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Monday, August 30, 2010

Religion of Peace Caught Again Looking For Another Shot At Mass Murder

U.S. authorities requested Dutch police arrest two men, Ahmed Mohammad Nasser al Soofi and traveling partner Hezem al Murisi, who had traveled from Chicago to Amsterdam in what has been termed an apparent dry run.
"Airport security screeners in Birmingham, Alabama first stopped al Soofi and referred him to additional screening because of what officials said was his "bulky clothing."

Not that there's anything wrong with that.
In addition, officials said, al Soofi was found to be carrying $7,000 in cash, and a check of his luggage found a cell phone taped to a Pepto-Bismol bottle, three cell phones taped together, several watches taped together, a box cutter and three large knives.

I wonder if it was one of those Cordoba House, Presidential Seal box cutters?




Those are the really nice ones, which you can only get through our friends at Cordoba House.


Would this all be a part of what Imam Feisal Abdul Raul calls his muslim cross-cultural dialogue?

Worrisome? Come, come. We have to be broad minded. It turns out that though the TSA found the baggage contents to be curious, it was not so much so that they felt they should detain him:
"Officials said there was no indication of explosives and he and his luggage were cleared for the flight from Birmingham to Chicago O'Hare."

Just as an aside, if the TSA finds stuff like this on a flight that I am booked on, let one of them take my seat and I'll take the next flight out.
Once in Chicago, officials say they learned al Soofi checked his luggage on a flight to Washington's Dulles airport for connections on flights to Dubai and then Yemen, even though he did not board the flight himself. Instead, al Soofi was joined by the second man, Al Murisi, and boarded the United flight from Chicago to Amsterdam.

Now that might rouse the suspisions of even our TSA screeners.

What do you think, were Ahmed Mohammad and Hezem thinking about a little of this?


When Customs and Border officials learned al Soofi was not on the flight from Dulles to Dubai, the plane was ordered to return to the gate so his luggage could be removed. Officials said additional screening found no evidence of explosives.

Well, I'm sure Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, the man behind that great islamic outreach effort The Ground Zero Victory Super-Mosque (GZVSM), will find that this is just another example of rampant American intolerance and hatred against the disciples of Islam.

UPDATE 8/31/10

Newsweek has weighed in in their usual penetrating fashion:
"They were both arrested apparently because they were booked on the same flight at about the same time."

This after earlier noting:
"A statement by Dutch authorities confirmed key details, describing the suspicious items this way: “Mobile phones were found taped, one phone was taped to a plastic bottle. These phones were seized in the US [and] stayed there.” The statement said, “Luggage of the flight to Amsterdam was searched, but nothing suspicious was found.”

So, we are getting ready to say that these men were simply misunderstood. They were just travelers who had lsot there way. Listen, who doesn't travel with seven thousand dollars cash on them? And I don't know about you, but when I travel international, I often bring along four cell phones. I like to tape three of them together, to make them easier to find later. The fourth I will tape to my Peptobismal. That way, if I can't find it in my bag, I just dial that number and go to where I here the ring. Oh, and I like to bring along a few clocks, and tape them together. You can loose clocks so easily when you travel internationally!

The Newsweek crowd is a dangerous bunch to be trusting the news to.

2 comments:

  1. I don't know, Jim. I'm getting the vibe here that the system worked as it was intended. They were on to them from the moment they changed their tickets--maybe even before. The scanners saw the suspicious materials in their checked bags. I'm guessing they used handheld chemical testers to determine that no explosive materials or binaries were present. They let this play out to make sure they could grab up everyone involved. Maybe even letting it play out overseas--after getting teams in place. My guess is that some government lawyer had a conniption fit when they were dotting the "i's" and crossing the "t's" with warrants. I can imagine the conversation "Are YOU crazy? Putting passenger lives in danger!" No, No one is in danger--we've confirmed that no explosives are present--no residue on their clothing or baggage. The box cutters are in checked luggage. "Are you crazy? The Press will have a field day-- putting people in danger!!!" No, you don't understand....

    I personally would like the whole thing to play out and for everyone involved to get what they deserve--including foreign funders and contacts.
    They also exposed the airlines violating policy by separating passengers and luggage.

    The villain here? The people that stopped the operation prematurely. No passenger was in danger. The bad guys were always under close watch. The more bad guys grabbed up the safer we all are. We need people with the intestinal fortitude to see things through.

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  2. I would love to be wrong on this and discover that the TSA acted intelligently and kept the passengers safe, if not apprised. I'd still want one of them to trade out seats with me.

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