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White House Notebook: Obama Misses Dinner In Iraq

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  • White House Notebook: Obama Misses Dinner In Iraq

    WHITE HOUSE NOTEBOOK: OBAMA MISSES DINNER IN IRAQ
    By Jennifer Loven

    AP
    8 April 09

    BAGHDAD (AP) -- One thing missing from President Barack Obama's
    whirlwind visit to the capital of Iraq? Dinner at the president's
    residence.

    Before he disappeared behind closed doors to meet with President Jalal
    Talabani, Obama said the meal was one thing he missed. The two shared
    dinner at Talabani's house when he visited Baghdad as senator.

    Tuesday's unannounced visit to Baghdad was Obama's first to the Iraq
    war zone as president.

    ___

    Obama also commented on Talabani's health, telling the president,
    "You look very well."

    "Are you feeling better?" Obama asked.

    Talabani had surgery on a heart valve last summer in the United
    States, after initially going to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.,
    for knee surgery.

    Several months before that, he collapsed and was hospitalized in Jordan
    and the U.S. after suffering from what aides said was exhaustion and
    dehydration caused by lung and sinus infections.

    ___

    Obama suggested he had another reason for visiting Iraq besides
    thanking U.S. troops for their work.

    The reporters who cover him hadn't traveled enough.

    "I thought you guys hadn't been on the road long enough," Obama
    told them after he stepped out from a meeting with Gen. Ray Odierno,
    the top U.S. commander in Iraq.

    "I know that you didn't feel like going home, we had under-worked y
    ou. So I figured one more stop," he said.

    The eight-day trip also took Obama, and the reporters who cover him,
    to England, France, Germany, the Czech Republic and Turkey.

    ___

    Let's hear it for "Mom Rule."

    In Turkey, Obama said just put mothers in charge and all will be fine.

    Obama was answering a question during a round-table discussion
    with Turkish college students when he said he believes mothers of
    Palestinian children and mothers of Israeli children want the same
    thing: for their children not to be victims of violence or to suffer
    indignities because of who they are.

    "And so sometimes I think that if you just put the mothers in charge
    for a while, that things would get resolved," Obama said.

    ___

    Obama avoided the term "genocide" when he addressed Turkish lawmakers
    about the widespread killings of Armenians in the final years of the
    Ottoman Empire.

    He used the word Tuesday while recognizing the 15-year anniversary
    of the genocide in Rwanda.

    The White House released a statement in which Obama said the memory
    of the killings of more than 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus should
    deepen the commitment of the U.S. and its world partners to never let
    such an atrocity happen again. He also said the U.S. is committed to
    lasting peace in the African country.

    As a candidate for president, Obama said America deserved a leader
    who speaks truthfully about the Armenian gen ocide.

    Turkey rejects the widely held view that there was a systematic
    campaign to wipe out the population of Armenians early in the 20th
    century.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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