This is a ten minute clip taken from the documentary '9/11 Press for Truth', which connects the dots between 9/11, al-Qaeda and the Pakistani ISI -- the Pakistani intelligence agency and a virtual puppet of US-British-Israeli intelligence, which played a clear role in the September 11th attacks. http://www.hipforums.com/modules.php?name=Videos&file=viewlinkinfo&lid=800&gid=0
It's going to take me a while to download. But I'd just like to say, why after our president says "smoke em out" and "dead or alive" do we stop our special forces at the Pakistani border? Ask yourself that. We can spend billions on taking out dictator that was confined but we can't cross the border of a supposed ally? I think before we expand this war into Iran, I think we should bomb the shit out of Pakistan and make sure they are not harboring the world's most wanted criminal.
The problem is that the ISI is not a "puppet" of the US, UK, or Israel. That's just Rat lying like he always does.
Not much has changed with Musharraf. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070910/ap_on_re_as/pakistan_politics By MATTHEW PENNINGTON, Associated Press Writer 34 minutes ago ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - President Gen. Pervez Musharraf defied Pakistan's Supreme Court on Monday, sending commandos to the airport and tossing out a bitter rival hours after he returned from exile in hopes of a making political comeback and opposing the military leader. The expulsion of Nawaz Sharif, who was ousted as an elected prime minister by Musharraf in a 1999 bloodless coup, could deepen the general's unpopularity and undermine the legitimacy of upcoming elections. Not long after he arrived from London to cheers from supporters accompanying him on the plane, Sharif was charged with corruption and money-laundering and bundled away by police from the airport VIP lounge. Four hours after landing, he was on a special flight to Saudi Arabia. His unceremonious departure for the country where he had been exiled in 2000 scuttled his plans for a grand homecoming to campaign against the U.S.-allied Musharraf's bid for election to a new presidential term amid growing public resentment over military rule. "Musharraf has probably taken a decision to twist any law to do what he can do to stay in power. This is the politics of survival," said Rasul Bakhsh Rais, a political scientist at Lahore University of Management Sciences. "He is relying on strong-arm tactics, not the law and the constitution."The deportation drew criticism from the European Union, which noted the Pakistani Supreme Court ruled last month that authorities had no right to block Sharif's return.