Sunday, November 23, 2008

Al Qaida Needs to Make a Loud Noise to Get Attention, or face Ignominy

November 24, 2008
Times Online


Hitting al-Qaeda
US attacks on militants in Pakistan have proved selective and effective

The reported killing of Rashid Rauf, the Birmingham-born militant suspected of masterminding the alleged plot to blow up passenger jets over the Atlantic in 2006, and Abu Zubair al-Masri, a senior al-Qaeda operative appears to deal another heavy blow to al-Qaeda. Rauf and Abu al-Masri were targeted by a missile fired on Saturday from a pilotless US drone while they were hiding in a mud compound in a Pakistani border village in North Waziristan, a sanctuary for al-Qaeda and the Taleban. Their deaths, days after a similar raid killed another senior al-Qaeda member and six others, account for eight of the 20 men most wanted by Pakistani and Western intelligence, who say this has crippled al-Qaeda's ability to launch another terrorist attack on the West.

Pakistan has repeatedly issued public protests at the use of US drones to target militants inside Pakistan. It has given a warning that this could spark an uprising in the tribal areas bordering Afghanistan. But it is clear that, privately, President Zardari and his Government are pleased with this swift elimination of many in al-Qaeda's top command who have eluded capture and have led the resistance to Islamabad, inflicting heavy casualties on the Pakistani Army.

Questions have also been asked in Britain over the targeted killing of a British citizen, arrested in Pakistan in connection with the alleged airline plot and wanted for questioning here over the murder of his uncle in Birmingham in 2002. But despite calls on the Government to reveal what it knew in advance of the missile attack, there should be realism over sharing terrorist tip-offs.

Both British and US intelligence services co-operate with counterparts in Pakistan. Both are aware of the dangers. ISI, Pakistan's military intelligence agency, was deeply involved in early support for the Taleban. Some agents have not accepted former President Musharraf's volte-face, and maintain old links, using them, it is suspected, for the recent bomb attack on the Indian Embassy in Kabul. The US has been frustrated at Islamabad's failure to strike harder at al-Qaeda and infuriated by recent deals to call off attacks on tribal areas. It is hardly likely to warn Pakistan, or Britain, in advance of airstrikes that might easily be compromised.

[to read the rest of the article, click on the title link]


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If you are a citizen of any country - Britain, France, Germany, or the US, and you aide, work for, assist, support, or give protection to al qaida or any terrorist group - you should not expect, nor should you receive the protections that your country would otherwise afford to a person who robbed a grocery store, or stole a car.

You deserve - NOTHING.

You deserve - a trial, and should the evidence warrant, a conviction, and execution.





al qaida

Make Mine Freedom - 1948


American Form of Government

Who's on First? Certainly isn't the Euro.