To the best of my ability I write about my experience of the Universe Past, Present and Future
Wednesday, June 29, 2016
Kerry takes heat
Actually, I agree with Kerry. Only people who haven't studied this whole situation or ISIS enough would have this reaction. It is extremely partison but also ignorant and plays into the Election season and many people who haven't studied all this fully.
Basically, it's like this. The Islamic State has been a country with millions of hostages taken by ISIS. So, it could be said it is a country of Millions of hostages held for ranson or killed by ISIS.
Blackmail on this level we are likely talking about somewhere between 100 million dollars to over 1 billion dollars worth of ransom for all these people paid or those people are dead.
If ISIS doesn't have a country to spend this money on defending it's Country of hostages, then this money will be spent blowing up planes and airports but the level of explosions are only going to increase as the ISlamic State, especially Mosul dissapears. It's just like Al Qaeda. Has Al Qaeda gone away since Bin Laden was assassinated?
No!
It just went underground.
Now imagine Al Qaeda as ISIS with hundreds of times or thousands of times the money to do damage to the world without a country to economically sustain it.
This is what most people cannot see worldwide. As ISIS is defeated as a country it then becomes thousands of times more dangerous as the most well funded terrorist organization in the history of the world. The danger just moves from the battle field to planes and airports instead worldwide.
So, when Mosul falls we likely should expect hundreds of these types of attacks still for 5 or 10 years worldwide until ISIS is drained of money one way or another by the governments of the world.
None of the word buttons on this page likely are going to work. If you want to read any of these articles I would suggest you copy and paste the article names into Google of if you don't know how to do that then type the article names into google if you want to read any of these articles. If you aren't used to doing this sometimes only a few words 3 or more of the title is enough for google search to find it.
Note: I"m only referring to word buttons inside this one article. All the rest of the word buttons on my web page except the word buttons inside this article should work okay. end note.
By the way I'm making an exception to my "No fox Articles Rule" with this one on purpose in order for more people to better understand this.
Secretary of State John Kerry faced swift criticism
Wednesday for suggesting the terror attack at Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport
was evidence the Islamic State is getting “desperate” – an assessment
one top Republican official said “defies reality.”
Kerry made the remarks late Tuesday at the Aspen Ideas Festival in Colorado, referring to ISIS by the name Daesh.
Crediting coalition efforts, Kerry said it’s been over a year since the group launched a “full-scale military offensive.”
"Now, yes, you can bomb an airport, you can blow
yourself up. That's the tragedy. Daesh and others like it know that we
have to get it right 24/7/365. They have to get it right for ten minutes
or one hour. So it's a very different scale,” Kerry said. "And if
you're desperate and if you know you’re losing, and you know you want to
give up your life, then obviously you can do some harm.”
House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Mike McCaul, R-Texas, slammed the secretary’s assessment.
“They’ve said they’re on the run for many years, and
they’re not,” McCaul told Fox News Wednesday morning. “I think the
airstrikes have ramped up external operations … This is an unprecedented
pace of terror in modern times. And so to say they’re on the run …
absolutely defies reality.”
Underscoring Kerry’s questionable characterization was news Wednesday
that Islamic State militants were pushing back U.S.-trained Syrian
rebels in a battle for control of a town on the Iraqi border.
While no terror group has claimed responsibility for
the Istanbul attack, Turkish officials told The Associated Press and
Reuters that ISIS was the prime suspect. The attack killed at least 42
and injured hundreds, with the body county expected to keep rising. The
attack at one of the world's busiest airports was committed by three
suicide bombers who opened fire with AK-47s before blowing themselves
up.
Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani told Fox
News these attacks – along with those in Paris, Brussels and, most
recently, Orlando, Fla. – are “following their plan.”
“This isn’t accidental,” he said, adding “something’s wrong” with the secretary of state’s analysis.
Officials inside the Obama administration have given a conflicting picture of ISIS’ strength.
What’s clear is that the group is under pressure from
coalition forces in its central territory of Iraq and Syria, even as it
pushes back. The Iraqi government declared victory over the weekend in
driving ISIS out of the Iraqi city of Fallujah, and the Pentagon
confirmed that Iraqi security forces are in “100 percent control” of the
city -- while also saying ISIS has not had a “strategic victory” in
over a year.
The disconnect comes when administration officials discuss ISIS operations and strength outside Iraq and Syria.
Earlier this month, CIA Director John Brennan
testified on Capitol Hill that despite progress against ISIS on the
battlefield, “our efforts have not reduced the group's terrorism
capability and global reach.”
He described the group as “resilient” and said they will wage their terror campaign globally in response.
“The group's foreign branches and global networks can
help preserve its capacity for terrorism regardless of events in Iraq
and Syria,” Brennan said. “In fact, as the pressure mounts on ISIL, we
judge that it will intensify its global terror campaign to maintain its
dominance of the global terrorism agenda.”
The chilling warning came after Obama said the
anti-ISIS campaign “is firing on all cylinders” and the group “is under
more pressure than ever before.”
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