The police in Pakistan how can anybody trust them.  Now the hunters
become the hunted but this bunch is using masonic rituals......what kind
of people commit such murders - this is Mafia stuff and they use the
bible calendar as a communication.

Remember John Walker (Lindh) - and the videon tape?   His elbows tied
behind his back and someone taking the video - two men, one named David
- CIA, and someone says David, you are our enemy and the CIA agent is
killled, the other guy causing the problem escapes....for it was said he
was doiong the talking.   Word David is Red Flag.

Who set Danny Pearl up and sent him off like a Uriah to be killed?
This Reid thing was not part of his Wall Street Journal assignment, and
no Al Qaeda is going to give information to the Wall Street Journal and
the killers knew Danny was an Israli.

This thing like Littleton, with the cameras rolling.and this stupid John
Walker with honey French accent - they will sell the death of Dannyl
Pearl but that is Hollywood - only this tape will be real.

The curtain opens.....

2 Samuel, chapter 11

"13": And when David had called him, he did eat and drink before him;
and he made him drunk: and at even he went out to lie on his bed with
the servants of his lord, but went not down to his house.

"14": And it came to pass in the morning, that David wrote a letter to
Joab, and sent it by the hand of Uriah.

"15": And he wrote in the letter, saying, Set ye Uriah in the forefront
of the hottest battle, and retire ye from him, that he may be smitten,
and die.

"16": And it came to pass, when Joab observed the city, that he assigned
Uriah unto a place where he knew that valiant men were.

"17": And the men of the city went out, and fought with Joab: and there
fell some of the people of the servants of David; and Uriah the Hittite
died also.

"18": Then Joab sent and told David all the things concerning the war;

"19": And charged the messenger, saying, When thou hast made an end of
telling the matters of the war unto the king,
"20": And if so be that the king's wrath arise, and he say unto thee,
Wherefore approached ye so nigh unto the city when ye did fight? knew ye
not that they would shoot from the wall?
"21": Who smote Abimelech the son of Jerubbesheth? did not a woman cast
a piece of a millstone upon him from the wall, that he died in Thebez?
why went ye nigh the wall? then say thou, Thy servant Uriah the Hittite
is dead also.
"22": So the messenger went, and came and shewed David all that Joab had
sent him for.
"23": And the messenger said unto David, Surely the men prevailed
against us, and came out unto us into the field, and we were upon them
even unto the entering of the gate.
"24": And the shooters shot from off the wall upon thy servants; and
some of the king's servants be dead, and thy servant Uriah the Hittite
is dead also.

"25": Then David said unto the messenger, Thus shalt thou say unto Joab,
Let not this thing displease thee, for the sword devoureth one as well
as another: make thy battle more strong against the city, and overthrow
it: and encourage thou him.

"26": And when the wife of Uriah heard that Uriah her husband was dead,
she mourned for her husband.

"27": And when the mourning was past, David sent and fetched her to his
house, and she became his wife, and bare him a son. But the thing that
David had done displeased the LORD.

Well that's Hollywood - those kids at Littleton hoped a movie would be
made of their Judgment Day....who prepared Danny Pearl for the Kill
using the Greatest Story Every Told?

Think of Uriah as a Reporter......sent to the front, for the Wall Street
Journal wanted to send this man Afghanistan and he refor he said he had
a wn to be bay, at home assignment was "too dangerous".

Why am I thinking of Oswald....when asked what is in the package Lee -
he said "Curtain Rods".......the rod that killed JFK and it was curtains
- the final curtain.

OSaba



Pakistan hunts for Pearl's killers
Three Arab national sought in caseFeb. 23
� Investigators now believe the murder of Daniel Pearl could be part
of a larger terrorist plot against Americans abroad. NBC's Norah
O'Donnell reports
NBC, MSNBC AND NEWS SERVICES
Feb. 24 � �Police are searching for three Arab nationals believed to
have played a role in the kidnapping and murder of Wall Street Journal
reporter Daniel Pearl, a senior investigator said, suggesting there may
be a link between the kidnappers and Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida
terrorist network.
� � �� � �
�
� � �
Feb. 22 � NBC News analyst Steve Emerson discusses the possible
reactions of the United States to the killing of journalist Daniel
Pearl.
� � � �NO DETAILS were immediately available Sunday on the
Arabs' identity or how they might have participated in the crime.
� � � �Four Pakistani suspects currently being sought in the
case had strong links to the ousted Taliban regime in neighboring
Afghanistan and possibly the al-Qaida network as well, investigators
said.
� � � �On Saturday, Pakistani officials said a videotape of the
killing of Pearl was too gruesome for public release. Pakistani
authorities also warned foreign organizations in the country to take
precautions, saying Pearl's murder may be part of a wider terrorist
scheme.
� � � �A senior government official told Reuters that President
Pervez Musharraf's regime had discussed releasing the tape but decided
it was too barbaric to air.
� � � �The official told Reuters the videotape, sent by the
radical Islamic gang suspected of kidnapping Pearl to a newspaper worker
who handed it to authorities, showed the reporter's severed head in its
last frame.
� � � �Earlier parts of the brief tape showed Pearl's throat
being cut from behind while he was still talking to the camera.
� � � �"It was discussed at the most senior level whether to
release this video to television channels, but finally it was decided
that even foreign television channels would not be able to show such
gruesome scenes," the official said.
� � � �"The last scene shows Pearl's head separated from his
body."
� � � �However different sources have provided conflicting
accounts of what appears on the tape.
� � � �According to a report in the New York Times on Saturday,
people "with detailed knowledge" of a videotape of Pearl's murder said
it showed that he had apparently been unconscious when his throat was
cut.
� � � �
LARGER CONSPIRACY?
� � � �Meanwhile, Pakistani authorities believe Pearl's murder
may be part of a larger terrorist scheme to destabilize the country
following Musharraf's pledge to rid Pakistan of Muslim extremism in the
wake of the Sept. 11 attack in the United States.
� � � �The government warned foreign missions, embassies and
dignitaries to boost their security, the Interior Ministry officials
said, adding that attacks on U.S. interests in Pakistan cannot be ruled
out. Daniel Pearl
 � � � �According to the New York Times, some political parties
that were banned when Musharraf took power in a 1999 coup accused his
government of failing to prevent Pearl's death by allowing a general
breakdown in security.
� � � �The Pakistan People's Party, led by former prime minister
Benazir Bhutto said in a statement that "the murder of Daniel Pearl
could be a sign of worse to come."
� � � �Top Pakistani investigators told Reuters on Saturday that
they had received threatening calls from people using Pearl's mobile
phone a day before U.S. officials received a video showing his killing.
� � � �On Friday, Musharraf pledged to apprehend "each and every
one of the gang of terrorists" involved in Pearl's murder. The State
Department praised Musharraf's handling of the case, but U.S. officials
told NBC News that they could not rule out the possibility that
Pakistani security officials were involved.
� � � �
BUSH CONFERS WITH MUSHARRAF
� � � �Musharraf expressed his "profound grief" over the killing
and ordered security forces "to apprehend each and every member of the
gang of terrorists involved in this gruesome murder."
� � � �President Bush, who called Pearl's killing a "criminal,
barbaric act" Thursday, spoke with Musharraf early Friday as he returned
home from a five-day trip to Asia.
� � � �Lonnie Kelley, public affairs officer at the U.S.
consulate in Karachi, said, "Both Pakistan and U.S. investigators have
identified the perpetrators behind the crime."
� � � �Four people had been arrested and charged in the case
previously, including Islamic militant Ahmad Omar Saeed Sheikh, who said
during a court hearing that he had engineered Pearl's abduction to
protest Pakistan's alliance with the United States' post-Sept. 11 war on
terrorism.
� � � �Sheikh is "clearly right in the middle of this," the
senior U.S. official told NBC News, adding, however, that U.S. officials
did not have a clear idea of the quality of the evidence against him. It
also was unclear whether Sheikh knew where Pearl was being held and
could have been more helpful before he was killed.
� � � �The senior U.S. official who spoke to NBC News,
meanwhile, noted persistent rumors of involvement by members of
Pakistan's ISI security force and said the United States could not rule
out the possibility that "elements" of the ISI were involved.
Advertisement

� � � �The ISI supported the militant Islamic Taliban rulers of
Afghanistan before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in the United States.
Musharraf reversed Pakistan's policy of support for the Taliban under
heavy U.S. diplomatic pressure, and Musharraf was widely reported to
have removed several senior ISI officials who dissented from the
decision.
� � � �State Department spokesman Richard Boucher refused Friday
to address the question of ISI involvement, saying he would not
speculate on what every employee of a foreign governmental organization
"might do."
� � � �Boucher told reporters at the State Department's daily
news briefing in Washington that the U.S. government had "had excellent
cooperation" from Pakistan. "We expect that to continue," he said.
 null

� � � �
LURED INTO A TRAP?


��For Syria, opportunity and peril  ��In Lebanon, nothing's
black and white  ��U.S. warms to 'rogue' Sudan regime  ��The new
view from America  ��Hard choices on defense  ��U.S. crosses a
line in Colombia  ��Broadcasts make Prague a target  ��'Axis'
missiles fall short  ��Strange Bedfellows: Bush and Beijing
��Series front
� � � �Pearl was abducted Jan. 23 in Karachi after arranging to
interview the leader of a radical Muslim faction with purported ties to
the al-Qaida terrorist network and to Richard Reid, who was arrested on
a Paris-to-Miami flight with explosives in his shoes.
� � � �Pakistani officials said there were indications that
Pearl had been lured into a trap by false information.
� � � �Four days after Pearl disappeared, an e-mail sent to
Pakistani and international media showed photos of him in captivity and
demanded that the United States repatriate Pakistanis captured in
Afghanistan and detained at the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
� � � �A second e-mail sent Jan. 30 said Pearl would be killed
in 24 hours. That was the last known message from his captors.
� � � �The announcement of Pearl's death crushed the hopes of
his colleagues and his pregnant wife, Mariane, who had pleaded for his
safe return.
� � � �Mariane Pearl was told of his death in Karachi, where she
had been staying while awaiting word on her husband's fate, said Steve
Goldstein, a vice president of Dow Jones & Co., the owner of the
Journal. In the weeks since her husband's capture, Mariane Pearl, a
freelance journalist, had pleaded for his freedom and offered herself in
his place.

��War coverage  ��The home front  ��Video, photos
��Newsweek coverage  ��Behind the headlines  ��Coverage for
kids
� � � �The Journal released a statement Friday from Mariane
Pearl expressing "my gratitude to all of the people throughout the world
who have given Danny and me support and encouragement."
� � � �"From this act of barbarism, terrorists expect all of us
to bow our heads and retreat as victims forever threatened by their
ruthlessness," she said. "What terrorists forget is that they may seize
the life of an innocent man or the lives of many innocent people as they
did on Sept. 11, but they cannot claim the spirit or faith of individual
human beings."
� � � �
� � � �
 Newsweek: Remembering Daniel Pearl
� � � �
� � � �The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this
report.


� � � �
� � � ��
 � � � � � �
�10 U.S. soldiers believed dead in helicopter crash�WashPost: Al
Qaeda ally in Somalia in tatters�Paper: U.S. thinks bin Laden
alive�WashPost: Iraq action not imminent�Britons in Cuba could be
repatriated�Italy convicts 4 al-Qaida members

�Nepal soldiers kill 37 Maoist rebels�Cease-fire pact signed in Sri
Lanka�Controversy around Sri Lanka rebel�America Strikes Back: Full
coverage�NDTV provides news from India
�Complete coverage
�
� �  �


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