OP-ED In the War with ISIS, Don’t Forget About Sun Tzu

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.thestrategybridge.com/the-bridge/2016/4/15/in-the-war-with-isis-dont-forget-about-sun-tzu

In the War with ISIS, Don’t Forget About Sun Tzu

Sebastian J. Bae · April 15, 2016

Carl von Clausewitz, the young Prussian strategist of the Napoleonic age, is a giant in the field of security studies. His seminal work, On War, is widely considered the definitive text in understanding the nature of war. His famous quote, “War is the continuation of politics by other means,” is generally considered the cardinal rule for war—it is often quoted and equally often ignored in practice. So, it is unsurprising that contemporary Western strategists and thinkers look towards Clausewitz for answers and insights, but is he the only choice?

In “What Would Clausewitz Do?,” Mark Perry explored how the Prussian strategist would tackle the challenge of the Islamic State (ISIS). Perry astutely emphasized the need for a clear, achievable political goal driving the war effort combined with a level-headed understanding of the war being fought. Clausewitz would be proud. However, Perry’s singular focus on the bare-fisted, no holds barred type of warfare is both mismatched to today’s socio-political climate and a woefully one-dimensional characterization of Clausewitz’s theory of war. Although frequently quoted, Clausewitz’s comprehensive theory of war is often misrepresented...or at least poorly understood in its entirety. Clausewitz provides the abstraction of absolute war as an intellectual baseline to highlight the utility and constraints of limited warfare in practice, as explained in Book One’s “Purpose and Means in War.” Contrary to popular representation, Clausewitz outlines a masterful theory of war where the grammar of warfare adapts and changes to the logic of politics—ranging from conventional warfare to counterinsurgency involving non-state actors. Thus, to reduce Clausewitz’s theory of war to a simplistic suggestion “to hit them, and relentlessly, before they hit us,” as Mark Perry suggests, is both inaccurate and provides a false strategic dichotomy.

That said, however, Perry’s characterization of Clausewitz highlights the need to incorporate both nuance and a wider range of voices in the crafting of strategy. Thus, modern strategists should not be limited to the 18th century Prussian strategist for answers, but also look to the 5th century BCE strategist, Sun Tzu.

Although historical sources disagree on the details of Sun Tzu’s life or even his existence, his work, The Art of War, is considered a masterpiece in the philosophy of war and strategy. For hundreds of years, The Art of War provided the foundations of military theory in China and continues to have tremendous influence today. Although separated by nearly 2,000 years, Clausewitz and Sun Tzu both stressed the importance of politics in warfare, the role of the commander, and the dynamic nature of war. Yet these strategists significantly differed in their approach to warfare. Clausewitz emphasized a deductive approach to the study of warfare by focusing on a theory that incorporated empirical experience. In contrast, Sun Tzu, reflective of his time, preferred a more inductive approach and understanding of warfare. But most importantly, while Clausewitz demonstrated skepticism regarding the value of intelligence in warfare, Sun Tzu advocated victory through the systematic use of intelligence, deception, and manipulation.

Like Clausewitz, Sun Tzu understood knowledge of the adversary’s disposition, position, intentions, and capabilities were paramount in achieving victory. However, unlike Clausewitz, Sun Tzu emphasized the use of various types of spies to gain what we would now call human intelligence. He adamantly advised, “Be subtle! Be subtle! And use your spies for every kind of business.” Thus, Sun Tzu’s campaign against ISIS would begin with an intense and systemic intelligence operation. Tragically, the current intelligence operation against ISIS has been marred by dysfunction and lapses. To many, the intelligence community has been unable to stay ahead of the curve, constantly reacting as we move from crisis to crisis, best characterized by the prevalence of ISIS attacks abroad. Not to completely disparage the efforts of the intelligence community, they have gathered valuable information on ISIS supply routes, finances, and movements. However, as Sun Tzu warns, “Knowledge of the enemy's dispositions can only be obtained from other men.” Although modern surveillance and imagery technology is invaluable, Sun Tzu, reminiscent of a classic spymaster, would argue there is no substitute for accurate human intelligence gathered by human agents on the ground. Aerial reconnaissance can provide useful target lists, but it cannot determine the real utility of each target nor can it give understanding of a commander’s personality or a city’s disposition. To Sun Tzu, meticulously preparing the battlefield through the diverse use of spies, including the recruiting double-agents and embedding agents in the adversary’s force, is the first step to long-term success.

Unlike his Prussian counterpart, Sun Tzu stresses deception, not military force, at the center of his war philosophy. The “Chinese character li (force) occurs only nine times" in The Art of War, reflecting Sun Tzu’s belief that victory was achieved through psychological dominance and not by materially destroying the enemy. Sun Tzu famously argues, “All warfare is based on deception.” Consequently, he would be appalled at the transparent nature of the current campaign against ISIS. For instance, Flightradar24 (FR24), an open-source flight tracker, allows anyone to track flights in real time, which has occasionally revealed locations of military operations. Robert Hopkins III, a former commander of intelligence-gathering aircraft, told Vice News that, “Looking at FR24 on a laptop and seeing a slew of KC-135s with the call sign ‘Quid’ orbiting off Cyprus is a good indicator that a strike package is on its way to Syria, no matter how good the operational security (OPSEC) of the strike aircraft might be.” Similarly, in response to the prevalence of social media use by service members, the U.S. Air Force started a campaign in 2015, entitled “Loose tweets sink fleets,” over concerns of proper OPSEC. Likewise, a Pentagon briefer mistakenly revealed to the media a spring offensive planned for April/May 2015 to retake Mosul from ISIS, an operation then indefinitely postponed. Perhaps, the U.S. military should take a page (or, more accurately, a bamboo strip) from Sun Tzu’s playbook and let their “plans be dark and impenetrable as night, and when you move, fall like a thunderbolt.”

Although Sun Tzu emphasizes deception over force, he does not discount the utility or need for force in warfare. He simply argues, “To fight and conquer in all your battles is not supreme excellence; supreme excellence consists in breaking the enemy's resistance without fighting.” Sun Tzu believed warfare was incredibly costly, both in terms of wealth and men. Therefore, he sought to leverage the minimum force to win key decisive engagements, striving to mitigate the heavy price of open warfare. Therefore, Sun Tzu would never approve of the U.S.’s plans to retake Mosul from ISIS in a bloody, direct offensive. When U.S.-Iraqi forces retook Ramadi in January 2016, the city was completely devastated by the ensuing battle. The campaign involved house-to-house engagements and was bogged down by bobby traps and improvised explosive devices (IEDs). Although Ramadi was nominally liberated, the city was essentially decimated. Sabah Karhout, the head of the Anbar provincial council, told The New York Times that “Ramadi is a city of ghosts” and the reconstruction would cost roughly $12 billion. Similarly, a direct offensive on Mosul would be another bloody rendition of a previous strategic mistake. U.S.-Iraqi forces may win on the battlefield, but the wholesale destruction will only feed the narrative of grievance advocated by ISIS. Therefore, Sun Tzu argued, “In the practical art of war, the best thing of all is to take the enemy's country whole and intact; to shatter and destroy it is not so good.” He understood post-war reconstruction would only incur additional costs for the state. One has only to look at the U.S.’s interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq, which total roughly $1.5 trillion in reconstruction efforts, to see the wisdom in his words.

Hence, instead of a direct offensive, Sun Tzu would advocate to “hold out bait to entice the enemy” and then “attack him where he is unprepared, appear where you are not expected.” At the moment, ISIS’s growth and appeal is rooted in the perception that the group is winning the war—fueled by grotesque public displays of violence and a savvy use of social media. Consequently, ISIS has dictated the terms of the war in every aspect, whether in the realm of public opinion or on the battlefield. Therefore, like Clausewitz, Sun Tzu would advise the coalition to attack softer yet strategically important targets such as the ISIS-controlled Omar oil field, which generates roughly $1.7 million to $5.1 million per month for ISIS. By recapturing ISIS-controlled assets, coalition forces would slowly, but steadily apply both political and military pressure on ISIS. Eventually, ISIS would be forced to seek new initiative in an offensive campaign of its own, whether out of logistical desperation or an ill-fated effort to regain its prestige. At that moment, coalition forces can dictate the terms of the engagement in terms of time, place, and manner. Therefore, instead of attacking headlong into a well-defended city, laden with traps and IEDs, the coalition can coax ISIS into a decisive engagement on its terms, best playing to its strengths instead of those of ISIS.

In the end, both Sun Tzu’s The Art of War and Clausewitz’s On War provide invaluable insight into the nature of warfare and strategy and rightfully belong on the bookshelf of any policymaker or strategist. Nevertheless, one must understand the two seminal works differ significantly in medium, context, methodology, and intended audience. The Art of War, written on thin bamboo strips, is designed as a manual of sorts for the battlefield commander, comprising only thirteen short chapters. Produced in ancient China, The Art of War valued deception and manipulation in an era that lacked industrialized military forces. In contrast, On War is a rigorous dialectic examination of absolute war in an effort to determine the nature of limited warfare in reality, which was heavily influenced by Clausewitz’s own experiences in the Napoleonic wars. Each has its place in the greater security literature. However, in an era where nuclear deterrence exists and large scale industrial warfare is vilified, it may be time for policymakers and strategists to dust off their copy of The Art of War and add new tools to the policy toolkit. Therefore, policymakers should seek to widen their perspectives – seeking to incorporate more voices in how to craft and execute strategy in modern times. Ultimately, the fact remains:

“The art of war is of vital importance to the State. It is a matter of life and death, a road either to safety or to ruin. Hence it is a subject of inquiry which can on no account be neglected.”

Sebastian J. Bae is a contributor to Best Defense at Foreign Policy and served six years in the Marine Corps infantry, leaving as a Sergeant. He deployed to Iraq in 2009. He earned a Masters in Georgetown University’s Security Studies Program, specializing in violent non-state actors, counterinsurgency, and humanitarian interventions. You can follow him on Twitter: @SebastianBae.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://warontherocks.com/2016/04/a-new-generation-of-unrestricted-warfare/

A New Generation of Unrestricted Warfare

David Barno and Nora Bensahel
April 19, 2016

In 1999, two Chinese colonels wrote a book called Unrestricted Warfare, about warfare in the age of globalization. Their main argument: Warfare in the modern world will no longer be primarily a struggle defined by military means — or even involve the military at all.

They were about a decade and a half before their time.

Colonels Qiao Liang and Wang Xiangsui argued that war was no longer about “using armed forces to compel the enemy to submit to one’s will” in the classic Clausewitzian sense. Rather, they asserted that war had evolved to “using all means, including armed force or non-armed force, military and non-military, and lethal and non-lethal means to compel the enemy to accept one’s interests.” The barrier between soldiers and civilians would fundamentally be erased, because the battle would be everywhere. The number of new battlefields would be “virtually infinite,” and could include environmental warfare, financial warfare, trade warfare, cultural warfare, and legal warfare, to name just a few. They wrote of assassinating financial speculators to safeguard a nation’s financial security, setting up slush funds to influence opponents’ legislatures and governments, and buying controlling shares of stocks to convert an adversary’s major television and newspapers outlets into tools of media warfare. According to the editor’s note, Qiao argued in a subsequent interview that “the first rule of unrestricted warfare is that there are no rules, with nothing forbidden.” That vision clearly transcends any traditional notions of war.

Unrestricted Warfare was an explicit response to the reigning Western military orthodoxy of the time. The preface is dated January 17, 1999, which the authors note was the eighth anniversary of the outbreak of the 1991 Gulf War. In many ways, their argument refuted many of the Western lessons drawn from that conflict: that wars could be short, sharp, and dominated by high-technology weaponry used with stunning precision to shatter an enemy’s armed forces in hours or days. By 1999, U.S. military thinking was dominated by the revolution in military affairs and network centric-warfare, which relied on advanced technologies to give the United States total battlefield dominance.

But Qiao and Wang argued that the battlefield had fundamentally changed. It was no longer a place where militaries met and fought; instead, society itself was now the battlefield. Future wars would inevitably encompass attacks on all elements of society without limits. Military battles resembling those of 1991 might become secondary elements of conflict — if they even occurred at all.

A lot has changed in the past 17 years. The United States has fought two long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and weathered the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, for example. But perhaps the most fundamental change to the way we live has been the explosive growth of the internet and our utter dependence on the cyber domain. When Qiao and Wang wrote their book, today’s cyber world was barely imaginable, and then only in the minds of visionaries and the most imaginative computer geeks. In 1999, AOL was still mailing those annoying cds with its software to every address in America, since almost three-quarters of American households did not have internet access the previous year.

Today, the United States, and increasingly the rest of the world, thoroughly depends on web connections built in cyberspace. The internet dominates all aspects of global trade, economics, communications, and even societies. And that makes Unrestricted Warfare even more relevant today than when it was published — because waging war without limits is now simpler and easier than even its authors could have envisioned. In 1999, the ability to assault all elements of an opponent’s society seemed to require the resources or sponsorship of a powerful nation state. Now, an increasingly interconnected world allows adversaries at keyboards — from states to terrorist groups to disgruntled citizens — to instantly vault oceans and continents to strike at any element of another nation and society without ever having to encounter defending military forces. A basement hacker in Sarajevo can target the City of London’s financial networks one moment and a Brazilian municipal power grid the next — and never change out of her pajamas.

The nation will always need military forces to defend against foreign military threats. But the U.S. armed forces — which remain the strongest and best-resourced in the world — provide virtually no defense against the cyber vulnerabilities that affect every American business and household. And the ever-expanding Internet of things (IoT) only increases those vulnerabilities. A very small example: One of your loyal Strategic Outpost columnists just joined the IoT by installing a Nest thermostat in her home. The next day, she woke up to a freezing house, and immediately wondered whether she’d already been hacked. One cold columnist does not signal a national security crisis, of course. But our massive and ever-growing national reliance upon the cyber domain fundamentally alters the nature of what must be defended for the nation to continue to function — and makes it far easier to conduct the type of unrestricted warfare that Qiao and Wang described 17 years ago.

These deep national and global vulnerabilities require us to think about conflict and warfare in a much more holistic way than ever before. We still think of warfare as primarily military in nature, channeling our 20th-century experience. But our adversaries can now bypass the military domain completely and can directly attack how we live our lives. And now, unlike in 1999, nearly anyone with a smart phone or laptop can join that fight.

In our inaugural Strategic Outpost column, we asked a provocative question: Is traditional warfare dead? Our conclusion today remains the same: No, it is not dead, but it is increasingly irrelevant for average Americans. The utility of military power is becoming increasingly limited, confined to foreign battlefields and directed against armed adversaries. In an age of unrestricted warfare, how will we protect our country and our increasingly cyber-centric way of life at home from those same adversaries who can attack and disrupt us without firing a shot? Against those who realize that they no longer need to build an army, navy, or air force to wage a potentially catastrophic war against the United States?

Seventeen years ago, Qiao and Wang warned us that these myriad new forms of non-military warfare were coming. Today we all now live on that battlefield — an unlimited zone of conflict that can reach each one of us in every aspect of our lives and work. The unconstrained notions of modern war articulated in Unrestricted Warfare have now arrived. Boundaries between soldiers and civilians, combatants and bystanders have all but disappeared in this dangerous new world. Providing effective national security in this unprecedented environment of mass exposure requires our policymakers to plan for unrestricted warfare. This growing and nearly boundless threat requires us to develop better policies, better deterrent capabilities, and far more developed defenses. We can’t wait for the first big attack of the next war to throw society into chaos — rethinking what war now means in our interconnected world demands the attention of our civilian and military leaders today.


Lt. General David W. Barno, USA (Ret.) is a Distinguished Practitioner in Residence, and Dr. Nora Bensahel is a Distinguished Scholar in Residence, at the School of International Service at American University. Both also serve as Nonresident Senior Fellows at the Atlantic Council. Their column appears in War on the Rocks every other Tuesday. To sign up for Barno and Bensahel’s Strategic Outpost newsletter, where you can track their articles as well as their public events, click here.
 

SSTemplar

Veteran Member
This article in a round about way describes the war fare that has thken place in this country for the last 100 years. That war has about reached it's conclusion.
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
Sun Tzu wrote for warlord armies, not the armed forces of nation states. There WERE NO nation states when Sun Tzu was alive.

Serious students study the GENERATIONS of warfare and its evolution over time in parallel with the changing political realities of the times in which wars took place.

Right now I would suggest serious study of one John Robb is in order - Brave New War is the title of one of his books, and is a good intro to where we are today. See globalguerrillas.typepad.com for updates.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Sun Tzu wrote for warlord armies, not the armed forces of nation states. There WERE NO nation states when Sun Tzu was alive.

Serious students study the GENERATIONS of warfare and its evolution over time in parallel with the changing political realities of the times in which wars took place.

Right now I would suggest serious study of one John Robb is in order - Brave New War is the title of one of his books, and is a good intro to where we are today. See globalguerrillas.typepad.com for updates.

Technically, the Europe that Clausewitz was writing about was also a warlord based one being on the tail end of the "right of kings" era and the feudal state.

That being said, Robb is a very good source...
 

Double_A

TB Fanatic
Speaking of Sun Tzu's book The Art of War I picked up two copies at Barnes and Nobel last Christmas. One for me and gift wrapped the other for a person I thought would enjoy a nice pocket hard bound copy.

Dude Clear you mailbox and pm me.
 

almost ready

Inactive
Technically, the Europe that Clausewitz was writing about was also a warlord based one being on the tail end of the "right of kings" era and the feudal state.

That being said, Robb is a very good source...

Nation states, to a greater extent than 20 years ago, are a polite fiction. There are few countries, to my knowledge, that don't have "no go" areas for their supposed governments. Some exceptions, such as Japan, have not split their tribes up to be subject to other rule.

Warlords rule. Nation States per se, were invented in the 1800's and depended for the most part on splitting up tribes into neighboring states to maintain their governing hegemony. We are paying a high price today, as the weapon power to disrupt rule is much, much less expensive than that needed to maintain order.

Why the rulers of the EU decided to deliberately trash and destroy their own area of governance is a mystery that has fed the rumor mills of the world.

How many others at TB keep a translation of sun tsu's art of war by the bedside and refer to it, reading segments for future contemplation? 'fess up! (not the only one, there are stacks, but it's in a place of easy reach....)

Time to dust off the warning book by Robert Kaplan, "The Coming Anarchy", in parens as it was originally a series of articles and this was the title of one. Atlantic Magazine, 1994. One of my go-to books to understand the rise of the Muslim world and the chaos it turns into "peace". Yes, it is a nightmare rule, but people can walk safely to market and home and there is food to buy. Should be next to Sun Tsu on everyone's shelf.

The people running our (and Western Europe's) show and teaching our colleges are so horribly deluded, it must be a huge psy op to destroy the country's fabric. Errors of this magnitude don't just happen. Period.

Could it really be as simple as pure destruction because "If I can't have it nobody will"? Surely they know they have destroyed the very nations they pledged to support (here read "states", which were effectively a group of nations bound by a common defense treaty and decision to open commerce and travel freely between them, without tariffs nor border controls).
 

Ragnarok

On and On, South of Heaven
"All Warfare Is Based Upon Deception"
- Sun Tzu

"War is Deceit"
- Muhammad

Qu'ran 8: 20-23 - "O ye who believe! obey Allah and his apostle and turn not away from him when ye hear (him speak). Nor be like those who say "we hear" but listen not: For the worst of beasts in the sight of Allah are the deaf and the dumb those who understand not. If Allah had found in them any good He would indeed have made them listen; (as it is) if He had made them listen they would but have turned back and declined (faith)."

Muhammad was lashing out against the good people of Medina and calling them bad Muslims for not following his orders to fight ( Again, note the lower case "him" that the people do not listen to ).

While it is obvious that this demented doctrine needs to be exposed and exterminated-sentenced to die for its crimes-bad Muslims should be leading the parade. Their faux deity just called them the vilest of creatures. Yes, any Muslim who does not follow Muhammad’s orders to murder infidels, to pillage and plunder them is "deaf and dumb, senseless, the worst of beasts".

I beg any Muslim reading these words to let them sink in. Your god condemns you if you to not lash out in Jihad, if you do not fight to the death for his demented cause. If the Qur’an is true, if Allah is God, if Muhammad was a prophet—and you are a peaceful, loving Muslim-you are destined for a hell even more torturous than that prepared for the hospitality of the infidels. It’s a lose-lose game, with your soul at stake. If Islam is true, you’re toast. If Islam is a lie, you live in the poverty of a delusional doctrine and will spend eternity separated from Yahweh, your creator. It doesn’t have to be that way

Before we leave this stunning indictment of Islam, I’d like to address the opening salvo of the 20th verse. Muhammad said that any time he speaks he must be believed, followed, and obeyed. Not Allah, him. Even Ishaq agrees:

Ishaq:322 - “Allah said, ‘Do not turn away from Muhammad when he is speaking to you. Do not contradict his orders. And do not be a hypocrite, one who pretends to be obedient to him and then disobeys him. Those who do so will receive My vengeance. You must respond to the Apostle when he summons you to war.”

Technically, one cannot be a bad Muslim. A peaceful, loving person is either a non-Muslim or a hypocrite. Therefore, all true Muslims obey Islam’s dictates and are bad people!

Muhammad’s summons was to raid civilians and steal their property. This wasn’t holy war; it was terrorism. Also, to follow Muhammad’s orders, as Allah is compelling, one must understand the Sunnah and comply with its Hadith. That is the only place the prophet’s commands and terrorist example can be found. From this point forward Islam is a terrorist manifesto. Its creed is: obey Muhammad, fight for Muhammad and pay Muhammad.

Since the last Qur’anic pronouncement was too transparent even for Islam’s prophet, the megalomaniac stepped aside momentarily and placed himself back on equal footing with his god:

Qu'ran 8:24 - "O ye who believe! give your response to Allah and His apostle when He calleth you to that which will give you life; and know that Allah cometh in between a man and his heart and that it is He to whom Ye shall (all) be gathered."

Ever deceitful, Muhammad and Allah are calling Muslims to fight to the death for their benefit, yet they say they are being called to life.

The hateful and violent message of the Qur’an is as clear as Mein Kampf.

Qu'ran 8:39 - "O believers, fight them until there is no more mischief and the Deen of Allah (way of life prescribed by Allah) is established completely; but if they do stop from mischief, then surely Allah is observant of all their actions."

In or out of context, this is unequivocal. The Islamic war machine must continue to roll until every soul on earth “submits to the religion of Allah.” There will be no understandings, no appeasements, no compromises, no treaties. It is surrender or die. And this verse cannot be misinterpreted, corrupted, or dismissed. The order is clear: “Fight until the whole world is in submission to Islam.”

But should you want confirmation, Ishaq, the first imam to record the message of fundamental Islam interprets the verse this way:

Ishaq:324 -“He said, Fight them so that there is no more rebellion, and religion, all of it, is for Allah only. Allah must have no rivals.”

This verse should be hung in every church, in every synagogue, in every school, and statehouse. It ought to be plastered on the front door of the State Department, Pentagon, Capitol, and White House.

Incidentally, there are two wars being announced here, not one. The first is religious; the second is spiritual. Submission to the religion of Islam is entirely political, a war designed to suppress and plunder. That battle is being fought with swords, guns, and bombs. It destroys physical things including the flesh. The spiritual war is being waged for souls. Allah, as Satan, will not tolerate a rival. “Allahu Akbar,” (Allah is Greater) is the battle cry. Lucifer wants us to worship him. Islam is simply his most effective and deadly scheme.

Before anyone puts their trust in the “peace process” or supports a treaty with an Islamic organization or nation, they should consider Allah’s admonition:

Qu'ran 8:58-60 - "If thou fearest treachery from any group throw back ( their covenant/treaty ) to them ( so as to be ) on equal terms: For Allah loveth not the treacherous. Let not the unbelievers think that they can get the better (of Allah): they will never frustrate (them). Against them make ready your strength to the utmost of your power including steeds of war to strike terror into (the hearts of) the enemies of Allah and your enemies and others besides whom ye may not know but whom Allah doth know. Whatever ye shall spend in the cause of Allah shall be repaid unto you and ye shall not be treated unjustly."

Allah is ordering Muslims to terrorize his enemies, their enemies, and enemies yet unknown. This is as purposeful as a panzer tank, as unyielding as a kamikaze. It explains why Muslims are terrorists. And it foretells our future if we fail to expose this doctrine, if we fail to annihilate it before it annihilates us.

If you were ignorant of verses 57 through 60, you might be suckered by the 61st.

Qu'ran 8:61-62 - “But if the enemy inclines toward peace, do you (also) incline to peace, and trust in Allah.” However…“Should they intend to deceive or cheat you, verily Allah suffices: He strengthened you with His aid and with the Believers.” The small print here is real important. “Should they intend to deceive or cheat” is an open invitation to invoke 8:57 to 60. It presupposes a hypothetical before anything occurs. And Muhammad knew it. Within days he would claim that he “feared” the Jewish Qaynuqa. He broke the treaty he had formed with them, besieged them, exiled them, and stole their homes, property, and businesses.

This brings us to:

Qu'ran 8:65 - "O apostle! rouse the believers to the fight. If there are twenty amongst you patient and persevering they will vanquish two hundred: if a hundred they will vanquish a thousand of the unbelievers: for these are a people without understanding."

On September 11th nineteen “good” Muslims followed Allah’s instructions and murdered 3,000 innocent men, women, and children, fathers and mothers, sons and daughters, brothers and sisters. They snuffed out their lives because we were a people devoid of understanding.

I know that the temptation is to read on. But please, before you do, ponder the implications of this surah. This is the spirit of Islam speaking directly to Muslims. It is why they are terrorists.

Such could be said for America. The U.S. State Department has managed to lose the peace because they are ignorant of the truth. Believing that the “enemy of my enemy is my friend,” we fight with less than ideal intentions. As a nation we have partnered with the wrong people and thereby created our next foe. We liberated China and they slaughtered us in Korea.We supported Stalin and it killed us in Vietnam.We funded the Mujahidun and they became al-Qaeda. We furnished biological weapons to Saddam and Americans died to keep him from using them. Not to be outdone, we have formed alliances with Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Syria against Israel so that our friend might be victimized.

On the spiritual level what of the plurality of pastors in the Christian church that urge "tolerance" and promote "multi-culturalism" they are as dangerous as they are ignorant of what they speak and open their churches and congregations, who they are supposed to be protecting as shepards, to this poisonous ideology.

This is the price we pay for our blindness, for seeing Islam as a religion rather than a terrorist dogma.We allow mosques to preach the hatred and violence of the 8th surah right next door to our businesses, our schools, and our homes. The crater that was the World Trade Center stands as a memorial to our ignorance.

Qu'ran 8:67-69 - "It is not for any Prophet to have captives until he hath made slaughter in the land. Ye desire the lure of this world and Allah desireth (for you) the Hereafter, and Allah is Mighty, Wise. Had it not been for an ordinance of Allah which had gone before, an awful doom had come upon you on account of what ye took. Very well, enjoy the booty which you have taken, for it is lawful and pure, but in the future fear Allah. Allah is Forgiving, Merciful."

What are we, as a society, missing in the message of Islam? Allah, the god of 1.5 billion people, not only authorizes war until the whole world is subdued and subservient to Islam. But, as we see in the above passage, encourages "slaughter" in the land and declares that war and the taking of "booty" is "lawful and pure".

Someone want to tell me, again, how Allah is the same as Jesus or Yahweh of the Bible?

Someone want to tell me, again, how "they hate us" because of our foreign policy in the Middle East?

Someone want o tell me. again, that Islam is a peace loving religion?

So, now you know who the enemy really is. You know why they kill. You know that the civilized world will continue to be terrorized as long as we tolerate Islam. It will continue to destroy men’s souls, seducing them to murder and mayhem. Only one question remains: what will you do about it?
 

almost ready

Inactive
"All Warfare Is Based Upon Deception"
- Sun Tzu

"War is Deceit"
- Muhammad

Sun Tsu would be proud to achieve advance placement of an army behind enemy lines. It also explains those caches of weapons interdicted that were headed onto the European mainland.

They got in, however, by having highly placed figures with deep pockets determined to destroy Europe, already accepted as "European". There's the rub.
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
It's the same war, using the same strategies and tactics, that 'they' are bringing here to the FUSA as well.

If you are not prepared to fight as well as survive - YOU ARE UNPREPARED!

Get prepped ...
 

RB Martin

Veteran Member
Someone want to tell me, again, how Allah is the same as Jesus or Yahweh of the Bible?

Someone want to tell me, again, how "they hate us" because of our foreign policy in the Middle East?

Someone want o tell me. again, that Islam is a peace loving religion?

So, now you know who the enemy really is. You know why they kill. You know that the civilized world will continue to be terrorized as long as we tolerate Islam. It will continue to destroy men’s souls, seducing them to murder and mayhem. Only one question remains: what will you do about it?

Good summation!
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
Best seen at the original site...

And REMEMBER - your community IS your country.
=====================

http://www.stopshouting.blogspot.com/2016/04/past-as-prelude-in-fusa.html#more

Monday, April 18, 2016

Violent Balkans Past as Prelude in FUSA - Manufactured Crisis & Ethnic Civil Unrest

As an icebreaker, I am writing this to tune up my neurons for my next book review. It has occurred to me that the dearth of historical understanding in the X/Y/Z generation calls for a brief review of what functions were performed to effect national policy in the Balkans. I am writing this from the view of Serbia, although the lessons in this are universal and need to be understood. Take advance note that the so-called "Western" style of warfare gives short shrift to these topics. These are not for the squeamish, as it addresses the intersection of Europa and Islam, of who gets to rot in a field and devoured by the crows, and who does not. Never forget that the propaganda of such events is of critical importance.


"Diary of an Uncivil War" written by Canadian soldier/journalist Scott Taylor, editor and publisher of Esprit de Corps magazine. Written from firsthand observations inside Yugoslavia and Macedonia

Begin with the concentration of a population into disadvantaged pockets (to ensure cultural/ethnic/class enemies occupy scattered, not mutually supporting terrain).

Manufactured/created conflict acts as a driver to the prey, it gets a group/population to do "something" (reaction), such as move or get into conflict/proximity with the other as a "cat's paw". Although this is a macro view of FUSA, your local area will reflect similar issues.

http://www.cdc.gov/pcd/issues/2007/oct/07_0091.htm
Tactic of burning/destruction of shelter and sustenance as a deliberative means to force movement, control resettlement, erase cultural history. Recent examples:

-American Civil War (burned records counties; burning of the Shenandoah Valley, "breadbasket of the South")
-Nazi invasions


-ISIS (Palmyra)

-Taliban (Bamiyan)

-Vietnam

When strength does not allow direct elimination of a pocket of opposition, the default tactic is to encourage third parties to evacuate them for "humanitarian" reasons. Note that the third world is not giving up their power players and competents/functional, just detritus, rapists, felons and assorted scum (Mariel Boat Lift, trans Mediterranean crimmigrant hordes, Lesbos Island crimmigrant route).


"Relocation failures"

The goal of these principles is to homogenize an area by removal of the other. Ask yourself how "section 8", HUD diktats, and stealth "refugee resettlement" ("unaccompanied minors, "Syrian Refugee crisis") is/are a method of accomplishing this in your area. Take a look at the graphic below and ponder a moment how ghettoization worked out then.


http://image.slidesharecdn.com/holo...5/holocaust-in-poland-4-638.jpg?cb=1419360411
If external players interfere, strike back on their own soil. This widens the war and generates political pressure against external involvement. If the warmongers/Neocons/Communist vanguardists sense real and up close personal risk, it forces a recalculation of if "the juice is worth the squeeze".


THIS is why you A) take the key terrain/high ground AND take it FIRST.


Seizure of "peacekeepers". They are leverage, no matter how they are treated. Hezbollah snatched 2 Israeli soldiers, goaded Israel into an unwinnable war. There are lessons in this for all.

Show great contrast in how captured belligerent groups are treated... it forces fractures in any coalition. This peels away coalition members who do not see it as existential.

Above all, while they watch the clock, you and yours watch the calendar. Outlast and WIN. As a closer, consider if you will if/when you will see the equivalent of THIS in America. Ponder if #BLM killings of police are the same with reversed roles. It strikes me as uncanny how similar this sequence is to the demise of Lee Harvey Oswald. How long until FUSA has this moment? Has the moment come and passed to the next exciting stage under Obama?


Nice S&W Air Weight in action. Note that the VC suspect here received street justice for wiping out the family and personal friend of the Police Chief. The media conveniently forgets that.

Here is LHO on his day with Jack Ruby...


Early LHO.....Kind of reminds one of Bradley/Chelsea Manning, no?


Just like the Saigon Police Chief pic: victim, killer, shocked bystander roles filled.


I'll leave you with a video of a classic American song, by "Filter". Cogitate well.

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THIS IS YOUR WAR, folks. Ready or not.
 

Troke

On TB every waking moment
"..Someone want to tell me, again, how "they hate us" because of our foreign policy in the Middle East? ...."

Well, I heard Ron Paul flatly state that our meddling in the ME caused 9/11. Guiliani was right there and was not amused.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
"..Someone want to tell me, again, how "they hate us" because of our foreign policy in the Middle East? ...."

Well, I heard Ron Paul flatly state that our meddling in the ME caused 9/11. Guiliani was right there and was not amused.

The issue of pre-conceived notions know no bounds as to whom they efflict.
 
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