Untitled Document
Not only did the “terrorists” in Canada not have a target
for their so-called fertilizer bomb, the fertilizer was delivered by the RCMP
as part of a sting operation (i.e., the suspects were framed), according to
the Toronto
Star. “Sources say investigators who had learned of the group’s
alleged plan to build a bomb were controlling the sale and transport of the
massive amount of fertilizer, a key component in creating explosives. Once the
deal was done, the RCMP-led anti-terrorism task force moved in for the arrests….
At a news conference yesterday morning, the RCMP displayed a sample of ammonium
nitrate and a crude cell phone detonator they say was seized in the massive
police sweep when the 17 were taken into custody. However, they made no mention
of the police force’s involvement in the sale.”
Of course not. Because the entire affair is little more than a dog and pony
show designed to convince Canadians local Muslims pose a threat to the country.
Meanwhile, some Canadians have responded in the desired manner. “The vandalizing
of a Toronto mosque on the weekend could be part of a reaction against Islam
after police arrested 17 Muslim men and youth in southern Ontario amid accusations
of an al-Qaeda-inspired bombing plot, an imam says,” reports CBC
News, making sure to link “al-Qaeda” to the suspects, who are
of course guilty until proven innocent.
Naturally, the corporate media and “experts” on such matters are
clueless. “A Canadian terrorism expert said the type of fertilizer ordered
by the group—34-0-0—is the highest grade and the best for making
explosives,” reports the neocon National
Post, not bothering to mention the fact Canadian police arranged the delivery
of the fertilizer. “This would indicate that they had done their homework,”
Tom Quiggin, a senior fellow at the Centre of Excellence for National Security
in Singapore, told the discredited newspaper, basically a neocon propaganda
tool. In fact, it appears the RCMP “had done their homework,” not
the patsies.
In order to demonize the suspects, or rather patsies, the National
Post and other newspapers in Canada have gone out of their way to establish,
at best tenuously, an “al-Qaeda” connection. “Fahim
Ahmad, 21, and Zakaria Amara, 20, are being described as the key figures among
the 12 adults and five juveniles charged over the weekend with terrorism-related
offences…. Both had been followers of Qayyum Abdul Jamal, 43, a senior
member of the Al-Rahman Islamic Centre in Mississauga and the oldest of the
17 accused.” Jamal, according to the National Post, quoting Aly Hindy,
imam at the Salaheddin Islamic Centre in Scarborough, “was upset at the
way some in Toronto’s Muslim community have distanced themselves from
the Khadrs, the Toronto family that once lived in Osama bin Laden’s compound
in Afghanistan.”
In 2004, the Khadr family was at the center of an effort to amend Canada’s
Citizenship Act after they supposedly admitted “patriarchal links to Osama
bin Laden,” as CTV
put it. “It’s very regrettable that the Conservatives would exploit
the fear of terrorism to identify an individual or two individuals and somehow
suggest their citizenship should be revoked,” Peter Kormos of the NDP
said at the time. “It’s very dangerous to use a single instance
like that to set a precedent or paint a broad sweep.” But then, of course,
the “conservatives” (neocons) in Canada and the United States are
all about “broad sweeps” and obviously sting operations, if they
forward the agenda.
Meanwhile, so-called “counter-terrorism officials” have
admitted “that lethal chemical devices they feared had been stored at
an east London house raided on Friday may never have existed,” the Guardian
reports. “Confidence among officials appeared to be waning as
searches at the address continued to yield no evidence of a plot for an attack
with cyanide or other chemicals. A man was shot during the raid, adding to pressure
on the authorities for answers about the accuracy of the intelligence that led
them to send 250 officers to storm the man’s family home at dawn.”
But then the idea here is not “a duty of care to the general public,”
as officials claim, but rather to create irrational hysteria and animosity toward
Muslims.
It does not matter a chemical attack never occurred, or the police are unable
to find chemicals or deadly substances, because simply mentioning “cyanide
or other chemicals” and the same sentence with “terrorists”
is enough to provoke a stampede, almost the same as an actual attack occurring.
It worked famously in the lead-up to the neocon invasion of Iraq. How many people
still believe Iraq has chemical and biological weapons, even though there is
absolutely no evidence of this? How many people, thanks to misrepresentation
and outright lies parroted by the corporate media, cannot tell the difference
between Saddam is Osama? How many people believe the United States invaded and
occupied Iraq in response to nine eleven? Millions.
And now millions believe there are Muslim terrorists in our midst,
even though the latest incidents are farcical and obvious set-ups engineered
to ramp up the paranoia and fear in preparation for the next phase of the “long
war” against Muslim society and culture. The Straussian neocons, firmly
entrenched in the Pentagon and foreign policy establishment, are only peripherally
interested in consensus, although a bit more paranoia, fear, and anger—the
latter resulting in vandalism at the International Muslims Organization of Toronto—is
helpful in creating the appropriate domestic conditions for the commencement
of criminal mass murder in Iran.