Rice postpones trip to Beirut after horrific Israeli attack

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060730/ap_on_go_pr_wh/rice

By KATHERINE SHRADER, Associated Press

JERUSALEM - Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said on Sunday she is "deeply saddened by the terrible loss of innocent life," after an attack on a village in southern Lebanon. But, despite international pressure on the United States, she did not call for an immediate cease-fire in the fighting between Israel and the Hezbollah militia.

Rice said she spoke with Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora to say she would postpone a visit to Beirut on Sunday. She planned to stay in Jerusalem instead, where she said she had work to do to end the fighting.

"We are also pushing for an urgent end to the current hostilities, but the views of the parties on how to achieve this are different," she said.

Israeli missiles hit several homes in the southern Lebanese village of Qana early Sunday. Some 50 people died, according to initial reports. At least 20 bodies wrapped in white sheets were taken away, including children and elderly residents who were attacked while they were sleeping.

Rice reiterated U.S. concerns about the loss of civilian life in the fighting. Hundreds, mostly Lebanese civilians, have died in the three weeks since Hezbollah captured two Israeli soldiers in a raid into Israel. The action provoked Israel's largest military campaign against Lebanon in 24 years.

"We all recognize this kind of warfare is extremely difficult," said Rice, noting it comes in areas where civilians live. "It unfortunately has awful consequences sometimes."

"We want a cease-fire as soon as possible," said Rice, in one of her strongest statements yet on the desire to end the conflict.

The United States and Israel are pressing for a settlement that addresses enduring issues between Lebanon and Israel and disables the Hezbollah - not the quick truce favored by most world leaders.

The Qana attack comes at a damaging and difficult moment for Rice, who arrived in the Middle East for a second visit in a week and hoped to leave with progress that could lead to a decisive U.N. resolution to end the hostilities.

"I am here ... in pretty political and dicey circumstances," she said. "I do believe that it is best to try to address these issues face-to-face and see what we can achieve."

A U.S. official, who spoke on condition of anonymity about the diplomatic dialogue, said Rice and her aides were wrapping up discussions in Jerusalem and planned to move the focus of to the U.N. headquarters in New York.

Speaking in Beirut, Saniora said the attack on Lebanese civilians demonstrates a cease-fire is the only option. "There is no place at this sad moment for any discussions other than an immediate and unconditional cease-fire as well as international investigation of the Israeli massacres in Lebanon now," he told reporters Sunday morning.

Rice said she was meeting with Israeli Defense Minister Amir Peretz when news of the attack came. "Once again, I was reiterating our strong concern about the impact of Israeli military operations on innocent civilians," she said.

She said she is working with all parties to try to stop the violence. "Too many innocent people - Lebanese and Israeli - have suffered. Too many people have lost their lives. Too many families are homeless. And too many children have been killed, injured or are living in fear for their lives."

"Emotions are understandably running high on all sides," she said.

Rice said she had not yet spoken to Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, whom she had dinner with Saturday night, but planned to reach him after an Israeli Cabinet meeting.

She has spoken by phone to Saniora to express the condolences of the U.S. government and its citizens.

"In the wake of the tragedy that the people and the government of Lebanon are dealing with today, I have decided to postpone my discussion in Beirut," Rice said. "In any case, my work today is here."

She said she will continue to meet with Israeli officials to agree on the elements of an agreement that will allow the U.N. Security Council to take action toward a resolution.

"We are making real progress on the political framework and believe the parties are coming together," she said.
 
Though Rice says she decided to postpone her meeting with Saniora, I saw a TV news report that he cancelled it. By the way, it was reported that the Israelis place the blame for these Qana deaths "squarely on the shoulders of Hezbollah," and that they warned civialians to get out, like that's so practical and easy.

This situation is so ugly and gruesome, yet the CNN and Fox anchors are still doing their usual lighthearted giggling as they lead into and out of reporting on it, unless some Westerners are affected (like, by having to move), of course. "Gee, it's hot in here, isn't it?" "Ha ha, you two are always hot, while I'm cold!" "I'm sure some viewers are thinking I'm hot because I'm next to you two ladies, ha ha!" -- Fox New this morning.
 
http://time.blogs.com/allen_report/

It's the Condi Rice Show

She has Bush's ear, global clout and a high profile. Now she needs
some results.

Back in 2003, Condoleezza Rice, then the national Security Adviser,
decided that U.S. administrator L. Paul Bremer's plan for getting a
government going in Iraq wasn't viable. Without telling Bremer or his
boss, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, Rice went to President
George W. Bush after her summer vacation to put the viceroy on a
shorter leash. She knew that the President exercised with Bremer when
he visited Washington, appreciated his strong Catholic faith and
treated him like a Cabinet member. But she drew on her even deeper
bond with the President. She soft-pedaled her views of Bremer's
record so as not to make it personal and got herself put in charge of
Iraq policy.

The episode, a precursor of Rice's outmaneuvering of Bush hard-liners
when she became Secretary of State, is revealed in Imperial Life in
the Emerald City
, a forthcoming book about the Green Zone by the
Washington Post's former Baghdad bureau chief Rajiv Chandrasekaran.

The details were confirmed for Time by an official who was involved,
who added a telling coda: Bremer actually liked the new arrangement
because he "got to deal with Condi, who had the President's ear."

Since moving out of the West Wing to take over State in early 2005,
Rice has returned there often and has remained close to the President
and First Lady. Now the President's hopes for becoming a Middle East
peacemaker lie with the imperturbable and at times inflexible concert
pianist and childhood championship ice skater he calls "an
unsticker"--a solver of insoluble problems.


Rice announced before heading off to Israel and Lebanon last week
that she was not after "a temporary solution," much to the
consternation of Arab and European allies of the U.S. The New York
Times ran a vivid front-page photo of Rice, eyes closed, holding her
head as if in despair. In fact, she was wiping off perspiration that
was pouring down her forehead in a broiling conference room in Rome.
(The hall normally seats about 100 people but was packed with 1,000;
firefighters showed up to remove doors to cool the place down.)

Her goal is grander than the instant results demanded by her critics. She
says she is after nothing less than a changed Middle East, which
requires more than a cease-fire that could quickly be breached. As
White House press secretary Tony Snow put it, the objective is to
"create the conditions so that you not only have the piece of paper,
you have the peace."

Rice has greater access and latitude than any Secretary of State
since Henry Kissinger left government after Gerald Ford lost in 1976,
and she has capitalized on every bit of it. Many senior officials at
the National Security Council are Rice loyalists who date back to her
days there, so the State Department and the White House work closely
together and sometimes cut the Pentagon out, according to
participants.

Until now, she has won generally glowing marks for a
record that includes offering the first substantive talks with Iran
in 27 years. But some Bush aides were miffed that she embarked on
what they sarcastically called the "Condi Rice Show" without a
clearly attainable goal. Her initial round of diplomacy in the
Israel-Hizballah hostilities was mostly portrayed as a failure, and
she looked drained as she emerged from a meeting of world powers in
Rome, where many allies had pushed to call for an immediate
cease-fire.

Earlier this month Rice took her senior staff to the Wye River
Conference Center on Maryland's Eastern Shore to plan the fall,
including a presidential trip to the U.N. The former plantation was
the site of Bill Clinton's negotiations between the Israelis and
Palestinians. A reprise looks very far off to the Bush team.

Nevertheless, friends say, Rice, 51, is thriving in her
higher-profile role, working from 6:30 a.m. until 7:30 or 8 at night,
then treating herself to tennis, the Kennedy Center and brunches with
friends on weekends. Roughly one Sunday a month she has her
chamber-music group over to her Watergate apartment.

She worked on the National Security Council of President George H.W.
Bush, and some Bush-family aides say Rice's election as the first
black and first woman President could be one of the clan's greatest
legacies. Although no national race appears to be in the offing for
2008, friends hope she will eventually run statewide in California.

Rice's staff recognizes that the speculation about her political
future may be useful, and has overhauled the optics of the job to
give her coverage greater pizazz. In Washington she appears with
world leaders in front of a fireplace that could be in the Oval
Office. Abroad, she is photographed stepping from a plane with an
almost presidential wave, a shot that Colin Powell's staff rarely
facilitated. "The time for diplomacy is now," she said at her
confirmation hearing. It was a message not only to the world but also
to parts of the Administration that had thwarted Powell.

Rice's staff asked State Department historians for the dossiers of
successful Secretaries. One characteristic they had in common was
clout. She can check that off. Now she must show she can use it.

--With reporting by Elaine Shannon, traveling with Rice
 
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