Posted on 02/01/2002 9:38:51 AM PST by RCW2001
CNN reporting live that "New organizations have received Email claiming that kidnapped WSJ has been killed.
Searching for wirecopy confirmation.
IMO, though, it's going to be interesting to watch the liberal WSJ lament that the government did nothing to save their man.
I think that's the point the other posters are trying to get across. He didn't CHOSE to be kidnapped, of course. But he did agree to meet with terrorists, alone. That was a big mistake.
I know of this woman from a personal friend. She has prayed considerably on this matter and wants only for her husband to be released. She is doing a fabluous job keeping her head about her. Can you imagine the inner strength it takes to not appear a blubbering victim in front of the world? That only plays into the kidnappers hands.
I would hope that my wife could be that disciplined and focused if I were in his shoes.
She is not aloof whatsoever, she is composed and focused on doing her part to help win his release.
Unfortunately, the kidnappers don't want to deal with the government. They want cash from the parents or the church - I think he said $ 1 million.
It's hard to have one-sided negotiations.
FresnoDA
The BLU-82B/C-130 weapon system, nicknamed Commando Vault in Vietnam and Daisy Cutter in Afghanistan, is a high altitude delivery of 15,000 pound conventional bomb, delivered from an MC-130 since it is far too heavy for the bomb racks on any bomber or attack aircraft. Originally designed to create an instant clearing in the jungle, it has been used in Afghanistan as an anti-personnel weapon and as an intimidation weapon because of its very large lethal radius (variously reported as 300-900 feet) combined with flash and sound visible at long distances. It is the largest conventional bomb in existence but is less than one thousandth the power of the Hiroshima nuclear bomb.
Frequent press reports to the contrary, the Daisy Cutter is not a fuel-air explosive (FAE). It is a conventional explosive incorporating both agent and oxidizer. In contrast, an FAE consists only of agent and a dispersing mechanism, and takes its oxidizer from the oxygen in the air. FAEs generally run between 500 and 2000 pounds; it would be difficult to make an FAE the size of Daisy Cutter because the correct uniform mixture of agent with ambient air would be difficult to maintain if the agent were so widely dispersed. Thus, the conventional explosive technique of Daisy Cutter is more reliable than that of an FAE, particularly if there is significant wind or thermal gradient.
This system depends upon the accurate positioning of the aircraft by either a fixed ground radar or onboard navigation equipment. The ground radar controller, or aircrew navigator as applicable, is responsible for positioning the aircraft prior to final countdown and release. Primary aircrew considerations include accurate ballistic and wind computations provided by the navigator, and precision instrument flying with strict adherence to controller instructions. The minimum altitude for release due to blast effects of the weapon is 6,000 feet AGL. The BLU-82 was originally designed to clear helicopter landing zones and artillery emplacements in Vietnam. The warhead contains 12,600 pounds of low-cost GSX slurry (ammonium nitrate, aluminum powder, and polystyrene) and is detonated just above ground level by a 38-inch fuze extender, optimized for destruction and ground level without digging a crater. The weapon produces an overpressure of 1000 psi [pounds per square inch] near ground zero, tapering off as distance increases.
Eleven BLU-82s were dropped during Desert Storm, all from Special Operations C-130s. The initial drops were intended to test the ability of the bomb to clear mines; no reliable bomb damage assessment exists on mine clearing effectiveness. Later, bombs were dropped as much for their psychological effect as for their antipersonnel effects.
Specifications |
|
Class | 15,000 lb. Blast |
Guidance | Ballistic |
Control: | |
Autopilot: | None |
Propulsion: | None |
Weight (lb.) | 15,000 |
Length (in) | 141.6 |
Diameter (in) | 54 |
Warhead (lbs.) | 15,000 |
Explosive | Aluminum Powder (12,600 lbs.) |
Fuze | M904 (Nose); M905 (Tail) |
Unit Cost | $27,318 |
Aircraft | MC-130 |
Kinda makes me wonder what info CNN is sending back to them.
Exactly. this is totally inexcusable as far as I'm concerned. But, unfortunately, not surprising.
a. He was a westerner and a Jew.
b. These people he was going to see were neither, in fact were Islamic and thus mindless animals if they confront someone of different culture;
c. Pakistan is in the 14th century, and Islam is mostly still in the 7th. He should have set his watch back 700 to 1400 years when he landed, and he put it off thinking it unimportant.
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