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Editorial
See other Editorial Articles

Title: Real torture ignored, fake torture flogged
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.dailymail.com/story/Opin ... -ignored-fake-torture-flogged/
Published: May 31, 2007
Author: Don Surber
Post Date: 2007-05-31 22:36:27 by BeAChooser
Keywords: None
Views: 356
Comments: 38

Real torture ignored, fake torture flogged

The news media is the spoiled brat of the United States

IF you know about the torture manual used by al-Qaida, then you did not learn about it by reading the Washington Post, the New York Times or sadly, this newspaper. Neither the Associated Press nor Reuters picked up on the story.

Fox News was the only major outlet with the story. Sir Rupert Murdoch's newspapers in Australia republished the Fox report.

The handbook was posted at the Smoking Gun Web site. It showed -- with drawings -- how al-Qaida uses drills, irons, vises and other devices to mutilate their captives.

This is true torture, the same kind employed by Saddam Hussein's henchmen at Abu Ghraib.

The handbook helped explain why a few days later, U.S. forces liberated 42 victims of al-Qaida torture from a location in Iraq.

But while they ignored the handbook story, the New York Times and Washington Post did not hesitate to publish a press handout from the United Nations condemning Guantanamo Bay. Why? Because the jihadis we captured are not given lawyers quickly enough.

Will someone tell me the name of Daniel Pearl's lawyer?

This is the same United Nations whose "human rights council" includes every dictatorship from Burkina Faso to Zimbabwe.

Gitmo has been demonized in part by the false and preposterous allegation that a guard flushed an inmate's Koran down the toilet. The New York Times published no less than 29 stories about this lie.

Small wonder most Americans think Torquemada, chief of the Spanish Inquisition, runs Gitmo.

Then again, the New York Times is the home of the infamous "Memos on Bush Are Fake But Accurate, Typist Says" headline.

That was the headline a copy editor slapped on a story that grudgingly conceded that Dan Rather's memo disparaging George Walker Bush's military service was a fraud, a phony -- another lie.

Either Rather was had, or he deliberately tried to throw the 2004 election to John Kerry.

Over the last six years, the press has treated President Bush with a scorn not shown a president since Richard Nixon.

The coverage of the Florida election was decidedly pro-Al Gore. He made false accusation upon false accusation in his attempt to steal the election. No one bothered to hold Vice President Gore accountable for his many lies.

A year later, an unprecedented recount by the media showed that Bush won by 493 votes out of 6 million cast, a difference of only 44 votes from the official tally made on election night.

Far from being a debacle, the official Florida result was remarkably accurate.

But we're wasting billions on vote "reform" anyway.

Then there is this business of the Associated Press keeping a running tab on the number of U.S. deaths in the war. Not included in this scoreboard is the number of enemy killed.

In previous wars, AP offered no such daily box score. Not all changes are improvements.

The American press has gotten rather full of itself in recent years, and people are losing respect for it.

For example, I was always taught that the press should protect its sources. And yet, when columnist Bob Novak connected Joe Wilson's wife to the CIA, newspapers across the nation demanded an investigation of this "leak."

The principle of protecting sources was thrown overboard in the zeal to get the president, so sure were these newspaper editors that the White House was the source.

It turned out a critic of the war, Richard Armitage, leaked the name. He was not charged with anything. Instead, Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff was indicted and convicted by a jury that included a stringer for the Washington Post.

As a newspaperman with 30 years or whatever it is under my belt, I am sad to see a pretty good trade sell itself out like this.

No, blind support of the war in Iraq is not demanded.

But fairness is.

The Fox News motto is "We report, you decide."

The rest of the news media view that line with utter contempt. That is how low my trade has sunk.

Publishing 29 stories about a lie about a flushed Koran is bad enough. But when a newspaper then refuses to publish one story about a very real handbook on torture that is used by the enemy, that newspaper is no longer being objective.

It is taking sides.

And not the right side, at that.

Many good people made great sacrifices for freedom of the press. It is sad to see today's newspaper people piddle away that heritage.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 15.

#1. To: BeAChooser (#0)

Will someone tell me the name of Daniel Pearl's lawyer?

It was some guy that worked for our "friends", the Pakistani ISI. Let's see, I think his name was Omar Saeed, the same guy that sent $100,000 to 9/11 hijacker Mohammed Atta, on orders from ISI Director General Mahmud Ahmad.

FormerLurker  posted on  2007-05-31   22:53:04 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: FormerLurker, ALL (#1)

the same guy that sent $100,000 to 9/11 hijacker Mohammed Atta, on orders from ISI Director General Mahmud Ahmad.

You have no proof of that, FL. An unsourced claim in the Times of India was your source for the original claim, but the Times of India admitted later (in February) that there is NO evidence that General Ahmed knew Sheikh was going to use the money for terrorists strikes in America. And one day later they even questioned whether the money came from the General. Try again...

BeAChooser  posted on  2007-05-31   23:02:48 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: BeAChooser (#2)

the Times of India admitted later (in February) that there is NO evidence that General Ahmed knew Sheikh was going to use the money for terrorists strikes in America

But why then did the General give Omar Saeed $100,000? You know, the same Omar Saeed that killed Daniel Pearl...

And BTW, as I recall, the Times of India never refuted the fact that General Ahmed ordered Omar Saeed to wire $100,000 to Mohammed Atta. They may have later qualified their original statement a bit and said they had no proof he knew what the money was going to ultimately be used for, but I don't think they ever retracted the rest of the story..

FormerLurker  posted on  2007-05-31   23:12:00 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: FormerLurker, ALL (#4)

as I recall, the Times of India never refuted the fact that General Ahmed ordered Omar Saeed to wire $100,000 to Mohammed Atta. They may have later qualified their original statement a bit and said they had no proof he knew what the money was going to ultimately be used for, but I don't think they ever retracted the rest of the story..

Excerpts from http://www.ratical.org/ratville/CAH/KUP209A.html (an article you originally posted at LP):

Note the portions in bold.

***********

"If the October 9 revelation seemed -- on its face -- to be an attempt by India to soil the reputation of Pakistan, by February 13, the Times of India was explicitly backing away from the sinister implications of its October 9 outing. When the news of Saeed's "official" arrest broke on February 12, here is how the Times of India would describe Saeed's connection to the 9/11 money trail a day later: "...there were allegations that [Saeed] had organized at least one bank remittance to the terrorists who were responsible for the September 11 strikes in the US and that Lt. Gen. Mahmood Ahmed had helped him in this regard. There was, however, no evidence to indicate whether Ahmed was aware that this amount was meant for the terrorist strikes in the U.S."

"on February 13, the Times of India then proceeded, on February 14, to fully "inoculate" against the virus that it had released on October 9. Its main vaccine -- Aftab Ansari: "Aftab Ansari arranged for $100,000 for Omar [Saeed] Sheikh, prime accused in the kidnapping of WSJ reporter Daniel Pearl...Ansari arranged a series of e-mails with [Saeed] and Asif Reza Khan [who was killed on December 7] in August 2001, where he was asked to help out with a 'noble cause'... Indian officials interrogating Ansari said that, on August 8, 2001, Ansari asked Khan over e-mail whether he agreed to part with $100,000 for a 'noble cause' as requested by [Saeed]...on August 11, Ansari sent an e-mail to Khan saying that 'the amount mentioned had been sent to [Saeed]'...On August 19, [Saeed] e-mailed Ansari again, saying, 'The money that was sent has been passed on.'"

***************

Oh my, looks like the Times of India did indeed change its mind about your supposed General Ahmed connection. Now how many times do I have to post this to you before it sticks? ROTFLOL!

BeAChooser  posted on  2007-05-31   23:35:27 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#14. To: BeAChooser (#11)

You miss the crux of the story. Let me post a bit of the meaningful narrative that you omitted..

The whole cover story, however -- with its endless obfuscations, diversions, and fallback explanations -- cannot obscure the fact that it depends on a huge number of coincidences and conveniently timed set-ups to keep it in place. Moreover, evidence can be marshaled to show that the mainstream media -- either as willful agents or as passive mouthpieces of the intelligence apparatus -- planted disinformation that was meant to structure perceptions in a specific direction. The elaboration of the cover story bears the marks of its apparent mistakes and missteps.

But more disturbingly, the Omar Saeed/ Money Trail Story effectively shatters the credibility of the media/intelligence apparatus that provided virtually all the information on bin Laden and his al-Qaida network over the years. If this one small element of the overall 9/11 terror picture shows this much evidence of information management, one wonders how many other elements in this tale bear the marks of elaborate orchestration by the parties who have fed us all the data.

In intelligence operations, a credible "legend" is created through acting out all elements in the story rather than simply fabricating them for later use. Thus, "lead" hijacker Mohamed Atta most likely did receive a wire transfer of $100,000, arranged by an operative who was connected to al-Qaida, an organization that was fully financed, structured and "false-flagged" by Pakistanis and Saudis acting as operative proxy agents/patsies for what appears to be a globally connected Western elite intelligence apparatus.

As a crucial element in constructing the "legend" of 9/11, it was necessary to provide the links between the hijackers and al-Qaida. The paradox is this -- an apparently sophisticated terror entity like al-Qaida would be required to maintain an elaborate evidential trail leading to its hijackers. Put simply, the names on those boarding passes would have to be the same names linked to various credit cards, witnesses, apartments, cell phone records, etc. Whether or not a hijacker by the name of Al-Suqami, al-Shehhi, or Atta was using a false passport would be largely irrelevant if it could be shown that someone employing the same false alias was linked to the same incriminating evidence. The evidence -- culled from credit card charges, Internet communications, cell phone calls, and ATM withdrawls -- revealed, according to a November 4, 2001 article in the New York Times, "...a picture in which the roles of the 19 hijackers are so well-defined as to be almost corporate in their organization and coordination." And that is the paradox. If the names on those boarding passes were used only once, there would be no evidence at all linking those hijackers to al-Qaida.

Here was an example of an anomaly "hiding in plain sight." With the hijackers conveniently sowing a consistent trail of the same names or aliases all over the place -- establishing a "legend" that could be corroborated by real witnesses -- the media could then be used to plant all kinds of disinformation and red herrings to divert attention from this most obvious anomaly. For example, where ABC News would report on September 12 that a passport belonging to a hijacker named Satam Al-Suqami was found in the rubble of the World Trade Center, the other mainstream outlets would widely report the discovery of the "mystery passport" days later -- on September 16 -- as having some kind of evidential significance. But it was an obvious red herring. At best, it would signify this -- that a passport was found which bore the same name as someone whose boarding pass bore the same name as someone linked to an al-Qaida training camp in Afghanistan. More "smoke" would then be wafted over the "mystery" surrounding this discovery when it was widely reported that FBI honcho Barry Mawn would not reveal the name on the passport (when all the media had to do was to check their Sept. 12 file clippings from ABC News).

FormerLurker  posted on  2007-05-31   23:47:01 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: FormerLurker (#14)

always happy to see you, FL

christine  posted on  2007-06-01   0:01:11 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 15.

#19. To: christine (#15)

always happy to see you, FL

It's always good to drop by and say hello when I can.. :)

FormerLurker  posted on  2007-06-01 00:05:50 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 15.

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