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Posts Tagged ‘Islamists’

Connecting The Dots: Google, Obama, Egypt, and the Muslim Brotherhood

by 1389AD ( 130 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Breaking News, Censorship, Egypt, Jihad, Koran, Leftist-Islamic Alliance, Muslim Brotherhood at February 8th, 2011 - 2:00 pm

I have already blogged about some of the ties between the Obama administration and the anti-Mubarak uprising in Egypt (see Obama Supports Islamist Takeover Of Egypt). The Muslim Brotherhood is waiting to take over the government in Egypt as soon as the opportunity presents itself. (See Egypt: “Populist Revolt” or Muslim Brotherhood?.)

The Jawa Report has figured out that Google has a connection with Obama, the anti-Mubarak uprising in Egypt, and the Muslim Brotherhood.

That is no surprise. I have discussed issues with Google Blogger here and here. Suffice it to say that Google Blogger has repeatedly deleted or restricted access to legitimate counterjihad blogs. In addition, despite the notable successes of the SMACKDOWN Corps, Google’s YouTube continues to be a favorite spot for hosting jihadi videos.

From The Jawa Report:

February 07, 2011

Connecting the dots: Googles former Google CEO Eric Schmidt Obi Ones Tech Czar

In 2008 Schmidt stated he would not serve as technology czar in Barack Obama’s administration if he was asked.

In 2009 Obi One names him as one of the tech czars

In Jan 2010 Schmidt resigns as CEO of Google. He will still continue “as the executive chairman of the company and act as an advisor to co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin”

In 2010 State Dept lifts ban & issues visa to Tariq Ramadan Tariq Ramadan’s grandfather founded the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt

In Jan 2010 Googles ME exec Wael Ghonim went missing in Egypt. He was detained by Egypt gov and was released today

More than a week after his mysterious disappearance in Egypt, Google executive and political activist Wael Ghonim has been released from government detention on Monday, the State Department told the Wall Street Journal[…]

It remains unclear what role, if any, Ghonim played in organizing the Jan. 25 protest movement itself, the largest Egypt has seen in more than 30 years. However, he played a prominent role in online activism in the months ahead of the historic protests.

Last year, Ghonim was one of four administrators running the first of the major Facebook pages that became a virtual headquarters for the protest movement, according to a collaborator in the political opposition, and also according to an Internet activist familiar with the situation. Mr. Ghonim also set up the official campaign website for opposition leader Mohamed ElBaradei and volunteered as a tech consultant for other opposition groups, according to Ziad Al-Alimi, a senior aide to Mr. ElBaradei.

Mohamed ElBaradei has Muslim Brotherhoods support.

Obama stated in his interview with O’Reilly ‘some factions strains of the MB ideology are against the US:

“The Muslim Brotherhood is one faction in Egypt. They don’t have majority support in Egypt, but they are well organized and there are “strains of their ideology that are against the U.S., there’s no doubt about it,”

MB is against the US, democracy and all things Western. They want the Islamic Caliphate to rule the world and make no bones about it on their website.

“Allah is our objective; the Quran is our constitution, the Prophet is our leader; Jihad is our way; and death for the sake of Allah is the highest of our aspirations.”

Read it all.


Originally published on 1389 Blog.


Obama Supports Islamist Takeover Of Egypt

by 1389AD ( 150 Comments › )
Filed under African Liberation Movements, Barack Obama, Breaking News, Egypt, George W. Bush, Hamas, Iran, Islamists, Israel, Leftist-Islamic Alliance, Muslim Brotherhood, Palestinians, Tranzis at February 2nd, 2011 - 8:30 am

(update by m 08:20 am:)

Mubarak supporters clash with Egyptian opposition protesters

THE crisis in Egypt lurched into a potentially dangerous new phase overnight as supporters of embattled President Hosni Mubarak faced off with anti-government protesters who defied a military call to disperse.

A crowd of 20,000 Mubarak supporters marched to Tahrir (Liberation) Square in central Cairo, the epicentre of nine days of unrest, far outnumbering the opposition supporters encamped there, Sky News reported.



The Obama administration and the entire liberal establishment are actively supporting the Islamist takeover, not only of Egypt, but of all Muslim countries.

Caroline B. Glick: Clueless in Washington

(h/t: yenta-fada)

Does the US fail to understand what will happen to its strategic interests in the region if the Muslim Brotherhood is the power behind the throne of the next regime?

I would go much further than that. Genuine US strategic interests in the Middle East and everywhere else, including at home, would mean an all-out effort to roll back the worldwide jihad.

But the strategic interests of the US government at this point are exactly the opposite of the genuine stragetic interests of the American citizen, voter, and taxpayer. The Obama Administration and the US State Department are doing everything they can to promote the Islamic jihad.

…Certainly it is true that the regime is populated by old men. Mubarak is 82 years old. It is also true that his regime is corrupt and tyrannical. Since the Muslim Brotherhood spinoff Islamic Jihad terror group murdered Mubarak’s predecessor president Anwar Sadat in 1981, Egypt has been governed by emergency laws that ban democratic freedoms. Mubarak has consistently rejected US pressure to ease regime repression and enact liberal reforms in governance.

This reality has led many American commentators across the political spectrum to side enthusiastically with the rioters. A prestigious working group on Egypt formed in recent months by Middle East experts from Left and Right issued a statement over the weekend calling for the Obama administration to dump Mubarak and withdraw its support for the Egyptian regime. It recommended further that the administration force Mubarak to abdicate and his regime to fall by suspending all economic and military assistance to Egypt for the duration.
[…]
The problem with this recommendation is that it is based entirely on the nature of Mubarak’s regime. If the regime was the biggest problem, then certainly removing US support for it would make sense. However, the character of the protesters is not liberal.

Indeed, their character is a bigger problem than the character of the regime they seek to overthrow.

According to a Pew opinion survey of Egyptians from June 2010, 59 percent said they back Islamists. Only 27% said they back modernizers. Half of Egyptians support Hamas. Thirty percent support Hizbullah and 20% support al Qaida. Moreover, 95% of them would welcome Islamic influence over their politics. When this preference is translated into actual government policy, it is clear that the Islam they support is the al Qaida Salafist version.

Eighty two percent of Egyptians support executing adulterers by stoning, 77% support whipping and cutting the hands off thieves. 84% support executing any Muslim who changes his religion.

WHAT ALL of this makes clear is that if the regime falls, the successor regime will not be a liberal democracy. Mubarak’s military authoritarianism will be replaced by Islamic totalitarianism. The US’s greatest Arab ally will become its greatest enemy. Israel’s peace partner will again become its gravest foe.

Understanding this, Israeli officials and commentators have been nearly unanimous in their negative responses to what is happening in Egypt. The IDF, the national security council, all intelligence agencies and the government as well as the media have all agreed that Israel’s entire regional approach will have to change dramatically in the event that Egypt’s regime is overthrown.

None of the scenarios under discussion are positive.
[…]
Anti-colonialists by definition must always support the most anti-Western forces as “authentic.” In light of Mubarak’s 30-year alliance with the US, it makes sense that Obama’s instincts would place the US president on the side of the protesters.

Read it all.

But why?

(more…)

Why Arabs Lose (Conventional) Wars

by 1389AD ( 224 Comments › )
Filed under Egypt, History, Islam, Israel, Jihad, Military, Terrorism at February 1st, 2011 - 11:30 am

Arab armies – and more to the point, Muslim Arab armies – lose modern wars because their war-making ability is compromised, both by Islamic doctrine and thought patterns, and by their ancient Arab tribal culture, which Islam tends to freeze into place.

But we must never allow their lack of prowess at conventional warfare to lull us into a false sense of security. Muslim Arabs are only too well aware of their incapacity to win modern conventional wars. Instead, for the most part, they go with stealth jihad – which means da’wa, corruption of Western academia, news media, and politicians, buying influence with petrodollars, litigation jihad, and mass immigration into non-Muslim countries and territories wherever possible. When and where Muslim Arabs think it will help their cause, they opt for “asymmetrical” rather than conventional warfare – meaning various forms of terrorism and/or guerrilla warfare.

This article is not new; it was first printed in “Middle East Quarterly” Dec. 1999, Vol. 6, No. 2. That said, I would doubt that the social and cultural factors have changed all that much since it was written.

American Diplomacy: Why Arabs Lose Wars

(h/t: mawskrat).

By Norvell B. De Atkine

The author, a retired U.S. Army colonel, draws upon many years of firsthand observation of Arabs in training to reach conclusions about the ways in which they go into combat. His findings derive from personal experience with Arab military establishments in the capacity of U.S. military attache and security assistance officer, observer officer with the British-officered Trucial Oman Scouts (the security force in the emirates prior to the establishment of the UAE), as well as some thirty years of study of the Middle East.~ Ed.

Why Arabs Lose Wars

ARABIC-SPEAKING ARMIES have been generally ineffective in the modern era. Egyptian regular forces did poorly against Yemeni irregulars in the 1960s. Syrians could only impose their will in Lebanon during the mid-1970s by the use of overwhelming weaponry and numbers. Iraqis showed ineptness against an Iranian military ripped apart by revolutionary turmoil in the 1980s and could not win a three-decades-long war against the Kurds. The Arab military performance on both sides of the 1990 Kuwait war was mediocre. And the Arabs have done poorly in nearly all the military confrontations with Israel. Why this unimpressive record? There are many factors — economic, ideological, technical — but perhaps the most important has to do with culture and certain societal attributes which inhibit Arabs from producing an effective military force.

False starts

Including culture in strategic assessments has a poor legacy, for it has often been spun from an ugly brew of ignorance, wishful thinking, and mythology. Thus, the U.S. Army in the 1930s evaluated the Japanese national character as lacking originality and drew the unwarranted conclusion that that country would be permanently disadvantaged in technology. Hitler dismissed the United States as a mongrel society and consequently underestimated the impact of America’s entry into the war. American strategists assumed that the pain threshold of the North Vietnamese approximated our own and that the air bombardment of the North would bring it to its knees. Three days of aerial attacks were thought to be all the Serbs could withstand; in fact, seventy-eight days were needed.
As these examples suggest, when culture is considered in calculating the relative strengths and weaknesses of opposing forces, it tends to lead to wild distortions, especially when it is a matter of understanding why states unprepared for war enter into combat flushed with confidence. The temptation is to impute cultural attributes to the enemy state that negate its superior numbers or weaponry. Or the opposite: to view the potential enemy through the prism of one’s own cultural norms.

It is particularly dangerous to make facile assumptions about abilities in warfare based on past performance, for societies evolve and so does the military subculture with it. The dismal French performance in the 1870 Franco-Prussian war led the German high command to an overly optimistic assessment prior to World War I. Then tenacity and courage of French soldiers in World War I lead everyone from Winston Churchill to the German high command vastly to overestimate the French army’s fighting abilities. Israeli generals underestimated the Egyptian army of 1973 based on Egypt’s hapless performance in the 1967 war.

Culture is difficult to pin down. It is not synonymous with an individual’s race nor ethnic identity. The history of warfare makes a mockery of attempts to assign rigid cultural attributes to individuals — as the military histories of the Ottoman and Roman empires illustrate. In both cases it was training, discipline, esprit, and élan which made the difference, not the individual soldiers’ origin. The highly disciplined and effective Roman legions, for example, recruited from throughout the Roman Empire, and the elite Ottoman Janissaries (slave soldiers) were Christians forcibly recruited as boys from the Balkans.

The role of culture

These problems notwithstanding, culture does need to be taken into account. Indeed, awareness of prior mistakes should make it possible to assess the role of cultural factors in warfare. John Keegan, the eminent historian of warfare, argues that culture is a prime determinant of the nature of warfare. In contrast to the usual manner of European warfare, which he terms “face to face,” Keegan depicts the early Arab armies in the Islamic era as masters of evasion, delay, and indirection. Examining Arab warfare in this century leads to the conclusion that the Arabs remain more successful in insurgent, or political, warfare — what T. E. Lawrence termed “winning wars without battles.” Even the much-lauded Egyptian crossing of the Suez in 1973 at its core entailed a masterful deception plan. It may well be that these seemingly permanent attributes result from a culture that engenders subtlety, indirection, and dissimulation in personal relationships.

Along these lines, Kenneth Pollock concludes his exhaustive study of Arab military effectiveness by noting that “certain patterns of behavior fostered by the dominant Arab culture were the most important factors contributing to the limited military effectiveness of Arab armies and air forces from 1945 to 1991.” These attributes included over-centralization, discouraging initiative, lack of flexibility, manipulation of information, and the discouragement of leadership at the junior officer level. The barrage of criticism leveled at Samuel Huntington’s notion of a “clash of civilizations” in no way lessens the vital point he made — that however much the grouping of peoples by religion and culture rather than political or economic divisions offends academics who propound a world defined by class, race, and gender, it is a reality, one not diminished by modern communications.

But how does one integrate the study of culture into military training? At present, it has hardly any role. Paul M. Belbutowski, a scholar and former member of the U.S. Delta Force, succinctly stated a deficiency in our own military education system: “Culture, comprised of all that is vague and intangible, is not generally integrated into strategic planning except at the most superficial level.” And yet it is precisely “all that is vague and intangible” that defines low-intensity conflicts. The Vietnamese communists did not fight the war the United States had trained for, nor did the Chechens and Afghans fight the war the Russians prepared for. This entails far more than simply retooling weaponry and retraining soldiers. It requires an understanding of the cultural mythology, history, attitude toward time, etc.; and it demands a more substantial investment in time and money than a bureaucratic organization is likely to authorize.
Mindful of walking through a minefield of past errors and present cultural sensibilities, I offer some assessments of the role of culture in the military training of Arabic-speaking officers. I confine myself principally to training for two reasons:

• First, I observed much training but only one combat campaign (the Jordanian Army against the Palestine Liberation Organization in 1970).

• Secondly, armies fight as they train. Troops are conditioned by peacetime habits, policies, and procedures; they do not undergo a sudden metamorphosis that transforms civilians in uniform into warriors. General George Patton was fond of relating the story about Julius Caesar, who “in the winter time. . . so trained his legions in all that became soldiers and so habituated them to the proper performance of their duties, that when in the spring he committed them to battle against the Gauls, it was not necessary to give them orders, for they knew what to do and how to do it.”

Information as power

In every society information is a means of making a living or wielding power, but Arabs husband information and hold it especially tightly. U.S. trainers have often been surprised over the years by the fact that information provided to key personnel does not get much further than them. Having learned to perform some complicated procedure, an Arab technician knows that he is invaluable so long as he is the only one in a unit to have that knowledge; once he dispenses it to others he no longer is the only font of knowledge and his power dissipates. This explains the commonplace hoarding of manuals, books, training pamphlets, and other training or logistics literature.[…]
Norvell 'Tex' de Atkine
Norvell “Tex” de Atkine served eight years in Lebanon, Jordan, and Egypt (in addition to extensive combat service in Vietnam). A West Pointer, he holds a graduate degree in Arab studies from the American University of Beirut. Currently he teaches at the JFK Special Warfare School at Ft. Bragg, North Carolina. See also his “The Political-Military Officer: Soldier Scholar or Cocktail Commando?” in American Diplomacy Vol. IV, No. 1 (Winter 1999)

Read it all!

Part 1
Part 2


For Those Who Believe Islamic Terrorism Is In Response To Our Support of Israel.

by Flyovercountry ( 116 Comments › )
Filed under Islam, Islamic Terrorism, Islamists, Terrorism at January 24th, 2011 - 2:00 pm

Crossposted at Musings of a Mad Conservative. 

It appears that the Religion of Peace has struck again.  This morning, I awoke to a report of a mass homicidal attack via Islamic suicide occurred at a Russian airport.  The toll in terms of human life was heavy.  What stands out though, is that Russia can hardly be called a supporter of Israel.  In fairness, Russia can’t even be called friendly towards Israel.  The favorite meme of the left for years has been that we are creating a recruitment bonanza for Islamic terror groups because of our support for the Zionist State.  I will concede that it is not the entire left which has been spouting this.  My fellow members of the Jewish faith have been voting mostly with the liberals for many years.  Historically, it has been about 80/20, however that has become more even in recent election cycles.  I am referring to the ISM, ANSWER Coalition, Code Pink, hard core crowd.  Unmistakably though, a majority of those on the left have a very anti-Israel, anti-Semitic bent to them.  So, where does that leave us today?  What this attack, along with dozens of others which occur on a constant basis, is that support for Israel has nothing to do with Islamic Terrorism.  What does spur on Islamic Terrorism is people not bowing down to Islamic demands and perceived insults against their vision of a worldwide caliphate. 

When we notice these things going on daily, we are told that we suffer from Islamiphobia.  A new disease which makes us irrationally afraid helping some peaceful man wearing a bomb for a sweater vest reach his life’s ambition of living with Mohamed and enjoying his 72 virgins.  (Quick question here: How do they know that the virgins are indeed human and/or female?)  That only if we sought psychiatric help, we would somehow be safe and indeed shielded from the effects of their chosen fashion statement.  (Isn’t Semtex lovely in the spring?)  Not a believer that the Religion of Peace is not about peace?  Well, then, click the link and take a look at what they’ve been up to.  Out of the 16000 plus instances of documented attacks since September of 2001, how many were perpetrated against the tiny nation of Israel?

 

We have been told by Islamist apologists for years that jihad means an inner struggle for a more spiritual existence.  We have been told by adherents to that religion that jihad means fighting a holy war intended to kill or subjugate all non believers until Islam reigns supreme in the entire world.  To be sure, there are some, “moderate Muslims,” who tell us that the former definition of jihad is the correct one.  To me though, that group reminds me of a movie we all saw:

I will concede that not all Muslims are terrorists, nor even fit into the category of apologists for Muslim terror. I do however believe that the, “small percentage,” factoid is just as ridiculous. The laughingly deceptive propaganda documentary published by Gallup puts that number at 50%, which is in itself scary considering that Gallup, as of 2002 is owned by Saudi Arabia. It is also important to note that the 50% number is broken into separate constituencies. It includes terrorists, those who support terror as an acceptable means to an end, those who feel that terror is justified, those who feel it is no different than western methods of diplomacy etc. Once again, this requires our good friend moral equivalency to rear its ugly head. That is one of the places I must part with the left.  My point though does not depend on what percentage of Muslims agree with the second definition of jihad, but merely on whether support for Israel is the actual cause for tension, or just a handy excuse.  If you believe it is the former, why the attacks in Russia, Philippines, Brazil, Indonesia, Malaysia, Sudan, Rhodesia, England, Ireland, Scottland, France, Spain, and probably dozens of other non-Israel supporting nations?