Eric Margolis
exposes the al Qaeda bogeyman.
"How did al-Qaida, a tiny anti-Communist group in Afghanistan that had
no more than 200 active members in 2001 become a supposed worldwide
threat?
How can al-Qaida be all over the Mideast, North Africa, and now much
of black Africa? This after the US spent over $1 trillion trying to
stamp out al-Qaida in Afghanistan and Pakistan?
The answer is simple. As an organization and threat, al-Qaida barely
exists. But as a name, al-Qaida and “terrorism” have become the
west’s handy universal term for armed groups fighting western influence,
corruption or repression in Asia and Africa. Al-Qaida is nowhere – but
everywhere."
Like-minded jihadists are everywhere, and the US always centralizes enemies, like the drug cartels.
"If you’re a rebel group seeking publicity, the fastest way is by pledging allegiance to the shadowy, nowhere al-Qaida."
It benefits both sides.
"US special forces, drone and manned aircraft, and CIA mercenaries are
already in action around Fallujah and Ramadi. As in past years, CIA is
paying millions to Sunni tribesmen to fight anti-government forces.
Crazy as it sounds, the US is considering buying attack helicopters
from Russia to give to the Baghdad regime, as it is now doing in
Afghanistan with the Kabul regime."
Crazy is right.
"Speaking of Afghanistan, former Pentagon chief Leon Panetta admitted
that there were no more than 25 to 50 al-Qaida members in Afghanistan.
But now, al-Qaida has popped up in Pakistan, Jordan, Saudi Arabia,
Yemen, across North Africa, Nigeria, Mali, Central African Republic, and
so on. Somalia’s anti-western resistance group, Shebab, is also
branded “al-Qaida linked.”"
And they probably are linked by ideology.
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