Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
June 28, 2014
It seems that ISIS is ready to rise in Jordan. They have the support, all they will need to do is send in a couple commanders, and the fire goes off.
Demonstrators angry with Jordan’s government have unfurled in this desert city the black battle flags of the al-Qaeda-inspired extremists now in control of large swaths of Iraq, stirring fears that support for the group is growing in Jordan.
At two rallies in Maan this week, scores of young men, some in black masks, raised their fists, waved homemade banners bearing the logo and inscriptions of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and shouted, “Down, down with Abdullah,” the king of Jordan. Abdullah II, a close U.S. ally, is widely viewed as a moderate in a country considered an oasis of stability in the Middle East.
The demonstrations have been the first public displays of support for ISIS in Jordan.
Abdullah’s government has put the country’s Border Guard on alert, reinforced troops along its 125-mile frontier with Iraq and added tanks and armor to thwart any move into Jordan by the ISIS militants, who along with Sunni insurgents have seized a string of cities from northern Syria to western Iraq.
But more troubling to the Amman government than the possibility of an ISIS invasion are signs that support for the group may be expanding here and that homegrown recruits could take action in Jordan, according to former military officers, security analysts and members of Jordan’s jihadist movement.
“We no longer trust or respect the government and have been searching for an alternative that ensures our basic rights,” said Mohammed Kreishan, one of the marchers. “In the Islamic State, we have found our alternative.”
On Wednesday, anti-government demonstrators gathered at the mosque in central Maan and marched toward the courthouse with gasoline bombs, but they were deterred by the presence of Jordanian riot police in armored personnel carriers.
A symbol of Jordan’s monarchy and central government, the charred and bullet-riddled courthouse has been the scene of near-nightly gunfire in recent weeks. ISIS banners were briefly raised on the mosque’s roof and still fly from flagpoles at traffic circles.
I have tried to explain that in my understanding of Arabs, they all love this stuff. They love the violence of it. When the men are invited to join such a thing, it is like a black guy being invited to a KFC. They simply cannot resist it.
I was criticized a bit for postulating that the ISIS invasion of Iraq could be the beginning of something huge. But as time goes on, it appears that this is indeed very possible.
Of course, it is still possible that nothing could really happen – I have to state that.
But you have these people, who love the violence, and hate with their blood what their nations are turning into at the behest of the West, and there is a very serious chance that this could sweep the entire Sunni Islamic world.
ISIS have already said they will invade Saudi Arabia. Saudi is mobilizing against them.
Anything is now possible.
If the US-funded terror groups in Libya, Yemen, etc. all join ISIS, the whole world will change very quickly.