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Politics : How Quickly Can Obama Totally Destroy the US? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: FJB who wrote (5333)9/10/2013 2:39:25 PM
From: joseffy2 Recommendations

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FJB
Woody_Nickels

  Respond to of 16547
 



To: FJB who wrote (5333)9/10/2013 3:00:21 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation

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FJB

  Respond to of 16547
 
Timeline of the Syrian crisis
...............................................................................................

Aug. 21: A chemical attack is launched against civilians in rebel-controlled areas outside Damascus, killing over 1,000 people, hundreds of whom are children. Bashar al-Assad’s regime, which is known to possess chemical weapons, is immediately suspected.

Aug. 24: UN Inspectors arrive in Damascus. White House weighs military strike on Assad.

Aug. 25: France, UK and U.S. consider military action. U.S. official says Syria’s offer to allow UN inspections is “too late to be credible.”

Aug. 26: U.S. official tells CNN that a strike could be launched “within hours” on Obama’s order.

Iraq refuses use of its airspace for any U.S. attack on Syria.

Members of Congress circulate letter to Obama demanding he come to Congress before starting a war.

White House spokesman Jay Carney downplays role for Congress, United Nations in Syria air strike.

Aug. 28: UN inspectors beg for at least four days to investigate, call on Obama to go to the UN Security Council first.

For the first time since the American Revolution, UK Parliament rejects a government-backed war in a narrow vote. Prime Minister David Cameron says he will abide by the outcome, removing UK from the coalition.

Arab League refuses to support U.S. attack.

White House floats trial balloon, signalling that it will act in Syria with or without allies, NATO, or UN support. Members of Congress object, call on Obama to make the case to them.

Aug. 29: King Abdullah II of Jordan and Pope Francis say dialogue is “the only option” on Syria.

Aug. 30: U.S. releases report to justify Syria strike.

Aug. 31: Lacking outside support, Obama reverses White House stance, announces that he will, in fact, go to Congress for war authorization after the House returns to session Sept. 9.

Obama’s top advisors think this is a work of genius because it forces Congress to buy into the war.

Sept. 2: Assad tells Le Figaro that France and the U.S. will be helping terrorists if they attack him.

Sept. 3: House leaders Pelosi, Boehner and Cantor back Obama on Syria strike.

Secretary of State John Kerry and Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel begin several rounds of Syria testimony before House and Senate committees, testifying, among other things, that the war is not really a “war” and that action will be too limited to force any major consequences like regime change.

Assad reportedly moves weapons and troops ahead of strike.

Sept 5: UN Ambassador Samantha Power blasts Russia at the UN: “…continues to hold the [UN Security] Council hostage and shirk its responsibility.

White House leaks word that Obama refused to do any horse-trading with Putin over Assad’s fate. (This obviously becomes important later.)

Sept. 6: Congress not buying it — 226 declare themselves “no” or “lean no” as of Friday, Sept. 6, according to the Washington Post.

Sept. 7: Pope Francis holds peace vigil, calls for fasting and prayer to avoid war.

Sept. 8: Rep. Justin Amash, R-Mich., accuses the administration of embellishment in its public case for war.

Charlie Rose interviews Assad, who claims there’s no evidence he was responsible for the attack.

Sept. 9: In answer to fears of deep entanglement in Syria, Kerry promises an “unbelievably small” attack.

National Security Advisor Susan Rice makes an impassioned and emotional case for war at the New America Foundation, repeatedly invoking dead Syrian children and arguing that failure to act would also endanger U.S. national security.

New Pew Poll (as well as several other polls released the same day) shows public opposition to war has grown substantially.

Asked whether there might be any way to avoid war, Kerry mentions that Assad could give up his chemical weapons into international hands.

U.S. State Department immediately “clarifies” that this wasn’t meant as an actual offer.

Too late. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov pounces on Kerry’s comment and calls on Syria to give up its weapons.

Additional members of Congress declare opposition to war.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, lacking the votes for war, delays the vote.

Obama, already scheduled to give multiple television interviews, speaks favorably of the deal, changes the text of his Tuesday night speech.

Sept. 10: Assad accepts the Russians’ deal, which solves nearly all of his problems for the time being. He immediately redeploys his Air Force to bomb rebels in the Damascus suburbs.

Russia opposes UN resolution allowing inspections of Syrian chemical weapons, throwing the deal into doubt.

- See more at: conservativeintel.com



A timeline of the Syrian crisis
Written by David Freddoso. Posted in Uncategorized



Published on September 10, 2013




1
By the time hints emerged today that Russia’s offer to help disgorge Syria’s chemical weapons might not be very serious, it was already being debated whether it had been a diplomatic master-stroke on Obama’s part, or a sign that the administration had bungled its way to a good conclusion of the Syrian crisis.

Just so that everyone has the same facts available, I’ve started building a timeline on Syria.

This is a work in progress. If I’ve gotten something wrong or I’m missing something you think is important, please let me know on Twitter at @freddoso.

Aug. 21: A chemical attack is launched against civilians in rebel-controlled areas outside Damascus, killing over 1,000 people, hundreds of whom are children. Bashar al-Assad’s regime, which is known to possess chemical weapons, is immediately suspected.

Aug. 24: UN Inspectors arrive in Damascus. White House weighs military strike on Assad.

Aug. 25: France, UK and U.S. consider military action. U.S. official says Syria’s offer to allow UN inspections is “too late to be credible.”

Aug. 26: U.S. official tells CNN that a strike could be launched “within hours” on Obama’s order.

Iraq refuses use of its airspace for any U.S. attack on Syria.

Members of Congress circulate letter to Obama demanding he come to Congress before starting a war.

White House spokesman Jay Carney downplays role for Congress, United Nations in Syria air strike.

Aug. 28: UN inspectors beg for at least four days to investigate, call on Obama to go to the UN Security Council first.

For the first time since the American Revolution, UK Parliament rejects a government-backed war in a narrow vote. Prime Minister David Cameron says he will abide by the outcome, removing UK from the coalition.

Arab League refuses to support U.S. attack.

White House floats trial balloon, signalling that it will act in Syria with or without allies, NATO, or UN support. Members of Congress object, call on Obama to make the case to them.

Aug. 29: King Abdullah II of Jordan and Pope Francis say dialogue is “the only option” on Syria.

Aug. 30: U.S. releases report to justify Syria strike.

Aug. 31: Lacking outside support, Obama reverses White House stance, announces that he will, in fact, go to Congress for war authorization after the House returns to session Sept. 9.

Obama’s top advisors think this is a work of genius because it forces Congress to buy into the war.

Sept. 2: Assad tells Le Figaro that France and the U.S. will be helping terrorists if they attack him.

Sept. 3: House leaders Pelosi, Boehner and Cantor back Obama on Syria strike.

Secretary of State John Kerry and Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel begin several rounds of Syria testimony before House and Senate committees, testifying, among other things, that the war is not really a “war” and that action will be too limited to force any major consequences like regime change.

Assad reportedly moves weapons and troops ahead of strike.

Sept 5: UN Ambassador Samantha Power blasts Russia at the UN: “…continues to hold the [UN Security] Council hostage and shirk its responsibility.

White House leaks word that Obama refused to do any horse-trading with Putin over Assad’s fate. (This obviously becomes important later.)

Sept. 6: Congress not buying it — 226 declare themselves “no” or “lean no” as of Friday, Sept. 6, according to the Washington Post.

Sept. 7: Pope Francis holds peace vigil, calls for fasting and prayer to avoid war.

Sept. 8: Rep. Justin Amash, R-Mich., accuses the administration of embellishment in its public case for war.

Charlie Rose interviews Assad, who claims there’s no evidence he was responsible for the attack.

Sept. 9: In answer to fears of deep entanglement in Syria, Kerry promises an “unbelievably small” attack.

National Security Advisor Susan Rice makes an impassioned and emotional case for war at the New America Foundation, repeatedly invoking dead Syrian children and arguing that failure to act would also endanger U.S. national security.

New Pew Poll (as well as several other polls released the same day) shows public opposition to war has grown substantially.

Asked whether there might be any way to avoid war, Kerry mentions that Assad could give up his chemical weapons into international hands.

U.S. State Department immediately “clarifies” that this wasn’t meant as an actual offer.

Too late. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov pounces on Kerry’s comment and calls on Syria to give up its weapons.

Additional members of Congress declare opposition to war.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, lacking the votes for war, delays the vote.

Obama, already scheduled to give multiple television interviews, speaks favorably of the deal, changes the text of his Tuesday night speech.

Sept. 10: Assad accepts the Russians’ deal, which solves nearly all of his problems for the time being. He immediately redeploys his Air Force to bomb rebels in the Damascus suburbs.

Russia opposes UN resolution allowing inspections of Syrian chemical weapons, throwing the deal into doubt.

- See more at: conservativeintel.com

A timeline of the Syrian crisis
Written by David Freddoso. Posted in Uncategorized



Published on September 10, 2013




1
By the time hints emerged today that Russia’s offer to help disgorge Syria’s chemical weapons might not be very serious, it was already being debated whether it had been a diplomatic master-stroke on Obama’s part, or a sign that the administration had bungled its way to a good conclusion of the Syrian crisis.

Just so that everyone has the same facts available, I’ve started building a timeline on Syria.

This is a work in progress. If I’ve gotten something wrong or I’m missing something you think is important, please let me know on Twitter at @freddoso.

Aug. 21: A chemical attack is launched against civilians in rebel-controlled areas outside Damascus, killing over 1,000 people, hundreds of whom are children. Bashar al-Assad’s regime, which is known to possess chemical weapons, is immediately suspected.

Aug. 24: UN Inspectors arrive in Damascus. White House weighs military strike on Assad.

Aug. 25: France, UK and U.S. consider military action. U.S. official says Syria’s offer to allow UN inspections is “too late to be credible.”

Aug. 26: U.S. official tells CNN that a strike could be launched “within hours” on Obama’s order.

Iraq refuses use of its airspace for any U.S. attack on Syria.

Members of Congress circulate letter to Obama demanding he come to Congress before starting a war.

White House spokesman Jay Carney downplays role for Congress, United Nations in Syria air strike.

Aug. 28: UN inspectors beg for at least four days to investigate, call on Obama to go to the UN Security Council first.

For the first time since the American Revolution, UK Parliament rejects a government-backed war in a narrow vote. Prime Minister David Cameron says he will abide by the outcome, removing UK from the coalition.

Arab League refuses to support U.S. attack.

White House floats trial balloon, signalling that it will act in Syria with or without allies, NATO, or UN support. Members of Congress object, call on Obama to make the case to them.

Aug. 29: King Abdullah II of Jordan and Pope Francis say dialogue is “the only option” on Syria.

Aug. 30: U.S. releases report to justify Syria strike.

Aug. 31: Lacking outside support, Obama reverses White House stance, announces that he will, in fact, go to Congress for war authorization after the House returns to session Sept. 9.

Obama’s top advisors think this is a work of genius because it forces Congress to buy into the war.

Sept. 2: Assad tells Le Figaro that France and the U.S. will be helping terrorists if they attack him.

Sept. 3: House leaders Pelosi, Boehner and Cantor back Obama on Syria strike.

Secretary of State John Kerry and Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel begin several rounds of Syria testimony before House and Senate committees, testifying, among other things, that the war is not really a “war” and that action will be too limited to force any major consequences like regime change.

Assad reportedly moves weapons and troops ahead of strike.

Sept 5: UN Ambassador Samantha Power blasts Russia at the UN: “…continues to hold the [UN Security] Council hostage and shirk its responsibility.

White House leaks word that Obama refused to do any horse-trading with Putin over Assad’s fate. (This obviously becomes important later.)

Sept. 6: Congress not buying it — 226 declare themselves “no” or “lean no” as of Friday, Sept. 6, according to the Washington Post.

Sept. 7: Pope Francis holds peace vigil, calls for fasting and prayer to avoid war.

Sept. 8: Rep. Justin Amash, R-Mich., accuses the administration of embellishment in its public case for war.

Charlie Rose interviews Assad, who claims there’s no evidence he was responsible for the attack.

Sept. 9: In answer to fears of deep entanglement in Syria, Kerry promises an “unbelievably small” attack.

National Security Advisor Susan Rice makes an impassioned and emotional case for war at the New America Foundation, repeatedly invoking dead Syrian children and arguing that failure to act would also endanger U.S. national security.

New Pew Poll (as well as several other polls released the same day) shows public opposition to war has grown substantially.

Asked whether there might be any way to avoid war, Kerry mentions that Assad could give up his chemical weapons into international hands.

U.S. State Department immediately “clarifies” that this wasn’t meant as an actual offer.

Too late. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov pounces on Kerry’s comment and calls on Syria to give up its weapons.

Additional members of Congress declare opposition to war.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, lacking the votes for war, delays the vote.

Obama, already scheduled to give multiple television interviews, speaks favorably of the deal, changes the text of his Tuesday night speech.

Sept. 10: Assad accepts the Russians’ deal, which solves nearly all of his problems for the time being. He immediately redeploys his Air Force to bomb rebels in the Damascus suburbs.

Russia opposes UN resolution allowing inspections of Syrian chemical weapons, throwing the deal into doubt.

- See more at: conservativeintel.com

A timeline of the Syrian crisis
Written by David Freddoso. Posted in Uncategorized



Published on September 10, 2013




1
By the time hints emerged today that Russia’s offer to help disgorge Syria’s chemical weapons might not be very serious, it was already being debated whether it had been a diplomatic master-stroke on Obama’s part, or a sign that the administration had bungled its way to a good conclusion of the Syrian crisis.

Just so that everyone has the same facts available, I’ve started building a timeline on Syria.

This is a work in progress. If I’ve gotten something wrong or I’m missing something you think is important, please let me know on Twitter at @freddoso.

Aug. 21: A chemical attack is launched against civilians in rebel-controlled areas outside Damascus, killing over 1,000 people, hundreds of whom are children. Bashar al-Assad’s regime, which is known to possess chemical weapons, is immediately suspected.

Aug. 24: UN Inspectors arrive in Damascus. White House weighs military strike on Assad.

Aug. 25: France, UK and U.S. consider military action. U.S. official says Syria’s offer to allow UN inspections is “too late to be credible.”

Aug. 26: U.S. official tells CNN that a strike could be launched “within hours” on Obama’s order.

Iraq refuses use of its airspace for any U.S. attack on Syria.

Members of Congress circulate letter to Obama demanding he come to Congress before starting a war.

White House spokesman Jay Carney downplays role for Congress, United Nations in Syria air strike.

Aug. 28: UN inspectors beg for at least four days to investigate, call on Obama to go to the UN Security Council first.

For the first time since the American Revolution, UK Parliament rejects a government-backed war in a narrow vote. Prime Minister David Cameron says he will abide by the outcome, removing UK from the coalition.

Arab League refuses to support U.S. attack.

White House floats trial balloon, signalling that it will act in Syria with or without allies, NATO, or UN support. Members of Congress object, call on Obama to make the case to them.

Aug. 29: King Abdullah II of Jordan and Pope Francis say dialogue is “the only option” on Syria.

Aug. 30: U.S. releases report to justify Syria strike.

Aug. 31: Lacking outside support, Obama reverses White House stance, announces that he will, in fact, go to Congress for war authorization after the House returns to session Sept. 9.

Obama’s top advisors think this is a work of genius because it forces Congress to buy into the war.

Sept. 2: Assad tells Le Figaro that France and the U.S. will be helping terrorists if they attack him.

Sept. 3: House leaders Pelosi, Boehner and Cantor back Obama on Syria strike.

Secretary of State John Kerry and Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel begin several rounds of Syria testimony before House and Senate committees, testifying, among other things, that the war is not really a “war” and that action will be too limited to force any major consequences like regime change.

Assad reportedly moves weapons and troops ahead of strike.

Sept 5: UN Ambassador Samantha Power blasts Russia at the UN: “…continues to hold the [UN Security] Council hostage and shirk its responsibility.

White House leaks word that Obama refused to do any horse-trading with Putin over Assad’s fate. (This obviously becomes important later.)

Sept. 6: Congress not buying it — 226 declare themselves “no” or “lean no” as of Friday, Sept. 6, according to the Washington Post.

Sept. 7: Pope Francis holds peace vigil, calls for fasting and prayer to avoid war.

Sept. 8: Rep. Justin Amash, R-Mich., accuses the administration of embellishment in its public case for war.

Charlie Rose interviews Assad, who claims there’s no evidence he was responsible for the attack.

Sept. 9: In answer to fears of deep entanglement in Syria, Kerry promises an “unbelievably small” attack.

National Security Advisor Susan Rice makes an impassioned and emotional case for war at the New America Foundation, repeatedly invoking dead Syrian children and arguing that failure to act would also endanger U.S. national security.

New Pew Poll (as well as several other polls released the same day) shows public opposition to war has grown substantially.

Asked whether there might be any way to avoid war, Kerry mentions that Assad could give up his chemical weapons into international hands.

U.S. State Department immediately “clarifies” that this wasn’t meant as an actual offer.

Too late. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov pounces on Kerry’s comment and calls on Syria to give up its weapons.

Additional members of Congress declare opposition to war.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, lacking the votes for war, delays the vote.

Obama, already scheduled to give multiple television interviews, speaks favorably of the deal, changes the text of his Tuesday night speech.

Sept. 10: Assad accepts the Russians’ deal, which solves nearly all of his problems for the time being. He immediately redeploys his Air Force to bomb rebels in the Damascus suburbs.

Russia opposes UN resolution allowing inspections of Syrian chemical weapons, throwing the deal into doubt.

- See more at: conservativeintel.com



To: FJB who wrote (5333)9/10/2013 3:26:06 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
Obama boast of ‘decimated’ al Qaeda undermined by intel briefings

Agencies warned administration the group was expanding, not ‘on the run’


By Guy Taylor The Washington Times Monday, September 9, 2013
washingtontimes.com

As President Obama ran to election victory last fall with claims that al Qaeda was “decimated” and “on the run,” his intelligence team was privately offering a different assessment that the terrorist movement was shifting resources and capabilities to emerging spinoff groups in Africa that posed fresh threats to American security.

Top U.S. officials, including the president, were told in the summer and fall of 2012 that the African offshoots were gaining money, lethal knowledge and a mounting determination to strike U.S. and Western interests while keeping in some contact with al Qaeda’s central leadership, said several people directly familiar with the intelligence.

PHOTOS: President Obama's favorite footstool: The famous Resolute desk

The gulf between the classified briefings and Mr. Obama’s pronouncements on the campaign trail touched off a closed-door debate inside the intelligence community about whether the terrorist group’s demise was being overstated for political reasons, officials told The Washington Times.

Many Americans believed when they voted in November that the president was justifiably touting a major national security success of his first term. After all, U.S. special operations forces succeeded in May 2011 in capturing and killing the al Qaeda founder and original leader, Osama bin Laden, in Pakistan.

But key players in the intelligence community and in Congress were actually worried that Mr. Obama was leaving out a major new chapter in al Qaeda’s evolving story in order to bend the reality of how successful his administration had been during its first four years in the fight against terrorism.

“I completely believe that the candidate Obama was understating the threat,” said Rep. Mike Rogers, Michigan Republican and chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. “To say the core is decimated and therefore we have al Qaeda on the run was not consistent with the overall intelligence assessment at the time.”

Rep. C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger, the ranking Democrat on the House intelligence committee, told The Times that “we need to evaluate statements, by the administration or anyone else, in the context of when they were made” during an election.

Like the intelligence community last year, Mr. Ruppersberger draws a distinction between al Qaeda central in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) between Pakistan and Afghanistan, and the offshoots gaining strength in Africa.

SEE ALSO: FLASHBACK: Obama: Al Qaeda is on ‘a path to defeat’; calls for resetting terror policy

“It is important to define what we mean when we are talking about al Qaeda,” Mr. Ruppersberger told The Times. “Core al Qaeda is the original organization, headed then by Osama bin Laden and now by [Ayman] al-Zawahri, that orchestrated 9/11 and has a safe haven in the FATA in Pakistan.

“That group has been weakened, but is adaptive and resilient,” he said. “Thus, its strength level fluctuates.”

Obama administration officials declined to comment on the record for this article, though many described privately the nature of the intelligence that the president was receiving last fall.

With America approaching the 12th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks and the one-year anniversary of the deadly terrorist attack on the U.S. diplomatic post in Benghazi, Libya, Mr. Obama will try Tuesday night to rally war-wary Americans to support military action by asking them to trust his description of the intelligence that Syrian President Bashar Assad used chemical weapons.

Some of those who will be listening in Congress say the president’s handling of the al Qaeda intelligence last year might provide a red flag for the coming debate.

Mr. Rogers, the House intelligence committee chairman, told The Times that there was “more than enough info at the time to understand the changes that were occurring in al Qaeda” and that two possible scenarios were at play behind the narrative Mr. Obama pushed on the campaign trail.

“One, he wasn’t getting the information that the rest of us were getting, or two, he got the information and decided to disregard it for political purposes. Either of those is a problem for a commander in chief,” he said.

The next generation

Most officials interviewed for this article, who spoke only on the condition of anonymity, credited Mr. Obama with publicly correcting his assessment of the evolving threat posed by al Qaeda during a major speech this year.

The problem, they said, is that he did so only after winning a second term. Intelligence that the president wove into a May 23 speech at the National Defense University was, in fact, well-known among analysts at America’s major spy agencies nearly a year earlier, the officials said.

While Mr. Obama crowed on the campaign trail about al Qaeda’s demise, the intelligence community was privately providing the president, along with Republican opponent Mitt Romney and several top congressional leaders, a much more complicated view of the terrorist movement, whose name in Arabic means “the base.”

The consensus was that, yes, al Qaeda’s traditional central leadership in Pakistan and Afghanistan had suffered serious losses and had less day-to-day influence, but the terrorist group was advancing quickly on a new and dangerous path.

From David H. Petraeus, the CIA director at the time, to Air Force Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, there were numerous private warnings during the summer and fall of 2012 that al Qaeda in the post-bin Laden world was “metastasizing” from its original core to much smaller but strong offshoots as al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula in Yemen; al-Shabab in Somalia; al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb in Libya, Algeria and Mali; Jabhat al-Nusra in Syria; Boko Haram in Nigeria; and less-defined groups with growing operational capabilities in Africa and the Middle East.

Sources familiar with these offshoots said the classified briefings stressed that many of them were driven by local agendas — such as al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula’s desire to overthrow the pro-U.S. government in Yemen — but at times remained in contact with al Qaeda’s new central leadership of al-Zawahri. The Egyptian doctor, who succeeded bin Laden, was believed to be hiding in the Wild West-like FATA region.

A central point of the briefings was that the offshoots were gaining money, lethal knowledge and a mounting determination to strike U.S. and Western interests. “The terrorist threat to the West was clearly shifting away from the FATA,” one senior intelligence official told The Times.

“In mid-2012, al Qaeda’s decimated senior leadership in Pakistan could only try to set the strategic direction for the increasingly decentralized global affiliates,” the senior intelligence official said. “At that time, [al Qaeda’s] core was providing overall guidance but wasn’t calling the operational shots outside of South Asia.”

There were also varying views within the intelligence community over the level of influence exerted by al-Zawahri — long understood to be al Qaeda’s operational mastermind.

A second senior intelligence official told The Times that “from intercepts and allies, we knew last year that al Qaeda central was still exerting influence on these offshoots even as political statements came out saying the leadership was on the run and losing control.

“We believed al Qaeda had simply transferred operational capabilities to these affiliates, knowing how much communications were being monitored,” the official said. “But they still were determined to strike us, mostly through these affiliates.”

The whole truth?

Questions about al-Zawahri’s reach quickly became a hallmark of the intelligence community’s attempts to make sense of the deadly September 2012 attacks on the U.S. diplomatic post and secret CIA station in Benghazi.

Key attackers were identified early as belonging to al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM). A video message sent via cyberspace from al-Zawahri on the night before the incident explicitly called for attacks on Americans in Libya to avenge a fatal U.S. drone strike on a Libyan-born senior al Qaeda operative in Pakistan.

The message was almost immediately identified as a possible motivation, or trigger, for the Benghazi attack.

Despite being briefed on it privately, Mr. Obama and his surrogates resisted portraying the attack as having been carried out, or even inspired by, al Qaeda. To the contrary, Mr. Obama — then in the throes of daily campaigning for re-election — appeared only to ramp up his narrative that the al Qaeda threat was diminished.

On the day after the Benghazi attack, which occurred on the 11th anniversary of Sept. 11, Mr. Obama told an audience in Las Vegas that “al Qaeda is on the path to defeat and bin Laden is dead” — a talking point the president hammered again the next day in Golden, Colo., and in back-to-back speeches Sept. 17 in Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio.

At times, Mr. Obama substituted the word “decimated” to describe al Qaeda in general. “We have gone after the terrorists who actually attacked us 9/11 and decimated al Qaeda,” he said at an Oct. 24 fundraising event at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York.

A week later, he told an audience in Green Bay, Wis., “Thanks to sacrifice and service of our brave men and women in uniform, the war in Iraq is over, the war in Afghanistan is winding down, al Qaeda has been decimated, Osama bin Laden is dead.”

Politically savvy insiders on the Republican side viewed the president’s declarations with bitter amusement. “It’s not that it was an alternative narrative being pushed,” said one congressional source familiar with the intelligence. “But, kind of like a half-truth.”

“There was a narrative of al Qaeda being ‘defeated’ or ‘decimated,’ but that would only be true in the case of specifying al Qaeda’s core in Pakistan,” said the source, who chastised the campaign for “not specifying that that’s what they were talking about.”

“To the general public, a lot of people don’t know the difference” between al Qaeda central and its African offshoots, the source said.

Inside the intelligence community, officials feared Mr. Obama’s campaign rhetoric might boomerang on American spy agencies if there is a major terrorist attack on the United States.

“Intelligence leaders didn’t want a media story line that they somehow missed this emerging Africa threat if something happened,” the official said.

Two former senior intelligence officials even took to the airwaves last fall to try to combat the political portrait of al Qaeda on its last leg. Former CIA Directors Porter J. Goss and Michael V. Hayden gave pointed interviews disputing the oversimplification of the political rhetoric and insisting that al Qaeda remained a real threat to strike through the African affiliates.

Asked for his own assessment of al Qaeda, Mr. Goss told Fox News in October that “it’s much stronger” and “it’s spreading out.”

“It’s sort of running across the map of northern Africa,” Mr. Goss said. “There are franchise activities springing up with different names and constantly are changing the names. They basically are part of this loosely affiliated network. There’s a lot of money in it. There is a lot of dedication and commitment in it.”

Mr. Hayden openly suggested that the Obama administration may have tried to hide the al Qaeda affiliate’s role in the Benghazi tragedy for political reasons when, in fact, “Benghazi is really a home game for al Qaeda.”

Combing the PDB

Although some sources told The Times that Mr. Obama was definitely receiving briefings from the CIA on the threat posed by al Qaeda affiliates, others said it was not specifically clear how prominently the assessments factored into the Presidential Daily Brief (PDB) presented to Mr. Obama last summer and fall.

The PDB is among the most closely guarded classified documents in Washington — particularly because of politically disastrous ramifications if the American public were to find out that a sitting president ignored warnings presented in the document.

In 2004, George W. Bush became the first U.S. president in history to release a PDB to the public. The briefing — detailed in the official 9/11 Commission Report — was titled “Bin Laden Determined to Strike in US” and was delivered to Mr. Bush roughly five weeks before the horrific terrorist attacks on New York and Washington.

With regard to the months leading up to the November election, one source familiar with the process explained how material from various intelligence agencies fed to the White House was ultimately cleared by the office of Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper.

“There might be different points of view from different agency heads. At the end of the day, though, the intelligence community view is put forth by the DNI,” the source said.

Mr. Clapper appeared eager to provide a rosy assessment of the threat in February 2012 — roughly eight months before the election. He told the Senate Committee on Armed Services that the “coming two to three years” would bring a situation in which the leadership of the “global jihadist movement” would become “more decentralized, with ‘core’ al Qaeda — the Pakistan-based group formerly led by Osama bin Laden — diminishing in operational importance.”

“There is a better-than-even chance that decentralization will lead to fragmentation of the movement within a few years,” Mr. Clapper said in written testimony. As a result, he said, “core al Qaeda will likely be of largely symbolic importance to the movement; regional groups, and to a lesser extent small cells and individuals, will drive the global jihad agenda both within the United States and abroad.”

The roots of the assessment can be found in a March 2012 report by the DNI’s own National Counterterrorism Center, which portrayed an evolving al Qaeda threat that could be read in multiple ways.

The report said terrorist attacks carried out “by AQ and its affiliates” actually “increased by 8 percent from 2010 to 2011.”

But the spike was not a result of increases in attacks by al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) or al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM). Rather, it was because of a sharp jump in the number of attacks carried out in Somalia by the al-Shabab network — an organization that intelligence analysts largely regard to be more localized than the others and, as a result, less threatening overall to the U.S.

An “Overarching Trends” section of the report cited “an 11.5 percent increase” in the number of terrorist attacks carried out across Africa, an increase attributable to the rise of the shadowy Islamist group “Boko Haram” in Nigeria.

The new ‘core’

In light of such assessments, some intelligence sources cautioned against reading too eagerly into Mr. Obama’s sloganeering on the campaign trail. Providing a more accurate depiction of the evolving al Qaeda threat would have required the kind of more detailed explanation that has, in the current era, come to be shunned by candidates running for the highest office.

Mr. Obama did attempt such an explanation on at least one occasion during the campaign.

“We’ve decimated al Qaeda’s top leadership in the border regions around Pakistan,” he told an audience on Sept. 20 at the University of Miami. “But in Yemen, in Libya, in other of these places — increasingly in places like Syria — what you see is these elements that don’t have the same capacity that a bin Laden or core al Qaeda had, but can still cause a lot of damage, and we’ve got to make sure that we remain vigilant and are focused on preventing them from doing us any harm.”

Shown those remarks recently, one intelligence source told The Times that “there’s really not a lot of daylight in that statement and where we were at the time in our assessments.”

Why it did not more regularly make its way into the president’s campaign talking points is unclear — specifically since al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula had factored into multiple U.S.-focused terrorist plots foiled during Mr. Obama’s first term.

In his statement to The Times, Mr. Ruppersberger described al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula as “the ‘affiliate’ that is the strongest and the consensus assessment is that it is a threat to U.S. interests.”

“We now know that there is contact between AQAP and core AQ,” he said.

The intelligence community’s focus on AQAP shifted as far back as 2009, when the group claimed responsibility for the failed Christmas Day plot in which a 23-year-old Nigerian attempted to ignite a clutch of plastic explosives sewn to his underwear aboard a Northwest Airlines flight from Amsterdam to Detroit.

AQAP’s support for such a plot — with no obvious strategic connection to the group’s localized focus in Yemen — suggested the hidden hand of al Qaeda’s leadership was at play.

Debate on the question was still swirling through Congress after the 2012 election when Republicans on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence pressed John O. Brennan, in his confirmation hearing to be CIA director, to opine publicly on the influence exerted over the affiliates by al Qaeda’s core leadership.

“We do see al Qaeda core trying to exert some control over some of these elements,” Mr. Brennan said in response to a question from Sen. Daniel Coats, Indiana Republican.

Sen. Susan M. Collins, a Maine Republican who was new to the committee, suggested that al Qaeda was not so decimated as Mr. Obama sought to portray it on the campaign trail.

“If you look at a map today, you would see al Qaeda in all sorts of countries,” said Mrs. Collins. “That’s not to say that there weren’t cells in other countries back in 2001, but it raises the question in my mind of whether, even though we’ve been successful in taking out some of the core of al Qaeda and some high-level leaders, whether our strategy is working.”

Mr. Brennan acknowledged that “al Qaeda and this — you know, the forces of Islamic extremists, that have really corrupted and perverted Islam, are making some progress in areas that give me real concern.”

Mrs. Collins told The Times that despite successes against the “core” in Pakistan and Afghanistan, “the fact is that the Islamist extremist threat has metastasized to other countries.”

AQAP in Yemen, Mrs. Collins said, “has become the new ‘core’ al Qaeda in many ways, posing a threat to the region and to Western targets, including the United States.”

“We must be clear-eyed,” she said, “in recognizing that ‘core’ al Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan is not the only location from which attacks can be planned.”



To: FJB who wrote (5333)9/10/2013 4:09:05 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation

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Putin To Obama: “Check Mate – Little Boys Shouldn’t Play A Man’s Game
..........................................................................

by Steve Foley on September 10, 2013
theminorityreportblog.com



By Dave in Denver

In a move that I can only describe as the equivalent of Putin changing Obama’s political diapers for him, the Russian President has persuaded Syria to place its chemical weapons stockpile under international control: LINK

This takes away any stated motive for Obama and John Kerry to press their dwindling cast of supporters into firing away at Syria. Furthermore, it removes the possibility of the U.S. staging another “false flag” chemical weapons show, which is what most rational-minded observers have concluded occurred in Syria.

To be quite frank, I have to say that in the latest footage I’ve seen of John Kerry making his case for war in Syria, he has a frightening “rabid dog” look in his eyes – he’s literally foaming at the mouth to attack Syria and get rid of the Assad Government. I have to conclude that Obama and Kerry are acting in a politically insane manner here and I stand by my earlier conclusions that the underlying motive for this attempted attack on Syria by the Obama Government is seeded in money – oil-based blood money.

Is this the kind of leadership and political directive this country needs right now (or ever for that matter), when a record number of people sign up for food stamps and social security disability every month: LINK I have to believe that Obama has more serious policy agendas at home with the number of people in this country slipping into poverty growing by the day.

How about the Government debt ceiling Barack? According to your blood money Secretary of Treasury and quiet advocate of your move to attack Syria, the Treasury runs out of money in about weeks. How about the sinking economy? Unfortunately money is the ultimate persuader in DC these days and AIPAC, the defense industry and the oil industry are throwing horse bales of it around very liberally.

The truth of the matter is that as the widespread and overt corruption on Wall Street and Capitol Hill grows by day, Obama needs something to divert our attention from our collapsing system.

History has taught us that crumbling empires always resort to war.



To: FJB who wrote (5333)9/10/2013 4:09:41 PM
From: joseffy2 Recommendations

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R2O

  Respond to of 16547
 
the equivalent of Putin changing Obama’s political diapers for him



To: FJB who wrote (5333)9/10/2013 8:34:47 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
Palin: 'Enough foreign fiasco distraction. It is time to bomb Obamacare'



To: FJB who wrote (5333)9/11/2013 2:52:24 AM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
Rick Rescorla: A Hero on 9/11
...........................................................................................
The San Diego Daily Transcript ^ | September 10, 2013 | Michael Giorgino


Twelve years ago on 9/11, Rick Rescorla was on duty on the 44th floor of the World Trade Center, tower two. He was vice president for corporate security at Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co., and a jumbo jet had just plowed into the other tower.

As smoke rose from tower one, someone from the Port Authority ordered Rescorla to keep his people at their desks. He replied, “Piss off. Everything above where that plane hit is going to collapse, and it's going to take the whole building with it. I'm getting my people out of here!” Rescorla ordered an immediate evacuation, saving more than 2,700 people before the second plane plowed into tower two.

Rick Rescorla was born in Cornwall, England, in 1939. After service in the British armed forces, he earned a commission as an officer in the U.S. Army. Rescorla volunteered to fight in Vietnam. He fought with the 7th Cavalry Regiment (Airmobile) in the 1965 Battle of Ia Drang. He was the gritty soldier pictured on the cover of “We Were Soldiers Once ... And Young.” Co-author Lt. Gen. Harold Moore described him as “the best platoon leader I ever saw.” Rescorla’s men called him “Hard Core” for his extraordinary courage in battle.

The History Channel has a chilling documentary about Rescorla called “The Man Who Predicted 9/11.” It tells how in 1992, Rescorla warned the Port Authority about the possibility of a truck bomb attack in the unguarded basement of the World Trade Center. He was ignored.

When terrorists tried to bring down the Twin Towers with a truck bomb in 1993, Rescorla took charge of the evacuation and was the last man out.

Rescorla then warned Morgan Stanley that the terrorists would return to finish the job — next time with aircraft. He said they should move their corporate headquarters to a safer location in New Jersey. The company’s lease in Manhattan did not end until 2006, and they failed to heed his warning.

Rescorla did the next best thing: He prepared for another attack. At his insistence, all employees, including senior executives, participated in full-blown, no-notice emergency evacuation drills every three months. High-powered stock brokers complained about being yanked away from their million-dollar deals to trudge down 40 stories. But it all paid off on 9/11.

At 8:46 a.m. on Sept. 11, 2001, American Airlines Flight 11 struck tower one. Rescorla sprang into action and had most of Morgan Stanley’s 2,700 employees and hundreds of visitors safely out of the building before United Airlines Flight 175 hit tower two at 9:02 a.m. Rescorla loved his adopted county. As thousands marched down to safety, he sang “God Bless America” over a bullhorn and encouraged everyone to “be proud to be an American.” The last voice many heard as they descended from tower two was Rescorla singing his version of the song from the movie “Zulu”:

“Men of Cornwall stand ye steady;

It cannot be ever said ye

for the battle were not ready;

Stand and never yield!”

A Morgan Stanley director told Rescorla he had to get out, too. “As soon as I make sure everyone else is out,” Rescorla said.

In his last call to his wife, Susan, Rescorla said, "Stop crying, I have to get these people out safely. If something should happen to me, I want you to know I've never been happier. You made my life." Rescorla was last seen heading back up to rescue stragglers. His remains have never been recovered.

In the years since 9/11, neither Congress nor any president has ever paid formal tribute to Rescorla's heroism. So in 2009, America’s Medal of Honor holders awarded Rescorla their Above & Beyond Citizen Medal. In their words, “Inside of us all, a hero lies. For some, it rises up and shows itself through an extraordinary act of courage and selflessness. On the battlefields of their everyday lives, these incredible individuals are moved to act. And so they go willingly, selflessly, courageously — above and beyond.”

I first read the amazing story of Rick Rescorla in “Heart of a Soldier” by James B. Stewart (Simon & Schuster, 2002). The San Francisco Opera transformed Stewart’s book into an opera, which premiered on Sept. 10, 2011, the eve of the 10th anniversary of 9/11. Imagine the pride that Susan Rescorla will experience as the music rises higher, ever higher with each crescendo, soaring up to the ultimate triumph of love, courage and devotion that Rick Rescorla achieved in his life on 9/11.

Mike Giorgino is a retired Navy commander and a Gulf War veteran. He may be contacted at mgiorgino@aol.com.



To: FJB who wrote (5333)9/11/2013 10:30:08 AM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
Egypt Muslim Bros to Christians: Convert to Islam, or pay 'jizya' tax...
................................................................................................................

Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood to Coptic Christians: Convert to Islam, or pay ‘jizya’ tax


By Jessica Chasmar The Washington Times Tuesday, September 10, 2013

The Muslim Brotherhood and its supporters have began forcing the roughly 15,000 Christian Copts of Dalga village in Egypt to pay a jizya tax as indicated in Koran 9:29, author and translator Raymond Ibrahim reported on Sunday.

Jizya is the money, or tribute, “that conquered non-Muslims historically had to pay to their Islamic overlords ‘with willing submission and while feeling themselves subdued’ to safeguard their existence,” Mr. Ibrahim explained.

According to Fr. Yunis Shawqi, who spoke yesterday to Dostor reporters in Dalga, all Copts in the village, “without exception,” are being forced to pay the tax.“[The] value of the tribute and method of payment differ from one place to another in the village, so that, some are being expected to pay 200 Egyptian pounds per day, others 500 Egyptian pounds per day,” Mr. Shawqi said, according to the translator.

In some cases, families not able to pay have been attacked. As many as 40 Christian families have now fled Dalga, Mr. Ibrahim reported.

The taxes are not unique to Egypt either.

Just over the weekend Syrian rebels went into a Christian man’s “shop and gave him three options: become Muslim; pay $70,000 as a tax levied on non-Muslims, known as jizya; or be killed along with his family,” Christian Science Monitor reported.

Read more: washingtontimes.com



To: FJB who wrote (5333)9/11/2013 10:44:30 AM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation

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  Respond to of 16547
 
73% of U.S. Casualties in Afghanistan on Obama's Watch...



To: FJB who wrote (5333)9/11/2013 11:53:14 AM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
PUTIN CAN'T HANDLE THIS MAN




To: FJB who wrote (5333)9/11/2013 12:12:06 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation

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  Respond to of 16547
 
Gun Control Dems Kicked Out of Office in Colorado



To: FJB who wrote (5333)9/11/2013 6:07:02 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
Obviously retribution for the meeting with Arpaio.

Grantville police chief suspended
.times-herald.com ^ | Sep 11, 2013 | Celia Shortt



To: FJB who wrote (5333)9/13/2013 4:55:04 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
Wash. teens plead not guilty in vet beating death (Delbert Benton)



To: FJB who wrote (5333)9/14/2013 9:18:03 AM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
REPORT: ICE Released 2,837 Convicted Alien Sex Offenders...

TSA agent arrested smuggling illegal aliens...

CA lawmakers approve measure to allow driver's licenses for illegal aliens...

Allows illegal immigrants to practice law...



To: FJB who wrote (5333)9/14/2013 11:11:49 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation

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FJB

  Respond to of 16547
 
Why does Obama want to go to war in Syria? It is simply to support the Muslim Brotherhood.

Like he does in Libya.

Like he did and still does in Egypt.


The fact that his actions hurt the U.S. and help al Qaeda is just too bad.

But not to worry. The MSM and 99% of Obama loyalists won't notice or won't care.



To: FJB who wrote (5333)9/14/2013 11:13:01 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
The bottom line is that Obama is trying to help the Muslims set the world up for the Caliphate.



To: FJB who wrote (5333)9/15/2013 12:06:33 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation

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  Respond to of 16547