• Iran,  Iran Nuclear Watch,  Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

    Iran Nuclear Watch: Ahmadinejad Leads Anti-USA Rally in Dubai

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    Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad waves as he addresses the Iranian residents of Dubai May 13, 2007. Ahmadinejad called for an end to the presence of U.S. troops in the Gulf during a visit to the U.S.-allied United Arab Emirates on Sunday, an Iranian news agency reported.

    Iranian President Leads Anti-U.S. Rally

    Iran’s president led a raucous anti-American rally on Sunday in this tightly controlled U.S. ally in the Persian Gulf, a day after a low- key visit by Vice President Dick Cheney aimed at countering Tehran’s influence in the region.

    Mahmoud Ahmadinejad told a cheering crowd that America was to blame for creating instability and robbing the region of its wealth.

    “We are telling you to leave the region. This is for your benefit and the benefit of your nation,” Ahmadinejad shouted to the crowd of thousands at a soccer stadium. “The nations of the region can no longer take you forcing yourself on them. The nations of the region know better how to create peace and security.”

    Ahmadinejad’s visit was the first by an Iranian head of state to this Sunni-led Arab country since its independence in 1971 and his rally was remarkable in a country where political parties are banned and power is held solely by tribal families.

    Cheney’s quiet visit Saturday to the Emirates, which hosts three American military bases, was part of a tour of the region to try to curb Iran’s growing influence. On Friday, from an aircraft carrier in the Persian Gulf, Cheney warned Iran that the U.S. and its allies will keep it from restricting sea traffic as well as from developing nuclear weapons.

    Iran’s Mullahs and Ahmadinejad want the Emirates, Oman and other Gulf States to drop their alliance with the United States. This is the start of expanding Iranian hegemony in the region to include Sunni Arab countries.

    And, why Iran is helping Iraqi insurgents fighting the United States in the Iraq War.

    Is the picture getting clearer for the rest of the world?

    irannukemay132007bweb

    An Iranian girl holds posters of Iran’s President, Mahmood Ahmadinejad, during his visit at the Iranian Club in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Sunday May 13, 2007. Ahmadinejad is in UAE for a two day visit.

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    Iran Nuclear Watch: Vice President Cheney Warns Iran

    Iran Nuclear Watch: Olmert – 10 Day Attack Will Set Iran’s Nuclear Program Back Years

    Iran Watch: US-Iranian Nuclear Worker Steals Nuclear Plant Software for Iran

    John McCain Watch: Bomb Bomb Bomb, Bomb Bomb Iran

    Iran Nuclear Watch: Iran Moves Ahead with Uranium Enrichment

    Iran Nuclear Watch: Iran Will Respond to United Nations Sanctions

    Iran Nuclear Watch: Iran To Build Two Additional Bushehr Nuclear Power Plants

    The Iran Nuclear Files

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    The Natanz uranium enrichment complex in Natanz is pictured in this January 2, 2006 satellite image.


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  • Giuliani Notes,  President 2008,  Rudy Giuliani

    Giuliani Notes: Trump Fundraiser Banks $1 Million for Rudy

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    Rudy with Donald Trump and Wife at the Trump International Golf Club, in West Palm Beach, May 13, 2007.

    GIULIANI HITS GREEN AT $1M TRUMP GOLF FEST

    Florida donors golfed up a storm of cash for Rudy Giuliani’s presidential ambitions yesterday – about $1 million, according to real-estate mogul Donald Trump, who hosted the “golf-raiser.”
    “It’s been a great day – every hole was packed with people,” said The Donald, who threw the shindig at the posh Trump International Golf Club, in West Palm Beach.

    A host of sports notables and Florida politicos attended, including tennis ace Jennifer Capriati, hockey veterans Guy Charron and Pierre Groulx, Palm Beach Mayor Jack McDonald, and Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum.

    Trump reportedly won the tournament. He said Giuliani “played very well.”

    About 500 people paid $1,000 each to attend a post-tournament cocktail party.

    And the latest Florida poll shows Rudy in the lead:

    Rudy – 29%

    McCain – 15%

    Romney – 14%

    Fred Thompson – 9%

    Florida stands to play a much greater role in the nominating process than it has in years past because state lawmakers moved the state’s primary election from March to January 29. That makes Florida the first megastate to weigh in on the nominations, followed by some 20 states expected to vote on Feb. 5.

    Part of Rudy’s strategy, on his way to a decisive win on Super Duper Tsunami Tuesday, February 5, 2008 is to win the early Florida primary. The race is not a lock but it will be difficult for any of the remaining candidates to compete with the number of former New York City retirees and voters who reside there and hold Rudy in such high regard.

    In this Florida poll, Rudy leads McCain by 13 points.

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    The Rudy Giuliani Files


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  • Giuliani Notes,  President 2008,  Rudy Giuliani

    Giuliani Notes: Today’s World Requires a Bigger Army

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    Chris Wallace (R), host of Fox News Sunday, interviews former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani and current Republican Presidential candidate at the Willow Brook Country Club in Tyler, Texas May 11, 2007.

    Today’s world requires a bigger Army by Rudy Giuliani

    The greatest challenge of our generation is to win the terrorists’ war on us. The next president needs to keep America on offense against the terrorists — that’s why I’ve called for the creation of 10 new combat brigades for the U.S. Army.

    We need to remember the lesson from previous generations: Peace is best achieved through strength.

    This isn’t the first time the United States has been faced with the need to expand our military during wartime. After winning World War I, the Army was cut by 90 percent. And when World War II came to American shores with the attack on Pearl Harbor, we were forced to play catch-up through the first years of the fight. After defeating the Axis powers, our Army of more than 7 million soldiers was reduced to fewer than 500,000 by 1948.

    When the Cold War heated up, Harry Truman — a Democratic president — and the Republican-led Congress needed to establish a large peacetime military for the first time in our nation’s history. Our responsibilities as a world power demanded it.

    But after winning the Cold War we again dramatically reduced our military. Washington called it a “peace dividend,” and it became the core of government policy in the 1990s.

    The peace dividend has proven to be a disastrous decision. We cut military and intelligence budgets as Islamic terrorists were focusing their attacks on America and Americans. Terrorists attacked us in 1993 at the World Trade Center and in 1996 at the Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia. In 1998, our embassies were bombed in Kenya and Tanzania, and in 2000, terrorists attacked the USS Cole, killing 17 servicemen. During this time, Osama Bin Laden even declared war on us.

    We didn’t recognize the magnitude of the threat. During that time an Army of 18 divisions — the force that won the first Gulf War — was cut to 10 divisions. Total military manpower was reduced from about 775,000 in the 1980s to 470,000 on the eve of Sept. 11. The cuts extended to the purchase of new equipment — that’s why many of today’s Marine Corps pilots are flying the same helicopters their fathers were flying in Vietnam.

    The good news is that conditions for our fighting men and women are improving. President Bush raised their pay and improved benefits. President Bush also increased the ranks of the Army and Marine Corps. More ships are being built for the Navy, and the Air Force is finally getting some long-awaited next-generation fighters.

    These increases are necessary and important, but we need to do more. Military families are feeling the stretch of extended involvement in Afghanistan and Iraq. We need a force that can both deter aggression and meet any challenge that might come our way — even two conflicts simultaneously. That’s why America must increase the size of our armed forces — in particular the Army, which has been cut the most and is under the greatest stress.

    Ten new combat brigades will offer reinforcements where they are needed most. They will deter others from calculating that a stretched-thin U.S. military presents an opportunity for aggression. And they will allow the United States greater flexibility to fight and win the wider war against the terrorists.

    I believe that Washington needs a healthy dose of fiscal discipline, but it must be done by establishing clear priorities. Our current military spending is low by historical standards — 4.1 percent of GDP, if you include supplemental spending. At the height of the Reagan build-up, it was at 6.2 percent of GDP.

    Besides, costs should not be considered in a vacuum: They must be weighed against the prospective benefits of securing a more peaceful world, the threats posed by the terrorists’ war against us, and the certain drawbacks of letting down our guard. And while recruitment during military conflicts can be a challenge, I believe that the 9/11 generation — with its heightened sense of public service — will rise to this challenge if we make it a national priority.

    America will win the war of the terrorists on us by staying on offense. We can’t listen to those who counsel retreat or advocate giving our enemy a timetable of our withdrawal. America doesn’t retreat: America advances. And to win, we must understand that realistic peace is best achieved by a stronger, larger and better-trained military.

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    The Rudy Giuliani Files


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