The only thing Egypt was missing was a UN hack. Now they are complete.
1 posted on
07/06/2013 12:02:35 PM PDT by
Pan_Yan
To: Pan_Yan
Obama backing ElBaradei?
Beirut According to well-connected Washington sources, including a Congressional staffer whose job description includes following political events in Egypt, once it became evident that Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi might well be ousted by Egypts Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF), it did not take Mohamed Mustafa ElBaradei, the Sharia legal scholar, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, and for 12 years (1997-2009) the Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) very long to contact the Washington, DC law firm of Patton Boggs. That was this past Tuesday.
2 posted on
07/06/2013 12:06:18 PM PDT by
cripplecreek
(REMEMBER THE RIVER RAISIN!)
To: Pan_Yan
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohamed_ElBaradei
International Crisis Group
ElBaradei served on the Board of Trustees of the International Crisis Group, a non-governmental organization that enjoys an annual budget of over $15 million and is bankrolled by the Carnegie, the Ford Foundation, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, as well as George Soros Open Society Institute. Soros himself serves as a member of the organizations Executive Committee.
4 posted on
07/06/2013 12:24:11 PM PDT by
opentalk
To: Pan_Yan
Egypt now has a very pro iranian, anti western figurehead. I remember everything about this demon from his UN days and he is bad ju ju.
LLS
6 posted on
07/06/2013 12:29:02 PM PDT by
LibLieSlayer
(FROM MY COLD, DEAD HANDS!)
To: Pan_Yan
Gee, a secular internationalist UN type. Who would have thought?
Sort of like appointing Zbigniew Brzezinski “interim president” of the US, if the election was overturned because by accident, a conservative Republican had been elected.
To: Pan_Yan; All
It all comes clear. The money and organizing muscle behind the ‘protests’ and the lack of outcry by the global elites. My joy at the fall of the MB is now tempered with dismay. I’m now expecting similar outcomes in Tunisia, Jordan etc. It also explains the ‘protests’ in Turkey.
I have always
harboured an exaggerated view of my self-
importance, he wrote. To put it bluntly, I
fancied myself as some kind of god or an
economic reformer like Keynes, or, even better,
like Einstein.’-The Alchemy of Finance (quoting Soros)
12 posted on
07/06/2013 1:04:19 PM PDT by
pluvmantelo
(After Bush & Obama, surely most people agree, the Excutive must be curtailed!)
To: Pan_Yan
This Story is being denied by the Egyptian Army.
13 posted on
07/06/2013 6:01:21 PM PDT by
swamprebel
(a Constitution once changed from Freedom, can never be restored.)
To: Pan_Yan
To: Pan_Yan
This is like that old bit Dennis Miller did about german reunification back in 89:
“I view this in much the same way I view a possible Dean Martin - Jerry Lewis reconciliation: I never really enjoyed their old sh!t,...... and I’m not sure I need to see any of their new sh!t either
RLTW
17 posted on
07/07/2013 11:53:10 AM PDT by
military cop
(I carry a .45....cause they don't make a .46....)
To: Pan_Yan
Left wing? Eh. Beats the terrorists though.
19 posted on
07/09/2013 4:34:33 AM PDT by
Impy
(Bring back the spoils system.)
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