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Since he left the White House in 1981, former President Jimmy Carter has not been shy about wading into contentious political battles - sometimes to the chagrin of his successors.That reputation for candor was on full display during a press conference convened Thursday to discuss his cancer diagnosis, as Mr. Carter weighed in on his own political history and some other global issues.Carter, 90, announced Thursday he was diagnosed with melanoma and the cancer has spread stanley cup to his liver and brain. He said he would begin treatment for the disease immediately. He had surgery earlier this month to remove a mass in his liver. Doctors found that there were four spots of melanoma on my brain ... they are very small spots, about two mil stanley vaso limeters, Carter said. I ll get my first radiation treatment for the melanoma in my brain this afternoon. Jimmy Carter provides details about cancer diagnosis 05:29 U.S. relations with Iran: 35 years after hostage crisis 01:16 Asked whether he has any regrets, as he l stanley bottles ooks back on his career, Carter admitted he s second-guessed his response to the Iranian hos Uopm Bidlack To Play Alexander Hamilton
CBS News Below is a transcript of Face the Nation on September 16, 2012, hosted by CBS News Bob Schieffer. Guests include: Libyan President Mohamed Magariaf, U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice, Senator John McCain, R-Ariz., and a roundtable of Israeli Ambassador Martin Indyk, New York Times Columnist Tom Friedman, and Richard Haass, President of the Council on Foreign Relations. BOB SCHIEFFER: Today stanley fr on FACE THE NATION on the anniversary of 9/11, an attack in Libya takes the life of our ambassador there and three other Americans. And a new attack in Afghanistan today leaves four U.S. service members dead.As the anti-American protests over a U.S.-made anti-Muslim film spread across the Arab world from Africa to Afghanistan to Australia. Here at home, big questions remain about the safety of U.S. personnel overseas. And how all this will affect Campaign 2012. We will cover it all from all sides with the President of Libya s General National Congress Mohamed Yousef Magariaf; U.N. ambassador Susan Rice; and Republican Senator John McCain. For analyses, we ll look to former U.S. ambassador to Israel, Martin Indyk; stanley thermoskannen the preside stanley cups uk nt of the Council on Foreign Relations, Richard Haass; and New York Times columnist Tom Friedman.Plus, we ll talk to the chief Washington correspondent of The Times, David Sanger; TIME magazine deputy international editor Bobby Ghosh; and CBS News political director, John Dickerson. This is FACE THE NATION.ANNOUNCER: F
Since he left the White House in 1981, former President Jimmy Carter has not been shy about wading into contentious political battles - sometimes to the chagrin of his successors.That reputation for candor was on full display during a press conference convened Thursday to discuss his cancer diagnosis, as Mr. Carter weighed in on his own political history and some other global issues.Carter, 90, announced Thursday he was diagnosed with melanoma and the cancer has spread stanley cup to his liver and brain. He said he would begin treatment for the disease immediately. He had surgery earlier this month to remove a mass in his liver. Doctors found that there were four spots of melanoma on my brain ... they are very small spots, about two mil stanley vaso limeters, Carter said. I ll get my first radiation treatment for the melanoma in my brain this afternoon. Jimmy Carter provides details about cancer diagnosis 05:29 U.S. relations with Iran: 35 years after hostage crisis 01:16 Asked whether he has any regrets, as he l stanley bottles ooks back on his career, Carter admitted he s second-guessed his response to the Iranian hos Uopm Bidlack To Play Alexander Hamilton
CBS News Below is a transcript of Face the Nation on September 16, 2012, hosted by CBS News Bob Schieffer. Guests include: Libyan President Mohamed Magariaf, U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice, Senator John McCain, R-Ariz., and a roundtable of Israeli Ambassador Martin Indyk, New York Times Columnist Tom Friedman, and Richard Haass, President of the Council on Foreign Relations. BOB SCHIEFFER: Today stanley fr on FACE THE NATION on the anniversary of 9/11, an attack in Libya takes the life of our ambassador there and three other Americans. And a new attack in Afghanistan today leaves four U.S. service members dead.As the anti-American protests over a U.S.-made anti-Muslim film spread across the Arab world from Africa to Afghanistan to Australia. Here at home, big questions remain about the safety of U.S. personnel overseas. And how all this will affect Campaign 2012. We will cover it all from all sides with the President of Libya s General National Congress Mohamed Yousef Magariaf; U.N. ambassador Susan Rice; and Republican Senator John McCain. For analyses, we ll look to former U.S. ambassador to Israel, Martin Indyk; stanley thermoskannen the preside stanley cups uk nt of the Council on Foreign Relations, Richard Haass; and New York Times columnist Tom Friedman.Plus, we ll talk to the chief Washington correspondent of The Times, David Sanger; TIME magazine deputy international editor Bobby Ghosh; and CBS News political director, John Dickerson. This is FACE THE NATION.ANNOUNCER: F