Bush to admit to ”flaws and mistakes” in his memoir

Washington, Apr.27 (ANI): Former US President George W Bush will admit to his “flaws and mistakes” in a forthcoming memoir.

According to The Telegraph, the memoir will focus on 14 key decisions made during his eight years in office (2001-2009).

According to Crown Publishing, Decision Points, will offer “gripping, never-before-heard detail” about key events such as the disputed 2000 election, the September 11 attacks and the launch of the war on Iraq.

Aided by a former White House speech-writer Chris Michel, Bush will also reveal his decisions on the financial crisis, Hurricane Katrina, Afghanistan and Iran, as well as discussing his battle with alcohol, his discovery of faith and family relationships.

Since leaving the White House in January 2009, Bush has dedicated most of his time to the book, which will be released this autumn.

The cover features a photo of then-President Bush alone with his thoughts, standing in the Rose Garden colonnade of the White House, wearing a dark suit and holding a briefing book.

During his presidency, Bush was known for his unapologetic approach, especially regarding the Iraq War, and for taking pride in his decisiveness. He left office amid a collapsing economy and the lowest approval ratings any president has ever received since polling began. (ANI)

Obama signed healthcare bill with 22 pens

Washington, Mar. 25 (ANI): Many presidents have embraced the idea of signing historic legislation – like the healthcare bill – with multiple pens and US President Barack Obama was no different. He signed the healthcare bill on Tuesday with 22 pens.

According to the Christian Science Monitor (CSM), Obama used each of the 22 pens to contribute to a letter, or even just half a letter, to his signature.

A full minute and 35 seconds elapsed between when the president began and finished.

As he placed the last pen back in the box, the president announced, “We are done.”

Many modern presidents have used multiple pens to sign major pieces of legislation.

The moment they leave the president’s hand, these pens become valuable political souvenirs worth hundreds of dollars.

Presidents often give them out to political supporters and friends.

Franklin Roosevelt was the first president to use multiple pens to sign legislation. President Truman did so as well, but it was President Lyndon Johnson who used 72 pens to sign the Civil Rights Act.

Other presidents, including Ronald Reagan, have done the same.
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President Bush, however, used only one pen to sign legislation.

Yesterday’s bill signing was not the first time President Obama used multiple pens to sign legislation.

He signed the Lily Ledbetter Fair Pay Act last year with seven pens.

On Tuesday, Obama kept one pen for himself and two for the archives. The rest of the pens were given out to supporters. (ANI)

Rove-elations: Former Bush Adviser Opens Up About Katrina, WMDs, Obama

President Obama thinks Karl Rove “hates” him; President Bush should have declared a “federal takeover” in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina; and the Iraq war never would have happened without those pesky WMDs — which were never found. Those are just some of the “Rove-elations” in Rove’s new book.
President Obama thinks Karl Rove “hates” him; President Bush should have declared a “federal takeover” in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina; and the Iraq war never would have happened without those pesky WMDs — which were never found.

Those are just some of the “Rove-elations” Republican strategist and longtime Democratic antagonist Karl Rove provides in his new book, “Courage and Consequence.”

Rove writes that the Bush administration mishandled several aspects of the response to Katrina, including allowing the president to survey the devastation from Air Force One. Rove says it was a mistake to allow Bush to fly over the storm-ravaged area, which resulted in a photograph of Bush that critics said showed him as aloof in his response.

“We shouldn’t have dropped into New Orleans, because it would have been disruptive, but we should have gone to Baton Rouge, the site of Louisiana’s disaster command center. I’m one of the people responsible for this mistake,” Rove wrote. “Our decision was right for the relief effort but wrong for President Bush’s public standing.”

Rove, now a Fox News contributor, also hammers Obama as “loose with the facts,” defends the Bush administration from a number of Democratic criticisms and acknowledges that the war in Iraq probably never would have happened without the “threat” of weapons of mass destruction. Here’s more:
- Rove writes that in the aftermath of Katrina, the administration was hindered by infighting and ineptitude on the local level. He says Bush should have ordered a “federal takeover” in response.

“Behind the scenes, the White House staff engaged in a complicated, high-stakes legal and constitutional battle with Louisiana’s governor — which had huge ramifications for New Orleans and the administration. As events unfolded, it became clear that Ray Nagin was no Rudy Giuliani and Kathleen Blanco was no Haley Barbour … their respective staffs were extremely critical of each other, which made cooperation even more problematic.”

He continues: “Our biggest mistake was that we did not seize control of the situation in Louisiana sooner. As the Air Force One meeting showed, Nagin and Blanco couldn’t even agree on who was responsible for public safety in New Orleans. The president should have ordered a federal takeover and taken the heat for pushing Louisiana officials aside.”

– As the Sept. 11 attacks were being carried out, Rove says Bush gave authorization for the military to shoot down any more hijacked planes in the event that they “could not be controlled.” Rove writes that Vice President Cheney posed the question to Bush.

“Almost immediately after we were airborne, Vice President Cheney phoned with a tough decision for Bush to make. The Air Force had scrambled to put up a combat jet patrol over Washington but needed rules of engagement,” Rove writes. “What should happen if another plane were hijacked and could not be controlled? Could it be shot down? The president uttered a forceful ‘Yes.’ Cheney asked again and Bush said, ‘You have my authorization.’”

– Rove admits that weapons of mass destruction were the linchpin of the Iraq war, even though they were never found.

“Would the Iraq War have occurred without WMD? I doubt it: Congress was very unlikely to have supported the use-of-force resolution without the threat of WMD.”

But he says the administration was convinced about the weapons’ existence, and so it did not knowingly lead the nation into war on false pretenses.

“So, then did Bush lie us into war? Absolutely not,” he writes.

– Rove claims the Bush administration did not act forcefully enough in rebutting Democrats’ claims about the president’s approach to the Iraq war.

“When the pattern of the Democratic attacks became apparent in July 2003, we should have countered in a forceful and overwhelming way. The assault was worthy of significant attention by the entire White House, including a rebuttal delivered in a presidential address. We should have seen this for what it was: a poison-tipped dagger aimed at the heart of the Bush presidency,” Rove writes. “By not engaging, we let more of the public come to believe dangerous falsehoods about the war: that Bush lied, that Saddam Hussein never had and never wanted WMD, that we claimed Iraq had been behind 9/11. These attacked undermined support for the war and public confidence in the president. So who was responsible for the failure to respond? I was. I should have stepped forward, rung the warning bell, and pressed for full-scale response. I didn’t.”

– Rove disputes an accusation from Obama’s memoir “The Audacity of Hope” that Rove and fellow conservatives Newt Gingrich and Grover Norquist once declared, “We are a Christian nation.”

“I certainly don’t believe and have never said, ‘We are a Christian nation,’” Rove insists in “Courage.” “What happened to the Jews? The Muslims? The Hindus? The Buddhists? The skeptics and nonbelievers?”

Rove says he confronted Obama, then the junior senator from Illinois, about the quotation during a chance encounter in the White House cafeteria. According to Rove, Obama initially denied attributing the quote to Rove, who then showed Obama the page in question.

“He looked surprised and began insisting he really wasn’t saying what he had quoted me as saying,” Rove writes. “After a few moments, the conversation drew to an awkward and unsatisfactory conclusion; he was unwilling to acknowledge the mistake or apologize. It seemed to me he didn’t much care that he had attributed to me something I had never said and found offensive.”

– Rove writes that Obama once confided via an e-mail to adviser Valerie Jarrett, “Rove hates me.” Rove claims the sentiment was rooted in their “run-in” over Obama’s book.

Iraq invasion would not have happened if Bush was not misled on WMD: Aide

Washington, Mar. 5 (ANI): Former President George W Bush’s top political adviser, Karl Rove, has claimed that Bush would not have ordered the invasion of Iraq had he known that intelligence on weapons of mass destruction was erroneous.

“Would the Iraq war have occurred without WMD? I doubt it. The Bush administration itself would probably have sought other ways to constrain Saddam,” the Independent quoted Rove, as saying in his memoir, Courage and Consequence: My Life as a Conservative in the Fight.

While the Rove book is being seen as a staunch defence of the eight years that Bush spent in office, it also confirms that the Iraq war was fought under entirely false pretences.

In his book, Rove admits that failure by the White House to counter the erroneous intelligence claims was “one of the biggest mistakes of the Bush years”.

The book comes after Blair admitted that he probably would have moved ahead with removing Saddam Hussein from power even had he known that the narrative about weapons of mass destruction was fictional by finding different ways to justify it.

Although not many people will accept the notion that the White House was as out-of-the-loop about the facts on WMD, Rove says that, without the WMD storyline, Bush would surely have backed away from military action even if he, the writer, still believes it would have been justified. (ANI)

Musharraf describes ‘good friend’ George Bush as a ‘very good man’

London, Sep.10 (ANI): Former Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf still relishes his days in Presidency when he maintained a ‘good friendship’ with his former US counterpart George Bush.

In an interview with a private television channel, Musharraf described Bush, as a ‘very good man’ and ‘a good friend’ of his.

Musharraf said he specially liked Bush’s straight forwardness.

“I think President Bush was a very sincere person, he was a very straight-talking, upright man. I like that in a man. A man who can look into your eyes and talk straight,” Musharraf said

“In the military, my experience shows if you look into the eyes of a person … you can see from the glint in their eyes whether they like the man or not. I think everyone (who worked for him) loved him,” The News quoted Musharraf, as saying.

When asked about the expectations the Muslim world has with Barack Obama, Musharraf said Obama has a daunting task ahead of him as the Islamic countries have huge hope from him.

“The Muslim world was very upbeat about his election. Having said that, he must deliver, I think it is a tough job that he faces to deliver on all that he has been talking, he said, adding, ” Muslims expect the United States to play a very fair role, an impartial role to deliver justice to the Islamic world.” (ANI)

Jenna Bush Hager roped in for NBC’s ‘Today’

Washington, Aug 31 (ANI): Former US President George Bush’s daughter, Jenna Bush Hager, has been roped in to serve as a once-a-month contributor on topics like education on the NBC show ‘Today’.

Jim Bell, the executive producer of the show, has confirmed the news, reports Politico.

He said the show decided to give Jenna a chance after she had come off as a “natural presence” in two previous appearances on “Today”, to promote her book for young adults “Ana’s Story”.

It was about a young woman born with HIV/AIDS who met the former president’s daughter while working as a UNICEF intern in Latin America.

Hager’s first story for Today is expected to air sometime next month. (ANI)

Biden acknowledges that Obama wears the pants in the White House

Florida (US), Aug.20 (ANI): Vice President Joe Biden has acknowledged that Barack Obama wears the pants in the White House.

He admitted this during a fundraising dinner Wednesday in Florida, when he responded to a suggestion that President Bush leaned heavily on Vice President Cheney for guidance.

That’s not how the Obama administration works, Biden reportedly told about 150 political donors at the Orlando event.

“He’s the president, I’m the vice president. We’ve got the pecking order in this administration right,” Biden said.

“I know George Bush, and he’s no Barack Obama,” Biden said. (ANI)

Bush’s court appointments emphasized ideology over diversity

Washington, July 12 (ANI): A new analysis has indicated that the judicial appointments of former president George W. Bush suggest that his motivation for appointing nontraditional judges was driven more by ideology and strategy than concerns for diversity.

The analysis was done by Jennifer Segal Diascro, a professor of government at American University’s School of Public Affairs, and Rorie Spill Solberg, a professor of political science at Oregon State University.

The examination of all the federal judicial appointments during the two terms of his presidency shows that Bush did make a number of diverse appointments, especially Hispanics, but the overall number of minority judges in the federal courts did not increase during his tenure.

“Bush cared about diversity, but it was not his first priority,” Diascro said. “We suspect that he had many Hispanic conservatives from whom to choose when filling vacancies on the bench, yet he chose to appoint traditional candidates instead,” she added.
ccording to the analysis, when compared with all presidents since Jimmy Carter, Bush maintained the status quo in appointing nontraditional judges to the bench.

He appointed more men (78 percent overall) than women (22 percent) and more Caucasians (82 percent) than minorities (18 percent).

When comparing total appointments, the study found that Bush appointed more white females (50) than Carter (32), Ronald Reagan (27) or George H.W. Bush (31), but fewer than Bill Clinton (83).

He appointed more Hispanic females (12) than Clinton (5), but fewer African American females (8 compared to 15) than Clinton.

Like Carter, Reagan, and George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush often appointed minorities to seats for political gain or for ideological purposes, Spill Solberg explained.

“There is a tendency, and we see this across the political spectrum, to use bench appointments to gain clout with certain voters,” said Diascro.

“The Bush administration was actively courting the Hispanic vote, so it isn’t surprising that he made more appointments of Hispanic judges than African Americans, but it was often also based on judicial philosophy,” she added.

According to Diascro, “Not so for African Americans. By the time Bush left office, the proportion of seats on the court of appeals held by African Americans had increased by only half a percent.”

“Replacement patterns are key to understanding efforts to increase diversity on the bench,” she said.

“Presidents may appoint a number of nontraditional judges, as President Bush did, but if their appointments maintain the status quo and don’t add nontraditional judges, then their impact is less than it could be,” she added. (ANI)

Dallas police cut extra protection at Bush home

Dallas (Texas, US), July 9 (ANI): The Dallas Police Department has cut back on some of the additional protection that the department provided around the Preston Hollow home of former President George W. Bush.

In addition to the usual Secret Service protection, Dallas until last week had stationed one on-duty tactical officer per eight-hour shift on the street outside the president’s home.

The estimated cost of that service was 300,000 a year, according to police officials who asked that they not be named.

“We just had to cut it,” said one police official, who agreed to speak on the condition on anonymity.

The city of Dallas has been struggling to deal with a 190 million dollar budget deficit.

Dallas Police Chief David Kunkle, who declined to discuss specific changes said, “Our decision on how to deploy people around security issues like this is not dependent on the budget. They’re based on other factors.”

The cuts to the president’s security detail were first reported by KTVT-TV on Tuesday. (ANI)

Demi Moore Bush Picture Becomes Hot Internet Search Phrase

Demi Moore Bush Picture Becomes Hot Internet Search PhraseDemi Moore Bush picture somehow became the top search item on the Web the last two days. A Demi Moore Bush picture might make one believe at first that Demi Moore met with President Bush somehow. But there is a cruder meaning to a Demi Moore Bush picture, of course. In this case, the idea of searching for a Demi Moore Bush picture came from television, as Comedy Central’s newest Internet based show gave tips to Web users everyone on how to find a particularly noteworthy “Demi Moore Bush picture”

Comedy Central’s new show Tosh.0 has comedian Daniel Tosh surfing the Internet for embarrassing, noteworthy items that Internet users can find and enjoy. In the second episode of Tosh.0 this Thursday, Tosh sent his viewers on a Google search for the term “Demi Moore George Bush”

Tosh then suggested to viewers to take the “George” out of the search term and see what happens. Many people did just that, turning “Demi Moore Bush” into the hot search item on Google.

When searching for this term, the first result that comes up is a webpage called “Downtown Alleys” with an article called “Demi Moore has a huge bush” The picture was posted in 2005, and is a picture of Demi Moore from the 1980′s, with one breast exposed, as well as full frontal exposure as well.

The shot of the full frontal in question – and the size of the search item in question – shows just why Daniel Tosh wanted his viewers to see it. And it appears he either has millions of viewers already, or that his precious Internet is quick to spread the word.

Demi Moore is no stranger to nudity or having fans see her nude, since she seemed to get naked at some point for half her films while she was a big star in the 90′s. But it wasn’t usually to this extent, and didn’t reveal quite so much as what this picture from the 80′s did.

The Internet has been a useful tool for Moore and husband Ashton Kutcher, given the massive following they have on Twitter. But this time, the Internet was used to dig up something embarrassing on Moore, or at least Daniel Tosh did with his Demi Moore Bush picture tips. Comedy Central shows tend to have a lot of power on the Internet, as Jon Stewart’s big bits and interviews on The Daily Show are massive Web hits, and Stephen Colbert often orders his “Colbert Nation” to vote for his name to be put on things like the Space Station. But Comedy Central newcomer Daniel Tosh used the power of the web for vastly different, and cruder, purposes.

Moore and Kutcher themselves have had no comment on their Twitter pages.

Cheney attacks Obama over Guantanamo prison plan

President Obama and his policies on terror have come under strong attack from none other than former vice president Dick Cheney who says Obama’s plan to close down the Guantanamo prison has made America less safe.

While former President Bush has said it would be inappropriate for him to comment on the new administration’s policies, the former VP seems to be embracing the role of the Republican Party’s unofficial chief spokesman against President Obama’s national security policies.

Dick Cheney has emerged as one of the strongest critics of the popular president Obama. He even took on the President in a back-to-back televised speech on his plans to close down the Guantanamo prison – which could require jailing some detainees on American soil.

“We are not going to release anyone if it would endanger our national security,” Obama had said.

“Just don’t bring them into the United States. Just remember it is a serious step to begin unveiling some of the very policies that have kept our people safe since 9/11,” said former vice president Dick Cheney.

The former vice president is a highly unpopular figure in American politics and Republicans are split over what role he should play in the party now but Cheney has helped the party find a issue they can corner the President on – national security.

“The Republicans, Mitch McConnell in the Senate and of course Dick Cheney have made it a real issue. An issue of principle for them, but also a very powerful political issue,” said Steven Hess, Political Analyst.

Rarely has a top official of a previous administration attacked a new president in such strong and harsh terms, but the Republican Party, which is still reeling from a disastrous performance in the elections, is searching for new leadership. Perhaps it’s a void Dick Cheney is hoping to fill.

Osama’s cook coming to New York to face charges in embassy bombing

Washington, May 22 (ANI): Al Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden’s former Tanzanian cook is coming to New York to face charges for his role in the bombings of two U.S. embassies in East Africa 11 years ago, President Obama announced Thursday.

Ahmed Kalfan Ghailani will be moved from Guantanamo Bay as part of Obama’s controversial order to shut down the U.S. terror prison camps in Cuba over the objections of many lawmakers from both parties.

“Preventing this detainee from coming to our shores would prevent his trial and conviction,” Obama said in a Washington speech.

The baby-faced and diminutive Ghailani – known as “Foopie” – faced a bounty of 25 million dollars when he was nabbed in July 2004 after a 12-hour shootout at an Al Qaeda safe house in Pakistan.

Ghailani rose from an Al Qaeda “rank-and-file soldier” in Afghanistan before 9/11 to become Bin Laden’s cook and his most prolific passport forger and travel agent, according to a Directorate of National Intelligence biography.

Four other plotters were convicted in federal trials in the city for the Aug. 7, 1998, bombings of U.S. embassies in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi, Kenya, which killed a dozen Americans and 211 others.

Ghailani was among the original 22 “most wanted” terrorists designated by ex-President Bush’s FBI after 9/11, even though the government admits he “was not directly involved in operational planning” by Al Qaeda. (ANI)

Obama turns pressers into precise 13 questions science!

Washington, May 1 (ANI): US President Barack Obama, it seems, has perfected the art of allowing only 13 questions during his presidential press conferences, so much so that it literally boils down to being a science.

According to the Christian Science Monitor, he makes teleprompter-assisted opening remarks and then calls on exactly 13 reporters to ask questions.

Some sneak in more than one question, but somehow after the 13th member of the Fourth Estate has had his or her moment in the spotlight, the hour is up.

This has been the pattern at the three press conferences Obama has held to date, most recently Wednesday night, which capped off his 100th day in office.

Maybe it’s the rhythm to the way Obama responds that adds up to 13 questions in the allotted time. He never answers (or dismisses) a question briskly, the way President Bush did at times.

With Obama, there’s always a windup, several minutes of professorial discourse, then maybe an answer, or maybe not. (ANI)

Celebs suggest Cheney’s imprisonment at Tribeca Film Festival party

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New York, Apr 27 (ANI): Robert De Niro and Graydon Carter’s Tribeca Film Festival opening night party last week at the state criminal courthouse inspired celebrity guests to suggest the possible prosecution of US politician Dick Cheney./pp
Cheney, 68, who served as Vice President during George W. Bush’s presidency, has been accusing President Obama of risking national security by releasing CIA documents about waterboarding and other torture used against terror suspects./pp
Regarding his own participation Cheney called it legal, but human rights activists have called for his indictment. /pp
I was delighted that they published the stuff, the New York Daily News quoted Bono as saying, though he wasn’t sure Cheney should be tried. /pp
But author Salman Rushdie has been very forward about his feelings. /pp
I want to see Cheney in jail, he said. /pp
There used to be a tradition in this country that when people leave office, they shut the hell up. /pp
President Bush has done that. If Vice President Cheney could learn that lesson, the world would be a better place, he added. (ANI)/p

Terrified of al Qaeda’s capabilities post-9/11 US turned to torture: Stratfor

Lahore, Apr 22 (ANI): The US was so terrified of al Qaeda’s capabilities post-9/11 that the then Bush Administration expected follow-up attacks at any moment and was forced to turn to torture due to lack of intelligence about the terrorist organisation activities, Stratfor, the global think tank, has said.

The report, by George Friedman, states the government had also received intelligence indicating al Qaeda might have a nuclear weapon, but they had no idea whether those scraps had any value. At one point, the report noted, then president and vice president were continually kept at different locations to maintain security.

Collecting intelligence, thus rapidly became the highest national priority, the report notes. No action in pursuit of intelligence was out of the question, so long as it promised quick answers, leading to the authorisation of torture, the Daily Times reported.

Friedman said this raises a moral question: Should the US adhere to respecting human rights, or should it do its best to protect the physical security of the US “against all enemies, foreign and domestic”.

President Bush did not know that torture would work, but he clearly did not feel that he had the right to avoid it.

However, what the intelligence community failed to consider was that post-9/11, situational awareness was needed, not specific information. Torture thus was not a precise solution to a specific problem: It became an intelligence-gathering technique.

Not only did the US not know what it needed to know, it had to follow many false leads due to the addition of torture. In addition, the report notes, torture applied by anyone other than well-trained, experienced personnel only compounds the problems, and makes the practice less productive.

Defenders of torture frequently seem to believe the person in custody is known to have valuable information, and that this information must be forced out of him.

Torture thus becomes not only a waste of time and a violation of decency, actually undermining good intelligence. This is especially true when people tell you what they think you want to hear to make torture stop.

However, defending the torture, the report states that critics of torture seem to assume the torture was brutality for the sake of brutality instead of a desperate attempt to get some clarity.

According to Friedman, Bush’s mistake was not knowing when to move beyond the emergency. He states in the report that if you know that an individual is loaded with information, torture can be a useful tool. (ANI)

Meghan McCain says Bush’s political guru is following her on Twitter

New York, Apr 21 (ANI): John McCain’s daughter Meghan has revealed that she is not happy that her Twitter feed is being followed by former President George Bush’s political guru, Karl Rove.

Meghan, 24, who came into the limelight in 2007 for her blog, McCain Blogette, wrote on The Daily Beast website, that Rove is the Internet stalker, who has been stalking her.

“Karl Rove follows me on Twitter. That’s creepy,” the New York Daily News quoted her as having written on the website.

McCain wrote she joined Twitter a few months ago because it allowed her to share the “less serious” and “humorously uncensored moments” of her life.

“But there’s also been a downside: I am now being followed by Karl Rove, and my local sheriff, and God knows how many other political pundits,” she wrote.

“We need to take Twitter back from the creepy people,” she stated. (ANI)

Biden bearing brunt of Obama’s ‘non-jokability’!

Chicago, Apr 19 (ANI): Since US President Barack Obama is hard to mock, jesters are turning their aim to Vice President Joe Biden.

If you’re wondering why Obama is “non-jokeable”, well it could be that jokers are reluctant to riff on a man they admire, or he’s simply a “no-joke making” human being.

“As a comedian, I’m gonna miss President Bush. Because Barack Obama is not easy to do jokes about. He doesn’t give you a lot to go on. This is why God gave us Joe Biden,” The Chicago Sun-Times quoted American TV host Jay Leno, as saying.

According to David Letterman, Biden’s most important responsibility is to pick up Obama’s daughters at school.

As far as Craig Ferguson is concerned, the Scottish-American television host says Obama gave Biden 12 cupcakes for the vice president’s birthday – “which is a smart gift to give Biden because when his mouth is full of cupcakes he can’t say anything stupid.”

Former Second City member Jason Sudeikis, on NBC’s “Saturday Night Live,” portrayed Biden as, in the words of one critic, “a contained lunatic.”

Sudeikis has said he developed his impersonation by “watching a lot of YouTube,” but mainly his impersonation is “all teeth.” (ANI)

Barbara Bush ‘not getting married anytime soon’

Washington, Apr 15 (ANI): Former First Daughter Barbara Bush has no plans of getting married anytime soon, according to sources.

Earlier, rumors were abuzz that the Bush twin, 27, is going to marry her boyfriend Jaly Blount this summer.

Now, however, a Bush family source has told People that there is no wedding in the works.

“The story is absolutely not true,” the source says.

It’s been nearly a year since Barbara’s twin, Jenna, married Henry Hager in Texas last May.

A spokesman in the Dallas offices of the former President George W. Bush and First Lady Laura Bush declined to comment on Barbara’s rumored nuptials. (ANI)

Obama urges UN to punish North Korea for missile launch

Prague, April 5 (IANS) US President Barack Obama has said that North Korea violated international rules when it tested a rocket capable of sending weapons at long range, and called on the UN Security Council to take action, a media report said.

‘This provocation underscores the need for action, not just this (Sunday) afternoon at the Security Council but in our determination to prevent the spread of these weapons,’ Obama said.

‘Rules must be binding. Violations must be punished. Words must mean something,’ the New York Times quoted Obama as saying Sunday.

The US Northern Command issued a statement that North Korea’s Taepodong 2 missile flew over Japan, with its payload landing in the Pacific Ocean.

‘No object entered orbit and no debris fell on Japan,’ the assessment said.

White House officials said the failure of the launch would not stop the US from taking the matter to the Security Council.

‘I think there have been a number of instances now where the North Koreans have failed in these attempts,’ White House Spokesman Robert Gibbs said.

‘The launch itself was a violation,’ he said, adding that the fact that the launch failed did not make a difference in pursuing punitive sanctions.

Obama’s comments on North Korea were delivered here at the end of a historic speech before more than 20,000 people that, in a twist of irony, was planned in advance to lay out Obama’s plans to stop the spread of nuclear arms.

Deliberate or not, the North Korean action served the dual purpose of lending urgency to Obama’s speech while emphasising the often tied hands of the international community with regard to stopping North Korea’s pursuit of nuclear weapons.

The Security Council may slap Pyongyang on the wrist, as it has before, but China, a permanent member, has often stood in the way of strong international action.

But it remained unclear exactly what the West would be able to do. President Bush pressed for similar sanctions after the North’s nuclear test in October 2006, but they had little long-term effect.

Obama also said that he still planned to continue plans to pursue missile defence, but he tied the need for such a system to any Iranian acquisition of nuclear weapons.

Russia opposes locating a defence shield in Poland and the Czech Republic, as current plans call for, and Obama said in a letter to Russian President Dmitri Medvedev two months ago that if Russia were able to help the US stop Iran from getting a nuclear weapon, there would be no need for a missile defence shield in in Eastern Europe.

The issue has particular resonance here in Prague, since the now collapsed government of Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek went to bat against popular opinion here to support the missile shield, only to have the Obama administration begin to walk back from the plan.