Wednesday, May 18, 2011

US Was Prepared to Wage War With Pakistan





From Strategypage.com

May 15, 2011: On May 2nd, the United States was prepared to go to war with Pakistan. The American raid on that day, which killed Osama bin Laden and seized a huge mass of al Qaeda data from his Pakistani hideout, was carried out without informing Pakistan beforehand.

Although Pakistan had years earlier agreed that the U.S. could enter Pakistani territory in hot pursuit of terrorists fleeing Afghanistan, or to grab high ranking al Qaeda leaders, it was always assumed that the U.S. would let the Pakistani military know what was coming. But because the Pakistani government was full of bin Laden fans, the U.S. did not inform Pakistan about the raid until it was underway. Apparently, that message included a reminder that if the U.S. troops in the bin Laden compound were attacked by Pakistani forces, there would be instant, and far-reaching, consequences.
























The extent of those consequences has since been pieced together, from unclassified information. By May 2nd, the U.S. had assembled a huge naval and air force in the region, that was pointed at Pakistan. This force would attack any Pakistani troops or warplanes that went after the U.S. forces in the bin Laden compound, or who might be able to do so. The U.S. had assembled three aircraft carriers, hundreds of air force aircraft in Afghanistan and the Persian Gulf, and dozens of helicopters, and thousands of troops, in Afghanistan. Most of these troops didn't know what they were alerted for. Such alerts happen all the time, often for no reason (as far as the troops are concerned.) But this time, as word of the bin Laden raid got out, it became obvious (at least to those who know how these things work) that the alerts throughout the region were to prepare for the possible need to quickly get the American raiders out, and destroy any Pakistani forces that sought to interfere.

Not surprisingly, the Pakistanis did not interfere. In fact, local Pakistani forces surrounded the bin Laden compound and kept anyone from getting in, or out, by land. The Pakistanis did not enter the compound until the Americans had flown away, with bin Laden's body, and documents. Pakistan later complained about this violation of their territory. The complaints were somewhat muted by the need to answer embarrassing questions about why bin Laden and his family had been in this military town (home to the national military academy, over 10,000 troops and hundreds of high ranking retired officers) for six years without being noticed.

The Pakistani was apparently willing to help hide bin Laden, but not, on a large scale, die for him.source

**HIGHLY GRAPHIC** russian murders caught on film

those two murdered that homeless woman. they also murdered 3 other people

more info: http://mysouth.su/2011/04/the-kids-murderers-four-month-hold-in-awe-the-whole-akademgorodok/

http://www.vsp.ru/social/2011/04/09/510077


















UFO's Return To Lake Michigan 2011

Filmed Over Lake Michigan May 15, 2011.






















Jagung Berbiji Batu

 
















klik link dibawah   

jagung berbiji batu

 

 

Anti-Ahmadiyah Kekerasan di Cikeusik Indonesia



video ini tersebar di dunia maya! apa kata dunia?




















Strange ufo Beijing China

This object was flimed over Beijing in 2006






















Entiti Ghaib Seakan Penanggal

Di rakam di cctv sebuah rumah di kandang, melaka.



















Obama's Official Birth Certificate Layers Removed

New Obama Birth Certificate is a Forgery http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mBIivmWFh3g

http://www.infowars.com/new-obama-birth-certificate-is-a-forgery/

Kurt Nimmo Infowars.com April 28, 2011 Our investigation of the purported Obama birth certificate released by Hawaiian authorities today reveals the document is a shoddily contrived hoax. Infowars.com computer specialists dismissed the document as a fraud soon after examining it.

Check out the document released by WhiteHouse.gov for yourself.

Upon first inspection, the document appears to be a photocopy taken from state records and printed on official green paper. However, when the government released PDF is taken into the image editing program Adobe Illustrator, we discover a number of separate elements that reveal the document is not a single scan on paper, as one might surmise. Elements are place in layers or editing boxes over the scan and green textured paper, which is to say the least unusual.

When sections of the document are enlarged significantly, we discover glaring inconsistencies. For instance, it appears the date stamped on the document has been altered. Moreover, the document contains text, numbers, and lines with suspicious white borders indicating these items were pasted from the original scan and dropped over a background image of green paper.

Let's assume the state of Hawaii scanned the original document and placed it on the green textured background. This does not explain the broken out or separate elements. There is no logical reason for this to be done unless the government planned to modify the document and make it appear to be something other than it is.

There are two elements of interest, as shown in the image to the above -- both entries for the date accepted by the local registry. This appears to have been modified in an image editing program.

The media was quick to dispel the fact the document was modified. "Our analysis of the latest controversy: The original birth certificate was probably in a 'negative' form, and someone at the White House took it upon themselves to doctor it up so the form can be readable," writes Joe Brooks for Wireupdate.

Nathan Goulding, writing for the National Review, tells us anybody can open the White House released PDF in Illustrator and it will break out into layers. "I've confirmed that scanning an image, converting it to a PDF, optimizing that PDF, and then opening it up in Illustrator, does in fact create layers similar to what is seen in the birth certificate PDF. You can try it yourself at home," he writes.

Indeed, but this does not answer the question why in the Obama birth certificate PDF the layers or elements contain dates -- which appear to be modified -- and the signature of the state registrar. If the document was acquired from state records in whole, why was in necessary to add elements? Goulding and Brooks do not address this issue.

These layers are also revealed by the White House issued PDF's hex file in freeware hex editor. Within its code are listed 8 image masks, which if changed from value "true" to "false" turn off and on to reveal the layers as demonstrated in the video and in Illustrator. Whether these represent compression artifacts or other digitizing processes, or whether these masks represent deliberate manipulation remains to be conclusively shown.

Infowars will continue to analyze this issue as more information comes in. It is significant that the Obama Administration was pressured into responding to this controversy, whatever the final analysis of this document. However, the administration still needs to release his other records which have been sealed at great expense. Is there an issue with his being naturalized in Indonesia? Why are his college records at Columbia and Occidental sealed, and what do they contain? Did Obama travel to Pakistan on a foreign passport? These questions and many others have not been properly answered.

Aaron Dykes contributed to this report





















Four U.S. soldiers killed in blast in Afghanistan




















KABUL, Afghanistan - Four American soldiers serving with NATO forces in Afghanistan died Monday in an explosion in the country's south, NATO and a defense department official said, bringing home the human cost of the U.S.-led push into Taliban strongholds.
The official said they were hit by an improvised explosive device. He spoke on condition of anonymity because relatives of those killed were still being notified. The latest deaths make a total of 16 NATO service members killed so far this month, and 167 so far this year.

The latest casualties came as the second-ranking U.S. general in Afghanistan said Monday it was too early to tell if the killing of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden in neighboring Pakistan will have an impact on the Afghan war effort.

Lt. Gen. David Rodriguez, who is in charge of NATO's joint command, said that al-Qaida as a movement was not based on bin Laden's leadership alone, and that the military has been waiting to see how his May 2 death will affect the strength of the terror group and its influence in Afghanistan.

Rodriguez said bin Laden's killing by U.S. Navy SEALs in the garrison city of Abbottabad had "no affects that we can see at this point. It's too early to see that, but we are continuing to watch that over time."

According to Rodriguez, al-Qaida has fewer than 100 operatives in Afghanistan, mostly providing support and resources to insurgents."The al-Qaida movement is not based on just one individual and we will have to see what that impact is ... and how much that will be on the strength of al-Qaida and associated movements. But that is yet to be seen," Rodriguez said.

There has been hope that the killing of bin Laden will weaken the terror group's connections with the Taliban, especially with leaders such as Mullah Mohammed Omar who had personal ties to the dead al-Qaida leader. Pakistan may also feel pressured to help bring some Afghan Taliban leaders to the negotiating table. The Taliban's leadership is thought to be hiding in Pakistan.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai, who has often called on Pakistan for help with the Taliban, has been pushing for reconciliation with the insurgents. The United States has also been promoting what it has called a diplomatic surge to help find a nonmilitary solution to the fighting.

Rodriguez predicted that violence would increase further this summer as the Taliban try to retake territory they lost in southern Kandahar and southwestern Helmand provinces in the past year.
"We have said for several months that we will see a rise in violence this spring and summer. And as the Afghan government keeps gaining support from the people, the insurgents will continue to launch sensational attacks against soft targets," Rodriguez said.

He added that Afghan and coalition forces would try to expand security around Kandahar and Helmand and link the two regions."These were the two centers of the Taliban movement and the combined team holds them and intends to retain them. We know that the Taliban want them back and we expect, and we are seeing him, continue to attack. But everyday we hold them is one day more to build and harden the environment," said Australian Maj. Gen. Michael Krause, the coalition's deputy chief of staff for plans.

The Taliban recently launched a long-promised spring offensive and have carried out attacks in the southern and eastern parts of Afghanistan, near the border with Pakistan. The Taliban and other insurgent groups retain bases in safe havens across the border in Pakistan's lawless tribal areas.
A Taliban mortar attack Monday in eastern Kunar province left three Afghan civilians dead and eight wounded. The intended target was a U.S. base, Combat Outpost Honaker Miracle, but the four mortars missed it, NATO said."Our Afghan National Security and coalition forces are working diligently to counter the recently announced Taliban spring offensive," said Afghan National Army Maj. Shereen Agha, 2nd Brigade, 201st Corps.

The coalition's director of public affairs, U.S. Rear Adm. Vic Beck, said "each of these heinous attacks turns support away from their cause and strengthens the resolve of the people against them."
NATO and the United States hope to slowly start relinquishing control for security to Afghan forces, with the eventual goal of handing over responsibility at the end of 2014. President Barack Obama has said the United States, with about 100,000 troops on the ground, will begin a gradual drawdown in July - with the number to be determined by the situation at the time.

http://www.fayobserver.com/articles/2011/05/16/1094546?sac=World

Former Head of Afghan Intelligence Agency Speaks Out on Pakistan and Bin Laden

15-5-2011

The former head of Afghanistan's intelligence says Pakistan has supported the Taliban for years and in 2007, he says, his information pinpointed Osama bin Laden 12 miles from where American forces killed him last week. Lara Logan reports.

vidoe from "60 Minutes" CBS News


















Taliban Escape Tunnel Revealed

Kandahar - Afghanistan
Nearly 500 prisoners were spirited out of the main jail in Kandahar, Afghanistan, overnight, through a 320-metre tunnel that the Taliban claims it secretly created over a five-month period.

The jailbreak of about 480 mostly Taliban prisoners comes after the 1,200-inmate Sarposa Prison had undergone a series of security upgrades and heightened procedures following a suicide bomb attack in 2008. That incident freed 900 inmates.

The escape, carried out in the dead of night, suggests some collusion with prison guards or officials. After months of battlefield setbacks for the Taliban, the jailbreak is a humiliating strike against their opponents.

As he announced that this latest plot is under investigation, Afghan presidential spokesman Waheed Omar was blunt.

"This is a blow," Omar told The Associated Press. "A prison break of this magnitude of course points to a vulnerability."

The Sarposa facility -- which does not hold as high-profile inmates as other jails near the Bagram Ari Base and Kabul -- is ringed by concrete barriers topped with razor wire. Guard towers also overlook the compound that should only be accessible through multiple gates and checkpoints.

But in a statement, Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid said a months-long effort to dig the tunnel beneath those checkpoints finally reached the prison cells at approximately 11 p.m. on Sunday night.

The Taliban are believed to even have sold off the dirt.

Reporters who later toured the prison were shown a one-meter diameter hole in a prison cell floor, leading to a 1.5-meter drop into the tunnel.

The tunnel led to a house, easily within shooting distance of the prison.

Over the course of the ensuing four-and-a-half hours, Mujahid said an undetected stream of inmates was assisted through that underground escapeway and out of the jail by three prisoners who were not only aware of the plan in advance, but had copies of the jail cell keys.

In a phone call to The Associated Press, a now-freed prisoner who claimed he helped organize the plot from within the prison walls suggested possible collusion with guards at the facility.

"There were four or five of us who knew that our friends were digging a tunnel from the outside," Mohammad Abdullah told the AP.

"Some of our friends helped us by providing copies of the keys. When the time came at night, we managed to open the doors for friends who were in other rooms," he said, describing how inmates were woken and quietly sneaked out in small groups of four or five.

Once out of the prison, the escapees were then disappeared into Kandahar city.

Mujahid claims that 100 of the freed inmates were Taliban commanders, while another Taliban spokesman, Qari Yousef Ahmadi, said four were provincial-level commanders.

While Afghan officials remain tight-lipped about the identities of the escapees, Canadian Press reporter Colin Perkel said they were all officially classifies as "political prisoners."

Nevertheless, he says the fact they are now free is worrying for those trying to maintain security in the southern Afghanistan city considered to be the birthplace of the Taliban

"The prospect that these guys could return to the battlefield and soon be taking up arms again against coalition forces and Afghan security forces is a rather disconcerting proposition, especially with fighting season on the cusp at this particular moment," Perkel told CTV News in an interview from Kandahar.

Sarposa officials say they discovered the breach at 4 a.m., approximately 30 minutes after the insurgent group claims it had led the last of its escapees from the prison.

On Monday, Afghan and American security forces were swarming the area around the jail -- with a particular focus on the nearby house where they have confirmed the tunnel began.

But efforts to recapture the hundreds of escaped prisoners are subject to many challenges.

Even though authorities say they have biometric information that can be used to confirm the identities of the escapees, Perkel said nabbing them in and around Kandahar is next-to-impossible.

"The Afghan police are not exactly a crack investigative unit by any stretch of the imagination," he said.

"And Kandahar is kind of an aberrance. It's the home turf and local playground of these guys, so it's very, very easy for them to disappear and lie low."

So far, police said efforts to recapture the escapees had already netted 26. Another two were shot and killed when they tried to evade capture.






















US Drone attack in Isagai area

ailed attack,noboby was killed or wounded
at 0:06 us predator flying over my head..



















ARMADILLO War Documentary

War documentary about Danish troops in Afghanistan

ARMADILLO (2010)is an upfront account of growing cynicism and adrenaline addiction for young soldiers at war.

Mads and Daniel are serving their first mission in Helmand, Afghanistan. Their platoon is stationed in Camp Armadillo, right on the Helmand frontline, fighting tough battles against the Taliban. The soldiers are there to help the Afghans, but as fighting gets tougher and operations increasingly hairy, Mads, Daniel and their friends becomes cynical widening the gap between themselves and the Afghan civilisation. Mistrust and paranoia set in causing alienation and disillusion.

Armadillo is a journey into the soldier's minds and a unique film on the mythological story of man and war, staged in its contemporary version in Afghanistan.


















 Part 1