-Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, speaking at the United Nations in New York, proclaimed his love for all the world's peoples, and suggested that the United States halt domestic fuel production and buy its energy from him “at a fifty percent discount.”
-Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez objected to the smell of sulfur in the U.N.'s General Assembly hall, and offered to relocate the U.N.'s headquarters to Caracas.
-Ted Turner called the Iraq war one of the “dumbest moves of all time,” and a spokesman for the Iraq Study Group, a think tank created to analyze events in Iraq, announced that it had “made no judgment of any kind at this point about any aspect of policy with regard to Iraq.”
-The judge in the trial of Saddam Hussein was removed because “he hurt the feelings of the Iraqi people.”
-In Afghanistan, Marine General James L. Jones claimed to have killed as many as a third of the Taliban's “hardcore” fighters, leaving only the “weekend warriors.”
-A British major described the Royal Air Force as “utterly, utterly useless.”
-In Thailand, General Sonthi Boonyaratglin staged a coup d'etat, dismissing the prime minister and revoking the constitution. “Democracy has won!” said one coup supporter.
-Hungarian prime minister Ferenc Gyurcsany admitted that his campaign was based on lies. “We lied in the morning,” said Gyurcsany. “We lied in the evening.”
-British Home Secretary John Reid declared that England's “fight is not with Muslims generally,” and in Jordan, a failed suicide bomber was sentenced to be hanged.
- Pakistani president Pervez Musharraf said it was “very rude” for former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage to threaten to bomb his country “back to the Stone Age.”
-Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah attended a rally in Beirut to commemorate the “divine and historic victory” in the war with Israel, and President George W. Bush said he now knew that the stability he believed to exist in the Middle East was a “mirage.”
http://www.harpers.org/WeeklyReview2006-09-26.html