Wednesday, May 06, 2009

IAEA: Weapons-grade uranium found in Egypt

Obama to be prayer day no-show
President to sign proclamation, observe privately.

Obama prepares to throw Israel under the bus
It is not the aggressor here but the victim of aggression that America is now choosing to beat up. In any sane world, one might think the Americans would be piling the pressure on the Palestinians to renounce their genocidal ambitions against Israel, to stop teaching and training their children to hate and kill Jews, to adhere to the primary requirement in the Road Map that they must dismantle their infrastructure of violence as the first step in the peace process; one might think, indeed, that they would view Mahmoud Abbas’s repeated statements that the Palestinians will never accept Israel as a Jewish state to be the main impediment to peace.






Indian business students snap up copies of Mein Kampf
Sales of Mein Kampf, Adolf Hitler's autobiography and apologia for his anti-semitism, are soaring in India where business students regard the dictator as a management guru.

Ahmadinejad slams 'the Zionists'

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad slammed Zionism as "occupation" and "aggression" Tuesday as he delivered his latest diatribe against the Jewish state on a visit to key Middle East ally Syria.

"The Zionist occupiers are destructive microbes, because Zionism itself is occupation, aggression, the use of assassination and annihilation," he told a joint news conference with President Bashar al-Assad in the Syrian capital.

US-Israel rift on nuclear Iran stays unbridged by Obama-Peres talks
Peres went through the motions of arguing that Europe's appeasement of Hitler in the 1930s resulted in a war which left 50 million dead including six million Jews, but Obama remained unmoved. Later, the Israeli president said he was reassured that the United States under Obama would not allow Iran to possess nuclear weapons. "As long as the goal is clear, why not try all means? If you can achieve it by engagement, God bless you."

The US president promised nothing – neither a time limit for his diplomatic experiment with Tehran nor how America would respond to its failure. Neither did he address the fundamental concern shared by Israel and other pro-Western nations like Egypt and Saudi Arabia that the dialogue in itself granted Iran the gift of time to attain nuclearization.



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