Friday, November 24, 2006

What's really going on in the world

The United States, Britain and Australian coalition won the Iraq war a long time ago but the media won't admit that because they want Bush to be impeached and history written as the worst US President since Nixon. The reality is we won the war. What we lost was the after-war effort to make Iraq a democracy. What's worse is it the elected Iraqi government that has failed everyone. Maliki is a pacifist and let everyone dictate what he does and when instead of being a leader. The result of the failed Iraqi government is shown in the below news clips. Make no mistake about it, Vladimir Putin is using Iraq to take the United States down a few notches. His goal is to get Russia back on top as the world super power and he's using Iran and North Korea to do it.
 
Now, the news clips...
 
BAGHDAD, Iraq - Shiite militiamen doused six Sunni Arabs with kerosene and burned them alive as Iraqi soldiers stood by, and killed 19 other Sunnis in attacks on their mosques Friday, taking revenge for the slaughter of at least 215 Shiites in the Sadr City slum the day before. The mosque attacks came after the government, in a desperate attempt to avert civil war, imposed a sweeping curfew on the capital, shut down the international airport and closed the country's main outlet to the shipping lanes in the Persian Gulf. The Mahdi Army militiamen, armed with machines guns and rocket-propelled grenades, swept through Hurriyah neighborhood near an Iraqi army post, burning four mosques and several homes, and attacking worshippers as they left Friday services.   In a statement read after his death, Litvinenko accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of orchestrating his killing and said the Russian leader would face "a howl of protest from around the world."

"You have shown yourself to be as barbaric and ruthless as your most hostile critics claim," he said in the statement released Friday.

 

LONDON, England (CNN) -- Former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko died after being poisoned by a large dose of radiation, British health officials said Friday. The 43-year-old was a longtime critic of the Russian government, which he and his friends blamed for his illness. The Kremlin has denied any involvement.  Litvinenko, who had been living in Britain, died Thursday in a London hospital after falling ill three weeks ago.  "A large quantity of alpha radiation from polonium-210 was found in the urine of Mr. Litvinenko," said Roger Cox, director of Britain's Health Protection Agency.

 

MOSCOW -- Russia has begun delivery of Tor-M1 air defense missile systems to Iran, a Defense Ministry official said Friday, confirming that Moscow would proceed with arms deals with Tehran in spite of Western criticism. 



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