Always
good to hear from John Brennan, noting that this is going to press a
lot of buttons for Americans. So let's see, ISIS just declared
itse3lf a Caliphate, crucifying 9 Syrian rebels for being "too
moderate". No worries because John Brennan and the Saudis, with
the assistance of Netanyahu, empowered ISIS to begin with in order to
tear Iraq apart. Or was it in order to establish a Caliphate through
which they could then tear America apart? This is way too complex for
most Americans and it can't be good for Obama's poll-standing, which
is plunging ever-further. All that's needed now is for CNN or the NY
Times to suddenly report that Obama's been aiding Nazis all this time
in Kiev. Maybe ISIS could be the agent to spill the beans in that
regard. (That's what I would call poetic justice.) I wonder when the
Republicans are going to call for a Congressional committee to
investigate John McCain's current state of dementia. Or John
Brennan's. Or Obama's. The planetary cluster fuck has now begun in
earnest, it seems. Everything leading up to this point was just a
dress rehearsal.
--Michael
Green
ISIS
Leader to USA: ‘Soon We Will be in Direct Confrontation’
13
June, 2014
(CNSNews.com)
- Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of the Islamic State of Iraq and
Syria (ISIS), issued a rare audio message back on January 21 in which
he flatly stated his group’s intention to march on Baghdad and move
into “direct confrontation” with the United States.
“Our
last message is to the Americans. Soon we will be in direct
confrontation, and the sons of Islam have prepared for such a day,”
Baghdadi said. “So watch, for we are with you, watching.”
When
the House Foreign Affairs Committee held a hearing on February 5 on
al Qaida’s resurgence in Iraq, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State
for Iran and Iraq Brett McGurk presented
written testimony explaining
the agenda of ISIS (also known as the Islamic State of Iraq and the
Levant, or ISIL), and discussed Baghdadi’s audio message to
Americans.
ISIL,
McGurk said, focuses on “an aim to carve out an Islamic caliphate
stretching from Baghdad to Lebanon.”
“ISIL
has also made its intentions clear: move from a new base of
operations in Fallujah to Baghdad--a distance of under 30 miles,”
McGurk said in his
written testimony.
“Its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, had this to say in a rare audio
statement issued on January 21: ‘As for ISIS in Iraq: Be in the
frontlines against the Shia, and march toward Baghdad and the South,
keep the Shia busy in their own areas. Know that the entire Sunni
population and the brothers in Syria are watching you.’”
McGurk
then noted that Baghdadi went on to conclude his audio statement by
issuing a direct threat to the United States. Specifically, Baghdadi
said: “Our last message is to the Americans. Soon we will be in
direct confrontation, and the sons of Islam have prepared for such a
day. So watch, for we are with you, watching.”
“We
take such threats seriously and through cooperation with this
committee and the Congress, we intend to help the Iraqis in their
efforts to defeat ISIL over long term,” McGurk told the committee
in his spoken testimony.
The
day before McGurk appeared in the Foreign Affairs Committee, CIA
Director John Brennan testified at the House Permanent Select
Committee on Intelligence’s annual hearing on “Worldwide
Threats.” Discussing Jabhat al Nusra, which is the al Qaeda
affiliate in Syria, and ISIL, Brennan warned that al Qaeda may
develop the capability to “use Syria as a launching pad” for
attacks on the West, and that al Qaeda already had training camps
both in Syria and Iraq where it was developing capabilities that
could threaten the West.
“There
are three groups of people [operating in Eastern Syria] that are a
concern, from an extremist standpoint; Ahrar Asham, Jabhat al-Nusra,
which is the Al Qaida element within Syria, and the Islamic state of
Iraq and Levant,” said Brennan. “It's those latter two I think
are most dedicated to a terrorist agenda.
“We
are concerned about the use of Syrian territory by the Al Qaida
organization to recruit individuals and develop the capability to be
able not just to carry out attacks inside of Syria, but also to use
Syria as a launching pad,” he said.
“So
it's those elements--Al Qaida and ISIL--that I'm concerned about, and
especially the ability of these groups to attract individuals from
other countries, both from the West, as well as throughout the Middle
East and South Asia, and with some experienced operatives there who
have had experience in carrying out a global Jihad,” Brennan
continued.
“There
are camps inside of both Iraq and Syria that are used by Al Qaida to
develop capabilities that are applicable, both in the theater, as
well as beyond,” the CIA director testified.
House
Intelligence Chairman Mike Rogers asked Brennan: “Do you believe
that that ungoverned space presents a real threat to the United
States of America, via al Qaida operations, or the West?
“I
do,” said Brennan.
On
Feb. 2, al Qaeda had issued a statement on inline disassociating
itself from ISIL, which had tried to take over al Nusra Front, which
al Qaeda had designated as its official affiliate in Syria. In his
Feb. 5 testimony, McGurk discussed this break between al Qaeda and
ISIL.
"ISIL
and al Nusra were both kind of came out of Al Qaida in Iraq,"
said McGurk. "ISIL, basically, is al Qaida in Iraq. It's leader
was the al Qaida and Iraq leader since 2010. Nusra was a bit of an
offshoot and is focused more on Syria. As you said, there's now this
message, which seems from [al Qaida leader] Zawahiri, saying that
ISIL is no longer affiliated with Al Qaida central."
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