What did Josef Goebbels say about repeating the Big Lie?
If you believe this you'll believe anything.
If you believe this you'll believe anything.
Embassy
Closures Extended Through Aug. 10 Out Of Caution, State Department
Says
The
United States extended the closures of some embassies and consulates
in the Middle East - which had been closed Sunday due to an al Qaeda
threat - through Aug. 10 due to caution but not the emergence of any
new threat, the State Department said.
The bogeyman lives on
4
August, 2013
Other
U.S. diplomatic posts, including in Kabul, Baghdad and Algiers, that
had been closed on Sunday, will reopen on Monday, the State
Department said.
Posts
in Abu Dhabi, Amman, Cairo, Riyadh, Dhahran, Jeddah, Doha, Dubai,
Kuwait, Manama, Muscat, Sanaa, Tripoli, Antanarivo, Bujumbura,
Djibouti, Khartoum, Kigali, and Port Louis will be closed through
Saturday.
U.S.
diplomatic posts in Dhaka, Algiers, Nouakchott, Kabul, Herat, Mazar
el Sharif, Baghdad, Basrah, and Erbil will open on Monday, the State
Department said
U.S.
Al Qaeda Threat: 'Major Attack' Being Talked About, Lawmakers Say
The
unusual US decision to close its diplomatic missions en masse in the
Middle East Sunday was prompted by intercepts of high-ranking
Al-Qaeda operatives signalling a major attack, US lawmakers said
Sunday.
4
August, 2013
Lawmakers
briefed on the intelligence called the threat reporting among the
most serious they've seen in recent years, reminiscent of the
intelligence chatter that preceded the September 11, 2001 attacks.
"There
is a significant threat stream and we're reacting to it,"
General Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
said in an interview with ABC.
Dempsey
said the specific locations and targets were not known but "the
intent is to attack western, not just US interests."
At
least 25 US embassies and consular offices were ordered closed
Sunday, most of them in the Middle East and North Africa, in response
to the threat.
Representative
Dutch Ruppersberger, the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence
Committee, told ABC's "This Week" that Al-Qaeda's
"operatives are in place."
He
said the United States knows this "because we've received
information that high level people from al Qaeda in the Arabian
Peninsula are talking about a major attack and these are people in
the high level."
ABC
News cited an unnamed US official as saying there was concern that
Al-Qaeda might deploy suicide attackers with surgically implanted
bombs to evade security.
Representative
Peter King, a Republican member of the House Intelligence Committee,
said the intelligence was specific "as to how enormous it was
going to be, and also there's certain dates were given."
"And,
you know, the assumption is that it's probably most likely to happen
in the Middle East at or about one of the embassies, but there's no
guarantee of that at all," he said on the same ABC show.
"It
could basically be in Europe, it could be in the United States, it
could be a series of combined attacks," he said.
Saxby
Chambliss, the ranking Republican on the Senate Intelligence
Committee, likened it to the intelligence chatter that preceded the
9/11 attacks in New York and Washington.
"What
we have heard is some specifics on what's intended to be done and
some individuals who are making plans such as we saw before 9/11,"
he said on NBC's "Meet the Press."
"Whether
they're going to be suicide deaths that are used or whether they're
planning on vehicle-born bombs being carried into an area, we don't
know," he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.