Feral Jundi

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Al Qaeda: Top AQ Leader Blames Blackwater for Peshawar Blasts

Filed under: Al Qaeda,Pakistan — Tags: , , — Matt @ 10:13 PM

   This is interesting.  I have always thought that AQ and the Taliban were behind the new media assault against PMC’s and PSC’s in Pakistan, and this is just more indication of such.  If you ever follow the Pakistani blogosphere, in regards to companies like BW or DynCorp, you would think those companies were Satan Inc.

   I think AQ and company should have more to worry about, than a couple of PMC’s.  But hey, if it pisses off the bad guys, then I love it. –Matt

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Top al Qaeda leader blames Blackwater for Peshawar blasts

From Saad Abedine

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Audio message said to be from Mustafa Abu Yazid, al Qaeda’s commander of operations in Afghanistan

Said muslims not behind the attacks because they are fighting to protect the honor and lives of other Muslims

Critics of Blackwater cite the company’s actions in Iraq as evidence of its malevolent intents

Iraq refused to renew the license of the company after its guards killed 17 civilians two years ago

(CNN) — A senior al Qaeda leader in Afghanistan has blamed the U.S. security firm formerly known as Blackwater as being behind the recent spate of deadly attacks in the Pakistani city of Peshawar.

An audio message said to be from Mustafa Abu Yazid, released Thursday, said Muslims could not have been behind the attacks, because they are fighting to protect the honor and lives of other Muslims.

The mujahadeen, as Yazid called the militants, target only security forces who are far from civilian gathering places, he said.

“Today, everyone knows what Blackwater and the criminal security contractors are doing after they came to Pakistan with the support of the criminal, corrupt government and its intelligence and security apparatus,” Yazid said.

“They are the ones who commit these heinous acts, then accuse the mujahadeen of their crimes.”

Yazid is al Qaeda’s commander of operations in Afghanistan and its No. 3 man.

The tape was posted on several Islamist Web sites, known to carry statements from the radical Islamic group.

CNN could not immediately determine the authenticity of the tape.

Blackwater, now known as Xe, is a ready bogeyman for Pakistanis who cite the company’s actions in Iraq as evidence of its malevolent intents in their country.

Iraq refused to renew the license of the private security company after its security guards killed 17 civilians two years ago.

Peshawar — the capital of the North West Frontier Province — has repeatedly come under attack in recent days. Intelligence officials say the attacks are retaliation against an army offensive to rout militants from their havens along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.

On Tuesday, a suicide car bomber struck a congested traffic circle outside Peshawar, killing at least 26 people — including children — and wounding 60 others.

A suicide bombing at a police checkpoint on Peshawar’s Ring Road killed at least three people Monday. A suicide car bombing killed 17 people in the city Sunday, including an area mayor.

And on October 28, a massive car bomb tore through the heart of a bustling marketplace in Peshawar, killing at least 100 people and wounding at least 200 others.

Story here.

 

1 Comment

  1. Hi Matt,

    Having terrorists, insurgents, disaffected peoples with guns or whatever else you want to call them asking the media to assist them to get rid of anyone trying to stop them, is nothing new. In Angola, UNITA saw itself as a force that was entitled to murder, rape and pillage – much as the RUF in Sierra Leone. Granted, UNITA did not revert to cannibalism as the RUF did. The media (and the UN) were quite contented to turn a blind eye against these “freedom fighters” and forgive them any multitude of crimes they committed.

    When EO was called in to stop them, the media was highly upset that we dared to interfere in the democratic right of rebels and quickly took up the rebels’ fight against us by becoming their propaganda arm. As EO’s success grew, so too did the media shout louder and louder until they were the champions of the “oppressed rebels” and self-appointed judges of EO – despite the fact that the rebels were feeding them information. And, when the rebels did something particulary bad, it was easy to blame EO for their actions.

    I suspect that what Blackwater has experienced is much of a muchness. When the media start punting rebel disinformation one needs to realise that you are being successful.

    Rgds,

    Eeben

    Comment by Eeben Barlow — Thursday, November 12, 2009 @ 9:40 PM

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