Bwahahahahahahahahahahaha. What a laugh.
>> the attack in Benghazi was retaliation for the same insulting video
Hard hitting ... propaganda.
I assume the article is no more informative than the excerpt.
The MSM is the Country’s greatest threat.
Rush said it would take a week...
He was the willing partner of The Regime then, and he is exactly that, now, too:
He turned himself in specifically to say this story —for how much? Who knows, we only know the price is high, though rest assured he’ll be swapped back.
WE CAN BE SURE HILLARY IS RUNNING.
ROFLOL
Another Zimmerman show trial.
Of course the nyt has full access to the certified transcripts of these conversations.
Do I need /s?
nyt: liars by all means.
Gee, the Slimes didn’t do this just in front of Hellery’s Fox News interview on purpose, did they?
“Roll in hot with the Muzzie video excuse, Hillary — the lapdog media have got your six!” (And what a huge six it is.)
So BamBam made a deal that went bad in 2012. He made another deal that also soured a bit with the prisoner for traitor exchange. Now he has a guy who has been walking around free as a bird for two years captured by Special Forces. And the next day the NYTimes says the guy was saying it was all because he was angry about a video on YouTube. Yup. So believable. Just like the email going POOF.
Bovine excrement writ large.
Well, there it is. The Benghazi question has been answered. Case closed. And he’s such a reliable witness. /s/
Why did this move now? 2 reasons:
1. Trey Gowdy plans to publicly question witnesses as to WHY Chris Stevens was in Benghazi? Obama and Hillary do NOT want that rock turned over publicly.
2. The revelation last week that the US had intercepted telephone calls of the terrorists using cell phones.
a. They do NOT want to reveal how we captured voice calls in real-time in Libya.
b. More importantly, we now know that the White House knew before the attack ended that it was a planned terrorists attack. Susan Rice’s testimony is now DEMONSTRABLY a planned lie. Which leads you back to point #1.
Why was Ambassador Stevens in Benghazi? What was the CIA doing?
I’d say the odds are better than 50/50 that the Obama Administration helped arm ISIS. We are living in a bizarre world. Had the media even gave a 1/4 second of thought that George Bush had done what Obama has done, the media would have been leading the demonstrations at the gates of the White House for Bush’s immediate arrest and impeachment.
Why do NY Times’ headlines read like an old Nancy Drew novel?
Gee,,as predicted
As Abraham Lincoln would have said about the cause of the Benghazi attack, “Out damned video”.
(Spot Resolutionn, 1848)
“Suliman Ali Zway contributed reporting from Tripoli, Libya.”
A-team fixers, whom within months catapulted from construction/materials contractors to rebel fighters, then onto foreign journalists most trusting ears and eyes award winners.
https://rorypecktrust.org/rpt-live/November-2011/Libyan-Fixers-to-Receive-2011-Martin-Adler-Prize
Friday, 11 November 2011
Written by Rory Peck Trust
Suliman Ali Zway and Osama Alfitory, known to international journalists as the A Team worked with many of the worlds biggest news organisations to deliver accurate and ground breaking stories from Libya
The Rory Peck Trust today announced that Libyan fixers Suliman Ali Zway and Osama Alfitory will be the recipients of this years Martin Adler Prize. Now in its fifth year, the prize recognises the dedication and bravery of local freelancers who have played a significant role in the reporting of a major news story. Suliman and Osama will be presented with the prize at the Rory Peck Awards ceremony on Wednesday 16 November at Londons BFI Southbank, hosted by BBCs Mishal Husain and Channel 4s Alex Thomson.
Known by international journalists as the A Team, Suliman Ali Zway and Osama Alfitory, found themselves in every corner of the country during Libyas revolution, helping journalists deliver accurate and ground breaking news. Both had made comfortable livings working in the construction business but in early February, when many young people in eastern Libya were volunteering to help visiting journalists, the two men joined the wave. Suliman worked briefly with an Italian television crew, and for reporters working for the Washington Post. Osama first worked with a New York Times Magazine reporter.
Weeks later, after many of the young Libyan volunteers had gone back to their lives, Osama and Suliman continued to assist international journalists, travelling to the front lines with Jon Lee Anderson of the New Yorker and Leila Fadel of the Washington Post, helping them uncover stories.
(snip)
Wherever there was news, we went: Libyas A-Team fixers on getting the story out
When fighting broke out in Benghazi, Libyan construction workers Suliman Ali
Zway and Osama Alfitory began working with international journalists. Their work was recognised last night when they won the Martin Adler Prize
Posted: 17 November 2011
(snip)
This years winners are Suliman Ali Zway and Osama Alfitory, two Libyan fixers who worked with some of the worlds most established foreign correspondents during the countrys tumultuous revolution.
Zway and Alfitory were construction workers who quit comfortable jobs to volunteer for the Western journalists that flooded into Benghazi when the February protests turned to armed rebellion.
How it began
It all came by chance at the beginning, Zway tells me during a trip to London to collect his award.
The protests were over and the fighting was just beginning. Only a few were fighting and had gone to the frontline. A lot of journalists came in and wanted to get an idea of what was happening.
No one really knows anything about Libya, Alfitory says, but suddenly all these journalists came to Benghazi to find out what was going on.
In the beginning I had decided to fight with the rebels, as it was our duty to protect our city. But just for a moment, until in my mind I realised that to help the journalists would be a much better cause. Back in February there were a lot of people starting to fight but not many helping journalists.
(snip)
More than a work relationship
Zway and Alfitory are now in London to attend the Rory Peck Awards ceremony, and will stay for two weeks to unwind after eight months of conflict.
Their trip was part-funded by Jon Lee Anderson and organised by a group of journalists who worked with them, including Fadel.
Anderson is unequivocal about the importance of Zways and Alfitorys work and the award it has won them.
The work Suliman and Osama did for me, as they did for others in Libya, was essential, he says.
They were my trusted eyes and ears in an alien environment and my sounding boards for everything; together we found and reported the stories I later published. There were many reporters who did not have such fixers and they really struggled.
(snip)
http://mije.org/richardprince/adl-flies-latino-journalists-israel
Zway and Alfitory were construction workers who quit comfortable jobs to volunteer for the Western journalists that flooded into Benghazi when the February protests turned to armed rebellion.
http://www.shabablibya.org/news/king-of-kings-the-last-days-of-muammar-qaddafi
I asked my friend Suliman Ali Zway, a construction-materials contractor who was helping me as an interpreter, to tell me what it said.
(snip)
But Qaddafis ban on private enterprise created many food and commodity scarcities; bananas, for instance, became a prized luxury. David Sullivan, a private investigator from San Francisco, worked for a contractor in Libya, setting up telecommunications systems around the country. Nearly all work was done by foreigners. he said.
Known by international journalists as the A Team, Suliman Ali Zway and Osama osama martin alderAlfitory, found themselves in every corner of the country during Libyas revolution, helping journalists deliver accurate and ground breaking news. Both had made comfortable livings working in the construction business but in early February, when many young people in eastern Libya were volunteering to help visiting journalists, the two men joined the wave. Suliman worked briefly with an Italian television crew, and for reporters working for the Washington Post. Osama first worked with a New York Times Magazine reporter.
Weeks later, after many of the young Libyan volunteers had gone back to their lives, Osama and Suliman continued to assist international journalists, travelling to the front lines with Jon Lee Anderson of the New Yorker and Leila Fadel of the Washington Post, helping them uncover stories.
Separately, they worked often voluntarily for many of the worlds biggest international news organizations, including the BBC, the New York Times, PBS and CBS. Working together they helped to probe allegations of a death squad in Benghazi and reveal the psychological toll of the war, among other stories.
Osama and Sulimans dedication and insight about Libya were so coveted by international journalists that they earned the nickname the A-Team. Both are now journalists in their own right and have penned articles on difficult subjects for a new Libyan magazine, The Libyan.
http://www.unionleader.com/article/20110821/NEWS/110829983
August 21. 2011 8:05PM
Gadhafi regime apparently falls in Libya
By SULIMAN ALI ZWAY,
HANNAH ALLAM
and SHASHANK BENGALI
McClatchey Newspapers
In His Last Days, Qaddafi Wearied of Fugitives Life
By KAREEM FAHIM
Published: October 22, 2011
Suliman Ali Zway contributed reporting.