Thursday, January 7, 2010

Microsoft Office 2003trial Problem

Yemen, when the hurry is a bad counselor

 

 

Le autorità di Sana'a smentiscono l'arresto del capo di al-Qaeda, anche perché quello vero è un imam nato e cresciuto negli Usa

 

Yemen

 

Il vertice di martedì 5 gennaio nella Situation Room, un locale blindato qualche piano sotto lo Studio Ovale alla Casa Bianca, deve essere stato un vero e proprio regolamento di conti tra le troppe agenzie della sicurezza negli Usa. Il presidente Obama furioso, attaccato dai media conservatori e non, voleva results to be displayed immediately on the news the United States of America.

mistaken identity. Haste, however, is a bad counselor, and yesterday the U.S. and European media have rushed to celebrate the arrest of the 'head of al-Qaeda in Yemen'. Only it was not true, either because the Yemeni authorities have denied today they had arrested Mohammad Ahmed al-Hana and because it is the same as the leader of al-Hana network of Islamic extremists Yemen.
Haste, as mentioned, to score a point in favor of 'fighting terrorism' has confused the cards. Al-Hana, in fact, is the man who commanded the cell that, in recent days, has taken hold of a cargo of arms and explosives, traveling (rather unwisely) on six Yemeni army trucks direct to the troops at the front fighting in Saada Governorate, northern Yemen, against insurgents loyal to Shiite preacher al-Hout. The fundamentalists of al-Hana attacked the convoy and took over the weapons. Crimson Tide to close embassies in Yemen and in the capital, as all were convinced that the load would be used to strike targets in the capital.

performance anxiety. In the early hours after the disappearance of the load the Yemeni army special forces have created a furious manhunt, and within a few hours, they found the gang and have engaged the battle. Two militiamen, January 5, were killed during the operation and three others wounded in the hospital and then guarded. Yesterday, January 6, the spread of news of the capture of Mohammad Ahmed al Hana, head of the group, escaped at first capture.
excellent news for Obama, tomorrow, announced a shocking report which shows that U.S. intelligence had all the information you need to stop Abdulmutallab Umar Farouk, the Nigerian boy on December 24 last year tried to blow himself up on a flight Amsterdam - Detroit.
The website of the U.S. Embassy in Sana'a, promptly reopened, the U.S. State Department congratulated the Yemeni authorities, and even if he could not write it, believed it could better justify the rain of money coming from Washington, but for now has produced mediocre results.

Washington - Sana'a: High Voltage. First evasion in February 2006, 23 inmates from a maximum security prison in the Yemeni capital. Among them, the minds of the attack in October 2000 against the USS Cole destroyer in the U.S. Navy, which killed 17 U.S. sailors. What's more, there are dozens of Guantanamo detainees that come from Yemen and many of those released have returned to their homeland and shipped within a few hours in the ranks of fighters. U.S. President Obama in the election campaign, has made closing the prison at Guantanamo a point of honor for the state of U.S. law. For now, the base is still open, but Obama and his staff already imagine the attacks of the right of the closing of the prison. So
needed a result but what is wrong. As said Mohammad Ahmed al-Hana is not among those captured yesterday and, more importantly, is not the head of al-Qaeda in Yemen.
The real leader, the undisputed king of the net with his fatwas, Anwar al-Awlaki, the man designated by the same Minister of Interior of Yemen as a mentor Abdulmutallab.

The real boss. Al-Awlaki, 38, was born in the United States, New Mexico, where his father taught at the university. After studying as an engineer, was given to religious studies and became one of the most extremist imams. Still he had investigated Nidal Malik Hasan, the officer who massacred 13 people last November 5 in the U.S. military base at Fort Hood.
Al-Awlaki returned to Yemen with his family before returning to the U.S. where he worked as imam in San Diego and surrounding areas. He was arrested once in 1996, on charges of forced prostitution. A dark page in the life of this devout Muslim, or more prosaically, networks of contacts with ordinary crime to finance other activities? At that time, has frequent contact with at least two of the bombers of 11 September 2001. Just after the attack on the Twin Towers to leave forever the States, but not abandoned on a mountain refuge in Pakistan, but in London. The capital of the most important U.S. ally in the world is home for two years, before returning to Yemen. Where he moved, undisturbed, in the province of Shabwa. The U.S., alo Yemen, have given millions of dollars to fight people like Anwar al-Awlaki, but nothing has been done. Obama, in his report upsetting, should explain how it is possible that al-Awlaki has moved, for years, freely. It should do so even if it is very embarrassing to admit that he is the real leader of al-Qaeda in Yemen.

Source: Peacereporter

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