Mumbai is a Globalist Inside Job!
The stuff that the mainstream media refuses to see.
The motives behind the act. The ones who blame are collusively instigating the false flag terror themselves.
The right hand of empire blames terror and the left hand is the terror.
The entire body of global elite politics implements laws that increase it's power.
The earners suffer loss of marketshare, the savers suffer loss of buying power, The poor suffer starvation.
And then come to find out that there weren't any terrorists. It was all a contrived event using dupes, idiots, blind zealots as pawns.
Nobody of central importance asks what is instigating the terror from behind the scenes... where are the origin of money flows... Who benefits? Who has their hand in the cookie jar. The investigation goes nowhere because the investigators are the instigators.
- Who did sells state secrets? - The CIA (those charged with keeping state secrets)
- Who brings in the drugs? - The DEA (Those charged with enforcing the war on drugs)
- Who is instigates false flag terrorism? - The government black op military forces (those charged with stopping real terrorism)
- Who crashes the economy? The financial institutions (those charged with keeping the economy running smoothly)
The ones closest to temptation are the ones most tempted to use their power for evil and it was always that way.
Why can't this generation simply accept what the Italians have always known since the first Caesar? "Qui Bono?" Who benefits? Always ask who benefits and wo is most likely to carry out an attack. This is the short list for any detective. Begin with the spouse, right. Begin close to home. Begin with those who are closest, who think they can get away with murder. These are the first suspects.
I am sorry for India, Iraq, Afghanistan... these people did nothing and they are used as sacrificial pawns by the very people pretending to save them... it has always been that way. The exception to tha t rule is rare.
Anyway, that is how I see things from here based on history.
Time will probably tell a lot more but people are already fixed in their belief that the crimes are external to their government. History shows that it is usually an insider instigation by the very people trained to do what is being done.
Cheers,
Tate
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Tarek Fatah: Look to Pakistan power struggle for roots of Mumbai murders
Posted: November 27, 2008, 4:37 PM by Kelly McParland
Tarek Fatah, Ful Comment
The terrorist mayhem in Mumbai had barely subsided when I received the first e-mail suggesting the attacks had been carried out by agents of Mossad — Israel's foreign intelligence agency — masquerading as Islamic terrorists to give Muslims a bad name.
Alex James of Toronto forwarded a news item claiming, "India's Internal Security Police are now holding and questioning an identified Israeli Mossad agent, who had been in communication with some of the alleged terrorists in India two weeks before the black-op attacks took place."
As ridiculous as this may sound, chances are that countless Muslims are deluding themselves into believing that it is not their co-religionists who are responsible for the savagery let loose on India, but some hidden U.S.-Zionist conspiracy against Islam.
If at all there was an intelligence agency whose fingerprints can be spotted at the crime scene, it appears to be Islamist rogue elements from Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence (ISI), which is hell-bent on disrupting India's (recently improving) relations with neighbouring Pakistan.
For two decades, the ISI has been the de-facto government in Pakistan, toppling regimes, aiding the Taliban, giving cover to al-Qaeda fugitives and running a business empire worth billions of dollars.
In July, the new democratically elected government in Islamabad, led by Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani, attempted to bring the ISI under civilian control. Under threat of a military coup, it had to perform a humiliating about-face within 24 hours.
Then last Sunday, Pakistan's Foreign Minister announced that the political wing of the ISI, which is responsible for rigging elections and blackmailing politicians, had been disbanded, saying, "The ISI is a precious national institution and wants to focus on counterterrorism activities."
It seems the Foreign Minister had spoken too soon. Within hours of his announcement, the BBC reported that an unnamed senior security official had contradicted the statement.
While this tussle for control of the country's intelligence network was going on behind the scenes, on Tuesday, the president of Pakistan, Asif Zardari, threw a bombshell that caught the Pakistan military establishment off-guard. Speaking to an Indian TV audience via a satellite link, President Zardari announced a strategic shift in Pakistan's military doctrine. He told a cheering Indian audience that Pakistan had adopted a "no first-strike" nuclear policy.
This apparently did not go down well within Pakistan's military establishment, which has ruled the country for decades using the Indian bogeyman to justify the maintenance of a huge military machine on a permanent war footing.
Immediately, military commentators denounced Zardari, with one saying he believed the President was "not fully informed or completely aware of" Pakistan's policy on the issue.
To further alarm Pakistan's own military-industrial complex, Zardari borrowed a quote from his late wife, Benazir Bhutto, who once said that there's a "little bit of India in every Pakistani and a little bit of Pakistan" in every Indian.
"I do not know whether it is the Indian or the Pakistani in me that is talking to you today," Zardari said, amid applause from his high-profile audience, which included diplomats, politicians and industrialists.
While most Pakistanis welcomed the new air of peace and friendship between Indian and Pakistan, the country's religious right was upset.
Just a month ago, the founder of one of Pakistan's most feared armed Islamist groups had accused Zardari of being too dovish toward India, and criticized him for referring to militants in Indian-held Kashmir as "terrorists.
Then, this week, the so-called Deccan Mujahideen struck against India with the clear aim of triggering a Hindu backlash against the country's minority Muslims — with the obvious attendant danger to Pakistan-India relations.
Most security commentators agree that the Deccan Mujahideen is merely a tag of convenience, and that behind this well-planned terror attack lies Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), a major militant group fighting in Indian Kashmir — the same group that has recently warned Zardari to desist from warming up to India.
Time will tell whether these Islamists succeed or whether the people of India — Hindus and Muslims alike — can see through this provocation and embrace the hand of friendship extended by President Zardari.
In the meantime, Muslims around the world will also have to decide whether to enter the 21st century and distance themselves from the doctrine of armed jihad, or embrace these murderous haters of joy and peace.
National Post
tarekfatah@rogers.com
Tarek Fatah is the author of Chasing a Mirage: The Tragic Illusion of an Islamic State (Wiley).
Photo: Indian commandos take positions outside "Nariman Bhavan", where the armed militants are believed to be holed up in Mumbai November 27, 2008. The building has mainly Jewish residents. REUTERS/Arko Datta