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| | |-+  INS didn't act on Fort Dix suspects for 16 years
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Author Topic: INS didn't act on Fort Dix suspects for 16 years  (Read 857 times)
Soldier4Christ
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« on: May 17, 2007, 06:53:23 PM »

INS didn't act on Fort Dix suspects for 16 years 
Asylum application by illegals stalled due to paperwork 'backlog'

Prime Minister Tony Blair is making the final White House visit of his tenure to mark a friendship with President Bush that many believe tarnished the legacy of the once popular British leader.

The British leader's visit was designed to honor the long-term Bush- Blair partnership and was expected to produce no major results. The two men planned to discuss a range of issues Thursday, then hold a joint news conference.

Blair began his visit Wednesday with a private, working dinner at the White House. That was to be followed by a rare overnight stay for a foreign leader in the U.S. executive mansion. He was staying in the Queen's Bedroom that was used by Winston Churchill during the former British leader's frequent World War II-era visits to Washington.

Blair's White House visit was one of a series of meetings with foreign leaders during a carefully choreographed exit after his announcement last week that he would step down as prime minister on June 27.

"I think the visit is more sentimental and social than substantive," said Henry Catto, a U.S. ambassador to London under former President Bush and current chairman of the Atlantic Council of the United States.

As Blair prepares to step aside for his likely successor, Gordon Brown, he has a limited ability to reach substantial policy decisions in talks with Bush. His standing at home has been severely undermined by the unpopularity of the Iraq war and a perception that his steadfast support of Bush's policies have not produced reciprocal results for Britain. Britain is by far the largest non-U.S. contributor of forces to the war.

"It has been a significant part of Blair's undoing that he was seen as being so close and unquestionably loyal to Bush," said Adam Ward, executive director of the Washington office of the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a London-based think tank.

Blair's tenure has been otherwise highly regarded because he has overseen a period of prosperity at home and success in the Northern Ireland peace talks.

The Bush-Blair talks may focus on negotiations between the United States and European countries leading to the Group of Eight gathering of major industrialized countries in Germany early next month, where Blair will make one of his last appearances on the world stage.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who is hosting the G-8 meeting, has made clear that she was looking for the Bush administration to move toward greater cooperation with other countries in fighting global warming. So far, administration officials have resisted.

"My guess is that Blair will push quite hard to get some kind of progress on climate change for the G-8," said Daniel Benjamin, director of the Center on the United States and Europe at the Brookings Institution.

As Bush looks for new allies among European leaders during the last years of his own term, divergence on global warming is likely to remain a theme. Both Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy, sworn in as president of France on Wednesday, have made a priority of the issue.

While Bush has seen some warming with Germany and France, Blair's departure creates some uncertainty in relations between London and Washington.

Brown, now Britain's chancellor of the exchequer, has made few of his foreign policy positions clear, and he is not expected to cultivate a friendship with Bush in the way that Blair has. Some analysts said Blair may carry a message to the White House that his successor will continue Britain's long tradition of partnership with the United States.
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Joh 9:4  I must work the works of him that sent me, while it is day: the night cometh, when no man can work.
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