You cute little trouble-maker you who were willing to dump the blood of a million Iraqi children on our heads and who rattled your little saber against Milosewicz so much that you would have had egg on your face if you had backed down so you butchered a bunch of poor Serbs to build pipelines in their country and appropriate the biggest, richest, metal mines in Europe.
I have no patience for neo-Liberals who collaborated in the neo-Con game. Go away Madeleine and let better people speak for us.
I guarantee it won't be someone so in bed with the corporations that they utter sentences like the one you just uttered today "We should support various reformers who want to get the best out of globalisation".
Well the Iraqis have globalization now! They even have Monsanto! You are thrilled Madeleine. Do not for one minute pretend you are not.
'Things worth fighting for'
Foreign policy team visits OSU
By Mike Spahn
Daily Staff Reporter
COLUMBUS - President Clinton's foreign policy team met yesterday at Ohio State University with a rowdy crowd in a town hall meeting to discuss the current situation in Iraq.
![](http://www.s-t.com/daily/02-98/02-20-98/iraqsign.jpg)
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, Secretary of Defense William Cohen and National Security Adviser Sandy Berger met for 90 minutes with a crowd that often yelled and chanted in protest of possible U.S. military action against Iraq.
(snip)
The discussion was interrupted early and often. Protesters began chanting anti-war slogans during Albright's opening comments and continued through much of the debate.
(snip)
http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/1998/feb/02-19-98/news/news1.html==
COLUMBIA, South Carolina (CNN) -- Cheers and standing ovations greeted U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright Thursday, but U.S. threats to use force against Iraq ran afoul of skeptical Americans for the second straight day.
A day after a stormy town meeting in Columbus, Ohio, Albright met with college students in Nashville, Tennessee, and Columbia, South Carolina, as the Clinton administration continued its attempts to rally support for its hard-nosed policy on Iraq.
And while Albright was greeted with an honor guard, a marching band and old-fashioned Southern courtesy -- rather than the jeers and taunts she ran into in Ohio Wednesday -- she also found her audiences informed and willing to question authority.
(snip)
But questioners focused on whether Iraq is a threat to national security, and concerns for the welfare of innocent Iraqi civilians.
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Standing before a map of the Middle East and using rhetoric reminiscent of that used by then-President George Bush in 1991 before the Gulf War, she vilified Hussein as the most evil man the world had seen since Hitler.
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http://www.cnn.com/US/9802/19/iraq.us/Lesley Stahl on U.S. sanctions against Iraq: We have heard that a
half million children have died. I mean, that's more children than died in Hiroshima. And, you know, is the price worth it? Secretary of State Madeleine Albright: I think this is a very hard choice, but
the price--we think the price is worth it. --60 Minutes (5/12/96)
http://www.fair.org/extra/0111/iraq.html