Does Red Team still want to "Defend Saudi Arabia to the Last American Soldier"?

"President Donald Trump confirmed that the suspected shooter who killed three people and wounded 11 others at a Naval base in Pensacola on Friday morning was a Saudi national and announced that he’d spoken with the kingdom’s ruler about the attack."
https://www.politico.com/news/2019/12/06/trump-saudi-king-salman-pensacola-shooting-077222

It was not a State sponsored attack, Dufus. :palm:

It was a Muslim inspired attack.

The Ft. Hood shooter was born to Palestinian parents. Do you want to bomb them too.
 
"President Donald Trump confirmed that the suspected shooter who killed three people and wounded 11 others at a Naval base in Pensacola on Friday morning was a Saudi national and announced that he’d spoken with the kingdom’s ruler about the attack."
https://www.politico.com/news/2019/12/06/trump-saudi-king-salman-pensacola-shooting-077222

Trump didn't give a rat's ass about the Saudi's butchering journalists so why pretend he would care if one of them murder American sailors, the last thing he wants to do is have the Saudi move out of the floor they rent in Trump Tower
 
It was not a State sponsored attack, Dufus. :palm:

It was a Muslim inspired attack.

The Ft. Hood shooter was born to Palestinian parents. Do you want to bomb them too.

Littledog: "It was not a State sponsored attack, "
Jack: ...would you be interested in buying a Bridge?

"In the 18th century, a pact between Islamic preacher Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab and a regional emir, Muhammad bin Saud, brought a fiercely puritanical strain of Sunni Islam first to the Najd region and then to the Arabian Peninsula. Referred to by supporters as "Salafism" and by others as "Wahhabism", this interpretation of Islam became the state religion and interpretation of Islam espoused by Muhammad bin Saud and his successors (the Al Saud family), who eventually created the modern kingdom of Saudi Arabia in 1932. The Saudi government has spent tens of billions of dollars of its petroleum export revenue throughout the Islamic world and elsewhere on building mosques, publishing books, giving scholarships and fellowships,[3] hosting international Islamic organisations, and promoting its form of Islam, sometimes referred to as "petro-Islam".[4]"
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islam_in_Saudi_Arabia
 
When you stop starting threads based on faulty premises I will take you seriously

"Does Red Team still want to "Defend Saudi Arabia to the Last American Soldier"?"

The US just sent thousands of American soldiers to defend Saudi Arabia while at the same time deserting our Kurdish allies. And, so far, I have heard zero complaints about this from Red Team.
(are you ready to step up to the plate?)
 
"Does Red Team still want to "Defend Saudi Arabia to the Last American Soldier"?"

The US just sent thousands of American soldiers to defend Saudi Arabia while at the same time deserting our Kurdish allies. And, so far, I have heard zero complaints about this from Red Team.
(are you ready to step up to the plate?)

So, Jacky, you are a warmonger?
 
Littledog: "It was not a State sponsored attack, "
Jack: ...would you be interested in buying a Bridge?

"In the 18th century, a pact between Islamic preacher Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab and a regional emir, Muhammad bin Saud, brought a fiercely puritanical strain of Sunni Islam first to the Najd region and then to the Arabian Peninsula. Referred to by supporters as "Salafism" and by others as "Wahhabism", this interpretation of Islam became the state religion and interpretation of Islam espoused by Muhammad bin Saud and his successors (the Al Saud family), who eventually created the modern kingdom of Saudi Arabia in 1932. The Saudi government has spent tens of billions of dollars of its petroleum export revenue throughout the Islamic world and elsewhere on building mosques, publishing books, giving scholarships and fellowships,[3] hosting international Islamic organisations, and promoting its form of Islam, sometimes referred to as "petro-Islam".[4]"
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islam_in_Saudi_Arabia

Provide a link proving it was a state sponsored attack, Jacky.

I’ll wait.
 
Provide a link proving it was a state sponsored attack, Jacky.

I’ll wait.

"This is a list of charities accused of ties to terrorism. A number of charities have been accused or convicted in court of using their revenues to fund terrorism or revolutionary movements, rather than for the humanitarian purposes for which contributions were ostensibly collected. During the "war on terror" the names of several such organisations have been published, although the phenomenon predates 9/11.[1] Some detainees have been captured largely because they volunteered or worked for these charities."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_charities_accused_of_ties_to_terrorism

"This internal, top-secret report from the Treasury Department gave the intelligence details behind the decision in August of that year to list two branches the International Islamic Relief Organization (IIRO) and one of its leaders as banned terrorist entities. The Saudi-based charity, an offshoot of the Muslim World League, supported terrorist organizations beginning in the early 1990s "through to at least the first half of 2006." Lawyers for the plaintiffs in the Saudi suit, who obtained a partly redacted copy of the Treasury Department report through the Freedom of Information Act, said other affidavits and statements from charity officials show it is largely run by members of the Saudi royal family."
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive...links-between-saudi-royal-family-and-al-qaeda

--->officials show it is largely run by members of the Saudi royal family<---

STOP being a Saudi Suck Up, Earl.
 
Littledog: "It was not a State sponsored attack, "
Jack: ...would you be interested in buying a Bridge?

"In the 18th century, a pact between Islamic preacher Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab and a regional emir, Muhammad bin Saud, brought a fiercely puritanical strain of Sunni Islam first to the Najd region and then to the Arabian Peninsula. Referred to by supporters as "Salafism" and by others as "Wahhabism", this interpretation of Islam became the state religion and interpretation of Islam espoused by Muhammad bin Saud and his successors (the Al Saud family), who eventually created the modern kingdom of Saudi Arabia in 1932. The Saudi government has spent tens of billions of dollars of its petroleum export revenue throughout the Islamic world and elsewhere on building mosques, publishing books, giving scholarships and fellowships,[3] hosting international Islamic organisations, and promoting its form of Islam, sometimes referred to as "petro-Islam".[4]"
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islam_in_Saudi_Arabia

I'm quite familiar with the long history of Wahhabism, Jack. :palm:

Did you have a point? Are you saying we should have destroyed SA 200 years ago?
 
I'm quite familiar with the long history of Wahhabism, Jack. :palm:

Did you have a point?


30074610_2.jpg


You had to ask...
 
Right wing scum going out of their way throwing the dead ,killed by a Saudi under the bus.
So they can continue to worship at the alter of Trump!
 
"This is a list of charities accused of ties to terrorism. A number of charities have been accused or convicted in court of using their revenues to fund terrorism or revolutionary movements, rather than for the humanitarian purposes for which contributions were ostensibly collected. During the "war on terror" the names of several such organisations have been published, although the phenomenon predates 9/11.[1] Some detainees have been captured largely because they volunteered or worked for these charities."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_charities_accused_of_ties_to_terrorism

"This internal, top-secret report from the Treasury Department gave the intelligence details behind the decision in August of that year to list two branches the International Islamic Relief Organization (IIRO) and one of its leaders as banned terrorist entities. The Saudi-based charity, an offshoot of the Muslim World League, supported terrorist organizations beginning in the early 1990s "through to at least the first half of 2006." Lawyers for the plaintiffs in the Saudi suit, who obtained a partly redacted copy of the Treasury Department report through the Freedom of Information Act, said other affidavits and statements from charity officials show it is largely run by members of the Saudi royal family."
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive...links-between-saudi-royal-family-and-al-qaeda

--->officials show it is largely run by members of the Saudi royal family<---

STOP being a Saudi Suck Up, Earl.

Earl isn't a Saudi suck up!
He is a Saudi suck off!
 
Funny to watch dumb Republicans break their backs and frazzle what's left of their integrity carving out an exception
for Saudi Arabia in their Pan-hate Muslim worldview. Is it the money they have or the fact that Trump is too much of a coward to do
anything about it, or both?
 
San Bernardino, December 2015 (14 killed 22 wounded): Tashfeed Malik passed three background checks by immigration officials before coming to the U.S. from Pakistan on a fiancee visa. That’s despite the fact that she had expressed support for violent jihad on social media.

Her husband, Syed Rizwan Farook, meanwhile, had been radicalized for years, and the FBI later said he had ties to a group of jihadists in California who had been arrested in 2012. His actions before the shooting alarmed his neighbors, who said they didn’t report “suspicious activity” at his home out of fear of being called racist.

Chattanooga, Tenn., July 2015 (5 killed 2 wounded): Kuwaiti-born Mohammad Youssef Abdulazeez had spent seven months in Jordan before shooting up a recruiting center and a Navy Reserve center. A friend told CNN that “something happened over there,” and before the shooting Abdulazeez blogged about wanting to become a martyr, fighting “jihad for the sake of Allah.”

Garland, Texas, May 2015 (2 killed): One of the killers at a “Draw Mohammad” contest, Elton Simpson, was reportedly on a no-fly list for a terror-related offense in 2011. Another had been investigated in 2012 and was suspected of plotting an attack at a Super Bowl game.

Boston Marathon, April 2013 (3 killed, 264 wounded): The Russian government had warned U.S. authorities that one of the Boston Marathon bombers, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, was a violent radical Islamist almost two years before the attack. The CIA reportedly cleared him of ties to violent extremism.

Benghazi, Libya, September 2012: (4 killed): As Sharyl Attkisson reported, there were eight major warning signs before the Benghazi attacks -- which claimed the lives of Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans -- including an online posting in which al-Qaida stated its intent to attack the Red Cross, the British and Americans in Benghazi. “The goals were accomplished in order,” Attkisson notes.

Ft. Hood, Killeen, Texas, November 2009 (13 killed, 32 wounded): A Senate investigation faulted the Army and the FBI for missing warnings signs that could have prevented the Fort Hood attack, in which Maj. Nidal Hasan went on a shooting spree. Then Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman, I-Conn., said the probe's "painful conclusion is that the Fort Hood massacre could have and should have been prevented."

Little Rock, Ark., June 2009 (1 killed, 1 wounded): After Abdulhakim Muhammad opened fire on a U.S. military recruiting office in Little Rock, Ark., it came to light that the FBI had him in its sights, but didn’t think he posed a threat. After the killing, his father blasted the FBI for ignoring what the father said were obvious signs of his son’s radicalization.

This is to say nothing of two Islamic terror attacks that failed only because the terrorists themselves bungled the job.

When Adul Farouk Abdulmutallab tried to blow up a Northwest Airlines flight into Detroit, even Obama admitted that there were “warning signs (that) would have triggered red flags, and the suspect would have never been allowed to board that plane for America.” Had he succeeded, it would have cost 289 people their lives.

After Faisal Shahzad’s bomb in Times Square failed to go off, Richard C. Holbrooke, the special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, admitted that the U.S. hadn’t “paid enough attention to the warning signs” about Shahzad. The FBI said the bomb could have killed thousands had it gone off as intended.

Obviously the government can’t stop every single attack, and there have been some attempts foiled by the FBI and Homeland Security. But Obama clearly deserves blame for the attacks that have succeeded.

As IBD pointed out after the San Bernardino attacks, Obama took several steps to redirect the war on terror to his own, more politically correct, liking.

“He ordered the FBI and Homeland Security to delete ‘jihad’ from counterterrorism manuals and fire all trainers who linked terrorism to Islam,” we noted in this space.

“He also stopped a major investigation of terror-supporting Muslim Brotherhood front groups and mosques after U.S. attorneys successfully prosecuted Brotherhood charities. And he opened the floodgates to Muslim immigrants, importing more than 400,000 of them, many from terrorist hot spots Somalia, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.”

Even now, Obama seems more intent on blaming the NRA for the Orlando attacks than radical Islam.

The massacre, he said, is a “further reminder of how easy it is for someone to get their hands on a weapon that lets them shoot people in a school, or in a house of worship, or a movie theater, or in a nightclub.”

Wrong, Mr. President.

The attack is a further reminder that you have been failing to do your job of protecting U.S. citizens from threats foreign and domestic because he refuses to acknowledge the source of these threats.
https://www.investors.com/politics/e...error-attacks/
 
Thanks Trump. :(


San Bernardino, December 2015 (14 killed 22 wounded): Tashfeed Malik passed three background checks by immigration officials before coming to the U.S. from Pakistan on a fiancee visa. That’s despite the fact that she had expressed support for violent jihad on social media.

Her husband, Syed Rizwan Farook, meanwhile, had been radicalized for years, and the FBI later said he had ties to a group of jihadists in California who had been arrested in 2012. His actions before the shooting alarmed his neighbors, who said they didn’t report “suspicious activity” at his home out of fear of being called racist.

Chattanooga, Tenn., July 2015 (5 killed 2 wounded): Kuwaiti-born Mohammad Youssef Abdulazeez had spent seven months in Jordan before shooting up a recruiting center and a Navy Reserve center. A friend told CNN that “something happened over there,” and before the shooting Abdulazeez blogged about wanting to become a martyr, fighting “jihad for the sake of Allah.”

Garland, Texas, May 2015 (2 killed): One of the killers at a “Draw Mohammad” contest, Elton Simpson, was reportedly on a no-fly list for a terror-related offense in 2011. Another had been investigated in 2012 and was suspected of plotting an attack at a Super Bowl game.

Boston Marathon, April 2013 (3 killed, 264 wounded): The Russian government had warned U.S. authorities that one of the Boston Marathon bombers, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, was a violent radical Islamist almost two years before the attack. The CIA reportedly cleared him of ties to violent extremism.

Benghazi, Libya, September 2012: (4 killed): As Sharyl Attkisson reported, there were eight major warning signs before the Benghazi attacks -- which claimed the lives of Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans -- including an online posting in which al-Qaida stated its intent to attack the Red Cross, the British and Americans in Benghazi. “The goals were accomplished in order,” Attkisson notes.

Ft. Hood, Killeen, Texas, November 2009 (13 killed, 32 wounded): A Senate investigation faulted the Army and the FBI for missing warnings signs that could have prevented the Fort Hood attack, in which Maj. Nidal Hasan went on a shooting spree. Then Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman, I-Conn., said the probe's "painful conclusion is that the Fort Hood massacre could have and should have been prevented."

Little Rock, Ark., June 2009 (1 killed, 1 wounded): After Abdulhakim Muhammad opened fire on a U.S. military recruiting office in Little Rock, Ark., it came to light that the FBI had him in its sights, but didn’t think he posed a threat. After the killing, his father blasted the FBI for ignoring what the father said were obvious signs of his son’s radicalization.

This is to say nothing of two Islamic terror attacks that failed only because the terrorists themselves bungled the job.

When Adul Farouk Abdulmutallab tried to blow up a Northwest Airlines flight into Detroit, even Obama admitted that there were “warning signs (that) would have triggered red flags, and the suspect would have never been allowed to board that plane for America.” Had he succeeded, it would have cost 289 people their lives.

After Faisal Shahzad’s bomb in Times Square failed to go off, Richard C. Holbrooke, the special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, admitted that the U.S. hadn’t “paid enough attention to the warning signs” about Shahzad. The FBI said the bomb could have killed thousands had it gone off as intended.

Obviously the government can’t stop every single attack, and there have been some attempts foiled by the FBI and Homeland Security. But Obama clearly deserves blame for the attacks that have succeeded.

As IBD pointed out after the San Bernardino attacks, Obama took several steps to redirect the war on terror to his own, more politically correct, liking.

“He ordered the FBI and Homeland Security to delete ‘jihad’ from counterterrorism manuals and fire all trainers who linked terrorism to Islam,” we noted in this space.

“He also stopped a major investigation of terror-supporting Muslim Brotherhood front groups and mosques after U.S. attorneys successfully prosecuted Brotherhood charities. And he opened the floodgates to Muslim immigrants, importing more than 400,000 of them, many from terrorist hot spots Somalia, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.”

Even now, Obama seems more intent on blaming the NRA for the Orlando attacks than radical Islam.

The massacre, he said, is a “further reminder of how easy it is for someone to get their hands on a weapon that lets them shoot people in a school, or in a house of worship, or a movie theater, or in a nightclub.”

Wrong, Mr. President.

The attack is a further reminder that you have been failing to do your job of protecting U.S. citizens from threats foreign and domestic because he refuses to acknowledge the source of these threats.
https://www.investors.com/politics/e...error-attacks/
 
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