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To: Hawkmoon who wrote (76796)9/17/2001 6:19:44 PM
From: long-gone  Respond to of 116753
 
<<If the Federal government told you that your place of business would be closed for a specified period of time in the interest of "national security", >>

Or a gold mine because of the "environment"? Oh, sorry, it's OK with you when it's gold. I forgot. actions by the governments of Europe acting in concert with the bankers in nothing less than the same.



To: Hawkmoon who wrote (76796)9/17/2001 6:20:35 PM
From: Broken_Clock  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 116753
 
- News you won't read in America:
smh.com.au
WORLD

Made by the USA: a $6billion rebel
group that haunts its former
masters

Who built the monster? America itself, with
Pakistan's help, writes Christopher Kremmer.

If, as the old saying goes, you must set a thief to
catch a thief, then America may have found the right
partner for its new war on terror.

Since the 1970s, Pakistan has patronised Islamic
fundamentalist groups with close links to Osama bin
Laden's al-Qaeda ("The Base") organisation, experts
say. Ironically, it organised them at the behest of
the same United States Government which now demands
their elimination.

The 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan saw the CIA
funnel some $US3billion to mujahideen rebels. The
fundamentalist - but friendly - oil sheikhs in Saudi
Arabia provided another $US3billion.

With his family background in the construction
business, and inspired by the Islamic cause, bin
Laden helped build a system of tunnels near Khost
used by the CIA-funded Muslim rebels to fight the
Russians.

By 1998, when the US tried to kill him with cruise
missiles for his alleged role in bombing US
embassies in Africa, they had to target those very
same facilities, where he now runs training camps.

In the 1980s, deciding where covert US funding for
the Afghan rebels went was delegated to the Pakistan
military government of General Mohammed Zia-ul-Haq.
The generals siphoned off millions to buy ranches in
the US and other baubles.

Today, with no embassy in Kabul, and cutbacks to the
budget for expensive human intelligence, US
intelligence relies mainly on satellites.

Now another Pakistani military ruler is being leaned
on heavily - and relied upon - to do Washington's
bidding.

Pakistan will want to see the sanctions imposed on
its nuclear weapons program lifted, and a decisive
American role in sorting out its Kashmir problem
with India. Calls for restoring democracy in
Pakistan will be muffled.

The ironies continue when you remember that it was
Pakistan which nurtured the Taliban.

In the mid-1990s, American officials flirted with
the mad mullahs in Kandahar, lured by the promise of
a new order which could secure pipeline routes to
tap the rich oil and gas reserves of Central Asia.

As late as 1997 I met former CIA officials based in
Kandahar and engaged by US oil companies to grease
the wheels between the US and the Taliban. In the
end, they failed. But having sown the wind, America
now reaps the whirlwind.

A blind, wounded giant is demanding retribution for
attacks almost certainly carried out by the very
Muslim groups it used to bring down the Soviet
Union. The road leads back to Afghanistan.

But it also leads to Kashmir, where extremist
Islamic militias based in Pakistan have for a decade
been engaged in a bloody struggle to wrest the
disputed territory from India.

"In the Kashmir war, Pakistan provided explicit
diplomatic and political support to the insurgents
and, according to Pakistani military sources, a
substantial amount of money and weapons, as well as
training, logistical support, and a sanctuary,"
wrote Samuel P. Huntingdon in The Clash of
Civilisations.

Pakistan relies on the jihadi groups to keep the
pot boiling in Kashmir. It was one of these groups
which hijacked an Indian Airlines plane, which they
flew to Kandahar and held for a week, killing one
Indian captive by slitting his throat.

The hijackers succeeded in forcing the Indian
government to release three Muslim militants held in
its jails, among them the fundamentalist preacher
Maulana Masood Azhar.

Not long afterwards, investigators believe, Azhar
met bin Laden in Afghanistan and received generous
funding to establish a fundamentalist political
party, the Jaish-e Mohammed. Perhaps it was then
that bin Laden decided that crime paid.



To: Hawkmoon who wrote (76796)9/17/2001 9:41:07 PM
From: long-gone  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116753
 
My main problem with a bailout of the airlines is all but two were bleeding read ink weeks before 9-11. were but they all as good as Southwest.........



To: Hawkmoon who wrote (76796)9/17/2001 9:50:21 PM
From: Zardoz  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 116753
 
Canadian Government hacker team is back in service as of Saturday. They are monitoring all internet traffic between USA and any foreign and domestic computers. As you are well aware USA can't monitor computer traffic in and out of USA, {just on foreign soil} yet Canada can fulfill the monitoring between USA and outside of USA, under Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS). And they can monitor inside Canada as well.

Hutch