Supplement to Archive Prophecy Number 176B
The Islamic Big Devil – Little Devil Complex is Real!
July 18, 2005
http://www.tribulationperiod.com/
Dardanelle MBC
If Iraq had been positioned where Missouri is located, such that it was completed surrounded by American states, and had not been composed of the followers of Islam, and had not been possessed of the Big Devil – Little Devil complex of hate for the United States and Israel, then I suppose it might have been at least possible to change it to a democracy. There is no way in heaven Iraq can ever become a Democracy before the battle of Armageddon.
As I have stated for the past five years, we were right to go in to take out Saddam Hussein, but since that has been accomplished, we need to get out.
We cannot transform the leopard into a spotless democracy in the midst of an Arab swamp.
No matter what we do, I assure you the end result will be Iraq as one of the nations
of Islam with just as much hatred as they ever had for us and
for Israel.
I am confident that Iraq will be one of the 10 Arab nations that will eventually attack Israel from outside its borders with Syria.
By 2008 you will see Iraq and Iran as bosom buddies, united in a common military security pact bound by a common hatred for all infidels.
FIRST OF TWO ARTICLES
BEGIN ARTICLE FROM TEHRAN TIMES
Iraqi Premier Aims to Reconstruct Iran-Iraqi Ties
TEHRAN – Reconstructing Iran-Iraq ties is one of the issues on the agenda of Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim Jafari’s trip to Iran, an official of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), said on Saturday.
Mohsen Hakim, a political advisor to SCIRI leader Seyyed Abdul Aziz Hakim, told the Mehr News Agency that during Jafari’s stay in Tehran various protocols would be signed between the two neighboring countries and efforts will also be made to resolve previous problems.
He noted that 10 ministers are accompanying the Iraqi premier in his trip to Iran, expressing hope that the visit would open a new chapter in brotherly and friendly ties between Tehran and Baghdad.
“This cooperation will certainly not be against a third country but will only be aimed at expanding bilateral ties,” Hakim said.
He noted that the presence of foreign forces in Iraq has become an important challenge for the country.
“I hope we will witness the withdrawal of foreign troops from the country as soon as Iraq reconstructs its national security structure. No Iraqi agrees with the presence of foreign forces in his country,” Hakim stated.
One of the strategic policies of the new Iraqi government is to improve ties with regional countries especially neighbors and with the rest of the world, he underlined.
Hakim noted that Iran and Iraq share many historical, cultural, religious and geopolitical commonalities, saying Iraq’s former dictatorial regime had prevented the establishment of Iran-Iraq ties based on mutual interests.
“We all know that the Iranian nation and government have always been one of the biggest supporters of Iraq and it’s wrong to think that the Islamic Republic has centered its support on the Iraqi Shiite community. “The Iranians have always voiced support for the entire Iraqi nation irrespective of their language, religion and ethnicity.”
Hakim stated that Iran and Iraq can establish positive ties in various political, economic, religious and security fields.
END ARTICLE FROM TEHRAN TIMES
IRAQ IS SPLIT – IF THEY GIVE JEWS RIGHTS, THEY CAN’T LEGALLY KILL THEM WHEN WE PULL OUT!
BEGIN JERUSALEM POST EXTRACT
Iraq Split on Rights of Jewish Minority
By Orly Halpern, THE JERUSALEM POST
September 18, 2005
One month before the deadline for the creation of the new Iraqi constitution, a debate on whether to include Jews as an official minority has broken out in the National Assembly, members of the assembly have told The Jerusalem Post.
“There have been suggestions that when it comes to minority rights, we specify who are the minorities,” Saad Jawad Qindeel, a Shi’ite member said in a phone call from Baghdad. “They [the Iraqi Jews] should not be included as a minority because their number is too small.”
Qindeel, who is also the head of the political bureau of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq – one of the country’s most popular Shi’ite groups – said this view has official endorsement.
“According to the UN international convention defining minorities, there must be a minimum number,” said Qindeel. “The Jews are fewer than that number. I think there are only 60.”
There are in fact fewer than 20 Jews remaining in Iraq, all of them in Baghdad.
The granting of minority status to Jews would afford them a measure of state protection, ensure they were represented in government and mean that Jewish holy days were recognized.
END JERUSALEM POST EXTRACT