From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Thu Aug 01 2002 - 12:17:06 MDT
On 1 Aug 2002 at 6:18, rhinoceros wrote:
> 
> [kharin]
> You have written in the past that the rise of Islamic fundamentalism in a 
number of states was a blowback resulting from the policy pursued 
against 
the Soviets; can you be certain that the same will not happen through 
the 
current actions?
> 
> [Joe Dees]
> It's going to happen anyway.  The very rejection of the supremacy of 
Islam and the Shar'ia as a model for constitutional governance is itself a 
causus belli in the eyes of the rabid Dar Al Islami Ummah.
> 
> [rhinoceros]
> What is that which is going to happen anyway, and why? Aren't Islamists 
and Islamic states subject to human nature and its social aspects? Just 
look at Iran. They oppress and abuse their people, but they are seeking 
international relations with the "infidels" for economical reasons. And 
this 
is happening not in the face of just "not accepting the supremacy of 
Islam", 
but in the face of active rejection, aggresive isolation, pressure for 
social 
change, even war against other muslim states. Can you really explain 
Iran's international policy through the Koran. What about Saudi Arabia?
>
Iran's Mullahs have allowed al Quaeda to escape through their common 
morder with Afghanistan, actively support Gulbuddin Hekmatyr, who is 
instigating anti-government terror in Afghanistan, and have harbored 
the most-wanted terrorist Imad Fayez Mugniyah the planner of the 
bombing, in Lebanon, of the Marine barracks and our embassy, and the 
hijacking of an aircraft and an exection of an American passenger 
abourd, Navy diver Robert Stetham, and the source of the 83 tubes of 
weapons, totaling 50 tons, that were being smuggled to the palestinian 
PLA but were intercepted by Israel.  While it is true that their president 
and many youth, who I believe have rejected the rabid versions of 
radical Islam but dare not say so publicly, press for reform, they are 
overruled by the mullahs, who control the courts and can (and do) 
imprison and kill the louder objectors with total impunity.
Saudi Arabia need us to buy their oil and to keep Iraq from invading 
them, but at the same time their royal family and citizens send many 
millions to Al Quaeda and to support the brainwashing Pakistani 
madrasas.  They actively export one of the most vile and vicious forms 
of radical Islam, Wahhabism (Al Quaeda is mostly Wahhabist, as is Bin 
Laden himself), which is also the brand of Islam allied with the House of 
Saud.
>
> I find your belief attributing a top significance to the Koran unfounded. 
Did the crusades really happen because of the the Bible?
> 
Clearly you have not done your homework.  And yes, if neither the Bible 
nor the Koran ever existed (nor the Zend Avesta of Zarathustra) in the 
absence of an absolutist patriarchal monotheistic book with which to 
replace them, history might have been much safer and saner.
> 
> [Joe Dees]
> In this case, just as with the Soviet case, the US sees itself threatened 
globally, and for good reason.  The only law that the adversaries 
recognize is Shar'ia.
> 
> [rhinoceros]
> Deliberate intervention based on strategic-economic interests has also 
some Sharia-like characteristics (pressure towards a worldview).
> 
People can believe what they wish as long as they don't kill people who 
believe differently for the reason that they believe differently, and so 
long as they allow free trade and commerce between consenting 
parties.
>
> What is really happening is feeding pan-arabic nationalism through 
interventions dictated by the interests of the USA (consider Saudi 
Arabia 
vs Iraq). It seems reasonable to assume that the USA thinktanks know 
that very well, but those interests are considered too important.
>
The rabid dar-Al Islami Ummah will use any excuse, or none, to feed 
their 'pan-arabic nationalism' .
>
> Another interesting issue would be what the politically correct term 
"interests of the USA" means in practice, and what are its implications 
for 
the ordinary citizen of the USA. By not questioning such issues, one 
would 
be satisfied to use the word *we* and engage happily in planning the 
next 
strategically crucial operation on a map on his desk.
> 
Right now it means stopping Al Quaeda operatives wherever they may 
be or go and regardless of who supports or shelters them (and to 
pursue the supporters and shelterers, too) in order to prevent future 
terrorist attacks upon our citizens at home and abroad, and preventing 
such forces from stifling and holding hostage international commerce; 
these objectives accrue not just to the benefit of the US, but also to the 
benefit of the world community as a whole.
> ----
> This message was posted by rhinoceros to the Virus 2002 board on Church of Virus BBS.
> <http://virus.lucifer.com/bbs/index.php?board=51;action=display;threadid=25860>
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