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al Qaeda
Mon Feb 15, 2010 at 07:36:02 AM EST
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James Carroll offers in today's Boston Globe an op ed Nuclear sites vulnerable to break-ins in which we read:Six anti-nuclear activists climbed over an outer fence at Kleine Brogel Air Base, then cut their way through a pair of inner fences, and wandered around the "highly secure'' base for up to an hour, tracking a route through the snow of more than one kilometer, and ultimately coming within yards of the storage bunker where the nukes are held - all this before being challenged by a guard. They videotaped their unimpeded walk-through of one of the most "secure'' compounds in the world. Guards finally arrested them and confiscated their camera, but, in yet another show of ineptitude, not before the activists were able to remove its video-card. They posted their caper on YouTube.
And yet, this is a base at which similar entries have been attempted regularly for many years by an anti-nuclear group called Bombspotting
Let me offer more from Carroll, and some observations of my own, but first:
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Thu Dec 03, 2009 at 12:11:40 PM EST
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( - promoted by KathyinBlacksburg)
Oh, what tangled webs we weave, when first we practice to deceive....
One of the ironies of what has transpired in the last eight years since the September 11 attack is that many of the origins of the conflict came from the waning years of the Cold War, as the United States tried to finish off the Soviet Union. The CIA worked overtime in devising covert ways to use radical foreigners for its purposes; unfortunately, it failed to take into account how it could dismantle the monsters it created.
It would seem obvious by now that much of the plotting and scheming in the modern era by various powerful nations to surreptitiously undermine "opponents" usually ends in unforeseen consequences for the "creator." The scenario has repeated itself in different parts of the world.
Here's how it works: A nation trying to weaken and/or destroy an opponent without resorting to overt war supports some group willing to take on the adversary with the covert support of the nation. Even if the tactic works, the consequences in the future cannot be predicted. Quite often, the result is a dangerous "blowback" on the nation that made the violent group possible in the first place. I'll go over at several examples.
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Wed Dec 02, 2009 at 11:48:05 AM EST
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( - promoted by KathyinBlacksburg)
I am more than a bit dismayed by the criticism being heaped upon President Obama's policy decision regarding the war in Afghanistan by the liberal wing of the Democratic Party. These folks are supposed to be my philosophical "family," but not this time. Instead, I am afraid they are just reinforcing that false stereotype of liberalism as opposed to all war, no matter how much the nation is threatened.
I, for one, and sick and tired of the right wing of the Republican party being able to portray us as being non-supportive of our military and of the young people who serve.
Sure, Americans are tired of fighting one war for eight years (Afghanistan) and one for six years (Iraq). Certainly, we all know now that we on the left of the Democratic Party were absolutely right about the lies and distortions used by the Bush administration to get us into Iraq.
We all also would probably agree that we did have the right to invade Afghanistan in order to seek out and destroy the terrorist group that attacked the heartland of the United States on September 11, 2001. When he was running for office, President Obama made it quite clear that he was committed to ending the conflict in Iraq and focusing American effort on Afghanistan.
Afghanistan and September 11 are as connected as Japan and December 7, 1941's attack on Pearl Harbor are.
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