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IS Mega Discussion Thread

*sigh*

I can't imagine what the parents are going through.


Missing schoolgirls: Police appeal for three London teenagers feared to have travelled to Syria to join Isis




Scotland Yard is appealing for information about three teenage schoolgirls who are believed to be trying to make their way to Isis-controlled territories in Syria.

Shamima Begum, 15, possibly travelling under the name of Aklima Begum and Kadiza Sultana, 16, are missing along with a 15-year-old girl who is not being named at the request of her family.

All three girls left their homes at 8am on Tuesday morning and met at Gatwick Airport, where they boarded a Turkish Airlines flight to Istanbul.

Detectives from the Metropolitan Police urgently appealed for information about the missing girls, who all go to the Bethnal Green Academy school and were described as "straight-A students".

Counter Terrorism Command (SO15) Commander Richard Walton said: “We are extremely concerned for the safety of these young girls and would urge anyone with information to come forward and speak to police. Our priority is the safe return of these girls to their families.

"We are reaching out to the girls using the Turkish media and social media in the hope that Shamima, Kadiza and their friend hear our messages, hear our concerns for their safety and have the courage to return now, back to their families who are so worried about them."

CCTV-syria-girls.jpg


Commander Walton said he was concerned “about the numbers of girls and young women who have or are intending to travel to the part of Syria that is controlled by the terrorist group calling themselves Isis”.

He said the girls are good friends with another 15-year-old who ran away to Syria in recent months.

“It is an extremely dangerous place and we have seen reports of what life is like for them and how restricted their lives become. It is not uncommon for girls or women to be prevented from being allowed out of their houses or if allowed out, only when accompanied by a guardian.

“The choice of returning home from Syria is often taken away from those under the control of Islamic State, leaving their families in the UK devastated and with very few options to secure their safe return."

Shamima and the unidentified girl were reported missing by their families on Tuesday night. Kadiza was reported missing on Wednesday morning.

Shamina is described as 5''7" tall, and wearing black thick rimmed glasses, a black hijab, light brown and black leopard print scarf, dark red jumper, black trousers and jacket.

Shamima-Begum-PA.jpg


Kadiza is described as 5'6" tall, of slim build and wearing black rimmed glasses, a long black jacket with a hood, grey striped scarf, grey jumper, dark red trousers, carrying a black holdall.

The third missing girl is described as 5'6" tall, of slim build, wearing black thick rimmed glasses, black head scarf, long dark green jacket with fur lined hood, light yellow long sleeved top, black trousers, white trainers carrying a black Nike holdall.

Anyone with information on their whereabouts is asked to call the incident room via the free phone Anti-Terrorist Hotline number on 0800 789 321.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/u...have-gone-to-syria-to-join-isis-10059763.html
 
Anyone else find the portrayal of women here as sexist?...

I mean these girls are portrayed as helpless victims as opposed to fanatics...they are viewed as sympathetic whilst men are viewed as fanatic even when men of a similar age have been joining IS...

If these girls do make it back to the UK they should be arrested and charged just like the men are...
 
Anyone else find the portrayal of women here as sexist?...

I mean these girls are portrayed as helpless victims as opposed to fanatics...they are viewed as sympathetic whilst men are viewed as fanatic even when men of a similar age have been joining IS...

If these girls do make it back to the UK they should be arrested and charged just like the men are...

Seems that is normal in the UK. Recently a pedophile woman was freed after just 2 years. If it was a man, then there would be different standards.
 
Anyone else find the portrayal of women here as sexist?...

I mean these girls are portrayed as helpless victims as opposed to fanatics...they are viewed as sympathetic whilst men are viewed as fanatic even when men of a similar age have been joining IS...

If these girls do make it back to the UK they should be arrested and charged just like the men are...

This is the case in general in western countries. Women who commit domestic violence, murder, statutory rape, pedophilia (also mentioned by above post) are often shown to be somehow being under the possession of big bad men, or how the real victim did something to make women do that. It is not just in the media - it is institutionalized at the state and judiciary level where women get significantly smaller sentences than men for the same crime.
 

Probably the same as those parents whose daughters get caught lap dancing in magalluf
Apart from most of their kids will come back unless they become Spanish waiters


My 16 year old self would have done the same gone to Syria that is had I not had a single mum and a push to education from her

When you're 16 becoming a notorious jihadi sidekick sounds more exciting than getting the bus to college tbf


How do we combat it, well pushing Muslims towards politics apart from away from it like in Egypt, tower hamlets etc would be a great start
Muslims are also pushed away from charity work as well as humanitarian work in Syria

There is a current social network campaign to help Muslim kids become more 'nationalistic' I.e Pakistani kids love Pakistan more and black kids love 'black culture' more
Turning Pakistanis away from 'arabism' seems to be a good idea but less corruption and more accountability At home would also be a good idea

No surprise two of the girls are Bangladesh
 
They can stay there for all I care. They have no idea or appreciation for how hard their parents worked and the difficulties they faced adjusting to an alien country to give them the life they had where they can just stroll through to Turkey in their fashionable hijabs and holdalls. If only they knew what their lives would have been like in Bangladesh. I'm given to understand that they are all straight-A students. How about continuing to work hard, get a higher education, getting a well-paid job and helping the people of the land that you come from, where many people are in far worse condition than in Syria and it's not even a warzone, and helping them to escape poverty. I guess that's too far-fetched. The status of 'jihadi bride' is far more honourable.
 
They can stay there for all I care. They have no idea or appreciation for how hard their parents worked and the difficulties they faced adjusting to an alien country to give them the life they had where they can just stroll through to Turkey in their fashionable hijabs and holdalls. If only they knew what their lives would have been like in Bangladesh. I'm given to understand that they are all straight-A students. How about continuing to work hard, get a higher education, getting a well-paid job and helping the people of the land that you come from, where many people are in far worse condition than in Syria and it's not even a warzone, and helping them to escape poverty. I guess that's too far-fetched. The status of 'jihadi bride' is far more honourable.

Those words could be aimed at most 15 year olds tbf apart from hijab and alien
 
FBI Arrests 3 Brooklyn Men Suspected Of Planning To Join ISIS
Three Brooklyn men who allegedly planned to join the Islamic State were arrested Wednesday by the FBI.

The Department of Justice said in a press release that two of the suspects planned to return to New York and carry out a terror attack if they failed to join up with the Islamic militant group, also known as ISIS or ISIL.

Authorities identified the men, all residents of Brooklyn, as Abdurasul Hasanovich Juraboev, 24, Akhror Saidakhmetov, 19, and Abror Habibov, 30. Juraboev and Habivov are citizens of Uzbekistan, and Saidakhmetov is a citizen of Kazakhstan, according to the release.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Douglas Pravda said at an arraignment that Juraboev and Saidakhmetov confessed after their arrests of plans to leave the U.S., travel to Syria, and "wage jihad on behalf of ISIS." The two had been under surveillance since August, and appear never to have posed a serious threat.

Saidakhmetov was captured at John F. Kennedy International Airport as he attempted to board a flight to Turkey. Western diplomats have warned that smugglers operating along Turkey's porous 500-mile border with Syria are ferrying oil, weapons, goods and foreign fighters in and out of the war-torn country.
The FBI began its investigation after discovering an online message from one of the men.

"We will vigorously prosecute those who attempt to travel to Syria to wage violent jihad on behalf of ISIL and those who support them," Loretta Lynch, the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York, said in a statement. "Anyone who threatens our citizens and our allies, here or abroad, will face the full force of American justice."

An attorney for one of the men arrested told reporters the U.S. attorney's office had "rushed to prosecution."

Adam Perlmutter, the lawyer for Saidakhmetov, also slammed the government for interrogating his client and Jurobaev "without counsel" present, but did not elaborate.

"My hope," Perlmutter said, is that the public remembers there is a "presumption of innocence." He added that the government's case rested on the testimony of a paid confidential informant, who he characterized as "enormously manipulative."

An affidavit filed in federal court by FBI Special Agent Ryan Singer outlined details of both the men's alleged plans and authorities' investigations -- and provides a portrait of bumbling would-be terrorists who were hopelessly outmatched in their efforts to keep their communications a secret.

The starting point of the investigation was apparently an Uzbek-language jihadi website that included postings that suggested one could achieve martyrdom through killings. One posting traced by authorities to a Brooklyn address read in part: "I am in USA now but we don't have any arms. But is it possible to commit ourselves as dedicated martyrs anyway while here? What I'm saying is, to shoot Obama and then get shot ourselves, will it do? That will strike fear in the hearts of the infidels."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/02/25/brooklyn-isis-arrests_n_6753034.html
Foreign fighters seems to be the backbone of ISIS, so U.S. must pressurize Arab and neighboring countries to do something about this, especially Turkey since many terrorists use Turkey to enter Syria then Iraq. Absolute scums, I doubt they even have interests of majority of the locals in their hearts.
 
'Jihadi John' Killer Featured In Islamic State Beheading Videos Reportedly Identified As Mohammed Emwazi
The "Jihadi John" killer who has featured in several Islamic State beheading videos is Mohammed Emwazi, a Briton from a middle class family who grew up in London and graduated from college with a degree in computer programming, the Washington Post newspaper said.

In videos released by Islamic State (IS), the masked, black-clad militant brandishing a knife and speaking with an English accent appears to have carried out the beheadings of hostages including Americans and Britons.

The Washington Post said Emwazi was believed to have traveled to Syria around 2012 and to have later joined IS.

"His real name, according to friends and others familiar with his case, is Mohammed Emwazi, a Briton from a well-to-do family who grew up in West London and graduated from college with a degree in computer programming," the Post said.

In each beheading video, he is dressed entirely in black, a balaclava covering all but his eyes and the ridge of his nose. He wears a holster under his left arm.

Hostages gave him the name John as he and other Britons had been nicknamed the Beatles, another was dubbed George.

The paper said he had been born in Kuwait, was raised in a middle-class neighborhood in London and occasionally prayed at a mosque in Greenwich, southeast London.

Police declined to comment on the reports.

"We are not going to confirm the identity of anyone at this stage or give an update on the progress of this live counter- terrorism investigation," said Commander Richard Walton of the Metropolitan Police's Counter Terrorism Command in a statement.

The Post quoted friends of Emwazi, who spoke on condition of anonymity, as saying they thought he had started to become radicalized after a planned safari in Tanzania following his graduation from the University of Westminster in London.

They said Emwazi and two friends - a German convert to Islam named Omar and another man, Abu Talib - never made it to the safari. On landing in Dar es Salaam, in May 2009, they were detained by police and held overnight before eventually being deported, they said.

No comment was immediately available from the University of Westminster.

The Post said counterterrorism officials in Britain detained Emwazi in 2010, fingerprinting him and searching his belongings.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/02/26/jihadi-john-identified-mohammed-emwazi_n_6759214.html
CIA should try to infiltrate ISIS and take this guy out.
 
Quite nauseating the way Moazzam Begg's CAGE group is on tv here essentially eulogising Jihadi John. He was a 'beautiful young man' who turned to beheading because the British spooks questioned him a few times about being an extremist. Oh and of course he was marginalised etc etc.

It's no wonder Moazzam Begg said this last year:

Former Guantánamo Bay detainee Moazzam Begg offered to intervene to help save the life of British hostage Alan Henning with an extraordinary public appeal but was twice rebuffed by the Foreign Office.

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/oct/07/moazzam-begg-offered-secure-release-alan-henning
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en-gb"><p>Who should be held accountable for beheadings <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/cage?src=hash">#cage</a> is asked.

Security services should be held accountable for alienating Jihadi John reply</p>— Kay Burley (@KayBurley) <a href="https://twitter.com/KayBurley/status/570973353479184384">February 26, 2015</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en-gb"><p>Mohammed Emwazi was "kind gentle, soft-spoken, humble", according to <a href="https://twitter.com/UK_CAGE">@UK_CAGE</a>. Course he was. Loved animals too, no doubt. Give me strength.</p>— Iain Dale (@IainDale) <a href="https://twitter.com/IainDale/status/570966801317670913">February 26, 2015</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en-gb"><p>So there is an actual claim today that being stopped by the security services as a suspected jihadist "turned" Jihadi John into a jihadist.</p>— Samira Ahmed (@SamiraAhmedUK) <a href="https://twitter.com/SamiraAhmedUK/status/570977636744351744">February 26, 2015</a></blockquote>
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The guy they claim is john is probably dead. More nonsense drama by the security forces .
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en-gb"><p>"Jihadi John" was apparently so put out about his harassment by UK intelligence he had to join a group mass-murdering Iraqi civilians.</p>— Murtaza Hussain (@MazMHussain) <a href="https://twitter.com/MazMHussain/status/570948892038189056">February 26, 2015</a></blockquote>
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ISIS holed up in Mosul preparation for ground attack
The Iraqi city of Mosul (north) is witnessing military reinforcements and fortifications by ISIS organization in anticipation for possible military ground operation

by Iraqi forces for the liberation of the city, especially after the statements of the international coalition coordinator against "ISIS," John Allen, on " a ground attack that will start soon against ISIS terrorist gang led by Iraqi forces with support from the coalition countries. "

The International coalition forces led by the United States is seekingt onslaught ISIS organization's main stronghold in Mosul, Iraq's second largest city with a Sunni majority and controlled by "ISIS" since the tenth of last June.

According to witnesses, ISIS organization is preparing since months for this battle to build an impervious defensive line repels any ground troops may try to enter Mosul, however, in the recent period all concrete barriers were removed in front of the institutions inside and placed at all entrances to Mosul to block any interference.

The case did not stop with the organization's defense position, but tried to put itself as an organization still has the lead, so attacks some areas adjacent to Kurdistan Region at a time work is underway in Mosul to increase their defensive fortifications.

One of the first fortifications that ISIS began is digging a trench surrounding the city of Mosul and is still continuing the work in depth of 1.5 meters and a width of 1.5 meters with a concrete barrier in the middle.

As the organization removed all the concrete barriers and fenders that surrounded government buildings and distributed in the streets and placed them on the outskirts of Mosul from the north and south, east and west where are the exists expecting to break into Mosul in the ground war.

Abu Mohammed al- Musli ( sixty years old) says : barriers are placed in Kokjla area (east of Mosul), where the entrance to Mosul coming from Erbil (the capital of Kurdistan Region) stretch barriers on a dirt road outside Mosul city.

Unlike barriers, in recent days, armed groups called "al-Usra Army " spread within Mosul city and these groups are close to the organization's leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and their presence in a place is evidence of the existence of al-Baghdadi, according to one of the city's residents called himself " Medhat al-Mualem " for fear on his life.

Mualem explained that "the militants of al-Usra army are heavily armed and dressed in black, and most of them are foreign fighters," he said, "When we see these forces patrolling the streets of Mosul, we know very well that al-Baghdadi is in Mosul."

He added that "the force does not stand in place or intersection but cars scouring , pass and come back quickly."

Population do shopping to buy food to be stored; in anticipation of war may be prolonged, Saad Al-Atraqchi carrying a black bag and examines in a wooden cart for legumes to buy them, said: "We do not know what the time hide, but we are afraid to run out of supplies, and we are in the midst of battle."

Atraqchi spoke softly like a whispered fearing the wrath of ISIS: "Despite the fear of war, but we as residents are happy; because the war will save us from ISIS which destroyed the land of Mosul."

For his part, Brigadier General Ghanim al-Sabawi, one of Nineveh police officers that is being reformed to liberate Mosul in Nineveh camp in Dobrdan east of Mosul said, "ISIS is seeking for some time to develop weapons through some chemical gases seized from Reqqa Syrian and Mosul city as well as gases in scientific laboratories that we believe was able to grab ."

Sabawi added that "ISIS also works on plating truck bombs in order not to affect the shells (so as not to blow them up before they reach the goal) if the ground troops tried to break into Mosul," noting that "the Iraqi forces and the Peshmerga captured some of these armored vehicles, The organization is creative in making arms since the period of preparation for this fight. "

ISIS elements are moving between the period and the other from one place to another because of the intensification of the bombing on them and make churches as headquarters and warehouses to store weapons and explosives as the organization believes that churches are not targeted by coalition aircraft, according to the population of Mosul, who started to prepare to the Battle of Mosul, as Mosul is in anticipation with the announcement of near Mosul battle, while welcoming to get rid of their suffering from ISIS.

In the eighth of February, John Allen, coordinator of the international coalition against ”ISIS “ and the US President's advisor, announced that the attack on the ground will start against "ISIS" soon.

In remarks from Petra News Agency, the official Allen said that "an attack on the ground will start soon against the terrorist gang ISIS -led Iraqi forces with support from the coalition countries."

Allen pointed out that "coalition forces are equipping 12 Iraqi Brigades in preparation for a ground campaign against ISIS," noting that he will travel to East Asian countries to expand the international coalition, "which includes today 62 countries."

The US official denied that there is a change in the coalition strategy, saying, "Our strategy is clear, based on ISIS defeat."

In June, ISIS has dominated large areas in the north and west of Iraq before including them to lands seized by ISIS in northern and eastern Syria, under the banner of "Caliphate State" which were promulgated in the same month.

While the Kurdish Peshmerga forces are fighting alongside Iraqi forces , militias and tribes supported from the air by an international coalition led by the United States against ISIS in order to stop the expansion of the organization and restore areas that it has dominated during the past months.
Seems like Pakistan is not the only country that spread the news of an important military operation before it even begins.
 
Quite nauseating the way Moazzam Begg's CAGE group is on tv here essentially eulogising Jihadi John. He was a 'beautiful young man' who turned to beheading because the British spooks questioned him a few times about being an extremist. Oh and of course he was marginalised etc etc.

It's no wonder Moazzam Begg said this last year:



http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/oct/07/moazzam-begg-offered-secure-release-alan-henning


There are lots of talks of cia and fbi entrapments of young men put into terrorist cells etc

There's even talks of a u.s spy with thegermany rapper isis member who has since fled back to the u.s

So talks of the u.k knowing and even training 'jihadi john' and he even going rogue are not so far fetched


As much as Saudi and Pak are blamed for training or harbouring militants, the u.k and the u.s have been known to keep agents who have gone rogue
I could go into conspiracy theories, false flag missions and the magna carta but that has not been provne thus far
 
Islamic State under pressure as Kurds seize Syrian town
Kurdish forces dealt a blow to Islamic State by capturing an important town on Friday in the latest stage of a powerful offensive in northeast Syria, a Kurdish militia spokesman said.

Islamic State has been forced into retreat across parts of the strategic region, a land bridge between territory it controls in Syria and Iraq, even as its fighters have mounted new raids this week on Assyrian Christian villages, abducting more than 200 people.

The capture of Tel Hamis was announced by the Kurdish YPG militia and confirmed by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the country's civil war.

"The flag is flying over Tel Hamis. We are now combing the city for terrorists and mines," militia spokesman Redur Xelil told Reuters.

"Daesh continue to have a considerable number of territories and forces. But we can say we have stopped its advance," Xelil said, using the Arabic acronym of Islamic State

The British-based Observatory said Kurdish forces killed at least 175 members and commanders of the ultra-hardline Islamist militants in an offensive which began last weekend.

"The bodies of these fighters are still with the Kurdish militants," said the Observatory's head Rami Abdulrahman. He said the Kurds, with backing from U.S.-led air strikes, have taken at least 103 villages in the area and are now in the village of Suleima on the border with Iraq.

The United States and its allies have carried out hundreds of air strikes in Iraq and Syria since launching a campaign to "degrade and destroy" Islamic State, which last year declared a "caliphate" on territory it has captured in both countries.

The U.S.-led coalition has launched 20 strikes against Islamic State in Syria since early Thursday, its Combined Joint Task Force said on Friday.

TOUGH FOE

The Kurdish YPG militia has been one of Islamic State's toughest enemies in Syria. Last month it flushed the group out of Kobani on the Turkish border, breaking the militants' four-month siege of the town with the help of U.S. and allied air support and Iraqi Kurdish reinforcements on the ground.

Since then, Kurdish forces backed by other Syrian armed groups have pursued Islamic State fighters as far their provincial stronghold of Raqqa.

But while the group has shown signs of strain after the Kobani battle, it is far from collapsing. This week it abducted at least 220 Assyrian Christians in the region of Tel Tamr, about 100 km (60 miles) west of Tel Hamis, according to the Observatory.

Their fate remains unclear.

"We do not know what happened or is happening to them, a prominent Syrian Christian, Bassam Ishak, told Reuters. "There are attempts from some church members to engage in negotiations but we do not how fruitful it will be."

Syria's foreign ministry sent letters to the United Nations Secretary-General and Security Council regarding the attacks, appealing for international cooperation.

"The international community should confirm its commitment to fighting terrorism .. through coordinating with Syria, which is standing as an impervious dam against the spread of international terrorism," state news agency SANA quoted the foreign ministry as saying.

While bent on destroying Islamic State, the United States refuses to ally itself with President Bashar al-Assad in Syria's civil war. More than 200,000 people have been killed since 2011 in the conflict, which pits Assad's forces against an array of jihadist and other rebel factions.

Washington on Wednesday condemned the attacks against Christians, which it said included the burning of homes and churches and abduction of women, children and the elderly.

Islamic State has staged mass killings of religious minorities, including Yazidis in Iraq and Egyptian Coptic Christians in Libya, as well as fellow Sunni Muslims who refuse to swear allegiance to its caliphate.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/02/27/us-mideast-crisis-syria-kurds-idUSKBN0LV1N320150227
Kurds deserve their own country because of their efforts to defeat ISIS, at least in Syria and Iraq as Turkey and Iran might not agree to give them land from their own countries.
 
Shocked to hear that "Jihadi John" went to the same university campus as me.
 
Was it at the same time as you?

Nah he graduated in 2009, I started in 2009. But a friend of mine who still studies there says things are quite tense at the campus right now, the university has suspended an event organised by the Islamic society because apparently there was going to be a preacher there who has some controversial views of homosexuality.
 
Nah he graduated in 2009, I started in 2009. But a friend of mine who still studies there says things are quite tense at the campus right now, the university has suspended an event organised by the Islamic society because apparently there was going to be a preacher there who has some controversial views of homosexuality.

Haitham al haddad
 
boko haram pledges allegiance to isis

http://nypost.com/2015/03/08/boko-haram-pledges-allegiance-to-isis/

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria — Nigeria’s home-grown Boko Haram group, newly weakened by a multinational force that has dislodged it from a score of northeastern towns, reportedly pledged formal allegiance to the Islamic State group.The pledge to IS came in an Arabic audio message with English subtitles alleged to have come from Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau and posted Saturday on Twitter, according to the SITE Intelligence monitoring service.
“We announce our allegiance to the Caliph of the Muslims … and will hear and obey in times of difficulty and prosperity, in hardship and ease, and to endure being discriminated against, and not to dispute about rule with those in power, except in case of evident infidelity regarding that which there is a proof from Allah,” said the message. IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi has declared himself the caliph.Earlier, the Nigerian extremist group was blamed for four suicide bomb attacks that police said killed at least 54 people and wounded 143 in the northeast city of Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state and birthplace of Boko Haram.
The blasts occurred over four hours in locations from a busy fish market to a crowded bus station, said Police Commissioner Clement Adoda.
A fifth explosion from a car bomb at a military checkpoint 50 miles (75 kilometers) outside the city wounded a soldier and two members of a civilian self-defense unit. The bomber apparently wanted to reach Maiduguri, said a police officer at the scene who spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not allowed to speak to the press.

In the deadliest blast, 18 people died when a suicide bomber blew himself up in a tricycle taxi at the entrance to the bustling Baga fish market, police said.
“I saw many dead bodies lying on the ground, many dead, and several others badly injured,” said fish seller Idi Idrisa.

The Boko Haram pledge to IS comes as the Nigerian militants reportedly are massing in the northeastern town of Gwoza, considered their headquarters, for a showdown with the Chadian-led multinational force.

Though there was no way to independently verify the message, it comes weeks after Boko Haram’s new Twitter account broadcast that the group’s Shura council was considering whether to swear formal allegiance to IS.

The Twitter account, increasingly slick and more frequent video messages from Boko Haram, and a new media arm all are considered signs that the group is being helped by IS propagandists.
Boko Haram in August followed the lead of IS in declaring an Islamic caliphate in northeast Nigeria that grew to cover an area the size of Belgium. The Islamic State had declared a caliphate in vast swaths of territory that it controls in Iraq and Syria.

The Nigerian group also began publishing videos of beheadings. The latest one, published March 2, borrowed certain elements from IS productions, such as the sound of a beating heart and heavy breathing immediately before the execution, according to SITE.
In earlier video messages last year, Shekau sent greetings and praise to both al-Baghdadi and leaders of al-Qaida. But Boko Haram has never been an affiliate of al-Qaida, some analysts surmise because al-Qaida considers the Nigerians’ indiscriminate slaughter of Muslim civilians as un-Islamic.
FILED UNDER ABUBAKAR SHEKAU
 
I don't think this move by Boko Haram is anything more than symbolic. They may get more recruits in the short-term but I doubt if there's a solid alliance in terms of funding or weaponry. I doubt if ISIL would even want to give Boko Haram any of their cash or weapons.

Boko Haram are a bunch of opportunists, they pledged allegiance before to Al Shabaab and some other West African terrorist group.
 
I don't think this move by Boko Haram is anything more than symbolic. They may get more recruits in the short-term but I doubt if there's a solid alliance in terms of funding or weaponry. I doubt if ISIL would even want to give Boko Haram any of their cash or weapons.

Boko Haram are a bunch of opportunists, they pledged allegiance before to Al Shabaab and some other West African terrorist group.


More than an aqeedah issue too
Boko haram are deviants even before suicide bombing comes into it
 
ISIS has released a video showing a child killing a Palestinian man they accuse of being an Israeli spy.


Jerusalem (CNN)A newly released ISIS video shows a child shooting a man the group claims is an Israeli spy.

The video identifies the man as 19-year-old Mohamed Said Ismail Musallam, an Israeli citizen of Palestinian descent.

In the video, ISIS shows Musallam's Israeli passport and claims he's an agent sent to infiltrate the group. The 19-year-old's family told CNN Tuesday that he had no ties with the Mossad, Israel's spy agency, and had, in fact, been recruited by ISIS.

"Mohamed told me and his brother that ISIS took him," according to Said Musallam, his father. "They sent him money through the Western Union. They said you will have girls, money, cars, villas, paradise, but afterwords he discovered that there is nothing."

It wasn't long before Musallam's family members didn't recognize him when they talked to him on Skype. The man they knew as a kind and funny brother and son who was once a volunteer firefighter had grown a long beard and was carrying a rifle.

His father tried to help him get home, sending him money and even enlisting the Red Cross. But his son never made it back to Israel. About a month ago, Said Musallam said, he was told his son was taken by ISIS when he was on his way back and trying to cross the border.

A video posted Tuesday on ISIS-affiliated social media accounts shows a man who appears to be Musallam on his knees, wearing an orange jumpsuit.

An adult ISIS fighter and a child -- both in fatigues -- stand behind him.

The adult, speaking French, gives a command to the child to go forward with the killing. The child steps in front of the man and raises what appears to be a 9 mm semiautomatic handgun and shoots Musallam in the forehead. The man immediately falls forward to the ground. The child appears to then fire at least two more shots into the body.

'I used to take care of him'

Ahmad Musallam said he'd seen the video of his brother and was devastated by his death.

"I used to take care of him and babysit him when Mom went to work," he said, crying. "Mohamed is not a brother. He is a son."

But he refuses to show the video to his parents, who still can't believe their son is dead.

An issue last month of ISIS' English-language propaganda magazine, Dabiq, included a purported interview with Musallam and described his alleged work for the Israeli spy agency.

In the ISIS video, Musallam seems to be reading what appears to be a prepared confession, saying he is an Israeli intelligence agent working for Mossad, sent to infiltrate ISIS.

Musallam's family members said they believe he was coerced in the video, forced to lie about ties to Israeli intelligence.

"Mohamed is not an agent. Mohamed doesn't have a shekel. If he was an agent he would have lived a beautiful life," his mother, Hind Musallam, said. "We could have been living a different life and I would not be working cleaning houses so we can live."

ISIS propaganda features children

This isn't the first time ISIS has used children to drive home its message.

An ISIS propaganda video released in January -- one that CNN could not independently verify -- shows a boy with a pistol apparently shooting two men in the back of the head. The boy then stands over one of the bodies, fires two more times, and later raises his pistol high. Last August, a photo posted to Twitter from an ISIS stronghold showed a 7-year-old boy holding a man's severed head and his father's words, "That's my boy."

ISIS has featured children as fighters before, calling them the "cubs of the caliphate" (the adult jihadis call each other "lions") and has encouraged foreign fighters to bring their families.

It has taken over schools to indoctrinate children. Human Rights Watch says ISIS and other extremist groups "have specifically recruited children through free schooling campaigns that include weapons training and have given them dangerous tasks, including suicide bombing missions."

CNN's Stefan Simons, Cynde Strand, Ben Wedeman, Kevin Flower, Catherine E. Shoichet, Faith Karimi, Greg Botelho and Jessica King contributed to this report.

http://www.cnn.com/2015/03/10/middleeast/isis-video-israeli-killed/index.html
 
http://youtu.be/CiyyWiO-IKY

Extraordinary VICE documentary showing the war in Aleppo. This rebel group being filmed are fighting both ISIS and the Syrian regime. The city, once a fluorishing metropolis has been reduced to a ghost town. Watched for about 25 mins and had enough personally.

Its astonishing how lawless the place is, how pointless this war is as both sides clearly cannot win and yet the fighting continues. Why won't anyone take any initiative and end this conflict ? Why won't Assad just step down or at least accept that the 10% Alawite community cannot control 90% Sunni population ? Why won't these rebels understand they're not going to defeat such a powerful army like the Syrian army, backed by Russia, China and Iran ?

This is unbelievably disillusioning and how can we then say to people, the Islamophobes, that Islam is a religion of peace ? They'll point to footage like this and tell us that Islam is anything but peaceful. How can you counter that ? Every time Islam is mentioned - its these sniper rounds and AK47s that comes to mind and unfortunately not anything else.

I've never felt more distant to Islam like now because of these idiots who chant "Allahu Akbar" after every bomb they plant or every grenade they throw. I cannot relate to these people and feel ashamed that they share the same faith community. I don't want to be a part of such a community if they use religion as a pretext for their bloodlust. God isn't on your side and stop committing atrocities in the name of religion.

To say these people are Muslims is sickening and embarrassing.

I tell you what - let the war continue. Let it go on for another decade. Forget the peace plans and diplomacy. Let them wipe each other out.

At least we'll be shut of these barbaric animals and savages once and for all. Maybe then hopefully the civilians who want no part of these war can rebuild their country.
 
One highlight from that Vice film was a father and son, both claiming they are happy to die and become martyrs. Another was kids who looked very young actually lobbing grenades at Syrian positions.

What is in these peoples' heads ? They're happy to throw their lives away in pursuit of an unattainable military victory. This war is so utterly pointless a d they cannot see it.
 
It's an incredibly depressing situation. ISIS cannot be wiped out properly using air power alone because their fighters live and hide amongst innocent civilians. And the alternative is therefore ground troops which no one is willing to commit too. The Brits and the Americans could never sell that kind of plan to their people, the Iraqi army are impotent cowards and the Arab League would like others to get their hands messy, not themselves. The Iranian backed Shiite militia are doing a good job protecting territory in Iraq however at times they are behaving just like ISIS with no regard for human life whatsoever.

Even if Assad did step down now who would take his place and how would they regain control of the territory which has been lost to ISIS?

The only way to solve this properly is if the Iranians and the Sunni states work together, the Americans and the Russians work together or at least come to some kind of understanding, the Turks and Kurds work together and finally Assad needs to make a lot of concessions or ideally step down. The chances of all of the aforementioned taking place are very very slim.
 
One highlight from that Vice film was a father and son, both claiming they are happy to die and become martyrs. Another was kids who looked very young actually lobbing grenades at Syrian positions.

What is in these peoples' heads ? They're happy to throw their lives away in pursuit of an unattainable military victory. This war is so utterly pointless a d they cannot see it.

It's a real shame


Young Syrian kids have this dream of a utopian democracy and they are paying with their lives to try and get there
Their sacrifice sofar has been worthless
 
Keeping Iraq Unified Will Be Nearly Impossible
When his three-car convoy pulled up to a police checkpoint in Baghdad on Friday the 13th of February, Sheikh Qassem al-Janabi had little reason for concern. An influential Sunni moderate who was assisting the Iraqi government’s efforts to draw Sunni tribes away from the orbit of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, the charismatic Sheikh Janabi had many friends in high places.
He was in the capital, supposedly far away from any likely ISIS assassins. And he was a longtime friend of the United States, which in the past year had sent military forces back to Iraq to counter the ISIS terrorist group. Sheikh Janabi was riding with seven bodyguards and his son Mohamed, recently returned to Iraq from earning a law degree from the University of Glasgow. They were traveling from their tribal homeland south of Baghdad on the Muslim day of prayer.

The men at the police checkpoint were impostors and suspected Shiite militiamen, and they bundled up Janabi and his entourage at gunpoint, quickly driving them away. Their bodies were later found across town in the ramshackle Shiite slum of Sadr City. Janabi was slumped in the back of one of the cars, his hands tied behind his back with his own belt, a bullet in his head. The bodies of his son Mohamed and seven bodyguards lay nearby, all of them shot execution style. To reach Sadr City, the gunmen would likely have passed through several police checkpoints, raising questions of possible official collusion in the murders.

When the history of the second Iraq civil war is written, the death of Sheikh Qassem al-Janabi may prove notable for what it said about the rapidly closing window for national reconciliation, and for foreshadowing the ominous turn toward outright sectarianism that the fighting in Iraq has taken. Certainly the Sunni lawmakers who walked out of parliament in mass protest on learning of his murder understood his importance, both real and symbolic. Along with other moderate Sunni tribal leaders who first turned against al-Qaida in 2006-07 and took part in the “Anbar Awakening” during Iraq’s first civil war, Janabi rejected the terrorists’ vision of a purifying civil war between Sunnis and Shiites. Instead he continued to embrace the U.S. vision of a unified and democratic Iraq until the day of this death.

When U.S. officials and military forces returned to Iraq last year, helpfully nudging aside sectarian strongman and Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, the question they posed was whether enough Sunni leaders of goodwill could still be found to rekindle the dream of reconciliation and create another Anbar “miracle.” The ascendance of Iranian-backed Shiite militias and death squads, and the manner of Janabi’s death, suggest that such hopes are tenuous. In a well-documented massacre in the eastern province of Diyala just weeks before his death, for instance, more than 70 unarmed Sunni men were killed by Shiite militiamen, and there have been numerous accounts of smaller scale atrocities by roving Shiite death squads.

Even more ominously, Iranian-backed Shiite militias are leading the Iraqi offensive launched this week to retake the Sunni stronghold of Tikrit, former home of Saddam Hussein. Multiple credible reports indicate that Iranian Revolutionary Guard forces and Shiite Hezbollah fighters are actively supporting the offensive, which reportedly is overseen by infamous Iranian Quds Force Commander General Qassem Suleimani. There are also reports that Sunni civilians in Tikrit, terrified of revenge killings and a campaign of ethnic cleansing, are fleeing north to the ISIS-occupied city of Mosul. Shiite militia commanders have promised on state television to take revenge in Tikrit for ISIS’s massacre of Shiite soldiers captured at nearby Camp Speicher last June, when hundreds were executed in an atrocity videotaped and posted on YouTube.

Just as worrisome, U.S. officials remarkably insist that they were taken “by surprise” by a Tikrit offensive involving tens of thousands of Iraqi troops and irregulars. Not only were they apparently not consulted, but U.S. forces are not providing air power to the campaign. Nor are U.S. officials otherwise involved in the biggest Iraqi counteroffensive since ISIS captured roughly a third of the country last summer.

“Bottom line, Iranian-backed Shiite militias are doing most of the anti-ISIS fighting in the Tikrit campaign and elsewhere in Iraq, and that is terrifying to Sunni populations who have heard all these stories about ethnic cleansing, both real and exaggerated,” said Ken Pollack, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution’s Center for Middle East Policy, and formerly a CIA Middle East analyst. “The Obama administration seems to think that reconciliation is something that they can focus on later, or just leave to the Iraqis to sort out themselves, but they are flat-out wrong,” said Pollack, who recently returned from Iraq. “This is not a theoretical issue. If this trend continues, the United States really will become the air force for Iranian-backed Shiite militias and the Kurdish Peshmerga in a sectarian civil war.”
http://www.defenseone.com/threats/2015/03/keeping-iraq-unified-will-be-nearly-impossible/106914/?oref=d-channelriver
 
Sickening.



Suicide bombers have attacked two mosques in Yemen's capital, Sanaa, killing at least 77 people and wounding 121 others, medics say.

Worshippers were attending noon prayers at the Badr and al-Hashoosh mosques when at least three attackers struck.

The mosques are used mainly by supporters of the Zaidi Shia-led Houthi rebel movement, which controls Sanaa.

Islamic State (IS), which set up a branch in Yemen in November, said it was behind the attacks.

If confirmed, the attacks would be the first carried out by IS in Yemen.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-31983627

Tunisia rampage raises new fears about reach of Islamic State groups

TUNIS — The Islamic State said Thursday that two of its fighters had carried out the attack on a museum here that killed 20 foreign tourists, a rampage that raised fears of the jihadist group’s growing international footprint.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world...63f968-cdb6-11e4-8730-4f473416e759_story.html
 
10521088_10153134527875762_6468193919772101863_n.jpg

Lol Kurdish fighters are pretty hot...

No wonder men are flocking to ISIS...look at the spoils of war ;) ...
 
Palestinians liberated by ISIS!... but Palestinians fighting back.

Islamic State militants have seized most of a sprawling Palestinian refugee district in the southern part of the Syrian capital, Damascus, an area that has been under siege and bombardment for nearly two years already, according to Palestinian and United Nations officials and residents.

The officials called for quick action by international organizations, the Syrian government and all armed groups to head off an unfolding catastrophe. Reports of killings and even beheadings were beginning to circulate on Saturday, worsening what is already a longstanding humanitarian nightmare for the 18,000 residents of the Yarmouk refugee camp.

But as the Hamas-linked fighters clashed with ISIS and tried to keep it from establishing a foothold in the camp, members of the Nusra Front, a Qaeda affiliate that has a major presence there, did not help, several residents said. Some said that despite its rivalry with the Islamic State elsewhere, the Nusra Front actively prevented other insurgent groups from sending reinforcements from nearby suburbs, and that many of its members defected to ISIS.

Anwar Raja, a spokesman for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command, a pro-Assad group, said Nusra and the Islamic State were “all the same” and the latest fighting showed that recent talks to reach a settlement for the camp were “nonsense and promotion for terrorism".

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/05/w...s-palestinian-refugee-camp-in-syria.html?_r=0

[utube]NsanSjhr660[/utube]
 
Gotta feel for the Palestinians. Either live in Gaza where they are effectively ducks in a barrel or go to Syria and be attacked by ISIS.

Why arent these refugees being helped by any of their supposed Muslim friends though? If something like this was happening elsewhere I'd fully expect refugees to be given appropriate help
 
Gotta feel for the Palestinians. Either live in Gaza where they are effectively ducks in a barrel or go to Syria and be attacked by ISIS.

Why arent these refugees being helped by any of their supposed Muslim friends though? If something like this was happening elsewhere I'd fully expect refugees to be given appropriate help

There are Palestinian refugee camps in all bordering Arab countries, where these Palestinians are treated as second-class citizens, with no process in place to give them citizenship of the country they are camped in.

I personally would like to see my Pakistani Muslim brothers bring in 100K Palestinians and house them in Pakistan; basically put their money where their mouth is. Looking at how Afghan refugees are treated in Pakistan, I wouldnt be surprised if their Palestinian love affair goes the same way.
 
Gotta feel for the Palestinians. Either live in Gaza where they are effectively ducks in a barrel or go to Syria and be attacked by ISIS.

Why arent these refugees being helped by any of their supposed Muslim friends though? If something like this was happening elsewhere I'd fully expect refugees to be given appropriate help

You mean kind of how the Ottomans helped the Irish during the great famine

Tbf to Palestinians , they have opposed Assad and gone against Iran although both Iran and Syria were probably the most pro Hamas
 
Over a thousand Palestinians killed by ISIS

An Arab member of Israel’s Knesset condemned the global community, including the Arab world, for allowing the massacre by the Islamic State of Levant and Iraq in Syria’s Yarmouk Palestinian refugee camp.

“What’s happening in the Yarmouk camp is a crime against humanity,” Ahmed Tibi said. “Over a thousand Palestinians were killed.”

The Yarmouk camp near Damascus, was once home to over 100,000 residents, but now has some 18,000 according to the UN Relief and Works Agency.


http://www.worldtribune.com/2015/04...rlds-apathy-at-isil-massacre-in-refugee-camp/


As if anyone here cares, as long as its Muslim killing Muslims, nothing to get infuriated about, even if its our dear Palestinians. Expect no demos in London or Pakistan.

Its not even worth its own thread. :inti
 
Old news.. But still interesting.

http://www.globalresearch.ca/isis-l...y-israeli-mossad-nsa-documents-reveal/5391593

he former employee at US National Security Agency (NSA), Edward Snowden, has revealed that the British and American intelligence and the Mossad worked together to create the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS).

.




شانزے خان – ڈيجيٹل آؤٹ ريچ ٹيم – يو ايس اسٹيٹ ڈيپارٹمينٹ

کيا يہ درست نہيں ہے کہ اب سے کچھ عرصہ پہلے تک امريکی ناقدين عراقی حکومت کے حوالے سے جو اصطلاح سب سے زيادہ استعمال کرتے تھے وہ يہی تھی کہ يہ تو محض "امريکی کٹھ پتلی" حکومت ہے۔ اور اب جبکہ اسی حکومت کے خلاف برسر پيکار آئ ايس آئ ايس نامی تنظيم منظرعام پر ابھری ہے تو ايک بار پھر ہميں ہی اس "فتنے" کے ليے مورد الزام قرار ديا جا رہا ہے۔ اگر يہ راۓ دہندگان اپنی گزشتہ سوچ کو تہہ دل سے درست سمجھتے تھے اور اس بات پر قائل تھے کہ عراقی حکومت اور اس کے عہديدار محض ہماری کٹھ پتلياں ہيں تو پھر کس منطق کے تحت ہم اپنی مبينہ طور پر ماتحت حکومت کے خلاف آئ ايس آئ ايس کی مدد يا حمايت کريں گے؟


يقينی طور پر آپ يہ توقع نہيں کر سکتے کہ ہم ايک ايسے گروہ کے ليے اپنے وسائل وقف کريں گے جو خطے ميں ہماری ہی مبينہ حکومت کو ختم کرنے کے درپے ہے؟


يہ ايک ناقابل ترديد حقيقت ہے کہ البغدادی اور آئ ايس آئ ايس کی چھتری کے نيچے کام کرنے والے جرائم پيشہ افراد کا ٹولہ جن مختلف محرکات کی وجہ سے اکٹھے ہوۓ ہيں، ان ميں کوئ بھی امريکی يا مغربی مفادات کی طرف نہيں جاتا۔


ريکارڈ کی درستگی کے ليے يہ بھی واضح رہے کہ البغدادی کے جذباتيت سے مزين بيانات اور نۓ "فوجيوں" کی بھرتی کی غرض سے تيار کردہ پروپيگنڈہ ويڈيوز ميں اہم ترين عنصر امريکہ اور خطے ميں ہمارے شراکت داروں کے خلاف زہر افشانی ہی ہوتا ہے۔ بلکہ جنوری ميں آئ ايس آئ ايس کے جنگجوؤں سے اپنے خطاب ميں البغدادی نے ان الفاظ کے ساتھ امريکہ کو دھمکی دی تھی۔


"بہت جلد ہم براہراست آپ کے ساتھ محاذ آرائ کا حصہ ہوں گے۔ ہمارا انتظار کريں کيونکہ ہم آپ پر نگاہ رکھے ہوئے ہيں"۔


علاوہ ازيں سال 2011 ميں ايبٹ آباد کے کامياب آپريشن کے بعد البغدادی اور اس کے گروہ نے اپنی ويب سائٹ پر اس عزم کا اظہار کيا تھا کہ اسامہ بن لادن کی موت کا بدلہ لينے کے ليے عراق کے طول وعرض ميں سو سے زيادہ حملے کيے جائيں گے۔


يقينی طور پر آپ امريکی حکومت سے يہ توقع نہيں کر سکتے کہ ہم ايک ايسے فرد کو کسی بھی قسم کی مدد فراہم کريں گے جو نا صرف يہ کہ ايک مسلح گروہ تيار کر رہا ہے بلکہ جو عوامی سطح پر ہمارے شہريوں اور مفادات پر حملوں کا ارادہ بھی ظاہر کر چکا ہے۔


ريکارڈ کی درستگی کے ليے يہ واضح رہے کہ امريکی وزارت خارجہ نے اکتوبر 4 2011 کو البغدادی کو ايک عالمی دہشت گرد قرار ديتے ہوۓ اس کی گرفتاری اور موت کے ضمن ميں معلومات کی فراہمی کی صورت ميں 10 ملين ڈالرز کی انعامی رقم کا بھی اعلان کيا تھا جس کی اہميت کا اندازہ اس بات سے لگايا جا سکتا ہے کہ بين الا اقوامی دہشت گرد تنظيم القائدہ کے ليڈر ايمن الزھواری پر مقرر کردہ 25 ملين ڈالرز کی انعامی رقم کے بعد يہ سب سے بڑا انعام ہے۔


شانزے خان – ڈيجيٹل آؤٹ ريچ ٹيم – يو ايس اسٹيٹ ڈيپارٹمينٹ

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Read this one recently. Worth sharing and very true!

Yesterday an ISIS member stopped the car of a christian couple, and asked them if they are Muslim or not?

The Christian man: I'm Muslim

ISIS member: If you are a Muslim then recite a verse of Quran
Christian man recited a verse from Bible

ISIS member: Yeah! that was right, you are allowed to go.

"Why did you take such a big risk! why did you tell him that we are Muslims? if he knew you were lying he would have killed both of us" asked the wife when they got further.

"Do not worry! if they knew Quran they would not kill innocents" Answered the Husband.

‪#‎ISIS‬ is not Islam, terrorism has no religion
 
Self proclaimed caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi has been incapacitated.

Wounded Al Baghdadi may have to give up control of Daesh

Physics professor and longtime senior Daesh official has taken operational control of the terror group


Cairo: The leader of Daesh, Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi, has been so badly wounded by a US air strike in Iraq that he may never resume control of the group he masterminded to power.

According to reports, Al Baghdadi has been incapacitated since March 18 due to spinal damage, suffered when an air strike hit a three-car convoy in which he was travelling through the Al Baaj district of Nineveh, close to the Syrian border.

The enigmatic leader is being treated by two ideologically sympathetic doctors who travel to his hideout from the group’s stronghold in the Iraqi city of Mosul.

His location remains a closely guarded secret. Al Baghdadi’s wounds were said to be life-threatening initially, prompting urgent meetings among the leadership in order to name his successor.

Operational control of Daesh has reportedly been passed to Abu Ala’a Al Afri, a physics professor and longtime senior official, who had been appointed deputy leader when his predecessor was killed by another air strike late last year.

Also known as Haji Iman, Al Afri taught in the northwestern Iraqi city of Tal Afar, and has reportedly built solid respect among Daesh’s senior leadership. Al Afri is thought to have acted as the link between Al Baghdadi, his inner circle, and Daesh’s network of emirs across their self-proclaimed caliphate, spanning large swathes of Iraq and Syria.

Hesham Al Hashimi, senior adviser on Daesh to the Iraqi government described Al Afri as the “strongest man in [Daesh] after Al Baghdadi”.

“The injury of Baghdadi hasn’t affected operations yet, but [his replacement] could see the beginning of disputes between Daesh’s foreign fighters and its Iraqis,” Al Hashimi said.

Al Baghdadi has been a towering figure in the rise of Daesh, and its Al Qaida affiliated predecessor. “Their big strategic moves have all been masterminded by Al Baghdadi, even if others have helped with the specifics,” said Aymenn Jawad Al Tamimi, a Fellow at the Middle East Forum.

Al Afri is understood to be more open to the prospect of reconciliation between Daesh and Al Nusra Front, a rival Al Qaida affiliated group in Syria which has led rebel forces to impressive gains in recent months.

The last known communique bearing Al Baghdadi’s name came last week, calling on terrorists to send reinforcements to the Iraqi provinces of Al Anbar and Salah Al Deen.

http://gulfnews.com/news/mena/iraq/...ay-have-to-give-up-control-of-daesh-1.1503097
 
Islamic State continue to gain territory in both Iraq and Syria.

Islamic State tightens grip on a key Iraqi city a day after assault

BAGHDAD — Islamic State militants tightened their grip on Ramadi on Saturday as officials, police and residents accused the Sunni extremists of executing dozens of civilians and blowing up homes in the capital of Iraq’s largest province.

On Thursday, the insurgent group launched a brutal offensive involving car bombings and heavy shelling to seize Ramadi about 80 miles west of Baghdad. The militants controlled most of the city by Friday afternoon, hoisting the group’s black flag over government buildings as pro-government forces retreated.

“They blew up the houses of the officers and [tribal] sheikhs who fought them,” said Col. Hamid Shandoukh, speaking by telephone from the Malaab area of Ramadi.

The attack is a significant setback to Iraq’s U.S.-backed government, which is waging a military campaign to retake territory that the Islamic State seized in sweeping advances last summer. The United States has assumed a prominent role in that effort, leading an international coalition that is conducting airstrikes against the extremist group in Iraq, as well as Syria.

Dozens of residents across Ramadi have been executed by the Islamic State fighters, including women and children, according to residents and pro-government forces. “We don’t have precise figures, but we can say that dozens of them were shot by Daesh,” Shandoukh said, using the Arabic term for the group.

Police, counterterrorism forces and tribal fighters have retreated to Malaab and a nearby military command hub, where hundreds of them are surrounded by Islamic State fighters. Police and local officials say that supply lines to the facility have been cut, and those on the inside are in desperate need of food as well as military reinforcements to defend against shelling and car bombings.

“We are calling on the government to provide food as well as military reinforcements to these areas that are besieged by Daesh,” said Suleiman Kubaysi, head of media relations for Anbar’s provincial council. He spoke by telephone from Baghdad.

Ramadi, capital of the largely Sunni-Muslim Anbar province, has long been a stronghold of opposition to the Islamic State and its al-Qaeda precursor. A little less than a decade ago, the city’s residents were at the forefront of a U.S.-backed revolt by Sunni tribesmen against al-Qaeda.

Ramadi’s apparent fall is a major blow to U.S.-supported efforts by the government of Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi to form another Sunni force against the Islamic State, said Hassan Hassan, an Abu Dhabi-based Middle East analyst and co-author of “ISIS: Inside the Army of Terror.” ISIS and ISIL are acronyms for the Islamic State.

“This is a heavy blow to the idea of getting Iraq’s Sunnis to rise up to fight ISIS,” he said, adding that Ramadi is “vital” for such an effort. Despite capturing most of Anbar last summer, the Islamic State had been unable to conquer Ramadi despite repeated attempts that included an attack last month. In that assault, militants gained control of northern areas of the city.

Now, with its capture of most of the city, the Islamic State has received a major morale boost after loosing significant territory recently to Iraqi forces, including the city of Tikrit, Hassan said. “This is important for ISIS in terms of bouncing back and reclaiming momentum,” he said.

During a telephone call Friday that highlights concern in Washington over the Ramadi attacks, Vice President Biden promised Abadi deliveries of heavy weapons, the White House said.

During a television interview Saturday morning, an Iraqi military spokesmen, Brig. Gen. Saad Maan, said that troop reinforcements had been sent to city. “Painful” airstrikes from the U.S.-managed coalition also inflicted damage on the Islamic State, he said, without giving details of the military support.

Kubaysi, the provincial councilmen, said that a convoy of several dozen military vehicles, carrying soldiers and counterterrorism forces, arrived from Baghdad to the Malaab area on Saturday afternoon. But the additional troops have not engaged in fighting, he said.

“They are waiting for more reinforcements to arrive from Baghdad before they fight,” he said.

Falih al-Eissawi, deputy head of Anbar’s provincial council, said several members of Iraq’s SWAT team arrived Friday night but that the city is still waiting for special forces units to join the fight. Coalition airstrikes also were targeting militants in the city, he said. He added that officials put the preliminary death toll during recent fighting in Ramadi at over 500 people, including police, soldiers and civilians.

Unconfirmed video posted on social media by the Islamic State shows the group’s fighters capturing the main hospital in downtown Ramadi. In photographs posted online, the group also claims to have seized rocket-propelled grenades, boxes of ammunition and vehicles from police and military installations in the city. The group also posted pictures of what it says are executions in the city.

Col. Eissa al-Alwani of the Ramadi police said that the pro-government forces besieged in the city’s military operations compound were quickly running out of ammunition. The Islamic State is targeting the facility, where three of his brothers are trapped, with heavy shelling and car bombs, he said.

In other parts of the city, he said, Islamic State “sleeper cells” have begun informing the group’s fighters of residents who joined the police and military. Those who were identified as government collaborators, including families, are being executed and their homes are being blown up, Alwani said.

“Yesterday, they killed 20 of my cousins, and they blew up my house in Albu Alwan,” he said by telephone, speaking from Ramadi’s Malaab area.

He added: “There will be a massacre if there is no to help.”

In the battle for Tikrit, about 120 miles north of Baghdad, pro-Iranian Shiite militias proved decisive in overwhelming Islamic State forces.

But those militias have not participated in the fight in Anbar, in part over fear of stoking sectarian tensions with the area’s largely Sunni residents. The Islamic State took control of most of Anbar by capitalizing on Sunni grievances with the Shiite-dominated authority in Baghdad.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world...944498-fb33-11e4-a47c-e56f4db884ed_story.html
 
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ISIL advances on Syria's ancient city of Palmyra

Fighters belonging to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) have advanced on Syria's ancient city of Palmyra, one of the Middle East's most famous UNESCO heritage sites, with fierce clashes taking place close to the city's historic citadel.

Photos circulating on social media sites on Saturday appeared to show intense clashes near the 13th century citadel of Fakhr-al-Din al-Ma'ani as ISIL fighters engaged the Syrian military.

Talal Barazi, the governor of central Homs province, where the city is located, said on Friday that the "army has sent reinforcements and it is bombing the [ISIL] positions from the air".

Palmyra, a 2,000-year-old desert oasis, is believed to be home to some 100,000 people, including displaced Syrians who fled there after their home towns were engulfed in violence.

The city is also home to the notorious Tadmor prison, where extensive human rights abuses, torture and summary executions have taken place.

Irina Bokova, the head of the UN's cultural body UNESCO, called on Syrian troops and ISIL to spare the city, saying it "represents an irreplaceable treasure for the Syrian people and the world".

"Palmyra must be saved," Bokova said at a two-day conference in Cairo on protecting the region's archaeological sites.

Bokova said it was important to work "against extremism, against this strategy of eradicating ... our collective memory."

Nicknamed "the pearl of the desert", UNESCO has described Palmyra a heritage site of "outstanding universal value".

The historical city stood on a caravan route at the crossroads of several civilisations, and its first and second century temples and colonnaded streets house a series of old and beautifully decorated tombs.

However the ancient city, which has previously been a frontline in the four-year-long Syrian conflict, has already been deeply affected by the conflict.

One of its masterpieces, the Temple of Baal, was damaged by artillery exchanges prompting UNESCO to include it in a list of World Heritage sites in danger.

Related: The blood antiquities funding ISIL

ISIL, which controls large swaths of territory, has ransacked and demolished several ancient sites, including Muslim shrines, in order to eliminate what it views as heresy, whilst selling artefacts on the black market in order to finance its campaign.

At least 73 soldiers, in addition to 26 civilians, have been killed since the group began its offensive on Tuesday.

Rami Abdel Rahman, the head of the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights which monitors the conflict through a network of local activists, said the families of government officials were among those killed in the village of Amiriyeh, just north of Palmyra.

The Syrian conflict, which began as a peaceful uprising against Assad's rule more than three years ago, has become a bloody and protracted sectarian war killing more than 200,000 people.


http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2015/...med-castle-syria-palmyra-150516052303945.html
 
The Iraqi army showing their bravery once again.

Iraq’s Ramadi falls to ISIS after army deserts city

The western Iraqi city of Ramadi on Sunday fell to the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), after the militants relentlessly bombarded the capital of the Anbar province with suicide bombers, Al Arabiya News Channel reported.

Ramadi fell after the Iraqi army deserted the city, the channel added, in a withdrawal echoing the military’s shock departure from Iraq’s second largest city of Mosul in June last year.

ISIS also claimed to hold the entire city but Iraqi officials disagreed with each other over whether Ramadi had fallen.


http://english.alarabiya.net/en/New...di-falls-to-ISIS-after-army-leaves-city-.html
 
How can 400 odd ISIS jihadists overrun such a strategically important city ?

Apparently Shia militias are now going to enter the city to fight them.
 
The Americans are going to continue to supply air support.

The Shia militia groups Asaib ahl al-Haq and the Jeish al-Mehdi were two of the US military’s most formidable foes from 2006-11, accounting for more than 25% of its casualties and here we are in 2015 as the Americans are set to assist them in retaking Ramadi !
 
ISIS now control almost half of Syria. It's astonishing how such a small group can take over and control such a large area.

Islamic State seizes Syria's ancient Palmyra

Islamic State (IS) militants in Syria have entered the Unesco World Heritage site of Palmyra after seizing the town next to the ancient ruins, reports say.

Unesco says its destruction would be "an enormous loss to humanity", but no damage has been reported there yet.

IS now controls the nearby airport, prison and intelligence HQ, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says.

The militants have previously demolished ancient sites in Iraq that pre-date Islam.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-32820857
 
I was reading an article on BBC where it mentioned that ISIS is being backed by x generals and members from saddam's regime. That's why they are becoming stronger day by day.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Yes it's starting to look that way. Yet another result of the giant cock up by Bush, Blair, Cheney, Rumsfeld and co.

The hidden hand behind the Islamic State militants? Saddam Hussein’s.

SANLIURFA, Turkey — When Abu Hamza, a former Syrian rebel, agreed to join the Islamic State, he did so assuming he would become a part of the group’s promised Islamist utopia, which has lured foreign jihadists from around the globe.

Instead, he found himself being supervised by an Iraqi emir and receiving orders from shadowy Iraqis who moved in and out of the battlefield in Syria. When Abu Hamza disagreed with fellow commanders at an Islamic State meeting last year, he said, he was placed under arrest on the orders of a masked Iraqi man who had sat silently through the proceedings, listening and taking notes.

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

His account, and those of others who have lived with or fought against the Islamic State over the past two years, underscore the pervasive role played by members of Iraq’s former Baathist army in an organization more typically associated with flamboyant foreign jihadists and the gruesome videos in which they star.

Even with the influx of thousands of foreign fighters, almost all of the leaders of the Islamic State are former Iraqi officers, including the members of its shadowy military and security committees, and the majority of its emirs and princes, according to Iraqis, Syrians and analysts who study the group.

They have brought to the organization the military expertise and some of the agendas of the former Baathists, as well as the smuggling networks developed to avoid sanctions in the 1990s and which now facilitate the Islamic State’s illicit oil trading.

In Syria, local “emirs” are typically shadowed by a deputy who is Iraqi and makes the real decisions, said Abu Hamza, who fled to Turkey last summer after growing disillusioned with the group. He uses a pseudonym because he fears for his safety.

“All the decision makers are Iraqi, and most of them are former Iraqi officers. The Iraqi officers are in command, and they make the tactics and the battle plans,” he said. “But the Iraqis themselves don’t fight. They put the foreign fighters on the front lines.”

[The Islamic State is failing at being a state]

The public profile of the foreign jihadists frequently obscures the Islamic State’s roots in the bloody recent history of Iraq, its brutal excesses as much a symptom as a cause of the country’s woes.

The raw cruelty of Hussein’s Baathist regime, the disbandment of the Iraqi army after the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, the subsequent insurgency and the marginalization of Sunni Iraqis by the Shiite-dominated government all are intertwined with the Islamic State’s ascent, said Hassan Hassan, a Dubai-based analyst and co-author of the book “ISIS: Inside the Army of Terror.”

“A lot of people think of the Islamic State as a terrorist group, and it’s not useful,” Hassan said. “It is a terrorist group, but it is more than that. It is a homegrown Iraqi insurgency, and it is organic to Iraq.”

The de-Baathification law promulgated by L.* Paul Bremer, Iraq’s American ruler in 2003, has long been identified as one of the contributors to the original insurgency. At a stroke, 400,000 members of the defeated Iraqi army were barred from government employment, denied pensions — and also allowed to keep their guns.

The U.S. military failed in the early years to recognize the role the disbanded Baathist officers would eventually come to play in the extremist group, eclipsing the foreign fighters whom American officials preferred to blame, said Col. Joel Rayburn, a senior fellow at the National Defense University who served as an adviser to top generals in Iraq and describes the links between Baathists and the Islamic State in his book, “Iraq After America.”

The U.S. military always knew that the former Baathist officers had joined other insurgent groups and were giving tactical support to the Al Qaeda in Iraq affiliate, the precursor to the Islamic State, he said. But American officials didn’t anticipate that they would become not only adjuncts to al-Qaeda, but core members of the jihadist group.

[Islamic State appears to be fraying from within]

“We might have been able to come up with ways to head off the fusion, the completion of the Iraqization process,” he said. The former officers were probably not reconcilable, “but it was the labeling of them as irrelevant that was the mistake.”

Under the leadership of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the Islamic State’s self-proclaimed caliph, the former officers became more than relevant. They were instrumental in the group’s rebirth from the defeats inflicted on insurgents by the U.S. military, which is now back in Iraq bombing many of the same men it had already fought twice before.

At first glance, the secularist dogma of Hussein’s tyrannical Baath Party seems at odds with the Islamic State’s harsh interpretation of the Islamic laws it purports to uphold.

But the two creeds broadly overlap in several regards, especially their reliance on fear to secure the submission of the people under the group’s rule. Two decades ago, the elaborate and cruel forms of torture perpetrated by Hussein dominated the discourse about Iraq, much as the Islamic State’s harsh punishments do today.

Like the Islamic State, Hussein’s Baath Party also regarded itself as a transnational movement, forming branches in countries across the Middle East and running training camps for foreign volunteers from across the Arab world.

By the time U.S. troops invaded in 2003, Hussein had begun to tilt toward a more religious approach to governance, making the transition from Baathist to Islamist ideology less improbable for some of the disenfranchised Iraqi officers, said Ahmed S. Hashim, a professor who is researching the ties at Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University.

With the launch of the Iraqi dictator’s Faith Campaign in 1994, strict Islamic precepts were introduced. The words “God is Great” were inscribed on the Iraqi flag. Amputations were decreed for theft. Former Baathist officers recall friends who suddenly stopped drinking, started praying and embraced the deeply conservative form of Islam known as Salafism in the years preceding the U.S. invasion.

In the last two years of Hussein’s rule, a campaign of beheadings, mainly targeting women suspected of prostitution and carried out by his elite Fedayeen unit, killed more than 200 people, human rights groups reported at the time.

The brutality deployed by the Islamic State today recalls the bloodthirstiness of some of those Fedayeen, said Hassan. Promotional videos from the Hussein era include scenes resembling those broadcast today by the Islamic State, showing the Fedayeen training, marching in black masks, practicing the art of decapitation and in one instance eating a live dog.

Some of those Baathists became early recruits to the al-Qaeda affiliate established by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Palestinian Jordanian fighter who is regarded as the progenitor of the current Islamic State, said Hisham al Hashemi, an Iraqi analyst who advises the Iraqi government and has relatives who served in the Iraqi military under Hussein. Other Iraqis were radicalized at Camp Bucca, the American prison in southern Iraq where thousands of ordinary citizens were detained and intermingled with jihadists.

Zarqawi kept the former Baathists at a distance, because he distrusted their secular outlook, according to Hashim, the professor.

It was under the watch of the current Islamic State leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, that the recruitment of former Baathist officers became a deliberate strategy, according to analysts and former officers.

Tasked with rebuilding the greatly weakened insurgent organization after 2010, Baghdadi embarked on an aggressive campaign to woo the former officers, drawing on the vast pool of men who had either remained unemployed or had joined other, less extremist insurgent groups.

Some of them had fought against al-Qaeda after changing sides and aligning with the American-backed Awakening movement during the surge of troops in 2007. When U.S. troops withdrew and the Iraqi government abandoned the Awakening fighters, the Islamic State was the only surviving option for those who felt betrayed and wanted to change sides again, said Brian Fishman, who researched the group in Iraq for West Point’s Combating Terrorism Center and is now a fellow with the New America Foundation.

Baghdadi’s effort was further aided by a new round of de-Baathification launched after U.S. troops left in 2011 by then Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who set about firing even those officers who had been rehabilitated by the U.S. military.

Among them was Brig. Gen. Hassan Dulaimi, a former intelligence officer in the old Iraqi army who was recruited back into service by U.S. troops in 2006, as a police commander in Ramadi, the capital of the long restive province of Anbar.

Within months of the American departure, he was dismissed, he said, losing his salary and his pension, along with 124 other officers who had served alongside the Americans.

“The crisis of ISIS didn’t happen by chance,” Dulaimi said in an interview in Baghdad, using an acronym for the Islamic State. “It was the result of an accumulation of problems created by the Americans and the [Iraqi] government.”

He cited the case of a close friend, a former intelligence officer in Baghdad who was fired in 2003 and struggled for many years to make a living. He now serves as the Islamic State’s wali, or leader, in the Anbar town of Hit, Dulaimi said.

“I last saw him in 2009. He complained that he was very poor. He is an old friend, so I gave him some money,” he recalled. “He was fixable. If someone had given him a job and a salary, he wouldn’t have joined the Islamic State.

“There are hundreds, thousands like him,” he added. “The people in charge of military operations in the Islamic State were the best officers in the former Iraqi army, and that is why the Islamic State beats us in intelligence and on the battlefield.”

The Islamic State’s seizure of territory was also smoothed by the Maliki government’s broader persecution of the Sunni minority, which intensified after U.S. troops withdrew and left many ordinary Sunnis willing to welcome the extremists as an alternative to the often brutal Iraqi security forces.

But it was the influx of Baathist officers into the ranks of the Islamic State itself that propelled its fresh military victories, said Hashem. By 2013, Baghdadi had surrounded himself with former officers, who oversaw the Islamic State’s expansion in Syria and drove the offensives in Iraq.

[The Islamic State’s war against history]

Some of Baghdadi’s closest aides, including Abu Muslim al-Turkmani, his deputy in Iraq, and Abu Ayman al-Iraqi, one of his top military commanders in Syria, both of them former Iraqi officers, have since reportedly been killed — though Dulaimi suspects that many feign their own deaths in order to evade detection, making its current leadership difficult to discern.

Any gaps however are filled by former officers, sustaining the Iraqi influence at the group’s core, even as its ranks are swelled by arriving foreigners, said Hassan.

Fearing infiltration and spies, the leadership insulates itself from the foreign fighters and the regular Syrian and Iraqi fighters through elaborate networks of intermediaries frequently drawn from the old Iraqi intelligence agencies, he said.

“They introduced the Baathist mind-set of secrecy as well as its skills,” he said.

The masked man who ordered the detention of Abu Hamza was one of a group of feared security officers who circulate within the Islamic State, monitoring its members for signs of dissent, the Syrian recalled.

“They are the eyes and ears of Daesh’s security, and they are very powerful,” he said, using an Arabic acronym for the Islamic State.

Abu Hamza was released from jail after agreeing to fall into line with the other commanders, he said. But the experience contributed to his disillusionment with the group.

The foreign fighters he served alongside were “good Muslims,” he said. But he is less sure about the Iraqi leaders.

“They pray and they fast and you can’t be an emir without praying, but inside I don’t think they believe it much,” he said. “The Baathists are using Daesh. They don’t care about Baathism or even Saddam.

“They just want power. They are used to being in power, and they want it back.”
‘They want to run Iraq’

Whether the former Baathists adhere to the Islamic State’s ideology is a matter of debate. Hashim suspects many of them do not.

“One could still argue that it’s a tactical alliance,” he said. “A lot of these Baathists are not interested in ISIS running Iraq. They want to run Iraq. A lot of them view the jihadists with this Leninist mind-set that they’re useful idiots who we can use to rise to power.”

Rayburn questions whether even some of the foreign volunteers realize the extent to which they are being drawn into Iraq’s morass. Some of the fiercest battles being waged today in Iraq are for control of communities and neighborhoods that have been hotly contested among Iraqis for years, before the extremists appeared.

“You have fighters coming from across the globe to fight these local political battles that the global jihad can’t possibly have a stake in.”

The Islamic State was dumped by al-Qaeda a year ago. Now look at it.

Former Baathist officers who served alongside some of those now fighting with the Islamic State believe it is the other way around. Rather than the Baathists using the jihadists to return to power, it is the jihadists who have exploited the desperation of the disbanded officers, according to a former general who commanded Iraqi troops during the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990 and the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003. He spoke on the condition of anonymity because he fears for his safety in Irbil, the capital of the northern Iraqi region of Kurdistan, where he now resides.

The ex-Baathists could be lured away, if they were offered alternatives and hope for the future, he said.

“The Americans bear the biggest responsibility. When they dismantled the army what did they expect those men to do?” he asked. “They were out in the cold with nothing to do and there was only one way out for them to put food on the table.”

When U.S. officials demobilized the Baathist army, “they didn’t de-Baathify people’s minds, they just took away their jobs,” he said.

There are former Baathists with other insurgent groups who might be persuaded to switch sides, said Hassan, citing the example of the Army of the Men of the Naqshbandi Order, usually referred to by its Arabic acronym JRTN. They welcomed the Islamic State during its sweep through northern Iraq last summer, but the groups have since fallen out.

But most of the Baathists who actually joined the Islamic State are now likely to have themselves become radicalized, either in prison or on the battlefield, he said.

“Even if you didn’t walk in with that vision you might walk out with it, after five years of hard fighting,” said Fishman, of the New America Foundation. “They have been through brutal things that are going to shape their vision in a really dramatic way.”

Correction: An earlier version of this story misstated the name of Ahmed S. Hashim, a professor at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. This version is correct.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/world...97676c-cc32-11e4-8730-4f473416e759_story.html
 
Isis burns woman alive for refusing to engage in 'extreme' sex act, UN says


"After attacking a village, [the Islamic State] splits women from men and executes boys and men aged 14 and over. The women and mothers are separated; girls are stripped naked, tested for virginity and examined for breast size and prettiness. The youngest, and those considered the prettiest virgins fetch higher prices and are sent to Raqqa, the IS stronghold.

There is a hierarchy: sheikhs get first choice, then emirs, then fighters. They often take three or four girls each and keep them for a month or so, until they grow tired of a girl, when she goes back to market. At slave auctions, buyers haggle fiercely, driving down prices by disparaging girls as flat-chested or unattractive.

We heard about one girl who was traded 22 times, and another, who had escaped, told us that the sheikh who had captured her wrote his name on the back of her hand to show that she was his 'property'."

the death of islam
 
the death of humanity - but hey, why hold these barbarians accountable when we can blame the Jews and America... It all comes back to them. These folk have no free will or conscious control.
 
I thought I would share this

Below is an e-mail from 4 December 2011 from a well meaning questioner named Ryan. It was on the question of salvation and the basis of what Muslims understand salvation to be and the only way one might be safe from Eternal Judgement. I hope that all readers find benefit in the answer:

I wanted to know what Muslims have to be sure that they are saved when they do not subscribe to the doctrine of original sin or a high priest as we have in our Lord Jesus Christ. I don’t want polemics but rather just a simple exposition of your faith. Thank you

Ryan

________________________________

Dear Ryan,

Thank you for typing your message to HTS Publications after taking a look at our downloads. The website is specifically designed to cater to the needs of those who are trapped in either cults or false religions. Those of us who have worked on the site seek to follow the way of the Orthodox believers by preaching the faith with frankness and a generous heart.

We noticed that the faith of salvation had been hijacked and at times misrepresented by either schismatic sheep or well meaning Orthodox believers who were ill-equipped to deal with the matters that were challenging them. This in turn led to more confusion, so we decided to try to call back to the way of the Orthodox Fathers.

SALVATION

The first matter that every believer must understand is the matter of salvation. Salvation comes from the Arabic word Najah, which means, ‘unearned, unmerited salvation from the Eternal Fire and safety and admittance into the Paradise,’ which is indeed by the Mercy of Allah.

The Lord has mentioned salvation when he said,

“My people! What is the matter that I call you to salvation and you call me to the Fire. You call me to disbelieve in and to associate partners with Him that I have no knowledge of at all. I however invite you to the Almighty, the All-Forgiving.” [1]

The Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him, stated,

“No one of you will be saved by his deeds, but by the Mercy of Allah.” [2]

Thus we understand that we are not simply barging into the Paradise, but that we are admitted by the Mercy of Allah from His Salvation. This matter is very important and has to be stressed. Why is it that we are not able to enter the Paradise by our deeds? It is simply due to the fact that our deeds are 1) not good enough and 2) are not even valid unless one is saved.

The Lord has said about the ineffectiveness of deeds such as sacrifices of meat and offerings for salvation,

Say, ‘It is neither their meat nor their blood that reaches Allah, but it is the piety from you that reaches Him.[3]

Our Lord has spoken about the ineffectiveness of deeds through other people for salvation,


No one may bear the burden of another, but the human being only has what he has put forth.[4]

Our Lord has spoken about the ineffectiveness of working good deeds and being a good person,

Those who do not believe, their deeds are like a mirage in a sandy desert. Those taking part in it think they will find refreshment and water, until when they come to it, they find nothing but Allah waiting to give them their account – and Allah is swift in taking account.[5]


None of these ways is sufficient to be saved in the sight of our Lord. It is only through His Word and Testimony of salvation that one might be saved,

Know that there is no god but Allah, then ask forgiveness for your sin.[6]

We find here that the Lord has said first to bear witness to the testimony of faith La ilaha illallah, there is no god but Him. But there is a second part of the sentence, which is,

Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah.[7]

Thus the sentence, ‘There is no god but Allah and Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah’ is the testimony of salvation. There is no salvation under any other way or testimony. Someone once asked the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him, after the death of his uncle, “What is salvation?” He answered, “Salvation is to believe in the word that my uncle had rejected today.” [8]

This lofty belief must be stated with conviction and its’ implications understood by the one seeking the relationship with the Lord.

What are some of the outcomes of believing in the testimony of faith in the life of a believer? They are the following,

A direct relationship with the Lord Everlasting

Our Lord has said,

When My slaves ask you about Me, indeed I am Near.[9]

He has also said further,

Indeed He is the All Hearing, the Near.[10]

Being given the promise of seeing the Most Merciful in the Hereafter.

Allah, the Almighty, has said the following,

Faces that day will be radiant, looking at their Lord.[11]

This promise is made some 11 or more times in the Word of Allah (the Qur’an) as well as the Sunnah of His Messenger Muhammad, peace and blessings of Allah be upon him.

Salvation from eternal judgement and admittance into the Paradise

You who believe! fear Allah as is His Right to be feared and do not die except as Muslims. Hold fast to the rope of Allah and do not become divided. Remember the favour of Allah upon you when you were enemies and then by His Favour he put love between your hearts and made you brothers. You were on the very edge of the pit of the Fire and He gave you salvation from it.[12]

Forgiveness of sins along with continuous cleansing of sins with righteous deeds committed thereafter

Allah will exalt those among you who believe who have knowledge in ranks. Allah knows everything you do.[13]

This is also further stated by Allah when He proclaims,

Righteous deeds wipe out evil deeds.[14]

Further, as a believer, you will want to obey Allah and do things pleasing to Him. Believers do good deeds because Allah saved them, not to become saved. Your obedience shows that you are in a committed relationship,

Say, “If you love Allah, then follow me. Allah will love you and forgive your sins. Allah is Forgiving, Merciful.” Say, “Obey Allah and Obey the Messenger. Allah does not love the unbelievers.”[15]

Thank you again for contacting me and may the Lord richly bless you with sound faith and salvation.

Al-Hajj Abu Ja`far Al-Hanbali

Src:https://jurjis.wordpress.com/2015/05/23/throwback-e-mails/
 
the death of humanity - but hey, why hold these barbarians accountable when we can blame the Jews and America... It all comes back to them. These folk have no free will or conscious control.

Why don't you go fight them if your feelings are so hurt? Yeah this whole mess in Iraq and Syria has nothing to do with America and Israel. It does sound stupid when people blame India or America for the problems in Pakistan but save the BS in Iraq and Syria for yourself. Go to some Arab forum and tell them to hold these guys accountable.
 
ISIS destroyed famous lion god statue in captured Syrian city of Palmyra. These barbarians have destroyed so many priceless structures along the same line as the prophet did in Mecca.

source
 
So the Frankenstein monster of Saudi Arabia is now active on it's soil and turning on it's creator? I wonder if the Saudis even care - to them Shiite lives are probably expendable.
 
Here is a deash leader leading his army.:))) They march so openly, I wonder why obama doesn't drone them when they are out in open.
 
Islamic State militants 'filmed torturing 14 year old Syrian boy'

Have a read of this - utterly shocking stuff. Where are the protests ? Why aren't there people lining the streets against these barbarians who are dragging Islam back to the stone age ? You'll see millions marching for Gaza or Kashmir but when its Muslims who are oppressing other Muslims there's nothing but silence and a few cliched lines about this being the actions of a minority.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-32957619

A graphic mobile phone video obtained by the BBC appears to show militants from Islamic State (IS) torturing a 14-year-old Syrian boy. The footage, filmed by a defector from the jihadist group, shows the boy being beaten while he hangs by his wrists.

The UN has accused IS and other armed groups in Syria and Iraq of torturing and killing children. Children have also been recruited, trained and used on the battlefield.

Another teenager told the BBC how he fought and killed for the al-Qaeda-linked al-Nusra Front at the age of just 15, and that when he switched to IS he found 13-year-olds being indoctrinated.

The mobile phone footage shows Ahmed hanging a foot or so off the ground. He is blindfolded, and two masked men, dressed head to toe in black, pace the ground in front of him. One has a knife and a pistol; the other strides around the room with an AK-47.

They hung Ahmed from the ceiling by his arms and then the beating started. He was just 14 when IS captured and tortured him. From the safety of neighbouring Turkey, he relived the nightmare.

"I thought about my parents. I thought about my mum," he said.

"I thought I was going to die and leave my parents, my siblings, my friends, my relatives all behind. I thought I was going to die."

"They started lashing me, electrocuting me in order to confess. I told them everything".

In the IS-controlled northern Syrian city of Raqqa, Ahmed had sold bread to make a living. Two men he knew asked him to put a bag near an IS meeting place. Ahmed had been duped into planting a bomb. His age was unimportant to his torturers. The abuse lasted two days.

"When they electrocuted me, I used to scream calling for my mother," he said. "But as soon as I did, [one of the torturers] used to up the voltage even more. 'Don't bring your mother in it,' he used to say. They pretend they're religious, but they're infidels. They used to smoke. They pretend to be enforcing the rules of Muslims, but they're not. They hit and kill people".

From prison, Ahmed was sentenced to death. But his executioner took pity on him, and allowed him to escape. "It's rare that I'm able to sleep," he explained. "When I first came to Turkey, I used to have nightmares all the time. I got some treatment. But I couldn't sleep - I used to dream about it all the time. "Whenever I closed my eyes, I used to have nightmares then stay up all night." I met the man who filmed Ahmed's beating. He has since defected from IS and says he is full of remorse. The film was made for propaganda purposes, he said. The fate of the two other men filmed being tortured at the same time as Ahmed is not known. "I am regretting every moment," the man said. "When I joined IS, I wasn't convinced of it but I had to."

"Although I wasn't particularly heavy-handed with people, I hope that the people I hurt will forgive me."

Inside its self-declared caliphate, Islamic State has ended secular education and instead created military-style schools which indoctrinate children and train them to kill.

An IS propaganda video shows children, some barely teenagers, undergoing drills and learning to shoot. Children are shown in beheading videos, and also taking part in killings. Khaled - not his real name - is now 17, but just two years ago he fought and killed for al-Qaeda's affiliate in Syria, al-Nusra front. Later, he was forced to join IS. He has since defected, but for him entering battle was a rite of passage to manhood. He said that children were being specifically targeted to fight.

"Adult fighters of the Islamic State are a minority. My graduation class was full of 15 and 16 year olds," he said. "There were even many as young as 13 or 14. Those are more eager to fight and wage jihad for the sake of God."
 
How many of us think ISIS is not doing anything wrong? And how many of us sympathize to their cause?
 
How many of us think ISIS is not doing anything wrong? And how many of us sympathize to their cause?

No one here with a brain would think that. However not too long ago there were posters who thought the allegations of sexual violence against the yazidis were fabricated or exaggerated.
 
No one here with a brain would think that. However not too long ago there were posters who thought the allegations of sexual violence against the yazidis were fabricated or exaggerated.

Do not underestimate the power of Ummah. There are several supporters especially from UK and then there are others who think ISIS are just American/Jewish army wearing masks blaming innocent Muslims.
 
This thread makes me sick to my stomach.

Rarely visit it but whenever I do, I get depressed.

Oh God...please save the innocents.
 
Islamic State militants 'filmed torturing 14 year old Syrian boy'

Have a read of this - utterly shocking stuff. Where are the protests ? Why aren't there people lining the streets against these barbarians who are dragging Islam back to the stone age ? You'll see millions marching for Gaza or Kashmir but when its Muslims who are oppressing other Muslims there's nothing but silence and a few cliched lines about this being the actions of a minority.

I think it's already established that such protests only happen when the 'oppressive' force is non-Muslim, which is not the case here.
 
I think it's already established that such protests only happen when the 'oppressive' force is non-Muslim, which is not the case here.

9 page thread

Currently don't see one on the CAR, rohingya or even The Uighurs
 
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