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Terror Networks
In Photos, ISIS Shows How Brussels Terror Originated in Syria
2016-04-14
[NYTIMES] Somewhere, there is a digital archive containing the portraits of the Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not really Moslems....
’s network of fighters in Europe. The image of each fighter was stored in this database months before last year’s attacks in Gay Paree, and after each new terror strike, the group has reached into it and released the photographs. So it was on Wednesday.

The latest issue of Dabiq, the Islamic State’s slick online magazine, includes an image of Najim Laachraoui, the 24-year-old former Catholic school pupil who was last seen wheeling a suitcase bomb into the Brussels airport. He is wearing military fatigues and sadistically winking at the camera. Next to him is a man with a bloody knife, suggesting they had just beheaded a captive.

It is worth noting that the two men’s uniforms exactly match those worn by the Gay Paree attackers last year, as shown in another set of photographs and an accompanying video, also pulled from the archive. Those were shot somewhere in Syria or Iraq before the attacks, and made public soon after. They have the same desert camouflage pattern, the same tan cap and tactical vest, the same cutoff gloves and grotesque scene of bloodshed.

Before returning to Europe, both the Brussels bomber and the Gay Paree plotters posed for carefully choreographed scenes, showing the atrocities they committed in Syria and Iraq. The purpose is clear: to show the West that the attackers really were sent from the heart of the group’s terror machinery.

In a short biography of Mr. Laachraoui, who is also identified by the nom de guerre Abu Idris al-Baljiki, the Islamic State says he was the bombmaker for both the Gay Paree and Brussels attacks. The biography also says the future jacket wallah’s first foray in Syria was as a recruit in the battalion of Amr al-Absi, the leader of a group calling itself the Mujahedeen Shura Council. In 2012, that group became a magnet for European jihadists, especially Belgians, who flocked to a walled villa in Kafr Hamra, just outside Aleppo, Syria, as Ben Taub reported in an excellent piece for The New Yorker.

Later, Mr. Absi’s group pledged allegiance to the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIS. The biography says Mr. Laachraoui "was one of the first, along with the rest of his group, to pledge allegiance."
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Africa North
Islamist Militias Form New Coalition in Libya's Derna
2014-12-14
[AnNahar] Islamist militias in the eastern Libyan town of Derna say they have formed a new coalition ahead of an expected assault by pro-government forces.

"Everybody saw what happened in Benghazi: disaster; institutions destroyed; houses demolished; mosques and universities burned by the criminal hands of Haftar's supporters," said the newly formed Mujahedeen Shura Council.

Forces loyal to former general Khalifa Haftar
... served in the Libyan army under Muammar Qadaffy, and took part in the coup that brought Qadaffy to power in 1969. He became a prisoner of war in Chad in 1987. While held prisoner, he and his fellow officers formed a group hoping to overthrow Qadaffy. He was released around 1990 in a deal with the United States government and spent nearly two decades in the United States, gaining US citizenship. In 1993, while living in the United States, he was convicted in absentia of crimes against the Jamahiriya and sentenced to death. Haftar held a senior position in the anti-Qadaffy forces in the 2011 Libyan Civil War. In 2014 he was commander of the Libyan Army when the General National Congress (GNC) refused to give up power in accordance with its term of office. Haftar launched a campaign against the GNC and its Islamic fundamentalist allies. His campaign allowed elections to take place to replace the GNC, but then developed into a civil war. Guess you can't win them all...
and Abdullah al-Thani, Libya's internationally recognized prime minister, are fighting to wrest full control of Tripoli
...a confusing city, one end of which is located in Lebanon and the other end of which is the capital of Libya. Its chief distinction is being mentioned in the Marine Hymn...
and the eastern city of Benghazi from Islamist krazed killers.

The jihadist Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not really Moslems....
(IS) group that has seized chunks of Iraq and Syria is thought to have gained a foothold in Derna amid the chaos in Libya since the 2011 uprising that ousted dictator Muammar Qadaffy
...a reminder that a single man with an idea can change an entire nation, usually for the worse...

In its statement issued late on Friday, the Mujahedeen Shura Council called on everyone in Derna to join the new coalition. It also addressed Islamist fighters in Benghazi, saying: "We are with you in the war against the criminal Haftar and his soldiers".

Ahead of the announcement, the Islamists staged a military parade in Derna, with tanks and combatants carrying black flags.

Since the 2011 uprising, Libya has been sliding deeper into crisis, torn by rival governments, parliaments and powerful militias, despite U.N. efforts to broker talks on ending the violence.

Western countries have been increasingly worried that the political turmoil could provide fertile ground for Islamic bully boys.

A top U.S. military general said last week that the IS group has set up training camps in eastern Libya and that the American military is closely monitoring the situation.

Analysts say a number of factions in Derna have pledged loyalty to the IS group, but it remains unclear how much support they enjoy.
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Africa North
Rocket Hits Outskirts of Israel's Eilat Resort
2014-01-21
[An Nahar] At least one rocket struck the outskirts of Israel's southern Red Sea resort of Eilat on Monday, a security source told Agence La Belle France Presse.

"At least one rocket was fired at Eilat and they found the remains on the outskirts of the city," he said, speaking on condition of anonymity
... for fear of being murdered...
, adding the searches were continuing.

Neither the police nor the army could confirm rocket fire on the city, although residents had reported hearing several kabooms earlier in the evening, a police statement said.

The last time the resort city came under attack was in August 2013 when the Israeli army said its Iron Dome anti-missile system had intercepted and destroyed a rocket but did not say where it came from.

That attack was claimed by a Gazoo-based Salafist group called the Mujahedeen Shura Council, which has previously said its snuffies in Sinai had staged several rocket attacks on Eilat.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Netanyahu: Israel to 'Exact Price' for Eilat Rocket Attack
2013-04-22
[An Nahar] Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday vowed Israel would "exact a price" from the Gazoo Orcs and similar vermin who recently fired missiles from Sinai at the southern resort city of Eilat.

"Last week missiles were fired from Sinai at Eilat," Netanyahu said at the start of his weekly cabinet meeting.

"Those who fired them are apparently a terror squad that departed Gazoo and used the territory of Sinai to attack an Israeli city.

"We will not accept this and we will exact a price -- this has been our consistent policy the past four years and it will serve us in this case as well," he said in remarks relayed by his bureau.

On Wednesday, Orcs and similar vermin fired two rockets from Egypt's Sinai Peninsula at Eilat which hit inside the city but caused no casualties.

The attack was claimed by a Gazoo-based Salafist group called the Mujahedeen Shura Council, which has in recent months fired rockets from Gazoo into Israel.

Eilat has been hit by intermittent rocket fire from Sinai over the past few years. The last attack was in August 2012 when Orcs and similar vermin from another Salafist group called Ansar Beit al-Maqdis fired two rockets at the city without causing injuries.
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Africa North
Egypt army dispatches team to Sinai following Eilat attack
2013-04-18
[Al Ahram] "Egyptian lands are not and will not become a source of threats to neighbouring states," an Egyptian military spokesman asserted on Wednesday, following a rocket attack on the southern Israeli resort city of Eilat earlier the same day.

The Israeli army claims that two rockets were fired from Egypt's Sinai Peninsula on Wednesday, neither of which, it says, caused any casualties.

Egyptian military spokesman Colonel Ahmed Mohamed Ali said via Facebook that the Egyptian Army had dispatched technical teams to Sinai to investigate claims that the rockets had been launched from the peninsula.

A Salafist group, the 'Lions of the Mujahedeen Shura Council in the Environs of Jerusalem,' allegedly claimed Wednesday's attack, AFP reported.

For his side, Major General Alaa Ezzedine, head of Egypt's Strategic Centre of the Armed Forces, denied that rockets had been fired from Egypt's Sinai Peninsula into the Israeli Red Sea resort of Eilat.

Ezzedine said that Israel was responsible for determining the location from which the rockets were fired, arguing that such an incident proved the "failure" of Israel's Iron Dome anti-missile system, recently deployed around Eilat, which did not intercept the rockets.

He told Ahram Online that the Egyptian armed forces were currently working on a strict plan aimed at stopping "law breakers" located Sinai.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Salafists say Hamas made arrests for rocket attacks
2013-04-05
[Al Ahram] The Paleostinian movement Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason, which rules Gazoo has enjugged
Drop the gat, Rocky, or you're a dead 'un!
two hardline Islamists in connection with rocket attacks on Israel, sources close to a Salafist group said Thursday.

The Hamas interior ministry, however, denied any arrests had been made for "resistance against the occupation."

Hamas's "internal security apparatus in the last two days arrested two mujahedeen. One was released after several hours. The other is still tossed in the slammer
Please don't kill me!
," a Salafist source told AFP on condition of anonymity.

The source said it was part of a "campaign to pursue Salafists
...Salafists are ostentatiously devout Moslems who figure the ostentation of their piety gives them the right to tell others how to do it and to kill those who don't listen to them...
after the targeting of Israel with rockets."

A Gazoo-based Salafist group claimed firing rockets at Israel on Tuesday and Wednesday that landed in open fields, causing no damage or casualties. In response, Israel carried out two air strikes, also without causing harm.

The Mujahedeen Shura Council said the rocket attacks were a response to the death of a Paleostinian prisoner detained by Israel who died of cancer while serving a life sentence.

Interior ministry front man Islam Shahwan denied there had been any "arrests for resistance to the enemy (Israel)," saying such action would "not help national consensus (unity)."
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Israel Air Strike Kills One Palestinian in Gaza
2012-10-14
[An Nahar] An Israeli air strike killed one Paleostinian and maimed two others, including a child, in the Gazoo Strip on Saturday, Paleostinian medical sources said.

The attack, one of several on the coastal strip over the course of the day, targeted an unidentified man driving a cycle of violence in the northern town of Jabaliya, they said.

The Israeli army confirmed an attack, but gave no details.

Following the fatal strike, the air force also hit a training camp in Gazoo City of the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of the Islamist movement Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason,, which controls the strip, Paleostinian sources said.

No casualties were reported.

Earlier on Saturday, the air force hit three targets in Gazoo, hours after a rocket fired from the territory went kaboom! near a house in southern Israel, sources on both sides said.

"Aircraft targeted a terror activity site in the northern Gazoo Strip, and two terror activity sites in the central Gazoo Strip. Direct hits were confirmed," a statement from the Israeli military said.

"The sites were targeted in response to the rocket fire towards southern Israel."

Paleostinian security officials said there were no casualties from the strikes, one of which hit an unmanned training camp of the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of the ruling Hamas movement, south of Gazoo City.

They said the other two hit open ground near the Nusseirat and Al-Bureij refugee camps in central Gazoo, possibly used as rocket launch sites.

On Friday night, Gazoo gun-hung tough guys fired a Grad rocket that went kaboom! in the yard of a residential building in the southern Israeli town of Netivot.

One person was taken for medical treatment suffering from shock, and the building was damaged by the rocket.

The Mujahedeen Shura Council, a Salafist group, issued a statement saying it fired the rocket on Netivot.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Three Gaza Rockets Hit Israel, House Damaged
2012-09-10
[An Nahar] A rocket fired from Gazoo crashed into a house in southern Israel on Sunday, causing heavy damage but not casualties, as two more landed near the city of Beersheva, an Israel police front man said.

Spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said one rocket hit a house in Netivot and caused damage to a second, while two others landed near Beersheva, a city of 194,000 people.

"There were two near Beersheva, and another in Netivot which damaged two houses," he said.

A military spokeswoman could only confirm two rockets, saying one had landed in "an uninhabited area near Beersheva" while a second "slammed into a house in Netivot causing serious damage."

According to a count by the army, beturbanned goons have fired 14 rockets at Israel since September 1.

Following the attack, schools were closed for the day in Beersheva as well as in the southern coastal cities of Ashkelon, which has a population of 113,000 people, and Ashdod, home to 207,000 people, media reports said.

There has been a steady increase in rocket fire on southern Israel over the last few weeks, with a number of the attacks claimed by radical Salafist groups.

On Saturday, a Salafist group called Mujahedeen Shura Council said it had fired two rockets at southern Israel.

Israel routinely responds to rocket attacks with air strikes, and last week, six Paleostinian were killed in two attacks within a 12-hour period.

Gazoo health officials said all of them were civilians, but the Israeli military said it had targeted beturbanned goons preparing attacks.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Israeli Airstrikes Target Hamas Camps in Gaza
2012-08-29
[An Nahar] Israeli aircraft attacked three Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason, training camps in the Gazoo Strip early Tuesday, causing no injuries, eyewitnesses in the enclave said.

An Israeli helicopter fired six missiles at two different sites northwest of Gazoo city, both training camps for Hamas' military wing, the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, eyewitnesses said.

In addition, an Israeli aircraft fired four rockets at a Qassam training camp south of Gazoo City, according to sources in Gazoo.

There were no injuries in any of the attacks.

The Israeli military confirmed the strikes on the northern Gazoo Strip, without mentioning the third one.

In a statement, the army said its "aircraft targeted two sites -- a weapon manufacturing site and a weapon storage facility in the northern Gazoo Strip."

"Direct hits were confirmed. The sites were targeted in response to the continuous rocket fire towards southern Israel," the statement read.

On Monday, Gazoo faceless myrmidons fired three mortars that hit southern Israel, causing no damages or injuries.

And on Sunday, two factories in the southern Israeli city Sderot were damaged by rockets. A Salafist group from Gazoo, Mujahedeen Shura Council, assumed responsibility for that attack.

Hamas, which rules the Gazoo Strip, has maintained a tacit truce with Israel, but other armed Paleostinian groups regularly fire rockets and mortars across the border, which can spark air strikes in response.
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Iraq
Wanted Terrorist back in Fallujah?
2007-05-15
Resistance commander reported ready to chair new, united Resistance organization in al-Fallujah.

The Iraqi Patriotic alliance published a report on its website on Sunday, 13 May indicating that the former Chairman of the Mujahideen Shura Council in al-Fallujah during the Second Battle of al-Fallujah – which took place from November 2004 to January 2005 – is planning to return to take up the struggle there again.

According to sources quoted by al-Muliff Press, Chairman al-Jannabi, who is one of the Resistance men most wanted by the US occupation and its puppet regime, is now expected to take up the leadership of a new Resistance formation to be called the Jaysh al-Muslimeen (Army of the Muslims) which will be made up out of the unification of four organizations into one group with one political position and one orientation. The four groups that are reportedly putting the finishing touches on the structure of their united movement are the Brigades of the 1920 Revolution, the Liwa’ al-Islam, the Army of the al-Mujahideen, and the Army of the Rashideen.

Five other Resistance groups have also reportedly united into another new Resistance formation in what is seen to be a response to a new stage in the Resistance in which the increased threat of Iranian hegemony in Iraq makes a confrontation with the Iranian regime and its Iraqi agents a vital necessity.

Take this with a grain of salt due to the source. Here is some more info on al-Janabi...

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Before the assault on Fallujah, U.S. officials described the city as a den of foreign terrorists, but its top commanders were an electrician and a mosque preacher - both natives of the community and now on the run from American forces.

Religious fervor and hatred of Americans brought Omar Hadid and Abdullah al-Janabi together in a partnership that played a major role in transforming Fallujah from a sleepy Euphrates River backwater into a potent symbol of Arab nationalism.

Their rise to prominence provides insight into contemporary Iraq, where the U.S. presence sparked a religious backlash that gave radical Muslim leaders major roles in filling the void created by the ouster of Saddam Hussein's regime and its replacement by a weak U.S.-backed government.

After U.S. Marines lifted the siege of Fallujah last April, central government control collapsed. That enabled men like Hadid, an electrician who lived with his mother, and al-Janabi, a local imam and member of an important local clan, to emerge as powerbrokers until the Marines took the city back this month.

Of the two, Hadid, thought to be in his early 30s, appears to have been the more influential, even though al-Janabi, in his 50s, headed the Mujahedeen Shura Council, which set up Islamic courts that meted out Islamic punishments, executed suspected spies and enforced a strict Islamic lifestyle.

Fallujah residents and Iraqis with close family ties to the city said al-Janabi was more a spiritual leader - deeply respected but without the leverage that Hadid enjoyed over the bands of fighters who patrolled the streets, directed traffic, attacked U.S. positions on the city's fringes and fought the Americans in April and again this month.

Hadid led one of the bigger and better armed factions in the city, residents say, but they also stress there were other groups of fighters and all largely operated independently of one another.

Some U.S. and Iraqi officials believe Hadid was close to Jordanian terrorist leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, whose al-Qaida-linked movement allegedly used Fallujah as a headquarters. Al-Zarqawi's group has claimed responsibility for many of the suicide bombings and beheadings of foreign hostages.

But many Fallujans insist al-Zarqawi was never in the city, even though American forces found what they believe was a command and training center for his movement. Residents also insist the number of foreign Arab fighters was small, giving estimates ranging from several dozen to a couple of hundred in a city of nearly 300,000 people.

Given the uncertainty about al-Zarqawi's role, it is difficult to determine his relationship with either Hadid or al-Janabi.

Some Iraqis who knew Hadid said he was too independent-minded to have taken orders from al-Zarqawi or anyone else. "Omar is far too powerful to be anyone's deputy," said a neighbor of Hadid, who spoke on condition his name not be printed for security reasons.

Those who knew him said Hadid came from a lower middle class Fallujah family. Since his father died a few years ago, Hadid had lived with his mother in the family home in the city's al-Moatasim area until the fighting in April. He's married but without children.

About two months ago, one of Hadid's brothers and a nephew were killed by a U.S. airstrike that also injured several other family members, the neighbor said. Hadid escaped with a minor injury, he said.

People who know Hadid differ over the depth and nature of his religious persuasion. Some said he is a Salafi, a conservative sect whose members try to emulate the appearance and behavior of Islam's 7th century prophet, Muhammad. Others said he is a Wahhabi, the austere and radical brand of Islam dominant in Saudi Arabia.

Al-Janabi, on the other hand, is a Sufi, a mystical version of the faith that seeks closeness to God through the cleansing of one's soul. Sufis abhor violence, but al-Janabi found in Hadid a like-minded partner as Salafis and Wahhabis began to prevail over Sufis in Fallujah.

"He's a Salafi in a Sufi disguise," said one native of Fallujah who says he knew both men.

Al-Janabi even joined Hadid in orchestrating the expulsion of a prominent Sufi cleric and mujahedeen leader, Sheik Dhafer al-Obeidi, from the Shura Council after they became alarmed by his growing popularity, say residents who knew the cleric. Al-Obeidi now lives in hiding abroad.

In 1998, al-Janabi, married with five children, was suspended by Saddam's government from delivering Friday sermons because of his public criticism of government policies. He returned to the pulpit of Fallujah's Saad Bin Abi Waqas mosque after Saddam's ouster, devoting most of his sermons to calling on Iraqis to join in a holy war against the Americans.

Fearing for his safety, he stopped giving Friday sermons after the April fighting.

Residents said al-Janabi never carried a weapon in public, but was frequently seen during the April fighting talking to front-line mujahedeen, exhorting them to fight on and telling them that those who died fighting Islam's enemies would be rewarded with eternity in paradise.


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Iraq
Abu Omar al-Baghdadi Nabbed in Iraq Raid
2007-03-09
We're trotting out the accordion lady to keep y'all entertained until this is rock-solid confirmed. AoS.
The leader of the al-Qaida-affiliated Islamic State of Iraq has been captured in a raid west of Baghdad, an Iraqi military spokesman said Friday. Abu Omar al-Baghdadi was captured Friday in a raid in Abu Ghraib on the western outskirts of Baghdad, said Brig. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi, spokesman of the Baghdad security operation.
U.S. officials had no confirmation of the capture.
U.S. officials had no confirmation of the capture. "One of the terrorists who was arrested with him confessed that the one in our hands is al-Baghdadi," al-Moussawi said.

Al-Baghdadi has been identified in statements posted on Islamic extremist Web sites as the head of the Islamic State, which was proclaimed last year after the death of the leader of al-Qaida in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. Al-Baghdadi was said to have headed the Mujahedeen Shura Council, an alliance of al-Qaida and other jihadist organizations, which was set up last year to downplay the role of foreigners in the Iraqi insurgency. The name first surfaced after al-Zarqawi's death, when the Mujahedeen Shura Council posted a condolence message on a militant Web site. "As for you the slaves of the cross (U.S.-led coalition forces), the grandsons of Ibn al-Alqami (Shiites), and every infidel of the Sunnis, we can't wait to sever your necks with our swords," the message read. It was signed by Abdullah bin Rashid al-Baghdadi, who was identified as the council leader.

In a tape released last November, the leader of al-Qaida in Iraq called on Sunni Muslims to pledge their allegiance to a new state that militants have said they created in Iraq, and said al-Baghdadi was its ruler. "I vow allegiance to you," Abu Hamza al-Muhajir said in the tape. He addressed al-Baghdadi as the "ruler of believers" and placed al-Qaida in Iraq fighters under his command.

On Friday, the Islamic State of Iraq announced it would soon release a video on the death of a U.S. Air Force pilot whose F-16 jet crashed Nov. 27 north of Baghdad, according to IntelCenter, which monitors insurgent Web sites. The pilot, Maj. Troy L. Gilbert, was listed officially as "whereabouts unknown" but then reported by the U.S. military as dead following DNA tests from remains at the scene. IntelCenter said it was unclear what the video would show.
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Iraq
StrategyPage Iraq: Death Toll Declining
2006-10-17
The Sunni Arab terrorists are running out of manpower, and the government has managed to restrain many of the death squads. This is being done partly by using American troops more to disband, or purge, police units that have been too active in the Shia revenge attacks. Iraqi deaths (civilians and security forces) are down about 40 percent from the September rate. Last month, there were nearly 4,000 civilian and security force deaths (plus 76 Americans, a steady increase from the July low of 46.) Like lights going out on a Christmas tree, the Sunni Arab suicide bomber cells are being taken down. The anti-terrorist tribal alliance in Anbar province has forced terrorists to concentrate on defending themselves. These defensive operations are carried out by directing attacks against tribal militia, or U.S. troops that are assisting. Rather than drive into Baghdad (which is not as easy as it used to be, what with all the additional roadblocks and security checks), the Islamic terrorists can now set up roadside bombs in their own neighborhoods, which are now patrolled by U.S. troops. This sort of thing is demoralizing for many Sunni Arabs, who had entertained the fantasy, since 2003, that all this violence was "winning the war." The absence of government, or U.S., troops for two years, allowed these Sunni Arabs to believe the fantastic reports, of Sunni Arab terrorist victories, in the Arab media. But those fantasies are now in ruins, especially since Shia death squads are starting to visit, often dressed up as police or paramilitaries. The terror that Sunni Arabs served up for so many decades, has now returned, with the long-time killers, now the victims.

Meanwhile, one group of Sunni Arab Islamic radicals, Mujahedeen Shura Council, has proclaimed the establishment of an Islamic State in Iraq. This fantasy is supported by the enforcement of strict Islamic lifestyle by Islamic gangs in some parts of Iraq. But beyond that, it's nothing by press release bravado, and some dead bodies. Always the dead bodies accompany announcements of religious importance in Iraq. It's quite the culture of death, all in the name of God.

The government is trying to reduce the amount of Shia Arab death squad activity, at least in line with the destruction of Sunni Arab terrorist groups. If the government cannot do that, then the number of refugees (largely Sunni Arab) will increase. Jordan and Saudi Arabia, which have been helpful to Iraq, are complaining about the growing number of Sunni Arab refugees crossing their borders. However, many Shia Arab Iraqi government officials would like to see more Sunni Arabs get out of the country. But, officially, the government is trying to reduce the migration, and the violence that spurs it.
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