Explosives on Detroit-Bound Airplane

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Postby Uncle $cam » Wed Dec 30, 2009 7:55 am

"Obama is not an actor. He is a unique stage on which the stage can appear as an actor. That is the beauty of imperial control, especially when it's cash cows have dwindled away and the people are unhappy. Obama was necessary,..."


Well put 82_28...

Someone mentioned in an earlier thread/post , that ironically, there isn't anybody "in charge" and "the world" *already* works without anyone, or a few, being "in charge" wrt Obama as leader? There is no one at the ete of the pyramid?

Has a worldwide "Synocracy" already been "emerging"? without anyone being in charge? -- other than me being in charge of my own life, of course.
Suffering raises up those souls that are truly great; it is only small souls that are made mean-spirited by it.
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Postby AlicetheKurious » Wed Dec 30, 2009 8:17 am

Metalious wrote:I just fail to see the value of Yemen and I don't see how a pipeline that will never go through Yemen has any relevance to Israel's energy security.


The value of Yemen is what it has always been: as an extremely poor, culturally and ethnically diverse country that is very strategically located at the juncture where the Red Sea meets the Arabian Sea that is one of the world's most important trade routes to Asia.

Not coincidentally, Yemen has been used for centuries as a quagmire in which rival empires and aspiring empires try to drag each other down. As Saudi Arabia's soft underbelly, it was the staging ground of a debilitating proxy war between the Arab nationalists under Nasser and the Saudi- and Jordan-backed royalists during the 1960s. Before that, it was where the British Empire tried to drown the Ottoman Turks. There has not been a decade since the beginning of the 20th century, not one, that has been free of the threat or actual outbreak of a foreign-backed civil war in Yemen.

The current conflict in Yemen can be viewed from a number of different perspectives:

- It can be viewed as one part of a comprehensive campaign by the U.S., Israel and its Saudi clients to isolate and destabilize Iran and its allies by stoking the fires of a supposedly Sunni-Shi'ite civil war. In fact, the current conflict was deliberately launched by an unprovoked attack by the US-backed government of Ali Abdallah Salih against Huthi tribes in 2004. Though Salih is ironically himself a Zaidi, his government represents Saudi-U.S. interests and is backed with their full military and political support against the Huthis, who are being accused of receiving aid from Iran. This serves the additional purpose of bolstering the ethnic/religious conflicts that are relentlessly being promoted by Israel's American proxy throughout the Middle East, from Iraq to Sudan. Interestingly, Iran, while expressing its sympathy for the Huthi rebels and its disapproval of the Yemen army, US and Saudi slaughter of Huthi civilians, has so far avoided every provocation to get directly involved.

- Saudi Arabia includes an increasingly vulnerable Zaidi Shi'ite population along its border with Yemen, and this conflict has only contributed to this community's disenfranchisement, which sets the stage for future Saudi fragmentation and instability. This also melds perfectly with Israel's longstanding plan to aggravate and exploit ethnic/religious divisions throughout the Middle East, explicitly including in Saudi Arabia, with the goal of creating a New Middle East of weak and mutually hostile ethnic/religious statelets. Indeed, zionist media outlets such as MEMRI and the Jerusalem Post have been heavily promoting the theme that this conflict is a deliberately-engineered campaign to destroy Saudi Arabia as a unified state. In fact, that's true, but the fragmentation of Saudi Arabia is a zionist, not an Iranian objective.

- Supposedly in order to prevent arms transfers from Iran to the Huthi rebels, as the Yemeni government keeps alleging but has yet to prove, Saudi Arabia has sent its navy to blockade Yemen's Red Sea coast, which just happens to be where the mysteriously well-equipped and organized Somali pirates have been most active. It seems that a number of parties are either inventing or exploiting excuses to establish a military presence in that very strategic area of the Red Sea that leads to Asian oil markets.

- At the same time, Yemen has recently launched the first shipment of Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) to Korea from a massive, multi-billion dollar dollar refining plant (estimates range between $3.7 and $4.5 billion) in that desperately poor country. Despite strenuous denials from the Yemeni government, which is a majority shareholder, there have been persistent rumors and accusations of covert Israeli involvement in the enterprise. Just one example:

    Israeli Hi-Tech Firm to Supply Equipment to Yemen Gas Company

    by Avraham Zuroff

    (IsraelNN.com)
    An Israeli company that supplies laboratory information management systems (LIMS) has been awarded a tender to help run a natural gas exploration project off Yemen's coast, the Al Quds Al Arabiya Arabic-language newspaper reports. Media leakage has created quite an embarrassment for the Yemenite regime, which does not share diplomatic relations with Israel.

    According to the newspaper, Israel’s Starlims company will supply the French oil giant, Total, operating off Yemen's Balhaf coast with computer systems for analyzing data and laboratory results of samples from the natural gas drilling site. The extent of the deal is unknown. Nevertheless, Yemen Liquified Natural Gas Company (YLNG), which is partially owned by the regime, announced that its 3.7 billion dollar project is the most important in Yemen’s history.

    YLNG is a joint venture owned by the state-run Yemen Gas Company, Total and the American Hunt Oil company, as well as the South Korean firms, Kogas and Hyundai. The project is expected to generate the greatest revenue in the country’s history.

    News of the deal was initially reported by the Yemenite Al Wahdawi news website. Documents of the agreement, which is in its final negotiating stage, show that Starlim’s headquarters are in Hong Kong. In actuality, the company is based in Tel Aviv. The documents were presented through an Arab intermediary.

    Yemeni opposition leaders called for the national gas company to back out of the intended agreement and not allow the Israeli company to operate in Yemen. In response, YLNG has denied reports that it has signed a deal with an Israeli firm. Yemen’s news agency, Saba, reports that the company is not authorized to sign contracts with Israeli companies and that it carefully examines contracts that it signs.

    “Tens of companies are participating in the Yemen LNG project, but all of the participating companies are non-Israeli ones,” the company’s information official stated.

    “As the government is a shareholder in the project through the YLNG and the Yemen Insurance Company, and as the chairman of the board of directors is Yemen’s minister of Oil and Minerals, Israeli companies cannot be part of the project,” the official further stated.

    When asked for a response to validate details of Stalims’ operations in Yemen, the management of Stalims Israel stated that the company does not regularly respond to publicity regarding future transactions.

    http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/130165

- Speaking of covert Israeli involvement, it was only a year ago that the Yemeni security forces caught yet another in a string of "al Qaeda" and "Islamist terror cells" that have been linked to Israeli intelligence, not only in Yemen, Lebanon and Palestine, but even in India:

    Sometime back a 'splinter group' of Al-Qaeda was found to be involved in a terrorist attack in Yemen. As it happens in all such attacks innocent people were killed and property worth billions of Rs was destroyed. The Yemenese police could nab the culprits with its efficient handling of the case. But police officials and the people in power were in for surprise when they discovered that the splinter group was propped up by Mossad, the dreaded intelligence wing of Israel's Zionist regime.

      Dubai, Oct 8 (IANS) A terrorist cell busted in Yemen last month after a suicide attack on the US embassy there had links with an Israeli intelligence agency, the state-run Saba news agency reported.The report, quoting an unnamed source, said investigations and data retrieved from a computer seized from the cell, showed there was correspondence between the Islamic Jihad group’s deputy leader Bassam Abdullah Fadhel Al-Haidari and an Israeli intelligence agency.

    Question naturally arises, was it for the first time that Mossad had propped up 'Islamic terrorist' groups ? 'The Week', a leading newsmagazine in the subcontinent had done a special story way back in 2000 (Aborted Mission: Investigation: Did Mossad attempt to infiltrate Islamic radical outfits in south Asia? by Subir Bhaumik, February 6, 2000, http://www.the-week.com/20feb06/events2.htm) [the link no longer works -- Alice] showing how the Indian intelligence agencies had nabbed a group of Islamic radicals in Kolkatta airport for their 'suspicious' looking activities and discovered to their dismay that this group was going to Dhaka on a special mission at the behest of Israel.

    On January 12 Indian intelligence officials in Calcutta detained 11 foreign nationals for interrogation before they were to board a Dhaka-bound Bangladesh Biman flight. They were detained on the suspicion of being hijackers.“But we realised that they were tabliqis (Islamic preachers), so we let them go,” said an intelligence official. They had planned to attend an Islamic convention near Dhaka, but Bangladesh refused them visa. Later, seemingly under Israeli pressure, India allowed them to fly to Tel Aviv.

    According to Indian intelligence officials,
      "..[T]el Aviv “exerted considerable pressure” on Delhi to secure their release. “It appeared that they could be working for a sensitive organisation in Israel and were on a mission to Bangladesh,” the official said. The Israeli intelligence outfit, Mossad, is known to recruit Shia Muslims to penetrate Islamic radical networks.".... ”It is not unlikely for Mossad to recruit 11 Afghans in Iran and grant them Israeli citizenship to penetrate a network such as Bin Laden’s. They would begin by infiltrating them into an Islamic radical group in an unlikely place like Bangladesh,” said intelligence analyst Ashok Debbarma. The pressure exerted on India by Israel for the release of the men, and the hurry with which they were flown back suggested an aborted operation’.

    Mossad watchers say the operation was possibly blown off by “unwelcome intervention” in a friendly country, and they decided to pull out. The 'aborted mission' in India reminded one of the 'Operation Susannah' better known as 'Lavon affair' way back in 1954 when the nascent Israeli state witnessed a power struggle between the Prime Minister Moshe Sharret and defence minister Lavon. In an article written after the Mumbai terror attack, a south African scholar Saber Ahmed Jazbhay (01 December, 2008 Media Monitors) provides details of the action by Jewish terrorists when they blew up British and American targets in Egypt. In fact

      "[t]he intention was to blame it on the Egyptian regime headed at the time by Gamal Abdel Nasser but the affair was blown and the ring leaders, all Jewish were apprehended and a few were hanged whilst those who survived the usual prison ordeal were forgotten about in Egyptian jails. It was only in 2005 that the Israelis acknowledged involvement when President at the time,Moshe Katsav,honoured the nine Israeli agents who were involved. (For further details refer “The Dispersion of Egyptian Jewry: Culture, Politics. and the Formation of Modern Diaspora” by Joel Beinin

    http://www.countercurrents.org/gatade241208.htm


To sum up, Yemen is very important as a stage for isolating Iran and promoting Shi'ite/Sunni fragmentation across the region, including in neighboring Saudi Arabia; and expanding the Israeli military/intelligence and economic presence at this vital strategic crossroad between Asia and the Middle East and Asia and Africa. The launch of this latest civil war in Yemen just happens to coincide with the opening of the TBC pipeline from Baku to Ceyhan in the summer of 2005. Its escalation in the past few months coincides with the start of serious negotiations to extend the TBC to Israel:


    Turkey-Israel agree to start works on pipeline project

    Turkey, Israel agreed to start to feasibility studies on the Mediterranean Pipeline Project (Medstream) that would consist of five pipelines that would carry water, natural gas, oil, electricity and fibreoptics from Turkey's Mediterranean coast to Israel. (UPDATED)

    Turkey-Israel agree to start works on pipeline project


    Feasibility studies on an accompanying oil pipeline will be done in 10 months, said Turkish Energy Minister Hilmi Guler after meeting with Israeli Infrastructure Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, adding that the pipeline could carry at least 40 million tons of oil annually.

    Guler said India was also be included in the project and therefore a tripartite meeting would be held with the participation of Turkish, Israeli and Indian officials in the next 10 days. "This will be followed by a ministerial meeting," he added.

    The project consists of five pipelines that would carry water, natural gas, oil, electricity and fiberoptics from Turkey's Mediterranean coast to Israel.

    Ben-Eliezer also said his country was near to an agreement with Russia to secure natural gas for the planned Medstream project. "We are very close to reaching an agreement with Russia that would supply the pipeline with natural gas," Ben-Eliezer said. Azerbaijan has said it is interested in using the pipeline to ship its oil to eastern markets, Ben-Eliezer added.

    Following the meeting, Ben-Eliezer said that the Mediterranean Pipeline Project (Medstream) including the Mediterranean, the Red Sea, India, the People's Republic of China and Taiwan would make valuable contributions to the Middle East peace process.

    The oil pipeline is seen as an important step to reducing the time it takes to transport crude oil to eastern Asia. According to the most elaborate part of the proposal, the oil sent to Israel from Turkey would then be transferred by tankers to the Far East, including to India, China and South Korea.

    The water transferred by the pipeline are seen as earmark for Israel as well as for the Palestinian territories and Jordan, who are all suffering from chronic water shortages. ...

    http://www.hurriyet.com.tr/english/fina ... .asp?scr=1


And here:

    Israel interested in pumping Azerbaijani oil via Ashkelon-Eilat pipeline

    Thu 03 December 2009 | 06:25 GMT
    Michael Lavon-Lotem

    Israeli Ambassador transportation of Azerbaijani oil through the Ashkelon-Eilat pipeline ‘is economically profitable’.

    The Ambassador Michael Lavon-Lotem said: "Experts say the project is economically profitable as an alternative route of oil transportation to the Far East market. Now we should convince exporters about the convenience of the project. We're working on it ", mignews.com reports.


    Azerbaijan's Azeri Light crude oil is supplied to the Mediterranean via the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline. The pipeline capacity is 1.2 million barrels per day. The same pipeline pumps Kazakh oil from Tengiz.

    A greater part of oil pumped via the pipeline belongs to the Azerbaijan State Oil Company (SOCAR), which is greatly interested in expansion to Asian markets.

    Experts in oil business believe that the transportation of Azerbaijani oil from Ceyhan to Ashkelon and then through an existing pipeline to Eilat and the Red Sea would significantly increase the competitiveness of Azerbaijan's oil on Asian markets.

    http://www.news.az/articles/3721

As an absolute prerequisite for Israel to implement its plan to control the flow of oil and gas to Asia by extending the BTC to its own ports and transporting it through the Red Sea to Asian markets, it will need to guarantee safe passage through the coastal waters of Syria, Lebanon, Sudan, Somalia and Yemen.

What's happening right now in Yemen should not be viewed in isolation, but as part of the same endgame that is simultaneously being played in every one of those countries: Syria, Lebanon, Sudan, Somalia and Yemen. Meanwhile, Russia is struggling to regain its influence with oil-rich former Soviet states that also form its strategic security belt, and China is maneuvering to gain secure access to vital oil and gas in order to maintain control over its own economy.

Iran is also very important to Israeli objectives in the long run for a number of reasons, but right now zionist goals are temporarily limited to isolating it through crippling sanctions so that it can no longer support resistance movements in any of the countries named above.

There is every indication that what is happening in Yemen right now is just the tip of a very dark iceberg:

    U.S. Widens Terror War to Yemen, a Qaeda Bastion

    By ERIC SCHMITT and ROBERT F. WORTH
    Published: December 27, 2009

    WASHINGTON — In the midst of two unfinished major wars, the United States has quietly opened a third, largely covert front against Al Qaeda in Yemen.


    A year ago, the Central Intelligence Agency sent several of its top field operatives with counterterrorism experience to the country, according a former top agency official. At the same time, some of the most secretive Special Operations commandos have begun training Yemeni security forces in counterterrorism tactics, senior military officers said.

    The Pentagon is spending more than $70 million over the next 18 months, and using teams of Special Forces, to train and equip Yemeni military, Interior Ministry and coast guard forces, more than doubling previous military aid levels.

    As American investigators sought to corroborate the claims of a 23-year-old Nigerian man that Qaeda leaders in Yemen had trained and equipped him to blow up a Detroit-bound Northwest Airlines jet on Christmas Day, the plot casts a spotlight on the Obama administration’s complicated relationship with Yemen.

    The country has long been a refuge for jihadists, in part because Yemen’s government welcomed returning Islamist fighters who had fought in Afghanistan during the 1980s. The Yemen port of Aden was the site of the audacious bombing of the American destroyer Cole in October 2000 by Qaeda militants, which killed 17 sailors.

    But Qaeda militants have made much more focused efforts to build a base in Yemen in recent years, drawing recruits from throughout the region and mounting attacks more frequently on foreign embassies and other targets. [Not surprisingly, the NYT doesn't mention that the "Al Qaeda cell" that was caught after bombing the U.S. embassy has been linked to the Mossad -- Alice] The White House is seeking to nurture enduring ties with the government of President Ali Abdullah Saleh and prod him to combat the local Qaeda affiliate, Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, even as his impoverished country grapples with seemingly intractable internal turmoil.

    With fears also growing of a resurgent Islamist extremism in nearby Somalia and East Africa, administration officials and American lawmakers said Yemen could become Al Qaeda’s next operational and training hub, rivaling the lawless tribal areas of Pakistan where the organization’s top leaders operate.

    “Yemen now becomes one of the centers of that fight,” said Senator Joseph I. Lieberman, independent of Connecticut and chairman of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, who visited the country in August. “We have a growing presence there, and we have to, of Special Operations, Green Berets, intelligence,” he said on “Fox News Sunday.”

    American and Yemeni officials said that a pivotal point in the relationship was reached in late summer after separate secret visits to Yemen by Gen. David H. Petraeus, the American regional commander, and John O. Brennan, President Obama’s counterterrorism adviser.

    President Saleh agreed to expanded overt and covert assistance in response to growing pressure from the United States and Yemen’s neighbors, notably Saudi Arabia, from which many Qaeda operatives had fled to Yemen, as well as a rising threat against the country’s political inner circle, the officials said.

    Yemen’s security problems won’t just stay in Yemen,” said Christopher Boucek, who studies Yemen as an associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington. “They’re regional problems and they affect Western interests.” ...


http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/28/world ... yemen.html

P.S. It's fascinating to note that the pipelines that are PLANNED through Afghanistan and Pakistan, if allowed to go through, will wreck Israeli plans for a monopoly on oil and gas transport from the Caspian Basin to Asian markets, as well as the actual pipelines going through Western India. That prompts me to predict that all three countries will be embroiled in chaos for the foreseeable future, if the zionists can help it.
Last edited by AlicetheKurious on Wed Dec 30, 2009 8:40 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Postby AlicetheKurious » Wed Dec 30, 2009 8:27 am

Uncle $cam wrote:
"Obama is not an actor. He is a unique stage on which the stage can appear as an actor. That is the beauty of imperial control, especially when it's cash cows have dwindled away and the people are unhappy. Obama was necessary,..."


Well put 82_28...

Someone mentioned in an earlier thread/post , that ironically, there isn't anybody "in charge" and "the world" *already* works without anyone, or a few, being "in charge" wrt Obama as leader? There is no one at the ete of the pyramid?

Has a worldwide "Synocracy" already been "emerging"? without anyone being in charge? -- other than me being in charge of my own life, of course.


Why mystify everything? Given enough information, which I believe is already available if one is willing to dig a bit, many of the seemingly irrational and random events that are shaping our world in fact make perfect, if terrifying, sense. Ignore the spurious "analysis" in the elite-controlled media and keep your eyes on the actual power to shape our reality (including our perceptions of that reality) -- who's got it, and who's trying to get even more of it.
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Postby 82_28 » Wed Dec 30, 2009 9:31 am

Here it comes. Is it time to "bare all". I believe it is that season. Cheers!

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/n ... acy30.html


Terrorism and planes: Is it time to bare all?

By JOHN SCHWARTZ

The New York Times

Technology that reveals objects hidden under clothes exists, and many experts say it would have detected the explosive carried aboard the Detroit-bound flight last week. But the machines have been fought by privacy advocates who say the technology is too intrusive, leading to a newly intensified debate over the limits of airport security.

Screening technologies with names such as millimeter-wave and backscatter X-ray can show contours of the body and reveal foreign objects. Such machines, properly used, are a leap ahead of metal detectors used in most airports, and supporters say they are necessary to keep up with potential terrorists.

"If they'd been deployed, this would pick up this kind of device," said Michael Chertoff, the former homeland security secretary, referring to chemicals hidden in the underwear of the Nigerian man who federal officials say tried to blow up Northwest Airlines Flight 253 on Christmas Day.

But others say the technology is no security panacea, and that its use should be controlled carefully because of risks to privacy, including the potential for its ghostly naked images to show up on the Internet.

"The big question to our country is how to balance the need for personal privacy with the safety and security needs of our country," said Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, who sponsored a successful House measure this year to require that the devices be used only as a secondary screening method and to set punishments for government employees who copy or share images. (The bill has not passed in the Senate.)

"I'm on an airplane every three or four days; I want that plane to be as safe and secure as possible," he said. However, "I don't think anybody needs to see my 8-year-old naked in order to secure that airplane."

Full-body-imaging machines are in use in 19 U.S. airports and are used as the primary method of screening at six — San Francisco; Las Vegas; Salt Lake City; Miami; Albuquerque, N.M., and Tulsa, Okla. The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) this year announced plans to buy 150 more machines and to use them as the primary screening method for passengers.

That prompted a coalition of 24 privacy groups to send a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, including the Electronic Privacy Information Center and the American Civil Liberties Union. "Your agency will be capturing the naked photographs of millions of American air travelers suspected of no wrongdoing," it said.

Images produced by the machines in the days before privacy advocates began using phrases such as "digital strip search" could be startlingly detailed. Machines used in airports today, however, protect privacy to a greater extent, TSA spokeswoman Kristin Lee said.

Depending on the specific technology used, faces might be obscured or bodies reduced to the equivalent of a chalk outline. Also, the person reviewing the images must be in a separate room and cannot see who is entering the scanner. Machines have been modified to make it impossible to store the images, Lee said, and the procedure "is always optional to all passengers." Anyone who refuses to be scanned "will receive an equivalent screening": a full pat-down.

Since the Christmas bombing attempt, supporters of tighter security have raised their voices in criticism of privacy advocates. "I do think the privacy groups have some explaining to do," said Stewart Baker, a former homeland-security official in the administration of President George W. Bush.

However, he added, body-imaging technology has limits — the machines, for example, can't detect objects stowed in bodily orifices or concealed within the folds of an obese person's flesh.

Bruce Schneier, a security expert who has been critical of the technology, said the latest incident had not changed his mind. "If there are a hundred tactics and I protect against two of them, I'm not making you safer," he said. "If we use full-body scanning, they're going to do something else."

The millions of dollars being spent on new equipment, he said, would be better invested in investigation and intelligence work to detect bombers before they arrive at the airport.

Marc Rotenberg, head of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, said his group had not objected to use of the devices, as long as they were designed not to store and record images.

Chertoff said he found such statements a "strategic retreat" from more strident positions taken before last week's terrorism attempt. He acknowledged that "nothing is 100 percent," but added, "the more difficult you make it for someone to conceal weapons, the fewer people who are going to be willing or capable of concealment" and the harder it would be to make effective weapons.

Information from McClatchy Newspapers is included in this report.

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Postby 8bitagent » Wed Dec 30, 2009 10:52 am

Just posted all the latest news reports with commentary:
http://rigorousintuition.ca/board/viewt ... 142#308142

But in summary:

Yemen
Yemen
Yemen
Yemen
...oh and Yemen(and Somalia)

Watch out for Yemen being conflated with Somalia soon.

Let's see, oh yeah...Anwar Awlaki is now the one who "blessed" the Detroit operation. I'm sure the elite would be ok with "letting go" with a major city like Detroit in a nuclear terror event, not that the Detroit
attack was even meant to be anything but a dud.

1. Yemen is next, possibly Somalia.

2. Radical 9/11 Hijacker tied Iman linked to Fort Hood and Detroit Bomber=Yemen is next

3. Anyone could be a terrorist; all Americans are now suspect...time to give up more rights...oh and we may need to check your underwear.

4. Can't trust those African men!

Am I missing anything? Man this is the all too perfect to end the bizarre decade and year on.
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Postby beeline » Wed Dec 30, 2009 11:06 am

Link

Dutch to use full body scanners for US flights

by MIKE CORDER, Associated Press Writer Mike Corder, Associated Press Writer

THE HAGUE, Netherlands –

The Netherlands announced Wednesday it will immediately begin using full body scanners for flights heading to the United States, issuing a report that called the failed Christmas Day airline bombing a "professional" terror attack.

"It is not exaggerating to say the world has escaped a disaster," Interior Minister Guusje Ter Horst told a news conference.

She said the U.S. had not wanted these scanners to be used previously because of privacy concerns but said the Obama administration in Washington now agreed that "all possible measures will be used on flights to the U.S."

Officials say Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, a 23-year-old Nigerian, managed to board Northwest Airlines Flight 253 to Detroit from Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport carrying undetected explosives but failed to detonate them. The plane was carrying over 300 people.

In its preliminary report, the Dutch government called the plan to blow up the Detroit-bound aircraft "professional" but said its execution was "amateurish."

Abdulmutallab arrived in Amsterdam on Friday from Lagos, Nigeria on a KLM flight. After a layover of less than three hours, he passed through a security check at the gate in Amsterdam, including a hand baggage scan and a metal detector, and headed to the Northwest flight.

Ter Horst said Abdulmutallab apparently assembled the explosive device, including 80 grams of Pentrite, or PETN, in the Northwest aircraft toilet, then planned to detonate it with a syringe of chemicals. She said the explosives appeared to have been professionally prepared and had been given to Abdulmutallab, but did not elaborate.

"The approach in this case shows — despite the failure of the attack — a fairly professional approach," a summary of the investigation said. "Pentrite is a very powerful conventional explosive, which is not easy to produce yourself, nor is its production without risk."

"If you want to detonate it, you have to do that another way than he did. That is why we talk about amateurism," Ter Horst said.

Abdulmutallab was carrying a valid Nigerian passport and had a valid U.S. visa, the Dutch said. His name also did not appear on any Dutch list of terror suspects.

"No suspicious matters which would give reason to classify the person involved as a high-risk passenger were identified during the security check," Ter Horst said.

Abdulmutallab, charged with trying to destroy an aircraft, is being held at the federal prison in Milan, Michigan.

Amsterdam's Schiphol has 15 body scanners, but their use has been limited because of privacy objections that they display the contours of the passenger's body. Neither the European Union nor the U.S. have approved the routine use of the scanners at European airports.

New software, however, eliminates that problem by projecting a stylized image onto a computer screen, highlighting the area of the body where objects are concealed in pockets or under the clothing and alerting security guards.

At least two scanners have been experimentally using that software since late November and the Dutch said those will be put into use immediately. All other scanners will be upgraded within three weeks so they can be used on flights to the United States.

"Our view now is that the use of millimeter wave scanners would certainly have helped detect that he had something on his body, but you can never give 100 percent guarantees," Ter Horst said.

Meanwhile, officials told The Associated Press on Wednesday that a man tried to board a commercial airliner in the Somali capital of Mogadishu last month carrying powdered chemicals, liquid and a syringe in a case bearing chilling similarities to the Detroit airliner plot.

The Somali man — whose name has not yet been released — was arrested by African Union peacekeeping troops before the Nov. 13 Daallo Airlines flight took off. It had been scheduled to travel from Mogadishu to the northern Somali city of Hargeisa, then to Djibouti and Dubai. A Somali police spokesman, Abdulahi Hassan Barise, said the suspect is in Somali custody.

"We don't know whether he's linked with al-Qaida or other foreign organizations, but his actions were the acts of a terrorist. We caught him red-handed," said Barise.

On Tuesday, President Barack Obama demanded a preliminary report by Thursday from U.S. security authorities on what went wrong in the Detroit airliner case. Obama said the intelligence community should have been able to piece together information that would have raised "red flags" and possibly prevented Abdulmutallab from boarding the airliner.

"There was a mix of human and systemic failures that contributed to this potential catastrophic breach of security," Obama told reporters in Hawaii, calling the intelligence shortcomings "totally unacceptable."

"There were bits of information available within the intelligence community that could have — and should have — been pieced together," he said.

"Had this critical information been shared, it could have been compiled with other intelligence, and a fuller, clearer picture of the suspect would have emerged," Obama said. "The warning signs would have triggered red flags, and the suspect would have never been allowed to board that plane for America."

Abdulmutallab had been placed in one expansive database, but he never made it onto more restrictive lists that would have caught the attention of U.S. counterterrorist screeners, despite his father's warnings to U.S. Embassy officials in Nigeria last month. Those warnings also did not result in Abdulmutallab's U.S. visa being revoked.

Law enforcement officials believe the suspect tried to ignite a two-part concoction of the high explosive PETN and possibly a glycol-based liquid explosive. It set off popping, smoke and some fire but no deadly detonation.

U.S. investigators said Abdulmutallab told them he received training and instructions from al-Qaida operatives in Yemen — which lies across the Gulf of Aden from Somalia. Similarly, large swaths of Somalia are controlled by an insurgent group, al-Shabab, which has ties to al-Qaida.

Western officials say many of the hundreds of foreign jihadi fighters in Somalia come in small boats across the Gulf of Aden from Yemen.

A Somali security official involved in the capture of the suspect in Mogadishu said he had a 1-kilogram (2.2-pound) package of chemical powder and a container of liquid chemicals.

Once security officials detected the powder chemicals and syringe, the suspect tried to bribe the security team that detained him, the Somali security official said. The security official said the suspect had a white shampoo bottle with a black acid-like substance in it. He also had a clear plastic bag with a light green chalky substance and a syringe containing a green liquid. The security official spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to release the information.

___

Associated Press reporter Mohamed Olad Hassan contributed from Mogadishu, Somalia; Katharine Houreld contributed from Baghdad and Jason Straziuso contributed reporting from Nairobi, Kenya.
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Postby 23 » Wed Dec 30, 2009 2:06 pm

http://rawstory.com/2009/12/ron-paul-su ... n-liberty/
Ron Paul suggests ‘agenda’ to expand terror war, attack American liberty

How does a massive, costly security apparatus fail to stop a known terrorism threat from boarding an airplane and wrecking devastation?

It happened on Sept. 11, 2001, and again on Dec. 25, 2009.

"There must be an agenda," suggested Congressman Ron Paul (R-TX) in a recent video message to supporters.

"It seems ironic that there is so much excitement about this and now talk about attacking Yemen," he said, noting recent bombing raids by Saudi forces, carried out with the explicit blessing of the United States.

(excerpted)

"The bigger the problem and the more the fear is built up, the more they take away our personal liberties and turn us all into zombies and the American people go along with it and say, 'as long as it makes us safer I guess it’s okay to go along,'" he countinued. "But it's time the American people woke up and started realizing that there's a bit of propaganda going on and quite possibly this incident will not only undermine our personal liberties but will also accelerate our intervention and the violence occurring in the Middle East."
"Once you label me, you negate me." — Soren Kierkegaard
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Postby chump » Wed Dec 30, 2009 10:28 pm

Thank you Ron Paul!
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Postby Nordic » Wed Dec 30, 2009 11:21 pm

I know a guy who smuggled opium by taping the package behind his ball sack. They frisked him thoroughly and missed it.

Taint nothing!
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Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Dec 30, 2009 11:50 pm

Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Postby 82_28 » Thu Dec 31, 2009 12:46 am



OK, I hate Alex Jones as much as anybody else here. But these are provocative clips.

Here is why and why after 9/11 I became suspicious of all government activity period since that day (just my story). Haskell speaks of the ready-to-go photos of the "terrorists" the FBI presented him with, I guess to identify the "sharp dressed man". Anyhoo. . .

Here is why:

The day after 9/11, it occurred to me HOW IS IT POSSIBLE TO HAVE PHOTOS OF ALL HIJACKERS 24 HOURS AFTER THE ATTACKS, WHILE 24 HOURS BEFORE, THE PHOTOS THEMSELVES WERE UNAVAILABLE AND THE GOVERNMENT KNEW NOTHING OF THESE CULPRITS? Unavailable, unknown, men. I grokked that on my own way back before "Troof movements" and all that. Sorry for the caps. But this is the main and initial narrative management arrow pointing to what went down in my opinion. And what led to "war".

What was it Baudrillard, who suggested 911 created a psy-op blank slate on which a new worldview could be written? That, I say was the first bit of data written upon our new minds.
There is no me. There is no you. There is all. There is no you. There is no me. And that is all. A profound acceptance of an enormous pageantry. A haunting certainty that the unifying principle of this universe is love. -- Propagandhi
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Postby 82_28 » Thu Dec 31, 2009 1:01 am

So the story now is, is that was all videotaped aboard this plane by some other wishy-washy figure? WTF?

I flash upon Balloon Boy and Dad. Perhaps they have swirled all of reality into their fiction and somehow, subconsciously everybody accepts this new hybrid reality as it has become our new "reality".

I was watching a video collage on a local station today. They were looking back on the last year. Just to name a few. . .

Obama
Oprah's end
MJ's end
Tiger Woods end
DC sniper's end
Kanye West dissing Swift
Crazy "googly eyed" brownish skinned people who have done this or that
The Seattle area cop assassinations

And you know what? All of it framed in and of the view of upsetting white people.

MJ's white daughter
Oprah's white audience
Tiger's white sport
Crazy black people ambushing white cops

And on and on. . .

There was more. But that is what I remember for now.
There is no me. There is no you. There is all. There is no you. There is no me. And that is all. A profound acceptance of an enormous pageantry. A haunting certainty that the unifying principle of this universe is love. -- Propagandhi
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Postby 82_28 » Thu Dec 31, 2009 1:05 am

All would do well to watch the Century of the Self one more time. I cracked that shit open again earlier today.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid ... 825999151#

Extremely and possibly even more instructive than the first time I watched it.
There is no me. There is no you. There is all. There is no you. There is no me. And that is all. A profound acceptance of an enormous pageantry. A haunting certainty that the unifying principle of this universe is love. -- Propagandhi
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Postby anothershamus » Thu Dec 31, 2009 1:05 am

Nordic wrote:I know a guy who smuggled opium by taping the package behind his ball sack. They frisked him thoroughly and missed it.

Taint nothing!


my friend just carries his hash in his key pocket like it was nothing and they don't even look. I don't know what he will do if a dog comes around.
)'(
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Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Dec 31, 2009 1:11 am

anothershamus wrote:
Nordic wrote:I know a guy who smuggled opium by taping the package behind his ball sack. They frisked him thoroughly and missed it.

Taint nothing!


my friend just carries his hash in his key pocket like it was nothing and they don't even look. I don't know what he will do if a dog comes around.



China just executed an English guy for smuggling
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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