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Sunday, July 21, 2013

The Kurdish element is the most interesting ingredient in the Muslim Molotov cocktail

I wonder what the map of Kurdistan will look like after they get full autonomy from all the countries where their population has grown to a strong percentage.  I am imagining something like a land mass cutting through and enveloping parts of Iraq, Turkey, Syria and Iran and maybe even a bit of Armenia.

Listen to the vid below which was posted yesterday, to grasp a little bit of the Kurdish problem.   Kurds and Turks  sound the same in the man's accent but you will still get the gist of what he's trying to convey.   I have to read up on the Kurdish people, but if memory serves right, the original name for a country that existed for the Kurds was called Cordyne  or something like that AND it was not a muslim country at that time but had a pagan culture that worshipped the Sun. Their present day flag still has the sun on it.

IMO, it's important to know about all these sects in the Muslim world because our glorious Jason Kenney has been importing immigrants from that world in their tens of thousands and we need to know to separate the most vile from the not so much and that's by learning about  their opinions, views and cultural practices. Many of these newcomers are gonna be our new neighbours.  I have already started seeing a lot more muzzies in the supermarket I frequent.  



From TodaysZaman:
Turkish gov't says won't tolerate PYD's fait accompli in northern Syria.  The Turkish General Staff has confirmed that the Democratic Union Party (PYD) -- a political offshoot of the terrorist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in Syria -- has captured Ras al-Ain on Syria's northern border with Turkey, while the Turkish government assures that it will never tolerate an autonomous Kurdish administration in northern Syria.

The PYD has been fighting against opposition fighters in northern Syria for months in an effort to gain an advantage and declare autonomy in a nation rocked by a war between President Bashar al-Assad's regime forces and opposition groups. The PYD seized control of the Syrian town of Ras al-Ain -- very close to Turkey's Ceylanpınar district of Şanlıurfa -- which heightened Ankara's fears that the emergence of an autonomous Kurdish region in Syria could embolden homegrown militants of the PKK, which is fighting for autonomy in Turkey. Just days before, the PYD declared that it would establish autonomy in northern Syrian on July 19.

Turkey's Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu voiced his concern about the spillover of violence from the war in Turkey's southern neighbor and called again on the United Nations Security Council, which has yet to come to a consensus over Syria, to act. Speaking during an event in Ankara on Wednesday evening, he said Turkey will continue its firm stance against any kind of terrorist dominance near its borders. "This illustrates a striking picture of how much the crisis in Syria can affect us and our citizens. Once again, we call upon the international community. … If the UN Security Council is to do the job it is required to do, then the moment is now," he stated.

Turkey, which has emerged as one of al-Assad's most vocal critics and biggest backers of the rebels fighting to overthrow him, has previously lashed out at the UN Security Council for failing to adopt a united stance on Syria.......

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