Author Topic: hezbollah in mex  (Read 4244 times)

ccd

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Re: hezbollah in mex
« Reply #10 on: November 03, 2013, 10:04:50 PM »
  Hezbollah has a long history of smuggling drugs and arms around the globe. This has given the organization a great deal of expertise in laundering money and forging documents on a global scale. They are also able to procure arms at the same level as any country. They are able to procure weapons from established sellers(Iran, Russia, China and North Korea) that no other militia group in the world can get. This goes from everything as simple as ammo to relatively sophisticated things such as short range cruise missiles, air defense systems and more. Unfortunately Hezbollah now works in concert with the IRGC in most of their fundraising activities. The US wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have greatly enriched both groups as they acted as intermediaries for suppliers that wished to remain anonymous.
   Hezbollah's has been active in the western hemisphere for quite a while, originally in South America where there were many Shiites who fled Lebanon's civil war. Hezbollah has slowly moved ever closer to the US. Although to be honest Hezbollah has quite a presence in the US since even before the civil war (Lebanese.) But most of this US activity has historically just been involved smuggling of items into and out of the USA to generate funds for use in Lebanon. Unfortunately this new Hezbollah activity  is conducted on behalf of the IRGC. Even as corrupt as many of the militaries in Latin America are: they don't have an endless supply of weaponry. The more than decades long drug wars, in Mexico and Columbia before it, have exhausted a great deal of the supply of arms available. Not to mention that even lax suppliers such as South Korea, eventually get tired of their arms ending up in the hands of drug cartels, and  impose conditions on future purchases.
   The IRGC runs many shadow trading companies around the globe and are able to get containerized shipments through several important Asian ports. These then make their way to Mexican ports as legitimate cargo. This is especially important in regards to certain items that have recently become harder to get directly from Chinese companies. IRGC involvement in Venezuela is quite open, and even though hell has one more occupant; the current leadership(Venezuela) has always viewed Mexico, and it's elites, as a more immediate threat than the USA. The Venezuelans have decided to take the American tactic for Mexico from the early 1900's: Anything they can do to destabilize Mexico is in their best interests. The activities of Hezbollah and IRGC work towards this end.
   Unfortunately the IRGC and Hezbollah really have no need to smuggle agents across the border as they are quite easily able to enter the United States legally; or are already US citizens or Canadian citizens.

tombogan03884

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Re: hezbollah in mex
« Reply #11 on: November 04, 2013, 01:48:36 PM »
Muslim Brotherhood is here as well.

http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2013/11/exposed_names_and_identities_of_muslim_brotherhood_operatives_in_us.html



El Watan, one of Egypt's most widely circulated and read newspapers, has published a report discussing the Muslim Brotherhood's influence over the United States, especially in the context of inciting pro-Brotherhood policies against Egypt's popular June 30 Revolution, which resulted in the ousting of Muhammad Morsi and the Brotherhood from power.

Titled (in translation), "With Names, Identities, and Roadmap...  El Watan Exposes Brotherhood Cells in America," it's written by investigative journalist Ahmed al-Tahiri, who begins the report by saying:

    In the context of El Watan's ongoing investigation concerning the Brotherhood's cells and lobby inside America that support the regime of the ousted [Morsi], and which intensified their activities to attack and defame the June 30 Revolution, informed sources have disclosed to El Watan newspaper the names and cell entities of the Brotherhood and their roadmap of activities all throughout the United States of America.

    The sources said that these organizations, which are spread throughout the States, agitated for and were supportive of the decisions taken by Muhammad Morsi's project to "Brotherhoodize" and consolidate power [in Egypt] and gave a favorable opinion to the general American public that Morsi's decisions were welcomed by the public [in Egypt]. Following the June 30 Revolution, these groups  launched a malicious war in order to incite the American administration to take hostile decisions against Egypt, with the aim of bringing back the Brotherhood to the power.

El Watan then goes on to name names, saying that the following activists and entities are Brotherhood operatives working within the United States (reproduced verbatim):

    Union of Egyptian Imams in North America, represented by Sheikh Muhammad al-Bani
    The Egyptian American Foundation for Development
    Dr. Khalid Lamada, New York
    Dr. Hassan al-Sayah, Virginia
    The Egyptian Network in America, led by Dr. Muhammad Helmi
    Dr. Akram al-Zand, Sa'ad Foundation
    Muhammad al-Khashab, Head of ART channelsin America
    Sameh al-Henawi, member, Business Association of America
    Dr. Hany Saqr, member, Egyptian Association in America
    Dr. Khalid Hassan, Maryland
    Dr. Muhammad Abdel Hakem, Seattle
    Dr. Ahmed Ismat al-Bendari, President, Islamic Society of America
    Walid Yusari, Chicago
    Ahmed Shadid, New Jersey
    Ahmed al-Hatab, Indiana
    Dr. Muhammad Morjan, Boston
    Ramadan Ridwan, Houston
    Ahmed Fayez, Las Vegas
    Dr. Amru Abbas, member, Egyptian Foundation in Michigan
    Dr. Safi al-Din Hamed, Pennsylvania
    Dr. Hamdy Radwan, North Carolina
    Ahmed Shehata, Director, Egyptian American Organization for Democracy and Human Rights
    Dr. Iman Shehata, New York
    Dr. Muhammad Amru Attawiya, member, Organization of Islamic Relief in the United States
    Dr. Khalid al-Sayes, member, Rebuilding of Egypt Foundation
    Dr. Tariq Hussein, member, American Islamic Relations Council (CAIR)
    Dr Hisham al-Gayar, member, Egyptian Foundation, Michigan
    Amin Mahmoud, Maryland

As a most recent example, El Watan quotes from an American op-ed published on October 16 (just two days before the publication of the El Watan report itself).  Titled "Egypt: 100 days later" and written by Ahmed Shehata of the Egyptian American Organization for Democracy and Human Rights, the piece appeared in The Hill, the Capitol's most widely circulated newspaper, published specifically for Congress.

The op-ed is certainly a prime example of pro-Muslim Brotherhood propaganda that actually tries to "shame" U.S. policymakers into returning the Brotherhood back to power in the name of "democracy."

Key excerpts follow:

    While the U.S. must consider its own interests in the region, it is baffling and disheartening to think the current administration would choose to discount the suffering that continues to occur on a daily basis as well as the complete violation of democratic principles which it espouses to the rest of the world....  As this past week marked 100 days since the coup and the lives of the Egyptian people continue to be sacrificed, the United States cannot be silent any longer for the sake of their own interests and convenience....  To that end, Egypt represents a golden opportunity for the U.S. to uphold democratic values by pushing for the reinstatement of the democratically elected government, despite their shortcomings. This would aid tremendously in showing the world that, above any one particular physical interest, stands the mantle of freedom and the rule of law.

Anyone familiar with the real happenings of Egypt knows that Shehata's assertions are complete opposites of the truth: the military ousted the Brotherhood in response to the will of millions of Egyptians -- the people, the demos, as in democracy -- who took to the streets protesting against the totalitarian Morsi government.  Moreover, it is the Muslim Brotherhood and their supporters who have been committing numerous human rights atrocities -- including the slaughter and persecution of Christians, the torture and murder of many Egyptians (including before the revolution), and the destruction and torching of some 85 Christian churches.

Shehata seems to think that if the Muslim Brotherhood and their supporters terrorize, murder, destroy, persecute, and betray their nation -- which is precisely why tens of millions of average Egyptians rose up against them (though you might not know that following Al Jazeera-led Western media that distorted the popularity of the revolution) -- as long as they won "elections" (which from the start many authorities insisted they didn't), then that is all that matters; and, if need be, the U.S. must war with Egypt's military and people on behalf of the ousted terrorists -- all in the name of "democracy" and "human rights," as Shehata's U.S.-based Brotherhood front is laughably called.

That such a shameless piece of Muslim Brotherhood propaganda can be published in the most influential and widely read Capitol Hill publication certainly goes a long way in validating El Watan's claims that the Brotherhood has its tentacles all around the United States' points of influence.

 

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