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Thread 4. http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1084291/posts |
Posted on 02/05/2004 8:31:17 PM PST by Mossad1967
Edited on 02/09/2004 3:20:18 PM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]
SANAA, Yemen, Jan. 24 (UPI) -- A purported statement by al-Qaida in Yemen warned Saturday of a "major strike" soon in the United States.
The statement, distributed by the Yemeni Tagamoo Party for Reforms, said: "A major strike, a big event will take place in America soon," reminiscent of the Sept. 11 attacks.
Tue Feb 17, 3:49 AM ET
KUWAIT CITY - A bus carry American troops rolled over near a Kuwaiti air base over the weekend, injuring 25 soldiers, four of them seriously, a military spokesman said Tuesday.
The Kuwaiti authorities are investigating the accident, which happened Sunday afternoon near the Ali Al Salem air base, Capt. Randall Baucom told The Associated Press.
The bus had been leased from a local company, Baucom said.
News of the accident emerged on Tuesday after the local newspaper Al-Anba reported it with Kuwaiti sources.
The four U.S. soldiers who were seriously wounded have been admitted to the Kuwait Armed Forces hospital. The other injured were treated at various U.S. camps in Kuwait, Baucom said.
Kuwait has been a major ally of Washington in the area, since a U.S.-led coalition fought the 1991 Gulf War that liberated it from a seven-month Iraqi occupation.
The small oil-rich state was the launch pad for the war in Iraq that toppled Saddam Hussein's regime in April.
TOKYO - Police investigating a disturbance outside Japan's Defense Agency on Tuesday found a pair of homemade rocket launchers that may have used been in a symbolic attack by leftist radicals. No injuries or damage were reported.
The area around the agency in downtown Tokyo was cordoned off and police and firefighters were called in after authorities received reports of two loud bangs late Tuesday night.
Investigators found a pair of pipes fashioned into crude projectile launchers but were still looking for what they might have fired, a spokesman for the Tokyo Metropolitan Police said on condition of anonymity.
Leftist radicals in Japan occasionally make symbolic attacks with such weapons on targets related to the military or Japan's royal family.
Police suspect the homemade weapons may have been set off in a protest of a controversial decision by the Japanese government to send troops to help rebuild Iraq (news - web sites), the spokesman said.
Uh..... and five days until Feb. 22?
What's supposed to happen on 2/21?
18feb04
LONDON: Terrorists may be "in the final stages" of preparing more attacks in Saudi Arabia, the British Government warned yesterday as it advised UK citizens not to travel to the country.
The unusually strong statement followed the cancellation of a British Airways flight from London to the Saudi capital of Riyadh, which was grounded because of unspecified security fears.
"Following terrorist attacks in Riyadh in May and November 2003, we believe that terrorists remain determined to carry out further attacks in Saudi Arabia and that these may be in the final stages of preparation," the Foreign Office said on its website.
"We advise British nationals against all but essential travel to Saudi Arabia," it said in updated travel advice.
"The threat includes, but is not limited to, residential compounds," it added. "British Airways cancelled its 16 February BA 263 flight to Riyadh for security reasons."
The Foreign Office has issued a string of warnings to its citizens about Saudi Arabia in the wake of a series of attacks blamed on Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida network.
On November 9, terrorists attacked the Muhayya residential compound in Riyadh, killing 18 people and injuring more than 80.
That attack followed co-ordinated bombings at residential compounds in Riyadh on May 12, which killed more than 30 people, including two British nationals.
On Friday, the Saudi interior ministry warned residents of the capital that a car carrying explosives and registered to a wanted suspect could be used in an attack.
The ministry urged residents to be on the alert, "especially since this misled group (of terror suspects) tends to hide these dangerous components in residential areas".
British Airways has been hit by a series of terrorism alerts this year, with flight 263 to Riyadh cancelled twice and one service from London to Washington grounded five times, with the latest scare at the weekend.
BA recently accepted in principal that it would allow armed air marshalls on its planes to guard against possible hijackings.
Earlier yesterday, representatives from the five leading European Union nations met in Germany to discuss the issue of the sky marshalls.
Interior ministers from Germany, France, Britain and Spain, along with Italian officials, gathered in Garmisch-Partenkirchen for the meeting.
17feb04
RUSSIAN President Vladimir Putin set sail today in the Arctic seas on board a nuclear submarine to oversee massive military exercises staged less than one month before presidential elections.
He went off into the Barents Sea - where the Kursk nuclear submarine sank in August 2000 and killed 118 seamen just months into Mr Putin's first term as president - yesterday evening to oversee what has been advertised as some of the largest war games staged by Russia in recent years.
News reports said they include six submarines carrying nuclear weapons. Tu-95 strategic bombers where due to test fire a cruise missile today over the Kola Peninsula on the north-western edge of Russia near the Finnish border.
The exercises also were due to include the test launch of intercontinental ballistic missiles from submarines and ground troops across Russia and onto military target sites in the country's Far East.
ITAR-TASS reported that the games - which were expected to last several weeks - would feature some 5000 servicemen.
Mr Putin was shown wearing navy gear yesterday evening as he boarded the Arkhangelsk nuclear submarine, Russia's largest.
He inspected the ship and dined with the crew in a move which only bolsters his tough-guy image among voters ahead of March 14 presidential elections.
The Kremlin press service said he spent the night on board the submarine with the seamen and was expected to stay there until this evening.
Russian military officials have repeatedly said on the eve of the war games that they were a regular test of the country's military readiness and not aimed as a show of force against the West.
This is the COMPLETE 17-page Terror-Memo
Please distribute.
Thanks! I knew there was something I had been looking for, but never found, then forgot. ;-)
Printed for a later read.
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Posted: February 16, 2004
© 2004 WorldNetDaily.com
It happened again! What are we going to do about it?
Young, good-looking, college graduate, American citizen, Army National Guardsman, self-proclaimed shooter and gun collector, Muslim convert ... arrested for espionage, possible traitor.
Twenty-six-year-old Spc. Ryan G. Anderson is the man. He's a tank crew member of the 81st Armor Brigade, training at Fort Lewis near Tacoma, Wash. Four-thousand strong, they're preparing to leave for Iraq this week.
Anderson won't be with them. He's under arrest. The Army says he was taken into custody and will stay behind bars "pending criminal charges of aiding the enemy by wrongfully attempting to communicate and give intelligence" to the Islamic militant group, al-Qaida.
Apparently there's enough to hold and charge him.
Would that we'd have the courage to follow through if he's found guilty of espionage. The firing squad is the historic solution for those who sell out their country, but I fear in our politically correct world, that wouldn't happen. But there's another more powerful reason than political correctness. Religion.
We're in a real war that involves religion. It's arguably the first such war this country has faced and I'm afraid we haven't the guts or the heart to handle it properly for fear of offending someone.
Personally, I find treason more offensive.
I hear the usual arguments: Our country was founded on religious freedom. Everyone has the right to their own religion with no interference. It wouldn't be right to investigate the religion of military members.
But accepting that, it follows that even if we see a dangerous pattern involving individuals of a certain religion, we can't focus on it to protect ourselves or screen it out.
Talk about being sitting ducks!
Anderson is part of that pattern, which could become more evident, as the war against terrorism continues.
Air Force translator, Sr. Airman Ahmed Al Halabi, a native of Syria who moved to Detroit as a teenager, has been accused of relaying 180-plus classified messages from al-Qaida and Taliban terrorists at Guantanamo Bay.
Capt. James Yee, now Youseff Yee, a former Fort Lewis chaplain, was accused of mishandling classified documents for terrorists at Guantanamo, where he was also a chaplain.
An American-born Chinese, raised Lutheran and a graduate of West Point, he left the military, studied in Syria, converted to Islam, married a Syrian woman, returned to the U.S. and rejoined the military.
Mark Fidel Kools, spent his youth in California and is a California graduate who enrolled in ROTC. He also studied at an Islamic mosque in Los Angeles and changed his name to Asan Akbar.
Part of the 101st Airborne in Kuwait last March, he rolled grenades into three tents of sleeping officers and shot at least two in the back as they ran from the explosions. One man was killed, 15 injured.
Officials reported Akbar had been "having what some might call an attitude problem." We're told the motive "most likely was resentment" about the war against Islamic terrorists.
Apparently, no one paid any attention to the clues there are others.
Estimates are there are 4,000 to15, 000 (or more) Muslims in the military. No one counts. Ft. Lewis spokesman Lt. Col. Stephen Barger says "religious preferences are individual right and responsibility."
Uh-oh. We have a big problem because we're ignoring the implications and avoiding reality.
How do we know Muslims in the military are loyal to the uniform and the country?
We don't.
What is there in Islam that leads people to choose it above their country? These issues don't present with other religions.
We know Islamic teachings say Muslims should not fight other Muslims that, in the case of conflict, fealty to Muhammad is supreme.
If that's the case, do we want people of those beliefs in our military or in places of delicate security where explicit trust is required?
Inasmuch as other Islamic teachings say it's acceptable to lie to infidels (non-Muslims), whom do we believe?
Ryan Anderson hinted his ambivalence about the United States in one of his many letters to the editor. He said he had only "kindness, patience, courtesy and understanding" from Muslims, but "bigotry, hatred and mindless rage from ... 'educated thinkers' ... in the U.S."
In a 1998 letter, he said: "Today I am a young soldier, sworn to protect and defend this country. But if tomorrow I find that this nation is no longer the one based upon the freedom I was taught to love, I'll have little choice but to go where I can live in freedom."
We're warned of terrorist sleeper cells already in this country. We know many mosques preach hatred of the West. We know that few Muslims speak out against the radicals among them and we know Muslims are in every part of American life.
What we don't know is whom to trust.
We haven't protected ourselves from those with evil intent who hide among the innocent to perpetuate their intent to destroy us.
If we don't devise a way to re-evaluate Muslims to assure everyone's safety, we'll lose the war before we fight it which is exactly the terrorist's goal.
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Barbara Simpson
That would be known as a real crappy day.
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