Thursday, July 30, 2015

Mullah Omar prepares to give Obama the forkby




By treating Americans with autoimmune diseases
With Bcg as he learned from Assad, who learned from faustmanlab.org. Who learned from 
Pubmed.org RISTORI + bcg

To save face for doing good he is brewing multidrug resistant tb to be used as the poor man's
Biological aerosol for airplanes.

Obama mutilates Americans by failing to see that Bcg is widely and easily and inexpensively available without travel to pakistan, Syria, turkey etc




Taliban Leader Mullah Omar Is Dead, Afghan Spy Agency Says

Death raises questions about who will lead movement

Mullah Mohammad Omar, the spiritual leader of the Taliban, has been dead for two years according according to Afghanistan’s Intelligence Agency.
Mullah Mohammad Omar, who went from being an obscure cleric to one of the world’s most-wanted fugitives as the spiritual leader of the Taliban, is dead, said the Afghan government and two people close to the insurgent group.
News of his demise, which Afghan officials say took place in 2013, raises questions about the leadership of the group that allied with al Qaeda, fought a war with the U.S. and is now divided over whether to pursue an elusive peace deal with Afghanistan’s new government.
For Washington, anything that threatens Afghanistan’s tenuous stability is a major concern, given President Barack Obama’s goal of winding down U.S. involvement there by the time he leaves office.
There currently are about 10,000 American troops in Afghanistan and Mr. Obama has said there would be no more than about 1,000 by the end of 2016. But instability in Afghanistan and a fear of a repeat of the U.S. experience in Iraq—where violence flared a few years after the U.S. departure—has prompted Mr. Obama to essentially freeze the U.S. withdrawal through much of this year.
It remains unclear when and how Mullah Omar may have died, or when the White House or U.S. intelligence agencies first learned of it.
The Taliban were unusually silent Wednesday and didn’t reply to multiple requests to comment.
“The government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, based on credible information, confirms that Mullah Mohammad Omar, leader of the Taliban, died in April 2013 in Pakistan,” the office of Afghan President Ashraf Ghani said on Wednesday.
Abdul Hassib Sediqi, a spokesman for Afghanistan’s spy agency, the National Directorate of Security, said Mullah Omar “died suspiciously” in a Karachi hospital.
A Pakistani Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman said the ministry had no information on that claim. An Afghan official and two people close to the Taliban said Mullah Omar is buried in southern Afghanistan.
White House spokesman Eric Schultz tacitly confirmed Mullah Omar’s death, saying, “We do believe reports of his death to be credible.”
U.S. officials said they picked up indications that Mullah Omar was dead in recent days, after learning Taliban officials had begun discussing his death. U.S. officials said the information they received didn’t indicate when he died and under what circumstances. Until this week, U.S. officials said they had no credible evidence of his death.
Others question whether Mullah Omar is dead.
“The official channels of the Taliban have not confirmed his death,” said Sayed Mohammad Akbar Agha, a former Taliban commander who fought alongside Mullah Omar against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. “Even if he is dead, that doesn’t affect the Taliban movement.”
Since the Taliban regime fell in 2001, many of the movement’s leaders—including Mullah Omar—have been based in Pakistan with the tacit backing of elements of Islamabad’s security establishment, U.S., Afghan and European intelligence agencies say.

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