What's new

Would-be bin Laden assassin held in Pakistan

FreekiN

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 25, 2009
Messages
2,908
Reaction score
0
Would-be bin Laden assassin held in Pakistan\

PESHAWAR, Pakistan - An American man armed with a pistol and a 40-inch sword was detained in northern Pakistan as he tried to cross the border into Afghanistan on a mission to avenge the 9-11 attacks and kill Osama bin Laden, police said Tuesday.

Police said Gary Brooks Faulkner, a 51-year-old construction worker, was also carrying Christian literature and a small amount of hashish.

Faulkner's sister, interviewed in Colorado, said her brother has polycystic kidney disease that has left him with only 9 percent kidney function and needs dialysis.

But Deanna M. Faulkner, of Grand Junction, Colorado, told The Associated Press that she didn't think her brother's illness was his motivation in going to Pakistan.

"I don't believe this was, 'I'm dying and I'm going to do a hurrah thing.'" She said her brother is "very religious" but declined to elaborate.

Bin Laden evades massive manhunt
Late Tuesday, the top police officer in the Chitral region declined to repeat his earlier statement that the American had said he was on a mission to kill bin Laden. Mumtaz Ahmad Khan did not retract his remarks, but said that they were not the American's "pure words." He put down the phone when asked to elaborate.

Khan did repeat earlier allegations that Faulkner was armed with a pistol, the sword and a dagger when he was arrested late Sunday. He declined to give more details, saying Faulkner was now in the hands of the country's all-powerful intelligence agencies.

The whereabouts of bin Laden is a very sensitive issue for Pakistan's military and intelligence establishment. Their officials generally deny the possibility that bin Laden is hiding somewhere along the Pakistan-Afghan border as Western intelligence agencies believe.

Bin Laden has evaded a massive manhunt since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United States, which he is accused of masterminding along with other attacks. Washington has offered a bounty of $25 million for information leading to his capture.

Faulkner was picked up in a forest in the Chitral region late on Sunday, where he was "roaming in the security zone in a suspicious manner," Khan said.

"We initially laughed when he told us that he wanted to kill Osama bin Laden," said Khan. But he said when officers seized the weapons and night-vision equipment, "our suspicion grew." He said the American was trying to cross into the nearby Afghan region of Nuristan.

Chitral and Nuristan are among several rumored hiding places for bin Laden along the mountainous 2,400 kilometer long border between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Faulkner was being questioned Tuesday by intelligence officials in Peshawar, the main northwestern city. He has not been charged.

Angry after the Sept. 11 attacks
Khan said the man told investigators that he was angry after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks in the United States.

"I think Osama is responsible for bloodshed in the world, and I want to kill him," he quoted him as saying.

Khan said Faulkner was also carrying a book containing Christian verses and teachings.

When asked why he thought he had a chance of tracing bin Laden, Faulkner replied, "God is with me, and I am confident I will be successful in killing him," said Khan.

He said that police had confiscated a small amount of hashish, enough for a single joint, from Faulkner.

Faulkner allegedly told police he visited Pakistan seven times, and this was his third trip to Chitral, a mountainous region that attracts adventurous Western tourists and hikers. Unlike much of northwestern Pakistan, it is considered relatively safe for foreigners.

Faulkner arrived in the Chitrali town of Bumburate on June 3 and stayed in a hotel there. Provincial police chief of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Malik Naveed, told NBC News that the bearded Faulkner said he wanted to support and "encourage" NATO troops in Afghanistan.

He was assigned a police guard, as is quite common for foreigners visiting remote parts of Pakistan. When he checked out without informing police, officers began hunting for him, said Khan.

U.S. Embassy spokesman Richard Snelsire said the mission had received notification from Pakistani officials that an American citizen had been arrested. He said embassy officials were trying to meet the man and confirm his identity.

'His family is here and we love him'
Deanna Faulkner said her brother usually gets dialysis every three days but can go up to two weeks without it.

"

He was planning on getting back here before then," she said. She didn't know when he left the country.

"We contacted the State Department to let them know of his medical condition and that his family is here and we love him," Deanna Faulkner said.

She said family members haven't heard from him since he left the country.

"He's in a country where he can't get word out," she said.

She said Scott Faulkner was a construction worker who has lived in both Colorado and California, but she declined to say where he was living when he left for Pakistan. She said he will be 52 at the end of the summer.

"If this is your family member, there you go. What do you do?"


CLICK FOR RELATED CONTENT
NYT: Setbacks cloud Afghan pullout plans
Wanted Pakistan militant killed by IED
Report slams Pakistan for aiding Afghan militants
She said her brother isn't in danger of dying anytime soon unless he doesn't get dialysis in a week or two.

"People can live 20 years on dialysis," she said.

"I'm worried about him. I'm worried that in Pakistan they won't give him his dialysis and if he doesn't get it, he's in serious trouble."

Asked about Pakistani authorities saying Faulkner had made previous trips there, Deanna Faulkner said, "He has been all over the world many times."

"Obviously, we love and care for our brother, our family member. Without the treatment, healthwise, he's in serious trouble."

Would-be bin Laden assassin held in Pakistan - Pakistan - msnbc.com
:rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl:
 
'would-be'.... hahahah. look at their certainty.

y chitral? oo ya. there was a report saying that OBL is in chitral. apparently he took it too seriously.

---------- Post added at 08:23 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:22 PM ----------

and he has dialysis? lol. at least some commonality with OBL
 
From Chitral News

US national arrested in Chitral

Chitral -- --An American national Gary Brooks Faulkner was arrested from the Bumburet Kalash valley of Chitral, reportedly trying to cross over into Nuristan province of Afghanistan which borders the area. The suspect was reportedly armed with a pistol a dagger and a scimitar and he was repeatedly expressing his intentions of crossing into Afghanistan and fighting the Taliban and Osama. The arrested person had visited Pakistan on seven occasions earlier. (Muhkamuddin, 15 June 10)

US national arrested in Chitral -letter

The way the subject news has been splashed across the global media in a flash, seems to be a sinister plan from somewhere to antagonise the local population against Christians, as some western papers have reported the gentleman was carrying biblical verses on him when caught. I hope Chitralis will take the whole story with a pinch of salt and dismiss such sensationalism to continue with their peaceful tranquil and tolerant way of life.
Muhammad Arif,
Chitral,
15 June 10.


U.S. Man Held in Pakistan Had Sights on bin Laden
New York Times
By SABRINA TAVERNISE and SALMAN MASOOD
Published: June 15, 2010

16pstan-cnd-articleInline.jpg

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — A middle-aged American construction worker, on a self-proclaimed mission to help American troops, armed himself with a dagger, a pistol, a sword, Christian texts, hashish and night vision goggles and headed to the lawless tribal areas between Afghanistan and Pakistan to hunt down, single-handedly, Osama bin Laden.

Pakistani police detained the man on Monday, according to a police official from the border district of Chitral in Pakistan — an area widely rumored to hide Mr. bin Laden. On Tuesday, the man was transferred to Peshawar, the capital of Pakistan’s northwest, a Pakistani security official said. He was identified by several variations of the name Gary Brooks Faulkner; some news reports said he was a construction worker.

Many details of the man’s mission remain a mystery, including the relevance of an intriguing parallel with his quarry: bad kidneys.

On June 12, the heavily bearded Mr. Faulkner checked into the Ishpata Inn in the Bumboret Valley, a picturesque area far from any city and without telephone contact with the rest of the country, the police in Chitral said.

He disappeared a day later, and the police sent out a search party to find him. They tracked him down in the village of Sheikhanandeh. He threatened to kill anyone who got close to him, according to the Chitral police officials.

“He was roaming in the security zone in a suspicious manner,” said the Chitral police chief, Jaffer Khan, according to Reuters. “He had a dagger and night vision goggles with him. He is being investigated.”

American officials were circumspect. A spokesman for the United States Embassy in Islamabad said the American consulate in Peshawar, the regional capital of northwestern Pakistan, was alerted on Tuesday morning that an American citizen had been detained, but that officials had not yet been able see him. The official did not say where the American was being held, and said privacy laws prevented them from identifying him.

Reuters cited Mumtaz Ahmed, a senior police official in Chitral, as saying that Mr. Brooks was hunting Mr. bin Laden because he had suffered personal losses in the Sept. 11 attacks in the United States. The New York Daily News published an interview with a woman identified as his sister, Deanna Faulkner, who said he had been “extremely religious since his troubled youth,” and that his kidneys were failing.

“I’m guessing that he wanted to do one last thing for his country before he died," she was quoted as saying.

Mr. Ahmed confirmed that the man was carrying medicines for kidney and blood pressure treatment” and told The Associated Press that Mr. Faulkner had a book containing Christian verses and teachings.

But he was also carrying a pistol with forty rounds, a night vision device, a camera, a dagger, a knife and a small quantity of hash, according to a security official who asked not to be identified because he was not allowed to speak publicly on the matter.

The official said that the man told the police that he wanted to go to the Afghan province of Nuristan, just across the border, “to locate Bin Laden and kill him.” He also said he wanted to help American forces.

Officials said that the man had made several trips to Pakistan in the last seven years and had been many times to Chitral in the last three. It was unclear what he had done on those trips.

Ismail Khan contributed reporting from Peshawar, Pakistan.

Video from CNN with idiotic brother:-
Video - Breaking News Videos from CNN.com
 
Kinda confused on reading this one. This is kind of sarcastic yet is stupid and extremely wrong is asserting that OBL is near Chitral. Chitral is a very peaceful and calm area. The author is highly idiotic, uninformed and plainly does not know anything what he is talking about.

Call Him Crazy, but bin Laden Bounty Hunter May Have Been Close
By DEXTER FILKINS

The Hindukush mountain range near Chitral, in northwest Pakistan. The area is thought to be a refuge of Osama bin Laden.

By now, you’ve probably heard the news: a middle-aged construction worker from Colorado was arrested in a forest in northwest Pakistan, carrying a samurai sword and a pistol, looking for Osama bin Laden.

He didn’t find him.

Before you chuckle, let me just say: Whatever else we might conclude about Gary Faulkner, our arrested American bounty hunter, we should give him this: He was looking in the right place.

Or at least the place where many intelligence analysts think he is: the mountainous high-altitude district of Chitral. For me, the mere mention of the place evokes the image of the Saudi terrorist.


Last December, early on a Sunday morning, I sat at a long table in the basement of the Pentagon talking with an American military officer about the situation in Afghanistan. As the meeting ended, another man approached, wearing plain clothes and a plainer face.

“Chitral,” he said, half-smiling. “If you’re looking for Osama, you might try Chitral.”

He muttered something else, then walked away. The man didn’t identify himself, but he didn’t have to. He was almost certainly an intelligence analyst. If I had to guess, I’d say, given our location, that he worked for the Defense Intelligence Agency.

Why Chitral? Well, for one thing, it’s remote. Chitral is a mountainous district of Pakistan’s North-West Frontier Province, in the far end of the country, abutting an Afghan region called Wakhan, notable because it’s shaped like a panhandle. In other words, it’s a long way from the Federal Administered Tribal Areas, or FATA, where many other intelligence analysts believe Mr. bin Laden is probably hiding.

There is one other reason. As he walked away, my plain-faced Pentagon acquaintance said one other thing: “We have a hard time putting Predators up there.” Apparently, the drones cannot stay up long, because their bases are so far away. In a funny kind of way, he was asking for help.

Until Mr. bin Laden was thought to be hiding there, Chitral was famous for only one thing: Every July, tourists from all over gather in a town called Shandur to watch a polo match between the Chitralis and a team from nearby Gilgit. They called it “the world’s highest polo match.” At 12,000 feet, it probably is.

Not many tourists go to Shandur or the rest of Chitral anymore, on account of the spread of Islamic militancy.

Back to Mr. Faulkner. Oddly enough, according to initial reports, it seems that he and his quarry have a striking number of details in common.

1. Both are very religious. (When he was caught, Mr. Faulkner was carrying a book of Christian phrases.)
2. Both were in the construction business.
3. Both have bad kidneys.
4. Both have beards. (Assuming Mr. bin Laden hasn’t shaved his off.)

Meanwhile, just Monday, Mr. bin Laden put out yet another audio speech, this one on his imprisoned confederate, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed. It’s his 27th since 2001.
 
video footage released





Is that S-2 or Solomon?

Serious note: he should be charged with carrying a weapon without license and other subsequent charges at the very LEAST. How do we know he's not a CIA operative pretending to be loony American? I hope questions about where he acquired these weapons and who assisted him on his journey to Chitral are asked and his background is fully investigated.
 
Kinda confused on reading this one. This is kind of sarcastic yet is stupid and extremely wrong is asserting that OBL is near Chitral. Chitral is a very peaceful and calm area. The author is highly idiotic, uninformed and plainly does not know anything what he is talking about.

Call Him Crazy, but bin Laden Bounty Hunter May Have Been Close
By DEXTER FILKINS

The Hindukush mountain range near Chitral, in northwest Pakistan. The area is thought to be a refuge of Osama bin Laden.

By now, you’ve probably heard the news: a middle-aged construction worker from Colorado was arrested in a forest in northwest Pakistan, carrying a samurai sword and a pistol, looking for Osama bin Laden.

He didn’t find him.

Before you chuckle, let me just say: Whatever else we might conclude about Gary Faulkner, our arrested American bounty hunter, we should give him this: He was looking in the right place.

Or at least the place where many intelligence analysts think he is: the mountainous high-altitude district of Chitral. For me, the mere mention of the place evokes the image of the Saudi terrorist.


Last December, early on a Sunday morning, I sat at a long table in the basement of the Pentagon talking with an American military officer about the situation in Afghanistan. As the meeting ended, another man approached, wearing plain clothes and a plainer face.

“Chitral,” he said, half-smiling. “If you’re looking for Osama, you might try Chitral.”

He muttered something else, then walked away. The man didn’t identify himself, but he didn’t have to. He was almost certainly an intelligence analyst. If I had to guess, I’d say, given our location, that he worked for the Defense Intelligence Agency.

Why Chitral? Well, for one thing, it’s remote. Chitral is a mountainous district of Pakistan’s North-West Frontier Province, in the far end of the country, abutting an Afghan region called Wakhan, notable because it’s shaped like a panhandle. In other words, it’s a long way from the Federal Administered Tribal Areas, or FATA, where many other intelligence analysts believe Mr. bin Laden is probably hiding.

There is one other reason. As he walked away, my plain-faced Pentagon acquaintance said one other thing: “We have a hard time putting Predators up there.” Apparently, the drones cannot stay up long, because their bases are so far away. In a funny kind of way, he was asking for help.

Until Mr. bin Laden was thought to be hiding there, Chitral was famous for only one thing: Every July, tourists from all over gather in a town called Shandur to watch a polo match between the Chitralis and a team from nearby Gilgit. They called it “the world’s highest polo match.” At 12,000 feet, it probably is.

Not many tourists go to Shandur or the rest of Chitral anymore, on account of the spread of Islamic militancy.

Back to Mr. Faulkner. Oddly enough, according to initial reports, it seems that he and his quarry have a striking number of details in common.

1. Both are very religious. (When he was caught, Mr. Faulkner was carrying a book of Christian phrases.)
2. Both were in the construction business.
3. Both have bad kidneys.
4. Both have beards. (Assuming Mr. bin Laden hasn’t shaved his off.)

Meanwhile, just Monday, Mr. bin Laden put out yet another audio speech, this one on his imprisoned confederate, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed. It’s his 27th since 2001.

wow everyday we come across new heights of BS..!

He was close but Pakistani Police cought hime just when he was about to kill OBL and BTW OBL was hunting birds in Chitral :lol:
 
Ok I get the pistol part...................but
Hashish? Sword? & conversion material?

he looks more like a psychedelic hippie from San Fran than a killer!
 
Serious note: he should be charged with carrying a weapon without license and other subsequent charges at the very LEAST. How do we know he's not a CIA operative pretending to be loony American? I hope questions about where he acquired these weapons and who assisted him on his journey to Chitral are asked and his background is fully investigated.

Do you want that we should treat him simillarly the way US treated Afia siddiki. Sure not coz that wont make us any different from those so called civilized beasts....!
 
video footage released





Is that S-2 or Solomon?

Serious note: he should be charged with carrying a weapon without license and other subsequent charges at the very LEAST. How do we know he's not a CIA operative pretending to be loony American? I hope questions about where he acquired these weapons and who assisted him on his journey to Chitral are asked and his background is fully investigated.

Cant be S2. He is way cool. :usflag:
Must be that creature you mentioned 2nd.
 
Rambo with a failing kidney ! But on a serious note, Govts cant do what a lone man can do. Never under estimate power of a common man!!
 

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom