El violento levantamiento de la milicia Estado Islámico (antiguo Estado Islámico de Irak y el Levante, EIIL) ha sumido a Irak en una nueva situación de guerra que amenaza a toda la región. Se cree que la milicia del Estado Islámico que opera en Irak y Siria controla 2.000 millones de dólares y se compone de 10.000 combatientes, lo que permite a este grupo combatir exitosamente contra el Ejército iraquí y así intentar controlar una región que se extiende desde la ciudad de Alepo en Siria, hasta las ciudades de Faluya, Mosul y Tal Afar en Irak.
Ahora que van a decir Los sabios opinólogos de la TV peruana, los congresistas mediáticos como Abugatás y Chehade nos tratan de influenciar sobre sus sentimientos heredados, al parecer aplicaron las presiones necesarias a su partido, por ende al canciller, a los medios chicha sin informar bien la verdad de lo que todo significa y lo que ocurre en la realidad del "Hamás" y la constante amenaza para el mundo judeo-cristiano desatada por los terroristas Islámicos y Los jihadistas ¿Acaso no sabian que hay Una Guerra Santa?
pero su religión dice que deben acabar y exterminarnos a todos los JUDEO-CRISTIANOS ellos tienen armas de destrucción masiva y no tienen piedad hasta se imolan pensando que en el otro mundo serán recompensados osea que amárrense los pantalones que en IRAK matan a miles de cristianos y nadie por Perú ni nuestros fabulosos medios chicha dicen nada al respecto. La comunidad de contrainteligencia de EE.UU. identifica Abu Musab al-Suri como el teórico más importante de la jihad islámica global y considera su manifiesto que el documento estratégico más importante producido por Al Qaeda o cualquier organización yihadista en más de una década. Su manuscrito de 1.600 páginas consiste en gran parte de la erudición islámica incomprensible, impenetrable. El analista de defensa Jim Lacey ofrece una síntesis significativa de llamadas de al-Suri al Global Jihad Islámica, EN una obra que ha sido llamado el Mein Kampf del movimiento. hHa escrito un libro que toda latinoamérica debe leer.
Fui voluntario durante dos guerras y conozco muy bien el tema del terrorismo "JIHAD" significa "GUERRA SANTA" por si no lo saben España estuvo invadida por los "JIHADISTAS" por más de 700 años. Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar el "Cid campeador" liberó su guerra de independencia en las CRUZADAS liberando a España y Europa del yugo islámico desgraciadamente esa guerra sigue después de siglos y en IRAK continúa el genocidio no hace mucho eliminaron a todo un pueblo con gas SARIN y otros armamentos químicos, con las matanzas y genocidios es una amenaza que acosa a todo el mundo incluyendo a todos los países JUDEO-CRISTIANO los medios de esta BASURA chicha de PERIÓDICOS, RADIO y TV broadcasters peruanos no cubren, por ser "políticamente correcta
os con los que los sobornan o los contratan" Que no tengamos pues, que combatirlos en las puertas de nuestras casas por mera ignorancia y falta de cultura histórica, para los que no saben, el JIHAD es la misma guerra de hace siglos, es una guerra que ellos continúan por puro fanatismo religioso, impuesto por sus líderes para controlar las masas y ambición de poder.
En una entrevista a CNN, Mark Arabo, uno de los líderes de la comunidad caldea en EE.UU., advierte que "el mundo no ha visto este tipo de atrocidad en generaciones".
"Hay un parque en Mosul donde [EI] decapita sistemáticamente a los niños y pone sus cabezas encima de palos. Cada vez más niños están siendo decapitados; sus madres son violadas y asesinadas. A sus padres los están colgando", relata Arabo, cuya comunidad tiene sus raíces precisamente en Mosul.
"Este es un crimen contra la humanidad", subraya Arabo, y pide a la comunidad internacional que ofrezca asilo a los más de 300.000 cristianos que viven en esta región de Irak.
Según los datos ofrecidos por el líder cristiano, alrededor del 95% de los cristianos ya ha huido de la zona donde se producen las hostilidades y el 5% se ha convertido al Islam. EI, insiste Arabo, ha señalado los hogares pertenecientes a cristianos y amenaza con la muerte a quienes regresen. "El Cristianismoha muerto en Mosul. El Holocausto cristiano ha llegado", remata Arabo.
Texto completo en: http://actualidad.rt.com/actualidad/view/136431-irak-estado-islamico-ninos-cristianos-holocausto
En España los vencieron después de haber sido invadidos y sometidos por 7 siglos, sin embargo la guerra continúa después de haber sido vencidos en las CRUZADAS
"A TERRORIST´S CALL TO GLOBAL JIHAD" si quieren un poco de información lean un resumen en la revista electrónica y proyecto multimedia "MUTINY AT THE BOUNTY"
The U.S. counterintelligence community identifies Abu Musab al-Suri as the most important theorist of the global Islamic jihad and considers his manifesto to be the most important strategic document produced by al Qaida or any jihadi organization in more than a decade. But to Americans his 1,600-page manuscript largely consists of incomprehensible, impenetrable Islamic scholarship. With this publication, defense analyst Jim Lacey delivers a meaningful distillation of al-Suri's Call to Global Islamic Jihad, a work that has been called the Mein Kampf of the movement. This project is sponsored by the United States Joint Forces Command.
Sunday, May 11, 2008
With the release of ?A Terrorists Call to Global Jihad?, the real story on the Global War on Terror has left the secretive world of the intelligence agencies and is now made available for the mainstream public. Jim Lacey expertly condensed the original 1600-page document into a digestible 200-page book focusing on the key points. The ?Islamic Call for Global Jihad? could roughly be equated to the President?s annual State of the Union Address. Al-Suri?s insider perspective delivers a candid, if somewhat distorted, assessment of the threats facing the Islamic jihadi movement. The edited version of the book was an easy read, which should not be surprising considering the intended audience for the book is the next generation of mujahideen. The book certainly highlights the violence and religious fervor necessary for the revolution, but without a strategic economic vision, they would merely replace one national leader with another and would fail to address the second issue addressed earlier in the book. This book should be required reading for every American to gain understanding of this most recent threat to our country.
Mustafa Setmariam Nasar
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mustafa Setmariam Nasar | |
---|---|
Born | c. 1958 Aleppo, Syria |
Other names | kunya: Abu Musab al-Suri,[1] Umar Abd al-Hakim,[2][3] |
Occupation | none |
Children | 4 |
Abu Musab al-Suri, born Mustafa bin Abd al-Qadir Setmariam Nasar (Arabic: مصطفى بن عبد القادر ست مريم نصار), is a suspected al-Qaeda member and writer. He has held Spanish citizenship since the late 1980s following marriage to a Spanish woman.[4] He is wanted in Spain for the 1985 El Descanso bombing, which killed eighteen people, and (as a witness)[3] in connection with the 2004 Madrid train bombings.[5] He is considered by many as 'the most articulate exponent of the modern jihad and its most sophisticated strategies'.[4] [6]
Nasar was captured by Pakistani security forces in 2005 and was rendered to Syria.[6] where he was a wanted man.[5]
Contents
[hide]Life[edit]
Nasar has ginger hair, green eyes, and a brown complexion. He was born and grew up in Aleppo in Syria, and attended four years of university studies there at the University of Aleppo's Department of mechanical engineering. In 1980, he joined the Combatant Vanguard organisation, a radical offshoot of the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood, which was at the forefront in the Islamic uprising in Syria against Hafez Assad's regime. Nasar was forced to flee Syria at the end of 1980. He then joined the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood organisation in exile, receiving training at their bases and safe houses in Iraq and Jordan. He is reported to have participated in the uprising of Hama in 1982.[4] He emigrated to France and later to Spain in the mid-1980s.
In 1987, Nasar and a small group of Syrian friends left Spain for Peshawar where they met Abdallah Azzam, the godfather of the Arab-Afghan movement. Nasar was enlisted as a military trainer at the camps for Arab volunteer fighters, and he also fought at the frontlines against Soviet Union in Afghanistan and the Communist regime in Kabul after the Soviet withdrawal in 1988.
Nasar met Osama bin Laden in Peshawar and claims to have been a member of his inner circle and working for bin Ladin until sometime around 1992, when Nasar returned to Spain.[citation needed] In Peshawar, Nasar became well-known under his pen name Umar Abd al-Hakim after he published a 900 page treatise in May 1991, entitled 'The Islamic jihadi revolution in Syria’, also known as 'the Syrian Experience' (al-tajrubah al-suriyyah). The treatise was a vehement attack on the Muslim Brotherhood and constituted an important part of the intellectual foundation for al-Qaida and the jihadi current during the 1990s.
From 1985 to 1995 Nasar adopted Spain as his primary place of residence, even though he traveled extensively and spent much time in Afghanistan. In Spain, he married his wife Elena Moreno in 1987 (or 88), who converted to Islam, which allowed him to become a Spanish citizen. They have four children.
Among his associates there were Imad Eddin Yarkas alias Abu Dahdah, head of al-Qaeda's Madrid cell, who was arrested in November 2001, on suspicion of membership in al-Qaida and of involvement in the 11 September 2001 attacks in the United States. He was later acquitted of charges of assisting the 9/11 plotters, but convicted of membership in a terrorist organization.
Nasar first moved to London in 1994, and brought his family along in mid-1995. It is possible that he fled Spain because of suspicions he was involved in the 1995 Islamist terror bombings in France. For a time Nasar edited al-Ansar, the most important jihadi magazine at the time, with ties to the Algerian Armed Islamic Group (GIA). Nasar left the journal in 1996 partly due to disagreements with the new GIA leadership in Algeria and partly as a result of a conflict with its chief editor, Umar Mahmud Uthman Abu Umar, better known as Abu Qatada al-Filastini. The latter is widely regarded as al-Qaeda's principal cleric in Europe.[7]
In 1997, Nasar established a media company called Islamic Conflict Studies Bureau with Mohamed Bahaiah. Through this media office he facilitated two important media events for bin Ladin in Afghanistan, in particular Peter Bergen's famous CNN interview with bin Laden in March 1997.[1]
In the autumn of 1997 Nasar left London for Afghanistan, operating initially as a lecturer and trainer in the Arab-Afghan camps and guesthouses. He settled there with his family in 1998. In 1999 he formed a media and research center in Kabul and in 2000 he was allowed to open his own training camp, the al-Ghuraba Camp, located in Kargha, near Kabul. Nasar's camp was formally part of Taliban's Ministry of defense, and separate from al-Qaida and bin Ladin's organization, whom he had fallen out with in 1998. In a seven-page letter from mid-1998, Nasar launched scathing criticism of bin Ladin for the disdain al-Qaeda has shown towards the Taliban leadership of Afghanistan, including Mullah Omar. He is also highly critical of their strategies, and has denounced al-Qaeda's 1998 attacks on the US embassies in East Africa, and the 11 September attack on New York's Twin Towers, which he argues put a catastrophic end to the jihadi cause.[4]
On 19 January 2009, FBI interrogator Robert Fuller testified during a hearing before Canadian Omar Khadr's Guantanamo military commission that Khadr during interrogations in October 2002 Khadr confessed to staying at a Kabul guest house run by "Abu Musab al-Suri".[8]
In September 2003, Spanish magistrate Baltasar Garzon indicted 35 members of the Madrid cell for its role in the 11 September attacks, including Nasar. In November 2004, the United States Department of Statenamed Nasar a Most Wanted Terrorist and offered a reward of US$5 million for information about his location.[9]
Reports of detention[edit]
Nasar was reportedly captured in the Pakistani city of Quetta in late October 2005, although exactly where and when is disputed.[3] [1] He was handed over to American custody a month or so after his capture, however he was not among the 14 high-profile al-Qaida suspects transferred to the Guantanamo Bay detention camp in late 2006, and there were persistent reports that he was one of the ghost prisoners held in secret detention on Diego Garcia.[10]
On 14 April 2009, Spanish magistrate Baltazar Garzon sent out queries as to Nasar's location.[11] Daniel Wodlls, reporting for the Associated Press, reported that Garzon queried Britain, the USA, Pakistan, Syria and Afghanistan. The report stated US officials confirmed that Nasar was apprehended in Quetta, Pakistan in November 2005. The Spanish newspaper El País attributed Garzon's query to United States President Barack Obama's announcement that the Guantanamo detention camp, and the CIA's black sites would be closed.
It appears that at some stage Nasar was rendered to Syria,[6] where he was a wanted man.[5] In late 2011 rumours emerged that Abu Musab al-Suri had been released from a Syrian jail.[12] This was repeated in early 2012 by a posting on an al Qaeda linked web forum,[13]
However, in March 2014, al-Qaeda propagandist Adam Gadahn revealed that al-Suri is still in prison.[14]
In April 2014, al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri also confirmed that al-Suri is still in prison.[15]
Works and Influence[edit]
Due to his prolific writings on strategic and political issues, and his guerrilla warfare experience, Nasar was a popular lecturer and to a certain degree an unofficial adviser for a wide range of jihadi groups in Afghanistan. Organizationally, however, he remained a rather independent figure. While some reports have linked him to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who later led al-Qaeda's component of the insurgency in Iraq, his network of contacts was much wider, and included jihadis from Morocco, Algeria, Libya, Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Iraqi Kurdistan, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Uzbekistan, and elsewhere. Media reports have also alleged that one of his associates, the Moroccan Amer Azizi, (Uthman al-Andalusi), had met 11 September organizers Mohamed Atta and Ramzi bin al-Shibh in Tarragona, Spain weeks before the attacks, but this seems to be incorrect
.
.
Nasar's best known work is the 1600-page book The Global Islamic Resistance Call (Da'wat al-muqawamah al-islamiyyah al-'alamiyyah) which appeared on the Internet in December 2004 or January 2005.[5] In it author Lawrence Wright reports that Nasar
'proposes that the next stage of jihad will be characterized by terrorism created by individuals or small autonomous groups (what he terms `leaderless resistance') which will wear down the enemy and prepare the ground for the far ambitious aim of waging war on `open fronts' .... `without confrontation in the field and seizing control of the land, we cannot establish a state, which is the strategic goal of the resistance.'
The American occupation of Iraq, he declares, inaugurated a `historical new period' that almost single-handedly rescued the jihadi movement just when many of its critics thought it was finished.[7]
In early 2014 a top Sharia official in the Syrian Jihadist group Jabhat al-Nusra, Dr Sami Al Oraidi, acknowledged that his group is influenced by the teachings of Abu Musab Al Suri. The strategies derived from Abu Musab’s guidelines to win hearts and minds amongst local Muslim communities include: providing services to people, avoid being seen as extremists, maintaining strong relationships with communities and other fighting groups, and putting the focus on fighting the regime.[16]
Publication of articles in Inspire[edit]
In June 2010, Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula was reported to have published Inspire magazine – its first English language publication.[17] It contained an article published under the name Abu Mu'sab al-Suri.[18]This article was the beginning of a series entitled: "The Jihadi experiences". Further articles in this series appeared in the next 5 issues of Inspire. These excerpts were copied from a translation of "The Global Islamic Resistance Call" which appeared in a biography of Abu Musab al-Suri. [19]
Holocausto cristiano: "El Estado
Islámico decapita a los niños"
Publicado: 8 ago 2014 | 10:38 GMT Última actualización: 9 ago 2014 | 9:14 GMT
Un destacado líder de la comunidad caldea en EE.UU. denuncia que el Estado Islámico lleva a cabo un "genocidio" contra los cristianos en Irak
En una entrevista a CNN, Mark Arabo, uno de los líderes de la comunidad caldea en EE.UU., advierte que "el mundo no ha visto este tipo de atrocidad en generaciones".
El cristianismo ha muerto en Mosul. El Holocausto cristiano ha llegado
"Hay un parque en Mosul donde [EI] decapita sistemáticamente a los niños y pone sus cabezas encima de palos. Cada vez más niños están siendo decapitados; sus madres son violadas y asesinadas. A sus padres los están colgando", relata Arabo, cuya comunidad tiene sus raíces precisamente en Mosul.
"Este es un crimen contra la humanidad", subraya Arabo, y pide a la comunidad internacional que ofrezca asilo a los más de 300.000 cristianos que viven en esta región de Irak.
Según los datos ofrecidos por el líder cristiano, alrededor del 95% de los cristianos ya ha huido de la zona donde se producen las hostilidades y el 5% se ha convertido al Islam. EI, insiste Arabo, ha señalado los hogares pertenecientes a cristianos y amenaza con la muerte a quienes regresen. "El Cristianismoha muerto en Mosul. El Holocausto cristiano ha llegado", remata Arabo.
Texto completo en: http://actualidad.rt.com/actualidad/view/136431-irak-estado-islamico-ninos-cristianos-holocausto
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