Jordan's King Abdullah II, one of the first Arab leaders to call for al-Assad to step down, told CNN that he didn't think the attack means the regime is about to crumble.
When his family got legal residency, he though Geovani had a bright future in the U.S. He didn't imagine that future would end in a roadside bomb attack in Iraq.
He didn't offer further details or say whether there was specific information about an attack on Hyderabad, the capital of Andhra Pradesh state and home to the local units of several overseas companies such as Microsoft Corp.
Obama seemingly welcomed the attack and calmly rebutted the Ayers connection. (He didn't really address the ACORN claim, though he did earlier this week.) Obama consistently turned his responses to the idea that there were far bigger issues at play for most Americans, like the failing economy and their job security.
In fact, Cheney had suffered what his doctors belatedly described as a mild heart attack, though Bush almost certainly didn't know that when he appeared before the cameras.