|
No war in Iran?
|
|
Topic Started: Jan 31 2007, 12:05 PM (72 Views)
|
|
TheObserver
|
Jan 31 2007, 12:05 PM
Post #1
|
|
- Posts:
- 12,855
- Group:
- Members
- Member
- #51
- Joined:
- February 7, 2006
- All Time Favorite Wrestler(s):
- Great Muta HBK Steamboat Vader
- Favorite Active Wrestler(s):
- Angle Daniels Punk Joe Beer Money Doug Williams
- STATUS:
- AJ Styles to Madison: SHUT UP HOOKER!
|
- Quote:
-
WASHINGTON - Republican and Democratic senators warned Tuesday against a drift toward war with an emboldened Iran and suggested the Bush administration was missing a chance to engage its longtime adversary in potentially helpful talks over next-door Iraq.
"What I think many of us are concerned about is that we stumble into active hostilities with Iran without having aggressively pursued diplomatic approaches, without the American people understanding exactly what's taking place," Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., told John Negroponte, who is in line to become the nation's No. 2 diplomat as Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's deputy.
Obama, a candidate for president in 2008, warned during the Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing that senators of both parties will demand "clarity and transparency in terms of U.S. policy so that we don't repeat some of the mistakes that have been made in the past," a reference to the faulty intelligence underlying the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
Sen. Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., a possible presidential candidate, asked Negroponte if he thinks the United States is edging toward a military confrontation with Tehran. In response, Negroponte repeated President Bush's oft-stated preference for diplomacy, although he later added, "We don't rule out other possibilities."
Separately, the Navy admiral poised to lead American forces in the Middle East said Iran wants to limit America's influence in the region.
"They have not been helpful in Iraq," Adm. William Fallon told the Senate Armed Services Committee. "It seems to me that in the region, as they grow their military capabilities, we're going to have to pay close attention to what they do and what they may bring to the table."
The Bush administration has increased rhetorical, diplomatic, military and economic pressure on Iran over the past few months, in response to Iran's alleged deadly help for extremists fighting U.S. troops in Iraq and the long-running dispute over Iran's nuclear program.
Bush said Tuesday the United States "will deal with it" if Iran escalates military action inside Iraq and endangers American forces. But, in an interview with ABC News, Bush emphasized this talk signals no intention of invading Iran itself.
A day earlier, the president acknowledged skepticism concerning U.S. intelligence about Iran, because Washington was wrong in accusing Iraq of harboring weapons of mass destruction before the U.S.-led invasion in 2003. "I'm like a lot of Americans that say, 'Well, if it wasn't right in Iraq, how do you know it's right in Iran,'" the president said.
Washington accuses Iran of arming and training Shiite Muslim extremists in Iraq. U.S. troops have responded by arresting Iranian diplomats in Iraq, and the White House has said Bush has authorized U.S. troops to kill or capture Iranians inside Iraq.
The United States also accuses Iran of secretly developing atomic weapons _ an allegation Tehran denies. Iran's refusal to suspend uranium enrichment lead the U.N. Security Council to impose limited economic sanctions.
Senators including Hagel, George Voinovich, R-Ohio, and Joseph R. Biden Jr., D-Del., sounded frustrated with the administration's decision not to engage Iran and fellow outcast Syria in efforts to reduce sectarian violence in Iraq.
Negroponte, a career diplomat who is leaving a higher-ranked job as the nation's top intelligence official, gave only a mild endorsement of the administration's diplomatic hands-off policy toward Damascus and Tehran.
Negroponte would lead the department's Iraq policy if confirmed, as expected. He said Syria is letting 40 to 75 foreign fighters cross its border into Iraq each month and repeated the charge that Iran is providing lethal help to insurgents fighting U.S. forces in Iraq. Iran and Syria are not helping promote stability and peace in Iraq and understand what the United States and other nation expect of them.
"I would never want to say never with respect to initiating a high-level dialogue with either of these two countries, but that's the position, as I understand it, at this time," Negroponte said.
The Senate Foreign Relations Committee is expected to approve Negroponte quickly for a job vacant since July.
I heard something about them might trying to bring the draft back.
|
|
|
| |
|
Nubochanozep
|
Jan 31 2007, 12:15 PM
Post #2
|
|
- Posts:
- 17,631
- Group:
- Members
- Member
- #27
- Joined:
- January 17, 2006
- All Time Favorite Wrestler(s):
- Shawn Michaels, Mick Foley
- Favorite Active Wrestler(s):
- Brock Lesnar
|
What's with that administration and war?
|
|
|
| |
|
TheObserver
|
Jan 31 2007, 12:18 PM
Post #3
|
|
- Posts:
- 12,855
- Group:
- Members
- Member
- #51
- Joined:
- February 7, 2006
- All Time Favorite Wrestler(s):
- Great Muta HBK Steamboat Vader
- Favorite Active Wrestler(s):
- Angle Daniels Punk Joe Beer Money Doug Williams
- STATUS:
- AJ Styles to Madison: SHUT UP HOOKER!
|
I wish I really knew what was going on in their heads down there, but Bush is just an idiot.
We keep sending more troops over and more just keep dying, it sucks. On top of that I have some friends over there.
|
|
|
| |
|
Nubochanozep
|
Jan 31 2007, 01:13 PM
Post #4
|
|
- Posts:
- 17,631
- Group:
- Members
- Member
- #27
- Joined:
- January 17, 2006
- All Time Favorite Wrestler(s):
- Shawn Michaels, Mick Foley
- Favorite Active Wrestler(s):
- Brock Lesnar
|
Yeah, that, and the fact that for every armed, armour laden soldier in Iraq/Iran are 20 unarmed civilians blown up by a bomb from a plane, or shot and raped by a bunch of lunatic wackos from the US Marines. Then again, there's two schools of thought about that, both of which place most of the blame squarely on the eggheads who start wars in the first place. Read: Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and the bloodlust gang.
|
|
|
| |
|
SRP76
|
Feb 1 2007, 05:58 AM
Post #5
|
|
The Man. Any Questions?
- Posts:
- 8,013
- Group:
- Members
- Member
- #170
- Joined:
- June 8, 2006
- Current Theme:
- Classic Acid
- All Time Favorite Wrestler(s):
- The Undertaker
- Favorite Active Wrestler(s):
- Velvet Sky
|
Didn't you two read the part that said the U.S. was not going to invade Iran?
I wonder what you'll be saying when Iran says, "hey, look at this bomb we built while you dumbasses believed that we were just making power plants!".
Probably the same thing you (would have) said when Germany invaded Poland.
|
|
|
| |
| 1 user reading this topic (1 Guest and 0 Anonymous)
|