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UAE criticises Ahmadinejad visit to Iran's own Persian Gulf island!!

Unfathomable. Just because they consider Shias as Kafirs, maybe?

May Allah guide these people . I can only pray.

Yep and the Shia consider us Kaffirs.

The lifetime goal of Shia clergy has always been total annihilation of Sunnis. The massacres of Halaku and Timur are for all to see.

So it is a competition, either killed or be killed. We as majority refuse to give up.

Scroll back and read my comments on Safvid attrocties and forced conversion of Persia as well as the role of Iraqi Shia clerics in giving legitimacy to these massacres.

That article in no way invalidates the claim that Abdullah indeed encouraged US to invade and destroy Iran.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/29/world/middleeast/29iran.html?_r=2&hp

Maybe you should straighten your belief and accept the truth?

Well let say he did..is there a problem with that??
 
•10/05/2010: Turkey is willing to act as an intermediary in talks between the UAE and Iran over the issue of the occupied UAE islands of Abu Mousa, Lesser Tunb and Greater Tunb, according to Bahaeddine Jabaji, adviser to the President of Turkey

http://www.defence.pk/forums/irania...s-own-persian-gulf-island-24.html#post2818017

What should i understand? I am not representative of Turkey nor representative of her ruling party.

For me, Turkey should mind its own business, not mingle with explosive materials.
 
Now he will come back and say, they are not Muslim but Zionist collaborators..Tafkeeris at their best!

That article in no way invalidates the claim that Abdullah indeed encouraged US to invade and destroy Iran.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/29/world/middleeast/29iran.html?_r=2&hp

Maybe you should straighten your belief and accept the truth?

Maybe you should?? You once again confirm what I said. You choose to completely ignore western sources except when it fits your agends bringing an article from the NYTimes. While i brought the actual quote of wikileaks.
 
He has the same opinion as Abdullah. Mosamania thanks him. Wants to nuke and destroy Iran and Shias. Considers shias as Kafirs.

Well, buddy, open your eyes. Still there is time. Arabs are falling like dominoes one by one. Don't you fear the day you will face the same fate as Iraqis and Afghanis? Don't you fear the day when they will rape your sisters and loot your brothers, like they did in Palestine, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Yemen? Arabs are already getting slaughtered like goats and this was predicted by our Prophet 1400 years ago. If you have faith in our Prophet, open your eyes.

I've never seen any Shia in the forum calling Saudis Kafirs. That is a Saudi trademark. I have many examples of Saudis calling us Kafirs though. :)

Yep and the Shia consider us Kaffirs.

The lifetime goal of Shia clergy has always been total annihilation of Sunnis. The massacres of Halaku and Timur are for all to see.

So it is a competition, either killed or be killed. We as majority refuse to give up.

Scroll back and read my comments on Safvid attrocties and forced conversion of Persia as well as the role of Iraqi Shia clerics in giving legitimacy to these massacres.



Well let say he did..is there a problem with that??
 
It is extemely saddening watching our Muslim brothers fall for the Zionist plot of sewing discord between us as such. I will continue to pray to Allah to give them guidance.
 
The Takfiri ideaology that is being propagated by Iran must be stopped. Iran is polrizing the Muslim world and this is unforgiveable.
 
It is extemely saddening watching our Muslim brothers fall for the Zionist plot of sewing discord between us as such. I will continue to pray to Allah to give them guidance.

:rofl::rofl: You mean Sauds falling for Zionism

Funny Zionists think Pakistan and Iran are enemies not Sauds:rofl: Why? Cos they know their enemy and friends


Jewish News: Iran and Pakistan together are a massive problem

Ialmost dropped my coffee when reading the caption under a picture of a mild-looking Muslim cleric type on Page 2 of the International Herald Tribune Thursday morning.

I’ll quote: “I am here,” Hafiz Saeed, described as the leader of the militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba and accused of planning the 2008 attacks on Mumbai, on Wednesday taunted the United States at a news conference in Rawalpindi, near Pakistan’s military headquarters, a day after Washington offered $10 million for information leading to his capture.

There was no story to accompany the picture by Aamir Qureshi of Agence France Press, only the caption above which, in a few words, seems to say it all: Pakistan is out of control. And worse, the very thin strand that links American control to Pakistan’s nuclear weapons has become frayed to the point of snapping.

The Saeed press conference could not have been held without the connivance of the Pakistani authorities. If the media knew, Pakistani intelligence knew.

And it could not have been held around the block from Pakistan’s military headquarters in downtown Rawalpindi, unless the Pakistani security services wanted it to. Clearly, there was a message here.

The American killing last year of Osama bin Laden on Pakistani soil where he had been hiding for several years was as open a signal as one could wish for that military trust has broken down between the Pakistanis and the Americans.

Since then much straw has been added to the burden on the camel’s back, fueled mainly by the collateral damage the Pakistanis continue to encounter as a result of America’s ongoing war with the Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan.

Bad feelings have been exacerbated by the burning of the Koran by American forces; the running amok of an American serviceman leaving women and children slaughtered, and the continued inadvertent allied military attacks on Pakistani forces in one way or another. All have all taken their toll on the relationship.

And now the Saeed press conference which can only be interpreted as the equivalent of a Pakistani forefinger-in-the air to the Americans; their way of saying, “Goodnight Irene, goodnight!” Except, if anything, what I hear are alarm bells; a wake-up call. It is time for the world to stop being exclusively preoccupied with Iran, though it should not give up working to prevent Iran from becoming nuclear for one moment, and start being worried about Pakistan as well.

Each of these two, Iran and Pakistan, alone are a problem; together they are a massive problem.

According to the 2010 Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, the Pakistanis have between 70 and 90 nuclear weapons; others have claimed 250, a figure reported in the Washington Post in 2011.

They have been involved in nuclear development since 1972, conducted six nuclear tests in May1998 with bombs at least three times more explosive than those dropped on Hiroshima, have between 10,000 to 20,000 highly advanced centrifuges producing bombgrade material in Kahuta and missiles with a range of 2,500 kilometers. This is no paper tiger.

For the past decade or so, the Pakistanis and Americans have had an agreement on the security of these weapons. The Americans also reportedly invested over $100 million in helping to keep them safe.

Those agreements, however, are with the military, not the regime and, as we have seen in Egypt and more importantly Turkey, generals can be ousted.

Now, with a sought after terrorist giving a press conference down the road from the military folks with their fingers on the button, one cannot but wonder what control there really is right now, and how much cooperation is left.

The Belfer Center at Harvard says in its 2010 study, “Securing the Bomb,” that Pakistan unequivocally poses the greatest threat on earth that Islamic fundamentalists are going to get their hands on a nuclear weapon. Pakistan’s current government, and increasingly its military, are not far off from filling the requirement of being “Islamic fundamentalists” themselves.

This has to be a source of concern.

The Americans, justifiably, are very keen to get out of Afghanistan as quickly as possible. And they know better than others how acute the gulf of mistrust between the Pakistanis and the Americans has become. But whatever they do, the Americans cannot leave 250 70 KT nuclear bombs and 10,000 spinning centrifuges unchecked.

The thought that the Americans would allow this to happen is scary. But things happen in life, including the six Pakistani nuclear tests in Baluchistan between May 28 and 30, 1998 that took everyone by surprise. So did the Shah of Iran’s Israeliled missile program which fell so conveniently into the laps of the Ayatollahs way back when.

This is something that needs to be addressed now, and in the same strident way the world is demanding safety from the specter of an Iranian nuclear weapon.

Imagine a world with multiple fundamentalist Islamic nuclear powers, with Pakistan and Iran at its head. Imagine a world where a nuclear power allows a wanted terrorist to hold a press conference on the doorstep of the country’s security apparatus.

Yup, I agree, time to move to Mars!

PostScript: A scary moment - JPost - Opinion - Columnists
 
Oh Al-Saud how can we wish for better rulers. Thank you Allah for making them our leaders for we could not have asked for better. May your Kingdom expand and your Khalifat Empire dream come true.
 
The Takfiri ideaology that is being propagated by Iran must be stopped. Iran is polrizing the Muslim world and this is unforgiveable.

Extreme version of Sunni Islam ( well you dont like the word Wahabism) is being propagated by some unknown powers here in Turkey. They aim to create sectarian conflict between Turks (Sunni -Alevi). They want to spill Turkish blood for unknown reasons in Syria.
 

Why do Zionists think Pakistan and Iran are a problem but not Saudi. Think about it guys



:rofl::rofl: You mean Sauds falling for Zionism

Funny Zionists think Pakistan and Iran are enemies not Sauds:rofl: Why? Cos they know their enemy and friends


Jewish News: Iran and Pakistan together are a massive problem

Ialmost dropped my coffee when reading the caption under a picture of a mild-looking Muslim cleric type on Page 2 of the International Herald Tribune Thursday morning.

I’ll quote: “I am here,” Hafiz Saeed, described as the leader of the militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba and accused of planning the 2008 attacks on Mumbai, on Wednesday taunted the United States at a news conference in Rawalpindi, near Pakistan’s military headquarters, a day after Washington offered $10 million for information leading to his capture.

There was no story to accompany the picture by Aamir Qureshi of Agence France Press, only the caption above which, in a few words, seems to say it all: Pakistan is out of control. And worse, the very thin strand that links American control to Pakistan’s nuclear weapons has become frayed to the point of snapping.

The Saeed press conference could not have been held without the connivance of the Pakistani authorities. If the media knew, Pakistani intelligence knew.

And it could not have been held around the block from Pakistan’s military headquarters in downtown Rawalpindi, unless the Pakistani security services wanted it to. Clearly, there was a message here.

The American killing last year of Osama bin Laden on Pakistani soil where he had been hiding for several years was as open a signal as one could wish for that military trust has broken down between the Pakistanis and the Americans.

Since then much straw has been added to the burden on the camel’s back, fueled mainly by the collateral damage the Pakistanis continue to encounter as a result of America’s ongoing war with the Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan.

Bad feelings have been exacerbated by the burning of the Koran by American forces; the running amok of an American serviceman leaving women and children slaughtered, and the continued inadvertent allied military attacks on Pakistani forces in one way or another. All have all taken their toll on the relationship.

And now the Saeed press conference which can only be interpreted as the equivalent of a Pakistani forefinger-in-the air to the Americans; their way of saying, “Goodnight Irene, goodnight!” Except, if anything, what I hear are alarm bells; a wake-up call. It is time for the world to stop being exclusively preoccupied with Iran, though it should not give up working to prevent Iran from becoming nuclear for one moment, and start being worried about Pakistan as well.

Each of these two, Iran and Pakistan, alone are a problem; together they are a massive problem.

According to the 2010 Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, the Pakistanis have between 70 and 90 nuclear weapons; others have claimed 250, a figure reported in the Washington Post in 2011.

They have been involved in nuclear development since 1972, conducted six nuclear tests in May1998 with bombs at least three times more explosive than those dropped on Hiroshima, have between 10,000 to 20,000 highly advanced centrifuges producing bombgrade material in Kahuta and missiles with a range of 2,500 kilometers. This is no paper tiger.

For the past decade or so, the Pakistanis and Americans have had an agreement on the security of these weapons. The Americans also reportedly invested over $100 million in helping to keep them safe.

Those agreements, however, are with the military, not the regime and, as we have seen in Egypt and more importantly Turkey, generals can be ousted.

Now, with a sought after terrorist giving a press conference down the road from the military folks with their fingers on the button, one cannot but wonder what control there really is right now, and how much cooperation is left.

The Belfer Center at Harvard says in its 2010 study, “Securing the Bomb,” that Pakistan unequivocally poses the greatest threat on earth that Islamic fundamentalists are going to get their hands on a nuclear weapon. Pakistan’s current government, and increasingly its military, are not far off from filling the requirement of being “Islamic fundamentalists” themselves.

This has to be a source of concern.

The Americans, justifiably, are very keen to get out of Afghanistan as quickly as possible. And they know better than others how acute the gulf of mistrust between the Pakistanis and the Americans has become. But whatever they do, the Americans cannot leave 250 70 KT nuclear bombs and 10,000 spinning centrifuges unchecked.

The thought that the Americans would allow this to happen is scary. But things happen in life, including the six Pakistani nuclear tests in Baluchistan between May 28 and 30, 1998 that took everyone by surprise. So did the Shah of Iran’s Israeliled missile program which fell so conveniently into the laps of the Ayatollahs way back when.

This is something that needs to be addressed now, and in the same strident way the world is demanding safety from the specter of an Iranian nuclear weapon.

Imagine a world with multiple fundamentalist Islamic nuclear powers, with Pakistan and Iran at its head. Imagine a world where a nuclear power allows a wanted terrorist to hold a press conference on the doorstep of the country’s security apparatus.

Yup, I agree, time to move to Mars!

PostScript: A scary moment - JPost - Opinion - Columnists

Extreme version of Sunni Islam ( well you dont like the word Wahabism) is being propagated by some unknown powers here in Turkey. They aim to create sectarian conflict between Turks (Sunni -Alevi). They want to spill Turkish blood for unknown reasons in Syria.

I pray for our Turk brothers not to fall for their nefarious plot
 
He has the same opinion as Abdullah. Mosamania thanks him. Wants to nuke and destroy Iran and Shias. Considers shias as Kafirs.

Well, buddy, open your eyes. Still there is time. Arabs are falling like dominoes one by one. Don't you fear the day you will face the same fate as Iraqis and Afghanis? Don't you fear the day when they will rape your sisters and loot your brothers, like they did in Palestine, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Yemen? Arabs are already getting slaughtered like goats and this was predicted by our Prophet 1400 years ago. If you have faith in our Prophet, open your eyes.

I've never seen any Shia in the forum calling Saudis Kafirs. That is a Saudi trademark. I have many examples of Saudis calling us Kafirs though. :)

When someone calls Sunnis as kaffirs you dont seem to notice that post but when someone replies to that post in an equal way you notice the reply very much with not 2 but 4 eyes.
 
King-AbdullahSaudi-ArabiaForbes1.jpg


God bless you my King for you have built this country and forever changed its course. We will never forget what you have done and is doing for us. The transformation of our country to the way it is now and in the future we owe all to you.
 
When someone calls Sunnis as kaffirs you dont seem to notice that post but when someone replies to that post in an equal way you notice the reply very much with not 2 but 4 eyes.

You are defending the hedonism for one family. If I could sacrifice my entire family for Muslim unity I would. but of course this Saud family thinks just for its own survival
 

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