9004. jexster - 6/9/2008 6:06:44 PM No doubt receiving instructions for Iran's sockpuppets on the Potomac!
9005. jexster - 6/9/2008 6:16:15 PM This should come as no surprise
Surrender Monkeys Prepare for the Coming of the Caliphate:
A poll in late May of five major countries -- Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Russia -- showed Sen. Obama getting 52% support, compared with 15% for Sen. McCain. In France, 65% favor Sen. Obama, compared with 8% for Sen. McCain, according to the poll for the United Kingdom's Daily Telegraph newspaper. Another poll published online Saturday in Belgium's Le Soir newspaper showed Belgians prefer Sen. Obama over Sen. McCain 74% to 12%. 9006. jexster - 6/10/2008 12:51:14 AM Ayatollah's Sockpuppet Surrenders
Damn. Kahmeni only delivered the orders yesterday.
Fast work
The Bush administration is conceding for the first time that the United States may not finish a complex security agreement with Iraq before President Bush leaves office.
Faced with stiff Iraqi opposition, it is "very possible" the U.S. may have to extend an existing U.N. mandate, said a senior administration official close to the talks. That would mean major decisions about how U.S. forces operate in Iraq could be left to the next president, including how much authority the U.S. must give Iraqis over military operations and how quickly the handover takes place.
The official said the goal is still to have an agreement by year's end. And the U.S. ambassador to Iraq, Ryan Crocker, said he feels no pressure from the U.S. political calendar, and that Dec. 31 is "a clear deadline." 9007. jexster - 6/10/2008 2:20:03 AM Darling of the Cheese Eaters: Obama Holds Mirror Up to the French
(Financial Times) 9008. jexster - 6/11/2008 12:14:13 AM "We can't win, can't lose and can't leave," said a former CIA official with experience in the region, who requested anonymity. "We're stuck. It will be too unthinkably humiliating if we leave."
Iraq?
Guess again
Try Afghanistan 9009. jexster - 6/11/2008 4:45:06 PM Bush Bombs Pakistan: 11 Pakistani Soldiers Killed 9010. jexster - 6/11/2008 5:26:03 PM DEATH TO PAKISTAN!
Death to Macacans 9011. jexster - 6/11/2008 7:53:33 PM Pakistan: George McBush is a cowardly low life pile of elephant dung 9012. wonkers2 - 6/11/2008 8:49:02 PM Madeline Albright in a NYT op-ed today says the concept of national sovereignty is making a comeback! 9013. jexster - 6/12/2008 12:41:02 AM Xena Warrior Princess? Hillary's chief FP adviser? That one?
Guess she's polishin the ole resume
9014. jexster - 6/12/2008 12:41:47 AM I just want to kill macaca people
They called George Bush a coward today 9015. jexster - 6/12/2008 9:58:17 PM Same old surrender monkeys...
French Fried Appeasement - Sarko Invites Assad to Bastille Day 9016. jexster - 6/13/2008 2:05:27 AM President of the Planet
Foreign nations overwhelmingly prefer Obama, survey finds 9017. jexster - 6/14/2008 8:21:42 PM And McBush says they hate our values!
A regular fucking Hollywood Blvd, cept the heroin is cheaper
and the ho's too!
Sex trade thrives in Afghanistan
The girl was 11 when she was molested by a man with no legs.
The man paid her $5. And that was how she started selling sex.
Afghanistan is one of the world's most conservative countries, yet its sex trade appears to be thriving. Sex is sold most obviously at brothels full of women from China who serve both Afghans and foreigners. Far more controversial are Afghan prostitutes, who stay underground in a society that pretends they don't exist.
Customs meant to keep women "pure" have not stopped prostitution. Girls are expected to remain virgins until their wedding nights, so some prostitutes have only anal sex. 9018. jexster - 6/15/2008 6:01:02 PM McBushWar Pakistan....
A Sober Assessment of Afghanistan
Outgoing U.S. Commander Cites 50% Spike in Attacks in East 9019. jexster - 6/15/2008 7:58:02 PM La révolution Obama
D'ores et déjà, Barack Obama a gagné son pari. En quelques mois, il a révolutionné la politique américaine. Porteur d'un message d'espoir, il s'est placé au dessus des lignes partisanes et a réussi à entrainer derrière lui des centaines de milliers d'Américains. 9020. jexster - 6/16/2008 6:57:49 PM 6 wars, 11 defeats...
US is uneasy as Pakistan bargains with militants
American and NATO officials fear that truce negotiations in tribal areas will result in more violence in Afghanistan.
The Idiot of the US said the other day that they should have one of them jirgas
There having beaucoup jirgas 9021. jexster - 6/16/2008 6:59:02 PM They're having jirgas too!
What a mess 9022. jexster - 6/17/2008 9:06:39 PM How many more humiliating defeats will American tolerate?
Old-Line Taliban Commander Is Face of Rising Afghan Threat
9023. jexster - 6/18/2008 4:36:57 PM Sixth War
11th Defeat
One PO'ed pak of Macacas
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The Pakistani military is so angry over the American airstrikes here last week that it is threatening to postpone or cancel an American program to train a paramilitary force in counterinsurgency for combating Islamist militants, two Pakistani government officials said.
President Pervez Musharraf, left, last year with his successor as army chief, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani. The alliance between the United States and Pakistan has depended on the relationship between President Bush and Mr. Musharraf, whose power is waning. General Kayani has refused every suggestion of letting American forces operate in the tribal areas.
Some Pakistani officials are convinced that the Americans deliberately fired on their military, killing 11 men from the very paramilitary force the Americans want to train, an accusation the Americans deny.
The uncertainty over the program reflects how deeply scarred the United States’ alliance with Pakistan, already strained, has been since the June 10 airstrikes, Pakistani officials and Western diplomats said.
The $400 million training program is intended to combat militancy by fielding a paramilitary force, called the Frontier Corps, from among the tribes that live in the border areas. It was a compromise between American and Pakistani officials looking for the least intrusive way to fortify security in an area where the Pakistani government has rejected the idea of American soldiers and where even the regular Pakistani Army is often not welcome.
Ending or delaying the program, which is already under way, would deny the United States what little leverage it has in the tribal areas to combat a rising number of cross-border attacks from Pakistan into Afghanistan against American and NATO forces this year.
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