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February 2003, Week 3

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Subject:
From:
Mark Boyd <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Mark Boyd <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 20 Feb 2003 14:01:39 -0800
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Just how the heck is attacking Iraq a response to 9/11?  Granted, I don't
watch much television, so there could be all kinds of ties to Iraq, but I
thought the trail of the 9/11 people lead back to the Saudis.  Geedub's
hard-on for Iraq is for their oil, plain and simple.

-----Original Message-----
From: John Lee [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Thursday, February 20, 2003 1:06 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [HP3000-L] OT: We're just haggling over the price


So all of you, the opinions of whom I respect, I repeat an earlier
question:  if you were President, what would your response to Sept. 11 have
been?  We all sit here criticizing this party or that, and it's really easy
to take shots at W, but come clean here - if you're him, what would you have
done?  Or doesn't anybody want to be on the hotseat?

John Lee



At 02:45 PM 2/20/03 EST, Wirt Atmar wrote:
>Yosef writes:
>
>> Turkey, one of the members of "The Coalition of the Willing," has
refused an
>>  offer of 26 billion dollars to let the US use their country to
>> launch an  attack on Iraq.
>
>Turkey hasn't yet completely refused, they just want more money. Their
>last bid was for 32 billion dollars. Colin Powell reportedly told
>Turkey just yesterday that 26 billion was as much as the US was
>prepared to pay them in order for them to be a "willing partner."
>
>In the 1991 Gulf War, the level of world-wide assistance was such that
>the US made a profit. The single greatest expense for the war was the
>cost of fuel, which the Saudis provided for free in 1991. This time,
>they're charging slightly higher than market rates -- and asking that
>after the coming war, all US forces leave the country. And no country
>this time is providing any significant support, other than Kuwait and
>Qatar, in contrast to the significant levels of aid that most of Europe
>and Japan provided earlier.
>
>The "Coalition of the Willing" in 2003 is made up primarily of such
>bulwarks of freedom and democracy as Romania and Bulgaria and some of
>the former republics of Yugoslavia. On the other hand, "willing
>partners" Estonia, Latavia and Lithuiania are providing such valuable
>assistance as the use of their airspace, should the battle move
>northward, toward the Baltic.
>
>To the best of my knowledge, the payments to these countries have not
>yet been disclosed, but I'm sure that they will be soon. In the
>meantime, it appears that entire cost for this elective war will be
>picked up by the American taxpayer. Record deficits, a faltering
>economy and world-wide popular opposition are not the stuff that deters
>a "real leader."
>
>Wirt Atmar
>
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