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Politics : WAR on Terror. Will it engulf the Entire Middle East? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Oral Roberts who wrote (18172)11/29/2006 10:59:52 AM
From: DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32591
 
France's two faces on NATO
Between political gaffes, the French talk a good game -- but words in wartime are cheap.
November 29, 2006
latimes.com

JACQUES CHIRAC IS expected to step down next year as France's president, so his clownish performance at Tuesday's NATO summit in Riga, Latvia, was apparently something of a final Bronx cheer for his fellow Atlantic Alliance leaders. At a time when the alliance is crying out for sober deeds, the French are yet again uttering meaningless words.

Chirac's office was negotiating with Russian President Vladimir V. Putin to drop by Riga after the summit to celebrate the French leader's 74th birthday and perhaps dine with Latvian President Vaira Vike-Freiberga. It's hard to imagine how even Chirac could be so tin-eared about politics in the Baltic states, where no Russian leader has visited since the Soviet collapse in 1991. The incident created an uproar, threatening to upstage the summit's few accomplishments, even though in the end the Kremlin canceled.

More tangibly damaging was Chirac's latest effort to assert French leadership out of one side of his mouth while limiting French support out of the other. "It is essential for each member state to agree to an appropriate defense effort," Chirac wrote in the Christian Science Monitor this week. "The Europeans have relied on their American allies for too long." Quite right, yet France is hardly setting a strong example.

The primary issue that NATO leaders hoped to address Tuesday is a shortage of troops in southern Afghanistan, where unexpectedly heavy resistance from the Taliban is endangering the alliance's most important mission. Among those not pulling their weight is France. Like Germany, Italy and Spain, France has placed caveats on the use of its 1,900 soldiers, preventing them from being shifted nimbly to the areas where they're most needed. The French also have refused to deploy a NATO strategic reserve battalion to address calls for 2,500 more combat troops.

NATO's mission in Afghanistan, unlike the war in Iraq, is a multilateral effort against a foe that presents a well-known threat to the West. A failure there would not only create a terrorist haven, it would expose NATO as a feeble, divided force. There were indicators Tuesday that some members have agreed to eliminate their caveats, which might bring more troops to the south. But the reluctance in many European capitals to commit the needed forces to such a vital effort is distressing.

This is not new territory for France. In 2005, Chirac announced with great fanfare that he would help stabilize Iraq by sending one (1) training officer to Brussels. When the call came out for a peacekeeping mission in Lebanon, Chirac's answer was a measly 200 French engineers. Stunts like the Putin invitation may make headlines, but it's the country's reluctance to participate fully in NATO — and lack of alternative ideas — that keep France from fulfilling a truly international role.



To: Oral Roberts who wrote (18172)11/29/2006 11:07:24 AM
From: Ichy Smith  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32591
 
These clowns did everything in their power to get kicked off the airplane and succeeded and this will undoubtedly end up being US Air's fault and we will pass laws that all Muslims must be allowed to fly anytime, anywhere to make sure their sensibilities aren't hurt.


I think it is called testing the defenses. Instead of pointedly checking Muslims we check Italians and Swedes, so that Muslims don't feel picked on. The serious part to me is they managed to commandeer seats they were not entitled to, and cause such a fuss. If a drunk causes problems he can be tossed off the plane. And Charged. We have failed in that we have not charged these people for their activities on the plane. Now the terrorists know exactly what parts of the system are weak. We need armed marshals trained to shoot to kill, armed with tasers and other safer weapons so that the terrorists next time can be disabled, and questioned. Then executed.



To: Oral Roberts who wrote (18172)11/30/2006 4:49:32 PM
From: lorne  Respond to of 32591
 
Oral...It is painful to watch the advance of islam in our free countries and in knowing there are so many people in our free countries that are ignorant of the goals of islam.

IMO many innocent people will die because of the ignorance or stupidity of liberal minds.