ISIL's
Next Goal: Take Over Saudi Arabia
Saudi
Arabia is next in the crosshairs of the self-proclaimed Islamic State
(IS), according to one Washington DC think tank.
10
March, 2014
IS
has gone farther than other extremist groups, including al-Qaeda, in
its ability to expand into territories and win and keep the support
of its sympathizers. It has support throughout the Middle East and
elsewhere, and doesn’t look like it’s going to slow down anytime
soon – and that’s where Saudi Arabia comes in, according to the
Jamestown Foundation.
“In
addition to confronting the incumbent regimes in Iraq and Syria and
rival militants and insurgents, the Islamic State has an ambitious
set of goals that include challenging Saudi Arabia,” the Foundation
says.
IS,
it adds, is behaving in a more aggressive manner toward Saudi Arabia.
Sanders
urged the anti-ISIL Muslim nations to lead the fight “for the soul
of Islam,” and said that Western nations, including the United
States, should be supportive of such efforts
In
an audio statement released last fall, the group’s leader Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi talked of expanding into the “lands of al-Haramein”
(two holy places), refusing even to call it by the name Saudi Arabia
because IS considers the Saudi royal family unworthy of any
recognition. Al-Baghdadi instead highlights Islam’s two holiest
sites — Mecca and Medina, and proclaims the appointment of regional
governors to represent IS — calling on followers in Saudi Arabia
and elsewhere to recognize and follow their leadership.
Al-Baghdadi
also issued a call to arms, telling Saudis to attack the country and
“their soldiers.”
The
IS leader holds Saudi Arabia in such low regard that he calls the
country al-Saloul, a derogatory reference to the al-Saud family, and
he implored his followers to attack the country’s substantial
minority of Shi’a Muslims, adding that the IS flag will soon “fly
over Mecca and Medina.”
It’s
not just idle talk, as a group of militants in January infiltrated a
northeast Saudi Arabian town and got into a skirmish with the border
police. The attackers included a suicide bomber who detonated his
vest while surrendering to a Saudi security officer, killing himself
and the officer.
IS
ostensibly holds such animosity towards Saudi Arabia because they
consider the Saudi government to be corrupt and in bed with the US,
which the group says is hell bent on controlling the Arab and Islamic
world.
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