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How to Divide and Conquer Islam - Stratfor founder George Friedman

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https://geopoliticalfutures.com/us-strategies-in-the-middle-east/

US Strategies in the Middle East

Feb. 8, 2017
Washington must choose sides.

By George Friedman

Last week, Iran confirmed that it test-fired a ballistic missile. The United States has responded by imposing new sanctions on Iran and stating that Iran remains both a major source of terrorism and a threat to American national interests. A review is now underway concerning U.S. policy toward Iran. At the same time, President Donald Trump has declared his intention of crushing the Islamic State, which has been U.S. policy since the emergence of IS.



U.S. National Security Adviser Michael Flynn speaks during the daily press briefing as Press Secretary Sean Spicer (L) looks on at the White House in Washington, on Feb. 1, 2017. Flynn signaled a more hardline American stance on Iran, condemning a recent missile test and declaring he was “officially putting Iran on notice.” NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images

U.S. strategy in Iraq prior to the 2007 surge was to oppose both Shiite and Sunni claims to power in Iraq. The United States tried to craft a government in Baghdad that was independent of both major factions, ideally secular and closely aligned with the United States. That government was created, but it was never effective. The Shiites, supported by the Iranians, deeply penetrated the government, and more importantly, the government never had broad support beyond the coalition that backed it. The most dynamic forces in Iraq were deeply embedded in the Shiite and Sunni communities. Both drew strength from outside Iraq – the Sunnis from Saudi Arabia and the Shiites from Iran.


(click to enlarge)

What the United States wanted to create was very different from the reality on the ground. In the surge, the U.S. recognized this, saw the Iranian-supported Shiites as the greater threat and tried to counterbalance them by reaching a financial and political understanding with the Sunni leadership. Apart from providing the U.S. with an opportunity for a graceful exit, the surge didn’t solve the strategic problem the U.S. was dealing with. IS arose as the champion of a substantial part of the Sunni Arab population, and the Iraqi government became, to an imperfect but real extent, captive to Iran. The U.S. remained powerless to craft the Iraq it wanted.

The United States now has three broad strategic options. The first is, after 15 years of ineffective fighting, to accept defeat in the region, withdraw and allow the region to evolve as it will. The advantage of this strategy is that it accepts the reality and consequences of the previous 15 years, and it halts an ineffective approach. The weakness of this strategy is that in accepting the evolution of the region, the U.S. could face an increasingly powerful Sunni world and a powerful Shiite Iran. After the sense of relief may come an unbearable headache.

The second option is to use American force to crush IS and isolate Iran, or failing that, engage Iran in some form of military action, possibly directed at its nuclear program. The United States does not have a military force large enough to simultaneous wage war from the Mediterranean to Iran, and also in Afghanistan. Former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said at the beginning of the Iraq war that you fight with the army you have. He should have added that if the army you have is insufficient, you will lose, or at most, face an endless stalemate. The goal of this strategy would be to crush not merely the current organizations fighting for Sunni and Shiite causes but to destroy the will of the Arab and Persian worlds to create new organizations out of the ashes of the old. The United States has never fought a major foreign war without a coalition of forces. Its distance from the Eurasian battlefield means that support from other forces for the logistical effort is essential. This is why there is discussion of an alliance with Russia. But Russia does not have the same interests in Iran as the United States, nor is it looking for the same outcome.


(click to enlarge)

The third strategic option is built on two realities. First, the U.S. has limited forces, reluctant or discordant allies, and cannot win a war on this scale. Second, the Islamic world is deeply divided along religious and ethnic lines. There is the religious split between Shiites and Sunnis. There is the split between the Arab and non-Arab world. In other words, Islam is not of a single fabric and these divisions are its point of vulnerability. The third strategy would require allying with one faction to give it the thing it desires the most – the defeat of the other.

From the beginning of American history, the U.S. has used the divisions in the world to achieve its ends. The American Revolution prevailed by using the ongoing tension between Britain and France to convince the French to intervene. In World War II, facing Nazi Germany and the Stalinist Soviet Union, the United States won the war by supplying the Soviets with the wherewithal to bleed the German army dry, opening the door to American invasion and, with Britain, the occupation of Europe.

Unless you have decisive and overwhelming power, your only options are to decline combat, vastly increase your military force at staggering cost and time, or use divergent interests to recruit a coalition that shares your strategic goal. Morally, the third option is always a painful strategy. The United States asking monarchists for help in isolating the British at Yorktown was in a way a deal with the devil. The United States allying with a murderous and oppressive Soviet Union to defeat another murderous and oppressive regime was also a deal with the devil. George Washington and Franklin D. Roosevelt both gladly made these deals, each knowing a truth about strategy: What comes after the war comes after the war. For now, the goal is to reach the end of the war victorious.


(click to enlarge)

In the case of the Middle East, I would argue that the United States lacks the forces or even a conceivable strategy to crush either the Sunni rising or Iran. Iran is a country of about 80 million defended to the west by rugged mountains and to the east by harsh deserts. This is the point where someone inevitably will say that the U.S. should use air power. This is the point where I will say that whenever Americans want to win a war without paying the price, they fantasize about air power because it is low-cost and irresistible. Air power is an adjunct to war on the ground. It has never proven to be an effective alternative.

The idea that the United States will simultaneously wage wars in Syria, Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan and emerge victorious is fantasy. What is not fantasy is the fact that the Islamic world, both strategically and tactically, is profoundly divided. The United States must decide who is the enemy. “Everybody” is an emotionally satisfying answer to some, but it will lead to defeat. The United States cannot fight everyone from the Mediterranean to the Hindu Kush. It can indefinitely carry out raids and other operations, but it can’t win.

To craft an effective strategy, the United States must go back to the strategic foundations of the republic: a willingness to ally with one enemy to defeat another. The goal should be to ally with the weaker enemy, or the enemy with other interests, so that one war does not immediately lead to another. At this moment, the Sunnis are weaker than the Iranians. But there are far more Sunnis, they cover a vast swath of ground and they are far more energized than Iran. Currently, Iran is more powerful, but I would argue the Sunnis are more dangerous. Therefore, I am suggesting an alignment with the Iranians, not because they are any more likable (and neither were Stalin or Louis XVI), but because they are the convenient option.

The Iranians hate and fear the Sunnis. Any opportunity to crush the Sunnis will appeal. The Iranians are also as cynical as George Washington was. But in point of fact, an alliance with the Sunnis against the Shiites could also work. The Sunnis despise the Iranians, and given the hope of crushing them, the Sunnis could be induced to abandon terrorism. There are arguments to be made on either side, as there is in Afghanistan.

In my opinion, what cannot be supported is simultaneous conflicts with Sunnis and Shiites, Arabs and Persians. What we learned in Iraq is that we will not win such a conflict. Attempting what failed in Iraq on a far larger scale makes little sense. Dividing your enemies is a fundamental principle of strategy. Uniting them makes little sense. Therefore, simultaneously waging war on Sunnis and Shiites is irrational. Simply withdrawing from the region carries enormous long-term risks.

In the end, Washington wanted to defeat the British and Roosevelt wanted to defeat Hitler. Without the French or Soviets, these wars would have been lost. In the end, the Bourbons and communists were destroyed. Washington and Roosevelt were in no rush. There is always time for the winner to pursue the end he wants. There is never time for the loser.



REBUTTAL:

Another article with good insights on how some people think by Stratfor's George Friedman. He claims the US could support either the "Shias" or the "Sunnis" against the other and in the process keep them both down. I find it very hard for the US to dump the GCCs, over night, who have been supplying trillions of dollars to US and similarly, partner with the Iranian government,l who thrives on anti-US sentiments. Don't see Trump able to dump the Arab gov't nor Iran willing to trust the US at the drop of a hat. Any such switch would take decades and a big event. Russia could push Iran and US together; but, this would still be a long process.

First, neither the "Sunnis", nor the "Shias" have any designs against the US. Instead, it's a few Republicans who want to partner with Russia to divide and conquer the Middle East while it's still weak like Africa: exploit its "diamonds" with wars.

Second, he mistakenly claims that ISIS is a "Sunni" organization that US needs to crush militarily. They are a CIA asset as exposed by US House Rep from Hawaii, https://gabbard.house.gov/news/pres...rns-syria-renewed-calls-end-regime-change-war. Crushing ISIS is really easy and under US control.

Third, this article is basically putting the GCCs on notice: "Work with us against Iran, or we will take you down." If the GCCs cave in, they are really doomed and will take down the rest of the Muslim world for a long time to come.

Nonetheless, Muslims need to change to protect ourselves from these would be power brokers:

1. Why fight amongst ourselves? The much talked about Sunni, Shia rivalry is not as bad as he claims. But, it's bad enough that they keep exploiting it. To counter these, at the very least, Muslims should:

i. Declare truce,

ii. Freeze boundaries (no support for breakaway groups, Shias in Bahrain, Sunnis in Syria, Kurds everywhere, etc)

iii. Stop with regime change (The Ayatollahs, the monarchs and military dictators are all an internal issues for those countries to decide.), and

iv. Protect each other's strategic interests

2. Be careful who you ally with. Muslim can trust outsiders only at our own peril. This Stratfor Machiavellian is just a reminder of our reality.

This will calm things down to a point where we are not being dragged into endless wars in our own homes.

Your thoughts...
 
REBUTTAL:


Third, this article is basically putting the GCCs on notice: "Work with us against Iran, or we will take you down." If the GCCs cave in, they are really doomed and will take down the rest of the Muslim world for a long time to come.

Nonetheless, Muslims need to change to protect ourselves from these would be power brokers:

1. Why fight amongst ourselves? The much talked about Sunni, Shia rivalry is not as bad as he claims. But, it's bad enough that they keep exploiting it. To counter these, at the very least, Muslims should:

i. Declare truce,

ii. Freeze boundaries (no support for breakaway groups, Shias in Bahrain, Sunnis in Syria, Kurds everywhere, etc)

iii. Stop with regime change (The Ayatollahs, the monarchs and military dictators are all an internal issues for those countries to decide.), and

iv. Protect each other's strategic interests

2. Be careful who you ally with. Muslim can trust outsiders only at our own peril. This Stratfor Machiavellian is just a reminder of our reality.

This will calm things down to a point where we are not being dragged into endless wars in our own homes.

Your thoughts...


What you propose it will not work.

The regimes in the region are implanted by Western powers. They survive because of Western powers. To think that they can act on their own is foolhardy. Moreover, the populations of the region have lower IQ. If the Western world wanted to do the same in India, South East Asia, Central Asia, Latin America or Africa, you would see the same scene. The locals would be powerless against imperialist stretch of the Americans.

You have to be realistic and you must learn how to strategise. Wishful thinking does nobody any good. Wishing that flimsy alliances will last with tribal people is not wise. Tribal bedouins love to fight and get killed because that is all they know in the desert landscape. Their intellect and their civilization has not transcended that desert territory.

There is only one way to overcome your troubles. This is what Saladin the Kurdish fighter did. This is what Liu Bang the founder of Han dynasty did. This is what your potential future statesman has to do. Unify all of your territories - by force .

Then you will be a military behemoth that can think and act with one voice and with one set of interests in mind. Not otherwise.
 
The article may have some truth and some exagerrations

However
One must stop painting only with shia and sunni amd realize that divisions go deeper into bloodlines and tribes

Both iraq and jordan are artificially drawn out by a cheerio brit using random lines
That led to a lot of divisions within traditional tribes and settlements as well
 
We have been hearing such fairy tales for decades. The West doesn't have a magical wand. They can't even control Iraq or Syria. We know how messy it is and everyone is burning in this fire including Western powers. The whole divide and conquer thing is just wishful thinking which won't ever come to fruition. This isn't the colonial age where you can massacre natives at the barrel of the gun.

The Americans are daydreaming if they think they can now ally with Islamic countries of their picking and choosing after exposing their true face during the Iraq/Afghanistan wars. No country, be it Sunni or Shia is going to side with the US. Countries are going to milk the US, not side with them. All the US can do at most is support one clan against another. Even that won't work as we have seen in Iraq and Syria.

The US will have to give up its desire to control regions. It won't work.
 
Last edited:
There is only one way to overcome your troubles. This is what Saladin the Kurdish fighter did. This is what Liu Bang the founder of Han dynasty did. This is what your potential future statesman has to do. Unify all of your territories - by force .

Then you will be a military behemoth that can think and act with one voice and with one set of interests in mind. Not otherwise.

Amen to that brother. Bullseye.
 
What you propose it will not work.

The regimes in the region are implanted by Western powers. They survive because of Western powers. To think that they can act on their own is foolhardy. Moreover, the populations of the region have lower IQ. If the Western world wanted to do the same in India, South East Asia, Central Asia, Latin America or Africa, you would see the same scene. The locals would be powerless against imperialist stretch of the Americans.

You have to be realistic and you must learn how to strategise. Wishful thinking does nobody any good. Wishing that flimsy alliances will last with tribal people is not wise. Tribal bedouins love to fight and get killed because that is all they know in the desert landscape. Their intellect and their civilization has not transcended that desert territory.

There is only one way to overcome your troubles. This is what Saladin the Kurdish fighter did. This is what Liu Bang the founder of Han dynasty did. This is what your potential future statesman has to do. Unify all of your territories - by force .

Then you will be a military behemoth that can think and act with one voice and with one set of interests in mind. Not otherwise.

The last Saddam tried to unify his nation by force the Americans came in and destroyed every living and breathing thing.
 
This is exactly it

Once Great Ottoman Empire collapsed we Muslims are now orphans no leader

We can't help anyone let alone each other

Any talk of Islamic unity and Americans will have them killed

Any slightest indication Muslims are working as Ummah that's its western country will make plot to kill and destroy

If we make military alliance to fight terrorism they are happy

Let see what happens if we try to make military alliance to help Rohingha Muslims or any other Muslims , straight away US will invade

May Allah swt help us revival of Muslims one day inshallah
 
https://geopoliticalfutures.com/us-strategies-in-the-middle-east/

US Strategies in the Middle East

Feb. 8, 2017
Washington must choose sides.


By George Friedman

Last week, Iran confirmed that it test-fired a ballistic missile. The United States has responded by imposing new sanctions on Iran and stating that Iran remains both a major source of terrorism and a threat to American national interests. A review is now underway concerning U.S. policy toward Iran. At the same time, President Donald Trump has declared his intention of crushing the Islamic State, which has been U.S. policy since the emergence of IS.



U.S. National Security Adviser Michael Flynn speaks during the daily press briefing as Press Secretary Sean Spicer (L) looks on at the White House in Washington, on Feb. 1, 2017. Flynn signaled a more hardline American stance on Iran, condemning a recent missile test and declaring he was “officially putting Iran on notice.” NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images

U.S. strategy in Iraq prior to the 2007 surge was to oppose both Shiite and Sunni claims to power in Iraq. The United States tried to craft a government in Baghdad that was independent of both major factions, ideally secular and closely aligned with the United States. That government was created, but it was never effective. The Shiites, supported by the Iranians, deeply penetrated the government, and more importantly, the government never had broad support beyond the coalition that backed it. The most dynamic forces in Iraq were deeply embedded in the Shiite and Sunni communities. Both drew strength from outside Iraq – the Sunnis from Saudi Arabia and the Shiites from Iran.


(click to enlarge)

What the United States wanted to create was very different from the reality on the ground. In the surge, the U.S. recognized this, saw the Iranian-supported Shiites as the greater threat and tried to counterbalance them by reaching a financial and political understanding with the Sunni leadership. Apart from providing the U.S. with an opportunity for a graceful exit, the surge didn’t solve the strategic problem the U.S. was dealing with. IS arose as the champion of a substantial part of the Sunni Arab population, and the Iraqi government became, to an imperfect but real extent, captive to Iran. The U.S. remained powerless to craft the Iraq it wanted.

The United States now has three broad strategic options. The first is, after 15 years of ineffective fighting, to accept defeat in the region, withdraw and allow the region to evolve as it will. The advantage of this strategy is that it accepts the reality and consequences of the previous 15 years, and it halts an ineffective approach. The weakness of this strategy is that in accepting the evolution of the region, the U.S. could face an increasingly powerful Sunni world and a powerful Shiite Iran. After the sense of relief may come an unbearable headache.

The second option is to use American force to crush IS and isolate Iran, or failing that, engage Iran in some form of military action, possibly directed at its nuclear program. The United States does not have a military force large enough to simultaneous wage war from the Mediterranean to Iran, and also in Afghanistan. Former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said at the beginning of the Iraq war that you fight with the army you have. He should have added that if the army you have is insufficient, you will lose, or at most, face an endless stalemate. The goal of this strategy would be to crush not merely the current organizations fighting for Sunni and Shiite causes but to destroy the will of the Arab and Persian worlds to create new organizations out of the ashes of the old. The United States has never fought a major foreign war without a coalition of forces. Its distance from the Eurasian battlefield means that support from other forces for the logistical effort is essential. This is why there is discussion of an alliance with Russia. But Russia does not have the same interests in Iran as the United States, nor is it looking for the same outcome.


(click to enlarge)

The third strategic option is built on two realities. First, the U.S. has limited forces, reluctant or discordant allies, and cannot win a war on this scale. Second, the Islamic world is deeply divided along religious and ethnic lines. There is the religious split between Shiites and Sunnis. There is the split between the Arab and non-Arab world. In other words, Islam is not of a single fabric and these divisions are its point of vulnerability. The third strategy would require allying with one faction to give it the thing it desires the most – the defeat of the other.

From the beginning of American history, the U.S. has used the divisions in the world to achieve its ends. The American Revolution prevailed by using the ongoing tension between Britain and France to convince the French to intervene. In World War II, facing Nazi Germany and the Stalinist Soviet Union, the United States won the war by supplying the Soviets with the wherewithal to bleed the German army dry, opening the door to American invasion and, with Britain, the occupation of Europe.

Unless you have decisive and overwhelming power, your only options are to decline combat, vastly increase your military force at staggering cost and time, or use divergent interests to recruit a coalition that shares your strategic goal. Morally, the third option is always a painful strategy. The United States asking monarchists for help in isolating the British at Yorktown was in a way a deal with the devil. The United States allying with a murderous and oppressive Soviet Union to defeat another murderous and oppressive regime was also a deal with the devil. George Washington and Franklin D. Roosevelt both gladly made these deals, each knowing a truth about strategy: What comes after the war comes after the war. For now, the goal is to reach the end of the war victorious.


(click to enlarge)

In the case of the Middle East, I would argue that the United States lacks the forces or even a conceivable strategy to crush either the Sunni rising or Iran. Iran is a country of about 80 million defended to the west by rugged mountains and to the east by harsh deserts. This is the point where someone inevitably will say that the U.S. should use air power. This is the point where I will say that whenever Americans want to win a war without paying the price, they fantasize about air power because it is low-cost and irresistible. Air power is an adjunct to war on the ground. It has never proven to be an effective alternative.

The idea that the United States will simultaneously wage wars in Syria, Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan and emerge victorious is fantasy. What is not fantasy is the fact that the Islamic world, both strategically and tactically, is profoundly divided. The United States must decide who is the enemy. “Everybody” is an emotionally satisfying answer to some, but it will lead to defeat. The United States cannot fight everyone from the Mediterranean to the Hindu Kush. It can indefinitely carry out raids and other operations, but it can’t win.

To craft an effective strategy, the United States must go back to the strategic foundations of the republic: a willingness to ally with one enemy to defeat another. The goal should be to ally with the weaker enemy, or the enemy with other interests, so that one war does not immediately lead to another. At this moment, the Sunnis are weaker than the Iranians. But there are far more Sunnis, they cover a vast swath of ground and they are far more energized than Iran. Currently, Iran is more powerful, but I would argue the Sunnis are more dangerous. Therefore, I am suggesting an alignment with the Iranians, not because they are any more likable (and neither were Stalin or Louis XVI), but because they are the convenient option.

The Iranians hate and fear the Sunnis. Any opportunity to crush the Sunnis will appeal. The Iranians are also as cynical as George Washington was. But in point of fact, an alliance with the Sunnis against the Shiites could also work. The Sunnis despise the Iranians, and given the hope of crushing them, the Sunnis could be induced to abandon terrorism. There are arguments to be made on either side, as there is in Afghanistan.

In my opinion, what cannot be supported is simultaneous conflicts with Sunnis and Shiites, Arabs and Persians. What we learned in Iraq is that we will not win such a conflict. Attempting what failed in Iraq on a far larger scale makes little sense. Dividing your enemies is a fundamental principle of strategy. Uniting them makes little sense. Therefore, simultaneously waging war on Sunnis and Shiites is irrational. Simply withdrawing from the region carries enormous long-term risks.

In the end, Washington wanted to defeat the British and Roosevelt wanted to defeat Hitler. Without the French or Soviets, these wars would have been lost. In the end, the Bourbons and communists were destroyed. Washington and Roosevelt were in no rush. There is always time for the winner to pursue the end he wants. There is never time for the loser.



REBUTTAL:

Another article with good insights on how some people think by Stratfor's George Friedman. He claims the US could support either the "Shias" or the "Sunnis" against the other and in the process keep them both down. I find it very hard for the US to dump the GCCs, over night, who have been supplying trillions of dollars to US and similarly, partner with the Iranian government,l who thrives on anti-US sentiments. Don't see Trump able to dump the Arab gov't nor Iran willing to trust the US at the drop of a hat. Any such switch would take decades and a big event. Russia could push Iran and US together; but, this would still be a long process.

First, neither the "Sunnis", nor the "Shias" have any designs against the US. Instead, it's a few Republicans who want to partner with Russia to divide and conquer the Middle East while it's still weak like Africa: exploit its "diamonds" with wars.

Second, he mistakenly claims that ISIS is a "Sunni" organization that US needs to crush militarily. They are a CIA asset as exposed by US House Rep from Hawaii, https://gabbard.house.gov/news/pres...rns-syria-renewed-calls-end-regime-change-war. Crushing ISIS is really easy and under US control.

Third, this article is basically putting the GCCs on notice: "Work with us against Iran, or we will take you down." If the GCCs cave in, they are really doomed and will take down the rest of the Muslim world for a long time to come.

Nonetheless, Muslims need to change to protect ourselves from these would be power brokers:

1. Why fight amongst ourselves? The much talked about Sunni, Shia rivalry is not as bad as he claims. But, it's bad enough that they keep exploiting it. To counter these, at the very least, Muslims should:

i. Declare truce,

ii. Freeze boundaries (no support for breakaway groups, Shias in Bahrain, Sunnis in Syria, Kurds everywhere, etc)

iii. Stop with regime change (The Ayatollahs, the monarchs and military dictators are all an internal issues for those countries to decide.), and

iv. Protect each other's strategic interests

2. Be careful who you ally with. Muslim can trust outsiders only at our own peril. This Stratfor Machiavellian is just a reminder of our reality.

This will calm things down to a point where we are not being dragged into endless wars in our own homes.

Your thoughts...
I live in Saudi Arabia, there is no such things as Wahabbi.

Its just Sunni Muslims.
 
This is exactly it

Once Great Ottoman Empire collapsed we Muslims are now orphans no leader

May Allah swt help us revival of Muslims one day inshallah


The regimes in the region are implanted by Western powers. They survive because of Western powers. To think that they can act on their own is foolhardy.

There is only one way to overcome your troubles. This is what Saladin the Kurdish fighter did. This is what Liu Bang the founder of Han dynasty did. This is what your potential future statesman has to do. Unify all of your territories - by force .

Then you will be a military behemoth that can think and act with one voice and with one set of interests in mind. Not otherwise.

Mostly, he united by diplomacy due to his high character. It's an important job, and someone will have to do it. Here is a letter Saladin is said to have written to the Muslims of his time, sadly it applies to us even aft 1,000 years:


“We hope in Allah most high, to whom be praise, who leads the hearts of Muslims to calm what torments them and ruins their prosperity.


Where is the sense of honor of Muslims? The pride of Believers? The Zeal of the Faithful?


We shall never cease to be amazed at how the disbelievers for their part have shown trusts, and it is the Muslims who have been lacking in zeal. Not one of them has responded to the call. Not one intervenes to straighten what is distorted; but observe how far the Franks have gone what unity they have achieved. What aims they pursue. What help they have given. What sums of money they have borrowed and spent. What wealth they have collected and distributed and divided amongst them. There is not a King left in their lands or islands, not a lord or a rich man who has not competed with his neighbors to produce more support and rival his peers in strenuous military efforts. In defense of their religion they consider it a small thing to spend life and soul; and they have kept their infidel brothers supplied with arms and champions of war; and all they have done and all their generosity has been purely out of zeal for him they worship in jealous defense of their faith.


The Muslims on the other hand are weak and demoralized; they have become negligent and lazy, the victims of unproductive stupefaction and completely lacking in enthusiasm. If , Allah forbid, Islam should draw rein, obscure her splendor, blunt her sword, there would be no one, east or west, far or near who would blaze the zeal for Allah’s religion, or choose to come to the aid of truth against error.


This is the moment to cast off laziness, to summon from far and near all those men who have blood in their veins; but we are confident (he speaks about himself and the small party of believers who began with him and then became a large party); but we are confident, thanks to Allah -Alhamdulillah- in the Help that will come from him and entrust ourselves to him in sincerity of purpose and deepest devotion.


In sha Allah, the disbelievers shall perish and the faithful have a sure deliverance.”


— Salahuddin Ayyubi 12 CE
 
articles like these are so stupid they deserve a mourning. Islam neither has gold mines not a dollar printing press to become an object of conquest..and worst case scenario there is always the power of Nukes..! Frankly speaking it is nothing but post colonial European ethics which keeps the Muslims from being bombed to oblivion or occupied as colonial subject.
 

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