En Route Pour La Mosquee

20/12/2008 18:51 par braveheart

  • En Route Pour La Mosquee

    En Route Pour La Mosquee

    20/12/2008 18:51 par braveheart

Le Vendredi 19 Decembre 2008 a 11.00, avant de partir a la Mosque pour faire la priere de Jamu3ah

At Sealine

20/12/2008 15:11 par braveheart

  • At Sealine

    At Sealine

    20/12/2008 15:11 par braveheart

Ce Jour La Avant De Dire "AdiEu'

Bush Ducks Flying Shoes...Any FootwEar For Donald Ramsfeld??

16/12/2008 16:47 par braveheart

  • Bush Ducks Flying Shoes...Any FootwEar For Donald Ramsfeld??

    Bush Ducks Flying Shoes...Any FootwEar For Donald Ramsfeld??

    16/12/2008 16:47 par braveheart

This is how Mr. Joseph A. Palermo entitled his article about the historical incident that occurred to G. W. during his forbading visit to Iraq. I personally wish none of these shoes had missed him. Anyway, here is the Artcile as I copy it from "The Huffungton Post Newspaper dated on Tuesday 16th of December 2008.

George W. Bush apparently thought it would be a good idea before he leaves office to go to Iraq and take a final victory lap, a sort of "farewell tour." But he ended up giving the world a set of lasting images that are fitting testimonials to the bloodiest failure of a presidency plagued with thousands of them. "This is a goodbye kiss, you dog!" yelled an Iraqi television journalist, Muthathar al Zaidi, as he hurled both of his shoes right at Bush's head. Ducking nimbly (I guess all those hours in the gym paid off) the shoes just missed the president's face by a few inches but the video of the incident immediately became a viral sensation on the Internet. Given the power of footwear in Iraqi culture to symbolically disgrace people it was a potent insult aimed at Bush. At least two other Iraqi journalists called Zaidi's shoe toss "courageous." The American press might learn a thing or two from the Iraqi journalists. Members of the White House press corps gave Bush a free ride when he brought the nation to war on false pretenses. He didn't even have to duck their softball questions, let alone a pair of their shoes.

Bush's reception in Baghdad came at the same time a long-awaited report from the Office of the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction was released showing conclusively that the Bush Administration botched the most important aspect of the whole Iraq operation: rebuilding the country. By the middle of 2008 the American taxpayer had spent over $50 billion on reconstruction aid for Iraq but there has been little progress. Most of the money was frittered away through deception, waste, poor planning, and corruption. The report, titled "Hard Lessons: The Iraq Reconstruction Experience," is an internal secret history of the Iraq reconstruction project somewhat similar to the Pentagon Papers of the Vietnam era. The New York Times yesterday summarized its findings: "Tables in the history show that measures of things like the national production of electricity and oil, public access to potable water, mobile and landline telephone service and the presence of Iraqi security forces all plummeted by at least 70 percent, and in some cases all the way to zero, in the weeks after the invasion." And nearly six years later, oil production is still below pre-war levels, electricity is spotty or non-existent in much of the country, and the availability of potable water has increased only modestly. In other words, the biggest U.S. foreign reconstruction project since the Marshall Plan can be chalked up as another miserable failure of the presidency of George W. Bush. No wonder Iraqi journalists are pitching their shoes at him. Even Karl Rove and his "legacy project" are going to have a hard time spinning this catastrophe.

Donald Rumsfeld emerges as a key villain in the report insisting that the United States did not have to worry about rebuilding the country it had destroyed. "If you think we're going to spend a billion dollars of our money over there," he told James Garner, the first viceroy in Iraq, "you are sadly mistaken." What followed was a horrific combination of imperial hubris, arrogance, and incompetence that Rummy himself came to personify.

During the run up to the war there was never any doubt the United States had the power to overthrow the government in Baghdad so the key question always was: Then what? Donald Rumsfeld never had to answer that pivotal question during all of his egomaniacal press conferences because the corporate media never pressed it. Whenever the issue did come up Bush mouthpieces served up nonsense about being greeted with flowers and chocolates or that stabilizing the country would be a cakewalk or the reconstruction would be paid for with oil revenues, etc. Everyone but Rummy seemed to understand that rebuilding Iraq was just as important as toppling the government.

Rumsfeld also surfaces in another recent government document that sought to discover the roles of high-ranking officials behind the widespread torture and abuse of detainees. The Senate Armed Services Committee released an executive summary of a still largely classified report concluding that Rumsfeld, as secretary of defense, bore major responsibility for the abuses committed by American troops at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. Thus, a Senate committee has concluded that Rumsfeld is guilty of war crimes for condoning torture as the head of the Defense Department.

"The Senate Armed Services Committee Inquiry into the Treatment of Detainees in U.S. Custody" states in its summary: "Conclusion 13: Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld's authorization of aggressive interrogation techniques for use at Guantanamo Bay was a direct cause of detainee abuse there. Secretary Rumsfeld's December 2, 2002 approval of Mr. [William] Haynes's recommendation that most of the techniques contained in GTMO's October 11, 2002 request be authorized, influenced and contributed to the use of abusive techniques, including military working dogs, forced nudity, and stress positions, in Afghanistan and Iraq." The executive summary closes by stating: "Conclusion 19: The abuse of detainees at Abu Ghraib in late 2003 was not simply the result of a few soldiers acting on their own. Interrogation techniques such as stripping detainees of their clothes, placing them in stress positions, and using military working dogs to intimidate them appeared in Iraq only after they had been approved for use in Afghanistan and at GTMO. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld's December 2, 2002 authorization of aggressive interrogation techniques and subsequent interrogation policies and plans approved by senior military and civilian officials conveyed the message that physical pressures and degradation were appropriate treatment for detainees in U.S. military custody. What followed was an erosion in standards dictating that detainees be treated humanely."

This new Senate report raises the simple question: If Private Lynndie England served 521 days in a military brig for her crimes interrogating detainees at Abu Ghraib, shouldn't Donald Rumsfeld do a little time himself for authorizing the behavior for which she was condemned?

Rumsfeld's utter contempt for the U.S. Congress continues unabated. His lawyer, Keith Urbahn, responded to the Senate Armed Services Committee report this way: "Because of irresponsible charges by a few individuals in positions of responsibility in Congress, millions of people around the world have been led to believe that the United States condones torture." Here we have a sleaze-ball lawyer (Urbahn) who represents an unelected former U.S. official (Rummy) attacking the U.S. Congress for doing its job of informing the American people about the actions of their own government. The hubris continues.

The sad truth is that high officials in the Bush Administration knowingly violated U.S. and international law by ordering American military and intelligence personnel to torture prisoners who were terrorism suspects. The use of torture spread like a virus. And by asserting the primacy of the will of the torturer (the State) over the individual, the Bush Administration established itself as being above the law. The "rights" of the individual under the law were stripped away.

Therefore, in my view, the only way to really show the world, especially Iraqis, that the United States is no longer in the torture business is to prosecute criminally Donald Rumsfeld and other top Bush officials, bring them to justice, and sentence them to lengthy prison terms. There must be accountability. Only then could we begin to repair the damage that has been done.

There are not enough shoes in the world to express adequately the outrages the world has endured from the Bush Administration over the past eight years. Don Rumsfeld was once a member of the Illinois congressional delegation. If we can't prosecute Rummy for abetting torture maybe we can link him to Rod Blagojevich and indict him for influence peddling.

 

 

Flying Shoes Create a Hero In Arab World

16/12/2008 10:12 par braveheart

  • Flying Shoes Create a Hero In Arab World

    Flying Shoes Create a Hero In Arab World

    16/12/2008 10:12 par braveheart

 

Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, December 16, 2008; Page A01

BAGHDAD, Dec. 15 -- In hurling footwear and insults at President Bush, Muntadar al-Zaidi expressed what relatives said were his own frustrations with American policy in Iraq and made himself into an overnight celebrity in the Arab world.

After the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, Zaidi was distraught over the torture of prisoners at Abu Ghraib. He interviewed widows and orphans in his work as a journalist, once telling an editor that he hoped to meet Bush "and hit him with my shoes." Earlier this year, Zaidi was arrested during an American raid in his neighborhood and released a day later. And in March he covered a U.S. airstrike in which children were trapped under the rubble.

"This incident made him very angry against the American forces," recalled Maithan al-Zaidi, 28, his brother.

On Monday, people across the Middle East applauded Zaidi for expressing their anger at the Bush administration. In cafes and online chat rooms, people joked about the incident with glee, releasing years of frustration with U.S. policies. Thousands of Iraqis demonstrated in the streets demanding his release from Iraqi custody.

Iraqi authorities have not charged Zaidi, but they have arrested him for "his aggressive actions against an official and a visitor of the Iraqi government," Yaseen Majeed, a top media adviser to Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, said in a statement. Majeed called Zaidi "a disgrace to journalism" and said he would be handed over to the Iraqi justice system for punishment.

Munqeth al-Faroon, an Iraqi court official, said Zaidi could be sentenced to up to seven years in prison for insulting the nation's leader. On Sunday, at a news conference held by Maliki and Bush, Zaidi threw his shoes, one after the other, at the U.S. president, shouting, "This is a farewell kiss!" As Iraqi security guards converged on Zaidi, he yelled: "Dog! Dog!"

U.S. officials said they would leave it to the Iraqi government to prosecute Zaidi.

The shoe assault turned Bush's trip to Iraq into a public relations fiasco, overshadowing the White House's message of impending victory in a long and unpopular war. The incident served as a bookend to Bush's flamboyant 2003 arrival aboard an aircraft carrier decorated with a banner reading "Mission Accomplished," which was meant as a declaration of victory but soon became a symbol of U.S. hubris as the war continued.

Bush responded to the shoe-throwing by quipping that the shoes were "size 10" and joking to reporters, "I didn't know what the guy said, but I saw his sole."

He rejected suggestions that the incident symbolized wider Iraqi displeasure with his administration and the conduct of the war. "I don't think you can take one guy throwing shoes and say this represents a broad movement in Iraq," Bush told reporters aboard Air Force One after leaving Baghdad. "You can try to do that if you want to. I don't think it would be accurate."

But many people are doing that -- in the blogosphere, on television, in editorials. Users of the Facebook networking Web site created groups in support of Zaidi, including one called "I'm a fan of the great hero who hit Bush with his shoes in Baghdad" that had more than 9,000 members Monday night.

The al-Baghdadia television network, which employs Zaidi, broadcast his photo and martial anthems. Arab satellite TV channels and Web sites repeatedly played the scene of Bush ducking as the shoes flew past.

In Libya, a charity led by Moammar Gaddafi's daughter Aisha announced it would give Zaidi an award for bravery and urged the Iraqi government to free him. "What he did represents a victory for human rights across the world," said the organization, Wa Attassimou.

"The flying shoe speaks more for Arab public opinion than all the despots/puppets that Bush meets with during his travels in the Middle East," Asad Abu Khalil, a Lebanese American college professor, wrote in his blog, the Angry Arab News Service (http://angryarab.blogspot.com).

A Saudi businessman offered to buy either of the shoes thrown at Bush for $10 million, Saudi television reported.

In Cairo, Egyptians in the middle-class neighborhood of Bulak laughed as they recounted Zaidi throwing his shoes at Bush.

"It was especially gratifying that it happened toward the end of his presidency, because this is how he will be forever remembered," Nermine Gabaly, a 32-year-old homemaker, said with a smile. "The Iraqi reporter should not be penalized for doing this," she added. "He just expressed his emotions as an Iraqi citizen."

During college, Zaidi, whose family is originally from the southern city of Nasiriyah, was the head of the student union. Unmarried, he had a reputation for jumping on stories that took him to the front lines of Iraq's conflict. He declined a promotion because he didn't want to be cooped up inside an office, said his brother Durgham al-Zaidi, a cameraman.

"When we see a family that has experienced tragedy, we look at them as if we had lost one of our own relatives," Durgham said.

On the air, Zaidi referred to the U.S. military presence as "the occupation" and was known to call Bush "the devil." Saif al-Deen al-Kaisi, an editor at al-Baghdadia, recalled a conversation a year and half ago in which Zaidi said, "I hope to meet Bush and hit him with my shoes."

Zaidi opposed a recently signed U.S.-Iraq security agreement that will extend the presence of U.S. troops for at least three years. "Any honest Iraqi patriot rejected the agreement," Maithan al-Zaidi said.

Zaidi had returned to Baghdad two weeks ago after spending two months in Lebanon attending a journalism course, his relatives said. Two hours before the news conference, he spoke to Maithan and made plans to have dinner with him afterward, Maithan said. He added that there was no discussion of throwing shoes at Bush.

After the incident, Iraqi guards wrestled Zaidi, his colleague Waad al-Taie and another journalist to the ground, Taie said. "They beat us and said, 'You are a group of conspirators against this visit,' " he recalled. "I told them: 'I had no idea about all this. He surprised me just as much as you.' " Taie said a U.S. official asked the Iraqis to release him and the other journalist.

"Muntadar has not joined any party or movement," Maithan said. "Nobody paid him to do this. His love for Iraq made him do this."

In the southern city of Najaf, several hundred followers of Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr took to the streets Monday, describing Zaidi as a religious warrior. They threw shoes at U.S. military Humvees but the Americans did not respond, witnesses said. In Sadr's Baghdad stronghold of Sadr City, protesters burned American flags and chanted, "Bush, Bush listen well: We pushed you out with two shoes."

But Hassan Jarrah, a government employee in Najaf, said that Zaidi should have "expressed his personal views of protest by words, not through assaulting President Bush."

"What he did is condemned by all decent, reasonable people," Jarrah added. "We should show to the Iraqi public and the world at large that we Iraqis do not condone such acts, and we are innocent of his actions."

Zaidi's brothers said they had received scores of offers from lawyers to represent him. Iraqi politicians have also expressed their support, but Durgham said he was worried about his brother. "If in front of TV cameras, they are beating him, can you imagine what they are doing to him behind the cameras?"

Correspondent Ellen Knickmeyer in Cairo; staff writer Dan Eggen

in Washington; special correspondents Sherine el-Bayoumi in Cairo, Qais Mizher and K.I. Ibrahim in Baghdad, and Saad Sarhan in Najaf; and other Post staff in Iraq contributed to this report.

 

 

Adil

14/12/2008 19:11 par braveheart

  • Adil

    Adil

    14/12/2008 19:11 par braveheart

Here you are ladies & gents, it's a great pleasure introducing to you a very close friend to me. In brief, Adil has always been there when needed, i just don t know to say it in words, I am so proud of having such a friend like you Adil.

Bah pose howa hadak, 8,5/10, le regard fixe kaydel ke t un homme serieux, c a dire "pas de joking svp" et noubliez pas "moumkin te9leb 6 a 9" a nimporte kel moment sans prevenir. Biensur vous ne comprendrez po de koi je parle car vous avez pas encore eu la chance de rencontrer un tell gar. Bah les chaussures reflectent ta personaliter Mr. Adil, j ai toujours apprecie tez chaussures,wakh mabghaytich tgoliya mnin katechrihom.

Mouhim howa lessentiel, makhassek ghir dir line l ete prochain inshallah chi 3erasiya nderdkou fiha.

Enfin frere Adil, je te felicite pour le succes ke ta performe dans ta carriere, je te souhaite tout le bon courage et bonne continuation.

Haiya Le7biba

14/12/2008 18:44 par braveheart

  • Haiya Le7biba

    Haiya Le7biba

    14/12/2008 18:44 par braveheart

Et voila, c a nouveau ma niece la princesse chainese,

Youssef & Hoor

14/12/2008 18:14 par braveheart

  • Youssef & Hoor

    Youssef & Hoor

    14/12/2008 18:14 par braveheart

C'est mon frere Youssef avec notre bien aimee Mlle. Hoor Youssef Al Chaibi. Allah yesla7ha

Ahmed et son ami Mostafa

13/12/2008 16:54 par braveheart

  • Ahmed et son ami Mostafa

    Ahmed et son ami Mostafa

    13/12/2008 16:54 par braveheart

Hoha ba Hamood tani!

Me & Satoof

11/12/2008 16:54 par braveheart

  • Me & Satoof

    Me & Satoof

    11/12/2008 16:54 par braveheart

Et voila, workinig ensemble, je preparai le thee marocain, et mostafa bien evidement dayr fiha fahem mezian dak chi dial l9otban

AdAm

11/12/2008 16:36 par braveheart

  • AdAm

    AdAm

    11/12/2008 16:36 par braveheart

It'smy little nephew AdAm while sleeping, so cute!!