Tuesday, April 17, 2018

The West's Russian Roulette



The West's Russian Roulette
Alexander Maistrovoy ,   | updated: 17:18




It is not Putin, it is Erdogan who promised Europe "religious wars", and  it is not Russians, Germans and Jews, but Muslims, who will become "cannon fodder" in these wars.
It was not Moscow, it was Tehran and Hezbollah that created the Shia network in Germany with a center in Hamburg and "sleeping cells" in North Rhine-Westphalia.

In France, Union des Organisations Islamiques de France (UOIF) and its mother organization Federation of Islamic Organizations in Europe (FIOE) are branches of MB.

In October 2016, a youth gang besieged the Hélène-Boucher school in Seine-Saint-Denis. They attacked the building with firebombs and beat the director.  Yacine, 21 years old, a student at the University of Paris, said: “This is a warning. These young people don’t act spontaneously; they attack institutions, the State itself.” Did anybody listen to her?

It was Qatar, not Russia, that invested 50 million Euro for establishing Sharia in French cities in 2012. Qatari Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani subsidizes radical groups all over the world.

“Everyone knows that all mosques in Brussels are in the hands of Salafists”, said former Brussels mayor Yvan Mayeur. In Molenbeek alone, there are 51 organizations connected with terrorism.

The new Muslim party “Be.One” headed by Lebanese founder of the European Arab League Dyab Abou Jahjah is a branch of Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party - abbreviated officially AK Parti in Turkish,- a part of MB. The same can be said about Denk Party in Holland.

The Austrian Party Neue Bewegung für die Zukunft (New Movement for the Future) is the "fifth column" of the new Turkish sultan, and he doesn't even hide it.

Pakistan-born journalist Shams Ul-Haq lived in asylum homes across the country under the guise of a migrant. He said that Salafists invaded minds of migrants and triggered religious hatred by recruiting them into militias. 


Sebastian Kurtz is one of the few Western leaders who understands that it is they, not Putin, who represent a strategic threat to his country.


In Spain, which is still called Andalus by Arabs, back in 1985, Saudis opened the Islamic Cultural Center (Madrid), which was the Europe’s second largest mosque after the the Islamic Center of Malaga, and launched a new TV Channel Córdoba TV. The Sheikh of Qatar is planning to buy the famous La Monumental Arena in Barcelona to turn it into the Europe's biggest mosque. UAE subsidized the building of the Great Mosque of Granada, and Kuwait is funding the construction of mosques in Reus and Torredembarra. 

Iran subsidizes the popular left-wing radical party "Podemos". Is this also the Kremlin’s hand?

According to a report by the Henry Jackson Society dated July 2017, Middle Eastern countries provide financial support to mosques and Islamic educational institutions in the UK. Tom Brake, a Liberal Democrat and foreign affairs spokesman, said that Saudi Arabia funded hundreds of Wahhabist mosques in the country. A counterinsurgency expert Tom Collins warned about the MB danger. He called it a terrorist organization and underlined that Qatar funded the organization. According to the Jenkins Commission report, MB is a dangerous and violence-prone organization threatening the national interests of the country. 
Britain is building an alliance against Moscow. 

In the US they found out about MB plans back in 1991 after one of their activists had written a memorandum about civilized jihad in America. MB’s activity is still a mystery. "I've been studying the Brotherhood for 15 years," - says Lorenzo Vidino, director the Program on Extremism at George Washington University. - "I maybe understand 10 percent of how it works”, adding that “… it clearly linked to the Brotherhood abroad” .

MB in USA is closely connected to the Holy Land Foundation, which transferred funds to Hamas. MB is also represented by CAIR, which was declared a terrorist group in UAE. In 2008 FBI Special Agent Lara Burns labeled CAIR a front group for Hamas, and in January 2009 the FBI's DC cut ties with CAIR.

However MB hasn’t been banned and is forming an alliance against American democracy together with Antifa and Black Life Matters. 
At same time Iran and Hezbollah founded a branched network in Latin America and US. “…Hezbollah is determined to give itself a potential homeland option as a critical component of its terrorism playbook” – said Nicholas Rasmussen, Director of National Counterterrorism Center, after recent arrests of alleged “Hezbollah” operatives in New York and Michigan.

Nevertheless US is obsessed with "hunting Russian witches".

Let me remind you of something.
Not in Moscow, but in Teheran, homosexuals are hanged on construction cranes.
Not in St. Petersburg, but in Istanbul, journalists, teachers, professors and public figures are rotting alive in jails.
Not in Russia, but in Iran, political prisoners are raped in prisons.
Not Russia, but Turkey, carries out ethnic cleansing of Kurds.
Not in Russia, but in Qatar, they established an institute of badly disguised slavery.
It is not Russia regularly provoking NATO members, it is Turkey doing this to Greece and Cyprus. The West forgives them all abominations.

Four centuries ago, the West did everything to undermine Byzantium and achieved its goal. Half a century later, however, the Ottoman Muslim hordes stood right
under the gates of Vienna.

"Russian roulette" is a favorite game of the West.










Forget the beheading videos, the ISIS propaganda on social media, even the terrorist attacks themselves. Europe, sayscounterterrorism expert Afshin Ellian, is Islamizing itself, and in the process, the Western values on which its democracies are built are increasingly put at risk.


Take, for instance, Belgium's ISLAM Party, which now hopes to participate in the country's October local elections in 28 regions. (Its name serves as an acronym for "Integrité, Solidarité, Liberté, Authenticité, Moralité.)

Its ultimate aim: transforming Belgium into an Islamic state. Items high on its agenda include separating men and women on public transportation, and the incorporation of sharia law – as long as this does not conflict with current laws –according to the party's founder, Redouane Ahrouch. His own behavior, however, suggests that his respect for "current laws" and mores has its bounds: He reportedly refuses to shake hands with women, and in 2003, he received a six-month sentence for beating and threatening his wife. Currently, the Islam Party has two elected representatives in office – one in Anderlecht, the other in Molenbeek – both regions that happen to be known as hotbeds of extremism.


Or consider DENK, Holland's pro-Islam party founded in 2015 by Turkish-Dutch politicians Selçuk Ozturk and Tunahan Kuzu. The party platform, which supports boycotts and sanctions against Israel, also discourages assimilation, calling instead for "mutual acceptance" of multiple cultures. Non-Muslims, for instance, would apparently be required to "accept" the Muslim extremist father who beats his daughter for refusing an arranged marriage, or for becoming too "Westernized" for his taste. It's his culture, after all.
DENK also calls for a "racism police force" to monitor allegedly racist comments and actions. Those found guilty would be placed in a government "racism register," and banned from government jobs and other employment.

So far, such pro-Islamist views have served the party well. In local Dutch elections last month, DENK (which means "think" in Dutch) gained three seats in Rotterdam, totaling four seats among 45 total and edging out Geert Wilders' far-right Partij voor de Vrijheid(PVV), which fell from three seats to one. In Amsterdam, which also has 45 seats, a full 50 percent of Dutch-Moroccans and about two-thirds of Dutch-Turks gave the party a three-seat win in its first election there, as well. Many of these voters, according to post-election analyses, moved to DENK from the center-left Labor Party (PvdA), clearly feeling more at home with a more overtly pro-Muslim politic.


Similarly, France's Union of Muslim Democrats (UDMF) has taken a number of voters from the Green Party by promising to defend Muslims. UDMF's online program statement condemns burqa and headscarf bans. What's more, in its pretense of supporting what it calls the "sweet dream of Democracy, Union and Human Rights," the party loudly (though rightly) condemns "anti-Muslim speeches" that "lead the most psychologically fragile people to commit acts of unprecedented violence." Examples of such "unprecedented violence" follow: a German white supremacist, who killed an Egyptian woman wearing a veil in 2009, and the stabbing of a French Muslim in Vaucluse. "Heavy weapons attacks have exploded in Europe since the beginning of the year against Muslim places of worship," the statement reads.

What the party statement does not mention anywhere are the attacks by Muslims in Paris and Nice that together killed 240 people between January 2015 and July 2016; the attack by a Muslim extremist on a Jewish school in Toulouse in 2012; and the kidnapping and heinous torture of Ilan Halimi, a 23-year-old Jew, in 2006. These are among other acts of "unprecedented violence" by Islamists.


Most disturbing are the large numbers of Muslims who have all flocked to parties like DENK and UDMF throughout Europe. Rather than moving towards more secular, traditionally democratic political movements, Europe's Muslims are apparently increasingly distancing themselves from the "European" side of their identity and identifying more with Islam and the Muslim community. And this, too, is part of Europe's "self-Islamizing," the result of taking too unsure a hand, too ambivalent a position, on the issue of assimilation.

Elsewhere, other signs of self-Islamization can be found in the rise of other Muslim parties in Austria as well as a failed effort in Sweden; a proposed ban on the British press against identifying terrorists as Muslim; the proliferation of sharia courts in the UK; and the repeated efforts by some Canadian officials to legalize sharia – a debate that recently has been revived.
While all of this involves political movements, it stands as a reminder of what the ideology behind the "war on terrorism" is really all about: an attack against our culture. We need to do better at protecting it.


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