* However, unlike Hitler, the Saudi dictator has political cowards traitors "allies" all over the world. And these "politicians" are almost never supported by the majority of the people on this particular bug in democracy.
Arabic language, "the holy places", OIC's anti-Human Rights sharia, and the threat from Palestine/Iran, constitute the components of the problem - and solution.
If the text seems too graphic and "offensive" for you, do remind yourself that Klevius is here talking about a muslim theocracy dictatorship "country" where Human Rights and Atheism (i.e. not to believe in a 'god" made up for defending racism and sexism) are heavily criminalized. And then take a look in your mirror!
Of course, the basic problem is with islam itself and its incompatibility with Human Rights (compare Saudi based and steered OIC's sharia declaration against Human Rights - deceptively called "islamic human rights") due to islam's "prophetic" ties to its evil past (the world's worst slave rader/traider ever).
However, islam is nothing if not connected to its context. And the irrefutable fact is that the combination of 1) oil wealth 2) custodianship of islam 3) custodianship of OIC (the muslim world sharia Umma/nation*) 4) islam as a language imperialist Arabic "religion", puts the islamofascist oil rich Saudi dictator family** in the center of islam's evilness today. With disastrous consequences not only in Yemen and Syria but all over the world through Saudi induced Sunni/Salafist islamic hate mongering. Even Theresa May had to escape one of those Saudi steered street attacks.
* Muslims can never be classified as "a minority"
because their Umma doesn't accept any borders, hence making muslims the
biggest nationalist supremacist party.
**
Have you noticed that the muslim islamofascist members of the Saudi
dictator family are rarely called what they are by BBC - namely just
'muslims'. Is it "offensive" against muslims
The islamofascist Saudi dictator family fully utilizes the situation that the "islamophobia" campaign they themselves have sponsored, now offers them, i.e. to spread their evil influence and power hunger all over the Arab world and beyond. Hitler used the German language as his excuse...
The solution
Stop immediately the support of the islamofascist Saudi dictator family, and treat them at least equally hostile as you treat Russia, Iran etc. And although Iran is always a lesser islamic evil and threat due to it not being an Arabic majority country, the majority of its people are just longing for getting rid of islam and returning to its Persian roots. Roots that the Saudis lack completely. The only roots (except the evil islamic ones) the Saudis have are the ones they got from the "British" gardener less than 100 years ago. And as most people do well without sticking to some evil roots, Klevius thinks the young Saudis could do as well if they were allowed to.
A treaty with Iran that is combined with the stopping of the Saudi war mongering (and oppression of Shia muslims) against Iran, and which includes a safety guarantee for Israel, would be the best solution for not only Mideast but for the world. And the Iranian people would surely take care of their Ayatollahs - and without replacing them with Saudi steered substitutes.
The islamofascist muslim war criminal and Saudi dictator "prince", Mohammad Salman's desecration of the Queen, ordered by Theresa May against the will of the people.
Some voices about Saudi war crimes from the web:
Jeremy Corbyn has accused the government of colluding in war crimes committed by Saudi forces in Yemen in an intervention which prompted a furious response from Downing Street.
As Mohammed bin Salman, the Saudi crown prince, began a three-day visit to the UK, the Labour leader used prime minister’s questions to attack Theresa May for co-operating with the regime, claiming British forces personnel were “directing” the conflict in Yemen. Downing Street reacted angrily, saying Mr Corbyn’s allegation was “simply not true”.
End the US Enabling of Saudi War Crimes in Yemen
Zaid Jilani reports that the U.S. military has no idea what missions are carried out in Yemen by the coalition planes that they refuel:
In a surprising admission on Tuesday, the head of U.S. Central Command – which oversees U.S. forces in the Middle East and Central Asia – admitted that the Pentagon doesn’t know a whole lot about the Saudi airstrikes in Yemen that the United States is supporting through intelligence, munitions, and refueling.
U.S. CENTCOM Cmdr. Gen. Joseph Votel made the admission in response to questions from Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., during a hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee.
“General Votel, does CENTCOM track the purpose of the missions it is refueling? In other words, where a U.S.-refueled aircraft is going, what targets it strikes, and the result of the mission?” Warren asked.
“Senator, we do not,” Votel replied.
If the U.S. military doesn’t track what the coalition planes do after they are refueled, it can’t honestly claim that it isn’t aiding and abetting coalition violations of international law. They don’t know what the coalition planes they refuel do later on, and perhaps they don’t want to know. If the U.S. isn’t tracking how our assistance is used, it isn’t credible to say that our government is using that assistance to change the coalition’s conduct of the war for the better. The U.S. is blindly enabling indiscriminate coalition bombing without making any effort to understand the effects of our support.
Gen. Votel also stated that the U.S. is not a party to the conflict. This is the lie that U.S. officials have been hiding behind for the last three years. When our military refuels planes that go on to bomb targets in another country, our military has joined that war on the side of the governments it is aiding. That should be an uncontroversial statement of fact, but supporters of U.S. involvement in the war are desperate to deny it. If the U.S. weren’t a party to the conflict, there would be no need to debate the extensive assistance that the U.S. provides to the governments wrecking and starving Yemen for the last three years.
U.S. support has been essential to the Saudi-led war, and it would be much harder for the Saudis and their allies to continue waging that war without our military assistance. That is why those in favor of continuing the war don’t want to cut off that support. They wish to keep the war going, but they want to dodge the responsibility our government has for aiding and abetting the coalition’s crimes. Americans that want to end U.S. involvement and help bring an end to the war on Yemen should urge their senators to vote for S.J.Res. 54.
The Senate is expected to debate a war powers resolution next week that calls for the United States to end its involvement in the Yemen conflict, but a top Senate Republican leader signaled Thursday GOP leaders would prefer to put off a final vote on the divisive issue until after it can be more closely studied in committee.
"I think it would be better for the committee to consider it and make a recommendation after having a hearing so everybody understands exactly what the consequences are," said Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, the No. 2 GOP leader in the chamber, referring to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
The US has provided military support -- including intelligence sharing, logistical support, and mid-flight refueling -- to a coalition led by Saudi Arabia against Iranian-backed Houthis in Yemen. The conflict, which is considered, in part, a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran as they struggle for dominance in the region, has created a dire humanitarian crisis in Yemen.
Three senators -- Mike Lee, a Republican from Utah, Bernie Sanders, an independent from Vermont, and Chris Murphy, a Democrat from Connecticut -- authored the privileged resolution and are working to force a vote on it. They believe the refueling and other actions by the US armed forces are akin to "boots on the ground" and that Congress needs to authorize it.
They described their bill as the "first-ever vote in the Senate to withdraw US armed forces from an unauthorized war."
She's only 12, but her father is already planning her wedding
"For too long, and under both parties, Congress has abdicated it responsibility to provide authorization for the use of military force," the three senators wrote recently in a letter to bipartisan Senate leaders. "Regardless of what one thinks of our involvement in Yemen, as we enter a fourth year of helping the Saudis prosecute this war it is important that Congress either provides express authorization for our involvement in the conflict or calls on the president to cease operations."
"I hope the Congress and the Senate vote next week to get the United States out of aiding Saudi Arabia in this very terrible war and works on a humanitarian solution and works to bring peace to a very volatile region," Sanders told reporters Wednesday as he departed a classified briefing on Yemen for all senators by Trump administration officials.
Pentagon leaders oppose the resolution and have argued refueling and the other limited assistance they are providing don't constitute "hostilities" that need congressional approval.
Russia vetoes UN resolution linking Iran with terror activities in Yemen
Sen. Bob Corker, a Tennessee Republican who chairs Foreign Relations, said he agrees.
"We do so much of that with our allies around the world and don't consider that to be involved in hostilities but simply helping our allies in what they're doing," Corker said. "I think if we use the War Powers Act to call these kinds of activities hostilities, we could go down a really slippery slope."
Senators and aides involved in the issue say they are unsure where the votes are and predict it could be close. GOP leaders may try to redirect the measure on procedural motion, for which a majority vote is needed to succeed.
Such a move could diffuse the issue, which will take place the same week Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman visits Washington.
A study shows weapons imports to the Middle East and Asia have soared over the past five years, with Saudi Arabia leading the steep rise amid its bloody war on Yemen.
According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), arms imports to the Middle East between 2013 and 2017 jumped by 103 percent compared with the previous five-year period.
Saudi Arabia is now the world’s second largest importer of arms after India. The kingdom registered a 225-percent rise in military purchases - almost all from the US and Europe - during the period, the study released on Monday said.
American weapons constitute 61 percent of arms imports to Saudi Arabia and British weapons 23 percent. During the period, the Saudis received 78 combat aircraft, 72 combat helicopters, 328 tanks and 4,000 vehicles, the SIPRI noted.
The same period, it said, saw Israel increasing its arms exports by 55 percent.
“The US and European states remain the main arms exporters to the region and supplied over 98 percent of weapons imported by Saudi Arabia,” it said.
On Friday, Saudi Arabia signed a preliminary deal to buy 48 Typhoon jets worth as much as $10 billion.
Saudi Arabia already operates more than 70 Typhoon jets. They have been used extensively in the Yemen war, and the deal is likely to spark outrage among rights groups and campaigners.
Arms remain the main component of UK-Saudi trade and the UK government has approved the export of $6.4 billion in weapons since the start of the war in Yemen, despite allegations that Saudi-led forces have committed war crimes.
The United Kingdom has increased its weapons sales by around 500 percent since March 2015, The Independent reported last November.
PressTV-Saudi, UK to finalize hefty warplane deal amid protests
Britain and Saudi Arabia agree to finalize a warplane deal despite protests against Riyadh's deadly war on Yemen.
Last May, US President Donald Trump visited Saudi Arabia in his first foreign visit, signing a $110-billion deal to sell weapons to the kingdom.
“Widespread violent conflict in the Middle East and concerns about human rights have led to political debate in Western Europe and North America about restricting arms sales,” said senior SIPRI researcher Pieter Wezeman.
“Yet the US and European states remain the main arms exporters to the region and supplied over 98 percent of weapons imported by Saudi Arabia.”
More than 13,600 people have died since the Saudi-led invasion began, and Yemen has turned into the scene of the world's worst humanitarian crisis.
Comments (17)
[Hasan Hakim]
Hasan Hakim3 days ago 15:48
The Talmudic-Crpyto saudi mafia is an Insult to Islam, I Am 63-Yrs-Old, I Pray ALLAH-(SWT) Lets me live to see the Day When The Proud Yemeni People March into Arabia & free the Kabba from these Edomites.........In Iran [Che Guevara] Pictured Below Is Studied May ALLAH-(SWT) Have Mercy On His Soul.....
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[Joseph Lieberman]
Joseph Lieberman3 days ago 10:59
Wherever they are located, let all Saudi weapon stockpiles be destroyed.
Im sure even saudi citizens are ready to do this deed, for the sake of justice.
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[Pakistan Is Moving Away From US What is Saudi Doing?]
Pakistan Is Moving Away From US What is Saudi Doing?3 days ago 09:30
While you are in Pakistan Dear Zarif ask the Pakistani Government a sensitive question that they don't like to answer if possible about Saudi Arabia Terrorist Activities & servile attitudes to Terrorist states like UK, US and Israel that has not only killed hundreds & thousands of innocent Muslims Sunni or Shia but also Non Muslims raping women and children supporting IS, ISIS, Daesh, Takfari, Al-Qaeda and other rotten groups of Zionism and surly that DOES NOT serve the interest of "Islam" and the "Main Stream Unity of Islam" on the whole as "Creator" has intended and how the fight against this UK-US-Israel-Saudi TERRORISM should end...
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[(We?) Unknown Higher Order Entity Since 2011...]
(We?) Unknown Higher Order Entity Since 2011...3 days ago 09:02
The very puppet regime of Saudi Arabai is 100% "HARAM" and a GREAT insult to "Islam" & "Main Stream Unity of Islam" and a abominable act against "Creator"...
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[David Kuperman]
David Kuperman3 days ago 08:18
Weapons can not save Saudi Monarchy.
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[FREE PALESTINE]
FREE PALESTINE3 days ago 07:48
BAD SICK RACIST ZIONIST ARAB LEADERS - OF USA UK FRANCE ISRAEL WILL LEAVE THE ARAB WORLD - NO MORE ZIONISTS IN THE ARAB WORLD. THEY KILL CIVILIANS ONLY BY CIA MOSSAD MI6 TERROR--ISIS TERROR--WE WILL NEVER FORGET--WE WILL NEVER FORGIVE.... NEVER- NEVER- NEVER.
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[methos]
methos3 days ago 06:48
The Saudi Regime is a cash cow for the west, as they do nothing but stockpiling armament operated by unmotivated foreign mercenary
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[Ap]
Ap3 days ago 03:33
This brainless Saudi idiot only make people laugh but nothing else but that day is not so far when they will face irreversible consequences which must lead their complete destruction.
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[john]
john3 days ago 03:19
another war against iran by arabs is highly likely. islamic republic got many enemies both inside middle east and outside it.this is how stupids diplomacy works creating more enemy for a bankrupt country with no agriculture no industry no future no hope.
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[Ali]
Ali3 days ago 03:13
These Arms are useless to the people who have no ability to fight - THE REAL REASON behind buying these arms is the theft of ARABIAN RESOURCES - The Crypto Jews ruling Arabian peninsula are funding British and US aggression in Middle east. Britain and US (the greatest Debtor) cannot sustain their hostile policy without the Oil dollars they cunningly steal from Muslim lands. In the past the Arab rulers would lose trillions in Casino (as covert gift to US and Britain)
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[J.J._Knows_the_I.D.F._R_Cowards]
J.J._Knows_the_I.D.F._R_Cowards3 days ago 03:10
It doesn't take a long time after opening a History Book to realize that
when a Country is arming like K.S.A. is, they're intending to use those
arms in aggressive wars against their neighbors.
Any nations that K.S.A.has shown any type of aggression towards
need to arm themselves now for defense.
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[Assad]
Assad3 days ago 02:10
Brainless idiots/imbeciles are appointed at the head of Saudi government by international gangsters
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[Gharib]
Gharib3 days ago 02:09
Why then Saudi's cannot win the war in Yemmen?
For fairness, Yemen should be granted the 'Nobel Prize for resistance'.
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[Assad]
Assad3 days ago 02:06
Saudi Arabia with its huge oil revenues is used by Zionist gangsters as a marionnette and serves as a venue for flooding the Middle East with arms for terrorist activities. Arms paid for by Saudi money. Gangsters steal oil and the money
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[Hasan Hakim]
Hasan Hakim> Assad3 days ago 15:50
1000% Correct-!!!!
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[Lion od Haqq]
Lion od Haqq3 days ago 01:24
The ruling Gulf Arab puppets are not Muslims. They kill and persecute elderly, women, children, all on behalf of USrael. Shame on them.
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[Hasan Hakim]
Hasan Hakim> Lion od Haqq3 days ago 15:56
Cowards Have No Shame
When Ali Ibn Abi Talib-(A.S.)
Was On The Battlefield, the Cowards Pulled Down There Pants & Ex-posed Themselves to the Great Imam-(A.S.) The Imam-(A.S.) Let Them Be & Looked Away For A Worthy-Opponent............