In January 2011 an American called Raymond Davis murdered two Pakistanis. This murder took place at a busy road junction in the Pakistani city of Lahore. The Obama regime wants Davis back in the USA. Pakistan's Foreign Minister, Shah Qureshi, was not happy about this. So the USA's President Obama had Qureshi sacked. Presumably Qureshi, unlike so many others in Pakistan, is not owned by the CIA. Davis, a former US special forces soldier, is assumed to be an agent of the CIA or some similar US organisation. Davis is said to have been working WITH the Pakistan Taliban to destroy Pakistan. Davis "had made contact with Taliban-linked extremists in the country’s lawless, tribal region, according to details of phone records leaked by the police." You may spot the similarity between Davis and the American agent David Headley who has admitted responsibility for the 2008 Mumbai attacks. Davis appears to have fallen into a trap set by Pakistan intelligence (ISI). He killed the men knowing full well who they were, Pakistani spies who were following him. Pakistan authorities have informed the media that Davis had contact with the TTP (Taliban).
"There is conjecture that Mr. 'Davis' walked into a trap laid out by the ISI." Witnesses say Davis then got out of his car and snapped photos of the men before driving away. He was pulled over by police minutes later and arrested. Police continue to seek the driver of an SUV from the U.S. Consulate in Lahore, who rushed to the scene of the shooting after Davis called him. Police say that driver drove the wrong way down a Lahore street and struck and killed another person on a motorcycle. Pakistani police say the Lahore consulate has refused to turn over the driver to authorities. The men on the motorcycle, Faizan Haider and Faheem Shamshad, were carrying stolen cellphones and handguns, police said. But Lahore Police Chief Aslam Tareen says Davis’ claim of self-defense doesn’t hold up because Haider was shot in the back as he tried to flee. Tareen also said that though police found ammunition in the magazine of one man’s gun, they found no cartridge in its chamber. Davis (whose identity was first denied and later confirmed by the US Embassy in Islamabad), and the embassy have claimed that he was hired as an employee of a US security company called Hyperion Protective Consultants, LLC, which was said to be located at 5100 North Lane in Orlando, Florida. Business cards for Hyperion were found on Davis by arresting officers. Mobile phone clip of Raymond Davis, who shot dead two men in Lahore, deepens mystery about his US embassy role. … Davis says at one point in the video that he’s with the US Embassy, which is in Islamabad, and says later that he’s doing consulting work for the consular general, who is based at the US consulate in Lahore. He also says he’s with the RAO, an apparent reference to the US Regional Affairs Office. According to records from the Pentagon, the 36-year-old Davis is a former special forces soldier who left the army in August 2003 after 10 years of service. A Virginia native, he served with infantry divisions prior to joining the 3rd Special Forces Group in Fort Bragg, North Carolina. Davis, who was first claimed by the US embassy as a Lahore consulate staffer and was later declared as assigned to Islamabad embassy, at the time of his arrest, according to his interrogators, carried an ID showing that he worked for the US consulate general in Peshawar, a copy of which has been obtained by Dawn. It looks to be an interesting case of an embassy staffer concurrently working at three different stations. Some of the other information shared with by the investigators confirmed the previously known information that he had a military background and was posted with US Regional Affairs Office {RAO}, which is linked by many analysts to CIA. A US Department of Veteran Affairs card and Department of Defence contractor card were also in possession of Davis, which only adds to the confusion over his identity. The contract documents in Davis` possession revealed that he was on an annual contract with a fee of $200,000.
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