Rosenberg et al v. Lashkar-E-Taiba et al
Filing
14
AFFIDAVIT/DECLARATION in Support re 12 MOTION to Dismiss for Lack of Jurisdiction Declaration of Kevin J. Walsh filed by Inter-Services Intelligence of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, Ahmed Shuja Pasha, Nadeem Taj. (Attachments: # 1 Exhibit Exhibit A to the Walsh Declaration, # 2 Exhibit Exhibit B to the Walsh Declaration, # 3 Exhibit Exhibit C to the Walsh Declaration, # 4 Exhibit Exhibit D to the Walsh Declaration, # 5 Exhibit Exhibit E to the Walsh Declaration, # 6 Exhibit Exhibit F to the Walsh Declaration, # 7 Exhibit Exhibit G to the Walsh Declaration, # 8 Exhibit Exhibit H to the Walsh Declaration, # 9 Exhibit Exhibit I to the Walsh Declaration, # 10 Exhibit Exhibit J to the Walsh Declaration, # 11 Exhibit Exhibit K to the Walsh Declaration, # 12 Exhibit Exhibit L to the Walsh Declaration, # 13 Exhibit Exhibit M to the Walsh Declaration, # 14 Exhibit Exhibit N to the Walsh Declaration, # 15 Exhibit Exhibit O to the Walsh Declaration, # 16 Exhibit Exhibit P to the Walsh Declaration, # 17 Exhibit Exhibit Q to the Walsh Declaration, # 18 Exhibit Exhibit R to the Walsh Declaration, # 19 Exhibit Exhibit S to the Walsh Declaration, # 20 Exhibit Exhibit T to the Walsh Declaration, # 21 Exhibit Exhibit U to the Walsh Declaration, # 22 Exhibit Exhibit V to the Walsh Declaration, # 23 Exhibit Exhibit W to the Walsh Declaration, # 24 Exhibit Exhibit X to the Walsh Declaration, # 25 Exhibit Exhibit Y to the Walsh Declaration, # 26 Exhibit Exhibit Z to the Walsh Declaration, # 27 Exhibit Exhibit AA to the Walsh Declaration, # 28 Exhibit Exhibit AB to the Walsh Declaration, # 29 Exhibit Exhibit AC to the Walsh Declaration, # 30 Exhibit Exhibit AD to the Walsh Declaration, # 31 Exhibit Exhibit AE to the Walsh Declaration, # 32 Exhibit Exhibit AF to the Walsh Declaration, # 33 Exhibit Exhibit AG to the Walsh Declaration) (Walsh, Kevin)
EXHIBIT
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'Meet the Press' transcript for Dec. 7, 2008
President-elect Barack Obama
updated 12/7/2008 12:45:13 PM ET
MR. TOM BROKAW: Our issues this Sunday:
In 44 days, Barack Obama will become the
44th president of the United States. His new
team is almost complete. But since Election
Day 2008, the list of challenges facing the
incoming president has only grown: that
terrorist attack in Mumbai, growing turmoil in
the financial markets, the worst
unemployment in 15 years, and the auto
industry on the verge of bankruptcy. Tough
problems all waiting on the desk of our
exclusive guest, the president-elect of the
United States, Barack Obama.
And yesterday in Chicago I did sit down with
the president-elect, Barack Obama, to talk
about those topics and much more.
President-elect Obama, welcome back to
MEET THE PRESS.
gets better. Sixty-seven years ago this day,
one of your predecessors, Franklin
Roosevelt, faced Pearl Harbor.
PRES.-ELECT OBAMA: Right.
MR. BROKAW: What are the differences
between his challenges and the ones that you
face?
PRES.-ELECT OBAMA: Well, first of all, I think
it's important for us to remember that as
tough as times are right now, they're nothing
compared to what my grandparents went
through, what the "greatest generation" went
through. You know, at this point you already
had 25, 30 percent unemployment across the
country, and we didn't have many of the
social safety nets that emerged out of the
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PRES.-ELECT BARACK OBAMA: Great to be
here. Thank you.
MR. BROKAW: Very nice to have you with us.
As we saw in the opening, the world has
gotten considerably worse since your
election. There is no evidence that it's cause
and effect, you should be happy to know.
But, nonetheless, we now are officially in a
recession. It's around the world, and most
analysts think it's going to get worse before it
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hat greed is good and "What's in it for me," it
turns out that that's not good for anybody.
It's not good for the wealthy, it's not good for
the poor, and it's not good for the vast
majority in the middle. If we've learned
anything from this current financial crisis-think about how this evolved. You had a
situation in which you started seeing home
foreclosures rise. You had a middle class that
was vulnerable and couldn't make payments.
Suddenly, all the borrowing that had been-and, and, and all the speculation that had
been premised on those folks doing OK, that
starts evaporating. Next thing you know,
you've got Lehman Brothers going under.
People used to think that, well, there, there's
no connection between those two things. It
turns out that when we all do well, then the
economy, as a whole, is going to benefit.
MR. BROKAW: I want to move now to
international affairs, the war on terror.
Obviously, we have all been stunned by what
happened in India at Mumbai. It is still playing
out in that part of the world. You have said
that the United States reserves the right to go
after terrorists in Pakistan if you have targets
of opportunity. Does India now also have
that right of hot pursuit?
the Afghan government--to stamp out the
kind of militant, violent, terrorist extremists
that have set up base camps and that are o
perating in ways that threaten the security
of everybody in the international community.
And, as I've said before, we can't continue to
look at Afghanistan in isolation. We have to
see it as a part of a regional problem that
includes Pakistan, includes India, includes
Kashmir, includes Iran. And part of the kind
of foreign policy I want to shape is one in
which we have tough, direct diplomacy
combined with more effective military
operations, focused on what is the number
one threat against U.S. interests and U.S.
lives. And that's al-Qaeda and, and, and their
various affiliates, and we are going to go after
them fiercely in the years to come.
MR. BROKAW: President Zardari of Pakistan
has said that he expects you to re-examine
the American policy of using unmanned
missiles for attacks on terrorist camps in
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PRES.-ELECT OBAMA: Well, I'm not going to
comment on that. What, what I'm going to
restate is a basic principle. Number one, if a
country is attacked, it has the right to defend
itself. I think that's universally
acknowledged. The second thing is that we
need a strategic partnership with all the
parties in the region--Pakistan and India and
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Pakistan; and there have been civilian
casualties in those attacks as well. Are you
re-examining that policy?
PRES.-ELECT OBAMA: Well, I--what I want to
do is to create the kind of effective, strategic
partnership with Pakistan that allows us, in
concert, to assure that terrorists are not
setting up safe havens in some of these
border regions between Pakistan and
Afghanistan. So far President Zardari has
sent the right signals. He's indicated that he
recognizes this is not just a threat to the
United States, but it is a threat to Pakistan as
well. There was a bombing in Pakistan just
yesterday that killed scores of people, and so
you're seeing greater and greater terrorist
activity inside of Pakistan. I think this
democratically-elected government
understands that threat, and I hope that in
the coming months that we're going to be
able to establish the kind of close, effective,
working relationship that makes both
countries safer.
Clinton; Jim Jones, who will be my national
security adviser; Bob Gates; Susan Rice, my
U.N. representative--that my intelligence
folks, when they get appointed, that we come
up with a comprehensive strategy. I have
enormous confidence in Senator Clinton's
ability to rebuild alliances and to send a
strong signal that we're going to do business
differently and place an emphasis on
diplomacy.
MR. BROKAW: Let's talk for a moment about
Iraq. It was a principal--it was one of the
principals in the organization of your
campaign at the beginning. A lot of people
voted for you because they thought you
would bring the war in Iraq to an end very
swiftly. Here is what you had to say on July
3rd of this year about what you would do
once you took office.
(Videotape)
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MR. BROKAW: That part of the world is such
a hot zone.
PRES.-ELECT OBAMA: Right.
MR. BROKAW: Is it going to be necessary for
you to appoint some kind of a special envoy
to worry only about South Asia with
presidential authority?
PRES.-ELECT OBAMA: Well, my first job is to
make sure that my core national security
team--Secretary of State designee Hillary
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