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Posted on 08/06/2005 4:45:21 PM PDT by nwctwx
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Threat Matrix HTML designed by: Ian Livingston
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jerseygirl wrote:
Travelling around the net, I had come across eom referencing something
about we will see 3 stars in the sky the night before the "big hit".
I keep looking at that map of the torn USA with cities missing and find...3
stars
Also there is of course reference to "anniversary" and we will see the light
of (1000's?) of suns.<<<
Do you still have these messages?
Does the 3 stars match the post in 2213? and 2230?
Interesting, thanks.
MTA locks riders into terror trap
NY Daily News
8/21/05
http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/339076p-289567c.html
Imagine this terrifying scenario: You're on a moving subway car when
the backpack carried by the man beside you starts to smoke. You see a
wire hanging out, hear a hissing sound and pop-pop-pop.
You instantly move away and push toward the end door. The door won't
open - it's locked. You're trapped beside a suicide bomber.
That very scenario took place in London, but with a crucial difference.
Underground riders fleeing smoking and hissing backpacks July 21 got
out of their moving cars through the end doors and into the next cars.
In New York, there's a good chance they would have been trapped because
of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority's decision to lock the end
doors on 25% of subway cars.
Even as it searches passenger bags, the MTA has obvious security holes.
There are stations without security cameras or public address systems,
turnstile gates that are locked and train yards that are wide open. The
age of terror is upon us, and the MTA is behind the curve.
Nothing shows the problem as clearly as the locked doors on 1,600
subway cars. As wrong as that policy is, the reason behind it is absolutely
shocking. The agency is stuck in a time warp, more worried about a
safety problem of the late 1970s than a modern terror blast.
Fortunately, the July 21 London bombs - two weeks after the first
attack, which killed 52 people - malfunctioned. The fuses ignited, but the
explosives did not detonate.
But luck is not a strategy for safety. Nor is a foolish devotion to the
past.
Back in the late '70s and early '80s, transit systems were bedeviled by
accidents involving riders falling between cars. The National
Transportation Safety Board found that, over a five-year period, 25 of 48 rail
deaths involved "between car fatalities." Of the nine such fatalities
reported in 1981, eight were in the city.
The NTSB recommended that New York get better warning signs and
strictly enforce existing rules against riding between moving cars. According
to its 1982 report, the agency, which is advisory only, noted a
consensus among experts that locking doors "would be far more dangerous in
case of an emergency than the practice of leaving doors unlocked."
But MTA officials had already started locking some doors. That policy
continues to this day, unaffected by the menace of terror
(clipped)
Bookmarking.
NYC subway system must boost security measures soon.
'I Will Go to Do Jihad Again and Again'
Prisoner's Story Highlights Pakistan-Based Training Network for
Insurgents
By N.C. Aizenman
Washington Post Foreign Service
Sunday, August 21, 2005; A17
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/20/AR2005082001002.html
KABUL, Afghanistan -- The prisoner perched on a metal chair, hugging
his knees to his chest and rocking slightly, like a nervous child.
But his expression relaxed into a blissful smile as he described what
he would do if released from his cell in the headquarters of the
national intelligence service.
"When I get the chance, I will stick to my promise," said Sher Ali, 28,
a Pakistani man with cropped black hair and a long beard. "I will go to
do jihad again and again."
Ali said he took his vow to wage holy war against U.S. forces in
Afghanistan earlier this summer, just before embarking on what he described
as a 20-day weapons training course at a secret mountain camp in
northeastern Pakistan.
He was captured by Afghan police about three weeks ago, shortly after
crossing into Afghanistan's rugged, northeastern Konar province. The
area has been a haven for armed renegades from an assortment of groups,
including al Qaeda, the Taliban and backers of former Afghan leader
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, who is now a fugitive.
Over the last several months, insurgents have killed hundreds of people
in Afghanistan, including aid workers, religious and tribal leaders,
government officials, and Afghan and U.S. troops, many in ambushes and
bombings apparently aimed at derailing parliamentary elections scheduled
for Sept. 18.
American and Afghan forces have countered with an aggressive effort to
flush the fighters from their remote mountain hideouts, killing several
hundred in operations in border provinces from Konar in the north to
Kandahar in the south. They have also taken several hundred suspected
insurgents prisoner and allowed a few to speak to journalists.
Ali's story, which could not be verified independently,
( snipped)
Ali spoke in the presence of an Afghan intelligence official, but he
did not show signs of having been mistreated. Some details, such as the
existence of jihadist training camps and the recruitment of Islamic
fighters,
(snipped)
"We know where a lot of these training camps are. We have their names.
And we've given the Pakistanis all the information we have," said a
senior Afghan intelligence official. "We're waiting for Pakistan to show
the willingness to fight."
Pakistan's president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, has repeatedly pointed out
that his government has captured or killed more than 700 suspected al
Qaeda members in Pakistan since 2001. It also lost more than 250
soldiers last year in battles against al Qaeda bases in the largely lawless
semiautonomous tribal regions along the Afghan border.
Officials from the two governments have recently exchanged pledges to
collaborate closely on security. But they must still contend with the
sympathy that many Pakistanis feel toward the Taliban, particularly in
tribal border towns such as Miram Shah, where residents share the same
Pashtun ethnicity as the Afghan militia.
It was in Miram Shah this summer, at the home of a friend, that Sher
Ali said he met Zubair, an Afghan in his late twenties, who recruited him
to fight in Afghanistan. Ali, who was visiting from his village, said
Zubair did not initially admit to being an insurgent. "But from the way
he talked, I could tell that he had been a fighter," Ali said during an
hour-long interview in the intelligence headquarters.
Ali said Zubair told him and his companions that Western troops were
bombing, arresting and torturing innocent Afghans. "He kept saying, 'It's
our duty as Muslims to go there and help,' " said Ali.
That night, Ali recalled, Zubair turned to him and asked point-blank:
"Do you want to join the jihad?"
The son of a truck driver, Ali said he had never belonged to any
religious movement and had never attended any of the thousands of free
religious schools that cater to impoverished Pakistani children. Instead he
had dropped out of public school at 13 to take a series of odd jobs,
most recently as a security guard.
During that pivotal evening in Miram Shah, Ali said he thought of his
wife and 1-year-old son, who lived with his parents in a mud hut. But he
also thought of how he had often seethed at the idea of U.S. troops in
Muslim lands such as Afghanistan and Iraq and at the U.S. military's
detention of Muslim prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
"It was like Zubair had poured the petrol, lit the match and set fire
to this issue of jihad for me," he said.
Several days later, Ali said he boarded a public bus for the four-hour
journey from Peshawar, the city nearest his village, to the
northeastern Pakistani mountain town of Mansehra. He carried only a backpack
stuffed with three changes of clothes and a bar of soap. His ears rang with
his mother's wails of protest at the news that he was setting off for
jihad.
(snipped)
"I knew then that when I was killed in jihad, I would go directly to
heaven," he said, smiling.
On reaching the bus stop in Mansehra, Ali walked to a stand selling
fried dumplings and looked for the contact Zubair had promised would be
waiting.
"Salaam aleikum," peace be to you, he said tentatively to a middle-age
man with a long beard.
"Are you the person who has come from Peshawar?" the man asked.
Ali nodded, and the man quickly led him to another bus, this one far
more dilapidated. They rode for an hour to a small town, then alighted
and began a steep hike up into the hills, following no discernable path.
For more than four hours they trekked in silence under a cool canopy of
trees, taller than any Ali had ever seen.
Finally they reached a small camp of five white tents, where about 20
men were preparing to perform afternoon prayers. Ali was introduced to a
soft-spoken Pakistani instructor who never gave his name, though Ali
said he overheard others refer to him as Maksud.
Maksud never gave the name of the group that was training him, Ali
said. However, the hills around Mansehra overlook Pakistan's border with
Kashmir, a disputed Himalayan province that is split between Pakistan and
India.
The area has long been a training ground for Kashmiri guerrillas,
unofficially supported by Pakistan. In recent years, several Kashmiri groups
have joined forces with al Qaeda or the Taliban to attack Western
targets, but critics charge that the Pakistani military remains reluctant to
defang them.
Every day, Ali said, the trainees awoke before dawn and did sprinting
exercises for 20 minutes. They spent several hours learning how to
assemble, aim and fire weapons, from Kalashnikov rifles to rocket-propelled
grenade launchers, although Ali said there was only one rocket, so the
trainees never actually fired it.
Despite the loud bangs emanating from the camp, Ali said, Maksud took
pains to conceal it and warned the trainees not to wander too far away.
Shortly after Ali returned to Peshawar, he said, Zubair arrived and
announced they would drive into Afghanistan the next morning. Ali said
Zubair never told him whom they would be joining, but an Afghan
intelligence investigator said Ali had confessed under interrogation that Zubair
was working for a senior Taliban commander, Jalaluddin Haqqani.
Ali said Afghan border guards waved them into Konar, assuming they were
Afghan. But some miles later, police stopped their taxi. When they
discovered Ali did not have identity papers, they arrested him.
Ali complained that the Konar police kept him tied up for several days
and threatened to hurt him. But he said that he was never beaten and
added he had been pleasantly surprised by the extent to which Afghans
appeared to be in charge of their country.
Still, the Pakistani prisoner remained skeptical and defiant. The
interview over, Ali rose from his chair in the investigator's office and
began to shuffle out of the room. Suddenly, he stopped and popped his head
back through the door.
"So," he demanded, "when are you taking me to Guantanamo?"
New York, Canada...
ON THE NET...
http://www.internet-haganah.us/harchives/004814.html
http://www.jihadunspun.com/home.php
In other words, the three choices are join Islam, pay a protection tax
called jizyah or be killed in warfare.
Ibrahim told ANS the book declares Muslims "must remove any
obstacle in the way of implementing the Islamic ruling system." These
three housewives are seen as an obstacle that must be removed, he
said.<<<<<<<<
The clip above says it all.
Thanks Velveeta.
SF and Nebraska manhole covers need to be secured.
Yep, that's a WOW fact bottom line, huh?
FSB (Russia) Says Terrorists Are Trying to Secure WMD
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1467825/posts
Earlier this summer, the chief of the Defense Ministry's nuclear safety and security department said there was a constant stream of intelligence from the FSB indicating that terrorist groups were developing plans to target the military's nuclear arsenals. "We have special information continuously coming from the Federal Security Service on terrorist groups' plans against our facilities," Igor Valynkin, head of the ministry's 12th Main Directorate, said in June.
Thanks Fair Opinion for the ping.
ON THE NET...
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/keyword?k=wmd
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/keyword?k=terrorists
WOW!!
Thanks for the photo, could be 3 stars.
The peak looks like Twin Peak in the Black Mountains, that
is on the east side of the range. Near Oatman, Arizona.
Florida, Arizona
ON THE NET...
http://www.internet-haganah.us/harchives/004817.html
http://www.sarayaalquds.org
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1467830/posts
"Bomb Threat in Crawford"
Powerline ^
Posted on 08/21/2005 2:05:39 PM PDT by Republican Red
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1467830/posts
Bomb threat to gift shop in Crawford, Texas
ON THE NET...
http://www.internet-haganah.us/jihadi/
http://www.jihadwatch.org
http://www.memri.org/jihad.html
http://www.memritv.org
===
===
Note to JP...See you back here soon. -Cindy
"Most people don't realise that the House of Commons meets where there used to be a Roman Catholic Chapel
in the Palace of Westminster."
Did you know of the WMD threat to the House of Commons when you posted this? I heard about it today.
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