Christopher Stevens was deeply involved with anti-Ghaddafi rebels.

Octoldit

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Sowing, Reaping, Pillaging and the Black Crow Night: LINK: kenny's sideshow: Sowing, Reaping, Pillaging and the Black Crow Night

This is a very rare image of the former US ambassador to Libya Christopher Stevens who died alongside three other embassy staff following an attack on the US Consulate in Benghazi last Wednesday.

The image shows Christopher Stevens leaning over {alleged} Muammar Ghaddafi's body after the heinous murder of the former Libyan strongman by a gang of rebels.

Reportedly, Christopher Stevens was deeply involved with anti-Ghaddafi rebels.

Ambassador Stevens, had directed illegal arms supply to various groups of rebels including Al-Qaeda members during the Libyan crisis.

Before his death, Stevens and staff were involved in a wide range of clandestine activities aimed at promoting US-NATO interests inside Libya.

Stevens was no hero. He was nothing more than a cog in the war machine's globalist expansion. Sometimes you do reap what you sow.
 
Granny says send some Predator drones an' cruise missiles over there an' tell `em Santa Claus bringin' em some more 'gifts'...
:cool:
Al Qaeda in North Africa calls death of U.S. ambassador a 'gift'
September 18th, 2012 - As the fallout from an online film that mocks Islam's holy prophet continues, al Qaeda's affiliate in North Africa urged Muslims in the region Tuesday to kill U.S. government representatives and called the death of Ambassador Chris Stevens a "gift."
"We encourage all Muslims to continue to demonstrate and escalate their protests ... and to kill their (American) ambassadors and representatives or to expel them to cleanse our land from their wickedness," said the statement from al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb. The group called last week's killing of Stevens, the U.S. ambassador to Libya, "the best gift you (can) give to his arrogant and unjust administration." The video, "The Innocence of Muslims," is a low-budget, amateurish 14-minute movie trailer produced privately in the United States and posted on YouTube. The clip mocks the Prophet Mohammed as a womanizer, child molester and killer.

Islam forbids any depictions of Mohammed, and blasphemy is taboo among many in the Muslim world. The video was relatively obscure until September 11 when rioters seizing on it breached the U.S. Embassy in Cairo. Protesters also attacked the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya, killing Stevens and three other Americans. Although Washington has made it clear it did not sanction the film, a wave of protests since then has rippled from Morocco to Malaysia, spurring U.S. officials to increase security at diplomatic missions and demand other governments to take action.

Here are the latest key developments:

Suicide attack in Afghanistan

A Taliban-allied insurgent group claimed responsibility for a suicide attack that killed 12 people, including eight South Africans, in Afghanistan. The attack was a response to the film, the group said. Hezb-e-Islami Gulbuddin, a group allied with the Taliban, said a 22-year-old woman drove a car packed with 660 pounds (300 kilograms) of explosives into a van on a road leading to Kabul International Airport. Eleven others were wounded in the attack, the Afghan Interior Ministry said.

The escalating tensions have spilled into NATO military operations in the central Asia nation, prompting the alliance to order its troops to adjust joint operations with Afghan security forces to minimize attacks on them by their local allies. "Recent events outside of and inside Afghanistan related to the 'Innocence of Muslims' video plus the conduct of recent insider attacks have given cause for ISAF troops to exercise increased vigilance and carefully review all activities and interactions with the local population," said a spokeswoman for NATO's International Security Assistance Force. The operations with Afghan forces could increase as the "threat level" goes down, she said.

More protests

See also:

In attack aftermath, disagreement over how it began
September 14th, 2012 - As the investigation into the deadly attack on the U.S. diplomatic post in Benghazi, Libya, continues, there is disagreement about whether the violence was a result of a mob gone awry, a planned terror attack or a combination of the two.
The White House said Friday there was no indication before the attack in Libya this week that something was in the works beforehand. "We were not aware of any actionable intelligence indicating that an attack on the U.S. mission in Benghazi was planned or imminent," presidential spokesman Jay Carney said. The comment came as a top Libyan official and some within Congress and other aspects of the U.S. government said there are signs now that the attack on the consulate that killed the ambassador and three other Americans was not a spontaneous outgrowth of a mob angered by an anti-Muslim film. A U.S. official told CNN's Suzanne Kelly that American intelligence was sufficiently concerned about the attention the movie was receiving online to warn the embassy in Egypt in a bulletin a few days before protesters stormed that compound in Cairo on Tuesday, the same day the consulate in Libya was attacked by armed militants.

The warning did not specify a threat and the source did not say if that intelligence bulletin was sent to American diplomats in Libya. Several American officials have told CNN this week there was no intelligence in advance that there was a plot in the making. Some officials have said it does not appear it was a fully planned ahead of time. But a senior U.S. official told CNN's Barbara Starr on Friday that while the United States is not ready to draw a conclusion about whether the attack was spontaneous or planned, there is some evidence pointing to the notion there was a level of organization and planning behind it, given the extensive nature of the attack. Moreover, a congressional source told CNN's Suzanne Kelly on Friday that there is disagreement within the intelligence community over whether this was planned. When pressed individually, some analysts have hedged, according to the source.

The Libyan government believes the Benghazi attack was planned and intended to inflict maximum damage, a top Libyan official told CNN's Arwa Damon. Mohammed al-Megaryef, the president of Libya's ruling General National Congress, said the attacks were carried out by extremists with the intent of driving apart Libyans and Americans and sabotaging the relationship.

More In attack aftermath, disagreement over how it began – CNN Security Clearance - CNN.com Blogs
 

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