Friday, October 14, 2005

Islamo-Fascist Blood-Lusters turn on the Sunnis

BBC NEWS has the story here. A Sunni political party committed the unpardonable sin of supporting the proposed Constitution. Never mind that Shia and Kurdish leaders in the National Assembly agreed to changes in the constitution, which could benefit Sunnis, after the December elections. Oh, no! Any cooperation with the infidel occupiers and their blasphemous collaborators must be met with blood! Nothing less than the return of the Good Leader will do! Even if he ain't Saddam; as long as the Sunnis are on top, it's all good!

Take a closer look:
Three offices of an Iraqi Sunni party which dropped its opposition to the new constitution have been attacked, a day before a referendum on the text.

In Baghdad, a bomb exploded outside the office of the Iraqi Islamic Party.

Gunmen set fire to the party's office in the western city of Falluja, and ransacked its office in Baiji, north of Baghdad. No injuries were reported.

Many Sunni parties oppose the text, and have called on Iraqis to boycott the poll or vote "No".

(snip)

Alaa Makki, a senior party official, condemned the Baghdad attack, saying the party would "use the political process to fight terrorism and promote stability in Iraq", the Associated Press news agency reported.

Earlier this week, the Islamic Party said it would encourage Sunnis to support the constitution after Shia and Kurdish political leaders agreed to consider further revisions after elections in December.
The Islamo-Fascist Blood-Lusters will succeed only in isolating themselves from those Sunnis that believe a political solution is possible. What happens when the tribes of that coalition tire of facing "insurgent" attacks? Perhaps they'll launch a counter-offensive of their own, as one Sunni force did against al-Zarqawi's Al Qaeda franchise recently. Or maybe they'll just turn informant and lead Iraqi security forces to their supply depots. Or even them! Either way, the Blood-Lusters will alienate the support of the people they need the most.

The US and Iraq approach the end game of this blood campaign. If even a strong minority of Sunnis approve the constitution, they'll join the majorities expected from Shia and Kurdish provinces. Iraq will have a constitution, and a democratic republic will soon govern the nation--without the negative connotations of undue US influence. If a majority of the people--including significant numbers of Sunnis--approve, then for whom will the "insurgents" be fighting. While their last assaults may be their fiercest, they'll have exhausted any legitimacy Sunnis have given them up until now. Without that cover, their finished.

They just don't know it yet. That's why they'll be deadlier than ever.