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View Full Version : tPF ISIL threatens Washington DC and London- you’re next



Peter1469
07-27-2016, 05:17 PM
ISIL threatens Washington DC and London- you’re next (http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/isis-warn-london-next-attacked-8500399)

They get the imagery for DC wrong. But we get the point.


London is on the next list of target cities for twisted jihadis, it has been claimed.

Images threatening attacks in London and other major world capitals have been posted on messaging app Telegram, according to analysts at SITE Intelligence Group.


One picture chillingly shows New York’s Statue of Liberty engulfed in flames but with the caption “Washington soon” - referring to the US capital 225 miles away.


The threat comes as security at British churches is being ramped up amid a newterror (http://www.mirror.co.uk/all-about/terrorism) alert after ISIS (http://www.mirror.co.uk/all-about/isis) knifemen forced a French priest to kneel before slitting his throat on camera.

waltky
07-29-2016, 04:54 PM
Colonization by immigration...
http://www.politicalforum.com/images/smilies/icon_omg.gif
Europe’s peace shaken after attacks in France, Germany; increased number of ISIS-inspired killers
Friday 29th July, 2016 - European governments have been sounding alarms over the increase in terror attacks across the continent, with the most recent one being the murder of an 86-year-old Catholic priest, Jacques Hamel, at the altar of his church in a Rouen suburb in France.


The knife slaughter was carried out by Islamic militants, and comes as killers inspired by the Islamic State change their tactics like lightning, confusing authorities seeking to combat them. Since 2015, ISIS-inspired attackers have killed at least 235 people in France, recorded as the largest casualty rate of any Western country by far. President Francois Hollande appealed for the public’s support, as the incident has shaken the traditionally Catholic country, and stressed that attacks on any religious institution hits a fundamental aspect of the republic. He said, “Killing a priest is to desecrate the republic, which guarantees freedom of conscience,” and the statement has given rise to speculations that, despite the country upholding secularism as its highest ideal, Hollande emphasised France’s age-old relationship to the Catholic Church.

The “epidemic of terrorism” has proved quite difficult for authorities to curtail, despite the French government stepping up its military action against the Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq, imposing a state of emergency and reinforcing security to levels unheard of. Investigations into the murder are underway, and French officials identified the second man involved in the attack as Abdel-Malik Nabil Petitjean, a 19-year-old from St.-Die-des-Voges, France. Both Petitjean and the first suspect Adel Kermiche, also 19, were killed by police after taking three nuns and two churchgoers hostage on Wednesday at the church in St.-Etienne-du-Rouvray Petitjean was already known to and earmarked by French authorities as radicalised and a potential Islamist militant, although few individuals, who knew him, begged to differ.


http://cdn.bignewsnetwork.com/uni1469718569.jpg

Djamel Tazghat, head of a local mosque in the southeastern town of Aix-les-Bains where Petitjean lived said of Petitjean that, “I liked him a lot. We never had a problem with him at the mosque. No strange observations, he was always smiling... It’s incredible.” Neighbour Germany was also hit by a series of four attacks in one week, with two of them being the first in Germany claimed by the extremist Islamic State group. In Bavaria, Mohammed Daleel died and 15 people were wounded when his bomb exploded outside a wine bar Sunday night after he was denied entry into a nearby open-air concert as he didn’t have a ticket. Chancellor Angela Merkel said that the two men responsible for the Bavarian attacks had come to Germany as refugees and carried out attacks claimed by the ISIS - a fact which “mocks the country that took them in.” Bavarian Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann said that the Syrian asylum-seeker who blew himself up outside a bar in southern Germany was active in an online chat with a person in the Middle East, shortly before the explosion occurred.

Germany’s commissioner for immigration, refugees and integration Aydan Ozoguz called for mosques across the country to be more efficient in preventing radicalism among Muslim youth. On Thursday Merkel pledged to clear up the “barbaric acts” and bring to justice those who orchestrated the attacks. She added that Germany will do “everything humanly possible” to ensure security, and will “stick to our principles.” She claimed that the attacks would not reverse their decision to take in refugees but proposed increased security measures including information sharing, deciphering web chatter and tackling arms sales on the internet. She said, “Taboos of civilisation are being broken… I am still convinced today that ‘we can do it’ — it is our historic duty and this is a historic challenge in times of globalisation. We have already achieved very, very much in the last 11 months.”

http://www.bignewsnetwork.com/news/246237713/europe-peace-shaken-after-attacks-in-france-germany-increased-number-of-isis-inspired-killers

See also:

5 Things to Learn from the Latest 3 Jihadist Attacks in Germany
July 28, 2016 - It is okay to wonder when the madness will end, but it is not okay to do nothing about it.


The past few days have been pretty rough for Germans, who witnessed a spate of three violent terrorist attacks over a short span of three days.

On July 22nd, David Ali Sonboly, a 18-year-old holding dual nationalities in both Germany and Iran, opened gunfire and killed nine people at a McDonald’s mall location in Munich, leaving nine dead and more than fifteen injured. Two days later, on July 23rd, a 21-year-old bearded Syrian refugee, who was known to authorities for previous acts of violence, stabbed and killed a pregnant Polish woman with a machete and injured two others in the southwestern German city of Reutlingen (and the human baby in her womb also died). That same night, a 27-year-old Syrian who was denied asylum by German authorities blew himself up outside of a music festival in Ansbach, injuring fifteen people. And these attacks only come about a week after a 17-year-old Afghani refugee, Muhammad Riyad—who we now know was incontrovertibly inspired by ISIS—went on a bloody knife rampage that left eighteen people injured on a train in Würzburg.

The following are some points to bear in mind regarding these recent events:

There is a trend of Muslims of foreign descent committing high-profile crimes in Germany. At least two of the above attacks (the Wurzburg and Ansbach attacks) were indisputably Islamist attacks that were inspired by ISIS. It is not yet clear whether the Syrian refugee responsible for the machete attack was an Islamist, nor is it is clear that the Iranian-German Munich shooter was; though it is not implausible that these two attackers also turn out to be Islamists.

1. There is a trend of false or misleading information being disseminated about recent high-profile Islamist-perpetrated attacks. (http://counterjihad.com/5-things-to-learn-from-the-latest-3-jihadist-attacks-in-germany/)

Peter1469
07-29-2016, 04:57 PM
The drive towards globalism at this point in history is insane. Evil.

Hillary represents that.