Be INFORMED

Sunday, February 11, 2007

U.S./Iraqi forces Found 14 Weapon Stashes and Arrested 140 In A Week

Al-Jazeera English

US and Iraqi forces have arrested 140 people and uncovered 14 stashes of weapons in a week as they ramp up a security operation in Baghdad, the US military has said.

The combined forces "uncovered 14 weapons caches and detained 140 insurgent suspects in and around the Iraqi capital during the week of February 3-9," a statement on Sunday said.

The US military said 34 operations had been carried out during the week in question, 20 of them joint actions and 14 led by US troops.

   This must have been when U.S. intelligence found the bomb parts with the Iranian serial numbers on them. I personally think that Cheney has been stamping them out while hiding down in his White House bunker.

 

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John Edwards Will At Least Admit That " I Was Wrong"

    Something that Hillary Clinton has refused to do so far that John Edwards did do back in 2005, ""I was wrong."  Edwards wrote those words three years after he had approved the authorization of Bush to take us into Iraq. Mrs. Clinton has not done so to this day and until she does, she will never get the support that she desires in order to make it into the presidential race.

   John Edwards

Feb. 19, 2007 issue - In the fall of 2005, John Edwards sat down with a pad and pen and scrawled out three simple words: "I was wrong." It was nearly three years after he'd joined a Senate majority in voting to authorize war in Iraq. After an unsuccessful run as John Kerry's vice presidential candidate in the 2004 election, Edwards had returned home to North Carolina and watched as the war descended into chaos. Increasingly filled with regret, he concluded that the three-word confession would be the right way to start a Washington Post op-ed admitting his vote was a mistake.

But when a draft came back from his aides in Washington, Edwards's admission was gone. Determined, the senator reinserted the sentence. Again a draft came back from Washington; again the sentence had been taken out. "We went back and forth, back and forth," Edwards tells NEWSWEEK. "They didn't want me to say it. They were saying I should stress that I'd been misled." The opening sentence remained. "That was the single most important thing for me to say," Edwards recalls. "I had to show how I really feel."

 

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