Tag Archives: Ground Zero

Sheikhing Us Blind

By Allan Erickson

Muslim Brotherhood pressuring White House to release Blind Sheikh Sheikhing us Blind

It is true we tried in civilian court a known Islamic terrorist after the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center. Sheikh Omar Abdel-Rahman from Egypt, the”Blind Sheikh,” was convicted of seditious conspiracy, murder, plans to blow up other New York landmarks including the U.N., and a plot to kill Egyptian President Mubarak. Adbel-Rahman is serving a life sentence in a U.S. facility.

Among his other accomplishments:

  • Fiery preaching encouraging Egyptian army officers to assassinate Egyptian President Sadat;
  • Approving followers who killed 60 tourists in Luxor in an attempt to get the sheikh freed;
  • Issuing a fatwa from jail providing bin Laden theological permission to perpetrate 9/11

This has been a very bad guy for a very long time. He has the blood of innocents on his hands, literally thousands of victims.

Roughly six months ago, we learned the Obama Administration was preparing the way to release this maniac into Egyptian custody, now that the Muslim Brotherhood is in charge in Cairo.

We provide Egypt billions of dollars in aid and military hardware annually. We have given support to the current Muslim Brotherhood regime in other ways, despite mayhem and murder in the streets. In return, Egypt, led by Morsi of the Brotherhood, refuses to help us investigate Benghazi, helps Iran transport weapons through the Suez to attack Israel, and insists we release Abdel-Rahman.

No doubt John Kerry will pick up where Hillary Clinton left off and continue licking the boots of the Brotherhood, even as he acknowledges Obama’s Libyan war released tens of thousands of RPGs and other weapons of war to Al Qaeda, which is obviously not decimated as the administration claims.

Speaking of Al Qaeda, the U.S. got its hands on another bin Laden partner recently. But rather than put him on trial via the military at Gitmo, as in the case of 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (KSM), Obama and Holder have decided to bring Sulaiman Abu Ghaith (SAG) to New York to stand trial in civilian court, where he will enjoy the right to remain silent, at taxpayer expense of course. SAG is Osama bin Laden’s son-in-law, one ‘suspected’ of being extremely helpful to KSM and bin Laden in killing 2,975 Americans on September 11, 2001.

Held in custody just blocks from Ground Zero, SAG no doubt enjoys reading a Koran untouched by infidels, a prayer mat, and Halal food specially prepared. He entered a plea of not guilty just days ago.

We are told SAG cannot be interrogated now because this is a criminal proceeding and he has rights. We are told he was brought to New York secretly and has attorneys appointed by the court to provide representation. Why do we extend the rights of U.S. citizenship to terrorists?

Many prominent Americans, including the minority leader in the Senate, have said SAG is an enemy combatant just like KSM. Therefore, he should be interrogated, held at Gitmo, and tried. Many others agree, no doubt the majority of New Yorkers and the family members of the victims of 9/11.

Eric Holder and Barack Obama apparently …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Bin Laden son-in-law could yield info on al-Qaida

Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, the charismatic al-Qaida spokesman, fundraiser and son-in-law to Osama bin Laden, is likely to have a vast trove of knowledge about the terror network’s central command but not much useful information about current threats or plots, intelligence officials and other experts say.

Abu Ghaith pleaded not guilty Friday to conspiring to kill Americans in propaganda videos that warned of further assaults against the United States as devastating as the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon that killed nearly 3,000 people.

Believed to be more of a strategic player in bin Laden’s inner circle than an operational plotter, Abu Ghaith would be the highest-ranking al-Qaida figure to stand trial on U.S. soil since 9/11. Intelligence officials say he may be able to shed new light on al-Qaida’s inner workings — concerning al-Qaida’s murky dealings in Iran over the past decade, for example — but probably will have few details about specific or imminent ongoing threats.

He gave U.S. officials a 22-page statement after his Feb. 28 arrest in Jordan, according to prosecutors. They would not describe the statement.

Bearded and balding, Abu Ghaith said little during the 15-minute hearing in U.S. District Court in New York — in lower Manhattan just blocks from Ground Zero — and displayed none of the finger-wagging or strident orations that marked his propaganda in the days and months after 9/11.

Through an interpreter, Judge Lewis A. Kaplan asked whether he understood his rights. Abu Ghaith nodded and said, “Yes.” Asked whether he had money to hire an attorney, he shook his head and said no. He nodded and said yes when asked whether he had signed an affidavit describing his financial situation.

Kaplan promised to set a trial date when the case returns to court on April 8. Bail was not requested, and none was set. Abu Ghaith‘s lawyer declined comment after the hearing.

The fact that the defendant is being tried in federal district court is controversial in itself. Republicans are criticizing the Obama administration for bringing Abu Ghaith to New York instead of sending him to the military detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

President Barack Obama has promised to close Guantanamo, where terror detainees generally have fewer legal rights and due process than they would have in a U.S. federal court. But …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Ground Zero Mosque Imam Embezzled Millions: Lawsuit

By Matt Cantor The former imam for the much-maligned mosque near Ground Zero embezzled millions of dollars from his charity, a $25 million lawsuit alleges. Feisal Abdul Rauf, ousted two years ago from the mosque, used the money to fund a luxury lifestyle, including gifts and support for a woman outside his marriage,… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Alphabet dispute revives old injuries in Croatia

Can Vukovar also be Bykobap?

Whether the name of the war-scarred town on the Danube is written in the Latin or Cyrillic alphabet is a sensitive question. Croatia‘s upcoming entry into the European Union is forcing residents of the Balkan country to answer it.

More than twenty years after it was reduced to rubble in a brutal Serb-led army siege, Vukovar is testing if Croatians are ready to respect the EU‘s standards on minority rights when their country joins as the 28th member on July 1.

The Croatian government is trying to introduce Serbian Cyrillic writing into areas with sizeable ethnic Serb communities, a move that has infuriated Croatia‘s war veterans and nationalists. Thousands of flag-waving protesters, some wearing military uniforms, joined a demonstration against the change on Saturday in downtown Vukovar.

Unlike ethnic Croats, the minority Serbs use the Cyrillic alphabet influenced by Orthodox Christianity and also used by Russians. Though Vukovar, for instance, sounds the same in both alphabets, in Cyrillic it is written Bykobap.

Saturday’s protest is organized by veteran groups, Vukovar wartime defenders and hardline political parties. Opponents of Serbian script have been active on Facebook, where one of the postings reads: “The final strike on Vukovar — Cyrillic!”

Once a picturesque baroque tow, Vukovar has become a symbol of the senseless destruction during the war that followed the breakup of the former Yugoslavia in the early 1990s — leaving more than 100,000 people dead and millions homeless in Europe‘s worst carnage since World War II.

Even decades later, many Croats and Serbs in Vukovar and elsewhere continue to live parallel lives, with children attending separate schools and each ethnic community visiting its own cafes or shops.

The EU maintains that Croatia must protect its minorities, particularly ethnic Serbs, from discrimination and violence. But Zarko Puhovski, a liberal Croatian analyst, pointed out that “a rebellion against Cyrillic is something that was to be expected in Croatia” in the aftermath of the war with Serbia.

“Many people are against it, and that tells you that the situation may not be ready,” Puhovski said. “But, if we were to wait until it is ready, it would never happen.”

The fighting in Croatia started when it declared independence from the former federation in 1991, triggering a rebellion by the minority Serbs and an onslaught by the Serb-led Yugoslav army. Vukovar, located on the boundary with Serbia, took the first blow. Once Croatia joins the EU, the still-tense town and the Danube will become the bloc’s eastern border.

In three months of siege, Yugoslav army bombardment all but obliterated the town before it fell in November 1991. The army troops and Serb paramilitaries overran Vukovar, killing and expelling its residents, and leaving a ghost town of shattered buildings, pockmarked by grenades and tank fire. More than 200 prisoners were executed and buried in a mass grave at a nearby pig farm.

The war ended in 1995, in a U.N.-brokered peace agreement that envisaged the region’s gradual return to Croatian rule.

Although the U.N. war crimes tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands, has sentenced several Serbian officers and politicians in connection with destruction of Vukovar and the killings, many in Croatia have felt it was not enough.

They say the introduction of Cyrillic is a slap in the face.

“It would be as if a sign in Arabic was put up next to Ground Zero in New York,” nationalist Croatian politician Zoran Vinkovic claimed.

Today, nearly 35 percent of Serbs live in Vukovar, according to the results of a postwar census published in 2011 — enough for the introduction of the Serbian script at road signs, in schools, and on documents.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Never Say Die: Finding Small Business Success in Tough Times

By Ty Kiisel, Contributor Early Monday morning a colleague and I landed at JFK and spent a few days in Manhattan talking to the media for Lendio. Early Monday we made it a point to visit the memorial at Ground Zero and were moved by the beautiful fountains and the work they’re doing to remember those who lost their lives. I admit to being moved—but almost as powerful as the memorial itself were the sounds of new construction that accompanied us through the bustle of the financial district.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest