"WMD biological most likely came from Fallujah"
Read on and you will see stories that are NOT being reported in the United States. WMDs HAVE been found. Why are people continuing to ignore this?
Rayelan,
Skull & Bones Flag Flies With U.S. Troops in Iraq *PIC*
Posted By: ChristopherBollyn
Date: Wednesday, 28 April 2004, 9:22 a.m.
Who is this guy? I do not agree with his statement " U.S. forces engaged in an illegal invasion and occupation of Iraq"
Where are his quotes, sources of info, etc.
However, I like this flag better.

http://www.beaglebay.com/pirate_facts.htm
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A skull and crossed swords flag belonged to Calico Jack Rackam,
with whom Mary Read and Ann Bonny sailed.
The captain (like Blackbeard or Henry Morgan) was, in fact, a battle leader for boarding ships and leading land raids. The ship’s pilot, the person who actually steered the ship, was the real captain. (S)he received a share of booty equal to the captain.
Rayelan, you are the pilot of RMN!
RMN is plundering the NWO and its evil.
Jack Rackam
Also known as Calico Jack for the bright cottonclothing he often wore, Rackam was the man voted into Vanes captaincy. He went on to plunder the West Indies until he was captured in November of 1720, and brought to Jamaica. It was there that he and nearly his entire crew were hanged.
Rackam's place in history rests on his great romance with lady pirate Anne Bonny. Afloat or asore, according to Defoe, Rackam "had nothing but Anne Bonny in his head."
When pirates wished to show their deadly intent, they flew long blood-red pennants from the yardarms of their mainmast. This signal was called, "No Quarter."
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Sir Henry Morgan (The Pirate, Bucaneer, I believe
originally used this flag. (I think).
Lets take a look at Fallujah.
Search GOOGLE for Fallujah + WMD + Tunnels
Suggest you look at these web sites.
http://eagle.ncag.edu/academic/artsci/faculty/ggillespie/WAR%20NEWS%20FLASH.htm
WMD biological most likely came from Fallujah.
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Mega chemical attack foiled in Jordan
Itamar Inbari/ Maariv International/ April 16, 2004
The terror cell that was apprehended last week in Jordan planned to carry out a large-scale chemical attack, Jordanian officials told the al-Hayat London-based newspaper. According to the officials, the successful prevention of the attack may have saved thousands of lives.
The report added that the terrorists planned to detonate a powerful chemical bomb at a Jordanian Military Intelligence installation. The cell also intended to use poison gas during attacks on the US embassy in Amman and a government building in the country.
The terrorists managed to smuggle three cars packed with explosives. In one of the cars, security forces found the chemical charge. The officials were quoted as saying, "The bomb, had it been detonated, could have affected people in a one kilometer radius and cause the deaths of up to 20,000 people, according to estimates". http://www.maarivintl.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=printArticle&articleID=6059
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Al-Qaida Hoped to Kill 80,000 with Chemical Bombs
NewsMax/ Tuesday, Apr. 27, 2004
AMMAN, Jordan - Al-Qaida plotted bomb and poison gas attacks against the U.S. Embassy and other targets in Jordan, suspects confessed in a videotape that aired Monday on Jordanian state television. A commentator said the plotters hoped to kill 80,000 people.
The bearded Hussein, looking anxious, said al-Jayousi told him the aim was "carrying out the first suicide attack to be launched by al-Qaida using chemicals ... striking at Jordan, its Hashemite (royal family) and launching war on the Crusaders and nonbelievers." http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2004/4/26/223935.shtml
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WMD Found: Shell Game in Syria
Joe Mariani/ Men’s News Daily/ April 21, 2004
During the last few months leading up to the Iraq war, some of Saddam's arsenal of WMDs was apparently being shipped across the Syrian border for safe-keeping. The Israelis believed that the bulk of it kept going, to be buried in Lebanon's Beka'a Valley, under Hezbollah control.
Now, our intelligence sources can disclose exclusively that the relocation of Iraq’s WMD systems took place between January 10 and March 10 and was completed just 10 days before the US-led offensive was launched against Iraq. The banned arsenal, hauled in giant tankers from Iraq to Syria and from there to the Bekaa Valley under Syrian special forces and military intelligence escort, was discharged into pits 6-8 meters across and 25-35 meters deep dug by Syrian army engineers.
They were sealed and planted over with new seedlings. Nonetheless, their location is known and detectable with the right instruments. Our sources have learned that Syria was paid about $35 million to make Saddam Hussein’s forbidden weapons disappear. http://mensnewsdaily.com/archive/m-n/mariani/2004/mariani042104.htm
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King Abdullah: Al-Qaida WMDs Came From Syria
Newsmax/ Saturday, April 17, 2004
Jordan's King Abdullah revealed on Saturday that vehicles reportedly containing chemical weapons and poison gas that were part of a deadly al-Qaida bomb plot came from Syria, the country named by U.S. weapons inspector David Kay last year as a likely repository for Iraq's weapons of mass destruction.
"It was a major, major operation. It would have decapitated the government," King Abdullah told the San Francisco Chronicle. Jordanian officials estimated that the death count could have been as high as 20,000 - seven times greater than the Sept. 11 attacks. http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2004/4/17/141224.shtml
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/2555123.stm
Sunday, 8 December, 2002, 14:45 GMT
Experts await arrival of Iraqi dossier
Iraq's long-awaited weapons declaration is being flown for analysis at the United Nations in New York and the International Atomic Energy Agency's headquarters in Vienna.
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Biological and chemical experts went to Fallugah, north-west of the capital.
There are three Fallugah complexes, all sites where Iraq produced chemical and biological arms in the past.
Parts of these sites were destroyed during the 1991 Gulf War and later during Operation Desert Fox in 1998.
Fallujah now produces chlorine and phenol - the CIA believes the output is too great for civilian uses.
Castor beans are also processed at Fallujah to produce brake fluids, but they can also be transformed to make ricin toxin - a biological weapon, the BBC's Kim Ghattas reports from Baghdad.
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http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/iraq/2004-04-04-fallujah-usat_x.htm
Posted 4/4/2004 8:22 PM Updated 4/5/2004 10:42 AM
Fallujah leaders set defiant tone
By Kevin Johnson, USA TODAY
FALLUJAH, Iraq — In a warning to the U.S.-led coalition, some local leaders in this restive city said they would endorse the continued killing of soldiers and foreign civilians as part of what they described as a justified resistance to the continued occupation of Iraq.
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Fallujah, 35 miles west of Baghdad, has resisted repeated U.S. efforts at pacification. Saddam Hussein drew considerable support from the Sunni Muslim region and gave choice military and intelligence jobs to people from Fallujah and its province, Anbar.
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http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110004903
WHAT'S AT STAKE
Fallujah
A reminder of what the future might look like if we fail.
BY CHRISTOPHER HITCHENS
Friday, April 2, 2004 12:01 a.m. EST
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I debate with the opponents of the Iraq intervention almost every day. I always have the same questions for them, which never seem to get answered. Do you believe that a confrontation with Saddam Hussein's regime was inevitable or not? Do you believe that a confrontation with an Uday/Qusay regime would have been better? Do you know that Saddam's envoys were trying to buy a weapons production line off the shelf from North Korea (vide the Kay report) as late as last March? Why do you think Saddam offered "succor" (Mr. Clarke's word) to the man most wanted in the 1993 bombings in New York? Would you have been in favor of lifting the "no fly zones" over northern and southern Iraq; a 10-year prolongation of the original "Gulf War"? Were you content to have Kurdish and Shiite resistance fighters do all the fighting for us? Do you think that the timing of a confrontation should have been left, as it was in the past, for Baghdad to choose?
I hope I do not misrepresent my opponents, but their general view seems to be that Iraq was an elective target; a country that would not otherwise have been troubling our sleep. This ahistorical opinion makes it appear that Saddam Hussein was a new enemy, somehow chosen by shady elements within the Bush administration, instead of one of the longest-standing foes with which the United States, and indeed the international community, was faced. So, what about the "bad news" from Iraq? There was always going to be bad news from there. Credit belongs to those who accepted--can we really decently say pre-empted?--this long-term responsibility. Fallujah is a reminder, not just of what Saddamism looks like, or of what the future might look like if we fail, but of what the future held before the Coalition took a hand.
Mr. Hitchens is a columnist for Vanity Fair. He is writing a study of Thomas Jefferson for the "Eminent Lives" series, from HarperCollins.
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http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Jan2004/n01082004_200401081.html
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9 Dead in Black Hawk Crash Near Fallujah
By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Jan. 8, 2004 – An Army UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter crashed southeast of Fallujah, Iraq, today, killing all nine aboard, coalition officials said during a press conference in Baghdad.
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http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/iraq/fallujah.htm
Fallujah / Habbaniyah
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On 28 August 2002, Western reporters were taken to one of the Fallujah facilities. The visit to the Falluja-3 plant came during a diplomatic offensive Iraq to muster international opposition to a US attack. According to a report filed by CNN's James Martone, "What we saw were warehouses, I would say three-fourths empty. What we did see on the ground, boxes of things like rat poison was one item that an official there showed us. There were pesticides that farmers use, they said, in their crops. They said that this plant, which was established in '87, has always been used for pesticides. They said that when the U.N. UNSCOM, the weapons inspectors were in Iraq, that they visited it on numerous occasions, and we even saw UNSCOM stickers to that effect." [CNN DAYBREAK, 05:00 August 28, 2002 ]
According to news reports in February 2001, the German Federal Intelligence Service (BND) estimates that since the end of UN weapons inspections, the number of Iraqi sites involved in chemicals production has increased from 20 to 80. Of that total, the BND reportedly believes that as many as twenty may be involved in making weapons.
In September 2002, the US Government reported that Iraq was seeking to purchase chemical weapons agent precursors and applicable production equipment, and is making an effort to hide activities at the Fallujah plant, which was one of Iraq’s chemical weapons production facilities before the Gulf War. At Fallujah and three other plants, Iraq now has chlorine production capacity far higher than any civilian need for water treatment, and the evidence indicates that some of its chlorine imports are being diverted for military purposes.
As of late September 2002, the Castor Oil Production Plant at Fallujah was still a facility of concern, according to the British Dossier Iraq’s Weapons of Mass Destruction. The facility had been damaged in UK/US air attacks in 1998 during Operation Desert Fox but had been rebuilt. The residue from the castor bean pulp can be used in the production of the biological agent ricin.
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Picture that accompanied this article has copyright protection on it... please so to this page to view it:
http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/iraq/fallujah.htm
Credit: DigitalGlobe. Copyright (c) DigitalGlobe. All RIGHTS RESERVED. Contact DigitalGlobe for media permission or purchase at 1-(800) 496-1225 or info@digitalglobe.com
Fallujah / Habbaniyah -- http://www.digitalglobe.com/
Tactical Pilotage Chart with NIMA CIB imageryoverlayed showing the three Fallujah CW plants in relation to the towns of Fallujah, and Al Habbaniyah
Comparison of the Fallujah I, II, and III
Fallujah leaders set defiant tone
By Kevin Johnson, USA TODAY
FALLUJAH, Iraq — In a warning to the U.S.-led coalition, some local leaders in this restive city said they would endorse the continued killing of soldiers and foreign civilians as part of what they described as a justified resistance to the continued occupation of Iraq.