Khanverse News

Who did the Islamobomb blast?

September 21st, 2008 by Khanverse

http://www.wakeupfromyourslumber.com/node/8217

read this knuckleheads.

i didn’t write it so i obviously don’t agree with everything homie wrote but I find it utterly distateful so many heads fall for the okeydoke like good little drones…

stickin ya head in the sand isn’t gonna change the FACTS.

the 1, 2, 5, 10 dead bombings are our retarded brothers usually, the 30, 50, 100+, dead are “them”, usually, sending a message.

i mean God Damn yo, look at the SIZE of the CRATER!

was this a litmus test for the new corrupt mr. 10% pakistani puppet?

kinda like the glascow “attack” for Gordon Brown?

i can’t be the only one that is not buyin this bullshit

Posted in terrorism | No Comments »

CIA agents “targets” of Islamabomb blast

September 21st, 2008 by Khanverse

uh…

CIA agents were the target?

ain’t it lovely how they play word games? if they were “targets” that means bubble gum cave-dwellin militants are hot on the CIAs trail. this is a secret organization funded to the tune of BILLIONS. but despite being there, did any CIA agents actually DIE? hmm.

Posted in conspiracy, terrorism | No Comments »

Seek Forgiveness in Ramadan

September 20th, 2008 by Khanverse

Huzur said it feels as if the blessed month of Ramadan started just yesterday. Even the middle ten days of the month are nearly over and the last ten days are upon us. In a tradition of the Holy Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be on him) it is related that the first ten days of Ramadan bring Allah’s mercy, the middle ten days His forgiveness and the last ten days save one from the fire of Hell.

Huzur said he would give a discourse about the distinction of the current ten days of Ramadan and also the last ten days. Allah has commanded Istaghfar (seeking forgiveness) on believers and as well as His prophets have enjoined it. When Allah states ‘seek forgiveness’ He also declares ‘surely, Allah is Most Forgiving, Merciful’ (2:200). When Allah has His Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be on him) announce that this is a month of forgiveness and also states it Himself, then He also forgives. It is not possible that His servants turn to Him for forgiveness and are not forgiven. In actual fact, forgiveness and salvation from Fire are linked together through distancing oneself from Satan and seeking Allah’s nearness.

It is with His mercy alone that one is enabled to fast and Allah forgives all of one’s past sins and covers one with His forgiveness. Forgiveness too is with His mercy. The continuation of repentance and forgiveness carries on with His mercy. As it carries on a person endeavours to be completely sincere with Allah, he does good works and follows all the commandment and as a result he is saved from Fire. Surely Fire cannot touch one who attains the beneficence of Allah’s pleasure.

The three sets of 10 days of Ramadan are interconnected and their excellences are conditional to one’s practices, one’s deeds. It is not just not eating food etc. between dawn and dusk that makes a person deserving of the beneficence of Ramadan. Indeed Allah creates a special environment for Ramadan where He puts Satan in fetters and Himself comes nearer to mankind. It is then the task of His servants to make concerted efforts to seek His blessings. Huzur read an excerpt from the writings of the Promised Messiah (on whom be peace) elucidating Divine forgiveness and said that Allah states I forgive the sins of one who repents even if the sins are [the size of] mountains. Huzur said when Allah is so forgiving in ordinary times then during Ramadan His mercy must shower down. Fortunate are those who take advantage of His mercy and His forgiveness. There is still time to seek His mercy and forgiveness. When a person turns to Him in absolute humility then Allah states no one is as merciful as I am.

Huzur said in order to attain Divine mercy and forgiveness we need to look and search. Allah declares especially in these days that His door is open. Whoever will look for Him will find His door open. Allah has employed the words ‘I am near’ (2:187) in the Qur’an when citing Ramadan. Allah says come into the refuge of My forgiveness. Even in ordinary times My mercy is more and My chastisement is less but in the days of Ramadan further doors of mercy are opened. Indeed the Holy Qur’an states: ‘…they would have surely found Allah Oft-Returning with compassion, and Merciful.’ (4:65). Allah says I am Merciful and Compassionate but man continues to wrong his soul and does not ask for forgiveness. Huzur said Hadith relates as well as the Promised Messiah (on whom be peace) has said that whenever a person ‘walks’ towards Allah, Allah runs to him. As the Qur’an states: ‘And as for those who strive in Our path - We will, surely, guide them in Our ways. And, verily, Allah is with those who do good.’ (29:70)

Huzur said Istaghfar is the way to Allah. The Promised Messiah (on whom be peace) said that the real and true meanings of Istaghfar are to supplicate to Allah that one’s human frailties are not evident and one is taken in the sphere of His help that He may cover one’s natural weaknesses. Huzur said it is not possible that one’s human weaknesses are not evident, Satan is ever ready to attack. Therefore it is only possible to stay protected with continuous Istaghfar and continually seeking Allah’s pleasure, otherwise as the Holy Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be on him) said Satan runs in a person’s bloodstream. Huzur said we will truly avail of this when we make all that we have attained during Ramadan part of our lives. Otherwise just as some diseases cannot be completely eradicated, they stay dormant in the body and when a person is not strong physically they are active once again. Similarly one’s moral and spiritual ills are curbed through Istaghfar and Istaghfar also provides future protection from them. It is Allah’s grace and favour that He has commanded us to continually focus on Istaghfar and has also provided an ‘intensive spiritual training’ in the form of Ramadan once a year to facilitate our attainment of Divine nearness and spiritual development. If it was to be understood that one concentrated during these ten days and forgot about it all for the rest of the year then these days cannot be ten days of forgiveness. We can only achieve success in this respect if we strive and promise not to repeat our past mistakes. This indeed is true Istaghfar.

Explaining the two words Istaghfar and Taubah (repentance) that are cited in the Holy Qur’an many times Huzur cited verse 4 of Surah Hud and said this is the true Istaghfar and repentance that Allah wants. The Promised Messiah (on whom be peace) explained the difference between Istaghfar and repentance and said the Muslim ummah is granted two things, one to attain strength and the other to put the attained strength in practice. That is, Istaghfar is a weapon with which Satan can be contended with and Taubah is the usage of this weapon. That is to say the manifestation of those practical strengths which will help keep Satan away and our nafs (self) is never vanquished. For this one has to continually strive to do pious deeds which are commanded, otherwise Istaghfar does not bring any results.

During Ramadan one may fulfil all the requisites but if he does not put the Quranic commandments in practice like not usurping one’s brother, then this will not be real Istaghfar and repentance. When Allah enables one to cover one’s faults and weaknesses then one needs to promptly replace them with good and pious things otherwise if the vessel of one’s heart remains empty Satan fills it up again. Allah states in the Holy Quran about sincere repentance (66:9) that through it Allah removes the evil consequences of one’s deeds. Huzur said it is one’s obligation to always be mindful of honouring Allah’s rights as well as the rights of mankind. Huzur said sincere repentance requires three things. Each evil first takes shape in one’s mind. Therefore unless one purifies one’s mind, one’s thoughts, repentance cannot be sincere. Then, if somehow a bad thought does come, one should get rid of it and feel remorseful about it. Huzur said things like arrogating others’ rights etc. are evil and take one away from sincere repentance. A sincere repentance would be when one is extremely anxious even at a small mistake. Of course, one who repents should be resolute in one’s objective. Huzur said if these three things are inculcated then Allah grants the capacity for sincere repentance so much so that one’s ills are replaced with high morals. True repentance transforms ills into piety as Allah states in the Qur’an in (25:71).

Huzur said a revolutionary change is required in that one seeks forgiveness, is remorseful and then makes an unwavering resolve to try and bring each deed and each practice in accordance with Allah’s commandment. During fasting one gets training for resilience and fortitude - all this combined should result in making the ten days of forgiveness actually bring forgiveness and facilitate reaping benefit from the next ten days. In this way the following month after month and indeed year after year will make way for forgiveness. Huzur said this is the spirit of the [aforementioned] saying of the Holy Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be on him) which we should try and understand.

Fortunate are those who do true Istaghfar and repentance during Ramadan and witness its effects and are thus the recipient of Allah’s mercy. It is man who is negligent otherwise Allah is ever turning to His servants and accepts their repentance as it is cited in (4:28) in the Holy Qur’an. Therefore it is the task of His servants to do Istaghfar and turn to Allah during this month when His mercy and forgiveness is granted more than at other times. We should try our utmost to derive benefit from this. Citing (25:72) Huzur said when Allah states that the middle ten days of Ramadan are of forgiveness, their effect will only materialise when effort is made to aim every deed in accordance with Divine teachings. Then alone will the last ten days of Ramadan bring us salvation from Fire. Citing verse 84 of Surah Al Anfal (8:34) Huzur said during Ramadan when one is fulfilling all requirements and is also practising good deeds, is responding to petulant people by simply saying, ‘I am fasting’ and is striving to make such demeanour part of one’s life, one will be attaining Allah’s pleasure and as one is attaining His pleasure one is freeing oneself from the Fire and ultimately entering His Paradise.

Huzur said usually the so-called religious leaders of Pakistan try and influence people to persecute Ahmadis in emotional, financial and spiritual ways. However, the Promised Messiah (on whom be peace) has taught us never to let go of patience and steadfastness in particular during Ramadan. Allah and His Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be on him) have given glad-tidings of Paradise to that true believer who does good works. Then, in this specific blessed month when one is receiving training through enhanced praying and worship, one may be striving to bring Paradise closer still. It is to people who do sincere and good works that Allah addresses in verse 13 of Surah Al Dahr (76:13) and promises them supreme reward. Today if we are persecuted it is because we have obeyed Allah’s commandment. Let the enemy transgress. Show steadfastness because we are those who wish to seek Allah’s pleasure. The Qur’an is full of warnings for the transgressor and Allah knows best how He will deal with them.

Huzur said during these days we should pray for mankind in general and Muslims in particular. The majority of Muslims are highly charged and emotional about faith but rather unaware of religious teachings or perhaps frightened of the so-called religious scholars who lead them astray. During the last ten days of Ramadan we should exercise patience, do good works and pledge to tread the path of taqwa. We will then be those who save themselves from the Fire and who attain Paradise. We should endeavour to be counted among people who are cited in (50:32) of the Holy Qur’an. We should try and spend the last few days of Ramadan in the manner which Allah and His Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be on him) commanded. May we be enabled to gather blessings in the last ten days and do good works.

THE MARTYRDOMS:

Huzur said after Jummah he would lead some funeral prayers in absentia. Huzur said last week he had requested for prayers for brother Sheikh Saeed Ahmad sahib who had been injured. After twelve days in the hospital he has passed away. Inna lillahe wa inna alaihe raji’oon. This shaheed too was young of age; he was 42 years old and was only married last year. It was during his hospitalization that his first-born was born. He was given this news of a baby boy to which he could not respond verbally but his eyes became tearful. Huzur said his family has had three other martyrs, including his father, his brother and an uncle. Sheikh Seed shaheed was very keen on Tabligh and had been imprisoned once on the complaint of a maulwi. He is survived by his wife, baby son and an elderly mother. Huzur said when he mentioned the martyrs last week he had referred to Dr. Abdul Mannan. He was very well known in his area, in addition his region is larger than the region of the other martyr. This does not in any way mean that there is any difference in the status of the martyrs. Someone wrote to Huzur and only sent condolences for Dr. Abdul Mannan’s martyrdom. Huzur said the other martyr from last week’s Sermon, Saith sahib was also known to Huzur personally. He had great passion for religion and would always come to meet Huzur every time Huzur went to his region and Huzur said he had visited the area many times. Huzur said he wanted to clarify this.

Next Huzur said recently our Syrian sister Merwa passed away. She was involved in a road accident. She was a young woman of 24 and was working very hard on our Arabic website. She had also translated a book on Zakat for alislam.org website. She was working on having it published and was going to see the printers or such like when she met with the accident. She was a pious young lady. Her fiancé Muhammad Malas sahib also works at MTA Al Arabia. May Allah forgive her and elevate her status.

Another Syrian Ahmadi, Sami Kazak sahib has also recently passed away. He had great passion for faith. He had come for Jalsa Salana in 1996 and the affection of Hadhrat Khalifatul Masih IV (may Allah have mercy on him) further enhanced his faith. On his return he gave away one of his houses for the use of the Community. He was a pious, sociable person. May Allah elevate his status and enable his children to join the Ahmadiyya Community.

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Yahudi RETARD

September 17th, 2008 by Khanverse

DUMBASS

look at the clown, listen to him speak

got robbed by a hooker that same night and overinflated the value of his losses:

http://www.yestodemocracy.com/yes_to_democracy_no_to_pu/2008/09/karma-in-action.html

looks like a typical hell-dweller

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An Apology: Azhar Usman

September 17th, 2008 by Khanverse

© 2008 Azhar Usman

An Apology

Heartfelt reflections on the passing of a legendary Blackamerican Muslim leader

On September 11th, 2008, while countless American flags whipped in the wind and the television and radio waves were dominated by remembrances, recordings, and stories about the terror attacks of seven years ago, I attended the funeral of Imam W.D. Mohammed (may God be pleased with him). For me, it was a somber day, but I found myself mostly lost in thought: about African-American Muslim communities, about the challenges ahead in American Muslim institution- building, and about the future of Islam in America. If you don’t know who Imam WDM was, you should look him up. The Sufis say: “The true sage belongs to his era.” And of the many gifts given to Imam WDM by God, perhaps the most obvious and beneficial one was the Imam’s profound understanding of the principles of religion, and his adeptness at intelligently applying those Islamic principles in a socially and culturally appropriate manner befitting the everyday lives of his North American followers. While carefully respecting sound, traditional jurisprudential methodologies of the Islamic religion, and the collective religious history and time-honored scholarship of classical Islam, he promulgated creative ideas and dynamic teachings across many domains of human endeavor, including theology, law, spirituality and even ethics and aesthetics, that together articulated a vision for a quintessentially “American Muslim” cultural identity. And he did all of this before anyone else, with quiet strength and unending humility—a true sage indeed.

So I stood before his final resting place, brokenhearted. And I suddenly began to feel the weight of the moment, realizing that when God takes back one of his dearly beloved friends, those who are left behind should cry not for the deceased, but rather for themselves. For the fact that they are now without one of God’s friends in their midst, and, in a sense, they are orphaned. And the tears began to well up, for I became acutely aware that I was standing in front of the grave of my spiritual grandfather, who was himself a spiritual descendant of Bilal al-Habashi (may God be pleased with him), the mighty and beloved companion of the Prophet himself. Bilal was the first Black African to convert to al-Islam at the hands of the Prophet Muhammad (may God bless him and keep him) in the sands of Arabia nearly a thousand and a half years ago. Undoubtedly, some measure of that love, mercy, compassion, and spiritual stature that inhabited the heart of Bilal has found its way down through the ages, and I found myself begging God to transfer to my own heart some glimpse of these realities now laying before me.

Almost five years ago, my business partner, Preacher Moss (who is a member of the WDM community) founded the standup comedy tour “Allah Made Me Funny,” and he invited me to be his co-founder. Needless to say, it has been nothing less than an honor to work with him on the project. But to many, it was an unusual pairing: a Black comic and an Indian comic? Both Muslims? Working together? And before we ever even announced our partnership publicly, we met privately and swore an allegiance to one another—a blood oath of sorts—which was this: No matter what happens, in good times and in bad, we have to be the brothers no one expects us to be. And built on this promise (and premise), we brought on our first collaborator, Brother Azeem (who is a member of Minister Farrakhan’s NOI), with whom we toured for over two years (2004-2006) before parting ways amicably. Then we brought Mohammed Amer onto the team in the fall of 2006 (a Kuwaiti-born Palestinian refugee who grew up in a Sunni Muslim family in Houston, Texas). Mo, Preach, and I are still going strong together, and we are grateful for the unqualified support, love, and blessings that Imam WDM and the entire community have always given us.

But today, as I observed the funeral proceedings, I felt sad and heavy-hearted. Something wasn’t sitting right. Something was physically paining my heart, and it felt like remorse, shame perhaps, maybe even guilt. I began to realize that the tears flowing from my eyes were as much a function of these feelings as they were any lofty spiritual aspirations of mine.

You see, I attended an interfaith event a couple of years ago on 9/11. A group had assembled to commemorate the tragic event, to honor those who perished that day, and to pledge ongoing inter-community support and bridge-building to fight ignorance, hate, and intolerance. At that event, there was this short, middle-aged, sweet, extremely kindhearted, White Christian woman. When she took the microphone to speak, she was already teary-eyed, and I assumed that she was going to make some comments about the victims of 9/11, as so many others already had that night.

But she didn’t do that. Instead, she explained that she had become utterly grief-stricken by the constant barrage of news stories she witnessed about Muslims and Arabs being harassed, profiled, and mistreated after 9/11. She explained that she felt powerless to do anything about it, and that it made her sick to her stomach to hear of hate crimes against Muslims and Arabs, and especially to hear of Christian preachers denigrating Islam and its Prophet. She started to cry, and so did many others in the room, humbled by the magnanimity of this simple woman.

And then she did what I thought was a strange thing: she apologized. She prefaced her apology with all the logical disclaimers, such as “I know this may mean nothing to you,” and “I know that I am not the one who did these horrible things,” and “I know that you may dismiss this as empty rhetoric until you see some follow-up action on my part, but anyway,” she continued, “I want to apologize on behalf of all the Christians and all non-Muslims and non-Arabs who have been attacking your communities, harassing your people, and accusing your religion of all these horrible things. I’m sorry. I’m very, very sorry.” I was stunned. Speechless, in fact. Though all of her disclaimers were true, and my skeptical mind knew it, her apology melted our hearts. Here was this powerless servant of God sharing some of her most deeply felt emotional vulnerabilities, and she was apologizing to Muslims for something she didn’t even do? Jesus (may God bless him and keep him) once famously remarked: “Make the world your teacher,” and so I immediately took this woman as a lesson in humility. Admitting her powerlessness made her incredibly powerful.

And this brings me to the point (and title) of this essay. I would like to unburden myself of something that has been sitting like a ton of bricks on my heart for my entire life. I want to apologize to my Blackamerican brothers and sisters in Islam. I know that this apology may not mean very much; and I know that our American Muslim communities have a LONG way to go before we can have truly healthy political conciliation and de-racialized religious cooperation; and I know that I am not the one who is responsible for so much of the historical wrongdoing of so-called “immigrant Muslims”—wrongdoings that have been so hurtful, and insulting, and degrading, and disrespectful, and dismissive, and marginalizing, and often downright dehumanizing.

But anyway, for every “Tablighi” brother who may have had “good intentions” in his own subjective mind, but behaved in an utterly insensitive and outrageous manner toward you when he suggested that you need to learn how to urinate correctly, I’m sorry.

And for every Pakistani doctor who can find money in his budget to drive a Lexus and live in a million-dollar house in suburbia, and who has the audacity to give Friday sermons about the virtues of “Brotherhood in Islam,” while the “Black mosque” can’t pay the heating bills or provide enough money to feed starving Muslim families just twenty miles away, I’m sorry.

And for every Arab speaker in America who makes it his business to raise millions and millions of dollars to provide “relief” for Muslim refugees around the world, but turns a blind eye to the plight of our very own Muslim sisters and brothers right here in our American inner cities just because, in his mind, the color black might as well be considered invisible, I’m sorry.

And for every liquor store in the “hood” with a plaque that says Maashaa’ Allah hanging on the wall behind the counter, I’m sorry.

And for every news media item or Hollywood portrayal that constantly reinforces the notion that “Muslim=foreigner” so that the consciousness of Blackamerican Muslims begins even to doubt itself (asking “Can I ever be Muslim enough?”), I’m sorry.

And for every Salafi Muslim brother (even the ones who used to be Black themselves before converting to Arab) who has rattled off a hadith or a verse from Koran in Arabic as his “daleel” to Kafirize you and make you feel defensive about even claiming this deen as your own, I’m sorry.

And for every time you’ve been asked “So when did you convert to Islam?” even though that question should more properly have been put to your grandparents, since they became Muslims by the grace of God Almighty back in the 1950s, and raised your parents as believers, and Islam is now as much your own inheritance as it is the one’s posing that presumptuous, condescending question, I’m sorry.

And for every time some Muslim has self-righteously told you that your hijab is not quite “Shariah” enough, or your beard is not quite “Sunnah” enough, or your outfit is not quite “Islamic” enough, or your Koranic recitation is not quite “Arabic” enough, or your family customs are not quite “traditional” enough, or your worldview is not quite “classical” enough, or your ideas are not “authentic” enough, or your manner of making wudu is not quite “Hanafi,” “Shafi,” “Maliki,” or “Hanbali” enough, or your religious services are not quite “Masjid” enough, or your chicken is not quite “Halal” enough, I’m sorry.

And for every Labor Day weekend when you’ve felt divided in your heart, wondering “When will we ever do this thing right and figure out how we can pool our collective resources to have ONE, big convention?, ” I’m sorry.

And for every time a Muslim has tried to bait you with a question about the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, trying to force you to condemn him—turning it into some sort of binary litmus test of true iman—with reckless and irresponsible disregard for the historical fact that he was among the first Black men in America to ever do anything meaningful for the upliftment and betterment of Black people, I’m sorry.

And for every time you’ve heard of an African-American brother who tried to bring home a South Asian or Arab sister to meet his parents, only to learn that her parents would rather commit suicide than let their daughter marry a “Black Muslim” (a/k/a “Bilalian brother”), even as they cheer hypocritically at stadium style speeches by Imams Siraj Wahhaj, Zaid Shakir, Johari Abdul Malik, or others—or get in line to bring one of them to speak at their multi-million dollar fundraiser for yet another superfluous suburban mosque, I’m sorry.

I’m sorry. I’m very, very sorry.

From the bottom of my heart, I want every African-American Muslim brother and sister to know that I am ashamed of this treatment that you have received and, in many cases, continue to receive, over the decades. I want you to know that I am aware of it. I am conscious of the problem. (Indeed, I am even conscious that I myself am part of the problem since curing hypocrisy begins by looking in the mirror.)

I am not alone in this apology. There are literally thousands, if not tens of thousands of young American Muslims just like me, born to immigrant parents who originate from all over the Muslim world. We get it, and we too are sick of the putrid stench of racism within our own Muslim communities. Let us pledge to work on this problem together, honestly validating our own and one another’s insecurities, emotions, and feelings regarding these realities. Forgiveness is needed to right past wrongs, yet forgiveness is predicated on acknowledging wrongdoing and sincerely apologizing. Let us make a blood oath of sorts.

When the bulldozer came to place the final mounds of dirt over the tomb of Imam WDM, I was standing under a nearby tree, under the light drizzle that had just begun (perhaps as a sign of mercy dropping from the heavens as the final moments of the burial were drawing to a close), and I was talking to a dear friend and sister in faith, whose family has been closely aligned with Imam WDM for decades. She shared with me a story that her father had just related to her about the passing of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad in 1975 (the same year I was born, incidentally) . She told me that her father described the scene in the immediate aftermath of Elijah’s demise: utter confusion and chaos within the NOI and the communities surrounding it. There was much debate and discord about what direction the NOI would take, and many were still in shock and denial that the founder had actually died. Out of the midst of that confusion arose Imam WDM, and along with his strong leadership came an even more, perhaps surprisingly courageous direction: the path away from the Black nationalism, pan-Africanism, and proto-religious beliefs of his father, and instead the unequivocal charge toward mainstream Islam, the same universal and cosmopolitan faith held and practiced by over a billion adherents worldwide. In this manner, her father explained, the death of Elijah Muhammad became a definitive end to a chapter in our collective history, and the resulting re-direction by Imam WDM marked the beginning of the next, far better, chapter in that unfolding history.

Maybe I am just an idealistic fool, or maybe Pharaoh Sanders was right about the Creator’s Master Plan, but I sincerely believe that all we have to do—all of us together: Black folks, South Asians (Indians, Pakistanis, Bangladeshis) , Arabs from every part of the Middle East and North Africa, Southeast Asians (Indonesians and Malaysians), Persians, Turks, Latinos, assorted Muslims of all stripes, colors, and backgrounds, and yes, even our White Muslim brothers and sisters—is live up to a simple promise to one another: No matter what happens, in good times and in bad, we have to be the brothers and sisters no one expects us to be. It is hoped that the passing of Imam WDM will also mark the end of a chapter in our collective American Muslim history, and perhaps now, in earnest, we can all look together toward The Third Resurrection. May God mend our broken hearts, lift our spirits, purify our souls, heal the rifts between our communities, unify our aims, remove our obstacles, defeat our enemies, and bless and accept our humble offerings and service.

———— ——— ——— ——— —-

© 2008 Azhar Usman
| 10 Ramadan 1429 |
11 September 2008

About the Author

Azhar Usman is a Chicago-based, full-time standup comedian. He is co-founder of “Allah Made Me Funny—The Official Muslim Comedy Tour,” which has toured extensively all over the world. He is frequently interviewed, profiled, and quoted in the press, and he is an advisor to the Inner-city Muslim Action Network’s Arts and Culture programs. Mr. Usman is also a co-founding board member of The Nawawi Foundation, a non-profit American Muslim research institution. He considers himself a citizen of the world and holds degrees from the University of Illinois at Chicago and the University of Minnesota Law School. Born and raised in Chicago, his parents originally hail from Bihar, India. DISCLAIMER: The views and emotions expressed in this essay are those of the author and are not necessarily held, advocated, or even endorsed by any of the institutions with which he may be affiliated.

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IAEA being coerced on Iran?

September 17th, 2008 by Khanverse

nothing has changed yet the rhetoric of the IAEA is changing to make it more feasible to justify sanctions and/or an attack…

this isn’t good news:

Big-bang report blasts Iran

By Kaveh L Afrasiabi

One week ahead of the annual gathering of world leaders at the United Nations in New York, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has issued a new report that while confirming the agency’s full-scope inspection and verification of Iran’s nuclear activities, discovering no evidence of any military diversion, is permeated with “serious concerns” and “outstanding questions”.

These questions relate to certain “alleged studies” and the overall effect could be a shot in the arm for the flagging “Iran Six” multilateral diplomacy on Iran involving the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China plus Germany. This could lead to even more sanctions on Iran, or worse, an Israeli or American strike against Iran’s nuclear infrastructure.

The IAEA describes a collection of weaponization designs and documents that suggest Iran has tried to develop a nuclear warhead as “alleged studies” and wants Tehran to identify the factually corrects parts of the documents and those it considers fabricated.

“Iran so far has not been forthcoming in replying to our questions and we seem to be at a dead end there,” a senior United Nations official was quoted as saying on Monday.

A senior Iranian official quoted by Reuters retorted that the IAEA was to blame for the impasse and that the nuclear agency should work in a “legal and logical” manner.

A White House spokesman said the report showed “once again that Iran is refusing to cooperate with the international community” and that Iran would face “further implementation of the existing United Nations Security Council sanctions and the possibility of new sanctions” if it did not suspend uranium enrichment. The UN has imposed three rounds of sanctions against Iran and further US and European sanctions have been unilaterally implemented.

Since the outbreak of the Georgia crisis with Russia last month, the efforts of the “Iran Six” have been stalled, given the widespread antagonistic response to Moscow’s intervention in the breakaway state of South Ossetia. The latest IAEA report will likely act as a timely, though questionable and partly flawed, glue binding the recalcitrant Russians (and Chinese) to the US-led chariot of sanctions on Iran.

Arab groups such as the Gulf Cooperation Council have recently expressed concerns about Iran’s nuclear program. They will now be pleased that the IAEA’s often controversial yet ultimately conformist director general, Mohamed ElBaradei, has invoked a seemingly infinite array of “outstanding questions”.

This is despite the fact that in his previous two reports ElBaradei closed the books on “outstanding questions” in terms of nuclear transparency between Iran and the IAEA.

This means ElBaradei will not be content to issue a clean bill of health for Iran until it has compromised its national security by disclosing all its military, for example missile, secrets, including the “R&D [research and development] activities of military-related institutes and companies”.

ElBaradei at the same time wants people to believe his agency’s probing these activities will not expose Iran to the danger of compromising its national security.

To this end he has proposed a “modality” to Iran whereby sensitive conventional weapons secrets would be protected.

The problem is the IAEA’s failed record with respect to Iraq, where eventually the US utilized information procured by the IAEA to help justify its invasion in 2003.

The Iraq analogy is hardly misleading. Just as Iraq was pressed to “prove a negative”, that is, the absence of a clandestine weapons of mass destruction program, the IAEA is now dead set on denying Iran a clean bill of health as long as it has not satisfied concerns about a similar absence.

Consequently, irrespective of his proposed modality, ElBaradei in his report cites a long laundry list of military-related individuals, institutes and other places that need to be investigated thoroughly before the atomic agency can fully ascertain the “absence of undeclared nuclear material and activities in Iran”. That places the bar artificially high and well beyond what the report’s title, about Iran’s nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) safeguard agreement, calls for.

The IAEA is now suddenly firmly sold on the authenticity and trustworthiness of the information regarding the “alleged studies” - much of it provided by US intelligence - even though all outstanding questions were said previously to have been settled in Iran’s favor.

Citing information that Iran’s alleged experiments involving testing of the detonation of hemispheres of explosives “may have involved the assistance of foreign experts”, the IAEA report essentially disregards Iran’s May 117-page response to the IAEA. This, in the words of Iran’s representative to the agency, Ali Asghar Soltanieh, “presents multiple evidence” concerning the fake or “fabricated” nature of alleged documents pertaining to the “weaponization studies”.

Iran has not been given any of those documents, only their “electronic version”, which makes it doubly difficult to prove or disprove their authenticity. Yet ElBaradei is now a full convert to their authenticity, informing us in a footnote that this documentation come from “multiple sources over different periods of time, is detailed in content and appears to be consistent”.

None of this washes the taint of a new leap toward subjectivity on ElBaradei’s part. First, what if the multiple sources consist of the US’s junior partners in their collective crusade to checkmate Iran’s rising power, and Israel is one of those sources.

It is irrelevant if the documentation pertains to one or more periods of time, and ElBaradei is outright wrong in using this as a criteria of their authenticity. The same goes for their being detailed, since in today’s high-tech surveillance that is taken for granted. As for being “consistent”, that only means that the other side has done a good job in putting out believable disinformation. Some of this cannot be disproved short of risking Iran’s legitimate military secrets, such as on high-explosives testing and military related activities. ElBaradei states flatly that Iran “might have additional information” regarding these matters that it has stubbornly refused to share with the IAEA.

Putting the Washington-desired spin on all of this is the adjective “gridlock”, invoked by some sources close to the IAEA, per an article by American nuclear expert David Albright. He fails to add that this is largely a manufactured gridlock that is less due to Iran “stonewalling” and more the result of a weak agency that continues to allow itself to be manipulated by the big powers. This is irrespective of the IAEA’s own admission, repeated no less than 15 times throughout the report, that there is no evidence of military diversion from peaceful nuclear activities.

Iran has made steady progress in mastering the nuclear fuel cycle, which is a right under the NPT, to which it is a signatory. IAEA officials would be hard-pressed to show any other country, such as Japan or Brazil, which has subjected itself to such thorough inspections.

The IAEA report of September 15 says that IAEA inspectors had made 17 unannounced visits at the fuel enrichment plant in Natanz where, per Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson, the IAEA has installed cameras at the main halls, where the cascades are placed, and all nuclear material is accounted for. In the case of Russian-delivered fuel at the nuclear plant at Bushehr, it remains under the agency’s seal.

Still, give the IAEA partial credit. The ElBaradei report repeatedly states that the nearly 500 kilograms of enriched uranium produced by Iran are all “low-enriched” and not highly enriched or “weapons-grade”, contrary to misinformation put out by certain Western experts. See The next peace and false bells on Iran Asia Times Online, September 12, 2008.)

This should mean there is little cause for concern about Iran as long as it continues with its NPT obligations and allows systematic inspection of its facilities by the IAEA, per the parameters of Iran-IAEA safeguard agreements.

There is reason to worry when additional unreasonable pressures and threats are added, the latest being the manner in which the IAEA has eschewed its previous glowing appraise of Iran’s nuclear transparency in favor of “serious concerns” about the lack of “substantive progress” on the “alleged studies”.

Iran could capitulate and satisfy the concerns about making progress by simply admitting to the allegations made against it. The tone of ElBaradei’s report leads one to believe the real progress needed is a more independent agency.

Kaveh L Afrasiabi, PhD, is the author of After Khomeini: New Directions in Iran’s Foreign Policy (Westview Press) and co-author of “Negotiating Iran’s Nuclear Populism”, Brown Journal of World Affairs, Volume XII, Issue 2, Summer 2005, with Mustafa Kibaroglu. He also wrote “Keeping Iran’s nuclear potential latent”, Harvard International Review, and is author of Iran’s Nuclear Program: Debating Facts Versus Fiction. For his Wikipedia entry, click here.

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Khanverse & Andre Discussion

September 16th, 2008 by Khanverse

discuss possible manufactured chaos, the controllers, inventors, subversion of technology, “their” (khazar jewish) system, the roadblocks, culture engineering, where its headed, solutions, spirituality, and cyclical cataclysms

we have good rapport but it’s usually even better than this…

Sept 9, 2008: Andre & Khanverse Discussion

Andre’s Forum: http://www.outlawjournalism.com/forum

The debates referenced in the audio:

Khan VS Andre Debate Part I

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