http://www.msnbc.com/news/885222.asp?0cv=KA01&cp1=1

[Partial Article]

The United States will soon be at war with Iraq. It would seem, on the face
of it, a justifiable use of military force. Saddam Hussein runs one of the
most tyrannical regimes in modern history.

   FOR MORE THAN 25 years he has sought to acquire chemical, biological and
nuclear weapons, and has, in several documented cases, succeeded. He gassed
60,000 of his own people in 1986 in Halabja. He has launched two
catastrophic wars, sacrificing nearly a million Iraqis and killing or
wounding more than a million Iranians. He has flouted 16 United Nations
resolutions over 12 years that have warned him to disarm or else, including
one, four months ago, giving him a "final opportunity" to do so "fully and
immediately" or face "serious consequences." But in its campaign against
Iraq, America is virtually alone. Never will it have waged a war in such
isolation. Never have so many of its allies been so firmly opposed to its
policies. Never has it provoked so much public opposition, resentment and
mistrust. And all this before the first shot has been fired.

[Snip biggest part of article (50K+) and go to end]

 There are many specific ways for the United States to rebuild its relations
with the world. It can match its military buildup with diplomatic efforts
that demonstrate its interest and engagement in the world's problems. It can
stop oversubsidizing American steelworkers, farmers and textile-mill owners,
and open its borders to goods from poorer countries. But above all, it must
make the world comfortable with its power by leading through consensus.
America's special role in the world-its ability to buck history-is based not
simply on its great strength, but on a global faith that this power is
legitimate. If America squanders that, the loss will outweigh any gains in
domestic security. And this next American century could prove to be lonely,
brutish and short.


xponent
Public Interest Maru
rob

My love and I, we escaped, we left no trace
For they had raped both body and soul ...
The taste was much too hard to swallow,
We ran naked through the cold ...
Above our heads, in fiery red,
The clouds, they bled like open wounds across the sky ...
The wings of many nations, falling, burning, turning,
Trying oh, so hard to die ...
 Oh, oh, oh, oh, there's Panic in the World ...



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