ANSWERS: 10
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We should respect the rights of a sovereign nation. We should send small Navy SEALs and Army Rangers teams to hunt Bin Laden.
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Political rhetoric. It means nothing. The CIA searches everywhere. And they have found them and will continue to find them.
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US should stay the fuck out of middle east and catch Bin Laden at its own civilan lives expense..
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send in CIA operatives or even some Israeli's to do the job regardless of how much Pakistan wants to protect the guy. I do understand that the Pakistani government has to be careful in backing the US with it's population being so anti-US, but I think if the US actually takes Bin Laden out the Pakistani government will denounce it publicly and cheer privately.
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Nothing. Keep missiling. They have to survive in their country and keep on saying things like that. But who cares. Most of pakistan is controlled by Mullahs.
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The statement was made for internal consumption. . What's the juice for the capture of OBL? 25 mil? . I'm going to catch the bastard! You guys coming?
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We should NOT give Pakistan ANY type of Financial or Military assistance whatsoever ! We should also make it know our stand in the United Nations ... just for the record . +5
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Osama bin Laden was US operator: President Asif Ali Zardari By Arun Kumar May 11, 2009 "New Karala" -- Washington, May 11 : Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari has alleged that elusive Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was a US operator who had tried to destabilise his late wife Benazir Bhutto's government back in 1989. In fact, as premier Bhutto had "warned America about Osama bin Laden in 1989 with a call to then US president George H. Bush", Zardari said on NBC's Meet the Press programme Sunday. "She rang senior Bush and asked of him: 'Are you destabilizing my government?' because he (apparently referring to bin Laden) paid the then opposition $10 million to overthrow the first woman elected (prime minister) in an Islamic country," Zardari added. "So, we knew that he was your operator," said Zardari responding to a question about bin Laden's whereabouts. "You'll have been there (in Afghanistan) for eight years. (So) you tell me. You lost him in Tora Bora, I didn't, I was in prison," he countered when asked where bin Laden was before hurling the allegation at Washington. Asked if Pakistan was actively looking for bin Laden, Zardari replied: "The world is looking for him and we are part of the world look-out brigade." Zardari also reiterated his belief that bin Laden is dead. "I have a strong feeling and I have reason to believe that because I've asked my counterparts in the American intelligence agencies and they have not heard of him since seven years." http://informationclearinghouse.info/article22594.htm
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I think we should send somebody over there to talk to them right away! Flip for it, Heads Hillary - Tails Bill.
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Ignore it. It costs us nothing and they wouldn't have said it if they didn't feel it was worth it. . "Diplomacy: The patriotic art of lying for one’s country." - Ambrose Bierce
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