Book -- Cold Terror: How Canada Nurtures and Exports Terrorism to the World
Stewart Bell's article on the death of the man who urged Palestinian killing of Israelis, Sheik Yassin, entitled "He helped keep Hamas on short leash" is not on the website yet, but it is worth reading. (See the National Post, Mar. 23, 03) Bell quotes several Middle East experts/researchers on the implications for all of us of the killing of the murderer Palestinian Sheik Yassin. It bodes ill for all of us; nevertheless, I still feel that, in the face of continued suicide bombing and an attempt at getting to a chemical site (I believe) in Israel for Palestinian destruction, Israel has a right to protect its citizens and its infrastructure.
Meanwhile, check this link with a description of the content of Stewart Bell's book, Cold Terror: How Canada Nurtures and Exports Terrorism to the World, . It is truly frightening what has been allowed to happen in Canada for the last several years -- compliments of the usual suspects. It is worth linking to this just to read what is in this book and who contributed information -- some knowledgeable sources, I would think.
A Turkish diplomat is gunned down in an Ottawa parking lot; a truck bomb destroys the business district of the Sri Lankan capital Colombo; a plot to assassinate the Israeli prime minister is uncovered in Jerusalem; a bomb destined for Los Angeles International Airport is found stashed in the trunk of a car; an explosion levels a crowded nightclub in Indonesia.
The common denominator? All were the work of Canadian-based terrorists. While Canada is officially an ally in the war on global terror, over the past two decades, the country has allowed itself to become an important center of world terrorism, a place where violent radicals raise money, buy weapons, recruit operatives, plan attacks and spread their hateful ideologies.
A timely and well-researched book, Cold Terror tells the untold story of how Canada became a base for the world's deadliest terrorist organizations. [. . . .]
Drawing on a vast collection of classified intelligence documents, the author's frontline accounts from the war on terror and exclusive interviews with senior Canadian counter-terrorism officials, victims of terror and terrorists themselves, Cold Terror vividly presents Canada's long-neglected terrorism problem--and its bloody consequences.