Word: rumsfeld
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...nation which, however much its economic future may be linked to that of the U.S., is certainly not an ally. In the last two months a veritable squadron of top U.S. officials-including Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick, Trade Representative Rob Portman and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld-have visited Beijing, to praise China's economic development out of one side of their mouth, while complaining of Chinese behavior on everything from piracy to defense spending from the other. So far, China's main response to U.S. lectures on the need to open up its political system has been...
...court’s decision in the case, Rumsfeld v. FAIR, will have immediate ramifications for Harvard. The Law School has tried to require all recruiters who use its career services office to sign a pledge stating that they will not discriminate against employees based on sexual orientation. The Pentagon’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy bars openly gay individuals from the military, but Harvard granted the military access to Law School resources this fall after the Pentagon threatened to cut over $400 million in federal funds...
...Plame’s identity. Yet despite the recent investigation and admissions of guilt, he has yet to ask for one resignation. This is not surprising considering the Administration’s consistent failure to responsibly deal with internal incompetence or corruption—neither John Ashcroft nor Donald Rumsfeld were ever asked to resign when such action would have demonstrated appropriate accountability. Even Libby—who resigned himself—received no official calls from the White House. It is unfortunate that we cannot trust our President to be a man of his word and must rely...
...even before the Libby indictments, the wall of silence had been crumbling. First there was the Oct. 19 speech by Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, former chief of staff for Secretary of State Colin Powell, in which Wilkerson charged that a "cabal" of Cheney and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld had "flummoxed" a President who is "not versed in international relations and not too much interested in them either." Even more stinging was the interview given by Brent Scowcroft--National Security Adviser to Bush's father during the first Gulf War--to the New Yorker, in which he not only questioned...
...country with this issue," that it would reinforce the party's image as strong on defense. The simultaneous decision to take the Iraq situation to the United Nations was also a campaign ploy-polls showed the vast majority of voters favored this course-and a chimera. Both Cheney and Rumsfeld were opposed to the move, and Rumsfeld pretty much ignored it: he proceeded full-speed ahead, deploying troops for a late-winter invasion...