Today's Article
In 1998, John
McCain had a
simple choice: He
made the wrong one.
The American Spark
McCain Against U.S. Strikes On Al-Qaeda In 1998

By Cliff Montgomery - Oct. 8th, 2008

GOP Vice Presidential Nominee Sarah Palin has made a fool of herself after having "exaggerated the nature
of [Democratic Presidential Nominee] Barack Obama's personal ties to a former 1960s radical," according to
article published yesterday by
The Associated Press (AP).

"Sarah Palin tells audiences the election is about the 'truthfulness and judgment' needed to be president. But
the Alaska governor often stretches the truth herself," flatly states
AP.

In fact if Ms. Palin bothered to read any reliable media reports of any kind, she would know that it is her party--
the party of John McCain, George W. Bush and Dick Cheney--who often are the clear pals of known, active
terrorists.

It is the party of McCain and Palin which helped turn the "Afghan mujahidin"--the rebels who fought the Soviet
occupation of Afghanistan through the 1980s--into a group filled and run by Islamic Jihadists who clearly hated
America as much as Russia.

A segment of this "mujahidin" later morphed into al-Qaeda.

In late 1979, Soviet forces moved into Afghanistan. Then-President Jimmy Carter and others feared this was a
power grab from the Soviets.

Carter, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) joined in an effort to quietly aid anti-Soviet
groups in Afghanistan. But Carter worked on a two-tier approach, which both provided moderate amounts of
covert aid and sought a diplomatic settlement to the crisis.

But "Carter’s loss to Reagan in the 1980 presidential election signaled the end of the negotiation track," states
a report on Afghanistan by
The National Security Archive, a non-governmental secrecy watchdog group.

Reagan CIA head William Casey pursued three highly secret--yet telling and significant--changes from the
Carter Doctrine.

First, Casey persuaded Congress to supply the Afghan mujahidin "with American-made Stinger anti-aircraft
missiles to shoot down Soviet planes and provide U.S. advisors to train the guerrillas," according to Ahmed
Rashid's fascinating book,
Taliban.

"Until then no U.S.-made weapons or personnel had been used directly in the war effort," stated Rashid.

Secondly, Casey--along with the ISI and Britain's MI6--decided the Afghan guerrillas should engage in acts of
terrorism against average Soviet citizens, as a means of creating mass fear. They decided the terrorists should
first strike the citizens of Soviet Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

"In March 1987, small units crossed the Amu Darya River from bases in northern Afghanistan and launched
their first rocket attacks against villages in Tajikistan," according to
Taliban.

"Casey was delighted with the news and on his next secret trip to Pakistan he crossed the border into
Afghanistan...to review the mujahidin groups," adds the book.

And "thirdly, Casey committed CIA support to a long-standing ISI initiative to recruit radical Muslims from
around the world to come to Pakistan and fight with the Afghan mujahidin," stated Rashid.

Among that new, much more radical group invited and trained in the arts of terrorism by American neo-
conservatives was a young, rich Saudi named Osama bin Laden.

Bin Laden joined the mujahidin in 1982. In 1986, Bin Laden--son of a wealthy construction magnate--helped
the CIA build a massive underground complex for the terrorist groups near the Afghan-Pakistan border. It
housed a medical facility, a training center and a huge arms storage depot.

This also is about the time in which he set up his first terrorist training camp. In a statement published in 1998
by
Agence France-Presse--a French wire service--Bin Laden discussed how he was able to do this:

"To counter these atheist Russians, the Saudis chose me as their representative in Afghanistan," said Bin
Laden. "I settled in Pakistan, in the Afghan border region. There I received volunteers who came from the
Saudi Kingdom and from all over the Arab and Muslim countries. I set up my first camp where these volunteers
were trained by Pakistani and American officers. The weapons were supplied by the Americans, the money by
the Saudis. I discovered that it was not enough to fight in Afghanistan, but that we had to fight on all fronts,
communist or Western oppression."

So the party of McCain and Palin, of George W. Bush and Dick Cheney, trained and supplied Bin Laden's Anti-
Russian and Anti-American terrorist forces.

After the first Gulf War in 1990, Bin Laden would form al-Qaeda from former mujahidin fighters and declare war
on America.  

The party of McCain and Palin continued to pal around with these terrorists until the association ceased to be
profitable.

In fact, the young George W. Bush--a man for whom John McCain "did everything [he] could to get him
elected, and re-elected, president"--was a failure in business until a number of wealthy Saudis bailed out yet
another faltering company in 1987-88, where Dubya was working on the board of directors.

It was an important step for the young Bush. As journalist Craig Unger wrote in his powerful book,
House of
Bush, House of Saud
:

"The Saudi bailout of Harken Energy...helped George W. Bush make his fortune."

Among those wealthy Saudis helping "George W. Bush make his fortune" was a man named Salem bin
Laden--Osama's half-brother.

And what of John McCain's own judgment of Bin Laden? On Aug. 7th, 1998, al-Qaeda bombed two U.S.
embassies, one in Kenya and the other in Tanzania. The blast murdered more than 200 people, including 12
American citizens.
This is the declassified FBI executive summary of those deadly terrorist attacks.

But in September 1998, John McCain actually bad-mouthed then-President Clinton for going after al-Qaeda
immediately after that brutal attack on American soil, and after the murder of our fellow citizens.

Apparently the loss of American lives wasn't enough to keep McCain from continuing to explain away this
terrorist friend of U.S. neo-conservatives. Check out this interesting statement from a damning
Mother Jones
interview:

    Mother Jones: You not only have had combat experience in Vietnam, but you were also a prisoner of
    war. When you look at terrorism right now, with people like Osama bin Laden, do you have any
    reservations about watching strikes like [Clinton's retaliation on Bin Laden]?

    John McCain: You could say: Look, is this guy, Laden, really the bad guy that's depicted? Most of
    us have never heard of him before.

But John McCain certainly had. He served as a U.S. representative of Arizona from 1983-1986, and has
served as a U.S. senator from 1987 to the present moment. It is inconceivable for him to claim that he had no
knowledge of Osama bin Laden. After the embassy attacks, Clinton did everything in his power to inform both
Congress and the public of the activities of al-Qaeda and its sinister leader, to explain his just retaliation on the
terrorist group.

In 1998, John McCain had a simple choice: Side with his country against those who had just attacked U.S. soil
and martyred its citizens, or side with the terrorists. McCain made the wrong choice.

This November, the choice is yours.



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