Sunday, February 27, 2011

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pervez_Musharraf
Pervez Musharraf wikipedia
Excerpt:
The arrival of Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif fast-tracked a return to democracy ending Musharraf's military rule. On 12 February 2011, an arrest warrant was issued for Musharraf by a Pakistani court, alleging his involvement with the assassination of Benazir Bhutto.[1]

american killer raymond davis, give us our sister Dr. Afiya Siddiqui take your raymond.  youtube
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Cjjg3tD7io

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aafia_Siddiqui
Aafia Siddiqui wikipedia
Excerpt:
Aafia Siddiqui (Urdu: عافیہ صدیقی; born March 2, 1972) is an American-educated Pakistani cognitive neuroscientist[6][12][13] who was convicted after a jury trial in a U.S. federal court of assault with intent to murder her U.S. interrogators in Afghanistan. The charges carried a maximum sentence of life in prison.[14][15][16] In September 2010, she was sentenced by the U.S. judge to 86 years in prison.[10][17]
A devout Muslim who had engaged in Islamic charity work and proselytizing,[18] Siddiqui moved back to Pakistan in 2002. She disappeared with her three young children in March 2003, shortly after the arrest of her second husband's uncle, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the alleged chief planner of the September 11 attacks.[1][5][9] It was reported that Khalid Mohammed mentioned Siddiqui's name while he was being interrogated.[12] Siddiqui was added to the FBI Seeking Information – War on Terrorism list in 2003.[1][19] In May 2004, the FBI named Siddiqui as one of its seven Most Wanted Terrorists.[1] Her whereabouts remained unknown for more than five years, until she was arrested in July 2008 in Afghanistan.[5] The Afghan police said she was carrying in her purse handwritten notes and a computer thumb drive containing recipes for conventional bombs and weapons of mass destruction, instructions on how to make machines to shoot down U.S. drones, descriptions of New York City landmarks with references to a mass casualty attack, and two pounds of sodium cyanide in a glass jar.[17][20][21]
Siddiqui was shot and severely wounded at the police compound the following day when she grabbed the unattended rifle of one of her American interrogators and began shooting at them.[22] She got medical attention for her wounds at Bagram Air Base and was flown to the U.S.[23] to be charged in a New York City federal court with attempted murder, and armed assault on U.S. officers and employees.[9][24] She denied the charges and said the interrogators had fired on her when she had attempted to flee.[25] After receiving psychological evaluations and therapy, the judge declared her mentally fit to stand trial.[26][27] Amnesty International monitored the trial for fairness.[28] Siddiqui interrupted the trial proceedings with vocal outbursts and was ejected from the courtroom several times.[17] The jury convicted her of all the charges in February 2010.[9][14][15][22] The prosecution argued for "terrorism enhancement" of the charges that would require a life term;[10] Siddiqui's lawyers requested a 12-year sentence, arguing that she was mentally ill. [16][29] The charges against her stemmed solely from the shooting, and Siddiqui was not charged with, or prosecuted for, any terrorism-related offenses.[30][31]
Many of Siddiqui's supporters, including international human rights organizations, have claimed that Siddiqui was not an extremist and that she and her young children were illegally detained, interrogated and tortured by Pakistani intelligence or U.S. authorities or both during her five-year disappearance.[5] The U.S. and Pakistan governments have denied all such claims.[20][32]

 

[edit] Biography

[edit] Family and early life

Siddiqui was born in Karachi, Pakistan to Muhammad Salay Siddiqui, a British-trained neurosurgeon, who is now deceased, and Ismet (née Faroochi), an Islamic teacher, social worker, and charity volunteer, who is now retired.[1][33] Her mother was prominent in political and religious circles and at one time a member of Pakistan's parliament.[34] Siddiqui is the youngest of three siblings.[1] Her brother is an architect who lives in Sugar Land, Texas. Her sister, Fowzia, is a Harvard-trained neurologist, who worked at Sinai Hospital in Baltimore[35] and taught at Johns Hopkins University before she returned to Pakistan.[36]
Siddiqui attended school in Zambia until the age of eight, and finished her primary and secondary schooling in Karachi.[33]

http://yasirimran.wordpress.com/2008/07/29/keya-wo-afiya-siddiqi-hai/

http://www.columnspk.com/benazir-bhutto-murder-case-arrest-warrant-issued-for-pervaiz-musharraf/
Excerpt:
RAWALPINDI: The Rawalpindi Anti-Terrorism Court on Saturday issued the arrest warrant for former President Pervez Musharraf in the Benazir Bhutto assassination case.  Syed Ali reported that the warrant has been issued to secure Musharraf’s presence in court.
A detailed charge-sheet had been presented in Rawalpindi’s Anti Terrorism Court (ATC) on Friday, including Musharraf and Baitullah Mehsud as those directly involved in the murder of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto.
Earlier, an interim charge-sheet had been presented in the ATC in this regard on Monday. The detailed charge-sheet says that there was a planned conspiracy behind Bhutto’s assassination, adding that Musharraf provided Mehsud with the opportunity to carry out suicide attacks on Bhutto.
The latest investigation report compiled by the FIA investigation team probing the Benazir murder case also came down hard on Pervez Musharraf. The report compiled by head of investigation team Khalid Qureshi says:
“Musharraf was equally responsible for facilitation and abetment of the assassination of Benazir Bhutto through his government and justified failure in providing her the requisite security protection that her status demanded twice. There was a security lapse.” The fresh report is likely to be submitted to Interior Minister by end of this week. The report also says: “Musharraf himself appointed Saud Aziz on junior assignment in Rawalpindi on April 10, 2008.”

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/02/12/musharraf-bhutto-assassination_n_822305.html
Excerpt:
ISLAMABAD — A Pakistani court issued an arrest warrant for ousted military leader Pervez Musharraf on Saturday over allegations he played a role in the 2007 assassination of an ex-prime minister and rival. It was a major setback for the onetime U.S. ally, who was plotting a political comeback from outside the country.
Musharraf, who has not been charged, described accusations that he had a hand in the attack on ex-Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto as a smear campaign by a government led by her aggrieved husband.
The stunning allegation that Musharraf – a self-declared opponent of Islamic militancy – was linked to extremists accused in the attack was likely to keep him out of Pakistan, at least in the short term.

http://www.rferl.org/content/article/1073863.html
Excerpt:

By Country / Afghanistan

World: Former CIA Analyst Says West Misunderstands Al-Qaeda

January 08, 2007


RFE/RL: For several years you were the head of the CIA unit charged with capturing Osama bin Laden. How do you judge current efforts to find him?

Michael Scheuer: I think the current efforts to capture Osama bin Laden are probably the best we can make -- but in a situation where it's almost impossible to expect success. Bin Laden lives in an area that has the most difficult topography on earth. He lives among a population that is very loyal to him, as a hero in the Islamic world.

But I think most importantly, American forces there and NATO forces are more engaged on a day-to-day basis trying to make sure [that Afghan] President [Hamid] Karzai's government survives than they are in chasing Osama bin Laden. The tide has really turned against us in Afghanistan, and it seems to me very unreasonable to expect to capture or kill Osama bin Laden in the foreseeable future.
I resigned because I thought the 9/11 commission had thoroughly failed America by not finding anyone responsible for anything before 9/11. The amount of individual negligence and culpability at the highest levels of the American government was completely whitewashed by the 9/11 commission.

RFE/RL: Yet for years, U.S. President George W. Bush has characterized bin Laden's capture as an important victory in the war on terror.

Scheuer: Well, he is certainly the symbol of a war, a war that really had very little to do with terrorism. American political leaders on both sides of the aisle have really not come to grips yet, five years later, with what this war is about. They continue to say that bin Laden and Al-Qaeda and its allies are focused on destroying America and its democracy, its freedom, [its] gender equality. And really this war has very, very little to do with any of that. It has to do with what the West and the United States do in the Islamic world.

And so because of our misunderstanding of the enemy's motivation and his intent, we have greatly underestimated the difficulty of attacking him and destroying him before we get attacked again.

RFE/RL: It sounds like you think the Bush administration is making some serious mistakes in how they are waging the war on terror and the hunt for Al-Qaeda figures like bin Laden.

Scheuer: Well, I think the whole war effort so far has been a mistake, in the sense that we're slowly becoming [like] Israel, in that the only options we have open to ourselves are military and intelligence operations.

Bin Laden has never been focused at all on Western civilization, as such. His ability to rally Muslims to his side is dependent almost solely on the perception in the Islamic world that Western foreign policy is an attack on Islam and the followers of Islam.

RFE/RL: Has the United States created more of a target with its invasion of Iraq?

Scheuer: Certainly we have, and not intentionally. I'm not one that thinks that we have leaders who are eager for this war.

But we just don't have leaders with the courage to stand up and understand that it's our presence more than anything else in the Islamic world that motivates the enemy, and Iraq was really a turning point in the war on Al-Qaeda and its allies.


A boy in Pakistan shows a mobile phone with an image of Osama bin Laden (epa file photo)
A boy in Pakistan shows a mobile phone with an image of Osama bin Laden (epa file photo)
I'm not at all an expert on Iraq or whatever threat was posed by [former Iraqi President] Saddam Hussein. But the sad reality of it is that the invasion of Iraq turned Al-Qaeda and Osama bin Laden from a man and an organization into a philosophy and a movement. And now we're faced with an Islamic militancy around the world that is far greater than it was on [September 11, 2001,] and almost certainly durable enough to sustain an eventual loss of Osama bin Laden or Ayman al-Zawahiri.

RFE/RL: Do you foresee more attacks on the United States or in the West on the scale of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in New York and Washington?

Scheuer: Oh, I think greater than 9/11. I don't think it will happen in Europe, but I do think it will happen in the United States. Bin Laden has been very clear that each of Al-Qaeda's attacks on America will be greater than the last, and I think the only reason we haven't seen an attack so far is that he doesn't have that attack prepared. But when he does, he will use it. And try to get us out of the way, which of course is his main goal.

America is not his main enemy. His main enemies are the Al-Saud family in Saudi Arabia, the Mubarak regime in Egypt, and Israel.

RFE/RL: Explain a bit about what you mean by that.

Scheuer: The primary goal of Al-Qaeda and the movement it has tried to inspire around the world has been to create Islamic governments in the Islamic world that govern according to their religion. And bin Laden's view on this is that those governments -- the government of Egypt, the government of Saudi Arabia, the government of Jordan, Algeria, right down the line -- only survive because the United States protects them, and Europe protects them. Either with money, diplomatic and political support, or military protection.

And bin Laden's goal has been to simply hurt the United States enough to force us to look at home, to take care of things here, and thereby prevent us from supporting those governments, which he -- and I think the vast majority of Muslims -- regard as oppressive police states.

Once America is removed from that sort of support, Al-Qaeda intends to focus on removing those governments, eliminating Israel, and the third step, further down the road: settling scores with what the Sunni world regards as heretics in the Shi'ite part of the Islamic world. So his vision for the world, and the vision they're pursuing, is a very clear and orderly one, at least from their perspective
Michael Sheuer (Courtesy Photo)
Michael Sheuer (Courtesy Photo)
WASHINGTON, January 8, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- Michael Scheuer is a 22-year veteran of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), where for six years he was in charge of the search for Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. While in the CIA, Scheuer anonymously authored two books critical of how Western governments were waging the "war on terror." He resigned in 2004 and is now a terrorism analyst for CBS News. RFE/RL correspondent Heather Maher asked him to assess the fight against Al-Qaeda.

No comments:

Post a Comment