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re: Why does the “prayer rug found on the border” make libs so upset?

Posted on 1/20/19 at 12:28 am to
Posted by Powerman
Member since Jan 2004
162282 posts
Posted on 1/20/19 at 12:28 am to
quote:


So, it is your position that a Muslim from the Middle East, who is on a watch list, that crossed the ocean, entered somewhere in South America, and walks up through Mexico and illegally enters the United States is MORE LIKELY:

a.) A non-threat who is on the watch list for no significant reason and just wants a better life in America

or

b.) has bad intentions

They must be waiting very patiently for their time to strike ...
Posted by Smeg
Member since Aug 2018
9462 posts
Posted on 1/20/19 at 12:31 am to
quote:

They must be waiting very patiently for their time to strike ...


So you think they crossed the ocean and came up through the border to pick oranges?
Posted by CleverUserName
Member since Oct 2016
12818 posts
Posted on 1/20/19 at 7:50 am to
quote:

They must be waiting very patiently for their time to strike


You ever heard of “sleeper cells”? Because the Intelligence agencies, the FBI, and congress has.

LINK

quote:

Iranian-Backed ‘Sleeper Cell’ Militants Hibernating in U.S., Positioned for Attack Iranian militants poised to attack U.S. homeland

Asked if Iran could use Hezbollah to conduct strikes on the United States, a panel of experts including intelligence officials and former White House insiders responded in the affirmative.

"They are as good or better at explosive devices than ISIS, they are better at assassinations and developing assassination cells," said Michael Pregent, a former intelligence officer who worked to counter Iranian influence in the region. "They're better at targeting, better at looking at things," and they can outsource attacks to Hezbollah.

"Hezbollah is smart," Pregent said. "They're very good at keeping their communications secure, keeping their operational security secure, and, again, from a high profile attack perspective, they'd be good at improvised explosive devices."

Others testifying before Congress agreed with this assessment.

"The answer is absolutely. We do face a threat," said Emanuele Ottolenghi, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies who has long tracked Iran's militant efforts. "Their networks are present in the Untied States."

Iran is believed to have an auxiliary fighting force or around 200,000 militants spread across the Middle East, according to Nader Uskowi, a onetime policy adviser to U.S. Central Command and current visiting fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

At least 50 to 60 thousand of these militants are "battle tested" in Syria and elsewhere.

"It doesn't take many of them to penetrate this country and be a major threat," Uskowi said. "They can pose a major threat to our homeland."


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