Green diary rescue & open thread
58 minutes ago
Sen. Richard G. Lugar (R-Ind.), chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, voiced some skepticism that the administration can reach the conditions set for withdrawing troops.Read More......
"Given current events in Baghdad in particular reported on every day quite apart from Anbar province, the violence is horrific," he said on "Face the Nation.
The chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee urged the Bush administration Sunday to seek criminal charges against The New York Times for reporting on a secret financial-monitoring program used to trace terrorists.... [Rep. Peter] King [R-NY] said he thought investigators should also examine the reports by the [Wall Street] Journal and Los Angeles Times...Read More......
"We cannot pull out and hope for the best," said Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., calling redeployments now "a significant step on the road to disaster."But as we learned in last night's New York Times, Bush has seemingly approved a plan to establish a timetable for a partial US withdrawal from Iraq - albeit a very small withdrawal. So does McCain think Bush's new redeployment plan is a significant step on the road to disaster? And is Brownback upset that Bush apparently is no longer interested in seeing it through? Read More......
Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan., likewise dismissed a timetable: "We have to see this through to a successful conclusion."
STEPHANOPOULOS: We spoke to Iraqis in the parliament this morning and they're saying it's still being debated... giving amnesty to people who may have killed Americans. And I just want to know is that acceptable to you?Interesting, since a few days ago McConnell suggested we praise the Iraqi government for that very same amnesty proposal.
MCCONNELL: No, I don't think granting amnesty to people who killed Americans is acceptable...
MCCONNELL: ...might it not just be as useful an exercise to be trying to pass a resolution commending the Iraqi government for the position that they've taken today with regard to this discussion of Amnesty?Other top GOP Senators joined McConnell at the time in defending the Iraqi amnesty proposal.
When the dust had settled barely 24 hours later, a rather more modest version of events had emerged. The seven young black men arrested at a warehouse in Miami and Atlanta had never been in touch with al-Qa'ida, and had no explosives. Their "plan" to destroy America's tallest building was little more than wishful thinking, expressed by one of them to an FBI informant purporting to be a member of Osama bin Laden's terrorist organisation.Read More......
He's like an owner of a business that's slowly going under. He doesn't know how to save the situation. So he won't get more money or resources to fix the business. That's throwing good money after bad. And he won't just liquidate and save what he can, because then he'd have to come to grips with the fact that he's failed. So his policy is denial and slow failure. Here of course the analogy to President Bush is rather precise since he only has to hold out until 2009 when he can give the problem to someone else, just as he did in his past life with other businesses he drove into the ground.Read More......
But for the country that's not acceptable. We don't have a policy except for slow burn and denial. And the president's ego isn't enough to ask men and women to die for. We need an actual plan. And the president doesn't have one.
Democrats need to hammer this point again and again and not get tripped up in the president's bully-boy rhetoric. The president has no plan. He wants to stay in Iraq forever. He says for at least three more years. All the Republicans agree they want more of the same.
Sen. Russ Feingold, D-WI, on the Iraq war & his potential candidacy for the White House in 2008. Then, a political roundtable on how Iraq will affect the 2006 and 2008 elections with David Broder, Ron Brownstein, David Gregory & Anne KornblutThis Week:
* SUNDAY EXCLUSIVE: Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill., on the renewed debate over Iraq in the SenateFace the Nation:
* SUNDAY EXCLUSIVE: Larry Summers, outgoing Harvard University president, on the comments and controversy surrounding his leadership
* SUNDAY'S ROUNDTABLE: Newsweek's Fareed Zakaria, ABC News White House correspondent Martha Raddatz, and CNN anchor Lou Dobbs
* VOICES SUNDAY: ABC News anchor John Stossel on "Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity"
Topics:Situation In Iraq, North Korea Missile Threat...Guests: Sen. Richard Lugar...Sen. Barbara Boxer...Doyle McManus, Los Angeles Times, Washington Bureau ChiefFox News Sunday:
Timetable for withdrawal from Iraq? Sens. John Warner and Carl Levin weigh in...Plus, Sen. Arlen Specter and Rep. Pete King on immigration reform deadlockCNN's Late Edition:
Hamid Karzai: President of Afghanistan, Sen. Joseph Biden: D-Delaware, Foreign Relations Committee ranking member, Sen. Chuck Hagel: R-Nebraska, Foreign Relations Committee and Select Intelligence Committee, Hussein Shahristani: Iraqi oil minister, Madeleine Albright: Former secretary of state, Henry Kissinger: Former secretary of stateRead More......
Lieutenant General Nick Houghton told the Commons defence committee: "There is a worrying amount of violence and murder carried out between rival Shia factions. There is no doubt that it has got worse of late, due to the protracted period of talks to form the government."Read More......
Since a spate of bomb attacks against them last autumn, British forces have largely kept out of the centre of Basra. Much of the police force in the south has been taken over by Shia militias who often clash with one another as well as intimidating ordinary people and attacking what is left of the Sunni community in the south.
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