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Strategies & Market Trends : MARKET INDEX TECHNICAL ANALYSIS - MITA -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: J.T. who wrote (8680)9/28/2001 12:04:25 AM
From: J.T.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19219
 
Bin Laden's sacred cow dust

By Ralph Reiland

© 2001 WorldNetDaily.com

Interviewing Osama bin Laden last February, ABC News asked this question: "You have been charged with masterminding the bombings of the two U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. Are these charges true?"

Bin Laden's answer:

Praise be to God, the Cherisher and Sustainer of the Worlds. Peace and blessings be upon Prophet Muhammad, his companions and his kin. Let me begin by stating that we, in the World Islamic Front for jihad against Jews and Crusaders, have, by the grace of God Almighty, issued a crystal clear fatwa calling on the Nation to carry on jihad aimed at liberating Islamic holy sites, and the Ancient House, The Holy Ka'aba, and Al-Aksa Mosque and all Islamic lands. By the grace of God, praise and glory be to him, this Nation, the Nation of Muhammad, God's peace and blessings be upon him, has responded to this appeal and this instigation. We will continue this course because it is a part of our religion, and because God, praise and glory be to him, ordered us to carry out jihad so that the word of God may remain exalted to the heights. If the instigation for jihad against the Jews and the Americans, in order to liberate Al-Aksa Mosque and the Holy Ka'aba, is considered a crime, let history be a witness that I am a criminal.

Strip away the bovine excrement and here's the answer: Yes.

The bombs went off at the U.S. embassies, in other words, because the Grand Pooh-Bah in the Sky has ordered a holy war, has ordered his most ardent fans to blow themselves up in pizza shops and smash passenger jets into the sides of skyscrapers.

And "we will continue this course," explains bin Laden, because it's "a part of our religion." And if that's "considered a crime," i.e., considered a crime to kill 10 or 20 thousand people in one morning at the World Trade Center, so be it.

And here's the second question from ABC News: "You warned that Americans would die. Then, two months later, the U.S. embassies in Nairobi and Dar As Salaam were bombed. Were these bombings because of your fatwa, your decree, against America?"

Bin Laden's reply: "By the grace of God, praise and glory be to him, we have repeatedly issued warnings, over a number of years. Following these warnings and these calls, anti-American explosions took place in a number of Islamic countries. Most probably, these acts came about as a result of such calls and warnings. But only God knows the truth."

Again, get past the heifer dust and here's the answer: Yes. Yes, I ordered the hits and "most probably, these acts came about as a result," but, hey, only the Grand Pooh-Bah knows for sure.

There's nothing new in any of this, except that the destruction has escalated. It's the same demonization of the West, the same painting of the United States as the Great Satan, the same faith-based blather, the same envy of our prosperity from the boondocks of the world, the same hatred of our freedom by those who've sacrificed their individual distinctiveness to a collective psychosis.

If Ronald Reagan was still in the White House, he might well be saying the same thing now about bin Laden that he said in his Jan. 7, 1986, press conference about Libyan leader Col. Gaddafi: "I find he's not only a barbarian but he's flaky."

Unfortunately, it looks like we ain't seen nothing yet. "They're looking to acquire chemical, biological and nuclear weapons," says former U.S. Defense Secretary William Cohen. Benjamin Netanyahu, former Prime Minister of Israel, issued much the same warning six years ago in his book "Fighting Terrorism": "The very real possibility that terrorists may soon acquire horrific weapons of mass destruction and use them to escalate terrorism beyond our wildest dreams has not been addressed properly by Western governments. Today's tragedies can either be the harbingers of much greater calamities yet to come or the turning point in which free societies once again mobilize their resources, their ingenuity, and their will to wipe out this evil from our midst. Fighting terrorism is not a 'policy option'; it is a necessity for our survival."

The problem, says Leonard Peikoff, founder of the Ayn Rand Institute, is that we've been too soft: "Fifty years of increasing American appeasement in the Mideast" have led to "fifty years of increasing contempt in the Muslim world for the U.S." – and Sept. 11 was the "inevitable climax."

At its root, Peikoff argues, our capitulation was philosophical. We were denounced as too wealthy, too unholy, too egoistic and we refused to answer back that we are motivated, and rightfully so, by the desire to pursue personal happiness here on earth in a rich, free, secular and individualist society.

And now? "We must wipe out the terrorist training camps and eliminate any retaliatory military capability – and thereby terrorize and paralyze all the tyrannies watching, who will now know what is in store for them if they choose in any form to attack the U.S.," states Peikoff. "The choice today is mass death in the U.S. or mass death in the terrorist nations. To those who oppose war, I ask: If not now, when? How many more corpses are necessary before this country should take action?"


Best Regards, J.T.



To: J.T. who wrote (8680)9/28/2001 2:11:29 AM
From: James F. Hopkins  Respond to of 19219
 
One More thing;
RE>> leader Jesse Jackson as an envoy.
Jackson said he was invited by the Taliban; the Taliban said it was Jackson who approached them, but they were willing to accept his offer to ``mediate between the Taliban and America.'' <<<
If that AH sticks his nose in and goes over there
against the advice of the State Dept..He should have
to stay over there

What Reuters didn't say is his "envoy" is suppose
to be a negotiation to get them to release
hostages they took (of the care workers) who were
trying to help feed all the refugees.
Ya the Taliban took them hostage.
------------
Some other jerk on SI is saying what we are
doing in Pakistan will cause enough problems
that the Taliban will wind up in charge and
take of Pakistan's Nukes..
Well I got news for him they have been planing
that for some time and if we don't go in the
whole damm Terrorist network will have NUKEs
that's been part of their game plan from the start.
Jim



To: J.T. who wrote (8680)9/28/2001 11:13:41 AM
From: J.T.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19219
 
Leaders in Afghanistan for Talks
By STEVEN GUTKIN, Associated Press Writer

Friday September 28 10:35 AM ET

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) - In a new bid to break the deadlock over Osama bin Laden, Pakistani religious leaders and government officials traveled to Afghanistan on Friday to try to press the ruling Taliban to surrender bin Laden or force him to leave the country.

In Pakistan, the first of a series of planeloads of food aid earmarked for Afghan refugees arrived in the border city of Peshawar, and angry demonstrators took to the streets to protest against Pakistan's support for the United States in the crisis. Worshippers in Kabul, the Afghan capital, called on God to bring down America after Friday Muslim prayers.

The Pakistani delegation's visit to Afghanistan came a day after the Taliban delivered a message to bin Laden, the prime suspect in the Sept. 11 terror attacks on the United States, asking him to leave the country voluntarily. It was the first indication from the Taliban that they knew where bin Laden was, or how to communicate with him.

President Bush has demanded the Taliban surrender bin Laden or share his fate, raising expectations of an American-led military action against Afghanistan, though none has yet materialized and American officials now say none is imminent.

The Taliban ambassador in neighboring Pakistan, Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef, accompanied the Pakistani delegation to Afghanistan's southern city of Kandahar, the Taliban's home base. He confirmed in a statement to the Afghan Islamic Press agency that the team - which included Gen. Mahmood Ahmed, the head of Pakistan's intelligence service - was to meet with the reclusive Taliban leader, Mullah Mohammed Omar, and was expected to fly back Friday night.

A second delegation, consisting of clerics from Pakistan's main Islamic parties, said it hoped to travel to Afghanistan in coming days.

Officials would spell out the delegation's message to the Taliban. But Riaz Mohammed Khan, a spokesman for Pakistan's Foreign Office, said: ``In view of the gravity of the situation, the Afghan leadership should be responsive to what the world is expecting of them.''

Gen. Rashid Qureshi, spokesman of Pakistan's military government, said the contact reflected Pakistan's determination to help resolve the standoff between the United States and the Taliban, Afghanistan's hard-line leaders.

``It is a continuation of the diplomatic contacts Pakistan has with the Afghan government to persuade them of the need to address the concerns of the United States and the world community,'' he told The Associated Press. ``Pakistan will continue to try its best to resolve the crisis amicably.''

Pakistan's decision to support the United States - including possible use of its airspace and territory as staging ground for any military strikes - has drawn fury from hard-line Islamic groups inside the country, and more protests erupted on Friday.

In Islamabad, the country's biggest Sunni Muslim party, Sipah-e-Sahaba, staged a raucous protest near a central mosque after Friday's prayers, the most important of the Muslim week. Protesters carried placards reading ``Osama is our hero'' and ``Anyone who supports America is a traitor.'' They burned U.S. and U.N. flags and an effigy of Bush.

A delegation of students from another Islamic party handed over a letter to the main United Nations office in Islamabad, demanding that there be no U.S. strike on Afghanistan.

In Afghanistan, worshippers at the main mosque in the capital, Kabul, called on God to punish the ``arrogance'' of the United States. The mullah told them in his sermon that Afghans ``will never bow'' before the United States.

Amid fears of war, hundreds of thousands of refugees have been on the move inside Afghanistan, and the United Nations has warned of a burgeoning humanitarian crisis, with food stocks dwindling and the start of the harsh Afghan winter is only six weeks away.

The first of several planeloads of food being flown to Afghanistan's neighbors by the World Food Program arrived Friday in the Pakistani border city of Peshawar, the WFP said.

Kabul Radio denied reports of food shortages in the capital and major provinces. A broadcast monitored Thursday in Islamabad quoted senior municipal officials as saying there was enough food in markets and assuring residents ``we have sufficient stocks available in Kabul and other provinces.''

Best Regards, J.T.