Montag, 11. Juni 2007

G8 False Flag Terror Attack Averted

G8 False Flag Terror Attack Averted?
US "security men" attempted to smuggle C4 plastic explosive past checkpoint
Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet
Sunday, June 10, 2007

It looks highly likely that a false flag terror attack to be blamed on protesters of the G8 summit in Germany was averted after German surveillance stopped a team of "US security men" attempting to smuggle C4 plastic explosives past a checkpoint at Heiligendamm.

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The alarming revelation was buried at the end of a Deutsche Press-Agentur news article about the ongoing battles between police and protesters at the global forum.

Sources told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa that US security men tested German security by trying to smuggle C4 plastic explosive past a checkpoint at Heiligendamm.

German surveillance machinery detected the tiny stash in a suitcase in a car and the Americans in plainclothes then identified themselves. German police declined comment.

Was this simply a "test" as is claimed or more likely, an aborted false flag terror attack that was set to be blamed on protesters to legitimize the powerhouse G8 nations and the global elite while demonizing anti-globalization activists and justifying the use of lethal force against demonstrators?

If so, it wouldn't be without precedent.

During the Genoa G8 summit in 2001, police planted petrol bombs in schools and other residences of protest groups in order to justify brutal raids on the properties during which activists were severely beaten and jailed Police claimed the raids were justified because the protesters were planning violence.

After the trial against the police got underway, the bomb evidence conveniently "disappeared".
http://tinyurl.com/3cd39a

The World's Most Dangerous Terror Organization

THE WORLD'S MOST DANGEROUS TERROR ORGANIZATION
By Jeff Archer
Saturday-Monday, June 9-11, 2007

On March 15, 2005, Agence France News Agency published a press release that was short, yet chilling. Tariq Aziz, the Deputy Prime Minister of Iraq who is being illegally held in prison, appealed to the world for help for him and his imprisoned comrades in a note that literally had to be smuggled out of the building. The plea was hand-written on the pages of a lawyer’s pocket calendar. The lawyer was present as Aziz was being grilled by a United Nations panel investigating corruption in Iraq’s oil-for-food program. It read:
To the world public opinion: we hope that you will help us … We need fair treatment, a fair investigation and finally, a fair trial. Please help us.

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We have been (text not clear) for a long time and we have been cut out of our families, no contacts or phones, no letters, even no parcels sent to us by our families and not one given to us.
Other than Saddam Hussein, Tariq Aziz was the most recognizable face that the western world saw from Iraq between 1990 and 2003. Many times, he appeared in press conferences giving the Iraqi side to the stories fabricated by the U.S. He was eloquent by any standards in a language that was not his first (English). Watching him speak was a treat to those of us who did not buy into the U.S. fabrications about Iraq. When he finished a speech, the listener came away with not only his current message, but information about world history and sociology as well.
For instance, about six months before the illegal March 2003 invasion, a speech by Aziz was carried by the U.S. network C-SPAN, that was an in-depth lecture about how revolution and terrorism were opposing forces. This was during the time when the Bush administration was giving a full-court press to the absurd concept that Saddam Hussein and Osam bin-Laden were in cahoots in attempting to destroy the U.S.
I was mesmerized by Aziz' mastery of the English language as well as the sociological information he brought forth. No U.S. or British professor could have exceeded his eloquence.

Today, Tariq Aziz rots in a prison cell. He does not know where he is and neither does his family. His incarceration, as well as that of the other imprisoned Iraqi government officials, is a blight that the world should be ashamed of.
Part of the U.S. arsenal is to humiliate people beyond the norms of human behavior. Aziz is now in the middle of such a program.
Much of U.S. culture is based on humiliation. In sports, business, education, and many other cultural pursuits, this humiliation is standard fare in the American psyche, so it is easy to see why the administration uses these methods against its "enemies." I once wrote a piece concerning how the U.S. tried to humiliate President Saddam Hussein in depicting his capture; showing him to be a coward on the run. Fortunately, the truth did emerge and it differed considerably from what was shown on TV and published in the print media. Saddam was captured at a friend's house while shooting it out with U.S. military personnel.
Demonizing a leader who disagrees with the U.S. is a successful manner in which to con the U.S. public. Despite all the truth eventually emerging, the citizenry of America still believes the lies every time they are told. And, the lies are big: the bigger, the more the U.S. public believes them.
Saddam Hussein was crazy. Psychologists (in all probability U.S. administration employees posing as doctors) wrote that he was nuts because his left eyebrow was at a different angle from his right one. The public bought it. Saddam was a madman who must be stopped.
Manuel Noriega, the former president of Panama was depicted in the same terms. And, he was kidnapped by the U.S.
In 1993, the U.S. went into Somalia and after a few months changed strides and began to demonize Mohamed Aidid. Instead of being a nationalist who was fighting for his country, Aidid was again portrayed as a madman.
A little-known fact behind the demonizing of Aidid is the identity of the author of the scenario. The infamous April Glaspie, the U.S. ambassador to Iraq in 1990 who met with Saddam Hussein in July of that year and made the statement, "We (U.S.) take no opinion in Arab to Arab matters," was assigned to Somalia in June 1993 to up the ante. She created anti-Aidid propaganda and the so-called humanitarian mission changed into a manhunt for Aidid.
The U.S. is masterful at creating enemies and depicting them as crazed madmen. It is also masterful at kidnapping and assassinating foreign leaders. Saddam Hussein had been the target of many a U.S. missile or bomb since 1991, as well as CIA-inspired plots from inside Iraq. He survived all and only could be put down by a bogus court that was set up by the U.S. Even seconds before his death, he was defiant and refused to "repent" to U.S. demands.
The U.S. invasion of Iraq was declared illegal by the U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Anan. We all know that is was illegal. If so, how can the U.S. be allowed to kill or kidnap members of a legal government and not be held accountable? This is the question that the world should be discussing.
Instead, most countries ignore the plight of the imprisoned leaders. Many are outright afraid of a U.S. reprisal, either in the form of military action, or the taking away of funds used to buy off the countries. Others, such as Arab countries who once benefited from Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, are just willing to keep their mouths shut because their leaders do not want to lose the money the U.S. gives them and by not speaking up about Iraq, they are allowed to keep their medieval societies in place without opposition from U.S. propaganda. So much for the U.S. crusade for "democracy" in the world.
The current state of the imprisoned Iraqi government officials transcends the plight of a dozen or so individuals. Several suffered the same fate as Saddam and ended up at the end of the hangman’s noose. Others are being tried and will also be hanged because of the verdict of a kangaroo court. The world has been sent a message that is even more dire than that of the invasion of Iraq: it has been given notice that the U.S. can and will do anything it wants at any time it wants and there will be no opposition. Never in the history of the world has such power been given to any one nation.
The peace groups who once massed in cities worldwide to protest the impending war against Iraq are now mute on the subject of the incarcerated Iraqi government. Most have bought into the administration's line of "what's done is done." They have taken their signs home and thrown them in the trash.
We should be seeing a worldwide movement that could define the history of this planet. We should be seeing massive numbers of people protesting the plight of Tariq Aziz and his comrades. Baghdad should be the destination of millions of fair-minded people to create an atmosphere of protest that no one can ignore. Instead, we hear silence.
There are a few leaders who have stood up for justice in Iraq. Presidents Fidel Castro of Cuba and Hugo Chavez of Venezuela are two. However, they both are in the cross-hairs of U.S. policy and they know they will be targets, but they have let their integrity rule, instead of fear or greed. How long will they stay alive?
Terrorism is rampant today in the world. Never have their been so many terrorist activities; daily and worldwide. The headquarters for the largest, most efficient, most well-armed and most dangerous terrorist organization in the world are located at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, in Washington, D.C., U.S.A.
http://tinyurl.com/28lx4f

India “bigfoot” sightings prompt official probe

India “bigfoot” sightings prompt official probe
(AFP)
10 June 2007

TURA, India - Claims by terrified villagers that “bigfoot”-type hairy giants are roaming the jungles of India’s remote northeast have prompted authorities to order an investigation, a local official said.

The bizarre sightings have been made in the Garo hills area of Meghalaya state, close to the borders with Bangladesh and Bhutan, with villagers calling the mysterious creatures “Mande Burung” — or Jungle Man.

“A team of wildlife officials and other experts will conduct a study to find out if there is any truth in the locals’ claims about these hairy giants,” said Samphat Kumar, a district magistrate in the West Garo Hills district.

The creatures have apparently been talked about and occasionally spotted for years, but sightings have increased in the past month, prompting authorities to look into the matter.

One local farmer, 40-year-old Wallen Sangma, said he had seen an entire family of the creatures — possibly a lowland relative of the Himalayan Yeti, or a cousin of the North American bigfoot and Sasquatch, or Australia’s Yowie.

“The sight was frightening: two adults and two smaller ones, huge and bulky, furry,” he told an AFP reporter who visited the remote area on Thursday and Friday.

“Their heads looked as if they were wearing caps, and their colour was blackish-brown,” he said, adding the four “monsters” were about 30 to 40 metres (100 to 130 feet) away from him as he looked for firewood in a forested area.

“The four of them quietly vanished into the undergrowth,” he said of the recent sighting.

One Garo Hills group, the Achik Tourism society, has been trying to verify the creature’s existence for the past 10 years, photographing footprints and “nests” reported by locals.

The group claims to have hair samples of the creature taken from the forest and will send them for DNA testing.
http://tinyurl.com/yvmooc

China raises tension in India dispute

China raises tension in India dispute
By Jo Johnson and Richard McGregor
Published: June 10 2007 17:38

India’s strengthening ties with the US are the cause of China’s increasingly aggressive position over the disputed India-China border in the eastern Himalayas, according to security affairs analysts in both countries.

The two fast-growing economies have co-ordinated their approach to climate change through the Group of Eight, and bilateral trade surged 56 per cent in the first four months of the year. But political relations have come under unex­pected stress recently.

Beijing claims 90,000 sq km of land in the eastern Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, which borders Bhutan and Tibet. India says China is occupying 38,000 sq km of its territory in Kashmir illegally ceded by Pakistan.

“[The Chinese claim] came as a big surprise to New Delhi,” says Brahma Chellaney, an Indian security affairs analyst. “The new shrillness in China’s rhetoric on territorial issues is a reflection of its anger at India gradually getting co-opted into the US league.”

Hawkish elements in the Indian media on Sunday accused Manmohan Singh of “appeasing” Beijing after the prime minister struck a conciliatory tone in his meeting with Chinese president Hu Jintao in Berlin. Mr Singh described China as India’s “greatest neighbour”.

China seemed to harden its stance over the territorial dispute. Foreign minister Yang Jiechi told his Indian counterpart Pranab Mukherjee in Hamburg last week that the “mere presence” of settled populations did not affect Chinese claims.

Analysts say China’s blunt assertion of claims to an area more than twice the size of Taiwan is inconsistent with “political parameters” for a potential settlement agreed in 2005 and could contaminate other areas of the relationship.

“This is the elephant in the room,” says Uday Bhaskar, defence analyst. “The Indians had taken the political parameters as Chinese acceptance of the status quo. But China is now sending out very different signals. We’ll have to see how far they push it.”

The US is trying hard to improve bilateral relations with India. At the centre of its effort is a nuclear energy co-operation agreement that promises to end 30 years of sanctions against a country now seen as a potential counterbalance to China.

Analysts anticipate a gradual Americanisation of the Indian military, which is expected to import hardware and software worth $30bn in the next five years, according to the Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India.

The country’s navy chief last month said there was “no evil intent” in trilateral naval exercises with Japan and the US along the Pacific coastline of East Asia. India has also held exercises with China, Russia and south-east Asian states.

India last month cancelled a confidence-building visit to China by 107 elite civil servants after China denied a visa to an official from Arunachal Pradesh on the grounds that he was “Chinese” and did not need one.

Analysts said the denial of the visa was intended to reinforce China’s claim to the entire state, not just disputed land around Tawang, which it has long asserted to be part of Tibet, itself annexed in the 1950s.

Ma Jiali, a researcher at the China Institute of Contemporary International Relations in Beijing, said: “India should have been fully aware of China’s stance on the border issue, which has been specified by the Chinese government many times.”

Last November, days before Mr Hu’s maiden visit to India, Beijing’s envoy to India said the “entire state was a part of China”.

The Indian ministry of external affairs has repeatedly stated that Arunachal Pradesh is an integral part of India. “ This position has been consistently and categorically conveyed to China,” officials said.

During a trip to India by Wen Jiabao, China’s premier, in 2005, India and China agreed broad principles to settle the border issue. Although negotiators will meet again in July, few expect any breakthrough ahead of Mr Singh’s visit to Beijing this year.

The border dispute has not prevented a blossoming of trade and economic ties. The countries aim for two-way trade worth $40bn by 2010. Trade surged to $17.6bn in 2005-06, from $260m in 1990.

A senior Chinese foreign ministry official, speaking before the G8 summit, said the two countries had maintained “close consultations” about which policies developing countries should adopt on global warming.

“There are a lot of similarities between the two countries,” the official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said. “We agree that developing countries should give top priority to poverty reduction and national development.”

China released its first “action plan” on global warming this week. It promised to put the issue at the heart of its economic and energy policies, but asserted that developed countries had an “unshirkable duty” to lead in cutting emissions.

China’s existing and projected emissions far outstrip India’s, and that makes New Delhi a valuable ally for Beijing in warding off pressure from developed countries and Europe in particular.
http://tinyurl.com/25ajb3

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