Ivo Skoric on Fri, 5 Oct 2001 23:25:18 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] global civil war |
Al Qaeda would be most happy if people around the world would fear to leave their homes and if their leaders would tremble in terror. The goal is to have world political leaders make decisions to appease Al Qaeda. Particularly the Middle Eastern political leaders. Key countries like Algeria, Sudan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Pakistan, where the infiltration by Al Qaeda political viral infection is the strongest, in the "ideal" scenario would have puppet leaders that would answer to Bin Laden, who would thus excersise control over the world's most important commodity (oil) and who would be the Calif, the Sheikh of the Mountain from the ancient legend of Alamut, that he so succesfully revived by uniting various terrorist groups in his umbrella 'foundation' type organization, sharing intelligence and resources among them. "Cells" are perhaps spread everywhere around the planet - well trained individuals who are ready to give their lives for Al Qaeda at any moment. Anything would do. Fake hijacking in India. Derranged individuals in buses in Midwest US. Outbreaks of hemorragic fever in Afghan refugee camps in Pakistan. A lone case of anthrax infection in Florida (first in 25 years). Destruction of a Russian airplane full of Israeli passengers over Black Sea. On purpose, I didn't yet open CNN today. Suddenly, all those events, that otherwise would be viewed as unrelated, or that even may be unrelated, and even coincidental, do not seem so, despite the insistence of the authorities and mainstream media that they are. Perhaps, to avoid widespread panic, Ukrainian misfired surface-to-air missile would do better than yet another mem-with-box-cutters scenario. But then, there is also the TWA flight 800 - which was never fully solved and in which case the US misfired surface-to-air missile was suspected but officially denied. Could that airplane have been destroyed in some sort of rehersal operation? Al Qaeda wants us guessing - what? where? and how? it would strike next. But, eventually, the 'cells' will exhaust themselves, some will be caught, some will unfortunatelly carry their assignment to the gruesome end. New cells will be harder to build if "the base" is cut off from the world. The only thing that can defeat the world in a long term is the fear build-up (something that in 11th century with no TV was not possible). Meanwhile, most of Afgnanis are trying to flee the country fearing American aerial onslaught - some of them are even afraid of nuclear strikes. While those were never considered by the US, or anybody else, this testifies that Afghanis do understand the extend of global rage their leadership caused by hosting Al Qaeda's headquarters. On the other hand, the US government is essentially bending over backwards to show that it changed its ways and that it wants to be a friend and a benefactor of the world. At home, Bush is showering people with money (where is he getting all those trillions from?), bailing out businisses, raising minimum wage, extending unemployment benefits, making it easier to apply for social services, healthcare, etc. Abroad, the US is patiently building coalition with some of the previously most unlikely allies, suddenly recognizing Islam as a major religion, lifting up trade restrictions, rescheduling loans of the poor nations, talking about Palestinian state and planning to 'bomb' Afghanistan with bread. Wouldn't it be so much better if those policy changes occurred before the September 11 disaster? ivo _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold