It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
THE underpaid scientist opens the fridge door and pulls out a Tupperware box containing vials of anthrax for me to inspect. Behind us a row of ancient refrigerators hold vast quantities of plague. The scientist pulls out a tray of diseases, then accidentally whacks the fragile glass vials as she puts them away. One of her colleagues gasps in fear. Everybody in the room freezes. Nobody dares to breathe.
Welcome to this former Soviet biological weapons laboratory in Kazakhstan, abandoned by Moscow when the USSR collapsed in 1991, and now a Plague Research Institute. Security is woefully inadequate, and the door to the main stock of biological nightmares is secured with a wax seal. Although they would struggle to stop intruders, at least scientists will know if stocks have been stolen after a break-in.
Even if the facility had better security, Alim Aikimbayev, Director of the Institute, did not exactly reassure me about the risk of determined terrorists obtaining biological weapons. �If I need to get a virus, as a scientist I can infect myself, then go outside, infect other people with the virus and then I can cure myself,� he said. �I could do this if I was paid enough.�
by Leveller
The only country in the area that is likely to cause problems to the West is Uzbekistan. The government there is totally repressive and unlike some of the others, seems to have no intention whatsoever of reforming and is even hardening it's grip on it's people. The US has troops stationed there and could become a target through association.
...American political support for the authoritarian regimes in Central Asia is further fuelling anger and hatred of the West and driving more young men into the arms of new and established groups.
Heading south-west across Kyrgyzstan, we found an activist from the shadowy banned militant Islamic group Hizb-ut-Tahrir, which is becoming active across the whole region. �America will die,� he assured me.
�At the moment, we don�t have an atomic bomb in our hands, but we rely on Allah,� he said. �And if Allah wishes, we will have it.� Three times during our talk the militant said he wanted to martyr himself against the West.
"I cannot think of a time when we have had a region emerge as suddenly to become as strategically significant as the Caspian," said Dick Cheney in a speech to oil industrialists in 1998. In May 2001, the US vice-president recommended in the national energy policy report that "the president makes energy security a priority of our trade and foreign policy", singling out the Caspian basin as a "rapidly growing new area of supply
Although the US state department acknowledges that Uzbek security forces use "torture as a routine investigation technique", Washington last year gave the Karimov regime $500m in aid and rent payments for the US air base in Chanabad. The state department also quietly removed Uzbekistan from its annual list of countries where freedom of religion is under threat. The British government seems to support Washington's policy, as Whitehall recently recalled its ambassador Craig Murray from Tashkent after he openly decried Uzbekistan's abysmal human rights record.
Worse is to come: disgusted with the US's cynical alliances with their corrupt and despotic rulers, the region's impoverished populaces increasingly embrace virulent anti-Americanism and militant Islam. As in Iraq, America's brazen energy imperialism in Central Asia jeopardises the few successes in the war on terror because the resentment it causes makes it ever easier for terrorist groups to recruit angry young men. It is all very well to pursue oil interests, but is it worth mortgaging our security to do so?
Originally posted by kegs
Should it be seen as solely another Al Queda type attack, or the start of a battle against the oppressive government, however brutal?
www.realcities.com...
Hundreds of people reportedly have been arrested or detained without being charged. Some say they have suffered severe beatings, electric shocks and anal rape with bottles.
They've been arresting everyone on their blacklist, and then some, especially young people," said Atanazar Aripov, the secretary-general of the outlawed Erk (Free) Party. "They're using the attacks as an excuse for this crackdown. They just want to repress democracy even more."
Aripov, a retired physicist, said reports of arrests and abuses continued to pour in. They're being compiled by workers from the Erk Party and the Party of Free Farmers.
He told the story of Surat Mirvaliev, a 31-year-old greenhouse attendant whom police accused of being a member of Hizb ut-Tahrir, a banned Muslim group. Mirvaliev's mother, who briefly saw him in jail, said he'd been beaten so badly about the head that "he was sitting in a corner, shaking and babbling like a madman."
In another case, a nursing mother, Khamida Karbaeva, told Human Rights Watch that she was detained April 3 by plainclothes officers. She said she'd been beaten by the officers; a week later, bruises were still obvious on her body.
Karbaeva said the officers, who'd been searching for her fugitive husband, pointed to a mattress in the corner of the interrogation room and threatened to rape her on it. They also said they would strip her, photograph her naked, then spread the pictures around her conservative Muslim neighborhood.
www.myrtlebeachonline.com...
Militant Islamist groups from Central Asia took heavy losses while fighting alongside the Taliban, but the remnants of those mini armies have proved remarkably resilient in recent months and now appear to be regrouping with new recruits, new strategies and old money.
No longer secure in Afghanistan, hundreds of Uzbek, Tajik and Chinese militants have recently returned to familiar sanctuaries back home. Analysts think they're retrenching at their former camps and hideouts, mostly in the rugged and unpoliced mountains of Tajikistan.
When asked if the main leader was Tahir Yuldash - the political leader of the al-Qaida-allied Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, which found shelter in Afghanistan before Sept. 11, 2001 - Kasymov said investigators were still probing links between the Jamoat and the IMU.
Pakistani troops claimed to have injured Yuldash in anti-terrorism operations on the Afghan border last month before the Uzbekistan attacks. But Uzbek officials have been reluctant to draw a connection between the attacks and the IMU, a group they claim was decimated in the U.S.-led campaign in Afghanistan in late 2001.
However, the prosecutor-general has said the Jamoat was influenced by the Islamic Movement of Turkestan, a group that Kasymov said incorporated the IMU and extremists reaching from Kazakhstan to Uighur separatists from China's predominantly Muslim Xinjiang province. The IMU may also continue to exist, Kasymov said.