Posted on 04/08/2003 1:16:41 AM PDT by WaterDragon
THE NEXT KING TO RULE BAGHDAD WILL BE a Queen, much to the consternation of some misogynist, macho Muslim males. But she will also be attacked in Washington, D.C., by the same Leftist Democrats who fought to keep Saddam Hussein in power.
A joke of late is that President George W. Bush plans to divide Iraq into three parts Premium, regular and unleaded.
Coalition forces indeed have announced creation of a northern, southern, and central zone of the de facto administrative government of Iraq, the Pentagons Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance headed by 64-year-old retired U.S. Army Lieutenant General Jay Garner.
This central zone, including Baghdad, is to be administered by career foreign service officer Ambassador Barbara K. Bodine.
This tough, two-fisted, blue-eyed professional was Ambassador to Yemen when the destroyer U.S.S. Cole was bombed by terrorists there in 2000, killing 17 sailors. (She angered conspiracy theorists by refusing maverick FBI agent John ONeill a visa to re-enter Yemen.)...(snip)
Click HERE For Complete Article.
One minute you're reading about Ambassador Bodine and her qualifications,....
and suddenly, you're reading a dissertation on the sexually dysfunctional arab male!
What a rant!..
FBI to resume Cole probe in Yemen
The USS Cole was damaged in a bombing last October that killed 17 U.S. sailors.
By Andrea Koppel
CNN Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- After an absence of more than three months, FBI investigators are expected to return to Yemen as soon as next week to resume their investigation into last year's bombing of the USS Cole, a senior administration source tells CNN.
An advance team from the FBI, consisting of "technical folks," are now in Yemen to pave the way for next week's arrival of FBI agents after the long holiday weekend.
Earlier this month, the FBI and the State Department reached a tentative agreement on security arrangements for FBI investigators working in Yemen.
The FBI pulled all of its investigators out of Yemen in June after a dispute between the U.S. ambassador to Yemen, Barbara Bodine, and the FBI's lead supervisor of the investigation, John O'Neill, who wanted permission for his agents to carry heavier weapons in Yemen due to "specific and credible" security threats.
When Bodine denied O'Neill's request, saying that FBI investigators would be protected by the same diplomatic security rules as agents who guard U.S. diplomats at the U.S. Embassy, the FBI suspended its operation in Yemen.
In recent weeks, teams from the FBI, the U.S. Navy and the State Department have been meeting in Washington and in Yemen to try to work out a compromise acceptable to all parties.
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