Posted on 01/20/2002 12:24:02 PM PST by knighthawk
BAGHDAD: Arab League Secretary-General Amr Mussa said in Baghdad yesterday that all Arab countries would oppose an eventual US military strike on Iraq.
There is an Arab consensus on opposing any strike against any Arab country, Mussa told reporters after arriving here on the first official visit to Iraq by a head of the pan-Arab body since 1990.
The Arab League, the Arab Ministerial Council and the Arab summit, all were very clear in (upholding) the security, safety and territorial integrity of all Arab countries, including Iraq, he said at the airport when asked about the possibility of a US military offensive against Iraq.
Mussa said he would discuss various aspects of the situation in Iraq with officials here, including President Saddam Hussein, during his 24-hour visit.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Naji Sabri was on hand at the airport to greet Mussa, who arrived to sanctions-hit Iraq on a special flight authorised by the UN.
Iraq opens its arms to its Arab brethren, chief among them the man who leads the mechanism of joint Arab action, Sabri said in a reference to the Arab League chief.
Mussas visit comes ahead of an Arab summit due March in Beirut. I am visiting Iraq at a critical time for the Arab world and the Middle East region, Mussa said.
The talks I will hold here are important in the context of reviving Arab solidarity, he added.
So it was ok for him to invade Kuwait killing many in the process??? All over oil??? Your double standards are beginning to show.....
I think laws which prohibit the possession of a firearm by a citizen are bad. Unconstitutional in my opinion, for what that's worth.
At the same time, I think laws which prohibit the ownership or possession of a firearm by a violent criminal, particularly one who has used a firearm in the commission of a crime, are good. I feel the criminal has lost his rights as a citizen.
I do not believe citizens should be stripped of their right to bear arms merely on the fact they have been served with a restraining order, particularly if they have no history of violence.
Good. For us, or against us . . .
Well, I never said anything that you did, but I wish I had.
Got to disagree with you here.....the people of America are so removed from their goverment as to almost be NON-participants.
The very thing our goverment stands for.....freedom....is the thing that has allowed it to be twisted and bent out of shape by those less scrupulous, with goals that are not in tune with the average citizen. It is the best thing going but it is broken IMHO.
You mean you think they are covering their arses? Is that in the Koran? heh heh
Either a person is a criminal, and behind bars, or a person is a citizen, having paid his/her debt to society (if previously a criminal), free to enjoy all rights granted by the Constitution. I see no reason why a citizen should not be able to defend his/her self, family, or property. The deeper issue here is the prison system; too many crooks get released before they've paid their dues and been truly reformed. By your logic, once a criminal, always a criminal. Further, by your logic, ex-convicts should simply reach for the phone when their family is threatened.
California profile,but Labour Party champion?Last time I checked,Americans spelled it with a z.
Nope, if the criminal uses a gun to commit a crime, too bad. He ought not be allowed to have easy access to repeat his error. His "family" ought to move on from the loser.
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