the Washington think tank, Empower America.

And then there was his comment on the Don Imus show that marrying out of the faith was kosher. A comment, notes the Brooklynite, that he never publicly retracted. The senator, notes Lieberman, also flip-flopped on issues such as affirmative action and educational choice.

Does the parochial school teacher actually expect to ever discuss his issues with the senator? Not really, it seems. But it's not for lack of trying.

Lieberman has phoned and e-mailed his namesake — "always with the utmost of respect, of course" — and he even attempted to bring his class to meet with the pol on the school's annual trip to Washington. But when he phoned to arrange the meeting, the staffers said that the senator would not be interested. When pressed for a reason, they would not give one, Lieberman says.

"When Sen. Lieberman changes his ways, I'll be more than happy to pull my book from Amazon.com and stop speaking out against him," he promises. Until then, he feels it's a mitzvah, or religious duty, "for believing, observant Jews to be vocal about what Judaism is and isn't."

On one point, however, Lieberman concedes — actually, hopes — in the end he may be proven wrong.

Amid the electronic debate, he wrote: "Mr. Freilich, it is very unlikely that we will change each other's minds." In the duo's last exchange, Freilich wrote that he needed to think-through Lieberman's point about an individual not being able to morally separate his private and public selves.