Friday, August 5, 2011

Matrix 5* Man-In-The-Middle Propaganda Attack - Hacking Into Sky News’ Ku-band PKI** - May Day Spin On OBL Contract Hit - Police's Trident Unit

To whom it may concern

August 5, 2011

Did Rebekah skyhack Osama hit for some Templar spin with Cressida Dick?

Abel Danger believes Crown Agents’ Sister Rebekah Wade launched a Matrix 5* man-in-the-middle propaganda attack on America and Pakistan by hacking Sky News’ Ku-band PKI** with spin on the May Day contract hit of an Osama bin Laden doppelganger which, we infer, was staged for Middle Templars by Sister Cressida Dick, former head of the Metropolitan Police’s Trident unit with expertise in simulated gun-drug crimes (cf. Sky News spin around Jean Paul Menezes, 7/7 London Underground and Andrew Berwick, Utoya).

Matrix 5* MitM = Banker + Anglophone + Francophone + Lesbian + Pedophile attacks

PKI** - Public key infrastructure

Rebekah Skyhack 23 July 2011


Rebekah Skyhack 2 May 2011


Rebekah Skyhack 2 May 2011
How 'Most Pious Son' Became Al Qaeda Chief

Rebekah Skyhack 3 May 2011
How Special Forces Raid On Osama Unfolded

Rebekah Skyhack 3 May 2011
US: DNA Test Match Proves Bin Laden Death

Rebekah Skyhack 7 July 2005


Rebekah Skyhack 12 Dec 2008
Jury Return Open Verdict In Jean Charles De Menezes Inquest

Prequel
Middle Temple Patent - Matrix 5 Mistress of the Revels - Femme Comp Inc. Extortionists - Hacked Sky News Ku-Band Satellite Link - Snuff-Film Images

Kindle
New Captain Sherlock eBook

See #16 and #65
Abel Danger Mischief Makers - Mistress of the Revels - 'Man-In-The-Middle' Attacks

Clues, clues and more clues!!
How Special Forces Raid On Osama Unfolded



“Sky News How Special Forces Raid On Osama Unfolded 10:50am UK, Tuesday May 03, 2011 [The following CSI and spoliation information is of a detail for AD to infer that Rebekah Wade must have hacked through the Sky News PKI to Middle Templars and Kristine Marcy’s SES agents in U.S. Cyber Command] Osama bin Laden was killed in a daring US raid lasting just 40 minutes, after he was tracked to a compound in Pakistan. The operation by special forces, masterminded by the CIA, was so secret only a handful of US officials knew it was taking place. Helicopters left an airbase in north-west Pakistan and dropped the team in Abbottabad just before 1am local time on Monday. A US official said two dozen Navy Seals in night-vision goggles dropped into the high-walled compound by sliding down ropes from Chinook helicopters. Intelligence officials located the $1m hideout there last August after years of monitoring one of the terrorist leader's couriers. Detainees in Guantanamo Bay, captured after 9/11, had given up the courier's pseudonym during interrogation four years ago. They said he was a protege of September 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and was so trusted he could be living with Bin Laden. It took another two years to find out where the courier was operating and trace him to Abbottabad and the al Qaeda chief himself. Months were then spent standing up the intelligence and approval for a raid was finally given by US President Barack Obama last week. The fortified compound was surrounded by walls as high as 18ft with barbed wire on the top. Bin Laden compound before construction In 2004 (L) and post-construction in 2011 A sprawling house far larger than nearby homes, it was just 100 yards from a Pakistani military academy. Two security gates guarded the only entrance and a third-floor terrace was shielded by a high wall. There were no phone lines or internet connection linking it to the outside world and any rubbish was burned. Abbottabad, a picturesque haven for tourists, is only around 37miles (60km) from Islamabad. There was initially incredulity in the US that the world's most wanted man could be hiding in such a spot. A senior US administration official told Sky News: "The bottom line .... was that we had high confidence that the compound harbored a high-value terrorist target. "There was a strong probability that the terrorist that was hiding there was Osama bin Laden."

He was apparently living there with his youngest wife, his brother and other family members. An official in the Obama administration said: "Everything we saw, the extremely elaborate operational security, the brothers' background and their behaviour and the location of the compound itself was perfectly consistent with what our experts expected bin Laden's hide-out to look like." By mid-February, the intelligence was strong enough that the US President had decided on an "aggressive course of action". The US would not usually carry out a ground operation in Pakistan without collaboration with their intelligence service. But this operation was so sensitive that it was kept quiet, although diplomatic approval was given by the Pakistani government. America's allies were also given no hint of what was to come when final approval for a ground raid was granted by Mr Obama on Friday. The mission needed even more accuracy than US Predator drones, making ground troops the only option. The CIA conference room in Virginia became a command centre with officials watching from there in real-time. Details of exactly how the raid unfolded are not yet entirely clear but a fire fight quickly erupted. A senior US official speaking to Reuters news agency on condition of anonymity said the soldiers involved were under orders to kill not capture Bin Laden. "This was a kill operation," the official said. That was later contradicted by US counter-terrorism chief John Brennan, who said troops would have captured Bin Laden alive if that had been possible. Bin Laden's guards fired rocket-propelled grenades from the roof and at least two explosions rocked the town during the fight. Officials said the terror chief refused to give himself up, returned fire, and was eventually shot in the head and killed. Three other adult men - including the leader’s son - are believed to have died. A woman apparently used as a human shield - thought to be another of Bin Laden's wives- also died in the battle. None of the US troops were injured in the operation, during which they were on the ground for just 40 minutes. The firefight itself lasted around five minutes. bin laden video: dates and locations unspecified One US helicopter broke down and could not fly out again, which meant the troops had to carry out Bin Laden's body on foot. It was mid-afternoon in Virginia when the CIA chief and his team received word the terrorist leader was dead. An official said: "When word came in that the operation was a success, CIA officials in the conference room had a rather large applause." The mission is now set to go down in history as one of the most spectacular intelligence operations in US history. And it will be a huge boost to Mr Obama's presidency as he begins to campaign for a second term. The leader had made finding the al Qaeda boss the CIA's top priority when he took office in 2008. His predecessor George W Bush had declared he wanted Bin Laden alive or dead weeks after the September 11 attacks in 2001. But it took 10 years and vast resources to eventually locate the man described as 'the world's most wanted', in a Pakistani army town. Abbottabad is surrounded by hills and is less than half a day’s drive from the borders of Afghanistan and two hours from Islamabad. His discovery there raises questions about how he managed to evade capture and whether some officials in Pakistan had turned a blind eye [smear linked to Templar and Rebekah Wade's MitM attack on the American - Pakistan alliance]. The US had believed they were close to capturing the terror chief in the mountains of Tora Bora in December 2001 but he slipped through the net. Most intelligence had put Bin Laden in the lawless border area between the two countries, possibly in a cave being sheltered by tribesmen.”

“Two British officers played key role in operation 'Geronimo' London, May 8 (PTI) Two officers from the British special forces played a vital role in planning the covert operation that killed al Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden at his hideout in the heart of Pakistan, a media report said today. The unnamed officers, a captain and a major, were involved in the "detailed planning of an operation so precise that an exact replica of bin Laden's sprawling home was constructed in Afghanistan so the assault could be rehearsed," the Sunday Express reported. Two officers from Britain's Special Boat Service (SBS) could be in line for American military honours for the parts they played in planning the audacious raid on Osama's compound at Abbottabad in Pakistan, the report said. Neither the captain nor the major had a "trigger job" in the fight that raged when US Navy Seals stormed bin Laden's lair on Monday but their top secret role has been described as crucial for the success of the mission. Details have also began to emerge about the sophisticated levels of cyber warfare used in Operation Neptune's Spear, nicknamed "Geronimo". In the run-up to the assault, the Americans [through Rebekah Wade’s Sky News, FC-Ku PKI operators and Onion Router encryption] jammed all communications in the target area, bringing down electronic systems and cell phones. The mission was mounted by an EA-6 Prowler aircraft operating from the aircraft carrier Carl Vinson and a revolutionary pilotless drone aircraft.Britain's SBS officers were involved in the briefings prior to the attack, according to the report. A military insider has said: "One of the things the SBS is renowned for is its specialist signals capabilities and these were used by US forces in the days and weeks leading up to the operation." A separate intelligence source told the Express: "We did have people on exchange but they were exchange staff officers in a role which we have maintained for many years." The Pentagon has encouraged British involvement in some of their most secretive work in recent times because of our special forces' unrivalled expertise in urban warfare, particularly surveillance operations and raids on fortified buildings, the source said. Britain's Special Air Service (SAS) and SBS personnel have carried out as many as 2,000 assaults on al Qaeda and Taliban strongholds in Iraq and Afghanistan over the past decade, many in close co-operation with US troops, the source said. Another source told the paper that the elite unit charged with attacking bin Laden's sanctuary has enjoyed co-operating with the SBS because of their joint maritime links and because of British success at completing raids without relying on air force back-up. "Navy Seals see a special kindred with the SBS, who specialise in maritime warfare and rarely require air support," said the source. The use of special forces has increased dramatically in recent years and the need for co-operation between Nato allies has seen frequent exchanges of specialists. Colonel Richard Kemp, former commander of British forces in Afghanistan, has said: "It comes as no surprise to learn that UK special forces were involved in this operation. "There is a long history of UK and US Special Forces working hand in glove particularly, in recent years, in Iraq and Afghanistan. They trust and respect each other highly and play a crucial role in operations against both al Qaeda and the Taliban." The two SBS operators left their base in Poole, Dorset, last July and arrived at the allies' Bagram air base in Afghanistan several weeks ago after the CIA ordered Operation Neptune's Spear to be fine-tuned for final White House approval. In the weeks running up to the assault, Navy Seals practised on a full-scale replica of bin Laden's compound with each member of the 24-man team becoming accustomed to such tiny details as the position of electrical cables and the layout of rooms. A source added: "The British officers contributed to the intense planning and are understood to have briefed the assault teams in aspects of the mission." US President Barack Obama has already awarded the Presidential Citation to the Navy Seals, which is the highest award in the US military. It was not known whether the individual unit members, including those of the SBS, would be awarded the Navy's Distinguished Service Medal, as has happened on other occasions.”

“Schmidle says he wasn’t able to interview any of the 23 Navy SEALs involved in the mission itself. Instead, he said, he relied on the accounts of others who had debriefed the men. But a casual reader of the article wouldn’t know that; neither the article nor an editor’s note describes the sourcing for parts of the story. Schmidle, in fact, piles up so many details about some of the men, such as their thoughts at various times, that the article leaves a strong impression that he spoke with them directly. The SEALs, he writes of the raid’s climactic moment, “instantly sensed that it was Crankshaft,” the mission’s name for bin Laden, implying that the SEALs themselves had conveyed this impression to him. He also writes that the raiders “were further jostled by the awareness that they were possibly minutes away from ending the costliest manhunt in American history; as a result, some of their recollections — on which this account is based — may be imprecise and, thus, subject to dispute.” Except that the account was based not on their recollections but on the recollections of people who spoke to the SEALs. Remnick says he’s satisfied with the accuracy of the account. “The sources spoke to our fact-checkers,” he said. “I know who they are. Those are the rules of the road around here. We have the time to do this. There isn’t always time” for publications with shorter deadlines to do the same checking. Schmidle, meanwhile, says he’s received positive feedback from his sources and others familiar with the raid since the article was published. Among the satisfied customers: Schmidle’s father, Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Robert E. Schmidle Jr., the deputy commander of the U.S. Cyber Command. “He knew I was working on it,” the younger Schmidle says, “but we both decided it was best not to discuss it in advance. We wanted to maintain distinct lines of operation.” http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/freelance-journalist-scores-coup-with-account-of-bin-laden-raid/2011/08/02/gIQAEiaeqI_story.html

“U.S. Cyber Command On June 23, 2009, the Secretary of Defense directed the Commander of U.S. Strategic Command to establish USCYBERCOM. Initial Operational Capability (IOC) was achieved on May 21, 2010. Formal Command Name U.S. Cyber Command (USCYBERCOM or CYBERCOM) Commander General Keith B. Alexander Mission USCYBERCOM plans, coordinates, integrates, synchronizes, and conducts activities to: direct the operations and defense of specified Department of Defense information networks and; prepare to, and when directed, conduct full-spectrum military cyberspace operations in order to enable actions in all domains, ensure US/Allied freedom of action in cyberspace and deny the same to our adversaries. Focus USCYBERCOM will fuse the Department’s full spectrum of cyberspace operations and will plan, coordinate, integrate, synchronize, and conduct activities to: lead day-to-day defense and protection of DoD information networks; coordinate DoD operations providing support to military missions; direct the operations and defense of specified DoD information networks and; prepare to, and when directed, conduct full spectrum military cyberspace operations. The command is charged with pulling together existing cyberspace resources, creating synergy that does not currently exist and synchronizing war-fighting effects to defend the information security environment. USCYBERCOM will centralize command of cyberspace operations, strengthen DoD cyberspace capabilities, and integrate and bolster DoD’s cyber expertise. Consequently, USCYBERCOM will improve DoD’s capabilities to ensure resilient, reliable information and communication networks, counter cyberspace threats, and assure access to cyberspace. USCYBERCOM’s efforts will also support the Armed Services’ ability to confidently conduct high-tempo, effective operations as well as protect command and control systems and the cyberspace infrastructure supporting weapons system platforms from disruptions, intrusions and attacks. Organization USCYBERCOM is a sub-unified command subordinate to U. S. Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM). Service Elements include Army Cyber Command (ARCYBER); 24th USAF; Fleet Cyber Command (FLTCYBERCOM); and Marine Forces Cyber Command (MARFORCYBER). Seal The eagle, our national symbol, is revered for the keen eyesight that allows it to pierce the darkness and remain vigilant to protect us. Forces USCYBERCOM is a sub-unified command subordinate to USSTRATCOM. Service Elements include: USA – Army Cyber Command (ARCYBER) USAF – 24th USAF USN – Fleet Cyber Command (FLTCYBERCOM) USMC – Marine Forces Cyber Command (MARFORCYBER) Point of Contact U.S. Cyber Command Public Affairs (301) 688-6584 http://www.defense.gov/cyber (Current as of October 2010)”

“A Breakfast Briefing Presented by: CyberSecurity Seminars and Crowell & Moring LLP, and the Georgtown Institute of Law, Science and Global Security on November 4 from 8am to 10:30am at 1001 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, 11th Floor. As cyber attacks continue to rise at alarming rates, both the military and civilian cyber defenses are needing to adapt constantly to counter the threat. Developing the best strategies to counter the constantly changing and growing threats is vitally important...and increasingly challenging in the 24/7, hyper kinetic world of cyberspace. Come hear from two key, government insider strategists involved at the ground floor of developing the cyber policies and strategies at the National Protection and Programs Directorate (NPPD) at DHS and the Navy Fleet Cyber Command (FCC) /10th Fleet (C10F) headquartered at Fort Meade. Robert Carey, the former CIO of the U.S. Department of the Navy, is the new Director of Strategy and Policy of FCC, which launched this past January and directs Navy cyberspace operations globally. Bruce McConnell, an experienced IT pro, advises on cybersecurity matters across DHS. Under his leadership, McConnell's Cyber + Strategy Team is responsible for developing the overall cybersecurity strategy for DHS, aligned with the national strategy developed by the White House National Security Staff. Finally, Amit Yoran, CEO of NetWitness, will assess and analyze the significance of STUXNET, which impacts the cybersecutiry strategies of government and industy alike. Register here. Georgetown University students and faculty should contact t lsgs@georgetown.edu if you would like to request additional information as well as the discount code for free admission provided on a first come, first served basis.”

“Sky News New Video Of 7/7 Bombs' Aftermath Released 6:03pm UK, Tuesday October 12, 2010 Jo Couzens and Katie Cassidy, Sky News Online Footage of the Tube trains wrecked in the July 7 attack in 2005 has been shown for the first time during the inquest into the deaths of 52 people killed in the bombings. The videos were filmed by a police photographic unit hours after the London explosions. It reveals the scene which greeted emergency workers when they arrived at the stricken Aldgate train, described to the inquest as one of devastation "akin to a battlefield". Footage from Aldgate station was the first to be shown at the capital's Royal Courts of Justice. It showed how the bomb ripped through the second carriage of the Circle line service travelling east from Liverpool Street to Aldgate. Hugo Keith QC, counsel to the 7/7 inquest, said: "It is distressing in that, this video shows the place where so many people tragically died. "Great care has been taken and the material has been edited and re-edited to make sure you do not see any of the deceased [or clues that might link Cressida Dick and Middle Templars to the hit of Jean Paul Menezes the following day]"

“Sky News Police Guard 'Was Meant To Be On Island' 11:49pm UK, Sunday July 24, 2011 A police guard had been due to be on the Norwegian island where a gunman massacred at least 86 people but detectives do not know where he was, they have revealed. "There was supposed to be a police officer there," acting police chief Sveinung Sponheim told a news conference, adding that it is unclear where he was. He also said a British police expert is helping the investigation into Friday's twin attacks that killed at least 93 people as part of co-operation with foreign forces [Cressida Dick and Middle Templars] "We have received help from the Metropolitan Police in London by a criminal technician expert," Mr Sponheim said. The suspect accused of the killings has confessed to police that he carried out the attacks but said he did not break the law.”

Those who may be concerned have a moral obligation to think hard.

http://www.abeldanger.net/

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