Atlas said:Response to posting by Kevin_Lowe
The terror tactics arise from this region. They appear to utililze the same techniques. Car bombs. Suicide Bombings, Children as shields, Children as bait, the perpetrators seemingly have the same trainers. Much of the horror ties back organizations like al Queda. Much of the support for terrorism is state sponsored, coming from Iran, Syria and some time ago Libya. I guess if you deny that then what I spout is a kook conspiracy theory.
Sigh. Correlation doth not a conspiracy make.
What possible relevance does the use of similar tactics have? The Zionist jews were amongst the first to use terrorist tactics in the region before 1948, are they in on the conspiracy too?
Syria and Iraq are Baathist states. Baathism is a secular socialist ideology and is the natural enemy of old time muslim religion. This became especially clear after the rise of Theocracy in Iran. Such a state has no room for Baathists. In any event Iraq and Syria developed into mutually loathing and mistrusting dictatorships and would be unlikely to cooperate if this is what you are suggesting. It really should be very clear that there is no reason to believe that either state would maintain a close relationship with a group like AL Q as their destruction is necessary for Al Q to achieve it's objectives . And, as is repeatedly pointed out, there is no such evidence. Iraq and Iran are old enemies of course so they are hardly likely to be members of the same conspiracy. As regards the Israel/Palestine disaster no conspiracy theory is needed. It's a run of the mill dispute about colonialism in which predictable positions are taken by the colonists (Israeli jews) and the locals ( every muslim for thousands of miles around). The locals want the colonists out or at least subordinate and the colonists think things are just fine the way they are. The dispute is purely local and not fundamentally ideological although US has worked hard to make it look that way.
No but pan-nationalism, militarism, expansion through war, racial/spiritual superiority combined with blind hatred of the Jews should at least raise a red flag.
I think the average Muslim would say that was not a bad definition of the USA, if you substitute blind hatred of arabs. Are you in the conspiracy too?
By the way what's wrong with pan arab nationalism? Seems very sensible.
I think the Iran/Syria and previously the Iraq/Syria connections are evidence of a coordinated program. Both Iraq and Iran have tried to become Nuclear powers while using the UN nonproliferation treaty as cover. Both have used terror tactics outside their borders. I did not use the word urgent - but I did call it a global threat. My point is that free peoples should take both the shadowy organizations and the states who sponsor them seriously when they issue their declarations of war against the west as they have. Although I believe that Osama is already dead, a charismatic leader in the region might be all that it takes to turn this nascent movement into the ignition for another world war.
You've said that as a conspiricy theorist I should bring evidence but much of the collaboration of Hamas, Fatah, HizBollah, Iran, Assad, Saddam, al Queda is public record. They may not collaborate with each and every part but they certainly collaborate and trade monies and weapons. Do you agree with that statement? Kevin, if you have an argument against Middle East collaborations and conspiracies, I'll listen. I kinda hold these things to be self evident.
Well Hamas, Fatah and Hezbollah are all part of the struggle against Israel as are/were Syria, Iraq, Iran and many other muslims. But so what? It's an anti colonial struggle and it's out in the open as much as the opposition expressed by a wide range of states to apartheid era South Africa. That said the support of the US for Israel and the Iraq invasion do give huge support to those Muslims who are attracted to Islamism and its thesis that the US is intent on imposing some sort of christian dominance on the middle east.