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Yemen Loyalists Retake Southern Provincial Capital
Today's Headlines
Headline Comments [Views]
Page 4: Opinion
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Bangladesh
Blogger's killing
[DAWN] IN 2013, 'Islamist' groups in Bangladesh circulated the names of 84 'atheist' bloggers in that country who they wanted to be tried for blasphemy. Niladri Chattopadhyay Niloy, who was brutally killed at his home in Dhaka on Friday, was the fourth blogger on that list to suffer this fate. All four killings have taken place this year and the criminal masterminds remain unidentified.
Just a thought, but you might keep an eye on your local Jamaat-e-Islami. They go in for that sort of thing. They like to leave it to their youth league, of course, so check the whereabouts of the nearest Shibir members on the day of the murder.
Unless something drastic is done to check the trend, a large number of people in Bangladesh remain exposed to what has the look of a well-coordinated effort to silence those who have been deemed guilty of crossing the line while expressing their opinion.
"Something drastic," for instance, like brutally murdering four Jamaat members or associates. In fact, I think it was the Hafejat, which is a front organization for the Jamaat, that first demanded the "atheists" be rounded up and killed.
Many at home and away accuse the Bangladesh government of not realising just how serious the situation is. Mr Niloy had complained to the police that he had received threats but media reports say he had got no protection.
Right. The cops, y'see, are there to solve crimes and apprehend the bad guyz, not to prevent crimes from happening. If that was the case, every woman who'd ever been thumped by a vile-tempered and Islamic husband would have a police escort and there aren't enough cops for that, are there?
Apparently his killers didn't have to spend too much time planning their act, either. They approached his house posing as potential tenants, took him to a room, completed the hideous job, and disappeared.
Into thin air, apparently. None of the neighbors heard a ruckus, there wasn't anybody on the street who noticed four blood spattered guys carrying machetes and high-fiving each other. Niloy had a four inch gash in his neck. The human body holds about 5 1/2 quarts of blood, and severing a major artery makes it spurt. Once it's on clothing and shoes it's hard to get out. I've still got blood on my shoes from last November when I mangled my hand with a table saw.
Viewed against the background of the global protest the earlier incidents in which bloggers had been killed had caused, and given the promises made by Dhaka to stand by its avowed secular ideals, this was far too easy an execution of a desire to exterminate the unwanted.
World indignation doesn't hunt down murderers. Cops do. I'll admit that Bangla has a better record in this are than Pakistain does.
There would be some cautious voices counselling restraint on the part of the bloggers but these must be overwhelmed by the ultimate argument: everything that is said can be countered by words wherever necessary. Violence is less equipped to control thoughts and opinion today than it ever was. There are so many convenient tools of expression available in the era of technology. Blog-spots are one option that a growing number employ as a very personal means to inform and comment. They are too numerous and too firmly rooted in modern society. Debate might defeat them. Violence cannot attempt to silence them.
Posted by: Fred || 08/10/2015 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under: Jamaat-e-Islami

#1  Islamist theocrats execute secular atheist. the sectarian war rolls on
Posted by: anon1 || 08/10/2015 4:37 Comments || Top||


Everyone must take steps to stop targeted killings of bloggers
[Dhaka Tribune] We offer our deepest condolences to the family of Niloy Chatterjee, the Gonojagoron Moncho activist and writer who was brutally stabbed to death in Dhaka on Friday afternoon.

The murder of Niloy is similar in both manner and apparent motivation to the killings of Mukto-Mona blogger Ananta Bijoy Das and the writers Oyasiqur Rahman Babu and Avijit Roy earlier this year.

It is chilling that all these people were publicly threatened for many years by groups which are hostile to the right of others to express any types of dissenting view on religion and related matters.

Such targeted murders will not end so long as those who orchestrate and incite violence against bloggers, can operate with impunity.

It is long overdue for the government to learn the lesson that it is not enough to only act after such murders have been carried out.

Authorities must do more to fulfill their duty to protect all citizens by addressing the targeting of hatred and violence against writers in the first place. The government needs to be pro-active in providing and improving protection for any people and groups who have been threatened. It must end the impunity to threaten others which emboldens those individuals who are minded or influenced to carry out such targeted acts of violence.

Measures must be taken against those who publicly threaten, or incite deadly violence against writers. Anything less will only encourage others to continue similar campaigns of targeted liquidation.

Concrete steps to uphold laws to prevent incitement of violence against others, also need the co-operation of the wider public. As a society, we should question the indifference and tacit acceptance which allows some to condone or justify violence against anyone who questions or criticises religion. Everyone should make clear that violence in the name of religion is unacceptable and intolerance should not be tolerated.
Posted by: Fred || 08/10/2015 00:00 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under: Jamaat-e-Islami


Hold police to account for failing to protect bloggers
[Dhaka Tribune] It is disgraceful that police refused to offer help to Niladri Chatterjee, the blogger who was brutally stabbed to death on Friday.

On May 15, writing under his Facebook name of Niloy Neel, he catalogued the events which led him to repeatedly seek police protection. It is shameful that after reporting how he had been suspiciously followed by two potentially identifiable people, while returning from an event commemorating the murdered writer Ananta Bijoy Das, he was told by coppers that his complaint was not under their jurisdiction, and advised to "leave the country as soon as possible."

He was subsequently also turned away when he tried to file a general diary at several cop shoppes. One police officer even reportedly told him that the police do not usually register such GDs since the officer who registers it will be accountable for ensuring the complaint's security, and they do not want to risk their jobs if found negligent in this duty.

Clearly, it was a far greater dereliction of duty for cop shoppes to have refused to act upon Niloy's concerns. Had the police made inquiries to follow up death threats and offered guidance and credible security measures to protect him, it is possible that the murder plot might have been prevented or disrupted.

There is no excuse for them not to have taken his requests seriously.

The country has witnessed a series of murders of academics and writers about religion and related matters, who have been killed after personal death threats were made against them by Islamist groups. With three such killings occurring this year, it is inexcusable that no practical help was offered to Niloy.

The government has to end the inaction and indifference which emboldens those who incite and carry out such murder plots.

It must hold the police to account for failing to register Niloy's concerns, and ensure meaningful measures are implemented to protect people who have been threatened by Death Eater groups.

Only by demonstrating that it takes death threats seriously can the government deter and prevent these cynically targeted murders and properly fulfill its duty to protect citizens.
Posted by: Fred || 08/10/2015 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under: Jamaat-e-Islami


Home Front: WoT
Rules of engagment - Obama style.
Moved to Opinion
Posted by: Besoeker || 08/10/2015 09:37 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Coming soon to a Baltimore near you.
Posted by: SteveS || 08/10/2015 12:07 Comments || Top||

#2  LBJ redux? He famously said the USAF couldn't bomb an enemy outhouse without his permission. I don't believe a certain central european 20th century dictator went THAT far...
Posted by: borgboy || 08/10/2015 16:17 Comments || Top||


The Democratic Party, on the Edge of the Abyss
Hat tip Instapundit.
by Martin Peretz

Editor-in-chief of The New Republic, 1974-2013, board member of The Israel Project
A simple question: where ya been these past seven years, Marty?
Posted by: Steve White || 08/10/2015 00:00 || Comments || Link || [5 views] Top|| File under:

#1  So, the future hangs on Schumer's honesty and good intentions.
Geebus. We are doomed.
Posted by: ed in texas || 08/10/2015 7:34 Comments || Top||

#2  Hey, misery likes company. They'll drag us all down with them.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 08/10/2015 10:41 Comments || Top||


Iraq
Are Saddam-era soldiers secretly behind the rise of Islamic State?
[Jpost] 'ISIS top brass is Iraqi army's former best and brightest." The Associated Press piece by Hamza Hendawi and Qassim Abdul-Zahra informs us that the "experience" these officers bring to Islamic State (IS, also ISIS or ISIL) help provide it discipline and military prowess.

The evidence provided by the authors was that army officers of the current Iraqi government had blamed their inability to stop IS on the presence of these Saddam military experts. Ali Omran, who now serves in Iraq's 5th division, claimed that an old artillery major he knew was serving with the Islamists now. The article claimed Saud Mohsen Hassan, who also goes by the names Abu Mutazz, Abu Muslim al-Turkmani and Fadel al-Hayali, was a Saddam-era major and now is the IS "second in command." Four of nine members of the IS military council were Saddam-era officers. Seven of 12 IS provinces even has governors who served in the Ba'ath army. In total there might be as many as 100- 160 Saddam-era soldiers in the IS ranks, according to the report.
A short review of the "evidence" = unsupported statements by various Iraqi "experts", and its coverage by western press
...LET'S PAUSE and digest all this. 140 or so men who served under Saddam are thought to play a role in middle or senior ranks of IS. Three Saddam-era officers ended up in the top six ranks of IS. Here we find Abu Ayman al-Iraqi, a former colonel in the air defense, Haji Bakr and Abu Ahmed al-Alwani, whose real name is Waleed Jassem al-Alwani, a former Saddam-era soldier.

When one considers how large Saddam's army was, it would be surprising if IS didn't have a plethora of former Saddam-era soldiers. Just the elite units in Saddam's disbanded army included 30,000 commandos, tens of thousands of Republican Guard and trained "fedayeen," or guerrilla fighters who were supposed to lead the insurgency. Saddam's elites were Sunnis, precisely the people disaffected under Nuri al-Maliki's Shi'ite-led government. But what was this "formidable" military experience they brought to help IS? If they had fought in the Iran- Iraq war they would today be in their fifties or older.

Most of these men came of age when Saddam's army was withering on the vine in the 1990s, and they spent 10 years supposedly unemployed from 2003 to 2013, when they decided to secretly become the backbone of IS? Why had they been such dismal insurgents for those 10 years, only then suddenly finding their stride? The truth is that a story of a Ba'athist hidden hand has been packaged and provided by sources in Iraq and Syria, primarily those who support the Iraqi government, are connected to its army or support the Shi'ite militias, in order to excuse the abject failure of the Iraqi central government; "Saddam is back, please help us, it's not our fault." Other sources have little credibility and are passed off by journalists as if they give some sort of real evidence.

The Iraqi army, that received hundreds of millions of dollars in equipment and training from the US, melted away in 2014. It surrendered thousands of US armored vehicles and Humvees to IS.

So we are to believe that a few Saddam-era colonels, majors and captains, artillery officers and air defense intelligence honchos swept aside thousands of vehicles, literally whole divisions, in their 2014 offensive? The same men who were so incompetent under Saddam? What is a Saddam-era "air defense colonel"? What air defense? His air defense achieved nothing. Saddam's intelligence services were good, but what does that have to do with IS ability to destroy the Iraqi army and withstand the bludgeoning of Iranian-backed Shi'ite militias? IS is a formidable fighting force in a sense, because its enemies are often so worthless. IS emerged in Iraq and Syria because of a backbone of Sunni supporters who were disenfranchised or disillusioned by the insurgency against Maliki and Syrian President Bashar Assad. When it came up against Kurdish fighters, after initial gains, it was defeated. The Kurds complained that their real problem fighting IS was lack of armored vehicles and anti-armor weapons, because ISIS had stolen so much American equipment. In small-unit battles IS was not superior to Kurdish peshmerga militia, who had learned their tactics fighting Saddam.
My personal view is that ISIS crisis been deliberately inflated by the "West" to justify rapprochement with Iran
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 08/10/2015 02:14 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under:

#1  So, the "JV" team is now composed of experts?
Posted by: ed in texas || 08/10/2015 8:27 Comments || Top||

#2  I didn't think this was remotely secret.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain || 08/10/2015 8:37 Comments || Top||

#3 
Posted by: || 08/10/2015 8:40 Comments || Top||

#4  Now, the riveting new book, "Courting Disaster", How the CIA Kept America Safe”(Regnery), has been published.

Here is an excerpt:

"Just before dawn on March 1, 2003, two dozen heavily armed Pakistani tactical assault forces move in and surround a safe house in Rawalpindi. A few hours earlier they had received a text message from an informant inside the house. It read: "I am with KSM."

Bursting in, they find the disheveled mastermind of the 9/11 attacks, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, in his bedroom. He is taken into custody. In the safe house, they find a treasure trove of computers, documents, cell phones and other valuable "pocket litter."

Once in custody, KSM is defiant. He refuses to answer questions, informing his captors that he will tell them everything when he gets to America and sees his lawyer. But KSM is not taken to America to see a lawyer Instead he is taken to a secret CIA "black site" in an undisclosed location.

Upon arrival, KSM finds himself in the complete control of Americans. He does not know where he is, how long he will be there, or what his fate will be. Despite his circumstances, KSM still refuses to talk. He spews contempt at his interrogators, telling them Americans are weak, lack resilience, and are unable to do what is necessary to prevent the terrorists from succeeding in their goals. He has trained to resist interrogation.

When he is asked for information about future attacks, he tells his questioners scornfully: "Soon, you will know."

It becomes clear he will not reveal the information using traditional interrogation techniques. So he undergoes a series of "enhanced interrogation techniques" approved for use only on the most high-value detainees. The techniques include water-boarding.

He begins telling his CIA debriefers about active al Qaeda plots to launch attacks against the United States and other Western targets. He holds classes for CIA officials, using a chalkboard to draw a picture of al Qaeda's operating structure, financing, communications, and logistics. He identifies al Qaeda travel routes and safe havens, and helps intelligence officers make sense of documents and computer records seized in terrorist raids.

He identifies voices in intercepted telephone calls, and helps officials understand the meaning of coded terrorist communications. He provides information that helps our intelligence community capture other high-ranking terrorists.

KSM's questioning, and that of other captured terrorists, produces more than 6,000 intelligence reports, which are shared across the intelligence community, as well as with our allies across the world.

In one of these reports, KSM describes in detail the revisions he made to his failed 1994-1995 plan known as the "Bojinka plot" to blow up a dozen airplanes carrying some 4,000 passengers over the Pacific Ocean.

Years later, an observant CIA officer notices the activities of a cell being followed by British authorities appear to match KSM's description of his plans for a Bojinka-style attack.

In an operation that involves unprecedented intelligence cooperation between our countries, British officials proceed to unravel the plot.

On the night of Aug. 9, 2006 they launch a series of raids in a northeast London suburb that lead to the arrest of two dozen al Qaeda terrorist suspects. They find a USB thumb-drive in the pocket of one of the men with security details for Heathrow airport, and information on seven Trans -Atlantic flights that were scheduled to take off within hours of each other:
• United Airlines Flight 931 to San Francisco departing at 2:15 PM
• Air Canada Flight 849 to Toronto departing at 3:00 PM
• Air Canada Flight 865 to Montreal departing at 3:15 PM
• United Airlines Flight 959 to Chicago departing at 3:40 PM
• United Airlines Flight 925 to Washington departing at 4:20 PM
• American Airlines Flight 131 to New York departing at 4:35 PM
• American Airlines Flight 91 to Chicago departing at 4:50 PM
They seize bomb-making equipment and hydrogen peroxide to make liquid explosives. And they find the chilling martyrdom videos the suicide bombers had prepared.

Today, if you asked an average person on the street what they know about the 2006 airlines plot, most would not be able to tell you much. Few Americans are aware of the fact al Qaeda had planned to mark the fifth anniversary of 9/11 with an attack of similar scope and magnitude. And still fewer realize the terrorists' true intentions in this plot were uncovered thanks to critical information obtained through the interrogation of the man who conceived it: Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.

This is only one of the many attacks stopped with the help of the CIA interrogation program established by the Bush Administration in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

In addition to helping break up these specific terrorist cells and plots, CIA questioning provided our intelligence community with an unparalleled body of information about al Qaeda Until the program was temporarily suspended in 2006, intelligence officials say, well over half of the information our government had about al Qaeda; how it operates, how it moves money, how it communicates, how it recruits operatives, how it picks targets, how it plans and carries out attacks-came from the interrogation of terrorists in CIA custody.

Former CIA Director George Tenet has declared: "I know this program has saved lives. I know we've disrupted plots. I know this program alone is worth more than what the FBI, the Central Intelligence Agency, and the National Security Agency put together have been able to tell us."

Former CIA Director Mike Hayden has said: "The facts of the case are that the use of these techniques against these terrorists made us safer. It really did work."
Even Barack Obama's Director of National Intelligence, Dennis Blair, has acknowledged: "High-value information came from interrogations in which those methods were used and provided a deeper understanding of the al Qaeda organization that was attacking this country."
Leon Panetta, Obama's CIA Director, has said: "Important information was gathered from these detainees. It provided information that was acted upon."

John Brennan, Obama's Homeland Security Advisor, when asked in an interview if enhanced-interrogation techniques were necessary to keep America safe, replied: "Would the U. S. be handicapped if the CIA was not, in fact, able to carry out these types of detention and debriefing activities, I would say yes."

On Jan. 22, 2009, President Obama issued Executive Order 13491, closing the CIA program and directing that, henceforth, all interrogations by U. S. personnel must follow the techniques contained in the Army Field Manual.

The morning of the announcement, Mike Hayden was still in his post as CIA Director, He called White House Counsel Greg Craig and told him bluntly: "You didn't ask, but this is the CIA officially non-concurring". The president went ahead anyway, over ruling the objections of the agency.

A few months later, on April 16, 2009, President Obama ordered the release of four Justice Department memos that described in detail the techniques used to interrogate KSM and other high-value terrorists. This time, not just Hayden (who was now retired) but five CIA directors-including Obama's own director, Leon Panetta objected. George Tenet called to urge against the memos' release. So did Porter Goss.

So did John Deutch. Hayden says: "You had CIA directors in a continuous unbroken stream to 1995 calling saying,'Don't do this.'"

In addition to objections from the men who led the agency for a collective 14 years, the President also heard objections from the agency's covert field operatives. A few weeks earlier, Panetta had arranged for the eight top officials of the Clandestine Service to meet with the President.

It was highly unusual for these clandestine officers to visit the Oval Office, and they used the opportunity to warn the President that releasing the memos would put agency operatives at risk.

The President reportedly listened respectfully-and then ignored their advice.

With these actions, Barack Obama arguably did more damage to America's national security in his first 100 days of office than any President in American history.

Posted by: Besoeker || 08/10/2015 8:55 Comments || Top||

#5  My personal view is that ISIS crisis been deliberately inflated by the "West" to justify rapprochement with Iran

You're giving Obama and the feckless Europeans way too much credit.
Posted by: jvalentour || 08/10/2015 9:10 Comments || Top||

#6  Now that I've read the article instead of the title, I have to say I halfway disagree.

I think ISIS has been inflated by Syria and Iraq. The Iraqi government basically starved the army in the Sunni and Kurd areas for supplies, and then "surrendered" vehicles to ISIS. Stop and think: if you want to get away from ISIS, are you going to leave your vehicle, with a full tank of gas, the keys in the ignition, and the engine running, and then run away on foot in the desert?
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain || 08/10/2015 15:28 Comments || Top||

#7  Also, ISIL has spent most of its time attacking Sunni areas in Iraq and Kurdish areas near the border. Almost as if they're Iraq and Iran's way of ethnically cleansing the Kurds and Sunnis without having to take the blame for it.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain || 08/10/2015 15:32 Comments || Top||

#8  Excellent post. Thank you very much! jf
Posted by: borgboy || 08/10/2015 16:26 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Former DIA director: Obama White House Made "Willful Decision" to Support AQ and MB in Syria
[Freedom Outpost] In Al Jazeera's latest Head to Head episode, former director of the Defense Intelligence Agency Michael Flynn confirms to Mehdi Hasan that not only had he studied the DIA memo predicting the West's backing of an Islamic State in Syria when it came across his desk in 2012, but even asserts that the White House's sponsoring of radical jihadists (that would emerge as ISIL and Nusra) against the Syrian regime was "a willful decision." [Lengthy discussion of the DIA memo begins at the 8:50 mark.]

Amazingly, Flynn actually took issue with the way interviewer Mehdi Hasan posed the question--Flynn seemed to want to make it clear that the policies that led to the rise of ISIL were not merely the result of ignorance or looking the other way, but the result of conscious decision making:

Hasan: You are basically saying that even in government at the time you knew these groups were around, you saw this analysis, and you were arguing against it, but who wasn't listening?

Flynn: I think the administration.
Posted by: Besoeker || 08/10/2015 01:56 || Comments || Link || [8 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Why limit yourself to internal policies---why mess a single country, when you can mess the entire world?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 08/10/2015 2:11 Comments || Top||

#2  Arab Spring regime change [picking winners and losers] gone terribly wrong. The Russians are not about to write Assad off. Any junior foreign affairs or policy analyst could have predicted this.
Posted by: Besoeker || 08/10/2015 8:33 Comments || Top||

#3  I'm always amazed to see what general officers are willing to disclose as soon as the designation "(Ret.)" appears after their names. I'm tempted to put that designation after all their names so we can get the full picture.
Posted by: Matt || 08/10/2015 13:19 Comments || Top||

#4  I'm always amazed to see what general officers are willing to disclose as soon as the designation "(Ret.)" appears after their names. I'm tempted to put that designation after all their names so we can get the full picture.Posted by: Matt

I generally agree Matt, but Flynn pretty much stayed at war with the regime [and their Klingon handlers] until he and his deputy were fired/told to retire. Mike Flynn uses every opportunity and forum at his disposal to stick it up Champ's arse.
Posted by: Besoeker || 08/10/2015 14:30 Comments || Top||


Government
Scott Walker: Everything That Hillary Clinton Touches Is a Mess
[PJ Media] Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker hit the stage at RedState Gathering Saturday and immediately began deconstructing the presumptive Democrat nominee.

"Every place in the world that Hillary Clinton has touched is more messed up today than when she and President Obama took office," Walker said during a barrage that was clearly meant to keep the focus on the GOP's eventual general election opponent.

The key question Republicans need to answer, says Walker, is "who's best equipped to make sure that Hillary Clinton is not the next president?"

He called his GOP rivals "a great group of Republicans" and said they're not the opponent, Hillary Clinton is. Walker noted that Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers "doesn't talk trash. He shows what he does on the field of play." Adopting that same attitude, he said to rising applause, "I don't just talk about it. I fight and I win and I have a record of accomplishment in a blue state and I did not compromise my principles to get it."
Posted by: Besoeker || 08/10/2015 01:30 || Comments || Link || [7 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Is there a chance this man will be your next president? Neh, wishful thinking of the worst kind.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 08/10/2015 2:07 Comments || Top||

#2  I'm wishing for it too.
Posted by: Iblis || 08/10/2015 14:40 Comments || Top||

#3  There's a fair chance, say 35%?
Posted by: Shipman || 08/10/2015 16:57 Comments || Top||

#4  But first, apparently, The Donald has to say or something beyond The Pale -- a glimmer of which, according to pollstirrers, ain't yet in sight.
Posted by: JHH || 08/10/2015 18:55 Comments || Top||

#5  ...or do...
Posted by: JHH || 08/10/2015 18:56 Comments || Top||



Who's in the News
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2Govt of Iran
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1Hezbollah
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1al-Nusra
1Palestinian Authority
1Abu Sayyaf

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A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.

Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.

Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has dominated Mexico for six years.
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Meet the Mods
In no particular order...
Steve White
Seafarious
tu3031
badanov
sherry
ryuge
GolfBravoUSMC
Bright Pebbles
trailing wife
Gloria
Fred
Besoeker
Glenmore
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Two weeks of WOT
Mon 2015-08-10
  Yemen Loyalists Retake Southern Provincial Capital
Sun 2015-08-09
  Yemen pro-govt forces launch offensive
Sat 2015-08-08
  Prominent Bangladeshi secular blogger murdered
Fri 2015-08-07
  'Father of Taliban' Sami ul-Haq pledge allegiance to Mullah Mansoor
Thu 2015-08-06
  66 Taliban and Daesh Insurgents Killed in Nangarhar Drone Strike
Wed 2015-08-05
  Head of Taliban's Qatar-based political office Tayeb Agha quits as leadership rift deepens
Tue 2015-08-04
  Mullah Omar's Son Yaqub Reportedly Killed: Official
Mon 2015-08-03
  Clash between Afghan Taliban fighters leaves nine dead
Sun 2015-08-02
  Official: Nearly 800 ISIS militants killed in Mosul last month
Sat 2015-08-01
  Jalaluddin Haqqani is dead, say Taliban sources
Fri 2015-07-31
  Afghan Taliban confirm leader Mullah Omar's death
Thu 2015-07-30
  Belgium Jails Syria Jihad Recruiters for Up to 20 Years
Wed 2015-07-29
  Lashkar-i-Jhangvi chief Malik Ishaq, two sons killed in Muzaffargarh 'encounter'
Tue 2015-07-28
  Syrian Army Advances in Palmyra, ISIL Militants Flee
Mon 2015-07-27
  13 Die as Bombers Target Swimming Pool in Northern Iraq


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