Wednesday, May 09, 2012

He killed his own brother in a suicide pact.

Abdullah Hassan al Asiri, (click here) perpetrator of the failed 27 Aug 09 suicide attack against Saudi Prince Muhammad bin Nayef and brother of Ibrahim Hassan al Asiri, assessed to be a top AQAP explosives expert and bombmaker.

Bombmaker, yes. Explosives EXPERT, no. If this man is on anyone's most wanted list, why then aren't mercenaries on the hunt? Yemen is a place of anarchy, it would be easy to capture and/or kill them. This is the fruit of anarchy. Take a good look.


When Arab leaders realized how deadly madrassas were they changed them to be schools instead of terrorist learning grounds. That can't be done in a country dominated by anarchy.


Poverty in any country is not simply a sad condition of the people it is a national security issue of any other nation. Changing that 'condition' is more difficult today with the Climate Crisis. Drought globally is effecting farming and agrarian lives are frequently one of choice during impoverishment.


I don't recall Wall Street doing anything about global poverty either. Wall Street's methodology is to give large sums of money to police enforcement in civilized nations to control demonstrators. Wall Street spends its money on making more money and laying communication cables across ocean floors. If I am not mistaken, a super fast communication cable, once hacked into, actually facilitates these global criminals. Ah, yes, all in the names of progress. Everyone's progress, it would seem.
..."ONLY ONE MAJOR BOMB MAKER"

The cartridge bomb plot followed in 2010.

In an English-language al Qaeda online magazine called Inspire, the network boasted that the cartridge plot cost only $4,300 and had achieved one important goal by scaring the West.

It hinted that Asiri had trained others in his Yemen-based group, saying: "Isn't it funny how America thinks AQAP has only one major bomb maker?"

Gauging the extent of Asiri's inventiveness, and of his ability to inspire the imaginations of his colleagues, has become a preoccupation Western security officials.

U.S. and allied officials, for example, say they are increasingly concerned that doctors working with AQAP will implant bombs inside living militants to try to circumvent airport security measures and bring down planes....