Posted on 06/17/2004 11:16:30 PM PDT by AdmSmith
8 | The news has sent a wave of happiness among the trade and business communities |
Surf's up!
When you study the infrastructure of Afghanistan, the one fact that leaps out at you is the near total absence of any effective transportation system. They are probably the world's record holder for the near total absence of railway lines. In fact, in the whole country, there is less than 16 miles (yes, you read that correctly) of railway lines. This one tiny little 64 mile railway, from Kandahar to Chaman, would more than quadruple Afghanistan's total railway mileage!
This is the best thing that could ever happen in that region, and they need lots more of it. The single biggest cultural problem that allows terrorism and a 12th Century lifestyle to exist in Afghanistan (and much of Pakistan), is ethnically based tribalism and regionalism. But as the song tells us, "How Do You Keep Them Down on the Farm Once They've Been to Par-ie (Paris)"?
Cultural and economic intercourse is absolutely vital to that region's long-term stability.
multimap.com | | | The above map came from MultiMap.com. Click the logo on the left to visit the best site on the internet for accurate and detailed maps of the entire world. |
To orient yourself regionally, find Kandahar on the map of Afghanistan, below (lower center) and in the map above (center).
--Boot Hill
No surprise there, the fighting (and casualties) have increased because of greatly intensified U.S. pressure on al-Qa'ida and Taliban forces as we close in on Osama bin Laden, Ayman al-Zawahiri (along the Paki/Afghan border), and Mullah Omar (in the mountains north of Kandahar). We have entered and held areas that previously were too hot. This is not a cause for concern, it is a cause for preparing the inevitable celebration.
Typical New York Times "gloom and doom" crap.
--Boot Hill
Connecting Kabul to Kandahar is just a beginning of what is needed. Look at the second map I posted in #641. Every city shown there should be on the rail line. Ticket prices for passengers should be subsidized to keep them artificially low to encourage travel.
But that's a plan for the long-term. In the short-term we need to kill as many of the Taliban and al-Qa'ida as it is humanly possible or no railway will make any sense or have any value.
--Boot Hill
"Estimates of the troops previously in the area run from 40,000 to 80,000, counting both Wana and Miram Shah based troops. In US terms, that's from 4 to 8 divisions, from 12 to 24 brigades, from 36 to 72 battalions."
Thanks for the breakdown.
Captured Qaeda Figure Led Way to Information Behind Warning
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1183149/posts?page=1
That person was not speaking Arabic nor Uighur. Maybe Pashto?
Strange name for the defense attorney "Wazir Ali Muhammad Al-Haaq"...
http://www.journalnow.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=WSJ%2FMGArticle%2FWSJ_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1031777058101&path=!localnews&s=1037645509099
Hearing begins at Fort Bragg for soldier charged in 101st attack
Boot IMHO .....Mullah Omar is in or near Quetta.
--Boot Hill
Someone on another thread mentioned the courier caught with a message from Zarqawi to Binny.....was caught on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border....
Yeah, but I haven't found confirmation of that story yet. Let me know if you find something.
Lol
"Incompetence or something else"
My guess is both.
They nabbed a courir:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,1280,-4380919,00.html
More al-Qaida Arrests Made in Pakistan
Tuesday August 3, 2004 11:46 AM
AP Photo ISL102
By PAUL HAVEN
Associated Press Writer
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) - Pakistani authorities have arrested several more al-Qaida suspects in the past few days, including one man seized trying to leave the country from an airport in the eastern city of Lahore and another arrested in a nearby town, a senior government official and police said.
The arrests were all made in the last 72 hours and the suspects were being interrogated, said the government official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
One of the men arrested identified himself as a Syrian named Juma Ibrahim. He was taken in Sunday in Hafizabad, a town near the eastern city of Lahore, said district police chief Aslam Ghauri. He said the man told authorities that he was in the town for business, but had no references and could not say who he was meeting with, Ghauri said.
The man has been turned over to Inter-Services Intelligence, Pakistan's spy agency, Ghauri said.
The senior government official said another man had been arrested trying to board a plane in Lahore with several questionable documents. He would give no details.
``Yes, we have made several arrests of al-Qaida linked people,'' said the official. It was not clear where the other arrest was made or how significant the suspects are.
The official said they were believed linked to other al-Qaida suspects taken in recently, including a computer expert arrested July 13 that has been identified as Mohammad Naeem Noor Khan, also known as Abu Talha.
Information provided by Khan, as well as another al-Qaida suspect, Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, a Tanzanian arrested July 25, was a major factor in the decision by U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge to issue a warning about a possible al-Qaida attack on prominent financial institutions in New York, Washington and Newark, New Jersey.
Ghauri said the Syrian suspect was arrested at a bus station. He had no passport or travel documents, only a U.N. refugee agency card that identified him as a refugee and allowed him to travel to Islamabad.
Meanwhile, more information emerged about the hunt that led authorities to Ghailani.
A senior intelligence official told The Associated Press that the man had spent some time in the tribal area of South Waziristan before traveling in recent weeks to Gujrat. He said he was helped by al-Qaida ``facilitators'' who arranged for him to hide in several local houses and stay out of sight.
Ghailani is African and would stand out among the tribal people along the Pakistan-Afghan border, but he likely never was seen by the locals.
``When these people enter a house, they don't come out. They have one or two local people who arrange food for them, and even they rarely see the person,'' said the intelligence official, who also spoke on condition his name not be used. ``They try to maintain that level of secrecy.''
Ghailani is also suspected of spending time in the southern port city of Karachi, home to a number of local extremist groups as well as al-Qaida, and in the eastern city of Lahore.
``We were searching for him for a while and we were several days behind him in different cities, until the moment was right and we caught him,'' the senior government official said.
Take a look at his encrypted documents.
I cn nt spll courier
Al Qaeda leadership is taking a major hit over the last three weeks. We are rolling them up left and right.
Regardless of whether these people are giving information about Bin Laden or Zawahiri's whereabouts, it would be wise for all of our troops and assets to remain vigilant, because Bin Laden cannot know whether he is safe or not and may be forced to make a move.
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