Day: September 25, 2006

  • Hariri Probe Uncovers Links to Other Assassinations

    The sticky strands of a murderous web are on the verge of being brought into light as an assassination investigation leads to links of others in Lebanon.

    A U.N. investigation into the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri has established links to 14 other political killings in Lebanon. A new report on the status of the probe says investigators are developing new leads as they move closer to pressing formal charges.

    An interim report by Belgian prosecutor Serge Brammertz confirms that a suicide bomber detonated the massive truck bomb that killed Rafik Hariri. The 22-page report says crime scene evidence indicates the bomber was a man in his early twenties who probably was not from Lebanon.

    Mr. Hariri and 22 others died in a massive blast in a Beirut suburb on February 14, 2005.

    Earlier reports by Brammertz’s predecessor Detlev Mehlis had implicated Syrian intelligence officials in the attack. Mehlis criticized authorities in Damascus for failing to cooperate with investigators. Syria has staunchly denied involvement, and condemned the assassination.

    The latest Brammertz report avoids naming suspects, and says Syria’s cooperation in recent months has been generally satisfactory.

    Brammertz does, however, confirm earlier indications that the assassination was a carefully orchestrated operation carried out by a team of professionals. He says his investigators have uncovered evidence of what he calls “a complex network of telecommunications traffic between a large number” of suspects.

    Brammertz also suggests the possibility of high-level involvement, saying his probe is closing in on what he calls “those who participated at different levels”.

    The Security Council, which authorized the probe, earlier gave Brammertz permission to expand its scope to include other political killings in Lebanon at about the same time. America’s U.N. Ambassador John Bolton says the latest report establishes clear links that may shed light on who is behind all the assassinations.

    “The evidence coming out in the investigation about the linkages among these 15 assassinations is significant,” said John Bolton. “This is something that Mr. Brammertz himself has deemed to be important because evidence that one can uncover about all 15 investigations can have a cumulative effect in showing the pattern, the activity and perhaps the direction and control of who actually ordered the assassinations as well as how they were carried out, and who carried them out.”

    Bolton says the investigation appears to be moving into the final phase, when the prosecutor will present his evidence in a Lebanese court.

    Yes, it certainly appears that the investigation is muddling through a rather sprawling web of bloodshed and victims. Anybody want to guess who is the spider lurking in the middle amongst the Lebanese bodies?

    It should also be noted that, besides the expected fingering of Syria that should stem from this investigation, the bold assassination also resulted in the surprising backblast that was the Cedar Revolution. That was certainly a miscalculation that I’m sure is greatly regretted by some key folk in Damascus.

  • Somalis Killed in Protests against Islamic Militiamen

    Obviously, violence and madness in Somalia is nothing new. Black Hawk Down, anyone? However, things have changed of late, as radical Islamists move ever closer to taking complete control of the strife-ridden country. I have been negligent in pointing this out, so here’s the latest bit o’ news that should boost the Somali tourist industry.

    Islamic fighters in the Somali port of Kismayo opened fire yesterday on residents who were burning tyres, throwing stones and chanting to protest against their takeover of the city hours earlier.

    A 13-year-old boy was shot dead and two other people were injured as violence raged for several hours in Somalia’s third biggest city, witnesses said.
    Click to learn more…

    “We have been taken over by extremists, the Islamic courts have taken us by force, and now they are firing at us,” said Dahabo Dirie, a protester.

    The Mogadishu-based Islamic militiamen poured into Kismayo overnight to extend their grip on south-central Somalia and effectively flank the powerless central government on three sides.

    Ministers accused the militias of mounting the offensive using fighters from Eritrea, Pakistan and Yemen.

    “There are foreign forces … which attacked Kismayo,” Hussein Mohamed Farah Aideed, the Somali interior minister said.

    A militia official, who spoke to a crowd in Kismayo before the protests began, said the movement was receiving help from abroad, but did not specify.

    Unfortunately, the kinds of tourists that developments such as this will draw are the radical Islamist expansionists and jihadists. Indeed, while the media blasts the clarion call of a resurgent Taliban in Afghanistan, that resurgence has only led to them dying by the bushel in much the same manner that they have in every one of their annual spring offensivepaloozas since they were swept from power. The only obvious differences this year is that they’ve garnered far more press for their strengthening and they are becoming martyrs in great numbers at the hands of so-called “second rate crusaders.”

    Iran is an obvious problem, and its rulers seem willing to work with the al Queda-type terrorist groups … to a degree. They share a common enemy in the Great Satan, but both have extremely different views about their hopes for the world and the Middle East in the event of success.

    Obviously, the radical Islamists that once found a home in Afghanistan, a home that harbored their training camps and allowed them to project their terror, are under too much pressure there now to be anything more than a threat against the westerners in that country. Likewise, they cannot find a strong base for their own growth in the long term in Iran. At this point, an Islamist seizure of Somalia would seem to be the best hope for a new base from which to train the jihadists and expand the bloodshed. Luckily, any such shift is something that has been in our game-planning for some time now.

  • Quote of the Week, 25 SEP 06

    Anyone who has to fight, even with the most modern weapons, against an enemy in complete command of the air, fights like a savage against modern European troops, under the same handicaps and with the same chances of success.

    -Erwin Rommel