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This is just what we need. Combine that with the Navy's UAV and we've just added to our advantage.
yep, just honest,hard working folks coming across the border for work. Right... We know better and so does my border patrol friend.
Islamic terrorists target Army base -- in Arizona
By Sara A. Carter
November 26, 2007
Fort Huachuca, the nation's largest intelligence-training center, changed security measures in May after being warned that Islamist terrorists, with the aid of Mexican drug cartels, were planning an attack on the facility.
Fort officials changed security measures after sources warned that possibly 60 Afghan and Iraqi terrorists were to be smuggled into the U.S. through underground tunnels with high-powered weapons to attack the Arizona Army base, according to multiple confidential law enforcement documents obtained by The Washington Times.
"A portion of the operatives were in the United States, with the remainder not yet in the United States," according to one of the documents, an FBI advisory that was distributed to the Defense Intelligence Agency, the CIA, Customs and Border Protection and the Justice Department, among several other law enforcement agencies throughout the nation. "The Afghanis and Iraqis shaved their beards so as not to appear to be Middle Easterners."
According to the FBI advisory, each Middle Easterner paid Mexican drug lords $20,000 "or the equivalent in weapons" for the cartel's assistance in smuggling them and their weapons through tunnels along the border into the U.S. The weapons would be sent through tunnels that supposedly ended in Arizona and New Mexico, but the Islamist terrorists would be smuggled through Laredo, Texas, and reclaim the weapons later.
A number of the Afghans and Iraqis are already in a safe house in Texas, the FBI advisory said.
Fort Huachuca, which lies about 20 miles from the Mexican border, has members of all four service branches training in intelligence and secret operations. About 12,000 persons work at the fort and many have their families on base.
Lt. Col. Matthew Garner, spokesman for Fort Huachuca, said details about the current phase of the investigation or security changes on the post "will not be disclosed."
"We are always taking precautions to ensure that soldiers, family members and civilians that work and live on Fort Huachuca are safe," Col. Garner said. "With this specific threat, we did change some aspects of our security that we did have in place."
According to the FBI report, some of the weapons associated with the plot have been smuggled through a tunnel from Mexico to the U.S.
The FBI report is based on Drug Enforcement Administration sources, including Mexican nationals with access to "sub-sources" in the drug cartels. The report's assessment is that the DEA's Mexican contacts have proven reliable in the past but the "sub-source" is of uncertain reliability.
According to the source who spoke with DEA intelligence agents, the weapons included two Milan anti-tank missiles, Soviet-made surface-to-air missiles, grenade launchers, long guns and handguns.
"FBI Comment: The surface-to-air missiles may in fact be RPGs," the advisory stated, adding that the weapons stash in Mexico could include two or three more Milan missiles.
The Milan, a French-German portable anti-tank weapon, was developed in the 1970s and widely sold to militaries around the world, including Saddam Hussein's Iraq. Insurgents in Iraq reportedly have used a Milan missile in an attack on a British tank. Iraqi guerrillas also have shot down U.S. helicopters using RPGs, or rocket-propelled grenades.
FBI spokesman Paul Bresson would not elaborate on the current investigation regarding the threat, but said that many times the initial reports are based on "raw, uncorroborated information that has not been completely vetted." He added that this report shows the extent to which all law enforcement and intelligence agencies cooperate in terror investigations.
"If nothing else, it provides a good look at the inner working of the law-enforcement and intelligence community and how they work together on a daily basis to share and deal with threat information," Mr. Bresson said. "It also demonstrates the cross-pollination that frequently exists between criminal and terrorist groups."
The connections between criminal enterprises, such as powerful drug cartels, and terrorist organizations have become a serious concern for intelligence agencies monitoring the U.S.-Mexico border.
"Based upon the information provided by the DEA handling agent, the DEA has classified the source as credible," stated a Department of Homeland Security document, regarding the possibility of an attack on Fort Huachuca. "The identity of the sub-source has been established; however, none of the information provided by the sub-source in the past has been corroborated."
The FBI advisory stated the "sub-source" for the information "is a member of the Zetas," the military arm of one of Mexico's most dangerous drug-trafficking organizations, the Gulf Cartel. The Gulf Cartel controls the movement of narcotics from Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, into the U.S. along the Laredo corridor.
However, the sub-source "for this information is of unknown reliability," the FBI advisory stated.
According to the DEA, the sub-source identified Mexico's Sinaloa cartel as the drug lords who would assist the terrorists in their plot.
This led the DEA to caution the FBI that its information may be a Gulf Cartel plant to bring the U.S. military in against its main rival. The Sinaloa and Gulf cartels have fought bloody battles along the border for control of shipping routes into the U.S.
"It doesn't mean that there isn't truth to some of what this source delivered to U.S. agents," said one law-enforcement intelligence agent, on the condition of anonymity. "The cartels have no loyalty to any nation or person. It isn't surprising that for the right price they would assist terrorists, knowingly or unknowingly."
http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071126/NATION/111260034/1001&template=nextpage
You gotta love this!
DE PALMA IRAQ FLICK BOMBS
November 25, 2007 -- IT'S hard for Hollywood pacifists like Brian De Palma to capture the hearts and minds of America if
Americans won't see their movies. While the public is staying away in droves from “Rendition," “Lions for Lambs" and “In the Valley of Elah," audiences are really avoiding “Redacted," De Palma's picture about US soldiers who rape a 14-year-old Iraqi girl, then kill her and her family. The message movie was produced by NBA Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, who insisted on deleting grisly images of Iraqi war casualties from the montage at the film's end. Cuban offered to sell the film back to De Palma at cost, but the director was too smart to go for that deal. “Redacted" - which “could be the worst movie I've ever seen," said critic Michael Medved -took in just $25,628 in its opening weekend in 15 theaters, which means roughly 3,000 people saw it in the entire country. “This, despite an A-list director, a huge wave of publicity, high praise in the Times, The New Yorker, left-leaning sites like Salon, etc. A Joe Strummer documentary [of punk-rock band The Clash] playing in fewer theaters made more in its third week," e-mailed one cineaste. “Not even people who presumably agree with the movie's antiwar thesis made the effort to see it."
http://www.nypost.com/seven/11252007/gossip/pagesix/de_palma_iraq_flick_bombs_582058.htm
Doubly nice as I'm a big Michelle Malkin fan.
Harsh reality there...the videos/interviews need to be checked out also.
http://www.militarytimes.com/projects/flash/bloodbrothers/
Great article! Keep it up longhorn
Welcome back from an old AF wx guy
Colorado crushing Nebraska 58-35...4 minutes to go. That's a big RM victory!
The jokers have taken over the DPDW board the past 2 weeks. It's a shame how the shady characters always show up on downtrends but are never to be found on uptrends. Hmmmmm. Use common sense people! Have these jokers done any DD? Brought any DD to the board? NO! It's tough only being up 700% since March...lol! 3 more added to my ignore list today. The real posters on DPDW are obvious and have done outstanding, consistent DD for months. DPDW has been a no-brainer all year. Any other opinions have been rendered mute.
Happy Thanksgiving to all those serving both at home and abroad...especially those in harms way. Don't forget them in your prayers today! God Bless all our troops.
you and me both!
Thanks to those selling at $1.25. Love it. Big fish appear to be loading also.
absolutely!
have a good evening all!
More indication that we are making serious progress. This word needs to get out!
Success in Iraq Possible, Commander Says
By Fred W. Baker III
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15, 2007 – Success is possible in Iraq, a senior Army commander there said today based on progress he has seen since his recent return to the country.
Speaking to a group of Internet journalists and “bloggers” via telephone from Iraq, Army Brig. Gen. James C. Boozer Sr., deputy commander of Multinational Division North, said he is “absolutely amazed” at improvements there since his return last month. This is his third tour in the country.
“This is a turning point. … I think in the next 12 or 15 months … that we’re going to make history. We’re going to allow the nation of Iraq to build itself,” Boozer said. “I believe that we can have success in Iraq, that it is possible.”
Boozer said he has seen “an absolute certain increase in capacity” in the Iraqi security forces since a previous tour there in 2004 and 2005.
Four Iraqi army divisions with about 55,000 soldiers operate in the nearly 50,000-square-mile area Boozer is responsible for. About 80,000 Iraqi police operate there, along with 25,000 coalition forces.
Boozer called the Iraqi security forces there some of the best he’s seen. For the most part, he said, they are conducting independent operations at a brigade combat team level. “That is a large leap from what they were able to do back in 2004-2005,” he said.
The commander said three elements are essential to continued progress in the region:
-- Allowing provincial local governments the ability to dialogue with the central government;
-- Transitioning Iraqi security forces so they can conduct independent operations; and
-- Setting conditions for a stable economic environment so the economy can grow.
“We’re doing nation building here,” he said. “We need to sustain and attain the security environment that we are currently enjoying.”
Increased security has resulted in a decline in violence in the region, he said. Also, a groundswell of local citizens is coming forward to help secure neighborhoods and join the Iraqi security forces. “All of this is coming together at the right time and the right place, I think, where we can see success here in Iraq in the coming future,” Boozer said.
Some al Qaeda cells have migrated north after being driven out of Baghdad by military operations there. But, Boozer said, his forces are pinpointing those cells.
“We believe that we have clearly disrupted al Qaeda here in MND North, and we will continue to sustain that pressure on them. We believe that that they are on their heels, that we’ve certainly knocked the breath out of them. But they can still conduct vicious attacks, … but they are isolated vicious attacks. They cannot bring together complex attacks like they could in the past,” Boozer said.
Coalition forces also will continue working with the Iraqi army and police on their logistics abilities and sustainment capabilities, which are showing progress, as well, Boozer said.
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=48155
Important progress. There is a briefing video at this link also.
IED Attacks Down Significantly; Enemy Being Pushed North, General Says
By Donna Miles
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15, 2007 – Initiatives taken in Iraq over the past 11 months have reduced improvised-explosive-device attacks dramatically and sent the enemy scrambling, Multinational Corps Iraq’s deputy commander for support told reporters in Baghdad today. (Video)
Army Maj. Gen. James E. Simmons pointed to a dramatic drop in IED “events” -- explosions or identifications. In March, 3,239 IED incidents were reported, with 1,641 of them exploding and 1,489 identified and cleared. In October, that number was down almost 50 percent. Of 1,560 IED events, 763 exploded and 767 were cleared.
“IED attacks and corresponding casualties for coalition forces, Iraqi security forces and Iraqi civilians have dropped significantly,” Simmons said. “We have seized the initiative and placed the enemy on the defense.”
Simmons credited the troop surge with helping bring about the turnaround, but cited other new initiatives, too. In June, combat engineers began disabling IEDs, a task that had been restricted to explosive ordnance disposal forces. This freed EOD and weapons intelligence teams to focus on the most dangerous IEDs and promising cache finds, he said.
Troops are responding to more IEDs, and, with the help of a new Multinational Corps Iraq biometric cell, have doubled their apprehension rate in the last four months, he said. They’re also uncovering more weapons caches. “We found more caches by May of this year than in all of 2006,” Simmons said.
In addition, more Iraqis who have tired of terrorists operating in their neighborhoods are passing tips about their whereabouts to coalition troops and Iraqi security forces, he said.
“Since June 2007, attacks and casualties have dropped to the lowest rate in two years,” Simmons said. “Although there remain tough pockets of enemy resistance that must be defeated, reporting through the 14th of November indicates a continuation of these positive trends.”
Most of the IED incidents are now occurring in Multinational Division North’s battle space, the area north of Taji that stretches to Mosul. Simmons said that’s where enemy forces have moved since being pushed out of Anbar province and Baghdad.
“The fighting in al Anbar (and) the success in Baghdad has forced these terrorists out of those areas and into that battle space,” he said. “And they take their preferred method of killing people with them whenever they are pushed into other areas of Iraq.”
Despite progress in countering the IED threat, Simmons said, the threat continues. “The IED has been and remains the enemy’s primary weapon of choice against coalition, Iraqi forces and Iraqi civilians,” he said. “Multinational Corps Iraq views this threat as extremely serious.”
An investigation is continuing into an attack yesterday on a Stryker vehicle operating just outside the International Zone in Baghdad, Simmons said. Officials believe several explosively formed penetrators, the most deadly form of IED, were used in the attack, Simmons said.
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=48153
No...I'll keep an eye out for it.
You think this will make the evening news? No way!
U.S., Iraqi Efforts Reduce Violence in Eastern Baghdad
By Gerry J. Gilmore
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15, 2007 – Surge-supplied U.S. and Iraqi security forces have contributed to a marked decrease of insurgent-committed violence in eastern Baghdad, a senior U.S. military officer said here today.
“We have been effective, and we have seen violence significantly reduced as Iraqi security forces have taken a larger role in all aspects of operations,” Army Col. Jeffrey Bannister, commander of 2nd Infantry Division’s 2nd Brigade Combat Team, told Pentagon reporters from Camp Liberty in Baghdad during a satellite-carried news conference.
In addition, Bannister said, he has observed increasing harmony among Sunni and Shiite residents in his sector.
During surge of forces operations that began in January, U.S. and Iraqi troops ramped up counterinsurgency efforts in and around Baghdad as part of a strategy that embedded units into local neighborhoods, Bannister explained.
The surge quickly accelerated improvement of the security situation across eastern Baghdad, said Bannister, whose area of operations includes nearly 2 million Iraqis, mostly Shiite, living in a dense urban area the size of Phoenix.
Bannister said his brigade partners with more than 12,000 Iraqi soldiers and police posted across three of Baghdad’s 10 security districts. Bannister’s troops, coalition forces and Iraqi soldiers and police are providing “a dominant security presence in the neighborhoods protecting the local population,” he said.
More than 92 percent of the neighborhoods under his watch are now considered to be under control of U.S. and Iraqi security forces, Bannister reported. Since January, there has been a 69 percent decrease in enemy attacks within his sector, he added.
The colonel also reported that sectarian violence is markedly down since a ceasefire agreement was made with Iraqi Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr in August. Although some Sadr adherents appear to be disregarding the ceasefire, the majority of Sadr’s followers “are following his pledge of honor,” Bannister said.
Yet, progress that has been achieved in reducing violence in his area hasn’t been easy, the colonel said. “We’ve had some tough days battling insurgents and criminal militias,” he acknowledged. “Our persistence has paid off, and we’re seeing an increase, not only in security, but (also) from Iraqi-citizen tips.”
Iraqi citizens want to rid their neighborhoods of insurgents and other criminals, and they are uncovering many enemy weapons caches, Bannister noted.
Improvised-explosive-device attacks in his sector have gone down from a high of about 100 in January to about 20 in October, the colonel said. The decrease in attacks is due to several factors, Bannister said, including the successful execution of counterinsurgency strategy, a lull in violence during the September-October Ramadan holiday period, and the ceasefire agreement with Sadr.
“I will tell you the greatest accelerant for this decrease has been the (counterinsurgency) strategy, combined with enough security forces to get the job done,” Bannister said. “Our dominate presence inside the neighborhoods has resulted in a much higher level of access to the population, and therefore, to intelligence.”
These efforts have led to more cache discoveries and reduced space for the insurgents to rest and regroup, Bannister pointed out.
In addition, the people of eastern Baghdad have simply grown tired of insurgent- and criminal militia-committed violence, the colonel said.
Iraqis “are reconciling themselves to put an end to the senseless violence and lawlessness,” he said.
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=48158
Officials Believe Iran Has Stemmed Weapons Flow Into Iraq, General Says
By Donna Miles
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15, 2007 – Recent weapons cache finds in Iraq indicate that the Iranian government is living up to its promise to Iraqi leaders to stem the flow of weapons across the border into Iraq, a senior U.S. general in Baghdad told reporters today.
Army Maj. Gen. James E. Simmons, Multinational Corps Iraq’s deputy commander for support, said coalition troops and Iraqi security forces continue to find Iranian weapons in caches they uncover.
“But most of these weapons appear to have been in Iraq for months,” he said. “So we have not seen any recent evidence that weapons continue to come across the border into Iraq. We believe that the initiatives and the commitments that the Iranians have made appear to be holding up.”
Simmons credited the new Multinational Corps Iraq Law Enforcement Forensics Laboratory with providing scientific analysis that’s able to determine how long weapons caches have been in place. “For most of the caches we have found, we have been able to determine that those weapons systems have been there for months,” he said.
Pressed by reporters, Simmons insisted there’s been no sign that Iran is continuing to send weapons into Iraq. “If we found evidence that a weapon system had just come across the border from Iran, we would be standing here telling you that,” he said. “But right now, I have not had any evidence laid in front of me that says that they have violated the commitment they have made.”
Officials in Tehran reportedly assured Iraqi government leaders they would work to stop the flow of bomb-making materials and other weapons into Iraq.
“It is my understanding that they have provided such assurances,” Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates told reporters during a Nov. 1 Pentagon news conference.
Gates said he had no solid proof that Ali Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader, was aware that parts for explosively formed penetrators, the most deadly form of roadside bomb, had been flowing from Iran into Iraq. “I haven’t seen anything definitive along those lines,” Gates said. “My guess is that the highest levels are aware.”
Navy Adm. Michael G. Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, agreed there’s no proof that Iranian leaders were aware of the shipments. “Although I don’t know how they couldn’t be,” he said.
Meanwhile, the Multinational Corps Iraq commander reported earlier this month that the number of explosively formed penetrators being found in Iraq is down. Army Lt. Gen. Raymond T. Odierno said during a Nov. 1 videoconference from Baghdad that coalition forces encountered 53 EFPs in October, 52 in September, 78 in August, and 99 in July.
Like Gates and Mullen, Odierno said he was adopting a wait-and-see approach before attributing the trend to any downshift in Iran’s activities. “It’s unclear yet to me whether they have slowed down brining in weapons and supporting the insurgency or not,” he said. “I’ll still wait and see.”
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=48157
Casey: Army Must Adapt to Changing Threats
By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15, 2007 – The next few decades will be a period of persistent conflict, and the U.S. Army will have to adapt to changing threats, that service’s top general said today.
“Global terrorism and extremist ideologies are a reality,” Army Chief of Staff Gen. George W. Casey Jr. said before the Senate Armed Services Committee. “As I look to the future, I believe the next decades will be one of what I call persistent conflict. This a period of protracted confrontation among states, non-state and individual actors who are increasingly willing to use violence to accomplish their political and ideological ends.”
Though it has positive aspects, globalization is a trend that exacerbates protracted confrontation. “It has also created ‘have’ and ‘have-not’ conditions that are ripe for exploitation,” Casey said.
“Technology is another double-edged sword,” he said. “The same innovations that improve quality of life and education and livelihood are also used by extremists to export terror around the globe and manipulate our media,” he said.
Demographic change also could contribute to instability. “The populations of lesser-developed nations are expected to double over the next 20 years,” the chief said. “That will create a ‘youth bulge’ that is ripe for exploitation by terrorist groups, especially as the governments of these lesser-developed countries are unable to deal with large population.”
Casey pointed to the global rise in demand for energy, water and food as these populations grow as a likely cause of competition and conflict. Climate change and natural disasters may cause humanitarian crises, population shifts and epidemic diseases, he said. The danger of proliferation of weapons of mass destruction will increase, he said, and there is the potential for catastrophic attack.
Finally, dangers arise from failed or failing states providing havens for extremist groups, the Army chief said.
None of these trends point to a specific threat, from a specific group, in a specific area, Casey said. “We know the Army will remain central to our national strategy to ensure our security in spite of these threatening trends,” he said.
The service is developing forces agile enough, with leadership able enough, and sustainment robust enough to ensure victory against any foe, Casey said. The force must operate with allies and with interagency partners and be able to handle the full spectrum of operations from humanitarian assistance to full-scale war, he added.
The Army is growing to a total of 547,000 soldiers over the next three years. In questioning, Casey said the service may need to expand beyond that number.
Casey said the Army is “consuming” its readiness as “fast as we can build it.” He also said the service must restore the balance between active and reserve components. It also must rebuild the force’s depth and build needed capabilities for the future.
Soldiers are the ultimate asymmetric advantage the United States has, Casey said, adding that training soldiers, providing programs and facilities for families, and caring for those wounded or hurt in service are paramount concerns. Preparing soldiers means providing the best equipment and most realistic training to the force, he said.
The general also said that resetting the force is crucial to success on the battlefields of the future. Army equipment has been used hard in the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq, he said.
“Resetting our forces is critical to restoring readiness,” Casey said. “This year we will reset more than 130,000 pieces of equipment and over 200,000 soldiers.”
Finally, transforming the Army means more of a mindset change, as opposed to just changing wiring diagrams or equipment, Casey said. “Transformation is a journey, not a destination,” he said.
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=48156
Army Secretary Sees Opportunity to Strengthen Force
By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15, 2007 – Out of calamity comes opportunity, Army Secretary Pete Geren told Congress today.
Geren and Army Chief of Staff Gen. George W. Casey Jr. testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee about the state of the service.
The secretary said that when crisis comes it gives both Congress and the service the political opportunity to do some things that wouldn’t get done without the crisis.
“It gives us the political energy, the bureaucratic energy, to take on some hard issues and make some changes that we would never get around to were it not for that,” he said.
Two “calamities” have highlighted weaknesses in the Army, and the service is using those to make changes, Geren said. Shortcomings in soldier health care make up one of those calamities; contracting is the second.
In regard to health care, the Army made immediate changes to conditions at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the service’s flagship medical facility, after shortcomings were brought to light in media reports, the secretary said. The service has established wounded warrior units throughout the United States and is working to reform the disability system. The secretary put great store in a pilot program that begins Nov. 26 to experiment with a single physical for both the departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs.
Contracting is another calamity the service is acting upon. “We have learned -- unfortunately, the hard way -- that our contracting system was not up to the needs of our Army in this century,” Geren said. “In 2007, the Army did 25 percent of all contracting for the government -- $111 billion.”
When shortcomings were brought to light, the service put a task force in place “to immediately stop the bleeding,” he said. As a result of studies, the service has learned that contracting is a problem throughout government.
“We need to do a better job of developing professional acquisition and contracting officers (and to) provide the resources, the training and valuing the invaluable role that these contracting officers provide to our government,” Geren said.
The service needs more contracting personnel, they need to be better trained, and leaders need to listen to their conclusions, Geren said.
The secretary also told the Senate panel that the service must do more for military families. “We are in the seventh year of war in Afghanistan and over four and a half years of war in Iraq; this is the third-longest conflict in U.S. history,” he said. “It’s the longest conflict we’ve ever fought with an all-volunteer force by quite a long shot.
“We are in uncharted waters, both for the soldiers and for the families,” he continued.
This all-volunteer Army is a different force from any the country has fielded before. “More than half of the soldiers are married; more than half of their spouses work outside the home,” he said. “The support that we provided to those key members of the all-volunteer force over the first 35 years of the force doesn’t work as we move into the seventh year of the conflict.”
Army leaders at all levels have signed a covenant with the families “to recognize the importance of our families to the all-volunteer force.” Geren said that families volunteer too, and the military must do a better job supporting them.
“We moved $100 million out of our budget last summer into family programs,” he said. “In ’08 in the supplemental, we moved $1.4 billion into family programs. We ask your help as we look to support families, that critical part of our all-volunteer force.”
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=48151
no doubt!
We better check those Chinese made PC's the govt is purchasing
We can't set a timetable. Don't they understand this? I don't think they even care.
That is a great find! Simply amazing.
gotta love that! Didn't realize it dates all the way back to Reagan. I guess it's about time then.
isn't that the truth!
And so many can't see that. They have no clue what a monster we have brewing here imo.
and we're up over 700 percent since March. This company has exceeded my expectations and seems to be well on the path to becoming much, much bigger. What do you think these shares some of us bought today will be worth in 5 years? I'm betting much higher. Relax and enjoy! jmho. GL!
just checking all the ridiculous posts from today and as usual we see who has done their DD and who hasn't. I also joined you in those $1.40 and under shares today. Thanks everybody. Always, always save dry powder. Whatta ya think these shares will be worth in 3-5 years! Gotta love it!
I love amateur hour.
Nice work as always! It was pretty obvious that management was making a statement in their PR yesterday by mentioning Mako Technologies, talking about Proteus and using the term acquisitions. Couldn't be more clear to me!
The company has proven itself many times over to us and obviously our institutional investors. I look forward to where we'll be at in 3-5 years from now!
That's why the early longs are up 600-900% and the traders are trying to flip for 10-20% at best and all the taxes that go with it. DPDW has been easy to buy early and just hang on.
I'll have to disagree and leave.
Better watch out for this anti-troops movie Redacted coming out. It's a Brian de Palma film bankrolled by Mark Cubin depicting the rape and murder of Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi and her family last year in Iraq. Despicable that they would stoop to this level for a movie.