Al-Qaeda leader Bin Laden 'dead'. Again. - Printable Version +- Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora) +-- Forum: Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Political Assassinations (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-4.html) +--- Thread: Al-Qaeda leader Bin Laden 'dead'. Again. (/thread-6328.html) |
Al-Qaeda leader Bin Laden 'dead'. Again. - Jan Klimkowski - 17-05-2011 Charles Drago Wrote:I'm not sure. Al-Qaeda leader Bin Laden 'dead'. Again. - Charles Drago - 17-05-2011 Ed Jewett Wrote:Wit aside, the exchange above is why I hang around here. Y'all ought to have your very own talk show, podcast, or something. Not sure that would be a good idea ... Al-Qaeda leader Bin Laden 'dead'. Again. - Helen Reyes - 18-05-2011 Um, I surely don't know either, but it was somewhat spectacular how Leon Panetta came out and ruined the White House Situation Room live action snuff film photo within 24 hours, or however long it was. CIA starting its own wikileaks (officially rather than secretly) with "terabytes" of Osama files is also a little strange, AS IF .... anyone would believe any of it, after director Leon discredited the whole fable publicly... It might be an either/or: either designed to totally disgrace and catch Obama in a lie while offering him the carrot of no opposition at the Democratic primaries; or, the corpse of Osama suddenly pops up out of the Arabian Sea with a note stuffed in his mouth, and the professional formers of public opinion quit releasing 4chan photoshops and bring out the really good fake photos and helmet cam shots to discredit "the deniers" who bit at the initial bait of obvious fakeness. However, it does on the surface look like a botched operation promoted to something grand and newsworthy on the fly, and it might just be that, an ad hoc attempt to wring victory from defeat. Nothing looked so bad on president Carter's resume as Oliver North's bombed and wrecked helicopter in Iran sent to rescue hostages being held at the behest of forces within the US intelligence establishment. I don't know. Al-Qaeda leader Bin Laden 'dead'. Again. - Jan Klimkowski - 18-05-2011 Helen Reyes Wrote:Um, I surely don't know either, but it was somewhat spectacular how Leon Panetta came out and ruined the White House Situation Room live action snuff film photo within 24 hours, or however long it was. Me too. But the insightful unpicking of the onion layers of this Tall Tale is a worthwhile endeavour. And it may be that the core event is close to your (or my, or other) working hypotheses in this thread. Even if another purpose is to create a sense of the Impossibility of Knowing For Sure.... Al-Qaeda leader Bin Laden 'dead'. Again. - Carsten Wiethoff - 19-05-2011 From http://www.thenews.com.pk/TodaysPrintDetail.aspx?ID=46960&Cat=1&dt=5/14/2011 Quote: Did a Pakistani official sell info to CIA to settle in the West? Al-Qaeda leader Bin Laden 'dead'. Again. - Magda Hassan - 19-05-2011 Gossip and unauthorized leaks from U.S. officials, politicians and retired military officers about the highly classified raid to kill Osama bin Laden have jeopardized the ability of special forces to carry out similar operations in the future, said Defense Secretary Robert Gates. "Too many people in too many places are talking too much about this operation," Gates said, adding that the level of disclosures and blabbing violates an agreement reached in the White House Situation Room on May 8 to keep details of the raid private. "That lasted about 15 hours," Gates said sourly. The cascade of details surfacing about the highly classified event makes similar operations in the future "that much more difficult and riskier," Gates told reporters at a Pentagon briefing Wednesday. "It is time to stop talking," agreed Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. In a pointed directive to officials, politicians and the retired military officers often featured on cable news programs, he added, "Get off the net." Members of the Navy SEAL team that tore into bin Laden's compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan and killed the 9/11 mastermind had expressed concern to Gates about the safety of their families after the team had been identified publicly and officials from the White House, the Pentagon and Congress widely discussed the operation. In a meeting with hundreds of Marines at Camp Lejeune last week, Gates acknowledged such concerns. He said the Defense Department had mounted "a consistent and effective effort" to protect the identities of those who participated in the raid. "We are very concerned about the security of our families -- of your families and our troops, and also these elite units that are engaged in things like that," Gates told the Marines. "And without getting into any details, I would tell you that when I met with the team last Thursday, they expressed a concern about that, and particularly with respect to their families," he added. "And so we're -- I -- as you say, I can't get into the details in this forum, but we are looking at what measures can be taken to pump up the security." White House National Security Adviser Tom Donilon initially disclosed sketchy details of the raid they day after it happened. But more information poured forth from Capitol Hill after members of Congress were briefed on the operation and as retired SEALs and others began explaining tactical details. Much of the information published was credited to unnamed officials. Officials and politicians have discussed the "stealth" helicopter that the SEALs were forced to leave behind after it malfunctioned over bin Laden's compound and the use of "stealth" drones that watched the compound for weeks before the raid, unseen by Pakistani air defense facilities. Leakers have also disclosed details of how the SEALs had planned to storm the compound, the back-up plan once the helicopter malfunctioned, and other tactical pieces of information. "We have gotten to a point where we are close to jeopardizing the precision capability that we have, and we can't afford to do that," Mullen told reporters. "This fight isn't over." http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/05/18/robert-gates-mike-mullen-bin-laden-raid-leakers_n_863712.html Al-Qaeda leader Bin Laden 'dead'. Again. - Jan Klimkowski - 19-05-2011 Carsten Wiethoff Wrote:From http://www.thenews.com.pk/TodaysPrintDetail.aspx?ID=46960&Cat=1&dt=5/14/2011 Carsten - thanks for posting. This is an important article, and needs to be considered as we analyze what really happened..... My own initial contribution to that analysis is that I categorize such articles as Political Porn, for Inside the Beltway reporters. They enable political correspondents (lobby correspondents in UK terms) to concoct narratives about infighting amongst our politicians. Such "political infighting" narratives strike me as fundamentally diversionary. During the 2nd Gulf War there were plenty of stories about infighting between Dick Cheney and Colin Powell, with Dubya Bush cast as the Prez being forced to choose. Any deep political analysis of Powell's career reveals his role as the officer chosen to cover up My Lai, who was later posted to the Golden Triangle with his "white son" and muscle, Richard Armitage. I regard all that Cheney versus Powell stuff as political theatre, and largely untrue. A few squabbles around tactics or timing perhaps. But no real disagreement about geopolitical goals. So, I regard the Wajid Ali Syed article with tales of infighting between those around Obama, and describing Obama as weak and procrastinating, as largely political fable to give the West Wing correspondents some subject matter. I find the following especially incredible: Quote:By January of 2011 there was a high degree of certainty that bin Laden was in the house. In early February, Panetta suggested that the US should move on bin Laden. But Gates and Petraeus were determined to avoid the "boots on the ground" strategy at all costs. CIA chief Panetta was in favour of an invasion. But President Obama balked on the advice of Valerie Jarrett, a close aide. What?!?!? DCIA wanted to INVADE Pakistan to "get Bin Laden"? That strikes me as fundamentally implausible. Al-Qaeda leader Bin Laden 'dead'. Again. - Carsten Wiethoff - 19-05-2011 Jan Klimkowski Wrote:What?!?!? Me too. I think this could be a mistranslation, the conflict being whether to send soldiers to get Bin Laden or to simply bomb the building. Al-Qaeda leader Bin Laden 'dead'. Again. - Helen Reyes - 19-05-2011 Gordon Duff tells Iran's Press TV Osama clone run by Raymond Davis was hit in raid: http://www.presstv.ir/detail/180564.html "US killed Bin Laden clone in Pakistan" ISI and CIA concocted alternative to virulently independent Kashmir separatist organization owned Abbottabad "mansion" and there was marijuana growing in the vegetable garden according to reporters who visited after the raid: http://www.thenewamerican.com/world-mainmenu-26/asia-mainmenu-33/7519-does-a-cia-qassetq-own-the-bin-laden-compound "Does a CIA 'Asset' Own the bin Laden Compound?" Al-Qaeda leader Bin Laden 'dead'. Again. - Peter Lemkin - 19-05-2011 Helen Reyes Wrote:Gordon Duff tells Iran's Press TV Osama clone run by Raymond Davis was hit in raid: While an interesting prospect or 'twist', who wrote that article? I think we are now dealing with slab upon slab of disinfo mean to bury forever the truth of what happened and who was there [living there and invading there]. This worry [wring hands icon] about 'people talking too much about what happened' are crocodile tears and pure theater. It would take a NON-USA independent investigation to ever untangle this. Short of that [and we can be sure of short of that!], the clarity will become more like the fog of war...the war against all but the ultra-rich, ultra-oligarchs of his World. Sadly. |