Islamic Terrorism: Our Ally For 38 Years – Well-written article grasps the essence of terrorism –
What a well-written article! Without a full
understanding of the essence of things, anybody cannot write such a high quality
of article in an easy-to-understand manner. I have reprinted almost all of the
text.
Reading the article, you can understand how
skillfully the Khazarian mafia use Islamic terrorists to achieve the NWO (New
World Order) agenda. If reviewing the history after the war in Afghanistan from
this viewpoint, we can clearly grasp what is occurring now.
I wonder how much time we have to wait
until the major media gets to talk about the truth from the viewpoint described
in the article.
June
19, 2017
Masatoshi
Takeshita
Note:
Shanti-phula has indicated some parts of
the following text in black boldface type or in red letters.
Excerpt from a Japanese article: Design of Creation Society – June 18, 2019 –
Islamic
Terrorism: Our Ally For 38 Years
Source:
<snip>
Chris Kanthan
June 14, 2017, Information Clearing House
<snip>
Islamic terrorists are
wonderful instruments for proxy wars – they cost very
little but fight fearlessly. <snip>
They are also expendable – we use
them when convenient and kill them when inconvenient.
<snip>
*Thomas Friedman of The New York Times
wrote that we shouldn’t attack ISIS in
Syria; and we should even consider
arming ISIS to overthrow Assad
*John Kerry admitted, “U.S. tried to use ISIS to force Assad into negotiations.”
*Israeli military chief explained, “Israel prefers ISIS to Assad.”
*Israeli defense minister recounted, “ISIS never intentionally attacks us; and
when it happened once, ISIS apologized immediately.” Hello!
*Hillary Clinton wrote, “Saudi Arabia and Qatar fund and arm ISIS.”
*Joe Biden, Gen. Martin Dempsey, Gen.
Wesley Clark all have stated that US
allies in the Middle East arm and fund Al Qaeda and ISIS.
Several State Department cables have
clearly laid out how Saudi Arabia is the
#1 source of funding for terrorism around the world – not just in the
Middle East.
<snip>
What goes through a reader’s mind when they
see an article titled “Accepting Al
Qaeda” that is published by Council on Foreign Relations – the think tank
behind US foreign policy? Or when Hillary Clinton’s chief foreign policy
advisor wrote to her, “Al Qaeda is on
our side”?
I can give many more such examples, but
let’s hop on the time machine for a moment.
Afghanistan, 1979 – 1989.
We used the Mujahideen to defeat the Soviet Union. Was
that not a good thing? Remember how the media and
Hollywood glorified those Afghan fighters
in the 1980’s? The Afghan rebels even got to visit the White House.
THIS FILM ISDEDICATEDTO THE BRAVE
MUJAHIDEEN OF FIGHTERS OF AFGHANISTAN
President Reagan with Afghan leaders in 1983
There are two critical factors that are
often forgotten in the Mujahideen story: foreign fighters from all over the
world and fundamentalist Islam.
<snip>
We also learned from Saudi Arabia that
indoctrination is essential to create good soldiers. So the CIA came up with clever textbooks for
Afghan kids that introduced them to concepts of jihad, weapons and hatred for
Russians.
(A is for Allah, J is for Jihad – Jihad is an
obligation
T is for Tufang (rifle) – My father buys rifles for Mujahidees
D is for Din (religion) – Our
religion is Islam. Russians are the enemies. )
(Since then, Saudi
Arabia has spent billions of dollars on Islamic schools – Madrassas – all over the world. These schools act as breeding
grounds for future activists, extremists and fighters. Saudis also print
textbooks that are used all over the world. Kids learn
loving messages such as “Kill Shiites,
Christians and Jews.” Saudi mosques and preachers all over the world
also continue spreading extremist messages.)
When the Afghan war was about to be won, it dawned on us that the Mujahideen project was a brilliant playbook that could be replicated in other parts of the world.
That’s when Al Qaeda was
formed. And it was perfect timing.
You see, Halliburton had just discovered
huge oil reserves near the Caspian Sea, but the countries around that region
were all pro-Russia even after the fall of the USSR.
Without the knowledge of the American
public, the Mujahideen were very active all throughout the 1990’s in Bosnia, Kosovo,
Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, Dagestan, Chechnya etc. These fighters were used for three major purposes:
*throw out
pro-Russia dictators
*install pro-West leaders who would help us build oil/gas pipelines and agree to host US military bases,
and
*disrupt Russian
pipelines and other interests
Azerbaijan was an easy one and we got our man in 1993.
Georgia took a long time, but George Soros and his color revolution finally installed our guy in 2005. Within
a year, we had a 1000-mile pipeline that linked Azerbaijan (Caspian Sea),
Georgia and Turkey!
Chechnya was a partial success. They were struggling
for independence from Russia and thus gladly
welcomed the Mujahideen who also had plenty of Saudi money and US
weapons. Within a short time, the non-violent and mystical Sufism of Chechnya
was taken over by Saudi Wahhabism.
Al Qaeda started blowing up Russian pipelines.
Russia invaded Chechnya in 1994, lost the war, and withdrew. It was fun to
watch the news those days. But then Putin became the
Prime Minister three years later, waged a
ruthless war against the jihadists, won decisively and installed his own
strongman in Chechnya. Even Sufism has seen a major revival lately and Chechens have now started rejecting Wahhabism and jihadism.
Al Qaeda was extremely
helpful in Bosnia, Albania, Macedonia and Kosovo. In the late 1990’s, we used
trumped-up charges and NATO bombing to get rid of the pro-Russia guy in Serbia.
<snip>
In Libya, we leveraged the Al Qaeda affiliate
called Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG). We released its leader (Belhadj)
from the CIA prison, dressed him up in a nice suit, arranged a photo-op with
John McCain, and he became the freedom fighter who fought Gaddafi, the brutal
dictator!
In Syria, tens of
thousands of Al Qaeda fighters were flown in from all over the world to topple
Assad. If it were not for Putin’s evil interventions, we would now have a Qatar
pipeline through Syria, and Israel would be drilling
oil in Golan Heights. A tragic situation indeed.
In Africa, Nigeria is a
strategic country with 170 million people and a land rich in oil and natural resources. That’s where Boko Haram – African ISIS – comes into play.
It has been extremely successful in every way. Also, thanks to Boko Haram, half
of Nigeria is under Sharia Law, which is a great tool to control people.
In Asia, we need to
prevail upon Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines.
Without them, we lose much of Asia to China. Sharia Law and Salafism are
gaining momentum in Indonesia, which is a positive sign.
Philippines’ crazy
leader, Duterte, has been too friendly with Russia and China. He will lose his popularity and get replaced if the ISIS affiliate
– Abu Sayyaf – causes enough problems. If he fights back against ISIS, we will cry “human rights” and “Islamophobia” at the UN and
impose sanctions.
Thailand has also been
foolishly moving into the Russia-China sphere of influence. Well, this peaceful, Buddhist country has been facing
Sunni/Salafist extremism in the south. Thai leaders
must realize that the entire tourism industry is very vulnerable – a few
bombings and attacks by jihadists can have serious effects.
<snip>
Finally, let’s look at
Europe. There has been a lot of
problems with mass immigration – terrorism, crimes etc. However, every
crisis is an opportunity. Some call it the Problem-Reaction-Solution.
Terrorism is the problem. Fear is the
reaction. Government is the solution.
Terrorism and crime give
us the chance to militarize the police in EU, create an “NSA” for entire
Europe, and even an EU army. The financial burden
caused by refugees also allows us to impose austerity and cut wasteful welfare
spending. Mass immigration will also result in a more homogeneous European
society. Twenty years from now, there won’t be much difference between France
and Germany. This means much easier management of EU.
Note:
(Administrator of the Japanese website
Design of Creation Society: Twenty-six notes showing quotation sources and
dates have been omitted from the original article.)