The shadow war
by Justin Raimondo
AntiWar.Com
01/26/05
On Jan. 17, the Cryptome Web site posted a remarkable document that affords us a glimpse inside the secret war now taking place all around us. I refer, of course, to the war on terrorism, which, we've all been informed, will be a 'generational' struggle, the outcome of which is uncertain -- and, what's more, its history is fated to remain in the shadows until long after it's all over. But the Cryptome document -- consisting of 'morning brief' reports issued by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) covering sporadic episodes from Sept. 26, 2003 to Jan. 16, 2004 -- gives us access to the raw unvarnished truth. It also permits entry, albeit briefly, into a strange twilit world, where that barely noticeable shadow over there in the corner could be as insignificant as it seems -- or could turn into a deadly menace...
http://www.antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=4581
Informant: Thomas L. Knapp
AntiWar.Com
01/26/05
On Jan. 17, the Cryptome Web site posted a remarkable document that affords us a glimpse inside the secret war now taking place all around us. I refer, of course, to the war on terrorism, which, we've all been informed, will be a 'generational' struggle, the outcome of which is uncertain -- and, what's more, its history is fated to remain in the shadows until long after it's all over. But the Cryptome document -- consisting of 'morning brief' reports issued by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) covering sporadic episodes from Sept. 26, 2003 to Jan. 16, 2004 -- gives us access to the raw unvarnished truth. It also permits entry, albeit briefly, into a strange twilit world, where that barely noticeable shadow over there in the corner could be as insignificant as it seems -- or could turn into a deadly menace...
http://www.antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=4581
Informant: Thomas L. Knapp
Starmail - 26. Jan, 11:50