CidanSultan
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Somaliland should develop ties with the Islamic State
CidanSultan replied to smartlander's topic in Politics
The real coward is you xabad you hanuman monkey worshiping cow piss drinking polytheist. I am scared of God alone. Unlike you i don't make up my religion my religion is written in black and white. What you can and can't do. Simple. Who said I live in Britain? I write not what I want I write what is correct and applicable to creating a society that people like me dream of. A world were islamic parties participate in governance. Where secularism is not the main concept of governance. Were Muslims don't have to fear getting bombed by the United States everytime they want to establish an Islamic ruling system. This is not about terrorism. This issue is extremely complex and has multiple dimensions. Therefore it's not something we can paint black and white. For a man who worships a cow and drinks cows piss and gives offering to a monkey God I honestly don't care what you have to say. -
Somaliland should develop ties with the Islamic State
CidanSultan replied to smartlander's topic in Politics
Talabo... Lol. I support the desire for Muslims to fight for islamic sharia be it Muslim brotherhood,A K P Turkey or any movement. I don't agree 100% with what the Islamic State does. Like I don't agree with many things Somaliland does. Do they have the right to establish an Islamic State yes. Do they have the right to defend sunnis yes. Do they have the right to kill innocent people no. Stop being so smug talabo -
Somaliland should develop ties with the Islamic State
CidanSultan replied to smartlander's topic in Politics
The Islamic State is a product of a failed American middle east policy pursued against Muslims. You can't really arm Israel as it kills innocent children, support middle east dictatorships with billions in money and weapons. Carpet bomb entire areas and not bread people who have a severe hatred of America and the West. This is the biggest support factor for the Islamic State. If the United States changed its policy the millions of good Muslims in the region can create a utopia. But America won't let it happen for interests. This is the real reason for All the current madness -
Somaliland should develop ties with the Islamic State
CidanSultan replied to smartlander's topic in Politics
Iska Amus Saxib you seriously have no idea. Buy a coloring book and a pack of crayons and colour within the lines ok.... No one knows were this organisation came from...it was born out of sectarian hate in Iraq and Syria. Don't confuse the Sunni uprising with the islamic state. They be headed an innocent man that was British that was part of aid convoy to help Syrians. Which was un islamic. Furthermore they pose with dead bodies and that is haram islamicly speaking. They shot captured soldiers and behead them which again is islamic. Islam has clear rules even in warfare. Islam is not terrorism. Just because we want sharia doesn't mean we support or condone terrorism. I can understand fighting the Shia because of oppression but the Kurds ?? The PKK are communists I understand but Kurds are a good people and gave Islam heroes like Islam ibn tammiya and salahudin Ayubi. They shouldn't be fighting Kurds. What Muslims want is the right to rule over themselves, sharia and the end of American aggression against Muslims. -
Norway delegation In Hargeysa there is only One Somalia wake up
CidanSultan replied to malistar2012's topic in Politics
Malister unlike you fake nationalist... We have something called dacaad and fear of Allah. The people of Las canod run their own affairs, Las canod today is richer then under said Barre, more stable and peaceful then both said Barre or under garowe. For one minute remove the poison of tribalism from your checkpoint rape approving mind. If an authority that is built on the will of the people through a real process on the ground by the people. That provides you with the services you need like security,free education and safety to do business and local councils why would you want to invite the AU to rape your daughter or some bandit to set up a checkpoint. Sometimes your have to use something severely lacking in Somalia common sense, self worth and doing things for yourself. Ohhh, the UN will help me, the AU will look after me, Kenya will secure this for me, Ethiopia is my brother. Wake the F%) : up and smell the coffee. The Islamic court system was by far the best system Somalia ever had. It was developed by the people and needed no outside help. -
GOD IS THE MOST JUST AND I PRAY TO GOD To PROTECTS MUSLIMS EVRYWHERE FROM THIS SCUM http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yk1HpUkZA8s ...
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The Internet is a historical record: Let it be known by anyone The real kawairij the are the servants of the United States. A nation founded on the principles of freemasonry and devil worship.
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Yeah I saw these pics on Twitter... The homosexual Kingdom of Saudi Arabia can't bomb Israel when it kills Muslims like. It doesn't even bomb syria when it kills Muslims. But bombs Isis... Yet they accuse them of being kawaarij
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Cabdi Qeybdiid gives puntland three days to respond to his demand
CidanSultan replied to malistar2012's topic in Politics
If you can't live together leave and be separate States if it brings peace. Better to be 6 powerful States then one state that is never ending chaos. Our enemy Ethiopia the Christian empire is rejoicing while they butcher Muslims. Kenya is rejoicing while they rape the women in Kismayo and take more land and sea from Muslims as they kill Muslims in kenya. au mercaneries are destroying our societal makeup while these idiots squabble over a half shack they call an airport. As the fake mugdisho government steals from the people and pimp out the rest. Have some shame and some blood. -
Cabdi Qeybdiid gives puntland three days to respond to his demand
CidanSultan replied to malistar2012's topic in Politics
This is what the Somali people have been reduced to... People like malister who claims to be a nationalist while obviously supporting tribal hatred, Further war and chaos. While he calls others hypocrites. In all honosty would an American nationalist or a British nationalist support what he supports if it was in their own countries. A true nationalist would be arguing for incorporating both these areas into a single area. Would he not. Somalians man... How far did the Italians, communism and lack of culture destroy your morality. -
Norway delegation In Hargeysa there is only One Somalia wake up
CidanSultan replied to malistar2012's topic in Politics
Who cares about the international community. Norway broke off from Sweden and before that from Denmark. Every nation has their own policy and objective. Somalia as a nation state is dead. Foreign mercaneries keep it on life support. The government of theft and hypocrisy. Women getting raped in day light. Muslims being killed in shebelle hoose, drone attacks. Kenya invasion in the south. The entire Kismayo debacle. Save us all the Bs.... The only solution to Somalia is an Islamic courts system in Southern Somalia and in mugdisho. Somaliland as a nation state is gone and the only real plausible approach at any unity is a European union style model with Muslim countries in the region. Norway said your part of Somalia..... Let's all have a party now... Hahaha... The world doesn't work like that unfortunately. Save your own women from rape before Barking up other trees you fake nationalist. In reality all you are are peddlers of tribalism and clearly that has failed just look at you. 30 years from now Somalia unless an Islamic courts system doesn't return will still be in this mess while Somaliland quietly waits and develops -
Acudubilah... Bis Milah... And they will come out [for judgement] before Allah all together, and the weak will say to those who were arrogant, "Indeed, we were your followers, so can you avail us anything against the punishment of Allah ?" They will say, "If Allah had guided us, we would have guided you. It is all the same for us whether we show intolerance or are patient: there is for us no place of escape." And Satan will say when the matter has been concluded, "Indeed, Allah had promised you the promise of truth. And I promised you, but I betrayed you. But I had no authority over you except that I invited you, and you responded to me. So do not blame me; but blame yourselves. I cannot be called to your aid, nor can you be called to my aid. Indeed, I deny your association of me [with Allah ] before. Indeed, for the wrongdoers is a painful punishment." - surah ibrahim
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1coI4JcO5xA It's not there yet but the plans are in motion it's a generational struggle to destroy anything Holy..of all religion and embrace satanism....
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The covert brainwashing of children to embrace satanism later.... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KAOvKb0S1dc
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The slow social death of the west as satanism takes hold... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iJqzRkv3vSI The cultural propagation of satanism through music and media... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JGx3cB3nnbY
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3 Tour US Iraq War Veteran Attacks Whitehouse With Knife
CidanSultan replied to CidanSultan's topic in Politics
I know I read the statistics...they went to Iraq and never really came home...they have been tormented since...good riddance SOB... -
Middle East Islamic State attack on Iraqi base leaves hundreds missing, shows army weaknesses. BAGHDAD — The army base in Iraq’s western Anbar province had been under siege by Islamic State militants for a week, so when a convoy of armored Humvees rolled up at the gate, the Iraqi soldiers at Camp Saqlawiyah believed saviors had arrived. But this was no rescue attempt. The vehicles were driven by militants on suicide missions, and within seconds on Sunday the base had become a bloody scene of multiple bombings. On Monday, a day after the attack, five survivors — including three officers — said that between 300 and 500 soldiers were missing and believed to be dead, kidnapped or in hiding. Army officials said the numbers were far lower, leading to accusations that they were concealing the true toll. If the survivors’ accounts are correct, it would make Sunday the most disastrous day for the Iraqi army since several divisions collapsed in the wake of the Islamic State’s capture of the northern city of Mosul amid its cross-country sweep in June. In any case, the chaotic incident has highlighted shortcomings in an army that the United States has spent billions of dollars training and equipping, and it has further undermined the force’s reliability as a partner as President Obama expands airstrikes into provinces including Anbar. The United States launches airstrikes against targets in Syria. Sept. 23, 2014 The USS Arleigh Burke launches a Tomahawk cruise missiles in the Red Sea against Islamic State targets in Syria. The United States and its Arab allies launched strikes from the air and sea against Islamic State militants, opening a new front in the battle against the brutal jihadist group. It has also heightened pressure on new Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, whose opponents have already seized on the incident to accuse him of a soft-handed approach to terrorists. While U.S. aircraft have carried out strikes in support of Iraqi forces in other recent clashes, there was no indication that any American airstrikes were made against these Islamic State attackers, other than unconfirmed reports from Iraqi officials. Accounts released Sunday and Monday by U.S. Central Command made no mention of the overrun Iraqi base. The lead-up to Sunday’s crisis began a week ago, when the last road to Camp Saqlawiyah, just north of insurgent-controlled Fallujah, was cut by Islamic State militants. One of two tanks that were among the vehicles guarding the road left to refuel, and the militants took the opportunity to attack those that remained, said a 9th Division soldier who was present and spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the news media. The fall of the units protecting the supply route meant that the five battalions inside the base were completely besieged. “There were no reinforcements, no food supplies, no medicine, no water, and then our ammunition began to run out,” said 1st Lt. Haider Majid, 28. “We called our leaders so many times. We called our commanders, we called members of parliament, but they just left us there to die.” Soldiers said they sought help from Lt. Gen. Rashid Fleih, the head of Anbar Military Command. He told Iraq’s al-Sumaria news on Monday that the troops on the base were just complaining because they were trapped and “bored.” Fleih said the army had delivered supplies while the base was under siege. But soldiers maintained that they received nothing, and thirst eventually forced them to dig a hole to dirty, salty water. “Even if it was dangerous for helicopters, it was their duty to try to help us,” Majid said. Survivors said they faced daily attacks during the week, including one using chlorine gas, a claim that was impossible to verify Monday. While some said colleagues had suffocated in the attack, Col. Ihab Hashem, the deputy commander of an 8th Division battalion, said canisters had fallen short of the base. Attackers in disguise The major assault came Sunday. Soldiers interviewed said army commanders had sent word via walkie-talkie that a rescue mission was on its way and had taken control of a nearby bridge. Shortly afterward, Iraqi army armored vehicles and military trucks arrived, and the men inside were dressed in the uniforms of Iraqi counterterrorism forces, the surviving soldiers said. “We thought this was the support we were promised was on the way,” said Capt. Ahmed Hussein of the 8th Division. “The first three Humvees were ahead of the rest with some military trucks. We just let them in.” One Humvee exploded in the middle of the camp. The two others drove to the perimeter and detonated. The rest of the Islamic State convoy was held back at the entrance, where the survivors said the militants carried out several more suicide bombings as they tried to break in. “I gathered my soldiers and said: ‘We are going to die anyway. Let’s try to get out,’ ” Hussein said, adding that he and about 400 other soldiers escaped under heavy fire in a convoy. Others were left behind. Those who got away divided into three groups, eventually leaving their vehicles after some were hit by roadside bombs. They continued on foot, traversing nearly two miles of territory held by the Islamic State until they reached Camp Tariq, about four miles away. “I was in the first group; there were about 150 soldiers in each,” Hussein said. “Only about half of each group made it.” The rescue mission that the soldiers had been told was coming “100 percent failed,” he said. On the bridge that they were told had been secured, they found the remnants of that mission: burned army vehicles. “No one knows how many people died,” said the 9th Division soldier, who spent days stranded in a house with 60 other soldiers. “We kept moving and never looked behind. Those who died, died. Those who were captured, were captured. We just ran for our lives.” Hussein estimated that 250 soldiers died at Camp Saqlawiyah, and 100 to 150 are missing. Hashem put the number of dead and missing at 400 to 500. But there were hopes that some might still make it back. A group of 13 has been in contact, according to Hashem, to say they are hiding in marshlands, another 13 in a grove of trees. He advised them to wait until the cover of night to try to make the rest of the journey. Government’s response The Iraqi Defense Ministry acknowledged Sunday that it had lost contact with some of its soldiers during the incident but did not say how many were missing. Fleih said that it was possible to “count them on one hand.” “It looks like the Defense Ministry is trying to push the numbers down,” said Mithal al-Alusi, a member of the Iraqi parliament’s defense and security committee. “If we have lost people or not, this proves military structure and military strategy is not able to fight ISIS,” he said, using an acronym for the Islamic State. He added: “Mosul they said was a surprise — what’s the excuse this time?” Abadi, who also holds the position of commander in chief of the armed forces, issued a statement Monday saying army commanders would be interrogated on charges of negligence. The statement said the prime minister had ordered supplies to be delivered to the stranded soldiers four days ago. For some soldiers, the incident was the latest — and last — in a series of humiliations. Hussein, for his part, said he would leave the army to join a Shiite militia. “We don’t have any leadership,” he said. But for the militias, “their leadership is with them in the field; they look after their soldiers.” Mustafa Salim contributed to this report.
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This is just a continuation on the war against Islam look at the source BBC. It's probably not even a mosque maybe some shack somewhere. No Muslim would pray in a gay mosque or a pro gay mosque because you can't be Muslim and gay it's written in black and white as the people of qomul lut proves. Homosexuality is used to weaken religion. Like Feminism. The satanist are waging a war to unsure in a new age of satanic worship or what they refer to as the new age movement. First they destroy the family, feminism, homosexuality, morality and decency. Don't by this BS.... Look at Europe...no family structure, women abused by society in the form of appearance, body is viewed as meat...I.e. Nothing but a sexual tool. Children watch satanic subliminal Disney, while the teenagers listen to satanic music and popular culture. This is a war between the forces of good and evil.
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Tests for a Still Broken IraqCan the U.S. Count on the New Government in Baghdad? By THE EDITORIAL BOARD SEPTEMBER 17, 2014 It is tempting, but shortsighted, to believe that the recently reconfigured governmentin Iraq is a dependable ally in the new military operation the Obama administration began this week to take back territory seized by the Islamic State, a Sunni extremist group. During his first few days in office, Haider al-Abadi, the prime minister, took constructive steps that might improve the prospect of reconciliation between the Shiite-run government and Sunnis, which is important to beating back the insurgency. But even as he vows to repair ties with the Sunnis and Kurds in western and northern Iraq, there is little evidence that the power brokers in government can win the trust of all segments of the country needed to isolate the Islamic State, also known as ISIS. As a first move, Mr. Abadi instructed Iraqi security forces to stop shelling civilian areas indiscriminately, often with imprecise munitions known as barrel bombs, which have resulted in many casualties. Those practices, routinely used by the Shiite-led security forces in fighting insurgents, have helped to build sympathy and drive support for the Islamic State, which now controls big sections of Iraq and Syria. The new government has also appointed as vice president Ayad Allawi, a secular Shiite politician who was backed by many Sunnis in his failed bid to become prime minister in 2010. But the fact remains, the Baghdad government is weak and structurally flawed, with divisions along sectarian lines. For years, Mr. Abadi has been a confidant of the former prime minister, Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, a fellow Shiite whose authoritarian streak and sectarianism are largely to blame for Iraq’s unraveling. Some Sunnis appear willing to give Mr. Abadi the benefit of the doubt, but many will also recall times when Mr. Maliki duplicitously presented himself as a conciliatory leader. And the nation’s core problems — including disputes over internal boundaries and oil proceeds — are unresolved. In arming and bolstering Kurds and Shiite-led Army divisions today, the Obama administration may be inadvertently shaping the course of future conflicts. If Mr. Abadi turns out to be a transformational politician able to bring about some cooperation between the factions, there might be hope for the gamble President Obama took by announcing an open-ended military operation that Congress has not authorized. But longtime observers of Iraqi politics are very skeptical that Mr. Abadi has the ability to undo years of brutal sectarian-based politics. “I think we’re basically hoping that these same politicians who have ruled Iraq since 2003 are going to behave differently,” said Emma Sky, an Iraq expert at Yale University who served as an adviser to American generals in Baghdad for several years. If the government in Baghdad is to succeed in charting a new course, it will need to take substantive steps soon. Among them is to appoint new defense and interior ministers, critical posts that for years were held by Mr. Maliki, and to appoint military leaders who are competent and untainted by sectarian abuses of the past. Another priority is to rein in the country’s Shiite militias, which re-emerged from the shadows as Islamic State fighters appeared within reach of the capital. Putting these Iranian-backed militias back on a leash will not be easy because they have often worked in tandem with Iraqi security forces and political factions. But Mr. Abadi’s government must insist that they start disbanding. To regain any trust among Sunnis, the government must start releasing those rounded up in mass arrests during Mr. Maliki’s tenure and bring back into the administration Sunni politicians who were pushed out with false allegations of having connections to extremists. One prominent example is Rafe al-Essawi, a former finance minister from Anbar Province who had to flee Baghdad last year after he denounced Mr. Maliki’s brutal crackdown on Sunni demonstrators. If the government is unable or unwilling to take these steps now, the American military will find itself once again defending a self-destructive Iraqi state
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3 Tour US Iraq War Veteran Attacks Whitehouse With Knife
CidanSultan replied to CidanSultan's topic in Politics
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z2B4ADO0XcM Statistically one American Iraq vet kills himself everyday... Mental problems. -
The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The man accused of getting inside the White House after scaling a fence is a veteran who was awarded a medal for his service in Iraq and retired due to disability, the Army said Sunday. Authorities have identified the intruder from Friday night's shocking incident as Omar J. Gonzalez, 42, of Copperas Cove, Texas, and the Army said he had served from 1997 to 2003, when he was discharged, and then again from 2005 to December 2012, when he retired. The military does not provide details about a soldier's disability due to privacy considerations. Gonzalez was expected to appear in federal court Monday to face charges of unlawfully entering a restricted building or grounds while carrying a deadly or dangerous weapon — a knife, in this case. The Secret Service tightened security outside the White House after the embarrassing breach in which the intruder carrying a knife climbed the fence, ran across the lawn and entered the building before agents stopped him. The first family was away from the White House at the time. Increased surveillance and more officer patrols are among the measures that Secret Service Director Julia Pierson ordered. She also began an investigation into what went wrong. A member of the House Homeland Security Committee said Sunday that it was astonishing, at a time of concerns about terrorist attacks, that "someone could actually get into the White House without being stopped." Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., said the intrusion was "absolutely inexcusable" and he expected congressional hearings into the incident at one of the world's most heavily secured buildings. "This demands a full investigation, an investigation as to what happened, why it happened and what's being done to make sure it never happens again," he told "Fox News Sunday." Officials first said the fact that the man appeared to be unarmed may have been a factor in why agents at the scene didn't shoot or have their dogs pursue him before he made it inside. But a criminal complaint issued late Friday revealed Gonzalez had a small folding knife with a 3 ½-inch serrated blade with him at the time of his arrest. At a hearing late Saturday afternoon in D.C. Superior Court, the assistant public defender representing Gonzalez said Gonzalez had no convictions or arrest warrants and had tested negative Saturday for drug use, according to The Washington Post. "This is someone who has provided service to his country and shown commitment in his life," said the lawyer, Margarita O'Donnell, as she tried unsuccessfully to get Gonzalez released. According to a criminal complaint, Gonzalez told Secret Service agents after his arrest that he was "concerned that the atmosphere was collapsing" and needed to contact the president "so he could get word out to the people." The Army said Gonzalez enlisted in July 1997 and was assigned to the 10th Cavalry Regiment, 2nd Brigade, 4th Infantry Division, at Fort Hood, Texas. At the time, he listed his home as Puerto Rico. He was discharged in September 2003 after completing his service obligation. Gonzalez enlisted a second time, in July 2005, and served until his retirement in late 2012. During this period, he was assigned to the 1st Squadron, 14th Cavalry Regiment, at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington state, and the 4th Squadron, 9th Cavalry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division at Ford Hood. Gonzalez served in Iraq from October 2006 to January 2008, according to the Army. Obama and his daughters had just left the White House by helicopter Friday evening when the intruder hopped the fence. The intruder ran toward the presidential residence unimpeded, ignoring orders from officers to stop, until being tackled just inside the doors of the North Portico — the grand, columned entrance overlooking Pennsylvania Ave. "Every day the Secret Service is challenged to ensure security at the White House complex while still allowing public accessibility to a national historical site," the agency said in a statement Saturday. "Although last night the officers showed tremendous restraint and discipline in dealing with this subject, the location of Gonzalez's arrest is not acceptable." With questions mounting, President Barack Obama tried to allay concerns about whether the Secret Service is still up to the task of protecting him and his family. "The president has full confidence in the Secret Service and is grateful to the men and women who day in and day out protect himself, his family and the White House," White House spokesman Frank Benenati said late Saturday. The Secret Service said its Office of Professional Responsibility was carrying out the review. The breach triggered a rare evacuation of much of the White House. Secret Service agents drew their weapons as they hurried White House staffers and journalists out of the West Wing through a side door. Less than 24 hours after Gonzalez's arrest, a second man was apprehended after he drove up to a White House gate and refused to leave, Secret Service spokesman Ed Donovan said, prompting bomb technicians in full gear to search the vehicle as agents briefly shut down nearby streets. There were no indications the two incidents were connected. But they only intensified the scrutiny of the Secret Service, which is struggling to rehabilitate its image following a series of allegations of misconduct by agents in recent years, including agents on Obama's detail.
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Som Gov names National Intelligence Security col Tuuryare.
CidanSultan replied to malistar2012's topic in Politics
Jahiil who me... Or you a person who supports the rape of Somali girls by African mercenaries with HIV. You support a government that controls nothing who is entirely dependent on African mercaneries and for that reason it is OK that they rape our sisters and mothers.
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