COLLECTIVE MADNESS


“Soft despotism is a term coined by Alexis de Tocqueville describing the state into which a country overrun by "a network of small complicated rules" might degrade. Soft despotism is different from despotism (also called 'hard despotism') in the sense that it is not obvious to the people."

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

There's Something about Muhammed!

There's Something about Muhammed!

It's no wonder that Britain has such a problem with homegrown terror. This joker, Omar Bakri Muhammed was given political asylum there in 1985 and for 18 years he repaid the British hospitality and welfare with hate. Now this member of the Muslim Brotherhood is being blamed for inspiring the recently foiled plot to kidnap and video tape the beheading of a British Muslim soldier.

From the Sunday Telegraph:
Ex-UK cleric 'inspired plot to kidnap soldier'
Andrew Alderson, Chief Reporter, Sunday Telegraph
Last Updated: 12:46am GMT 04/02/2007

A radical Islamist cleric banned from Britain has been secretly recorded in a series of rants in which he calls on Muslims to behead their enemies and kidnap Westerners.

The speeches of Omar Bakri Mohammed are suspected of inspiring the alleged plot, made public last week, to seize and kill a Muslim soldier serving in the Army.

Investigators have discovered that Bakri encouraged a kidnapping terrorist act just months before he was banned from the UK last year. On another occasion, he specifically mentioned capturing a British Muslim serving in the Army.

In one recording - obtained by The Sunday Telegraph - Bakri addresses Muslim followers in halting English in June last year from his new home in Beirut. He spoke shortly before he was excluded from the UK in August on the grounds that his presence was not conducive to the public good.

Bakri, who has frequently suggested that "the enemy" are Westerners, particularly Americans and the British, says: "When you meet the enemy, slice their own necks. And when you make the blood spill all over, and the enemy becomes so tired, now start to take from them prisoners. Then free them or exchange them until the war is finished.

"Verily they remind the sunnah (actions/sayings of the prophet Mohammed) of removing the head of the enemy. They remind the sunnah of slaughtering the enemy. They remind the sunnah of how to strike the neck of the enemy. We saw him in his brother's house. They removed the head of the enemy. Use the sword and remove the head of the enemy."

In a separate rallying call over the internet last summer, Bakri encouraged terrorists to kidnap a soldier serving in Iraq or Afghanistan. "I hope they capture British Muslims who are in the Army over there," he said.

Nine men were arrested on Wednesday as part of an alleged plot to kidnap a Muslim soldier, who was believed to have served in Afghanistan but who was back on home leave. The police think terrorists intended to torture and kill their victim before broadcasting their actions on the internet.

Security sources have revealed that they have been investigating the alleged plot for several months but their inquiry stepped up when it seemed the plan was coming to fruition.

Audio recordings of Bakri were obtained by Vigil, a privately funded investigative group, which believes that the police, security and intelligence services are so overstretched that they need help. The non-profit-making, London-based group seeks to disrupt and expose terrorist activity. Vigil has handed the tapes to anti-terrorist police and officers are believed to consider the evidence highly valuable. Detectives are expected to see whether they can prove that some of the alleged plotters used the same chat room as Bakri.

Vigil recorded rants by Bakri and others when it was monitoring a chat room used by radical Muslims. Bakri "entered" the chat room using his personal identification number. Voice recognition tests have proved it is the radical cleric who was speaking.

Bakri, 48, lived in Britain for 18 years. He praised the September 11 hijackers in the US as the "magnificent 19" and, while he was living in the UK, he blamed the British people and Government for the terrorist attacks in London in July 2005. He fled to Britain after being expelled from Saudi Arabia in 1988 and first came to public attention as the spiritual leader of al-Muhajiroun, a radical group connected to a number of militants in the UK.

Patrick Mercer, the Conservative spokesman on security, praised the work of Vigil: "Anybody who doubts the influence of these preachers of hate only has to see this evidence to understand how dangerous they are."

Bakri Mohammed had previously told the Sunday Telegraph that British police officers, soldiers and civil servants would one day become radicalized.
"When you start to ask Muslims to join your Army and your police you are making a grave mistake. That British Muslim who joins the police today will one day read the Koran and will have an awakening," he said.

"Those moderates are one day going to be practising Muslims. Now what happens if they are British police or in the Army and they have weapons? How much information do they have about you that they will use to serve the global struggle?
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"They will revolt against the system if they have been failed by your foreign policy which is oppressive against Islam, or have been contacted by people who believe Britain is a domain of war."
Please, Mr. Mohammed, how could you say such a thing? How insensitive. You should be ashamed!

So, what is it about the name Mohammed or Muhammed? These Mohammedans are causing trouble everywhere. The Counterterroism Blog is reporting that another Mohammed, Jamal Jafaar Mohammed, a sitting member of the Iraqi Parliament might be a convicted and still-active terrorist wanted for the 1983 bombings of US and French Embassies. In 1984 he was sentenced to death in Kuwait.

Some day, we'll be reading about the exploits of a terrorist named Osama Muhammed.

12 comments:

  1. "15 of the 19 terrorists were named Mohammed, Chief

    "Irrelevant you say?"

    "We have to find the "root cause"?"

    "Chief, 15 of the 19 were named Mohammed!"

    "Irrelevant, right, root causes, I understand."

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  2. It's a Religion of Peace, unless it is not.

    That 15 of 19 were Saudi, discounted. Even in preflight security inspections, quotas to be met.
    The Iranian Mullahs have become the current threat to America, not the Wahabbists of Saudi Arabia and their moneymen, the Golden Chain, that still finds santuary there.

    If 15 of 19 were named Mohammed, it'd be discounted as well.

    We're told not to worry about four dozen operational warheads in Wahabbist hands, in Pakistan. Worry instead about the Shia Mullahs and their effect in a democratic Iraq. Discount that in Basra, the heartland of Mr al-Hakim and the SCIRI's power, Iranian money holds dominion.

    As trish related last thread.
    Realities differ, depending on perception.

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  3. I know, I was just being a jerk. I thought your point was exactly right. Even now, some of these pc jackasses can't see the nose of their face.

    On Hannity and Colmes last night, Geraldine Ferraro and Alan Colmes saw nothing wrong with the Democrats Congressional Imam opening the session with a prayer that Allah "end the occupation."

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  4. That the people of Basra have more faith in the value of Iranian money, over their national Iraqi script, that is telling, and not in a positive way.

    People voting with their pocketbooks, the market choosing.
    And choosing Iran as the percieved store of value and security in the Region.

    Markets rule!
    or so it's said.

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  5. Imagine if there were a German skin head cult that named all their children, hmmm, let me think...Adolph. Yes all the little Adolphs running around dressed in little waffen ss uniforms, preposterous? I wonder if that would affect their behavior?

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  6. In a civil action, Muslim groups have taken a French satire magazine to court for reprinting the controversial Danish cartoons of the prophet Mohammad. They claim the cartoons are as offensive as Holocaust denial.

    This week in the land of Voltaire a civil court will debate where free speech and religious sensitivities overlap. The Grand Mosque of Paris and the Union of French Islamic Organisations are suing the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo over their reprinting of the Danish caricatures of the Prophet Mohammad which sparked violence in the Muslim world last year.

    The weekly is also being sued for publishing a third drawing by French cartoonist Cabu that showed Mohammed sobbing, holding his head in his hands and saying: "It is hard to be loved by fools."

    Paris Grand Mosque rector Dalil Boubakeur said the controversial cartoon showing Mohammad with a bomb in his turban was not simply satire, but an insult against all Muslims by suggesting they were all terrorists. Boubakeur said last week he wanted to show that reprinting the cartoons was a provocation equal to acts of anti-Semitism or Holocaust denial, which are both banned under French law.

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  7. Turkey's going Shiite also:

    Efforts of the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) move closer to Alevis, the adherents of a Shiite branch of Islam, has led to discussion among Alevi organizations questioning the political party's intentions. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan met with Alevi elders in İzmir over the weekend.

    In another move by the AK Party to move closer to the Alevis, a Alevi elders were sent to Germany with gray passports, only issued to state officials, to serve in Cem houses -- the Alevi alternative to a mosque -- during the month of Muharram. Muharram is the first month of the Islamic calendar and contains some of the holiest days for Shiites and Alevis, as Husayn, the grandson of the Prophet Muhammed was murdered in this month.

    According to reports, the gray passports were demanded by the Cem Foundation, an umbrella organization of the Alevis in Turkey. There were some recent reports that the Cem Foundation also approached the state to organize Koran courses in Cem houses.


    rapprochement with Alevis

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  8. I read that the other day, Trish and posted about it. The GOP flip-flop? What a difference 14 years makes.

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  9. Hagel looked and sounded like the Old McCain straight talk, crisp cadence, comfortable confidence: "We can't change the outcome of Iraq by putting American troops in the middle of a civil war." He said the United States should pull its forces back to seal Iraq's borders and train Iraqis to police their civil war.

    Hagel spoke with the sort of un-hedged honesty rarely heard since McCain left the campaign trail. Unfortunately, that sort of candor won't get him far in the Republican race.

    But that doesn't mean we've heard the last of Hagel in Campaign 2008.


    Presidential Trail

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  10. NYT 8th FEB :Several officials said it was unclear whether the attacks had succeeded because insurgents had adopted new tactics, but judging only by the number of successful attacks, it appeared to be part of a coordinated effort.

    ...

    An Internet message from an insurgent group calling itself the Islamic State of Iraq took responsibility for shooting down the helicopter, the latest in a string of crashes that the group has claimed responsibility for. The message said that the group’s “antiaircraft” battalion downed the aircraft about 10:40 a.m. near Karma, and asserted that the crash was witnessed by hundreds of onlookers shouting “God is great,” according to the SITE Institute, which tracks Internet postings by insurgent groups.


    Aha, remember you read it on EB first. Somebody has thrown a insurgent AD unit into the fight.


    Missiles are suspected in the NYT report. I will hazard that the internet/news guesses as the the identity of the missles have revolved around sovietesque SA-7/14 Grail and SA-16/18 Grouse are quite wrong.

    The Igla has a minumum range of 800 meters - think about trying to use that against helicopters in an urban environment

    Iran operates the Bofors RBS-70 - a laser beam rider. The target gets maximum a couple seconds warning, flares are useless, infrared jammers useless. It is not quite man portable (tripod mounted) but is certainly pickup portable. Normal minimum range is 500m, but with safeties removed ... :). Figure the missile hitting directly will down a chopper even if the warhead fails.

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  11. Meanwhile Peackeeper, newsreports last night said the military didn't think the Sea Knight had been shot down. Confusion, misdirection?

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