3748 Ralphさん ( ICQ=334410210、 メール、 ホームページ ) 05/15 (金) 05:27 UID:[ 6448@ZM3pSXlp ] I'm only getting an answering machine http://www.winsorcreative.com/edegra-tablet.pdf edegra side effects And even if Assad and Putin have had Saul-to-Paul conversions on the proverbial road to Damascus, the logistics of finding and neutralizing a far-flung chemical weapons program are overwhelming. As Bloomberg's Jeffrey Goldberg wrote this week, "the process of securing several hundred tons of chemical weapons, and thousands of warheads and rockets, would take years, even if Syria were at peace. The U.S. has been destroying its chemical weapons stocks for roughly 15 years, and it still isn't finished." And Syria is in the middle of a civil war that is metastasizing as greater numbers of foreign fighters are drawn there. "In Syria, Hezbollah and al-Qaida, among others, are struggling violently, even nihilistically, for supremacy," Goldberg notes. Appearing on CNN Wednesday night, former U.N. weapons inspector David Kay estimated that dealing with the Syrian arms in the middle of an ongoing civil war could take 10 years. The Russian plan, then, at best promises a long, drawn-out process with limited success, but more likely it will prove an endless opportunity for stalling and delay.
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