Word: breaches
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...block. "The man just happened to go bald soon after that," she deadpans. Iwasaki has set the record straight on the details of her life. But it's her ongoing feud with Golden that keeps ruffling kimonos in the literary world. An update: in 2001, Iwasaki sued Golden for breach of contract and a tarnished reputation. The ex-geisha, who now runs a furniture-restoration business, calls the notion that geishas are prostitutes "ridiculous," and was angered at the sex-for-money in Golden's novel. She also objected to the fact that Golden credited her as a source...
...letter accepting Resolution 1441, restated its claim that it has no such weapons programs. Blix pointedly urged them to reexamine their inventories to make sure that any offending items were declared, because any undeclared programs or stocks revealed in the course of subsequent inspections would put Iraq squarely in breach of 1441 - and almost certainly trigger a military response. The UNMOVIC chief's comments could be read as a subtle warning to the Iraqis that they'd be better off fessing up to any infractions, even if those contradict what was said by Baghdad a week ago, than being caught...
...being sent back precisely to investigate any discrepancy between what Saddam says he has and what Western intelligence agencies believe he has. And it's only once they find evidence of such discrepancy, or Saddam does something to impede them, that the Security Council will find Iraq in material breach of Resolution...
...decision, Buell wrote in an e-mail, was the “widespread concern and regret for the fact that the decision not to hold the event could easily be seen, and indeed has been seen—both within Harvard and beyond—as an unjustified breach of the principle of free speech within the academy...
...Administration officials concede that although the U.S. regards the "no-fly" zone confrontations as a breach of the latest resolution, that position would be unlikely to carry the day at the Security Council, and would therefore not serve Washington's interest in establishing a consensus on Iraq. A divided Council, after all, is the principal reason Saddam has managed to get away with thumbing his nose at the UN until now. While the U.S. may continue to cite the "no-fly" zone combat as evidence of Iraq's belligerent intentions, the violations that will count in the international conversation over...