Shadow Wolves join the hunt
March 12th, 2007 at 7:51 am . by nukeTheir name conjures up images of the old West, or more recently, the WWII Navajo code-talkers. They are an elite group of trackers who have been recruited from American Indian tribes, including the Navajo, Sioux, Lakota and Apache, called the Shadow Wolves. Recently, they have been used to track drug smugglers on the southern US border. Now, the Pentagon wants them to joint the hunt for bin Laden.
The Pentagon has been alarmed at the ease with which Taliban and al-Qa’ida fighters have been slipping in and out of Afghanistan. Defence officials are convinced their movements can be curtailed by the Shadow Wolves.
The unit has earned international respect for its tracking skills in the Arizona desert. It was founded in the early 1970s to curb the flow of marijuana into the US from Mexico and has since tracked people-smugglers across hundreds of square kilometres of the Tohono O’odham tribal reservation, southwest of Tucson.
Harold Thompson, a Navajo Indian, and Gary Ortega, from the Tohono reservation, are experts at “cutting sign”, the traditional Indian method of finding and following minute clues from a barren landscape. They can detect twigs snapped by passing humans or hair snagged on a branch and tell how long a sliver of food may have lain in the dirt.
Some military experts want the Shadow Wolves to help to track down bin Laden. Despite a $US25million bounty on his head and the use of billions of dollars worth of sophisticated equipment, US forces have so far failed to fulfil President George W. Bush’s promise to capture bin Laden “dead or alive”.
But a senior US official insisted last week that bin Laden’s trail had “not gone stone cold”. Vice-Admiral Mike McConnell, the new US director of national intelligence, told a Senate committee that bin Laden and his lieutenant, Ayman al-Zawahiri, were setting up new training camps in northwestern Pakistan.
Sounds like a plan to me.
More at cao’s blog
Background on the original Shadow Wolves (thanks swamps)
Comment posted by Robert D
at 3/12/2007 10:24:28 PM
Well Swamps, It’s Earlier Than You Think!!! Now how many times in your life have you heard that???
Comment posted by SwampWoman
at 3/12/2007 10:21:55 PM
G’nite! This daylight savings time change is kicking my butt right about now.
Comment posted by nuke
at 3/12/2007 10:08:52 PM
nite
Comment posted by Robert D
at 3/12/2007 10:04:03 PM
G’nite bud…..
Comment posted by no2liberals
at 3/12/2007 10:02:56 PM
Four times I have tried to link to Newt Gingrich’s newest endeavor, and all four times the posts have been sent into the ether.
I give up, night y’all.
Comment posted by no2liberals
at 3/12/2007 10:01:40 PM
For the third time, Ol’Newt is flexing his substantial brain power.
Comment posted by no2liberals
at 3/12/2007 10:00:19 PM
Let me try again.
Ol’Newt, flexing his brain muscles again.
American Solutions: The Cure for America’s Biggest Problems
Comment posted by no2liberals
at 3/12/2007 9:56:38 PM
Here’s Ol’Newt, flexing his substantial brain muscles again.
American Solutions: The Cure for America’s Biggest Problems.
Comment posted by no2liberals
at 3/12/2007 9:51:01 PM
Excellent piece, as usual, by Amir Taheri.
When a Power Fades, Another Rises.
Comment posted by Robert D
at 3/12/2007 9:50:36 PM
The Gorebals sound a lot like the dhems with their talking points and answers for every possible question. A bunch of robots. If you hear them in a debate situation on TV, and they can’t answer a direct question, they revert to the “Little Red Book” of talking points. If that fails, they recite the talking points louder until the segment is over. Never answer a question honestly, when you can out yell the truth. Seems the Gorbals are just getting wound up.
Sphere: Related Content
Harold Thompson, a Navajo Indian, and Gary Ortega, from the Tohono reservation, are experts at “cutting sign”, the traditional Indian method of finding and following minute clues from a barren landscape. They can detect twigs snapped by passing humans or hair snagged on a branch and tell how long a sliver of food may have lain in the dirt.

