03-09-2003, 11:42 PM
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#1
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Diamond Member
Join Date: Mar 2001
Posts: 7,788
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The following article was written for today's Washington Post by two-time Pulitzer Prize winning columnist Jim Hoagland. The author is probably the most distinguished foreign policy columnist writing in the United States, and he is very far from being dogmatically conservative. When he poses questions about possible ominous, dark links between Iraq and Al Queda, I think these questions bear thinking about...
9/11 Mysteries In Plain Sight
By Jim Hoagland
Sunday, March 9, 2003; Page B07
Analysis and commentary are my bread and my butter. But detached perspective is in short supply when it comes to Khalid Sheik Mohammed. I hate this murdering terrorist chieftain even for being captured.
Why? Because the news of the capture of al Qaeda's No. 3 in Pakistan stirs up the raw memories of the pain, suffering and dread of 9/11 -- and a spasm of self-reproach for not recalling directly what that day was like more often than I do. Worse: more often than I promised myself I would. It is like treading on a live electric wire after stepping over it for much of the past 18 months.
There is a song I avoid playing when I don't want to risk tears rolling down my cheeks. For me, Bruce Springsteen captures both the anger and the consolation of time passing since that "Lonesome Day":
House is on fire,
Viper's in the grass,
A little revenge and
This too shall pass.
I put the Boss's album on the instant I heard of the capture. And listened and hoped that the day of lawful, judicious revenge does not pass too quickly for this man known as Mohammed.
The capture of this particular viper may well be even more important than nabbing or killing Osama bin Laden, both in solving the mysteries of 9/11 and in reaching the tipping point in the war on terrorism.
Long years of interviewing Middle East terrorist leaders and my reading of human nature suggest this: It is one thing to give up your life to the delusion of advancing a glorious cause toward victory and the final removal of evil. It is quite another, much harder thing to sacrifice yourself to a losing cause in full retreat.
There is no scientific way of knowing where that tipping point is. But that it exists is shown by the cyclical pattern of terrorism through the ages. Civilization can never rid itself of murdering fanatics. But it can disrupt, disband and contain their operations, and organize defenses against them. The capture of Mohammed is a big step forward.
He knows the answer to these two central questions: How did al Qaeda, within two or three years, go from obscurity to becoming super-terrorists capable of blowing up U.S. embassies, warships and skyscrapers with astonishing precision? And what are the links between 9/11 and the bombing of the World Trade Center in 1993 by Ramzi Yousef, who authorities say is Mohammed's nephew?
The captured viper also knows the answer to another question that should not be rushed past just because it is obvious: Why did he choose to hide in Rawalpindi, which is the headquarters of Pakistan's military and Inter-Service Intelligence agency, and which is immediately adjacent to the Pakistani diplomatic capital of Islamabad, where Ramzi Yousef was captured in 1995?
The U.S. media and government officials describe Mohammed and Yousef as "masters of disguise," and then assume they are who they say they are this time. There is scant reason to be so trusting. When Judge Kevin Thomas Duffy sentenced Yousef to life plus 240 years in 1998, he said: "We don't even know what your real name is."
Why two men from the remote and ungoverned Pakistani province of Baluchistan who grew up in Kuwait would devote their lives to killing Americans is a mystery. How they acquired prodigious masterminding skills and, at least in Mohammed's case, rabid Islamic fanaticism after lives of intellectual mediocrity and pleasure-seeking, also is a mystery. So is their connection, if any, to al Qaeda at the time of the first World Trade Center bombing. So is their instinctive flight in extremis to the power centers of Pakistan.
Mohammed migrated from the identity of small-time freelance terrorist to the top ranks of bin Laden's ultra-secretive band not long after the 1993 bombing resulted in the breakup of Yousef's U.S. network. Could al Qaeda have been the target of a takeover operation by an intelligence service with good legend-manufacturing skills and a great, burning desire for revenge on the United States?
That is a question U.S. investigators should push more actively. In "Study of Revenge," author Laurie Mylroie sketches the strong ties that Iraq's intelligence services have developed in Pakistani Baluchistan. And the Iraqi Embassy in Islamabad has been publicly identified by Secretary of State Colin Powell as a center for contact with al Qaeda.
Why did the two master terrorists get chased to earth a handful of miles from that embassy? The answer to the 9/11 mysteries may be hiding in plain sight.
© 2003 The Washington Post Company
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What has the sheep to bargain with the wolf?
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03-10-2003, 10:34 AM
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#2
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Guru
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 13,363
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The US Intelligence should work harder. Many problems could be avoided gathering more and more information from the other side of the world.
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03-10-2003, 12:10 PM
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#3
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Diamond Member
Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 8,509
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I think US intelligence IS working harder, but by the time you have definitive, incontrovertible evidence of terrorist connections, it's often too late to prevent terrorist acts.
And some nations will not allow themselves to be convinced, will not acknowledge the undeniable, no matter how much evidence, no matter how much proof, no matter how many deaths.
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03-10-2003, 03:19 PM
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#4
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Aug 2002
Posts: 2,856
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US inteligence showed they arent as strong as they cracked up to be,so lets not keep our fingers crossed.
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03-10-2003, 05:53 PM
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#5
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Guru
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 17,057
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NP US Intelligence is very, very good. But they are not ommnicient. Putting unfair expecations on them is just that, unfair.
__________________
Never argue with an idiot. They will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience.
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03-10-2003, 07:35 PM
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#6
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Diamond Member
Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 8,509
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Better safe than sorry. Roast camel anyone?
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03-11-2003, 04:27 PM
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#7
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Aug 2002
Posts: 2,856
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im sorry but i think the CIA is very overated.
the fact they have a huge budget doesnt make them a good agency,and no matter how you look at it,9/11 was their flop,and its ine heck of a flop.
do you have osama,wheres the CIA with their spys catching osama?like i said,i think the US goverment should review the CIA and start making some changes.
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03-11-2003, 04:49 PM
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#8
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Diamond Member
Join Date: Mar 2001
Posts: 7,788
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You had better be careful Prophecy. The super-computers of the new CIA-FBI-NSA collaboration, the "Total Information Awareness Project", may have just logged that last post, simultaneously identified your true identity, and red-flagged you for future monitoring purposes...
__________________
What has the sheep to bargain with the wolf?
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03-11-2003, 04:53 PM
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#9
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Aug 2002
Posts: 2,856
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let them come,theres one jew in israel that still draws breath!
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