Thursday, October 15, 2015

Pakistani intelligence unit was using the hospital for directing the Taliban.

So, what!

The Doctor's Without Borders practices in that hospital and they DO NOT DISCRIMINATE in who they treat. If that means a Pakistani Intelligence Unit was in that hospital they are allowed to be.

Evidently, complicated dynamics are out of grasp at FOX. 

DO NOT MAKE THIS HOSPITAL A TARGET because FOX hates President Obama. 

The entire idea Pakistani intelligence would lead the Taliban is bizarre. And then to link it conducted same from the hospital that was part of an attack in Kunduz is even more bizarre.

Osama bin Laden was killed on May 2, 2011. I have no doubt he worked with members of the ISI. Bin Laden was known to have affiliations with the Taliban. The story can take flight from there.

October 26, 2011
Pakistan's security service provides weapons (click here) and training to Taliban insurgents fighting U.S. and British troops in Afghanistan, despite official denials, Taliban commanders say, in allegations that could worsen tensions between Pakistan and the United States.
A number of middle-ranking Taliban commanders revealed the extent of Pakistani support in interviews for a BBC Two documentary series, "Secret Pakistan," the first part of which was being broadcast on Wednesday. A former head of Afghan intelligence also told the program that Afghanistan gave Pakistan's former president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, information in 2006 that Osama bin Laden was hiding in northern Pakistan close to where the former al Qaeda leader was eventually killed by U.S. special forces in May. Admiral Mike Mullen, then the top U.S. military officer, accused Pakistani intelligence last month of backing violence against U.S. targets including the U.S. Embassy in Kabul....

The idea a Pakistan intelligence unit was using the hospital as a base of operations is nonsense. There were Americans within the Doctors Without Borders. The idea a hospital would be a legal target is more outrageous REGARDLESS of whom the patients were.