http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6015597/
http://www.frankdux.com/duxforum/viewthread.php?tid=1303&page=1#pid20860
"Two were kidnapped in broad daylight in Baghdad earlier this month. Last Thursday, Americans Eugene Armstrong and Jack Hensley and Briton Kenneth Bigley were seized by gunmen at the house they shared in Baghdad.
The Tawhid and Jihad group led by Jordanian-born terrorism mastermind Abu Musab al-Zarqawi says it had murdered Armstrong and Hensley because the U.S. military rejected its demand to free all Iraqi women from U.S.-run prisons in Iraq.
The videos show masked gunmen standing behind the blindfolded hostages, whose throats are then slit and their heads severed. CIA officials say analysis of the footage of Armstrongs killing suggests Zarqawi himself wielded the knife.
Hensleys decapitated body was found Wednesday in Baghdad."
Question:
There was a recent news story referencing an interview with one of the American Military commanders regarding finding/locating Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. According to the news reporter, the commander said that the role of finding militants such as al-Zarqawi is better suited for a covert operative more so than military units.
It is also a fact that former President Bill Clinton was quoted in a recent report that he thought that the U.S. should just drop a couple of Ninja into Afganistan to take out leadership of the 9/11 terrorist group.
There are also individuals in Iraq serving as Security consultants, Security Officers and Private Security Agents who have a background in martial arts, a few with backgrounds in Ninjitsu/Ninjutsu.
Although President Clinton may have been hummorous in his response (after sending in a couple of Missiles), do you think President Bush should contract a private individual to develope a strategy, organize and implement the strategy to "bring those responsible to justice?" Is it necessary for this contracted individual to have a background in Ninjitsu versus other military or martial expertise?
http://www.frankdux.com/duxforum/viewthread.php?tid=1303&page=1#pid20860
"Two were kidnapped in broad daylight in Baghdad earlier this month. Last Thursday, Americans Eugene Armstrong and Jack Hensley and Briton Kenneth Bigley were seized by gunmen at the house they shared in Baghdad.
The Tawhid and Jihad group led by Jordanian-born terrorism mastermind Abu Musab al-Zarqawi says it had murdered Armstrong and Hensley because the U.S. military rejected its demand to free all Iraqi women from U.S.-run prisons in Iraq.
The videos show masked gunmen standing behind the blindfolded hostages, whose throats are then slit and their heads severed. CIA officials say analysis of the footage of Armstrongs killing suggests Zarqawi himself wielded the knife.
Hensleys decapitated body was found Wednesday in Baghdad."
Question:
There was a recent news story referencing an interview with one of the American Military commanders regarding finding/locating Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. According to the news reporter, the commander said that the role of finding militants such as al-Zarqawi is better suited for a covert operative more so than military units.
It is also a fact that former President Bill Clinton was quoted in a recent report that he thought that the U.S. should just drop a couple of Ninja into Afganistan to take out leadership of the 9/11 terrorist group.
There are also individuals in Iraq serving as Security consultants, Security Officers and Private Security Agents who have a background in martial arts, a few with backgrounds in Ninjitsu/Ninjutsu.
Although President Clinton may have been hummorous in his response (after sending in a couple of Missiles), do you think President Bush should contract a private individual to develope a strategy, organize and implement the strategy to "bring those responsible to justice?" Is it necessary for this contracted individual to have a background in Ninjitsu versus other military or martial expertise?