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#1
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"NOYB" wrote in message
news ![]() Nidal is a Palestinian terrorist. Not an Iraqi terrorist. What does that tell you? What about the fact that many of the the 9-11 terrorists made Florida their home and in fact received their training there... Perhaps we should bomb the crap out of Florida. Florida is part of the US. You're showing your hatred for our country once again. No, Einstein. He's pointing out that a terrorists place of training does not automatically assign guilt to that country. If the world ran according to your logic, then the U.S.A. would be guilty of harboring terrorists. After all, they *did* learn to fly those planes at flight schools here, not abroad. |
#2
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![]() "Doug Kanter" wrote in message news:3knDb.12069 No, Einstein. He's pointing out that a terrorists place of training does not automatically assign guilt to that country. If the world ran according to your logic, then the U.S.A. would be guilty of harboring terrorists. After all, they *did* learn to fly those planes at flight schools here, not abroad. There's a world of difference between sending people to a flight school as innocuous individuals under false pretenses, and setting up a paramilitary training camp with the express approval and financial support of the host country. You do see that, don't you? |
#3
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"John Gaquin" wrote in message
... "Doug Kanter" wrote in message news:3knDb.12069 No, Einstein. He's pointing out that a terrorists place of training does not automatically assign guilt to that country. If the world ran according to your logic, then the U.S.A. would be guilty of harboring terrorists. After all, they *did* learn to fly those planes at flight schools here, not abroad. There's a world of difference between sending people to a flight school as innocuous individuals under false pretenses, and setting up a paramilitary training camp with the express approval and financial support of the host country. You do see that, don't you? Yes. And a meeting between two people in Baghdad doesn't necessarily constitute a training camp. Or, if it does, then the same thing applies to a Muslim house of worship in New Jersey, in which case the port authority may be liable for helping terrorists get from Manhattan to Jersey City repeatedly. |
#4
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![]() "Doug Kanter" wrote in message news:vgpDb.12073 Yes. And a meeting between two people in Baghdad doesn't necessarily constitute a training camp. Or, if it does, then the same thing applies to a Muslim house of worship in New Jersey, in which case the port authority may be liable for helping terrorists get from Manhattan to Jersey City repeatedly. Your point carries in principle, but suffers under realistic examination. The fact is that because of the way our country operates, with open borders, etc., just about anyone can come to school here (flight or otherwise), or come visit a house of worship, without knowledge of the government -- at least not immediate or timely knowledge. But the reverse is not true. No one - no one at all - gets into a mid-eastern country, particularly one of the ilk of Iraq, Iran, Syria, SA, without the police agencies being precisely aware of the who, where, and why of your visit. To schedule or attend a meeting with a government official would increase your 'attention quotient' in spades. There could be no such thing as a casual meeting in Baghdad involving either a known terrorist or a government official without security agency knowledge and consent. |
#5
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"John Gaquin" wrote in message
... "Doug Kanter" wrote in message news:vgpDb.12073 Yes. And a meeting between two people in Baghdad doesn't necessarily constitute a training camp. Or, if it does, then the same thing applies to a Muslim house of worship in New Jersey, in which case the port authority may be liable for helping terrorists get from Manhattan to Jersey City repeatedly. Your point carries in principle, but suffers under realistic examination. The fact is that because of the way our country operates, with open borders, etc., just about anyone can come to school here (flight or otherwise), or come visit a house of worship, without knowledge of the government -- at least not immediate or timely knowledge. But the reverse is not true. No one - no one at all - gets into a mid-eastern country, particularly one of the ilk of Iraq, Iran, Syria, SA, without the police agencies being precisely aware of the who, where, and why of your visit. To schedule or attend a meeting with a government official would increase your 'attention quotient' in spades. There could be no such thing as a casual meeting in Baghdad involving either a known terrorist or a government official without security agency knowledge and consent. OK. Where did they meet in Baghdad? |
#6
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Probably in the same apartment in which Abu Nidal was gunned down in shortly
thereafter. "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... "John Gaquin" wrote in message ... "Doug Kanter" wrote in message news:vgpDb.12073 Yes. And a meeting between two people in Baghdad doesn't necessarily constitute a training camp. Or, if it does, then the same thing applies to a Muslim house of worship in New Jersey, in which case the port authority may be liable for helping terrorists get from Manhattan to Jersey City repeatedly. Your point carries in principle, but suffers under realistic examination. The fact is that because of the way our country operates, with open borders, etc., just about anyone can come to school here (flight or otherwise), or come visit a house of worship, without knowledge of the government -- at least not immediate or timely knowledge. But the reverse is not true. No one - no one at all - gets into a mid-eastern country, particularly one of the ilk of Iraq, Iran, Syria, SA, without the police agencies being precisely aware of the who, where, and why of your visit. To schedule or attend a meeting with a government official would increase your 'attention quotient' in spades. There could be no such thing as a casual meeting in Baghdad involving either a known terrorist or a government official without security agency knowledge and consent. OK. Where did they meet in Baghdad? |
#7
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"NOYB" wrote in message ...
Probably in the same apartment in which Abu Nidal was gunned down in shortly thereafter. More pure speculation. But then again, you republicans don't mind going into a country, unprovoked, and blowing it to hell, along with innocent men, women and children, all based on nothing more than wild speculation. |
#8
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![]() "Doug Kanter" wrote in message news:LIpDb.12075 OK. Where did they meet in Baghdad? I have no idea where they met, and the where is beside the point. My point was that it could not have been a "casual" meeting. It could not have occurred without knowledge and consent of the Iraqi security forces. |
#9
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"John Gaquin" wrote in message
... "Doug Kanter" wrote in message news:LIpDb.12075 OK. Where did they meet in Baghdad? I have no idea where they met, and the where is beside the point. My point was that it could not have been a "casual" meeting. It could not have occurred without knowledge and consent of the Iraqi security forces. That's quite an "absolute". I'm sure Iraq was (and will again become) an Orwellian nightmare, but when WE have chosen to watch someone, we're capable of creating the same situation for that person. Still, it's not foolproof, and various attacks have shown. |
#10
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![]() "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... "John Gaquin" wrote in message ... "Doug Kanter" wrote in message news:3knDb.12069 No, Einstein. He's pointing out that a terrorists place of training does not automatically assign guilt to that country. If the world ran according to your logic, then the U.S.A. would be guilty of harboring terrorists. After all, they *did* learn to fly those planes at flight schools here, not abroad. There's a world of difference between sending people to a flight school as innocuous individuals under false pretenses, and setting up a paramilitary training camp with the express approval and financial support of the host country. You do see that, don't you? Yes. And a meeting between two people in Baghdad doesn't necessarily constitute a training camp. Doug, The Iraqi gov't issued sanctuary to Abu Nidal. He wasn't living there clandestinely. If he was meeting with al Qaeda, it was with the full knowledge of Saddam. All of those issues makes that situation a far cry from two terrorists meeting in New Jersey. |