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Bahrain, Saudi regimes will face Saddam fate: Iran cmdr.

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When we are divided and weak, the enemy will find ways to turn brother against brother. Before we attack our own brother we should look at the mirror. I think all of us are victims looking for a way out of our situation, but do not know how, hence the frustration and misguided actions. My free advice, as always is to concentrate on the planetary big picture as well as regional geopolitics and when possible please refrain from attacking our own.
 
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When we are divided and weak, the enemy will find ways to turn brother against brother. Before we attack our own brother we should look at the mirror. I think all of us are victims looking for a way out of our situation, but do not know how, hence the frustration and misguided actions. My free advice, as always is to concentrate on the planetary big picture as well as regional geopolitics and when possible please refrain from attacking our own.

Unfortunately, the same people with the same background backstab Umah in the name of Islam and anti-imperialism. No one is happy of what's going on in the region but USA and Israel, while Iran is helping them weakening ourselves. Iranian regime & Co have chosen this track and they will pay a dear price for it. Yes, what a dear price it will be!.
 
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Unfortunately, the same people with the same background backstab Umah in the name of Islam and anti-imperialism. No one is happy of what's going on in the region but USA and Israel, while Iran is helping them weakening ourselves. Iranian regime & Co have chosen this track and they will pay a dear price for it. Yes, what a dear price it will be!.

1. Good points about the facts though you have ignored the contribution of the Arab regimes. Iran has no USA or Zionist embassy on its soil, it's (some) Arab countries with Zionist embassies, and (I think) all Arab countries with USA embassies on its soil.
2. Iran could not dare to interfere in Arab countries the way it does now before the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime. The fault lies entirely on the shoulders of Arab regimes and partially on their citizens for not taking any meaningful action against USA.

You left the doors of your house open and went out. Then you blame the thief for stealing from your house. Who is to blame? I blame you (the Arabs) more than Iran in this case.

3. Only Allah (SWT) knows whether your prophecy will be true. Do not make fanciful or boastful statements that the world is all too used to hearing from Arabic secular dictators (like Saddam Hussein or Gaddafi) that never come true. Let's work first to attain, then boast about it. Let's not boast about something that has not been attained.
 
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1. Good points about the facts though you have ignored the contribution of the Arab regimes. Iran has no USA or Zionist embassy on its soil, it's (some) Arab countries with Zionist embassies, and (I think) all Arab countries with USA embassies on its soil.
2. Iran could not dare to interfere in Arab countries the way it does now before the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime. The fault lies entirely on the shoulders of Arab regimes and partially on their citizens for not taking any meaningful action against USA.

You left the doors of your house open and went out. Then you blame the thief for stealing from your house. Who is to blame? I blame you (the Arabs) more than Iran in this case.

3. Only Allah (SWT) knows whether your prophecy will be true. Do not make fanciful or boastful statements that the world is all too used to hearing from Arabic secular dictators (like Saddam Hussein or Gaddafi) that never come true. Let's work first to attain, then boast about it. Let's not boast about something that has not been attained.

100% agree. I couldn't agree more. Jordan payed a dear price for standing with Saddam, Jordanian and Palestinian expat were expelled from GCC, they cut off economic ties along with western countries which left Jordan with dire effects and it sought for every possible solution but didn't find except for reforming the relations with west by establishing diplomatic relations with Israel for Jordanians interests after it was left alone to wolves. I can't blame GCC for what they have done, everyone was mistaken. Those were very dark, heart breaking days to all Arabs.
 
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Unfortunately, the same people with the same background backstab Umah in the name of Islam and anti-imperialism. No one is happy of what's going on in the region but USA and Israel, while Iran is helping them weakening ourselves. Iranian regime & Co have chosen this track and they will pay a dear price for it. Yes, what a dear price it will be!.

A sad situation indeed. I do not support Iranian regime's "pan-shia" meddling, nor do I support anti-shia "sunni extremism". For now we need keep these two parties bent on fighting, as far away from each other as possible, so they can cool off and concentrate on their own more constructive affairs, such as regional integration (GCC integration, Iran-Pakistan pipeline etc.). Nothing pleases our enemy more than to see a shia-sunni fight.
 
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100% agree. I couldn't agree more. Jordan payed a dear price for standing with Saddam, Jordanian and Palestinian expat were expelled from GCC, they cut off economic ties along with western countries which left Jordan with dire effects and it sought for every possible solution but didn't find except for reforming the relations with west by establishing diplomatic relations with Israel for Jordanians interests after it was left alone to wolves. I can't blame GCC for what they have done, everyone was mistaken. Those were very dark, heart breaking days to all Arabs.

I think you are talking about Jordan's situation after Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait. But back then Saddam Hussein was not deposed or hanged, the way USA did after 2003 when Saddam Hussein did not invade anybody, nor did the 2 million or so innocent Iraqis commit any crimes to suffer the inhumane and unspeakable crimes committed by the West against Iraq.

The more I analyze and study the more I realize that it is infighting, disagreements, no unity amongst Arabs that is the cause of most Arab failures and disappointments of today, and most of all, no Islamic governance. This is true for the non Arab part of the Muslim world as well.
 
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A sad situation indeed. I do not support Iranian regime's "pan-shia" meddling, nor do I support anti-shia "sunni extremism". For now we need keep these two parties bent on fighting, as far away from each other as possible, so they can cool off and concentrate on their own more constructive affairs, such as regional integration (GCC integration, Iran-Pakistan pipeline etc.). Nothing pleases our enemy more than to see a shia-sunni fight.

They made it inevitable.
 
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I think you are talking about Jordan's situation after Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait. But back then Saddam Hussein was not deposed or hanged, the way USA did after 2003 when Saddam Hussein did not invade anybody, nor did the 2 million or so innocent Iraqis commit any crimes to suffer the inhumane and unspeakable crimes committed by the West against Iraq.

The more I analyze and study the more I realize that it is infighting, disagreements, no unity amongst Arabs that is the cause of most Arab failures and disappointments of today, and most of all, no Islamic governance. This is true for the non Arab part of the Muslim world as well.

Papa Bush kicked Saddam out from Kuwait, but didn't take Baghdad. It was the ongoing GWOT that started after 9/11 and subsequent Iraq invasion after it that handed Iran's regime a strategic victory for their pan-shia agenda. That is one of the many geo-strategic bungling on the part of US. But this geopolitical setback can be solved, that is what is happening in Syria today. Iraq may have to be partitioned, Kurdish part and Sunni part getting more and more autonomy for example and eventually getting independence. It all depends on how well we understand geopolitics.

But I do not support your assertion that "Islamic governance" or Shariah is the panacea. People should have the system of governance according to their democratic will, if Shariah or part of Shariah is something they think is best for them, then they can try it, but it should not be imposed on people just because some small number of people think it will solve all problems.
 
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Iran should worry about the survival of its own "regime" run by mullahs , i can't digest how Iranian top brass considers itself to have a moral high ground when they themselves are a dysfunctional dictatorship.

If Bahrain is merged with the Kingdom of SA , it effectively end the Iranian leverage and proxy politics in the arab peninsula. Falling domino will eventually catch House of Saud , Qatar , UAE and others but after Syria and Iraq are done with their revolts.

Iran has always been an irritation for its neighbors , they fully funded sectarian clashes in Pakistan during 80s and early 90s. Thank God , their attempts to have a proxy militant organization like Hizbullah in Pakistan failed.
 
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America is an illusionary enemy of the Saudis. Unless Saudis decide to do something creative other than digging money out of the ground, they will commit suicide. Hanging or overthrowing the current regime in Saudi will replace it with a similar one with depending solely on oil export. Iran had to learn this the hard way through the invasion funded and armed by US, when they decided they needed to be self reliant and self dependent.
 
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