Translate

Thursday, October 17, 2013

"The Caliphate of the Middle East" yup, sounds pretty good doesn't it !


What simple, good, decent human beings are unable to comprehend is how gangs of terrorists can take over entire governments and turn them into cult members.  I love such simple souls but at the same time it's frustrating that they have not educated themselves re. the history of the cult of islam and how barbarians make the most effective warriors.  These simple folks think that people like moi talking about "history repeating itself" are total bonkers and religious Christian nutjobs. Does one have to  be religious to hate evil?

Now, here comes the beginning of the news on the true intentions of the "Arab springs".....  this should have been expected. However, now that the cat's out of the bag,  the rats will all scamper over each other to write about it.

If you want to see how quick and how methodical was the route the muslims took to spread islam  go here for interactive maps.  

The first vid is from two weeks ago, the second was posted in 2009 and reminded me why I like Lou Dobbs.  

From IndependentUK:
Jihadists see Syria insurgency as just the beginning of a Middle East revolution. Al-Qa’ida groups aim for a revolution right across the Middle East.  Shortly before its operatives killed 14 Iraqi Shia children in a school bombing this month, the group once known as al-Qa’ida in Iraq sent guerrillas into northern Syrian villages with orders to reopen local Sunni classrooms. In a series of early-autumn visits, the militants handed out religious textbooks and backpacks bearing the group’s new name: the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria.

A four-hour drive to the east, a rival al-Qa’ida faction, Jabhat al-Nusra, was busy setting up a jobs programme in Ash-Shaddadi, a desert town it has held since February. The Islamists restarted production in an oilfield that had been closed by the fighting, and fired up the town’s gas plant, now a source of income for the town.

The two rebel groups, with their distinct lineages to the terrorist network founded by Osama bin Laden, have concentrated Western fears of rising jihadist influences within Syria’s rebel movement. Two-and-a-half years after the start of the country’s uprising, Islamists are carving out fiefdoms and showing signs of digging in.



“We all have the same aqidah [Islamic creed] as al-Nusra or the Islamic State,” said a 23-year-old Jordanian Palestinian who gave the name Abu Abdallah in an interview in Jordan and who fights for a rebel brigade allied with the Islamists. “The aim is to free the Muslim lands and have the Islamic flag there.”

The prominence of the two groups — as fighters, as recruiters and, more recently, as local administrators — appears to have accelerated even as the Obama administration seeks to bolster moderate and secularist rebels with new weapons and training. Multiple independent studies, as well as Western and Middle Eastern intelligence officials, show the hard-line Islamists surging ahead by almost every measure, undermining Western efforts to find a democratic alternative to President Assad.

The al-Qa’ida affiliates have clashed with ..........



No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.