Al-Qaeda, a Secret Service Operation?
By Ercan Gun
Published: Sunday, August 14, 2005
zaman.com
A fire in a house near the docks in the southern Turkish city of
Antalya has revealed that al-Qaeda was preparing an attack to target
Israeli cruise ships. The security operations that followed this
fortuitous incident made Turkish security the focus of security
agencies all around the world.
Countries facing the al-Qaeda threat are awaiting the intelligence
Turkish security is to provide. Amid the smoke from the fortuitous
fire emerged the possibility that al-Qaeda may not be, strictly
speaking, an organization but an element of an intelligence agency
operation. Turkish intelligence specialists agree that there is no
such organization as al-Qaeda. Rather, Al-Qaeda is the name of a
secret service operation. The concept “fighting terror” is the
background of the “low-intensity-warfare” conducted in the mono-polar
world order. The subject of this strategy of tension is named as
“al-Qaeda.”
Sakra, the fifth most senior man in Osama bin Ladin’s al-Qaeda that
has challenged the whole world from a base in the Afghan mountains, is
in the hands of Turkish Justice. Sakra has been sought by the secret
services since 2000. The US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
interrogated him twice before. Following the interrogation CIA offered
him employment. He also received a large sum of money by CIA. However
the CIA eventually lost contact with him. Following this development,
in 2000 the CIA passed intelligence about Sakra through a classified
notice to Turkey, calling for the Turkish National Security
Organization (MIT) to capture him. MIT caught Sakra in Turkey and
interrogated him. Sakra’s protests that, “MIT abducted my wife and
interrogated her for 20 days,” as he was brought to Besiktas court in
Istanbul for sentencing, seem to confirm these claims.
Sakra was sought and caught by Syrian al-Mukhabarat as well. Syria too
offered him employment. Sakra eventually became a triple agent for the
secret services. These astounding claims are the outcome of Sakra’s
four-day interrogation at Istanbul Anti-Terror Department
Headquarters. Turkish security officials, interrogating a senior
al-Qaeda figure for the first time, were thoroughly confused about
what they discovered about al-Qaeda. The prosecutor too was surprised.
A second hearing of the case about the attacks in Istanbul between
November 15-23, 2003, is reportedly possible.
.
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| User: "Woodswun" |
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| Title: Re: Al-Qaeda, A secret service operation? |
15 Aug 2005 04:23:04 PM |
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wrote:
Al-Qaeda, a Secret Service Operation?
By Ercan Gun
Published: Sunday, August 14, 2005
zaman.com
A fire in a house near the docks in the southern Turkish city of
Antalya has revealed that al-Qaeda was preparing an attack to target
Israeli cruise ships. The security operations that followed this
fortuitous incident made Turkish security the focus of security
agencies all around the world.
Countries facing the al-Qaeda threat are awaiting the intelligence
Turkish security is to provide. Amid the smoke from the fortuitous
fire emerged the possibility that al-Qaeda may not be, strictly
speaking, an organization but an element of an intelligence agency
operation. Turkish intelligence specialists agree that there is no
such organization as al-Qaeda. Rather, Al-Qaeda is the name of a
secret service operation. The concept fighting terror is the
background of the low-intensity-warfare conducted in the mono-polar
world order. The subject of this strategy of tension is named as
al-Qaeda.
Sakra, the fifth most senior man in Osama bin Ladins al-Qaeda that
has challenged the whole world from a base in the Afghan mountains, is
in the hands of Turkish Justice. Sakra has been sought by the secret
services since 2000. The US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
interrogated him twice before. Following the interrogation CIA offered
him employment. He also received a large sum of money by CIA. However
the CIA eventually lost contact with him. Following this development,
in 2000 the CIA passed intelligence about Sakra through a classified
notice to Turkey, calling for the Turkish National Security
Organization (MIT) to capture him. MIT caught Sakra in Turkey and
interrogated him. Sakras protests that, MIT abducted my wife and
interrogated her for 20 days, as he was brought to Besiktas court in
Istanbul for sentencing, seem to confirm these claims.
Sakra was sought and caught by Syrian al-Mukhabarat as well. Syria too
offered him employment. Sakra eventually became a triple agent for the
secret services. These astounding claims are the outcome of Sakras
four-day interrogation at Istanbul Anti-Terror Department
Headquarters. Turkish security officials, interrogating a senior
al-Qaeda figure for the first time, were thoroughly confused about
what they discovered about al-Qaeda. The prosecutor too was surprised.
A second hearing of the case about the attacks in Istanbul between
November 15-23, 2003, is reportedly possible.
Secret Service is FBI, not CIA.
Woods
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| User: "" |
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| Title: Re: Al-Qaeda, A secret service operation? |
16 Aug 2005 10:37:33 AM |
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On Mon, 15 Aug 2005 21:23:04 GMT, Woodswun <woodswun@tepidmail.com>
wrote:
Zak@home.com wrote:
Al-Qaeda, a Secret Service Operation?
By Ercan Gun
Published: Sunday, August 14, 2005
zaman.com
A fire in a house near the docks in the southern Turkish city of
Antalya has revealed that al-Qaeda was preparing an attack to target
Israeli cruise ships. The security operations that followed this
fortuitous incident made Turkish security the focus of security
agencies all around the world.
Countries facing the al-Qaeda threat are awaiting the intelligence
Turkish security is to provide. Amid the smoke from the fortuitous
fire emerged the possibility that al-Qaeda may not be, strictly
speaking, an organization but an element of an intelligence agency
operation. Turkish intelligence specialists agree that there is no
such organization as al-Qaeda. Rather, Al-Qaeda is the name of a
secret service operation. The concept “fighting terror” is the
background of the “low-intensity-warfare” conducted in the mono-polar
world order. The subject of this strategy of tension is named as
“al-Qaeda.”
Sakra, the fifth most senior man in Osama bin Ladin’s al-Qaeda that
has challenged the whole world from a base in the Afghan mountains, is
in the hands of Turkish Justice. Sakra has been sought by the secret
services since 2000. The US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
interrogated him twice before. Following the interrogation CIA offered
him employment. He also received a large sum of money by CIA. However
the CIA eventually lost contact with him. Following this development,
in 2000 the CIA passed intelligence about Sakra through a classified
notice to Turkey, calling for the Turkish National Security
Organization (MIT) to capture him. MIT caught Sakra in Turkey and
interrogated him. Sakra’s protests that, “MIT abducted my wife and
interrogated her for 20 days,” as he was brought to Besiktas court in
Istanbul for sentencing, seem to confirm these claims.
Sakra was sought and caught by Syrian al-Mukhabarat as well. Syria too
offered him employment. Sakra eventually became a triple agent for the
secret services. These astounding claims are the outcome of Sakra’s
four-day interrogation at Istanbul Anti-Terror Department
Headquarters. Turkish security officials, interrogating a senior
al-Qaeda figure for the first time, were thoroughly confused about
what they discovered about al-Qaeda. The prosecutor too was surprised.
A second hearing of the case about the attacks in Istanbul between
November 15-23, 2003, is reportedly possible.
Secret Service is FBI, not CIA.
Woods
Potato,potatoe...at this point aren't they all the same bunch of
scumbags?
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| User: "Woodswun" |
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| Title: Re: Al-Qaeda, A secret service operation? |
16 Aug 2005 04:06:26 PM |
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wrote:
On Mon, 15 Aug 2005 21:23:04 GMT, Woodswun <woodswun@tepidmail.com>
wrote:
wrote:
Al-Qaeda, a Secret Service Operation?
By Ercan Gun
Published: Sunday, August 14, 2005
zaman.com
A fire in a house near the docks in the southern Turkish city of
Antalya has revealed that al-Qaeda was preparing an attack to target
Israeli cruise ships. The security operations that followed this
fortuitous incident made Turkish security the focus of security
agencies all around the world.
Countries facing the al-Qaeda threat are awaiting the intelligence
Turkish security is to provide. Amid the smoke from the fortuitous
fire emerged the possibility that al-Qaeda may not be, strictly
speaking, an organization but an element of an intelligence agency
operation. Turkish intelligence specialists agree that there is no
such organization as al-Qaeda. Rather, Al-Qaeda is the name of a
secret service operation. The concept fighting terror is the
background of the low-intensity-warfare conducted in the mono-polar
world order. The subject of this strategy of tension is named as
al-Qaeda.
Sakra, the fifth most senior man in Osama bin Ladins al-Qaeda that
has challenged the whole world from a base in the Afghan mountains, is
in the hands of Turkish Justice. Sakra has been sought by the secret
services since 2000. The US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
interrogated him twice before. Following the interrogation CIA offered
him employment. He also received a large sum of money by CIA. However
the CIA eventually lost contact with him. Following this development,
in 2000 the CIA passed intelligence about Sakra through a classified
notice to Turkey, calling for the Turkish National Security
Organization (MIT) to capture him. MIT caught Sakra in Turkey and
interrogated him. Sakras protests that, MIT abducted my wife and
interrogated her for 20 days, as he was brought to Besiktas court in
Istanbul for sentencing, seem to confirm these claims.
Sakra was sought and caught by Syrian al-Mukhabarat as well. Syria too
offered him employment. Sakra eventually became a triple agent for the
secret services. These astounding claims are the outcome of Sakras
four-day interrogation at Istanbul Anti-Terror Department
Headquarters. Turkish security officials, interrogating a senior
al-Qaeda figure for the first time, were thoroughly confused about
what they discovered about al-Qaeda. The prosecutor too was surprised.
A second hearing of the case about the attacks in Istanbul between
November 15-23, 2003, is reportedly possible.
Secret Service is FBI, not CIA.
Woods
Potato,potatoe...at this point aren't they all the same bunch of
scumbags?
Nope.
Woods
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| User: "FourCell" |
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| Title: Re: Al-Qaeda, A secret service operation? |
16 Aug 2005 10:51:58 AM |
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What are you talking about? SS was reporting directly
to the POTUS until folded into Homeland Security 2 years
ago. SS was never part of the FBI. Never.
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| User: "dreamwalker" |
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| Title: Re: Al-Qaeda, A secret service operation? |
16 Aug 2005 11:44:35 PM |
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"FourCell" <fourcell@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1124207518.622092.286470@g14g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
What are you talking about? SS was reporting directly
to the POTUS until folded into Homeland Security 2 years
ago. SS was never part of the FBI. Never.
SS reported to the treasury secratary from 1865 until it's move to DHS during 3/03. Several divisons
had been created within the SS from it's creation. Please spare me from your upcoming paranoid
ideas, foreskin.
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| User: "Woodswun" |
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| Title: Re: Al-Qaeda, A secret service operation? |
16 Aug 2005 04:08:21 PM |
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FourCell wrote:
What are you talking about? SS was reporting directly
to the POTUS until folded into Homeland Security 2 years
ago. SS was never part of the FBI. Never.
Yes, you're correct. Sorry about that! (Had a cousin that entered the
FBI and ended up as SS for Reagan, confused me just a bit).
Woods
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| User: "FourCell" |
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| Title: Re: Al-Qaeda, A secret service operation? |
15 Aug 2005 09:05:51 AM |
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Al Qaeda is not SS, but re-activated by the US CIA and MI-6 in 1990,
to carry out terrorist acts, acting as proxies, like using Gladio
iin Europe to blow up trains and carry out assassinations.
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| User: "" |
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| Title: Re: Al-Qaeda, A secret service operation? |
15 Aug 2005 04:44:18 PM |
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If they are not an organisation, how can they be outlawed?
Nothing like an unacceptable ideology, to get the kittens racing!
See "Life of Brian"
LB
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