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Last weekend, while other Americans were watching football and eating leftover turkey, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld ended the Iraqi insurgency. It was easy, really: He declared that the insurgents would, henceforth, no longer be called insurgents. "Over the weekend, I thought to myself, 'You know, that gives them a greater legitimacy than they seem to merit,' " Rumsfeld, at a Pentagon brie
Bush Presents Plan to Win Iraq War Pelosi Says More Democrats Backing Call to Bring U.S. Troops Home Now By Michael A. Fletcher Washington Post Staff Writer Thursday, December 1, 2005 President Bush laid out his administration's vision yesterday for winning the war in Iraq, acknowledging that the U.S. military has suffered "setbacks" but asserting that it is making unmistakable progress in trainin
U.S. Debate on Pullout Resonates As Troops Engage Sunnis in Talks By Ellen Knickmeyer, Jonathan Finer and Omar Fekeiki Washington Post Foreign Service Wednesday, November 30, 2005 RAMADI, Iraq, Nov. 29 -- Outside Ramadi's city auditorium, the mortar rounds fell, two, then three, each rattling the concrete walls slightly. Inside, locked in an intense debate about what it would take for American tro
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Col Lawrence Wilkerson, the chief of staff to former US Secretary of State Colin Powell, was interviewed by Carolyn Quinn for the BBC's R4 Today programme. Here is a transcript of the interview. I asked Colonel Wilkerson why he felt the post-war planning had been so inadequate. The post-invasion planning for Iraq was handled, in my opinion, in this alternative decision-making process which, in thi
Zimbabwe Turnout Hits a Record Low Mugabe Backers to Dominate Senate By Craig Timberg Washington Post Foreign Service Tuesday, November 29, 2005 JOHANNESBURG, Nov. 28 -- Only one in five eligible voters cast a ballot in Saturday's elections in Zimbabwe, a record low turnout that opposition leaders and political analysts called a sign that the nation has lost faith in the ballot box as a means to b
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