Showing posts with label Iraq. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iraq. Show all posts

2008/10/19

Powell on Obama

Colin Powell delivers his endorsement of Barack Obama with such eloquence, it almost makes up for the fact that he helped to start the war in Iraq. Almost. BONUS: He defends Islam too!!!



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2008/04/15

Photo Post

Haven't done this in a while, so it's gonna be a biggie.

Photos from the past week approximately:


Iraq.

Berlusconi, you are a fat pig. Italy deserves nothing better than a fascist billionaire.



Morgan "had to copy-paste his last name" Tsvangirai, I hope you teach Robert Mugabe a big lesson in "What Happens to Corrupt Dictators."


Pakistan.

It's the woman in the middle who makes this pic. Something about airline prices.

Keep smilin' brother.

Phew! Beating the shit out of a car sure does work up an appetite. Good thing E. Honda taught me the hundred-hand slap.


Idols for the idolaters...



That's rice she's picking up. Look at the expression on the Iraqi soldier's face and tell me you don't ever wonder about going over there, if only to punch his face.

Oh you know, Mr. Clean works wonders. (Iraq, where else?)

"No such thing as evolution."


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2008/03/28

Five Awful Years


Does anyone look back at these five years and realize just the godawful disgusting truth of what's happened?

I honestly believe that with 170,000+ American troops and thousands more from the Coalition of the Willing still occupying the less-than-sovereign nation of Iraq, we as objective intelligent observers do not have the hindsight nor the chronlogical distance to comprehend the psychosis of the times.

A President and his administration walk free, furthering lies that have been disproven years prior, while the blood-stained truth is splattered across television screens, computer monitors and the sands and streets of Iraq.

Worse, we have a media that refuses to cover a war that rages on, thereby implicitly promoting the idea amongst average people that Iraq is either not a problem anymore, or that the war is over. Neither of which are true, of course.

Instead, we are force-fed 24 hour coverage of blowhard know-nothings ranting about superdelegates, poll numbers and speculation about a contest that won't matter to the thousands of Iraqis and hundreds of soldiers who will die between now and November 4 (Election Day, in case nobody told you), let alone January 21, 2009 (Inauguration Day).

So what is there to do except sit around and regret, write whiny blogposts from the comfort of one's home and go about our daily lives? For the dead, there is nothing we can do, except pray. For the living, I don't presume to tell you how to express yourselves in regards to the war. The options are out there, some simple and practical; some not quite so.

I choose the easy, practical method because I am no soldier, no mujahideen, no Iraqi and no rich, influential member of the world elite. Nor am I even an active member of any so-called peace group, not that the international peace movement has accomplished anything at all with regards to Iraq. In fact, this war and the five years it has dragged on is the biggest stain of failure for the peace movement. With all your protests, flyers, documentaries and books, all you have accomplished is for naught and the dead are still dying.

Besides myself and my generation, I choose to pick another target of my scorn and hate.

American people, I blame you. Sure, now you may be out waving Obama signs around or donating your meagre non-foreclosed savings to Hillary. And shit, you say you voted Gore and Kerry in the last two elections.

But whether you voted for W or not, he is your President.

The Congress that approved hundreds of billions of dollars of blood money is yours. The media that pulled the biggest lie in history is yours. The arms manufacturers, multinational corporations and impotent peace groups are all yours.

You say you have a democracy, whereby representatives are elected to represent the will of the people. The oft-repeated quote from President Lincoln's Gettysburg Address "A government of the People, by the People and for the People," is testament to this. Yet you refuse to recognize that this is a two-way street. You say that you are a democracy, and yet when your government invades another state, you throw your hands up and plead "It's not us, it's the government."

No...it's not "the government," ladies and gentlemen, as if it's some kind of foreign entity. It is *your* government.

Look, I understand that you're all drugged with sex and TV and celebrities and school, work and money. Traffic. Mortgages. Babysitters. Walking the dog. A lot of shit gets in the way of you being able to do something. But if you, American people, really wanted to kill this war, you would have done it by now. But you don't. And the more this thing drags on, the dirtier your faces are, the less respectable your voices seem and the bloodier your hands become.

Take responsibility. Replace your leaders. Prosecute the war profiteers and murderers. Fight the hawks and neocons. And for the love of all things holy and sacred: leave the Middle East and never come back.

I implore you, do something, or someone far more insane and angry than I will.

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2007/10/08

The Question of Iran


There's been a recent surge (no pun intended) of chatter in the mainstream media concerning a possible invasion/air-strike/surgical bombing of the Islamic Republic of Iran. The thought has been buzzing around in the background of policy circles in Washington (and Tel Aviv for that matter) for a while, certainly at least since W's State of the Union address on January 29, 2002 where he made his infamous "axis-of-evil" remark.

Of course, nowadays we can joke about that strange, aberrant era, the time of W and neo-cons, of the "war against terror," "orange alerts" and "dirty bombs." And though we still have with us some of the proponents of pre-emptive strikes and jingoism like Coulter, Rush and Mike Evans, other more temperate voices like Gore, Olbermann and Carter have risen to reclaim territory in the public sphere. The far-right is on the retreat.

Need more proof? Go and take a look at the candidates for the 2008 Presidential race. Not one of the at least 5 supposed frontrunners on the GOP side has broken through as a clear winner yet. All bets are off. Average Republicans are splintered in their choice to back a candidate and a considerable percentage have yet to declare their allegiance to anyone.

Left-wing or right, looking at the GOP and Democratic debates, it's two totally different worldviews. One side seems stuck on the September 12, 2001 mentality of "gotta find those terrrorists, smoke 'em out, get those varmints on the run, gotta defend America." The other is making once-taboo topics like universal health care, diplomacy and multilateralism, ending the occupation of Iraq and seriously fighting global warming the centre of political discussion. On the ground, in the small towns, in the living rooms of America, the people are not worrying about an invisible invasion of bearded Muslamo-Nazi goons. They care about their kids going to a good school, about being paid fairly for their hard work and about building a decent savings for retirement. Come to think of it, that doesn't sound too different from what most Iranians, Iraqis or anyone else wants.


So why so much Iran-this, Iran-that talk? Honestly, it's pretty simple. War talk hijacks the debate. It is a red herring, as they say in fiction. A random, false lead that interrupts the story and sends the pursuer of truth down the wrong path. It halts the relentless tide of progress and all of a sudden, we find ourselves back in 2002 talking about WMDs and the imminent threat of Iraq and Saddam.

It irks me greatly that so many of America's supposedly finest journalists and politicians continue to confuse the two distinct nations of Iraq and Iran. I shudder to think if we start mixing up the two Koreas, or Australia and Austria, or Israel and Palestine.

The W age is fast coming to a close. Some lefties say it's already done, that anything W says is irrelevant and a joke and that no-one trusts him anymore anyway. His approval ratings have been slumming around in the record-lows for more than a year. A popularly-supported military offensive by the U.S. or its surrogate instrument Israel is unthinkable now. The move has no support amongst regular people, moderate politicians nor, most importantly, with rank-and-file military commanders.

The worst part about this whole sideshow is that while we waste newspaper and website space on empty Iran talk, the blood of the children of Iraq still spills every day.

Iraq (with a *q*) is the real issue, and has been, for four, going on five, long years. May God have mercy on those suffering people.

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2007/07/13

Depressing Iraq News


Your periodic dosage of depressing news from the sovereign state of Iraq, land that God has abandoned.

Thieves Steal Nearly $300 Million U.S. From Iraqi Bank
http://www.reuters.com/article/oddlyEnoughNews/idUSL1274958920070712?feedType=RSS&rpc=22&sp=true

Former Iraqi MP Convicted For Embezzling Millions
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6292644.stm

Basra, Iraq's Second Largest City, On Verge of Collapse
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/IG10Ak01.html

U.S. Troops Have Shot and Killed 429 Iraqi Civilians Over Past Year
http://www.miamiherald.com/578/story/167922.html

19 People, including Woman and Children, Killed in U.S. Raid on Shia Neighborhood
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070713/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq;_ylt=Al2dVyuSKy9kc0Y6N0boPr7MWM0F

W Says No Change in Plans for Iraq
http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSYAT71336220070713

BONUS LINK

Radicals Disrupt Hindu Prayer in U.S. Senate
http://www.breitbart.tv/html/2957.html

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2007/05/09

No Decency


In the fifth year of Gulf War II, following massive upheavals and regime changes, insurgencies and surges, Saddams and Rumsfelds, Fallujahs and Hadithas, Coalition Authorities and democratically-elected parliaments, Mahdi Armies and Ba'ath loyalists, we still end up with a picture like this.

Oh for sure there are worse pictures out there for those inclined to such levels of abhorrence. And indeed, there are better. Who can forget the image of the anonymous hijab-wearing woman happily displaying her newly-stained purple fingers in a peace symbol signifying her having voted? Pvt. Jessica Lynch after being "saved" from certain death by heroic U.S. soldiers? Or the cheering men as Saddam snapped his neck in the fall from the gallows?

Much can be and indeed has been written about this defining event of the 2000s. The focus of this column is the fact that after so many years, hundreds of thousands of deaths and wounded and refugees, so much money (nearly $500,000,000,000 USD) and so much politics, n-o-t-h-i-n-g has changed.

You still can't walk around much of the country without getting shot, bombed, kidnapped, tortured, maimed, raped, disappeared or arrested. Your house and property are not safe. Your religious affiliation defines which neighborhoods you can and can't live in. You probably can't find a job, and if you do moderately well, you become a target. You've either got soldiers outside of your house or milita thugs. You can't let your children go out and do anything, less they end up like our subject up at the top of this page. If you want to send them to school, you've got to pack your own ammunition and do it yourself. That doesn't guarantee however that there won't be fighting outside of their school and that they will have to go home. Your power doesn't work because the circuit boxes have been shot up. Going to Friday prayers is riskier than cruising Queensbridge projects on a Saturday night. You and everyone you know knows people who have been killed and/or kidnapped by violence.

A couple key events that one can point to as being aggravators of the situation. One, and in my mind the primary event, was the re-election of George W. Bush in 2004. A blunder of democracy if there has been one. You can blame that on John F. Kerry's incompetence and the overall fallibility of the American public. If the Democrats won in 2004, or if a competent Democratic leader had emerged, the U.S. might have ended this black comedy already.
Another key event was the dissolving of the Ba'ath party in June 2003. What is happening now in terms of the civil war and insurgency can be traced back to this event. When thousands of otherwise skilled workers not only lost their jobs but indeed were barred from future work in government, many turned towards the insurgency and became important figures in planning the campaign of violence. A month before this, the *entire* Iraqi Army of 375,000 soldiers was laid-off, providing the manpower and expertise required for the guerilla war that has drowned the country.
Other less specific factors that have lead to the current situation include the long-delayed resignation of Donald Rumsfeld, the complete and total mismanagement of intelligence before the war, and post-war planning on the part of U.S. planners. Not to mention perhaps the main non-Bush administration culprits, the American media. It is they, as much as any Shia militant or U.S. Marine, who have blood on their hands for the way they hyped up and glorified this crime of crimes.
I demand justice for this little boy, for the thousands who have died and who indeed will die in the months and years to come. This must stop. Where is the political leadership? Where are the shaykhs who sit in their mosques and make du'a? Where is the media who should be blasting the horrors of this unholy mess in all of our faces till we grow nauseous and sick from it? Where are the Arab leaders making peace? Why, O Almighty, do we have this war in the year 2007/1428 and why can not anyone seem to stop it?

2007/04/28

Good ol' Pic Post

Haven't done this in a while... here be a smattering of images from across the globe taken over the past week:

Mourners hold vigil at Virginia Tech.

The view from an American outpost in Ramadi, Anbar Province, Iraq.

Congolese militia boy.

Canadian soldiers off duty in Kandahar, Afghanistan enjoy some icecaps and coffee.


An orphaned cougar in Vallejo, California.

Pakistani human rights advocate Asma Jehnagir submits a list of missing persons to a court in Islamabad.

Former Russian President Boris Yeltsin lies in state in Moscow.


Gunmen in Somalia prepare for battle.

Democratic candidates for President debate in South Carolina.


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2007/04/21

Invisible Blog

This post is for all those kind souls who care to visit this site without prodding or personal acquaintance with myself. It's early morning/late night April 21. I finished my last exam yesterday, so school's out for the summer. No, I'm not going to endure a month of summer classes in this town for half a credit. The current song on iTunes is a Spritualized track called "Don't Just Do Something" off their album Let it Come Down.

I contemplate ways of attracting more hits to this blog, without outright paid advertising. I would imagine this means active scouring of other blogs and message boards, trying to drum up support. Such a campaign would require active commitment. What if I turn it into a kind of sex blog with like detailed descriptions and erotica? Y'know, in addition to the geopolitical ego-driven Islamist analysis...

Plans for the summer include shooting and cutting this movie of mine called "Delivery" in MTL. We have some talented people and unique personalities working on it so it should come out alright. As well, finding a decent temporary place to reside would be beneficial. Finding a job is usually only a time-consuming activity, but certainly not an impossible one.

En plus, shall I tell the one how I feel about her? Oh the mid-90s Bollywood dilemma.

This roommate of mine is a cursed individual. I strongly feel he is cheating on his wife, who lives in Ghana. We share badlooks on any of the rare occasions we make eye contact. Talking or engaging in conversation is non-existant, except when there is the business of the bills or I am not using headphones or when my voice is "too high" while on the phone.

The tax return came, funding my immediate future.

There is no 24 hour delivery place in this town, an inconvenient problem.

There's a new Chuck Palahniuk book coming called "RANT" that sounds damn fine. I personally recommend "Diary," "Survivor," and "Choke," those being the ones I've read. No, "Fight Club" doesn't count, that one I'm sure you've already read, twice, and have it sitting on your bookshelf to impress people. I think I'll buy that this summer, along with "Deathly Hallows." Because I must find out what happens, who dies, who hooks up and what new spells and crazy duels that old bat pulls out.

I want to watch "Zodiac" again, because I can't stop thinking about nice-looking, well-paced, low-key, tense, oddly funny and sharp it all was.

I suppose I should get crackin' on that script of Detainee 063. It needs a new layer of subtext and a new subplot or diversion somewhere around the 60 page mark; not a twist, just something that makes it stick with you and so it doesn't become "that CIA torture movie." How about a fake allibi and intricate story that sends the interrogators off on some chase only to find out it's all some bullshit? Mmm...

Oh, considering we just passed 4/20, here's a link for those interested:

http://www.webehigh.com/

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2007/03/09

His Majesty King Abdullah II of Jordan Speaks Before Congress


The man's a coward, a criminal and a tyrant by nature, but his wife's hot and this speech is not bad either. It's about Palestine.

* * *

In the Name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful.

Madam Speaker,
Mr. Vice President,
Honorable Senators and Members of Congress,
My friends,

Thank you for such a warm welcome. It is an honor to stand, as my father did, before this historic institution. Allow me to thank you, on behalf of all Jordanians.

Jordan and the United States have had a long friendship. It is a special privilege to be here in the year that the American Congress welcomes its first woman Speaker, and its first Muslim-American member of Congress. These milestones send a message around the world about the America I know so well, a place where individuality is nurtured, a place where hard work is rewarded, a place where achievement is celebrated. The America I know so well believes that opportunity and justice belong to all.

In my days in Massachusetts, I also learned something of New England virtues. There wasn't actually a law against talking too much, but there was definitely an attitude that you didn't speak unless you could improve on silence.

Today, I must speak; I cannot be silent.

I must speak about a cause that is urgent for your people and for mine. I must speak about peace in the Middle East. I must speak about peace replacing the division, war, and conflict that have brought such disaster for the region and for the world.

This was the cause that brought my father King Hussein here in 1994. With Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin beside him, he spoke of a new vision for the Middle East. Their courageous work for peace received bipartisan support from your leaders. And there was tremendous hope for a new era. There was tremendous hope that people would be brought together. There was tremendous hope that a final and comprehensive settlement of all the issues would be achieved.

Thirteen years later, that work is still not completed. And until it is, we are all at risk. We are all at risk of being victims of further violence resulting from ideologies of terror and hatred. It is our greatest and most urgent duty to prevent such dangers to our region, to your country and to the world. The choice is ours: an open world full of promise, progress and justice for all; or a closed world of divided peoples, fear, and unfulfilled dreams. Nothing impacts this choice more than the future of peace in the Middle East.

I come to you today at a rare, and indeed historic, moment of opportunity, when there is a new international will to end the catastrophe. And I believe that America, with its enduring values, its moral responsibility, and yes, its unprecedented power, must play the central role.

Some may say, 'Peace is difficult, we can live with the status quo.' But, my friends, violent killings are taking place as part of this status quo. Palestinians and Israelis are not the only victims. We saw the violence ricochet into destruction in Lebanon last summer. And people around the world have been the victims of terrorists and extremists, who use the grievances of this conflict to legitimize and encourage acts of violence. Americans and Jordanians and others have suffered and survived terrorist attacks. In this room, there are representatives of American families and Jordanian families who have lost loved ones. Thousands of people have paid the highest price, the loss of their life. Thousands more continue to pay this terrible price, for their loved ones will never return. Are we going to let these thousands of lives be taken in vain? Has it become acceptable to lose that most basic of human rights? The right to live?

The status quo is also pulling the region and the world towards greater danger. As public confidence in the peace process has dropped, the cycle of crises is spinning faster, and with greater potential for destruction. Changing military doctrine and weaponry pose new dangers. Increasing numbers of external actors are intervening with their own strategic agendas, raising new dangers of proliferation and crisis. These are groups that seek even more division: faith against faith, nation against nation, community against community. Any further erosion in the situation would be serious for the future of moderation and coexistence, in the region and beyond. Have we all lost the will to live together in peace celebrating one another's strengths and differences?

Some may say, 'But there are other, urgent challenges.' How can there be anything more urgent than the restoration of a world where all people, not only some people, all people have the opportunity to live peacefully? This is not only a moral imperative, it is essential to the future of our world, because long-term, violent crisis is the enemy of all global prosperity and progress.

Certainly, our era faces critical issues. There is great public concern here, just as in our region, about the conflict in Iraq. The entire international community has vital decisions to make about the path forward, and how to ensure Iraq's security, unity, and future. But we cannot lose sight of a profound reality. The wellspring of regional division, the source of resentment and frustration far beyond, is the denial of justice and peace in Palestine.

There are those who say, 'It's not our business.' But this Congress knows: there are no bystanders in the 21st Century, there are no curious onlookers, there is no one who is not affected by the division and hatred that is present in our world.

Some will say: 'This is not the core issue in the Middle East.' I come here today as your friend to tell you that this is the core issue. And this core issue is not only producing severe consequences for our region, it is producing severe consequences for our world.

The security of all nations and the stability of our global economy are directly affected by the Middle East conflict. Across oceans, the conflict has estranged societies that should be friends. I meet Muslims thousands of miles away who have a deep, personal response to the suffering of the Palestinian people. They want to know how it is, that ordinary Palestinians are still without rights and without a country. They ask whether the West really means what it says about equality and respect and universal justice.

Yes, my friends, today I must speak. I cannot be silent.

Sixty years of Palestinian dispossession, forty years under occupation, a stop-and-go peace process, all this has left a bitter legacy of disappointment and despair, on all sides. It is time to create a new and different legacy, one that begins right now; one that can set a positive tone for the American and Middle East relationship; one that can restore hope to our region's people, to your people, and to the people of this precious world. Nothing can achieve that more effectively, nothing can assert America's moral vision more clearly, nothing can reach and teach the world's youth more directly, than your leadership in a peace process that delivers results not next year, not in five years, but this year.

How do we get there? Not by a solution imposed by one side. A lasting peace can only be built on understanding, agreement and compromise.

It begins with courage and vision. We, all of us, must take risks for peace. The Arab states recognized that reality in 2002, when we unanimously approved the Arab Peace Initiative. It puts forward a path for both sides, to achieve what people want and need: a collective peace treaty with Israel and normal relations with every Arab state, collective security guarantees for all the countries of the region, including Israel, an end to the conflict, a dream every Israeli citizen has longed for since the creation of Israel, and an agreed solution to the refugee problem, a withdrawal from Arab territories occupied since 1967, and a sovereign, viable, and independent Palestine.

The commitment we made in the Arab Peace Initiative is real. And our states are involved in ongoing efforts to advance a fair, just, and comprehensive peace. His Majesty King Abdullah Bin Abdul Aziz of Saudi Arabia initiated the 2002 proposal; today, he continues to rally international support. Momentum is also building among Muslim countries outside the Arab world. Ten days ago, in Islamabad, the foreign ministers of key Muslim states met. They came together to assure Palestinians and Israelis that they are not alone, that we back their effort to make and build peace.

The goal must be a peace in which all sides gain. It must be anchored in security and opportunity for all.

It must be a peace that will free young Palestinians to focus on a future of progress and prosperity.

It must be a peace that makes Israel a part of the neighborhood, a neighborhood that extends from the shores of the Atlantic Ocean, across the breadth of the southern Mediterranean, to the coast of the Indian Ocean.

It must be a peace that enables the entire region to look forward with excitement and hope, putting its resources into productive growth, partnering across borders to advance development, finding opportunities, and solving common challenges.

This goal is visionary, but my friends, it is attainable. History shows that longtime adversaries can define new relationships of peace and cooperation. The groundwork for a comprehensive, final settlement is already in place. At Taba, as in the Geneva Accords, the parties have outlined the parameters of the solution.

But we need all hands on deck. The international community, especially the United States, must be engaged in moving the process forward to achieve real results. Above all, we must make our process serve our purpose. We must achieve an agreed solution to the conflict.

Madam Speaker,

Mr. Vice President,

Honorable Members,

Your responsibility today is paramount. Your potential to help Palestinians and Israelis find peace is unrivalled. This is because the people of the region still regard the United States as the key to peace, the one country most capable of bringing the two sides closer together, holding them accountable, and making a just settlement reality.

Time after time, there has been progress towards peace when Americans have actively engaged. Camp David, Madrid, Wye River: nearly every breakthrough was accomplished when America was determined to help the parties succeed.

On behalf of all those who seek and strive for peace in my part of the world, I ask you now to exert that leadership once again. We ask you to join with us in an historic effort of courage and vision. We ask you to hear our call, to honor the spirit of King Hussein and Yitzhak Rabin, and help fulfill the aspirations of Palestinians and Israelis to live in peace today.

Let me reaffirm that Jordan is committed to playing a positive role in the peace process. It is part of our larger commitment to global co-existence and progress. Ours is an Islamic country with a proud record of diversity, moderation, and shared respect.

Allow me to say, we thank the Congress and the Administration for supporting Jordan's progress and development. I deeply value the partnership between our peoples, and the contributions of so many Americans to the future of our country.

My friends,

"A decent respect for the rights and dignity of all nations, large and small." That's how President Roosevelt – the great F.D.R. – described the basis of American foreign policy. He pledged American support for the four freedoms, freedom from fear, freedom from want, freedom of speech, and freedom of religion, everywhere in the world.

The Four Freedoms speech was given right here, before Congress. And that's entirely fitting. Because it is here in the People's House, that the voices and values of America have made hope real for so many people.

Today, the people of the Middle East are searching for these four freedoms. Today, the people of the Middle East are searching for new hope, hope for a future of prosperity and peace. We have seen the danger and destruction of violence, hatred, and injustice. But we have also seen what people can achieve when they are empowered, when they break down walls, when they commit to the future. And we know that Middle East peace can be a global beginning, creating new possibilities for our region and the entire world.

We look to you to play an historic role. Eleven American presidents and thirty American congresses have already faced this ongoing crisis. For not the future generation, but the generation alive today, let us say together: No more! Let us say together: Let's solve this! Let us say together: Yes, we will achieve this!

No Palestinian father should be helpless to feed his family and build a future for his sons and daughters. No Israeli mother should fear when her child boards a bus. Not one more generation should grow up thinking that violence and conflict are the norm.

As Roosevelt also said, "the justice of morality must and will win in the end." But he knew that it was up to responsible nations to stand up for justice when injustice threatens.

This is our challenge as well. And we must not leave it to another generation to meet this challenge.

Thirteen years ago, my father was here to talk about his hopes for peace. Today, we are talking about a promise that is within our reach.

We can wait no longer and that is why I am here before you. We must work together to restore Palestine, a nation in despair and without hope. We must work together to restore peace, hope and opportunity to the Palestinian people. And in so doing, we will begin a process of building peace, not only throughout the region, but throughout the world. How much more bloodshed and how many more lives will it cost for this grave situation to be resolved?

I say: No more bloodshed and no more lives pointlessly taken!

The young boy, traveling to school with his brother in Palestine, let him have a life of peace.

The mother, watching with fear as her children board a bus in Israel, let her have a life of peace.

The father in Lebanon, working hard to provide an education for his children, let him have a life of peace.

The little girl, born in Iraq, with her wide eyes full of wonder, let her have a life of peace.

The family, together eating their evening meal, in Asia, Africa, North America, South America, Europe, Australia, and the Middle East, let them all have a life of peace.

Today my friends, we must speak; we cannot be silent.

The next time a Jordanian, a Palestinian, or an Israeli comes before you, let it be to say: Thank you for helping peace become a reality.

Thank you very much.