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Re: هل هناك مشروع ضربة عسكرية امريكية وشيكة للسودان (Re: Tragie Mustafa)
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الأخت العزيزة تراجي ليس هناك طريق ثالث . فلقد وصلت الترتيبات و التجهيزات مراتب متقدمة جدا و لا يمكن وضعها في الرف إستجابة لمراوغات هذه الحكومة . ما ينوي النظام فعله الآن هو شراء الوقت لثلاث شهور أخري عل معجزة تحدث ( تختفي دارفور من الخارطة ... مثلا ) . هل العالم علي إستعداد لنعود الي المربع الأول في يناير و نتفرج علي نفس فلم المؤتمر الوطني من جديد ؟؟؟ حتي و لو ساد الهدوء التام دارفور من الآن و حتي 31 ديسمبر فقضية دارفور تظل بلا حل مع مراوغة هذه الحكومة و وقوفها عقبة في طريق الحل الشامل . الحديث في واشنطن و بعض العواصم الاوربية لا تتحدث عن عقوبات ... بل تتحدث عن حظر طيران و حل عسكري عاجل لنشر القوات الأممية بدارفور . هنا مقتطفات مما ورد في مقال أنتوني ليك و سوزانا رايس و دونالد بين :
News Article by AFP posted on October 02, 2006 at 16:29:52: EST (-5 GMT)
Former US officials urge military action against Sudan over Darfur
WASHINGTON, Oct 2, 2006 (AFP) - Two former senior US officials and a sitting congressman called Monday for the US to lead military strikes against Sudan if Khartoum persists in its refusal to allow UN peacekeepers into its Darfur region.
"It's time to get tough with Sudan," Anthony Lake, who served as president Bill Clinton's National Security Advisor, former assistant secretary of state for Africa Susan Rice and Democratic representative Donald Payne wrote in an opinion piece in Monday's Washington Post.
The three said Sudan President Omar al-Beshir's Arab-led government had launched a major new offensive against rebels in Darfur, threatening to unleash a "second wave of genocide" against the region's ethnic African population.
"After three years of fruitless negotiation and feckless rhetoric, it's time to go beyond unenforced UN resolutions to a new kind of resolution: the firm resolve to act," they said.
Beshir has adamantly refused to comply with a UN resolution calling on Sudan to accept the deployment of 22,000 UN peacekeepers in Darfur, where at least 200,000 people have been killed in more than three years of fighting between rebels and Arab militia funded by the government.
US President George W. Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice have issued thinly veiled threats to take tougher action if Sudan continues to reject the peacekeepers.
But they have declined to lay out just what they plan to do beyond naming a special envoy for Darfur, former USAID administrator Andrew Natsios, who met with Bush on Monday.
"An envoy's role is to negotiate, but the Sudanese have left nothing to negotiate," Rice, Lake and Payne said of Natsios' appointment.
The trio note that China, a major purchaser of Sudanese oil, is very unlikely to back a new UN resolution either ordering a unilateral deployment of peacekeepers to Darfur or imposing sanctions on Khartoum.
And they argue that even if the Security Council were to mandate tougher action, it would take months to implement.
"By then, Sudan will have completed its second wave of genocide in Darfur," they said.
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