Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Toothpaste Bombs on Aircraft to Sochi?

Today on CNN the concern seems to be toothpaste bombs or hand cream bombs and the like. It is getting to the point where if people aren't very brave they likely won't go to Sochi from around the world. So, mostly who is going to be there likely are Russians, and Olympic athletes from around the world and their parents and relatives and friends the way this whole thing is presently going. I don't remember an Oympics with this extreme of problems and warnings even before they started.

Even the Munich Oympics where many Israeli athletes were killed by terrorists there I don't think there was the threat level that we are seeing today at that Olympics beforehand.

The following is regarding the Munich Massacre during the 1972 Olympics there of Israeli athletes by terrorists. This is a quote from Wikipedia:

Munich massacre

The Games were largely overshadowed by what has come to be known as the "Munich massacre". On September 5 a group of eight Palestinians belonging to the Black September organization broke into the Olympic Village and took nine Israeli athletes, coaches and officials hostage in their apartments. Two of the hostages who resisted were killed in the first moments of the break-in; the subsequent standoff in the Olympic Village lasted for almost 18 hours.
Late in the evening of September 5, the terrorists and their hostages were transferred by helicopter to the military airport of Fürstenfeldbruck, ostensibly to board a plane bound for an undetermined Arab country. The German authorities planned to ambush them there, but underestimated the numbers of their opposition and were thus undermanned. During a botched rescue attempt, all of the Israeli hostages were killed. Four of them were shot, then incinerated when one of the terrorists detonated a grenade inside the helicopter in which the hostages were sitting. The five remaining hostages were then machine-gunned to death.
All but three of the terrorists were killed as well. Although arrested and imprisoned pending trial, they were released by the West German government on October 29, 1972 in exchange for a hijacked Lufthansa jet. Two of those three were supposedly hunted down and assassinated later by the Mossad.[5] Jamal Al-Gashey, who is believed to be the sole survivor, is still living today in hiding in an unspecified African country with his wife and two children. The Olympic events were suspended several hours after the initial attack, but once the incident was concluded, Avery Brundage, the International Olympic Committee president, declared that "the Games must go on". A memorial ceremony was then held in the Olympic stadium, and the competitions resumed after a stoppage of 24 hours. The attack prompted heightened security at subsequent Olympics beginning with the 1976 Winter Olympics. Security at Olympics was heightened further beginning with the 2002 Winter Olympics, as they were the first to take place since September 11, 2001.
The massacre led the German federal government to re-examine its anti-terrorism policies, which at the time were dominated by a pacifist approach adopted after World War II. This led to the creation of the elite counter-terrorist unit GSG 9, similar to the British SAS. It also led Israel to launch an aggressive campaign known as Operation Wrath of God, in which those suspected of involvement were systematically tracked down and assassinated. The events of the Munich massacre were chronicled in the Oscar-winning documentary, One Day in September. An account of the aftermath is dramatized in two films: the first was the 1986 made-for-TV movie Sword of Gideon, and the second was Steven Spielberg's 2005 film Munich.

end quote from:

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