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Crash of Airbus outside Islamabad now believed to have been a failed hijacking heading for nearby nuclear weapons facility |
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International
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Tuesday, 31 August 2010 18:46 |
The website Veterans Today reports sources in the Pakistani government say they are developing “hard evidence” that the Air Blue Airbus that crashed July 28th outside Islamabad was a terrorist hijacking tied to rogue US security forces operating inside the country. Sources say the plane crash was an unsuccessful hijacking attempt intended to fly the plane into the nuclear weapons facility at Kahuta, outside Islamabad. Such an attack would likely have been blamed on India and could easily have escalated to a nuclear exchange between the two enemy nations. Suspicions were raised in Pakistan’s military when private contractors employed by Blackwater showed up immediately after the crash and seized the black box and “other materials.” Royal Television in Islamabad has reported investigations are underway tying US-based contractors to the planning of the attack. Pakistani military and intelligence officials, and the US embassy are withholding all details of the investigation.
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Afghanistan bomb attacks kill twenty-one US soldiers in 48 hours Twenty-one US troops have been killed in Afghanistan since Friday, bringing to 484 the Nato-led coalition’s death toll this year. Afghan police and civilians have suffered far higher casualties. The coalition blames the rise in troop deaths partly on the influx of reinforcements, which allows commanders to target previously untouched insurgent safe havens where rebels are mounting stiff resistance. Read more U.S. Escalates Air War Over Afghanistan The US has dramatically escalated its air war over Afghanistan. Spy plane flights have nearly tripled in the past year. An influx of Reaper drones and executive-jets-turned-spy-planes allowed U.S. forces to fly 9,700 surveillance sorties over Afghanistan in the first seven months of 2010, up from 3,600 the year before.Read more Careful What You Write, It Might Come True September's Harper's Magazine has a short story by former Commander of U.S. Forces in Afghanistan, Gen. Stanley McChrystal. The story, written while McChrystal attended West Point in the 1970s, concerns the occupation of an unnamed Arab country rich in oil. The story, critical in tone, focuses on the seizure of oil fields and wanton slaying of an Arab youth who is mistaken for a terrorist. Read more In Iraq, Corpses Are “Files Tossed On Shelves” As the US begins to withdraw its troops from Iraq it is leaving behind an estimated 100,000 unidentified Iraqi victims of the war and occupation. Relatives of the deceased have to battle red tape and bribe officials in order to claim or identify their dead relations, efforts that are often fruitless. One policemen described unidentified bodies as “files tossed on the shelves.” Read more Remembering and Mourning the Disappeared Human rights activists marked International Day of the Disappeared Tuesday. In Iraq alone, one million people have disappeared in the last thirty years. And in the early 1990s 15,000 vanished during Peru's battle with Shining Path fighters. Women from disadvantaged backgrounds were the most likely to have disappeared. They were often murdered or used in the sex trade. Read more Blow to Xenophobia in France A French court Tuesday blocked the deportation of seven Gypsies, in a blow to President Nicolas Sarkozy's plan to dismantle the ethnic minority's “illegal” camps. The administrative tribunal in Lille cancelled the deportation orders, saying the cases did not meet the legal standard of posing ''an immediate and grave threat.' Sarkozy's cabinet vowed to press ahead with its crackdown on the country's Roma, particularly those caught stealing or begging. Read more LA Police to Release Documents on Murder of Ruben Salazar The Los Angeles County Sheriff's department is considering releasing secret documents on the death of civil rights reporter Ruben Salazar, who died 40 years ago when an LA policeman fired a tear gas missile at his head. The documents are expected to confirm what historians have long believed, that Salazar was murdered by the police. Read more Bedbugs Immune to Pesticides The US is experiencing a resurgence of bedbug infestations on a scale not seen for a half century. Bedbugs have become resistant to regular pesticides, prompting exterminators to turn to more hazardous chemicals that can even cause cancer. In New Jersey, a pest control company was accused of applying poisonous chemicals, spraying mattresses and children's toys.Read more Predator Drones patrol US/ Mexican Border Beginning Wednesday, the US will add a third Predator drone to patrol its border with Mexico, the result of a $600 million bill aimed at reinforcing border security. The US, concerned by the raging drug war in its southern neighbor, has already deployed 1,200 National Guard soldiers and 1,500 new agents to the border in recent weeks.
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Taliban delighted with anti-Mosque demonstrations |
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Domestic
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Tuesday, 31 August 2010 18:02 |
A spokesman for the Taliban says they are hoping the campaign to block the proposed Islamic cultural center near Ground Zero is successful. Spokesman Zabihullah told NEWSWEEK magazine: “By preventing this mosque from being built, America is doing us a big favor,” adding: “It’s providing us with more recruits, donations, and popular support.” Zabihullah claims the backlash against the project has drawn the heaviest e-mail response ever on jihadi Web sites. Zabihullah states the issue heads the list of talking points in Taliban meetings with fighters, villagers, and potential recruits. Zabihullah says: “We talk about how America tortures with waterboarding, about the cruel confinement of Muslims in wire cages in Guantánamo, about the killing of innocent women and children in air attacks—and now America gives us another gift with its street protests to prevent a mosque from being built in New York,” adding: “Showing reality always makes the best propaganda.”
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