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Statement regarding the arrest of brother Younus Abdullah Muhammad

Note: This comes as no surprise and is especially in line with the clear US war on Islam, its scholars and the callers to Islam. This also exposes the munfiqeen in the Muslim world, in this case, the Moroccan authorities (slaves of the United States). Brother Younis has sincerely and terelessly worked on educating Muslims about the various tentacles by which the US is waging war on Islam.

Akhi Younis, may Allah grant you patience and staedfastness in this time of trial for you. You are on the road of illustrious Muslims who have preceded you.

We ask Allah Azzawajal to grant Younis and his family patience and perseverance. Muslims are encouraged to send words of encouragement and support to Younis and his family via the website (www.islampolicy.com)

A list of Moroccan embassies in all countries is available here (http://www.maec.gov.ma/en/missionsEN.asp?code=1 ). We urge you to please voice your disgust and their action.

Sunday June 5, 2011

 

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Brother Younus Abdullah Muhammad

Early on Friday morning brother Younus was arrested by Moroccan authorities, his currently being held and is awaiting extradition to the United States. His arrest comes in the long line of Muslims who have been imprisoned for speaking out against the United States. It is part and parcel of the US war on Islam. It is a war, being waged on two interlink fronts.

One front is the military front, where the US uses its ‘hard power’ it dominate, and coerce the Muslim world into conforming to its interest. We see this taking place in many of our lands, from Iraq to Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia and many other places.

The other front is the ideological front where the US tries to change the beliefs and perceptions of Muslims, indeed to change Islam itself. To this end the US attempts to snuffle out voices of dissent, voices of truth. Whilst at the same time promoting those voices of compromise, who for whatever reason are willing to cooperate in the distortion of the truth of Islam. All this amounts to nothing more than a programme of intimidation, a systematic attempt to silence Muslim dissent, but we will not be silenced. 

As for Younus when I last spoke to him I found him to be content with what Allah (swt) had decreed for him, pointing out that in Imam Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahab ‘3 Fundamental principles’ we are obligated to learn four matters. One is to acquire knowledge of the religion, the second is to implement the knowledge in our lives, the third is to call the people to the deen and the four to be patient in the face adversity and difficulty. So we pray that Allah (swt) pour upon him patience in this difficult and trying time and hasten his release.

 

Aafia Siddiqui Sentenced to 86 years

Cageprisoners rejects the guilty verdict and rejects the 86 sentence of incarceration. Evidence of her abduction, rendition and torment faced at the hands of the Pakistani and United States government, crushing to the prosecution case, was thrown out by the Judge and thus undermines the very premise of her trial.
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Cageprisoners
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23 September 2010
 
PRESS RELEASE: Aafia Siddiqui Sentenced, 86 years – Cageprisoners disgusted by the actions of the US and Pakistani governments
 
The case should have been thrown out of court, but it went ahead and she was found guilty. On the afternoon of Thursday, 23 September 2010, she has been sentenced to 86 years on five charges by Judge Richard Berman in a Manhattan courtroom.
 
Cageprisoners rejects the guilty verdict and rejects the 86 year sentence of incarceration. Evidence of her abduction, rendition and torture faced at the hands of the Pakistani and United States government, crushing to the prosecution case, was thrown out by the Judge and thus undermines the very premise of her trial.
 
Cageprisoners Director, Moazzam Begg, commented:
 
“I just returned from Pakistan where Cageprisoners were trying to make final diplomatic efforts to intervene on behalf of Aafia Siddiqui. The sentiment of the general public makes it clear that the entirety of Pakistan want her back in their country. This case had the opportunity for the Obama administration to show that it had some semblance of humanity in its foreign policy, and yet they once again have shown that they have no compassion and have no understanding of the repercussions of their actions in Pakistan.”
 
The dignity with which she faced the court only serves to highlight the gross injustice that has been carried out against her.
 
Cageprisoners will continue to fight for the release of Dr Aafia Siddiqui.
 
Media Reports:
 

 
 

U.S. 'secret war' expands globally as Special Operations forces take larger role

Source: Washington Post

June 4, 2010

Beneath its commitment to soft-spoken diplomacy and beyond the combat zones of Afghanistan and Iraq, the Obama administration has significantly expanded a largely secret U.S. war against al-Qaeda and other radical groups, according to senior military and administration officials.

Special Operations forces have grown both in number and budget, and are deployed in 75 countries, compared with about 60 at the beginning of last year. In addition to units that have spent years in the Philippines and Colombia, teams are operating in Yemen and elsewhere in the Middle East, Africa and Central Asia.

Commanders are developing plans for increasing the use of such forces in Somalia, where a Special Operations raid last year killed the alleged head of al-Qaeda in East Africa. Plans exist for preemptive or retaliatory strikes in numerous places around the world, meant to be put into action when a plot has been identified, or after an attack linked to a specific group.

The surge in Special Operations deployments, along with intensified CIA drone attacks in western Pakistan, is the other side of the national security doctrine of global engagement and domestic values President Obama released last week.

One advantage of using "secret" forces for such missions is that they rarely discuss their operations in public. For a Democratic president such as Obama, who is criticized from either side of the political spectrum for too much or too little aggression, the unacknowledged CIA drone attacks in Pakistan, along with unilateral U.S. raids in Somalia and joint operations in Yemen, provide politically useful tools.

Obama, one senior military official said, has allowed "things that the previous administration did not."

Read more...

Help your sister Dr Aafia!

Please read below for the final day's proceedings as well as information as to how you can help.

Today its Aafia. Tomorrow, Allah forbid, it could be you! Who will come to your aid?

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USA v Aafia Siddiqui

Cageprisoners Inside the Courtroom Coverage

by Petra Bartosiewicz

Feb 3, 2010, DAY 12, USA v SIDDIQUI

After a day and a half of deliberation, a 12-member jury found Siddiqui guilty today on charges that she tried to kill a team of U.S. soldiers and FBI agents in Afghanistan in 2008. The verdict was announced just after 2 p.m. in a packed courtroom. Siddiqui remained silent as each juror answered "yes" when asked if she was guilty on all counts. As the jury was ushered from the courtroom, Siddiqui spoke out, saying, "This is a verdict coming from Israel, not America," and then turned to the spectator gallery and said, "Your anger should be directed where it belongs. I can testify to this and I have proof."

Siddiqui now faces up to 50 years in prison on seven charges, including attempted murder, assault, and possession of a firearm while committing a violent crime.

Read more...

Sister Aafia Siddiqui's "Trial" - Day 4

Source: CagePrisoners

January 22, 2009 (DAY 4)

Testimony continued with a single witness called by the government. Carlo Rosati, a forensic expert in firearms and ballistics, formerly at the FBI and now a contractor working with the agency, described how he analyzed various materials taken from the crime scene at the Ghazni police station where the shooting took place on July 18, 2008. Rosati, who said he did not travel to Afghanistan or speak with any witnesses connected with the case, analyzed the gold curtain that divided the room, behind which Siddiqui was located just before the shooting. He did not find gun shot residue whose presence might have suggested a gun had been fired nearby. He was, however, able to link the bullet and shell casing found in the room in the Ghazni police station to the 9mm revolver that the chief warrant officer used to shoot Siddiqui.

Much of Rosati's testimony focused on the tests he conducted in an effort to find evidence of any bullets fired from the M-4 rifle Siddiqui allegedly grabbed from the warrant officer. He examined a bag of debris taken from a section of the wall where bullets from the rifle were thought to be lodged, and gave a detailed account of the various tests he performed. Despite these visual, microscopic and chemical tests, and despite inspecting photographs from the scene itself, Rosati was unable to say with any certainty that the section of the wall he examined had been damaged by bullets.

"You found no shell casings, no bullets, no bullet fragments, no evidence the gun was fired?" defense attorney Charles Swift asked.

"Correct," said Rosati.

"You examined the curtain and the debris and neither yielded evidence that a gun was fired in or in the proximity of the curtain?" Swift asked.

"Correct," said Rosati.

Immediately after that exchange, however, Rosati said he could not rule out that the gun was fired either.

"Does all of that mean to you that the weapon was not fired at the crime scene?" he was asked by Assistant U.S. Attorney David Roday.

"No," said Rosati.

"The bullet could have ricocheted or been deflected?" asked Rody.

"Yes," said Rosati.

As the trial opened this week with the government's case, prosecutors called three eyewitnesses to the shooting in Ghazni. But despite vivid testimony from each of these individuals--a U.S. Army captain, an FBI agent, and a former U.S. Army translator--we have not yet gotten a clear account of what unfolded at the Afghan police station on July 18. The testimony has, in fact, highlighted the sharp divergence of the accounts on certain points, though prosecutors have highlighted the fact that the eyewitness accounts, though perhaps imprecise, match up sufficiently to confirm the allegations against Siddiqui.

On the forensic side of the case, however, testimony from a number of experts this week has, in fact, underscored the difficulty of proving the case with any scientific certainty. The fact that the shooting occurred in a remote city in a war zone clearly made securing the crime scene in a timely manner difficult, if not impossible. Eyewitnesses described a chaotic confrontation that concluded as the U.S. team beat a hasty retreat with Siddiqui just after the incident, leaving the crime scene unattended. The events unfolded in a foreign country whose procedures for preserving evidence like bullets and shell casings are unknown. The individuals present during the shooting were mostly Afghan and U.S. soldiers who were in a combat mentality that did not lend itself to a detailed criminal investigation after the incident.

At the close of the proceedings today Judge Richard Berman addressed the question of security measures outside the courtroom. During opening statements on Tuesday, individuals were permitted to enter the courtroom freely, though space for the general public was limited to just six seats (everyone else watched the proceedings on a video link in an overflow courtroom on a separate floor). But by Wednesday, the second day of the trial, a metal detector was posted outside the courtroom and individuals were asked for photo identification and their names and addresses were logged by court security officers. The measure came even though all individuals entering the courthouse are required to pass through a security check at the main doors, and despite the fact that attendance at the trial had dropped sharply from the prior day dropped sharply. At the close of proceedings yesterday, day three, defense attorney Charles Swift protested the identification check, suggesting that it was unconstitutional and would preclude Siddiqui from receiving a free and fair trial. "The suggestion is that the gallery may be a threat," said Swift, calling the measure "highly prejudicial." During today's proceedings Swift said he would submit a written briefing on the matter to the judge. Berman said he had not specifically ordered the names and addresses of attendees to be noted, but that he had instead merely agreed to the addition of the metal detector as a standard screening measure. Berman suggested that the U.S. Marshals had interpreted this instruction to include identification checks.

Berman said that the trial is proceeding on schedule, which means defense attorneys will likely begin presenting their case at some point next week. What remains unknown is whether Siddiqui will testify in her own defense. In recent weeks she has insisted that she is boycotting the trial and does not recognize her defense attorneys, who she says she has repeatedly tried to dismiss. She was ejected from the courtroom earlier this week after speaking out. During subsequent proceedings she remained silent in the jury's presence, until Friday, when she spoke out again to say she is being prevented from taking the stand. "They want to take away my right to testify. I've asked for it," she said. "I am not an enemy. I didn't shoot anyone. I can bring peace with Afghanistan and the Taliban in one day, God willing." The judge told Siddiqui she has a right to testify but is not obliged to do so, and then had her escorted from the courtroom by the U.S. Marshals.

The trial continues on Monday Jan 25, with DAY 5, USA v. Siddiqui.

Petra Bartosiewicz is a freelance journalist who has written for numerous publications, including The Nation, Mother Jones, and Salon.com. Her forthcoming book on terrorism trials in the U.S., The Best Terrorists We Could Find, will be published by Nation Books early next year. You can find her investigation of  Aafia Siddiqui's case in the November 2009 issue of Harper's magazine (www.harpers.org) and at her website www.petrabart.com. She can be reached at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Sister Aafia Siddiqui's "Trial" - Day 3

Source: CagePrisoners

22/01/2010

January 21, 2009 (DAY 3)

Government prosecutors continued to present their case today, shifting their focus from the testimony of eyewitnesses to the Ghazni shooting, to how evidence at the scene was secured. The day's testimony was dominated by FBI Special Agent Gordon Hurley, who made three trips to Ghazni in July, August and October 2008 to secure evidence at the scene of the shooting and interview U.S. and Afghan witnesses. Assistant U.S. Attorney Jenna Dabbs showed jurors numerous photographs and a video of the room on the second floor of the Afghan police station where the shooting took place, and a photo of the cell where Siddiqui was held when she was first brought to the station on July 17. Hurley's first trip was relatively short, but he said he took statements from witnesses at the scene, including Captain Snyder and his translator Ahmad Gul (both of whom gave testimony on day one of this trial), Staff Sergeant Lamont Williams, FBI Special Agents Eric Negron and John Jefferson, and the chief warrant officer. He did not conduct interviews with any Afghans during that first visit. While in Ghazni in July, Hurley also made a preliminary investigation of the room where the shooting took place. He said that on this visit U.S. Army Captain John Kendall gave him custody of both the M-4 automatic rifle that prosecutors say Siddiqui used to fire at the U.S. team and the 9 mm revolver that the chief warrant officer used to shoot her. The jurors were invited to handle both weapons as they were passed around the jury box. Hurley estimated the M-4 weighed 7.5 pounds and possibly as much as 9 pounds with the various scopes that had been attached to it at the time of the shooting. He said he left the three sighting scopes with the army after Kendall told him they did not have replacement devices and needed them for their ongoing combat operations.

Hurley returned to Ghazni again in August 2008 to conduct further interviews with witnesses, including Afghan military, civilian and police officials, as well as U.S. soldiers. He wanted to establish an evidentiary "chain of custody" for the evidence seized at the time of the shooting, which included not just the weapons but also the documents and other materials Siddiqui was allegedly arrested with. Hurley estimated he and his partner interviewed as many as 30 individuals. He was looking for any additional eyewitnesses and for friends or relatives of Siddiqui. He went to the local bazaar in Ghazni and interviewed shopkeepers there. On Aug 25 during this trip he also returned to the Ghazni police compound to do a more thorough investigation of the crime scene, where he made a more extensive examination of the room, including the area where bullets from the gun Siddiqui allegedly fired were thought to be lodged. Despite several probes, including removing a chunk of the wall itself, they were unable to locate any bullets from the area. Hurley inspected the back area where Siddiqui was standing just before the shooting and found a "projectile," or portion of a bullet there.

On cross examination, defense attorney Dawn Cardi questioned why Hurley did not return to Ghazni sooner after his first visit to continue his investigation and in order, for example, to retrieve evidence like the curtain that divided the room. Hurley said it wasn't easy to move around Afghanistan and that he hadn't tasked anyone with retrieving the curtain because there was "no one to call." He said that he and his partner returned as soon as they could get permission but that they didn't ask for any special dispensation to get there faster. Cardi also questioned Hurley about the inconsistencies in the various statements of the witnesses and why he didn't do more to resolve them. "Eyewitnesses see things very differently," said Hurley. "You don't want to force people to make their statements match." He rejected the suggestion that he had not been skeptical enough in receiving the accounts from the U.S. personnel he interviewed. "We're supposed to be skeptics," he said.

One of the major discrepancies in the testimony so far has been the question of whether the warrant officer looked behind the curtain before the shooting. Hurley recalled that FBI Special Agent John Jefferson said the chief warrant officer had checked behind the curtain just before the shooting and given the "all clear." FBI Special Agent Eric Negron, he said, told him that he recalled the warrant officer "glanced behind the curtain and saw no one was there." But Hurley could not remember what the other witnesses he interviewed said. He also said he didn't recall speaking with FBI agents about a letter the Afghan intelligence officials supposedly asked them to sign to absolve them of responsibility for the shooting (see day 2 testimony from Special Agent John Jefferson).

Hurley later said that securing the evidence at the scene was a relatively low priority for the U.S. military in Ghazni Province at the time. "They were doing other stuff, right?" asked Dabbs. "Fighting a war," said Hurley.

Although attendance at the trial dropped sharply after the first day, security has increasingly tightened as the trial has progressed. A metal detector was installed outside the courtroom door on the second day to screen all individuals sitting in the public gallery. Jurors were told not to make any adverse inferences from the added security. Today jurors were also required to pass through the metal detector and security guards made detailed searches of all bags brought into the courtroom. Members of the general public for the past two days have also been required to show photo identifications and court security guards have noted the name and address of each individual. At the conclusion of today's proceedings, defense attorney Charles Swift made note of the identification requirement and said that it is not in keeping with Siddiqui's right to a free and open trial. The judge said he would look into it, though attendees at the trial said a member of the court security detail told them the measures were on the direct order of the judge.

Tomorrow Jan 22, DAY 4, USA v. Siddiqui.

Petra Bartosiewicz is a freelance journalist who has written for numerous publications, including The Nation, Mother Jones, and Salon.com. Her forthcoming book on terrorism trials in the U.S., The Best Terrorists We Could Find, will be published by Nation Books early next year. You can find her investigation of  Aafia Siddiqui's case in the November 2009 issue of Harper's magazine (www.harpers.org) and at her website www.petrabart.com. She can be reached at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

Sister Aafia Siddiqui's "Trial" - Day 2

Source: CagePrisoners

21/01/2010

This week the long awaited trial of Aafia Siddiqui began in a federal courtroom in Manhattan. Her case has been one of the most baffling in the annals of post-9/11 terrorism prosecutions. Siddiqui, as regular readers of this website know, is a 37-year-old, MIT-educated neuroscientist, who lived in the U.S. for ten years before mysteriously vanishing from Karachi, her hometown, in 2003, along with her three children, two of whom are American born. For five years her whereabouts remained unknown, while rumors swirled that she was an Al Qaeda operative, and that she had married Ammar al Baluchi, the nephew of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and one of the five accused 9/11 plotters expected to face trial in the U.S. In July 2008 she was picked up in Ghazni, Afghanistan on suspicion of being a suicide bomber. The following day, as a team of U.S. soldiers and FBI agents arrived to question her at the police station where she was being held, she allegedly managed to get hold of an M-4 automatic rifle belonging to one of the soldiers, and, according to prosecutors, she opened fire. She hit no one but was herself hit in the abdomen by return fire. What is known is that the U.S. considered Siddiqui to be someone connected to a number of high level terrorism suspects. They say she went on the run and remained underground during her missing years. But human rights groups have long held that Siddiqui is no extremist and believe she was illegally detained and interrogated by Pakistani intelligence at the behest of the U.S. She now faces charges of attempted murder. Her trial is expected to last two weeks.

Read more...

U.S. To Store $800 Mil in Emergency Gear in Israel

Source: Forward

January 10, 2010

The U.S. Army will double the value of emergency military equipment it stockpiles on Israeli soil, and Israel will be allowed to use the U.S. ordnance in the event of a military emergency, according to a report in Monday’s issue of the U.S. weekly Defense News.

The report, written by Barbara Opall-Rome, the magazine’s Israel correspondent, said that an agreement reached between Washington and Tel Aviv last month will bring the value of the military gear to $800 million.

This is the final phase of a process that began over a year ago to determine the type and amount of U.S. weapons and ammunition to be stored in Israel, part of an overarching American effort to stockpile weapons in areas in which its army may need to operate while allowing American allies to make use of the ordnance in emergencies.

The agreement was signed by Brig. Gen. Ofer Wolf, who heads the Israel Defense Forces’ technology and logistics branch, and Rear Adm. Andy Brown, the logistics director of U.S. Army European Command.

The United States began stockpiling $100 million in military equipment in Israel in 1990, 12 years after it first began storing weapons within the territory of key allies, starting with South Korea.

An American defense official told Defense News that the U.S.-Israel agreement reflects the Obama administration’s continued commitment to Israel’s security and the understanding that changes in U.S. economic conditions and inflation have limited the weapons available to Israel.

The deal allows Israel access to a wider spectrum of military ordnance, and the U.S. official said his government was considering which forms of military supplies would be added to stores in Israel. Missiles, armored vehicles, aerial ammunition and artillery ordnance are already stockpiled in the country.

The agreement is expected to aid Israel in its effort to bolster its weapons stockpiles for use in an emergency. Israel’s stores of aerial and artillery ammunition were depleted during the Second Lebanon War in 2006, nearly reaching levels the IDF considers dangerously low.

Focus on Internet Imams as "Al Qaeda Recruiters"

Source: New York Times

December 31, 2009

The apparent ties between the Nigerian man charged with plotting to blow up an airliner on Christmas Day and a radical American-born Yemeni imam have cast a spotlight on a world of charismatic clerics who wield their Internet celebrity to indoctrinate young Muslims with extremist ideology and recruit them for Al Qaeda, American officials and counterterrorism specialists said.

American military and law enforcement authorities said Thursday that the man accused in the bombing attempt, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, most likely had contacts with the cleric, Anwar al-Awlaki, whom investigators have also named as having exchanged e-mail messages with Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, an American Army psychiatrist charged with killing 13 people in a shooting rampage in November at Fort Hood, Tex.

Speaking in eloquent, often colloquial, English, Mr. Awlaki and other Internet imams from the Middle East to Britain offer a televangelist’s persuasive message of faith, purpose and a way forward, for both the young and as yet uncommitted, as well as for the most devout worshipers ready to take the next step, to jihad, officials say.

“People across the spectrum of radicalism can gravitate to them, if they’re just dipping their toe in or they’re hard core,” said Jarret Brachman, author of “Global Jihadism: Theory and Practice” (Routledge, 2008) and a consultant to the United States government about terrorism. “The most important thing they do is take very complex ideological thoughts and make them simple, with clear guidelines on how to follow Islamic law.”

In an online posting in 2005 under the name “farouk1986,” Mr. Abdulmutallab referred to another radical Muslim cleric he listened to, a Jamaican-born preacher named Abdullah el-Faisal.

Mr. Faisal, who was deported from Britain in 2007, was convicted four years earlier for soliciting murder and inciting racial hatred in English- and Arabic-language tapes of speeches urging his followers to kill Hindus, Christians, Jews and Americans. He was later accused of influencing one of the attackers in the London bombings of July 2005.

These celebrity imams — in addition to their knowledge of the Koran and Islamic theology — offer in some cases an almost heroic flair because of their occasional brushes with the law. Among the examples are Abu Yahya al-Libi, a Libyan cleric, who escaped from prison in Afghanistan in 2005, and Mr. Faisal, who continued to preach online even after his arrest and deportation.

In his May 2005 online posting, Mr. Abdulmutallab wrote: “i thought once they are arrested, no one hears about them for life and the keys to their prison wards are thrown away. That’s what I heard sheikh faisal of UK say (he has also been arrested i heard).”

Mr. Abdulmutallab has now become somewhat of a hero, with his photograph posted on Web sites that feature announcements by these prominent clerics.

American and European authorities say some of these clerics, like Mr. Awlaki, offer something much more sinister than just guideposts to radical Islam: a pipeline to Al Qaeda operatives in places like Yemen and the lawless Pakistan tribal areas.

“Awlaki is, among other things, a talent spotter,” an American counterterrorism official said. “That’s part of his value to Al Qaeda. If people are drawn to him, he can pass them along to trainers and operational planners. Abdulmutallab was cannon fodder, a piece snapped into an operation.”

Sheikh Khalid bin Abdul Rahman al-Husainan of Kuwait, who is fast attracting a large following, mixes contemporary politics with talk of martyrdom.

“Obama, in the same way that you raised the slogan, ‘Yes We Can,’ I too have a slogan,” Mr. Husainan wrote in August 2009. “My slogan in this life — and memorize this slogan — is ‘Happiness is the day of my martyrdom.’ ”

Intelligence officials and Congressional aides briefed this week on the inquiry say investigators are still trying to determine the precise nature of any contacts between Mr. Abdulmutallab and Mr. Awlaki.

It is not clear what role, if any, Mr. Awlaki played in the airliner plot.

Marc Sageman, a former Central Intelligence Agency operations officer and Qaeda scholar, said the relationship between these celebrity imams and younger men like Major Hasan and perhaps Mr. Abdulmutallab was a two-way street.

“It is really young people seeking them out — the movement is from the bottom up,” Mr. Sageman said. “Just like you saw Major Hasan send 21 e-mails to al-Awlaki, who sends him two back. You have people seeking these guys and asking them for advice. What they provide is a justification for what these young kids want to do in the first place. There is an influence, but the direction is from the young people seeking folks out, as opposed to older guys recruiting them.”

Mr. Sageman cautioned about placing too much singular responsibility on leaders like Mr. Awlaki. He also said he had no independent evidence that Mr. Awlaki and Mr. Abdulmutallab were linked.

US Army suicides set to hit new high in 2009

Source: Reuters

Nov 18, 2009

Suicides in the U.S. Army will hit a new high this year, a top general said on Tuesday in a disclosure likely to increase concerns about stress on U.S. forces ahead of an expected buildup in Afghanistan.

The findings, released as President Barack Obama inches toward a decision to send up to 40,000 additional troops to Afghanistan, show the number of active-duty suicides so far in 2009 has already matched last year's record of 140 deaths.

"We are almost certainly going to end the year higher than last year," General Peter Chiarelli, the Army's vice chief of staff, told a Pentagon briefing.

"This is horrible, and I do not want to downplay the significance of these numbers in any way."

Another 71 soldiers committed suicide after being taken off active duty in 2009 -- nearly 25 percent more than the end-year total for 2008. Some had returned home only weeks before taking their own lives.

The figures applied only to the U.S. Army. Data from other branches of the armed services was not immediately available.

Chiarelli cautioned against generalizing about the causes of the suicides, or assuming links to combat stress on forces stretched thin by the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

He said the causes were still unclear and noted that roughly a third of the soldiers who took their own lives had never been deployed abroad.

The Army recently revealed that about one in five lower rank soldiers suffered mental health problems like depression.

The latest data and this month's shooting spree at a base in Fort Hood, Texas attributed to an Army psychiatrist have raised new questions about the effects of combat stress and the state of the military's mental health system.

STRESS 'MANAGEABLE'

The top U.S. military officer said on Tuesday deployments were still manageable even though troops would be operating in a "stress window for the next couple of years."

"I certainly don't underestimate, or I would not want to understate the seriousness of the stress issue," Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the U.S. military's Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a gathering of business leaders in Washington.

The Army has announced it would take a "hard look" at itself to discover how accused shooter Major Nidal Malik Hasan, who is charged with killing 13 people in the November 5 rampage, slipped through the cracks.

President Barack Obama has said he would hold to account those who missed warning signs, which U.S. officials say included Hasan's communications with an anti-American cleric in Yemen sympathetic to al Qaeda.As the largest branch of the U.S. armed forces with 1.1 million active duty and reserve soldiers, the Army has done the brunt of the fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, including years of extended duty and repeated deployments.

In 2008, there were 268 active-duty suicides across the U.S. armed forces, most in the Army.

The military's suicide rate among active-duty soldiers was about 20 per 100,000, nearly double the national U.S. rate of 11.1 suicides per 100,000 people, as reported by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Chiarelli said the Army was investigating whether stress related to a future deployment could be a factor in the deaths of soldiers yet to be sent abroad. He said a study being carried out in conjunction with the National Institute of Mental Health could shed some light.

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Polls

After the production of the movie insulting Rasulullah (saw) Muslims should

seek an apology, forgive the makers and move on - 3.6%
try to carry out the hadd on the writer/director - 78.6%
correct their behaviour - 10.7%
do nothing - 0%
respect freedom of expression - 7.1%

Total votes: 28
The voting for this poll has ended on: 01 Nov 2012 - 20:08