On the anniversary of the Kennedy assassination (not a word about JFK in the media here - not that was noticed, like he has been forgotten) a major story is being played out here as a special report instead;
_http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2010/11/19/f-rfa-macdonald-lebanon-hariri.html
Followed the story line by line that states to have figured out Hariri’s assassination by cell phone colour groupings, who had them and who used them – sort of. This telecom Intel evidence that the UN failed to follow, is implicated as the game changer, much to the relief of certain vested interests. This story has a host of characters and on the surface could be compelling; however, everything about this seems too over the top and discounts history and the true benefactors – it feels contrived with the Hezbollah target clearly in sight.
Following this, read Joe Quinn’s article (Tue, 15 Feb 2005) http://www.sott.net/articles/show/127146-Two-Years-Ago-Today-Mossad-Murders-Former-Lebanese-PM-in-Carbon-Copy-of-1979-Assassination from a number of years ago, and although the telecom Intel had not entered the picture back then, the just of Joe's article follows the history of the time and is as valid then as it is now against this report, IMO.
If you decide to read this story, think you may see some of the possible tributaries of manipulation within the so called evidence - start here with this quote;
Of the cell Phones:
[...]
This is a operation of thought, yet;
Indeed.
Of Eid =Capt. Wissam Eid, Policeman.
Others might have noticed, too?
On trying to figure out how he knew;
Of course this might be possible, but the networks, with phones, especially in this day and age, broadcasting as such; hmmm.
Eid was killed in 2008 - bomb.
And it gets summed up here by one;
Many suspicions it seems are now cleared-up...
In the "Special Report" there are numerous others worth thinking about, too. However, my initial reaction was this was not in keeping with this media outlet - something new perhaps. Spending three months piecing this report together; at their own expense, it was noted with some emphasis, with unnamed source who fear for their lives. It is rare that i've seen CBC do something like this with so many implications. Many, with and without knowing of the middle east issues, might feel that this concludes the assassination enigma with a period, and points the finger to whom they want/need to be the villains?
_http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2010/11/19/f-rfa-macdonald-lebanon-hariri.html
Followed the story line by line that states to have figured out Hariri’s assassination by cell phone colour groupings, who had them and who used them – sort of. This telecom Intel evidence that the UN failed to follow, is implicated as the game changer, much to the relief of certain vested interests. This story has a host of characters and on the surface could be compelling; however, everything about this seems too over the top and discounts history and the true benefactors – it feels contrived with the Hezbollah target clearly in sight.
Following this, read Joe Quinn’s article (Tue, 15 Feb 2005) http://www.sott.net/articles/show/127146-Two-Years-Ago-Today-Mossad-Murders-Former-Lebanese-PM-in-Carbon-Copy-of-1979-Assassination from a number of years ago, and although the telecom Intel had not entered the picture back then, the just of Joe's article follows the history of the time and is as valid then as it is now against this report, IMO.
If you decide to read this story, think you may see some of the possible tributaries of manipulation within the so called evidence - start here with this quote;
Among other things, CBC News has learned that:
• Evidence gathered by Lebanese police and, much later, the UN, points overwhelmingly to the fact that the assassins were from Hezbollah, the militant Party of God that is largely sponsored by Syria and Iran. CBC News has obtained cellphone and other telecommunications evidence that is at the core of the case.
• UN investigators came to believe their inquiry was penetrated early by Hezbollah and that that the commission's lax security likely led to the murder of a young, dedicated Lebanese policeman who had largely cracked the case on his own and was co-operating with the international inquiry.
• UN commission insiders also suspected Hariri's own chief of protocol at the time, a man who now heads Lebanon's intelligence service, of colluding with Hezbollah. But those suspicions, laid out in an extensive internal memo, were not pursued, basically for diplomatic reasons.
Of the cell Phones:
The red-phone carriers were clearly a disciplined group. They communicated with one another and almost never with an outside phone. And directly after the assassination, the red network went dead forever.
[...]
The blue network also exercised considerable discipline. It, too, remained a "closed" network. []Not once did any blue-network member make the sort of slip that telecom sleuths look for[/b].
This is a operation of thought, yet;
But these people also carried co-location phones and Eid kept following the ever-widening trail of crumbs.
The big break came when the blue network was closed down and the phones were collected by a minor electronics specialist who worked for Hezbollah, Abd al Majid al Ghamloush.
Ghamloush was, in the words of one former UN investigator, "an idiot."
Given the job of collecting and disposing of the blue phones, he noticed some still had time remaining on them and used one to call his girlfriend, Sawan, in the process basically identifying himself to Capt. Eid. He might as well have written his name on a whiteboard and held it up outside ISF headquarters.
Ghamloush's stupidity eventually led Eid to a pair of brothers named Hussein and Mouin Khreis, both Hezbollah operatives. One of them had actually been at the site of the blast.
Indeed.
Of Eid =Capt. Wissam Eid, Policeman.
Before his violent death in 2008, Wissam Eid was an unusual figure in the murky, often corrupt world of Arab policing.
He had never actually wanted to be a policeman, or an intelligence officer. In authoritarian Arab society, he had no interest in becoming an authority figure. And yet, he'd had no choice.
When he was doing his military service in the 1990s, the ISF, Lebanon's all-encompassing security force, noticed Eid's degree in computer engineering.
Others might have noticed, too?
Finally, Eid was handed a clue from the best source possible: He was contacted by Hezbollah itself and told that some of the phones he was chasing were being used by Hezbollah agents conducting a counter-espionage operation against Israel's Mossad spy agency and that he needed to back off.
On trying to figure out how he knew;
This Capt. Eid must have had help, thought the telecom experts. Someone must have given him this information. Perhaps he was involved somehow?
A deputation of telecom experts was dispatched to meet Eid. They questioned him and returned convinced that, somehow, he had indeed identified the networks himself.
Eid appeared to be one of those people who could intuit mathematical patterns, the sort who thinks several moves ahead in chess. Even better, he was willing to help directly. He wanted Hariri's killers to face justice, Hezbollah's warning be damned.
Of course this might be possible, but the networks, with phones, especially in this day and age, broadcasting as such; hmmm.
Eid was killed in 2008 - bomb.
And it gets summed up here by one;
Scott Carpenter, a former Bush administration official dispatched by the White House to Lebanon in the wake of Hariri's death, also says the reality is obvious.
But, he adds: "Is Hezbollah going to get away with it? Yes. Fewer travesties will be greater, but I don't see where the international will is to take this on, and I certainly don't see, absent that international will, how the Lebanese people can take it on."
Many suspicions it seems are now cleared-up...
In the "Special Report" there are numerous others worth thinking about, too. However, my initial reaction was this was not in keeping with this media outlet - something new perhaps. Spending three months piecing this report together; at their own expense, it was noted with some emphasis, with unnamed source who fear for their lives. It is rare that i've seen CBC do something like this with so many implications. Many, with and without knowing of the middle east issues, might feel that this concludes the assassination enigma with a period, and points the finger to whom they want/need to be the villains?