Guest Post by Kay Wilson – From Egypt, Peace Activists Kay Wilson and Ahmed Meligy


This is a 4-minute message of peace from Ahmed Meligy, an Egyptian and me, an Israeli. I was frightened to travel to Egypt, a Muslim country, because I am scarred from a Muslim machete. Yet I trusted Ahmed, who is also scarred from his time in an Egyptian prison. We are two different people from two different cultures, guilty of a mutual crime; our unequivocal insistence that Israel has the right to exist, survive and thrive.

Peace is not a bogus deal signed between the leader of the free world and a rogue state bent on destroying the State of Israel.

Peace is impossible with any leadership that justifies incitement that leads to terrorism; the maiming and murder of innocent civilians for political gain. However, true peace is possible and it happens when people of different cultures and faiths are willing to see beyond the dissimilarities and embrace one another as equal human beings.

Rabbi Nachman said, ‘the whole world is a bridge and the main thing is that we should not be afraid.’

Ahmed, as we walk this bridge together, we will hold each other’s hand. I hope that many will follow. May G-d keep you brave and safe my friend. I love you.

סירטון קצר שבו אני, ישראלית וחבר מוסלמי מצרי יקר מדברים על שלום. שלום לא של הסכמים שמסכנים את מדינת ישראל ולא שלום עם אנשים שרוצים לרצוח יהודים – אלא שלום אמיתי שנולד מרצון להכיר זה את זה ולכבד זה את זה. כל העולם כולו גשר צר מאוד והעיקר הוא לא לפחד כלל. אחמד, אחי היקר, אני אוהבת אותך ומעריצה אותך, שאלוהים ישמור עליך וביחד כולנו, צעד צעד, נעבור את הגשר

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ISIS Pushes West

jonathanspyer's avatarJonathan Spyer

PJMedia, 10/4

The conquest by the Islamic State of the Yarmouk Palestinian refugee camp near Damascus confirms the resilience of the jihadis and is an indicator of their current strategy.  Islamic State has lost considerable ground in Iraq, with the recapture of Tikrit constituting its latest setback.  IS has no real response to coalition air power, when it is combined with a competent and determined ground force.  This was first demonstrated in the organization’s defeat at Kobani in January, and it is now becoming apparent in Iraq.

However, Islamic State is responding to this reality in a shrewd and calculated way.

Just prior to its eruption into Iraq last June, ISIS carried out a strategic retreat in north west Syria.  In retrospect, this was clearly a preparation for the push into Iraq.  In so doing, the movement demonstrated its ability to concentrate its forces and to plan beyond the merely…

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Link – Spyer on the Breaking Up of the Middle East

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“In a process of profound importance, five Arab states in the Middle East have effectively ceased to exist over the last decade. The five states in question are Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Yemen and Libya. It is possible that more will follow.

The causes of their disappearance are not all the same. In two cases (Iraq, Libya) it was Western military intervention which began the process of collapse. In another case (Lebanon) it is intervention from a Middle Eastern state (Iran) which is at the root of the definitive hollowing out of the state.”

Spyer, Jonathan.  “In the Shadow of the Gunmen.”  IDC Herzliya, Rubin Center Research in International Affairs, April 4, 2015.

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Link – Palestinians Slaughtered by the Great Hate

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The Palestinians in Yarmouk are unlucky, mainly because they are being attacked and killed by Muslims, and not by Israel. An Israeli attack on the camp would have drawn worldwide condemnation and protests, with Palestinian and Arab leaders rushing to seek the intervention of the UN Security Council and the international community.

The Palestinians in Yarmouk are unlucky because their leaders in the Palestinian Authority and Hamas are still busy fighting each other over power and money. This is a power struggle that has been going on since Hamas drove the PA out of the Gaza Strip in the summer of 2007.

Toameh, Khaled Abu.  “Why Palestinians in Yarmouk Are Unlucky.”  Gatestone Institute, April 10, 2015.


Setting aside the fine points of Islamist rivalry that may exist between Daesh and Hamas, the absurdity and obscenity of the destruction of the Palestinian Yarmouk Camp may serve to highlight the sociopathic character of the despots who brought it about: Putin, Assad, Khamenei.

Aboud Dandachi’s observations regarding the perverting of Syria’s Arab Spring into an extremist’s civil war are borne out by the advance of the al-Qaeda spin-off that is Daesh and the more than equal measure of punishment meted to Yarmouk by the Assad (“Or Burn It”) regime.  All of the Arab accusation and handwringing on behalf of the (descendants of) refugees of 1948 have been betrayed as convenient loud mouthiness.  In the pinch, not one militant or military Arab hand stood to defend — to hold dear and keep safe — the larger population of Yarmouk.

If the reader should happen to be thinking like a healthy human being, this might be a good time to put on the mantle of any of a number of malign narcissistic sociopaths and start to think like a ringleader, a showman, a producer of conflict to be delivered, described, and framed in the cause of one’s own self-aggrandizing political theater.

Related Reference

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the mayhem has turned Yarmouk into “the deepest circle of hell.”

“A refugee camp is beginning to resemble a death camp,” Ban told reporters at the U.N., adding that the residents, including 3,500 children, are being used as human shields by armed elements inside Yarmouk and government forces outside it.

Aji, Albert.  “PLO says it won’t be drawn into battle to oust IS from embattled Palestinian camp in Syria.”  U.S. News & World Report, April 10, 2015.


You cannot understand the Islamic State’s assault on the camp or what it means unless you also consider how Bashar al-Assad, as a gift to the Palestinian people, turned a thriving neighborhood of hundreds of thousands of people into a desperate population of 18,000 waiting to die. We cannot stop what happened in Yarmouk from repeating itself elsewhere unless we save the 600,000 besieged civilians whom Assad is starving to death.

Zakarya, Qusai.  “The Starving of Yarmouk, Then the Capture: The Islamic State’s attack on the besieged Palestinian refugee camp outside Damascus is highly suspicious.  It could only have happened with Assad’s complicity.”  Foreign Policy, April 9, 2015.


At the time, the full scale of the group’s collusion with the Assad regime was not yet well known, and it was perceived as an independent Al-Qaeda group with dreams of a 21st century caliphate, which they started to impose on Raqqa.

Dandachi, Aboud.  “After Conquering Raqqa, ISIS Enters Mosul.  Are the Obamanite Isolationists Happy Now?”  From Homs to Istanbul, June 10, 2014.


In mid-2012, Hezbollah entered Syria, ostensibly to safeguard a regime that was vital in supporting its operations in the region. Once thought of as the ‘axis of resistance’ against Israel, their intervention, coupled with their ally’s brutal siege on Yarmouk, has damaged the movement’s popularity among Palestinians from Syria.

El-Shammah, Hugo.  “Inside the Middle East: Palestinians in Syria lose respect for Hezbollah.”  The Media Line in The Jerusalem Post, April 10, 2015.


Published about a year ago, this piece seems practically quaint by the standards of horror being visited today by Daesh on the beleaguered Palestinians.

Chulov, Martin.  “Besieged and terrified . . . and the food is about to run out for Damascus refugees.”  The Guardian, April 19, 2014.


Reports also say that several Palestinians including an imam have been beheaded by Isis. Grisly pictures posted on social media shows severed heads hung on spikes inside the refugee camps.

Varghese, Johnlee.  “Isis Posts Grisly Pictures of Beheaded Palestinians in Yarmouk Camp (Graphic Images).  International Business Times, April 5, 2015.

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Link – Sunni Arab Response to Iranian Expansionism

Iran will use those resources as it has for a couple of decades: to push the Shiite religious agenda, sponsor terrorism directed against Sunnis, Israelis, and the West (in roughly that order), and strengthen its already capable armed forces. Iran already effectively controls five capitals in the Middle East — Tehran, Damascus, Beirut, Baghdad, and most recently Sanaa.

Stavridis, James.  “The Arab NATO.”  Foreign Policy, April 9, 2015.


With despots, different talk — here: different religious teleology — serves the same walk: conquest followed by the imposition of absolute control.  The reward for that behavior: limitless aggrandizement and continuous narcissistic supply.  However, the Arab defensive posture in response to the war-by-proxy assault on Yemen may indicate the workings of a less self-centered and plainly more prudent psychology, for it appears to be Khamenei’s ambitions, already heading what this blog refers to as “Syndicate Red Brown Green”, propelling the necessity of pulling together a Sunni Arab defense bloc.

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Links – Dismissing “Islamophobia”

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“Martin said we must put Taylor’s concerns in a broader context. “It’s not just anti-Muslim rhetoric that puts Canada high on the radar list of enemies, or the upping of the ante by extending the Islamic State mission to Syria.” It’s also that the Harper government shut down the embassy in Tehran, as if that’s a bad thing. He might want to read The Islamic Republic of Iran—State sponsor of Terrorism by Shabnam Assadollahi, human rights advocate and Iran expert. Martin also suggested Harper has endangered us in the Arab world through unconditional support for Israel. If I understand Taylor’s statements, the last thing we want to do is upset the Arab/Muslim world for fear of the reaction of alienated Muslims in Canada. Is he suggesting Canada should make policy based on the potential actions of Muslims or any other ethnic/culture/ religious group in Canada? Should Canada turn a blind eye to Muslim on Muslim murder and Muslim on Christian murder for fear of hurting the feelings of Muslims in Canada?”

Bederman, Diane Weber.  “If I were a Muslim I’d be embarrassed”.  Canada Free Press, April 5, 2015.


. . . .  The problem is the Prophet Muhammad. If he were alive today, Amnesty International would certainly have a problem with his followers obeying his laws, which demand that certain people have their limbs amputated and their nose cut off. The Democrats would have him in their crosshairs as being at the forefront on the “war against women”. The New York Times would certainly seek to expose him and any whistle blower in his ranks would be celebrated as the next Julian Assange.

The Huffington Post and Daily Kos would be collecting signatures, to demand that our government do something to stop him. Media Matters would be reprinting all of the outrageous things he said, such as “I have become victorious through terror”.

Bell, Eric Allen.  “Facebook is Enforcing Islamic Blasphemy Laws.”  Faith Freedom Organization, February 2, 2015.


Rejecting criticism may serve to reject shame for a while, but time may develop an awareness greater than the narrative to which one clings for honor.  Acts and roles simply age, some better than others, but with greater cognition and comprehension become antiquated and archaic.

Conservative voices chattering around — not in — the BackChannels environment have a consistently straightforward way of dealing with feudal and psychological evil: call it out; detail it; echo justified observations; and, in general, maintain the critical front line defense of informed modern values and pluralism in intellectual battlespace.

The classically liberal conservative modern Muslim voices to which BackChannels has listened over the years offer a convoluted defense of Islamic thought — how good of Islam to “defend” the interests of select dhimmis in exchange for the acceptance of second-class status and the payment of tribute for it — or evade the portent of demonstrations of the obvious, as with Daesh Baghdadi’s strenuously studied recapitulation of General Muhammad’s experience and vision — at least as well as he may have gleaned through his scholarship — albeit with the contribution of otherwise unemployed former Baathist military.

For such strident and damning criticism of a core civilizational history once isolated in space and now, perhaps, isolated by time — the 7th Century is a long ago “then”, and this is now — when is it too soon to speak?

And when might it be too late?

Oh, one more thing . . . if the nut is loosened from the monkey’s grasp, what is to take its place?

In rare vocal encounter yesterday, BackChannels heard, “Islam doomed to its own self-destruction . . . disintegration from within . . . ethnic system – no solid ground to walk on . . . . maintained by brutality.”  Indeed, the penalties for apostasy, heresy, and hypocrisy seem high.  It also heard about Obama’s perceived role: ” . . . to destroy American hegemony . . . proto-Marxist . . . emulating his father . . . anti-colonialist . . . .”

Given that American has failed to colonize even Baltimore, BackChannels might be a little leary of that last characterization.

😉

Then too, those who follow this blog know that it may have as an underlying theme the want of bringing things to light, of digging around in the modern wells of seemingly limitless information and — this with a nod to political psychology — dredging and filtering what appears persistent across a broad spectrum of political expression plus separated historical observations over time.

Online — just a mouseclick away from where you are reading — “Change Navigator” Holger Nauheimer poses both a telling observation and question on slide 4 of 31:

  1. Attributed to Chris Spies (2006): “The dilemma with change is that everyone likes to talk about it, but very few have insight into their own willingness to change, let alone their ability to influence change.  Those who see the need for change often want others to change first.  That applies to adversaries and onlookers, but also to analysts and practitioners.  Why is this the case?”
  2. Stated in a thought cloud: “How to construct an environment in which people in conflict can safely explore new ideas towards a better future?”

Directly related:

Spies, Chris F. J. “Resolutionary Change: The Art of Awakening Dorman Faculties in Others: A Response by Chris F. J. Spies.”  Berghof Research Center for Constructive Conflict Management, August 2006.

Mitchell, Christopher R. 2005. Conflict, Social Change and Conflict Resolution. An Enquiry. Berlin: Berghof Research Center for Constructive Conflict Management/ Berghof Handbook for Conflict Transformation (online). http://www.berghof-handbook.net/uploads/download/michell_handbook.pdf

Chris Spies wraps the essay cited with this closing paragraph:

The time has arrived for change agents to wander with their partners, not as initiative takers (see Mitchell’s list on page 20), but as accompaniers and walking partners whose conversations reawaken people’s energies and imagination. They are partners in the forest – fellow human beings.  They will know the forest. They will navigate the rivers. Together they will transform competitive spaces into listening spaces; tactical planning into strategic planning; escalating dynamics into dynamic stability; and resistance to change into risk-taking for change.


Time has been space from the beginning, but only recently has the hard fact of it had, well, time to settle in: only for God is there a day without end or beginning; for all else, time moves along, transforms, runs out, begins anew.  It has features too, and perhaps for “accompaniers” some breathtaking rivers.  Moses, the Jews, and a “mixed multitude” found their way to just one such crossing.

Addendum

The Islamic virus first divests the person of his most fundamental human attribute. It takes away his right to make decisions himself and absolves him and in return, of any responsibility for his actions rendered in blind obedience to it.

Imani, Amil.  “The Virus of Islam: Can It Be Cured?”  Amilimani.com, April 8, 2015.

Too soon?

Too late?


In recent years, the search for an alternative to Islamism has been thwarted by the widening sectarian conflict within Islam, which has increased tensions and driven violence across the Muslim world. In light of this emergency, the need to reform Islamic jurisprudence and social thought has become more urgent than ever. Islamism’s menace to Muslims, however, has been compounded by the weakened state of critical thinking within Islamic religious and political traditions. In developing a reformist alternative to Islamism, Muslims do in fact have a substantial body of both historical as well as contemporary thinking that they can draw upon to help improve their political and social structures and create more just, inclusive societies.

Rumi, Raza.  “The Prospects for Reform in Islam.”  Hudson Institute, near March 30, 2015.


Watching the evolution of jihad videos, propaganda and message traffic I note a growing movement towards collective consciousness. This collective identity is nurtured with vitriolic attacks. What causes Muslims residing across the globe to be drawn to the hive of Abu Borg? Why choose divestment of individual personality (a gift from God) and investment in life as an assimilated slave? I no longer speak. We speak. I am no longer a free moral agent. My will bends and sways to the sound of thousands of voices. I become the enslaved.

Swofford, Tammy.  “Shadow.”  Daily Times, April 10, 2015.

Additional Links

http://www.berghof-foundation.org/

Homepage

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FTAC – Obama – Ambivalence, Feudalism, Obscurantism, and Political Jiu Jitsu – A Comment

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He’s done more than screw up the region — or address larger political tectonics like the post-Soviet collapse of Soviet arrangements and behaviors. Boasting transparency, he has removed from popular observation the underlying policies of his Administration, transforming America’s democracy into its own neo-feudal world, a mirror perhaps of the feudal world he has engaged.

I remain both ambivalent and clinical cold in my “reading” of Obama’s domestic and foreign political policy involving his avoidance of confrontation and a kind of almost (!) but not quite complete rollover to the infiltration and possible perversion of intellectual assets (from advisors to campuses to think tanks). The U.S., perhaps others as well, has absorbed the agents of malicious movements, but it has also weakened the legs of the post-KGB Putin-Khamenei programs. The end of the Cold War and suspension of the Soviet failed to permanently transform Russia into a rule-of-law state. Colonel President Emperor Putin has extended the old program under cover of a neo-feudal nationalism and Obama has been either stuck with its disassembly or made part of its longevity.


Credit Obama with destabilizing the Soviet holdovers in international business and criminal relationships.  The “Putin-Assad-Khamenei” arrangement has been looking a bit rough lately (I understand the preferred enemy — as opposed to a moderate popular revolutionary one — the “Islamist Front”  — because it makes a better self-glorifying story for our malignant narcissists — has drawn close to the gates defending whatever remains of Assad’s governing power [he has really destroyed his own crib]).

Also looking unmasked and pale: Venezuela’s Maduro may handily deal with the direct opposition using the tools familiar to dictators, but with the economic woes derived from his own disastrous national policies, he appears bound to deal with enemies within his own circles as well.

Related Reading and Additions

Leopoldo López has been imprisoned in a military prison for one year and a month. Leopoldo is innocent, he shouldn’t remain as a prisoner for another day. He is imprisoned because of his words, because of what he thinks, for daring to say what the majority of Venezuelans wanted to hear.

He denounced Maduro’s regime as undemocratic, corrupt, inefficient, and repressive. Those words are now more alive than ever.

Marty, Belen.  “Lilian Tintori: “Leopoldo Surrendered to Unmask Maduro.”  Pan Am Post, March 31, 2015.


It was a sign of how bad things are in the Americas. Authoritarian governments now rule in Nicaragua, El Salvador, Venezuela, Ecuador, Argentina and Bolivia. All employ, to varying degrees, at least some elements of the Cuban model in which the executive consolidates power, civil society is suppressed, and due process is passe.

Elections are rigged. Rulers expropriate at will. Media outlets that dare to differ from the party line face legal burdens that can wipe them out.

O’Grady, Mary Anastasia.  “Obama Rehabilitates the Castro Brothers: The Organization of American States is now open to dictatorships.”  The Wall Street Journal, April 5, 2015.


Hiding dictatorship — how it works its ugliness, what it really looks like — from the young appears increasingly difficult given American Presidential attention.  While American conservatives frame Obama’s about-to-happen meet-and-greet with Raoul Castro as a gross compromise of the American democratic spirit, as much also highlights how really awful — “state capitalist” (actually), criminal, manipulative, and repressive Cuba’s governing elite have been all along:

But a second activist, from Argentina, reported on social media suffering similar treatment.

Micaela Hierro Dori said “the same happened to me”, and that she was threatened with being deported to Argentina.

“They are looking to silence the young,” she said.

Alexander, Harriet.  “Cuban dissident arrested on arrival at Panama’s Summit of the Americas.”  The Telegraph, April 6, 2015.

Perhaps the young will wish not to be silenced this year.

Be that as it may, Obama’s friendly reach-out-and-touch-someone-awful tour appears to have a way of uncloaking or uncovering ageing despots: it appears some are getting the attention — the global spotlight — they themselves have long craved.


More From the Awesome Conversation:

Old southern joke about an drunk accused of arson: “Your honor,” he says, “the bed was already on fire when I got into it!”

For Obama, the middle east, so delicately balanced in power, was well screwed up when he got into office, and given both the clout and ruthlessness of the enemies of democracy and modernity, the direct “Arab Spring” may have been due to fail if too much associated with Washington. Instead, the demonic — those “malignant narcissists” — have been given their wish: highest visibility and plenty of room for showing the world how they do business and what the world — and its latest generations — really thinks of them.

We often let attitude and predisposition establish our beliefs when what is wanted may be a lot of observation and a little bit of “wait just a minute”.

While fretting over Khamenei getting The Bomb, have we given much thought to the impact on Iranians of various revelations about the Khamenei brothers wealth? What is that information doing to both colleagues and constituents within each despotic state?

Out of necessity, American presidents find themselves hitched to the momentum of American programs. They might fiddle with some things — get in some licks on behalf of their own inclinations and sentiments — but the machinery is larger than they are and, so far, it has survived every one of them.

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Link: KGB –> Saddam –> DAESH

Abu Hamza, who became the group’s ruler in a small community in Syria, never discovered the Iraqis’ real identities, which were cloaked by code names or simply not revealed. All of the men, however, were former Iraqi officers who had served under Saddam Hussein, including the masked man, who had once worked for an Iraqi intelligence agency and now belonged to the Islamic State’s own shadowy security service, he said.

Sly, Liz.  “The hidden hand behind the Islamic State militants?  Saddam Hussein’s.” The Washington Post, April 4, 2015.


The correspondent: Alexander, who, in your opinion, is the originator of this terrorist attack?

A. Litvinenko: You know, I have spoken about it earlier and I shall say now, that I know only one organization, which has made terrorism the main tool of solving of political problems. It is the Russian special services. The KGB was engaged in terrorism for many years, and, in mass terrorism. At the special department of the KGB they trained terrorists practically from all countries of the world; these courses lasted, as a rule, for a half-year. Specially trained and prepared agents of the KGB organized murders and explosions, including explosions of tankers, captures of passenger air liners, strikes on the diplomatic, state and commercial organizations practically worldwide.

Chechenpress Department of Interviews. “The originator of the acts of terrorism in London was standing near Tony Blair.”  Indymedia, July 19, 2005.

Additional Reference

BackChannels.  Search “Syndicate Red Brown Green”.  Live.

BackChannels.  “The Russian Section”.  Live.

Chechen Center.  “Russian FSB and Al-Qaida as Teamwork.”  April 23, 2013.

Rubin, Barry.  “The World Was Going Our Way: The KGB and the Battle for the Third World — by Christopher Andrew and Vasili Mitrokhin (New York: Basic Books, 2005).”  Book review.  The Middle East Quarterly, Spring 2006, pp. 69-71.

SANA.  “Bogdanov, PFLP-GC discuss dangers of terrorists displacing Palestinians from camps in Syria.”  March 11, 2014.  Note: BackChannels places the Bogdanov-PFLP meeting in November 2014 based on a video clip of the same (but will leave it to readers to locate that data using search string “PFLP, Moscow”).


The Saudis view the Muslim Brotherhood, which took over Egypt for a year from June 30 2012 to July 3, 2013, as a political cult, as a set of secretive revolutionary cells attempting to take over one country after another, rather as Stalinist cells took over Hungary and Czechoslovakia after the end of WW II. I.e., the Saudi leadership now looks at the Brotherhood rather as the American Right wing looked at Communism in the McCarthy period. And it looks at Qatar as the patron of the Brotherhood.

Cole, Juan.  “A New Arab Cold War: Saudi Arabia Pressures Qatar on Muslim Brotherhood, American Think Tanks.”  Informed Comment, March 10, 2014.


From 2002:

In overcoming traditional Shiite-Sunni divides, Gunaratna said bin Laden’s ability to forge relations between Shia and Sunni terrorist groups indicated what he called the terror mastermind’s “goal-oriented rather than rule-oriented doctrine.”

Iran has also been able to bridge Shiite-Sunni divisions, noted Cannistraro, citing Iranian support for Sunni Muslim-dominated groups involved in the Palestinian struggle, including Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

Jacino, Leela.  “Is Iran Supporting Al Qaeda?”  ABC News, May 22, 2002.


Rafizadeh, Majid.  “Complex double game: Iran supporting Assad AND al-Qaeda?”  Al Aribya, February 14, 2014.

Rafizadeh, Majid.  “Why ‘Operation: Decisive Storm’ is Iran’s worst nightmare.”  Al-Aribya, March 28, 2015.

Tanter, Raymond.  “Tehran’s Offer to fight al-Qaeda is Like the Arsonist Offering to Put Out the Fire.”  Foreign Policy, January 9, 2014.

Related Drag-and-Drops

http://english.alarabiya.net/en/views/news/middle-east/2015/04/05/The-calm-that-preceded-the-Decisive-Storm-.html – 4/5/2015.

http://english.alarabiya.net/en/views/news/middle-east/2015/04/05/How-can-an-unshackled-Iran-be-confronted-.html – 4/5/2015.

http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/5493/arabs-blast-obama-deal-with-iran – 4/4/2015.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/worldviews/wp/2015/03/30/saudi-arabias-hostile-relationship-with-russia-is-leaving-egypt-stuck-in-the-middle/ – 3/30/2015.

http://en.delfi.lt/central-eastern-europe/putins-russia-do-traces-of-kgb-fsb-and-gru-lead-to-islamic-state.d?id=66856642 – 1/9/2015:

In general, the links between Chechen terrorist and Russian secret services cannot be denied even by those Western experts and commentators who tend to call these links a conspiracy theory.

The fact that the famous Shamil Basayev, Ruslan Gelayev and some others Chechen terrorist commanders began their career not only fighting on the Russian side during the Georgian-Abkhaz war, but were directly trained by the special forces of Russian military intelligence (GRU), was basically never even denied in Russia. The traces of GRU agents were not a secret as well.


http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/russia-threatens-to-use-nuclear-force-over-crimea-and-the-baltic-states-10150565.html 4/2/2015.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/monkey-cage/wp/2014/03/20/saudi-arabias-muslim-brotherhood-predicament/ – 3/20/2014.


From correspondence today:

I’ve always said and continue to say that the Cold War was inf fact a “Hot” War by proxies. Also all the Third World anti-Colonialist so-called “Liberation Movements”, primarily “nationalistic” supported by Moscow and Beijing (Peking at the time) were born just before World War II and were for the great majority supported and financed by Nazi Germany in the context of the Geo-Political war (essentially for Oil and strategic positioning)) of the time. When Nazism collapsed, the Soviets took over where the Nazis left off…Aj Ali Husseini Grand Mufti of Jerusalem and the PLA (founded by the remnants of the Balkan Arab SS Brigades) being examples. The Baath Parties of Iraq (Sunni) and Syria (Shiite), or the Egyptian National Party of Gamal Abdel Nasser, were all Nazi proxies before Moscow proxies. And so was the Indian National Party of Ghandi, “the prince of peace”, was financed and its military arm armed by Nazi Germany… When Hitler died Nazism morphed into Arab Nationalist movements and the PLA. Today, Hezbollah and Hamas being the spitting images of proto-Nazism, from their goose stepping to their arm stretched salutes…and anti-Semitic agenda.

The author of the above observation, Eric Claessens, grew up in Belgian family that while living in the Belgian Congo became direct witness to the ascent of Patrice Lumumba, which affair has been also back in the news of late (http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/141523/stephen-r-weissman/what-really-happened-in-congo – July / August 2014; http://www.wsj.com/articles/book-review-death-in-the-congo-by-emmanuel-gerard-and-bruce-kuklick-1428089156 – 4/3/2015).

 

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