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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: LindyBill who wrote (113026)5/8/2005 3:41:33 PM
From: KLP  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793955
 
Yeah...kinda like the State Department, eh?

Are you surly this morning? <gg>

bad boy = key aide

Indeed.

Edit....Off to a Mother's Day brunch...and I don't have to cook! Yippee!



To: LindyBill who wrote (113026)5/8/2005 3:44:13 PM
From: Nadine Carroll  Respond to of 793955
 
Strategy Page has this interesting post:

The Sunni Arab media in the Middle East has gotten tired of blaming the United States for everything that doesn't work in Iraq. More and more stories blame Iraq's Sunni Arabs for the terrorism, corruption and tyranny in Iraq, and other parts of the Middle East. This is part of a trend, the growing popularity of Arabs taking responsibility for their actions. This is a radical concept in Middle Eastern politics. For several generations, all problems could be blamed on other forces. The list of the blameworthy was long; the United States, the West, Colonialism, Infidels (non Moslems, especially Jews), Capitalism, the CIA, Israel, Democracy and many others too absurd to mention. Giving up this crutch is not popular in the Middle East. Oil wealth has made it possible to sustain, for decades, the belief of all these conspiracies to keep the Arab people down and powerless. But the invasion of Iraq, and the overthrow of Saddam, forced Arabs to confront their long support for a tyrannical butcher like Saddam. Here was a dictator who knew how to play the blame game, and position himself as an Arab "hero." Saddam's supporters turned to terrorism to restore themselves to power. Two years of killing Iraqis has shamed an increasing number of Arabs into admitting that this is an Arab problem, not the fault of the United States

I checked the latest Al Jazeera writeup of Iraq attacks. It seems to support the post; dry noting of 2 Americans killed, human interest story on the Iraqi schoolgirls wounded in the attack. If your focus is on wounded schoolgirls, then you are definitely not covering the attack as a "sacred martyrdom operation", as they did when the schoolgirls were from Jerusalem.

Of course, that's al Jazeera's English site. I can't read their Arabic site.