About that Muslim Brotherhood...

Eyer and B-co, call your office for talking points!

Thanks for thinking of me, wannabe, but I'll just stand with my own "talking points", like those that have long resided throughout this thread...

...the latest, of course, being:

I truly hope, as a natural democrat, you're enjoying watching the Bros being exterminated in real-time right in their own back yard.

...you Hebrew-hating piece of sh!te.
 
Eyer and B-co, call your office for talking points!

Islamic Brotherhood failed to understand the majority of Egyptians rejects fundamentalism


LINK

The Muslim Brotherhood bases its right to rule on a mandate from heaven and seeks to turn the Egyptians into devout Muslims following a path dictated by the tenets of Islam and senior movement figures.

says it all....
 
They needed to be more like Erdogan in Turkey.


They boiled the frog with impatience...



Like our Dems and ObamaCare.
 
Egypt fighting terrorists

Obama and the Muslim Brotherhood

Oh hey, I get it!

You don't like President Obama,
You don't like the Muslim Brotherhood,
You don't like terrorists,
So...so....
President Obama and the Muslim Brotherhood must be terrorists!

Brilliant!
 
Oh hey, I get it!

You don't like President Obama,
You don't like the Muslim Brotherhood,
You don't like terrorists,
So...so....
President Obama and the Muslim Brotherhood must be terrorists!

Brilliant!

I thought I was on NU CLEAR IGGY:cool:
 
Movement that Toppled Morsi Targets Peace Deal with Israel
Tamarod, the Egyptian movement which led the opposition to Morsi, is now calling to cancel the peace treaty with Israel.
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By Elad Benari

Tamarod, the Egyptian movement which led the opposition to ousted President Mohammed Morsi, apparently now has a new target: the peace treaty with Israel.

Egyptian media reported on Saturday that Tamarod, which amassed 15 million signatures to a petition demanding Morsi’s departure before the army ousted him in July, is now collecting signatures to a new initiative calling to cancel the peace treaty signed between Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin in 1979.

Tamarod’s latest initiative, according to the reports, comes in the wake of what they called the “unacceptable U.S. interference in Egypt’s political affairs.” The members of the group are demanding that the Israel-Egypt treaty be put to a referendum.

The opposition movement is arguing that the agreements with Israel prevent Egypt from deploying large-scale military forces to the Sinai Peninsula which has been rampant with terrorists.

Egypt's army is currently engaged in an offensive in Sinai to curtail a surge in violence since Morsi was ousted on July 3.

The New York Times reported Saturday that Israel and Egyptian Defense Minister General Abdel Fatah al-Sisi have been in close contact throughout the latest crisis in Egypt.

Diplomats told the New York Times that Israel assured Egypt it did not have to worry about the U.S. threat to cut its enormous aid package to that country.

In response to the violence in Egypt this past week, U.S. President Barack Obama said that the United States "deplores" and "strongly condemns" violence in Egypt, and as a result is canceling U.S.-Egyptian military exercises scheduled for next month.

He said the United States believes the Egyptian government's "state of emergency should be lifted" and a process of reconciliation must begin.
 
The New York Times reported Saturday that Israel and Egyptian Defense Minister General Abdel Fatah al-Sisi have been in close contact throughout the latest crisis in Egypt.

Most excellent...

...I'm predicting, with the above cooperation, that there will be a thorough cleansing of the Bro's terrorist arm - Hamas - from the Gaza Strip.

One must remember the thorough cleansing Syria effected on their branch of the Bros in the city of Hama itself...

...it would definitely be enjoyable to read of the Egyptian and Israeli defense forces allying together to exterminate all jihadis in their part of the world.
 
Exterminate them. That will show the world what freedom can do.

Not necessarily a complete wipeout, but get all the leaders and most of the rank and file. Otherwise, they will be back within a year. They might be back anyhow, but not as strong.

There is no negotiating with them because they will have no compunction against breaking their word. They believe they have a higher duty and will do anything to accomplish that.
 
The happy-go-lucky secular community organizers executed 25 cops today.



That's cops without the t. Allah knows how many Copts they've murdered...
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by Boxlicker101 View Post
There is no negotiating with them because they will have no compunction against breaking their word. They believe they have a higher duty and will do anything to accomplish that.


Best summation of the Tea Party I've ever read.

No, I'm referring to Islamists.
 
The Middle East: All Bad Choices
From Libya to Iran, our past actions have drastically limited our current choices.
Victor Davis Hanson, NRO
AUGUST 20, 2013

Survey the Middle East, and there is nothing about which to be optimistic.

Iran is either fueling violence in Syria or racing toward a bomb, or both.

Syria is past imploding. Take your pick in a now-Manichean standoff between an authoritarian, thuggish Bashar Assad and al-Qaeda franchises that envision a Taliban-like state. There is increasingly not much in between, other than the chaos of something like another Sudan.

Our Libyan “leading from behind” led to Mogadishu-like chaos and Benghazi. Do we even remember the moral urgency of bombing Tripoli as articulated by the ethical triad of Hillary Clinton, Susan Rice, and Samantha Power?

A day late and a dollar short, we piggybacked on the Arab Spring in Egypt, damning the damnable Mubarak without much thought of who or what would take his place. The result is that a kleptocratic dictatorship gave way to a one-vote/one-time Muslim Brotherhood theocracy — and then full circle back to the familiar strongmen with epaulets and sunglasses. Even in the Middle East, it is hard to get yourself hated all at once by Islamists, the military, the Arab Street, Christian minorities, and secular reformists. In Egypt, the Obama administration has somehow managed all that and more. I wonder about all those supposedly pro-Western Google-using types who toppled Mubarak: Are they still there? Were they ever there? For now, the military is engaged in an existential struggle against the Islamists, who retaliate by going after Christians — a crime of enormous proportions going on throughout the Middle East, which is completely ignored by Western governments.

In Iraq, would it have been that hard to leave 5,000 U.S. troops at a fortified air base so that they could monitor Iraq’s air space, hunt down remnants of al-Qaeda, and keep the Maliki government somewhat constitutional — given the toll up to that point in American blood and treasure? In terms of strategic policy and U.S. self-interest, the answer is no; in terms of Obama’s 2012 reelection talking points, certainly it would have been problematic.

What is left to be said about our twelve years in Afghanistan? Obama’s 2008 “good war” that he was going to “put our eye back on” descended into surges, deadlines, withdrawals, musical-chair commanders, drone proxy wars, and finally inattention. The only remaining mystery is how many Afghan refugees and asylum seekers do we let in once the Taliban replays the North Vietnamese scenario and Kabul becomes a sort of Saigon 1975.

The West Bank is quiet to the degree that the Obama administration does not give loud lectures on solving the “Middle East problem” — as if Egyptians were killing Copts over Jewish settlements or Syrians leveling towns because of an Israeli checkpoint. But if John Kerry keeps trying to match Barack Obama’s Nobel Peace Prize, then we may yet stir things up enough for another intifada.

Turkey was supposed to be Obama’s model for an authentic Middle East, the circle of Islamic democracy squared by Erdogan’s New Ottomanism. For now we are in the surreal situation of pointing to Turkey as the model of compatibility between Islamism and democracy as Erdogan is doing his best to make the two incompatible.

Obama ran in 2008 on the notion of resetting the Middle East — his qualifications as a new sort of messianic leader being little more than that he was a utopian African-American novice senator with an Islamic middle name, and thus the opposite of the supposedly hated Texan George Bush. That was the subtext of every word Obama spoke for two years, culminating in the Al Arabiya interview and the Cairo speech. Five years later, the region is in chaos, and American popularity there is still at historical lows. False affinities and cheap visuals turn out to be a poor substitute for no-nonsense talk backed by strength.

What is the current status of the war on terror? It is something waged against somebody, but what and how and why, we are not being told. I think Islamists are the terrorist bad guys trying to kill us, but who knows, since the Obama administration has defined jihad as a holy struggle, had classified the Tsarnaevs as poor political refugees, and considers Major Nisan a danger to the Army’s diversity program? About April or May 2009, Guantanamo was virtually closed, renditions were declared over, tribunals and preventive detentions left the side of the barn wall, and the ghost of George Bush kept droning thousands of poor innocents. But do we remember when Senator/candidate Obama referred to the drone bombings by saying, “We’ve got to get the job done there, and that requires us to have enough troops so that we’re not just air-raiding villages and killing civilians, which is causing enormous pressure over there.” When I heard that, I supposed he wanted a vast curtailment of the drone war and a new, rugged conflict on the ground in Afghanistan. Six years later, it hasn’t turned out that way.

...
 
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