Word: iraqã
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True to Cambridge’s long-running opposition to the military—the city council voted unanimously in 2003 to express their opposition to a war in Iraq??several anti-war groups arrived on the scene to protest the Army...
...will prove difficult to eradicate, ethnic tensions could increase, and democracy itself can backslide toward authoritarian personal rule (e.g., Russia). Nevertheless, democratic rule is almost always a step forward. The problems faced by a new democratic leadership—like secessionist regions in Georgia or control of Kirkuk in Iraq??will have to be faced eventually. Autocratic rule did not solve these problems, and continued repression will only make them fester. Even if a corrupt and autocratic ruler is replaced by another corrupt insider, as may happen in Kyrgyzstan, the successor will certainly find his behavior constrained...
...said that some fear democratic elections will allow extremist groups to take power and pointed to the recent elections in Iraq??in which a Shia government won a majority—as an example...
...visitors were Iraq??s first-ever representatives to the annual HNMUN conference, which brings students from around the world together to simulate the United Nations...
...significance that these overused words have assumed, leaving a babbling Bush repeating “terror,” “terrorism,” “tool of torture,” followed by applause from the audience and dozens of repetitions of “Iraq?? and “Iraqis” and “weapons...