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To: All

Alarm out for missing truck with fertilizer
By Christine Green

Arkansas security officials reported information concerning a missing J&M Transport truck with a load of fertilizer on June 1. J&M is based in Cabot, Ark.

Randy McDaniel, 50, received a 51,000-pound load of urea fertilizer in Little Rock on May 25. McDaniel never reached the intended destination in Stuttgart, Ark., according to Highway ISAC and Mark Tabor of the Transportation Security Administration, who is based at Little Rock National Airport.

The fertilizer and vehicle are still missing. The driver has not made contact with his girlfriend or family members, officials said. They noted that former President Clinton is scheduled to arrive in Little Rock June 3.

Urea fertilizer can be used to make explosives.

The missing truck is a red 1996 Volvo with Arkansas plate F254068. It has a J&M Transport logo on the door, and a white trailer with Oklahoma plate 2106FB.

Anyone with information can contact Doug Freeman, at (501) 221-9100, or Tabor, at (501) 372-8384.

http://www.etrucker.com/apps/news/article.asp?id=47644


4,414 posted on 06/02/2005 6:17:36 PM PDT by Velveeta
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To: Velveeta

That doesn't sound good. Thanks for posting that info Velveeta.


4,416 posted on 06/02/2005 6:31:56 PM PDT by Oorang ( A great deal of talent is lost to the world for want of a little courage. -Goethe)
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To: Velveeta; Cindy; MamaDearest; grizzfan; All
Are the Taleban regrouping?
June 1, 2005

Islamabad - Gauging the strength of the factions, particularly the Taleban, fighting coalition and Afghan forces in Afghanistan, is an imprecise science.

Both sides have significantly stepped up operations against each other in the past few months, but they tend to talk up the overall impact their strikes have.

The Americans recently characterised the Taleban as a declining force.

However, some analysts say Afghanistan is witnessing an increase, not a decrease, in what they describe as the Taleban's sophisticated attacks and they believe that will continue during the coming months.

Increased attacks

As winter turned to spring in Afghanistan and the Taleban resumed guerrilla style offensives in the south and east, American commanders were declaring them a weakened, losing force.

They say they are down to around 2,000 men with declining appeal to former leaders and to the population.

But the American belief, that they are still funded and armed by al-Qaeda, coupled to the frequency and deadliness of their attacks in the past two months, tests that theory to the full.

One Kabul-based analyst said that although the Americans had stepped up anti-Taleban operations, he expected attacks by the rebel movement to increase in the coming months.

He said the real measure of their strength was not their numbers but the sophistication and degree of co-ordination of those attacks.

Sending a message

The assassination of Mawlawi Fayaz, he said, followed by a strike inside the mosque during his funeral, proved just how sophisticated.

Since the cleric was a close ally of Hamid Karzai, it served as a message to the Afghan president of the Taleban's continuing threat.

The killing of Kabul's recently appointed police chief, another ally, sent the same message.

If the Taleban were responsible for the Kandahar mosque attack, in the analyst's words, "they got a lot of bangs for their bucks."

http://www.sabawoon.com/news/miniheadlines.asp?dismode=article&artid=23329

_____________________________________

This article ties in with the last part of the article posted above:

Suicide bomber's part of Al-Qaeda network: Governor Kandahar
June 1, 2005

KANDAHAR - Kandahar Gov. Gul Agha Sherzai said the suicide bomber's body had been found and he was part of Osama bin Laden's terror network.

"The attacker was a member of al-Qaida. We have found documents on his body that show he was an Arab," Sherzai told reporters.

Kandahar was a stronghold of the hard-line Taliban regime that was ousted from power in late 2001 by U.S.-led forces for harboring bin Laden.

A foreign media reported that it received a call from a man claiming to be a Taliban member who said the movement was responsible for the attack. It did not identify the caller or say if the report had been verified.

But a purported Taliban spokesman, Mullah Latif Hakimi, said in a telephone call to The Associated Press that the group was not responsible for the bombing.

http://www.sabawoon.com/news/miniheadlines.asp?dismode=article&artid=23331

4,417 posted on 06/02/2005 6:44:38 PM PDT by Oorang ( A great deal of talent is lost to the world for want of a little courage. -Goethe)
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