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BEIRUT -- Syria's leader yesterday sent a July 4 message full of praise to President Barack Obama and invited him to visit Syria -- the latest signs that Damascus is hedging its bets in Mideast politics, warming up to its rival, the United States, at a time when its longtime ally, Iran, is in turmoil.
BEIRUT — Syria's leader sent a July 4 message full of praise to President Barack Obama today and invited him to visit Syria — the latest signs Damascus is hedging its bets in Mideast politics, warming up to its rival the United States at a time when its longtime ally Iran is in turmoil.
Syria's leader sent a July 4 message full of praise to President Barack Obama on Friday and invited him to visit Syria _ the latest signs Damascus is hedging its bets in Mideast politics, warming up to its rival the United States at a time when its longtime ally Iran is in turmoil.
Eds: ADDS comments from Assad's wife.
Eds: Minor edits.
Syria's leader sent a July 4th message full of praise to President Obama and invited him to visit Syria — the latest signs Damascus is hedging its bets in Mideast politics.
Between September 22, 1980 and August 18, 1988, the Baathist Republics of Iraq and the Islamic Republic of Iran engaged in a fierce war that had devastating consequences not only on the peoples of those countries but on international business, peace and security as well.
More than 18 months after the assassination of former Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto, the United Nations has begun a formal international inquiry into the "facts and circumstances" surrounding the traumatic day of December 27, 2007, in Rawalpindi.
(Angus Reid Global Monitor) - The majority of people in the Gaza Strip and West Bank think the best way to end the Arab-Israeli conflict is to create two states, according to a poll by Jerusalem Media & Communication Center. 55.2 per cent of respondents share this perception, up 2.2 points since November 2007.
There is a difference between the outlook of a secular generation of Iranian youth, yearning for a life in which religion (in the form of a clergy directing a theological state) refrains from meddling in their personal lives and individual fates as citizens, and the foreign and domestic policy considerations of the reformist trend.
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