View Full Version : How hard is it to find the most wanted man in the world - Osama
Whos Carl
11-16-2006, 08:55 PM
It has been over 5 years since 9/11 and Osama was pretty much linked to it straight away. SO why has nobody in the world not captured him? I watched a conspiracy film about 9/11 and it makes you wonder alot, there were so many irregularities and they can't find the main man behind it?
The bounty on his head is about 25 million I think and still nobody has found him, I smell something fishy.
Nochowderforyou
11-16-2006, 08:59 PM
Ha ha! Because no one is looking for him anymore. :p
Hell, I don't know. I don't even know why the US invaded Iraq after 9/11 happened. Seems like a tragic scam to invade Iraq over big, bad weapons (aka. their oil).
The Iraq war makes no sense to me at all. They should have been in Afghanistan looking for that crazy, if all the media is telling us true, but it wouldn't surprise me if the US were in partnership with Osoma.
Who knows. All I know is the US government are keeping secrets from their people, weird, fucked up shit.
Psycho4Bud
11-16-2006, 09:04 PM
First off Carl you know where to post this type of thing so don't play. Next, why did the Russians have such a hard time in Afghanistan? Lots of caves, etc.......not to mention that he has the backing of alot of these remote areas in what is considered as "no mans land" on the Pakistan/ Afghanistan border. One thing is for sure though........his influence isn't near what it was before.
Have a good one!:thumbsup:
ronjohn420
11-16-2006, 09:10 PM
well when you consider that the bushs have done busnuess with the binladen family since 1974 it wouldnt suprise me at all
when bush jr. took over "arbusto" oil in the 70's the bin ladens spotted him the money for it.....
in the 80's when bush was chairman of harken enegry and he was about to go under. the bin laden family bought out 17% of the company to keep him afloat
and heres the whopper when the soviet/afgan war had about ended, the CIA made up (and this is on congressional record) al-quedia (sp?)
the CIA founded and funded it during the carter administration and put bin laden in the hot seat (he was trained by CIA) osamas code name was
Tim Osman
http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/binladen_cia.html
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Tim+Osman&btnG=Google+Search
and after all that... bush sr. still meets (to this day) with members of the binladen family on behalf of the carlisle group
with all that they have been through,
(if they did you that good in the past, you wouldnt help them out????)
they have been business associates for over 25 years.....
c'mon man
ronjohn420
11-16-2006, 09:12 PM
P4B you know how i feel about politics
you knew where id take this!!!!
i suggest moving it now!!!! =) (while laughing)
later,
Ronjohn
Hamlet
11-17-2006, 12:40 AM
Why? Here's why...
"I donâ??t know where he is. Nor â?? you know, I just donâ??t spend that much time on him really, to be honest with you. I....I truly am not that concerned about him." George Bush Washington, D.C., March 13, 2002
blackbarbie
11-17-2006, 12:45 AM
Because he is most likely (if not already dead) hiding with the other Arabs that support him. And the US bounty of $20 million dollars doesn't mean shit because the only people who'd know where Bin Laden is are his supporters and I seriously doubt they'd trust the US to give them the money. Also what is a measly $20 mil when his net worth is estimated at $300 million.
Breukelen advocaat
11-17-2006, 12:51 AM
The bounty means nothing because anybody that turned him in would be killed, along with their family members. If they killed him, the same thing would happen.
why did the Russians have such a hard time in Afghanistan? Lots of caves, etc.......not to mention that he has the backing of alot of these remote areas in what is considered as "no mans land" on the Pakistan/ Afghanistan border.
Not to mention all kinds of neat guns and rockets that the Mujahadeen received from their good friend George H. W. Bush.
pisshead
11-28-2006, 02:09 AM
bin laden isn't even wanted for 9/11...for obvious reasons...
but still, he's not wanted for it, according to the fbi...
Ozarks
11-28-2006, 02:52 AM
Not to mention all kinds of neat guns and rockets that the Mujahadeen received from their good friend George H. W. Bush.
Actually neither Bush gave weapons to the Mujahadeen, Regan stopped the funding when the Russians announced they were going home.
All the Russians were gone by February of 89, 2 weeks after Bush (41) took office.
Bong30
11-28-2006, 03:53 AM
I think he died.....before that he was in deep hiding.....caves and such
what is 25 mill to these people...they rat they are dead.
pic at link
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/09/17/wafg17.xml
Hold fire at Taliban fighters: they are attending a funeral
By Philip Sherwell in New York
(Filed: 17/09/2006)
The American intelligence officers monitoring the satellite feed from an unmanned spy plane at their base in Afghanistan could hardly believe their eyes.
An estimated 190 Taliban fighters were lined up in tightly packed formation, captured in the crosshairs of a gun sight â?? as the picture shows.
The Predator drone traps 190 men in its sights before they disperse
Rarely in the mountainous terrain of Afghanistan are so many Taliban fighters gathered together on open land. The target was too tempting to ignore: all it required was authorisation for the Predator drone to launch an air strike.
"We were so excited. I came rushing in with the picture," an army officer told an NBC television journalist who obtained the grainy black-and-white photograph taken in July. But then, to his frustration, they were told that the United States military's rules of engagement made an attack impossible because the men were attending a funeral in a cemetery.
The officers then watched the satellite footage of the fighters splintering into small groups â?? not big enough for the drone to target â?? and heading back to their mountain redoubts. They were convinced that prominent Taliban leaders had been present.
At a time when British-led Nato forces are incurring heavy casualties as the resurgent Taliban pursues a guerrilla war on several fronts, the decision has caused amazement in America and been criticised by relatives of US troops killed in Afghanistan.
For many, it also brought back memories of the decision not to order an air strike when a Predator drone tracked Mullah Omar, the Taliban leader and Osama bin Laden ally, as he left Kabul in a convoy in late 2001 and took cover in a building with 100 fighters.
The disbelief was heightened as the picture of the assembled Taliban fighters appeared on an NBC news blog just two days after a suicide bomber killed six people at the funeral of the governor of Paktia province, who was assassinated by the Taliban.
The US military did not give a reason for the decision and does not discuss its rules of engagement. But it noted in a statement that while the Taliban had killed civilians during a funeral, coalition forces "hold themselves to a higher moral and ethical standard than their enemies".
The intelligence officers monitoring the footage were in no doubt that the men were Taliban fighters. Nonetheless, the military remains extremely wary of hitting culturally sensitive targets, even with apparently credible information, as was the case when US aircraft mistakenly bombed a wedding party in Afghanistan in 2002, killing several dozen civilians.
But American caution has also proved expensive at times. When Mullah Omar was located in 2001, the Central Intelligence Agency requested permission from Central Command in Florida to destroy the building. The response from Gen Tommy R Franks, the military commander, was that his legal officer "doesn't like this, so we're not going to fire". The mullah escaped unscathed.
Yesterday thousands of Afghan and foreign security forces kicked off a big new offensive against the Taliban in eastern Afghanistan as a Nato-led operation wound down in the south. About 4,000 Afghan police and soldiers and 3,000 troops with the US-led coalition launched Operation Mountain Fury in five provinces, three of them on the Pakistan border.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.5 Copyright © 2025 vBulletin Solutions Inc. All rights reserved.