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To: steve harris who wrote (335752)4/29/2007 3:17:13 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1574061
 
Protesters Greet Gonzales At Harvard Law School Reunion

CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts - A group of student protesters, including one wearing a black hood and an orange jumpsuit, heckled Attorney General Alberto Gonzales as he posed with old classmates during their 25-year Harvard Law School reunion.”When the photographer was getting everybody set up and having people say ‘cheese,’ the protesters yelled: ’say torture, instead,’ ‘resign’ and ‘I don’t recall,”‘ said Nate Ela, a protester and third-year student.

Law school spokesman Mike Armini said the impromptu protest Saturday was so small that some of those attending the photo shoot did not notice it.

Ela said the protesters followed Gonzales into the law school’s library, chanting “shame” and “resign,” before the attorney general’s security detail took him to his motorcade.

Gonzales was at the university to deliver a lunchtime speech, a visit that was unannounced to students. But word spread quickly after his motorcade and security detail were spotted.

“The departure was clearly undignified,” said Thomas Becker, a second-year law student who wore the black hood and orange jumpsuit during the protest. “He looked really annoyed.”

A Department of Justice spokesman did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

Gonzales is resisting pressure to resign as lawmakers question whether he could effectively run the Justice Department amid the controversy over the firings of eight prosecutors.



To: steve harris who wrote (335752)4/29/2007 4:02:28 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1574061
 
Do you support his nonsense?

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Rice: Bush Opposes Penalties in War Bill

By BEN FELLER
The Associated Press
Sunday, April 29, 2007; 3:17 PM

WASHINGTON -- President Bush will not sign any war spending bill that penalizes Iraq's government for failing to make progress, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Sunday, a fresh warning to Congress about challenging him.

Bush is expected to veto a bill this week that would order U.S. troops to begin withdrawing from Iraq by Oct. 1. Lacking the votes to override a veto, the Democratic-led Congress is considering a revised plan to pay for the way while requiring Iraq to meet benchmarks for progress.

Congress has not decided whether to punish Iraq for falling short. Rice sent lawmakers a clear message, saying Bush would not agree to a plan that penalizes the Baghdad for insufficient progress.

"To begin now to tie our own hands _ and to say 'We must do this if they don't do that' _ doesn't allow us the flexibility and creativity that we need to move this forward," Rice said.

Democratic lawmakers, eager to wind the war down, showed little appetite for establishing goals without consequences. Iraq has struggled to keep its own promises for distributing oil wealth, refining its constitution and expanding democratic participation.

"The benchmarks _ the Iraqis agreed to it, the president agreed it," said Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa., who heads a House subcommittee that controls defense spending. "We're saying to them, `Well, let's put some teeth into the benchmarks.'"

Even if they agree to scrap a troop withdrawal timetable, Democratic lawmakers say they want to link U.S. support to Iraq's performance in some way. But they must find an approach that win Republican support to pass a new bill that Bush is willing to sign.

Bush is expected the veto the war bill by Tuesday, then meet Wednesday with congressional leaders on the next steps. The current legislation would provide $124.2 billion, more than $90 billion of which would go for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Making the rounds of the Sunday talk shows, Rice said Iraqi leaders know U.S. patience is worn. Still, she said deadlines for progress could undermine the work of Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. military commander in Iraq, and Ryan Crocker, the new U.S. ambassador to Iraq.

"The United States is paying in blood and treasures," Rice acknowledged. "The Iraqi leadership is being told, and I think they understand, that the kind of Iraq that there is going to be is up to them. We can't give them a united Iraq."

Iraq's foreign minister, Hoshyar Zebari, said Iraqi leaders have gotten the message.

"We have no illusion that the U.S. commitment is not open-ended," he said. "We have said it from the beginning. This is our country."

Democrats are intent on finding some way to restrain the war, raising doubts about the combat troop increase that Bush has ordered.

"American troops are dying for no good reason at this point," said Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis. "They are in a situation where they are being sacrificed because people want political comfort in Washington. The surge isn't working. The situation in Iraq isn't working."

With a regional conference on Iraq set to begin Thursday in Egypt, Rice raised the possibility of a rare direct encounter between high-level U.S. and Iranian officials. Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki is expected to lead his country's delegation.

"I will not rule out that we may encounter one another," Rice said. "But what do we need to do? It's quite obvious. Stop the flow of arms to foreign fighters. Stop the flow of foreign fighters across the borders."

Rice appeared on CBS' "Face the Nation," CNN's "Late Edition" and "This Week" on ABC. Murtha was on CBS, Feingold on ABC and Zebari on CNN.

washingtonpost.com