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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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He does seem to be a straight shooter, pardon the pun.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1468043/posts
"Mexican cattle business linked to drug cartels"
Houston Chronicle ^ | August 22, 2005 | MICHAEL HEDGES, Houston Chronicle Washington Bureau
Posted on 08/22/2005 12:52:12 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
ARTICLE SNIPPET: "WASHINGTON - The Treasury Department, trying to block an elaborate money-laundering scheme, has announced that two Mexican cattle companies are fronts for drug-trafficking cartels.
The action means that cattle sold by the companies to Texas ranchers after Friday's announcement are subject to seizure by the federal government, said a high-ranking Treasury official who asked not to be named.
"Cattle already purchased and owned before the companies were identified as tied to the drug cartels are not going to suddenly be blocked," the official said.
The Treasury Department plans to inform cattle associations and other groups later this week of the action taken against the Mexican companies, officials said. The Treasury also will provide other information, such as the brands used by the cattle companies linked to the drug cartels.
For now, buyers are expected to practice due diligence when purchasing cattle.
Two Mexican drug cartels were named in the Treasury Department's statement, the Arriola Marquez organization and the Arellano Felix cartel based in Tijuana. The Arriola Marquez group, based in Mexico's Chihuahua state, is linked to Mexican drug kingpin Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, the department said. Guzman leads one of the factions fighting for control of Nuevo Laredo and its smuggling routes into Texas, officials have said.
'Another blow' to cartels Treasury officials said the Arriola Marquez group developed the idea of laundering cash from drug deals by buying large herds of cattle in Mexico.
Identifying the companies laundering drug money "deals another blow to the notorious Mexican drug cartels by targeting their financial webs," said Robert Werner, director of Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control.
The two Mexican cattle companies named by the Treasury Department are Corrales San Ignacio S.P.R. de R.L. de C.V. and Del Nortes Carnes Finas San Ignacio S.A. de C.V., both of Mexico's Chihuahua state.
A U.S. company in Presidio called Corrales San Ignacio L.L.C. was identified by the Treasury Department as a "mirror" entity an organization that exists on paper to give a foreign company a U.S. outlet officials said. "I don't know that (the Presidio) company has any cattle pens or feed lots," the Treasury official said.
Representatives of the companies could not be reached."
ON THE NET...
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/keyword?k=arellanofelix
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/keyword?k=arriolamarquez
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/keyword?k=elchapo
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/keyword?k=drugcartel
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/keyword?k=drugcartels
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/keyword?k=drugs
Davey, even we buy our bullets from russia and china.
That is why the threat of war with them is such a big deal, the answer is we can't fight them off, if we can't get the needed bullets.
Anything about clinton, I believe.
Once, for a freeper thread, I went after his trip to russia, the one they now say he did not take. about 1968, I googled until I found the family he stayed with in Chezslovakia (? or a country like that) he was there for training.
I actually found old letters the family had written.
clinton is a commie.......plain and simple.
in my opinion of course.
Jamaat-i-Islami to confront UN Sanctions
http://thepakistaninewspaper.com/news_detail.php?id=2978
United Nations Aug 21(NNI) Pakistan's leading religious political party
Jamaat-i-Islami might confront the United Nations sanctions. Few other
names of other Pakistani religious groups are also listed in the
committee confirmed the weekend duty officer spokesman Alexandra McLeod.
Threat of terrorism over the past few years have changed from fear to
defiance. A top aid of Osama was arrested in Rawapindi from the house of
a Jamaat-i-Islami leader two years before and the United Nations
committee is out to penalize the party on these grounds.
Renewing for another 17 months its global sanctions regime against
Al-Qaida, Osama bin Laden and the Taliban, the United Nations Security
Council have expanded the list of persons or splinter groups associated
with terrorist networks.
Unanimously adopting a resolution, last month the Council reiterated
its unequivocal condemnation of those groups for "ongoing and multiple
criminal terrorist acts," which have killed innocent civilians, destroyed
property and greatly undermined stability.
The text renewed the sanctions initially outlined in 1999, and
strengthened by subsequent resolutions, which require all 191 UN Member States
to impose a travel ban and arms embargo against Osama bin Laden, the
Taliban and those "associated with" them, and to freeze their financial
assets.
The new resolution spells out for the first time who is included among
those associated with Al-Qaida and the Taliban and can be subjected to
the measures.
It states that sanctions would apply to those who participate in
financing, planning, facilitating, preparing or perpetrating acts to support
the outlawed groups and who recruit, supply, sell or transfer weapons
to bin Laden, Al-Qaida, the Taliban "or any cell, affiliate, splinter
group or derivative thereof."
Also, the Council extended for 17 months the mandate of the Al-Qaida
Sanction's Committee's New York-based Analytical Support and Sanctions
Monitoring Team and gave guidelines for the inclusion of individuals and
entities associated with Osama bin Laden and the Taliban as referred to
in the Consolidated List created following the adoption of its
resolutions in 1999 and 2000.
The Council also requested the Secretary-General to increase
cooperation between the UN and Interpol in order to provide the Sanctions
Committee with better tools to fulfil its mandate and urged Member States to
ensure that stolen and lost passports and other travel documents were
invalidated as soon as possible, as well as to share information on those
documents with other Member States through Interpol's database.
For the first time, the Council urged all UN Member States to implement
the comprehensive global standards adopted by the Financial Action Task
Force, and inter-governmental body developing and promoting national
and international policies to combat money laundering and terrorist
financing
Aitzaz Chaudhry, MInister II Deputy Chief Pakistan Mission to the
United Nations declined to accept. He said "United Nations have no
jurisdiction to impose sanctions on any of religious party or group around the
world".
August 21, 2005 (this should be Ashland, Oregon)
The Seda-Saudi connection
How Ashland peace activist became international fugitive in war on
terror
By MARK FREEMAN
Mail Tribune
http://www.mailtribune.com/archive/2005/0821/local/stories/02local.htm
When Pete Seda and Soliman Al-Buthe first met in October 1997, they
discovered a kindred spirit forged on opposite sides of the world.
Seda was an Ashland arborist and peace activist who ran a small
foundation that sent copies of the Koran to prison inmates.
Al-Buthe was an agricultural engineer in Saudi Arabia. Like Seda, he
worked to build bridges of understanding between the Muslim world and the
West, but Al-Buthe did it through Saudi Arabiaâs largest charitable
group, the Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation Inc.
Together, Seda and Al-Buthe opened Al-Haramainâs first U.S. chapter.
Eight years later, they share another, more dubious distinction --
international fugitives whose alleged money-smuggling and tax-cheating
activities in 2000 keep them intertwined in the Bush administrationâs war
on terror.
Seda and Al-Buthe both are wanted for conspiring to defraud the United
States in a case involving a $150,000 donation to their chapter in
2000.
Seda allegedly helped Al-Buthe parlay the donation into 130 $1,000
travelerâs checks and a $21,000 cashierâs check. Al-Buthe then brought
the money to Saudi Arabia without reporting it, a violation of
financial-reporting laws.
"Thereâs no secrets here," says Tom Nelson, Al-Butheâs
Portland-based attorney. "Soliman left the United States with $130,000 of
travelerâs checks he didnât report.
"He was acting as a courier," Nelson says.
Al-Buthe, the Oregon chapter and other Al-Haramain chapters around the
globe have been designated as supporters of terror by the U.S. Treasury
Department. Nelson claims this designation and "9/11 fervor" have put
what he calls the pairâs "regulatory lapses" under a federal
microscope that likely would not have become trained on Seda and Al-Buthe had
planes not struck the twin towers.
"There is clearly an interest somewhere in the administration to appear
to be doing âsomethingâ about terrorism," Nelson says. "In some
accounts, itâs drawing in people who have nothing to do with terrorism,
like Pete and Soliman.
"This wouldnât happen if they were Hispanic," Nelson says. "Theyâre
being targeted because theyâre Muslims."
Federal agents discount Nelsonâs assertions, and they have laid out
their criminal case against the pair in indictments and lengthy
affidavits.
The government has traced the $150,000 from an initial wire transfer
from England to Ashland to the cache of travelerâs checks stuffed in
Al-Butheâs coat pocket on a flight from New York City to Riyadh, Saudi
Arabia.
Prosecutors donât make any assertions about where the money went from
there, nor do they claim financing terror was a motive for Seda and
Al-Butheâs actions.
The case, prosecutors say, is about how the pair broke federal
money-reporting and tax laws and how they conspired to do it â not about who
they are.
Nelsonâs assertions that the case is more about the people than their
crimes is "kind of what people said about Martha Stewart," says Pamala
Holsinger, chief of the criminal division in the U.S. Attorneyâs
Office in Portland.
"We evaluate the evidence on a case-by-case basis," Holsinger says.
"Clearly, that was done in this case."
The ongoing legal battle leaves Sedaâs supporters in Ashland still
wrestling over how two men who loved trees and spoke so loudly for peace
could entangle themselves, and their town, in the war on terror.
"His connection with Al-Haramain has caused him far more trouble than
benefit received," says David Berger, a Seda friend and adviser in
Ashland. "If he had known that then Iâm sure he wouldnât have gotten
into it."
#
In some ways, Seda and Al-Butheâs shared interests and backgrounds
foreshadowed their eventual partnership.
A naturalized citizen from Iran, Seda worked as an arborist and
activist who preached tolerance and understanding for and by Muslims. He wrote
a book called "Islam Is," which he passed around Ashland on
mimeographed pages in the late 1990s.
Al-Buthe has written countless articles for Middle Eastern periodicals
about helping the West understand Islam. He works as the assistant
director of "beautification" for Riyadh.
"One of the reasons Soliman liked going out there (to Ashland) was the
trees," Nelson says.
After Sedaâs efforts first became known in 1997 to Al-Haramain, the
parent charity sent Al-Buthe with an offer the cash-strapped Seda liked.
Al-Buthe asked if Seda wanted to form the first Al-Haramain chapter in
the United States. It would be based in Ashland but funded by the
charity.
"Al-Haramain took over the funding," Berger says. "This was all
initiated by Al-Haramain."
Seda and Al-Buthe became friends and soon had Berger draft papers to
get the new foundation chapter licensed through the Oregon Secretary of
Stateâs Office.
Together, Seda and Al-Buthe opened a bank account on behalf of the
chapter at the Bank of America branch in Ashland.
And with Al-Buthe came money.
Nine times between his first meeting with Seda in October 1997 and his
last known trip to the United States in March 2001, Al-Buthe brought in
a total of $777,845. He declared the money by filling out the required
Currency and Monetary Instrument Reports.
These CMIRs are required by anyone crossing the U.S. border with more
than $10,000 at any one time.
In seven of those cases, a federal affidavit states, Al-Buthe brought
in more than $10,000 worth of travelerâs checks and filled out a CMIR
for them.
Nelson says travelerâs checks are free in Saudi Arabia and considered
an easy way to transport money out of that country.
In December 1997, the chapter spent $190,162.50 to buy a house on
Highway 99 in Ashland that served as Sedaâs residence and the chapter
headquarters, where it hosted prayer meetings and distributed books, one
affidavit states.
In May 2000, CMIRs show that Al-Buthe legally brought in $275,000 of
foundation money, all in travelerâs checks and deposited in the
chapterâs Ashland account.
The next month, the chapter spent $378,291.74 for what it called a
prayer house in Springfield, Mo. Part of the purchase included a
cashierâs check for $318,291.74 signed by Seda and sent to a Missouri escrow
company, an affidavit states.
The chapter even helped spruce up and publish Sedaâs book, which
remains available online.
But the menâs actions involving the $150,000 donation on behalf of
"Muslim Brothers" in Chechnya is at the heart of their battle with the
federal government.
"This whole thing has a terribly sinister allure to it," Nelson says.
"But if you start from Day One and travel to the end of it, itâs truly
unremarkable."
#
Federal search-warrant affidavits spell out how the government traced
the various financial transactions.
On Feb. 24, 2000, a Egyptian doctor named Mahmoud T. El Feki wired
$150,000 from a London bank to the chapterâs Ashland bank account as a
donation to help Muslims fighting Russians.
Nelson says El Feki told Egyptian investigators that he chose to wire
the money there after seeing an Al-Haramain Web site that suggested
donations from the United States and Europe to aid Chechnyans be sent to
Al-Haramainâs Ashland chapter.
On March 7, Al-Buthe flew to the United States. On March 10, Al-Buthe
and Seda went to the Ashland bank and received the $130,000 in $1,000
travelerâs checks and Al-Buthe received one $21,000 cashierâs check
from the same bank on the next day.
On March 11, the men signed an agreement saying Seda was relinquishing
the donations to Al-Buthe for helping the Chechnyans.
On March 12, Al-Buthe flew from New York to Saudi Arabia without
declaring his possession of the money.
Al-Buthe cashed the travelerâs checks March 25 at a Saudi bank, and
he deposited the cashierâs check in a bank account, but the stamped
date on the check was illegible to federal agents.
The money, Nelson says, eventually was given to Al-Haramain officers in
Saudi Arabia.
In October 2001, Seda signed a 2000 tax return for the chapter in which
the $150,000 donation was not reported as being sent out of the country
with Al-Buthe, a move the government claims was to disguise the
transfer.
In February, Seda, Al-Buthe and the chapter were indicted on charges of
conspiracy to defraud the United States, with Seda also charged with
tax fraud. International arrest warrants were issued.
If found and convicted, Seda faces up to eight years in prison and
Al-Buthe faces up to 10 years in prison.
#
Nelson says it was Al-Butheâs first time leaving the United States
with more than $10,000 and he did not know the form was required.
"I wish the situation was different," Nelson says. "I wish
(prosecutors) wouldnât try to criminalize regulatory lapses. I donât think it
is criminal. I donât think it was intentional. It has to be
intentional to be criminal."
However, federal documents point out that Al-Buthe has filled out CMIRs
on nine different occasions. The form, agents say, states that it must
be filled out when entering or leaving the country with more than
$10,000.
Nelson also minimizes Sedaâs role in the transactions.
"Pete had next to nothing to do with the Chechnya donation," Nelson
says.
As for the tax fraud, Nelson suggests that Seda made a simple mistake
when asked about the money for tax forms 18 months after the
transactions.
Sedaâs lawyer, Larry Matasar of Portland, did not return telephone
calls seeking comment.
Holsinger, from the Department of Justice, has declined to reveal what
has spurred the investigation into Seda and Al-Buthe.
Holsinger says she believes the case is laid out quite effectively in
court records.
"Obviously, our take on it is whatâs in the indictment," Holsinger
says.
#
Al-Buthe remains in Saudi Arabia, which doesnât have an extradition
agreement with the United States.
Federal agents believe Seda is in his native Iran, which also doesnât
have an extradition agreement.
In court filings, Matasar has claimed federal attorneys are trying to
strong-arm Seda into returning to plead guilty to the charges, or
perhaps possibly face additional charges.
"Weâve been trying to work out a situation that at least one of the
two people might be able to return to the United States to face these
charges head-on," Nelson says.
Holsinger says it is a "mischaracterization" to claim the government is
strong-arming Seda or Al-Buthe.
"They have an option of coming back at any time they want," Holsinger
says. "They donât have to plead guilty.
"But we donât negotiate with fugitives to come back into the country
on their terms," Holsinger says.
Nelson says he hopes one day to get Seda and Al-Buthe vindicated and
get the chapterâs assets unfrozen and sold.
That way, the tree-loving activists from opposite ends of the world can
go their separate ways and close the book on Al-Haramainâs presence
in Ashland.
"What weâre trying to do is, as graciously as possible, shut this
thing down," Nelson says.
October 1997: Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation in Saudi Arabia appoints
Soliman Al-Buthe its treasurer. Al-Buthe travels to Ashland to form a
chapter.
December 1997: Al-Buthe buys a home at 3800 Highway 99 as a prayer
house and residence for Pete Seda.
February 1999: Al-Haramain incorporates its Oregon chapter through the
Secretary of Stateâs Office, stating it "stands against terrorism,
injustice, or subversive activities in any form." Seda is listed as the
registered agent.
February 2000: An Egyptian doctor in England wires $150,000 to the
foundationâs Ashland bank account to aid Muslims in Chechnya.
March 2000: Al-Buthe comes to Ashland, where he and Seda get $130,000
in travelerâs checks and a $21,000 cashierâs check. Al-Buthe takes
the money to Saudi Arabia without declaring it and cashes the checks.
May 2000: Al-Buthe legally transports $275,000 in travelerâs checks
from Saudi Arabia to Ashland for deposit.
June 2000: The foundation buys a prayer house in Springfield, Mo., for
$378,291.74.
Sept. 11, 2001: Al-Qaida terrorists attack the World Trade Center and
the Pentagon.
October 2001: Seda fails to report the $130,000 in travelerâs checks
properly on the foundationâs 2000 tax return.
March 2002: The U.S. Treasury Department designates six foreign
Al-Haramain chapters as supporters of terrorism.
March 2003: Shortly after an FBI interview, Seda leaves the United
States for the United Arab Emirates.
Feb. 18, 2004: Federal agents search Sedaâs residence. The
chapterâs assets and property are frozen a day later.
June 2004: Saudi Arabia dissolves the Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation.
Feb. 17, 2005: Seda, Al-Buthe and the Al-Haramain Foundationâs Oregon
chapter are indicted on felony charges of illegally transporting money
out of the United States, tax fraud and conspiracy to defraud the
United States. International arrest warrants are issued for Seda and
Al-Buthe.
Aug. 4, 2005: Federal attorneys file motion to dismiss charges against
the foundation, and declare continuing investigations of Seda and
Al-Buthe.
Aug. 21, 2005: Federal agents believe Al-Buthe is in Saudi Arabia and
that Seda may be in his native Iran. Neither country has extradition
agreements with the United States.
http://gloria.idc.ac.il/columns/2005/rubin/08_16.html
"Hamas's Hangover"
By Barry Rubin
August 16, 2005
August 21, 1983 - Philippines
Benigno Aquino Assassinated
No information provided.
August 21, 1968 - Czechoslovakia
Invasion By Warsaw Pact Forces
No information provided.
Upcoming Significant Events:
August 22, 1978 - Kenya
Death of Jomo Kenyatta
No information provided.
August 23, 1944 - Romania
Liberation Day
No information provided.
August 24, (year unknown) - Bermuda
Empire Day
No information provided.
August 25, 1825 - Uruguay
Independence Day
No information provided.
August 25, 1944 - France
Liberation Day
Paris liberated by Allied troops.
ON THE NET...
DiscoverThe Network.org: "AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION"
http://www.discoverthenetwork.org/groupProfile.asp?grpid=6145
TerroristWarning.com Terrorism Headlines 08/22/2005 # 1
National:
[PHXNews.com Jim Kouri] USA - Media Alert: Police Chiefs Predict Terrorist Attack
"The United States will suffer another large scale terrorist attack within the next year, according to a poll conducted by the National Association of Chiefs of Police"
http://www.phxnews.com/fullstory.php?article=24281
[AP] CALIFORNIA - Folsom Prison At Center Of Terror Probe
http://fox40.trb.com/news/ktxl-081705terror,0,381315.story?coll=ktxl-news-1
[Fox News] USA - Emergency Declared at U.S. Southern Border
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,166241,00.html
[New York Times] ARIZONA - Migrants awarded vigilante's Ariz. ranch
http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/0819ariz-immig-abuse19.html
[San Bernardino Sun] CALIFORNIA - State border police force sought
http://www.sbsun.com/Stories/0,1413,208~12588~3018567,00.html
[KVOA] ARIZONA - State lawmaker says border wall at top of her list
http://kvoa.com/Global/story.asp?S=3740577
[Capitol Media Services] ARIZONA - Leaders focus on border security
http://www.eastvalleytribune.com/index.php?sty=46462
[PR Web Press Release] USA - Al-Qaeda Has Infiltrated US Trucking Industry
http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/8/prweb275244.htm
[WISH TV] USA - American Airlines Flight Attendants Oppose Easing Security Rules
"TSA's proposal to lift the ban prohibiting knives, razor blades, ice picks and other potential weapons on board the aircraft is beyond comprehension,"
http://www.wishtv.com/global/Story.asp?s=3742710
International:
[AP] UNITED KINGDOM - Al-Qaida gas attack foiled
"Scotland Yard believes it thwarted an al-Qaida sarin gas attack on the British Parliament"
http://ottsun.canoe.ca/News/National/2005/08/21/1181726-sun.html
[The Sunday Times] UNITED KINGDOM - Police foil gas attack on Commons
They were planning to use chemicals, a dirty bomb and sarin gas. They looked at all sorts of ways of delivering it.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0%2C%2C2087-1743818%2C00.html
[Moscow Times] RUSSIA - FSB Says Terrorists Are Trying to Secure WMD
"Terrorist groups are making attempts to acquire weapons of mass destruction, including nuclear and biological weapons"
http://www.moscowtimes.ru/stories/2005/08/22/012.html
[Mosnews] RUSSIA - Radioactive Cargo Seized in Russian Far Eastern Port [1,500 micro-roentgen per hour]
"monitoring devices showed a radiation level surpassing the normal level 100 times in the port"
http://www.mosnews.com/news/2005/08/20/radioactivelitter.shtml
[Reuters] NORTH KOREA - N.Korea restarts Yongbyon nuclear reactor-report
http://olympics.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2005-08-21T052407Z_01_KNE119387_RTRIDST_0_NEWS-KOREA-NORTH-REACTOR-DC.XML
[AP] JORDAN / ISRAEL - Missiles fired at U.S. Navy ship in Jordan, airport in nearby Israel
http://www.940news.com/nouvelles.php?cat=24&id=81913
[The Pioneer] BANGLADESH - Bomb blasts in Bangladesh
"459 bomb blasts rocked 63 of her country's 64 districts in the hour before noon"
http://www.dailypioneer.com/columnist1.asp?main_variable=Columnist&file_name=parthasarathy%2Fparthasarathy82.txt&writer=parthasarathy
[AP] RUSSIA - Bomb explosion in southern Russian city kills 3 police officers
http://www.cbc.ca/cp/world/050820/w082062.html
[UPI] ALGERIA - Car bomb kills Algerian policeman
http://www.sciencedaily.com/upi/?feed=TopNews&article=UPI-1-20050820-11282100-bc-algeria-violence.xml
[IOL] TURKEY - Bomb targets Turkish passenger train
"bomb exploded under a passenger train traveling through the southeastern Turkish province of Gaziantep"
http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=3&art_id=qw1124543885236T623
[AP] ISRAEL - 2 Palestinians injured planting bomb by Kfar Darom
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1124417950508
[RTE News] THAILAND - Bomb in Thailand kills one and injures ten
http://www.rte.ie/news/2005/0820/bangkok.html
[Pakistan Times] PAKISTAN - Red alert in Srinagar after car-bomb blast
http://www.pakistantimes.net/2005/08/20/kashmir3.htm
[Rochdale Observer] SCOTLAND - Stadium is put on bomb alert
"Stadium was evacuated after a suspected makeshift bomb was discovered in a cleaners dustcart"
http://www.rochdaleobserver.co.uk/news/s/203/203108_stadium_is_put_on_bomb_alert.html
[Kantipur Online] NEPAL - Maoists bomb Jyoti Spinning Mills
http://www.kantipuronline.com/kolnews.php?&nid=49228
[GG2.NET NEWS] PAKISTAN - Pak, Russian scientists maintain al-Qaeda`s nuclear arsenal: ex-FBI consultant
http://www.gg2.net/viewnews.asp?nid=769&tid=top_headlines&catid=Top%20Headlines
[GG2.NET NEWS] INDIA / BANGLADESH - India, Bangladesh border firefight resumes
http://www.gg2.net/viewnews.asp?nid=1258&tid=top_stories&catid=Top
[AP] SAUDI ARABIA - Top Al Qaeda fugitive died in raid, Saudis say
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0508190100aug19,1,5001377.story?coll=chi-newsnationworld-hed
[Reuters] JORDAN - Dozens Detained in Jordan
http://www.moscowtimes.ru/stories/2005/08/22/251.html
[AP] RUSSIA - Makhachkala Bomb Kills 3 Policemen
http://www.moscowtimes.ru/stories/2005/08/22/019.html
[Xinhua] AFGHANISTAN - Roadside bomb kills 4 US soldiers
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2005-08/21/content_3384580.htm
[Novinite] BULGARIA - Police Unravels "Al-Qaeda" Terror Threats on Sofia [ Hoax ]
http://www.novinite.com/view_news.php?id=51453
[Tempo] PHILIPPINES - Gas tanker leak sets off explosions in QC; 39 injured, 100 shanties razed
http://www.tempo.com.ph/news.php?aid=15274
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1468050/posts
"What Is the ACLU Thinking?"
Liberal Matrix ^ | 8 AUGUST 2005 | Sher Zieve
Posted on 08/22/2005 2:26:06 AM PDT by rdb3
Thanks granny for the links.
http://www.cbn.com/700club/features/Amazing/Carrie_McDonnall082205.asp
AMAZING STORY
"Love Thy Enemies: The Story of Carrie and David McDonnall"
By Cheryl Wilcox with Kristi Watts
The 700 Club
CBN.com
ARTICLE SNIPPET: "Carrie is still recovering from her injuries and grieves Davids loss daily. With everything shes endured, you may wonder how she feels about the people that killed her husband.
I can guarantee you that if I didnt know Jesus that I probably would hate, she says. But were called to forgive. Ive had to pray through it and pray for their families that they would know the love of Christ.
When I see the violence of the Middle East, I hurt in two ways. I know faces that live there among that violence. I know that they dont want the violence. They want peace. I hurt in another way because I know that only true peace is going to come with the knowledge of Jesus Christ.
Carries plans for the future are uncertain. She is still willing to go back to the Middle East if God calls her there. Her love for the muslim people is so great.
Ive loved muslim people. I know theyre not all terrorists. Theyre not all full of hate, she says. My life is different on every level yet there is a hope that I know. Ill always grieve. That pain will probably always be there, but at the same time I know that Christ is good. He is faithful, and I will be able to carry on. I will keep living this life and live it hard.
He has overcome life and hes overcome death. And that theres nothing to fear."
ON THE NET...
PERSECUTION.ORG
http://www.persecution.org
REWARDS FOR JUSTICE.net: "WANTED TERRORISTS"
http://www.rewardsforjustice.net/english/wanted_captured/index.cfm?page=Wanted_Terrorist
Note: The following post is an exact quote:
===
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1468054/posts
Afghanistan - U.S. and Afghan Forces Kill At Least 105 Rebels in Three Weeks
AFP via Babelfish translation | August 22, 2005
Posted on 08/22/2005 2:55:35 AM PDT by HAL9000
Afghanistan: 105 rebels killed in three weeks, according to the American army
KABUL - the American forces and the Afghan governmental troops killed at least 105 rebels talibans at the time of operations carried out in Afghanistan during three last weeks, announced Monday the American army.
These operations are intended to reinforce safety from the point of view of the legislative elections which must take place on September 18, declared with journalists a military spokesman American, lieutenant Cindy Moore.
http://www2.dailynews.com/news/ci_2961474
"Unmanned planes aid firefighters on ground"
Associated Press
ARTICLE SNIPPET: "Firefighters across the West are getting a high-tech ally in their battle against wildland flames: a remote-controlled spy plane that doesn't mind smoke, can see in the dark and never sleeps.
Scientists have been testing whether flocks of the planes - similar to the spy drones the U.S. military flies over Iraq and Afghanistan - can help track the direction and behavior of fast-moving flames.
After the experimental flight of three unmanned aerial vehicles this summer, the U.S. Forest Service will launch the first real-life deployment next spring. The plan calls for planes to traverse a dozen Western states, mapping real forest fires 24 hours a day.
"Unmanned aircraft have the capability to do what we call the 3-D missions - the dull, dark and dangerous missions where you don't want to put a pilot on," said Vince Ambrosia, research scientist at NASA's Ames Research Center in the San Francisco Bay Area, where the experiment was done.
Wildfire surveillance currently relies on pilots who fly over hot spots and fire perimeters in aircraft and helicopters outfitted with special heat-sensing cameras that see through smoke and spot fires. The cameras relay images to ground personnel who use the data to help them plot how best to confront the blaze."
I was so looking forward to watching it. In my area of of NJ, Comcast basic cable doesn't carry National Geographic channel. So disappointed. Guess I'll have to wait for the video.
Thank you, looks as though the ACLU is a real terrorist group.
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