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Former Pakistani ISI Chief Hamid Gul : God Help America - The Alex Jones Show
By The Alex Jones Show In a landmark interview, Alex talks with former director of Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence, Hamid Gul. Mr. Gul recently characterized the "leaked" Wikileaks documents implicating him in a string of attacks against US and NATO forces in Afghanistan as "malicious, fictitious, and preposterous."

Categories: Interview  Afghanistan  Intelligence Agencies  Blackwater  Nuclear Weapons  Pakistan Army  

Added: August 21, 2010

Bin Laden is Dead;Long Live "Bin Laden"
By Maidhc Ó Cathail / Countercurrents.org But with the hunt for the elusive bin Laden having already cost thousands of lives and trillions of dollars, perhaps Americans should demand conclusive proof that Israel hasn't conned them into fighting a phoney "war on terror."

Categories: Osama bin Laden  War on Terror  Intelligence Agencies  Conspiracies  Mossad  

Added: August 17, 2010

From Freedom Fighter to Terrorist
By Jacob Hornberger / fff Before, Gul was helping the Afghans bring an end to the Soviet occupation of their country. That made him a freedom fighter. Now, however, Gul is helping the Afghanis bring an end to the U.S. occupation of their country, and that makes him a terrorist.

Categories: Afghanistan  Freedom Fighter  Intelligence Agencies  Pakistan Army  Terrorism  

Added: August 03, 2010

Afghanistan: It's Even Worse Than You Thought
By Haroon Siddiqui / Tronto Star Obama's military surge of 30,000 additional troops has not stopped the Taliban from controlling more territory. They are using more roadside bombs and hitting more NATO convoys and bases, even in Kabul.

Categories: Afghanistan  Barack Obama  Taliban  Nato  Intelligence Agencies  

Added: August 02, 2010

Dangerous Conspiracy Theories
By Peter Chamberlin /Countercurrents.org Government leaders undoubtably understood the great potential danger risked by allowing the release of the Wiki documents, but, being the practitioners of Nazi mind-science that they are, they fully understood the potential rewards to be reaped by the correct handling of the leaks and Western reporting on them. Popular emphasis upon the Pakistani angle of Wiki revelations could help create a national consensus for attacking Taliban bases in Pakistan.

Categories: Afghanistan  Intelligence Agencies  Taliban  Pakistan  Conspiracies  

Added: July 31, 2010

Afghan war logs: How the US is losing the battle for hearts and minds
By Simon Tisdall / The Gaurdian Leaked Afghanistan war logs reveal villagers' unenthusiastic responses to US army attempts to build bridges

Categories: Afghanistan  Intelligence Agencies  Human Rights  War Atrocities  The US  

Added: July 27, 2010

Pakistan Aids Insurgency in Afghanistan, Reports Assert
By MARK MAZZETTI, JANE PERLEZ, ERIC SCHMITT and ANDREW W. LEHREN / NY Times The documents, made available by an organization called WikiLeaks, suggest that Pakistan, an ostensible ally of the United States, allows representatives of its spy service to meet directly with the Taliban in secret strategy sessions to organize networks of militant groups that fight against American soldiers in Afghanistan, and even hatch plots to assassinate Afghan leaders.

Categories: Afghanistan  Pakistan  The US  Taliban  Intelligence Agencies  

Added: July 26, 2010

Canada's War on Islam: The Case of Mohamed Harkat
By Stephen Lendman /Countercurrents.org Like in America post-9/11, Canadian Muslims have been victimized, vilified, and persecuted for their faith, ethnicity, prominence, and activism. They've been targeted, hunted down, rounded up, held in detention, kept in isolation, denied bail, restricted in their right to counsel, tried on secret evidence, convicted or incriminated on bogus charges, given long sentences and incarcerated as political prisoners or deported to certain torture

Categories: Canadian Muslims  Discrimination  Islamophobia  Intelligence Agencies  Prisoner's Abuse  Multiculturalism  

Added: June 02, 2010

U.N.'s Bhutto Report Says What Pakistanis Already Know About Spy Agency and Army
By SABRINA TAVERNISE / NY Times The long-awaited United Nations report on the assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto did not answer the central question of who killed her, but did put its finger directly on what remains the most troubling part of Pakistan's reality, the dominance of its military and intelligence services over civilian leaders.

Categories: Benazir Bhutto  Assassination  Asif Ali Zardari  Pakistan Army  Intelligence Agencies  

Added: April 19, 2010