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Here Are The Techniques That I Use To Earn Extra Money Anytime I Need To. These Easy Money Making Ideas Can Be Used By Anyone.
Nov. 19, 1992: Hialeah police Sgt. Pedro Cainas dies several days after being shot in the head while responding to a complaint about a gun-toting man who refused to turn down his radio.
Jan. 3, 1992: North Miami police detective Steven Bauer is shot and killed while escorting two clerks carrying cash drawers to drive-in booths at the Kislak National Bank.
June 11, 1991: Miami Springs Officer Charles Stafford is killed with his own gun during a struggle with a suspected car thief.
Nov. 13, 1990: Broward Sheriff's Deputy Patrick Behan is doing paperwork in his patrol car when someone fires a bullet through an open window that strikes him in the face, killing him.
April 27, 1990: Metro-Dade Officer Joseph Martin is shot to death by an ex-con during a routine traffic stop.
Feb. 17, 1990: Broward Sheriff's Deputy John W. Greeney is killed in a barrage of gunfire after surprising two robbers at a fast-food chicken restaurant.
Nov. 28, 1988: Metro-Dade Officers Richard Boles and David Strzalkowski are killed with their own service revolvers when a man goes berserk at a Northeast Dade trailer park.
June 30, 1988: Miami Beach undercover Officer Scott Rakow dies the day after he was shot while chasing a suspect in a drug sting.
June 21, 1988: Miami police motorcycle officer William Craig, 37, thrown off his motorcycle in an accident at U.S. 1 and Southwest 67th Avenue, dies after 2 ½ months in a coma.
March 31, 1988: Miami police officer Victor Estefan, 49, is shot and killed after he tries to make a traffic stop at 36th Avenue and Southwest Eighth Street.
Nov. 6, 1986: Hialeah officer Emilio Miyares, 27, is shot during a struggle with a robbery suspect.
Sept. 3, 1986: Miami officer David Herring, 25, is killed by exhaust fumes in patrol car.
June 25, 1986: Sweetwater officer James K. Beasley, 44, is run down by a fleeing vehicle.
June 3, 1986: Opa-locka officer Ephraim Brown, 29, is shot while struggling with a drug suspect.
April 11, 1986: FBI agents Benjamin Grogan, 53, and Gerald Dove, 30, are killed in a shoot-out with bank robbery suspects.
Dec. 21, 1984: Miami motorcycle patrolman Jose De Leon, 26, is struck by a car while pursuing a suspect.
Feb. 25, 1984: Miami Beach officer Donald Bernard Kramer, 42, is shot by a homeless derelict.
Dec. 25, 1983: Metro officer Robert Zore, 25, is shot in a struggle with a robbery suspect.
May 28, 1983: Metro officer Stephen Corbett, 21, is struck by a car at an accident scene.
Sep. 23, 1981: Metro officer Edward Young is killed instantly after an unmarked patrol car in which he was riding slams into a concrete utility racing to a crime scene.
Sept. 2, 1981: Miami officer Nathaniel Broom, 23, is shot while following a traffic violator.
Nov. 5, 1980: North Miami policeman Carl Mertes, 41, is shot while trying to handcuff a traffic violator.
-- Miami Herald Staff
Chinese President Hu Jintao used a lunch address with US business leaders Thursday to underscore the theme he has sought to establish for his state visit to Washington: Both countries as well as the world can benefit from enhanced US-China cooperation, but it must be cooperation based on mutual respect.
Skip to next paragraphJust in case it was unclear to anyone what Mr. Hu meant, he spelled it out with two examples. The US, he said, must recognize that Taiwan and Tibet are “issues that concern China’s territorial integrity and China’s core interests.”
In other words, stay out. Hu cited the examples a day after President Obama referred to Tibet and the Dalai Lama in a press conference with Hu, and just hours after Nancy Pelosi, House Democratic leader, brought up the issue of Tibet in a meeting with Hu.
The House minority leader also conveyed “the concerns ... on both sides of the aisle” over the continued detention of Chinese human rights activist Liu Xiaobo, she said in a statement. Ms. Pelosi noted the fact that Mr. Liu was not permitted to travel to Norway in December to receive the Nobel Peace Prize. Mr. Obama, the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize laureate, refrained from publicly citing Liu’s case Wednesday.
Hu’s words, delivered at a luncheon in his honor sponsored by the US-China Business Council and the National Committee on United States-China Relations, suggested areas of potential future tension – for example, if the US continues to sell arms to Taiwan. Military-to-military relations between China and the US are only now beginning to recover from the freeze they experienced after the Obama administration announced arms sales to Taiwan more than a year ago.
Those flies in the ointment aside, Hu focused mostly on the benefits for both countries of increased economic and security cooperation. Addressing the commonly held view in the US that China is more of an economic threat than an opportunity, Hu said that in fact, China had been a bright spot for US business through the global recession.
“For many US companies, their China operations have become the most profitable of their global operations,” he said.
From Washington, Hu was to continue to Chicago, where he plans to visit a Chinese-owned auto-parts factory. Such a visit will put the emphasis on a China that creates US jobs, rather than destroying them.
Some US business leaders say they are holding out hope that Hu’s visit will mark a genuine turn in China toward the “level playing field” for US and other international companies that Obama called for Wednesday. During Hu’s visit, China committed to opening markets wider – including for government procurement contracts – and to honoring foreign companies’ intellectual property rights.
As one example, the Chinese government announced on Wednesday that it will audit government-office software use and publish the audit’s results. “If the audit is thorough, the additional transparency on this issue should result in greater software sales for US companies,” said John Frisbie, president of the US-China Business Council, in a statement.
Only 1 in 10 users of Microsoft software in China has paid for the product, said Steve Ballmer, Microsoft’s chief executive officer, in a White House meeting Wednesday with US business leaders, Hu, and Obama.
Even as Hu called for mutual respect and a sense of equitable cooperation – particularly in the Asia-Pacific – he also fell back on the notion of China as not-quite-yet a developed global power.
“We are keenly aware that China is still the largest developing country in the world,” he said. A day after publicly acknowledging China’s shortcomings in the respect of human rights, Hu said, “We still have a long way to go.... Development holds the key to all our problems.”
Hu was introduced to his audience by Henry Kissinger, the former secretary of State and national security adviser whom President Nixon dispatched on a secret mission to China in 1971, which led to the two adversaries reestablishing diplomatic relations.
Recalling that Chinese leader Zhou Enlai had told him that renewed US-China relations “will shake the world,” Dr. Kissinger said that the current generation of US-China leader “has different task.... We are working to build the world, not to shake it.”
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Dagan's comments did not lead to complacency, one official insisted. On the contrary, what he said should show the international community, which had thought beforehand that an Iranian bomb was a fait accompli, that a nuclear Iran was not imminent, and that there was still time to act.
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"What the international community needs to do now," the official said, "was take advantage of the time and act forcefully." The official said that Jerusalem hoped that the meeting in Istanbul would lead to a ratcheting up of diplomatic and economic sanctions against Iran.
"We also think that keeping the military option at center stage is also essential," he said.Another official said that Dagan had not taken the military option off the table by saying Israel should attack only if the "dagger was at its neck." Rather, he said, what Dagan did was step back away from the portrayal of a "crazy" and irresponsible "Israel" which needed to be stopped from carrying out an action that could endanger the world.
There were people trying to convince other countries of the necessity of sanctions by saying that if they were not taken there was no telling what the "crazy Israelis" could do, the official said.
"The problem with that tactic is that then the international community thinks they have to stop Israel, not Iran, and that is the wrong focus.," he said.
Netanyahu was reportedly furious with Dagan for his comments, concerned that this would make the world complacent in its dealing of Iran, and at a speech last week he characterized the comments as only "intelligence estimates." Dagan himself stepped back from his remarks during an appearance at the Knesset Foreign relations and Defense Committee this week, saying that Iran could "shorten the time" it takes to attain nuclear weapons.
Netanyahu, meanwhile, wasn't the only one worried about complacency. A study by the Federation of American Scientists shown to AP before the Istanbul meeting indicated that even as the West believes it has bought more time, Iran last year appeared to have increased efficiency of the machines that produce enriched uranium, giving it the technical capacity to produce enough material for a simple nuclear warhead in 5 months.
"The biggest issue with recent statements that Iran's nuclear drive has been slowed down is that we are getting a false sense of security that we have bought more time," Ivanka Barzashka, the author of the study, said in an e-mail. "That takes away from the urgency ... (of) a diplomatic breakthrough." The study concluded that "contrary to statements by US officials and many experts, Iran does not appear to be slowing down its nuclear drive." .
Such views contrast with the public optimism expressed by Washington ahead of the Istanbul talks convened by the EU and grouping Iran on one side of the table and the US, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany on the other.
Dagan's estimate that Iran could only produce the bomb by the middle of the decade compares favorably with projections three years ago that Iran would have nuclear capacity by 2011. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told NBC's Today show on Wednesday that the new Israeli estimates were "very significant." The delay, she said "gives us more of a breathing space to try to work to prevent them from obtaining a nuclear weapon." Two outside forces would account for any Iranian problems in enriching uranium — the increasing weight of U.N. sanctions, meant to choke off raw materials needed to make and maintain the program; and the apparent havoc caused by the mysterious Stuxnet computer malware.
Iran has acknowledged that Stuxnet hit "a limited number of centrifuges", saying its scientists discovered and neutralized the malware before it could cause any serious damage. The computer worm is assumed to have caused disruption of enrichment in November that temporarily crippled thousands of centrifuges at Natanz.
Barzashka said that — while the sanctions might have slowed Iran's ability to develop, new, and more efficient centrifuges — they do not seem to have slowed improvements in the output of the present generation of machines used at Natanz.
Ahead of the talks, Iran is trying to take the diplomatic offensive. It is pushing an agenda that covers just about everything except its nuclear program: global disarmament, Israel's suspected nuclear arsenal and Tehran's concerns about U.S. military bases in Iraq and elsewhere in the region.
"Let them issue 100,000 resolutions," Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Tuesday referring to U.N. Security Council sanctions and other efforts to curb Iran's nuclear program. "It's not important. Let them say what they want to." Iran's U.N. ambassador, Mohammad Khazaee, repeated that Iran will "never negotiate on our inalienable right to use nuclear energy for ... peaceful purposes." "It doesn't mean that Iranians are looking for confrontation," he told reporters in New York Tuesday. "But at the same time ... it's not going to work to put a knife in the neck of somebody, or your sword, and at the same time asking him to negotiate with you." On Thursday, Turkey urged Iran to offer assurances during the talks that it won't seek nuclear weapons.
"We are against nuclear weapons, but we believe that all countries have the right to peaceful use of nuclear energy," Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said at a joint news conference with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.
Lavrov, whose country is among the world powers negotiating with Iran, said there was a need for Iran to agree to intrusive inspection of its nuclear sites.
"It's not an obligation, but it will certainly be required given the history of the Iranian nuclear issue," Lavrov said.
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