MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
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MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
The photos released of the fortified villa in Abbottabad, Pakistan, where Osama bin Laden died on Sunday night, May 2, show a satellite dish as well as cables and wires snaking along the outer and inner walls. Smashed computers appear in shots of the interior rooms. Far from dispensing with electronic devices and Internet connections as widely reported, the fortress that was the al Qaeda leader's last haven proves to have been equipped with both.
All this up-to-date electronic technology would have opened the six-year old building wide to outside intelligence penetration and surveillance. Bin Laden additionally suffered from a kidney disease and was dependent on dialysis treatment and outside medical care - another porthole into the Bin Laden's establishment.
There was no need therefore to follow the trail of the couriers described as leading the CIA to the hideout of the most wanted terrorist in the world. He occupied a large three-storey building which stuck out on the skyline of the Pakistani garrison town of Abbottabad, 120 kilometers from Islamabad, and towered over neighboring buildings. Pakistani intelligence must have been curious, to say the least, about this sizeable compound when it was built in 2005 just 100 meters from a military academy in a small town housing a military base and generals' residences.(...) US President Barack Obama said he received his first lead to bin Laden's whereabouts last August. Why then did it take nine months for him to order the targeted operation? And why did the US intelligence and military need all that time to prepare it?
Comments
Hiding ones internet presence is fairly easy. Hackers do it all the time. With NAT (Network Address Translation) and internet proxies etc. Which is why they are so difficult to track down.
One can make it appear as though one is coming from inside Siberia and be located in New Zealand.
by cmaukonen on Tue, 05/03/2011 - 9:55am
I don't see any connection between your title and the quote you clipped, Dave. But Spengler at Asia Times had a theory about the connection; can't say I totally understand it, but there's a lot I read I don't understand.
by we are stardust on Tue, 05/03/2011 - 10:20am
It was 1000 meters away from the military compound not 100. Debka.com would not be on my list for information about anything, they are sloppy with facts, make them up, and have an ideology to promote.
by NCD on Tue, 05/03/2011 - 10:29am
they are sloppy with facts, make them up
And this is a particularly hilarious example. They don't offer any photos of the compound with the satellite dishes they claim can be seen in some, and I haven't seen any photos of the compound with such dishes. Then they talk about cables and computers in some rooms, as if a tangle of USB and similar cables having nothing to do with internet, i.e., electric cables, monitor cables, printer cables, data storage device cables, aren't part and parcel of using a computer for non-internet purposes. Nobody is reporting there weren't any computers there, just the opposite, in fact, they are gloating about the data trove they got--if anything maybe playing it up too much.
P.S. Should Debka happen to come up with a photo of the compound with a satellite dish and present it as meaning something, I'd like to invite them up to my rooftop in da Bronx to show them all the detached old satellite dishes laying on my neighbor's roofs.
by artappraiser on Wed, 05/04/2011 - 2:02am
by acanuck on Wed, 05/04/2011 - 2:15pm