Testing Allies

At a time when true U.S. allies are hard to find, the South Korean government has stood fast with the Bush administration, even sending the third-largest detachment of troops to Iraq. But, at home, it’s a different story. Under Seoul’s leftist government, the country’s textbooks are being rewritten, and the White House probably wouldn’t care ...

At a time when true U.S. allies are hard to find, the South Korean government has stood fast with the Bush administration, even sending the third-largest detachment of troops to Iraq. But, at home, it's a different story. Under Seoul's leftist government, the country's textbooks are being rewritten, and the White House probably wouldn't care for their tone. Consider one of the recent questions in a teacher's packet on the 1991 Gulf War:

At a time when true U.S. allies are hard to find, the South Korean government has stood fast with the Bush administration, even sending the third-largest detachment of troops to Iraq. But, at home, it’s a different story. Under Seoul’s leftist government, the country’s textbooks are being rewritten, and the White House probably wouldn’t care for their tone. Consider one of the recent questions in a teacher’s packet on the 1991 Gulf War:

1) Infant mortality increased by 150%, and in some areas, 70% of newborns had leukemia due to sanctions.

2) The United States and Britain conducted a bombing campaign against Iraq for 11 years after the war, causing terror among the Iraqi people.

3) Cancer among Iraqi children increased by 700% because of depleted uranium left from the bombing.

4) The infant mortality rate of Iraqi children in 1999 was 300% higher than it was a decade earlier.

5) Not one Iraqi starved to death after the war because of the extensive food relief program.

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