-Caveat Lector-
Now remember Hanssen this FBI Agent serving two masters, dual loyalty
shall we say for he worked for the FBI and the KGB; and John O'Neill
kept it oh so quiet he had taken employment with Larry Silverstein when
still in employ but under investigatian by his own FBI.
These two men, both counterintelligence and terrorist, etc. agents,
Hanssen gave all plans and maps and tunnels, etc., of Washingto DC to
the KGB in return for diamonds and some money, and he sold himself out
pretty cheap at that.
Now John O'Neill, they say is he a hero or what is he. He took plans
and drawings of New York City, including all tunnels, key locations in
case of terrorists attack - this man took this stuff to Tampa Florida,
lsot them along with his cigar cutter and lighter....and later were
retrieved in another hotel room - this was key areas for these so called
"terrorists" some of whom were pretty home grown at that.
So now Italy - why these so called "terrorists" they blame on Osama bin
Laden, who wanted to take out US embassy using cyanide in water? These
guys are French Moroccians - brown tone skinned, not arabic hue of grey
tone skinned people.
Strange isn't it, KGB wants plans of underground tunnels andplans in
Washington and this New York agent then losing similar plans?
Say how about that dual loyalty for before this is over, remember it is
the Mossad who use Egyptians jews to blow up movie houses in Egypt and
use their planes to bomb US Liberty.....dual loyalty.
Here is story re more these people who do not lie now, re plan to poison
the water in the Embassy. Osama's trademark was on holy land to
Muslims, he would attack....this is not his style.
OSaba
Ital
Italy foils al-Qaida cyanide attack NBC: Poison meant for water at
U.S. Embassy Security officers with machine guns patrolled the U.S.
Embassy in Rome in September.
NBC, MSNBC AND NEWS SERVICES
ROME, Feb. 20 � A foiled plot to poison the water at the U.S.
Embassy in Rome with cyanide was the work of al-Qaida, U.S. officials
told NBC News on Wednesday. In all, officials said, at least six strikes
by Osama bin Laden's terrorist network have been thwarted since the
Sept. 11 attacks in the United States.
� A look at the 22 suspects
ITALIAN POLICE ARRESTED four Moroccans in a raid on an
apartment on the outskirts of Rome, seizing false documents, maps of the
city and what they said was a substance believed to contain cyanide,
police said. Officials said the U.S. Embassy was marked on the maps.
Italian news reports said the city's water supply network
was also on the maps, but U.S. officials told NBC News that the target
was actually the embassy's water system. They said the suspects had
obtained the data on Rome's waterworks to determine where they could
insert the cyanide for maximum effect.
Cyanide is a water-soluble poison that can be used as a
chemical weapon. State Department sources said they were concerned that
the plot was an attempted chemical attack, which would be a new card in
the terrorists' hand.
The U.S. Embassy thanked the Italian police and security
forces for their "excellent work concerning the most recent security
threat against the embassy." But it added that "the case in question is
still an ongoing investigation, and therefore it would be premature to
comment any further at this time."
WIDESPREAD CONSPIRACY
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Col. Gianfranco Cavallo of the Carabinieri, the
paramilitary police force that carried out the raid in a poor
neighborhood on Rome's southern outskirts, would not comment on news
reports that the Moroccan suspects had a substance that could yield
poison cyanide. But the Rome newspaper Il Messaggero reported that
police seized nearly 9 pounds of powdered cyanide itself along with the
maps of Rome's water system.
Other Italian news reports said one of the four Moroccan
suspects had links to a suspected Milan cell that was dismantled last
year when seven Tunisians were arrested in northern Italy. In telephone
conversations wiretapped before their arrest, the suspected members of
the Milan cell referred to a drug using the code name "tomato cans,"
which Italian authorities said they believed to be cyanide.
State radio reported that about 100 blank documents used
to certify that foreigners had permission to live in Italy also were
found in the suspects' apartments, indicating that the plot intended to
bring scores of other people into the country illegally. Three other
Moroccans were arrested in the capital last week as part of the
investigation, Italian news reports said.
LATEST DEVELOPMENTS
THE WAR � Bush eyes 'evil' North Korean from border � Al-Qaida
suspects held � WashPost: Tales of U.S. bombing mistakes
� Complete coverage THE HOME FRONT � NYC fire station gets
back to work � Video captured firefighters on Sept. 11
� Complete coverage
It was unclear whether the attack was planned before or
after Sept. 11, U.S. officials said, but they said it underscored how
desperate Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida had become after its losses in
Afghanistan.
After the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, President Bush
launched a "war on terrorism" in Afghanistan aimed at destroying
al-Qaida, bin Laden and the Taliban government that harbored his
movement.
"While it doesn't mean they are getting sloppy, they are
getting more desperate," a senior official told NBC News on condition of
anonymity. "They might be doing things better if their means of
communications were better.
"Previous routes are not open to them because of what we
have done in Afghanistan. So they [al Qaida cells and individuals] are
doing things on their own."
FIVE OTHER ATTACKS
NBC's Robert Windrem reported that at least five other
major attacks overseas had been thwarted since Sept. 11, quoting a U.S.
official as saying some were foiled because U.S. agencies had passed
along information they had gathered in Afghanistan to local authorities.
Other officials said the United States provided
authorities in the island nation of Singapore with a videotape found in
an al-Qaida building in Afghanistan. The tape showed al-Qaida members
conducting surveillance of locations in Singapore as preparation for
attacks on the U.S. Embassy and Navy personnel there. Other information
regarding the attack were found on an al-Qaida computer, the officials
said.
� War coverage � The home front � Video, photos
� Newsweek coverage � Behind the headlines � Coverage for
kids
Other major operations that U.S. officials said had been
stopped involved plans to blow up the U.S. embassies in Paris and
Sana'a, Yemen, with truck bombs, as well as an attack on the embassy in
Sarajevo, Bosnia, using access supplied by a local employee whose family
included an al-Qaida operative.
A fifth attack was cut short when flight attendants
stopped a British man from igniting bombs in his shoes on a flight from
Paris. U.S. officials said that in each attack, planning began before
Sept. 11 and was not part of a wave of revenge for the U.S. military
campaign in Afghanistan.
"Those are the big ones," said the U.S. official who
revealed the operations, adding that "there are others we have thwarted
that are secret."
The official would not provide details of those cases,
saying: "We don't want them to know what we know, because they will
often try to reconstitute the operation later. ... That is their M.O.,"
or modus operandi.
The official described the other attacks as being "of
equal or greater scale" and "at the same or more advanced planning
levels" in Europe, East Asia and Africa. "There were none planned in the
U.S.," the official added.
Source: NBC News, MSNBC.com researchPrintable version
NBC's Robert Windrem in New York, Jim Miklaszewski and
Tammy Kupperman at the Pentagon, and Betsy Steuart at the State
Department; MSNBC.com's Sean Federico-O'Murchu and Alex Johnson; The
Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.
WashPost: Tales emerge of American mistakes WashPost: Search for
clarity in the Afghan skies U.S. troops complete
deployment WashPost: Propaganda plan divides Pentagon Pentagon plans
to plant fake news India-Pakistan row affects Pearl case
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