IAEA puts the heat on Tehran The US and other European countries drafted a tough statement that comes close to accusing Tehran of pursuing a secret nuclear weapons program. They were alarmed by the continuous stream of new revelations concerning Iran's nuclear activities despite its claims that all had been revealed. For it's part, Iran, angered by the statement, served notice that it planned to restart uranium enrichment.
Spain's Zapatero, a Bush ally, loses election The first of Bush's Iraq war allies has fallen; Spanish voters have swept Jose Maria Aznar and his centre-right government from power in the shadow of the March 11 train bombings. Socialist leader Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero is the new Prime Minister.
No proof of Iranian nuclear weapons Mohammed ElBaradei, President of the International Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency told US congressional lawmakers that he has no "specific proof" that Iran is developing nuclear weapons.
RIchard Clark's book "Against all Enemies" released In the book, Clarke writes that Bush and his Cabinet failed to recognize the al-Qaida threat before Sept. 11, 2001. In a curious move, even as they try to defend the Bush Administration against claims of lax anti-terrorism efforts, Senior cabinet members such has Dick Cheney and Condolezza Rice have claimed the former Chief Anti-Terrorism Coordinator wasn't in the loop.