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View Full Version : Dead in Damascus - another victory against terror


Truth Detector
02-14-2008, 05:10 PM
You probably won’t find this news on the front page, or any pages for that matter, of the mainstream press. But this is another victory in the fight against terror. As the author noted, its probably Mossad, but think how great it would be if we had an international Intelligence operation seeking out these thugs and assassinating them.

What is telling here is that this thug who has a price on his head was seen leaving Syrian Intelligence offices before his assassination.

As Bush stated early in his Presidency, Syria is indeed part of the axis of terror.

Dead in Damascus
February 14, 2008; Page A16

Given the clandestine nature of the war on terror, it's often hard to know how much progress we're making. But Tuesday's death in Damascus of Imad Mughniyeh looks like an unambiguous victory.

Before Osama bin Laden took the spotlight, Mughniyeh was probably the world's most wanted and elusive terrorist, a man with an FBI price tag of $5 million on his head. He masterminded some of Hezbollah's deadliest attacks in the 1980s and 1990s, including:

- The 241 U.S. Marines and 58 French soldiers who died in the 1983 truck bombings in Beirut along with 63 civilians, including 17 Americans, who died in the simultaneous bombing of the U.S. embassy there.

- Robert Stethem, the Navy diver whose beaten body was left on the tarmac during the 1985 hijacking of TWA Flight 847.

- William Buckley, the CIA station chief in Beirut who was kidnapped, tortured and killed in the mid-1980s.

- Twenty-nine people who died in the 1992 bombing of Israel's embassy in Buenos Aires and 85 more killed in the 1994 bombing of a Jewish Center in BA.

Mughniyeh died in a car bombing, probably orchestrated by Mossad, though Israel denies it. It'd be nice to think the CIA was up to this, but we have our doubts. The location -- Damascus -- of his killing is of special note, and the private intelligence agency Stratfor reports that he died as he was leaving a meeting at a Syrian intelligence office. Syrian officials surely knew of his whereabouts and could have arrested him if they really wanted some accommodation with the U.S. At least Mughniyeh will kill no more.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120294922638366823.html

Questerr
02-14-2008, 06:53 PM
Am I the only one that loves the poetic irony in this? I mean: a guy who organized the car bombing of a US marine barracks is killed in a car bombing.

You can't get better justice then that.

PatrickHenry
02-14-2008, 07:04 PM
The guy's a shapeshifter, a very cagey wraithlike terrorist.

I wonder if he's really dead or just staging a disinformation operation...

Truth Detector
02-14-2008, 07:58 PM
Am I the only one that loves the poetic irony in this? I mean: a guy who organized the car bombing of a US marine barracks is killed in a car bombing.

You can't get better justice then that.


Yes, so goes the saying: those who live by the sword, shall also die by the sword.

Grizz
02-14-2008, 09:50 PM
You probably won’t find this news on the front page, or any pages for that matter, of the mainstream press.

It was featured prominently in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the local paper right wingers love to trash.

Anyway, I don't know why whoever blew that worthless piece of dirt away didn't also bother to set off a few more car bombs during the funeral when the streets were clogged with all his apostles.

jafar00
02-15-2008, 07:40 AM
Do you people think it's ok for Mossad to blow up car bombs in other countries no matter who is the target? Are they allowed to be terrorists, but others are not?

PatrickHenry
02-15-2008, 07:43 AM
Car bombs are not the preferred method for dealing with terrorists, no.

I don't think Mossad has taken ownership of this...

Grizz
02-15-2008, 11:01 AM
Do you people think it's ok for Mossad to blow up car bombs in other countries no matter who is the target? Are they allowed to be terrorists, but others are not?



Short answer - yes. And taking out people who'd waged indiscriminate war against civilians, with few or no injuries to others in the area, beats the daylights out of dropping 500lb bombs on several neighborhoods in the hopes of taking out the bad guy.

apdst
02-15-2008, 03:46 PM
Do you people think it's ok for Mossad to blow up car bombs in other countries no matter who is the target? Are they allowed to be terrorists, but others are not?

Mossad isn't bombing a market. Big difference. Your padnahs use car bombing for shock value. Mossad uses them to neutralize high value targets.

Truth Detector
02-15-2008, 03:55 PM
Do you people think it's ok for Mossad to blow up car bombs in other countries no matter who is the target? Are they allowed to be terrorists, but others are not?



Short answer - yes. And taking out people who'd waged indiscriminate war against civilians, with few or no injuries to others in the area, beats the daylights out of dropping 500lb bombs on several neighborhoods in the hopes of taking out the bad guy.


We are in agreement on this one. [hr]
Do you people think it's ok for Mossad to blow up car bombs in other countries no matter who is the target? Are they allowed to be terrorists, but others are not?


First, we do not know who did this, so to presume it is Mossad without any evidence is nothing more than guessing and hyperbole.

Second, are people like you okay with the knowledge that KNOWN terrorists with bounties on their heads are protected and given the freedom to roam Syria and given access to Syrian intelligence?

How profound are you? Are you okay with terrorists blowing up innocents in Israel? Are you okay with terrorists blowing up Mosques? Are you okay with terrorists murdering journalists?

Are you a terrorist supporter?