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BREAKING NEWS: Explosion hits Shia mosque in Kuwait

As expected, the ape who blew himself up was a Saudi citizen. Saudi Arabia, sending peace-loving activists all over the globe. They are self-sufficient in 2 things, oil and suicide bombers.


13940405000376_PhotoL.jpg

Big words from a Farsi who lives in a country ruled by 100.000's of terrorists (Basij and Mullah's) and who is recognized as the world's biggest terrorism supporter.

Iran and state-sponsored terrorism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

He was a dual citizen like many Kuwaitis so try again.

Secondly 2000 Saudi Arabian ISIS members (which he was) out of 30 million people is nothing. Tunisia alone has more and it would not surprise me if there are more Farsi terrorists alone in Syria right now fighting for the genocidal Al-Assad regime.

@Kurlang

Those are nonsense links without any proof whatsoever, nor has Pakistan ever said anything to KSA about this. Thirdly there is nothing called "Wahhabism" either.

Your Western tabloids considers supporting the Syrian opposition as "terrorism" so screw them.

Yes, all 450 million Arabs will parish because of a few terrorist attacks here and there a few times each year and civil wars in Northern Iraq and Syria. Especially those in the GCC.:lol:

Meanwhile Pakistan is 1000 times worse than 75% of the Arab world on this front (terrorism) yet somehow standing despite many more people, more different ethnic groups and more poverty.

Got it.
 
sad thing is someone would blow himself up in a mosque during ramadan killing people thinking he is serving islam i still cant understand the way they are convinced to do such crime
 
As expected, the ape who blew himself up was a Saudi citizen. Saudi Arabia, sending peace-loving activists all over the globe. They are self-sufficient in 2 things, oil and suicide bombers.


13940405000376_PhotoL.jpg
may he burn in hell for ever with his fellow hounds of hell as prophesied by Muhammad PBUH
 
sad thing is someone would blow himself up in a mosque during ramadan killing people thinking he is serving islam i still cant understand the way they are convinced to do such crime

They are trying to make symbolic attacks. Attacks in Syria/Iraq don't get attention from other nations in region or other Shia's in region. Countries like Kuwaiit and KSA are wealthy and secure and these kind of attacks shock the people.
 
sad thing is someone would blow himself up in a mosque during ramadan killing people thinking he is serving islam i still cant understand the way they are convinced to do such crime
Well, you have no idea what Pakistani people and Pakistani army dealing with. More then 50,000 Paksitani died and hundred permanent disable due to this horrific teaching. Who is the teacher....

.In one hand they hold holy book other hand they have knife and shouting Allah name and under the foot another Muslim's neck for slaughter..........any idea ?
 
So he was a saudi citizen, is anyone surprised?

He was a dual citizen like many Kuwaitis. Try again. He could have been Pakistani, Afghan, Uzbek, Chechen, Farsi, Tunisian, Moroccan, Iraqi, Syrian etc. They all outscore KSA on this front.

Meanwhile your brethren are used as cannon fodder by your beloved Iran.:lol:

Iran Pays Afghans to Fight for Assad
Offers Them $500 Stipend, Residency Benefits

WO-AS389_IRAFGH_P_20140515190138.jpg

A 2013 funeral at a Damascus shrine Afghans are called on to defend. Reuters​
By
Farnaz Fassihi
May 22, 2014

Iran has been recruiting thousands of Afghan refugees to fight in Syria, offering $500 a month and Iranian residency to help the Assad regime beat back rebel forces, according to Afghans and a Western official.

The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, or IRGC, recruits and trains Shiite militias to fight in Syria. Details of their recruitment efforts were posted this week on a blog focused on Afghan refugees in Iran and confirmed by the office of Grand Ayatollah Mohaghegh Kabuli, an Afghan religious leader in the Iranian holy city of Qom. A member of the IRGC also confirmed the details.

"They [IRGC] find a connection to the refugee community and work on convincing our youth to go and fight in Syria," said the office administrator of Ayatollah Kabuli, reached by telephone in Qom. "They give them everything from salary to residency." Tehran is also offering them school registration for their children and charity cards.

Many Afghan young men have written to Ayatollah Kabuli to ask whether fighting in Syria was religiously sanctioned, his office said. He responded only if they were defending Shiite shrines. Lately, his office said he has kept silent and not even attended funerals of Afghans killed in Syria.


On Thursday, a large funeral procession attended by local and religious officials was held in the northeastern city of Mashhad, near the Afghan border, for four Afghan refugees killed in Syria. The coffins were shrouded in green cloth and the men's pictures were pinned to the sides, according to reports on Shiite religious websites and a news agency linked to the Revolutionary Guards.

Reports of funerals for the Afghan recruits who die in Syria began to emerge in November. Recently, there have been more frequent reports of such deaths popping up in Iranian media.

Hamid Babaei, a spokesman for Iran's U.N. mission, said allegations that Iran is sending Afghan refugees to Syria as fighters are unfounded. "Iranian presence in the country is solely advisory in nature in order to help counter the extremist... al-Qaeda groups from committing more massacre and bloodshed," he said.

Since the conflict started in Syria three years ago, the Islamic Republic has played an instrumental role in keeping President Bashar al-Assad in power. Iran has funded, trained, armed and sent foot soldiers and commanders to Syria to assist Mr. Assad's army.

Its close ally Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite militant and political group, has also sent soldiers and commanders to defend Syria's regime.

The Revolutionary Guards organize and command the Shiite militias sent to Syria.

Commanders work closely with Syrian army commanders to plan strategy and train Syrian soldiers in guerrilla warfare, according to Guards commanders.

As a result, in less than a year Mr. Assad has gone from being at the brink of collapse at the time of the chemical attacks against opposition strongholds last August to planning another four years in office with elections set for June.

Both Iran and Hezbollah have openly taken credit for their efforts in Syria. Gen. Hossein Hamedani, a senior Guards commander involved in planning war strategy in Syria, said last week that with God's help, Iran had trained an extra 130,000 soldiers ready for dispatch.

Thanks to the planning and wisdom of Iran's leaders, Syria's regime could enjoy "some stability," he said.

The 130,000 was an apparent reference to all the Shiite militias including Iranians, Hezbollah, Afghans and other foreign fighters.

Iran also took credit for the recent peace deal between opposition rebels and the regime in Homs, whereby the rebels evacuated the city and surrendered control to the government.

"Nothing happens in Syria without Iran's hand," said Hossein Sheikholeslam, a lawmaker and parliament's deputy head of foreign affairs.

Syria's civil war shows no sign of subsiding and both Iran and Hezbollah are wary of losing their trained men on the ground and the risk of public backlash with dead bodies returning home every week.

A Western official in Iran said recruiting Afghans was part of a shifting strategy to send poor foot soldiers to the front lines from a community with little clout to minimize casualties among Hezbollah and Guards members and political fallout.

The Afghan recruits, like Hezbollah and most Iranians, are all Shiites and support the Syrian regime dominated by minority Alawites, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

The rebels are predominantly Sunni and backed by the Sunni powers of the Middle East, such as Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

The Guards are convincing Afghans to join the war in Syria by playing off Shiite-Sunni sectarian rivalries.

They emphasize the role of hard-line Sunni rebel groups affiliated with al Qaeda, said the Western official.

"Iran wants to play a command and control role in Syria and with the Afghan refugees, they are purchasing mercenaries to do the fighting for them," said Nader Hashemi, director of the center for Middle East Studies at University of Denver, and an expert on Iran and Syria.

U.S. defense officials in Washington have noted with alarm that fighters from around the region have become involved in Syrian civil war, and don't doubt that Afghan fighters have joined in.

"One of the most concerning aspects of the Syrian conflict from a U.S. security perspective is that it is attracting foreign fighters from across the region and around the world," Matthew Spence, a senior defense official, told Congress recently.

"We assess that there are now significantly more foreign fighters in Syria than there were foreign fighters in Iraq at the height of the Iraq war," he said, referring to both sides in the civil war.

Afghan refugees are among the most vulnerable and poor in Iran.

There are about one million registered Afghan refugees in Iran, according to the U.N. refugee agency.

But additionally, there are as many as 2 million unregistered migrants, according to Human Rights Watch. Up to 800 Afghans try to cross illegally into Iran every day, according to Afghanistan's refugee ministry.

They are not allowed to officially work, attend school or register marriages or births.

Most Afghans work as day laborers in construction for meager salaries.

Reza Ismaeli was a 19-year-old Afghan refugee living in Mashhad. He was a state champion in bodybuilding before he was recruited to fight in Syria, according to an account of a friend and fellow Afghan fighter published in December by the Fars news agency, which is linked to the Revolutionary Guards.

After a few months of fighting in Syria, he became one of the leaders of the all-Afghan battalion called ‘Fatemiyoun, named for the Prophet Muhammad's daughter Fatima. Iranian news reports say Fatemiyoun battalion is in Syria to defend the Shiite shrine of Sayeda Zeinab in the suburbs of Damascus.

Mr. Ismaeli was killed in December, according to Fars, in a battle with opposition rebels near Damascus. "The battle was very intense. We only had a few hours of cease fire every few days," an Afghan refugee fighter named Abu Heydar told Fars. Mr. Ismaeili was captured by rebels and beheaded, the report said.

A series of pictures of Mr. Ismaeili on Fars show a short, baby-faced teenager in military fatigues and dark sunglasses posing with a machine gun in front of a tank and then next to a missile stuck in the ground. And then his decapitated bloody head held by a rebel soldier. The Iranian battalion found his headless body and sent back to his parents in Iran, Fars said.

In a blog dedicated to issues of Afghan refugees in Iran, young Afghan men debate whether they should go to Syria.

"Why is Syria our business? We don't have peace in our own country and we have to go become martyrs for Iran's holy war?" wrote one.


—Julian E. Barnes contributed to this article.

Iran Pays Afghans to Fight for Assad - WSJ

All while:




Go worry about this Arab-obsessed clown:

 
He was a dual citizen like many Kuwaitis. Try again. He could have been Pakistani, Afghan, Uzbek, Chechen, Farsi, Tunisian, Moroccan, Iraqi, Syrian etc. They all outscore KSA on this front.

Meanwhile your brethren are used as cannon fodder by your beloved Iran.:lol:

Iran Pays Afghans to Fight for Assad
Offers Them $500 Stipend, Residency Benefits

WO-AS389_IRAFGH_P_20140515190138.jpg

A 2013 funeral at a Damascus shrine Afghans are called on to defend. Reuters​
By
Farnaz Fassihi
May 22, 2014

Iran has been recruiting thousands of Afghan refugees to fight in Syria, offering $500 a month and Iranian residency to help the Assad regime beat back rebel forces, according to Afghans and a Western official.

The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, or IRGC, recruits and trains Shiite militias to fight in Syria. Details of their recruitment efforts were posted this week on a blog focused on Afghan refugees in Iran and confirmed by the office of Grand Ayatollah Mohaghegh Kabuli, an Afghan religious leader in the Iranian holy city of Qom. A member of the IRGC also confirmed the details.

"They [IRGC] find a connection to the refugee community and work on convincing our youth to go and fight in Syria," said the office administrator of Ayatollah Kabuli, reached by telephone in Qom. "They give them everything from salary to residency." Tehran is also offering them school registration for their children and charity cards.

Many Afghan young men have written to Ayatollah Kabuli to ask whether fighting in Syria was religiously sanctioned, his office said. He responded only if they were defending Shiite shrines. Lately, his office said he has kept silent and not even attended funerals of Afghans killed in Syria.


On Thursday, a large funeral procession attended by local and religious officials was held in the northeastern city of Mashhad, near the Afghan border, for four Afghan refugees killed in Syria. The coffins were shrouded in green cloth and the men's pictures were pinned to the sides, according to reports on Shiite religious websites and a news agency linked to the Revolutionary Guards.

Reports of funerals for the Afghan recruits who die in Syria began to emerge in November. Recently, there have been more frequent reports of such deaths popping up in Iranian media.

Hamid Babaei, a spokesman for Iran's U.N. mission, said allegations that Iran is sending Afghan refugees to Syria as fighters are unfounded. "Iranian presence in the country is solely advisory in nature in order to help counter the extremist... al-Qaeda groups from committing more massacre and bloodshed," he said.

Since the conflict started in Syria three years ago, the Islamic Republic has played an instrumental role in keeping President Bashar al-Assad in power. Iran has funded, trained, armed and sent foot soldiers and commanders to Syria to assist Mr. Assad's army.

Its close ally Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite militant and political group, has also sent soldiers and commanders to defend Syria's regime.

The Revolutionary Guards organize and command the Shiite militias sent to Syria.

Commanders work closely with Syrian army commanders to plan strategy and train Syrian soldiers in guerrilla warfare, according to Guards commanders.

As a result, in less than a year Mr. Assad has gone from being at the brink of collapse at the time of the chemical attacks against opposition strongholds last August to planning another four years in office with elections set for June.

Both Iran and Hezbollah have openly taken credit for their efforts in Syria. Gen. Hossein Hamedani, a senior Guards commander involved in planning war strategy in Syria, said last week that with God's help, Iran had trained an extra 130,000 soldiers ready for dispatch.

Thanks to the planning and wisdom of Iran's leaders, Syria's regime could enjoy "some stability," he said.

The 130,000 was an apparent reference to all the Shiite militias including Iranians, Hezbollah, Afghans and other foreign fighters.

Iran also took credit for the recent peace deal between opposition rebels and the regime in Homs, whereby the rebels evacuated the city and surrendered control to the government.

"Nothing happens in Syria without Iran's hand," said Hossein Sheikholeslam, a lawmaker and parliament's deputy head of foreign affairs.

Syria's civil war shows no sign of subsiding and both Iran and Hezbollah are wary of losing their trained men on the ground and the risk of public backlash with dead bodies returning home every week.

A Western official in Iran said recruiting Afghans was part of a shifting strategy to send poor foot soldiers to the front lines from a community with little clout to minimize casualties among Hezbollah and Guards members and political fallout.

The Afghan recruits, like Hezbollah and most Iranians, are all Shiites and support the Syrian regime dominated by minority Alawites, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

The rebels are predominantly Sunni and backed by the Sunni powers of the Middle East, such as Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

The Guards are convincing Afghans to join the war in Syria by playing off Shiite-Sunni sectarian rivalries.

They emphasize the role of hard-line Sunni rebel groups affiliated with al Qaeda, said the Western official.

"Iran wants to play a command and control role in Syria and with the Afghan refugees, they are purchasing mercenaries to do the fighting for them," said Nader Hashemi, director of the center for Middle East Studies at University of Denver, and an expert on Iran and Syria.

U.S. defense officials in Washington have noted with alarm that fighters from around the region have become involved in Syrian civil war, and don't doubt that Afghan fighters have joined in.

"One of the most concerning aspects of the Syrian conflict from a U.S. security perspective is that it is attracting foreign fighters from across the region and around the world," Matthew Spence, a senior defense official, told Congress recently.

"We assess that there are now significantly more foreign fighters in Syria than there were foreign fighters in Iraq at the height of the Iraq war," he said, referring to both sides in the civil war.

Afghan refugees are among the most vulnerable and poor in Iran.

There are about one million registered Afghan refugees in Iran, according to the U.N. refugee agency.

But additionally, there are as many as 2 million unregistered migrants, according to Human Rights Watch. Up to 800 Afghans try to cross illegally into Iran every day, according to Afghanistan's refugee ministry.

They are not allowed to officially work, attend school or register marriages or births.

Most Afghans work as day laborers in construction for meager salaries.

Reza Ismaeli was a 19-year-old Afghan refugee living in Mashhad. He was a state champion in bodybuilding before he was recruited to fight in Syria, according to an account of a friend and fellow Afghan fighter published in December by the Fars news agency, which is linked to the Revolutionary Guards.

After a few months of fighting in Syria, he became one of the leaders of the all-Afghan battalion called ‘Fatemiyoun, named for the Prophet Muhammad's daughter Fatima. Iranian news reports say Fatemiyoun battalion is in Syria to defend the Shiite shrine of Sayeda Zeinab in the suburbs of Damascus.

Mr. Ismaeli was killed in December, according to Fars, in a battle with opposition rebels near Damascus. "The battle was very intense. We only had a few hours of cease fire every few days," an Afghan refugee fighter named Abu Heydar told Fars. Mr. Ismaeili was captured by rebels and beheaded, the report said.

A series of pictures of Mr. Ismaeili on Fars show a short, baby-faced teenager in military fatigues and dark sunglasses posing with a machine gun in front of a tank and then next to a missile stuck in the ground. And then his decapitated bloody head held by a rebel soldier. The Iranian battalion found his headless body and sent back to his parents in Iran, Fars said.

In a blog dedicated to issues of Afghan refugees in Iran, young Afghan men debate whether they should go to Syria.

"Why is Syria our business? We don't have peace in our own country and we have to go become martyrs for Iran's holy war?" wrote one.


—Julian E. Barnes contributed to this article.

Iran Pays Afghans to Fight for Assad - WSJ

All while:




It's time you stop acting so insecure about Saudi suicide bombers and admit the reality even if it is harsh. Your country is responsible for exporting the largest amount of trash to the region, from Osama Bin Laden him self to creating and funding Taliban and thousands of other terrorists who joined Daesh, Al-Qaeda and Nusra. The more you live in deniability, the harsher it gets. Your over emotional responses to the fact that the ape who blew himself up was a Saudi, shows the insecurity at its best, including creating a troll duplicate thread minutes after and posting it here again.
 
He was a dual citizen like many Kuwaitis. Try again. He could have been Pakistani, Afghan, Uzbek, Chechen, Farsi, Tunisian, Moroccan, Iraqi, Syrian etc. They all outscore KSA on this front.

Meanwhile your brethren are used as cannon fodder by your beloved Iran.:lol:

Iran Pays Afghans to Fight for Assad
Offers Them $500 Stipend, Residency Benefits

WO-AS389_IRAFGH_P_20140515190138.jpg

A 2013 funeral at a Damascus shrine Afghans are called on to defend. Reuters​
By
Farnaz Fassihi
May 22, 2014

Iran has been recruiting thousands of Afghan refugees to fight in Syria, offering $500 a month and Iranian residency to help the Assad regime beat back rebel forces, according to Afghans and a Western official.

The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, or IRGC, recruits and trains Shiite militias to fight in Syria. Details of their recruitment efforts were posted this week on a blog focused on Afghan refugees in Iran and confirmed by the office of Grand Ayatollah Mohaghegh Kabuli, an Afghan religious leader in the Iranian holy city of Qom. A member of the IRGC also confirmed the details.

"They [IRGC] find a connection to the refugee community and work on convincing our youth to go and fight in Syria," said the office administrator of Ayatollah Kabuli, reached by telephone in Qom. "They give them everything from salary to residency." Tehran is also offering them school registration for their children and charity cards.

Many Afghan young men have written to Ayatollah Kabuli to ask whether fighting in Syria was religiously sanctioned, his office said. He responded only if they were defending Shiite shrines. Lately, his office said he has kept silent and not even attended funerals of Afghans killed in Syria.


On Thursday, a large funeral procession attended by local and religious officials was held in the northeastern city of Mashhad, near the Afghan border, for four Afghan refugees killed in Syria. The coffins were shrouded in green cloth and the men's pictures were pinned to the sides, according to reports on Shiite religious websites and a news agency linked to the Revolutionary Guards.

Reports of funerals for the Afghan recruits who die in Syria began to emerge in November. Recently, there have been more frequent reports of such deaths popping up in Iranian media.

Hamid Babaei, a spokesman for Iran's U.N. mission, said allegations that Iran is sending Afghan refugees to Syria as fighters are unfounded. "Iranian presence in the country is solely advisory in nature in order to help counter the extremist... al-Qaeda groups from committing more massacre and bloodshed," he said.

Since the conflict started in Syria three years ago, the Islamic Republic has played an instrumental role in keeping President Bashar al-Assad in power. Iran has funded, trained, armed and sent foot soldiers and commanders to Syria to assist Mr. Assad's army.

Its close ally Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite militant and political group, has also sent soldiers and commanders to defend Syria's regime.

The Revolutionary Guards organize and command the Shiite militias sent to Syria.

Commanders work closely with Syrian army commanders to plan strategy and train Syrian soldiers in guerrilla warfare, according to Guards commanders.

As a result, in less than a year Mr. Assad has gone from being at the brink of collapse at the time of the chemical attacks against opposition strongholds last August to planning another four years in office with elections set for June.

Both Iran and Hezbollah have openly taken credit for their efforts in Syria. Gen. Hossein Hamedani, a senior Guards commander involved in planning war strategy in Syria, said last week that with God's help, Iran had trained an extra 130,000 soldiers ready for dispatch.

Thanks to the planning and wisdom of Iran's leaders, Syria's regime could enjoy "some stability," he said.

The 130,000 was an apparent reference to all the Shiite militias including Iranians, Hezbollah, Afghans and other foreign fighters.

Iran also took credit for the recent peace deal between opposition rebels and the regime in Homs, whereby the rebels evacuated the city and surrendered control to the government.

"Nothing happens in Syria without Iran's hand," said Hossein Sheikholeslam, a lawmaker and parliament's deputy head of foreign affairs.

Syria's civil war shows no sign of subsiding and both Iran and Hezbollah are wary of losing their trained men on the ground and the risk of public backlash with dead bodies returning home every week.

A Western official in Iran said recruiting Afghans was part of a shifting strategy to send poor foot soldiers to the front lines from a community with little clout to minimize casualties among Hezbollah and Guards members and political fallout.

The Afghan recruits, like Hezbollah and most Iranians, are all Shiites and support the Syrian regime dominated by minority Alawites, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

The rebels are predominantly Sunni and backed by the Sunni powers of the Middle East, such as Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

The Guards are convincing Afghans to join the war in Syria by playing off Shiite-Sunni sectarian rivalries.

They emphasize the role of hard-line Sunni rebel groups affiliated with al Qaeda, said the Western official.

"Iran wants to play a command and control role in Syria and with the Afghan refugees, they are purchasing mercenaries to do the fighting for them," said Nader Hashemi, director of the center for Middle East Studies at University of Denver, and an expert on Iran and Syria.

U.S. defense officials in Washington have noted with alarm that fighters from around the region have become involved in Syrian civil war, and don't doubt that Afghan fighters have joined in.

"One of the most concerning aspects of the Syrian conflict from a U.S. security perspective is that it is attracting foreign fighters from across the region and around the world," Matthew Spence, a senior defense official, told Congress recently.

"We assess that there are now significantly more foreign fighters in Syria than there were foreign fighters in Iraq at the height of the Iraq war," he said, referring to both sides in the civil war.

Afghan refugees are among the most vulnerable and poor in Iran.

There are about one million registered Afghan refugees in Iran, according to the U.N. refugee agency.

But additionally, there are as many as 2 million unregistered migrants, according to Human Rights Watch. Up to 800 Afghans try to cross illegally into Iran every day, according to Afghanistan's refugee ministry.

They are not allowed to officially work, attend school or register marriages or births.

Most Afghans work as day laborers in construction for meager salaries.

Reza Ismaeli was a 19-year-old Afghan refugee living in Mashhad. He was a state champion in bodybuilding before he was recruited to fight in Syria, according to an account of a friend and fellow Afghan fighter published in December by the Fars news agency, which is linked to the Revolutionary Guards.

After a few months of fighting in Syria, he became one of the leaders of the all-Afghan battalion called ‘Fatemiyoun, named for the Prophet Muhammad's daughter Fatima. Iranian news reports say Fatemiyoun battalion is in Syria to defend the Shiite shrine of Sayeda Zeinab in the suburbs of Damascus.

Mr. Ismaeli was killed in December, according to Fars, in a battle with opposition rebels near Damascus. "The battle was very intense. We only had a few hours of cease fire every few days," an Afghan refugee fighter named Abu Heydar told Fars. Mr. Ismaeili was captured by rebels and beheaded, the report said.

A series of pictures of Mr. Ismaeili on Fars show a short, baby-faced teenager in military fatigues and dark sunglasses posing with a machine gun in front of a tank and then next to a missile stuck in the ground. And then his decapitated bloody head held by a rebel soldier. The Iranian battalion found his headless body and sent back to his parents in Iran, Fars said.

In a blog dedicated to issues of Afghan refugees in Iran, young Afghan men debate whether they should go to Syria.

"Why is Syria our business? We don't have peace in our own country and we have to go become martyrs for Iran's holy war?" wrote one.


—Julian E. Barnes contributed to this article.

Iran Pays Afghans to Fight for Assad - WSJ

typical response from al-hasani showing your insecurities once again. You're like a little baby who can't handle criticism so you change the subject. I'm highlighting the facts that ISIS resonates so well with saudis. I wonder why? The only thing that differentiates saudis is that some shakes hands with a cardboard cut out of the king whilst others will try to start a caliphate. Only politics are different
 
Last edited:
typical response from al-hasani showing your insecurities once again. You like a little baby who can't handle criticism so you change the subject. I'm highlighting the facts that ISIS resonates so well with saudis. I wonder why?

What I wrote is correct. There are more terrorists from those countries which a look at their respective countries confirm.

Oh, is that why only 2000 have joined out of 30 million people despite bordering Iraq, despite having ties with Iraq on all fronts (ancestral, tribal, linguistic etc.)? Do you even realize that almost all that went to Iraq and Syria have ancestral or tribal ties with those two countries? That less than 100 from Hijaz went and nobody from the Southern Provinces? Of course you don't.

Your Afghanistan is ruled by a bunch of terrorists and Taliban basically controls your country. In KSA Shias and Sunnis (KSA is home to all Islamic sect indigenously unlike any other Muslim country) live in complete peace while Sunnis and Shias are killing each other in your countries every single day.

10 million big Tunisia has more ISIS members than KSA despite being located 2000 km from Iraq if not more.

Keep obsessing about Arabs you obsessed clown.:lol:
 
Take some fucking responsibilities. Every time some excuse. All these terrorist actions, targeting innocent people, for the last few decades IS NOT JUST SOME WEIRD COINCIDENCE.

Just look at this forum. People directly or indirectly support groups like ISIS and then you wonder why they groups like ISIS or similar groups always pop up.

Cut ALL funding to any extreme groups, change the ideology that gives birth to such idiocy, stop turning every sect into heretics, cease every useless madrases in every freaking country, and maybe one of those morons will do something meaningful with their lives.
 
It's time you stop acting so insecure about Saudi suicide bombers and admit the reality even if it is harsh. Your country is responsible for exporting the largest amount of trash to the region, from Osama Bin Laden him self to creating and funding Taliban and thousands of other terrorists who joined Daesh, Al-Qaeda and Nusra. The more you live in deniability, the harsher it gets. Your over emotional responses to the fact that the ape who blew himself up was a Saudi, shows the insecurity at its best, including creating a troll duplicate thread minutes after and posting it here again.

As I told you Farsi your entire country is ruled by terrorists, there are more Farsis fighting for the Al-Assad regime in Syria alone than Saudi Arabian ISIS members, your media claims that at least 500 Farsi "martyrs" have died in Syria etc. You are designated as the world's biggest terrorism supporter too by the international community.

Iran and state-sponsored terrorism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

He was a Kuwaiti but a dual citizen (KSA) which many, many thousands upon thousands of Kuwaitis are.

OBL was half Yemeni and half Syrian so that won't work.

Since when did KSA create Taliban you fool and how are they any worse than all the dozens of terrorist proxies that your government has been supporting since 1979?

Yes, a article showing how pathetic your regime are (using poor Afghans who are treated as trash in Iran) in Syria instead of sending more Farsis to die, written by the Wall Street Journal is a "troll thread".:lol:

You pathetically tried to lock my thread 3-4 times until Webmaster opened it. Fail.:lol:

Suicide bombings were first used by Iranian backed Shia's in Lebanon too. So much for that. During the Iraq-Iran war 1000's of Iranians blew themselves up and walked on land mines as well.:lol:
 
Last edited:
As I told you Farsi your entire country is ruled by terrorists, there are more Farsis fighting for the Al-Assad regime in Syria alone than Saudi Arabian ISIS members, your media claims that at least 500 Farsi "martyrs" have died in Syria etc. You are designated as the world's biggest terrorism supporter too by the international community.

Iran and state-sponsored terrorism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

He was a Kuwaiti but a dual citizen (KSA) which many, many thousands upon thousands of Kuwaitis are.

OBL was half Yemeni and half Syrian so that won't work.

Since when did KSA create Taliban you fool and how are they any worse than all the dozens of terrorist proxies that your government has been supporting since 1979?

Yes, a article showing how pathetic your regime are (using poor Afghans who are treated as trash in Iran) in Syria instead of sending more Farsis to die, written by the Wall Street Journal is a "troll thread".:lol:

You pathetically tried to lock my thread 3-4 times until Webmaster opened it. Fail.:lol:

Your thread wasn't opened, it was merged with the thread that I told you currently exists (which was the reason that your new thread was reported to begin with), but you were so angry that you didn't even see my post.

Anyways, all these rants, insults and long posts indicates one thing only: insecurity. It's like you felt embarrassed that so many terrorists from your country are raised and blown up, hence the very emotional and hysterical reaction. Understandable.
 

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