A new Isis video taunts America, urging the nation to ‘bring it on’ before adding 'your numbers only increase us in faith'
Daily Mail: ISIS taunt America in new video urging them to 'bring it on' as they vow to bring fire on their enemies once '80 banners' have been raised against them and mock US soldier suicides
* The propaganda video desperately highlights suicide rates among soldiers
* The video claims that America is 'too weak' to put boots on the ground
* A Hollywood-style voiceover says that ISIS has the greatest ally - Allah
Barack Obama recently dismissed ISIS as ‘a bunch of killers with good social media’ – and appears to have prompted a sickening response from the terror group which mocks US soldiers' suicide rates.
A new video released by the Islamists also claims the Prophet predicted 'Islam's enemies' would be destroyed by 'the flames of war' when the number of banners opposed to them - a reference to the international coalition - reached 80.
Currently, 60 nations officially oppose ISIS.
The video taunts America, urging the nation to ‘bring it on’ before adding ‘your numbers only increase us in faith’.
WNU Editor: Their propaganda videos are getting better with each passing year.
3 comments:
Link doesn't work.
Wow .... YouTube can be very fast. You are right Jason. But the link on the Daily Mail post for the video still works.
http://www.timesofisrael.com/russian-crackdown-on-muslims-fuels-exodus-to-is/
Russian crackdown on Muslims fuels exodus to IS
Residents of Dagestan’s Salafi community describe systematic police harassment, prompting some 1,000 people to leave for Syria
By NATALIYA VASILYEVA November 26, 2015, 12:29
In this photo taken Friday, Nov. 13, 2015, men attend a Friday prayer at the mosque on Kotrova street in Dagestan's regional capital Makhachkala, Russia. (Sergei Grits/AP)
Newsroom
KOMSOMOLSKOYE, Russia (AP) — Rashid Magomedov had had enough, his father said. The devout Muslim was detained several times by Russian security police, spent two months in jail on charges that later were dismissed, and complained that police repeatedly planted weapons at his home as a pretext to arrest him.
So it was no surprise that the 30-year-old man fled to Syria to join the Islamic State group, leaving a pregnant wife and two children behind in Dagestan, Russia’s southernmost republic.
“The fact that he left for Syria — the police are to blame. They wouldn’t leave the boy alone,” said Magomedov’s elderly father, Zaynudin.
The heavy-handed security presence in the predominantly Muslim area is an outgrowth of two separatist wars in nearby Chechnya in the mid-1990s that spread an Islamic insurgency throughout the North Caucasus region of Russia. Militants carried out countless attacks, including suicide bombings and kidnappings, to pursue their goal of establishing Islamic fundamentalism, or simply to seek revenge against corrupt officials.
This culture of violence has fostered a generation of hardened fighters, which combined with the continuing crackdown by police and other security forces, has made areas like Komsomolskoye a fertile recruiting ground for the Islamic State group.
In this photo taken Thursday, Nov. 12, 2015, Abdulla Magomedov, brother of Rashid Magomedov who left to become an Islamic State fighter and was killed in Syria, sits at home in the village of Komsomolskoye, Dagestan, Russia. (Sergei Grits/AP)
In this photo taken Thursday, Nov. 12, 2015, Abdulla Magomedov, brother of Rashid Magomedov who left to become an Islamic State fighter and was killed in Syria, sits at home in the village of Komsomolskoye, Dagestan, Russia. (Sergei Grits/AP)
Few efforts are made by Russian authorities to stop young men from leaving. Many in Dagestan see the intimidating security presence as not only fueling the exodus but also serving to rid the region of potential militants by encouraging them to flee.
As a result, almost everyone in Komsomolskoye seems to know someone who has left for Syria to join the Islamic State group.
Dagestani police say 11 people have left Komsomolskoye to become IS fighters in Syria, but when residents are asked to list the names of those who have left, the number appears to be far bigger.
Nearly a third of the estimated 3,000 Russians who are believed to have gone to fight alongside IS militants in Syria are from Dagestan, a republic of 3 million people, the regional police say. They are men and women from both rich and poor families, from villages where young girls wear the hijab, to towns where women walk around in short skirts.
Komsomolskoye is one of several places where officials routinely announce “counter-terrorist operations” and send SWAT teams to raid houses of suspected militants at dawn. The main road in and out of the village is guarded around the clock by security officers armed with automatic weapons, and hundreds of residents are under surveillance, with their names kept on a so-called Wahhabi list.
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