Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Mossad Agent Pearlman Releases Phony "Al-Qaeda Tape"


While President Bush authorizes the CIA to bankroll and arm the real Al-Qaeda in Iran
PRISON PLANET

Adam Pearlman, the Jewish Mossad agent who once wrote stinging essays condemning Muslims as "bloodthirsty terrorists", has once again popped up as an "Al-Qaeda spokesman" to frighten the dwindling number of Americans who still believe Al-Qaeda exists outside of U.S. intelligence circles.
"An American member of al-Qaida warned President Bush on Tuesday to end U.S. involvement in all Muslim lands or face an attack worse than the Sept. 11 suicide assault, according to a new videotape."

"Wearing a white robe and a turban, Adam Yehiye Gadahn, who also goes by the name Azzam al-Amriki, said al-Qaida would not negotiate on its demands," reports the Associated Press.

Who is the mysterious Adam Yehiye Gadahn?

The FBI lists Gadahn's aliases as Abu Suhayb Al-Amriki, Abu Suhayb, Yihya Majadin Adams, Adam Pearlman, and Yayah.

Adam Pearlman is his real name and his grandfather is none other than the late Carl K. Pearlman; a prominent Jewish urologist in Orange County. Carl was also a member of the board of directors of the Anti-Defamation League, which was caught spying on Americans for Israel in 1993. Mike Rivero has the scoop at WhatReallyHappened.com .

Israel's Mossad intelligence agency was caught in 2002 creating a phony Al-Qaeda group to justify attacks on Palestinians.

Pearlman has a knack of releasing his tapes at the most politically opportune time for Bush, having first burst onto the scene shortly before the 2004 presidential election and then again right after Katrina when the President's approval rating was tanking fast.

Even more mainstream publications, like the Los Angeles City Beat , have dismissed Pearlman before as nothing more than "cartoonish propaganda."

Pearlman had a hippy upbringing, a brief but intense flirtation with death metal and before a sudden transformation, once referred to Muslims as “bloodthirsty, barbaric terrorists.” Pearlman was a hardcore Jewish Zionist and wrote essays and screeds bashing the Muslim faith. He even got into fights at mosques and beat up Muslim worshippers.

Pearlman, the hardcore Jewish Zionist who trashed Muslims and beat them up, grows a beard and suddenly becomes an "Al-Qaeda spokesman" - nothing suspicious here, move along!

Pearlman's personal history
and the highly suspicious nature in which he suddenly professed his conversion to Islam in a single Internet posting and later appeared on the scene as a spokesman for "Al-Qaeda" are all the ingredients needed to draw the conclusion that Pearlman is working as a double agent and most likely for Mossad.

The Pearlman tape was once again obtained by the IntelCenter group, a U.S. government contractor, and it's head Ben Venzke has given the tape credence in media interviews concerning the story.

In our previous groundbreaking expose , we unveiled the ties between Intelcenter, a group that regularly 'obtains' Al-Qaeda tapes and the Pentagon. Intelcenter is an offshoot of IDEFENSE, which was staffed by a senior military psy-op intelligence officer Jim Melnick, who has worked directly for Donald Rumsfeld.

Intelcenter were behind the October 2006 release of the "laughing hijackers" tape that showed Mohammad Atta and Ziad Jarrah allegedly attending a 2000 Al-Qaeda meeting and reading their last will and testament.

Segments of the video that were interspersed with footage of the "laughing hijackers," Jarrah and Atta, showing Bin Laden giving a speech to an audience in Afghanistan on January 8 2000, were culled from what terror experts described as surveillance footage taken by a "security agency."

News reports at the time contained the admission that the U.S. government had been in possession of the footage since 2002, while others said it was found when the United States invaded Afghanistan in 2001, and yet it was still bizarrely reported that the tape, bearing all the hallmarks of having been filmed and edited by undercover US intelligence and having admittedly been in US possession for five years, was released over the weekend of September 31/October 1 by Al-Qaeda.

The video also contained segments that were first broadcast in a British documentary called The Road to Guantanamo , which was originally aired in March 2006. The context of the corresponding scene in the dramatized documentary featured U.S. interrogators attempting to coerce Gitmo detainees into confessing Al-Qaeda membership by showing them fake videos where their likeness had been computer generated to appear as if they were in attendance during Bin Laden's January 8 2000 speech.

The monster in the closet is once again being waved in front of the American people's faces in order to quell bubbling national resentment about the ongoing carnage in Iraq and the fact that May was the deadliest month in terms of our boys returning home in flag-draped caskets.

Meanwhile, President Bush has authorized the CIA to bankroll and arm Jundullah, a Sunni Al-Qaeda organization , to attack Iran in order to destabilize Ahmadinejad's government.

While Bush grandstands in his Rose Garden speech about how Al-Qaeda wants to kill our children and as Mossad agent Pearlman rants on a video tape about a new 9/11, the only real Al-Qaeda are being equipped, funded and trained by our own government to kill innocent civilians in the Middle East in order to pave the way for the next chapter of Neo-Con blood-letting - while crude propaganda tapes are foisted on us at home in an effort to hoodwink us into supporting it all.

Bush begins push for immigration plan

He accuses rivals of criticizing bill before reading it
sfgate

President Bush cranked up his campaign for immigration reform Tuesday, accusing detractors of unfairly picking apart a compromise bill and of denouncing the legislation without reading it.

The president used his most forceful language yet in support of the Senate bill, which would establish a new point system for awarding green cards and offer legal status to many illegal workers already in the country.

"The first step to comprehensive reform must be to enforce immigration laws at the borders and at work sites across America. And this is what this bill does," Bush said at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in Glynco. "For the skeptics who say that we're not concerned about border security or workplace enforcement, they need to read the bill."

Bush accused conservative opponents of the bill of engaging in "empty political rhetoric."

"I know there are some people out there hollering and saying, 'Kick them out.' That is simply unrealistic. It won't work," the president said. "If you want to scare the American people, what you say is, the bill is an amnesty bill. It's not an amnesty bill. That's empty political rhetoric, trying to frighten our fellow citizens."

Under the deal struck this month between the White House and a bipartisan group of senators, workers seeking legal status would need to pay fines and back taxes and eventually demonstrate proficiency in English.

Border security also would need to be improved before other parts of the immigration package -- including a temporary worker program and legal status for some workers who are currently illegal -- can take effect.

One reason Bush chose to speak to law enforcement trainees at this federal site about 60 miles south of Savannah was to underscore his commitment to improved border controls. The bill would increase the number of border agents to 20,000, add hundreds of miles of fencing and vehicle barriers, and build 105 more surveillance towers.

"A lot of Americans are skeptical about immigration reform primarily because they don't think the government can fix the problems," Bush said. "And my answer to the skeptics is ... give us a chance to fix this problem. Don't try to kill this bill before it gets moving."

White House officials declined to say whether the president has made progress in persuading members of his own party to support the deal.

"I'm not going to get into nose counting right now," said White House spokesman Tony Snow. "We have been inviting folks to take a look. And I think the more they hear, the more they're going to be inclined to support it."

The immigration package survived several legislative challenges last week, its first on the floor of the Senate. The administration and other supporters say they are optimistic that the bill will be passed in the Senate with its central compromise intact: legal status for many of those already in the country in return for shifting the emphasis in the future away from family unification toward a more merit-based system.

The bill's fate in the House is less certain.

Last year, a comprehensive immigration reform package squeaked past the Senate only to die in the House. This year, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco, has said the White House needs to deliver 70 Republican votes or the bill will not make it to the president's desk.

"I appreciate the Republicans and Democrats in the United States Senate ... who put politics aside and put courage first to work on a comprehensive bill," Bush said. "It takes a lot of courage in the face of some of the criticism in the political world to do what's right, not what's comfortable. And what's right is to fix this system now before it's too late."

U.S. Wants Defense Cooperation as Russia Tests Weapon

May 30 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. wants cooperation with Russia on missile programs, the State Department said, as the government in Moscow announced it successfully tested a weapon that it claims is immune to all defense shields.

The U.S. can't confirm the Russian report, State Department deputy spokesman Tom Casey said a briefing in Washington yesterday. ``We would hope that the Russians would want to cooperate with us on the issue of missile defense,'' he said.

A strategic cruise missile was fired yesterday from a mobile ground-based system in the southern Astrakhan region near the Caspian Sea, Interfax cited Russian First Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov as saying.

Tensions have risen between the U.S. and Russia over a U.S. plan to base interceptor missiles in Poland and a radar station in the Czech Republic as part of a system defending against long-range missile attacks from countries such as Iran. Russian President Vladimir Putin said yesterday the U.S. action risked turning Europe into a ``powder keg.''

``Nothing we have proposed or planned is in any way, shape or form a threat to Russia's strategic capabilities and certainly shouldn't be viewed that way,'' Casey said, according to a State Department transcript.

The defense system involves only 10 interceptors and is ``designed to defend against a limited attack by a rogue nation, including a nation like Iran,'' he said. ``This is a threat that's there, not only for the United States and its European allies, but also for the Russians as well.''

Russian Defenses

The Russian test of a high precision missile shows the country has a new tactical and strategic system, Ivanov said, according to Interfax. Such missiles may be deployed in the defense program by 2009, he added.

The weapons are ``capable of overcoming all existing and future missile defense systems,'' he said. ``That is why, from the point of view of defense and security, Russians can look into the future without any worries.''

The U.S. deployment will spark a ``new spiral of the arms race,'' Putin said in Vienna last week. He dismissed American concerns that Iran could threaten the U.S. and Europe. Iranian missiles now have a maximum range of 1,100 miles (1,700 kilometers) and by 2012 they may have missiles with a range of 1,500 miles, too short to justify a missile shield, he said.

The dispute with the U.S. comes at a time of growing strains between Russia and seven eastern European countries that were once within the Soviet Union and are now members of the European Union.

Bush insider nominated to head World Bank

rte
The United States has nominated former trade representative and Deputy Secretary of State, Robert Zoellick, to become President of the World Bank, an international organisation designed to eliminate poverty.

Mr Zoellick will succeed Paul Wolfowitz, who steps down at the end of June following a scandal involving a pay deal for his partner.

Mr Zoellick has worked in various capacities for several US Presidents such as Ronald Reagan, George H Bush and George W Bush.
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His opposition to 'nation building' as a foreign policy put him at odds with neo-cons like Mr Wolfowitz.

However, Mr Wolfowitz and Mr Zoellick did co-sign a 1998 letter to then President Bill Clinton calling for the overthrow of Saddam Hussein.

They also served together in the informal group headed up by Condoleezza Rice known as the 'Vulcans' which advised George Bush on foreign policy during his first campaign.

Last year, Mr Zoellick stepped down from his job as Deputy Secretary of State to join the investment bank Goldman Sachs.

At the State Department, he tried to negotiate a peace deal in Darfur and worked to improve US relations with China.

From 2001 to 2005 he served as the US Trade Representative and was centrally involved in talks to lower tariffs and to bring China and Taiwan into the World Trade Organisation.

His name was mentioned early on as a replacement during the crisis which engulfed the World Bank.

The US traditionally nominates the head of the World Bank, however the bank's board must approve the appointment.

A formal announcement is expected today.