SAS agents wanted for questioning in connection with recent bombings: Where are these terrorists?
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Now that both Turkey and India have been hit with a series of bomb blasts, it’s worth remembering where some of these terrorists come from and who they work for.
In 2003 two SAS soldiers were freed from a jail in Basra by the British military after they were arrested by the Iraqi police for failing to “stop at an Iraqi police roadblock and subsequently open(ing) fire on the Iraqi police, killing one and wounding another.” The SAS agents did this while dressed in traditional Arab clothing. “In pursuit, the police surround(ed) and detain the drivers and (found) the vehicle packed with explosives.”
“That's right – two members of the British Armed forces disguised as Arab civilians killed a member of the Iraqi police while evading capture” in a civilian car that was filled with explosives. “When the people of Basra rightfully refused to turn the murderers over to the British government, per Coalition ‘mandate,’ they (the British) sent their own men in and released over 100 prisoners in the process.”
If this occurred anywhere else in the world, these two men would have been charged with terrorism, put on a one way flight to Guantanamo Bay, where they would have been tortured by Americans until they revealed the identity of their employers. All of that would have been unnecessary of course, since they were agent provocateurs working for the British government to destabilize the region.
This is not speculation, this incident has been well documented and it will remain a part of our history.
How many of these agent provocateurs the UK and US have unleashed on civilian populations around the world is anyone’s guess. Why they have done and continue to do such a thing can only be speculated upon. Again, the only ones who truly know the reasons are the governments of the United States and Britain.
So the next time we see a series of bomb blasts kill innocent civilians around the world we should remember where some of these terrorists come from and whom they work for.
In 2003 two SAS soldiers were freed from a jail in Basra by the British military after they were arrested by the Iraqi police for failing to “stop at an Iraqi police roadblock and subsequently open(ing) fire on the Iraqi police, killing one and wounding another.” The SAS agents did this while dressed in traditional Arab clothing. “In pursuit, the police surround(ed) and detain the drivers and (found) the vehicle packed with explosives.”
“That's right – two members of the British Armed forces disguised as Arab civilians killed a member of the Iraqi police while evading capture” in a civilian car that was filled with explosives. “When the people of Basra rightfully refused to turn the murderers over to the British government, per Coalition ‘mandate,’ they (the British) sent their own men in and released over 100 prisoners in the process.”
If this occurred anywhere else in the world, these two men would have been charged with terrorism, put on a one way flight to Guantanamo Bay, where they would have been tortured by Americans until they revealed the identity of their employers. All of that would have been unnecessary of course, since they were agent provocateurs working for the British government to destabilize the region.
This is not speculation, this incident has been well documented and it will remain a part of our history.
How many of these agent provocateurs the UK and US have unleashed on civilian populations around the world is anyone’s guess. Why they have done and continue to do such a thing can only be speculated upon. Again, the only ones who truly know the reasons are the governments of the United States and Britain.
So the next time we see a series of bomb blasts kill innocent civilians around the world we should remember where some of these terrorists come from and whom they work for.
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