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How China Became Jihadis’ New Target

Song Hong

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International terrorist organizations long considered Beijing a secondary focus. That’s changed.

By Raffaello Pantucci, a senior associate fellow at Britain’s Royal United Services Institute and a visiting senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore.


In early October, an Islamic State-Khorasan bomber killed nearly 50 people at a mosque in Kunduz, Afghanistan. That the militant group claimed responsibility for the attack wasn’t surprising, but, in a worrying new twist for Beijing, it also decided to link the massacre to China: The group said that the bomber was Uyghur and that the attack was aimed at punishing the Taliban for their close cooperation with China despite its actions against Uyghurs in Xinjiang.

China was long seen as a secondary target by international terrorist organizations. Groups like al Qaeda and the Islamic State were so focused on targeting the United States, the West more generally, or their local adversaries that they rarely raised their weapons toward China, even though they may have wanted to due to, for example, China’s mistreatment of Uyghur Muslims. But in Kunduz, this narrative was brought brutally to a close. China can now consider itself a clear target.

China’s history with violent Islamist groups is complicated. For a long time, Beijing’s ability to project a status as a “developing world” power meant it could hide to some degree behind a veneer of not being a “first world” former colonial power that antagonized the world’s downtrodden. Before 9/11, al Qaeda theorists went so far as to speak of Beijing as a possible partner. According to their logic, China was against the United States, al Qaeda’s sworn enemy, and therefore the old “my enemy’s enemy is my friend” trope might apply.

There’s very little evidence that happened. The tolerance China appeared to show in the late 1990s toward al Qaeda figures who occasionally used Chinese territory for transit and support operations was more likely due to ignorance than to plotting. By 2004, this dynamic had changed, and Chinese intelligence was willing to work with Western services to hand over suspected terrorists who passed through China’s airports.

During the first Taliban-led government in the 1990s, Chinese officials were hesitant but willing interlocutors with Mullah Mohammad Omar’s regime. China was never a full-throated Taliban supporter but instead preferred to find ways of working with the group in the background. This mostly took the form of China providing limited investment and support that was encouraged by Pakistan, with the expectation that the Taliban would restrain the Uyghur groups that had established themselves in Afghanistan under Mullah Omar’s protection from attacking China. Beijing didn’t seem to be very concerned about what the Taliban’s larger goals were, as long as Afghanistan’s leaders acted on this key request. Still, there is little evidence that Beijing linked this domestic problem to a broader international terrorist threat.

With the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan, and later Iraq, the problem of international terrorism took off globally, with groups targeting an expanding range of countries. Yet China’s successful push to get some of its own domestic Uyghur groups added to the United Nations and U.S. roster of terrorist organizations did not bring the country much international jihadi attention. Meanwhile, in the years immediately after 9/11, China became wary of the Taliban. A Uyghur group reportedly fought alongside the Taliban for years, as a video by al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri highlighted in 2016 and as U.S. intelligence information from Guantánamo Bay indicated earlier.

As the 2010s went on, more Chinese citizens started to be harmed in terrorist incidents around the globe, but, for the most part, these seemed incidental—a case of being at the wrong place at the wrong time. Al Qaeda and then Islamic State leaders released some statements that threatened Beijing for its treatment of Uyghurs—and indeed Muslims more generally—but for the most part, they were limited and didn’t lead to any major push to target China.

Now, it’s undeniable that China is being targeted, especially as its footprint in Afghanistan grows. Beijing has long skirted around formal engagement in Afghanistan, and while it continues to do this to some degree, it has also been the most willing of the major powers in the region to engage with the Taliban directly. The Islamic State-Khorasan clearly sees the Taliban bowing to Beijing as a weak point to capitalize on, and the group’s message is clear: It is offering itself as a home to Uyghurs who are unhappy with the Taliban regime, as well as others in Afghanistan appalled at China’s treatment of Muslim minorities.

The new Taliban government has publicly stated its desire to work with the Chinese government—something Beijing has made clear is conditional on action against Uyghur militants. Taliban leaders are especially keen to attract Chinese investment and economic partnerships. In late October, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi met with the group’s leaders in Doha, Qatar. Taliban Foreign Minister-designate Amir Khan Muttaqi presented Wang with a box of Afghan pine nuts, reflecting one of the many goods Afghanistan is hoping to export to the Chinese market. Wang, meanwhile, focused on the need for stable government in Afghanistan and appealed to the Taliban once again to sever their links with Uyghur militants.

But the degree to which the Taliban are able—or want—to entirely sever this Uyghur connection is an open question. Over the past few months, the group has said that they would not let their territory be used by militants to launch attacks abroad and that Uyghur militants had left the country. Yet while rumors circulate of anti-Uyghur action behind the scenes—and of the Taliban moving Uyghurs within Afghanistan away from China’s borders—Beijing is not entirely convinced. After the meeting in Doha, the Chinese foreign ministry wrote that Wang had expressed that China “hopes and believes” that the Taliban “will make a clean break with the ETIM” (the “East Turkestan Islamic Movement,” the name China uses to describe militant Uyghur networks), suggesting that the group hasn’t yet fulfilled Beijing’s desires.

Beijing likely knows that this is a dangerous development—especially in a region where it is facing greater threats.

It is this dynamic that the Islamic State-Khorasan capitalized on when it used a suicide bomber in the Kunduz attack with the battlefield name Muhammad al-Uighuri. In the message released by the Islamic State’s media channels claiming the attack, the group linked the attacker directly to the Taliban and China’s cooperation, stating, “the attacker was one of the Uyghur Muslims the Taliban has promised to deport in response to demands from China and its [China’s] policy against Muslims there.”

The message has many layers. First, it is a signal to the Taliban highlighting their inability to protect minorities in the country they now purport to control. Second, it is a message to China, attacking Beijing for its policies in Xinjiang and linking those to the group’s interests. Third, it is a message to other Uyghurs who feel abandoned or threatened by the Taliban and may be seeking to join other groups that will advance their interests. Finally, it is a message to the world, showing that the Islamic State-Khorasan is a capable organization that’s continuing the Islamic State traditions on the battlefield and speaking up for oppressed Muslims. These messages will resonate with potential supporters around the world.

Publicly, China was circumspect in its response, which decried the loss of life. No official comment was made about the attacker’s identity, though a Chinese academic published an opinion piece in the state-owned Global Times accusing the Associated Press of fabricating the narrative of the attacker being Uyghur. He instead advanced Taliban narratives that Uyghurs who had been fighting with the Taliban in Afghanistan had left the country and praised the Taliban’s control and cooperation with China.

But Beijing likely knows that this is a dangerous development—especially in a region where it is facing greater threats. There have been new reports of a growing Chinese security presence in Tajikistan aimed at strengthening its ability to address potential threats from Afghanistan. A growing range of militant groups in Pakistan are targeting Chinese interests there, with attacks in Dasu and Karachi coming from local Baluchi and Sindhi separatists. China’s embassy in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, was struck in 2016, as was its consulate in Karachi in 2018, an attack that killed four people (and three attackers). Local protest movements, militant groups, and politicians are all looking at China as an adversary. Until now, however, most of the attacks were conducted by local separatist movements. The addition of the Islamic State-Khorasan to the roster finally brings the country firmly into jihadis’ crosshairs.

The problem for China is that it is ill prepared to handle such threats. Its military may be large and well equipped, but it has little experience countering militant organizations and often relies on other countries to do so for it. Yet, as Beijing is increasingly discovering in Pakistan—one of its more reliable allies—this is difficult to guarantee. Taliban leadership may project great strength and hubris, but they will face the same difficulties as others in the region in quelling militant groups in their territory, and they may find it difficult to entirely protect China from determined terrorist organizations.

In a sense, Beijing is stuck. China is Afghanistan’s most powerful and influential neighbor, which partly explains the growing attention toward its role in the country. Beijing is increasingly seen as the Taliban’s great supporter on the international stage. In assuming this role, China runs the risk of being seen as filing the vacuum the United States left in Afghanistan—something Beijing is keen to avoid. The reality, however, is that it is already getting sucked in. The Islamic State-Khorasan’s attack in Kunduz merely highlighted how far down this path Beijing has already gone.



 
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Yeah that’s because many of the Islamic terrorist groups are created and trained by the CIA. They were previously used primarily to undermine regimes in the Islamic world that the US govt didn’t like or to hit soft targets in the west in order to sway public opinion, now China is the main target because the US is threatened by China’s rise.
 
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Yeah that’s because many of the Islamic terrorist groups are created and trained by the CIA. They were previously used primarily to undermine regimes in the Islamic world that the US govt didn’t like or to hit soft targets in the west in order to sway public opinion, now China is the main target because the US is threatened by China’s rise.

US captures terrorists and then release them back to the battlefield in return for supporting the US agenda.
 
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You can tell the author is having wet dreams about terrorist attacks in China, but alas, his dreams will remain just that. Xinjiang is so wired up that not a termite farts there without the government hearing it. ISIS, al-Qaeda, ETIM, and other terrorist groups are completely impotent to conduct attacks inside China.

This attack claimed some unfortunate people's lives in Afghanistan (it was an attack against a Shia mosque, I'm given to believe) but it didn't set back any of China's plans in Afghanistan because China really doesn't have any. People like the author and his colleagues who thought China was itching to mine Afghanistan's minerals as soon as America left are so stupid that if they were smarter, they would know better than to give their opinions in public. Because those opinions are so damn stupid. But the Dunning-Kruger thing is part of the stupidity.

Let me tell you the real strategy and how this is really going to play out: For a long time, it's going to look like China's doing absolutely nothing. But what'll be happening behind the scenes is that China will work to integrate Afghanistan into CPEC and help Pakistan stabilize the situation. Once that's done (and it'll take a while) China will be indirectly involved in economic projects in Afghanistan, while the most direct on-the-ground involvement will be by Chinese-trained Pakistani engineers and managers.
 
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Another delusional article written by a pro- Hindutva fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School...



Indian RAW money hard at work. China should just cut the head of the terror snake hiding behind the "Jihadi" proxies by invading northern India and cutting off the 'chicken neck'!
 
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International terrorist organizations long considered Beijing a secondary focus. That’s changed.

By Raffaello Pantucci, a senior associate fellow at Britain’s Royal United Services Institute and a visiting senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore.


In early October, an Islamic State-Khorasan bomber killed nearly 50 people at a mosque in Kunduz, Afghanistan. That the militant group claimed responsibility for the attack wasn’t surprising, but, in a worrying new twist for Beijing, it also decided to link the massacre to China: The group said that the bomber was Uyghur and that the attack was aimed at punishing the Taliban for their close cooperation with China despite its actions against Uyghurs in Xinjiang.

China was long seen as a secondary target by international terrorist organizations. Groups like al Qaeda and the Islamic State were so focused on targeting the United States, the West more generally, or their local adversaries that they rarely raised their weapons toward China, even though they may have wanted to due to, for example, China’s mistreatment of Uyghur Muslims. But in Kunduz, this narrative was brought brutally to a close. China can now consider itself a clear target.

China’s history with violent Islamist groups is complicated. For a long time, Beijing’s ability to project a status as a “developing world” power meant it could hide to some degree behind a veneer of not being a “first world” former colonial power that antagonized the world’s downtrodden. Before 9/11, al Qaeda theorists went so far as to speak of Beijing as a possible partner. According to their logic, China was against the United States, al Qaeda’s sworn enemy, and therefore the old “my enemy’s enemy is my friend” trope might apply.

There’s very little evidence that happened. The tolerance China appeared to show in the late 1990s toward al Qaeda figures who occasionally used Chinese territory for transit and support operations was more likely due to ignorance than to plotting. By 2004, this dynamic had changed, and Chinese intelligence was willing to work with Western services to hand over suspected terrorists who passed through China’s airports.

During the first Taliban-led government in the 1990s, Chinese officials were hesitant but willing interlocutors with Mullah Mohammad Omar’s regime. China was never a full-throated Taliban supporter but instead preferred to find ways of working with the group in the background. This mostly took the form of China providing limited investment and support that was encouraged by Pakistan, with the expectation that the Taliban would restrain the Uyghur groups that had established themselves in Afghanistan under Mullah Omar’s protection from attacking China. Beijing didn’t seem to be very concerned about what the Taliban’s larger goals were, as long as Afghanistan’s leaders acted on this key request. Still, there is little evidence that Beijing linked this domestic problem to a broader international terrorist threat.

With the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan, and later Iraq, the problem of international terrorism took off globally, with groups targeting an expanding range of countries. Yet China’s successful push to get some of its own domestic Uyghur groups added to the United Nations and U.S. roster of terrorist organizations did not bring the country much international jihadi attention. Meanwhile, in the years immediately after 9/11, China became wary of the Taliban. A Uyghur group reportedly fought alongside the Taliban for years, as a video by al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri highlighted in 2016 and as U.S. intelligence information from Guantánamo Bay indicated earlier.

As the 2010s went on, more Chinese citizens started to be harmed in terrorist incidents around the globe, but, for the most part, these seemed incidental—a case of being at the wrong place at the wrong time. Al Qaeda and then Islamic State leaders released some statements that threatened Beijing for its treatment of Uyghurs—and indeed Muslims more generally—but for the most part, they were limited and didn’t lead to any major push to target China.

Now, it’s undeniable that China is being targeted, especially as its footprint in Afghanistan grows. Beijing has long skirted around formal engagement in Afghanistan, and while it continues to do this to some degree, it has also been the most willing of the major powers in the region to engage with the Taliban directly. The Islamic State-Khorasan clearly sees the Taliban bowing to Beijing as a weak point to capitalize on, and the group’s message is clear: It is offering itself as a home to Uyghurs who are unhappy with the Taliban regime, as well as others in Afghanistan appalled at China’s treatment of Muslim minorities.

The new Taliban government has publicly stated its desire to work with the Chinese government—something Beijing has made clear is conditional on action against Uyghur militants. Taliban leaders are especially keen to attract Chinese investment and economic partnerships. In late October, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi met with the group’s leaders in Doha, Qatar. Taliban Foreign Minister-designate Amir Khan Muttaqi presented Wang with a box of Afghan pine nuts, reflecting one of the many goods Afghanistan is hoping to export to the Chinese market. Wang, meanwhile, focused on the need for stable government in Afghanistan and appealed to the Taliban once again to sever their links with Uyghur militants.

But the degree to which the Taliban are able—or want—to entirely sever this Uyghur connection is an open question. Over the past few months, the group has said that they would not let their territory be used by militants to launch attacks abroad and that Uyghur militants had left the country. Yet while rumors circulate of anti-Uyghur action behind the scenes—and of the Taliban moving Uyghurs within Afghanistan away from China’s borders—Beijing is not entirely convinced. After the meeting in Doha, the Chinese foreign ministry wrote that Wang had expressed that China “hopes and believes” that the Taliban “will make a clean break with the ETIM” (the “East Turkestan Islamic Movement,” the name China uses to describe militant Uyghur networks), suggesting that the group hasn’t yet fulfilled Beijing’s desires.

Beijing likely knows that this is a dangerous development—especially in a region where it is facing greater threats.

It is this dynamic that the Islamic State-Khorasan capitalized on when it used a suicide bomber in the Kunduz attack with the battlefield name Muhammad al-Uighuri. In the message released by the Islamic State’s media channels claiming the attack, the group linked the attacker directly to the Taliban and China’s cooperation, stating, “the attacker was one of the Uyghur Muslims the Taliban has promised to deport in response to demands from China and its [China’s] policy against Muslims there.”

The message has many layers. First, it is a signal to the Taliban highlighting their inability to protect minorities in the country they now purport to control. Second, it is a message to China, attacking Beijing for its policies in Xinjiang and linking those to the group’s interests. Third, it is a message to other Uyghurs who feel abandoned or threatened by the Taliban and may be seeking to join other groups that will advance their interests. Finally, it is a message to the world, showing that the Islamic State-Khorasan is a capable organization that’s continuing the Islamic State traditions on the battlefield and speaking up for oppressed Muslims. These messages will resonate with potential supporters around the world.

Publicly, China was circumspect in its response, which decried the loss of life. No official comment was made about the attacker’s identity, though a Chinese academic published an opinion piece in the state-owned Global Times accusing the Associated Press of fabricating the narrative of the attacker being Uyghur. He instead advanced Taliban narratives that Uyghurs who had been fighting with the Taliban in Afghanistan had left the country and praised the Taliban’s control and cooperation with China.

But Beijing likely knows that this is a dangerous development—especially in a region where it is facing greater threats. There have been new reports of a growing Chinese security presence in Tajikistan aimed at strengthening its ability to address potential threats from Afghanistan. A growing range of militant groups in Pakistan are targeting Chinese interests there, with attacks in Dasu and Karachi coming from local Baluchi and Sindhi separatists. China’s embassy in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, was struck in 2016, as was its consulate in Karachi in 2018, an attack that killed four people (and three attackers). Local protest movements, militant groups, and politicians are all looking at China as an adversary. Until now, however, most of the attacks were conducted by local separatist movements. The addition of the Islamic State-Khorasan to the roster finally brings the country firmly into jihadis’ crosshairs.

The problem for China is that it is ill prepared to handle such threats. Its military may be large and well equipped, but it has little experience countering militant organizations and often relies on other countries to do so for it. Yet, as Beijing is increasingly discovering in Pakistan—one of its more reliable allies—this is difficult to guarantee. Taliban leadership may project great strength and hubris, but they will face the same difficulties as others in the region in quelling militant groups in their territory, and they may find it difficult to entirely protect China from determined terrorist organizations.

In a sense, Beijing is stuck. China is Afghanistan’s most powerful and influential neighbor, which partly explains the growing attention toward its role in the country. Beijing is increasingly seen as the Taliban’s great supporter on the international stage. In assuming this role, China runs the risk of being seen as filing the vacuum the United States left in Afghanistan—something Beijing is keen to avoid. The reality, however, is that it is already getting sucked in. The Islamic State-Khorasan’s attack in Kunduz merely highlighted how far down this path Beijing has already gone.




It's no surprise that the US backed ETIM & India backed BLA would target China. While the reporter is trying to create an illusion of some new revelation, the only difference is actually that with the improved security within China especially Xinjiang, these groups can only strike targets outside of the country rather within China now.
 
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You can tell the author is having wet dreams about terrorist attacks in China, but alas, his dreams will remain just that. Xinjiang is so wired up that not a termite farts there without the government hearing it. ISIS, al-Qaeda, ETIM, and other terrorist groups are completely impotent to conduct attacks inside China.

This attack claimed some unfortunate people's lives in Afghanistan (it was an attack against a Shia mosque, I'm given to believe) but it didn't set back any of China's plans in Afghanistan because China really doesn't have any. People like the author and his colleagues who thought China was itching to mine Afghanistan's minerals as soon as America left are so stupid that if they were smarter, they would know better than to give their opinions in public. Because those opinions are so damn stupid. But the Dunning-Kruger thing is part of the stupidity.

Let me tell you the real strategy and how this is really going to play out: For a long time, it's going to look like China's doing absolutely nothing. But what'll be happening behind the scenes is that China will work to integrate Afghanistan into CPEC and help Pakistan stabilize the situation. Once that's done (and it'll take a while) China will be indirectly involved in economic projects in Afghanistan, while the most direct on-the-ground involvement will be by Chinese-trained Pakistani engineers and managers.

Yeah, these people are extremely stupid.
 
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US captures terrorists and then release them back to the battlefield in return for supporting the US agenda.
TTP the terrorist organization in Pakistan was literally created in this way.
 
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We can imitate <Cooperation mechanism for law enforcement and security in Mekong waters>(China, Laos, Myanmar and Thailand signed on October 31, 2011). China, Pakistan, Iran and Afghanistan signed a security cooperation agreement to establish a four nation joint security and counter-terrorism force to cooperate in combating all illegal organizations(TTP, BLA, ISIS...) in the region.

PS: The four countries of the Mekong River jointly clear the Golden Triangle in only two years.

At the same time, I suggest that:
Pakistan send some drillmaster corps help PLA to carry out long-term anti-terrorism training.
Pakistan and Afghanistan shelve the issue of the Durand line for 50 years and negotiate the Durand line after 50 years.
The Taliban allowed Tajiks to enter the govt.
Pakistan allows Afghanistan to connect CEPC and use Gwadar Port.
China is promise to large-scale investment in Afghanistan.
Tajikistan allows Afghanistan to connect the B&R line and uses Tajikistan's water resources to open lithium mines.


In this way, the four countries will gain and lose something:
Iran has won the friendship between Afghanistan and Pakistan, eliminated terrorist organizations, obtained support for the Tajik people in Afghanistan, obtained Chinese investment and obtained a stable oil sales channel. Iran will lose its influence in parts of Pakistan.
Pakistan has won the friendship of Afghanistan and Iran, eliminated terrorist organizations, obtained a stable development environment and a stable source of oil. Pakistan will lose part of the friendship between Saudi Arabia and the Americans.
The Taliban have won the friendship of all neighboring countries, the stability of the regime, a large amount of investment, two north-south commercial channels and Indian Ocean ports. The Taliban will lose the reason to refuse Tajiks to enter the government.
China has gained a lot and made investment.
 
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With the modern technology China developed during the past decades being used every nook and cranny in China, No terrorism of any kind can survive a single day here.
 
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We can imitate <Cooperation mechanism for law enforcement and security in Mekong waters>(China, Laos, Myanmar and Thailand signed on October 31, 2011). China, Pakistan, Iran and Afghanistan signed a security cooperation agreement to establish a four nation joint security and counter-terrorism force to cooperate in combating all illegal organizations(TTP, BLA, ISIS...) in the region.

PS: The four countries of the Mekong River jointly clear the Golden Triangle in only two years.

At the same time, I suggest that:
Pakistan send some drillmaster corps help PLA to carry out long-term anti-terrorism training.
Pakistan and Afghanistan shelve the issue of the Durand line for 50 years and negotiate the Durand line after 50 years.
The Taliban allowed Tajiks to enter the govt.
Pakistan allows Afghanistan to connect CEPC and use Gwadar Port.
China is promise to large-scale investment in Afghanistan.
Tajikistan allows Afghanistan to connect the B&R line and uses Tajikistan's water resources to open lithium mines.


In this way, the four countries will gain and lose something:
Iran has won the friendship between Afghanistan and Pakistan, eliminated terrorist organizations, obtained support for the Tajik people in Afghanistan, obtained Chinese investment and obtained a stable oil sales channel. Iran will lose its influence in parts of Pakistan.
Pakistan has won the friendship of Afghanistan and Iran, eliminated terrorist organizations, obtained a stable development environment and a stable source of oil. Pakistan will lose part of the friendship between Saudi Arabia and the Americans.
The Taliban have won the friendship of all neighboring countries, the stability of the regime, a large amount of investment, two north-south commercial channels and Indian Ocean ports. The Taliban will lose the reason to refuse Tajiks to enter the government.
China has gained a lot and made investment.
To get all these countries together...
Very hard, China will need to put it's weight other than I don't see them collaborating organically
 
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In early October, an Islamic State-Khorasan bomber killed nearly 50 people at a mosque in Kunduz, Afghanistan. That the militant group claimed responsibility for the attack wasn’t surprising, but, in a worrying new twist for Beijing, it also decided to link the massacre to China: The group said that the bomber was Uyghur and that the attack was aimed at punishing the Taliban for their close cooperation with China despite its actions against Uyghurs in Xinjiang.

The irony of the of the quoted incident is that the attack was conducted by ISIS on the Shia sect which is the majority sect of Uyghur community to avenge the so called supersession by Chinese authorities on the Uyghur Muslim.

So by their logic to avenge for victim community (Uyghur Muslim) they killed more common people of the same sect of the victim community in another country. A real facepalm moment

*ISIS= All major school of thoughts of Islam consider them 'Khawarij' which is an Islamic term and its literal meaning refer to those people 'who have Exist or Move Out' but as political and religious term it is used to refer those people who claim to muslim but have left Islam.
 
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Yeah that’s because many of the Islamic terrorist groups are created and trained by the CIA. They were previously used primarily to undermine regimes in the Islamic world that the US govt didn’t like or to hit soft targets in the west in order to sway public opinion, now China is the main target because the US is threatened by China’s rise.

On the mark... China should have airtight borders... Amreekas only tools are proxies and terrorists if China can neutralize them Amreeka is finished.
 
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China oppressed Uyghurs,
To protest against China
Kill innocent Muslims.

What a rigorous logic!
 
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