Iran helped 9/11, using the Saudis as proxies. Look at the facts. - US Treasury agrees

BaggerofTea

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Explain this bro.

You came in here not knowing about Iran...i'm PROVING to you that Iran has a connection to Al-Qaeda as a proxy.

I'm telling how how deep this shyt goes.

Just watch the 22 min video. Its all laid out. Facts on facts on facts.

An Iranian, using Iran's money, to organize Al-Qaeda.





from-gulf-to-central-and-south-asia.jpg

US charges Iran with al-Qaeda links

By Anna Fifield in Washington

The US government has accused Iran of allowing al-Qaeda operatives to funnel a “significant” amount of money through its territory to the group’s leaders in Pakistan and Afghanistan, making the strongest allegation yet of a link between Tehran and the terrorist network.

The Treasury Department on Thursday imposed sanctions on six men that it says are operating through Iran as part of a “critical funding and facilitation network for al-Qaeda”.

The designation was also a direct hit at the theocratic regime in Iran, said David Cohen, the Treasury’s undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence.

“Our sense is that this network is operating through Iranian territory with the knowledge of and at least the acquiescence of the Iranian authorities,” Mr Cohen said. “They are not operating in secret. It is pursuant to an agreement.”

The Treasury targeted Ezedin Abdel Aziz Khalil, a senior al-Qaeda facilitator who it said has been living and operating in Iran since 2005 under an agreement between the network and the Tehran regime.

It said that the Iranian authorities were allowing Mr Khalil to move both money and recruits from across the Middle East through Iran to Pakistan. He required each operative to deliver $10,000 to al-Qaeda in Pakistan, it said.

The Treasury also designated five others who were linked to former al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden or to al-Qaeda in Iraq, or who had helped deliver money or extremists to the network’s base in Pakistan.

:skip: Iranian money right?
 

BaggerofTea

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That shyt can't happen without Iran being complicit

Get that through your head.
:yeshrug: So?

Thats called Geopolitics. They have the gulf states terror funders on one side and a terror state on the other. Both are allied with the US.

It makes no good to clamp down on al-qaeda after all they would bomb you if they did and its not like the US would be there for assistance.

So guess what, as a smart government would do, you soften any al-qaeda impact by giving them enough to where they can't bytch, less chances they blown up shia shrines in your country while the US and Saudis go :manny:
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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:yeshrug: So?

Thats called Geopolitics. They have the gulf states terror funders on one side and a terror state on the other. Both are allied with the US.

It makes no good to clamp down on al-qaeda after all they would bomb you if they did and its not like the US would be there for assistance.

So guess what, as a smart government would do, you soften any al-qaeda impact by giving them enough to where they can't bytch, less chances they blown up shia shrines in your country while the US and Saudis go :manny:
Wait...so are you NOW admitting that Iran has a specific role in using Al-Qaeda as a proxy? :sas1:

I'm not going to troll you about changing your opinion, I just want you to acknowledge that you're learning about Iran's behavior in 9/11 and international terrorism
 

BaggerofTea

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Wait...so are you NOW admitting that Iran has a specific role in using Al-Qaeda as a proxy? :sas1:

I'm not going to troll you about changing your opinion, I just want you to acknowledge that you're learning about Iran's behavior in 9/11 and international terrorism
:upsetfavre: What are you talking about????

Thats not what they are doing at all. IRAN is acting like a mere proxy
 

BaggerofTea

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No.

Iran has FUNDED terrorist attacks.

Point. Blank. Period., including, but not limited to CRUCIAL funding related to 9/11.
:yeshrug: Yea, attacks through Hezbollah

You really are desperate as fukk reaching for this Iran angle :wow:

Are you a Saudi?????
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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Supreme Court Rules Iran Bank Must Pay for Terrorist Attacks


Supreme Court Rules Iran Bank Must Pay for Terrorist Attacks

Supreme Court Rules Iran Bank Must Pay for Terrorist Attacks
By ADAM LIPTAK

April 20, 2016

WASHINGTON — Iran’s central bank must pay nearly $2 billion to victims of terrorist attacks, the Supreme Court ruled on Wednesday.

In a 6-to-2 decision, the court said Congress had not exceeded its constitutional role in enacting a statute to make it easier for the plaintiffs to recover damages that had been awarded to them in a series of lawsuits.

The cases were brought by the families of Americans killed in terrorist attacks found to have been sponsored by Iran, including relatives of those who died in the 1983 Marine Corps barracks bombing in Lebanon. That attack killed 241 servicemen.

The plaintiffs sought to collect frozen funds from Bank Markazi, Iran’s central bank, relying on a 2012 federal law, the Iran Threat Reduction and Syria Human Rights Act, that made the task easier by specifying assets of the bank that could satisfy the plaintiffs’ judgments. The law was quite specific, naming a single, pending consolidated case by caption and docket number.

As a trial judge put it, the law “sweeps away” any “federal or state law impediments that might otherwise exist” to letting the plaintiffs obtain the money.

The bank responded that the law violated the Constitution because it was focused on a single case and compelled courts “to reach a predetermined result.”

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg rejected the argument, saying Congress has the power to alter legal standards in existing cases.

In dissent, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. said, “There has never been anything like” the 2012 law.

“Hereafter,” he wrote, “with this court’s seal of approval, Congress can unabashedly pick the winners and losers in particular pending cases.”

But Justice Ginsburg said the law was fairly routine, listing earlier ones that applied to given railroads, a single bridge, a specific settlement agreement and one oil tanker.

“Congress may indeed direct courts to apply newly enacted, outcome-altering legislation in pending civil cases,” she wrote, adding that “a statute does not impinge on judicial power when it directs courts to apply a new legal standard to undisputed facts.”

Graphic | How a Vacancy on the Supreme Court Affects Cases in the 2015-16 Term The empty seat left by Justice Antonin Scalia’s death leaves the court with two basic options for cases left on the docket this term if the justices are deadlocked at 4 to 4.

The 2012 law, she wrote, “provides a new standard clarifying that, if Iran owns certain assets, the victims of Iran-sponsored terrorist attacks will be permitted to execute against those assets.”

“Applying laws implementing Congress’ policy judgments, with fidelity to those judgments, is commonplace for the judiciary,” Justice Ginsburg wrote.

In any event, Justice Ginsburg wrote, the 2012 law still left courts with work to do, as it did not define key terms. Courts were required to sort out questions over the ownership and location of assets, she added.

The decision, in Bank Markazi v. Peterson, No. 14-770, came as the United States and Iran have taken steps to ease tensions. Justice Ginsburg said the court should be wary of intruding on judgments made by Congress and the president in the conduct of foreign affairs.

“Congress passed, and the president signed” the 2012 law, Justice Ginsburg wrote, “in furtherance of their stance on a matter of foreign policy. Action in that realm warrants respectful review by courts.”

The Obama administration supported the plaintiffs in the Supreme Court. When the case was argued in January, a lawyer for the administration drew a distinction between laws intended solely to pick a winner in a pending case and ones that changed the applicable law, even if only for a pending case.

Chief Justice Roberts said that was a distinction without a difference. “You’re saying Congress has to be cute about it,” he said.

Justices Anthony M. Kennedy, Stephen G. Breyer, Samuel A. Alito Jr., and Elena Kagan joined all of Justice Ginsburg’s opinion. Justice Clarence Thomas joined most of it, but he noted without explanation that he did not accept the part of the opinion concerning the deference due the other branches in matters of foreign affairs.

In dissent, Chief Justice Roberts, joined by Justice Sonia Sotomayor, said the majority had yielded too much power to Congress.

“No less than if it had passed a law saying ‘respondents win,’” the chief justice wrote, “Congress has decided this case by enacting a bespoke statute tailored to this case that resolves the parties’ specific legal disputes to guarantee respondents victory.”

The 2012 law, he wrote, allowed Congress to assume a role that the Constitution had committed to the judiciary, “changing the law — for these proceedings alone — simply to guarantee that respondents win.”

“At issue here is a basic principle, not a technical rule,” Chief Justice Roberts wrote, one that he said, quoting a 1988 dissent from Justice Antonin Scalia, may “effect important change in the equilibrium of power.”

 

Meta Reign

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This is up there with the "Iraq has weapons of mass destruction" lie.

A flat out lie that has potential of starting ww3.

God, bless us all. smh.
 

BaggerofTea

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Supreme Court Rules Iran Bank Must Pay for Terrorist Attacks


Supreme Court Rules Iran Bank Must Pay for Terrorist Attacks

Supreme Court Rules Iran Bank Must Pay for Terrorist Attacks
By ADAM LIPTAK

April 20, 2016
WASHINGTON — Iran’s central bank must pay nearly $2 billion to victims of terrorist attacks, the Supreme Court ruled on Wednesday.

In a 6-to-2 decision, the court said Congress had not exceeded its constitutional role in enacting a statute to make it easier for the plaintiffs to recover damages that had been awarded to them in a series of lawsuits.

The cases were brought by the families of Americans killed in terrorist attacks found to have been sponsored by Iran, including relatives of those who died in the 1983 Marine Corps barracks bombing in Lebanon. That attack killed 241 servicemen.

The plaintiffs sought to collect frozen funds from Bank Markazi, Iran’s central bank, relying on a 2012 federal law, the Iran Threat Reduction and Syria Human Rights Act, that made the task easier by specifying assets of the bank that could satisfy the plaintiffs’ judgments. The law was quite specific, naming a single, pending consolidated case by caption and docket number.

As a trial judge put it, the law “sweeps away” any “federal or state law impediments that might otherwise exist” to letting the plaintiffs obtain the money.

The bank responded that the law violated the Constitution because it was focused on a single case and compelled courts “to reach a predetermined result.”

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg rejected the argument, saying Congress has the power to alter legal standards in existing cases.

In dissent, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. said, “There has never been anything like” the 2012 law.

“Hereafter,” he wrote, “with this court’s seal of approval, Congress can unabashedly pick the winners and losers in particular pending cases.”

But Justice Ginsburg said the law was fairly routine, listing earlier ones that applied to given railroads, a single bridge, a specific settlement agreement and one oil tanker.

“Congress may indeed direct courts to apply newly enacted, outcome-altering legislation in pending civil cases,” she wrote, adding that “a statute does not impinge on judicial power when it directs courts to apply a new legal standard to undisputed facts.”

Graphic | How a Vacancy on the Supreme Court Affects Cases in the 2015-16 Term The empty seat left by Justice Antonin Scalia’s death leaves the court with two basic options for cases left on the docket this term if the justices are deadlocked at 4 to 4.
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/02/14/us/politics/100000004209293.mobile.html
The 2012 law, she wrote, “provides a new standard clarifying that, if Iran owns certain assets, the victims of Iran-sponsored terrorist attacks will be permitted to execute against those assets.”

“Applying laws implementing Congress’ policy judgments, with fidelity to those judgments, is commonplace for the judiciary,” Justice Ginsburg wrote.

In any event, Justice Ginsburg wrote, the 2012 law still left courts with work to do, as it did not define key terms. Courts were required to sort out questions over the ownership and location of assets, she added.

The decision, in Bank Markazi v. Peterson, No. 14-770, came as the United States and Iran have taken steps to ease tensions. Justice Ginsburg said the court should be wary of intruding on judgments made by Congress and the president in the conduct of foreign affairs.

“Congress passed, and the president signed” the 2012 law, Justice Ginsburg wrote, “in furtherance of their stance on a matter of foreign policy. Action in that realm warrants respectful review by courts.”

The Obama administration supported the plaintiffs in the Supreme Court. When the case was argued in January, a lawyer for the administration drew a distinction between laws intended solely to pick a winner in a pending case and ones that changed the applicable law, even if only for a pending case.

Chief Justice Roberts said that was a distinction without a difference. “You’re saying Congress has to be cute about it,” he said.

Justices Anthony M. Kennedy, Stephen G. Breyer, Samuel A. Alito Jr., and Elena Kagan joined all of Justice Ginsburg’s opinion. Justice Clarence Thomas joined most of it, but he noted without explanation that he did not accept the part of the opinion concerning the deference due the other branches in matters of foreign affairs.

In dissent, Chief Justice Roberts, joined by Justice Sonia Sotomayor, said the majority had yielded too much power to Congress.

“No less than if it had passed a law saying ‘respondents win,’” the chief justice wrote, “Congress has decided this case by enacting a bespoke statute tailored to this case that resolves the parties’ specific legal disputes to guarantee respondents victory.”

The 2012 law, he wrote, allowed Congress to assume a role that the Constitution had committed to the judiciary, “changing the law — for these proceedings alone — simply to guarantee that respondents win.”

“At issue here is a basic principle, not a technical rule,” Chief Justice Roberts wrote, one that he said, quoting a 1988 dissent from Justice Antonin Scalia, may “effect important change in the equilibrium of power.”

:manny: And this will be thrown in the trash just like what Bush did with the Lockerbie bombing
 

CouldntBeMeTho

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I'm going to be vindicated so hard :wow:

Just wait...you laugh now :wow:

@88m3 tell these boys my record...ask about Ukraine :wow: ask about Russia :wow: Ask about Snowden :wow: Ask about wikileaks :wow:
How could iran make plans go unintercepted? How could iran make buildings crumble to dust. Including a building that wasnt even hit by a plane? How could iran ship off the steel and evidence without doing a proper investigation? :jbhmm:
 
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