Word: hawkishly
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...interview.) A former Musharraf aide says Khan's megaton ego--almost as much as U.S. charges that he ran a nuclear bazaar--persuaded Musharraf to force him into retirement. But Pakistani investigators remain leery of squeezing the national hero too tightly. Khan is a public icon, his hawkish face known to every schoolchild. Arresting him could trigger dangerous protest among Islamist extremists and senior military officers who feel Musharraf has already gone too far in appeasing the White House. Khan's travel has been restricted, and even inside Pakistan, he is always accompanied by two military officers. He rarely leaves...
...other Muslims all over the world will take note of the Israeli pilots' courageous stand and appreciate the conflicts involved. I hope Muslims will be able to emulate the integrity and courage of these soldiers. The solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict lies with moderate citizens, not with the hawkish leadership on either side. Shaik Ibrahim Chennai, India...
...failure to adhere to the previous agreement negotiated with the Clinton administration in 1994. Since the day it took office, the Bush administration has been divided over North Korea, and even in the course of the current negotiations the President has never quite signaled a clear choice between the hawkish option of isolation and strangulation of North Korea in order to bring down its regime, and negotiation and engagement in order to police its behavior...
...details have yet been provided, of course, and there may well be some pushback against the idea of offering guarantees to North Korea from Vice President Dick Cheney and other hawkish elements in the administration when the presidential entourage returns to Washington. And the initiative will mean little if North Korea goes ahead and tests a weapon in the comings weeks or months. But for now, the U.S. response to the nuclear crisis on the Korean peninsula is following more familiar Cold War doctrines of containment, deterrence and engagement, rather than the "preemption" doctrine that got its first real-world...
...exaggerates its nuclear weapons capability, Iran insists it has no clandestine bomb program. But IAEA investigations have found evidence of secret uranium enrichment facilities, and the UN nuclear watchdog had put Iran on notice to sign an agreement accepting more intrusive inspections by October 31, or else. Again, although hawkish elements in the Bush administration had favored a more vigorous pursuit of "regime-change" in Tehran, Washington has pursued the issue of Iran's nuclear capability primarily through the IAEA, although President Bush has warned that the U.S. "will not tolerate" the construction of a nuclear weapon by Iran...