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Allah the Exalted has said in Sura Nuh (71, 1-20):

We
sent Nuh to his people: ‘Warn your people
before a painful punishment comes to them.’
He said, ‘My people, I am a clear warner to you.
Worship Allah, have taqwa of Him and obey me.
He will forgive you your wrong actions
and defer you until a specified time.
When Allah’s time comes it cannot be deferred,
if you only knew.’
He said, ‘My Lord, I have called my people night and day
but my calling has only made them more evasive.
Indeed, every time I called them to Your forgiveness,
they put their fingers in their ears,
wrapped themselves up in their clothes
and were overweeningly arrogant.
Then I called them openly.
Then I addressed them publicly
and addressed them privately.
I said, “Ask forgiveness of your Lord.
Truly He is Endlessly Forgiving.
He will send heaven down on you in abundant rain
and reinforce you with more wealth and sons,
and grant you gardens and grant you waterways.
What is the matter with you that you do not hope
for honour from Allah,
when He created you by successive stages?
Do you not see how He created seven heavens in layers,
and placed the moon as a light in them
and made the sun a blazing lamp?
Allah caused you to grow from the earth
then will return you to it
and bring you out again.
Allah has spread the earth out as a carpet for you
so that you could use its wide valleys as roadways.”’
From the beginning to the end it must
be understood who is responsible for the anarchy, civil
war, and insurgence in Iraq. This heavy responsibility
cannot be laid on the occupying forces. The U.S. and
U.K. presence in the land is an effect, but must not be
mistaken for the cause.
In the great hall of the Café Rachid
of Damascus, on 7 April 1947, a christian orthodox
Syrian, one Michel Aflak, declared the launching of the
Ba’ath (resurrection!) Party. He declared: ‘Either our
contribution will be creative, audacious, and able to
transform the life of all Arabs, allowing them to pass
from decadence to progress, or else we will experience a
complete failure.’ Educated in Paris, he had been
trained in the thinking of the vitalist jewish
philosopher Bergson as well as Marx and Lenin. His
doctrine declared that Arab nationalism, together with
socialism, could unite the Arab world. He rejected
communism and Islamic Law, and saw the role of Islam as
being a psychological and passive force of that
unification.
On 30 July 1968 the Army strengthened
the Ba’athist hold on Iraq. Firstly, on 17 July, they
overthrew Abdelrahman Aref with the help of right-wing
officers. This was a rejection of Nasserite socialism
and Syrian Ba’athism. Into the foreground came the two
leading Iraqi Ba’athists, Ahmad Hasan el-Bakr and Saddam
Hussein. They claimed that they were restoring the Party
to its original Aflaki line. In confirmation of this,
Michel Aflak joined them in Baghdad. So it was that the
two greatest and most highly educated Arab nation states
plunged into an epoch dominated by christian socialist
doctrines, Nasser’s socialism a neo-communist secularism
for Egypt, and Saddam’s socialism a neo-fascist
secularism for Iraq.
It must never be forgotten how
enthusiastically Ba’athism was received by the western
powers. From the Pope downwards (or upwards), annual
good wishes poured in to Saddam Hussein, viewed
unanimously as the liberator of the Arabs from the Deen
of Islam. The first great wave of persecution was on the
‘ulema and institutions of Islam. This happened
immediately on the Ba’athist victory. The second wave of
religious persecution fell on the Shi‘a religion
following the implied menace to Iraq of the Iranian
Revolution. This second purge took on ghastly
proportions at the point that Iraq invaded Iran.
It must not be forgotten that
Saddam’s Iraq was not only admired but envied in its
neighbouring Arab countries. During the Iraq-Iran War,
the U.A.E. had agreed to host the Fiqh Conference which
I had initiated in series in Norwich, Granada, and
Tunis. The most prestigious ‘ulema, expert in the
Madhhab of the Ahl al-Madinah, had been gathered in Abu
Dhabi. On the second day of the Conference Shaykh Zayed
suspended the hearings, silenced these great scholars,
and obliged us to listen, aghast, to speakers who had
been flown in from Iraq and Syria. The event was turned
into a propaganda exercise glorifying the Saddam regime,
its war on Iran, and its social philosophy. Of that
disastrous event, one retains an image of the Iraqi
foreign minister (white suit, black shirt, white tie)
standing alongside Shaykh Kuftaro in his flowing robes,
who was flushed with his recent success in
christian-muslim dialogue—a work climaxed in 1993 with
his praying “Hail Mary, Mother of God,” in public with
Cardinal Keeler of Baltimore (astaghfirullah!).
Perhaps more distressing than the
hijacking of Islamic scholarship was the fact that this
brother Arab nation would in the shortest time offer its
bases to bomb yesterday’s Arab brothers and leader.
After betrayal there only remains decadence, and now
Dubai is plunging into a social programme to make its
territory a macabre mix of Las Vegas and a
telecommunications ideology whose moral content makes
freemasonry seem an exalted pan-religious excellence in
comparison.
On the day the American President
declared that the second Gulf War was over, of course,
the Iraqi War began. This insurrection has resulted in a
Double Bind.
A) The Civil War. Bearing in mind
that the Iraqi people did not wage war against the
regime themselves, except for two groups, the Kurds and
the Shi‘a, it was not surprising that the Civil War
represented a struggle between the educated and rich
atheist/nationalist elite and the formerly oppressed
Shi‘a masses, now a menacing majority.
B) The Liberation War. This has
pitched the nationalist Ba’athists, who did so well
under Saddam, being his technological elite, against
occupying invader forces.
This in turn has created a Double
View.
A) The Shi‘a consider the invasion as
a means to re-instate the Ba’athists, in other words,
that educated class able to service the oil industry. At
the same time the invaders are determined to avoid a
Shi‘a majority rule with the devastating implications of
a linkage with Shi‘a Iran. Thus the Shi‘a view the
invaders as ironically obliged to stop democracy, i.e.
majority rule, in Iraq.
B) The atheist/nationalists consider
the interim regime (Shalabi, Alawi, and the elevation of
Sistani as a papal figure) as nothing less than a
preparation for a Shi‘a take-over.
All this must be seen against another
duality, the Double Deen.
A) The Shi‘a religion has played its
hand brilliantly, or rather its hands. Its strategy has
been based on applying one of the founding doctrines of
Shi’ism, Taqiyya.
This has provided the equation of
‘different’ Shi‘a factions, internally at war.
1 — Interim Government personnel. Dr.
Shalabi: the cleverest man in Iraq, was perceived as
dangerous because of his open intellectual scorn of U.S.
subservience to a jewish agenda, that is, not Israel but
banking. Dr. Alawi: he is a man of undoubted integrity
whose main determination and anxiety is to end the
suffering of the poor people of Iraq.
2 — Muqtada As-Sadr, the heroic
rebel, and his ‘holy army’. He is the champion of a
militant Khomeinism, inevitably linking his military arm
with the machinations of the Iranian state.
3 — The Grand Ayatollah Sistani. The
western media have fallen for the successful application
of Taqiyya, and thus imagine that this exalted figure of
holiness somehow represents that calming and unifying
force that will unite the factions, because he is ‘above
the storm’.
The U.S., so lamentably served by
their uneducated intelligence people, believe that from
these ‘fighting factions’ they can rescue the middle
ground party, that is to say a grouping of Shi‘a in name
and loyalty, but agreeable to the atheist doctrine of
the separation of state from religion. This is what they
call the desired model, the Islamic football team
system, each in their colours, the Shi‘a team, the
‘Sunni’ team, the Isma‘ili team—but playing in the
stadium of the state.
B) The Deen of Islam is only a
phantom presence on the actual field of combat.
Islam was basically wiped out in the
early years of Ba’athism as we have previously stated,
but must emphasise. The primary perception of Saddam was
that he was in power to initiate a new atheist
democratic state with an elite of educated technocrats
to run the oil industry. Thus, under his regime the
expansion of christian missionary activity was
supported, since they were already a proven passive
force in ‘democracy’. The deep and tragic underlying
contradiction of U.S. policy is that what it wants is to
reproduce that same Iraq that Saddam had created in the
first place, but now, financially under the U.S. oil
network. A Saddam regime, minus its dictator and its
prison system.
To achieve this it has had to re-fill
those same prisons with a new set of inmates, and then
submit them to exactly the same humiliation, abuse and
torture that was meted out to the previous inmates under
Saddam.
Now, the current projected situation
in Iraq is as follows: there are three groupings. 1) The
Kurds, 2) the Shi‘a, and 3) the ‘Sunni’. Notice this
gives us apparently one racial group and two ‘religious’
groups. Imagine the outcry at a proposed division of the
U.S.A. as follows: 1) The jews, 2) the christian
evangelicals, 3) the hispanics. In order to mask what is
in effect the re‑instatement of the Ba’athist regime,
these same Ba’athists must be redefined as the ‘Sunni’
Muslims.
The result of this is that the Iraqi
War has been waged under a Double Deception:
A) That Saddam had Weapons (did not
intend to have but had) of Mass Destruction.
B) That Iraq needed regime-change.
The reality of Iraq today, and it
must be said again, is that there has been no Islam
permitted in Iraq since Saddam’s coup d’état. Not only
were the educated ‘ulema class wiped out, but a terrible
silence was imposed on the country’s mimbars, except for
adulation of the dictator.
Saddam ruled under the masonic
doctrine of ‘tolérance’, claiming all religions equal
and in harmony—the opposing voices were, of course,
arrested and thrown into the Abu Ghuraib prison. Plus ça
change—plus c’est la même chose! (The more things
change—the more they remain the same). It follows that
if any of the ‘ulema of this new religion, ‘Sunni’
Islam, are alive today it is only because they were the
strong upholders of Saddam’s atheist state. The
so-called Councils of ‘Sunni’ Muslim ‘ulema are
therefore upholding yet again the doctrines of the
dictator calling for tolérance, only now it is that of
the occupying atheist powers. There is no ‘Sunni’ Islam.
There is only the Deen of Islam, so named by Allah the
Exalted in His Book: Al-Ma’ida (5,3)

Today I have
perfected your deen for you
and completed My blessing upon you
and I am pleased with Islam as a deen for you.
Yet another complicating factor is
that of the Kurds. It is significant that to the
occupying powers they are not categorised as simply part
of their ‘Sunni’ zone. In the main the Kurds are in the Deen of Islam, although they have two minority wings,
one communist and one pagan. The tragedy of the Kurdish
people is not the genocide they suffered at Saddam’s
hands, horrible though it was. Typical of their agony,
however, is the fact that the while the ‘effect’ of the
gassing was the criminal responsibility of Saddam, the
‘cause’ was the cynical and basically ignorant policy of
the U.S. administration. So today, the agony that the
‘Iraqi’ people have brought on themselves is another
crisis from that of the Kurds.
In further contradiction, prior to
Iraq’s expansionist policies, no nation treated the
Kurds better than Saddam’s Iraq. The true root of all
Kurdish persecution is precisely the ruthless
application of that same doctrine which is now being
visited on the Iraqis by the U.S. system, but which was
years ago visited on the Kurds by the last century’s
most despicable figure, Mustafa Kemal.
It is time to face up to the
realities of today’s Iraqi crisis. It is not about its
occupying army which, as they go, in fact, has proved
quite benign. It is not about the wicked U.S. and its
panicky need to control the world’s oil, to stave off
the inescapable collapse of the dollar. What is
happening in Iraq is the historical unravelling of the
humanist doctrine of democracy which grants governance
to those chosen by mass suffrage, while forbidding that
governance to have any power over the nation’s currency,
or wealth, thus permitting the wealth system to be
supra-national and in the hands of a non‑elected elite.
The sublime and successful system of Islamic rule by the
great Osmanli Sultans was destroyed in the name of the
anti-Islamic forces of world banking. In the notorious
words of the dictator, Kemal: ‘We took their gold and
gave them a bank.’
The Osmanli Islamic system was
undoubtedly the highest social achievement of the modern
world. It was not militarily defeated, but was brought
down by its mistaken and misjudged decision to permit
the change from a gold and silver currency to paper
money, which thus opened the way to bankism and its
universal usury practice. The Osmanli state was
non-centralist, while functioning in its full model. It
was a welfare state, with vast kitchens attached to the
mosques to feed the people. As Professor Maksodoglu has
pointed out, the Doctor/Patient ratio in the Osmanli
city has never been reached by any modern European
state. Its markets, also attached to its mosques,
functioned under the just and vitalising rules of trade
that are the life-blood of Islam, and without which the
Deen collapses. Relevant to us also is that under their
Islamic system there was no concept of racialism. Half
the Wazirs in Istanbul were Albanian. Many ‘ulema were
Kurds. The Osmanli language held in its system Arabic,
Turkish, Urdu, Kurdish and Albanian. A British
ambassador reported that he had made a serious blunder,
offending his hosts by referring to them as ‘Turks’. He
wrote that they had reprimanded him, saying, ‘We are not
Turks. We are Osmanli.’ Kurdistan was therefore
geographic and not political. Osmanli folded into
Kurdish both as language and as rule.
Kemal’s invention of the Turkish
nation, in his abolition of Islamic unity, meant the
persecution of the Kurds, and the elimination of their
language and culture as well as their religion, Islam.
With the gradual establishment of Kemalism in the area,
the Kurds found themselves cut off from one another. The
Osmanli Kurdistan, which had once had its own natural
autonomy, now found that its people were Syrian, Iraqi,
Iranian and Turkish. They also found that as the price
of nationhood they had automatically become debtors in
each of these lands to their National Banks,
unquestioningly owned by people named Cassel, Sassoon,
Zaharoff and Goldstein.
It is Kemalism that is being applied
to Iraq. It is Kemalism that is about to be applied in
Pakistan, by an imposed dictator trained in Turkey by
Kemalist experts. It will later be visited on India and
Indonesia, which will be divided up into small happy
nations, democratic and helpless. Kemalism is that model
of governance especially designed by the banking class
to abolish Islam during the process of
‘democratisation’. It must be remembered that the wahhabi deviant sect in Arabia joined with Britain in
fighting the Khalifate of Istanbul and also opposed that
necessary Fiqh without which there can be no Islamic
Law.
Today the curse of Kemalism is being
visited on Iraq. Our beloved brothers in Turkey must
bear in mind that it is also intended to return it to
its source in Istanbul. We pray that the skilful
leadership of the Prime Minister will protect the
country from the planned ‘revised Kemalism’ now being
prepared for Turkey. The so-called ‘democratic system’,
that can now clearly be seen as dictatorship, which is
currently being forced on Iraq, is being imposed at the
cost of Iraqi lives. Thousands of men, women and
children have been killed by bomb and missile attacks.
The Iraqi people have to be slaughtered until completely
broken. The survivors, Kemalised, will be allowed to
live, to work, to pay the debt incurred in the cost of
their liberation. Those survivors must be reminded that
in being raised to the status of en-debted citizens of
the Iraqi democracy, like the en-debted citizens of
Bosnia, owing as they will billions of dollars to the
World Bank, the IMF and the many banking institutions
now being set up, they have gained this enslavement
because they abandoned the Deen of Islam. The U.S.A. and
Britain are only secondarily responsible.
The 20th century can now be seen as
the epoch in which the whole Arab world abandoned the
Deen of Islam in exchange for the Dunya which they were
then denied, and the Debt with which they were then
rewarded.
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