Mansour-15
02-10-2009, 19:33
سلام عليكم ..:12:
تفضلو الدرس ..:24:
http://www.7ammil.com/upfiles/JWr01477.png (http://www.7ammil.com/)
m.b (http://www.7ammil.com/upfiles/JWr01477.png)
أتمنى أن أرى التطبيقات ..:27:
Mansour-15
02-10-2009, 19:50
ملاحظة .. لك الحّّريهـ في عمل فلتر شآربين ..
kaka messi
02-10-2009, 20:09
تعبك ما شاء لله اصبح ملحوظ يا منصور لذلك لازم نتعب احنا كمان لازم نتعب
امير الفؤاد
03-10-2009, 11:41
شكرا حياتي على كل شيء انت عضيم جداجدا حتى في حب كاكا ومسي
عاشق البرشا %
27-11-2009, 10:09
http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/46794000/jpg/_46794028_iraqpicturetwogetty226.jpgHowever, Sir Peter said there was no-one in the UK government in 2001 "promoting or supporting" regime change, as it was assumed "it was not our policy that we were seeking the removal of Saddam Hussein". While there were "voices" in Washington calling for Saddam to be removed even before the Bush administration came to power in early 2001, this did not result in a change to the longstanding policy of trying to contain Iraq through sanctions, he said. CORRESPONDENT'S VIEW From the BBC's Peter Biles at the Chilcot inquiry in London:The first members of the public arrived as early as 6.30am forming a queue outside the Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre.power leveling aion (http://www.wow-leveler.com/aion/aion-power-leveling.html)The bereaved families of servicemen and women killed in Iraq have waited with a sense of expectation for this Iraq inquiry, the most comprehensive of all the investigations held in Britain.Among those here today was Rose Gentle, whose son Gordon was killed in Iraq in 2004. Also present, the sisters of the aid worker Margaret Hassan who was kidnapped and executed.In a small demonstration outside a group of three people wore face masks caricaturing George Bush, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown. Inside, in the sterile atmosphere of the public hearing room, the committee chairman Sir John Chilcot opened proceedings with a warning that this inquiry might not be completed until the end of 2010. That will not come as a surprise - Sir John has already said his committee has received "mountains of written material" to digest.Sir William Patey, then head of the Middle East Department at the Foreign Office, said the UK had been aware "of the drumbeats from Washington" when it came to regime change but wanted to "stay away from that end of the spectrum". Sir William - now ambassador to Saudi Arabia - acknowledged that international support for the sanctions policy in place against Iraq since 1991 - which underpinned the policy of containment - was steadily breaking down at the time. However, asked whether this policy - which critics said was ineffective and which was actually hurting the Iraqi people - could have "kept Saddam caged" indefinitely, he replied "possibly". Focusing on the impact of the 9/11 attacks on British policy, Sir Peter said it "added an edge" to existing concerns about Iraq seeking to acquire weapons of mass destruction beyond any international control. powerleveling aion (http://www.wow-leveler.com/aion/aion-power-leveling.html)Despite there being no evidence of a direct link between al-Qaeda and Iraq, Sir Peter said there was a "tone of voice" in Washington after 9/11 that there would be "major implications" for Iraq if that was the case. US priorities after 9/11 remained al-Qaeda and Afghanistan, he said, but it became clear by the end of the year that the so-called war on terror was moving into a second, as yet, "undefined" phase. "It was clear from late autumn [2001] that Iraq was being considered in a different light in light of the 9/11 attacks," he said. But he said he did not "recall" any conversations with British ministers or policy discussions in Whitehall about regime change at that stage.
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