Europe is next on the HIT parade!

busybody..

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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GLOBAL JIHAD
20 terror commandos
unleashed on Europe
Al-Qaida plans attacks before
U.S. invades Iraq

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted: January 28, 2003
1:00 a.m. Eastern



© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com


At least 20 "terror commandos" have been unleashed by Osama bin Laden to attack Britain and other European countries in the run-up to war with Iraq, a leading German newspaper claims in a story that confirms earlier WorldNetDaily reports.

Germany's popular daily Bild Zeitung reported that the Federal Intelligence Agency has issued a warning that a group of Afghan extremists, traveling on false Pakistani passports, are on their way to Europe.

The newspaper cites intelligence sources as saying that at least 20 of al-Qaida's "terror commandos" had set out for the continent via Bahrain as part of an all-out effort to attack targets in the UK, Germany, Britain, France and the Czech Republic.

The terrorists are reportedly followers of Afghan warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar.

WorldNetDaily reported in December that U.S. military and intelligence sources expect Iran to launch major terrorist attacks against Western targets in anticipation of or in response to a U.S.-led attack on Iraq.

All Iranian-sponsored terrorist groups, including Hezbollah, which is increasingly seen as more potent and more dangerous than Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida network by many U.S. analysts, will be unleashed simultaneously on U.S. and allied targets around the world, according to WorldNetDaily intelligence sources.

Complicating the detection and prevention of such attacks, those sources say, is a breakdown in the National Security Agency's ability to collect information on activities in Iran.

While some officials in Washington have downplayed Shiite Iran's interest in "defending" Sunni Saddam Hussein's Iraq, the motivation for Tehran goes beyond the theological or an interest in preserving the current Baghdad regime, say the intelligence sources. For more than a decade, Iran and Iraq have backed many of the same anti-U.S. terror groups, including al-Qaida, because of their mutual interest in keeping U.S. military forces out of the Persian Gulf. Tehran is also wary U.S. forces might seek to destabilize its government, which is increasingly losing popular support.

As WND reports today, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer has confirmed that terrorist detainees from Afghanistan have implicated Iraq in providing training and support to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida network.

Meanwhile, the Scotsman reports steps to expose the network of terrorist cells that are believed to be spread throughout Europe have brought about dramatic and disturbing results lately.

Spanish anti-terror forces arrested 16 suspected extremists last week, claiming the men had links to al-Qaida and were allegedly preparing to launch chemical attacks.

Yesterday, a Spanish judge jailed the 16 suspects, arrested on Friday in Barcelona and other cities in northeast Spain, pending further investigation and a possible extradition request from French authorities. The 15 Algerians and a Moroccan deny any links to al-Qaida, and none of them has been formally charged. France has 40 days to request their extradition.

Italian police descended on the homes of three Muslims in the northern city of Rovigo, southwest of Venice, after discovering explosives and maps marking the route to a NATO installation and a detailed plan of central London in a separate raid earlier in the week.

Five Moroccans were detained after a kilogram of explosives was found in the building where the men were staying.

The heightened level of activity follows numerous raids in Britain after the discovery of the chemical ricin in a house in north London.

As WorldNetDaily has reported earlier, Saddam Hussein's defense against an imminent attack by the U.S. will be a strong offense – including terrorist operations coordinated with Yasser Arafat and Osama bin Laden. That's what top terrorism expert Yossef Bodansky, author of "The High Cost of Peace," says in his new book. He writes about joint preparations by Hussein, Arafat and al-Qaida for a new wave of anti-U.S. terror. The model for the terrorism campaign is Arafat's Black September Organization of the 1970s.

The initiative for the alliance came from Palestinian Islamists based in Lebanon and Syria, according to Bodansky, the U.S. Congress' top terrorism adviser. The response from al-Qaida came April 2, says Bodansky.

The anti-U.S. coalition also includes Hamas and Islamic Jihad.

A communique issued on April 2 from the Unified Leadership of the Intifadah – an umbrella organization representing Arafat's Fatah groups, Hamas, Islamic Jihad and other members of the Palestine Liberation Organization – called for attacks on U.S. interests.

Unit 999 of Iraqi intelligence has helped train both Arafat's shock troops and bin Laden's Islamists for suicide operations utilizing weapons of mass destruction. According to Bodansky's book, some of these terrorists have already "succeeded in infiltrating several Arab countries. They are provided with instructions, secret codes and advanced weapons."
 
busybody said:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GLOBAL JIHAD
20 terror commandos
unleashed on Europe
Al-Qaida plans attacks before
U.S. invades Iraq

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted: January 28, 2003
1:00 a.m. Eastern



© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com


At least 20 "terror commandos" have been unleashed by Osama bin Laden to attack Britain and other European countries in the run-up to war with Iraq, a leading German newspaper claims in a story that confirms earlier WorldNetDaily reports.

Germany's popular daily Bild Zeitung reported that the Federal Intelligence Agency has issued a warning that a group of Afghan extremists, traveling on false Pakistani passports, are on their way to Europe.

The newspaper cites intelligence sources as saying that at least 20 of al-Qaida's "terror commandos" had set out for the continent via Bahrain as part of an all-out effort to attack targets in the UK, Germany, Britain, France and the Czech Republic.

The terrorists are reportedly followers of Afghan warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar.

WorldNetDaily reported in December that U.S. military and intelligence sources expect Iran to launch major terrorist attacks against Western targets in anticipation of or in response to a U.S.-led attack on Iraq.

All Iranian-sponsored terrorist groups, including Hezbollah, which is increasingly seen as more potent and more dangerous than Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida network by many U.S. analysts, will be unleashed simultaneously on U.S. and allied targets around the world, according to WorldNetDaily intelligence sources.

Complicating the detection and prevention of such attacks, those sources say, is a breakdown in the National Security Agency's ability to collect information on activities in Iran.

While some officials in Washington have downplayed Shiite Iran's interest in "defending" Sunni Saddam Hussein's Iraq, the motivation for Tehran goes beyond the theological or an interest in preserving the current Baghdad regime, say the intelligence sources. For more than a decade, Iran and Iraq have backed many of the same anti-U.S. terror groups, including al-Qaida, because of their mutual interest in keeping U.S. military forces out of the Persian Gulf. Tehran is also wary U.S. forces might seek to destabilize its government, which is increasingly losing popular support.

As WND reports today, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer has confirmed that terrorist detainees from Afghanistan have implicated Iraq in providing training and support to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida network.

Meanwhile, the Scotsman reports steps to expose the network of terrorist cells that are believed to be spread throughout Europe have brought about dramatic and disturbing results lately.

Spanish anti-terror forces arrested 16 suspected extremists last week, claiming the men had links to al-Qaida and were allegedly preparing to launch chemical attacks.

Yesterday, a Spanish judge jailed the 16 suspects, arrested on Friday in Barcelona and other cities in northeast Spain, pending further investigation and a possible extradition request from French authorities. The 15 Algerians and a Moroccan deny any links to al-Qaida, and none of them has been formally charged. France has 40 days to request their extradition.

Italian police descended on the homes of three Muslims in the northern city of Rovigo, southwest of Venice, after discovering explosives and maps marking the route to a NATO installation and a detailed plan of central London in a separate raid earlier in the week.

Five Moroccans were detained after a kilogram of explosives was found in the building where the men were staying.

The heightened level of activity follows numerous raids in Britain after the discovery of the chemical ricin in a house in north London.

As WorldNetDaily has reported earlier, Saddam Hussein's defense against an imminent attack by the U.S. will be a strong offense – including terrorist operations coordinated with Yasser Arafat and Osama bin Laden. That's what top terrorism expert Yossef Bodansky, author of "The High Cost of Peace," says in his new book. He writes about joint preparations by Hussein, Arafat and al-Qaida for a new wave of anti-U.S. terror. The model for the terrorism campaign is Arafat's Black September Organization of the 1970s.

The initiative for the alliance came from Palestinian Islamists based in Lebanon and Syria, according to Bodansky, the U.S. Congress' top terrorism adviser. The response from al-Qaida came April 2, says Bodansky.

The anti-U.S. coalition also includes Hamas and Islamic Jihad.

A communique issued on April 2 from the Unified Leadership of the Intifadah – an umbrella organization representing Arafat's Fatah groups, Hamas, Islamic Jihad and other members of the Palestine Liberation Organization – called for attacks on U.S. interests.

Unit 999 of Iraqi intelligence has helped train both Arafat's shock troops and bin Laden's Islamists for suicide operations utilizing weapons of mass destruction. According to Bodansky's book, some of these terrorists have already "succeeded in infiltrating several Arab countries. They are provided with instructions, secret codes and advanced weapons."
 
Hanns_Schmidt said:
We have already seen the dozens of arrests over the last few months.


The Europeans will appease, appease, appease.

When the first Islamic terrorist attack hits Europe...they will turn to America, Bush, the CIA, FBI..and ask for help.

The Americans as usual will foot the bill for the intelligence work.
 
THE NEW WORLD DISORDER
Iraq to chair Conference on Disarmament
U.N.-related body's rotating presidency falls to Baghdad this spring

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted: January 27, 2003
10:18 p.m. Eastern


By Art Moore
© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com

Later this year, the U.N.-established Conference on Disarmament will seat a new president: Iraq.

The nation under scrutiny by the world body for weapons of mass destruction will have control – for nearly four weeks – of the agenda of a committee established in 1979 as "the single multilateral disarmament negotiating forum of the international community."

The conference was formed as a result of the United Nations General Assembly's first Special Session on Disarmament, held in 1978.

U.N. spokesman Farhan Haq, at first, was unaware that Iraq's turn was coming up. After further inquiry, however, he found that Baghdad will serve as chair, beginning at the end of May, according to a rotating schedule of the 75 member nations done in alphabetical order.

Haq said the role of conference presidency is a matter of "organizing the work and setting the agenda."

Does Iraq's defiance of U.N. disarmament resolutions damage the group's credibility?

"All the members at some point sit briefly as the chair of its work," Haq replied. "And that includes countries that are party to disarmament treaties and those that aren't."

The chair holds the position for half of each session. There are three sessions scheduled for this year. India and Indonesia each have a turn at the presidency during the current session, which runs from Jan. 21 through March 20.

Iran and Iraq are slated for the top spot during the May 12-June 27 session, and Ireland and Israel are scheduled for the final July 20-Sept. 10 meetings.

According to the conference's rules of procedure, the president, in addition to the "normal functions of a presiding officer," shall "in full consultation with the conference and under its authority, represent it in its relations with states, with the General Assembly and other organs of the United Nations and with other international organizations."

The rules say that when the conference is not in session, the functions of the president are carried out by the representative of the member state that presided over the previous meeting. That means Iraq will carry on its role from the end of May until July 20.

'Setbacks' to disarmament

Haq insisted that Iraq's upcoming position with the conference is not an issue because the group has not managed to establish an agenda.

"I think the main public relations concern is, What does it do substantively?" Haq said. "Since it's not exactly a body that has been meeting to deal with issues substantively for several years, the main worry is not about a procedural issue such as who is the chair; it's about what it can do."

U.N. General Secretary Kofi Annan, however, recently gave the conference a pep talk on the 25th anniversary of its establishment.

"The U.N. general secretary has tried to draw attention to the idea that if it does its work in the way it was intended, this committee should be able to deal with all the major issues of disarmament," Haq said.

In a message delivered by Sergei Ordzhonikidze, director-general of the U.N. office in Geneva, Annan said on Jan. 21:


This year marks the 25th anniversary of the first Special Session of the General Assembly devoted to disarmament, and the 25th session of the Conference on Disarmament. This is a significant milestone, but it is not an excuse for complacency. International peace and security continue to face profound challenges in the form of weapons of mass destruction and their delivery vehicles, rising military expenditures, the prospect of an arms race in outer space, and the continual development of new weapons systems. I hope, therefore, that 2003 will mark a turning point in the history of this Conference, a time to reinvigorate the sense of purpose in arms limitation and disarmament efforts that were shaped 25 years ago.
Annan did not mention Iraq in a section referring to "setbacks" to disarmament, but referred to North Korea's withdrawal from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

One week ago, the U.S. and Canada objected to Libya's election to the chairmanship of the U.N. Commission on Human Rights. A call by WND seeking comment on Iraq from the State Department's Bureau of Nonproliferation was not returned.

'Life goes on'

The Conference on Disarmament is distinct from the United Nations Disarmament Commission, or UNDC.

The UNDC's deputy secretary, Timur Alasaniya, explained to WND that the Conference on Disarmament works closely with the U.N. and reports to the General Assembly, but is not strictly a U.N. body.

He described it as "a unique, multilateral negotiating disarmament body within which international, binding legal agreements are negotiated."

The UNDC, on the other hand, is mainly a deliberative body, said Alasaniya, who comes from the Republic of Georgia.

"We don't negotiate issues, but discuss them, mainly in three-year cycles, then come up with specific proposals and guidelines," he said. "Then we suggest to the Conference on Disarmament to pick up a certain issue and start negotiating on it, or refer it to another body, such as a bilateral or trilateral framework."

Alasaniya said Iraq's chairmanship of the conference is a matter of procedure.

"Whatever Iraq is doing, or its state, life goes on," he said. "International legal instruments are still working. We cannot suspend them because of something that is happening in accordance with the rules. Unless they will be altered by the members themselves, they will remain the same. The rules say chairmanship goes by rotation in alphabetical order."




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Art Moore is a news editor with WorldNetDaily.com.
 
busybody said:
THE NEW WORLD DISORDER
Iraq to chair Conference on Disarmament
U.N.-related body's rotating presidency falls to Baghdad this spring

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted: January 27, 2003
10:18 p.m. Eastern


By Art Moore
© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com

Later this year, the U.N.-established Conference on Disarmament will seat a new president: Iraq.

The nation under scrutiny by the world body for weapons of mass destruction will have control – for nearly four weeks – of the agenda of a committee established in 1979 as "the single multilateral disarmament negotiating forum of the international community."

The conference was formed as a result of the United Nations General Assembly's first Special Session on Disarmament, held in 1978.

U.N. spokesman Farhan Haq, at first, was unaware that Iraq's turn was coming up. After further inquiry, however, he found that Baghdad will serve as chair, beginning at the end of May, according to a rotating schedule of the 75 member nations done in alphabetical order.

Haq said the role of conference presidency is a matter of "organizing the work and setting the agenda."

Does Iraq's defiance of U.N. disarmament resolutions damage the group's credibility?

"All the members at some point sit briefly as the chair of its work," Haq replied. "And that includes countries that are party to disarmament treaties and those that aren't."

The chair holds the position for half of each session. There are three sessions scheduled for this year. India and Indonesia each have a turn at the presidency during the current session, which runs from Jan. 21 through March 20.

Iran and Iraq are slated for the top spot during the May 12-June 27 session, and Ireland and Israel are scheduled for the final July 20-Sept. 10 meetings.

According to the conference's rules of procedure, the president, in addition to the "normal functions of a presiding officer," shall "in full consultation with the conference and under its authority, represent it in its relations with states, with the General Assembly and other organs of the United Nations and with other international organizations."

The rules say that when the conference is not in session, the functions of the president are carried out by the representative of the member state that presided over the previous meeting. That means Iraq will carry on its role from the end of May until July 20.

'Setbacks' to disarmament

Haq insisted that Iraq's upcoming position with the conference is not an issue because the group has not managed to establish an agenda.

"I think the main public relations concern is, What does it do substantively?" Haq said. "Since it's not exactly a body that has been meeting to deal with issues substantively for several years, the main worry is not about a procedural issue such as who is the chair; it's about what it can do."

U.N. General Secretary Kofi Annan, however, recently gave the conference a pep talk on the 25th anniversary of its establishment.

"The U.N. general secretary has tried to draw attention to the idea that if it does its work in the way it was intended, this committee should be able to deal with all the major issues of disarmament," Haq said.

In a message delivered by Sergei Ordzhonikidze, director-general of the U.N. office in Geneva, Annan said on Jan. 21:


This year marks the 25th anniversary of the first Special Session of the General Assembly devoted to disarmament, and the 25th session of the Conference on Disarmament. This is a significant milestone, but it is not an excuse for complacency. International peace and security continue to face profound challenges in the form of weapons of mass destruction and their delivery vehicles, rising military expenditures, the prospect of an arms race in outer space, and the continual development of new weapons systems. I hope, therefore, that 2003 will mark a turning point in the history of this Conference, a time to reinvigorate the sense of purpose in arms limitation and disarmament efforts that were shaped 25 years ago.
Annan did not mention Iraq in a section referring to "setbacks" to disarmament, but referred to North Korea's withdrawal from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

One week ago, the U.S. and Canada objected to Libya's election to the chairmanship of the U.N. Commission on Human Rights. A call by WND seeking comment on Iraq from the State Department's Bureau of Nonproliferation was not returned.

'Life goes on'

The Conference on Disarmament is distinct from the United Nations Disarmament Commission, or UNDC.

The UNDC's deputy secretary, Timur Alasaniya, explained to WND that the Conference on Disarmament works closely with the U.N. and reports to the General Assembly, but is not strictly a U.N. body.

He described it as "a unique, multilateral negotiating disarmament body within which international, binding legal agreements are negotiated."

The UNDC, on the other hand, is mainly a deliberative body, said Alasaniya, who comes from the Republic of Georgia.

"We don't negotiate issues, but discuss them, mainly in three-year cycles, then come up with specific proposals and guidelines," he said. "Then we suggest to the Conference on Disarmament to pick up a certain issue and start negotiating on it, or refer it to another body, such as a bilateral or trilateral framework."

Alasaniya said Iraq's chairmanship of the conference is a matter of procedure.

"Whatever Iraq is doing, or its state, life goes on," he said. "International legal instruments are still working. We cannot suspend them because of something that is happening in accordance with the rules. Unless they will be altered by the members themselves, they will remain the same. The rules say chairmanship goes by rotation in alphabetical order."




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Art Moore is a news editor with WorldNetDaily.com.
 
Problem Child said:
I have no choice but to rename this the gibberish thread.
I second the motion.
Motion carried.
Bang.
Let's have lunch.
 
Man you're so 80's BB

Europe has split up,their only legacy as a band is the tune "The final countdown".

The lead singer Joey Tempest ( real name: Joakim Larsson he comes from a suburb of Stockholm called Upplands Väsby) has had a dreadful solo career,though he has released a cd at one time or another.

There's no word on them getting back together.

So as usual your information is wrong,not that that surprises anyone.
 
HERE'S MORE ON THE ALGERIAN TERROR CONNECTION, from the Christian Science Monitor. Excerpt:


Over the past six weeks, European investigators in four countries have arrested more than 50 people with suspected links to Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda network. Police have uncovered explosives, chemicals, fake passports, and documents, including maps of the London Underground.

Algerians are consistently among those detained - a fact that Western intelligence officials say points to the formation of a North African network of Al Qaeda that is preparing to act.

Spanish Prime Minister José Maria Aznar, referring to the arrests Friday of 15 Algerians and a Moroccan in northeastern Spain, said police had broken up a "major terrorist network" linked to the Algerian Salafist group, a splinter of the Armed Islamic Group (GIA), which he said had clear links with Al Qaeda. He said the network also had connections with suspects recently arrested in France and Britain.


Interesting.
 
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