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Posted on 02/24/2004 3:19:05 AM PST by Revel
Edited on 05/26/2004 5:19:43 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
February 24, 2004 -- WASHINGTON - The Pentagon has dispatched the elite commando force that hunted down Saddam Hussein to Afghanistan for a new operation aimed at getting Osama bin Laden, officials said yesterday. Military sources confirmed that members of the shadowy Task Force 121, the unit that conducted the high-tech search for Saddam and his henchmen, have recently begun operating in the remote mountainous region along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border where bin Laden and key al Qaeda and Taliban fugitives are believed to be hiding. The Task Force is made up of highly trained Delta and SEAL commandos, as well as CIA paramilitary operators. It operates outside normal military channels.
(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
By AHMED AL-HAJ, Associated Press Writer
ABYAN, Yemen - Security forces have arrested a leading al-Qaida member in their pursuit of militants in the south Yemeni mountains, security officials said Thursday.
Abdul Raouf Naseeb was one of more than a dozen militants captured Wednesday night in a security force operation in the mountains of Abyan province, 292 miles south of the capital San'a, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Naseeb was sought by Yemeni police and U.S. officials and is believed to have survived the November 2002 attack by a CIA-operated drone that killed al-Qaida's chief agent in Yemen, Qaed Salim Sinan al-Harethi, said the officials. At the time of the attack, Yemeni officials did not say that any al-Qaida operatives had survived.
Naseeb allegedly planned the breakout of 10 militants who escaped from an Aden prison in April 2003, the officials added. The militants had been detained in connection with the suicide attack of the destroyer USS Cole in 2000, which killed 17 American sailors.
Security forces with tanks and helicopters surrounded a group of militants in the mountains late Wednesday. On Thursday, officials told reporters that the area had been cordoned off and the security forces were giving the militants a chance to surrender.
The crackdown came amid reports of planned attacks in Yemen. Security has been noticeably tightened in the capital, San'a, around embassies, foreign companies and government institutions.
On Wednesday, the pan-Arab daily Al-Hayat reported that Sayed Imam el-Sharif, a leading member of Egypt's Islamic Jihad, had been arrested in Yemen. Yemeni officials did not confirm the arrest Thursday.
El-Sharif, founder of the Islamic Jihad, moved to Yemen in 1996 and turned over control of the group to Ayman al-Zawahri, now al-Qaida's No. 2 leader.
Officials say the security forces are searching for Yemeni and Arab fighters, mainly Egyptians and Saudis, who took refuge in Yemen after fighting in Afghanistan alongside Osama bin Laden in the 1980s.
Yemen has allied itself with the U.S. war on terrorism, allowing American forces to enter the country and train its military. The country, which long has tolerated Muslim extremists, is the ancestral homeland of bin Laden.
By PAUL GARWOOD, Associated Press Writer
TIKRIT, Iraq - The U.S. Army is investigating a soldier in connection with the killing of an Iraqi man who was shot when he resisted arrest, an Army spokeswoman said Thursday.
The man was killed during a Feb. 27 patrol to round up suspected terrorists in al-Huwijah, southwest of Kirkuk, U.S. Army Maj. Josslyn Aberle said.
It wasn't clear what role the soldier from the 25th Infantry Division's 1st Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment played in the shooting. The soldier, who has not been identified, has been confined to his barracks at the U.S. Army post in Kirkuk.
Aberle said a separate investigation cleared U.S. soldiers involved in a Feb. 18 shooting near Kirkuk that killed an Iraqi girl and wounded her mother and sister.
American soldiers opened fire on the three Iraqis when they ran from an area where a roadside bomb had exploded near a U.S. patrol. There was no indication that the three were involved with the bombing.
Aberle said an investigation found that the soldiers, also from the 25th Infantry Division, followed the military's rules of engagement. She said the U.S. Army had paid compensation to the girl's family for her death.
The 1st Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment is in charge of security in the Kirkuk. It arrived in Iraq (news - web sites) from Schofield Barracks, Hawaii last month to replace the outgoing 173rd Airborne Brigade.
Not sure, I can't speak or read Arabic. StillProud2BeFree may be able to give us an idea what the doc/audio is all about.
Many of those gathered Tuesday when bombs went off were Iranian pilgrims like this man, who returned Thursday to Iran via ambulance.
MSNBC News Services Updated: 11:32 a.m. ET March 04, 2004BAGHDAD, Iraq - A large blast hit a Baghdad neighborhood near a telephone exchange Thursday, killing at least three people, Iraqi police said.
Wednesday, a bomb exploded at another telephone exchange in Baghdad, sparking fears that guerrillas were targeting Iraqs communications system in a new form of sabotage. The countrys energy infrastructure has been frequently attacked.
Click on link to read article in its entirety.
Jordanian Abu Mussab al-Zarqawi and Al-Qaeda emerged as prime suspects in the deadly attacks on Shiite shrines that killed around 170 Iraqi worshippers.(AFP/File/Marwan Naamani)
Leaflet Says Extremist Al-Zarqawi Is Dead
By LEE KEATH, Associated Press Writer
BAGHDAD, Iraq - A Jordanian extremist suspected of bloody suicide attacks in Iraq was killed some time ago in U.S. bombings and a letter outlining plans for fomenting sectarian war is a forgery, a leaflet signed by a dozen alleged insurgent groups said. A senior U.S. official denied that claim.
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi was killed in the Sulaimaniyah mountains of northern Iraq "during the American bombing there," according to the eight-page leaflet circulated this week in Fallujah, a city 30 miles west of Baghdad that is a hotbed of anti-U.S. insurgency activity.
There was no way to verify the authenticity of the leaflet. It was signed by 12 groups, including several cited by U.S. officials in the past including the Ansar al-Sunna Army and Muhammad's Army.
It said al-Zarqawi was unable to escape the bombing because of his artificial leg.
The leaflet did not say when al-Zarqawi was supposedly killed, but U.S. jets bombed strongholds of the extremist Ansar al-Islam in the north last April as Saddam Hussein's regime was collapsing.
A senior U.S. official said the claim al-Zarqawi is dead was false and that the United States had information showing the Jordanian militant was alive well after the bombing campaign.
In al-Zarqawi's hometown in Jordan, an associate of his family told The Associated Press that according to the family, al-Zarqawi had been in contact with his mother until four months ago, when the communication ended after police came to question the mother.
In a telephone call Thursday to the family home, a woman answered and said, "He's not in contact with us. We don't know anything about him. Don't call again." She then hung up.
Before the Iraq conflict began last March, Secretary of State Colin Powell said al-Zarqawi received hospital treatment in Baghdad after fleeing Afghanistan.
U.S. intelligence sources said he apparently was fitted with an artificial leg. He was believed to have taken refuge in northern Iraq before the U.S.-led invasion, and then possibly moved on to Iran. It was widely believed that he then was still coordinating closely with Ansar al-Islam in Kurdish areas.
In February, the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq made public an intercepted letter it said was written by al-Zarqawi to al-Qaida leaders, detailing a strategy of spectacular attacks to derail the planned June 30 handover of power to the Iraqis. U.S. officials say al-Zarqawi may have been involved in some of the series of suicide bombings this year in Iraq.
The leaflet in Fallujah said the "fabricated al-Zarqawi memo" has been used by the U.S.-run coalition "to back up their theory of a civil war" in Iraq.
"The truth is, al-Qaida is not present in Iraq," the leaflet said. Though many Arabs entered the country to fight U.S. troops, only a small number remain, the group said.
"We had to help hundreds of them leave for their own protection because they were only a burden on the resistance. It was difficult to hide them" from Iraqi informers cooperating with U.S. forces, it said.
Leaflets by "mujahedeen" groups allegedly involved in fighting the U.S. occupation are distributed frequently in Fallujah and other cities of the "Sunni Triangle," the region north and west of Baghdad where guerrilla activity is highest. U.S. officials have said Muhammad's Army may be an umbrella groups of former Iraqi intelligence and security agents and that Ansar al-Sunna Army may be an offshoot of Ansar al-Islam.
A little over a year ago, Jordanian authorities named al-Zarqawi as the mastermind behind the 2002 murder of Laurence Foley, a 60-year-old administrator of U.S. aid programs in Jordan.
Al-Zarqawi was born Ahmad Fadeel Nazzal al-Khalayleh in the Jordanian city of Zarqa, an industrial city 17 miles northeast of Amman from which he took his nom de guerre.
The owner of a car repair shop in Zarqa said he was told by al-Zarqawi's nephew that al-Zarqawi had been in contact with his mother, Umm Sayel. In their last communication four months ago, al-Zarqawi called his mother at a Jordanian hospital where she was undergoing surgery, the garage owner told AP on condition of anonymity.
The phone was tapped and police soon arrive to question Umm Sayel, and since then al-Zarqawi has not restored contact, the man said he was told by the nephew.
He would not give the nephew's name or disclose his whereabouts. The AP repeatedly has tried to speak with al-Zarqawi's family.
Al-Zarqawi, believed to be in his 30s, left Jordan for Afghanistan in the late 1980s. He later returned and in 1992 was jailed 7 1/2 years for militant activities in the kingdom. He left Jordan in August 1999 for Pakistan.
In a German court last year, Shadi Abdellah, a Palestinian on trial for allegedly plotting to attack Berlin's Jewish Museum and a Jewish-owned disco, testified he was working for al-Zarqawi. He said they met in Afghanistan.
German authorities have reportedly said they believe al-Zarqawi was appointed by al-Qaida's leadership to arrange attacks in Europe.
Moroccan government sources said a group blamed for bombings in May that killed 45 people in Casablanca got its orders from al-Zarqawi. In Turkey, officials said he was believed to have played a role in bombings that killed 63 at two synagogues, the British consulate and a British bank in Istanbul in November.
___
AP writer Jamal Halaby in Amman, Jordan, contributed to this report.
Kidding, of course :)
He's got that 100% correct and I hope he has success in pounding that into the heads of the Republicans running for office - it could make all the difference in their re-election campaigns. Getting and keeping illegals out of this country is not just a Texas issue. It's a national issue.
MOSCOW - An Arctic ice floe that was home to a Russian research station has broken up and the 12 scientists there will have to be rescued, officials said Thursday.
The ice floe bearing the North Pole-32 meteorological research station drifted farther south than expected and began to break up Wednesday, State Meteorological Service official Natalya Yershova said. A section of the floe disappeared beneath the surface, taking four of the station's six buildings with it, she said.
The scientists on the floe, 400 miles from the North Pole, are not in any danger, Yershova said. A helicopter will retrieve them Friday or Saturday, she said.
"The researchers have food, clothing, satellite communication equipment and two diesel-fueled generators," she said.
The drifting station was set up in April. Before the floe broke up, it had drifted some 1,710 miles, with the researchers recording weather conditions and studying climate change.
The station crew had planned to leave the ice floe which was about a half-mile long before it began breaking up toward the end of the month, Yershova said.
She said a search is under way for a suitable ice floe for a new expedition, North Pole-33, which is to begin in April.
If Bremer was following this thread daily, he would have known that a long time ago.
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