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Pastor
Max answers your questions on:
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The
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Heaven
- hell & eternity
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& healing
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to be accept Christ
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BIBLE
Messages
|
World
Terrorism- Violence &
Terrorism in the end times
World
Terrorism
- We are
Living
in a Time of Trouble
World
Terrorism- Bible Clocks
-
Inevitable survival of Israel
World
Terrorism- Prepare to
meet
thy God
World
Terrorism
- Can we
Trust the Russians?
World
Terrorism- Where
will
you Spend Eternity?
World
Terrorism - The
Jewish
Nation
Why the Jews have
suffered
so much |
World
Terrorism
- Tsunamis -
earth
quakes world
disasters Is
God sending
a
warning ?
World
Terrorism- Time is
Running
Out
World
Terrorism- Are you
taking
a
Chance
World
Terrorism-The
Great
Tribulation
World
Terrorism
- Vital
signs of
soon Return of Jesus Christ
World
Terrorism
-Why
do so
many Muslims hate America?
World
Terrorism - Who
killed
Jesus? Who is responsible
for
the death of Jesus Christ? |
|
|
|

Tuesday,
Sept. 12, 2006
12:28 a.m. EDT
Pope:
Islamic 'Holy War' Against
God's Nature
Pope
Benedict XVI invited
Muslims on Tuesday to join a
dialogue of cultures based on
the premise that the concept
of an Islamic
"holy war" is
unreasonable and against God's
nature.
In a major lecture at
Regensburg
University
, where he taught theology
from 1969 to 1977, Benedict
said Christianity is tightly linked to reason and contrasted this view with those who believe in spreading their faith
by the sword.
The 79-year-old Pontiff
avoided making a direct
criticism of Islam, packaging
his comments in a highly
complex academic lecture with
references ranging from
ancient Jewish and Greek
thinking to Protestant
theology and modern atheism.
In
his lecture, the Pope quoted,
among others,
the 14th century Byzantine
emperor Manuel II Paleologos
who wrote that Mohammad had
brought things "only
evil and inhuman, such as his
command to spread by the sword
the faith he preached."
The Pope, who used the
terms "jihad"
and "holy war"
in his lecture, added in his
own words: "Violence
is incompatible with the
nature of God and the nature
of the soul".
Benedict several times quoted
Emperor Manuel's argument that
spreading the faith through
violence is unreasonable
and that acting
without reason -
"logos" in the original Greek - was
against God's nature.
At the end of his lecture,
the Pope again quoted Manuel
and said: "It
is to this great 'logos', to
this breadth of reason, that
we invite our partners in the
dialogue of cultures."
Papal spokesman Father
Federico Lombardi said
Benedict used Emperor
Manuel's views on Islam
only to help explain the issue
and not to condemn all of the
Muslim religion as violent.
"This is just an
example. We know that inside
Islam there are many different
positions, violent and
non-violent," he said.
"The Pope does not want
to give an interpretation of
Islam that is violent."
Many Islamic leaders have
denounced Muslim radicals for
using violence, saying this
perverts their faith, but a
minority of extremists says
the Koran commands them to use
it.
Last
week, the Pope said no one had
the right to use religion to
justify terrorism and urged
greater inter-religious
dialogue to stop the cycle of
hate and revenge from
infecting future generations.
On Monday, he prayed for the
victims of Sept. 11 on the
fifth anniversary of the
attacks against the
United States
.
At an open-air mass earlier
in the day, Benedict
told about 260,000 faithful
that Christians believed in a
loving God whose name could
not be used to justify hatred
and fanaticism. Organisers
had expected 350,000 to
attend.
Regensburg
is the medieval city where the
Pope taught theology from 1969
to 1977 and hoped to return in
retirement from
Vatican
service to write one last
major theological work.
As Cardinal Joseph
Ratzinger, he twice asked Pope
John Paul to let him retire
from his job as the
Vatican
's top doctrinal official, but
John Paul refused.
At his university lecture,
Benedict, a leading theologian
who has always drawn clear
lines between Roman
Catholicism and other faiths,
also appeared to criticize
Protestant churches and
contemporary Third World
theologians for not stressing the
link between faith and reason
clearly enough.
Benedict stressed that his
criticism of modern empirical
reasoning "has
nothing to do with putting the
clock back to the time before
the Enlightenment and
rejecting the insights of the
modern age."
"The
intention here is not one of
retrenchment or negative
criticism, but of broadening
our concept of reason and its
application," said
Benedict, who told the
audience it was a moving
experience for him to give a
university lecture again.
(c) Reuters 2006. All
rights reserved.
Israeli
Columnist: New War After
Cease-fire
A United Nations cease-fire
resolution to halt the
fighting in Lebanon will only
guarantee that there will be
another war, a columnist for
the Jerusalem Post predicts.
"This is the case
because none of the moves
being considered involve the
one action that would prevent
the next war," writes
columnist Caroline Glick.
"That action is an
Israeli victory against
Hezbollah in Lebanon, and an
Israeli and allied strike
against Hezbollah's state
sponsors Syria and Iran, which
promote Hezbollah's wanton
aggression against Israel as a
central campaign in their
global jihad aimed at
annihilating the Jewish state
and defeating Western
civilization."
Israeli acceptance of a
Security Council resolution
before Hezbollah is utterly
crushed would enable "the
advance guard of the Iranian
army of jihad" not only
to survive as a fighting
force, but also to declare
victory against Israel, Glick
maintains.
The only way for Israel to
end the threat from Hezbollah
is to seize enough territory
in Lebanon to take Israel out
of the terrorist group's
missile range, and to kill
Hezbollah operative and
destroy their arsenals,
according to Glick, who
complains:
"Yet today ground
operations center on retaking
the former security zone – a
tiny foothold, control of
which makes no impact on
Hezbollah's continued ability
to rain missiles on sovereign
Israeli territory and render a
quarter of the population
internal refugees or relegated
to hiding in bomb shelters for
weeks upon weeks."
The war in Lebanon has not
only disrupted Israeli
society, but led to the
galvanizing of support for
jihad in Iraq and the "scapegoating
of Israel again" by
Western leftists as the
aggressor in the conflict,
Glick writes, adding:
"Many commentators who
understand what a Hezbollah
victory will mean for
international security rightly
argue that the international
community today is repeating
the mistakes of the 1930s,
when it refused to contend
with the growing dangers
emanating from Nazi Germany
and Imperial Japan."
|
FBI
INVESTIGATING
10,000
TERRORIST CASES!
Ronald
Kessler
Wednesday, July 19, 2006
WASHINGTON
-- Besides uncovering
a plot to blow up
tunnels in
New York City
, the FBI is currently
investigating 10,000
terrorism cases,
according to Joe
Billy, Jr., the
bureau's chief of
counterterrorism. The
investigations include
cases in
Iraq
and
Afghanistan
.
Meanwhile,
CIA and FBI officials
are dumbfounded by
quotes attributed to
them in Ron Suskind's
"The One Percent
Doctrine." They
say many of the
conversations never
took place. The FBI
took the unusual step
of issuing a press
release stating that
the book was wrong in
claiming that, two
years before the
London
subway bombings of
July 7, 2005
, the CIA had placed
Mohammad Sidique Khan,
a suspect in the
bombings, on the
U.S.
"No Fly
List" and warned
British intelligence
about him.
What
was touted as the
book's biggest
revelation was that
al-Qaida came within
45 days of attacking
the
New York
subway system with
cyanide spread by an
innovative gas
dispersal system.
"The plot was
called off by bin
Laden's No. 2 only 45
days from zero
hour," according
to a headline over
Time magazine's
excerpt of the book.
But in a NewsMax
interview, Joe Billy
said that while the
plan was discussed by
al-Qaida, it was just
talk.
"There
was never any
information acquired
that furthered the
plot along, that this
was in the
works," said
Billy, who is acting
assistant director
over the FBI's
counterterrorism
division and is
expected to be named
assistant director.
"We knew there
was discussion, we
knew they were
thinking about doing
it, we had it on good
sources, basically.
But that was it."
Since
9/11, Billy said, the
counterterrorism
effort has become
broader, with more
than a dozen federal
agencies working
together from the
National
Counterterrorism
Center (NCTC) based in
McLean
,
Va.
The FBI's
counterterrorism
operations center is
now at the NCTC.
At
the same time, because
Osama bin Laden has
been isolated, al-Qaida
has morphed into a
sort of franchise
operation. Inspired by
bin Laden, local
groups try to emulate
his example. While
they try to obtain
financing and support
from al-Qaida, they
generally operate on
their own. As
examples, Billy cited
terrorist arrests in
London
,
Montreal
, and
Miami
.
"The
London
bombings were a
concern in the sense
that they were
homegrown," Billy
said. "These
individuals were not
really on the watch of
the
U.K.
authorities. That
caused us to really do
an introspective look
here at this
phenomenon of
homegrown
extremists." Now
that more than
two-thirds of al-Qaida's
leadership has been
rolled up, its ability
to launch an attack
has been impaired.
"Key
planners and
facilitators of the
organization have been
captured or
killed," Billy
said. "Obviously,
you still have No. 1
and No. 2 who are
still about, and they
still have influence.
But their
infrastructure and
ability to organize
and carry out a
large-scale attack has
been somewhat
curtailed . . . I
think we've done well,
meaning we in the U.S.
and our partner
countries, have done
well to really hinder
al-Qaida's abilities
to launch a
large-scale,
multi-pronged attack
9/11-style."
The
FBI counts the number
of terrorism-related
arrests and
convictions in the
hundreds, but
thousands of others
are charged with
immigration
violations, thefts, or
cigarette smuggling.
While many of those
individuals may have
been suspected of
being part of a
terrorist group, there
is no way to know for
sure if they have
committed a
terrorist-related
crime. Under FBI
Director Robert
Mueller, the bureau's
approach is to prevent
the next attack by
putting potential
terrorists out of
commission when they
are violating even
minor criminal laws.
"You
can use the
immigration-type laws
in a positive
way," Billy said.
"To say, ‘Look,
first of all you're
illegal; second of
all, you're a member
of Hamas.' We have to
start looking at it
and saying, OK, what
can we do to enforce
those laws as
well?"
Even
though al-Qaida is
fragmented, it is
trying to acquire
weapons of mass
destruction and could
succeed at any moment.
"That's
really the race that
we're in right now, to
prevent the
acquisition and use of
any kind of type of
WMD, to implode a
nuclear device or
chemical-biological
weapon of some
type," Billy
said. "Hopefully,
they're not where they
have something like
that, but on any given
day someone could
acquire something
through some rogue
state and have the
means to bring it into
the
United States
and try to use
it."
The
FBI cannot expect to
find and arrest every
terrorist, Billy said,
any more than it can
stop all bank
robberies.
"The
question for us is
which ones do we not
know about, which
groups right now as we
sit here are trying
actively to put
something together to
perhaps harm us today
or tomorrow?
"Do
we know about all the
individuals? I still
think it's a small
number that have
gravitated to this,
but nevertheless it
doesn't take but one
or a small group to
wreak havoc on our
country and change the
dynamics in some
way."
Each
morning, Billy looks
at a briefing book
listing three or four
threats. The book is
as thick as a college
dictionary.
"A
lot of times, they
originate
overseas," he
said. "Someone
walks into the
U.S.
embassy at some
location and provides
information, says that
I'm aware of these
people who are perhaps
involved in something,
and these individuals
are coming to the
U.S.
or they're in the
U.S.
, and they're part of
al-Qaida and they're
looking to conduct
terrorism on the fifth
anniversary of Sept.
11. Another example
would be a write-in to
a government Web site,
putting down
information that is of
value.
"Another
way is an informant
who's being operated
by another country, by
our own intelligence
services, either here
or overseas. He
acquires information,
relays that
information to their
handlers. Their
handlers in turn
report it; that makes
it part of the threat
stream."
Many
of the leads are
bogus. Sometimes
ex-spouses or former
lovers invent claims
to get back at each
other. In other cases,
apparently suspicious
activity may turn out
to be innocent.
"Today,
you don't avoid
anything. Everything
is looked at,"
Billy said. "The
Joint Terrorism Task
Force [JTTF] in
Alabama
may send it back to
the local police,
saying someone's been
moving barrels into
their garage at three
in the morning over
the last two nights,
and they looked like
they were chemical
barrels. Or someone
just bought a large
quantity of . . .
fertilizer from a Home
Depot in
Springfield
,
Va.
He paid cash and
bought a truckload of
stuff. Is that a
threat, or is that
somebody with a farm?
You just don't
know."
In
the case of the man
loading barrels into
his home at night,
"The Joint
Terrorism Task Force
looked into it, and it
turned out it was a
fellow moving his
household goods. He
worked for a chemical
company and was using
clean barrels to load
his china and
everything else,
getting it ready for
the move. Completely
legitimate, but it had
to be at least
resolved so there was
no concern there . . .
You're not going to
take everything at
face value, but you
have to look at
it," Billy said.
"That's
what makes us work
hard because you don't
know what is . . . or
[isn't] real."
Today,
"You should feel
safer in a sense
because it's very
unlikely that
someone's going to
slip one by us at this
point, with everyone
working at it,"
Billy said. "I
may not catch it, but
another agency is
going to catch it, or
you're going to catch
part of it, and then
I'll add to it, and
we'll figure it
out."
The
FBI's successful
effort to disrupt the
plot against
New York
tunnels is the latest
example.
At
the same time,
"The biggest
piece for us is this
homegrown extremist
part where people do
not have links to
overseas camps or al-Qaida
members but yet are
sort of
self-radicalizing,
self-supporting, and
sort of build capacity
just among
themselves,"
Billy said. "To
me, that's the new
domestic terrorism
problem that we're
going to have to deal
with."
|
ISRAELI
DEFENSE
MINISTER
IRAN
THREATENS OUR
EXISTENCE!
Israeli
Defence Minister Shaul Mofaz has
called
Iran
an
"existential
threat” to
Israel
and says the rogue nation’s president is "one of the most extreme leaders since Hitler.”
In
a speech Monday at the
inauguration of the Center for
Iran Studies at
Tel
Aviv
University
, Mofaz
said his nation is facing four
main challenges – from
Iran
,
the Hamas
government,
Syria
and the global
jihad.
But
he had the strongest words of
warning regarding
Iran
,
reports
Ynetnews
,
Israel
’s
leading news Web site.
"We
cannot remain indifferent, let
alone on the eve of Holocaust
Memorial Day, to statements coming
from Tehran by one of the most
extreme leaders since Hitler, who
denies the Holocaust and calls to
destroy Israel,”
he told the gathering.
"We
must not procrastinate in light of
the Iranian threat. First,
diplomatic steps should be taken
in order to delay or curb the
Iranian nuclear program. On the
other hand, the State of
Israel
should be prepared to protect
Israel
.
We support the
United States
in leading the diplomatic front.
"Iran
constitutes an existential threat
on three levels: Extreme
leadership, missile capability,
and intent to acquire nuclear
weapons. Lately the Iranians are
doing their utmost to progress in
two programs – the open civilian
nuclear program and the secret
military nuclear program. I'm not
sure the West has all the
information about both."
Turning
his attention to Iranian-supported
terror, Mofaz revealed that since
the beginning of 2006,
Iran
has transferred $10 million to
terror groups. "This
is fuel for terrorist
organizations to continue
attacks," he said.
Several
people protesting
Israel
’s
killings in
Gaza
cut into Mofaz's speech, holding
signs that read: "You don't
establish democracy on bodies of
children" and "Amar
Basiuni, 16 years old, killed by
snipers."
Mofaz
told the protesters: "The State of
Israel
is undertaking the utmost efforts
to prevent hurting civilians,
while the Palestinians are doing
the opposite. Therefore, all those
bleeding hearts should visit the
bereaved [Israeli] families and
first express their condolences
there."
| Arrest
May
Indicate
Balkans-Al
Qaeda
Link |
|
Monday,
August
29,
2005
PRISTINA,
Serbia-Montenegro — The
arrest
in
Serbia (search)
of a top
terrorist
fugitive
has
raised
fresh
concerns
of an Al
Qaeda (search)
presence
in the
volatile
Balkans
(search),
where
thousands
of U.S.
and
other
international
troops
are
stationed
as
peacekeepers.
Abdelmajid
Bouchar,
a
22-year-old
Moroccan,
sought
for
involvement
in last
year's
train
bombings
in the
Spanish
capital
Madrid,
that
killed
nearly
200
people,
was
caught
at the
Belgrade
railway
station
in June.
The
arrest,
revealed
earlier
this
month,
revived
concerns
that the
Balkans
— with
its
porous
borders,
unsophisticated
security
systems,
rampant
corruption
and
organized
crime
—
could
serve as
a haven
for Al
Qaeda-linked
terrorist
groups.
Local
officials
and
experts
have
long
warned
that the
Balkans
at least
is a
major
transit
route
for the
terrorists,
as well
as for
organized
crime,
including
human
and drug
trafficking.
They
said the
two
often go
hand in
hand.
Serbian
Interior
Minister
Dragan
Jocic
said
police
believed
Bouchar
was most
likely
passing
through
Serbia.
He noted
that
"Serbia-Montenegro
lies on
important
east-west
transit
routes."
Bouchar
was
arrested
by
chance
during a
routine
police
patrol
check at
a train
that
arrived
to the
Serbian
capital
from the
northern
town of
Subotica,
located
on the
border
with
Hungary,
Serb
authorities
said.
Bouchar
was
sitting
in a
train
compartment
with
several
other
people.
He said
he was
an
immigrant
from
Iraq en
route to
Western
Europe
— a
common
sight
for
Serbia's
police
which
are used
to
escorting
people
who are
heading
west.
But
Bouchar
stood
out,
they
said. He
was
traveling
in the
wrong
direction,
from
north to
south,
had no
documents
on him
and was
too
well-dressed
for a
poor
Iraqi
immigrant
in
search
of a
better
life in
Western
Europe.
A
month
and a
half
later,
after
weeks of
back-and-forth
with
Interpol,
it
turned
out that
Bouchar
was one
of the
world's
most
wanted
fugitives.
"He
was
arrested
thanks
to the
good
thinking
of a
police
officer,"
said
Darko
Trifunovic,
who
teaches
at
Belgrade's
security
faculty.
"This
wasn't a
well-planned
action."
No
details
about
Bouchar's
stay in
Serbia
have
been
made
public.
Jocic
told The
Associated
Press
that an
investigation
was
under
way to
determine
what he
was
doing in
Belgrade
and
whether
he had
any
associates
here.
Zoran
Dragisic,
a
terrorism
expert
from
Belgrade's
Faculty
of
Defense,
warned
that the
Balkans
could be
more
than
just a
transit
station.
"The
Balkans
is the
springboard
for
Europe-bound
terrorism,"
he told
AP.
"We
should
all be
extremely
careful."
Dragisic
claimed
that Al
Qaeda
put down
roots in
the
Balkans
in the
early
1990s,
when the
region
exploded
in a
series
of
ethnic
conflicts.
The
political
turmoil
and
ensuing
instability
led to
the
collapse
of the
security
network,
allowing
organized
crime to
flourish.
News
reports
during
the
conflict
in
Bosnia
suggested
that
outsiders
joined
Bosnia's
Muslims
in their
conflict
with the
region's
Serbs
and
Croats
—
though
the
extent
of their
impact
in the
chaos
was
never
clear.
Dragisic
said
that
radical
Islamic
fighters
came to
the
region
to
fight.
Some
of the
outsiders
married
local
women
and
stayed
long
after
the end
of the 3
1/2 year
war.
In
2002,
during
worldwide
anti-terrorist
raids
following
the
Sept.
11, 2001
attacks
in New
York,
six Arab
men
suspected
of ties
with Al
Qaeda
were
arrested
in
Bosnia
and
shipped
to the
U.S.
base in
Guantanamo
Bay,
Cuba.
The
United
States
suspected
them of
planning
attacks
against
foreign
embassies
in
Bosnia.
Dragisic
argued
that
Balkans
is
"convenient"
for the
terrorist
groups
and
criminals
because
"you
can buy
anything,
including
your
freedom,
here
with a
couple
of
thousand
euros."
"The
states
here are
weak and
corrupt,"
he said.
"You
can do
anything
here."
International
officials
in
Bosnia
and
Kosovo
—
which
both
have
large
Muslim
population
and
foreign
troops
deployed
as
peacekeepers
— say
they
have no
evidence
of Al
Qaeda
presence,
but are
closely
monitoring
the
situation.
"One
of our
major
tasks in
Bosnia
is
preventing
terrorism,"
said
NATO's
spokesman
in
Sarajevo,
Maj.
Dwight
Mood.
"We
are
constantly
monitoring
to make
sure the
seed of
terrorism
is not
planted
here in
Bosnia."
Lt.
Col.
Bridget
Rose,
spokeswoman
for
Bosnia's
European
Union
peace
force,
acknowledged
that
"terrorism
is a
global
threat
and a
global
problem
and all
our
efforts
to bare
down on
organized
crime
and
corruption
have an
element
of
concern
about
terrorism."
In
Kosovo,
Col.
Charles
de
Kersabiec,
a NATO
spokesman,
said
that
"from
the
military
point of
view,
there is
no
specific
threat
from Al
Qaeda."
Serbia
and
other
Balkan
countries
so far
haven't
been
targeted
in
terrorist
attacks
similar
to those
that hit
Spain,
Great
Britain,
the
United
States
or their
allies
in the
Islamic
world.
Local
Serbian
officials
downplayed
the
terrorism
threat
even
after
Bouchar's
arrest.
Interior
Minister
Jocic
said
that the
"arrest
showed
Serbia's
resolve
to deal
with
terrorism
and
organized
crime."
"Serbia
is part
of a
European
front
against
terrorism,"
he
added.
Another
official,
Serbia-Montenegro's
Human
Rights
Minister
Rasim
Ljajic
said:
"I
don't
think
Serbia-Montenegro
is in
danger,
we are
not
interesting
to them
(the
militants)."
Still,
Ljajic
added
that
"we
have to
be part
of
global
anti-terrorism
network,
but we
should
be
careful
not to
draw the
rage
against
us."
But
expert
Dragisic
warns:
"We
must not
fool
ourselves
that we
are not
the
target."
"This
region
is
extremely
threatened,"
he said.
|
|
| Shadowy
Hamas Terror
Chief:
Eradicate
Israel |
|
Sunday,
August 28,
2005
|
|
| PHOTOS |
|
VIDEO |
|
PHOTO ESSAYS |
| STORIES |
 |
BACKGROUND |
 |
LINKS |
|
JERUSALEM
— Hamas
(search)
terrorists
released a
videotape
Saturday
purportedly
showing a
bombmaker
believed to
top Israel's
most-wanted
list
celebrating
the Gaza Strip
(search)
pullout as a
victory for
armed
resistance.
Senior
Hamas
commander Mohammed
Deif (search),
who
masterminded
the deaths of
dozens of
Israelis in
suicide
bombings, also
urged the
destruction of
the Jewish
state. It was
the latest
call for
continued
violence by
Hamas
officials as
the group
refocuses its
armed struggle
on the West
Bank, where
most of
Israel's
246,000
settlers live.
"You
are leaving
Gaza today in
shame,"
Deif said in
comments
directed
toward Israel,
which finished
evacuating the
last of its 21
Gaza
settlements
Monday.
"Today
you are
leaving hell.
But we promise
you that
tomorrow all
Palestine will
be hell for
you, God
willing."
In the
tape, Deif
praised the
armed struggle
against Israel
(search).
Hamas has
killed
hundreds of
Israelis since
violence
resumed in
2000.
"We
did not
achieve the
liberation of
the Gaza Strip
without this
holy war and
this
steadfastness,"
he said,
adding that
attacks should
continue until
Israel is
eradicated.
Israel's
obliteration
is Hamas'
ultimate goal.
On Sunday,
a suicide
attacker blew
himself up
next to a bus
in the
southern
Israeli city
of Beersheba,
wounding at
least 10
people,
officials
said.
Witnesses said
the bomber was
stopped by a
security guard
before he
could board
the bus.
The bombing
was the first
since Israel
began its
withdrawal
from the Gaza
Strip earlier
in the month.
There was no
immediate
claim of
responsibility.
Deif, known
for operating
in the
shadows, has
eluded Israeli
security
forces for
more than a
decade,
surviving at
least two
assassination
attempts,
including a
2002 missile
attack in
which he lost
an eye.
There was
no way to
positively
identify the
figure on the
videotape as
Deif, because
his face was
in silhouette.
He has been in
hiding since
1992 and the
only known
photos of him
were taken in
the 1980s.
But the
high quality
of the video,
which was
stamped with
the logo of
the Hamas
military wing,
as well as the
similarity of
the voice to
previous
recordings
indicated the
tape was
authentic.
Hamas would
not say when
the tape was
made. But it
had boasted
for nearly two
weeks that
Deif would
make a public
statement, and
militants
delivered the
tape to The
Associated
Press offices
in Gaza City.
The group also
posted a
transcript of
his comments
on its Web
site.
Gideon Meir,
an Israeli
Foreign
Ministry
senior
official, said
Deif's
comments
threatened to
sour the
climate of
good will that
the Gaza
pullout
created.
"The
disengagement
opened a
prospect of
hope for the
Palestinian
people and
Mohammed Deif
is trying to
spoil the
show,"
Meir said.
"His
declaration
proves again
why the
Palestinian
Authority must
fulfill its
duty and fight
the Hamas,
Islamic Jihad
and Al Aqsa
Martyrs'
Brigades."
Separately,
President Bush
also called on
the
Palestinians
to clamp down
on militants
after the Gaza
pullout.
"The
Palestinians
must show the
world that
they will
fight
terrorism and
govern in a
peaceful
way,"
Bush said in
his weekly
radio address
Saturday.
Tawfiq Abu
Khoussa, a
spokesman for
the
Palestinian
Interior
Ministry,
which oversees
security in
Palestinian-controlled
areas, said
Hamas remains
committed to a
cease-fire
Israel and the
Palestinians
declared in
February.
"It
wasn't secret
that a Hamas
military wing
in Gaza
exists, and
Mohammed Deif
is still
alive,"
he said.
"All
Palestinian
factions are
committed to
the truce,
including
Hamas, and we
see nothing
new in Hamas'
position
toward the
truce."
Hamas has
scaled back
its attacks
since the
truce
declaration,
but Israel
says the group
is using the
lull to rearm.
Israel has
said any
resumption of
peace talks
would depend
on Palestinian
leader Mahmoud
Abbas'
disarming
Hamas and
other militant
groups.
Deif's
comments on
continuing the
armed struggle
echoed those
made by Hamas
leader Mahmoud
Zahar shortly
after the Gaza
pullout began.
Zahar credited
the resistance
with driving
Israel out of
Gaza and said
the armed
struggle now
must move to
the West Bank.
Although
Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel
Sharon has
hinted he
would be
willing to
dismantle
small,
isolated
Jewish
settlements in
the West Bank,
he has made it
clear that he
sees the Gaza
pullout as
solidifying
Israel's grip
on major West
Bank
settlement
blocs, where
most Jewish
settlers live.
With
Palestinian
parliamentary
elections
nearing, the
Deif videotape
also was Hamas'
latest salvo
in a power
struggle
between
militants and
the
Palestinian
government
over who
should receive
credit for the
Gaza
withdrawal.
Hamas
claims that
years of
suicide
bombings and
rocket attacks
drove the
Israelis out.
Abbas, a vocal
critic of
violence who
aspires to
renewing peace
talks with
Israel, has
tried to shore
up his
standing with
promises he
can improve
life in Gaza
after the
withdrawal.
In an open
challenge to
Abbas, Deif
rejected calls
to disarm,
though he said
differences
between
Palestinian
groups should
be resolved
through
peaceful
dialogue.
"We
warn against
touching these
weapons, and
want to keep
them as an
effective
element to
liberate the
rest of our
homeland,"
he said.
"We want
to use
dialogue to
solve any
differences in
order to
protect our
Palestinian
blood and our
national
achievement."
|
|
|
Bomb
Hurts Russian Premier,
Kills Driver
|
|
Thursday, August 25,
2005
ROSTOV-ON-DON,
Russia — Two
bombs exploded
Thursday on a roadside
in Ingushetia (search),
wounding the southern
Russian republic's
prime minister in an
apparent assassination
attempt, officials
said — the latest
sign of growing
violence across the
heavily Muslim North
Caucasus region.
Ingushetia Prime
Minister Ibragim
Malsagov (search)
was hospitalized after
the attack in the city
of Nazran, but his
life was not in
danger, said Fyodor
Shcherbakov, an aide
to the Kremlin envoy
to the region.
Malsagov's driver
was killed and two
other people were
wounded in addition to
Malsagov, said Nikolai
Ivashkevich, a
spokesman for the
southern regional
branch of the Emergency
Situations Ministry
(search).
Malsagov, the second
highest-ranking
official in the
region, was hurt in
the hand and the leg.
The top police
official in Ingushetia,
Interior Minister
Beslan Khamkhoyev,
said two explosives
placed about 10-15
yards apart detonated
within 10 seconds, the
Interfax news agency
reported. The attack
occurred near one of
the city's outdoor
markets as Malsagov's
motorcade passed.
Lying in a hospital
bed with bandages
wrapped around his
head and hand,
Malsagov told
state-run Channel One
television that he had
been traveling on a
road near his home in
the middle of a
three-car motorcade
when there was an
explosion in front by
the first vehicle.
"Naturally, I
automatically jumped
out to run over and
see what happened, and
then there was another
explosion,"
Malsagov said. He
blamed "forces
that want to
destabilize the
situation."
Russian television
networks showed
footage of what
appeared to be
Malsagov's black
Mercedes, its rear
window a maze of
cracked glass, and of
a deep crater by the
roadside.
Nazran is the main
city in the Ingushetia
region, which has
suffered frequent
spillover violence
from neighboring
Chechnya to the east,
as well as attacks by
its own militants and
criminal gangs.
The top prosecutor
for southern Russia,
Deputy Prosecutor
General Nikolai Shepel,
said in televised
comments that the
attack seemed to have
"the same
signature" as
other terrorist
attacks that have
struck the North
Caucasus, adding,
"I mean the
international
organizations that
unfortunately are
present in the south
of Russia."
Russian authorities
are eager to link
their fight against
militants in the North
Caucasus with the
international struggle
against terror, and
often point to alleged
international
involvement in attacks
in the region.
Government critics say
flawed Kremlin ethnic
policy and corruption
among regional leaders
are major causes of
the violence.
Last week, Nazran
police chief Dzhabrail
Kostoyev was wounded
when unknown
assailants detonated a
radio-controlled land
mine as his car was
passing.
The republic's
police and security
forces were also
targeted in a
devastating overnight
assault by militants
in June 2004, in which
some 90 people were
killed. Chechen rebel
leader Shamil Basayev
claimed responsibility
for that attack and
for the hostage crisis
that killed more than
330 people last
September at a school
in Beslan in North
Ossetia, which borders
both Chechnya and
Ingushetia.
The republic on
Chechnya's eastern
border, Dagestan, has
also been plagued by
frequent bombings and
other attacks
targeting government
and law enforcement
officials.
Authorities in
other republics of the
North Caucasus have
also battled militants
they say are Islamic
extremists. Analysts
have expressed concern
that major violence
could break out in the
region even as Russian
and local government
officials assert that
life is returning to
normal in Chechnya,
devastated by two
separatist wars in the
past decade.
In the Stavropol
region, north of the
band of largely Muslim
republics, one police
officer a two gunmen
were killed in a
shootout Thursday in
the village of
Yanangui, a duty
officer at the
regional Interior
Ministry said. Another
gunman was detained.
The Interfax news
agency quoted an
unidentified regional
police official as
saying the gunmen were
suspected Islamic
extremists.
|
|
Prison
Gang May Have Plotted
Terror Attack
|
|
Wednesday,
August 17, 2005
|
|
| STORIES |
 |
BACKGROUND |
|
LOS
ANGELES — Officials
are investigating
whether an alleged
terrorist plot to attack
Los Angeles-area targets
on Sept. 11 or Jewish
holidays was organized
by members of a militant
Islamic state prison
gang, a top law
enforcement official
said Wednesday.
Federal
and local
counterterrorism
officials are examining
possible ties between a
Pakistani man arrested
in Los Angeles and a
prison gang known as Jamat
Ul-Isla Gascon (search),
said George Gascon,
assistant chief of the
Los Angeles Police
Department.
Investigators
believe Hammad Riaz
Samana (search),
who was arrested Aug. 2,
has communicated with
former or current
inmates at California
State Prison,
Sacramento, involved
with the gang, Gascon
said.
Samana's
arrest followed an
investigation in which
authorities found what
they believe was a
terrorist target list
after they arrested two
men on suspicion of a
series of gas station
robberies in Los Angeles
County. That list
included three National
Guard facilities, the
Israeli Consulate and
several synagogues.
Gascon
said authorities believe
the attacks were to be
carried out on Sept. 11,
the Jewish High Holidays
or other dates, and
warned the consulate and
guard that their
buildings were on the
list.
"The
plan was to assault, to
commit terrorist acts
against a variety of
targets," Gascon
said.
The
list was found at the
apartment of Levar
Haney Washington (search),
25, of Los Angeles.
Washington and Gregory
Vernon Patterson, 21
were arrested July 5 and
have pleaded not guilty
to robbery charges. They
have not been charged in
the terrorism probe.
Federal
officials have refused
to say what charges
Samana, 21, might face.
Cathy
Viray, an FBI
spokeswoman, would not
comment on the
investigation because it
is still under way.
Washington
was previously an inmate
at the prison outside
Sacramento and
investigators are
examining whether the
suspected plot was
organized by two inmates
there: Peter Martinez,
36, who is serving a
40-year sentence for
second-degree murder,
and cellmate Kevin
James, 29.
Investigators
have briefed prison
officials around
California and are
trying to determine
whether other inmates
were involved, Gascon
said.
It
was unclear what led
authorities from
Washington and Patterson
to Samana.
The
three men attended the
same mosque in
Inglewood, though they
were not seen meeting as
a group, according to
Arshed Quazi, president
of the Jamat-E-Masijidul
Islam mosque.
Samana
attended the mosque
after arriving in Los
Angeles several years
ago, Quazi said. He is
from the Karachi area of
Pakistan and was
studying at Santa Monica
College.
"He's
such a nice kid ... I'm
shocked," said
Quazi, adding that
Samana stayed with his
family across the street
from the mosque.
Quazi
said the FBI questioned
him several weeks ago,
asking him to identify
photographs of the three
men.
Patterson's
attorney, Winston
McKesson, said Patterson
has no connection to
extremist groups. A
message left for
Washington's attorney,
Jerome Haig, was not
immediately returned and
Samana's lawyer could
not immediately be
reached for comment.
Two
women who answered the
door at an apartment
listed for Samana across
from the mosque, and who
identified themselves as
his relatives, would not
comment.
|
|
FBI
Issues Fuel Truck Terror
Warning
|
|
Thursday,
August 11, 2005
|
|
| STORIES |
 |
BACKGROUND |
|
LOS
ANGELES — The
FBI has warned police
that Al Qaeda (search)
cells might use fuel
trucks as weapons to
attack Los Angeles, New
York and Chicago, but
officials stressed
Thursday the warning was
based on uncorroborated
intelligence.
The
warning was distributed
Tuesday via a computer
network by FBI (search)
officials in Los Angeles
to law enforcement
agencies primarily in
California, said FBI
spokeswoman Laura
Eimiller.
Though
intelligence bulletins
usually describe how
reliable the information
is, this one carried no
such statement.
The
bulletin warned police
that terrorists could
use fuel tankers in
assaults on the three
cities. The warning has
not been substantiated,
according to two law
enforcement officials
who spoke on condition
of anonymity because of
the sensitivity of the
situation.
The
intelligence originated
from FBI headquarters in
Washington. It was not
immediately clear why
the bulletin was sent
without details on its
reliability.
Eimiller
noted that FBI officials
often notify police of
possible threats,
regardless of how
accurate the information
might be.
"Information
at all levels is shared
with law
enforcement," she
said. |
British Plan to Deport 10 Foreigners
Thursday, August 11, 2005
LONDON — British authorities continued their crackdown of potential Islamic extremists Thursday, detaining 10 foreigners — chief among them, a Palestinian cleric thought to be Usama bin Laden's (search) spiritual ambassador in Europe.
"The circumstances of our national security have changed, it is vital that we act against those who threaten it," Home Secretary Charles Clarke said in a statement. He gave the 10 foreigners a "notice of intention to deport."
The detainees have five business days to appeal their deportations.
The detentions came a day after Britain signed an extradition agreement with Jordan, where the Palestinian cleric Omar Mahmoud Abu Omar, who is better known as Abu Qatada (search), has been sentenced in absentia to life imprisonment on terror charges.
The Home Office, the organization in Britain in charge of immigration and deportation issues, didn't identify the detainees. But a British government official has confirmed that Abu Qatada was in custody.
The cleric's lawyer, Gareth Peirce, also released a statement condemning the arrests and complaining the individuals had not been allowed to see their attorneys.
The Home Office said the foreigners would be deported once Britain was assured they would not face torture of mistreatment in the countries to which they were being sent.
Prime Minister Tony Blair (search) last week announced measures to deport radical Islamic extremists following the July terrorist attacks on London's transit system.
Abu Qatada was sentenced in Jordan in absentia for his alleged involvement in a series of explosions and terror plots. Copies of his speeches were found in the German apartment of one of the terrorists who brought down four airplanes on Sept. 11, 2001. He also has been described by British officials as bin Laden's "spiritual ambassador in Europe" and allegedly was an inspiration for Sept. 11 hijacker Mohamed Atta (search).
The cleric spent three years in a high security British prison without being charged, under anti-terror powers introduced after the Sept. 11 attacks, but the government did not have enough evidence to keep him in custody. He was released in March after Britain's highest court ruled the legislation breached human rights. Qatada is a Palestinian refugee from Jordan who had been living in Britain since 1993.
As a signatory to the European Convention on Human Rights (search), Britain is not allowed to deport people to a country where they may face torture or death. But the government has been trying to win pledges from approximately 10 countries, including Algeria, Lebanon, Tunisia and Egypt, that deportees would not be mistreated.
An agreement was signed Wednesday with Jordan.
Clarke said in a statement that Britain had received assurances from the countries where it planned to send the detainees that they would not be subjected to torture or ill treatment.
Meanwhile, radical cleric Omar Bakri (search) was arrested in Lebanon by security officials. Bakri left Britain, where he has lived for 20 years, last weekend amid speculation he could face treason charges and flew to Lebanon to see his mother.
The cleric founded the now-disbanded radical Islamic group al-Muhajiroun (search), which came under scrutiny in Britain, particularly after some of its members praised the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks.
Several people also appeared in British court Thursday in connection with the failed July 21 bomb attacks.
They included the wife and sister-in-law of Hamdi Issac (search), who is suspected of trying to blow up a subway train.
Issac, also known as Osman Hussain, later was detained in Rome and is being held there on international terrorism charges.
Issac's wife, Yeshiemebet Girma, 29, and her sister Mulumebet Girma, 21, appeared at Bow Street Magistrates' Court to face charges of withholding information from police about Issac's whereabouts. Judge Timothy Workman denied bail and ordered them detained until an appearance at the Central Criminal Court on Nov. 17.
A British judge, meanwhile, ordered Haroon Rashid Aswat (search), a terror suspect sought by U.S. authorities, to remain in custody until Sept. 8.
Aswat, 30, spoke at a preliminary extradition hearing only to confirm his name. He is accused by U.S. authorities of conspiring to set up a camp in Bly, Ore., in 1999-2000 to provide training in weapons, hand-to-hand combat and martial arts for Islamic militants aiming to fight in Afghanistan.
Aswat was deported from Zambia over the weekend and arrested by British police under the U.S. warrant. He has said he would contest the extradition and he denies the U.S. allegations.
Abu Qatada is among 10 foreign terror suspects released in March under a controversial anti-terrorism law in which they can be electronically tagged, kept under curfew, denied the use of telephones or the Internet and barred from meeting outsiders.
Among the eight other detainees due in court, three are also charged with assisting a person in evading arrest.
The three main suspects in the failed July 21 bomb attacks who are in British custody appeared in court earlier this week.
Muktar Said Ibrahim (search), 27, Ramzi Mohammed (search), 23, and Yassin Hassan Omar (search), 24, were ordered to remain in custody until Nov. 14 on charges of attempted murder, conspiracy to murder, possessing or making explosives and conspiracy to use explosives on July 21. They face life in prison if convicted.
So far, British police have not charged anyone in connection with the July 7 bombings, which killed 56 people, including the four attackers.
Britain's Immigration Service on Thursday detained the 10 foreigners in operations in London and the West Midlands, Bedfordshire and Leicestershire regions.
A spokesman for London's Metropolitan Police said officers helped the Immigration Service operation at seven addresses in the capital. Immigration officials detained several individuals, but no arrests were made, the spokesman said. A spokeswoman for West Midlands Police refused to comment on the case.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
|
|
                                                                                                                      
|
|
WORLD
TERRORISM
WHY
DID ISLAMIC TERRORISTS ATTACK AMERICA
ON SEPTEMBER 11, 2001 ?
Why
is there so much hatred and terrorism in the world?
Ever
since the dastardly, devilish and
evil terrorist attacks by fanatical Muslim
suicide bombers against America,
many people world wide and in the
United States have asked the
question "WHY?"
Why would the Arab terrorists plan
these horrid attacks against
America?
PRIME
MINISTER JEAN CHRETIEN BELIEVES
THE TERRORISM & ATTACKS ON AMERICA
WERE DUE TO AMERICA'S WEALTH
Canada's
lame duck Prime Minister, Jean
Chretien shared his belief that
the western world’s wealth
combined with other nation’s
poverty, was a major cause of the
terrorist attacks and terrorism in
general, and apparently was a big
factor in the September 11th
terrorist attack and in world
terrorism.
Progressive
Conservative leader Joe Clark, who
will be remembered among other
things as the ‘Grand
Marshall’ of Calgary’s
Gay Pride Parade, seemed to be in
agreement with the Prime Minister
on the issue. More
balanced and intelligent heads
prevailed, however, and there were
a chorus of writers, pundits and
politicians who discounted such
talk as ridiculous, among them
Stephen Harper, leader of Her
Majesty’s Loyal Opposition,
whose brain is still free from
Ottawa’s ‘politically
correct’
disease. He
stated: “Mr. Chretien’s
comments… are shameful. What
was behind the events of September
11 terrorist attacks are the forces of evil and
hatred…His comments are
unacceptable, and he should
apologize to the United States and
to the families of the Canadian
victims."
THE
REAL CAUSE OF ARABS HATE FOR
AMERICA IS ARAB
HATRED
FOR ISRAEL
News
reports from the Middle East and
comments from Arabs who have fled
their oppressive homelands and
received refuge in the West,
invariably lay the blame for their
plight at the feet of Israel.
One can sense the hatred when they
speak about ‘the
Jews’ and their God-given
right to live in their own land.
Just
mention
Jerusalem - Israel’s capital –
and Muslims go ballistic!
They
claim the 3,000 year-old ‘City
of David’ belongs to them, even
though Jerusalem
is not once mentioned in
the Quran, but is referred to
hundreds of times in the Holy
Bible.
And ironically, when most Muslims
pray toward Mecca,
they turn their backs toward
Jerusalem! And you don’t
hear of Israel seeking to
overthrow Damascus, Jordan,
Baghdad, Cairo or Riyadh.
Oh
sure, Jews are to blame for the
ignorance and incompetence of Arab
leaders. Israel is to blame
for the poverty brought upon them
by the lavish lifestyles of
thousands of dictatorial,
parasitic princes and kings, and
the ruthless rule of mullahs
brainwashed by the teachings of
Muhammad, Wahhabi, Khomeini and
Osama bin Laden.
The
danger is that ‘airhead
politicians’, and ‘wing-nut
academics’ in some
universities, are becoming
increasingly anti-Semitic and have
joined hands with Islamic Groups,
whose goal is to foment hatred and
violence against Jews, even in America and
Canada.
WORLD
TERRORISM & HATRED - IT
HAPPENED IN CANADA: HAS ANYONE
APOLOGIZED?
Canadians
ought to be concerned when a
visiting former prime minister,
who has been invited to speak at a
Canadian university, is prevented
from doing so because of a
protest, organized by Islamic
Groups against Israel.
How
would we feel if Canada’s former
Prime Minister Brian
Mulrooney, the late Pierre
Trudeau or the
‘retiring’ Jean
Chretien, were
treated as terribly in any given
country, as was the illustrious
and intelligent former Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in
Montreal recently?
Benjamin
Netanyahu, former prime minister
of Israel, had this to say about
the thugs that prevented him from
speaking at ‘Montreal’s
Concordia University’ September
9, 2002: “That
glint of hate, that mad zealotry,
is the same that I saw in the eyes
of these rioters in Montreal. It
is something that, once it begins
to infect democratic societies, it
spreads, it grows.” This
“glint of hate” was the same
Mr. Netanyahu had observed in the
eyes of anti-Israel terrorists,
writes Kevin Michael Grace in ‘The
Report’ (Oct. 7, 2002)
Jonathon
Kay wrote in the ‘National
Post’ (Sept.10, 2002)
that he was
“dismayed”
that the rioters considered the
former Israeli prime minister’s
presence an intolerable “provocation.”
And the Montreal Gazette’s
Fredrick Krantz stated that “not
to act decisively”
against “the
destruction of academic freedom
and free speech” would be
“a
dreadful, and portentous victory
– let us call a spade a spade
– for fascism."
Lawrence
Summers, President of Harvard
University, said recently:
“Serious and thoughtful people
are advocating and taking actions
that are anti-Semitic
in their effect, if not in
their intent.” He was referring
to the growing anti - Semitism on
US university campuses! At U.C.
Berkeley on the first night
of Passover, someone threw a
cinder block through the glass
door of the campus Hillel
Center for Jewish students
and spray painted the words F---
JEWS on the wall. Jewish students
were also assaulted on their way
to or from classes.
WORLD
TERRORISM - ARAB MUSLIM
EXTREMISM: DENMARK HAS HAD ENOUGH
Two
well-known authors - American
Daniel Pipes and Danish
Lars Hedegaard
have teamed up to report on
the forward thrust of Militant
Islam’s ‘agenda for control’
in Western Europe and North
America and spreading world wide
quickly.
Daniel
Pipes of www.DanielPipes.org
is author of ‘Militant
Islam Reaches America’
(W.W. Norton). Lars Hedegaard is a
regular contributor to two
Copenhagen newspapers, Berlingske
Tidende and Weekendavisen.
Here
in part is one of their recent
columns, carried by the Globe and
Mail:
“A
Muslim organization in Denmark
announced a few days ago that a
$30,000 bounty would be paid for
the murder of several prominent
Danish Jews, a threat that
garnered wide international
notice. Less well known is that
this is just one problem
associated with Denmark’s
approximately 200,000 Muslim
immigrants. The key issue is that
many of them show little desire to
fit into their adopted country.
For years, Danes
lauded
multiculturalism and insisted they
had no problem with the Muslim
customs
– until one day they found that
they did. Some major issue.
Living
on the dole. Third World
immigrants – most of them
Muslims from countries such as Turkey,
Somalia, Pakistan, Lebanon and
Iraq – constitutes 5% of
the population but consume upwards
of 40% of the welfare spending.
Engaging
in crime. Muslims are only 4% of
Denmark’s 5.4 million people but
make up a majority
of the country’s convicted
rapists, an especially
combustible issue given that
practically all the female victims
are non-Muslim. Similar, if
lesser, disproportions are found
in other crimes.
Importing
unacceptable customs. Forced
marriages – promising a newborn
daughter in Denmark to a male
cousin in the home country, then
compelling her to marry him,
sometimes on pain of death – are
one problem. Another is the vocal
intent to kill Muslims who
convert out of Islam.
Fomenting
anti-Semitism. Muslim violence
threatens Denmark’s
approximately 6,000
Jews, who increasingly
depend on police protection.
Jewish parents were told by one
school principal that she could
not guarantee their children’s
safety and advised to send them to
another institution. Anti-Israel
marches have turned into anti-Jewish
riots. One organization ‘Hizb-ut-Tahrir,
openly calls on Muslims to “kill
all Jews…wherever you find them.
Seeking
Islamic laws. Muslim leaders
openly declare their goal of
introducing Islamic law once
Denmark’s population grows large
enough – a not-that remote
prospect. If present trends
persist, one sociologist
estimates, every
third inhabitant of Denmark in
forty years will be Muslim."
The
Pipes/Hedegaard column also
states: “In reality, however,
the new government barely
addressed the existing problems.
Nor did it prevent new ones,
such as the
death threats against Jews, or
a recent Islamic edict calling on
Muslims
to drive Danes out of the Nørrebro
quarter of Copenhagen.
Terrorism Violence Sign of Times
Bible Prophecy & Bible Faith
Healing ~ Holy Bible Sermons
~ World News End Times ~God Jesus
The authorities remain indulgent.
The military mulls permitting
Muslim soldiers in Denmark’s
volunteer International Brigade to
opt out of actions they don’t
agree with – a privilege
unique to them. Mohammed Omar
Bakri, the self-proclaimed
London-based “eyes,
ears and mouth” of Osama
bin Laden, won permission to set
up a branch of his organization, Al-Muhajiroun.
Contrary
to media reports, the real news
from Denmark is not flirting with
fascism but getting mired
in inertia. A government
elected specifically to deal with
a set of problems has made minimal
headway. Its reluctance has
potentially profound implications
for the West as a whole!"
Daniel
Pipes is a respected Arabic expert
and has written a number of books
on that subject. Unnoticed by most
Westerners, Pipes wrote in 1995,
referring to militant Islam, “war
has been unilaterally declared on
Europe and the United States.”
The director of the Philadelphia -
based Middle
East Forum’
was one of the very few Americans
to understand the significance of
what to many appeared to be no
more than isolated cases of
violence. Long before September
2001, Pipes publicly warned
Americans that militant
Islam had
gone to war against America.
Now Americans listen to him."
He
explains what exactly militant
Islam is and stresses the large
and crucial difference between
Islam, the faith, and militant
Islam the ideology! He
demonstrates that there is no
clash of civilizations underway,
but a battle for the soul of Islam
among Muslims themselves. He shows
that militant Islam is not mainly
caused by poverty and that its
adherents, far from being the
dispossessed, tend to include the
more talented and Westernized
elements. Militant Islam has
strikingly much in common with
fascism and communism. Significant
elements within American Islam,
for example seek to replace the
Constitution with the Quran."
Commenting
on Marianne Meed Ward’s column
on “What’s Right” in the Toronto
Sun, The Report’s Kevin
Michael Grace writes:
“Her July 8 column argues that
importing people from countries
like Pakistan, where honor
rape is widespread, is not
a problem because ‘there’s a
difference between cultural
practices that are worth
tolerating and those that are
aren’t. How to decide? Three
words: the Criminal Code. Among
other things, it bans anybody
raping anybody’. But laws
are efficacious only if they
codify settled values. There is no
pro-rape constituency among
Canadians. There is, however, a considerable
pro-rape
constituency among
Pakistanis and other Muslims."
Grace
comments on countries that have
taken in large numbers of refugees
and immigrants: “Rape
is against the law in Norway, too.
The British news service Ananova
reported September 7, 2001, that
immigrants make up only 14 % of
the population of Oslo, yet “attackers
of non-Western origin were
described in 65 % of all reported
rapes” in
the Norwegian capital.
“Rachel Paul, from the Center
for Gender Equality, told
the daily newspaper ‘Dagbadet’
that immigrants needed to be
informed about sexual behavior in
Norway.” In other words, “FYI,
guys; it’s not okay to rape
women here."
“France
also forbids rape. But French
Muslims have made it a sport. James
Fulford notes on vdare.com
July 23
that the tournante
(“take your turn”) is the
subject of a French movie, La
Squale. The movie, which
‘shocked
a nation with its horrific scenes
of gang rape’, tells of
its ‘code
of silence’ in the North
African society that has been
transplanted to the suburbs of
France. One of the female leads in
the movie…told the BBC’s
Rosie Goldsmith that the
movie is totally realistic. ‘Two
of my friends’, she
explained, ‘have
been gang raped. One
Turkish girl and one white French
girl. The boys jumped on them, one
after another. In five minutes it
was over but those five minutes
have ruined
their lives. I am afraid
most of the time that it could
happen to me.'
“Muslim
gang rape has also been
transplanted to Australia, where
last year 15 Lebanese men were
charged with over 300 assaults in
one year on white Australian girls
aged 13 to 18. And the “code
of silence” has been transplanted
to Canada. Ms. Ward writes, “If
Pakistani immigrants are of the
rape-as-justice mindset, they’ll
be sorely disappointed by the
limits on their behavior in the
land of the supposed free."
The
question is, “Will our
corruption-prone, soft-on-crime,
politically correct government
have the ‘guts’ to enforce the
law, or will our un-elected judges
change the law to accommodate the
lawbreakers, because of terrorist
threats or the fear of being
called ‘racist’ or
prejudiced’?
WORLD
TERRORISM
POSTAGE
STAMPS SHOW ARAB INTENT
In
1965, Saudi Arabia, Syria,
Jordan, Yemen and Lebanon issued
postage stamps showing a bloody
knife in the heart of Israel.
Any unbiased researcher would have
to say, that hatred among Middle
Eastern Arabs and Muslims against
Jews and the nation of Israel, is
far stronger today that it was in
1965! That is a very scary and
solemn fact, especially when you
know how Muslim dictators treat
minorities and people of other
faiths.
THOUSANDS
OF JEWS MURDERED
History
reveals how Muhammad murdered
thousands of Jews, and broke his
peace treaty called ‘Hadabijjah
Pact’ with the Arabian
Qurash tribe! Yasser Arafat stated
that according to Omar bin Katab
and others, Muhammed’s peace
treaty was only a ‘Lesser
Value Agreement’ because
he had agreed to sign the treaty
without the words,
“Messenger
of Allah” after his name!
He did not keep his word, and his
name has no merit.
Anyone
who has read Paul Marshall’s, ‘Their
Blood Cries out’ or Nina
Shea’s, ‘In
the Lion’s Den’ or
heard Jewish Barrister Michael
Horowitz speaking at the United
States Congress on the
horrible slavery, brutalizing, and
genocide of Sudan’s Black
Christians in the south, by the
Arab Muslims of the north – between
1 to 2 million murdered during the
last 15 years – would not
wish Islamic rule on their worst
enemy!
TERROR
IN INDONESIA
In
a piece titled ‘Terror in
Indonesia’, David Aikman, a
senior fellow of the Ethics
and Public Policy Center in
Washington, D.C. and former
foreign correspondent with Time
magazine wrote in Charisma
(Feb. 2002):
“The
new element introduced by the
events of September 11 is that the
supporters of “Islamism”
– the
ideology of Osama bin Laden that
seeks to impose a global utopian
Islamic theocracy by force
– are quite open about declaring
a war on non-Muslim religions. “Islamists”,
the commonly accepted term for
Islamic political radicals, have
repeatedly made it clear that they
are indeed fighting a religious
war and that Christianity in
general is one of their targets.
Often they lump Christianity and
Judaism together as the chief
obstacles to Islamic world
domination, with a
conspiracy-theory view of their
chief adversary as “Crusader-Zionists.”
Unfortunately,
the religion of Islam can
certainly be used to rationalize
this world view. The overall
thrust of the Quran is aggressive
toward non-Muslims. One Quranic
verse directs followers of Islam
to “fight
against” Christians and
Jews. In sura
5:60 we read that Allah has
transformed Christians and Jews
into “apes
and swine” who worship “evil.”
In
addition, throughout most of
Islamic history, according to the
preeminent American scholar of
Islam, Bernard Lewis of Princeton
University, jihad
was overwhelmingly understood by
Islamic scholars and theologians
in its military
sense, though if can mean
“struggle” in the inner sense
of a Muslim’s wrestling against
sin.
It
is thus especially worrying when
the Web site of the Islamist
Laskar Jihad in Indonesia
openly advocates Jihad
against the Christians
of Sulawesi, an Island to
the northeast of Java.”
Aikman
reports: “One threat of an
imminent Laskar
Jihad onslaught
against 68,000 Christians
at the heart of Poso was
forestalled when Indonesian
President Megawati Sukarnoputri
in December ordered several
thousand troops into the area to
disperse the Islamic
warriors. It may well have
been an answer to a worldwide
concert of prayer.
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