AL-QAEDA: CREATED BY THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT.

The US government trained, armed, funded and supported Osama bin Laden
and his followers in Afghanistan during the cold war. With a huge
investment of $3,000,000,000 (three billion US dollars), the CIA effectively
created and nurtured bin Laden’s al-Qaeda terrorist network using American tax-payers money. Afghanistan is one of the world’s poorest countries, where such an enormous sum of money would have had extraordinary value.

ABC News article:
“In the 1980s, bin Laden left his comfortable
Saudi home for Afghanistan to participate in the
Afghan jihad, or holy war, against the invading
forces of the Soviet Union – a cause that,
ironically, the United States funded, pouring
$3 billion into the Afghan resistance via the CIA.”

ABC News, “Osama Bin Laden: Profile of a Terror Leader”, 20 March 2002.
[ http://abcnews.go.com/sections/world/DailyNews/binladen_profile.html ]

BBC news article:
“…Bin Laden left Saudi Arabia in 1979 to fight
against the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. The
Afghan jihad was backed with American dollars
and had the blessing of the governments of Saudi
Arabia and Pakistan. He received security
training from the CIA itself.”

BBC News, “Who is Osama Bin Laden?”, 18 December 2002.
[ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/155236.stm ]

Forbes business information service article:
“…[Osama bin Laden] received military and
financial assistance from the intelligence services
of Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and the United States.”

Forbes, “Who Is Osama Bin Laden?” 14 September 2001.
[ http://www.forbes.com/charitable/2001/09/14/0914whoisobl.html ]

http://www.theinsider.org/news/article.asp?id=227

 

Hillary Clinton Confirms this;

AND THEN BACK IN APRIL THIS IS WHAT WAS GOING ON – WE JUST DIDN’T SEE IT

Al-Qaeda in Iraq Moves Into Abu Ghraib With Eyes on Baghdad

Iraqi Capital in Reach for Islamist Fighters

by Jason Ditz, April 06, 2014

Al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) has held the major Iraqi city of Fallujah for three solid months now, and despite a heavy offensive from the nation’s military seems no closer to ceding it back to the central government.

Rather, AQI looks to be going on the offensive once again, with their fighters seizing Abu Ghraib, a key city on the edge of the Anbar Province, leading to the Baghdad governate.

The Army sees the move into Abu Ghraib, a city of nearly 200,000 itself, as an effort to split the offensive and “ease the pressure imposed on them in Fallujah.” That may be just part of the problem.

AQI’s reach continues to spread both in Anbar and elsewhere, and the capture of Abu Ghraib puts a large chunk of their fighters just a stone’s throw away from the capital city itself, with Fallujah and Abu Ghraib giving them effective control over the highway leading to Baghdad from the west.

Iraq’s military has warned in the past that AQI, awash with weapons from the Syrian Civil War, has enough armament to take Baghdad itself if not confronted. Now, it seems like even the military’s offensives are just slowing that push.

Other posts by Jason Ditz