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Politics : Israel to U.S. : Now Deal with Syria and Iran -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: denizen48 who wrote (14974)4/27/2007 10:31:40 AM
From: sea_urchin  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22250
 
Harry > We are so screwed. And by we I mean the world.

I'm sure what you say is true but nevertheless one must try not to be depressed or demotivated in one's search for truth and liberty and one's attempt to live one's life according to those principles. At the same time one shouldn't do stupid things like organizing against the state or belonging to such organizations -- for the simple reason that most of those organizations are set up by the state and are full of agents provocateurs.

I can tell you that during my life I was never politically motivated, even now, and at various times I was pulled to the right and the left by friends who had those affiliations. I did not participate because, since I was a teenager, I have believed politics is a trap for the unwary to inveigle them into futile conflict. Likewise, religion.

Of course, all this makes the path narrower and more obscure but it is there nonetheless. One must must just believe in it.



To: denizen48 who wrote (14974)4/28/2007 10:39:46 AM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 22250
 
Radical Shia cleric strongly attacks US president

(AP)

28 April 2007

BAGHDAD - Radical Shiite cleric Muqtada Al Sadr launched a strong attack on Saturday on President George W. Bush, calling him the “greatest evil” for refusing to withdraw American troops from Iraq.

Al Sadr’s statement was read during a parliament session by his cousin, Liqaa Al Yassin, after the US Congress ordered US troops to begin leaving Iraq by Oct. 1. Bush pledged to veto the measure and neither the House nor the Senate passed the measure with enough votes to override him.

“Here are the Democrats calling you to withdraw or even set a timetable and you are not responding,” Al Sadr’s statement said. “It is not only them who are calling for this but also Republicans, to whom you belong.”

“If you are ignoring your friends and partners, then it is no wonder that you ignore the international and Iraqi points of view. You will not benefit from this stubbornness,” he added.

Al Sadr led two armed uprisings against US forces in 2004, and his Mahdi militia is believed responsible for much of the sectarian killing that pushed this country into civil conflict.

The US military says he has fled to Iran, although his followers insist he is hiding in Iraq.

US and Iraqi troops have been targeting his followers in a major security plan in Baghdad that began on Feb. 14. Hundreds of his followers have been detained and troops carry almost daily raids in his stronghold of Sadr City in eastern Baghdad.

In the statement, al-Sadr criticized comments by top US commander Gen. David Petraeus and others who have warned of chaos here if US forces leave.

“What chaos are you claiming will happen if you and the armies of darkness withdraw from our land? What chaos can be worse than the one we are passing through in Iraq where blood is being continuously shed,” Al Sadr said.

“What freedom do you claim that you have spread in Iraq? Aren’t you aware that the most simple freedoms were stolen from Iraqis, even their right to life, to become independent and unite? If you claimed that your pictures will be hanged in the homes of Iraqis they are under their feet today.”

Al Sadr said Bush had “damaged the West’s image in the minds of the people of the east and if no one told you, I am telling you now. All this is because of your reckless acts,” al-Sadr said.

“If a tower was destroyed in America, what is our guilt as Iraqis? If Saddam (Hussein) destroyed it, and this is impossible, he is in burning Hell now. If the terrorists did it then you are the one who opened to the gates of Iraq to kill us as you live in peace,” Al Sadr said, referring to the September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center.

Al-Sadr praised those who carry attack against US troops, calling them “honorable Iraqis not terrorists at all.”

“The terrorist is the one who kills civilians whether a Shiite, Sunni and Christian and their weapons don’t target your tanks or soldiers. This means that your withdrawal is a victory to Iraqis whose hands were only tainted by resisting you,” he said.

On April 9, thousands of Al Sadr’s followers marched in the Shiite holy city of Najaf to mark the fourth anniversary of the fall of Saddam’s regime.

Earlier this month, the six Cabinet ministers allied with Al Sadr walked out of the government in protest after Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki rejected calls for a timetable for the withdrawal of US and coalition forces.

khaleejtimes.com