[Abel-tasman] ***SPAM*** I thought you'd be interested in this when I saw it...

Electronic Cigarette Free Trial ElectronicCigaretteFreeTrial at gungjoshedbluer.us
Tue Feb 18 08:48:45 CET 2014


Finally Smoke Anywhere You Want--Legally!

http://www.gungjoshedbluer.us/1635/159/365/880/1645.10tt20460282AAF9.php








To Unsub - http://www.gungjoshedbluer.us/1635/159/365/880/1645.10tt20460282AAF10.html















ce officers known as rakers visited local businesses such as Islamic bookstores 
and cafes, chatting up store owners to determine their ethnicities and gauge 
their views. They played cricket and eavesdropped in ethnic cafes and clubs.The 
AP stories also revealed that one of the CIA's most experienced clandestine 
operatives began working inside the police department in July as the special 
assistant to the deputy commissioner of intelligence.The CIA is prohibited from spying 
domestically. Its unusual partnership with the NYPD has troubled top lawmakers and 
prompted an internal investigation.Bloomberg in October defended the arrangement, saying it was 
necessary in a dangerous world."There are people trying to kill us," he 
said. "And if the CIA can help us I'm all for getting 
any information they have and then letting the police department use it 
as -- if it's appropriate to protect you and to protect me."The 
letter noted that Muslims comprise at least 10 percent of 
stan. Co-authored with The Washington Post's Vernon Loeb, the nearly 400-page book 
is part history lesson through Petraeus' eyes, part hagiography and part defense 
of the counterinsurgency strategy he applied in both wars.Critics of counterinsurgency argue 
the strategy has not yet proved a success, with violence spiking in 
Iraq after the departure of U.S. troops, and Afghan local forces deemed 
ill-prepared to take over by the 2014 deadline.The book unapologetically casts Petraeus 
in the hero's role, as in this description of the Afghanistan campaign: 
"There was a new strategic force released on Kabul: Petraeus' will."Broadwell does 
acknowledge that Petraeus rubs some people the wrong way."His critics fault him 
for ambition and self-promotion," she writes. But she adds that "his energy, 
optimism and will to win stand out more for me."The book also 
is peppered with Petraeus quotes that sound like olive branches meant to 
soothe Obama aides who feared Petraeus would
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://post.in-mind.de/pipermail/abel-tasman/attachments/20140217/752fe6ea/attachment-0001.htm


More information about the Abel-tasman mailing list