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Monday, April 25, 2011

SYRIA IS NEXT

Pastor Lindsey Williams said Yemen would fall next. Yesterday Saleh said that he will now go, but will take his time.

Overnight the NWO blatantly warned if not tried to kill Gaddafi by bombing his offices and library.

And now today I have just heard Lord Malloch-Brown, minion of George Soros (or is it t'other way around?), on BBC Radio 5 Live pleading with other interviewees, including an alleged man from Manchester with Syrian background, for NATO or someone to get in to Syria and blow up tanks etc.

Is this why a letter has been leaked implying that the SAS, the same SAS who instigated the Libyan al-Qaeda rebs to challenge Gaddafi, is short of personnel?

Should Gaddafi be out by now so that the SAS now in Libya should instead now be in Syria working their civil war magic with al Qaeda in Syria?

Is that why they say the SAS is short of personnel and they need new recruits immediately, even poor ones, to get into Syria, or to replace those in Libya so the Libya SAS can transfer to Syria before that uprising falls apart?

Note the sense of urgency and immediacy in the letter.

I think they are behind schedule.

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From http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/defence/8471560/SAS-at-risk-of-recruitment-crisis-as-Army-is-stretched-to-the-limit.html


SAS at risk of recruitment crisis as Army is stretched to the limit
The SAS is facing a shortage of recruits because ordinary soldiers are too over-stretched to apply for the elite regiment, a leaked letter from the head of infantry has warned.

By Thomas Harding, Defence Correspondent 9:30PM BST 24 Apr 2011

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The high “operational tempo” of the Armed Forces and the “unrelentingly demanding” operations in Afghanistan are combining to “mitigate against Special Forces recruitment”, Brig Richard Dennis warned. The SAS was also losing its unique position in the military as “interesting operations are no longer seen as the preserve of Special Forces”.

The disclosure is a major blow as the SAS is regarded as the world’s pre-eminent Special Forces unit. The regiment has played a leading role in the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq and is thought to be responsible for seizing key terrorists.

However, the head of the infantry said in the letter to Gen Sir Peter Wall, the head of the Army, that he now had deep concerns over the “challenge of fully manning the SAS”.

In the letter, seen by The Daily Telegraph, he warned that immediate action was needed to increase the “depth and quality” of potential recruits.

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