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April 5, 2004

   Toby Westerman, Editor and Publisher                                                                                   Copyright 2004

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THE SECRET OF FALLUJA
Foreign State Support and the Allies of Terror

APRIL, 5 2004
By Toby Westerman
Copyright 2004 International News Analysis Today
www.inatoday.com

The savagery directed against U.S. personnel in the Iraqi city of Falluja is both a challenge and a warning to the United States and to the world.

The media reported the mob chanting Muslim phrase "Allah Akbar," God is Great, as it committed its atrocities, and reported as an aside that Falluja is a stronghold of Saddam Hussein's Baath Party.

What is left unsaid, however, is that the Baath Party is a Socialist political organization which had strong ties to the Soviet Union during the Cold War, and after the collapse of Communism cooperated closely with the "new" Russia.

The Socialist Baath Party turned Iraq into one of the most secular nations in the Middle East, and alienated many devout Muslims. Saddam began identifying closely with Islam only when his position deteriorated under pressure from the United States.

Saddam-era parade of women soldiers
Source: worldrevolution.org

Cooperation between Islamic fundamentalists and Saddam's regime grew from a common hatred of the United States, not from any mutual admiration.

The raw hatred witnessed in Falluja is a vivid and grotesque example of the union of religious and political forces enraged at the United States and everything for which it stands.

America is at war, and Fox News commentator Bill O'Reilly was correct when on a recent television broadcast he described this conflict as "World War III."

The war the United States faces is not merely a war against religious fanatics, but fanatics supported by political ideology.

Some critics contend that America would not be in this war if the U.S. did not support the state of Israel. We do not believe that Israel is the fundamental question. Certainly America must put its own interests first in foreign policy, but even if Israel did not exist, Muslim fanatics in Falluja and elsewhere would still be determined to destroy the United States.

Although America is now one of the main targets for Islamic wrath, the roots of the fanaticism displayed in Falluja and elsewhere in Iraq extend back to before the establishment of the American republic.

In reaction to the decline of Muslim states and the rise of powerful European nations, a new, puritanical form of Islam began to grow in importance in the sands of the Arabian peninsula. In the mid-1700s a new movement called for a spiritual renewal and the unification of all Muslims against the Infidel. A local sheik from the family of Saud supported the movement, the same family which has dominated for almost two centuries the nation we call Saudi Arabia.

This Islamic religious movement, called Wahhabism, provides the theoretical support for much of the Muslim fanaticism today. It justifies Al Qaeda as well as the killings in Falluja. The Wahhabism of Saudi Arabia justifies the use of religious police who hunt down those practicing Christianity, and ensures that in Saudi Arabia not a cross is seen, nor a church bell heard.

Wahhabism, however, is willing to form alliances with the Infidel to further fanatical Muslim interests. In their wars for autonomy from the Turkish Sultan, Wahhabit Arab leaders sought the assistance of the leading power of the era, the British Empire.

The alliance of fanatical Socialist and Muslim in Falluja points to a wider common cause between those who hate America in general, and the West in particular.

The secret of Falluja is that fanaticism needs allies, including foreign allies, those Infidel nations which share common goals with militant Islam. The most obvious candidates for this alliance are the nations which consistently support movements and governments hostile to the U.S., as well as the terror networks which threaten the very survival of the West itself.

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