(Presentation given by Brig
retired Asif Haroon Raja at Thinkers Forum Pakistan on November 29,
2014, chaired by Air Chief Marshal retired Kaleem Sadat, Gen retired
Mirza Aslam Beg as chief guest and Lt Gen Abu Saeeduz Zafar in
attendance).
I shall be dwelling upon the newly emerged threat of Da’esh, which is
also known as Islamic State of Iraq & Sham (ISIS), which later
morphed into Islamic State (IS), also called Da’esh. Its emergence has
further disturbed the security situation of Middle East. It has created a
stir and fears are expressed all over the world. Claims of the US and
its strategic partners to degrade and destroy the ISIS are dubbed by
many as a cover up to achieve their hidden objectives in Middle East.
Motives of US in Iraq
The prime motivation to annex Iraq in 2003 was oil, but the other compelling reason was Israeli security concern.
Tel Aviv viewed Baathist Iraqi armed
forces under Saddam Hussain as the biggest strategic challenge to its
security and a bottleneck in the path of its ambition to establish
‘Greater Israel’. Division of Iraq into three States was Israeli
ambition and not that of USA.
Saddam kept Iraq United.
Notwithstanding the fact that Saddam Hussain was a ruthless dictator,
none can deny that he had kept ethnically diverse Iraq united and
economically and militarily strong. Today Iraq is rived in
sectarian/ethnic war and is at the verge of splitting into three States
of Kurds, Sunnis and Shias. Iraq urgently needs another Saddam type
leader to re-unite the country.
Baathist Army Disbanded. Sunni heavy
well trained/equipped Baathist Army was disbanded in 2003 and in its
place Iraqi National Army was raised essentially for counter terrorism
purposes. $ 20 billion was spent to train/equip 800,000 strong Iraqi
security forces.
Iraqi Sunnis Marginalized. War in Iraq
was primarily against Iraqi Sunnis since Iraqi Shias in the south and
Kurds in the north had been befriended. While the Shias and Kurds were
empowered, 5-6 million Sunnis who had ruled Iraq for centuries were
sidelined and persecuted by Nuri-al-Maliki’s Shia heavy regime installed
by the US in 2006
Reaction of Iraqi Sunnis/Al-Qaeda
Deprived of power and subjected to gruesome repression, several
militant Sunni groups sprouted in Iraq to wage a guerrilla war against
the occupation forces and the US installed regime.
Al-Qaeda joined the fray and soon became the leading resistance
group. Jihadist Salafism found fertile ground among the Sunnis of Iraq,
Syria and Lebanon.
Zarqawi –Al-Qaeda Connectivity
Iraqi Sunni groups Ansar al-Sunna and Iraqi Islamic Army fought the
occupation forces from August 2003 onwards. Jamaat al Tawhid wa al-Jihad
under Abu Masab al Zarqawi swore allegiance to Osama bin Laden in 2004
and became an affiliate of al-Qaeda. In January 2006, al-Qaeda in Iraq
merged with several groups under Mujahideen Shura Council.
Sectarian war in Iraq
Zarqawi, who was Abu Bakar Baghdadi’s guru, was the most ruthless
leader. He organized bombing of both Sunni and Shiite mosques/Imabargahs
under guidance of CIA. Bombing of one of the holiest Shia shrine
al-Askari in Samarra in February 2006 triggered sectarian war. Zarqawi
was killed in June 2006, but CIA and Mossad kept pouring oil on
sectarian conflict.
In response, Moqtada al-Sadr
established Iraqi Shias Army of 50,000 fighters. Inflammation of
sectarian conflict between two sects which peaked in 2006-07, became the
root cause of birth of Islamic State of Iraq (ISI).
Sufferings of Iraqis in War. War in
Iraq followed by sectarian war in Iraq caused over one million deaths,
displaced two millions outside Iraq and 2.7 million inside Iraq and made
870,000 children orphans.
Formation of Islamic State of Iraq
(ISI). Zarqawi’s group formed into ISI on October 13, 2006 under Abu
Abdullah al-Rashid Baghdadi and Abu Ayyub al-Masri. It claimed authority
over Baghdad, Anbar, Diyala, Kirkuk, Salahuddin, Ninawa and parts of
Babel. After Rashid Baghdadi and Masri were killed in an operation in
early 2010, ISI was taken over by 43 years Abu Bakar Baghdadi in April
2010.
Arab Spring. By that time Arab Spring
was fomented in Middle East in 2011 to weaken the militaries of powerful
Arab and North African States as well as to affect regime changes
wherever required. Tunisia, followed by Egypt became the immediate
victims. Qaddafi was murdered and a regime change took place in Libya,
while Syria got engulfed in sectarian war in 2011. Sudan was bisected,
while regime change took place in Yemen in 2012. From that time onwards,
the Middle East continued to descend further into the abyss of war,
ravaged by a terror seemingly animated by blood and violence.
Training of FSA Rebels in Jordon.
Reportedly the ISI fighters in Iraq proceeded to Syria via Jordon in
2011 and joined the civil war. Free Syrian Army (FSA) rebels led by
Salim Idris were trained by Jordanian and Israeli commandos along
Jordan-Syrian border. British Special Forces, MI-6 and French were also
involved in imparting training and in use of chemical weapons.
Support to Rebels in Syria. FSA and
Al-Nusra Front – an offshoot of Al-Qaeda, were fully supported by USA,
NATO, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Qatar and UAE to bring down Bashar al-Assad
regime. Turkish Army trained, equipped and sent across the anti-Assad
rebels.
ISI to ISIS
By early 2013, ISI established itself as a strong force in Syria. On
April 9, 2013, ISI’s name was changed to ISIS. Sham envisages
territories of Syria, Iraq and Lebanon.
Clash between Jihadi Groups
In April 2013, Al-Nusra Front leader Jawlani didn’t agree to
Baghdadi’s proposal of merging his group into ISIS. Zawahiri who wanted
Baghdadi to accept Jawlani as Emir in Syria also opposed the merger and
in October he ordered disbanding ISIS and put Al-Nusra in-charge of
Jihad in Syria. When Baghdadi paid no heed, in February 2014 al-Qaeda
disavowed any relations with ISIS.
Objectives of Jihadi Groups. Whereas
FSA and al-Nusra Front want overthrow of Asad regime and establish new
Sunni Emirate in Syria, ISIS want to establish its own Caliphate on
conquered territory. Al-Qaeda aspires to change the US run international
order to Islamic system.
Offensive in Syria. Once ISIS captured
series of towns including Raqqa in Syria, many fighters from FSA and
Nusra started joining it.
Offensive in Iraq
ISIS then crossed into Iraq in December 2013 and captured Fallujah in
Anbar province next month. All efforts by INA to retake Fallujah
failed. The Da’esh Jihadists then launched a major offensive on June 9,
2014 and within days captured five provinces in northwestern and central
Iraq that are Sunni inhabited. Mosul, second largest city with a
population of two million people and defended by 30,000 troops was also
captured.
The entire defensive structure built
by Maliki regime to save Sunni dominated regions from the onslaught of
Sunni militants crumbled. Large amount of armaments, helicopters,
planes, vehicles and cash was also seized by the militants.
Cash Held. Before Mosul, Da’esh total
cash and assets were $875 million. Cash was obtained through sale of oil
from oilfields in eastern Syria in late 2012. Today Da’esh claims to be
in possession of over $2 billion. 3/4th of the cash was seized from Mosul.
Oil Sale. Da’esh has control over most
of oil and gas fields in eastern and northern Syria. Till recent, it
was in control of biggest oil refinery Baiga near Baghdad which has been
retaken by Iraqi forces backed by air. Da’esh is selling bulk of oil
from Syria and Mosul through Turkey. Oil from northern Iraq is being
shipped to Texas Gulf of Mexico.
ISIS to Islamic State (IS). On June
29, the first of Ramadhan, the ISIS was named Islamic State and its
chief Baghdadi was declared Caliph and leader of Muslims everywhere.
They asked the Muslims worldwide to pledge allegiance to their chief.
Hailing from Quraish decent, devout, sane and physically whole, he
qualifies to be a Caliph. Osama bin Laden didn’t meet the pre-requisites
and so is the case with Mullah Omar. The Caliphate map encompasses
Syria, Iraq, Jordon, Israel, Palestine, parts of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait,
Cyprus and southern Turkey.
Urge for Caliphate
After the demise of Ottoman Caliphate in 1924, it was revived by the
Taliban by declaring Mullah Omar as Emir and Afghanistan as Islamic
Caliphate. TTP too has been toying with the idea of Caliphate and so is
Boko Haram in Nigeria, Al-Nusra in Syria, Al-Shabab in Somalia, Abu
Sayyaf in Philippines, IMU in Uzbekistan, Uyghur in Sinkiang and
al-Qaeda.
Islamic Caliphate/Daulat-e-Islamyia
The current span of Islamic Caliphate called Daulat-e-Islamyia
extends from Aleppo in northern Syria to Diyala in Iraq and its capital
is Raqqa. This stretch of territory is under complete control of Da’esh.
Da’esh – Strongest Jihadist Group
Today, Da’esh has become the strongest Jihadist group, both
militarily and financially the world over. It has inflicted successive
defeats to Iraqi Army, Syrian Army, Al-Nusra, FSA and Peshmergas and is a
force to reckon with. Reportedly, it has 31,500 fighters but some put
the figures to 200,000. 16000 are from foreign countries. Besides Sunni
rebel groups in Syria, Boko Haram and Abu Sayyaf group have declared
support to IS. Jihadis from Algeria, Morocco and Yemen also want to
join Da’esh.
Enforcement of Shariah laws in
captured cities by Da’esh has dropped crime rates. Public restaurants
providing free food have been opened in Raqqa and residents are given
free fuel. $400 monthly salary is paid to each member. Unlike al-Qaeda,
it has a sound organizational structure. Baghdadi has three deputies and
12 governors thereby establishing proper chain of command. Most of the
appointment holders are ex Iraqi Baathist Army and ex Syrian Army
officers and are well trained.
Da’esh Product of Bucca Camp
Majority of IS leading leaders were the products of CIA run Bucca
camp in Baghdad from 2003 until 2009. Abu Bakar al-Baghdadi, who earned a
doctorate in Islamic law in Baghdad, also remained imprisoned in Bucca
Camp from 2006 to 2009. His original name is Awad Ibrahim Ali al-Badri
al-Samarri. Some say Bucca Camp was a terrorist academy than a prison.
At that time the Iraqi Sunnis were trained and brainwashed to fight
al-Qaeda. Reportedly, large numbers of IS mercenaries are convicted
criminals, with many on death row, released from Saudi prisons on
condition they will join IS.
Quick in Uptake. Da’esh fighters are
motivated and they fight until death. They are proficient in using
modern techniques of warfare and psy warfare and are best snipers. They
learned the use of captured American tanks, artillery, helicopters and
other heavy equipment in Mosul with amazing speed and put them to quick
use. Same thing happened in Syria where they captured Russian origin
arms.
Use of Social Media
Da’esh is also employing the weapon of social media very effectively
to reach out to the Muslim youth. It is using 12000 Twitter accounts
called ‘Twitter Bombs’. Da’esh has appealed to the senses of educated
Muslim youth in Muslim world and in the west, who are well cognizant of
ills of capitalist system and US-western-Israeli dangerous designs
against Muslim world.
The educated youth is aware of their
intrigues aimed at weakening Muslim Ummah by creating misgivings and
inflaming sectarian war to divide the targeted Muslim countries into
smaller States. They feel that Muslim rulers are primarily responsible
for executing the agenda of the west and hence must be removed and
replaced by God fearing Muslim leaders and imposing Islamic system of
governance.
Because of IS’s rapid gains and
Baghdadi’s charisma, a continuous stream of Jihadists both men and young
girls from Europe, USA and Asia are joining Da’esh in Syria and in
Iraq. British girls are marrying Da’esh fighters.
Extremist Ideology
Battle of Siffin fought at Raqqa along the banks of Euphrates in 657
AD between the forces of Caliph Hazrat Ali and Emir Muawia, known as
‘First Fitna’, split Islam into two factions and fuelled sectarian
violence across the ages. Kharijis who believed that any Muslim
committing a sin became a non-Muslim and was unpardonable, continued to
trouble both the Ummayyads and Abbasids and it took the two dynasties
300 years to put down Kharijites.
Today, we are witnessing the
unraveling of centuries of bad blood and religious distortion. Da’esh is
known for its harsh interpretation of Islam and violence and follows
al-Qaeda ideology, which emerged from Kharijis and Tafkiri ideology.
Anti-Da’esh lobbies say Da’esh draws inspiration from Kharijis and Emir
Muawia and is dubbed as the ‘Second Fitna’.
Da’esh believes its Army is fulfilling
an Islamic prophecy and is waiting for arrival of Imam Mahdi. It wants
revival of golden period of Islam under Prophet Muhammad and four
Caliphs of Islam who ruled from 632 to 661. But it has adopted practices
of Kharijis and Salafis and aim at establishing Salafist model Islamic
State initially in Iraq and Syria and later expanding it.
While captured Shias are being killed,
Christians and Yazidis are given the choice to either convert to Islam,
or pay Jiziyah, or exit or die. Even 20 Sunni Ulema disagreeing with
the ideology of Da’esh, or refusing to pledge allegiance to the Caliph
were murdered. In Samarra, 1000 Sunnis were killed. It resorts to
Khariji style throat slitting or stoning of sinners.
Destruction of Holy Places. After
destroying the holy shrine of Prophet Yunus (AS) on July 24, the Nabi
Shiyt shrine in Mosul was also dynamited on July 26th. The Da’esh
leadership has vowed to head for Najaf and Karbala and destroy sacred
shrines. Da’esh has also threatened to capture Mecca and Madina since it
is against House of Saud.
Halaku Strategy in Play. Da’esh is
operating on the pattern of Halaku Khan to strike terror into the hearts
of the people and make them flee. When Mongols had sacked Baghdad in
1258, Halaku’s men slaughtered about a million Muslims in a week. Da’esh
believes in spreading Islam by the strength of sword and is mapping its
campaign based upon Emir Muawia’s campaigns.
Response of Kurds. As you know,
Kurdistan was divided in 1916. The Iraqi Kurds in northern Iraq,
aspiring to establish independent Kurdistan took control of oil
producing Kirkuk and vowed to fight the IS fighters. Likewise Syrian
Kurds and Turkish Kurds have resisted fall of Kobane in Syria. Efforts
of Kurds received a shot in the arm as result of NATO air intervention.
But for air support, Kurdish capital Arbil was almost lost to IS.
Likewise, Kobane would have fallen by now.
Response of Iraqi Shias. Shia militias
in Iraq at the call of Moqtada al-Sadr have united to fight the IS.
They are also killing captured Sunni militants. They are not so much
concerned about the preservation of united Iraq but are more anxious to
protect Baghdad, holy shrines of Shias and southern Iraq.
Da’esh viewed as Biggest Threat
Till its emergence, Israel was viewed as the foremost threat to the
Arab States. The security spectrum has now changed. As long as Da’esh
was fighting the security forces in Syria, Israel was quite content
since the iron was cutting the iron.
Now that Da’esh has grown into a big
monster and has published a map of its future caliphate which includes
Israel as well, Tel Aviv changed course and expressed its willingness to
jointly fight the common enemy. Taking advantage of fears of Arab
rulers, Netanyahu suggested an impractical idea of establishing a joint
HQ to confront the challenge.
Guns of Da’esh Silent against US/Israel
Intriguingly, neither any militant group operating in Middle East is
poised against Israel or its western backers, nor any Arab country
funding dozens of groups to fight Shiasm/terrorism diverted any group to
come to the rescue of people of Gaza when they were being mercilessly
slaughtered in July this year. None of the known Jihadist groups has
fired a single bullet against US military or Israeli forces.
US 3rd Intervention in Middle East
After creating the desired turmoil, the US and its western allies
have once again jumped into the oil-rich Middle East under the pretext
of fighting the biggest threat to the world peace posed by IS. This
time, western powers have decided not to send ground troops but only
airpower, technical and intelligence support and to muster ground forces
from the affected Arab countries. Several Arab countries, Turkey, Iran
and Albania have joined the coalition and China is also being convinced
to fight the menace.
Belated US Response. Quite
surprisingly, the US didn’t show much anxiety when the Da’esh was moving
ahead like a hurricane, capturing vast territories and slaughtering
people from mid 2013 onwards in Syria. It remained engrossed in
destabilization of Assad regime and in Ukraine crisis. It was only after
the Da’esh fighters killed Christians and Yazidis in Sinjar and
beheaded two US journalists and two British aid workers, and there was
uproar in the western world that Obama woke up and decided to hit the
IS. Another worry was western Jihadis return to their respective
countries.
Air action in Iraq. To start with
airstrikes in August were aimed at preventing fall of oil-rich Kirkuk
and Arbil, capital of Kurdish region which houses US Consulate and also
to help the marooned Yazidis. Dilemma on Syrian Front for USA
Syria has become a transit ground for
jihadists from all over the globe. They are pouring in with bulk coming
from Europe to fight Asad forces. The US wanting to strike Da’esh in
Syria, remained indecisive whether Da’esh or Assad regime was a bigger
threat.
From June to August, Syrian regime was
viewed as a lesser evil by the US and Arab States. It was contemplated
to assist Syrian Army to fight IS. But this view changed in September
and now it is again treating Assad regime as a foe.
Egypt’s lack of Response. Egypt is
being pressed to spare troops to fight the IS but Egyptian Army is busy
fighting the supporters of Morsi in northern Sinai and as such is no
position to get entangled elsewhere.
Iranian Support. The US remained in
two minds whether to ask Iran to combat IS threat in Iraq or not since
it could further enhance its influence in Iraq and also strengthen
Hezbollah-Syria-Iraq-Iran nexus. Ultimately Iran was given a green
signal and it supplied some Army units, military equipment and artillery
to support three main Iraqi Shia militias.
Catch-22 Situation for Turkey.
Notwithstanding Turkey’s ire against Asad regime in Syria, the IS has
posed a bigger threat to its security because of the involvement of
Kurds from Syria, Iraq and Turkey in the fight against the IS, and the
IS busy recruiting militants from Turkey. The catch-22 situation for
Erdogon is whether to aid FSA to bring down Asad regime or to fight the
IS in Syria. Both options are counterproductive and so is the option of
acting neutral.
Da’esh Linkages in Pakistan
Tehrik-e-Khilafat, part of TTP was the first group in South Asia to
declare allegiance to Da’esh on July 12, 2014. Jamaatul Ahrar, splinter
group of TTP, led by Omar Khalid Khurasani was the second group to
declare support to Da’esh on 4 September. On 8 October, six key
commanders of TTP belonging to different tribal agencies pledged
allegiance to Baghdadi. They all had sworn allegiance to Mullah Omar as
their Ameerul Momineen in 2008.
Posters, pamphlets and wall chalking
and book titled ‘Fatah’ in Pashtu/Darri languages concerning IS have
been found in different cities. Suicide attack on Wagah on 2 November
was claimed by IS linked Ahrar.
Reportedly, Baghdadi intends extending
boundaries of his Caliphate to Khurasan, which in its prime time
included northeastern Iran, parts of Central Asia, Afghanistan and
Pakistan. This has triggered an urge among militant leaders in Pakistan
to add Khurasani to their names. Fazlullah is one example.
Raison d’être. Reason is that as per
Hadiths of Prophet Muhammad, armies of Islam carrying black flags would
march to the Arab heartland for a final showdown and victory against
Jews and their allies in end times. Jihadis believe that Great War is an
inevitable occurrence and thus draw inspiration from Khurasan.
Largest Reservoir. Largest reservoirs
of well-trained and motivated Jihadists are found in Afghanistan,
Central Asia, Chechnya, Caucasia and Pakistan.
Competing Interests
Al-Qaeda, which has indicated its intention to open its offices in
India, Bangladesh and Pakistan, and Da’esh are competing for winning the
support of Pakistani Jihadis which in their view will tilt the balance
in their favor. Da’esh has overshadowed Al-Qaeda.
The IS has created a ten-member
‘Strategic Planning Wing’ with a master plan how to wage war against
Pakistan military. It claims to have recruited 10-12000 recruits in FATA
and Hangu district. However, Operation Zarb-e-Azb has upset their plans
and pushed their timeframe.
Skepticism Expressed
Many western analysts led by Michel
Chossudovsky, Noam Chomsky and Fuller are selling the idea that Da’esh
is CIA creation supported by MI-6, Mossad and Saudi Intelligence and is
funded by Saudi Arabia and Qatar to break up the
Iran-Iraq-Syria-Hezbollah alliance and bring down Assad regime in Syria.
Baghdadi is dubbed as US agent trained in Tel Aviv. They draw strength
from the fact that wounded soldiers of IS are treated in Israeli
hospitals. They say that the Muslims are being conned by a sophisticated
scheme drawn up by Zionists to fragment Middle East and pave the way
for establishment of ‘Greater Israel’.
Questions Asked
There may be some truth in what is being said since the US has been
supporting Islamic terror network since Reagan administration. Why did
McCain meet the rebels in Syria and why are they called moderates? If
the US wanted to eliminate Da’esh, why didn’t it carpet bomb their
convoys of Toyota pickups when they crossed from Syrian Desert into Iraq
in June 2014. When Americans could bomb, Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya,
why couldn’t they do so against Da’esh in open Syro-Arabian desert with
latest state-of-art jets? A stitch in time would have saved nine. How
can Da’seh ship oil from Syrian and Iraqi oilfields through Turkey and
how come oilfields have remained safe? Why can’t their websites be
blocked?
Where Lays the Problem?
The problem is, what face the advanced world led by USA has to
lecture and show mirror to the IS and demonize their acts when the
champions of human rights and democracy are the biggest violators of
their own laws. To avenge the deaths of about 3000 Americans, they have
killed over two million Muslims who had no connection with 9/11. In
fact, 9/11 was instrumental in formulation of GWOT.
The imperialist powers go to any
lengths for the realization of their geo-strategic and geo-economic
interests. Muslim world has been turned into a killing field and life of
a Muslim has become as cheap as a stray dog.
Willful effort has been made to
demonise Islam and to put all the ills of the world in the basket of
Muslims. Religious extremism in the Christian, Jewish and Hindu worlds
has been ignored. Existing ethnic and sectarian tensions and religious
divides among Muslims have been cleverly intensified to make Muslims
fight among each other, keep the Muslim countries weak, dependent and
subservient and thus facilitate their grand objective of neo-colonizing
the Muslim world and harnessing their resources. The US creates a
monster for achievement of its short-term objectives and then tries to
kill it when it starts defying the master.
None can deny that Da’esh cannot
operate and achieve spectacular successes at its own. Whoever is behind
Da’esh, one thing is clear. Muslims are bleeding each other and it suits
the imperialist powers.
How can we overlook Adid Yinon and
neo-cons plans to divide and rule Middle East, Col Ralph Peter’s map and
Pentagon’s Memo listing 7 Muslim countries as targets? Ongoing chaos
is in line with those insidious plans. Rather than failing the plans, we
are helping them to succeed.
Everyone is suggesting application of force to crush the new threat
not realizing that 13 years of war on terror has failed to control
terrorism. Rather, it has spread out like wild fire. Today it is Da’esh;
tomorrow some other outfit will emerge. Khurasan group in Syria is one
example which has been described more dangerous than Da’esh. Even
Haqqani Network and Lashkar Tayyaba are portrayed as monsters.
Root Causes
No one is interested in analyzing the root causes of mounting hatred
of the deprived class against the privileged which has led to growth of
intolerance, religious extremism and terrorism, what to talk of taking
remedial measures. Militants are the product of lower classes, having no
stake in the country and have nothing to lose.
Palestinian issue, Israeli
belligerence, Gaza turned into open prison, desecration of Al-Aqsa
mosque, double standards of the west, involvement of Iran’s increasing
involvement in Arab countries, Maliki’s revengeful persecution of
Sunnis, forcible change of regime in Libya, willful destabilization of
Syria, when seen in context with weakened welfare system within Arab
world, unemployment, misrule of Arab rulers, hatred against Hamas, their
pro-western policies all put together, have bred discontentment among
the Arab youth and they are fatally getting attracted towards Da’esh.
Remedy
In Pakistan, no effort has been made
by our rulers to put our house in order, and to win hearts and minds of
have-nots. Religious extremism and intolerance can be checkmated if the
elite class changes its feudal mindset and lifestyle, gets rid of
hypocrisy, revives pristine ethics and moral values, treat the poor as
human beings and gain their trust by genuinely alleviating their
sufferings by way of providing them basic amenities of life, equitable
opportunities for education and social growth, cheap and evenhanded
justice, creating in them sense of belonging and integrating the society
by making Pakistan a true Islamic welfare State.
The Ulema, thinkers and media have to
play a big role in lessening religious, sectarian and ethnic tensions
and promoting climate of tolerance. Operation Zarb-e-Azb will prove
productive only if civil administration, judiciary and media remain in
step with Army.
To conclude, I would say that unity of
Muslim Ummah in these testing times is absolutely essential for
survival. The age of continuous conflict is upon us; and Muslims are on
the menu. The Muslim countries must reduce their excessive dependence
upon the west and should hasten to get out of the destructive magic
spell of the US.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment