Author Topic: Revealed: How Obama SET FREE the merciless terrorist warlord now leading the ISIS horde blazing a trail of destruction through Iraq  (Read 876 times)

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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2657231/Revealed-Obama-RELEASED-warlord-head-ISIS-extremist-army-five-years-ago.html

Revealed: How Obama SET FREE the merciless terrorist warlord now leading the ISIS horde blazing a trail of destruction through Iraq

    WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT
    The U.S. once had Islamic State of Iraq and al-Shams (ISIS) leader Abu Bakr al Baghdadi in custody at a detention facility in Iraq, it was revealed Friday
    Al Baghdadi was among the prisoners released in 2009 from the U.S.'s now-closed Camp Bucca near Umm Qasr in Iraq
    It is unclear why the U.S. let the merciless al Qaeda leader slip away
    Al Baghadadi and his troops took the Iraqi cities of Fallujah and Ramadi earlier this year and conquered Tikrit and Mosul within the last several days
    They are now bearing down on Baghdad, burning down everything that stands in their way and carrying out executions on Iraqi civilians, soldiers and police officers
    ISIS posted an image today of an officer's decapitated head tweeted with sickening message: 'This is our ball. It's made of skin #WorldCup'

By Francesca Chambers

Published: 10:55 EST, 13 June 2014 | Updated: 14:20 EST, 13 June 2014



The United States once had Islamic State of Iraq and al-Shams (ISIS) leader Abu Bakr al Baghdadi in custody at a detention facility in Iraq, but president Barack Obama let him go, it was revealed on Friday.

Al Baghdadi was among the prisoners released in 2009 from the U.S.'s now-closed Camp Bucca near Umm Qasr in Iraq.

But now five years later he is leading the army of ruthless extremists bearing down on Baghdad who want to turn the country into an Islamist state by blazing a bloody trail through towns and cities, executing Iraqi soldiers, beheading police officers and gunning down innocent civilians.

continued..
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Online mystery-ak

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My MP son was stationed at Bucca and remembers this animal...was astounded when he was released...he was the worst of the worst..
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Offline GourmetDan

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My MP son was stationed at Bucca and remembers this animal...was astounded when he was released...he was the worst of the worst..

If an enemy did what Bambi has done to this country, we would have gone to war over it...


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Offline alicewonders

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My MP son was stationed at Bucca and remembers this animal...was astounded when he was released...he was the worst of the worst..

It almost looks like that was done to help them......heck!  It sure as HELL looks like it was done to help - the enemy!

 :nometalk:
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Offline flowers

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Not to mention ISIS is driving around in US military tanks, Toyotas has full on military gear, courtesy   of Obama as well.
« Last Edit: August 29, 2014, 06:26:47 pm by flowers »


Offline Right_in_Virginia

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Quote
Al Baghdadi was among the prisoners released in 2009 from the U.S.'s now-closed Camp Bucca near Umm Qasr in Iraq
It is unclear why the U.S. let the merciless al Qaeda leader slip away

Is no one  interested in finding an answer to this?   :#@$%:

Offline flowers

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Is no one  interested in finding an answer to this?   :#@$%:
I think we have the answer already don't we? Obie/Valjar are pleased with ISIS.


Offline alicewonders

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I think we have the answer already don't we? Obie/Valjar are pleased with ISIS.

It really is crystal clear, isn't it?  How much Obama dust do you have to have in your eyes to not see it? 
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Offline massadvj

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Is no one  interested in finding an answer to this?   :#@$%:

Those of you who have been around here for a while know that I am no conspiracy nut.  But this whole ISIS thing has me thinking.  What do Benghazi, the release of large numbers of prisoners from Guantanamo, the fact that ISIS is "well funded" and now this all have in common?  They lead to the conclusion that ISIS is an organization created, or at least enabled, by our own intelligence agencies for the purpose of defeating Syria and marginalizing Iran.

The thinking probably went something like this: we have all these nutcases around the world, and they are brutal and efficient fighters.  Why not set them up in a place where they damage our adversaries and advance American policy, instead of trying to track them down in remote regions controlled by governments that coddle them?  And so, with the help of funding from the Arab world, and with the full complicity of the GOP leadership in congress, we funded them and armed them.  The intelligence services in both the USA and Europe, who had infiltrated the most radical mosques, encouraged the worst actors to go to Syria and make jihad.

For a while, it looked like a great plan as Assad was brought to the brink of defeat.  What was not foreseen was how successful ISIS would become.  Having taken over vast swaths of Syrian land, and faced with well-prepared military resistance on its western front, ISIS moved east and took over the softer targets in Iraq, recruiting Sunnis in the Iraqi army to defect, and killing those that didn't.  Then they went after the Kurds and Shia.  And now here we are.

Fairy tale?  Maybe so, but what other explanation fits the facts we currently know: (1) no one from either party will reveal why Stevens was in a CIA safe house in Libya meeting with the Turkish ambassador and Libyan bad guys; (2) No one will explain why known terrorists among Guantanamo prisoners were systematically released in the last few years; (3) ISIS is reportedly "well funded" according to media reports, but no one seems to know where the money comes from; (4) Obama has "no strategy yet" to deal with ISIS.

I think Dr. Frankenstein is still perplexed that his monster has turned, and is trying to figure out how to put the genie back in the bottle.



Offline mountaineer

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Thank goodness Lurch is on the case.
Quote
'Stamp Out This Disease': Kerry Calls on the World to Help Defeat ISIS

Secretary of State John Kerry is calling for a "much fuller response" to fight against brutal Islamist militants in Iraq, and suggested that "airstrikes alone won't defeat this enemy." Kerry — in an op-ed published in The New York Times on Friday — wrote that the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) isn't satisfied wreaking havoc in Syria and Iraq, and "poses a threat well beyond that region" that could include strikes in the U.S. as well as "anywhere they could manage to travel undetected."

While U.S. airstrikes have "shifted the momentum of the fight" in Iraq, Kerry said, a broad coalition of countries must be formed, with each one playing a unique part in the fight against ISIS. "In this battle, there is a role for almost every country," Kerry wrote. "No decent country can support the horrors perpetrated by ISIS, and no civilized country should shirk its responsibility to help stamp out this disease," he added.

Kerry said that he and Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel will meet with European allies in the coming week to appeal to "the countries that are most directly threatened" for support, and work to enlist a wider swath of assistance from other countries in September. "Extremists are defeated only when responsible nations and their peoples unite to oppose them," Kerry wrote.
NBC News

So airstrikes alone won't "wipe out" ISIS, but having no strategy at all - and therefore doing nothing - are a good first step, I suppose.  **nononono*
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Offline mountaineer

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Effin's op-ed in the White House Times, er, I mean the New York Times:

IN a polarized region and a complicated world, the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria presents a unifying threat to a broad array of countries, including the United States. What’s needed to confront its nihilistic vision and genocidal agenda is a global coalition using political, humanitarian, economic, law enforcement and intelligence tools to support military force.

In addition to its beheadings, crucifixions and other acts of sheer evil, which have killed thousands of innocents in Syria, Iraq and Lebanon, including Sunni Muslims whose faith it purports to represent, ISIS (which the United States government calls ISIL, or the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant) poses a threat well beyond the region.

Continue reading the main story

Related in Opinion





Op-Ed Contributors: John McCain and Lindsey Graham: Confront ISIS NowAUG. 29, 2014


ISIS has its origins in what was once known as Al Qaeda in Iraq, which has over a decade of experience in extremist violence. The group has amassed a hardened fighting force of committed jihadists with global ambitions, exploiting the conflict in Syria and sectarian tensions in Iraq. Its leaders have repeatedly threatened the United States, and in May an ISIS-associated terrorist shot and killed three people at the Jewish Museum in Brussels. (A fourth victim died 13 days later.) ISIS’ cadre of foreign fighters are a rising threat not just in the region, but anywhere they could manage to travel undetected — including to America.

There is evidence that these extremists, if left unchecked, will not be satisfied at stopping with Syria and Iraq. They are larger and better funded in this new incarnation, using pirated oil, kidnapping and extortion to finance operations in Syria and Iraq. They are equipped with sophisticated heavy weapons looted from the battlefield. They have already demonstrated the ability to seize and hold more territory than any other terrorist organization, in a strategic region that borders Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey and is perilously close to Israel.

ISIS fighters have exhibited repulsive savagery and cruelty. Even as they butcher Shiite Muslims and Christians in their effort to touch off a broader ethnic and sectarian conflict, they pursue a calculated strategy of killing fellow Sunni Muslims to gain and hold territory. The beheading of an American journalist, James Foley, has shocked the conscience of the world.

With a united response led by the United States and the broadest possible coalition of nations, the cancer of ISIS will not be allowed to spread to other countries. The world can confront this scourge, and ultimately defeat it. ISIS is odious, but not omnipotent. We have proof already in northern Iraq, where United States airstrikes have shifted the momentum of the fight, providing space for Iraqi and Kurdish forces to go on the offensive. With our support, Iraqi leaders are coming together to form a new, inclusive government that is essential to isolating ISIS and securing the support of all of Iraq’s communities.

Airstrikes alone won’t defeat this enemy. A much fuller response is demanded from the world. We need to support Iraqi forces and the moderate Syrian opposition, who are facing ISIS on the front lines. We need to disrupt and degrade ISIS’ capabilities and counter its extremist message in the media. And we need to strengthen our own defenses and cooperation in protecting our people.

Continue reading the main story Continue reading the main story

Continue reading the main story

Next week, on the sidelines of the NATO summit meeting in Wales, Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel and I will meet with our counterparts from our European allies. The goal is to enlist the broadest possible assistance. Following the meeting, Mr. Hagel and I plan to travel to the Middle East to develop more support for the coalition among the countries that are most directly threatened.

The United States will hold the presidency of the United Nations Security Council in September, and we will use that opportunity to continue to build a broad coalition and highlight the danger posed by foreign terrorist fighters, including those who have joined ISIS. During the General Assembly session, President Obama will lead a summit meeting of the Security Council to put forward a plan to deal with this collective threat.

Continue reading the main story

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In this battle, there is a role for almost every country. Some will provide military assistance, direct and indirect. Some will provide desperately needed humanitarian assistance for the millions who have been displaced and victimized across the region. Others will help restore not just shattered economies but broken trust among neighbors. This effort is underway in Iraq, where other countries have joined us in providing humanitarian aid, military assistance and support for an inclusive government.

Already our efforts have brought dozens of nations to this cause. Certainly there are different interests at play. But no decent country can support the horrors perpetrated by ISIS, and no civilized country should shirk its responsibility to help stamp out this disease.
Continue reading the main story 
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Comments

ISIS’ abhorrent tactics are uniting and rallying neighbors with traditionally conflicting interests to support Iraq’s new government. And over time, this coalition can begin to address the underlying factors that fuel ISIS and other terrorist organizations with like-minded agendas.

Coalition building is hard work, but it is the best way to tackle a common enemy. When Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990, the first President George Bush and Secretary of State James A. Baker III did not act alone or in haste. They methodically assembled a coalition of countries whose concerted action brought a quick victory.

Extremists are defeated only when responsible nations and their peoples unite to oppose them.


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Offline alicewonders

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Those of you who have been around here for a while know that I am no conspiracy nut.  But this whole ISIS thing has me thinking.  What do Benghazi, the release of large numbers of prisoners from Guantanamo, the fact that ISIS is "well funded" and now this all have in common?  They lead to the conclusion that ISIS is an organization created, or at least enabled, by our own intelligence agencies for the purpose of defeating Syria and marginalizing Iran.

The thinking probably went something like this: we have all these nutcases around the world, and they are brutal and efficient fighters.  Why not set them up in a place where they damage our adversaries and advance American policy, instead of trying to track them down in remote regions controlled by governments that coddle them?  And so, with the help of funding from the Arab world, and with the full complicity of the GOP leadership in congress, we funded them and armed them.  The intelligence services in both the USA and Europe, who had infiltrated the most radical mosques, encouraged the worst actors to go to Syria and make jihad.

For a while, it looked like a great plan as Assad was brought to the brink of defeat.  What was not foreseen was how successful ISIS would become.  Having taken over vast swaths of Syrian land, and faced with well-prepared military resistance on its western front, ISIS moved east and took over the softer targets in Iraq, recruiting Sunnis in the Iraqi army to defect, and killing those that didn't.  Then they went after the Kurds and Shia.  And now here we are.

Fairy tale?  Maybe so, but what other explanation fits the facts we currently know: (1) no one from either party will reveal why Stevens was in a CIA safe house in Libya meeting with the Turkish ambassador and Libyan bad guys; (2) No one will explain why known terrorists among Guantanamo prisoners were systematically released in the last few years; (3) ISIS is reportedly "well funded" according to media reports, but no one seems to know where the money comes from; (4) Obama has "no strategy yet" to deal with ISIS.

I think Dr. Frankenstein is still perplexed that his monster has turned, and is trying to figure out how to put the genie back in the bottle.



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We told you Trump would win - bigly!

Offline flowers

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Those of you who have been around here for a while know that I am no conspiracy nut.  But this whole ISIS thing has me thinking.  What do Benghazi, the release of large numbers of prisoners from Guantanamo, the fact that ISIS is "well funded" and now this all have in common?  They lead to the conclusion that ISIS is an organization created, or at least enabled, by our own intelligence agencies for the purpose of defeating Syria and marginalizing Iran.

The thinking probably went something like this: we have all these nutcases around the world, and they are brutal and efficient fighters.  Why not set them up in a place where they damage our adversaries and advance American policy, instead of trying to track them down in remote regions controlled by governments that coddle them?  And so, with the help of funding from the Arab world, and with the full complicity of the GOP leadership in congress, we funded them and armed them.  The intelligence services in both the USA and Europe, who had infiltrated the most radical mosques, encouraged the worst actors to go to Syria and make jihad.

For a while, it looked like a great plan as Assad was brought to the brink of defeat.  What was not foreseen was how successful ISIS would become.  Having taken over vast swaths of Syrian land, and faced with well-prepared military resistance on its western front, ISIS moved east and took over the softer targets in Iraq, recruiting Sunnis in the Iraqi army to defect, and killing those that didn't.  Then they went after the Kurds and Shia.  And now here we are.

Fairy tale?  Maybe so, but what other explanation fits the facts we currently know: (1) no one from either party will reveal why Stevens was in a CIA safe house in Libya meeting with the Turkish ambassador and Libyan bad guys; (2) No one will explain why known terrorists among Guantanamo prisoners were systematically released in the last few years; (3) ISIS is reportedly "well funded" according to media reports, but no one seems to know where the money comes from; (4) Obama has "no strategy yet" to deal with ISIS.

I think Dr. Frankenstein is still perplexed that his monster has turned, and is trying to figure out how to put the genie back in the bottle.

The story is they got their money from that bank in Mosul. Oh another thing obie gave them all their high end weapons they are using now by not helping Iraq. They had to have known Iraq would fall and ISIS would get all the American tanks, toyotas etc.
« Last Edit: August 30, 2014, 04:19:36 pm by flowers »


Offline alicewonders

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The story is they got their money from that bank in Mosul. Oh another thing obie gave them all their high end weapons they are using now by not helping Iraq. They had to have known Iraq would fall and ISIS would get all the American tanks, toyotas etc.

You know, no one's yet to explain where and WHO withdrew all that money in a single day when John McCain suspended his campaign and George Bush said he would have to destroy our economy to save it.  It was, like - billions of dollars, wasn't it?
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Offline EC

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The funding thing is complex.

They get funding from Saudi, the USA, Europe. They make an absolute fortune from selling antiquities to collectors. They flat out steal money - Iraq is a bit like India in that the women carry the family wealth on their persons (in gold) at all times, and the first place they hit after the police station is the bank.
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Offline alicewonders

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The funding thing is complex.

They get funding from Saudi, the USA, Europe. They make an absolute fortune from selling antiquities to collectors. They flat out steal money - Iraq is a bit like India in that the women carry the family wealth on their persons (in gold) at all times, and the first place they hit after the police station is the bank.

Coming soon to a town near us if we don't stop them. 
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Offline flowers

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You know, no one's yet to explain where and WHO withdrew all that money in a single day when John McCain suspended his campaign and George Bush said he would have to destroy our economy to save it.  It was, like - billions of dollars, wasn't it?
Yes many billions.