KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) – One of two U.S. sailors missing in Afghanistan since last week has been confirmed dead and his body recovered, a NATO spokesman said Tuesday.
US Government condemns publication; Assange invites researchers to sort classified data The release by Wikileaks of more than 90,000 documents about military operations in Afghanistan may just be the start of similar problems for the US government.
A soldier from 36 Engineer Regiment, the 325th British serviceman killed in Afghanistan, is believed to have been hit by a shell fired by his own side.
KABUL, Afghanistan — One of two U.S. sailors missing in Afghanistan since last week has been confirmed dead and his body recovered, a NATO spokesman said Tuesday. Afghanistan – Asia – Taliban – United States Navy – United States armed forces
KABUL, Afghanistan One of two U.S. sailors missing in Afghanistan since last week has been confirmed dead and his body recovered, a NATO spokesman said Tuesday.
The United States has pursued a contradictory policy with regard to the Afghan war by ignoring Pakistan’s role in the insurgency, the Afghan government said on Tuesday, following the leak of U.S. military documents.
In Afghanistan, the release of the Wikileaks documents has elicited a much different response than the angry denunciations coming out of Washington and Islamabad. The Afghan government seems to have no objection at all about the leaking of so much classified information.
Wikileaks Docs Target Pakistan Kurt Nimmo Infowars.com July 26, 2010 Not long after Wikileaks dumped tens of thousands of classified Afghanistan “war” documents into the public arena for consumption, the corporate media zoomed in on Pakistan. “WikiLeaks documents released Sunday shine a spotlight on Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence, a spy agency that has been accused for years of having links to terrorist groups,” writes the Wall Street Journal. www.infowars.com www.waynemadsenreport.com