Curiouser and curiouser: Fort Hood Shooting
'Oddities' --Video surfaces of alleged shooter, Major
Nidal Hasan, at Homeland Security Task Force conference By Lori Price
Updated 06 Nov 2009 Major Hasan's name appears on page 29 of The George
Washington University Homeland Security Policy Institute's 'Thinking Anew—Security Priorities for the Next
Administration' --Proceedings Report of the HSPI Presidential Transition
Task Force - April 2008 - January 2009. The report is dated 19 May 2009.
Other news: The Alleged shooter graduated from Virginia Tech. Major Hasan is 'in a
coma,' and 'on a ventilator.' Officers raided the Texas home of the suspect in
the Fort Hood shootings. Full updates here.]
Mission
accomplished! ExxonMobil-led consortium nets
'supergiant' Iraq oil field
06 Nov 2009 An ExxonMobil-led
consortium has beaten rival Russian, French and Chinese groups to bag initial
rights to develop Iraq’s West Qurna field, the Oil Ministry said. With reserves
of 8.7 billion barrels, West Qurna is among the prized Iraqi fields eyed by
Western oil majors. "The consortium led by ExxonMobil, which includes Shell, won
the contract to develop West Qurna Phase One oilfield," Oil Ministry spokesman
Asim Jihad said. The initial deal was signed in Baghdad on Thursday but needs
Cabinet approval before it can be finalized. The 20-year contract is part of a
raft of deals Iraq is close to formalizing. [Will the real insurgency
keep ExxonMobil, Shell, and other corporaterrorists from taking Iraq's
oil?]
Sen. Dorgan: KBR Still Using Burn
Pits 06 Nov 2009 According to
Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-N.D.), who chairs the Senate Democratic Policy Committee,
military contractor [terrorist group] Kellogg, Brown, and Root (KBR) is
continuing to dispose of waste in Iraq using burn pits that reportedly give off
toxic fumes. "The Army and the contractor in charge of this waste disposal
Kellogg, Brown, and Root, made frequent and unnecessary use of these burn pits
and exposed thousands of U.S. troops to toxic smoke…burn pits are still used at
the Balad Airbase in Iraq, which is the largest U.S. base in that
country."
UN sanctions Goldstone report on Gaza
war 06 Nov 2009 The United Nations
General Assembly has voted overwhelmingly in favor of a report, which accuses
Israel of war crimes as well as crimes against humanity during the weeks-long
onslaught on the Gaza Strip. 114 states endorsed a resolution supporting the
report by a Human Rights Council panel led by the South African judge Richard
Goldstone in Thursday's UN vote while only 18 states including the US objected
to the report's adoption.
Palestinians take down parts of WB
wall 06 Nov 2009 Palestinian youths
have tipped over a part of Israel's separation wall in the occupied West Bank
during a demonstration which marked the fall of the Berlin Wall. Some 300
Palestinians and left-wing activists attended the demonstration in the village
of Naalin, Ynet reported on Friday. They held banners reading "No matter how tall, all walls fall." According to the
demonstrators, a 6-meter (20-foot) high section of the wall was taken down.
Policeman who killed British troops 'is
back with Taliban' --Gunman identified as
policeman called Gulbadin greeted with flowers on return to Taliban protection,
sources say 05 Nov 2009 The gunman who
killed five British soldiers in an attack in Afghanistan's Helmand province was
today back with Taliban fighters who greeted him with flowers, sources close to
the Afghan security forces said. The killer - identified only as a policeman
called Gulbadin - was back under Taliban protection, the source said. British
and Afghan commanders were undertaking an urgent investigation into the
circumstances of the attack.
Afghan National Police penetrated by
Taliban at 'every level' 04 Nov 2009 The Afghan National Police have been penetrated
by the Taliban "at every level" with officers poorly trained, corrupt and some
addicted to drugs, a former Army officer has said. Capt Doug Beattie, who served
two tours in Afghanistan working with the ANP, said many police officers are in
the paid of 'insurgents' and were more loyal to their tribes than the Afghan
government. British officers say that among low-ranking Afghan police, and
particularly in more rural areas away from central control, there is widespread
corruption and disloyalty.
25 troops injured in search for U.S.
paratroopers missing in Afghanistan 06
Nov 2009 More than 25 international and Afghan troops were wounded Friday in
western Afghanistan -- possibly by friendly
fire -- during a search operation for two U.S. Army paratroopers who
had gone missing, according to the military. The NATO-led International Security
Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan initially said that the troops conducting
the search had been injured by 'insurgents.' But a spokesman later said that
officials were investigating the incident and had not ruled out the possibility
of friendly fire.
Poland denies asking US troop
deployment 06 Nov 2009 Warsaw has
denied Russian media reports that Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski
asked Washington to deploy US troops to protect Poland. On Thursday, the Russian
Interfax news agency quoted Sikorski as saying Poland had requesting the United
States and NATO to deploy troops in Central Europe.
Cheney blasts probe of CIA
interrogations --'I find that absolutely
abhorrent,' former vice president says 06
Nov 2009 Former Vice President [sic] Dick Cheney held back no criticism Thursday
of President Barack Obama, strongly questioning the administration's policy in
Afghanistan and its approach to combating terrorism. Cheney, speaking to the
Economic Club of Southwest Michigan, was harshest when addressing a Department
of Justice investigation into so-called "enhanced interrogations" [torture] used
by the CIA and military on detained suspected terrorists. "I find that
absolutely abhorrent," said Cheney, who served under George W. Bush from 2001 to
2009.
Senate Votes on Terrorism
Trials 06 Nov 2009 The
Democratic-controlled Senate turned back a Republican-led effort to bar Sept. 11
terrorists from being prosecuted in civilian federal courts. Instead, senators
voted 54 to 45 to support a request by Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and
Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. to have the option of prosecuting those
accused of terrorism in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in either federal courts
or by military tribunals.
Guantanamo became a recruiting tool for
terrorism: Napolitano 06 Nov 2009
Guantanamo Bay was used as a "recruiting tool" for terrorism more than anything
else, US homeland security chief Janet Napolitano said Friday, during a visit to
the European parliament. "Guantanamo has been used more as a recruiting tool
than anything else," she told members of the European parliament's civil
liberties committee in Brussels. Therefore "it needs to be closed and the
individuals dealt with appropriately," she added.
Massachusetts: Terrorism
Charges 06 Nov 2009 A Massachusetts man
has been indicted on new charges involving a plot to kill two prominent
politicians and shoot people at shopping malls. The man, Tarek Mehanna, of
Sudbury, is accused of conspiring with two other men: Ahmad Abousamra, whom the
authorities say is now in Syria, and an unnamed cooperating witness. Mr.
Mehanna, was arrested Oct. 21 on a charge of conspiring to provide material
support to terrorists. The 10-count indictment also charges Mr. Mehanna and Mr.
Abousamra with conspiracy to kill in a foreign country, conspiracy to provide
false information to law enforcement and making false statements to law
enforcement.
Counter-terror plans will be revised to
reflect Fort Hood and Afghan attacks [Wow, that was quick!] 05 Nov 2009 (UK) A soldier turning on his
comrades at Fort Hood, an Afghan policeman killing the British soldiers who
trained him - two uncannily similar events in two days, but incidents which,
across the Western world, security authorities have been planning for and
dreading. Since the Mumbai attacks counter-terrorism planning has seen a major
shift. The shootings in Afghanistan and Fort Hood carry echoes of the attacks in
India with the added danger that the enemy has come from within.
Orlando Shooting Suspect Had Money
Woes --1 Confirmed Dead; 5 Others Hurt 06 Nov 2009 A man so broke
that he said he didn't have the money to visit his son 30 minutes away opened
fire Friday at the engineering firm that fired him two years ago, killing one
person and wounding five, authorities said. As officers led a handcuffed Jason
Rodriguez into a police station, a reporter asked the divorced 40-year-old why
he had attacked his former colleagues. "Because they left me to rot," said
Rodriguez, who recently told a bankruptcy judge he was making less than $30,000
a year... and owed nearly $90,000.
Orlando shooting suspect had recently
filed for bankruptcy 06 Nov 2009 The
suspect in Friday's shooting of six people in a downtown high-rise is a
40-year-old "man with economic woes that include a recent bankruptcy filing,
federal records show. In his filing last May for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, under
which he sought to have his assets liquidated and his debts discharged, Jason S.
Rodriguez listed his assets at $4,675 and his liabilities at $89,873.31.
Report: NWA Flight Had No Contact for 3
Hours 05 Nov 2009 FOX News has learned
Northwest Airlines Flight 188 that overshot Minneapolis by 150 miles in October
was out of contact with air traffic controllers for approximately three hours,
and NORAD was not informed until the last few minutes. Sources told FOX News
there were three NORDO's -- or non-contacts -- the first one occurring shortly
after the plane reached cruising altitude out of San Diego. The military was not
notified until after the third NORDO -- which occurred as the plane approached
Minneapolis.
Rare Ebola-like virus poses new
threat to Afghan troops 06 Nov 2009
U.S. military officials sent a medical team to a remote outpost in southern
Afghanistan this week to take blood samples from members of an Army unit after a
soldier in the unit died from an Ebola-like virus. Dr. Jim Radike, an expert in
internal medicine and infectious diseases at the Role 3 Trauma Hospital at
Kandahar Air Field, told The Washington Times that Sgt. Robert David Gordon, 22,
from River Falls, Ala., died Sept. 16 from what turned out to be Crimean-Congo
hemorrhagic fever after he was bitten by a tick. The virus is transmitted by
infected blood and can be carried by ticks, according to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC).
Dutch pull Pfizer vaccine batch after
infants die --110,000 doses of
anti-infection drug Prevenar quarantined after deaths 05 Nov 2009 Dutch authorities say they have banned
use of a batch of Pfizer's Prevenar, or Prevnar, after three infants died within
two weeks of receiving the anti-infection vaccination. Pfizer spokeswoman Gwen
Fisher said the three infants also received two unrelated other [deadly]
vaccines as part of routine immunizations.
Quebec woman dies from H1N1 virus after
getting vaccine 04 Nov 2009 A
42-year-old Quebec woman has died from complications resulting from the H1N1
virus. It is the third death in the province since September. The woman, who
worked at the Monteregie Health and Social Services Centre, died Tuesday night.
She had also received the H1N1 vaccination on Oct. 29,
two days before coming down with symptoms of the flu.
NYC Commissioner Defends Giving H1N1
Shots to Goldman 06 Nov 2009 New York
City Health Commissioner Thomas Farley said his department sent 6 percent of the
city’s limited doses of swine flu vaccine to Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group
Inc. and other large employers because they traditionally distribute shots in
flu seasons.
At Supreme Court: Can prosecutors be
sued for framing defendants? 03 Nov
2009 The US Supreme Court on Wednesday is set to consider an unusual question:
Do Americans who have been framed by unscrupulous prosecutors for crimes they
did not commit have a right to sue the prosecutors when the fraud is finally
exposed? According to the Obama administration, the
answer is no. Solicitor General Elena Kagan argues in a friend of the
court brief that local, state, and federal prosecutors must enjoy absolute
immunity from citizen lawsuits - even when they sent innocent men to prison
for life by fabricating incriminating evidence and hiding exculpatory
evidence.
U.S. Economy: Unemployment Rate Jumps
to 26-Year High 06 Nov 2009 The
unemployment rate in the U.S. jumped to 10.2 percent in October, the highest
level since 1983, casting a pall over the prospects for a sustained recovery and
risking further erosion of President Barack Obama’s popularity. Payrolls fell by
190,000 last month, more than forecast by economists, a Labor Department report
showed today in Washington.
Wall Street bonuses to rise by 40
percent By Patrick Martin 06 Nov 2009
The authors of the biggest financial catastrophe in world history--executives
and traders at US investment and commercial banks--will see their year-end
bonuses rise by an average of 40 percent compared to last year, according to a
report issued Wednesday by Johnson Associates, a Wall Street-based compensation
consulting firm. Traders in stocks, bonds and derivatives are likely to
significantly exceed even that lofty average, with projected bonuses 60 percent
higher than in 2008, the company said.
Fannie Mae seeks $15B more in
government aid after 3Q loss 05 Nov
2009 Fannie Mae is asking for an additional $15 billion in government aid after
posting another big loss in the third quarter as the taxpayer bill from the
housing market bust keeps rising. The government-controlled company continued to
see a dramatic surge of borrowers fall behind as the unemployment rate climbs.
More Delays? House Health Care Bill
Vote May Not Come Until Sunday
06 Nov 2009 Members of the House of
Representatives are poised to vote Saturday on health care legislation, but a
top Democratic leader acknowledged today that the vote may get pushed back to
Sunday or later if there is not enough support to pass the bill on the floor.
Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., said today that he still expects the vote to
take place on Saturday, but that Democrats may not have the 218 votes needed for
the bill to pass.
Quick
action: Protect Polar Bears and the Places They
Live 06 Nov 2009 Rising temperatures are
robbing polar bears of their homes and access to the food they need to survive.
In response, the Interior Department has announced a proposal to designate more
than 200,000 square miles of critical habitat for these struggling bears --
including the vital coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, one of
the most important onshore denning habitats for America’s struggling polar
bears. Please fill out the form to urge the Interior Department to adopt this
proposal to help save America's polar bears.
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Previous lead stories: 'US officials offered
me 500,000 dollars to set meeting with Taliban' US 'spending money to reach Taliban' --The US has already planned to allocate a specific budget from
its annual 680 billion dollar defense bill to the Taliban. 05 Nov
2009 Washington is ready to spend a huge sum of money to start talks with the
Taliban in Afghanistan, a former Pakistani lawmaker says. Javed Ibrahim Paracha,
a former member of Pakistan's National Assembly said that top US diplomats
contacted him in 2005 and offered him a huge sum of money to broker the talks.
"US officials had offered me 500,000 dollars in that meeting for mediating. I
refused that offer and had asked US officials to first take permission from the
government and corps commanders," The Daily Times quoted Paracha, as
saying. Paracha is known for having contacts with the Taliban leadership.
UN to evacuate staff in
Afghanistan --Some 600 non-essential staffers
will be moved to more secure locations while the body works to find safer
permanent housing 05 Nov 2009 The United Nations is temporarily relocating
more than half its staff in Afghanistan following last week's deadly Taliban
attack against UN workers. The UN mission is still reeling from a pre-dawn
assault on a guesthouse in the capital last week that left five UN staffers
dead. The Kabul attack was the most direct targeting of UN employees during the
organisation's decades of work in the country.
Italian court finds CIA agents guilty of
kidnapping terrorism suspect --First prosecution for US abduction of suspects to torture
states --Italian court convicts Robert Lady and 23 others in absentia
04 Nov 2009 Twenty-three Americans were tonight convicted of kidnapping by an
Italian court at the end of the first trial anywhere in the world involving the
CIA's "extraordinary rendition" programme for abducting terrorist suspects. The
former head of the CIA in Milan Robert Lady was given an eight-year jail
sentence for his part in the seizure of Osama Moustafa Hassan Nasr, known as Abu
Omar, who claimed that he was subsequently tortured in Egypt. Lady's superior,
Jeff Castelli, the then head of the CIA in Italy, and two other Americans were
acquitted on the grounds that they enjoyed diplomatic immunity. But another 21
alleged CIA operatives and a US air force officer were each sentenced to five
years in jail. All were tried in absentia and those who
were convicted will be regarded as fugitives under Italian law.
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CLG Managing Editor: Lori Price. Copyright © 2009,
Citizens For Legitimate Government ® All rights reserved.