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February 2004

Time: UTC   |   Date: , ,

See also

Ongoing events
Strange fires in Caronia
2004 Canadian Federal Election
  Conservative leadership race
  Liberal sponsorship scandal
2004 Taiwan Presidential Election
2004 U.S. Presidential Election
  Democratic presidential nomination
Bloody Sunday Inquiry
Exploration of Mars
  Mars Exploration Rovers
  Mars Express Orbiter
Bird flu
Hutton Inquiry
Israeli-Palestinian conflict
  Road Map to Peace
Kyoto Protocol
North Korean Crisis
Same-sex Marriage
SCO v. IBM
War on Terrorism
  Afghanistan timeline February 2004
Occupation of Iraq
  Iraqi Insurgency
  Iraq Timeline

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February 19, 2004

February 18, 2004

February 17, 2004

February 16, 2004

February 15, 2004

February 14, 2004

February 13, 2004

February 12, 2004

February 11, 2004

February 10, 2004

February 9, 2004

  • King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden made a statement where he praised sultan Hassanal Bolkiah, the dictator of Brunei for the open society in his country. This has led to a public outrage in Sweden with demands that the king abdicate. [135] [136]
  • Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf admits that he had suspected for at least three years that Abdul Qadeer Khan, Pakistan's top nuclear scientist, was sharing nuclear technology with other countries, blaming the United States for not giving him convincing proof of the activities of his own scientist.[137]
  • Russian federal prosecutors close a murder investigation, one hour after it had been opened by Moscow's prosecutor office, in the case of missing presidential candidate, Ivan Rybkin. Rybkin was last seen five days ago.[138]
  • In Haiti, an armed uprising spreads to nearly a dozen towns in the western and northern areas of the island nation. The uprising is the strongest challenge yet to President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. At least 41 people have been killed.[139]
  • The final three members of a group of Muslim men from the Portland, Oregon area of the United States who tried to enter Afghanistan to join the Taliban are sentenced to prison. In previous verdicts, the other four members of the group had been sentenced to prison.[140]
  • Russia's Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov announces that Russia is considering withdrawing from the Conventional Forces in Europe treaty, considered to be one of the main cornerstones of European security. Mr. Ivanov cites NATO expansion and the end of the Cold War as justifications for retiring the treaty. [141]

February 8, 2004

February 7, 2004

February 6, 2004

February 5, 2004

February 4, 2004

February 3, 2004

February 2, 2004

  • U.S. President George W. Bush announces he will form an independent, bipartisan inquiry presidential commission to probe into prewar intelligence regarding weapons of mass destruction leading up to the decision to invade Iraq. Former weapons inspector David Kay, meeting with Bush with at the White House, maintains that Bush was right to go to war in Iraq and characterizes Saddam's regime as "far more dangerous than even we anticipated" when it was thought he had WMDs ready to deploy. [204] [205] [206]
  • Traces of ricin are found in the mailroom of a U.S. Senate office building. [207]
  • Prime Minister of Israel Ariel Sharon announces to the Ha'aretz newspaper that he plans to dismantle 17 Jewish settlements in the Gaza Strip, and that he foresees a time when there are no Jews in Gaza at all. [208]
  • Pakistani nuclear scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan confesses to smuggling nuclear hardware on chartered planes, sharing secret designs for the centrifuges that produce the enriched uranium necessary to develop a nuclear weapon, and giving personal briefings to nuclear scientists from Iran, North Korea and Libya, believing that nuclear proliferation would "ease Western attention on Pakistan" and "help the Muslim cause" [209]
  • The leader of Norway's Conservative Party (Høyre), Jan Petersen, announces his resignation as party leader after 10 years at the helm. He will continue as Foreign Minister in the current coalition government where Høyre is the largest part. [210]

February 1, 2004

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2004: January
2003: January