
Army Reserve teams with D.C. Police to boost employment The Army Reserve recruited the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department in its new initiative to partner with public and private sector employers to jointly recruit, train and employ individuals. Either side can recruit an individual for the program, to let employees get Army training and enhance Army operations. D.C.'s police department, which hires 300 police officers per year, could be handed a solider who's graduated from military police school with security clearances... By this fall, they hope to have 400 to 500 companies signed up.
Get Osama Bin Laden [for one last job] before I leave office, orders George W Bush President [sic] George W Bush has enlisted British special forces in a final attempt to capture Osama Bin Laden before he leaves the White House. Defence and intelligence sources in Washington and London confirmed that a renewed hunt was on for the 'leader' of the September 11 attacks. "If he [Bush] can say he has killed Saddam Hussein and captured Bin Laden, he can claim to have left the world a safer place," said a US intelligence source.
Sex trade thrives in Afghanistan Afghanistan is one of the world's most conservative countries, yet its sex trade appears to be thriving. Prostitutes are often the casualties of nearly three decades of brutal war and a grinding poverty that forces most Afghans to live on less than $1 a day. Prostitutes in Afghanistan include scores of Chinese women serving Western customers who work for security firms, companies and aid groups in Afghanistan.
Desperate hunt for 1,100 who fled Afghan jail in Taliban raid Afghan and international troops launched a desperate hunt Saturday for more than 1,100 prisoners NATO said escaped a jail in Afghanistan when Taliban rebels blasted it open. The Taliban said 400 of its own fighters escaped when the rebels attacked the facility in the southern city of Kandahar late Friday with suicide bombs before shooting the guards.
Bush warns Brown over plan to cut Iraq force -- George Bush flies into London today with a warning for Gordon Brown not to announce a timetable for a British pull-out from Iraq, and expressing deep scepticism about the Prime Minister's high-profile strategy for bringing down world oil prices.
Iran is offered incentives to halt uranium enrichment --The Islamic Republic appears likely to reject the new package of economic and political inducements from Europe, Russia, China and the U.S. World powers urged Iran on Saturday to suspend its enrichment of uranium in exchange for a new package of economic and political incentives. But the package appeared to differ little substantively from a 2006 offer rejected by Iran, and Tehran appeared poised to spurn the latest offer as well.
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