Friday, January 08, 2010

IRAN AND THE GUARDIAN

The front page of The Guardian today claims that British forces were sent to the Iranian border immediately after Peter Moore had been kidnapped in order to rescue him and the other kidnapped men. However these forces failed somehow.

But again the details are not provided.

They weren't then (which is the most important part of this story).

They aren't now.

It seems that this story has been created years after the time.

If the details being provided now were known then they would have been published not just in The Guardian but in The Times, The Daily Telegraph and The Sun.

Iran has always been a target of our intelligence agencies, not because of the sand and its people but because of the fossil fuel for BP and the other Bilderberg oil corporations. Iran was named as a member of the Axis-of-Evil and named as a military target in Israels' A Clean Break and America's Rebuilding America's Defenses (both written by the same Zionist nutters).

Moore was kidnapped in May 2007. Are you telling me that Iran sent Iranians to Baghdad, kidnapped five British men, somehow sneaked them across the Iranian border even though the US and British military apparently knew where they were without any military intervention, and only now, nearly three years later, are the details of this being published in The Guardian at the same time that false allegations of Iranian nuclear triggers are published in The Times?!

Remember:
1. we went to war on the words of cabbie
2. The Guardian was the proudsest of the proud to demand mass genocide at Copenhagen

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From http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jan/07/british-troops-iran-border-hostages

British troops tried to rescue hostages at Iran border

Exclusive: UK forces sent to intercept hostages, including recently freed Peter Moore, as they were taken from Iraq

British troops in southern Iraq were scrambled to the Iranian border after the abduction of five British hostages in May 2007, in a failed attempt to stop them being taken into Iran, the Guardian has learned.

The troops were sent to the border area north of Basra to intercept the kidnappers after receiving intelligence that they were heading to the frontier from Baghdad, but failed to find them. It is unclear whether the British unit arrived too late or went to a different crossing point along the 1,500km border.

British officials today refused to give details of the attempted rescue operation, describing the issue as "extremely sensitive", but a British journalist visiting the Iraq-Iran border a few months after the abduction was briefed on the operation by British officers who had taken part.

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