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<strong><center><a href="http://www.jottertineswac.us/2467/88/208/1346/1689.10tt74103107AAF9.php"><H3>Press Release: GNC Announces New Discovery That Provides 2X More Effective Joint Relief</a></H3></strong>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> The 2010 report said lands like Chechnya -- as well as
Pakistan and Somalia -- are seen by "jihadi theoreticians" as places where
"fighting is not only legitimate but also compulsory." The same report also
noted Chechen rebel leader Doku Umarov has tried to align the insurgency
"with the global jihadist narrative," supporting the establishment of an
"Islamic emirate in the Caucasus."Whether Chechens, however, have actually
gone to the frontlines in Afghanistan and Pakistan is a matter of
fierce dispute. A Congressional Research Service report earlier this year
said "some Chechen fighters fighting alongside Taliban/Al Qaeda forces have
been captured or killed."But other studies have sharply questioned this
kind of reporting, claiming that American officials and media were buying
into a Russian narrative that Moscow was simply fighting Islamic terrorists
in Chechnya.A 2004 report from University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth
professor Brian Glyn Williams described a more complicated picture."While
it is certainly possible that Chechen individuals made their way to Afghanistan
to fight for the Taliban in Afghanistan, the complete absence of even
a single Chechen POW among the thousands captured by the Northern Alliance
and the U.S. would clearly refute the wild claims that the Chechens
formed the 'largest contingent of Al Qaeda's foreign legion'," he wrote.Williams
told FoxNews.com, rather, that "there's a jihad element that has grown large
, does aim to invest billions in border security -- both for
a security and fencing plan. In a bid to ease conservative concerns,
the bill establishes a set of "triggers" that would have to be
met before illegal immigrants currently in the country can apply for a
green card.Those triggers include steps for the Department of Homeland Security
to launch a new border security and fencing plan, and achieve high
levels of apprehension along high-risk areas on the Mexican border.But Crane
said the Senate legislation should be held until several major issues are
addressed -- including what he described as "directives" that release "dangerous
criminal aliens" back into the community and the Obama administration's
"dangerous abuse" of prosecutorial discretion.The administration has allowed
"prosecutorial discretion" to let the government focus on deporting high-risk
illegal immigrants. Officials have said criminal aliens are generally not
being released, and that only low-priority individuals are given a reprieve.
The administration also issued a directive allowing some illegal immigrants
who came to the U.S. as children to stay.Critics, though, warn that
legalizing the millions of illegal immigrants already in the country without
establishing a strict system of interior enforcement will allow the problem
to fester all over again.Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., who has been one
of the Senate's biggest critics of the immigration bill, echoed Crane's
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