Regarded with great favor, approval, or affection especially by the general public; "a popular tourist attraction"; "a popular girl"; "cabbage ...
democratic: representing or appealing to or adapted for the benefit of the people at large; "popular thought"; "popular science"; "popular fiction"
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Al-Qaeda fears that embodied Barack Obama?
Barack_obama_victoire.jpgAu wake of a virulent message of the terrorist organization Al-Qaeda sent the elected president of the United States Barack Obama, several specialists in the Arab world and questions why the terrorist organization seems to be afraid of what may embody Barack Obama. Remember yesterday, Ayman al-Zawahiri, the second of the terrorist network Al Qaeda, asked Isalmistes the world to continue to attack "America criminal." The right arm of Osama bin Laden has accused Barack Obama, of betraying its Islamic roots and warned not to continue the policies of George W. Bush in Iraq and in Afghanistan, arguing that this policy is doomed to failure as it was for George W. Bush, Pervez Musharraf and the Soviet Union. In the audio message, Al-Zawahiri addressed Obama, Secretary of State of the current administration Condoleezza Rice and her predecessor in the post Colin Powell, as "house slaves" for the whites. On Thursday, several experts analyze what the message embodies. Mathieu according GUIDERE, the Arab world specialist and professor at the University of Geneva interviewed by Le Figaro, the new American president could undermine the message of Al-Qaeda. According to him, Obama is a refutation of the "clash of civilizations" that has dominated the minds past ten years. He contends that the new American leader is "a synthesis of ethnic, political and cultural life of our modern world" able to "render meaningless the xenophobic rhetoric of Al-Qaeda and considerably weaken the terrorist organization at overall. " In addition, the special correspondent in New York from La Presse, Richard Hétu, interviewed on the same subject Fawaz Gerges, chairman of the department of Middle East studies at Sarah Lawrence College in New York and author of several books on the subject Jihad. Gerges said the journalist qu'Obama Quebec is the worst nightmare of bin Laden and eneva of legitimacy to his organization in the eyes of Arabs and Muslims throughout the world. Fawaz Gerges also believes that the message from Zawahiri could turn against him. Peter Bergen, the analyst's national security network CNN, for its part contends that such a message was expected. However, it does not because it does not always speak the leader of the terrorist organization, Osama bin Laden. Recent CIA reports indicate that the notorious terrorist would be isolated and fight for its survival.
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