Plateforme Level Extreme
Abonnement
Profil corporatif
Produits & Services
Support
Légal
English
This is how west has been selfish
Message
 
 
À
01/12/2008 10:47:05
Information générale
Forum:
Politics
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
01364599
Message ID:
01364861
Vues:
12
>>>>>>Unprecedented intelligence cooperation involving investigating agencies and spy outfits of India, United States, United Kingdom and Israel has got underway to crack the method and motive behind the Mumbai terrorist massacre, now widely blamed on Islamist radicals who appeared to have all four countries on their hit list when they arrived on the shores of India.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>Cooperation has been precipitated in part by the death of Americans, Britons, and Israelis, in the carnage. Thousands of Indians have died in terror attacks in India in the previous two decades without the world getting exercised about it, but the manner in which the terrorists who attacked Mumbai are reported to have singled out Americans and Britons, besides pointedly occupying a Jewish center, has revealed that their agenda was wider than just domestic discontent or the Kashmir issue.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>The British and Americans always used Pakistan to get India in trouble. Always used Kashmir as a soft target of India.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>You are the only human beings and rest of the world can die for your ugly politics.
>>>>>
>>>>>West people are worth people. Your people just statistical counts. Look at Naomi's recently message. She just wrote about five jewish killed by Israel commandos mistake. Others just number for her.
>>>>>
>>>>>Terrorists killed about 35.000 civillian in Turkey in last 30 years and that west didn't move a muscle. After 9/11 two country occupied for just 9/11. Recently Belgium give money back to PKK terrorists. Before that a killer terrorist Fehriye Erdal let free from Belgium. I suspicied they could let her free if USA looking for her.
>>>>>
>>>>>These make me angry really...
>>>>
>>>>To be fair to Naomi the reporting here in the UK highlighted the fact that 1 Briton was amongst the dead. I think its human nature.
>>>
>>>The same here. They also reported one Cypriot killed. And if I am not mistaken it is the same person. (Yacht magnat)
>>>He was British Cypriot, holder of both passports. At the scene he had 'wrong' one on him, and that (according to article) is
>>>what got him killed.
>>>
>>>However this was really gruesome event. Unlike with bombings, I belive this is first terrorist act where people were
>>>directly targeted by nationality (singled out / shot)
>>>
>>>World is getting more mad by the day.
>>
>>That was the early reporting here, too, but I thought in fact most of the victims were Indian. Now it may be the case that the terrorists sought out westerners and just didn't find many.
>>
>>What truly amazes me is that (this is what I have read, and haven't read everything) this was all the work of 10 guys. Killing that many people and holding a major city siege for days is quite a feat for 10 guys who aren't flying airplanes.
>
>It must have been more then 10 by all means. It was many city sites attacked so number must have been higher.
>Number 10 comes probably from an eye whitness who saw raft with 10 people
>getting on shore. But there were 2 hijacked vessels involved, and probably whole infrastructure already in town when it all started.
>
>Question is why is all this happening.
>I hope they will manage to avoid wider conflict as many fingers are pointing towards Pakistan and their underworld.
>Some say this is like regional 9/11. Very disturbing by all means.

Yes, it is. Between India, Pakistan, and Afghanistan that is already a powderkeg. All it needs is a match to set it off.

Here is the latest info I could find. To my surprise, it still isn't known who was involved in the attacks, five days later. (After 9/11, all 19 hijackers had their pictures in the paper around the world the next day). It is sounding like there were more than 10 involved, including some accomplices who were already in Mumbai when the others arrived by boat.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/02/world/asia/02mumbai.html?hp
Précédent
Suivant
Répondre
Fil
Voir

Click here to load this message in the networking platform