Mr.

abu sabaya, abu sayyaf, achille lauro, adolph coors, african americans, after iraqi, after saddam, air, air defense, al amara, al jumhuriya, al qaeda, al rasheed hotel, american anti, apartheid south africa, army special forces, attacked, bonn conference, bosnian serb, bosnian serbs, bush jr, california national guard, chinese embassy, cold war, colombian national police, colonel oliver north, defense, desert fox, desert storm, director william casey, drug enforcement agency, east german, el salvador, eugene hasenfus, february, five iraqis, forces, fort leavenworth, free congress foundation, general staff college, george bush, george bush jr, greater albania, guantanamo bay, gulf war, house administration committee chairman bob ney, in august, in march, in september, iraqi, iraqi intelligence service, iraqi kurdistan, iraqi national accord, iraqi national congress, january, john f. kennedy, july, khmer rouge, laszlo pasztor, mega, national endowment, national guard, national intelligence service, new jersey, no fly zone, north africa, north korea, north korean, north koreans, north vietnam, northern alliance, october, on august, on december, on june, on march, on november, on september, one american, one iraqi, operation allied force, operation desert fox, operation desert sabre, operation desert storm, operation enduring freedom, operation essential harvest, operation noble anvil, operation noble eagle, operation provide comfort, operation restore hope, operation uphold democracy, paul kagame, persian gulf, phnom penh, plan colombia, president clinton, president george bush, president jean, president reagan, quotoperation, rodney king, ronald reagan, s. army command, saddam hussein, safe haven, scott campbell, security council, shebaa farms, sierra leone, sites, socialist party, south africa, south african, south africans, south korea, southern air transport, southern iraq, southern lebanon, special forces, state department, troops, truth commission, united nations security council, us forces, washington post, william simon, world court, world trade organization, wounded