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Al Qaeda in Iran, Why Tehran is Accommodating the Terrorist Group?

Well, then no need to mention the knife thing in connecting with KSA. There is no such executions in KSA. If if has any interest then one can watch a execution from KSA by doing a simple google search and see that it lasts less than 1 second and how it is done.;)

The population of KSA is over 32 million. Iran's population is 77 million or so. So 2.5 times is about right. Also a census in KSA has not been held for years so the actual number is probably bigger than that. Even if you exclude the millions of illegals living in KSA. The fertility rate of KSA is also bigger than the one in Iran so the difference will become smaller in the future.

Anyway here is a execution from Iran (Tabriz). Hanging by a crane. As one can see the condemned (2 men and 1 women) are still showing signs of life 1 minute into the execution. Hardly Islamic.

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Whoops. I was confused, although I know not all of them are actually Saudi Arabian. Do you guys have the moowatan thing there? Like the GCC, you need to be born and have ancestors to have actual citizenship there.

And I didn't know you were speaking of KSA executions only I thought it was militia on militia violence.
 
The Al Qaeda-Iran connection

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Riyadh, Asharq Al-Awsat – In February 2009, the Saudi Arabia’s Interior Ministry issued a list of its 85 most wanted terrorists, and revealed that 35 of them were either present in Iran, or had passed through the country. Information also revealed that al-Qaeda inducted its latest recruits in Iran in September 2008, which means that its attraction has not waned, and that the Iranian branch of al-Qaeda is still operational.

A regional source informed Asharq Al-Awsat that “we are certain that some al-Qaeda activists and leadership figures are present in Iran, but we do not know how the two sides [al-Qaeda and Iran] are dealing with each other. Yet it is definite that al-Qaeda’s followers in Iran are under control.”

According to the source, who spoke to Asharq Al-Awsat on the condition of anonymity, statements issued by Eman [Bin Laden], daughter of Osama Bin Laden, who escaped from her Iranian minders and sought shelter in the Saudi embassy in Tehran, provides considerable evidence that al-Qaeda has a presence on Iranian soil.

Giving an account of how al-Qaeda used Iran as a center for its operations, the regional source confirmed that the “honeymoon period” between the two sides began with the war in Afghanistan. This saw al-Qaeda members on Afghan soil fleeing to the country for three destinations; some fled to Tora Bora, whilst others infiltrated Pakistan, and others traveled to Iran.

The source stressed to Asharq Al-Awsat that “it is certain that Iran has had dealings with al-Qaeda members and leaders who took refuge in the country, fleeing from the US military that was striking Afghanistan.” The source indicated that the Iranians seem to have imposed their authority upon the al-Qaeda members who entered the country, yet they have not prevented these al-Qaeda elements from performing their assigned roles.

The regional source raised a number of questions that may help in uncovering the truth behind the relations between al-Qaeda and Iran, asking “did Iran host al-Qaeda in order to secure a truce and avoid becoming a future target? Or did Tehran exploit al-Qaeda in order to achieve its goals in certain countries with whom it differs politically and ideologically?” The source stressed that these two questions about the nature of the relationship between al-Qaeda and Iran are still being raised in political circles today.

The source hinted that al-Qaeda’s branch in Yemen, the majority of whose members are Saudi and Yemeni nationals, was formed as a result of orders issued by the organization’s leadership in Iran. Asharq Al-Awsat also received information from exclusive sources that al-Qaeda elements in Iran, who are on Saudi Arabia’s list of 85 most wanted terrorists, are planning to strike Saudi or Jordanian interests. This same information claimed that some of these al-Qaeda members are intending to return to Saudi Arabia to carry out these operations themselves, whilst others are seeking to join new terrorist groups that are being set up in Yemen.

Perhaps the most prominent Saudi national who is a member of al-Qaeda in Iran is Saleh al-Qaraawi, who has now assumed a leadership position in al-Qaeda, both locally and internationally. Al-Qaraawi, who is in his late twenties, is a major al-Qaeda figure who plays a key role with regards to providing al-Qaeda members with facilities and financial aid, he is also believed to provide forged documents and be responsible for arranging the travel of wanted al-Qaeda members. Al-Qaraawi also reportedly had links with Abu-Musab al-Zarqawi, and is said to have provided the former al-Qaeda in Iraq leader with financing and recruits.

Saleh al-Qaraawi, who also uses the alias “Nejm” [meaning "star" in Arabic] has come to prominence as a key al-Qaeda coordinator from within Iran. During his stay in Iran, al-Qaraawi also married the daughter of Mohamed Khalil al-Hakim, one of al-Qaeda’s field commanders.

Saleh al-Qaraawi has utilized 14 different aliases and assumed names in his travels, and also received intensive training on the use of electronics in explosive devices whilst in Iran. He is utilizing Iran as a base for his operations, and plays the key role of middleman between the al-Qaeda leadership and rank and file members. In addition to this, al-Qaraawi is believed to be seeking to expand al-Qaeda’s operations in Iraq and Lebanon.

On the local level, al-Qaraawi, who has been present in Iran since September 2006, allegedly helped a fugitive who escaped from Riyadh’s Al-Malaz Prison, as well as other fugitives in Al-Jouf (northern Saudi Arabia), to escape to Iraq. He has also been active in coordinating the influx of terrorists into Lebanon, who receive training there before heading back to Saudi Arabia to carry out terrorist operations.

The Saudi nationals who joined the al-Qaeda leadership in Iraq passed through a number of different countries before arriving there; including Bahrain, the UAE, Qatar and Syria. Many of those on the Saudi Interior Ministry’s list of 85 most wanted terrorists are believed to be hiding out in the Pakistan – Afghanistan – Iran triangle, such as Adel Felaih al-Anzi, who is believed to have links with al-Qaeda coordinators in Iran.

Information also revealed that Abdullah al-Ayed, a wanted al-Qaeda operative currently living in Iran, is believed to have been involved in the assassination of a senior Saudi security officer. Al-Ayed is believed to have traveled to Iran via the UAE, utilizing fake travel documents, and he has been active in issuing provocative fatwas labeling others as infidels. Al-Ayed is also believed to have provided financial support to al-Qaeda members, as well as facilitated the recruitment of al-Qaeda cadres.

As for Mohamed Abul-Khair, he is a Saudi national who has utilized 11 different aliases and assumed names in his travels between various international terrorist hotspots. Abul-Khair is said to be one of the most prominent terrorists on the Saudi Interior Ministry’s list of 85 most wanted terrorist. He is believed to have been one of Osama Bin Laden’s personal bodyguards, in addition to being the former al-Qaeda chief’s sons-in-law. Information also reveals that Abul-Khair had ties with Ramzi Bin al-Shibh, who stands accused of being a “key facilitator for the September 11 attacks” and who is currently being detained by the US in Guantanamo Bay.

Abul-Khair’s aliases include “Abu Mahjan”, “Abu Abdullah”, “Abdul-Hamid”, “Mohannad”, “Al-Jeddawi”, “Abdullah al-Makki”, “Lutfi”, “Lataf”, “Mohannad al-Jeddawi”, and “Abdullah al-Halbi.” He served as a middleman between the al-Qaeda members in Afghanistan and the al-Qaeda members in Iran from the mid-1990s to 2000. Abul-Khair is currently believed to be hiding out in the Pakistan – Afghanistan – Iran triangle.

A number of the names included on the Saudi Interior Ministry’s list of 85 most wanted terrorist had direct links with Osama Bin Laden, such as Tulaihan Mutlaq al-Mutairi. Al-Mutairi is believed to have pledged allegiance to former al-Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden and received training in weaponry, explosives, urban warfare, and communication, amongst other skills, with the aim of training new al-Qaeda recruits.

Another Saudi national believed to be hiding out in Iran is Ahmed al-Shadawi AKA Abu-Hanzalah al-Makki. Al-Shadawi is believed to have left Saudi Arabia for the UAE on 24 February 2008. He is accused of having ties with leading al-Qaeda figures like Abdullah Ahmed Abdullah AKA Abu Mariam, who is an Egyptian national wanted by the US for his part in the 1998 African Embassy bombings, and who is believed to be hiding out in Iran. Al-Shadawi later joined al-Qaeda in Afghanistan, receiving training in the use of arms.

As for Adel al-Jafari, he is a recent al-Qaeda recruit who arrived in Iran via Qatar on 18 September 2008. He is believed to have links with a number of dangerous individuals, including suicide bombers in Iran.

Information also reveals that Azzam al-Subhi, another wanted Saudi national that is currently hiding out in Iran, has links with Saif al-Adel, who according to some media reports has been appointed the interim leader of al-Qaeda, amongst other senior al-Qaeda figures. Another Saudi national, Ali al-Amr, is also believed to be present in Iran. Al-Amr was reportedly recruited as an al-Qaeda envoy to Iran, and is considered by many to be one of the most dangerous al-Qaeda elements in Iran. There have been reports that al-Amr had expressed a desire to carry out a suicide attack, yet al-Qaeda denied this request, preferring that al-Amr continue to coordinate contact between al-Qaeda’s different elements.

The Al Qaeda-Iran connection | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT
 
Al Quaede was mainly formed base upon Saudi petrol money and ideology supported by CIA to deter the union soviet threat in Afghanistan, after collapse of the soviet union it has been merely utilized as a tool in the hands of western countries to justify their acts wide world.
None of the member of this terrorist group is Iranian while it's ipso facto that its founder "Osama bin bin Laden" is a Saudi citizen moreover in most of terrorist attack conducted by this group the majority of terrorists are Saudi.
Iran's been fighting by this group in Afghanistan, Lebanon, Syria and now Iraq .
Iran and Al-qaeda are like fire and cotton there is no way to see a mutual interest btw them, Iran is holding some of its leader to protect country from their attacks nothing else.
 
Al Quaede was mainly formed base upon Saudi petrol money and ideology supported by CIA to deter the union soviet threat in Afghanistan, after collapse of the soviet union it has been merely utilized as a tool in the hands of western countries to justify their acts wide world.
None of the member of this terrorist group is Iranian while it's ipso facto that its founder "Osama bin bin Laden" is a Saudi citizen moreover in most of terrorist attack conducted by this group the majority of terrorists are Saudi.
Iran's been fighting by this group in Afghanistan, Lebanon, Syria and now Iraq .
Iran and Al-qaeda are like fire and cotton there is no way to see a mutual interest btw them, Iran is holding some of its leader to protect country from their attacks nothing else.
Yes of course :crazy:
 
Look, whole region is in turmoil, one of the very few coutnries that have some stability is Iran itself. So if this means that the Persian land remains untouched by the AlQaeda animals, why not make some sort of arrangement with them ? just like how the US did in the past and is still doing to protect their interests, or Saudi Arabia.

It is all about interests people.

Anyway, if one day AlQaeda turns against Iran its not really a big deal, Iran is a unified state, so if these animals cross into Irans borders they will be dealt with swiftly as each Iranian citizen throughout the country will act as a informant to the government, dealing with the animals swiftly and powerfully.

However, i am of the opinion too that Iran must up its cooperation with regional countries.

Not some.There are 2-3 Blasts in south of Iran every year.Iran is totally stabil
 
Senegal severs ties with Iran

Senegal's foreign ministry accuses Tehran of supplying weapons to separatist rebels in its southern Casamance region.

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Senegal has cut diplomatic ties with Iran, accusing Tehran of supplying weapons to separatist rebels in its southern Casamance region, the foreign ministry said.

"Senegal has decided to break off diplomatic relations with the Republic of Iran," the foreign ministry said in a statement on Wednesday.

The statement linked the Iranian weapons with an attack on Sunday in Casamance, the latest in a string of such attacks by rebels engaged in one of Africa's longest-running conflicts, which resulted in the deaths of three Senegalese troops.

'Iranian bullets'
"The report presented to the president of the Republic [Abdoulaye Wade] by the army chief of staff on recent developments in Casamance has shown that the Casamance Movement of Democratic Forces (MFDC) was using sophisticated weapons which caused the death of Senegalese soldiers," the statement said.

"Senegal is outraged to see that Iranian bullets caused the death of three Senegalese soldiers."

The row is the latest in a spate of diplomatic upsets between Iran and West African nations over alleged arms smuggling that has damaged the Iranian government's search for trade partners on the continent.

In December, Senegal recalled its ambassador to Iran, saying the government of the west African country was unsatisfied with explanations given by Iranian officials over a seizure of mortars and rockets in Nigeria in October.

Senegal severs ties with Iran - Africa - Al Jazeera English
 
Senegal severs ties with Iran

Senegal's foreign ministry accuses Tehran of supplying weapons to separatist rebels in its southern Casamance region.


Senegal has cut diplomatic ties with Iran, accusing Tehran of supplying weapons to separatist rebels in its southern Casamance region, the foreign ministry said.

"Senegal has decided to break off diplomatic relations with the Republic of Iran," the foreign ministry said in a statement on Wednesday.

The statement linked the Iranian weapons with an attack on Sunday in Casamance, the latest in a string of such attacks by rebels engaged in one of Africa's longest-running conflicts, which resulted in the deaths of three Senegalese troops.

'Iranian bullets'
"The report presented to the president of the Republic [Abdoulaye Wade] by the army chief of staff on recent developments in Casamance has shown that the Casamance Movement of Democratic Forces (MFDC) was using sophisticated weapons which caused the death of Senegalese soldiers," the statement said.

"Senegal is outraged to see that Iranian bullets caused the death of three Senegalese soldiers."

The row is the latest in a spate of diplomatic upsets between Iran and West African nations over alleged arms smuggling that has damaged the Iranian government's search for trade partners on the continent.

In December, Senegal recalled its ambassador to Iran, saying the government of the west African country was unsatisfied with explanations given by Iranian officials over a seizure of mortars and rockets in Nigeria in October.

Senegal severs ties with Iran - Africa - Al Jazeera English
Nice try.

Senegal and Iran resume diplomatic ties

PressTV - Iran, Senegal resume bilateral relations

So, perhaps they understood that it was all a hoax and Iran didn't send any arms to rebels there and regretted their decision?
Nigeria also denied Senegalese claims. They just wanted an outsider to blame it for their failures.

Instead of searching 'Iran and Al-Qaeda' in Google and putting sources one by one here, do some real and proper research about Al-Qaeda, it's birth, ideology, 'real supporters' and source of funds, also nationality of its leaders and members.
We are yet to see one Iranian member or leader of Al-Qaeda, but I can present you the collection of Al-Qaeda members from Almost all Arab and 'Muslim' countries.

Just see the list. it's amazing :lol:

Category:Al-Qaeda members by nationality - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
Busted!

Senegal and Iran resume diplomatic ties

PressTV - Iran, Senegal resume bilateral relations

So, perhaps they understood that it was all a hoax and Iran didn't send any arms to rebels there and regretted their decision?
Nigeria also denied Senegalese claims. They just wanted an outsider to blame it for their failures.

Instead of searching 'Iran and Al-Qaeda' in Google and putting sources one by one here, so some actual research about Al-Qaeda, it's birth, ideology, 'real supporters' and source of funds, also nationality of its leaders and members.
We are yet to see one Iranian member of Al-Qaeda, but I can present you the collection of Al-Qaeda members from Almost all Arab and 'Muslim' countries.

Just see the list. it's amazing :lol:

Category:Al-Qaeda members by nationality - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
So help me out here, what you are saying is that after years of served relations because your terrorism was going to reach them, the relations have just been recovered? Well, yes.

And for Qaeda thingy, my man, every country/nationality/religion/race has criminals belong to one of them, and Qaeda are just a bunch of criminals but the difference between them and others is that there is a country which happens to be Iran has been sponsoring them.

Plz read the articles, I'm sure you don't think that the whole world is after you to make all of this up.
 
Helping Muslims in senegal is terrorism but killing muslims in Syria and Iraq not!
 
This is ridiculous :lol:

@Serpentine

You know, most of time I have discussions with you Iranians, I have to explain to you what you say and what I say just like my latest post here. Sometimes I don't have energy to do that. So please think carefully before posting anything.
 
So help me out here, what you are saying is that after years of served relations because your terrorism was going to reach them, the relations have just been recovered? Well, yes.

And for Qaeda thingy, my man, every country/nationality/religion/race has criminals belong to one of them, and Qaeda are just a bunch of criminals but the difference between them and others is that there is a country which happens to be Iran has been sponsoring them.

Plz read the articles, I'm sure you don't think that the whole world is after you to make all of this up.

You know better that this is nonsense.

Al-Qaeda will spare no time to target any Iranian interests they find around the world, like in Syria, Iraq and southeastern borders of Iran. They have killed our soldiers, citizens and sabotaged our construction plans in Iraq. We are now helping to kill them in masses in Syria and perhaps even in Iraq. We have also killed many of them attacking from Southeastern borders (Jundallah).
So here's what you are saying: Iran funds Al-Qaeda and at the same time helps to kill them in big numbers and also Al-Qaeda targets Iranian interests.

Criminals do exist in all countries, including Iran, but why don't we see random Iranian criminals joining Al-Qaeda? Because joining Al-Qaeda requires proper brainwashing and also the potential should exist in people they try to recruit. Some of them tried and (successfully) brainwashed illiterate Sunni Baluch people from Iran and Pakistan which led to formation of Jundallah and it lost most of its power after capture and execution of its leader Rigi. Iran and Al-Qaeda/Taliban go against each other in ideology and everything. We have killed or helped to kill too many of them. That's why they absorb members from Arab countries much more easily compared to Iran.

I don't expect to convince you here , because your judgement is based solely on hate and spreading propaganda against Iran, not a meaningful discussion, but people should be enlightened when someone is trying to spread lies and fabrications here.


PS: Keep those articles to yourself, do you want me to post tons of articles from supporting from some Arab countries/ millionaire individuals for Al-Qaeda? If I'm not posting them here doesn't mean they don't exist.
 
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