WHITE HOUSE INVITES A TERRORIST
Friday, 21 July 2006
WHITE HOUSE INVITES A TERRORIST
I found it ironic that G. W. Bush and Condi Rice condemn Hezbollah for its terrorists tactics and exclaim that the U.S. does not negotiate with or aid terrorists, and yet in June, 2006, one of the leading terrorists in the former Yugoslavia, Agim Ceku, the self-styled Prime Minister of Kosovo, was invited to Washington for talks with Rice.
Ceku, who was indicted by Serbia in 2002 for war crimes, is charged for the murders by KLA terrorists of 669 Serbs, 518 counts of inflicting grave bodily harm and torture, and 584 counts of kidnapping, of which most are presumed dead. Plus, with the end of hostilities between Serb forces and NATO, Ceku was charged with persisting to murder Serbs, forcing two-thirds of them from the province of Kosovo.
Bush and his administration, including Condi Rice, must walk the talk and be consistent in their criticisms of terrorists. By making exceptions, as in the greeting and support of Ceku and an independent Muslim, terrorist state, Kosovo, in Europe, Bush and company illustrate the hypocrisy of their “war on terror.”
BY CHRISTIAN GATSBY
I found it ironic that G. W. Bush and Condi Rice condemn Hezbollah for its terrorists tactics and exclaim that the U.S. does not negotiate with or aid terrorists, and yet in June, 2006, one of the leading terrorists in the former Yugoslavia, Agim Ceku, the self-styled Prime Minister of Kosovo, was invited to Washington for talks with Rice.
Ceku, who was indicted by Serbia in 2002 for war crimes, is charged for the murders by KLA terrorists of 669 Serbs, 518 counts of inflicting grave bodily harm and torture, and 584 counts of kidnapping, of which most are presumed dead. Plus, with the end of hostilities between Serb forces and NATO, Ceku was charged with persisting to murder Serbs, forcing two-thirds of them from the province of Kosovo.
Bush and his administration, including Condi Rice, must walk the talk and be consistent in their criticisms of terrorists. By making exceptions, as in the greeting and support of Ceku and an independent Muslim, terrorist state, Kosovo, in Europe, Bush and company illustrate the hypocrisy of their “war on terror.”
BY CHRISTIAN GATSBY
