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To: Myrddin
Jimmy Carter got a Nobel Peace prize for negotiating an agreement with North Korea.

Ahhh good Old Jimmy "The Peanut Farmer" Carter. He managed to do this while also giving away our interests in the Panama Canal and adjacent zones of interest and influence.

I'd guess it doesn't matter a whole lot if there are no longer any nukes on the DMZ when our nuclear sub fleet can lay just offshore with enough megatons to turn NK into glass. In any case, you're 100% correct: There is no viable reason to leave our guys there.

2,247 posted on 08/16/2004 3:20:02 PM PDT by ExSoldier (M1A: Any mission. Any conditions. Any foe. At any range.)
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To: ExSoldier; All
Fears summit foreshadows US blitz
The Australian

NEW YORK: US and Pakistani authorities fear a meeting of terrorist leaders in Pakistan was the precursor to a major al-Qa'ida attack on America, according to Time magazine.

Authorities discovered a "second string" of terrorist leaders met in the remote northwestern province of Waziristan in March, the magazine reported yesterday.

"The personalities involved, the operations, the fact an explosives expert came here and went back, all this was extremely significant," Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf said.

Some US officials fear the summit meeting might have been a key planning session ahead of a major attack -- just as the September 11, 2001, strike on the US was preceded by an al-Qa'ida gathering in Kuala Lumpur, the Malaysian capital, 11 months earlier.

A US official described those at the Pakistan summit as "cold-blooded killers who are very skilled at what they do and have an intense desire to inflict an awful lot of pain and suffering on America".

Participants included Abu Issa al Hindi, an Indian convert to radical Islam and surveillance specialist living in Britain; Adnan el Shukrijumah, a commercial pilot and bombmaker of Arab-Guyanese origin; and Mohammed Junaid Babar, a Pakistani-American who arrived at the summit with cash, sleeping bags and ponchos, Time reported.

Al Hindi is now under arrest in Britain, and Mohammed Babar was arrested in New York in April.

Others, including Shukrijumah, 29, are still at large. Shukrijumah "speaks English and has the ability to fit in and look innocuous", an FBI agent told Time.

Shukrijumah was born in Guyana and raised in Florida, where his late father, a Saudi-Yemeni cleric, preached hardline Wahhabism at a small mosque. He reportedly holds passports from Guyana and Trinidad, and may also have Canadian and Saudi passports. He can easily pass for Hispanic and authorities fear he may cross the Canadian or Mexican borders.

The FBI said Shukrijumah could be the "next Atta", a reference to Mohamed Atta, the Egyptian ringleader of the September 11 attacks.

2,248 posted on 08/16/2004 3:23:43 PM PDT by nwctwx
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To: ExSoldier

Just a thought regarding the canal. Would not it be prudent for the US Military to have contingency plans to seize the facility in case something bad goes down with either North Korea or Iran (or their puppet masters)?


2,307 posted on 08/16/2004 7:52:44 PM PDT by buckalfa
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To: ExSoldier
Jimmy Carter got a Nobel Peace prize for negotiating an agreement with North Korea.

Sickening isn't it?

2,328 posted on 08/16/2004 8:38:07 PM PDT by Selene
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