BeAChooser
Banned
- Joined
- Jun 20, 2007
- Messages
- 11,716
That doesn't mean bin Laden knew details of the plot.
But nevertheless, he did.
My point, in any case, is that Bin Laden was well aware that the plot was to attack certain specific targets by crashing airplanes into them around a certain date. And that certain people, like Atta were involved in it. One of them being KSM. That information alone, had it fallen into the hands of US interrogators, would likely have prevented success of the plot. The same is true in the KSM case. The interrogators were trying to find out what other plots were underway. The targets. The terrorist leaders of those plots. The dates at which they were supposed to occur. That information alone might be enough to have defeated those plots. Apparently, it was.
Zarqawi was nothing to do with Al Qaeda
False. Self-labeled al-qaeda members said they met with al-Zarqawi in Bagdhad PRIOR to the invasion of Iraq to plan and get funding for the chemical bomb attack in Jordan. al-Zarqawi had a training camp in Afghanistan before he came to Iraq (which happened after our invasion of Afghanistan). I don't think you can convince me that he was allowed to operate that camp in Afghanistan without the approval and cooperation of the Taliban AND al-Qaeda. Those two groups were joined at the hips ... literally ... with the children of bin Laden and the head of the Taliban even getting married. And besides, you yourself said that al-Qaeda was loosely structured and a franchise.
and I don't share your certainty about the "failed chemical attack". Do you believe everything you're told by security services?
But this case was tried in a Jordanian court, with witness after witness testifying, with the jury being shown the vehicles, chemicals and explosives the dozen terrorists brought into the country, with the terrorists admitting on video and in the court room to many details of the plot, including it's ultimate purpose, and with the jury convicting the terrorists, including al-Zarqawi. Funny how your side simply dismisses any evidence that doesn't fit your hate-Bush world view.
Zarqawi took on the Al Qaeda name in return for a bunch of Saudi money.
Prove that. A link please.
Here's an opposing views:
http://www.signandsight.com/features/449.html
During a year of research on Zarqawi, the Jordanian journalist Fuad Hussein interviewed a number of senior Al-Qaida members. They included Saif al-Adel, a former colonel in the Egyptian Special Forces and bin Laden's military commander. Saif al-Adel, supposedly under "house arrest" in Iran, sent his report on Zarqawi via a system of messengers. The document consists of 42 densely handwritten pages of yellow greaseproof paper. Each page has dozens of fold-marks. According to individuals present when the documents were handed over, they were folded to the size of cigarettes and smuggled into Jordan.
What Saif al-Adel had to tell was informative and explosive. Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, he claimed, was not unknown within Al-Qaida's highest circle. Osama bin Laden had allegedly been thinking how the tens of thousands of Afghanistan veterans who travelled home after the defeat of the Soviet troops could be mobilized for a continuation of the jihad. "Some of them were just wandering about out there", wrote Saif al-Adel, something he considered a "waste". Al-Qaida began to collect information on all of the pioneers of jihad: "The Jordanian and Palestinian brothers were at the top of this list," since the network's own intelligence "suggested that there were not many supporters of Al-Qaida or its ideas in Palestine and Jordan".
Zarqawi's "historic pleas" in court, in which he insulted the King of Jordan, had been noted with pride. "We were therefore very pleased early in 1999 when we heard that he had been released." Shortly after Zarqawi's arrival in Kandahar at the end of 1999, Saif al-Adel visited him at a guest house. He was immediately struck by Zarqawi's weaknesses. He found a man "with poor rhetorical skills, who expressed what was on his mind bluntly." Saif al-Adel also noted that Zarqawi's practical experience (of jihad) was "not extensive." "But his ambition was great, his objectives clear." He was more seriously worried about Zarqawi's "rigorist views" on some issues. This applied in particular to the "bayat", the vow of allegiance to al Qaida formulated by Osama bin Laden. Zarqawi wanted no compromises – as demonstrated by his position on the Saudi regime. He refused to support bin Laden until he declared war on the House of Saud. Moreover, he considered al Qaida's methods too moderate. The morning after this meeting, during a discussion with Osama bin Laden and his deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri, Saif al-Adel raised the question of Zarqawi. The two leaders did not seem enthusiastic. There was a fundamental problem: while bin Laden and Zawahiri were mainly interested in fighting "crusaders and Jews" (primarily the USA), Zarqawi's focus was on Arab regimes and Israel.
After two hours of heated debate, the two leaders granted Saif al-Adel permission to take care of Zarqawi. He suggested to the Jordanian that he found his own group, offering the use of a military training camp near the Afghan city of Herat, on the Iranian border. He was assured funding and weapons. For Zarqawi, this offer was a triumph. He was not even required to swear a vow of allegiance, merely to provide "coordination and cooperation in the service of our common goals". In concrete terms this meant the establishment of Al-Qaida cells in Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, Palestine and Iraq.
I'll concede a very low probability that he might have a name or two, but terrorists tend to use lots of names.
Don't be ridiculous, CD. You know darn well that someone as high in al-Qaeda's organization as KSM knew lots of names and certainly knew the identities of the people running the plots he was overwatching.
Even if he had information on plots-in-progress it would be useless after a couple of weeks.
That's not what the CIA said. You make lots of claims but what actual credentials do you have to make those claims. Now it's true that the CIA might be lying. But then so might you.
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And the CIA reported that he did disclose the existance of previously unknown plots, the names of terrorists involved in them, and that information helped foil the plots.
They would say that, wouldn't they?
And I could say the same thing about those on your side of the political fence. So like I said, the only way to resolve this is for your man, Obama, to release the reports needed to know. If he won't do that, I think that suggests it is because he knows the reports will show he's embarked on yet another foolish course ... and that his supporters by and large have been ... well ... spreading misinformation about the effectiveness of enhanced interrogation.
Of course they would.
Are you so desperate that you have to stoop to the ridiculous? Do you think the average employee at McD really knows all that much about the way McD as a corporation makes decisions and passes information back and forth between it's top management. The average al-Qaeda member probably knows just as little. Afterall, the rank and file al-Qaeda member isn't the brightest bulb in the drawer ... if you can get him to make a suicide attack.
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It's called compartmentalization.
If by that you mean what I think you mean, it's called a cell-structure.
No, it's also routinely called compartmentalization.
http://www.terrorism-research.com/groups/ "The smallest elements of terrorist organizations are the cells that serve as building blocks for the terrorist organization. One of the primary reasons for a cellular or compartmentalized structure is security. "
http://74.125.155.132/search?q=cach...compartmentalization&cd=9&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us "Although terrorism’s complex webs of characteristics — along with the inherent secrecy and compartmentalization of both terrorist organizations and
government responses — limit available data, the formulation of practical, useful measurement criteria appears both tractable and ready to be addressed."
http://tomdiaz.wordpress.com/2009/0...bollah-finding-big-money-in-drug-trafficking/ "The cartels operate just like terrorist organizations, with extremely complex organizational structures, consisting of highly compartmentalized cells: distribution cells, transportation cells, money laundering cells, and in some cases assassination cells or ‘hit squads.’ "
http://www.ladlass.com/intel/archives/010444.html "Compartmentalization into "cell" structures is crucial to the survival of the group. It has become vital as counter terrorist efforts have intensified in scope and effectiveness."
http://books.google.com/books?id=y7...PA-MhG&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3 "Additionally, the terrorist organization is compartmentalized into a cellular structure in which one member of one cell may know only one member of another cell."
http://www.hstoday.us/content/view/6239/92/ "“These groups, both terrorist groups and global drug trafficking organizations, operate in highly compartmentalized cells, where their handlers only know the operatives’ first names, and each cell knows either very little or nothing at all of other cells’ operations,” said Braun."
etc. etc. etc.
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It's called just being smarter than the average al-Qaeda member.
But then you might mean something else entirely.
No, I meant what I said. Osama and KSM were smarter than the average al-Qaeda member. That should be obvious. That's why they were near the top. And yes, even in a compartmentalized structure the guy at the top usually knows more than the guy at the bottom ... at least in terms of information you need to disrupt the organization.
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It's why capturing the guy at the top is ALWAYS important.
Cell-structure means that there are no critical nodes. Not even the top guy (who's still out there down a hole, apparently).
No, Osama is probably dead.
Well they would say that, wouldn't they?
And the folks on your side of the issue would say what they've said. Don't pretend there's no possibility their agenda is driving what they claim. It wouldn't be the first time that liberals have misrepresented or lied. So the only way to resolve this is for Obama to resolve it by releasing the reports.
If the CIA has those records why did they need to torture people for names?
They didn't find master lists containing every name. Perhaps they only found any such lists after they waterboarded someone.
They will come out sooner or later
Yeah ... maybe the NYTimes will publish them.
Nobody's got anything to hide anymore. This was all years ago.
Wrong. People have staked their reputations on what they've claimed. Interesting that Cheney is the one asking that the documents be released. He sounds confident he's right.
History will bear me out.
Or perhaps me. If there's a big successful terrorist attack in the next few years, want to bet it's success will be traced back to not getting some vital information in a timely manner that they could have gotten had they had better interrogation methods?
It took Al Qaeda years to pull off 9/11, and they used up all their assets in the process.
That's nonsense. al-Qaeda was a huge organization. Thousands and thousands of would be terrorists passed through the training camps in Afghanistan. But a few were "used up" on 9/11. And al-qaeda has plenty of money. If there is a reason we've had 8 years without a major attack on the US, perhaps the reason is vigilance on our part. The CIA says that numerous plots were stopped because of that vigilance ... which included enhanced interrogation of certain people. Now the only one who can show the CIA is lying or not lying about that is Obama. Since Obama isn't prosecuting the CIA for lying, or firing anyone in the CIA for lying, I can only assume that the CIA didn't lie. Because after all, Obama wouldn't want a bunch of liars at the CIA, would he?
Well there's a thing. Do we have anything more to go on than their word?
Yes. The secret documents detailing the interrogations, what was learned, and what was done with that information that are in Obama's hands.
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Had we waited for conventional interrogation methods (taking the terrorist to lunch at Denny's?) to work it's magic, it seems likely that particular attack would have succeeded. With the loss of many lives.
It doesn't seem likely to me.
Good for you. But that doesn't really mean anything. The only way to know is to see the actual reports.
I'm a sceptic, particularly when it comes to self-serving unsupported statements by security services about things that didn't happen.
I'm just as skeptical about self-serving unsupported statements by leftists and democrats who have their own agenda to promote.
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We knew a great deal more than that. And you know it.
No I don't.
You mean to say that after waterboarding thousands of our own soldiers and having countless experts study and refine the use of waterboarding as an interrogation tool, you really think we don't know a lot about it's effectiveness? Well if you insist on playing the "ridiculous claim card". Apparently you aren't even aware that "some of the military and intel people who have undergone waterboarding in their training report that they were waterboarded multiple times--until they gave up the information that they were told to try to withhold." I suggest you read this: http://www.veteranstoday.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=6085 , to clear up some of your lack of information regarding this issue, the CIA experience and the dishonesty of those disputing the CIA's claims.