Let's see, anyone here recall seeing Da Li'l Prick going to Congress,
demanding a declaration of war before we invaded a sovereign country? How
about Congressional approval for funding the operation? I don't recall Da
Li'l Prick addressing either a joint session of Congress or the American
people on the need for the invasion; does anyone here?
If not, then this must an illegal war, right! Da Li'l Prick must be tried as
a war criminal, right!! He must be perp-walked outta Da Honky Crib in Da
Hood (formerly The White House), transported to the ICC at The Hague, and
put in the dock, right!!!
Seems all you peacenik, maggot-treat bro-zos and ho-zos still in thrall of
Da Li'l Prick have gotten caught bending over and grabbing the ankles for
him! Enjoying being the ride, are ya?
Merry Christmas.
No Surrender!
Dionysus
>Well, I just learned that the US military is in Iraq ...killing Iraqis.
>
>Let's see, anyone here recall seeing Bush going to Congress,
>demanding a declaration of war before we invaded a sovereign country? How
>about Congressional approval for funding the operation? I don't recall Bush addressing either a joint session of Congress or the American
>people on the need for the invasion; does anyone here?
>
>If not, then this must an illegal war, right!Bush must be tried as
>a war criminal, right!! He must be perp-walked outta his hony ranch, transported to the ICC at The Hague, and
>put in the dock, right!!!
>
>Seems all you neo-con, imperialist, permanent republican majority, new american century assholes still in thrall of
>Bush have gotten caught bending over and grabbing the ankles for
Merry Christmas.
No Surrender
Dionysus
Don't fret; we know you're slow. We'll wait.
Merry Christmas.
No Surrender!
Dionysus
>
> --
> "The better educated a person is, the less likely it is that person will
> be
> a conservative."
>
> "Reagan proved deficits don't matter"
> Dick Cheney
>
> "Although it is not true that all conservatives are stupid people, it
> is true that most stupid people are conservative." - John Stuart Mill
> "Reagan proved deficits don't matter"
> Dick Cheney
Meanwhile Barry Obama is mass bombing children in Yemen!!!
Obama lied!!! Children died!!!
I'd call it: BUSH'S INVASION OF IRAQ.
Merry Christmas.
No Surrender!
Dionysus
>
>
>>
Dionysus wrote:
> Well, I just learned that the US military is in Yemen...killing Yemenis.
*********
None of what follows my statements here matters.
US OUT OF YEMEN, NOW!
BRING THE BOYS HOME, NOW!
NO BLOOD FOR YEMENI OIL, BRING 'EM HOME, NOW!
WE DEMAND DA LI'L PRICK AND SLO-JOE HAIRPLUGS BE IMPEACHED, NOW!
Oh, and Merry Christmas.
No Surrender!
Dionysus
>
Yemen accuses al-Qaida of kidnapping German family
By AHMAD AL-HAJ
Associated Press
2009-12-24 11:30 PM
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Yemen on Thursday accused al-Qaida for the first time of kidnapping a
German family that disappeared months ago in the tumultuous Arabian
peninsula nation.
The German man and his wife and their three young children went
missing in June along with a British man during an outing in the
northern region of Saada. Two German women and a Korean woman who
disappeared with them were found dead soon after. The group worked
with a Dutch charity providing medical services.
Yemen's deputy defense minister, Rashad al-Alaimy, told parliament on
Thursday that al-Qaida had kidnapped the group, with the help of
Shiite rebels known as Hawthis. The Shiite rebels have denied any
role. The government, which has been engaged in a fierce war with the
rebels in the Saada region, has often tried to link them to Sunni
Muslim al-Qaida but has not provided evidence.
"Al-Qaida with the help of Hawthi rebels in Saada is behind the
kidnapping of the German doctors and the British and the deaths of the
two Germans and the Korean, who came to our country to provide
humanitarian assistance," al-Alaimy said.
A Yemeni security official said the German Embassy in San'a had
received a video showing the couple's three children alive. The
official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of
the situation.
Germany's Bilt daily reported on Wednesday that a video of the
children had surfaced and was in the government's hands. The German
Foreign Ministry refused to comment at the time, and officials in
Germany and at the San'a embassy were not available for comment on
Thursday because of the Christmas holiday.
Germany has said little about efforts to win the Germans' release. The
Foreign Ministry said earlier this month that Juergen Chrobog, a
former deputy foreign minister, had traveled to Yemen and met
government officials there as part of efforts to resolve the case.
Chrobog, along with his family, was kidnapped in Yemen by tribesmen at
the end of 2005. They were released unharmed after being held for
three days.
Kidnappings are frequent in Yemen, usually by tribesmen unconnected to
al-Qaida who are trying to wrest concessions by the government.
But al-Qaida has steadily been increasing its presence in Yemen over
the past two years. On Thursday, Yemeni warplanes carried out strikes
on suspected al-Qaida hideouts, killing 30 militants, according to
Yemeni officials _ in a stepped-up campaign against the terror group.
----------------------
Top Al-Qaida operatives depart Iraq, Afghanistan for Somalia and Yemen
Top Al-Qaida operatives depart Iraq, Afghanistan for Somalia and Yemen
thumbnail
MOGADISHU (Somalilandpress) � The United States government which
continues to provide support to the Transitional Federal Government of
Somalia [TFG] has said senior Al-Qaida members have arrived in Somalia
after embarking on a long journey from the Afghan mountains of Tora
Bora.
A report from the US State Department said the Al-Qaida fugitives are
planning to re-establish itself in Somalia using insurgent groups
fighting to topple the Somali government and opposed to the presence
of foreign troops in the country as a proxy.
The report said their forces in Iraq and Afghanistan have learnt that
top Al-Qaida officials have made their way to Yemen and Somalia where
they are planning to melt into the community and carry out their
global agenda.
The report was published in US government website and has been
confirmed by Bryan G Whitman, the Deputy Assistant Secretary of
Defense for Public Affairs. Mr Brian said it is now inevitable that
the United States would be involved and may form and deploy a special
task force in Somalia.
He reassured that the US government will continue to support the
transitional government of Somalia and other groups opposed to Al-
Shabab and other extremists.
It is believed that Ahlu Sunna Wal Jama�a is one of the other group in
Somalia that receives support from the United States of America and
Ethiopia. Ahlu Sunna, a predominantly Sufi group is opposed to
violence in the name of religion and recognises the transitional
government.
Early this year, the United State has pledged 48 tonnes of arms to the
weak TFG led by President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmad, however recent
reports suggested much of the arms fell into the hands of the
insurgents opposed to its policies. The US government has expressed
deep concerns about how they will continue to support Somalia�s
transitional government.
Nonetheless, the US government is now arranging new additional funds
and arms for the transitional government to combat Al-Shabab and their
foreign operatives, whom control much of Somalia�s south.
Somalia has not had effective government since 1991 and is ideal for
militant groups looking for hideouts and training camps.
----------------
Yemen is growing front in Al Qaida battle
By LOLITA C. BALDOR , 12.23.09, 03:55 PM EST
WASHINGTON -- The secretive U.S. air strike against suspected al-Qaida
in Yemen last week is the latest in what has been a fast-growing
campaign to better equip and fund Yemeni forces so they can eliminate
the expanding al-Qaida safe havens there.
The Pentagon has poured nearly $70 million in military aid to Yemen
this year, a massive financial infusion compared to nothing in 2008.
Article Controls
Much like the effort with Pakistan's Frontier Corps, the military has
boosted its counterterrorism training for Yemeni forces, and is
providing more intelligence, which probably includes surveillance by
unmanned drones, according to U.s. officials and analysts.
---------------
At least 30 al-Qaida suspects killed in Yemen
www.chinaview.cn 2009-12-24 14:09:16
SANAA, Dec. 24 (Xinhua) -- At least 30 suspected al-Qaida terrorists
were killed in an air raid launched by the Yemeni army early Thursday,
said a security official.
The air strikes took place in Yemen's eastern province of Shabwa, as a
group of terror suspects were gathered for a meeting, said the
official on condition of anonymity.
---------------
http://english.aljazeera.net
Yemen al-Qaeda: War is against US
Men claiming to be leaders of al-Qaeda have made a rare public
appearance in Yemen, telling an anti-government rally the fight is
against the US, not the country's army.
The statement was made at an al-Qaeda training camp in southern Yemen
- the same one that was attacked by the Americans leaving more than 30
dead.
Al Jazeera's Tarek Bazley has this exclusive report.
---------
Cleric linked to Fort Hood attack grew more radicalized in Yemen
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Who's Blogging
� Links to this article
By Sudarsan Raghavan
Thursday, December 10, 2009
SANAA, YEMEN -- The Yemeni American cleric at the center of
investigations into last month's massacre of 13 people at Fort Hood,
Tex., became more openly radical in Yemen, following a path taken by
other extremists in this failing Middle East nation with a growing al-
Qaeda presence, according to relatives, friends and associates in
Yemen.
This Story
*
Cleric linked to Fort Hood attack grew more radicalized in Yemen
*
Full Coverage: Shootings at Ft. Hood
In interviews, they said Anwar al-Aulaqi, 38, blamed the United States
for 18 months he spent in a Yemeni jail, a little-known chapter in the
cleric's life that some described as a key path in his radicalization.
Aulaqi, who was born in the United States and spent time in Yemen as a
child, left for Britain in early 2002 after he drew scrutiny from U.S.
authorities. The United States alleges that Aulaqi was a spiritual
adviser to three of the Sept. 11, 2001, hijackers while he was a
prayer leader at the Dar al-Hijrah mosque in Falls Church and at a
mosque in San Diego.
An examination of some of Aulaqi's sermons and lectures, as well as
interviews conducted here, shows that he increasingly began to
publicly endorse violence as a religious duty after he returned to
Yemen in early 2004, completing his transformation from an imam who
condemned the Sept. 11 attacks to an Internet preacher who views
Americans as legitimate targets.
Maj. Nidal M. Hasan, who has been charged in the Fort Hood shootings,
first contacted Aulaqi by e-mail last December. U.S. authorities
intercepted some of the e-mails, but no threat was perceived. The FBI
has declined to comment on Aulaqi, citing an ongoing investigation.
After the Fort Hood attack, Aulaqi issued a statement calling Hasan a
"hero." In an interview later with a Yemeni journalist, Aulaqi denied
that he had ordered or incited Hasan to carry out the attack but said
Hasan considered him a confidant.
Aulaqi's path to radicalization, at first, appeared unlikely. The
Aulaqis' descendants were sultans who once ruled what is now Yemen's
southern province of Shabwa, home to the ancestral village where
Aulaqi now lives with his wife and five children. Aulaqi's father,
Nasser al-Aulaqi, is a former president of Sanaa University and
agriculture minister.
While in Yemen during his childhood, Aulaqi studied in a secular high
school in the capital, Sanaa, along with children from other elite
families, before returning to Colorado in 1991 to attend college, said
a close relative in an hour-long interview. The relative spoke on the
condition of anonymity to avoid harming his family's efforts to
persuade Aulaqi to become moderate.
He said Aulaqi was an avid swimmer who enjoyed deep-sea fishing. His
ambition was to become a college professor, focusing on finding ways
to address water shortages in Yemen, the relative said. Like many
Arabs, the relative said, Aulaqi was angered by the U.S. assault on
Iraq in the first Persian Gulf War but didn't show signs of
radicalization afterward.
"He was very moderate. He was always against al-Qaeda ideology," said
the relative, adding that Aulaqi's contact with the hijackers was a
"coincidence."
After Sept. 11, Aulaqi grew frustrated and felt targeted by U.S.
authorities, the relative said.
"Sept. 11 changed a lot of Muslims," the relative said. "And the
invasion in Iraq in 2003 made him even stronger in his beliefs."
U.S. authorities have alleged that Aulaqi had become radicalized while
still in the United States, before the Sept. 11 attacks, but they
never found evidence to detain him.
This Story
*
Cleric linked to Fort Hood attack grew more radicalized in Yemen
*
Full Coverage: Shootings at Ft. Hood
Beginning in 2002, when he left the United States for Britain, Aulaqi
lauded Palestinian suicide bombers on a Web site and in lectures
attended by ultraconservative Muslims. He spoke at fundraising events
hosted by Cage Prisoners, a rights group in Britain, but did not
incite violence or express support for al-Qaeda, said Moazzam Begg, a
former Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, detainee who heads the group. "He
wouldn't have been so popular if his message was not moderate and
across the board," Begg said in a phone interview from London.
In early 2004, Aulaqi returned to Yemen. At a lecture at Sanaa
University, he spoke eloquently about Islam's role in the world. He
railed against U.S. policies in Iraq. He denounced Israel, according
to those present at the lecture. But he stopped short of calling for
violent jihad.
"He was not inciting us to use arms," recalled Adil al-Howlari, who
now works as a journalist for the United Nations. "He was talking
about how to use English to spread Islamic values."
Aulaqi eventually took classes and lectured at Iman University in
Sanaa. The university is led by Sheik Abdul Majeed al-Zindani, an
influential religious figure whom U.S. officials have described as
Osama bin Laden's spiritual leader and placed on a list of global
terrorists.
The university has a reputation as an incubator of radicalism. John
Walker Lindh, an American who fought with the Taliban, is a former
student. Other students allegedly took part in numerous attacks.
Aulaqi's relative said the cleric had given four lectures at the
university about Islam's role in medieval Spain.
By 2006, Aulaqi's influence had widened into the world of terrorism
through his Web site and Facebook page, even though most Yemenis had
never heard of him. Starting that year, investigators have found
Aulaqi's sermons downloaded on the computers of suspects in nearly a
dozen terrorism cases in Britain and Canada.
In mid-2006, Yemeni authorities arrested him. Aulaqi was accused of
inciting attacks against a man over a tribal matter involving a woman.
Aulaqi denied the allegations in an interview with Begg last year and
accused the U.S. government of pressuring Yemen to keep him locked up.
In that interview, Aulaqi said he spent the first nine months in
solitary confinement in an underground cell. Around September 2007,
FBI agents interrogated him about the Sept. 11 attacks and other
issues, Aulaqi told Begg. Although he wasn't physically abused, Aulaqi
said, a U.S. Embassy legal attache swore at him. He was never charged
and was released in December 2007.
Yemeni officials have declined to comment.
After his release, Aulaqi's stance on using violence for jihad grew
more forceful. Last December, he penned a letter calling for fighters
and financing for al-Shabab, the Somali Islamist movement with ties to
al-Qaeda. And this January, he published an essay titled "44 Ways to
Support Jihad." It called, among other things, for Muslims to stay fit
and train in weapons to fight on the battlefield.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/12/09/AR2009120904422_2.html
<--- more on that 'thing'
--------------
Al Qaeda's Yemen Connection May Be Dead
Exclusive: Al Qaeda Leader Believed Killed by Drone Said to Be
Strategist for Moving Militants From Pakistan to Yemen
(CBS) The man responsible for executing part of al Qaeda's strategy
to move the terrorist groups' Arab militant fighters out of the
Afghanistan-Pakistan region to Yemen may be dead, senior Pakistani
security officials and Arab diplomats in Pakistan have told CBS News.
Reports of the likely death of Saleh al-Somali, a Somali-born key al
Qaeda operational planner, in a U.S. drone strike in northwestern
Pakistan Tuesday prompted at least one knowledgeable Arab diplomat in
the country to describe him as "a lynchpin in al Qaeda's well-
considered new strategy."
According to the diplomat who spoke to CBS NEWS on condition of
anonymity, al-Somali's responsibilities included plotting al Qaeda's
attacks and plans beyond the Afghanistan-Pakistan region.
"Since the summer of 2008, I believe he was involved with planning to
shift some of al Qaeda's Arab fighters to Yemen" - the conservative
state in the Arabian peninsula alongside Saudi Arabia's southern
border, where al Qaeda has pushed an increasingly violent insurgency
in the past year.
The diplomat said that between one-quarter to one-third of al Qaeda's
units in the Afghanistan-Pakistan region are now led by non-Arabs, in
a transition from "100 percent of these units which were once led by
Arabs."
He said militants from the central Asian former Soviet republic of
Uzbekistan and Afghanistan were now either "holding permanent or
temporary charge of these units," as some of al Qaeda's most hardened
fighters head out of the region for Yemen, which he described as
"their new frontier."
A Pakistani security official with knowledge of al Qaeda's operations,
who spoke to CBS News on condition of anonymity, said, "Saleh al-
Somali's killing will be a major setback for an outfit which does not
necessarily document all of its operational details. In this shady
world, individuals keep part of the information to themselves, which
means that if they vanish, there is a gap."
A second Arab diplomat who also spoke to CBS News on condition of
anonymity said that the exit of Arab militants from the Afghanistan-
Pakistan area "will now weaken al Qaeda's presence or stand here. They
are simply trying to move resources which they consider are of the
right kind to a new conflict" in Yemen.
The diplomat also revealed some intelligence reports which suggested
that al-Somali had traveled to Yemen in the past year to get a
firsthand look at the situation there.
"There was always a bit of a time lag in this information, so it was
impossible to target him," said the second Arab diplomat. "But
eventually, his killing has proved that al Qaeda is becoming
increasingly vulnerable."
CBS News' Farhan Bokhari reported from Islamabad.
------------
progress
------------
Proposed strategy to improve Yemen ports at $2.5 bln
[24/December/2009]
SANA'A, Dec. 24 (Saba)- The international Cornell Group has offered to
the government a strategy for the years 2010-2014 to carry out
investments aimed at improving the Yemeni ports at a total
estimated more than $2.5 billion, 26sep.net has reported.
A source at the Ministry of Planning and International Cooperation has
said that the proposed strategy includes improving ports in Aden,
Hudeidah and Hadramout governorates in partnership with the private
sector through four forms of privatization.
The Group emphasized that the privatization process takes place in two
stages, setting laws and preparing investment bylaws, and implementing
the signed agreements.
---------------
BRING THE BOYS HOME NOW!
US OUT OF YEMEN, NOW!
NO BLOOD FOR YEMENI OIL, BRING 'EM HOME, NOW!
WE DEMAND DA LI'L PRICK AND SLO-JOE HAIRPLUGS BE IMPEACHED, NOW!
Oh, and Merry Christmas.
No Surrender!
Dionysus
>
> --
> Damn the living - It's a lovely life. I'm whoever you want me to
> be.
> Silver silverware - Where is the love? At least I can stay in
> character.
> Oval swimming pool - Where is the love? Annoying Usenet one post at a
> time.
> Damn the living - It's a lovely life. We support you,
> Sarah.
US OUT OF YEMEN, NOW!
BRING THE BOYS HOME, NOW!
NO BLOOD FOR YEMENI OIL, BRING 'EM HOME, NOW!
WE DEMAND DA LI'L PRICK AND SLO-JOE HAIRPLUGS BE IMPEACHED, NOW!
Oh, and Merry Christmas.
No Surrender!
Dionysus
>
> --
>
> "My China Blue Heaven" <chine...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
> news:chine.bleu-CBB09...@news.eternal-september.org...
>> In article <5tWdnaB5jdDBtqnW...@giganews.com>,
>> "Dionysus" <no.sur...@never.net> wrote:
>>
>>> > Please cite where the US has "invaded" Yemen.
>>> ***********
>>> Well, Fish Stink Breath, what do you call it when we cross the
>>> border of a
>>> soverign nation, and kill it's citizens, a mutual assistance pact?
>>
>> Actually, yes. Yemen invited us in. They've also invited at times
>> Saudi Arabia
>> to kill Yeminis.
> ********
> So, did Da Li'l Prick go to Congress for funding this expeditionary
> force? If not, then it's an illegal action by Da Li'l Prick. He must
> be answerable to Congress; he is not a dictator...yet!
>
> US OUT OF YEMEN, NOW!
> BRING THE BOYS HOME, NOW!
> NO BLOOD FOR YEMENI OIL, BRING 'EM HOME, NOW!
Where were you when Bush put them in there, ya fuckin' moron
A NATION CHALLENGED: THE MILITARY; U.S. Broadens Terror Fight, Readying
Troops for Yemen
By MICHAEL R. GORDON and JAMES DAO
Published: March 2, 2002
WASHINGTON, March 1� President Bush has approved plans to send as many as
100 troops to Yemen to help train that nation's military to fight
terrorists, senior administration officials said today.
While American officials said the details were still being worked out,
they said the troops could leave as early as next week. They would
consist predominantly of Special Forces, but could also include
intelligence experts and other specialists. The main target would be Al
Qaeda fighters who are hiding in Yemen.
Yemen is just the latest partner in an increasingly broad campaign that
has expanded well beyond Afghanistan to the Persian Gulf, the Philippines
and potentially to Georgia and Indonesia as well.
> WE DEMAND DA LI'L PRICK AND SLO-JOE HAIRPLUGS BE IMPEACHED, NOW!
Ya got the wrong president, jerk. What is it with you repugs. Jump to
conclusions and never do your homework. Go enjoy your holiday turkey and
watch the Cartoon Network.
>
> Oh, and Happy Holiday
>
> No Surrender!
>
> Dionysus
>
>>
>> --
>> Damn the living - It's a lovely life. I'm whoever you want
>> me to be.
>> Silver silverware - Where is the love? At least I can stay in
>> character.
>> Oval swimming pool - Where is the love? Annoying Usenet one post
>> at a time.
>> Damn the living - It's a lovely life. We support
>> you, Sarah.
>
>
--
The gift of a joke, and the subsequent spirited conversation via the
Internet...snickers and chuckles from all of us who got the joke; an
explanation to those who didn't.
Not unlike Orson Wells' brilliant presentation of War of The Worlds where he
explained at the end, "It's Halloween." For me, I end my presentation with
"Merry Christmas."
Dionysus
Oh, and Merry Christmas, one last time in 2009.
No Surrender!
Dionysus
>
> "Kickin' Ass and Takin' Names" <PopUl...@hotmail.com> wrote in
> message news:tr48j55fllh202i92...@4ax.com...
>> On Thu, 24 Dec 2009 18:45:27 -0500, "Dionysus"
>> <no.sur...@never.net> wrote:
>>
>>> Well, I just learned that the US military is in Iraq ...killing Iraqis.
> ***********
> As usual, Lickin' Ass, you either miss the point or ignore it. Da
> Li'l Prick is doin' the same thing, Lickin' Ass, so how's that hope and
> change workin' out for ya?
>
> Merry Christmas.
>
> No Surrender
>
> Dionysus
>
>>> Let's see, anyone here recall seeing Bush going to Congress,
>>> demanding a declaration of war before
Yep and I also remember the democrats almost en masse supportin it
because they needed
time to whine about it before they could make it look bad! Could they
have been lying when
they said they supported our troops, you bet!
BTW a declaration of war is not required and congress did give approval
for actions taken!
>>> we invaded a sovereign country? How
>>> about Congressional approval for funding the operation?
Yep, they did make appropriations fer it and have in every budget since
>>> I don't recall Bush addressing either a joint session of Congress or
>>> the American
>>> people on the need for the invasion; does anyone here?
I remember some national addresses yes I do!
I also remember the troops cheering Bush, seems they didn't feel as
enthused when BO and
Biden showed up but, they were polite, more to their credit than BO's
worthiness!
>>>
>>> If not, then this must an illegal war, right!Bush must be tried as
>>> a war criminal, right!! He must be perp-walked outta his hony ranch,
>>> transported to the ICC at The Hague, and
>>> put in the dock, right!!!
Leftwing fantasy attack there likckin ass!
It was not an illegal war (Though we suspect your an illegal alien
entitlement baby)
>>>
>>> Seems all you neo-con, imperialist, permanent republican majority, new
>>> american century assholes still in thrall of
>>> Bush have gotten caught bending over and grabbing the ankles for
>>> him! Enjoying being the ride, are ya?
Sorry lickin ass, if Bush was so wrong why then is your guy BO
following Bush's gameplan,
could it be that it is the right gameplan?
Remember it was BO during campaign who disavowed the plan and is now
the one promoting
it (Could he have "GASP" been lyin to us!)
hahahahahahahaha
>>>
>>> Happy Pagan Solstice You atheists and Godless Communists!
>>>
>>> We Surrender!, oops I mean we dither, oops I mean were stupid, oops, Oh
>>> ferget it!
>>>
>>> Dionysus (AKA NYM Stealing lickin ass the marxist schill)
hahahahahahahahahahaha
Let Christ be your guide lickin ass, Scrooge learned his lesson there's
still time to shed
your self forged chain and the chains you would put on your neighbors