The Algerian daily Al-Khabar asserted that young children have been kidnapped from Algerian cities, transported to Morocco, and then sold to Israelis and American Jews who have then harvested their organs for sale on the black market.
"Al Qaeda’s North Africa wing has claimed responsibility for a suicide attack on a military academy in Algeria, accusing it of supporting the regime of Libya's Muammar Gaddafi.
Civilians were killed in the attack.
According to the Mossad-CIA-al Qaeda:
"On the night of the 27th of this holy month, and while the Muslim Libyan people were completing their victory over the dictator Gaddafi … the mujahideen in Algeria pursued their blessed attacks against the Algerian criminal regime, an ally to Gaddafi."
"Throughout the Middle East there is a strong undercurrent of simmering sectarian tension between Sunnis and Shiites...
"Shiites and Sunnis live cheek by jowl in the long arc that stretches from Lebanon to Pakistan, and the region’s two main power brokers, Shiite Iran and Sunni Saudi Arabia, are already jousting for power...
"The struggle that matters most is the one between Sunnis and Shiites...
"Shiites clamor for greater rights in Lebanon, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, while Sunnis are restless in Iraq and Syria...
"Saudis saw Iran’s hand behind a rebellion among Yemen’s Houthi tribe ... that started in 2004.
"Iran blamed Arab financing for its own decade-long revolt by Sunni Baluchis along its southeastern border with Pakistan.
"And since 2005, when Shiite Hezbollah was implicated in the assassination of Rafik Hariri, a popular Sunni prime minister who was close to the Saudis, a wide rift has divided Lebanon’s Sunni and Shiite communities, and prompted Saudi fury against Hezbollah...
"In March, fearing a snowball effect from the Arab Spring, Saudi Arabia drew a clear red line in Bahrain, where a Shiite majority would have been empowered had pro-democracy protests succeeded in ousting the Sunni monarchy...
"The turn of events in Syria is particularly important, because Sunnis elsewhere see the Alawite government as the linchpin in the Shiite alliance of Iran and Hezbollah.
"The Alawite-Sunni clash there could quickly draw in both of the major players in the region and ignite a broader regional sectarian conflict among their local allies, from Lebanon to Iraq to the Persian Gulf and beyond.
"The specter of protracted bloody clashes, assassinations and bombings, sectarian cleansing and refugee crises from Beirut to Manama, causing instability and feeding regional rivalry, could put an end to the hopeful Arab Spring.
"Radical voices on both sides would gain. In Bahrain, Lebanon, Syria and Iraq, it is already happening..."
On 8 March 2009, the media published photographs of a top UK anti-terrorism policeman, Bob Quick, as he was heading to a meeting at 10 Downing Street.
Quick appears to be deliberately, or accidentally, showing off a document labeled "Secret".
The document reportedly suggests to us that there really are Pakistani al Qaeda 'terrorists' out there.
After the publication of these photos, the police allegedly felt they had to make immediate arrests of the Pakistanis they had been watching. The arrest operation was brought forward 12 hours.
Reportedly, the USA and its allies want to break up Pakistan. It is important for the public to be brainwashed into seeing Pakistanis as being bad, dangerous people.
On 8 March 2009, ten Pakistanis, with suspected links to al Qaeda (CIA), were arrested by a counter-terrorism unit in North West England.
The timing is interesting.
The UK police want to distract attention away from the killing of Ian Tomlinson at the G20 summit; and want to emphasise that the police are facing dangerous 'terrorist' enemies. "I'm going to go way out on a limb here and suggest that this operation was carried out because Police felt the need to take the heat off of their comrades in the City of London Police Force."-[Deliberate?] 'Security leak' prompts arrests in suspected al Qaeda plot.
In 1986, Captain Alan West of the British navy removed secret documents from the Ministry of Defence 'without permission', carried them in his coat pocket when they should have been in a security briefcase, and then lost the documents.
It is suspected that the navy wanted the secret documents, which were about naval cuts, to be lost, and then found by the media.
West got promoted.
From 1989 to 1992 West was in charge of Naval Intelligence. In 1997 West was appointed Chief of Defence Intelligence.
The 9 11 attacks took place on 11 September 2001. In 2002, West was promoted to become head of the navy as First Sea Lord.
In 2006, West became Chairman of the QinetiQ Defence Advisory Board. Qinetiq is a defence technology company.
Admiral Sir Alan West became Gordon Brown's security minister.
Photo of Algiers by Damien Boilley. Source: Flickr.
Algeria is holding elections and, as in the USA, the contest is predetermined by the power of the state... In oil-rich Algeria, there is high unemployment, rampant corruption and chronic poverty Algeria's dangerous voting cocktail
An Amnesty report accuses Algerian security forces and state-armed militias of "massive" human rights violations, including extrajudicial executions and other unlawful killings. They were also responsible, the report alleges, of numerous enforced disappearances, secret and arbitrary detentions and torture and other ill treatment of thousands of real or suspected members or supporters of armed groups. - Impunity's third term
In MOLDOVA, the communists have performed well in the elections.
Election observers from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe said in preliminary findings that the vote was largely free and democratic.
Warren is being investigated by the U.S. Justice Department for allegedly raping women who claim he laced their drinks with a knock-out drug.
An affidavit says the first victim states she was raped by Warren in Sept. 2007 after being invited to a party at Warren's residence by U.S. embassy employees.
She told a State Department investigator that after Warren prepared a mixed drink of cola and whiskey, she felt unwell.
When she woke up the next morning, "she was lying on a bed, completely nude, with no memory of how she had been undressed."
She said she realized "she recently had engaged in sexual intercourse, though she had no memory of having intercourse."
According to the affidavit, a second alleged victim told a similar story, saying Warren met her at the U.S. embassy and invited her for a "tour of his home" where she said he prepared an apple martini for her "out of her sight."
The second victim said she suddenly felt faint and went to the bathroom.
She could see and hear, but she could not move, the affidavit says.
She told investigators Warren "was attempting to remove her pants."
The bin Ladens like to keep close to the Bush family
The alleged victim said she remembers being in Warren's bed and asking him to stop, but that "Warren made a statement to the effect of 'nobody stays in my expensive sheets with clothes on.'"
She told investigators "as she slipped in and out of consciousness she had conscious images of Warren penetrating her vagina repeatedly with his penis."
Warren admitted there were photographs of the two women on his personal laptop.
U.S. officials found videos that appear to have been secretly recorded and show, they say, Warren engaged in sexual acts.
Officials say one of the alleged victims is seen on tape, in a "semi-conscious state."
As the station chief in Algiers, Warren may know quite a lot about the al Qaeda (al CIAda) group responsible for a wave of bombings in Algeria.
In the most serious incident, 48 people were killed in a bombing in Aug. 2008 in Algiers, blamed on the al Qaeda group.
The Algerian ambassador to the United Nations, Mourad Benmehid, said his government had not been notified by the U.S. of the rape allegations or the criminal investigation.
No charges have been filed.
There has been terrorism in Algeria for many decades.
According to an article entitled The Arc of Crisisvarious Nazis and spooks have been involved in Algeria.
Reportedly, what these Nazis and spooks believe in is a 'Strategy of Tension'.
Fascism thrives on terror.
From 1954 - 62, there was a war for independence in Algeria. Thousands died in acts of terror.
Reportedly, elements of the US and French governments supplied both sides in the conflict.
Reportedly, Skorzeny became involved with the French Secret Army Organization (OAS), which tried to block President de Gaulle’s plans to give independence to Algeria.
Allen Dulles whose CIA Operation Paperclip assimilated Nazi scientists into the American establishment
Reportedly, the OAS was controlled by financier Pierre Guillain de Benouville, in cooperation with Allen Dulles of the CIA, Hitler’s Economics Minister Hjalmar Schacht and Genoud.
Reportedly, when Dulles was OSS Station Chief in Berne, Switzerland, he helped Genoud transfer Hitler money into Swiss bank accounts. (Henderson, Dean. “The Shah of Iran and David Rockefeller”. excerpted from Geopolitics: The Global Economy of Big Oil, Weapons and Drugs.)
Reportedly, elements of the OAS supported both sides in the war of independence in Algeria. Reportedly, François Mitterrand was part of this conspiracy.
Reportedly, Mitterand promoted the idea of the head of the OAS, Jacques Soustelle, becoming governor-general of Algeria.
Reportedly, the OAS linked up with Skorzeny, who trained elements of both the OAS and the FLN (those seeking independence).
Beginning in November 1954, the FLN launched attacks against the French.
The war ended in 1962 and an FLN government took over.
By 1991, the FLN government was seen as being corrupt and unpopular.
In 1991, a Moslem party, the Islamic Salavation Front (FIS), was about to win the elections.
The FLN government cancelled the elections and effectively there was rule by the military.
It is believed that members of the security services, disguised as terrorists, then began to carry out acts of terrorism, in order to discredit the Islamic Salvation Front.
1. In Algeria there is evidence that the 'terrorists' work for the security services.
These security services may be Algerian and / or French and / or American.
2. But the mainstream media wants us to think of al Qaeda.
Message from the CIA's Department of Disinformation? "Has bin Laden chosen Algeria as his launching pad to attack Europe?" - Algeria: al-Qaeda Connection/Huffington Post
"Algeria's present al-Qaida offshoot is known as Al-Qaida in Islamic North Africa. It grew out of the GSPC, the last extremist group left over from the bloody civil war, which joined Osama bin Laden's network in September 2006." - Al-Qaida claims responsibility for Algeria attacks
3. There is evidence from the past that the 'terrorists' worked for the French and Algerian security services.
The New Zealand Listener reported on the links between the security services and the 'Islamic terrorists' in Algeria.
'In recent years, firm evidence has begun to emerge from Algerian military sources and leading academics that the dreaded GIA has been – perhaps from the outset and certainly under Zitouni's bloody leadership – a dummy, or 'screen' organisation managed by French/Algerian counter-intelligence.' - http://www.listener.co.nz/default,1457.sm
4. Reportedly, the Algerian military, disguised as terrorists, were barbaric.
In February 2001, 'The Dirty War', by Habib Souaidia, a former Algerian army officer, was published.
It tells of the part played by the Algerian army in the killing of tens of thousands of Algerians.
Habib writes:"I have seen colleagues burn alive a 15-year-old child.
"I have seen soldiers disguising themselves as terrorists and massacring civilians.
"I have seen colonels kill mere suspects in cold blood.
Some observers think that within the military there is a pro-Russian faction and a pro-American/French faction.
The most likely explanation for recent events is that the bombs are meant to strengthen the pro-American/French faction.
6. How strong is the American interest in Algeria?
The United States is building a huge military surveillance base at Tamanrasset in Algeria.
US forces are training the Algerian military.
Washington wants to provide Algiers with pilot-less drone planes.
This military base is a result of agreements signed between Washington and Algiers for oil industry development.
In addition, the United States has worked to include Algeria in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), and considers this North African country one of its most important allies outside of NATO. - Fake terror in Algeria; the US military in Algeria; oil in Algeria.