US President George Bush refuses to rule out war with Iran. Iranian
President Mohammad Khatami says his country is ready to defend itself
against a possible US attack. The United States is pushing for a
peaceful solution to its nuclear impasse with Iran but, with mistrust
on both sides running high, encouraging signs are hard to find. “You
look around the world at potential trouble spots, Iran is right at the
top of the list,” Vice President Dick Cheney said yesterday, hours
before being sworn in to a second term. Perhaps the most pessimistic
comment of all this week came from Democratic Senator Joseph Biden of
Delaware. “There may be nothing we can do to persuade Iran not to
develop weapons of mass destruction,” Biden said during a Senate
Foreign Relations Committee confirmation hearing for Secretary of
State-designate Condoleezza Rice. Both Rice and Cheney made clear that
that the nuclear diplomacy that the United States has been pursuing in
the UN nuclear watchdog agency will continue. They said the
administration could raise the stakes with Iran by referring the
nuclear question to the UN Security Council if Iran does not abide by
its non-proliferation commitments. [more]
As of Friday, Jan. 21, 2005, at least
1,371 members of the U.S. military have died since the beginning of the
Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count [more]
A FAILED "TRANSITION": THE MOUNTING COSTS OF THE IRAQ WAR [more]