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Major Terror Plot Against U.S. Ignored
http://www.christian-underground.com/blog

Posted on 01/06/2006 8:03:18 AM PST by RVN Airplane Driver

Major Terror Plot Against U.S. Ignored

Jan. 5, 2006

The mainstream U.S. media outlets have failed to report a major terrorist plot against the U.S. - because it would tend to support President Bush's use of NSA domestic surveillance, according to media watchdog groups.

News of a planned attack masterminded by three Algerians operating out of Italy was widely reported outside the U.S., but went virtually unreported in the American media.

Italian authorities recently announced that they had used wiretaps to uncover the conspiracy to conduct a series of major attacks inside the U.S.

Italian Interior Minister Giuseppe Pisanu said the planned attacks would have targeted stadiums, ships and railway stations, and the terrorists' goal, he said, was to exceed the devastation caused by 9/11.

Italian authorities stepped up their internal surveillance programs after July's terrorist bombings in London. Their domestic wiretaps picked up phone conversations by Algerian Yamine Bouhrama that discussed terrorist attacks in Italy and abroad.

Italian authorities arrested Bouhrama on November 15 and he remains in prison. Authorities later arrested two other men, Achour Rabah and Tartaq Sami, who are believed to be Bouhrama’s chief aides in planning the attacks.

The arrests were a major coup for Italian anti-terror forces, and the story was carried in most major newspapers from Europe to China.

"U.S. terror attacks foiled,” read the headline in England’s Sunday Times. In France, a headline from Agence France Presse proclaimed, "Three Algerians arrested in Italy over plot targeting U.S.”

Curiously, what was deemed worthy of a worldwide media blitz abroad was virtually ignored by the U.S. media, and conservative media watchdog groups are saying that is no accident.

"My impression is that the major media want to use the NSA story to try and impeach the president," says Cliff Kincaid, editor of the Accuracy in Media Report published by the grassroots Accuracy in Media organization.

"If you remind people that terrorists actually are planning to kill us, that tends to support the case made by President Bush. They will ignore any issue that shows that this kind of [wiretapping] tactic can work in the war on terror.”

"The mainstream media have framed the story as one of the nefarious President Bush ‘spying on U.S. citizens,’ where the average American is a victim not a beneficiary,” commented Brent Baker, vice president of the Media Research Center, a Washington, D.C.-based organization dedicated to encouraging balanced news coverage, "so journalists have little interest in any evidence that the program has helped save lives by uncovering terrorist plans."

The Associated Press version of the story did not disclose that the men planned to target the U.S. Nor did it report that the evidence against the suspects was gathered via a wiretapping surveillance operation.

Furthermore, only one American newspaper, the Philadelphia Inquirer, is known to have published the story that the AP distributed. It ran on page A-6 under the headline "Italy Charges 3 Algerians.” The Inquirer report also made no mention of the plot to target the U.S. - although foreign publications included this information in the headlines and lead sentences of their stories. Nor did it advise readers that domestic wiretaps played a key role in nabbing the suspected terrorists.

One obvious question media critics are now raising: Did the American media intentionally ignore an important story because it didn't fit into their agenda of attacking President George Bush for using wiretapping to spy on potential terrorists in the U.S.?

"It's clear to me," says AIM's Kincaid, "that they're trying their best to make this NSA program to be an impeachable offense, saying it is directed at ordinary Americans. That's why they keep referring to this as a 'program of spying on Americans' - whereas the president keeps pointing out it's a program designed to uncover al-Qaida operations on American soil."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: jihadinamerica; mediabias; newsblackout
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To: WVNan
Is there a source for this?

I picked it out of a google cache. The google search terms were ...

Bouhrama Achour Rabah and Tartaq Sami

The link (not cached) is http://emernet.emergency.com/ENNDAY.htm.

Here is the cached link. It does not cite a source.

41 posted on 01/06/2006 9:48:44 AM PST by Cboldt
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This one gives a brief legal insight, "the government ... tightened laws, giving investigators more scope in their surveillance of suspects."

Anybody here know where to look up changes in EU law regarding surveillance and privacy?

Denis Barnett
Rome, Italy, November 17, 2005 (AFP) - Italian anti-terrorist police said Thursday three Algerian men arrested earlier this week were members of a banned Islamic group and were "potentially" able to carry out a terrorist attack in Europe.

Three Algerian men were arrested in police operations late Tuesday in the southern port city of Naples and in Brescia in the north. The three are "members of the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat," a Carabinieri spokesman told AFP.

The police gave no details about where or when the attack was to have taken place, but were to hold a news conference in Naples later Thursday.

Meanwhile, an interior ministry source told AFP that the Italian media had "overplayed" the arrests.

"The possibility, and I stress possibility, that they would carry out an attack, could concern Europe or another region of the world, not Italy," the source said. The men, named as Yamine Bouhrama, 32, Khaled Serai, 35, and Mohamed Larbi, 31, were expected to be formally charged with international terrorism on Friday, prosecutors said.

Italy has arrested scores of Muslims since the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States, usually in a blaze of publicity. However, a great number have been quietly released without convictions in the months following their arrest.

In the latest arrests, Bourhama was seized at Naples main railway station while the other two were arrested in Brescia. Police also searched several homes in the Brescia area.

"The arrest of more suspected terrorists is a worrying sign, but also it shows the efficient investigative and intelligence work going on in the north and south of Italy," said Gianni Alemanno, a minister in Silvio Berlusconi's centre-right government.

Italy has frequently received threats from extremist groups via the Internet for maintaining its 3,000-strong military contingent in southern Iraq.

In the wake of the London bombings last July, the government tightened anti-terrorist laws, giving investigators more scope in their surveillance of suspects.

Anti-terrorist police wiretaps and surveillance established that the men had contact with mujahedin groups in Bosnia and other Islamic fundamentalists living in Norway, France and Britain.

Police said Bouhrama and Serai had moved to France and then to Norway in the summer of last year, using false identification documents.

They returned after a few months and frequently moved between the Italian cities of Brescia, Vicenza, Naples and the southern province of Salerno. Bouhrama had spent time in training camps in Afghanistan, Chechnya and Georgia, investigators said.

Police reportedly decided to arrest the men after intercepting references to an attack in recent weeks, particularly after it appeared that one of the men was planning to leave Italy.

Sources told Italian media the men were in contact with members of the Armed Islamic Group GIA seeking the overthrow of the secular government in Algeria. The Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat in Europe is an offshoot of the GIA. One of its leaders, Djamel Lounici, was jailed by an Italian court after being arrested in Naples for giving logistical and economic support for terrorists in Algeria.

Police in Naples said the men were also linked to a group of North African men arrested in London in January 2003 after British police discovered a factory making the toxic chemical ricin.

According to the Corriere della Sera newspaper, the men first came to the notice of Italy's military intelligence service SISMI in 2002.

Italy, in common with other EU states, stepped up security in the wake of the London transport bombings in July and Berlusconi warned Italians they were in the "firing line" of terrorism because of Rome's support for the US-led war in Iraq. AFP http://www.quepasa.com/english/news/world/Italy.arrests.terrorists/394198.html


42 posted on 01/06/2006 10:09:43 AM PST by Cboldt
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To: RVN Airplane Driver

Here's a link to this article from the Assyrian News Agency:
http://www.aina.org/news/20060106102431.htm

And a link to News24 in South Africa (from 12/23/2005):
http://www.news24.com/News24/World/News/0,,2-10-1462_1855238,00.html

I got these links by doing a Google News search on "Bouhrama," one of the terrorists names:
http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&ned=us&ie=UTF-8&q=Bouhrama&btnG=Search+News

So, USA Lame Stream Media, where are you on this? I thought so! :)


43 posted on 01/06/2006 10:29:12 AM PST by upchuck (Article posts of just one or two sentences do not preserve the quality of FR. Lazy FReepers be gone!)
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To: Smokin' Joe

True. But I think they underestimate the American people. We've had plenty of movies about terrorists blowing up stadiums. We've had plenty of warnings about subways, railways, and malls. But people still use these things.

Since 9/11 there have been increased guards in Penn station, sometimes sniffer dogs, sometimes troops in fatigues. There are constant warnings from the loudspeakers not to leave a bag unattended. But people still use Penn Station.

People can adjust to these threats, once they are informed. An informed people is better able to defend itself, and to pull the lever for the right sort of politicians to help the defense.


44 posted on 01/06/2006 11:08:25 AM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: twigs

Agreed. The United States doesn't have subjects, it has citizens. We have our fair share of wimps and hopeless leftists, maybe a third of the country. But we still have plenty of people who can be trusted to take care of themselves, their families, and their communities. The best thing we can do for national security is to involve our citizens in it by keeping them truthfully informed.

It's good politics, too, because the news media have been telling everyone to go back to sleep, nothing to worry about, just vote Democrat and you'll be comfortable again.


45 posted on 01/06/2006 11:20:49 AM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: Arthur Wildfire! March

"How many elephants does the left think it can hide these days?"

This story came in on Newsmax as well. Apparently the left can hide as many elephants as it wants as long as it keeps depending on the leftist mainstream media to do its bidding and not make these stories available to the American public.


46 posted on 01/06/2006 11:24:06 AM PST by freeangel ( (free speech is only good until someone else doesn't like what you say))
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To: Cboldt

Thank You


47 posted on 01/06/2006 11:35:00 AM PST by Eagles Talon IV
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To: Salvey

Re the Old Leftist Media: 'They're no longer "the press" in the original sense of the term, but rather advertising handouts promoting the nefarious goals of their masters.'

Bingo!!!!!!!!!!!! Oh, yeah, prob'ly most of us would agree with that!

Here's a thought, FWIW; wouldn't it be instructive if someone would investigate how much "campaign advertising" money goes to the Old Media, from the Crats- is that the newest form of bribery?

Hmmmmmmm. Let's just suppose that the Pubs are charged 1 million for a specific ad/timeslot; and the Crats raise that, to say, 2 million and maybe get some of the choicest spots (prime time, etc) or even the same deal. Suppose the Crats have a standing order that they will always pay more, for the same type of deal? It would be one powerful reason for the Old Media types- the Chronkeeks and the Chronkettes- to slant their "news".

I've thought for a long time that one way to get some financial honesty in political campaigns would be to require not only where the money comes from, but also, where it goes.

Why else would these blowhards rate millions of dollars in salaries/perks- when their Nielsens are tanking? Or maybe it's just because they're so darned cute.

Or am I all wrong on this?


48 posted on 01/06/2006 1:53:57 PM PST by Anselma
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To: Anselma
Let's just suppose that the Pubs are charged 1 million for a specific ad/timeslot; and the Crats raise that, to say, 2 million

My gripe is that the 'RATS don't have to pay for ads; they get their vile messages printed gratis by having them woven into the "news" articles. Moreover, the MSM cherrypicks what it will print/broadcast directly from the DNC talking points. The cards are really stacked against the conservative view gaining exposure -- and RINO's like McCain haven't helped things.

49 posted on 01/06/2006 2:07:49 PM PST by Salvey (ancest)
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To: Salvey

Re your, "My gripe is that the 'RATS don't have to pay for ads... "

Don't let's be so sure about that! Besides which, everyone agrees the MSM is slanted- waaaay biased- to the Left and we are all justifiably upset about it.

The question remains: Wherefore? Wherefore are the egregious Leftist ones, S*** Heads, and not merely Talking Heads? Money talks.

Cherche La Buck.


50 posted on 01/06/2006 2:30:35 PM PST by Anselma
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To: Anselma

It would also be interesting to find out if/how much Crat money is going to prop up the NYT. Or maybe I'm confusing the Crats with the NEA ... Oh, wait. It's hard to tell the difference. ;>(


51 posted on 01/06/2006 2:37:33 PM PST by Anselma
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To: upchuck

Thanks for the information....


52 posted on 01/06/2006 5:08:47 PM PST by RVN Airplane Driver (Most Americans are so spoiled with freedom they have no idea what it takes to earn and keep it.)
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To: RVN Airplane Driver

bttt


53 posted on 01/06/2006 5:59:59 PM PST by harpu ( "...it's better to be hated for who you are than loved for someone you're not!")
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To: freeangel

"Apparently the left can hide as many elephants as it wants..."

But only from itself. Not from everyone outside their media grip. If I'm not mistaken, the BS media dominance is aging: ABS, NBS, and See-BS [as Rush used to describe them]. What is the average age of such a viewer? 60?


54 posted on 01/07/2006 7:03:00 AM PST by Arthur Wildfire! March (Fight corruption by choking government power and curbing government spending.)
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