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'Fort Hood shooter had links with Pakistan'

"yes the TTP is foreign funded they are funded from saudi arabia and the gulf states."

That, my friend, is hitting the nail on the head. More to the point, though, I don't think that their governments will be traceable. Lots of rich arabs who are doing their wishes through donations and charities though.

P.S.: Don't tell anybody. Everybody's quite comfortable just the way the story is now. You'll upset the apple-cart if you push this too hard.
 
And the US banking system is dumb enough not to have any trace of transfers??
 
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"And the US banking system is dumb enough not to have any trace of transfers??"

What makes you think that money is being run through OUR banks?

Now who's being dumb?
 
"And the US banking system is dumb enough not to have any trace of transfers??"

What makes you think that money is being run through OUR banks?

Now who's being dumb?

:) How come your law-maker suddenly become so active to trace the other mode of transfers.

The more funny part is when he says either he tranffered money to Pakistan or Pakistan tranffered money to him.
 
"How come your law-maker suddenly become so active to trace the other mode of transfers."

Ah, I see to what you're referring. I thought you were referencing my comments with Kidwaibhai about funding to the TTP from the G.C.C. region.

"The more funny part is when he says either he tranffered money to Pakistan or Pakistan tranffered money to him."

And the humor...? Please explain?

Thanks.
 
"And the US banking system is dumb enough not to have any trace of transfers??"

What makes you think that money is being run through OUR banks?

Now who's being dumb?

You're right. People still havent forgotten the BCCI scandal in Abudhabi. It was being used as a front for terrorism related fund transfers from the gulf.
 
yes the TTP is foreign funded they are funded from saudi arabia and the gulf states.
As far as the Pakistan connection goes i heard something on fox news about it but because it was fox news really did not pay any attention towards it. :chilli::chilli:

Saudi Arabia and Gulf states are friends of Pakistan ,please be care full next putting this type of false statement , your boys are flying their fighter planes and recently Saudia and Pakistan conducted joint army excercises.
 
The United States nuclear program has, since its inception, suffered from a number of accidents of varying forms, ranging from single-casualty research experiments (such as that of Louis Slotin during the Manhattan Project), to the nuclear fallout dispersion of the "Castle Bravo" shot in 1954, to the accidental dropping of nuclear weapons from aircraft ("broken arrows"). How close any of these accidents came to being "major" nuclear disasters is a matter of technical and scholarly debate and interpretation.

Weapons accidentally dropped by the United States include incidents near Atlantic City, New Jersey (1957), Savannah, Georgia (1958) (see Tybee Bomb), Goldsboro, North Carolina (1961), off the coast of Okinawa (1965), in the sea near Palomares, Spain (1966, see 1966 Palomares B-52 crash), and near Thule Air Base, Greenland (1968) (see 1968 Thule Air Base B-52 crash). In some of these cases (such as Palomares), the explosive system of the fission weapon discharged, but did not trigger a nuclear chain reaction (safety features prevent this from easily happening), but did disperse hazardous nuclear materials across wide areas, necessitating expensive cleanup endeavors. Eleven American nuclear warheads are thought to be lost and unrecovered, primarily in submarine accidents.

The nuclear testing program resulted in a number of cases of fallout dispersion onto populated areas. The most significant of these was the Castle Bravo test, which spread radioactive ash over an area of over one hundred miles, including a number of populated islands. The populations of the islands were evacuated but not before suffering radiation burns. They would later suffer long-term effects, such as birth defects and increased cancer risk. There were also instances during the nuclear testing program in which soldiers were exposed to overly high levels of radiation, which grew into a major scandal in the 1970s and 1980s, as many soldiers later suffered from what were claimed to be diseases caused by their exposures.

Many of the former nuclear facilities (see next section) produced significant environmental damages during their years of activity, and since the 1990s have been Superfund sites of cleanup and environmental remediation. The Radiation Exposure Compensation Act of 1990 allows for U.S. citizens exposed to radiation or other health risks through the U.S. nuclear program to file for compensation and damages.

Nuclear weapons and the United States - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Check this site for more nuclear accidents in US. Countless...

http://www.cdi.org/Issues/NukeAccidents/Accidents.htm

With up to 20,000 nuclear weapons over a 60 year period,, its a wonder something a lot worse hasnt happend....

I think there is a real fear that Pakistans nukes might get into the hands of terrorist or radical islamist and the fear is not just what the terrorist might do but what happens to Pakistan if such a thing happens....even if its just a few radicals involved Pakistan could be destroyed.
 
With up to 20,000 nuclear weapons over a 60 year period,, its a wonder something a lot worse hasnt happend....

I think there is a real fear that Pakistans nukes might get into the hands of terrorist or radical islamist and the fear is not just what the terrorist might do but what happens to Pakistan if such a thing happens....even if its just a few radicals involved Pakistan could be destroyed.

Oooh, sicburn. Quote me one accident and I might agree to what you are saying. Just one. :cheesy:
And if you can't, I'll ask you to zip it up. :whistle:

P.S. By the way, I can give you an idea about that radical. A CIA operative dressed as Afghan, sporting a long beard, armed with sophisticated weapons taking pictures of sensitive installments around capital at 3 in the morning. Go get 'em.
 
:cheesy: :eek: I wounder why they didn't link Oklahoma City bombing
to Pakistan.
 
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Saudi Arabia and Gulf states are friends of Pakistan ,please be care full next putting this type of false statement , your boys are flying their fighter planes and recently Saudia and Pakistan conducted joint army excercises.

Funniest thing is that Most here ignore is Some one is benefitting from all this in our country .

Escalating violence, lingering political uncertainty and rampant corruption may prompt a massive flee of capital from Afghanistan, as many Afghan business owners have already started moving their assets to safer economies in the Gulf.

According to Nurullah Delawari, the head of the Investment Support Agency of Afghanistan (ISA), a total of $5.3bn has been invested by the private sector in Afghanistan in the past seven years, of which only 27 per cent was foreign investment.

Delawari says that foreign investment has diminished due to deteriorating security conditions, but with over 60 per cent of private investment stemming from Afghan entrepreneurs, recent reports of an 'exodus' pose a far graver threat to the already shaky reconstruction process.

At an economic cooperation conference in Islamabad last May, Hamid Karzai, the Afghan president, said that rising violence targeting trade threatened to harm economic development
Karzai listed other issues that could stall progress, such as insufficient infrastructure and inconsistent policies, but he stopped short of naming pervasive corruption, his government's inability to regulate the private sector and the overarching weakness of the rule of law as other obstacles to investment in his country.

In its 2008 report, Transparency International, a global corruption watchdog, ranked Afghanistan as the fifth most corrupt state in the world.

Disgruntled business owners have also charged that those with political power have established their dominance in the business field, making it difficult for anyone outside of the power structure to be successful.

Dubai bound <-----Where ths money is going

Mohammad Fahim Hashimi is an Afghan entrepreneur who made his fortune in the past five years. Starting out as an interpreter at a US military base, he then used his strong business sense to secure supplies contracts from the US military.

Today his business interests include logistics, cargo, an airline and a TV channel. But Hashimi admits that he has finally diverted his capital to Dubai.

"While the day-to-day operations of most businesses are continuing, no major new investment is being made," he says. He adds that banks have put a temporary freeze on granting approvals for new loans or even credit extensions, which has perpetuated the stagnation.

When Seema Ghani, the managing director of the Baawar Consulting Group, arrived in Kabul in 2003 she was full of hope but fast became a victim of the system.

"With no rule of law in the country, my losses began in 2003 with my first business when a corrupt man as my partner stole money and the system supported him. I lost hundreds of thousands of dollars which was a lot in those days," says Ghani, who was living in London during the Taliban's rule.

Ghani went on to start up her management consultancy firm. Her gravest challenge now, she says, is endemic corruption.

"I have to pay to get projects from the government and mainly from the US companies. They are the biggest implementers of the USAID projects in this country," she says, adding that bribery is against her principles and as such, she loses out on many projects.

Hashimi contends that the anti-corruption fight that threatens local business should not be limited to tackling bribery.

"It [should] cover proper law enforcement and a clean judicial system. It contains no protection for friends and relatives of influential people, no preferential treatment in granting contracts or monopolising certain lucrative sectors."

Al Jazeera English - Focus - Business flees Afghan instability
 

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