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Team Sergeant
08-27-2005, 07:50
The gene pool needs cleaning.....again.....



Hamas Issues Videotape of Bombmaker
By IBRAHIM BARZAK
Associated Press Writer

August 27, 2005, 9:21 AM EDT


GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip -- The Islamic militant group Hamas released a videotape of a shadowy senior commander who has eluded Israeli forces for more than a decade, taking another shot in a Palestinian power struggle over who should get credit for Israel's pullout from Gaza.

The man, identifying himself as fugitive bombmaker Mohammed Deif, described Israel's withdrawal as a victory for armed resistance, rejected calls for his group to disarm and vowed to continue attacking Israel until the Jewish state is erased from the map.

"You are leaving Gaza today in shame," he said in comments directed at Israel. "Today you are leaving hell. But we promise you that tomorrow all Palestine will be hell for you, God willing."

Israeli officials said the tape underscored the need for the Palestinian Authority to crack down on militants. Palestinian officials said despite the comments, Hamas remained committed to a 6-month-old cease-fire.

In Crawford, Texas, meanwhile, President Bush issued a strong call for the Palestinian Authority to crack down on militant groups in the wake of the pullout from the Gaza Strip.

"The Palestinians must show the world that they will fight terrorism and govern in a peaceful way," Bush said in his weekly radio address.

With Palestinian legislative elections set for January, Hamas and Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah party are locked in a bitter struggle over who deserves credit for the Gaza withdrawal. Israel removed the last of its 21 Gaza settlements this week and is expected to complete the pullout by early October.

Hamas argues that years of suicide bombings and rocket attacks drove the Israelis out. Abbas, who is a vocal critic of violence and hopes to resume peace talks with Israel, has tried to shore up his standing with promises that he can improve life in Gaza after the withdrawal.

In the tape, Deif praised the armed struggle against Israel.

"Without this jihad and this steadfastness, we did not achieve the liberation of the Gaza Strip," he said, adding that attacks should continue until Israel is eliminated.
Hamas has killed hundreds of Israelis in attacks since fighting resumed in 2000.

In an open challenge to Abbas, Deif also rejected calls for Hamas to disarm, though he said differences between Palestinian groups should be resolved peacefully.

"We warn against touching these weapons, and want to keep them as an effective element to liberate the rest of our homeland," he said. "We want to use dialogue to solve any differences in order to protect our Palestinian blood and our national achievement."

Abbas has said all militant groups should give up their weapons after the Gaza pullout, but he has been hesitant to confront them with force.

Deif, widely believed to be at the top of Israel's most-wanted list, is responsible for the deaths of dozens of Israelis in suicide bombings. He has survived at least two Israeli assassination attempts, most recently a 2002 missile strike in which he lost an eye.

There was no way to positively identify the figure in the video as Deif because a dark shadow covered his face. Deif has been in hiding since 1992 and the only known photos of him were taken in the 1980s.

But the high quality of the video, which was stamped with the logo of the Hamas military wing, as well as the similarity of the voice to previous recordings indicated the tape was authentic.

The group would not say when Deib made the tape, citing security concerns. But it had boasted for nearly two weeks that Deib was going to make a public statement, and militants delivered the tape to The Associated Press offices in Gaza City. The group also posted a transcript of his comments on its Web site.

Tawfiq Abu Khoussa, a spokesman for the Palestinian Interior Ministry, which is in charge of security in Palestinian-controlled areas, said there was nothing new in the tape.

"It wasn't secret that Hamas military wing in Gaza exists, and Mohammed Deif is still alive," he said. "All Palestinian factions are committed to the truce, including Hamas, and we see nothing new in Hamas' position toward the truce."

Hamas has scaled back its activities since the truce declaration, but Israel says the group is using the lull to revamp its military capabilities. Israel has said any resumption of peace talks will depend on Abbas' ability to disarm Hamas and other militant groups.

Gideon Meir, a senior official with the Israeli Foreign Ministry, said the videotape threatened to derail the recent atmosphere of goodwill after the Gaza pullout.

Deif's "declaration proves again why the Palestinian Authority must fulfill its duty and fight the Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Al Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades," he said, referring to the major armed Palestinian groups.

Abbas met at his West Bank headquarters Saturday with Israeli lawmaker Ephraim Sneh, a leader in the Labor Party, the junior partner in the Israeli coalition government.

Sneh said the two men discussed ways to proceed with peace talks after the Gaza withdrawal. He declined to provide details, but Israeli media reported that Abbas promised to demand that Hamas disarm if it wants to join the Palestinian government.

http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/wire/sns-ap-israel-palestinians,0,3551016.story?coll=sns-ap-nationworld-headlines

Martin
08-27-2005, 10:07
There was no way to positively identify the figure in the video as Deif because a dark shadow covered his face.
Do anyone of you know where one can find a high quality copy of this video? I am reluctant to enter the Hamas homepage because of comments by Jimbo about tracing.

Martin

hemi5p
09-04-2005, 20:29
i did a quick google and i think ive found it

http://www.rednova.com/news/video/?mid=1197&category_id=2&release_time=2005-08-27

if that link doesnt work, go here

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=hamas+bombmaker+video&spell=1

and its at the bottom of the results list, its called Red Nova





Red Nova is a news site, you shouldnt look suspicious going there

edit: found another related video of the same guy, http://www.rednova.com/news/video/?mid=1184&category_id=2&release_time=2005-08-27

theres a little menu with videos on it, you could probly search Red Nova for "hamas" if you want more material

Martin
09-05-2005, 00:41
Thanks, hemi5p!

Martin

Martin
09-05-2005, 10:18
The Flash version wasn't good enough, because it blended the colors. I found an image taken from the video, but it had been tampered with to hide his face. I don't know if the original video was also edited.

At first he appears to wear a dark jacket with a lighter colored piece of clothing below.

EDIT: I'm not sure about the jacket... but it looks like a closed three button suit, with it pulled together above the highest button. With color rebalancing after the background distortion, I think it's blue. He's wearing a shirt and tie. If he's wearing a watch, it's below the shirt.

IISC (If I Speculate Correctly)... :)

Martin, the Pet Detective

A Soldier
09-24-2005, 09:59
Can you explain to me what tracing is??

I saw Jimbos post and I did not understand what he was talking about??

rubberneck
09-24-2005, 10:21
Seems like they are doing a pretty good job on thinning out their own gene pool.

Blast kills 15 Palestinians at Hamas rally in Gaza
By Nidal al-Mughrabi
Reuters
Friday, September 23, 2005; 5:45 PM
GAZA (Reuters) - An explosion at a militant Hamas rally killed at least 15 Palestinians, including children and gunmen, in the Gaza Strip on Friday in the first deadly incident in the territory since Israel completed its withdrawal.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah group and the Palestinian interior ministry said Hamas was responsible.

"The Fatah Central Committee holds the Hamas movement fully responsible for the victims of the military parade (that was held) among civilians," Fatah's Central Committee said in a statement.

Hamas said the explosion was the result of an Israeli airstrike, while Israel denied all involvement.

The explosion in the densely packed Jabalya refugee camp, which killed 15 people, including at least two children and three militants, occurred after Islamic Jihad militants fired rockets into Israel in retaliation for a deadly West Bank raid.
Senior Hamas leader Nizar Rayan, whose brother, a local commander for the group, died in the blast, said Israeli drones or helicopters targeted a vehicle carrying five Hamas gunmen.

He said that while Hamas would continue to honor an eight-month ceasefire it had agreed to in February by request of Abbas, it would still respond to Israeli attacks against Palestinians.

Fatah's Central Committee slammed Hamas for displaying munitions at the rally, which marked a show of armed force by the group following Israel's Gaza pullout on September 12 after 38 years of occupation, among thousands of civilians.
"The Fatah Central Committee calls upon all groups to stop these military parades and to put all weapons and explosives away from residential neighborhoods," the group said.

MORE THAN 60 WOUNDED
Medics said more than 60 people were wounded in the blast, which wrecked the Hamas vehicle. But Rayan denied reports that it had carried explosives, saying the vehicle only contained plastic models of rockets that could not detonate.
Palestinian militants from the armed Popular Resistance Committees group later fired several rockets into Israel in response to the rally blast, calling on gunmen "to mount a fast earth-quake like and painful reaction to the ugly massacre."

Prior to the explosion, militants from Islamic Jihad mounted the first rocket attack against Israel since the withdrawal, in response to an Israeli raid in the West Bank that killed three of its gunmen. It caused no casualties.
The Israeli army confirmed one rocket landed in a southern Israeli town, causing no casualties. Such attacks have decreased since militant groups agreed to the truce.

Palestinians are still celebrating Israel's withdrawal from Gaza, which Washington hopes could be a step to reviving a stalled peace "road map."
Palestinian authorities took charge on Friday of a border crossing for the first time, processing thousands of travellers from Gaza into Egypt following Israel's pullout.

Israel had sealed the Rafah terminal, Gaza's sole conduit to the outside world via Egypt, before completing its removal of forces, saying it would be shut for six months pending renovations and proof Palestinians could rein in Gaza militants.
But with Israel's consent, the crossing was opened on Friday for 48 hours to Palestinians who study, work or need medical treatment in Egypt or elsewhere.
Palestinians hope Gaza will become the embryo of a state in the territories Israel captured in the 1967 war. They want their state to include the larger West Bank and Arab East Jerusalem.
(Writing by Corinne Heller in Jerusalem, additional reporting by Mohammed Assadi in Ramallah)

Martin
09-24-2005, 10:23
Jimbo[/post]]I recommend against e-mailing the FARC directly as their web people are pretty good at IP tracing.
one-zero[/post].]Jimbo is right about the FARC website and especially email if you are so inclined. Other sites owned by entities listed by USG as terrorist orgs fall into the same category...even for research a stand-alone system is recommended. For the curious or non-gov type I recommend you look at 'em from an internet cafe - I won't get into specifics on this. There's nothing worth a shit on them anyway unless you know what to look for...
A Soldier,
Your computer is assigned a so called IP address when it accesses the internet. That IP address is logged on the servers (such as for websites) that you connect to. For instance, your IP address can be found on the computer hosting this page.

When you send an e-mail, unless you pass your e-mail through a mail system that removes the source and doesn't log your connection to it, your IP address is listed in the e-mail (in the 'headers') and likely in the mail software logs - which can be exploited by hackers.

The IP address offers ways to find the owner of the address. That is called IP tracing.

HTH

Martin