Yo Ho, Yo Ho
A terror detainee's life for me.
Handcrafted by Flip on June 15, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack
Prevaricatin' Pelosi Tries Another Angle
Okay, so maybe she did know about the waterboarding six years ago, and she did know it was more than a hypothetical, and she would've objected at the time... but her respect for "appropriate legislative channels" tied her hands (and tongue).
Or something.
For those of you keeping score at home, on deck is the gender card, followed by, "You've got the wrong twin."
Handcrafted by Flip on May 12, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack
Shep Melts Down on Strategy Room
Via Allah, who aptly characterizes Smith's outburst as a bout of "mindless absolutism".
Children, avert your ears.
Previously: Confirmed: Waterboarding Prevented Library Tower Attack
Handcrafted by Flip on April 23, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Confirmed: Waterboarding Prevented Library Tower Attack
If it was okay to shoot to kill unmirandized pirate youths (under direct Presidential authority) in an effort to save Captain Phillips' life (a 3:1 tradeoff of baddies for innocents), mightn't it also have been okay to spook and discomfort a single terrorist leader to save thousands of innocent lives?
The Central Intelligence Agency told CNSNews.com today that it stands by the assertion made in a May 30, 2005 Justice Department memo that the use of “enhanced techniques” of interrogation on al Qaeda leader Khalid Sheik Mohammed (KSM) -- including the use of waterboarding -- caused KSM to reveal information that allowed the U.S. government to thwart a planned attack on Los Angeles.
Before he was waterboarded, when KSM was asked about planned attacks on the United States, he ominously told his CIA interrogators, “Soon, you will know.”
According to the previously classified May 30, 2005 Justice Department memo that was released by President Barack Obama last week, the thwarted attack -- which KSM called the “Second Wave”-- planned “ ‘to use East Asian operatives to crash a hijacked airliner into’ a building in Los Angeles.”
(HT: Ace)
Handcrafted by Flip on April 21, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack
The Right Men For the Job
As we rejoice and marvel at the deft handling of the Somali piracy incident and the Navy SEALS' safe extraction of Captain Phillips, we can be thankful that the new helmsmen of U.S. foreign policy both served on the Senate Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on African Affairs.
No, neither one technically "attended" the subcommittee's meetings on Somali piracy over the last three years... but still, it was on their resumes. And that presumably gave the pirates pause. Perhaps just long enough to allow our dastardly military to do the deed.
Handcrafted by Flip on April 14, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Massive Sleeper Cell Uncovered In Wilton, CT
I guess that means we're now state sponsors of terrorism, to the tune of $150 billion.
Handcrafted by Flip on March 19, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Semantics: Our Most Powerful Weapon In the War On Terror
We have nothing to fear but "man-caused disasters".
Handcrafted by Flip on March 16, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Rendition Suddenly Back In Vogue
Under executive orders issued by Obama recently, the CIA still has authority to carry out what are known as renditions, secret abductions and transfers of prisoners to countries that cooperate with the United States.
Current and former U.S. intelligence officials said that the rendition program might be poised to play an expanded role going forward because it was the main remaining mechanism -- aside from Predator missile strikes -- for taking suspected terrorists off the street.
The rendition program became a source of embarrassment for the CIA, and a target of international scorn, as details emerged in recent years of botched captures, mistaken identities and allegations that prisoners were turned over to countries where they were tortured.
The sequel ought to be considerably more upbeat. Maybe people will go see this one.
(HT: NRO)
Handcrafted by Flip on February 1, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Video: Anti-Israel, Anti-US Protest at United Nations
Living a block from the United Nations has its occasional drawbacks. Whenever you see cops setting up metal barricades on Second Avenue, you know one of those drawbacks is getting ready to spoil your day.
Yesterday, the occasion was a noisy protest over the war crimes and genocide being perpetrated by Israel and the United States against Hamas' terrorist leaders the Palestinian people. Fourteen floors up, there was no escaping the blaring din of misplaced outrage, so I trotted downstairs to capture some footage.
Can you count the keffiyehs? How about the number of screaming children being used as propagandist props?
(Incidentally, this took place just steps away from Rachel Ray's studio. I wonder if she donned her hate couture and made an appearance.)
Handcrafted by Flip on January 4, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Algore Obliges Terrorists' Bargain
As little heartache as the cancellation of a Goracle Mystery Tour stop causes me, it wouldn't be inaccurate to say that once we start diverting weepy, preening hippie concerts in reaction to threat of violence, we hand the terrorists a win.
LIVE Earth India, a concert scheduled for December 7 in Mumbai to raise money for solar energy projects, has been cancelled due to the terrorist attacks in the city.
"Due to circumstances beyond our control, we are saddened to announce that Live Earth India has been called off,'' said a joint statement from the organisers, including former US vice-president Al Gore.
Musicians lined up for the event included Pink Floyd legend Roger Waters, rockers Bon Jovi, Black Eyed Peas frontman Will.I.Am, Indian rapper Hard Kaur and the daughter of legendary sitar player Ravi Shankar, Anoushka.
Bollywood stars, including actors Amitabh Bachchan, his son Abhishek Bachchan and daughter-in-law Aishwarya Rai, Hrithik Roshan and Preity Zinta, were also due to perform.
Mr Gore, Live Earth co-founder Kevin Wall and Rajednra Pachauri, the head of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, said everyone involved in the project was "stunned and distraught'' by the attacks.
(HT: JWF)
Handcrafted by Flip on November 29, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Mumbai Terror Attack - Latest Updates
Do what I do - just park at Allah's and keep refreshing.
Handcrafted by Flip on November 27, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Terrorist He Barely Knows Acknowledges President-Elect As a "Family Friend"
Shrewd timing there, Bill.
[William] Ayers, a professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago, adds few new details about his relationship with Obama in the afterword to Fugitive Days: Memoirs of an Anti-War Activist. The book is being reissued this month.
“We had served together on the board of a foundation, knew one another as neighbors and family friends, held an initial fund-raiser at my house, where I’d made a small donation to his earliest political campaign,” he writes.
(HT: Ace)
Handcrafted by Flip on November 13, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
O'Reilly Ambushes Bill Ayers
I generally don't have a whole lot of use for the Factor, but I'll be tuning in Friday night. Based on the promo, it looks like one of Bill O'Reilly's field correspondents simply follows Ayers around for a while and fruitlessly asks questions about his relationship with Obama and his lack of repentance for his terrorist ways.
Even so, if it's good enough for a man who dared to ask Obama an uncomfortable question when the candidate darkened his doorstep, then a bit of mild harassment is probably good enough for a proud Marxist bomber.
Handcrafted by Flip on October 24, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Judgment
Would you let these people babysit your kids?
(HT: Riehl World View)
Handcrafted by Flip on October 14, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
A Big Juicy Lie From the Obama Campaign
The One's chief political strategist David Axelrod would have you believe the candidate was ignorant of Bill Ayers' terrorist bona fides in 1995 when the unrepentant former fugitive bomber and FBI most wanted list member hosted Obama's political coming out party in his living room.
It's possible - though imagination-stretchingly unlikely - that Obama was simply clueless about the revolting criminal behavior of the neighbors with whom he worked privately and with whom he got in bed politically, but that scenario isn't much more encouraging.
Handcrafted by Flip on October 6, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack
Malkin Mobbed At the Mint
Tub of goo Alex Jones manages to give even 9/11 troofers a bad name.
During a terribly clever demonstration attempting to levitate the Denver Mint in protest of American military spending, Jones noticed Michelle Malkin covering the event and quickly abandoned the telekinetic endeavor in favor of showering everyone within earshot with spittle-flecked hysteria.
Michelle has links to some of the other blog coverage of Jones' meltdown.
Handcrafted by Flip on August 26, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Iranian Screen Door Enrichment Program Clearly Not For Civilian Purposes
Welcome to the 1940s, Mahmoud.
Iranian state TV says the country has launched production of a domestically built submarine capable of firing missiles and torpedoes.
Defense Minister Gen. Mostafa Mohammad Najjar inaugurated a production line Monday for the mid-sized sub, named Ghaem. The TV quotes him as saying Iran has made huge investments to become self-sufficient and equip its armed forces with modern weapons.
Handcrafted by Flip on August 25, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Are You Ready For Troof 2.0?
"9/11 was an inside job" is yesterday's delusion, now that conspiracy dolts have the suicide of Bruce Ivins to pore over.
Allah and Ace survey the budding field of Anthrax trutherism.
Handcrafted by Flip on August 7, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Waiter, There's a Bush Doctrine In My Messiah
WTF?
Democrat Barack Obama warned Wednesday about the danger of "fighting the last war" as he pledged to focus on emerging nuclear, biological and cyber threats if elected president.
...
He added, "The danger ... is that we are constantly fighting the last war, responding to the threats that have come to fruition, instead of staying one step ahead of the threats of the 21st century."
Say, Barry, that sounds an awful lot like an endorsement of the principle of waging preventive war against non-immediate, but gathering threats to national security.
In fairness to the Lightworker, he was referring not to preemption per se, but his strange fascination with surrendering our nation's nuclear defenses. Preemptive self-disarmament, if you will, presumably followed by preemptive hugs, a preemptive light dinner (ravioli, ham, sundae bar...), and a humble request that other nuclear nations kindly follow suit.
Hope!
(HT: Ace)
Handcrafted by Flip on July 17, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Counterterrorist Profiler - The Home Game
You there, ignorant xenophobe. Care to test your mettle in a real-world game of intrigue and sleuthery?
Consider the following, from today's news:
Three [nationality redacted] [religious affiliation redacted] accused of plotting to blow up transatlantic planes flying out of Heathrow with liquid bombs admitted today attempting to cause explosions.
[Defendants X, Y, and Z] admitted the offence at Woolwich Crown Court, in South-East London.
But they still deny that their bombs were part of a wave of suicide attacks on US-bound passenger jets using homemade devices made of hydrogen peroxide smuggled on board in Lucozade and Oasis soft drinks bottles.
...
[The defendants] wanted to achieve 'immortality' by murdering thousands of aircraft passengers in a series of suicide attacks, the jury was told.
(HT: JWF)
The three accused would-be mass-murdering terrorists are pictured below, as are three other individuals wholly uninvolved in this case.
Can you guess who's who, without letting your hatred and bigotry affect your judgment?

Answers after the jump.
If you guessed 2, 4, and 6, shame on you. You've managed to pick out the three Muslim men in their late 20s.
You're correct, but you're also a racist.
1, 3, and 5 are John Wayne Bobbit, Noelle Bush, and Yanni, all of whom have run afoul of the law and all of whom would've been more enlightened, more tolerant (though admittedly incorrect) choices.
Handcrafted by Flip on July 14, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Mahmoud the Fauxtographer
Noted document debunker Charles Johnson has noticed something peculiar about one of Iran's bits of official propaganda following Wednesday's missile launch.
Unless Iranian missile exhaust tends to form remarkably regular patterns, someone's been busying himself with the clone tool.
See LGF for the original hi-res image with some of the curious regions highlighted. I've taken the liberty of animating an overlay based on Johnson's apt pattern matching. As a gif, it suffers some degradation from the resolution of the original, but you get the idea.

Silly Mahmoud. We would've found you just as tough and manly with just the two missiles.
Update: This image, part of a framegrab from an Al Alam television broadcast of the launch (apparently taken at approximately the same time from a slightly higher elevation) makes it pretty clear which missile was conjured from borrowed pixels.

Update: Think it's only forged documents and still images that hornswoggle mainstream media outlets? Think again.
Update: The AFP retracts:
A handout picture released on the news website and public relations arm of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards … shows an image apparently digitally altered to show four missiles rising into the air instead of three during a test-firing at an undisclosed location in the Iranian desert on July 9, 2008. The 2nd Right missile has apparently been added in digital retouch to cover a grounded missile that may have failed during the test.
Update: This seems like a good excuse for a commemorative movie poster.
Click image for full size.
Handcrafted by Flip on July 9, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (27) | TrackBack
Weekend At Osama's
Rumors of bin Laden's death have been greatly understated. (HT: Ace)
In his producers' defense, they've done a fine job making him appear lifelike with the sunglasses, calypso music, and 2005-vintage grievances.
Update: There's the translated transcript.
Handcrafted by Flip on March 19, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Former Congressman Mark Deli Siljander (R-MI) Indicted For Terrorist Fundraising
A former congressman and delegate to the United Nations was indicted Wednesday as part of a terrorist fundraising ring that allegedly sent more than $130,000 to an al-Qaida and Taliban supporter who has threatened U.S. and international troops in Afghanistan.
The former Republican congressman from Michigan, Mark Deli Siljander, was charged with money laundering, conspiracy and obstructing justice for allegedly lying about lobbying senators on behalf of an Islamic charity that authorities said was secretly sending funds to terrorists.
A 42-count indictment, unsealed in U.S. District Court in Kansas City, Mo., accuses the Islamic American Relief Agency of paying Siljander $50,000 for the lobbying — money that turned out to be stolen from the U.S. Agency for International Development.
Siljander, who served two terms in the U.S. House of Representatives, was appointed by President Reagan to serve as a U.S. delegate to the United Nations for one year in 1987.
Ace has pounced on the story and has lots of links and background info. Bryan, Rusty, and Michelle are also on it, rapidly piecing things together.
Update: Via Bryan, Debbie Schlussel (who worked as a Congressional staffer for Siljander in 1985) paints a surprising picture of the man.
When I worked for Mark Siljander, in the summer after my junior year of high school, and again when I was headed to college, I was just 16, but more than an intern. I wrote speeches for him, I helped tutor him in Hebrew, which he learned to speak and write, and I accompanied him to many events.
What makes the allegations in the indictment so shocking, is that Siljander is a Born-Again Evangelical Christian. We had fast days in his office. There were prayer circles.
...
That's why it's so hard for me to read that he may have played for the opposite team--for the enemy. ... This is the Congressman--who when I worked for him--was decades ahead of his time in understanding the Islamist threat worldwide and to America. That he'd reverse course sickens and saddens me.I think this was about money. Since he lost his Congressional seat, he was hard up for money and was involved in many failed business ventures, including an AIDS-Test-By-Mail. (He also ran, unsuccessfully, for Congress from Virginia.)
Desperation and money do bad things.
Schlussel will appear on Fox & Friends tomorrow morning at 7:15 to discuss the Siljander situation.
Handcrafted by Flip on January 16, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack
Transcript Of Al Qaeda Congratulatory Phone Call re Bhutto Assassination
From the Telegraph:
Here is a translation of the transcript of the alleged telephone conversation from senior al-Qa'eda leader Baitullah Mehsud to another militant said to have been intercepted after the assassination.
...
Baitullah Mehsud (BM): Congratulations to you, were they our men?Maulvi Sahib (MS): Yes they were ours.
BM: Who were they?
MS: There was Saeed, there was Bilal from Badar and Ikramullah.
BM: The three of them did it?
MS: Ikramullah and Bilal did it.
BM: Then congratulations.
MS: Where are you? I want to meet you.
BM: I am at Makeen (town in South Waziristan tribal region), come over, I am at Anwar Shah's house.
MS: OK, I'll come.
BM: Don't inform their house for the time being.
MS: OK.
BM: It was a tremendous effort. They were really brave boys who killed her.
MS: Mashallah (Thank God). When I come I will give you all the details.
BM: I will wait for you. Congratulations, once again congratulations.
MS: Congratulations to you.
(HT: HA Headlines)
Handcrafted by Flip on December 28, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Candidates React To Benazir Bhutto Assassination
USA Today is collecting the official reactions pouring fast and furiously out of the major Presidential campaigns to today's assassination of former Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto.
Most candidates put out press releases, but some (including Clinton and McCain) used pre-planned Iowa campaign stops to address the situation in real-time. The Romney campaign has posted a YouTube video of the candidate's reaction.
Giuliani: Her death is a reminder that terrorism anywhere -- whether in New York, London, Tel-Aviv or Rawalpindi -- is an enemy of freedom. We must redouble our efforts to win the terrorists' war on us.
Huckabee: On this sad day, we are reminded that while our democracy has flaws, it stands as a shining beacon of hope for nations and people around the world who seek peace and opportunity through self-government.
McCain: I would be on the phone. ... I would be meeting with the National Security Council. ... I know the players, I know the individuals and I know the best way to address this situation.
Clinton: I will certainly do anything I can to support the continuing efforts to democratize a very important and critical nation to the future of that region and the world. ... When I think about our democracy and the intensity of feeling that people have demonstrated already in our election ... we take our elections seriously.
Richardson: We must use our diplomatic leverage and force the enemies of democracy to yield: President Bush should press Musharraf to step aside, and a broad-based coalition government, consisting of all the democratic parties, should be formed immediately.
Romney: For those who think Iraq is the sole front in the war on terror, one must look no further than what has happened today. America must show its commitment to stand with all moderate forces across the Islamic world and together face the defining challenge of our generation –- the struggle against violent, radical jihadists.
Obama: She was a respected and resilient advocate for the democratic aspirations of the Pakistani people. We join with them in mourning her loss, and stand with them in their quest for democracy and against the terrorists who threaten the common security of the world.
As for the domestic electoral impact (specifically as regards Iowa), barring any reaction gaffes, and dependent on how the situation shakes out, the primary effect will presumably be one of increased focus on foreign policy in general. Who makes the most hay of that is up in the air, but the focus shift would seem to be most harmful to foreign policy neophytes Obama and Huckabee (which, in Iowa, tends to benefit Clinton and Romney).
Handcrafted by Flip on December 27, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack
Iran Redux
It has been two weeks since U.S. Intelligence Director Mike McConnell released the latest National Intelligence Estimate, which concluded that Iran abandoned its nuclear weapons program in 2003. Shortly thereafter, Democrats pounced on the Intelligence Community and President Bush for not discovering this sooner.
Now that most of the rhetoric has died down, it seems fitting to evaluate the big picture.
- Iran, one of the world's most frightening regimes, does not have nuclear weapons. The Bush Administration induced Libya to give up its robust nuclear weapons program and is making progress in disarming a well-stocked North Korean regime. Iran has pursued nuclear weapons technology through the A.Q. Khan nuclear network and its failure is a success of the U.S. Intelligence Community.
- Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is a frightening man. His list of bellicose rhetoric and ridiculous rationalization is extensive and exceptionally worrisome. However, Ahmadinejad, who edged a moderate to win the presidency, could be history when his term expires in 2009. Recent criticism over his handling of the economy makes this a very real and exciting possibility.
- Ahmadinejad and Iran still pose a threat. Iran continues to aggressively pursue long-range missiles and has a newfound stock of low-grade uranium (think dirty bombs). While it evidently does not currently possess nuclear weapons, I believe Iran wouldn't hesitate to employ them if it did. Furthermore, Iranian financial and military support to the Iraqi insurgency continues.
In the end, it's very welcome news that Iran doesn't have nukes and is still several years away from producing them. Ideally, Ahmadinejad will be defeated in 2009 and a moderate can put Iran on a path to democracy and economic development. Until then, the U.S and the international community should continue to monitor Iran's actions and take steps to deter it from destabilizing activity.
Handcrafted by Gindu on December 18, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (16) | TrackBack
Coming Soon: The Al Qaeda YouTube Debate
This trend is catching on.
AL-QAEDA sympathisers have been asked to send in their questions for the terror network's second in command, which he will then answer in an online interview next month.
The bizarre stunt was announced in a new video posted on the internet in which al-Qaeda's number two, Ayman al-Zawahri, mocked today's British handover of security in southern Iraq to local forces as a sign that insurgents are gaining the upper hand.
...
The websites invited readers to send in questions during the next month for Zawahri to answer in an "open interview". How the interview would work was not immediately clear.
(HT: TechCrunch)
Handcrafted by Flip on December 17, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack
Tale of the Tape
Tomorrow, CIA Director Michael Hayden will testify before Congress on the destruction of video tapes from the interrogation of senior Al Qaeda leaders. Democrats such as Senator Joe Biden are accusing the CIA of a cover-up and are calling for a special prosecutor. While others such as Senator Jay Rockefeller have cast a broader but still accusatory net:
Were there things on those tapes that they didn't want to have seen, that didn't conform to what the attorney general would allow them to do? Were they just trying to bury the general subject?
In the rush to create a scandal amid progress in Iraq, Democrats are missing a very likely explanation for the destruction of these tapes: they weren't useful anymore. The CIA has admitted that the tapes were made in 2002 as part of a "secret detention and interrogation program" initiated after the arrest of senior al Qaeda operative Abu Zubaydah. This secret program led to the implementation of several novel interrogation techniques including waterboarding.
The fact that the videotaping of these particular interrogations ended in 2002 (although the practice of waterboarding continued until 2003) tells us something. I predict that General Hayden will admit tomorrow that these tapes were made to ensure that the new interrogation techniques were being properly implemented. As designed, the new techniques carefully navigated legal waters and the CIA had a duty to ensure that they were being carried out as conceived. The tapes were destroyed in 2005 because the legality and proper implementation of the techniques had been established. In addition, since the use of waterboarding, the most controversial of the techniques, ceased in 2003, there was no need to retain the tapes.
Some detractors have argued that the destruction does not make sense because the video tapes had intelligence value. I would postulate that the CIA either conducts video or audio recordings of all interrogations. After all, the purpose of the interrogation is to create intelligence and the people that need the intelligence are all over the world. To meet these needs, the CIA probably immediately transcribes the interrogation so that the text can be searched and discovered by U.S. intelligence analysts. Since intelligence is perishable, the CIA probably keeps the tapes for a few months should any analyst request a retranslation.
I know that Director Hayden has stated that the tapes were destroyed because of a fear of reprisal. While that may be one of the factors involved, I suspect it was not the primary motivation.
Check back tomorrow to see how well this prediction has fared.
__________________________________________________________________
Update: The closed nature of Director Hayden's testimony has made it difficult to ascertain the Agency's motivation for destroying the tapes. More commentary to come as the details begin to emerge.
Handcrafted by Gindu on December 10, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (19) | TrackBack
So What?
On the news that a new National Intelligence Estimate has found that Iran has not been pursuing nuclear weapons since 2003, Democrats have pounced on President Bush over his knowledge of the report. Democratic Senator Joe Biden went so far as to conclude:
Are you telling me a president that's briefed every single morning, who's fixated on Iran, is not told back in August that the tentative conclusion of 16 intelligence agencies in the U.S. government said they had abandoned their effort for a nuclear weapon in '03?
I refuse to believe that. If that's true, he has the most incompetent staff in modern American history, and he's one of the most incompetent presidents in modern American history.
Democrats are distraught that President Bush did not receive or pursue details of this "tentative conclusion." Let's assume that the Director of National Intelligence provided the President details on this preliminary information. The findings were still tentative and no responsible leader would direct policy changes until the report had undergone rigorous adjudication by the Intelligence Community.
Furthermore, Iran certainly did not deserve the benefit of the doubt. It has a history of pursuing nuclear weapon technology from Pakistan, developing indigenous long-range ballistic missiles, and procuring nuclear-capable cruise missiles. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) had discovered that Iran had used its laser centrifuges to produce an average level of enrichment between 8-9%, well above the level Iran had originally claimed (3%) and in excess of the 3-5% enrichment needed for nuclear power. Even International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Mohamed ElBaradei concluded, at the time, that Iran "has failed to meet its obligations under its Safeguards Agreement with respect to the reporting of nuclear material, the subsequent processing and use of that material and the declaration of facilities where the material was stored and processed."
After weapons of mass destruction were not found in Iraq, Americans wanted more rigorous intelligence processes to ensure that history did not repeat itself. The U.S. Intelligence Community met this expectation and publicly released its findings. Therefore, considering the circumstances, the President and the Intelligence Community acted appropriately.
Handcrafted by Gindu on December 4, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Time To Update Your Dead Pools
Geert Wilders = easy money. Quite certain to be shuffled off the mortal coil during 2008 by the long arm of jihad.
A Dutch conservative lawmaker said Wednesday he is making a film to highlight what he describes as "fascist" passages in the Quran, his latest high profile criticism of Islam.
The interior and justice ministers said they were concerned, but believed they had no authority to prevent the lawmaker, Geert Wilders, from screening his film.
Wilders plans to depict parts of the Quran he says are used as inspiration "by bad people to do bad things."
...
Wilders' planned broadcast is reminiscent of the film "Submission" — a fictional study of abused Muslim women with scenes of near-naked women with Quranic texts engraved on their flesh."Submission" director Theo van Gogh was shot and had his throat slit by a Muslim extremist on an Amsterdam street in 2004.
(HT: LGF)
Handcrafted by Flip on November 29, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Blowing Smoke
According to its official news agency, Iran has developed a new long-range missile:
Iran's military said Tuesday it has manufactured a new missile with a range of 1,200 miles capable of reaching Israel and U.S. bases across the Mideast
This new missile joins the Shahab-3, a medium-range missile with a known range of at least 800 miles. Iran has claimed it has improved the range of this missile to 1,200 miles. Recall Iran has previously acquired nuclear-capable cruise missiles with a range of 1,800 miles.
With this aggressive pursuit of advanced missile technology, it's hard to believe that the international community doubts the peaceful nature of Iran's nuclear development.
Handcrafted by Gindu on November 27, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Australia Loses John Howard
Michelle Malkin's got a round-up of coverage of the suboptimal results of today's Australian elections.
In short, U.S. ally and Liberal Party leader John Howard is ousted as Prime Minister in favor of the Labor Party's Kevin Rudd. Of course, down under, "Liberal" means "Conservative" and Howard's defeat is unwelcome news for fans of fighting global terrorism.
Rudd's win, however, is a victory for pica fans.
Handcrafted by Flip on November 24, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Gitmo Manual Hits Wikileaks [Update: Document Added]
A manual detailing operations at the terrorist detention camp in Guantanamo Bay entitled "Camp Delta Standard Operating Procedures" has apparently been leaked onto the site Wikileaks.
Whether because it's since been yanked or because of heavy site traffic, the link to the 238-page document is currently not functioning, but Wired has published a review of sorts (and a reproduction of one of the pages, illustrating the layout of one of the camps), along with a few excerpted globs of outrage now erupting out of the ACLU.
The Camp Delta document includes schematics of the camp, detailed checklists of what "comfort items" such as extra toilet paper can be given to detainees as rewards, six pages of instructions on how to process new detainees, instructions on how to psychologically manipulate prisoners, and rules for dealing with hunger strikes.
"What strikes me is the level of detail for handling all kind of situations, from admission to barbers and burials," says Jamil Dakwar, advocacy director of the ACLU's Human Rights program. Dakwar was in Guantánamo last week for a military-commission hearing.
Apparently, the torture has reached tonsorial heights.
Dakwar sees hints of Abu Ghraib in a section instructing guards to use dogs to intimidate prisoners.
...
"MWD (Military Working Dogs) will walk 'Main Street' in Camp Delta during shifts to demonstrate physical presence to detainees," reads a directive in the "Psychological Deterrence" section. "MWD will not be walked through the blocks unless directed by the (Joint Detention Operations Group)."
The Wikileaks front page appears to be down too, so I'm guessing this is just a traffic issue. If it amuses you, you can keep trying the document link. Once it frees up, I'll make a local copy available.
Update: Here's the document (fair warning: it's a PDF and it's 4.2 MB). This sucker's not so easy to get hold of - everyone discussing it is just linking in to the page on Wikileaks, which continues to be down. According to the Wikileaks' Wikipedia page:
A copy of 'Standard Operating Procedures for Camp Delta' dating from March 2003, the protocol of the US Army at the Guantánamo Bay detention camp, was released on the Wikileaks website on the 7th November 2007.[24] However, after this news became widespread on the 15th November the Wikileaks website became inaccessible.[citation needed]
No document hotlinks here though. Just a fresh copy delivered clean and whole for your perusal. If your finger quakes with uncertainty just above your mouse button, rest assured the document is mark "unclassified". The ACLU's already decrying the manual as shocking evidence of American atrocities in Guantanamo Bay. The more that reasonable people read it (which admittedly, I've not yet finished doing), the more credibly they'll be able to tell ACLU card-carrying pro-terrorists and other agents of related misinformation and anti-American propaganda to kindly cram it.
For extra cinematic impact, you can also print it out, bind it, and slam it on a table, demanding, "Is there no book. No pamphlet or manual, no regulation or set of written orders or instructions that lets me know that, as a Marine, one of my duties is to perform code reds?"
Update: If you're looking for a quick reference on Gitmo hospitality, check out pages 218-221 (Table 8-1 to 8-5). Approved detainee comfort items, violations and corresponding punishments, and authorized/unauthorized activities for prisoners of various levels.
Pages 131-132 (Military Working Dogs (MWD)) are also worth a look. Dakwar said he sees "shades of Abu Ghraib" in the section regarding how to parade military dogs around the grounds so as to "intimidate prisoners." "Intimidate" is a loaded word, because it's used in the Geneva Conventions where it has specific contextual meaning, but those disingenuously borrowed semantics aside, the psychological deterrent impact of harnessed guard dogs (released only to collect escaping detainees) is undoubtedly reasonable and effective. Coils of razor wire atop civilian prison walls aren't meant to torture inmates with the thought that their guards may turn on them and start whipping them with the wire. They're a psychological (and physical) deterrence to escape. Just as the MWDs are used "to enhance physical security and as a psychological deterrence."
Handcrafted by Flip on November 15, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Karol Sheinin On Truther Fatuity
Droves of fanatical, cookie-cutter nonconformists notwithstanding, Karol won last night's debate with a local 9/11 conspiracist and has posted a transcript of her remarks.
It's a wonderfully cogent and thorough rebuttal/rebuke of Truthermania and it displays a lot more patience than I'm able to muster when engaging these wackjobs. Karol noted the typical fruitlessness of debating a Truther in trademark Karol form.
At one point in his book, my opponent quotes some rap lyrics by a group called Dead Prez who basically call the American government terrorists, etc. I love, no, make that I live, for quoting rap lyrics so I was going to go with Jay-Z’s “a wise man told me don’t argue with fools, cause people from a distance can’t tell who is who”.
The audience voted Karol the winner of the debate, so apparently they were able to tell.
Read the full text of her remarks - they're therapeutic.
Handcrafted by Flip on November 8, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Bombs Away
U.S. Diplomats reported today that the disabling of North Korea's nuclear capability is going well.
I think we are off to a good start and will look forward to completing the task by the end of the year as planned
...
Our North Korean colleagues have actually done considerable preparatory work on all three facilities. So we were able to start at least some of the disablement activities this week
The Bush Administration has played hardball with North Korea from its earliest days in office. Critics insisted that the "Axis of Evil" label and tough sanctions would risk further isolation and possibly war. Today's State Department report is just another piece of evidence that this strategy has been effective. We should not forget that this approach previously forced another member of the nuclear club to cough up the goods.
Recall how North Korea developed nukes in the first place. In Spring 1994, North Korea expelled international weapons inspectors and withdrew from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty as it was preparing to begin reprocessing spent nuclear fuel rods into weapons-grade plutonium. President Clinton pursued sanctions but also quietly sent former President Carter to defuse the crisis. Carter negotiated an agreement that would have North Korea abandon its pursuit of nuclear weapons in return for substantial foreign aid.
Soon after, North Korea covertly pursued nuclear fabrication equipment from Pakistan. In October 2002, North Korean officials finally admitted to their extensive nuclear ruse, and President Bush immediately nullified the Carter-Clinton arrangement.
Why the refresher? Presidential Candidate Barack Obama is touting his willingness, if elected, to “engage in aggressive personal diplomacy” with Iran, which has nuclear ambitions of its own. Obama has even suggested he would offer economic incentives and security guarantees if Iran cooperated on Iraq, terrorism, and nuclear issues. Obama is clearly missing that history is repeating itself with Iran.
Obama's position is likely just an attempt to differentiate himself from Hillary; however, important national security issues are an irresponsible place to test this approach. This highlights his lack of foreign policy experience and shows he is not ready for the Big Show. The way to deal with hard line nations is not the soft glove. The Bush Administration has demonstrated how to get rogue nations to abandon their nuclear arms. Obama should not readily dismiss this lesson for political positioning because, if he's elected, many liberals will hold him to this foolish position.
Handcrafted by Gindu on November 6, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
To the Pain
Attorney General nominee Michael Mukasey is headed for confirmation. For the past two weeks Senator Patrick Leahy, who sponsored Mr. Mukasey's nomination, and other Democrats have been bogged down in Mukasey's failure to answer questions on a classified interrogation technique called waterboarding.
Waterboarding, in which a suspect has water poured over his cellophane covered mouth and nose to stimulate drowning, has rarely ever been used:
For all the debate over waterboarding, it has been used on only three al Qaeda figures
...
Waterboarding has not been used since 2003 and has been specifically prohibited since Gen. Michael Hayden took over as CIA director
Democrats failed to mention that this technique is no longer used, and even when it was in use, we saved it for the really bad guys.
The most effective use of waterboarding was in breaking Khalid Sheikh Mohammed...who took responsibility for the 9/11 attacks and virtually all other al Qaeda terror strikes, including the beheading of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl
...
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed lasted the longest under waterboarding, about a minute and a half, but once he broke, it never had to be used again
Before you mentally file Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in the "pansy" category, consider this:
CIA officers who subjected themselves to the waterboarding technique lasted an average of 14 seconds before caving in.
This technique just moved ahead of the Pit of Despair.
Handcrafted by Gindu on November 2, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Reading Lefty Blogs Can Be Torture
This waterboarding experiment being trumpeted at Democratic Undergound is roughly as dispositive as the fire-can't-weaken-steel experiment (also from the rigorous thinkers at DU) that proved George Bush, the Jews, and Roger Ailes knocked down the rabbit cages on 9/11.
Wouldn't it have been more illustrative for the investigators also to subject each other to undisputed methods of torture (car battery electrocution, bamboo shoots in the fingernails, the strappado, perhaps) to facilitate some meaningful comparison? If they'd been able to report waterboarding was as torturous as bona fide torture techniques, they'd have a much more powerful argument.
The only reason I can think of to forego such a compelling comparison (and it's a fine reason) is that few rational people would knowingly subject themselves to torture, even in the name of junk science.
Seems to me they inadvertently (but persuasively) made the counter-argument by undertaking the experiment in the first place.
Programming note: Check back later when I'll be posting a video proving that I'm not ticklish by tickling myself.
Handcrafted by Flip on October 30, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
The (Missile) Defense Rests
Today, Defense Secretary Robert Gates offered an olive branch to Russia over the proposed European-based missile defense sites by proposing their delayed activation.
We would consider tying together activation of the sites in Poland and the Czech Republic with definitive proof of the threat - in other words, Iranian missile testing and so on.
This is a departure from the Bush Administration’s previous position. Russia has strenuously objected to this course of action from the outset but President Bush has not compromised over the radar and missile sites in Poland and Czech Republic, even when Russia offered the use of one of its existing radar sites.
I’m glad to see the U.S. attempt to defuse the mounting tensions, although today’s offer was probably driven by the deteriorating political support in the host countries. With its recent oil wealth, Russia has been increasingly active on the international stage, and accordingly, has interjected itself into nearly every significant foreign policy issue of the past five years. It routinely exercises its Security Council veto much to the disappointment of Washington and many NATO members. The end result is a very relevant Russian Federation, which can hinder or obstruct American plans.
The smart play by the U.S. at this point is to abandon these controversial missile defense sites in exchange for Russian support and intervention in Iran’s nuclear pursuits. The declared purpose of the radar and missile sites is to defeat a missile threat from rogue Middle Eastern countries, that is, Iran. If the U.S. can secure Russia’s support for tougher sanctions with harsh penalties for non-compliance then the U.S. should table its European missile defense plans (until Russia fails to live up to its end of the bargain).
This tactic allows Russia to avoid the perceived affront to its power, and the U.S. finally gets meaningful action on Iran, one of the White House’s top international goals. This diplomatic standoff clearly has the potential to turn into a win-win situation.
Handcrafted by Gindu on October 23, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Blame it on the Raid
Details have begun to emerge about Israel's strike on a suspected Syrian nuclear site, but one aspect of this story will remain in the background. What is now well known is that on September 6, Israeli F-16s crossed the width of Syria and severely damaged a suspected North Korean designed nuclear facility. Recent reporting has shown America's advanced knowledge of the raid and internal White House deliberations.
When the Israelis came to the CIA with the pictures, the U.S. then got the site's coordinates and backed it up with very detailed satellite imagery of its own
...
The Israelis urged the U.S. government to destroy the complex, and the U.S. started looking at options about how to destroy the facility: Targeteers were assembled, and officials contemplated a special forces raid using helicopters, which would mean inserting forces to collect data and then blow the site up.
What hasn't made the headlines is that the Bush Administration declined to participate in the strike and attempted to dissuade Israel from carrying out the attack. While some articles have attributed this to the difficult nature of the target, my experience is that this attack was well within the capabilities of the US military. Additionally, a one-time air raid is one of the more straightforward options in the military toolbox because it doesn't involve follow-on air strikes or ground forces.
But the US decided to pass:
The Israelis made the decision to take the facility out themselves, though the U.S. urged them not to. The Bush administration, with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert Gates leading the way, said the Israelis and the U.S. should "confront not attack."
Many Democrats believe, as Rep. Pete Stark tastelessly expressed last week, that President Bush is a warmonger. This recent Israeli-Syrian incident is a clear indication that the Bush Administration is not out to initiate conflict, even when there may be sufficient cause.
Furthermore, the US appears not to be using this evidence of North Korean involvement to scrap recent diplomatic progress. Not only does this demonstrate restraint, it shows commitment to a strategic foreign policy.
In the end, major media outlets will continue to deny the Bush Administration the praise it deserves for its handling of this situation. Nevertheless, a job well done.
Handcrafted by Gindu on October 22, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Nobel Class of '07 Continues To Distinguish Itself
Doris Lessing, the octogenarian British novelist who essentially told a congratulatory journalist to piss off when he informed her of her Nobel win earlier this month, has now spit up some belittling condescension for us Yankees to chew on.
"September 11 was terrible, but if one goes back over the history of the IRA, what happened to the Americans wasn't that terrible," the Nobel Literature Prize winner told the leading Spanish daily El Pais.
"Some Americans will think I'm crazy. Many people died, two prominent buildings fell, but it was neither as terrible nor as extraordinary as they think. They're a very naive people, or they pretend to be," she said in an interview published Sunday.
"Do you know what people forget? That the IRA attacked with bombs against our government; it killed several people while a Conservative congress was being held and in which the prime minister, Margaret Thatcher, was (attending). People forget," she said.
Nearly 3,000 people were killed in the Sept. 11 attacks. About 3,700 died and tens of thousands of people were maimed in more than 30 years of violence in Northern Ireland.
Handcrafted by Flip on October 22, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
If There's Somethin' Wagin' Jihad... In Your Neighborhood
Yes, comically, tragically, truly, you're gonna call the Terrorist Busters, the CIA's retro-kitchily rebranded Counterterrorist Center.
Handcrafted by Flip on October 22, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Want To Get Out Of Jury Duty?
It's as easy as visiting this blog.
(HT: La Shawn Barber)
Handcrafted by Flip on October 9, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Rosie O'Donnell's Stirring [And Fleeting] 9/11 Tribute
WTF?
Update: Looks like she's yanked it. Must've gotten some flak, even from her Truther-laden audience. If you didn't get to see it, it was just a video montage of uncomfortably close close-ups of Rosie's sneering face.
(HT: HA Headlines)
Handcrafted by Flip on September 11, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (5) | TrackBack
In Memoriam
Keith Olbermann likes to close his Countdown broadcast on MSNBC with the snarky platitude "[X days since] mission accomplished in Iraq," (currently 1,594), referring to the President's speech from the USS Abraham Lincoln announcing the end of major combat operations in that country.
With the dawn of the 6th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, here's another statistic: 6,516,034 days stolen from that day's victims' lives. Not to mention the hundreds of millions of days of grief visited on the loved ones of the nearly 3,000 victims of the day's attacks.
Those many thousands of victims aren't the only reason we persist in the struggle against Islamo-facism and other terrorist ideologies, but today they serve as a palpable reminder of what's at stake in that struggle.
Never forget.
The list is after the jump.
World Trade Center Victims
Gordon M. Aamoth, Jr.
Edelmiro Abad
Maria Rose Abad
Andrew Anthony Abate
Vincent Abate
Laurence Christopher Abel
William F. Abrahamson
Richard Anthony Aceto
Jesus Acevedo Rescand
Heinrich Bernhard Ackermann
Paul Acquaviva
Donald LaRoy Adams
Patrick Adams
Shannon Lewis Adams
Stephen George Adams
Ignatius Udo Adanga
Christy A. Addamo
Terence E. Adderley, Jr.
Sophia Buruwad Addo
Lee Allan Adler
Daniel Thomas Afflitto
Emmanuel Akwasi Afuakwah
Alok Agarwal
Mukul Kumar Agarwala
Joseph Agnello
David Scott Agnes
Brian G. Ahearn
Jeremiah Joseph Ahern
Joanne Marie Ahladiotis
Shabbir Ahmed
Terrance Andre Aiken
Godwin Ajala
Gertrude M. Alagero
Andrew Alameno
Margaret Ann Alario
Gary M. Albero
Jon Leslie Albert
Peter Alderman
Jacquelyn Delaine Aldridge
David D. Alger
Sarah Ali-Escarcega
Ernest Alikakos
Edward L. Allegretto
Eric Allen
Joseph Ryan Allen
Richard Dennis Allen
Richard Lanard Allen
Christopher E. Allingham
Janet M. Alonso
Arturo Alva-Moreno
Anthony Alvarado
Antonio Javier Alvarez
Victoria Alvarez-Brito
Telmo E. Alvear
Cesar Amoranto Alviar
Tariq Amanullah
Angelo Amaranto
James M. Amato Joseph Amatuccio
Christopher Charles Amoroso
Kazuhiro Anai
Calixto Anaya, Jr.
Joseph Anchundia
Kermit Charles Anderson
Yvette Constance Anderson
John Andreacchio
Michael Rourke Andrews
Jean Ann Andrucki
Siew-Nya Ang
Joseph Angelini, Jr.
Joseph Angelini, Sr.
Laura Angilletta
Doreen J. Angrisani
Lorraine Antigua
Peter Paul Apollo
Faustino Apostol, Jr.
Frank Thomas Aquilino
Patrick Michael Aranyos
David Arce
Michael George Arczynski
Louis Arena
Adam P. Arias
Michael Armstrong
Jack Charles Aron
Joshua Aron
Richard Avery Aronow
Japhet Jesse Aryee
Patrick Asante
Carl Asaro
Michael Asciak
Michael Edward Asher
Janice Marie Ashley
Thomas J. Ashton
Manuel O. Asitimbay
Gregg Arthur Atlas
Gerald T. Atwood
James Audiffred
Louis Frank Aversano, Jr.
Ezra Aviles
Sandy Ayala
Arlene T. Babakitis
Eustace P. Bacchus
John J. Badagliacca
Jane Ellen Baeszler
Robert J. Baierwalter
Andrew J. Bailey
Brett T. Bailey
Tatyana Bakalinskaya
Michael S. Baksh
Sharon M. Balkcom
Michael Andrew Bane
Katherine Bantis
Gerard Baptiste
Walter Baran
Gerard A. Barbara
Paul Vincent Barbaro
James William Barbella
Ivan Kyrillos F. Barbosa
Victor Daniel Barbosa
Colleen Ann Barkow
David Michael Barkway
Matthew Barnes
Sheila Patricia Barnes
Evan J. Baron
Renee Barrett-Arjune
Nathaly Barrios La Cruz
Arthur Thaddeus Barry
Diane G. Barry
Maurice Vincent Barry
Scott D. Bart
Carlton W. Bartels
Guy Barzvi
Inna B. Basina
Alysia Basmajian
Kenneth William Basnicki
Steven Bates
Paul James Battaglia
Walter David Bauer, Jr.
Marlyn Capito Bautista
Jasper Baxter
Michele Beale
Paul Frederick Beatini
Jane S. Beatty
Lawrence Ira Beck
Manette Marie Beckles
Carl John Bedigian
Michael Earnest Beekman
Maria A. Behr
Yelena Belilovsky
Nina Patrice Bell
Debbie Bellows
Stephen Elliot Belson
Paul M. Benedetti
Denise Lenore Benedetto
Maria Bengochea
Bryan Craig Bennett
Eric L. Bennett
Oliver Duncan Bennett
Margaret L. Benson
Dominick J. Berardi
James Patrick Berger
Steven Howard Berger
John P. Bergin
Alvin Bergsohn
Daniel Bergstein
Michael J. Berkeley
Donna M. Bernaerts
David W. Bernard
William Bernstein
David M. Berray
David S. Berry
Joseph J. Berry
William Reed Bethke
Timothy Betterly
Edward Frank Beyea
Paul Beyer
Anil Tahilram Bharvaney
Bella J. Bhukhan
Shimmy D. Biegeleisen
Peter Alexander Bielfeld
William G. Biggart
Brian Bilcher
Carl Vincent Bini
Gary Eugene Bird
Joshua David Birnbaum
George John Bishop
Jeffrey Donald Bittner
Albert Balewa Blackman, Jr.
Christopher Joseph Blackwell
Susan Leigh Blair
Harry Blanding, Jr.
Janice Lee Blaney
Craig Michael Blass
Rita Blau
Richard Middleton Blood, Jr.
Michael Andrew Boccardi
John P. Bocchi
Michael Leopoldo Bocchino
Susan M. Bochino
Bruce D. Boehm
Mary Catherine Boffa
Nicholas Andrew Bogdan
Darren Christopher Bohan
Lawrence Francis Boisseau
Vincent M. Boland, Jr.
Alan Bondarenko
Andre Bonheur, Jr.
Colin Arthur Bonnett
Frank Bonomo
Yvonne Lucia Bonomo
Genieve Bonsignore, 3
Seaon Booker
Sherry Ann Bordeaux
Krystine Bordenabe
Martin Boryczewski
Richard Edward Bosco
John H. Boulton
Francisco Eligio Bourdier
Thomas Harold Bowden, Jr.
Kimberly S. Bowers
Veronique Nicole Bowers
Larry Bowman
Shawn Edward Bowman, Jr.
Kevin L. Bowser
Gary R. Box
Gennady Boyarsky
Pamela Boyce
Michael Boyle
Alfred Braca
Kevin Bracken
David Brian Brady
Alexander Braginsky
Nicholas W. Brandemarti
Michelle Renee Bratton
Patrice Braut
Lydia E. Bravo
Ronald Michael Breitweiser
Edward A. Brennan III
Francis Henry Brennan
Michael E. Brennan
Peter Brennan
Thomas M. Brennan
Daniel J. Brethel
Gary Lee Bright
Jonathan Briley
Mark A. Brisman
Paul Gary Bristow
Mark Francis Broderick
Herman Charles Broghammer
Keith A. Broomfield
Ethel Brown Janice
Juloise Brown
Lloyd Stanford Brown
Patrick J. Brown
Bettina Browne
Mark Bruce
Richard George Bruehert
Andrew Brunn
Vincent Brunton
Ronald Paul Bucca
Brandon J. Buchanan
Gregory Joseph Buck
Dennis Buckley
Nancy Clare Bueche
Patrick Joseph Buhse
John Edwards Bulaga, Jr.
Stephen Bunin
Matthew J. Burke
Thomas Daniel Burke
William Francis Burke, Jr.
Donald J. Burns
Kathleen Anne Burns
Keith James Burns
John Patrick Burnside
Irina Buslo
Milton G. Bustillo
Thomas M. Butler
Patrick Byrne
Timothy G. Byrne
Jesus Neptali Cabezas
Lillian Caceres
Brian Joseph Cachia
Steven Dennis Cafiero, Jr.
Richard M. Caggiano
Cecile Marella Caguicla
Michael John Cahill
Scott Walter Cahill
Thomas Joseph Cahill
George Cain
Salvatore B. Calabro
Joseph Calandrillo
Philip V. Calcagno
Edward Calderon
Kenneth Marcus Caldwell
Dominick Enrico Calia
Felix Calixte
Frank Callahan
Liam Callahan
Luigi Calvi
Roko Camaj
Michael F. Cammarata
David Otey Campbell
Geoffrey Thomas Campbell
Jill Marie Campbell
Robert Arthur Campbell
Sandra Patricia Campbell
Sean Thomas Canavan
John A. Candela
Vincent Cangelosi
Stephen J. Cangialosi
Lisa Bella Cannava
Brian Cannizzaro
Michael Canty
Louis Anthony Caporicci
Jonathan Neff Cappello
James Christopher Cappers
Richard Michael Caproni
Jose Manuel Cardona
Dennis M. Carey
Steve Carey
Edward Carlino
Michael Scott Carlo
David G. Carlone
Rosemarie C. Carlson
Mark Stephen Carney
Joyce Ann Carpeneto
Ivhan Luis Carpio Bautista
Jeremy M. Carrington
Michael Carroll
Peter Carroll
James Joseph Carson, Jr.
Marcia Cecil Carter
James Marcel Cartier
Vivian Casalduc
John Francis Casazza
Paul R. Cascio
Margarito Casillas
Thomas Anthony Casoria
William Otto Caspar
Alejandro Castano
Arcelia Castillo
Germaan Castillo Garcia
Leonard M. Castrianno
Jose Ramon Castro
Richard G. Catarelli
Christopher Sean Caton
Robert John Caufield
Mary Teresa Caulfield
Judson Cavalier
Michael Joseph Cawley
Jason David Cayne
Juan Armando Ceballos
Jason Michael Cefalu
Thomas Joseph Celic
Ana Mercedes Centeno
Joni Cesta
Jeffrey Marc Chairnoff
Swarna Chalasani
William Chalcoff
Eli Chalouh
Charles Lawrence Chan
Mandy Chang
Mark Lawrence Charette
Gregorio Manuel Chavez
Delrose E. Cheatham
Pedro Francisco Checo
Douglas MacMillan Cherry
Stephen Patrick Cherry
Vernon Paul Cherry
Nester Julio Chevalier
Swede Chevalier
Alexander H. Chiang
Dorothy J. Chiarchiaro
Luis Alfonso Chimbo
Robert Chin
Wing Wai Ching
Nicholas Paul Chiofalo
John Chipura
Peter A. Chirchirillo
Catherine Chirls
Kyung Hee Cho
Abul K. Chowdhury
Mohammad Salahuddin Chowdhury
Kirsten L. Christophe
Pamela Chu
Steven Chucknick
Wai Chung
Christopher Ciafardini
Alex F. Ciccone
Frances Ann Cilente
Elaine Cillo
Edna Cintron
Nestor Andre Cintron III
Robert Dominick Cirri
Juan Pablo Cisneros-Alvarez
Benjamin Keefe Clark
Eugene Clark
Gregory Alan Clark
Mannie Leroy Clark
Thomas R. Clark
Christopher Robert Clarke
Donna Marie Clarke
Michael J. Clarke
Suria Rachel Emma Clarke
Kevin Francis Cleary
James D. Cleere
Geoffrey W. Cloud
Susan Marie Clyne
Steven Coakley
Jeffrey Alan Coale
Patricia A. Cody
Daniel Michael Coffey
Jason M. Coffey
Florence G. Cohen
Kevin Sanford Cohen
Anthony Joseph Coladonato
Mark Joseph Colaio
Stephen Colaio
Christopher M. Colasanti
Kevin Nathaniel Colbert
Michel P. Colbert
Keith E. Coleman
Scott Thomas Coleman
Tarel Coleman
Liam Joseph Colhoun
Robert D. Colin
Robert J. Coll
Jean Collin
John Michael Collins
Michael L. Collins
Thomas J. Collins
Joseph Collison
Patricia Malia Colodner
Linda M. Colon
Sol E. Colon
Ronald Edward Comer
Sandra Jolane Conaty Brace
Jaime Concepcion
Albert Conde
Denease Conley
Susan P. Conlon
Margaret Mary Conner
Cynthia Marie Lise Connolly
John E. Connolly, Jr.
James Lee Connor
Jonathan M. Connors
Kevin Patrick Connors
Kevin F. Conroy
Jose Manuel Contreras-Fernandez
Brenda E. Conway
Dennis Michael Cook
Helen D. Cook
John A. Cooper
Joseph John Coppo, Jr.
Gerard J. Coppola
Joseph Albert Corbett
Alejandro Cordero
Robert Cordice
Ruben D. Correa
Danny A. Correa-Gutierrez
James J. Corrigan
Carlos Cortes
Kevin Cosgrove
Dolores Marie Costa
Digna Alexandra Costanza
Charles Gregory Costello, Jr.
Michael S. Costello
Conrod K. Cottoy
Martin John Coughlan
John Gerard Coughlin
Timothy J. Coughlin
James E. Cove
Andre Cox
Frederick John Cox
James Raymond Coyle
Michele Coyle-Eulau
Anne Marie Cramer
Christopher S. Cramer
Denise Elizabeth Crant
James Leslie Crawford, Jr.
Robert James Crawford
Joanne Mary Cregan
Lucy Crifasi
John A. Crisci
Daniel Hal Crisman
Dennis Cross
Kevin Raymond Crotty
Thomas G. Crotty
John Crowe
Welles Remy Crowther
Robert L. Cruikshank
John Robert Cruz
Grace Yu Cua
Kenneth John Cubas
Francisco Cruz Cubero
Richard J. Cudina
Neil James Cudmore
Thomas Patrick Cullen lll
Joyce Cummings
Brian Thomas Cummins
Michael Cunningham
Robert Curatolo
Laurence Damian Curia
Paul Dario Curioli
Beverly Curry
Michael S. Curtin
Gavin Cushny
John D'Allara
Vincent Gerard D'Amadeo
Jack D'Ambrosi
Mary D'Antonio
Edward A. D'Atri
Michael D. D'Auria
Michael Jude D'Esposito
Manuel John Da Mota
Caleb Arron Dack
Carlos S. DaCosta
Joao Alberto DaFonseca Aguiar, Jr.
Thomas A. Damaskinos
Jeannine Marie Damiani-Jones
Patrick W. Danahy
Nana Danso
Vincent Danz
Dwight Donald Darcy
Elizabeth Ann Darling
Annette Andrea Dataram
Lawrence Davidson
Michael Allen Davidson
Scott Matthew Davidson
Titus Davidson
Niurka Davila
Clinton Davis
Wayne Terrial Davis
Anthony Richard Dawson
Calvin Dawson
Edward James Day
Jayceryll de Chavez
Jennifer De Jesus
Monique E. De Jesus
Nereida De Jesus
Emerita De La Pena
Azucena Maria de la Torre
David Paul De Rubbio
Jemal Legesse De Santis
Christian Louis De Simone
Melanie Louise De Vere
William Thomas Dean
Robert J. DeAngelis, Jr.
Thomas Patrick DeAngelis
Tara E. Debek
Anna Marjia DeBin
James V. Deblase
Paul DeCola
Simon Marash Dedvukaj
Jason Defazio
David A. DeFeo
Manuel Del Valle, Jr.
Donald Arthur Delapenha
Vito Joseph DeLeo
Danielle Anne Delie
Joseph A. Della Pietra
Andrea DellaBella
Palmina DelliGatti
Colleen Ann Deloughery
Francis Albert DeMartini
Anthony Demas
Martin N. DeMeo
Francis Deming
Carol K. Demitz
Kevin Dennis
Thomas F. Dennis
Jean DePalma
Jose Depena
Robert John Deraney
Michael DeRienzo
Edward DeSimone III
Andrew Desperito
Cindy Ann Deuel
Jerry DeVito
Robert P. Devitt, Jr.
Dennis Lawrence Devlin
Gerard Dewan
Sulemanali Kassamali Dhanani
Patricia Florence Di Chiaro
Debra Ann Di Martino
Michael Louis Diagostino
Matthew Diaz
Nancy Diaz
Rafael Arturo Diaz
Michael A. Diaz-Piedra III
Judith Berquis Diaz-Sierra
Joseph Dermot Dickey, Jr.
Lawrence Patrick Dickinson
Michael D. Diehl
John Difato
Vincent Difazio
Carl Anthony DiFranco
Donald Difranco
Stephen Patrick Dimino
William John Dimmling
Marisa DiNardo Schorpp
Christopher M. Dincuff
Jeffrey Mark Dingle
Anthony Dionisio
George DiPasquale
Joseph Dipilato
Douglas Frank DiStefano
Ramzi A. Doany
John Joseph Doherty
Melissa C. Doi
Brendan Dolan
Neil Matthew Dollard
James Joseph Domanico
Benilda Pascua Domingo
Carlos Dominguez
Jerome Mark Patrick Dominguez
Kevin W. Donnelly
Jacqueline Donovan
Stephen Scott Dorf
Thomas Dowd
Kevin Dowdell
Mary Yolanda Dowling
Raymond Mathew Downey
Frank Joseph Doyle
Joseph Michael Doyle
Stephen Patrick Driscoll
Mirna A. Duarte
Michelle Beale Duberry
Luke A. Dudek
Christopher Michael Duffy
Gerard Duffy
Michael Joseph Duffy
Thomas W. Duffy
Antoinette Duger
Sareve Dukat
Christopher Joseph Dunne
Richard Anthony Dunstan
Patrick Thomas Dwyer
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Gerald Michael Olcott
Christine Anne Olender
Linda Mary Oliva
Edward Kraft Oliver
Leah E. Oliver
Eric T. Olsen
Jeffrey James Olsen
Maureen Lyons Olson
Steven John Olson
Toshihiro Onda
Seamus L. O'Neal
John P. Oneill
Frank Oni
Michael C. Opperman
Christopher Orgielewicz
Margaret Orloske
Virginia Anne Ormiston
Ronald Orsini
Peter Ortale
Juan Ortega-Campos
Alexander Ortiz
David Ortiz
Emilio Ortiz, Jr.
Pablo Ortiz
Paul Ortiz, Jr.
Sonia Ortiz
Masaru Ose
Elsy C. Osorio
James R. Ostrowski
Jason Douglas Oswald
Michael Otten
Isidro D. Ottenwalder
Michael Chung Ou
Todd Joseph Ouida
Jesus Ovalles
Peter J. Owens, Jr.
Adianes Oyola
Angel M. Pabon
Israel Pabon, Jr.
Roland Pacheco
Michael Benjamin Packer
Rene Padilla-Chavarria
Deepa Pakkala
Jeffrey Matthew Palazzo
Thomas Palazzo
Richard Palazzolo
Orio J. Palmer
Frank Anthony Palombo
Alan N. Palumbo
Christopher Matthew Panatier
Dominique Lisa Pandolfo
Paul J. Pansini
John M. Paolillo
Edward Joseph Papa
Salvatore T. Papasso
James Nicholas Pappageorge
Vinod Kumar Parakat
Vijayashanker Paramsothy
Nitin Parandkar
Hardai Parbhu
James Wendell Parham
Debra Marie Paris
George Paris
Gye Hyong Park
Philip Lacey Parker
Michael Alaine Parkes
Robert E. Parks, Jr.
Hashmukhrai C. Parmar
Robert Parro
Diane Marie Parsons
Leobardo Lopez Pascual
Michael Pascuma
Jerrold Paskins
Horace Robert Passananti
Suzanne H. Passaro
Avnish Ramanbhai Patel
Dipti Patel
Manish Patel
Steven Bennett Paterson
James Matthew Patrick
Manuel D. Patrocino
Bernard E. Patterson
Cira Marie Patti
Robert E. Pattison
James Robert Paul
Patrice Paz
Victor Paz-Gutierrez
Stacey Lynn Peak
Richard Allen Pearlman
Durrell V. Pearsall
Thomas Pedicini
Todd Douglas Pelino
Michel Adrian Pelletier
Anthony G. Peluso
Angel Ramon Pena
Richard Al Penny
Salvatore F. Pepe
Carl Peralta
Robert David Peraza
Jon A. Perconti
Alejo Perez
Angel Perez, Jr.
Angela Susan Perez
Anthony Perez
Ivan Perez
Nancy E. Perez
Joseph John Perroncino
Edward J. Perrotta
Emelda H. Perry
Glenn C. Perry
John William Perry
Franklin Allan Pershep
Danny Pesce
Michael John Pescherine
Davin Peterson
William Russell Peterson
Mark Petrocelli
Philip Scott Petti
Glen Kerrin Pettit
Dominick Pezzulo
Kaleen Elizabeth Pezzuti
Kevin Pfeifer
Tu-Anh Pham
Kenneth Phelan
Sneha Ann Philips
Gerard Phillips
Suzette Eugenia Piantieri
Ludwig John Picarro
Matthew M. Picerno
Joseph Oswald Pick
Christopher Pickford
Dennis J. Pierce
Bernard Pietronico
Nicholas P. Pietrunti
Theodoros Pigis
Susan Elizabeth Pinto
Joseph Piskadlo
Christopher Todd Pitman
Joshua Piver
Joseph Plumitallo
John Pocher
William Howard Pohlmann
Laurence Polatsch
Thomas H. Polhemus
Steve Pollicino
Susan M. Pollio
Joshua Iousa Poptean
Giovanna Porras
Anthony Portillo
James Edward Potorti
Daphne Pouletsos
Richard N. Poulos
Stephen Emanual Poulos
Brandon Jerome Powell
Shawn Edward Powell
Antonio Pratt
Gregory M. Preziose
Wanda Ivelisse Prince
Vincent Princiotta
Kevin Prior
Everett Martin Proctor III
Carrie Beth Progen
Sarah Prothero-Redheffer
David Lee Pruim
Richard Prunty
John Foster Puckett
Robert David Pugliese
Edward F. Pullis
Patricia Ann Puma
Hemanth Kumar Puttur
Edward R. Pykon
Christopher Quackenbush
Lars Peter Qualben
Lincoln Quappe
Beth Ann Quigley
Michael Quilty
James Francis Quinn
Ricardo J. Quinn
Carlos Quishpe-Cuaman
Carol Millicent Rabalais
Christopher Peter A. Racaniello
Leonard J. Ragaglia
Eugene Raggio
Laura Marie Ragonese-Snik
Michael Ragusa
Peter Frank Raimondi
Harry A. Raines
Ehtesham Raja
Valsa Raju
Edward Rall
Lukas Rambousek
Maria Ramirez
Harry Ramos
Vishnoo Ramsaroop
Lorenzo E. Ramzey
Alfred Todd Rancke
Adam David Rand
Jonathan C. Randall
Srinivasa Shreyas Ranganath
Anne T. Ransom
Faina Aronovna Rapoport
Robert A. Rasmussen
Amenia Rasool
Roger Mark Rasweiler
David Alan Rathkey
William Ralph Raub
Gerard P. Rauzi
Alexey Razuvaev
Gregory Reda
Michele Reed
Judith Ann Reese
Donald J. Regan
Robert M. Regan
Thomas Michael Regan
Christian Michael Otto Regenhard
Howard Reich
Gregg Reidy
James Brian Reilly
Kevin O. Reilly
Timothy E. Reilly
Joseph Reina, Jr.
Thomas Barnes Reinig
Frank Bennett Reisman
Joshua Scott Reiss
Karen Renda
John Armand Reo
Richard Cyril Rescorla
John Thomas Resta
Luis Clodoaldo Revilla
Eduvigis Reyes, Jr.
Bruce Albert Reynolds
John Frederick Rhodes
Francis Saverio Riccardelli
Rudolph N. Riccio
Ann Marie Riccoboni
David H. Rice
Eileen Mary Rice
Kenneth Frederick Rice III
Vernon Allan Richard
Claude Daniel Richards
Gregory David Richards
Michael Richards
Venesha Orintia Richards
James C. Riches
Alan Jay Richman
John M. Rigo
Theresa Risco
Rose Mary Riso
Moises N. Rivas
Joseph Rivelli
Carmen Alicia Rivera
Isaias Rivera
Juan William Rivera
Linda Ivelisse Rivera
David E. Rivers
Joseph R. Riverso
Paul V. Rizza
John Frank Rizzo
Stephen Louis Roach
Joseph Roberto
Leo Arthur Roberts
Michael Roberts
Michael Edward Roberts
Donald Walter Robertson, Jr.
Catherina Robinson
Jeffery Robinson
Michell Lee Jean Robotham
Donald A. Robson
Antonio A. Rocha
Raymond James Rocha
Laura Rockefeller
John Rodak
Antonio J. Rodrigues
Anthony Rodriguez
Carmen Milagros Rodriguez
Gregory Ernesto Rodriguez
Marsha A. Rodriguez
Mayra Valdes Rodriguez
Richard Rodriguez
David Bartolo Rodriguez-Vargas
Matthew Rogan
Karlie Barbara Rogers
Scott Williams Rohner
Keith Roma
Joseph M. Romagnolo
Efrain Romero, Sr.
Elvin Romero
Juan Romero
Orozco James A. Romito
Sean Paul Rooney
Eric Thomas Ropiteau
Aida Rosario
Angela Rosario
Wendy Alice Rosario Wakeford
Mark Rosen
Brooke David Rosenbaum
Linda Rosenbaum
Sheryl Lynn Rosenbaum
Lloyd Daniel Rosenberg
Mark Louis Rosenberg
Andrew Ira Rosenblum
Joshua M. Rosenblum
Joshua Alan Rosenthal
Richard David Rosenthal
Daniel Rosetti
Norman S. Rossinow
Nicholas P. Rossomando
Michael Craig Rothberg
Donna Marie Rothenberg
Nicholas Rowe
Timothy Alan Roy, Sr.
Paul G. Ruback
Ronald J. Ruben
Joanne Rubino
David M. Ruddle
Bart Joseph Ruggiere
Susan A. Ruggiero
Adam Keith Ruhalter
Gilbert Ruiz
Obdulio Ruiz Diaz
Stephen P. Russell
Steven Harris Russin
Michael Thomas Russo, Sr.
Wayne Alan Russo
Edward Ryan
John Joseph Ryan, Jr.
Jonathan Stephan Ryan
Matthew Lancelot Ryan
Tatiana Ryjova
Christina Sunga Ryook
Thierry Saada
Jason Elazar Sabbag
Thomas E. Sabella
Scott Saber
Joseph Francis Sacerdote
Neeraha Sadaranghgani
Mohammad Ali Sadeque
Francis John Sadocha
Jude Safi
Brock Joel Safronoff
Edward Saiya
John Patrick Salamone
Hernando Salas
Juan G. Salas
Esmerlin Antonio Salcedo
John Salvatore Salerno, Jr.
Richard L. Salinardi, Jr.
Wayne John Saloman
Nolbert Salomon
Catherine Patricia Salter
Frank Salvaterra
Paul Richard Salvio
Samuel Robert Salvo, Jr.
Rena Sam-Dinnoo
Carlos Alberto Samaniego
James Kenneth Samuel, Jr.
Michael San Phillip
Sylvia San Pio
Hugo M. Sanay
Erick Sanchez
Jacquelyn Patrice Sanchez
Eric M. Sand
Stacey Leigh Sanders
Herman S. Sandler
James Sands, Jr.
Ayleen J. Santiago
Kirsten Santiago
Maria Theresa Santillan
Susan Gayle Santo
Christopher Santora
John A. Santore
Mario L. Santoro
Rafael Humberto Santos
Rufino Conrado Flores Santos Iii
Jorge Octavio Santos Anaya
Kalyan Sarkar
Chapelle R. Sarker
Paul F. Sarle
Deepika Kumar Sattaluri
Gregory Thomas Saucedo
Susan M. Sauer
Anthony Savas
Vladimir Savinkin
Jackie Sayegh
John Michael Sbarbaro
Robert L. Scandole, Jr.
Michelle Scarpitta
Dennis Scauso
John Albert Schardt
John G. Scharf
Frederick Claude Scheffold, Jr.
Angela Susan Scheinberg
Scott Mitchell Schertzer
Sean Schielke
Steven Francis Schlag
Jon Schlissel
Karen Helene Schmidt
Ian Schneider
Thomas G. Schoales
Frank G. Schott, Jr.
Gerard Patrick Schrang
Jeffrey H. Schreier
John T. Schroeder
Susan Lee Schuler
Edward William Schunk
Mark E. Schurmeier
Clarin Shellie Schwartz
John Burkhart Schwartz
Mark Schwartz
Adriane Victoria Scibetta
Raphael Scorca
Randolph Scott
Sheila Scott
Christopher Jay Scudder
Arthur Warren Scullin
Michael Herman Seaman
Margaret M. Seeliger
Anthony Segarra
Carlos Segarra
Jason Sekzer
Matthew Carmen Sellitto
Howard Selwyn
Larry John Senko
Arturo Angelo Sereno
Frankie Serrano
Alena Sesinova
Adele Christine Sessa
Sita Nermalla Sewnarine
Karen Lynn Seymour
Davis Sezna
Thomas Joseph Sgroi
Jayesh S. Shah
Khalid M. Shahid
Mohammed Shajahan
Gary Shamay
Earl Richard Shanahan
Neil Shastri
Kathryn Anne Shatzoff
Barbara A. Shaw
Jeffrey James Shaw
Robert John Shay, Jr.
Daniel James Shea
Joseph Patrick Shea
Linda Sheehan
Hagay Shefi
John Anthony Sherry
Atsushi Shiratori
Thomas Joseph Shubert
Mark Shulman
See Wong Shum
Allan Abraham Shwartzstein
Johanna Sigmund
Dianne T. Signer
Gregory Sikorsky
Stephen Gerard Siller
David Silver
Craig A. Silverstein
Nasima Hameed Simjee
Bruce Edward Simmons
Arthur Simon
Kenneth Alan Simon
Michael J. Simon
Paul Joseph Simon
Marianne Teresa Simone
Barry Simowitz
Jeff Lyal Simpson
Khamladai Singh
Kulwant Singh
Roshan Ramesh Singh
Thomas E. Sinton III
Peter A. Siracuse
Muriel Fay Siskopoulos
Joseph Michael Sisolak
John P. Skala
Francis Joseph Skidmore, Jr.
Toyena Skinner
Paul A. Skrzypek
Christopher Paul Slattery
Vincent Robert Slavin
Robert F. Sliwak
Paul K. Sloan
Stanley S. Smagala, Jr.
Wendy L. Small
Catherine Smith
Daniel Laurence Smith
George Eric Smith
James Gregory Smith
Jeffrey R. Smith
Joyce Patricia Smith
Karl T. Smith
Keisha Smith
Kevin Joseph Smith
Leon Smith, Jr.
Moira Ann Smith
Rosemary A. Smith
Bonnie Jeanne Smithwick
Rochelle Monique Snell
Leonard J. Snyder, Jr.
Astrid Elizabeth Sohan
Sushil S. Solanki
Ruben Solares
Naomi Leah Solomon
Daniel W. Song
Michael Charles Sorresse
Fabian Soto
Timothy Patrick Soulas
Gregory Spagnoletti
Donald F. Spampinato, Jr.
Thomas Sparacio
John Anthony Spataro
Robert W. Spear, Jr.
Maynard S. Spence, Jr.
George Edward Spencer III
Robert Andrew Spencer
Mary Rubina Sperando
Tina Spicer
Frank Spinelli
William E. Spitz
Joseph Spor, Jr.
Klaus Johannes Sprockamp
Saranya Srinuan
Fitzroy St. Rose
Michael F. Stabile
Lawrence T. Stack
Timothy M. Stackpole
Richard James Stadelberger
Eric Stahlman
Gregory Stajk
Alexandru Liviu Stan
Corina Stan
Mary Domenica Stanley
Anthony Starita
Jeffrey Stark
Derek James Statkevicus
Craig William Staub
William V. Steckman
Eric Thomas Steen
William R. Steiner
Alexander Steinman
Andrew Stergiopoulos
Andrew Stern
Martha Stevens
Michael James Stewart
Richard H. Stewart, Jr.
Sanford M. Stoller
Lonny Jay Stone
Jimmy Nevill Storey
Timothy Stout
Thomas Strada
James J. Straine, Jr.
Edward W. Straub
George J. Strauch, Jr.
Edward T. Strauss
Steven R. Strauss
Steven F. Strobert
Walwyn W. Stuart, Jr.
Benjamin Suarez
David Scott Suarez
Ramon Suarez
Yoichi Sugiyama
William Christopher Sugra
Daniel Suhr
David Marc Sullins
Christopher P. Sullivan
Patrick Sullivan
Thomas Sullivan
Hilario Soriano Sumaya, Jr.
James Joseph Suozzo
Colleen Supinski
Robert Sutcliffe
Seline Sutter
Claudia Suzette Sutton
John Francis Swaine
Kristine M. Swearson
Brian Edward Sweeney
Kenneth J. Swenson
Thomas Swift
Derek Ogilvie Sword
Kevin Thomas Szocik
Gina Sztejnberg
Norbert P. Szurkowski
Harry Taback
Joann Tabeek
Norma C. Taddei
Michael Taddonio
Keiichiro Takahashi
Keiji Takahashi
Phyllis Gail Talbot
Robert Talhami
Sean Patrick Tallon
Paul Talty
Maurita Tam
Rachel Tamares
Hector Tamayo
Michael Andrew Tamuccio
Kenichiro Tanaka
Rhondelle Cheri Tankard
Michael Anthony Tanner
Dennis Gerard Taormina, Jr.
Kenneth Joseph Tarantino
Allan Tarasiewicz
Ronald Tartaro
Darryl Anthony Taylor
Donnie Brooks Taylor
Lorisa Ceylon Taylor
Michael Morgan Taylor
Paul A. Tegtmeier
Yeshauant Tembe
Anthony Tempesta
Dorothy Pearl Temple
Stanley Temple
David Tengelin
Brian John Terrenzi
Lisa M. Terry
Shell Tester
Goumatie T. Thackurdeen
Sumati Thakur
Harshad Sham Thatte
Thomas F. Theurkauf, Jr.
Lesley Anne Thomas
Brian Thomas Thompson
Clive Thompson
Glenn Thompson
Nigel Bruce Thompson
Perry A. Thompson
Vanavah Alexei Thompson
William H. Thompson
Eric Raymond Thorpe
Nichola Angela Thorpe
Sal Edward Tieri, Jr.
John p Tierney
Mary Ellen Tiesi
William R. Tieste
Kenneth Francis Tietjen
Stephen Edward Tighe
Scott Charles Timmes
Michael E. Tinley
Jennifer M. Tino
Robert Frank Tipaldi
John James Tipping II
David Tirado
Hector Luis Tirado, Jr.
Michelle Lee Titolo
John J. Tobin
Richard Todisco
Vladimir Tomasevic
Stephen Kevin Tompsett
Thomas Tong
Doris Torres
Luis Eduardo Torres
Amy Elizabeth Toyen
Christopher Michael Traina
Daniel Patrick Trant
Abdoul Karim Traore
Glenn J. Travers
Walter Philip Travers
Felicia Y. Traylor-Bass
Lisa L. Trerotola
Karamo Trerra
Michael Angel Trinidad
Francis Joseph Trombino
Gregory James Trost
William P. Tselepis
Zhanetta Valentinovna Tsoy
Michael Tucker
Lance Richard Tumulty
Ching Ping Tung
Simon James Turner
Donald Joseph Tuzio
Robert T. Twomey
Jennifer Tzemis
John G. Ueltzhoeffer
Tyler V. Ugolyn
Michael A. Uliano
Jonathan J. Uman
Anil Shivhari Umarkar
Allen V. Upton
Diane Marie Urban
John Damien Vaccacio
Bradley Hodges Vadas
Renuta Vaidea
William Valcarcel
Felix Antonio Vale
Ivan Vale
Benito Valentin
Santos Valentin, Jr.
Carlton Francis Valvo II
Erica H. Van Acker
Kenneth W. Van Auken
Richard B. Van Hine
Daniel M. Van Laere
Edward Raymond Vanacore
Jon C. Vandevander
Barrett Vanvelzer, 4
Edward Vanvelzer
Paul Herman Vanvelzer
Frederick Thomas Varacchi
Gopalakrishnan Varadhan
David Vargas
Scott C. Vasel
Azael Ismael Vasquez
Arcangel Vazquez
Santos Vazquez
Peter Anthony Vega
Sankara S. Velamuri
Jorge Velazquez
Lawrence G. Veling
Anthony Mark Ventura
David Vera
Loretta Ann Vero
Christopher James Vialonga
Matthew Gilbert Vianna
Robert Anthony Vicario
Celeste Torres Victoria
Joanna Vidal
John T. Vigiano II
Joseph Vincent Vigiano
Frank J. Vignola, Jr.
Joseph Barry Vilardo
Sergio Villanueva
Chantal Vincelli
Melissa Vincent
Francine Ann Virgilio
Lawrence Virgilio
Joseph Gerard Visciano
Joshua S. Vitale
Maria Percoco Vola
Lynette D. Vosges
Garo H. Voskerijian
Alfred Vukosa
Gregory Kamal Bruno Wachtler
Gabriela Waisman
Courtney Wainsworth Walcott
Victor Wald
Benjamin James Walker
Glen Wall
Mitchel Scott Wallace
Peter Guyder Wallace
Robert Francis Wallace
Roy Michael Wallace
Jeanmarie Wallendorf
Matthew Blake Wallens
John Wallice, Jr.
Barbara P. Walsh
James Henry Walsh
Jeffrey P. Walz
Ching Wang
Weibin Wang
Michael Warchola
Stephen Gordon Ward
James Arthur Waring
Brian G. Warner
Derrick Washington
Charles Waters
James Thomas Waters, Jr.
Patrick J. Waters
Kenneth Thomas Watson
Michael Henry Waye
Todd Christopher Weaver
Walter Edward Weaver
Nathaniel Webb
Dinah Webster
Joanne Flora Weil
Michael T. Weinberg
Steven Weinberg
Scott Jeffrey Weingard
Steven George Weinstein
Simon Weiser
David M. Weiss
David Thomas Weiss
Vincent Michael Wells
Timothy Matthew Welty
Christian Hans Rudolf Wemmers
Ssu-Hui Wen
Oleh D. Wengerchuk
Peter M. West
Whitfield West, Jr.
Meredith Lynn Whalen
Eugene Whelan
Adam S. White
Edward James White III
James Patrick White
John Sylvester White
Kenneth Wilburn White, Jr.
Leonard Anthony White
Malissa Y. White
Wayne White
Leanne Marie Whiteside
Mark P. Whitford
Michael T. Wholey
Mary Catherine Wieman
Jeffrey David Wiener
Wilham J. Wik
Alison Marie Wildman
Glenn E. Wilkenson
John C. Willett
Brian Patrick Williams
Crossley Richard Williams, Jr.
David J. Williams
Deborah Lynn Williams
Kevin Michael Williams
Louie Anthony Williams
Louis Calvin Williams III
John P. Williamson
Donna Ann Wilson
William Wilson
David Harold Winton
Glenn J. Winuk
Thomas Francis Wise
Alan L. Wisniewski
Frank Thomas Wisniewski
David Wiswall
Sigrid Wiswe
Michael Wittenstein
Christopher W. Wodenshek
Martin P. Wohlforth
Katherine Susan Wolf
Jennifer Yen Wong
Siu Cheung Wong
Yin Ping Wong
Yuk Ping Wong
Brent James Woodall
James John Woods
Patrick J. Woods
Richard Herron Woodwell
David Terence Wooley
John Bentley Works
Martin Michael Wortley
Rodney James Wotton
William Wren
John Wayne Wright
Neil Robin Wright
Sandra Lee Wright
Jupiter Yambem
Suresh Yanamadala
Matthew David Yarnell
Myrna Yaskulka
Shakila Yasmin
Olabisi Shadie Layeni Yee
William Yemele
Edward P. York
Kevin Patrick York
Raymond R. York
Suzanne Youmans
Barrington Young
Jacqueline Young
Elkin Yuen
Joseph C. Zaccoli
Adel Agayby Zakhary
Arkady Zaltsman
Edwin J. Zambrana, Jr.
Robert Alan Zampieri
Mark Zangrilli
Ira Zaslow
Kenneth Albert Zelman
Abraham J. Zelmanowitz
Martin Morales Zempoaltecatl
Zhe Zeng
Marc Scott Zeplin
Jie Yao Justin Zhao
Ivelin Ziminski
Michael Joseph Zinzi
Charles A. Zion
Julie Lynne Zipper
Salvatore Zisa
Prokopios Paul Zois
Joseph J. Zuccala
Andrew S. Zucker
Igor Zukelman
List of Victims on American Airlines Flight 11
Anna Allison
David Lawrence Angell
Lynn Edwards Angell
Seima Aoyama
Barbara Jean Arestegui
Myra Joy Aronson
Christine Barbuto
Carolyn Beug
Kelly Ann Booms
Carol Marie Bouchard
Robin Lynne Kaplan
Neilie Anne Heffernan Casey
Jeffrey Dwayne Collman
Jeffrey W. Coombs
Tara Kathleen Creamer
Thelma Cuccinello
Patrick Currivan
Brian Paul Dale
David Dimeglio
Donald Americo Ditullio
Alberto Dominguez
Paige Marie Farley-Hackel
Alexander Milan Filipov
Carol Ann Flyzik
Paul J. Friedman
Karleton D.B. Fyfe
Peter Alan Gay
Linda M. George
Edmund Glazer
Lisa Reinhart Gordenstein
Andrew Peter Charles Curry Green
Peter Paul Hashem
Robert Jay Hayes
Edward R. Hennessy, Jr.
John A. Hofer
Cora Hidalgo Holland
John Nicholas Humber, Jr.
Waleed Joseph Iskandar
John Charles Jenkins
Charles Edward Jones
Barbara A. Keating
David P. Kovalcin
Judith Camilla Larocque
Natalie Janis Lasden
Daniel John Lee
Daniel M. Lewin
Sara Elizabeth Low
Susan A. Mackay
Karen Ann Martin
Thomas F. McGuinness, Jr.
Christopher D. Mello
Jeffrey Peter Mladenik
Carlos Alberto Montoya
Antonio Jesus Montoya Valdes
Laura Lee Morabito
Mildred Naiman
Laurie Ann Neira
Renee Lucille Newell
Kathleen Ann Nicosia
Jacqueline June Norton
Robert Grant Norton
John Ogonowski
Betty Ann Ong
Jane M. Orth
Thomas Nicholas Pecorelli
Berinthia B. Perkins
Sonia M. Puopolo
David E. Retik
Jean Destrehan Roger
Philip Martin Rosenzweig
Richard Barry Ross
Jessica Leigh Sachs
Rahma Salie
Heather Lee Smith
Dianne Bullis Snyder
Douglas Joel Stone
Xavier Suarez
Madeline Amy Sweeney
Michael Theodoridis
James Anthony Trentini
Mary Barbara Trentini
Pendyala Vamsikrishna
Mary Alice Wahlstrom
Kenneth Waldie
John Joseph Wenckus
Candace Lee Williams
Christopher Rudolph Zarba, Jr.
List of Victims on United Airlines Flight 175
Alona Abraham
Garnet Edward Bailey
Mark Lawrence Bavis
Graham Andrew Berkeley
Touri Bolourchi
Klaus Bothe
Daniel Raymond Brandhorst
David Reed Gamboa Brandhorst
John Brett Cahill
Christoffer Mikael Carstanjen
John J. Corcoran III
Dorothy Alma de Araujo
Ana Gloria Pocasangre Debarrera
Robert John Fangman
Lisa Anne Frost
Ronald Gamboa
Lynn Catherine Goodchild
Peter M. Goodrich
Douglas Alan Gowell
Francis Edward Grogan
Carl Max Hammond, Jr.
Christine Lee Hanson
Peter Burton Hanson
Susan Kim Hanson
Gerald Francis Hardacre
Eric Hartono
James Edward Hayden
Herbert Wilson Homer
Michael Robert Horrocks
Robert Adrien Jalbert
Amy N. Jarret
Ralph Kershaw
Heinrich Kimmig
Amy R. King
Brian Kinney
Kathryn L. LaBorie
Robert G. Leblanc
Maclovio Lopez, Jr.
Marianne Macfarlane
Alfred Gilles Marchand
Louis Mariani
Juliana McCourt
Ruth Magdaline McCourt
Wolfgang Peter Menzel
Shawn M. Nassaney
Marie Pappalardo
Patrick J. Quigley IV
Frederick Charles Rimmele III
James Roux
Jesus Sanchez
Victor J. Saracini
Mary Kathleen Shearer
Robert M. Shearer
Jane Louise Simpkin
Brian David Sweeney
Michael C. Tarrou
Alicia N. Titus
Timothy Ray Ward
William Michael Weems
List of Victims at the Pentagon (Not Including Flight 77)
Note: USA - United Stated Army; USN - United States Navy
SPC Craig S. Amundson, USA
YN3 Melissa Rose Barnes, USN
MSG Max J. Beilke, Retired
IT2 Kris Romeo Bishundat, USN
Carrie R. Blagburn
COL Canfield D. Boone, ARNG
Donna M. Bowen
Allen P. Boyle
ET3 Christopher L. Burford, USN
ET3 Daniel M. Caballero, USN
SFC Jose O. Calderon-Olmedo, USA
Angelene C. Carter
Sharon A. Carver
SFC John J. Chada, USA, Retired
Rosa Maria Chapa
Julian T. Cooper
LCDR Eric A. Cranford, USN
Ada M. Davis
CAPT Gerald F. DeConto, USN
LTC Jerry D. Dickerson, USA
IT1 Johnnie Doctor, Jr., USN
CAPT Robert E. Dolan, Jr., USN
CDR William H. Donovan, USN
CDR Patrick Dunn, USN
AG1 Edward T. Earhart, USN
LCDR Robert R. Elseth, USNR
SK3 Jamie L. Fallon, USN
Amelia V. Fields
Gerald P. Fisher
AG2 Matthew M. Flocco, USN
Sandra N. Foster
CAPT Lawrence D. Getzfred, USN
Cortez Ghee
Brenda C. Gibson
COL Ronald F. Golinski, USA, Retired
Diane Hale-McKinzy
Carolyn B. Halmon
Sheila M.S. Hein
ET1 Ronald J. Hemenway, USN
MAJ Wallace Cole Hogan, Jr., USA
SSG Jimmie I. Holley, USA, Retired
Angela M. Houtz
Brady Kay Howell
Peggie M. Hurt
LTC Stephen N. Hyland, Jr., USA
Lt Col Robert J. Hymel, USAF, Retired
SGM Lacey B. Ivory, USA
LTC Dennis M. Johnson, USA
Judith L. Jones
Brenda Kegler
LT Michael S. Lamana, USN
David W. Laychak
Samantha L. Lightbourn-Allen
MAJ Stephen V. Long, USA
James T. Lynch, Jr.
Terence M. Lynch
OS2 Nehamon Lyons IV, USN
Shelley A. Marshall
Teresa M. Martin
Ada L. Mason-Acker
LTC Dean E. Mattson, USA
LTG Timothy J. Maude, USA
Robert J. Maxwell
Molly L. McKenzie
Patricia E. Mickley
MAJ Ronald D. Milam, USA
Gerard P. Moran, Jr.
Odessa V. Morris
ET1 Brian A. Moss, USN
Teddington H. Moy
LCDR Patrick J. Murphy, USNR
Khang Ngoc Nguyen
DM2 Michael A. Noeth, USN
Ruben S. Ornedo
Diana B. Padro
LT Jonas M. Panik, USNR
MAJ Clifford L. Patterson, Jr., USA
LT Darin H. Pontell, USNR
Scott Powell
CAPT Jack D. Punches, USN, Retired
AW1 Joseph J. Pycior, Jr., USN
Deborah A. Ramsaur
Rhonda Sue Rasmussen
IT1 Marsha D. Ratchford, USN
Martha M. Reszke
Cecelia E. (Lawson) Richard
Edward V. Rowenhorst
Judy Rowlett
SGM Robert E. Russell, USA, Retired
CW4 William R. Ruth, ARNG
Charles E. Sabin, Sr.
Marjorie C. Salamone
COL David M. Scales, USA
CDR Robert A. Schlegel, USN
Janice M. Scott
LTC Michael L. Selves, USA, Retired
Marian H. Serva
CDR Dan F. Shanower, USN
Antionette M. Sherman
Diane M. Simmons
Cheryle D. Sincock
ITC Gregg H. Smallwood, USN
LTC Gary F. Smith, USA, Retired
Patricia J. Statz
Edna L. Stephens
SGM Larry L. Strickland, USA
LTC Kip P. Taylor, USA
Sandra C. Taylor
LTC Karl W. Teepe, USA, Retired
SGT Tamara C. Thurman, USA
LCDR Otis V. Tolbert, USN
SSG Willie Q. Troy, USA, Retired
LCDR Ronald J. Vauk, USNR
LTC Karen J. Wagner, USA
Meta L. (Fuller) Waller
SPC Chin Sun Pak Wells, USA
SSG Maudlyn A. White, USA
Sandra L. White
Ernest M. Willcher
LCDR David L. Williams, USN
MAJ Dwayne Williams, USA
RMC Marvin Roger Woods, USN, Retired
IT2 Kevin W. Yokum, USN
ITC Donald M. Young, USN
Edmond G. Young, Jr.
Lisa L. Young
List of Victims on American Airlines Flight 77
Paul W. Ambrose
Yeneneh Betru
Mary Jane Booth
Bernard C. Brown, II
CAPT Charles F. Burlingame III, USNR, Retired
Suzanne M. Calley
William E. Caswell
David M. Charlebois
Sarah M. Clark
Asia S. Cottom
James D. Debeuneure
Rodney Dickens
Eddie A. Dillard
LCDR Charles A. Droz III, USN, Retired
Barbara G. Edwards
Charles S. Falkenberg
Dana Falkenberg
Zoe Falkenberg
J. Joseph Ferguson
Darlene E. Flagg
RADM Wilson F. Flagg, USNR, Retired
1stLt Richard P. Gabriel, USMC, Retired
Ian J. Gray
Stanley R. Hall
Michele M. Heidenberger
Bryan C. Jack
Steven D. Jacoby
Ann C. Judge
Chandler R. Keller
Yvonne E. Kennedy
Norma Cruz Khan
Karen Ann Kincaid
Dong Chul Lee
Jennifer Lewis
Kenneth E. Lewis
Renee A. May
Dora Marie Menchaca
Christopher C. Newton
Barbara K. Olson
Ruben S. Ornedo
Robert Penninger
Robert R. Ploger III
Zandra F. Ploger
Lisa J. Raines
Todd H. Reuben
John P. Sammartino
George W. Simmons
Donald D. Simmons
Mari-Rae Sopper
Robert Speisman
Norma Lang Steuerle
Hilda E. Taylor
Leonard E. Taylor
Sandra D. Teague
Leslie A. Whittington
CAPT John D. Yamnicky, Sr., USN, Retired
Vicki Yancey
Shuyin Yang
Yuguag Zheng
List of Victims on United Airlines Flight 93
Christian Adams
Lorraine G. Bay
Todd Beamer
Alan Beaven
Mark K. Bingham
Deora Frances Bodley
Sandra W. Bradshaw
Marion Britton
Thomas E. Burnett Jr.
William Cashman
Georgine Rose Corrigan
Patricia Cushing
Jason Dahl
Joseph Deluca
Patrick Driscoll
Edward Porter Felt
Jane C. Folger
Colleen Fraser
Andrew Garcia
Jeremy Glick
Lauren Grandcolas
Wanda A. Green
Donald F. Greene
Linda Gronlund
Richard Guadagno
Leroy Homer, Jr.
Toshiya Kuge
CeeCee Lyles
Hilda Marcin
Waleska Martinez
Nicole Miller
Louis J. Nacke, II
Donald Arthur Peterson
Jean Hoadley Peterson
Mark Rothenberg
Christine Snyder
John Talignani
Honor Elizabeth Wainio
Deborah Ann Jacobs Welsh
Kristin Gould White
Handcrafted by Flip on September 11, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack
9/11 6th Anniversary Notes
- I'll be joining Karol Sheinin at Ground Zero on Tuesday evening to help spread the Real Truth about 9/11. If you want to join the effort, just drop Karol a note. 5:00 pm at Liberty and Broadway.
- Scottish counterrorist hero and baggage handler John Smeaton is slated to attend the annual memorial ceremony.
- On the eve (of the eve) of the first 9/11 anniversary to fall on a Tuesday, Mark Steyn reflects on the state of the post-9/11 psyche.
Handcrafted by Flip on September 9, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack
Religion Of Peace Getting Slightly Less Peaceful
Extreme Makeover: Islam Edition: Al Qaida clerics distributing revised editions of Koran.
ABU DHABI — Qatar has banned the import and distribution of unauthorized Korans.
Officials said the Islamic Affairs Ministry has ordered mosques and clerics to use only Korans and other Islamic text approved by the government, Middle East Newsline reported. They said Al Qaida-aligned clerics have employed Korans revised to promote the doctrine of Islamic war against the West.
Officials acknowledged that Korans revised by Al Qaida-aligned clerics have been distributed in Qatar. They said some of chapters in the Islamic text were removed.
The Qatari daily Al Sharq reported that an unidentified Qatari national has financed the publication and distribution of the revised Korans. The newspaper quoted Qatari sources as saying that many such Korans had been sent to the Gulf emirate.
HT: Weasel Zippers, via HA Headlines
Handcrafted by Flip on August 27, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Failed London Multi-Car Bombing Does Appear Al Qaeda-Linked
They obviously bungled it pretty soundly, but this plot seems to have been the real deal, in terms of ambition and pedigree. The connection to Dhiren Barot alone confers instant jihadi-cred.
Barot's known associate who's thought to have been involved in today's martyrdom-interrupted isn't yet in custody, but we have London's famous superfluity of security cameras to thank for the "crystal clear" picture of the would-be bomber that enabled the bobbies to ID him.
Handcrafted by Flip on June 29, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Arrowhead Ripper: Day 3
The latest on the Battle for Baqubah, courtesy of Michael Yon, who reports that we're continuing to rout the bad guys ("Al Qaeda is about to be strangled and pummeled to death in this town," is how he puts it), notwithstanding what he sees as a serious lack of capable Iraqi commanders in the region.
The combat in Baqubah should soon reach a peak. Al Qaeda seems to have been effectively isolated. The initial attack on 19 June achieved enough surprise that al Qaeda was caught off guard and trapped. They have been beaten back mostly into pockets and are surrounded and will be dealt with. Part of this is actually due to the capability of Strykers. We were able to “attack from the march.” In other words, a huge force drove in from places like Baghdad and quickly locked down Baqubah.
The whole dispatch is worth a read, as real-time coverage of this major military campaign continues to be unavailable anywhere else.
Handcrafted by Flip on June 22, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Terror Charges Filed Against Wal-Mart Bomb Threat Suspect
Police have identified the man arrested yesterday and now arraigned on terrorism charges in connection with a string of bomb threats against the Wal-Mart Supercenter in Copperas Cove, Texas.
Gregory Dean Rhodes is named in complaints charging Terroristic Threat.
...
Bomb threats forced the evacuation of the Cove Wal-Mart Supercenter on Tuesday and Wednesday.In each case the building was searched, but no explosives were found, police said.
Police are still investigating bomb threats reported on June 7, June 8 and June 16 at the Wal-Mart.
According to the local Killeen Daily Herald, Rhodes is an employee of the McDonald's located inside the Copperas Cove Wal-Mart.
Previously: Suspect Nabbed, Following 5 Bomb Threats In 2 Weeks At Texas Wal-Mart
Handcrafted by Flip on June 22, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Quote Of the Day
Quoting Allahpundit, quoting Joe Klein, quoting Lt. Col. Bruce Antonia, quoting a Sunni insurgent:
One guy said to me, ‘We fought against you because you invaded our country and you’re infidels. But you treat us with more dignity than al-Qaeda,’ and he said they’d continue to work with us. I’ve been involved in many operations here and this is a first—usually everybody’s shooting at us. This is the first time we’ve had any of them on our side.
Allah has a great round-up of embedded coverage of the first day of the massive and perhaps highly pivotal Operation Arrowhead Ripper, including Michael Yon's latest, whose level of access and quality of coverage continue to astound.
Handcrafted by Flip on June 21, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
