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Jimmy Carter Sold out Iran
Iranianvoice ^ | 07/28/03 | Chuck Morse

Posted on 07/27/2003 11:51:03 PM PDT by freedom44

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To: PhilDragoo
I guess that I have finally met the man who dislikes Carter even more than me!

It is amazing what he has gotten away with, from being elected, to what he did as president and the crimes against America after his term.

He has been the media's poster boy of liberal treason for decades.
61 posted on 07/28/2003 9:55:53 PM PDT by Grampa Dave (Evil Old White Devil Californian Grampa for big Al Sharpton, Nader & Peter Camejo!)
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To: Cindy
Jimmy Carter will NEVER realize in his lifetime what a crumby president he was

He was crapby too. I'll never forget the malaise speech. I thought the whole world was laughing at us. It was hard to picture Carter as a line naval officer.

62 posted on 07/28/2003 10:08:52 PM PDT by oyez (I gotta' tell ya'.)
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To: PhilDragoo
Stansfield Turner cut 800 case officers from CIA operations, and the agency has never recovered. Carter betrayed Taiwan and embraced Beijing.

I agree with all your statements, but these two stand out in my mind.

Nobel Piece Prize my hillary. He deserves to rot in place.

63 posted on 07/29/2003 10:05:25 AM PDT by BOBTHENAILER (One by one, in groups or whole armies.....we don't care how we getcha, but we will)
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To: BOBTHENAILER
Here is a synopsis of U.S.-PRC-Taiwan relations:

Taiwan Relations Act Imperatives

By Christopher DeMuth, Edwin Feulner
Posted: Tuesday, April 13, 1999

Washington Times
Publication Date: April 13, 1999

China's deployment of more than 100 additional ballistic missiles in its eastern provinces, facing Taiwan, is a sobering reminder that the 20-year-old Taiwan Relations Act (TRA) has a very serious purpose that is just as valid today as when the TRA was signed into law.

Of course, much has changed since 1979, when Congress passed the TRA following President Carter's recognition of the People's Republic of China (PRC) as the sole legal government of China. At that time, the Cold War was at its height and containing communism was a major objective of U.S. foreign policy. Today, the Cold War is over and our foreign policy seems to have little, if any, focus.

One thing that hasn't changed, however, is the United States' goals in its relations with Taiwan, as set forth in the Taiwan Relations Act. The Act declares that the United States will:

* Preserve and promote extensive, close and friendly commercial and cultural relations between the people of the United States and the people of Taiwan.

* View any effort to determine Taiwan's future by aggressive means, including boycotts or embargoes, as a threat to regional peace and security.

* Provide Taiwan with defensive arms, based on what the president and Congress judge to be Taiwan's needs.

* Maintain the ability to resist any military force or other forms of coercion that would jeopardize the security, or the social and economic systems, of the people of Taiwan.

* Preserve and protect the human rights of the people of Taiwan.

* Oppose the exclusion or expulsion of Taiwan from membership in any international organization.

It's important to remember why Congress drafted the TRA in the first place - because of understandable concerns that Taiwan would otherwise be abandoned. When President Carter announced that the United States would break diplomatic relations with Taipei and recognize Beijing as the lone seat of China's government effective Jan. 1, 1979, he barely acknowledged the need to maintain relations with Taiwan. The TRA was designed to fill that void. It was approved with broad bipartisan support; its strongest advocates included liberals like Sen. Ted Kennedy, Massachusetts Democrat, and conservatives like Sen. Jesse Helms, North Carolina Republican. The TRA was signed by President Carter on April 10, 1979.

Speaking as a presidential candidate in August 1980, Ronald Reagan affirmed the need for the TRA: "It was the timely action of the Congress, reflecting the strong support of the American people for Taiwan, that forced the changes in the inadequate bill which Mr. Carter proposed. Clearly, the Congress was unwilling to buy the Carter plan, which it believed would have jeopardized Taiwan's security."

In the ensuing 20 years, the TRA has weathered several diplomatic challenges. In 1982, for example, the Reagan administration agreed through a diplomatic communique to gradually reduce the quantity and quality of arms sold to Taiwan if Beijing used peaceful means to deal with the island republic. When asked if this move contradicted U.S. obligations under the TRA, President Reagan responded, "We are not going to abandon our longtime friends and allies on Taiwan. And I'm going to carry out the terms of the Taiwan Relations Act . . .. It is a moral obligation that we'll keep."

And he did. Prior to signing the 1982 communique, President Reagan offered what became known as the "Six Assurances," in which he promised the government of Taiwan that the United States remained committed to the TRA.

Unfortunately, recent actions by the Clinton administration have implicitly called these commitments into question. The most egregious example of this shift occurred last June, when President Clinton, while in Shanghai, endorsed a key element of Beijing's Taiwan policy - the "Three Noes": No U.S. support for "one China, one Taiwan"; no U.S. support for Taiwanese independence; and no U.S. support for Taiwanese membership in various international organizations. While this last point clearly violates the letter and intent of the TRA, the entire statement represents a sharp departure from longstanding U.S. policy toward Taiwan. As in 1979, it may be necessary for Congress to affirm America's commitment to Taiwan to ensure America stands by its pledges.

The reason for Taiwan's concern that U.S. policy is tilting too far toward Beijing is clear enough given the Clinton administration's policies. The president continues to pursue a "constructive strategic partnership" with the PRC. At the same time, he does nothing to recognize and reward Taiwan, which should be our real partner in the region. What has the administration gained by accommodating Beijing, other than the deployment of more PRC missiles to threaten Taiwan?

The TRA works. To abandon it -in principle, if not in fact - would be a grave mistake. By consistently supporting Taiwan over the last two decades, the United States has promoted a dramatic transformation in that country. Freedom has spread from the marketplace to the ballot box, making Taiwan one of Asia's best and proudest examples of a free-market democracy. The 21 million people on Taiwan buy nearly twice as many American goods as the 1.2 billion people on the mainland. Its economic success alone is a lesson for all of us. Its political transformation could not have happened without the security guarantees of the TRA.

As an important first step toward giving Taiwan its due recognition, the U.S. government should receive Taiwan's democratically elected leaders in the United States. If the Clinton administration can deal publicly with Fidel Castro and Yasser Arafat, how can it continue to turn its back on the democratically chosen officials of Taiwan?

It is now up to Congress to keep the simple goals of the Taiwan Relations Act alive. Consistent with the "moral obligation" described by President Reagan, the United States must do all it can to guarantee Taiwan's ability to live in peace and prosperity. In short, it's time to replace the "Three Noes" with a resounding "Yes."

~~~

Not only did traitorrapist42 utter the Three Noes in Tiananmen like a good little Beijing butt boy, he proceeded to bash Taiwan in international fora, receiving 300K at the Australian meeting of the annual Taiwan roast hosted by PRC.

As for Stansfield Turner, his Halloween prank is dealt with by Bill Gertz in Breakdown: How America's Intelligence Failures Led to September 11, Regnery, 2002, page 63:

Turner, who had no professioal experience with intelligence, decided to cut 820 positions within the CIA Operations Directorate. The cuts were announced in impersonal notices sent out on Halloween--October 31, 1977. "It has been decided that your services are no longer needed," the termination notes stated. For the Clandestine Service, the cuts were a blow from which it never recovered. Every director of Central Intelligence since then has tried in vain to "rebuild" the operational capability of the CIA.

I submit there is a persistent malignancy in the "naive bunglings" of comrade Carter.

64 posted on 07/29/2003 5:10:58 PM PDT by PhilDragoo (Hitlery: das Butch von Buchenvald)
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To: PhilDragoo
I submit there is a persistent malignancy in the "naive bunglings" of comrade Carter.

Carter has elicited so much ire in me I can't begin to express it. His Taiwan sellout and Turner's gutting of the operational capabilities of the CIA are nothing short of treason.

My entire family was Democrat until Carter. After Jimmuh's horrific admin, I was able to convince my Father, a lifelong Democrat, that it was time to look for someone who cared about America. Reagan was the first Republican he ever voted for and I think his 5 year WWII experience convinced him that Carter, et al, were a danger to the country.

65 posted on 07/29/2003 6:06:56 PM PDT by BOBTHENAILER (One by one, in groups or whole armies.....we don't care how we getcha, but we will)
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To: freedom44
bttt
66 posted on 08/16/2003 6:08:41 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
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To: freedom44
I hated carter and I still Hate carter. Whan he was pres and mondale was vice pres, and inflation was raging at close to 20% and the military was getting raises of 5%, I was an 18 year veteran in the US Navy with a wife and 6 children that I was unable to feed on my salary (E-8). Walter mondale when he heard of the unrest in the military, said "let them vote with their feet" I did and ended a career 8 months short of retirement.
I hate both of those ANTI-AMERICAN BASTARDS.
67 posted on 08/16/2003 6:56:15 PM PDT by conqueror
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To: freedom44
Remember the year - 1979
The year WWIII started.

Remember the man - Jimmy Carter.
The man who let it happen.
68 posted on 08/27/2003 8:08:09 AM PDT by Only1choice____Freedom (If everything you experienced, believed, lived was a lie, would you want to know the truth?)
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To: Only1choice____Freedom
well said ...exactly right.... we are in WWlll and we better win!
69 posted on 08/27/2003 8:12:05 AM PDT by rrrod
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