Tuesday, 14 January 2014

‘RUSSIA COMMITTED TO DESTROYING AL-QAEDA AND TERRORISM’

ED Noor: There are some interesting concepts put forth in this piece; however, the author has failed to mention many facts that I have done my best to rectify ~ in the interest of clarity and sticking to script.  She failed one of my personal litmus tests ~ 911 and bin Laden. However, what she has to say about Putin and the Saudi regime are worth investigating further. Also by not making the Zionist connection clear, the reader misses much of the most basic understanding of the entire global situation and its ramifications for all of us. Russia, Saudi Arabia, Israel ~ these three nations are politically intertwined on so many levels this could easily escalate.
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By Tahmineh Bakhtiari
January 13, 2014 
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ED Noor: How would Americans react if Bandar had said THIS to Obama over one thing or another? You can bet they would clamour for some form of response. No one can hold this response against Putin, no one.

Related Interviews:
After the Black Widows terrorist operations in Volgograd, Russia is committed to destroying al-Qaeda.
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In his reports to Putin just few days after the attacks on January 8, chief of Russia’s FSB intelligence and counter-intelligence agency presented documents, which mostly revealed multi-layer communication and cyber lines in Britain, UAE, Lebanon and Turkey. In the report Saudi Arabia was described as the control center of the recent terrorist operations.
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This confidential report also detailed how Saudi Arabia provided financial and logistic support to the mentioned terrorist group.
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At the time Russian President Vladimir Putin asked the United Nations Security Council in an urgent meeting to consider adding Saudi Arabia to its list of terrorist supporters.
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Russia's government has realized
that it must raze al-Qaeda from its roots,
which could only be done
by overthrowing the Al Saud Wahhabi regime.
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A question that arises here, considering Russia’s commitment to its fight against al-Qaeda, is:
Could this situation lead to the downfall of the Saudi government?
The next question is:
Why is Saudi Arabia at the center of all terrorist operations in the Middle East and other countries, even in Russia and the US?
To answer this question, we must first look into the current state of Saudi Arabia at both domestic and international level.  
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ED Noor: One cannot forget that the Saudi family is Zionist at its roots, locked at the hips with Israel; they reached power through the backing of the British Rothschilds, er, bankers. It was to destroy the deep solidity of Islam that Wahabbism was created, married to the throne, and is now being dispersed about the globe through KSA funded terrorists such as those that helped destroy Afghanistan, Libya and now Syria. This Israeli/Saudi connection has not yet been picked up by the MSM enough to permeate mainstream consciousness and needs to be reiterated.
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Saudi Arabia is still governed by an unusual monarchy regime, which has about a hundred of princes at the same time.
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They wait a long time to become a king and mostly they die without experiencing the joys of the throne.

The intense internal conditions of Saudi Arabia is in such a way that even the US intelligence agencies have recently warned of the risk of a bloody coup in this country.

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Currently, there is a rift between Saudi spy chief Bandar bin Sultan and many of the Saudi princes. 
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Especially from 2010 onwards, wherever there is unrest, riots, bombing and sabotage, the name of al-Qaeda and its main sponsor Saudi Arabia is present. They see Bandar bin Sultan as the main cause of many internal and external problems of Saudi Arabia.
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Lack of freedom of speech, repeated violations of human rights, Gender and religious discriminations are among many other problems that have caused the deep rupture among the Saudi people.
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Thousands of political and intellectual activists are jailed in Saudi Arabia only for criticizing the Al Saud family.
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Under these circumstances, Al Saud officials try to divert world's attention from the country’s internal affairs to elsewhere and strengthen their family by supporting al-Qaeda.
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However this tactic is not very effective, because the 21st century is the era of the public opinion awakening and fast exchange of information. 
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AL-Qaeda has deceived many young people with false promises to use them to promote its own agenda. In the beginning al-Qaeda was formed as part of a plan to counter communism. 
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The group was used to promote Islam as a violent faith, serving the West’s interest on two fronts. Distorting the image of Islam among Europeans and acting as an ideological war against `communism.
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After the collapse of the Soviet Russia, the US tried to use al-Qaeda to disrupt the regional equations in Middle East, and that was their reason for not disarming them.
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In 2001, 9-11 attacks by al-Qaeda in New York gave the US the opportunity to carry out its plans in the Middle East. At first the US attacked Afghanistan and then Iraq to fight against the so-called origin of terrorism, which was al-Qaeda.
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ED Noor: Whoah! Did we really read that correctly, dear Readers?
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After the US attacks on Afghanistan and Iraq, not only al-Qaeda did not become weak, but it also nested in most of the Middle Eastern countries and even Russia. In a move contradictory to their past slogans, the US and some Arab countries sent money and weapons to the terrorists in Syria.



After the terrorist nature of Syria’s opposition and their links to al-Qaeda was exposed, international hostility towards Assad diminished. 
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Under these circumstances, America and some Western countries such as France and Britain realized that the continuation of this situation could be a major security threat to them, and it would lead to the distrust of their own people of their governments.
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So they stopped their financial support to al-Qaeda linked militants in Syria, a situation that led to the success of the Syrian Army in clearing out many areas from the militants.
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Some leaked reports even suggest of an alliance between the US, Russia and some European countries for destroying al-Qaeda, but there is a major difference in Russia’s stance compared to the US and European countries.
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Russia's government has realized
that it must raze al-Qaeda from its roots,
which could only be done
by overthrowing the Al Saud Wahhabi regime.
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The US killed Osama bin Laden and throw his body into the sea to suggest to the world that al-Qaeda has ended. However, not only al-Qaeda did not end, but it has been using more sophisticated tactics and terrorist methods in Iraq, Yemen and Syria.

ED Noor: Enough with the disinformation already! I want to believe this writer is sincere but the number of these misconceptions incorporated into interesting valuable insights is becoming overwhelming. The whole farce was a psychological operation as she alleges because bin Laden had been dead for years. Something had to be done to boost Obama's sagging ratings and to do as stated, symbolically kill Al Qaeda to make way for the Takfiri troops in all their vicious cells.
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Most of the intelligence agencies in the West have concluded that the financial support of Riyadh has kept al-Qaeda alive.
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It must also be noted that in all reports of terrorists act across the world the footprint of Saudi Arabia could be seen, without its name being in the list of terrorism sponsors. Not a single sanction has been imposed against this country and even human rights violations in Saudi Arabia have been ignored with gentle and non-binding statements.
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The West is concerned that a democratic government in Saudi Arabia could serve the Saudis, rather than its interests. This is while Russia, China and many other countries believe that the continued presence of the Al Saud dynasty in Saudi Arabia means the continuation of al-Qaeda and their terror operations and to target the core of this crisis, the Al Saud dynasty should be overthrown.
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This is a way that must be pursued to solve the root of terrorism and as long as Al Saud is in power there will be terrorism.
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Tahmineh Bakhtiari is an Iranian journalist and an expert on the Middle East and Latin America. Her writings have appeared in many print and online journals and newspapers including The Khorassan Daily, Jam-e Jam, Jomhuri Islami and Aftrab-e Yazd. Her book ‘The Genealogy of Zionism’ was published in 2001. Bakhtiari has a master’s degree in international relations.

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