Hi there, !
Today Sun 11/23/2008 Sat 11/22/2008 Fri 11/21/2008 Thu 11/20/2008 Wed 11/19/2008 Tue 11/18/2008 Mon 11/17/2008 Archives
Rantburg
532755 articles and 1859141 comments are archived on Rantburg.

Today: 58 articles and 261 comments as of 6:14.
Post a news link    Post your own article   
Area: WoT Background    Non-WoT    Opinion    Local News    Politix   
U.S. Dronezap Kills 6 Terrs in Pakistain
Today's Headlines
Headline Comments [Views]
Page 1: WoT Operations
3 00:00 Atomic Conspiracy [4] 
0 [] 
5 00:00 Barbara Skolaut [2] 
24 00:00 Redneck Jim [] 
4 00:00 Nimble Spemble [1] 
10 00:00 ex-lib [] 
4 00:00 ed [3] 
7 00:00 trailing wife [] 
0 [] 
0 [2] 
5 00:00 bigjim-ky [] 
3 00:00 Anguper Hupomosing9418 [] 
2 00:00 remoteman [] 
Page 2: WoT Background
1 00:00 trailing wife [2]
0 [1]
4 00:00 Ulereth the Prolific7507 [1]
1 00:00 3dc [1]
4 00:00 Frank G [3]
0 []
1 00:00 ed [2]
2 00:00 Mitch H. []
3 00:00 Mullah Richard []
0 []
1 00:00 Richard of Oregon [1]
1 00:00 Anonymoose []
3 00:00 Thealing Borgia 122 [1]
5 00:00 Abu do you love []
4 00:00 Barbara Skolaut [7]
10 00:00 Cornsilk Blondie [2]
1 00:00 Richard of Oregon []
4 00:00 Besoeker [1]
0 []
2 00:00 JosephMendiola [1]
11 00:00 Rambler in Virginia [3]
Page 3: Non-WoT
10 00:00 Spinelet Lumumba7308 [3]
3 00:00 Scott R [1]
3 00:00 crosspatch [1]
3 00:00 Steve White []
21 00:00 tipper [2]
10 00:00 trailing wife [2]
15 00:00 Chief []
6 00:00 Frank G [1]
0 []
Page 4: Opinion
1 00:00 tipover [2]
3 00:00 NoMoreBS [1]
3 00:00 Lagom [1]
2 00:00 newc []
0 []
9 00:00 Zenobia Ebbomose aka Broadhead6 [1]
Page 5: Russia-Former Soviet Union
5 00:00 trailing wife [2]
2 00:00 Woozle Elmeter 2700 []
7 00:00 Frank G [2]
5 00:00 3dc []
10 00:00 ed []
10 00:00 JFM []
2 00:00 borgboy []
0 []
Page 6: Politix
6 00:00 Rambler in Virginia [1]
Good morning
Posted by: Fred || 11/20/2008 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Wow, nice snapshot of Ms. Baker. Prime indeed!
Posted by: Scooter McGruder || 11/20/2008 1:21 Comments || Top||

#2  Horoshaya infa!
Posted by: Duaniawar || 11/20/2008 2:21 Comments || Top||

#3  I think that Marilyn in her prime deserves more than a head shot.
Posted by: Richard of Oregon || 11/20/2008 3:57 Comments || Top||

#4  Perhaps a pearl necklace Richard?
Posted by: Skidmark || 11/20/2008 8:36 Comments || Top||

#5  Prime hell - that there's choice...
Posted by: mojo || 11/20/2008 11:44 Comments || Top||

#6  Mojo, you just demoted Norma Jean.
Posted by: ed || 11/20/2008 11:54 Comments || Top||

#7  Well I for one, welcome Fred's new series of Women Who Shampoo and Rinse and Repeat for a Healthy Shine...
Posted by: Adriane || 11/20/2008 20:15 Comments || Top||

#8  Before she became a cocaine addict and aborted her 14 children?
Posted by: ex-lib || 11/20/2008 22:09 Comments || Top||

#9  Before she became a cocaine addict and aborted her 14 children?
Posted by: ex-lib || 11/20/2008 22:24 Comments || Top||

#10  Before she became a cocaine addict and aborted her 14 children?
Posted by: ex-lib || 11/20/2008 22:25 Comments || Top||


Africa Horn
Pirates demand $25m for oil tanker
SOMALI pirates who hijacked Saudi oil super-tanker Sirius Star are demanding $US25 million ($A39.25 million) in ransom, Agence France-Presse reported.
Posted by: tipper || 11/20/2008 04:17 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Hey! Where's my cut? Seems like I "deserve" something for NOT hijacking the boat.
Posted by: Richard of Oregon || 11/20/2008 6:52 Comments || Top||

#2  I'm not quite sure if I understand why the ENTIRE WORLD is powerless to take it back.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 11/20/2008 7:21 Comments || Top||

#3  Pirate - Somali for al Qaeda.
Posted by: WilliamMarcyTweed || 11/20/2008 8:16 Comments || Top||

#4  UAW Pirates?
Posted by: Besoeker || 11/20/2008 8:50 Comments || Top||

#5  If failed states turn to pirate states... It is time for me to invest in Viking Pirates from Iceland... (Likely Valkyries as the men leave the land of Ice and Snow.)
Posted by: 3dc || 11/20/2008 9:56 Comments || Top||

#6  BTW... what was the name of that old black and white movie about ship breakers in the Keys.. (not quite pirates...)
Posted by: 3dc || 11/20/2008 9:59 Comments || Top||

#7  Privateers broke up the Barbary pirates strangle hold on commerce....
Another thought: Long ago it was reported that Al Qaeda had at least six ships of their own, part of Bin Laden's investments to transport blood diamonds and other illicit cargo. He had brothers-in-law in the Philippines and on Madagascar, and little brother Khalil reportedly in the Tri-states area of South America overseeing drug trafficking. Maybe time to hunt down those mother ships with some mother-effing private contractors.
Posted by: Thealing Borgia 122 || 11/20/2008 10:14 Comments || Top||

#8  their orginization and frequency suggest new tactics... some kind of pirate navy?
Posted by: Black Charlie Jusoper3402 || 11/20/2008 10:23 Comments || Top||

#9  3dc, I was going to venture 'Islands in the Stream' but I that is a color flick.
Posted by: swksvolFF || 11/20/2008 10:39 Comments || Top||

#10  You know, in a way I'm jealous of these guys. They are out there living life to the maximum - albeit it may be a shorted life if they tangle with India again - while I'm sitting on my ass in a cube eating leftover pizza from last night and reading about men having adventures.

I bet there are a few here on Rantburg that understand...
Posted by: Yosemite Sam || 11/20/2008 10:47 Comments || Top||

#11  I say a few of we Rantburgers set to sea and demand $25 million from these pirates to not kill them.
Posted by: Mike N. || 11/20/2008 11:17 Comments || Top||

#12  Yosemite Sam,
To be a Wolf, in a world of sheep, I understand.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 11/20/2008 11:37 Comments || Top||

#13  Kind of like P.J. O'Rourke in the Philippines, when he shelled out a few bucks for those communist guerrillas. Holidays in Hell, IIRC.
Posted by: Plastic Snoopy || 11/20/2008 12:29 Comments || Top||

#14  piracy discussion link
Posted by: 3dc || 11/20/2008 13:05 Comments || Top||

#15  Dear Saudi Arabia. Guess what you can buy a lot of for a lot less than $25M?

http://www.blackwaterusa.com/
Posted by: Anonymoose || 11/20/2008 13:30 Comments || Top||

#16  #8 - I think there's a "mole" in the local shipping industry that knows where every ship will be at any given time, and passes the message to the pirates. I also wouldn't doubt that this outfit started out small, but with each success, grew. The fact that NO ONE has really fought back hard is a sad commentary on where we are in the world today. India killed one mother-ship. Great, and we welcome the action. But where are the NATO vessels? Where is the 5th Fleet? Where are the B-52s from Diego Garcia? Where are the AC-130s? Bomb Eyl off the map, and then stand ready to repeat the process the next time a ship is hijacked, and you'll cut the profit margin to nil, and put the fear of God into those that attempt any future pirating. Saying "Tut, tut", or "Naughty, naughty", isn't going to get us anywhere.
Posted by: Old Patriot || 11/20/2008 14:38 Comments || Top||

#17  But OP, what about the innocent fishermen and the mothers and little chirrens who are loving their new flat screens bought with the pirate ransom money?????

Yeah, my heart bleeds 5W/30 too.
Posted by: remoteman || 11/20/2008 14:46 Comments || Top||

#18  India gets the right of hot pursuit in Somali waters

Indian Navy could send more warships to counter Somalian pirates in the Gulf of Aden even as Somalia has permitted India to enter its territorial waters as part of an effort to check piracy.

Besides India, navies of US and France have also been permitted hot pursuit in Somalian territorial waters which extends upto 12 nautical miles from the coastline.

A Delhi class destroyer has already sailed from Mumbai to the Gulf of Aden to augment anti-piracy patrol off Somalia raising the number of Indian warships on patrol from Salalah to Aden to two.

The 6,900-tonne Delhi class destroyers are the largest indigenously built warships till date and pack more fire power in them than frigates.

They carry on board two Sea King helicopters, along with a Cheetah or a Chetak, and stock 16 Uran missiles, 100mm AK 100 gun, four multi-barrel 30mm AK 630 gun.
Posted by: john frum || 11/20/2008 14:56 Comments || Top||

#19  The Wahhabist 'royal' Saudi, OPEC oil barons have 'donated' multiple millions to the likes of the PLO and many other Arab & Muslim terrorist groups, coupled with paying for thousands of madrasas (Islamic training centers)worldwide.
For example. Saudi Sunni-Wahabbist cult based madrasas in Pakistan train future Sunni-related jihadists, which our troops are combating in Afghanistan & Iraq,


Over many years Saudi oil profits have financed Sunni-Arab killers, responsible for horrific murders of many numbers of Israelis, also Americans, British & other foreign nationals, coupled with scores of airline hijackings and the PLO's horrific dismemberment of Lebanon.

Saudi monetary contributions earned off of Western energy consumers also bought shipments of weapons, triggering the bloody 'Black September' civil war in Jordan, and more recent, 15 Wahhabist Saudi nationals out of the 19 September 11th, 2001 multi-terrorist attacks against America, resulting in over 3000 murdered innocent victims. A vile testament of a Saudi Wahhabist anti-Western 'education'.

Previously, oil-super-rich, despotic, Saudi rulers, who made billions in manipulated petroleum profits, while millions were stuck on long gas lines -- now those tyrannical ruling Saudi Wahhabists are on the receiving end of having some of their own oil supertankers being held hostage for ransom, by Somalian Muslim pirates, possibly trained or assisted directly, or indirectly, with Saudi oil profit 'donations'.

Reciprocity in motion!
Posted by: Mark Espinola || 11/20/2008 15:26 Comments || Top||

#20  Yosemite Sam

Yeah, but to be honest I'm starting to get to the point in life where the pizzia is starting to look pretty good.

I'm membered of the time a few years back when I mentioned to a younger guy that I was kind of sorry I missed the days when you really could run off the the South Seas and live the life.

He sort of looked at me and said you still could; he told me about how in the 90's he left hoime and went to to Hawaii to live for a few years.

He just did't get it when I started laughing liek the fool I most likely am.
Posted by: Kelly || 11/20/2008 15:46 Comments || Top||

#21  Since the tanker was headed to the US, who owns the oil?
Posted by: ed || 11/20/2008 16:20 Comments || Top||

#22  If you are interested in escape to the South Seas and piracy read about the White Rajahs of Sarawak.
Posted by: phil_b || 11/20/2008 16:28 Comments || Top||

#23  ed---it ain't US oil until the US firm takes delivery at the dock. Unless there is this prepay clause inserted in there somewhere.
Posted by: Alaska Paul || 11/20/2008 19:29 Comments || Top||

#24  Looks like the Saudi's aren't going to make any profit off that tankerfull.
Posted by: Redneck Jim || 11/20/2008 21:05 Comments || Top||


Somali pirates take another ship -maritime group
(SomaliNet) A regional maritime group said on Wednesday that Somali pirates have seized another ship, a Greek bulk carrier, despite a large international naval presence in the waters off their lawless country.

The vessel was they second they had taken since the weekend's spectacular capture of a Saudi supertanker carrying $100 million of oil that was the largest hijack in history.

The incident was the latest espisode in a wave of Somali piracy this year that has driven up insurance costs, made some shipping companies change their routes and prompted an unprecedented military response from NATO and the European Union among others.

"The pirates are sending out a message to the world that 'we can do what we want, we can think the unthinkable, do the unexpected'," Andrew Mwangura, coordinator of the East African Seafarers' Assistance Programme, told Reuters in Mombasa.

His group, which monitors attacks at sea, said the Greek ship was taken on Tuesday in the Gulf of Aden with about 25 crew on board. He had no further details but it followed the hijacking of a Hong Kong-flagged ship carrying grain and bound for Iran.

No ransom has been demanded so far for the Saudi supertanker Sirius Star, which the pirates seized on Saturday after dodging international naval patrols in their boldest strike yet. A spokesman for the owners, Saudi Aramco, said the company hoped to hear from the hijackers later on Wednesday.

The hijacking took place 450 nautical miles southeast of Mombasa, far beyond the gangs' usual area of operations. On Wednesday, it was believed to be anchored near Eyl, a former Somali fishing village now used as a well-defended pirate base. "Eyl residents told me they could see the lights of a big ship far out at sea that seems to be the tanker," Aweys Ali, chairman of Somalia's Galkayo region, told Reuters by telephone.

Somali gunmen were believed to be holding about a dozen ships in the area, and more than 200 hostages. Among the vessels is a Ukrainian ship loaded with 33 tanks and other weapons that was captured in another high-profile strike earlier this year.

The seizure of the Sirius Star was carried out despite an international naval response, including from NATO, to guard one of the world's busiest shipping routes. Warships from the United States, France and Russia are also off Somalia.

Given that the pirates were well-armed with grenades, heavy machineguns and rocket-launchers, the foreign forces were steering clear of direct confrontation, and in most cases the owners of the hijacked ships were trying to negotiate ransoms.

British Royal Navy Commodore Keith Winstanley, deputy commander of the Combined Maritime Forces in the Middle East, said coalition forces could not be everywhere. "The pirates will go somewhere we are not," he told Fairplay, part of defence analysts Jane's Information Group. "If we patrol the Gulf of Aden then they will go to Mogadishu. If we go to Mogadishu, they will go to the Gulf of Aden."

In a show of resolve, Kenyan police paraded eight suspected pirates in a Mombasa court on Wednesday. The Royal Navy captured them, and killed two others, in the Gulf of Aden last week.

Also on Wednesday, South Korea said it was planning to send navy ships to the waters off Somalia to protect commercial vessels from pirates, and Japan was considering a similar move.
Posted by: Fred || 11/20/2008 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  So why the greatly increased pirate activity in that area? Could it be that jihad income from oil profits, and other sources are down? The AQ, Taliban, Hamas, et al, may be experiencing something more like a depression than a recession. I hope.
Posted by: Richard of Oregon || 11/20/2008 4:51 Comments || Top||

#2  Or they're simply doing it because they can.  And they can because international order (political and economic) is breaking down.
Posted by: lotp || 11/20/2008 5:48 Comments || Top||

#3  Because that's where the tankers are.
Posted by: William Sutton || 11/20/2008 7:00 Comments || Top||

#4  If all the ships worth defending are in the port of Eyl, the Russian weapons, Iranian WMD's, $100 million Saudi crude, wouldn't it be easier to just J-Dam the cess pool called Somalia?
Posted by: Thealing Borgia 122 || 11/20/2008 10:22 Comments || Top||

#5  Got 2 words for Somalia:

Tsar Bomba
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 11/20/2008 12:01 Comments || Top||


Africa Subsaharan
Nigeria: Gunmen release hijacked cargo ship, free crew
(SomaliNet) A day after hijacking it in the restive Niger Delta, gunmen in Nigeria have released a cargo ship and its crew, a senior Nigerian military official said on Tuesday.

According to reports, the attackers intercepted the MV Thou Galaxy on Sunday as it sailed for Warri in Delta state, seizing at least 10 people on board including the captain. "The vessel was released yesterday with its cargo and all the crew members," said Brigadier-General Wuyep Rimtip, head of the military taskforce in the western Niger Delta. "I'm not aware that any ransom was paid before their release and I don't expect the state government to pay any ransom for their release."

A military spokesman on Monday said he believed gunmen loyal to rebel leader Tom Polo were behind the attack. Insecurity in the Niger Delta, home to Nigeria's oil sector, has slashed a fifth of the OPEC member's oil production since early 2006.-
Posted by: Fred || 11/20/2008 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:


Bangladesh
Launcher with 5 grenades found in Ctg
Rab recovered one US-made belt-fed M79 grenade launcher and five 40mm grenades at Rangamatia in Chittagong's Fatikchhari upazila early yesterday. The weapons were found abandoned near a graveyard during a raid on a hideout of criminal gang Daulat Bahini at Malikasha in North Rangamatia, Rab said.

Rab 7 commanding officer Zahidur Rahim said they believe the arms belong to Daulat, the gang's kingpin. "The M79 grenade launcher and its 40mm grenades were first widely used by the US troops during the Vietnam War," he told The Daily Star.

"The grenades can successfully hit their target within 150m (point target) and is effective within a range of 350m (area target)," he added. "The anti-personnel cartridges were used against people and light vehicles and had a devastating effect within a 5m radius of the target," said the Rab official.
Posted by: Fred || 11/20/2008 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Why didn't they unload it on the RAB? What kind of lousy, half-assed criminal drops a fully loaded grenade launcher? Damned banglas, they can't even break the law right.
Posted by: bigjim-ky || 11/20/2008 7:23 Comments || Top||

#2  Big-jim: If you're caught and you haven't killed anyone from the RAB, you're given a couple of swats of the baton and carted off to jail. If you DO manage to kill a RAB member, you're disassembled alive before a live RAB audience wearing earplugs.
Posted by: Old Patriot || 11/20/2008 15:05 Comments || Top||

#3  Not to be picky but the M79 is a single shot launcher. Mark 19's are belt fed and there was an earlier vietnam era one, but I don't remember the designation off the top of my head.
Posted by: Silentbrick || 11/20/2008 17:14 Comments || Top||

#4  Yes, but they were thermobaric or white phosphorus rounds. I forget which.
Posted by: ed || 11/20/2008 17:33 Comments || Top||

#5  Every third round on the beltfed M79 was atomic as I recall.
Posted by: Besoeker || 11/20/2008 18:02 Comments || Top||

#6  "Every third round on the beltfed M79 was atomic as I recall."

Shhh. Don't give the Iranians any ideas.
Posted by: crosspatch || 11/20/2008 18:57 Comments || Top||

#7  They can't fool me. A grenade launcher can't possibly look anything like a shutter gun.
Posted by: trailing wife || 11/20/2008 22:15 Comments || Top||


Europe
Italy: Police anti-terror raids target suspected Islamists
(AKI) - Italian anti-terrorism police have carried out at least 135 raids and are investigating 11 foreigners in various Italian regions who are suspected of links to an alleged Morocco-based Islamist group. The organisation, called 'Al-Adl Wal Ihsan' or Justice and Charity, is being investigated for association to commit international terrorist acts.

Several apartments and cultural centres thought to be linked to the Moroccan movement are being investigated as well as 11 foreigners.

According to investigators, the 'Justice and Charity' movement is a front for a group seeking the restoration of an Islamic caliphate in Morocco and the abolition of the monarchy.

Justice and Charity is believed to be Morocco's largest opposition Islamist movement. However, the group claims it wants to transform Moroccan society through non-violent means and social work.

Justice and Charity is tolerated by the Moroccan government but reportedly has no legal status to organise meetings.

The group has repeatedly accused the government of imprisoning its members and limiting its funding resources.

The anti-terrorism investigations are taking place in the regions of Friuli Venezia-Giulia, Lombardy, Veneto in northern Italy and in the central Emilia Romagna and Marche region.
Posted by: Fred || 11/20/2008 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under: al-Qaeda in Europe


India-Pakistan
Taliban warns of reprisals as Pakistan protests US drone attacks
A militant Taliban group warned Thursday of reprisals in Pakistan if there was another US drone attack, as the government condemned the latest missile strike in its territory.

Top Pakistani Taliban leader Hafiz Gul Bahadur warned he would mount revenge attacks if the US carried out further strikes in tribal territory after missiles fired from a drone Wednesday killed six people, including a major Al-Qaeda operative.

Bahadur's group has been accused by the United States of launching attacks across the border in Afghanistan, but it abstains from violence in Pakistani territory under an understanding with military authorities.

"We will start revenge attacks across other districts if the US drone attacks do not stop after November 20," Taliban spokesman Ahmadullah Ahmadi said in a statement. ...
Dumbass threatens to pee on another section of the living room carpet.
Posted by: ed || 11/20/2008 17:15 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:


U.S. Airstrike Kills 6 Terrs in Pakistan
KABUL, Nov. 19 -- A suspected U.S. suspected airstrike deep inside suspected Pakistani territory Wednesday killed suspected six insurgent suspected fighters and wounded suspected several others, according to a suspected Pakistani security suspected official.

The airstrike in the district of Bannu in the North-West Frontier Province appears to be the first such attack outside Pakistan's tribal areas. It came as the country's top military officer met with NATO officials in Brussels to discuss the cross-border missile strikes, which have been increasingly frequent in recent months and which the United States considers necessary for combating al-Qaeda and the Taliban. The attacks have stoked tensions in Pakistan and drawn public rebukes from the government.

An unmanned U.S. Predator drone fired at least two missiles early Wednesday morning at a house near North Waziristan, one of seven semi-autonomous tribal territories that line Pakistan's border with Afghanistan. A Pakistani security official said the six who were killed were believed to be foreigners with suspected links to al-Qaeda.
So nobody will especially miss them ...
Details about those killed could not be confirmed. A Pakistani military spokesman declined to comment. The U.S. generally does not acknowledge such attacks and has so far not issued any public comments on the use of Predator airstrikes on Pakistani soil.

Shortly after Wednesday's strike, Quazi Hussain Ahmad, head of the Islamist party Jamaat-e-Islami, vowed to block a vital NATO supply route if the U.S. attacks continue, the Associated Press reported.
Make .. our .. day ...
Posted by: Steve White || 11/20/2008 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I suspect that WaPo at least suspects that nobody else in that part of the world uses these suspected missile-firing drones. They won't even admit to suspecting that the terrorists are in fact terrorists, and I find this policy suspicious.
In any case, there is more than a suspicion that these six will not be back in Afghanistan shooting, bombing, and beating up girls.
Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy || 11/20/2008 5:29 Comments || Top||

#2  Pakistan protest to US ambassador
Posted by: tipper || 11/20/2008 11:02 Comments || Top||

#3  The Islamic terrorist enemy sneaking into Afghanistan from Pakistan, due to the Paki government's inability, or refusal, to halt the continuous daily cross border jihadist intrusions, mandates our troops protect themselves to the fullest by taking this counter Islamic terrorism war to the radicalized Muslim enemy's home front and front door steps.
Posted by: Mark Espinola || 11/20/2008 15:44 Comments || Top||

#4  Groundhog day in Islamabad.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 11/20/2008 15:48 Comments || Top||


Retired major general shot dead near Capital
Gunmen riding a motorbike shot dead a retired major general of Pakistan Army and his driver in the outskirts of the capital on Wednesday,

Major General (R) Ameer Faisal Alvi from the Special Services Group (SSG) had retired more than two years ago. He was heading for his Islamabad office at 9:30am on Wednesday when the unidentified gunmen stopped his car on Islamabad Highway near the PWD Colony in Koral police precincts, a police official told Daily Times.

They shot at him and his driver Tanveer and fled, he added. Police cordoned off the area and began a search while the bodies were taken to the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences.

Hospital sources said eight bullets hit Gen Alvi -- three in the head, two in the neck and three in the chest. The driver had six bullet injuries including one in his head. Police told Online news agency one or more 8MM pistols had been used in the attack.

A first information report had not been registered by Wednesday evening.

Terrorist act: Police sources said the killing was being seen as a terrorist act by 'militants'. Taliban and Al Qaeda operatives have targeted top army leaders and security officials in the past.

One senior official said personal rivalry could not be ruled out. He said the murder could not be linked with the Lal Masjid operation because the general had retired long before the incident.

Violence began to escalate last July when army commandos stormed the Lal Masjid during the regime of General (r) Pervez Musharraf, himself an ex-SSG head. A wave of suicide bombings has since killed hundreds of people and Taliban have targeted security forces.

Violence subsided when the new government that came to power after the election in February opened talks with Taliban, but it picked up again after top Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud suspended the talks in June.

President, PM condemn: President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani condemned the killing in separate messages. Gilani deplored the tragic killing and expressed deep sorrow over the demise of the retired general.

President Zardari said he "prayed to Allah Almighty to rest the departed soul in peace and grant courage to the bereaved family to bear the loss with equanimity".

Security has deteriorated alarmingly in the country over recent months with the military attacking Al Qaeda and Taliban strongholds in the northwest while they have responded with attacks on security forces. Two suicide bombers had killed at least 59 people in an attack on the country's main defence industry complex in August.
Posted by: Fred || 11/20/2008 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under: al-Qaeda in Pakistan

#1  First assumption - terrorists.
Alternative hypothesis - he knew where too many bodies were buried.
Posted by: Glenmore || 11/20/2008 8:37 Comments || Top||

#2  Third assumption - he was on the take, and asked for too much.
Fourth and most likely assumption - all of the above.
Posted by: Old Patriot || 11/20/2008 15:30 Comments || Top||

#3  Fifth possibility -- cash-strapped Pakistan is cutting its pension obligations
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 || 11/20/2008 18:49 Comments || Top||


5 Taliban banged in Bajaur, 5 shot in Swat
Five suspected Taliban fighters were killed in artillery fire and shelling by gunship helicopters in various areas of Bajaur Agency on Wednesday, while five Taliban and four civilians were killed in the military operation in Swat. In Bajaur, officials and locals said the aerial strikes targetted Taliban positions in Mamoond and Charmang areas.

APP reported that Taliban fighters had also been killed in Nawagai tehsil. The political administration has tightened security in the agency by setting up checkposts in various areas and increasing the number of security personnel, continuing the search for Afghan refugees and arresting seven suspects.

In Swat, ISPR said five Taliban fighters were killed by security forces in Kabal tehsil. A spokesman for the military's media information centre in Swat told APP that gunship helicopters were called in after the Taliban attacked troops in Kabal. Civilian deaths: Also, four people -- two women in Khwazakhela and two men in Kabal -- were killed and seven injured as mortar shells hit civilian houses, according to locals. ISPR officials refused comment on the civilian deaths. NNI however reported that 10 civilians had been injured in the operation in Swat.

School blown up: Meanwhile, the Taliban blew up a boys' primary school in Bara Bandai area of Kabal tehsil. NNI however reported that a girls' school had been blown up. According to official figures, 123 schools have so far been destroyed by the Taliban in Swat.
Posted by: Fred || 11/20/2008 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under: TTP

#1  5 shot in Swat

is that near the groin?
Posted by: Frank G || 11/20/2008 7:56 Comments || Top||

#2  is that near the groin?

Well it certainly is in the asshole of the world.
Posted by: remoteman || 11/20/2008 12:35 Comments || Top||


Iraq
US raid kills Iraqi blamed in 2004 reservist death
A father whose Army reservist son was captured, held hostage and killed in Iraq said Thursday that he's glad to learn one of the men responsible for his son's death has been "held accountable."

Hajji Hammadi, the al-Qaida in Iraq leader blamed in the 2004 abduction and killing of Staff Sgt. Matt Maupin and other deadly attacks over several years, was killed in a Nov. 11 raid by U.S. forces in Baghdad, the military said Thursday.

"This guy was finally held accountable for what he's done, and I think I'm happy about that because we're all held accountable," Keith Maupin said. "They told me they killed him on Veterans Day. Ain't that appropriate."

Maupin's son was a 20-year-old private first class who was seized when his fuel convoy was attacked by insurgents in Iraq on April 19, 2004. Al-Jazeera aired a video later that month showing Maupin wearing camouflage and a floppy desert hat, sitting on a floor and surrounded by five masked men holding automatic rifles.

Keith Maupin said the Army told him that Hammadi was the tall man standing behind his son in the videotape. "It seems as though these bad guys over there think they can do whatever they want to do and they don't have to answer to nobody," Keith Maupin said. "We all have to answer to somebody sooner or later."

Maupin and his former wife, Carolyn, pressured the Pentagon for nearly four years to keep looking for their son. They met with President Bush on his trips to Cincinnati and received periodic briefings in Washington. "We told them we don't hold the Army responsible, but we're damn sure going to hold you accountable for getting Matt home," Maupin said.

His son's remains were found in March on the outskirts of Baghdad, about 12 miles from where the convoy was ambushed. While he was missing, the Maupins had distributed photos of Matt in thousands of boxes of snacks, games, magazines and toiletries sent to troops in Iraq by the Yellow Ribbon Support Center, which the Maupins ran in suburban Cincinnati. Matt Maupin was originally from Batavia, Ohio.

Two other Iraqi militants involved in the attack on Maupin's convoy were captured this year, tried and sentenced to death for terrorist acts, according to his father, who was informed by military officials. "They said absolutely, positively, these are two of those men," Maupin said.

The statement released by the military on Thursday said Hammadi, also known as Hammadi Awdah Abd Farhan and Abd-al-Salam Ahmad Abdallah al-Janabi, led a group of fighters against U.S. forces in the second battle of Fallujah in the fall of 2004.

Hammadi also was the mastermind of a June 26 suicide bombing against a meeting of pro-government Sunni sheiks in Karmah, west of Baghdad, the military said. The attacker was dressed as an Iraqi policeman and killed three U.S. Marines, two interpreters and more than 20 Iraqis. "Hammadi escorted the suicide bomber to the location and videotaped the attack," the military said.

Five other suspected insurgents were detained in the raid that killed Hammadi, it added. The military said it was announcing the death after Hammadi was positively identified.

It said the insurgent leader became al-Qaida's emir in a volatile area west of Baghdad in 2004 and had links to slain al-Qaida in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and his successor Abu Ayyub al-Masri, also known as Abu Hamza al-Muhajir.

"The removal of Hajji Hammadi from the AQI (al-Qaida in Iraq) network is yet another significant blow to the terrorist organization," Brig. Gen. David Perkins said.
Posted by: ed || 11/20/2008 17:20 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  have a blast in hell
Posted by: chris || 11/20/2008 17:56 Comments || Top||

#2  Karma is a bitch.
Posted by: DarthVader || 11/20/2008 17:57 Comments || Top||

#3  Matt Maupin was captured during one of the worst incidents of the Iraq war, a week or so after the Blackwater atrocity in Fallujah.
An American contractor who was captured with Matt later escaped, but another soldier and several other contractors were killed during the ambush. The AQ devils posted pictures of the bodies lying on the ground, relatively intact, right afterward. By the time they were found in a common grave a week later, the recovery team could not even tell how many people were there. As with the Fallujah outrage, people who do this kind of thing to Americans need to understand that they will be hunted down and destroyed, no matter how far we have to go, how long it takes, or what it costs. I am glad to see that another devil has learned this the hard way.
Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy || 11/20/2008 20:50 Comments || Top||


Iraq arrests senior Iranian commando at airport
Iraqi security forces have arrested an alleged "senior" Iranian commando from the elite Revolutionary Guard's Quds Force at Baghdad International Airport, the U.S. military said Wednesday.

The military said they suspected the man of "involvement in facilitating Iranian weapons shipments into Iraq" under the cover of working for an organization involved in the restoration of Iraqi religious sites. The man is alleged to have used the organization as a front in order to bring weapons into Iraq concealed in shipments of building materials, the military said in a statement released late Tuesday.

The U.S. military has long accused Iran's Quds Force of arming, training, and funding Iraqi militiamen to stoke the sectarian violence that has convulsed the country since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, charges Tehran has denied.

The statement also said the man was carrying an "unspecified amount" of cocaine.
Posted by: Fred || 11/20/2008 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under: IRGC

#1  No coke, Pepsi!
Posted by: Muggsy Glink || 11/20/2008 0:10 Comments || Top||

#2  cheep! cheep!
Posted by: .5MT || 11/20/2008 7:53 Comments || Top||

#3  Coming or going?
And what's with the cocaine? Iraqi security carrying drop bags so they can make the arrest stick? Or residual from his last trip to A'stan where he picked up a delivery for his boss?
Posted by: Glenmore || 11/20/2008 8:50 Comments || Top||

#4  On a connecting flight from Venezuela?
Posted by: ed || 11/20/2008 9:43 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran can make at least one nuclear bomb
Iran has now produced roughly enough nuclear material to make, with added purification, a single atom bomb, according to nuclear experts analyzing the latest report from global atomic inspectors.
About as I calculated yesterday: 630 kg of 5% enriched uranium works out to about 40 kg of 80% uranium, minus losses in refining and handling.
The figures detailing Iran's progress were contained in a routine update on Wednesday from the International Atomic Energy Agency, which has been conducting inspections of the country's main nuclear plant at Natanz. The report concluded that as of early this month, Iran had made 630 kilograms of low-enriched uranium.

Several experts said that was enough for a bomb, but they cautioned that the milestone was mostly symbolic, because Iran would have to take additional steps. Not only would it have to breach its international agreements and kick out the inspectors, but it would also have to further purify the fuel and put it into a warhead design - a technical advance that Western experts are unsure Iran has yet achieved.

"They clearly have enough material for a bomb," said Richard Garwin, a top nuclear physicist who helped invent the hydrogen bomb and has advised Washington for decades. "They know how to do the enrichment. Whether they know how to design a bomb, well, that's another matter."

Iran insists that it wants only to fuel reactors for nuclear power. But many western nations, led by the United States, suspect that its real goal is to gain the ability to make nuclear weapons.

While some Iranian officials have threatened to bar inspectors in the past, the country has made no such moves, and many experts inside the Bush administration and the IAEA believe it will avoid the risk of attempting "nuclear breakout" until it possessed a larger uranium supply. American intelligence agencies have said Iran could make a bomb between 2009 and 2015.
Posted by: john frum || 11/20/2008 16:10 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Gee, think there are any other countries that might have that final puzzle piece for sale?
Posted by: AlanC || 11/20/2008 16:45 Comments || Top||

#2  Just their declared centrifuges have enough capacity for 1 bomb per year. The Iranians are idiots if they don't have several times more than that humming away in tunnels.
Posted by: ed || 11/20/2008 16:48 Comments || Top||

#3  They don't need to design a thing.

The Chinese provided designs to Pakistan (for Uranium and Plutonium implosion type missile warheads). These designs were both fully tested.

The IAEA found a copy in Libya (apparently provided free by AQ Khan when his stolen centrifuge designs are purchased) still wrapped in the plastic bag from his dry cleaners in Karachi.

These included copious notes in Urdu, written by the Chinese, that describe fabrication of each component ("bombs for dummies").

The Pakistanis provided the Chinese with the Uranium enrichment centrifuge designs (stolen from URENCO in the Netherlands by AQ Khan) in exchange for this weapon.

They traded both with North Korea for ballistic missile designs and components.

Iran has bought both the North Korean missile plans and the Pakistani centrifuge plans. Why would they not have obtained the Chinese weapon designs from either?
Posted by: john frum || 11/20/2008 17:07 Comments || Top||

#4  Iran claimed ages ago to have, if I recall correctly, 80,000 centrifuges spinning to refine uranium.

The election is over. Bomb everything related to Iran's nuclear effort. Bomb the mullahs' homes. Bomb the Revolutionary Guards barracks in the middle of the night. Then bounce the rubble. If this is unwise, then put the blue Star of David on everything; the Israelis are tough -- they'll handle the fall out as they've done when they were the ones who did it.
Posted by: trailing wife || 11/20/2008 22:06 Comments || Top||

#5  Ooooo - me likee super-tough tw! ;-p
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 11/20/2008 22:23 Comments || Top||



Who's in the News
45[untagged]
3TTP
2Govt of Iran
1al-Qaeda in Pakistan
1Govt of Sudan
1Govt of Syria
1IRGC
1Jamaat-e-Islami
1Mahdi Army
1al-Qaeda in Europe
1al-Qaeda

Bookmark
E-Mail Me

The Classics
The O Club
Rantburg Store
The Bloids
The Never-ending Story
Thugburg
Gulf War I
The Way We Were
Bio

Merry-Go-Blog











On Sale now!


A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.

Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.

Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has dominated Mexico for six years.
Click here for more information

Meet the Mods
In no particular order...
Steve White
Seafarious
tu3031
badanov
sherry
ryuge
GolfBravoUSMC
Bright Pebbles
trailing wife
Gloria
Fred
Besoeker
Glenmore
Frank G
3dc
Skidmark

Two weeks of WOT
Thu 2008-11-20
  U.S. Dronezap Kills 6 Terrs in Pakistain
Wed 2008-11-19
  Indian Navy destroys Somali pirate mothership
Tue 2008-11-18
  B.O. vows to exit Iraq, shut down Gitmo
Mon 2008-11-17
  Pirates take Saudi supertanker off Mombasa
Sun 2008-11-16
  Lankan Army seizes entire west coast from LTTE
Sat 2008-11-15
  Al-Shabaab closes in on Mog
Fri 2008-11-14
  U.S. missiles hit Pak Talibs, 12 dead
Thu 2008-11-13
  Somali pirates open fire on Brit marines. Hilarity ensues.
Wed 2008-11-12
  Philippines ship, 23 crew seized near Somalia
Tue 2008-11-11
  EU launches anti-piracy mission off Somalia
Mon 2008-11-10
  Somali gunnies kidnap two Italian nuns
Sun 2008-11-09
  Boomerette hits emergency room west of Baghdad
Sat 2008-11-08
  Mukhlas, Amrozi and Samudra executed
Fri 2008-11-07
  Pak: 13 dead in dronezap
Thu 2008-11-06
  Iran: We can block off Persian Gulf in blink of an eye


Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.
18.219.112.111
Help keep the Burg running! Paypal:
WoT Background (21)    Non-WoT (9)    Opinion (6)    Local News (8)    Politix (1)