The sudden
implosion of the vast Iraqi Army of the Baghdad
Puppet Regime constructed by the U.S. is an
excellent early warning of the fates of the other
U.S. puppet states in the Muslim World—Afghanistan,
Egypt, Pakistan, Yemen, Libya, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait,
Bahrain, U.A.E., and lesser ones. As always, there
are many differences among these puppet states,
including degrees of being puppets of the U.S., but
the general picture of them and their situation now
are roughly similar.
The U.S. War
Against Islam, which began with the annihilations of
Afghanistan and Iraq roughly thirteen years ago, led
to a sudden, immense, secret transformation of the
Muslim World from anxious allies of the U.S. to
secret enemies and led to the rapid growth of the
Holy Warrior guerrilla groups and parties started
earlier by Hizbollah and al-Queda because of the
U.S. support of the Israeli occupation of Lebanon
and Palestine and the growing hatred of the older
U.S. puppets, especially Saudi Arabia. The Islamic
peoples had begun secretly turning against the U.S.
in the 1950′s and 1960′s as the U.S. began more and
more to quietly replace the retreating European
empires in the region and support pro-American
puppet regimes. The U.S. CIA with U.K. help worked
with corrupt Iranian forces to overthrow the Iranian
democracy in 1953 and replace it with the terrorist
secret police state of the Shah and Savak. As that
bit of U.S. treachery and conspiracy became more and
more known in Iran, Iran became the first of the
revolutionary Islamic states to turn against the
U.S. Other peoples learned the same hard lessons
over the decades and followed in their footsteps.
Since Bush et al. declared a “World War” against the
“Islamic Axis of Evil” after 9/11 attacks on New
York and Washington by al-Queda, a predominantly
Saudi guerrilla group enraged at the U.S. over its
puppet Saudi Arabian police state, the whole Muslim
World of one and a half billion people have turned
overwhelmingly against the U.S. and more and more
secretly support guerrilla groups against the U.S.
puppet regimes oppressing them. Pakistan, a huge
nuclear state with about 150 millon people quickly
went from pro-U.S. to fiercely anti-U.S. over the
annihilation of Afghanistan, the systematic plane
and then drone attacks on Pakistanis, and all the
rest.
As far as I can tell from what we can see so far in
this implosion of the al-Maliki puppet regime in
Iraq, this small army of fierce Holy Warriors of
somewhere between a few thousand and ten thousand
was able to terrify and disperse the huge army and
police forces of the Iraqi state numbering nearly
100,000 in the North [out of about one million
nationwide] because the Sunni majority in those
areas welcomed them or went along with them and,
very importantly, I expect the Sunni minority in the
Shia dominated national army and police did the
same. It was probably this sudden desertion of tens
of thousands of Sunni soldiers and policemen who had
been working with them that threw them into panicky
flight.
All of these puppet regimes who have tried to build
nationwide security forces in nations that are very
pluralistic and divided in their populations [like
Iraq which is divided into the Shia, Sunni and
Kurds] face the same danger. They are normally
highly infiltrated by other ethnic groups who resent
the dominant puppet regimes as well as by the major
guerrilla forces, since guerrillas always do this, a
crucial reason the U.S. and its puppet S. Vietnamese
governments lost the war in Vietnam and the puppet
forces suddenly imploded when seriously attacked by
guerrillas and the North Vietnamese army.
These U.S. constructed national security forces look
formidable on paper and can growl fiercely as long
as they are not seriously attacked by homogeneous,
tight knit, fierce and effective guerrilla armies.
When that happens they become paper tigers and flee,
even throwing their vastly superior weapons away in
terror.
Napoleon said that the moral factors of war, all the
nonphysical ones, are three times more powerful than
the physical. That remains true in general in our
age of high tech. weapons. But there are situations
such as I have been describing above in which the
moral factors are vastly more important than that.
These Sunni guerrillas with a little help from spies
in Mosul threw a vast, modern army with vast weapon
superiority into total panic by doing little more
than huffing and puffing on their rams’ horns, a
greater feat than Joshua’s defeat of the fortress
forces of Jericho with the help of God.
These Holy Warriors overrunning Iraq have overrun
almost all the Sunni areas with the help of the
locals in a few days. Now they are coming up against
the Holy Warrior Shia militias and probably
supporting Republican Guards of Iran which are
highly trained and very effective. If Moqtada al-Sadr
is able to get his partially moth-balled Mahdi Army
into fierce and organized fighting shape quickly,
the Shia will hold their heartland from Baghdad
south to Kuwait and the Persian Gulf. I argued many
years ago that Moqtada is the natural leader of Iraq
for many reasons, including the fact he is a holy
man, not corrupt like al-Maliki, and is able and
willing to work with Sunnis and Kurds. He is by far
the most beloved military leader of the Shia in Iraq
and he is even an old friend of the head of
Hizbollah, the vastly effective Shia guerrilla army
of Lebanon that has given the Syrian government a
victory after looking like it was doomed.
If I were the leader of this fierce little Holy
Warrior army, I would feint toward Baghdad to pin
down the Shia and mislead others, but I would speed
South to strike into the oil heartland of Saudi
Arabia in the N.W. where the Shia hate the Saudis
and the paid military forces from other countries
share that hatred. I would have sent a force down
from Syria through Jordan to join my invading army
in Saudi Arabia. I would promise big bonuses to the
paid foreign troops if they join me and then go home
after we seize the wealth of the Saudi puppet
tyrants. And I would be prepared to destroy the oil
shipment facilities in Saudia Arabia on the Gulf
instantly if the U.S. attacked us.
I think Saudi Arabia is a paper tiger and would
implode. We would have realized the dream of Osama
bin Laden, a Saudi Yemenite, and with the vast
wealth of Saudi Arabia in our control we would
rapidly build our Caliphate of loyal and fierce
Sunnis to control nearly half the oil exports of the
world, then build our Middle Eastern wide Caliphate
of all Sunnis and live in glory the rest of my days.
If that dream conquest failed, I would lead my
remaining forces back up to Iraq or through Jordan
into Syria and then into northern Iraq to control
that rich prize and build the Caliphate out from
that more slowly.
I think it is possible they will be thinking like me
and do that or something very similar.
In any event, the U.S. will for decades be reaping
the whirlwind of its incompetent and insanely stupid
“divide and conquer” plan in the Muslim World.
[N.B. I am not a Sunni and will not accept supreme
command of that Holy Warrior army if they do ask
me.]
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