
	by Tony Cartalucci
	January 17, 2013 
	
	from
	
	LandDestroyer Website
	
	
	
 
	
	 
	
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	Exactly as predicted, the ongoing French 
	"intervention" in the North African nation of Mali has spilled into Algeria 
	- the next most likely objective of Western geopolitical interests in the 
	region since the successful destabilization of Libya in 2011.
	
	In last week's "France 
	Displays Unhinged Hypocrisy as Bombs Fall on Mali" report, it was stated 
	specifically that:  
	
		
			
			"As far back as August of 2011, Bruce 
			Riedel out of the corporate-financier funded think-tank, the 
			Brookings Institution, wrote "Algeria 
			will be next to fall," where he gleefully predicted success in 
			Libya would embolden radical elements in Algeria, in particular AQIM.
			
			 
			
			Between extremist violence and the 
			prospect of French airstrikes, Riedel hoped to see the fall of the 
			Algerian government.
			 
			
			Ironically Riedel noted:  
 
		
			
				
				Algeria has expressed particular 
				concern that the unrest in Libya could lead to the development 
				of a major safe haven and sanctuary for al-Qaeda and other 
				extremist jihadis.
 
		
		
		And thanks to NATO, that is exactly what 
		Libya has become -
		
		a Western sponsored sanctuary for Al-Qaeda. AQIM's headway in 
		northern Mali and now French involvement will see the conflict 
		inevitably spill over into Algeria. 
		 
		
		It should be noted that Riedel is a 
		co-author of "Which 
		Path to Persia?" which openly 
		conspires to arm yet another
		US State 
		Department-listed terrorist organization (list as #28), the 
		Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK) to wreak havoc across Iran and help collapse the 
		government there - illustrating a pattern of using clearly terroristic 
		organizations, even those listed as so by the US State Department, to 
		carry out US foreign policy."
	
	
	Now, it is reported that "Al Qaeda-linked" 
	terrorists have seized American hostages in Algeria in what is being 
	described by the Western press as "spill over" from France's Mali 
	operations.
	
	The Washington Post, in their article, "Al-Qaida-linked 
	militants seize BP complex in Algeria, take hostages in revenge for Mali," 
	claims: 
	
		
		"As Algerian army helicopters clattered 
		overhead deep in the Sahara desert, Islamist militants hunkered down for 
		the night in a natural gas complex they had assaulted Wednesday morning, 
		killing two people and taking dozens of foreigners hostage in what could 
		be the first spillover from France’s intervention in Mali."
	
	
	The Wall Street Journal, in its article, "Militants 
	Grab U.S. Hostages in Algeria," reports that: 
	
		
		"Militants with possible links to al Qaeda 
		seized about 40 foreign hostages, including several Americans, at a 
		natural-gas field in Algeria, posing a new level of threat to nations 
		trying to blunt the growing influence of Islamist extremists in Africa.
		
		
		As security officials in the U.S. and Europe 
		assessed options to reach the captives from distant bases, Algerian 
		security forces failed in an attempt late Wednesday to storm the 
		facility."
	
	
	The WSJ also added:  
	
		
		"Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said the 
		U.S. would take "necessary and proper steps" in the hostage situation, 
		and didn't rule out military action. He said the Algeria attack could 
		represent a spillover from Mali."  
	
	
	And it is military action, both covert and 
	incrementally more overt, that will see the West's extremist proxies and the 
	West's faux efforts to stem them, increasingly creep over the Mali-Algerian 
	border, as the old imperial maps of Europe are redrawn right before our 
	eyes.
	
 
	
	
		
			
				
					
						
						
						Image: The 
						
						French Empire 
						at its height right before the World Wars. 
						
						
						The 
						regions that are now Libya, Algeria, Mali, and the Ivory 
						Coast all face reconquest by the French and 
						Anglo-Americans, with French troops literally occupying 
						the region and playing a pivotal role in installing 
						Western-friendly client regimes. 
						
						
						Also notice Syria too, was a French holding - now under 
						attack by US-British-French funded, armed, and backed 
						terrorists - the same terrorists allegedly being fought 
						in Mali and now Algeria.
					
				
			
		
	
	
	
	Meanwhile,
	
	these very same terrorist forces continue to receive funding, arms, 
	covert military support, and diplomatic recognition in Syria, by NATO, and 
	specifically the US and France who are both claiming to fight the "Free 
	Syrian Army's" ideological and very literal allies in North Africa.
	
	In reality, Al Qaeda is allowing the US and France to intervene and 
	interfere in Algeria, after attempts in 2011 to trigger political subversion 
	was soundly defeated by the Algerian government. 
	 
	
	Al Qaeda is essentially both a casus belli 
	and mercenary force, deployed by the West against targeted nations.
	 
	
	It is clear that French operations seek to 
	trigger armed conflict in Algeria as well as a possible Western military 
	intervention there as well, with the Mali conflict serving only as a 
	pretense.