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Daesh leader threatens attacks in Turkey & Saudi Arabia, but not in Iran!

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Islamic State’s leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who is reportedly hiding out in the besieged city of Mosul, released his first message since 2015, urging followers to wage all-out war and take the fighting into Saudi Arabia and Turkey.
In the recorded message, the Islamic State (IS, previously ISIS/ISIL) chief also expressed confidence that the terrorist group would ultimately be victorious in fending off the Iraqi forces and allied militias trying to retake Mosul, where he declared the ‘caliphate’ two years ago.

The 31-minute-long recording, the authenticity of which could not be verified, was released by Islamic State supporters on Thursday, according to Reuters.

In the message, which does not specifically refer to Mosul, al-Baghdadi threatens unbelievers with suicide attacks and rivers of blood.

Al-Baghdadi, whose real name is Ibrahim al-Samarrai, said that the terror group’s militants will “unleash the fire of their anger” on Ankara, apparently referring to Turkish troops stationed at a base outside Mosul, as well as President Recep Tayip Erdogan’s diehard rhetoric, which has fanned fears that Turkey plans to unilaterally intervene in Iraq.

The IS leader also threatened to carry out multiple attacks in Saudi Arabia, targeting the Islamic kingdom’s security services, government officials and, notably, members of Al Saud royal family, while accusing them of siding with countries involved in hostilities in Iraq and Syria.

The battle for Mosul, a city that still has a population of around 1.5 million people, was launched on October 17 with an Iraqi army offensive supported by US-led coalition airstrikes and ground support.

As the troops advance on Islamic State’s Iraq stronghold, concerns about the safety of civilians living in the city’s densely populated urban areas have been rising. Russia’s Defense Ministry noted on Tuesday that the absence of escape routes for civilians may result in mass casualties as the battle continues.

US-led coalition air raids on IS targets have already resulted in collateral damage. According to Russia’s estimates, 60 civilians were killed and up to 200 injured during the first days of coalition bombings on residential areas in Mosul.

In the meantime, some top-tier Syrian officials believe the US may allow Islamic State’s jihadists to freely leave the city. In late October, President Bashar Assad’s media adviser, Dr. Bouthaina Shaaban, told RT: “The way they encircle Mosul shows they would like these terrorists to move into to Syria.

“They’re navigating terrorism from one place to another, limiting terrorism in one place, directing it to another place. That’s the absolute truth of what is happening in our region,” she asserted.

RT

You need to be insane to believe that Daesh has bad intentions toward its regional ally & founder (Iran).
Daesh has never attacked Iran, how come is that possible?
A dog will never bite the hand that feeds it.
 
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Al-Baghdadi, whose real name is Ibrahim al-Samarrai, said that the terror group’s militants will “unleash the fire of their anger” on Ankara, apparently referring to Turkish troops stationed at a base outside Mosul, as well as President Recep Tayip Erdogan’s diehard rhetoric, which has fanned fears that Turkey plans to unilaterally intervene in Iraq.
Not about that but about kicking their @ss in Syria.....
 
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That makes the US a co-founder of Daesh with Iran. They brought some Yezide girls to the UN to say the same thing that Kuwaiti girl said about Saddam
Great contribution.

Well thing is IS did attack, kill and rape Yazidis whilst the Kuwaiti girl's testimony was all fake.

If anyone it's you that supports IS not Iran, when IS was advancing in 2014 only one state in the region decided to help which is Iran, the rest were watching quietly telling the US not to intervene.
 
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you can't deny ISIS genocide in Iraq whit this
ISIS member and supporter deserve to die
Aha, I forgot to say that one third of ISIS members in Iraq are saudis

Nor what the Iraqi army did in Kuwait. Both instances are well documented.

The point here is that this "ISIS" which supposedly hates Iran and Iranians more than anybody else yet hardly ever mentions them nor attacks them, is supposedly a proxy of Saudi Arabia/GCC/Arab nations/Turkey/West etc. What a wonderful proxy that never attacks your supposed enemy but your own interests in the region and your own self! Brilliant theory!

Did your pull that "statistic" out of your hairy ***** *** or what? Or did you inject too much opium today? It is obvious that you are a Farsi so I am not sure why you are using the Afghan flag.

Well thing is IS did attack, kill and rape Yazidis whilst the Kuwaiti girl's testimony was all fake.

If anyone it's you that supports IS not Iran, when IS was advancing in 2014 only one state in the region decided to help which is Iran, the rest were watching quietly telling the US not to intervene.

You forgot that most of your leadership, that came to power thanks to Baba America, are more loyal to the Mullah's in Iran than their own country. Many speak about this openly (WIlayat al-Faqih) and not only that during the Iraq-Iran war many thought with Iran against their own countrymen.
And what exactly was the nature of that "aid"? A few advisers etc. that changed nothing on the ground. Similar to how the Mullah's claimed to have "saved" 12 million big Baghdad from at most 10.000 ISIS members. Another good joke.

If the Mullah's are such good friends of yours why don't they return the planes, military equipment etc. that they stole from Iraq and which could have been used ages ago? Why don't they host any Iraqi refugees? Why are there more Iraqis in UAE alone since 2003?

I do not think that any regional countries were telling the US anything as the US does not need to listen to any regional country.

Anyway yet another confirmation of what we all knew.

Iranians have the highest number of heroin addicts in the world and every Tom, Dick and Harry is able to smuggle drugs into Iran, barefooted Baloch militants are crossing the Iranian-Pakistani border on a weekly basis, Kurds from Iraq are crossing into Iran freely etc. yet we are all to believe that the only reason why Iran has not been attacked by ISIS is due to their strong internal security. Despite ISIS being next door.:lol:

As for not having "ISIS members within them", there have been at least 200 Iranians (Iranian Kurds alone mind you) fighting for ISIS. A few dozen suicide bombers included. All of which can be documented by a few Google searches.

Recently we saw some anti-terror operation being published by the Mullah's of supposed ISIS cells however it looked so staged that hardly anyone outside of Iran took it for granted.

ISIS can attack the most powerful regional countries let alone nations in the world (Western powers) etc. but not "mighty Iran". That is something only the 1000's upon 1000's of drug smugglers, Kurds, Baloch etc. can do.

Not only that ISIS has been a blessing for Iran in every way and shape that you can look at it. Similar to how Al-Assad freed all jailed Islamists and allowed much of his opposition to be dominated by certain groups. Permitting ISIS to kill FSA members etc. Buying oil from ISIS etc.

ISIS suddenly appearing in Syria meant the delegitimization of the Syrian opposition globally and served the interests of Al-Assad perfectly. Similar to how an ISIS insurgency benefits many Iraqi politicians in power (Sunni as Shia) etc. Removes focus from their horrible job at running the country and actually offering people services. For once unites people too and gives a bigger say to Shia militants and their allied political groups.

Not to say that ISIS is basically an local creation and a mixture of Ba'athism (the entire leadership is made up by former Iraqi Baathists - a dead ideology) and a mixture of Jihadism which serves well to get recruits. KSA never had good ties with the Baathists and they threatened Arab monarchism as "Arab nationalists" and now they are doing it under the disguise of Islamists.

Essentially it is a power struggle between Iraqi Sunni Arabs (a significant portion of them) and Iraqi Shia Arabs.

This is why initially you had Iraqi Sunni Sufi Groups, tribal groups in Anbar, Ninawa, Diyala, Salah-ad-Din etc., mainstream politicians (Nujaifi, Jabouri, Issawi, Abu Risha etc. - none of them can be called ISIS followers or believers in their ideology), Ad-Douris groups etc. supporting the revolts back in 2012 and 2013 (before too) and the opposition against the Baghdad regime led then by Al-Maliki. All those groups joined hands until ISIS wanted a monopoly and started targeting those former "allies". They were not really allies but they both did not want to be ruled by Al-Malikis regime and de facto the Mullah's in Iran and their henchmen/puppets in Iraq.

And to think that this will suddenly change should ISIS return to sleeper cells or until another group emerges, is wishful thinking and I honestly don't blame the average Iraqi Sunni Arab living in Ninawa, Anbar, Salah ad-Din, Diyala, Kirkuk, Babil etc. for not wanting to live under such an regime. Unless of course the unimaginable happens and the corrupt, incompetent etc. Iraqi politicians begin to serve their people and country and the loyal puppets of Iran/Mullah's become more loyal to their country rather than foreigners. The list is very long and none of this seems likely in the nearby future.

Now they are "celebrating" the slow capture of a 1.5 million big city that was captured by less than 10.000 ISIS members (vast majority local members to make it even more embarrassing) and which should never have been captured to begin with if those people in power were so great as some claim.

That makes the US a co-founder of Daesh with Iran. They brought some Yezide girls to the UN to say the same thing that Kuwaiti girl said about Saddam
Great contribution.

Funnily enough both of those parties (Iraqi Ba'athists aka ISIS) are twins if not at least siblings. Along with a third group (Al-Assad aka Syrian Ba'athists). Talk about a bad comedy gone wrong.

Another hilarious thing is Syrian Ba'athist's (led by Alawis - not even Shias) are great but Iraqi Ba'athist's (mostly Sunnis) are bad despite there not being any difference in politics or actions.

Islamists ruling the "Islamic" "Republic" of Iran is great but Islamists (read Sunnis) ruling elsewhere is bad.

When you think about it both ISIS and the "Islamic" "Republic" of Iran are two sides of the same coin foreign policy wise. One is trying to spread their version of Islamism (Wilayat al-Faqih) and the other (ISIS) their own perverted version. Both despise Arab monarchies and consider them their foremost enemies. Funny, is it not?

Even funnier when both of those terrorist groups policies are doing nothing but damage the Arab world and Arab countries which is the end goal of both. One due to ancient rivalries the other due to chaos being needed for them to exist in the first place. Both hate mainstream Sunni Islam too and want to undermine it.

Similar to how the Iranian Mullah's want to undermine the traditional way of understanding Zaydism in Northern Yemen (through using proxies such as Houthis and sending their leaders to Iran in order to be influenced by the cancerous Wilayat al-Faqih) and the Iraqi Shia Arab traditional view of Twelver Islam as understood by the Iraqi Arab hawza in Najaf and Karbala. This power struggle is ongoing currently and many Iraqi Shia clerics speak about it openly.

One of them spoke about it as far back as pre-2003.


Former Hezbollah member (leading member) talking about the exact same thing.


We Arabs know our enemies well and their plots. Maybe outsiders will be fooled but eventually the ant will be crushed and we are well prepared.

Of course dumb and blind sheep will never change. Too bad when it is their countries that suffer the most from this cancer (Iraq, Lebanon, Syria and now Yemen too). At one period in time you reach a limit where you say/conclude; "we want the best for you, but if you are unable to help yourself first there is little we can do". I have reached this conclusion but time will once again prove me right as it has done so many times before on so many different issues. 1979 was indeed a bad year that gave rise to two cancers

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iranian_Revolution

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Mosque_seizure

of whose descendants we are still fighting to this very day.

Any sane person that understands this region, its history, historical rivalries, internal rivalries and the ground realties can make his own conclusions. I especially appeal to the non-Muslim and Western readers here. Read my post, investigate everything that I wrote which is factual and based on facts (you can yourself check this) and connect the dots.

Ask yourself which regimes, groups, states etc. benefit the most from those actions that I have described. Once you are able to answer this question you have the likely source.

And of course I have not even talked about the Western involvement here and their plans of reshaping the region. Also that part you can investigate based on what has occurred in the past 3-4 years and once again connect the dots.

Better to understand what is currently going on, look at Syria and the actions of those regimes, groups etc. who supposedly want the Al-Assad regime removed yet do nothing , let alone did nothing for years before Russia suddenly appeared "out of nowhere". The last claim is of course another lie and we all know that the West and Russia cooperate together in Syria.

Syria by itself is not so interesting or special but the politics that have followed and will follow will tell us a lot about the future goals of certain regimes and powers in regards to the region and its future.
 
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you can't deny ISIS genocide in Iraq whit this
ISIS member and supporter deserve to die
Aha, I forgot to say that one third of ISIS members in Iraq are saudis

What genocide?
 
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Nor what the Iraqi army did in Kuwait. Both instances are well documented.

The point here is that this "ISIS" which supposedly hates Iran and Iranians more than anybody else yet hardly ever mentions them nor attacks them, is supposedly a proxy of Saudi Arabia/GCC/Arab nations/Turkey/West etc. What a wonderful proxy that never attacks your supposed enemy but your own interests in the region and your own self! Brilliant theory!

Did your pull that "statistic" out of your hairy farsi *** or what? Or did you inject too much opium today? It is obvious that you are a Farsi so I am not sure why you are using the Afghan flag.



You forgot that most of your leadership, that came to power thanks to Baba America, are more loyal to the Mullah's in Iran than their own country. Many speak about this openly (WIlayat al-Faqih) and not only that during the Iraq-Iran war many thought with Iran against their own countrymen.
And what exactly was the nature of that "aid"? A few advisers etc. that changed nothing on the ground. Similar to how the Mullah's claimed to have "saved" 12 million big Baghdad from at most 10.000 ISIS members. Another good joke.

If the Mullah's are such good friends of yours why don't they return the planes, military equipment etc. that they stole from Iraq and which could have been used ages ago? Why don't they host any Iraqi refugees? Why are there more Iraqis in UAE alone since 2003?

I do not think that any regional countries were telling the US anything as the US does not need to listen to any regional country.

Anyway yet another confirmation of what we all knew.

Iranians have the highest number of heroin addicts in the world and every Tom, Dick and Harry is able to smuggle drugs into Iran, barefooted Baloch militants are crossing the Iranian-Pakistani border on a weekly basis, Kurds from Iraq are crossing into Iran freely etc. yet we are all to believe that the only reason why Iran has not been attacked by ISIS is due to their strong internal security. Despite ISIS being next door.:lol:

As for not having "ISIS members within them", there have been at least 200 Iranians fighting for ISIS. A few dozen suicide bombers included.

Recently we saw some anti-terror operation being published by the Mullah's of supposed ISIS cells however it looked so staged that hardly anyone outside of Iran took it for granted.

ISIS can attack the most powerful regional countries let alone nations in the world (Western powers) etc. but not "mighty Iran". That is something only the 1000's upon 1000's of drug smugglers, Kurds, Baloch etc. can do.

Not only that ISIS has been a blessing for Iran in every way and shape that you can look at it. Similar to how Al-Assad freed all jailed Islamists and allowed much of his opposition to be dominated by certain groups. Permitting ISIS to kill FSA members etc. Buying oil from ISIS etc.

ISIS suddenly appearing in Syria meant the delegitimization of the Syrian opposition globally and served the interests of Al-Assad perfectly. Similar to how an ISIS insurgency benefits many Iraqi politicians in power (Sunni as Shia) etc. Removes focus from their horrible job at running the country and actually offering people services. For once unites people too and gives a bigger say to Shia militants and their allied political groups.

Not to say that ISIS is basically an local creation and a mixture of Ba'athism (the entire leadership is made up by former Iraqi Baathists - a dead ideology) and a mixture of Jihadism which serves well to get recruits. KSA never had good ties with the Baathists and they threatened Arab monarchism as "Arab nationalists" and now they are doing it under the disguise of Islamists.

Essentially it is a power struggle between Iraqi Sunni Arabs (a significant portion of them) and Iraqi Shia Arabs.

This is why initially you had Iraqi Sunni Sufi Groups, tribal groups in Anbar, Ninawa, Diyala, Salah-ad-Din etc., mainstream politicians (Nujaifi, Jabouri, Issawi, Abu Risha etc. - none of them can be called ISIS followers or believers in their ideology), Ad-Douris groups etc. supporting the revolts back in 2012 and 2013 (before too) and the opposition against the Baghdad regime led then by Al-Maliki. All those groups joined hands until ISIS wanted a monopoly and started targeting those former "allies". They were not really allies but they both did not want to be ruled by Al-Malikis regime and de facto the Mullah's in Iran and their henchmen/puppets in Iraq.

And to think that this will suddenly change should ISIS return to sleeper cells or until another group emerges, is wishful thinking and I honestly don't blame the average Iraqi Sunni Arab living in Ninawa, Anbar, Salah ad-Din, Diyala, Kirkuk, Babil etc. for not wanting to live under such an regime. Unless of course the unimaginable happens and the corrupt, incompetent etc. Iraqi politicians begin to serve their people and country and the loyal puppets of Iran/Mullah's become more loyal to their country rather than foreigners. The list is very long and none of this seems likely in the nearby future.

Now they are "celebrating" the slow capture of a 1.5 million big city that was captured by less than 10.000 ISIS members (vast majority local members to make it even more embarrassing) and which should never have been captured to begin with if those people in power were so great as some claim.



Funnily enough both of those parties (Iraqi Ba'athists aka ISIS) are twins if not at least siblings. Along with a third group (Al-Assad aka Syrian Ba'athists). Talk about a bad comedy gone wrong.

Another hilarious thing is Syrian Ba'athist's (led by Alawis - not even Shias) are great but Iraqi Ba'athist's (mostly Sunnis) are bad despite there not being any difference in politics or actions.

Islamists ruling the "Islamic" "Republic" of Iran is great but Islamists (read Sunnis) ruling elsewhere is bad.

When you think about it both ISIS and the "Islamic" "Republic" of Iran are two sides of the same coin foreign policy wise. One is trying to spread their version of Islamism (Wilayat al-Faqih) and the other (ISIS) their own perverted version. Both despise Arab monarchies and consider them their foremost enemies. Funny, is it not?

Even funnier when both of those terrorist groups policies are doing nothing but damage the Arab world and Arab countries which is the end goal of both. One due to ancient rivalries the other due to chaos being needed for them to exist in the first place. Both hate mainstream Sunni Islam too and want to undermine it.

Similar to how the Iranian Mullah's want to undermine the traditional way of understanding Zaydism in Northern Yemen (through using proxies such as Houthis and sending their leaders to Iran in order to be influenced by the cancerous Wilayat al-Faqih) and the Iraqi Shia Arab traditional view of Twelver Islam as understood by the Iraqi Arab hawza in Najaf and Karbala. This power struggle is ongoing currently and many Iraqi Shia clerics speak about it openly.

One of them spoke about it as far back as pre-2003.


Former Hezbollah member (leading member) talking about the exact same thing.


We Arabs know our enemies well and their plots. Maybe outsiders will be fooled but eventually the ant will be crushed and we are well prepared.

Of course dumb and blind sheep will never change. Too bad when it is their countries that suffer the most from this cancer (Iraq, Lebanon, Syria and now Yemen too). At one period in time you reach a limit where you say/conclude; "we want the best for you, but if you are unable to help yourself first there is little we can do". I have reached this conclusion but time will once again prove me right as it has done so many times before on so many different issues.


@waz @Oscar @Manticore @Jungibaaz

This troll has come back with yet another one of this fake accounts after 2 of them were banned last week.

I am not sure why his fake accounts were not deleted? He keeps returning to troll using one after another of his fake account after they're banned.
 
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1) How does Turkey benefit from isis by 'supporting' it?

2) Turkey openly supported and keeps supporting the fsa. Isis and fsa battle(d) and weakened each other in the face of Assad and ypg, all of which Turkey opposes. What do you make of that in light of the 'Turkey supports isis' accusation???

3) Turkey has been arresting and cracking down on isis for a long time and it has suffered from many isis (suicide) attacks. Isis has also threatened to conquer Istanbul from us. Are these actions not strange considering 'Turkey supports isis'? which brings me to the next point

4) What has Turkey historically done to isis to make it 'bite the hand that fed it' and thus force it to attack Turkey more than the countries isis is supposed to hate more (Israel and Iran for example)?

'Inaction' (till 2 months back) as in not fighting isis in Syria doesnt mean Turkey hasnt been cracking down on isis within Turkey. It is of course very easy and convenient to join the anti-Turkey Western mainstream propaganda 'media' bandwagon (like Russia did after the downing of the plane and not before it), but the arguments and proof need to be credible and make sense too.

Looking at Isis' intentions and how the US 'uses' them to weaken and reshape Syria (Turkey opened its eyes too late) and how isis perfectly plays the evil 'muzzie' boogeyman (interestingly Baghdadi still hasn't been found in these years despite having the US and many renowned Western intelligence services after him) role to keep stoking islamophobia, i think we can all agree that we need to look across the ocean to find the more likable culprit.

Besides, what group calls itself 'islamic state'? It's such a tryhard attempt to catch attention, and exactly a name that can instill fear in a world where anything related with 'islam' is deemed negative.

Furthermore, let's not forget that the US paid some good money to produce those fake 'beheading' videos.

Anyone blaming Turkey, KSA and other regional countries does so to cover their own heinous deeds (US foremost responsible for the mess in Iraq) by using their media power to blame these countries and keep the attention away from themselves or deliberately do so to associate these countries with isis.

It's really simple actually; who benefits from isis and all the consequences?
Fsa? No.
Turkey? No.
Regional Arab countries? No.
Iran? Quite a bit.
Israel? Yes.
US? Yes.
Ypg/pkk? Yes.

Isis is merely a tool for the ones that need an excuse to push through their agenda in the ME.
 
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581ae387c46188f8568b456a.jpg


Islamic State’s leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who is reportedly hiding out in the besieged city of Mosul, released his first message since 2015, urging followers to wage all-out war and take the fighting into Saudi Arabia and Turkey.
In the recorded message, the Islamic State (IS, previously ISIS/ISIL) chief also expressed confidence that the terrorist group would ultimately be victorious in fending off the Iraqi forces and allied militias trying to retake Mosul, where he declared the ‘caliphate’ two years ago.

The 31-minute-long recording, the authenticity of which could not be verified, was released by Islamic State supporters on Thursday, according to Reuters.

In the message, which does not specifically refer to Mosul, al-Baghdadi threatens unbelievers with suicide attacks and rivers of blood.

Al-Baghdadi, whose real name is Ibrahim al-Samarrai, said that the terror group’s militants will “unleash the fire of their anger” on Ankara, apparently referring to Turkish troops stationed at a base outside Mosul, as well as President Recep Tayip Erdogan’s diehard rhetoric, which has fanned fears that Turkey plans to unilaterally intervene in Iraq.

The IS leader also threatened to carry out multiple attacks in Saudi Arabia, targeting the Islamic kingdom’s security services, government officials and, notably, members of Al Saud royal family, while accusing them of siding with countries involved in hostilities in Iraq and Syria.

The battle for Mosul, a city that still has a population of around 1.5 million people, was launched on October 17 with an Iraqi army offensive supported by US-led coalition airstrikes and ground support.

As the troops advance on Islamic State’s Iraq stronghold, concerns about the safety of civilians living in the city’s densely populated urban areas have been rising. Russia’s Defense Ministry noted on Tuesday that the absence of escape routes for civilians may result in mass casualties as the battle continues.

US-led coalition air raids on IS targets have already resulted in collateral damage. According to Russia’s estimates, 60 civilians were killed and up to 200 injured during the first days of coalition bombings on residential areas in Mosul.

In the meantime, some top-tier Syrian officials believe the US may allow Islamic State’s jihadists to freely leave the city. In late October, President Bashar Assad’s media adviser, Dr. Bouthaina Shaaban, told RT: “The way they encircle Mosul shows they would like these terrorists to move into to Syria.

“They’re navigating terrorism from one place to another, limiting terrorism in one place, directing it to another place. That’s the absolute truth of what is happening in our region,” she asserted.

RT

You need to be insane to believe that Daesh has bad intentions toward its regional ally & founder (Iran).
Daesh has never attacked Iran, how come is that possible?
A dog will never bite the hand that feeds it.

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-...mitted-john-kerry-it-created-isis-there-twist
But the punchline: Saudi's admission that it itself created Daesh, or ISIS. As for the twist: as the late Saudi foreign minister says, the Saudis only created ISIS in response to Obama's disastrous policy in the region.

After the Iraqi city of Mosul fell to a lightning Isis offensive in 2014, even the late Prince Saud al-Faisal, the respected Saudi foreign minister, remonstrated with John Kerry, US secretary of state, that “Daesh [Isis] is our [Sunni] response to your support for the Da’wa” — the Tehran-aligned Shia Islamist ruling party of Iraq.
 
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http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-...mitted-john-kerry-it-created-isis-there-twist
But the punchline: Saudi's admission that it itself created Daesh, or ISIS. As for the twist: as the late Saudi foreign minister says, the Saudis only created ISIS in response to Obama's disastrous policy in the region.

After the Iraqi city of Mosul fell to a lightning Isis offensive in 2014, even the late Prince Saud al-Faisal, the respected Saudi foreign minister, remonstrated with John Kerry, US secretary of state, that “Daesh [Isis] is our [Sunni] response to your support for the Da’wa” — the Tehran-aligned Shia Islamist ruling party of Iraq.

The question is: Why the Iranians have the right to interfere in the region while the Saudis dont?
 
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Does this dude really exist? I only have seen one photo from him and as far as i know the Iraqi government already has killed a fabricated Al Baghdadi years ago

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/18/world/africa/18iht-iraq.4.6718200.html

Yeah, he exists. There's nothing mysterious about him. He was captured by the Americans in 2004, they let him go because he was a low threat civilian at the time along with a few others who created the ISIS.

Before him was another Al Baghdadi, same name different chap. The original leader of ISIS. He as killed by the Iraqis and this new Baghdadi replaced him as the next leader.
 
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