Thursday, October 1, 2009

A Gathering Threat

An attempt on the life of Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, the Saudi Deputy Minister of Home Affairs, last Thursday in Jeddah has shown that when the first battle has been won against Islamic terrorism in Saudi Arabia, the war is far beyond .
"It is naive to think that there would be no further testing on humans," said Prince Mohammed Al Faisal, member of the royal family of the journalist. Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, was slightly injured when a man makes his way to his house Jeddah implementing a bomb placed in his intestine during an Iftar, the meal that celebrates breaking the fast at sunset during the holy month of Ramadan. The bomb was triggered by a cell phone. The Home Office is responsible for internal security. Some special units against terrorism with the help of the United States created
Britain, France and Germany after the first wave of deadly attacks that rocked the kingdom until 2007, are troops and units of the Interior.
The Jeddah attack essentially sends a message to the Interior Ministry to infiltrate the very organization that had for tracking down Islamic terrorists that, despite all the efforts it intends to look at location, the heart of the Department of Government, that should be observed.

And although no major terrorist attack in the kingdom since 2007, which should not be a sign that the war is over have been taken. It is not. In fact, when Prince Mohammed al-Faisal said the journalist, "the fact that it may take a break never be interpreted as a victory against terror.
These people have taken two decades (80 and 90) built under the radar, we should expect to completely cut off more time for this type of cancer. " It is also important to note, as the terrorists made use of the holy month of Ramadan in order to perpetrate the attack, and the manner in which explosives are transported to the site of the attack.

Most Muslims would agree that at least two great sins committed in this transaction is not including suicide and murder. Firstly, with the occasion of an Iftar its target at the Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, the perpetrators of this heinous act desecrated and defiled the sacred months to achieve. Ramadan is traditionally a time when Muslims should purify their bodies through fasting and feel closer to God through prayer.
Second, by placing the explosive device into the body of the suicide bombers, these authors have desecrated the corpse, the last of God's creation. Not to mention the fact that in choosing the way he died, the bombers, despite what had some fanatic imams may think he brainwashed to about paradise, whether or not virgins waiting at the end of the journey will be a rude awakening.
You have to understand the rest of eternity, as they were wrong.
Finally, it is hard to believe that after these despicable acts we want to still believe that Al-Qaeda speaks for Islam. The third point is that the renewed terrorist activity in Saudi Arabia happens with the outbreak of heavy fighting in Yemen, near the border with Saudi Arabia. Could it be a direct connection between the two? Maybe.

Bin Laden remains a following of his country of origin and where the Islamists have been looking into the bleak and difficult to police regions in the interior. The disease has happened in Yemen, which should not be underestimated, ignored or written off as trivial 
 inter-tribal feuds. It is anything but ordinary.

Yemen is the Achilles heel of the Arab world. The country is difficult to govern outside the major metropolitan areas. It is along tribal lines, with lines of loyalty to family, clan, tribe, sect and religion structured before the nation. It is not surprising that, when it was divided into two countries, between North and South, in the south of the only Arab country that was itself a Communist. Bin Laden, who spent several years in the land of their ancestors, Yemen knows only too well.

In the background, that the fact that Al-Qaeda branch in Saudi Arabia and Yemen merged last February to the so-called "Al-Qaeda Jihad in the Arabian Peninsula." Asher had the attacker apparently flown in Jeddah from Yemen, said a statement from Al-Qaeda claiming responsibility for the assassination attempt against Deputy Minister. This despite the fact he was one of 85 wanted terrorists in the kingdom.

"I think we're on the right track, we usually still more of what we have done, and do our vitality, vibrancy and energy.

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