Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Our country must address as best it can Iraq’s many problems. The United States has long-term relationships and interests at stake in the Middle East, and needs to stay engaged. In this consensus report, the ten members of the Iraq Study Group present a new approach because we believe there is a better way forward.

  2. Our country must address as best it can Iraq’s many problems. The United States has long-term relationships and interests at stake in the Middle East, and needs to stay engaged. In this consensus report, the ten members of the Iraq Study Group present a new approach because we believe there is a better way forward.

  3. speech on Iraq, The New Way Forward.7 In the speech, President Bush acknowledged that despite the 2005 national elections in Iraq and the formation of a new Iraqi national unity government8 in 2006, 6. See Robin Wright, Bush Initiates Iraq Policy Review Separate From Baker Group’s, WASH. POST, Nov. 15, 2006, at A16 (reporting that on November 14,

  4. 25. Jan. 2007 · In December 2006, the Iraq Study Group (ISG), a bipartisan group formed by the Congress, concluded nine months of study and proposed a new way forward. The ISG proposal recognized that the key actions needed in Iraq must be taken by the Iraqi government and the Iraqi Army, and provided the incentives for those actions. The ISG proposal also recognized that the U.S. needed to begin the ...

  5. The report calls for U.S. combat brigades to move out of Iraq and says further that, ‘‘By the first quarter of 2008, subject to unex-pected developments in the security situation on the ground, all combat brigades not necessary for force protection could be out of Iraq.’’ A principal reason for the Iraq Study Group, that they called for

  6. 6. Dez. 2006 · The urge to dismiss the Study Group’s report as a surrender document (as some neoconservatives have already done) is off the mark. Read carefully, it is a tough, intricate policy statement ...

  7. The United States has long-term relationships and interests at stake in the Middle East, and needs to stay engaged. In this consensus report, the ten members of the Iraq Study Group present a new approach because we believe there is a better way forward. All options have not been exhausted.