داعش وحش أعمى

    • داعش وحش أعمى

      أصبحت الدولة الإسلامية مرادفا للشراسة وقطع الرؤوس، والصلب، والرجم، والمذابح، ودفن الضحايا أحياء والتطهيرالديني والعرقي ، والآن حرق الناس وهم أحياء. في حين قد تبدو مثل هذه الوحشية غير مبررة بالنسبة للغالبية العظمى من البشر المتحضرين، فهي مجرد جزء من معتقدات هؤلاء المرضى.
      حتى بن لادن حاول أن يسوق رسالته للمسلمين والعالم على أنها دفاع عن النفس، وليس عدوانا. حاول هو وغيره من المتطرفين تبرير القتل . ولكن حتى تبرير أفعالهم أمر غير مهم بالنسبة لداعش، الذين لا يأبهون على الإطلاق بما يفكره العالم عن إراقة الدماءالتي يقومون بها. في الواقع، هم يستمتعون باستعراض الهمجية وتقديم أنفسهم كمتوحشين. إن داعش هو آلة قتل يحركها الدم والحديد. وقد سلط قطع رؤوس اثنين من اليابانيين وحرق الطيار الأردني معاذ الكساسبة حيا ، الضوء على هذه الصورة بوضوح كلي.
      اليابان لا تشارك في الحملة العسكرية ضد داعش. لكن اليابان تقدم المساعدات الإنسانية في الشرق الأوسط. غوتو، الصحفي، ذهب إلى سوريا لأنه قال انه شعر بأن عليه توثيق قصص الحرب، حتى لو كان ذلك يعني الذهاب الى بعض الأماكن الأكثر خطورة في العالم. وقال: "الشعب السوري يعاني منذ ثلاث سنوات ونصف، وهذا يكفي"، وقال في لقطة فيديو في اكتوبر تشرين الاول. "لذلك أود الحصول على قصة ما يريد داعش القيام به."
      ولكنه الآن أصبح هو القصة. مثل العديد من الصحفيين غيره ، سقط ضحية لبشاعة التطرف الأعمى. ربما لم يحصل على قصة يرويها عن داعش أو الشعب السوري، ولكن قتله ، مثله مثل قطع رأس الرهينة الياباني الآخر يوكاوا وحرق معاذ الكساسبة الوحشي ، قال الكثير عن الجماعة الشريرة التي تتجاهل كل حشمة وسلوك بشري.
      يعتقد العديد من الخبراء أن داعش يرتكبون هذه الجرائم لتوظيفها ، لأنهم يعتقدون أنها بمثابة وسيلة جيدة لتجنيد الشبان والشابات. ولكن في الواقع تلك الفظائع تقنع المزيد من الناس أن ليس هناك إلا طريقة واحدة يمكن التعامل فيها مع هؤلاء المجرمين وهي فقط القضاء على المجموعة وهو ما سيجعل العالم مكانا أكثر أمنا.
      انضم رجال الدين المسلمين على نطاق واسع إلى العالم في إدانة هذه الجرائم بشدة، وأدانوا بدورهم حرق معاذ حتى الموت معتبرين أن هذا شكل من أشكال القتل التي يشمئز منها الإسلام، بغض النظر عن الدافع.
      وقال الرئيس أوباما،" إن تفاني الملازم الكساسبة- وشجاعته، وخدمته لبلاده وأسرته تمثل القيم الإنسانية العالمية التي تتعارض مع جبن وفساد تنظيم الدولة الإسلامية، الذي تم رفضه على نطاق واسع في جميع أنحاء العالم. علينا ونحن نحزن معا الوقوف صفا واحدا، احتراما لتضحيته ولهزيمة هذه الآفة. اليوم، يكافح الائتلاف من أجل جميع من عانى من وحشية الدولة الإسلامية في العراق والشام. وذكراهم هي من تحفزنا وشركاءنا في التحالف بعزم لا يرتدع حتى تنفى داعش وأيديولوجيتها البغيضة إلى خبايا التاريخ ".


    • A former top official at the National Security Agency says the Islamic State terrorist group has “clearly” capitalized on the voluminous leaks from former NSA contractor Edward Snowden and is exploiting the top-secret disclosures to evade U.S. intelligence.
      Bottom line: Islamic State killers are harder to find because they know how to avoid detection.Chris Inglis was the NSA’s deputy director during Mr. Snowden’s flood of documents to the news media last year. Mr. Snowden disclosed how the agency eavesdrops, including spying on Internet communications such as emails and on the Web’s ubiquitous social media.
      [HR][/HR]
      [HR][/HR]
      Asked by The Washington Times if the Islamic State has studied Mr. Snowden’s documents and taken action, Mr. Inglis answered, “Clearly.”The top-secret spill has proven ready-made for the Islamic State (also referred to as ISIL or ISIS). It relies heavily on Internet channels to communicate internally and to spread propaganda.Mr. Snowden “went way beyond disclosing things that bore on privacy concerns,” said Mr. Inglis, who retired in January. “‘Sources and methods’ is what we say inside the intelligence community — the means and methods we use to hold our adversaries at risk, and ISIL is clearly one of those.“Having disclosed all of those methods, or at least some degree of those methods, it would be impossible to imagine that, as intelligent as they are in the use of technology, in the employment of communications for their own purposes, it’s impossible to imagine that they wouldn’t understand how they might be at risk to intelligence services around the world, not the least of which is the U.S. And they necessarily do what they think is in their best interest to defend themselves,” he said.Another former official also bemoans the damage Mr. Snowden has done.Retired Air Force Gen. Michael Hayden ran the NSA when al Qaeda struck on Sept. 11, 2001. He moved to modernize technology and methodology in an agency that some internal critics said “had gone deaf” in the 1990s.
      “The changed communications practices and patterns of terrorist groups following the Snowden revelations have impacted our ability to track and monitor these groups,” said Mr. Hayden, who writes a bimonthly column for The Times.Matthew G. Olsen, who directs the National Counterterrorism Center, supports Mr. Hayden’s assessment.“Following the disclosure of the stolen NSA documents, terrorists are changing how they communicate to avoid surveillance. They are moving to more secure communications platforms, using encryption and avoiding electronic communications altogether,” Mr. Olsen, a former NSA general counsel, said Wednesday at the Brookings Institution. “This is a problem for us in many areas where we have limited human collection and depend on intercepted communications to identify and disrupt plots.”A former military official said some Islamic State operators have virtually disappeared, giving no hint as to their whereabouts or actions.Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al Baghdadi, an Iraqi devoted to former al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, is known to practice evasive tradecraft that undoubtedly improved because of Mr. Snowden’s disclosures.A former military intelligence official said the U.S. thought it had killed him several times when he was a chieftain in al Qaeda in Iraq, which morphed into the Islamic State. The U.S. later discovered he had passed his communication devices to another terrorist whom intelligence agencies tracked thinking he was the man who then went by the name Abu Dura.Some of the documents turned over by Mr. Snowden, principally to Great Britain’s The Guardian and to The Washington Post, provided precise details on how the U.S. tracks an al Qaeda operative.Thus, officials argue, Islamic State operatives reading the series of Snowden documents and news stories know what types of communication to avoid or how to make them more secure.For example, Mr. Snowden disclosed an NSA report that told of its involvement in finding and then killing bin Laden confidant Hassan Ghul in October 2012.It was Ghul’s wife who unwittingly betrayed him by mentioning her husband’s living conditions in an email intercepted by the NSA.“In Ghul’s case, the agency deployed an arsenal of cyberespionage tools, secretly seizing control of laptops, siphoning audio files and other messages and tracking radio transmissions to determine where Ghul might ‘bed down,’” The Post said, based on Mr. Snowden’s collection.A Senate defense committee staffer said Thursday: “Our lax security has provided our adversaries with a gold mine of information about our tactics and procedures.”Mr. Snowden’s leaks came in 2013 before the Islamic State became widely known as a vicious terrorist group and army rolled into one, determined to attack America. In June it rampaged through Iraq, brutally conquering territory, and recently beheaded two American journalists.Today a fugitive from U.S. justice in Russia, Mr. Snowden won sympathy from liberals, libertarians and some conservatives for exposing the NSA’s mass collection of communications to spy on enemies and allies alike.Now that the U.S. has a new and especially vicious enemy, the Islamic State may sway some Snowden supporters to take a second look.What angers intelligence officials is that Mr. Snowden claims to be an activist and reformer on the issue of privacy, yet he exposed basic spying techniques for finding terrorists who want to kill Americans.“Snowden’s original pretext that we were violating the law or that we were doing things that were simply inappropriate — the spirit or the letter of the law — has not been borne out,” said Mr. Inglis. “He went way beyond disclosing things that bore on privacy concerns.”




      globalresearch.ca/isis-leader-…-documents-reveal/5391593
      politifact.com/punditfact/stat…-documents-show-us-israel
      [/B]


      ¨°o.O ( على كف القدر نمشي ولا ندري عن المكتوب ) O.o°¨
      ---
      أتمنى لكم إقامة طيبة في الساحة العمانية

      وأدعوكم للإستفادة بمقالات متقدمة في مجال التقنية والأمن الإلكتروني
      رابط مباشر للمقالات هنا. ومن لديه الرغبة بتعلم البرمجة بلغات مختلفة أعرض لكم بعض
      المشاريع التي برمجتها مفتوحة المصدر ومجانا للجميع من هنا. تجدون أيضا بعض البرامج المجانية التي قمت بتطويرها بذات الموقع ..
      والكثير من أسرار التقنية في عالمي الثاني
      Eagle Eye Digital Solutions
    • [h=1]The Snowden Hoax[/h]
      How a Lie Traveled Around the World Before the Truth Could Get Its Boots On





      [h=2]Saturday, August 9, 2014[/h][h=3]Andreasept[/h]



      In mid-July 2014, Time attempted an antiviral intervention against the first Internet hoax involving NSA leaker Edward Snowden. "Why Iran Believes the Militant Group ISIS Is an American Plot" read the headline above a lead that began, "Conspiracy theories are nothing new in the Middle East…." This particular rumor, said Time, had "assumed truthlike proportions through multiple reposts and links." It postulated a secret U.S., British and Israeli op—codenamed "Hornet's Nest"—hatching the Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria (ISIS) to attract terrorists worldwide to so vex the region that Israel's enemies would be in Biblical disarray. Time traced the hoax to Iran's official Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA), which Time accused of "concocting an obviously fictional fake Snowden interview to bolster the narrative." Six days later, IRNA reacted testily, complaining that Time (which it called "Times") had smeared IRNA's report as "fabricated" without once referring to its original source, The Intercept.
      The problem is that journalist Glenn Greenwald's online startup The Intercept, which since its February 2014 launch has posted 295 pages of NSA documents leaked by Snowden and numerous articles based on those leaks, hasn't said a word about Israel's national intelligence arm, the Mossad, grooming ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi as chief stinger for the Hornet's Nest. In the 30-day run-up to July 6, when the story first surfaced, The Intercept published just four articles, none of which mentioned Mossad or al-Baghdadi. "Hornet's Nest" occurs twice on The Intercept's website, in comments posted by reader Kelly on July 21 and July 29—weeks after the hoax began—both in the context of Hamas being ill-advised to stir the metaphorical Israeli hornet's nest causing the "entire swarm" to attack; her comment had nothing to do with a secret U.S., British and Israeli op involving ISIS. It's also significant that in rebuttal to Time, IRNA neglects to include a single hyperlink to The Intercept or any of "several other news outlets" that IRNA claims "also published The Intercept story." As we shall see, this omission of links to sources is de rigueur for articles spreading the hoax.
      Ironically, among those failing to link crucial documents is Time itself, which somehow forgets to point us to what it calls IRNA's "scoop" that supposedly started the fuss. Instead we're linked to the Tehran Times, where Time says an English translation of IRNA's scoop "recently" appeared—only to be confronted with the Tehran Times home page, not any specific article. Using the site's search function, we get 50 hits on the keyword "Snowden," but none more recent than April 2014 and none translating IRNA's scoop. To conclude that IRNA "concocted an obviously fictional fake Snowden interview," a reader must rely on the opinion of Time's Middle East Bureau Chief, Aryn Baker. That leaves rigorous debunkers unfulfilled.
      Regrettably, not knowing the date of IRNA's scoop, or being able to view its text online, complicates investigation. The earliest available evidence of the Snowden Hoax is a July 6 post in Arabic with a title that roughly translates as "Snowden: Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the result of a three-nation intelligence cooperation."

      Its pseudonymous author is "shababek," which is also the name of the website where it is posted within a German domain, www.shababek.de. All of the elements of the nascent hoax are in place. Edward Snowden is said to have revealed that the NSA, together with Britain's secret intelligence service MI6 and Israel's Mossad, "paved the way for the emergence" of ISIS as part of "an old British plan known as the 'Hornet's Nest' for the protection of the Zionist entity." Al-Baghdadi underwent "intensive," year-long military training "at the hands of the Mossad." The source of Snowden's revelations is "The Andreasept"—aka The Intercept. And of course there are no hyperlinks.

      Social media puts a face to "shababek." The Twitter account @shababekT is active but contains only three tweets, in Arabic, all from August 2012 and two containing busted links to the website shababek.de. The profile photo shows a well-groomed, black-haired man in his 40s with goatee, dressed in a conventional business suit with necktie, above the name Kareem Al baidani. The same photo adorns the Facebook page of Abosamir Albaidani, who posts in Arabic, most recently in October 2013, and self-identifies as a graduate engineer. Some of these posts too contain broken links to shababek.de. A different photo of the same man, taken later judging from his graying goatee, is on the Facebook page of Kareem Al-Baidani, who likewise posts in Arabic, mainly about Iraq and most recently in March 2014, and again with nonfunctional links to shababek.de. Without reading Arabic, one can glean from the Internet that Kareem Al-Baidani is an Iraqi Shiite writer based in Munich, Germany. His Facebook photo is copyright Irak Heute Programm, which is German for Iraq Today program. A TV show by that name—"Al-Iraq Alyom" (Iraq Today)—appears on Al-Alam, an Arabic news channel broadcasting from Iran by the state-owned media corporation Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting.
      These tenuous connections between an Iraqi Shiite writer and Iran's state-controlled media are at most suggestive. We cannot say definitively that Kareem Al-Baidani is Hoaxer Zero, whose three-part inventions about the NSA, MI6 and Mossad hornet's nest exposed by Edward Snowden found a ready audience, initially in the Middle East but soon around the world. Nevertheless, we can note that a day after he posted the hoax online, it was picked up—word for word—on the Arabic website Iraq Now, with an expanded title: "Snowden: Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the result of a three-nation intelligence cooperation and trained by the Israeli Mossad." The following day, the Arabic version of Iran's semi-official Fars News Agency (FNA) ran the story, again identical to Al-Baidani's original but with a snappier headline: "Snowden: Baghdadi underwent an intensive course at the hands of Mossad."

      FNA was no stranger to Snowden-related stories of shady provenance. In January 2014 and in apparent seriousness, FNA published "Snowden Documents Proving 'US-Alien-Hitler' Link" to the effect that space aliens run the U.S. government. (No jokes, please.) It linked to a piece posted the previous day at whatdoesitmean.com that relied on, but provided no link to, a "stunning" report from Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB). Neither of these articles linked to any Snowden docs. And more than a year before, Fars had republished as straight reporting a piece from The Onion's satirical website claiming that a Gallup poll found rural white Americans preferred Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, then president of Iran, over U.S. President Obama. So it's entirely consistent for a propaganda arm of the Iranian government to disseminate disinformation by invoking that internationally recognized paragon of truthfulness, Edward Snowden. In this case, Fars would be especially motivated by a threat much closer to home than space aliens. About 90% of Iranians are Shia, which is the official state religion; only 9% are Sunni or Sufi. ISIS, by contrast, grew out of the Sunni insurgency and built its violent reputation by brutalizing Shia Muslims. Naturally Iran would strive to defame the hated and feared ISIS and al-Baghdadi through association with the demonic three-headed hydra U.S., Britain and Israel.
      Citing FNA as an impeccable authority, the hoax next began to spread in languages other than Arabic. Just two days after Kareem Al-Baidani's brainchild emerged from its birth canal, Al-Manar—a Beirut-based Lebanese satellite TV station affiliated with the Shia Islamist terrorist organization Hezbollah—published the story in Spanish, titled "Snowden: el lأ*der del EI fue formado por el Mossad israelأ*." Al-Manar added a decorative touch by illustrating its piece with a posed photo of NBC News anchorman Brian Williams and Edward Snowden taken to promote NBC's May 2014 exclusive interview with the leaker, televised 41 days before Al-Manar published this article that never mentions said interview. The picture of two men seated pensively in front of tasteful, well-stocked wooden bookcases just looks good, is all.

      Finally, three days into the hoax, an article appeared that linked to a reputable news outlet. At last! Baghdad-based Iraqi satellite TV network Alsumaria's "Snowden: Al-Baghdadi is the product of three intelligence cooperation" identified its source with the familiar hyperlinked logo of Arabic CNN. Alas, this led merely to the homepage and no specific story. Good luck finding Alsumaria's source. The blog Going Global East Meets West soon followed suit by linking its story to the "original source" that turned out to be—you guessed it—Alsumaria's report relying on an unspecified post at Arabic CNN. The Snowden Hoax had now become circular and self-contained. Whereas earlier versions simply omitted sources outright and unashamedly, subsequent iterations would cite them as sources.
      Four days in, the hoax transitioned to Persian with "Snowden: Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi made in Britain, America and Mossad," published by Salam Times. The article cited the Iranian Students' News Agency, run by university students, but contained no links. That same day, the hoax debuted in French with Croah's "Snowden confirme que Al Baghdadi a été formé par le MOSSAD," linking to Al-Manar's day-old French translation of its two-day old Spanish report.

      Croah, however, replaced the purloined picture of Brian Williams and Snowden with paired photos of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and Snowden seemingly glancing at each other with mutual distrust. This image would thereafter fortify other articles and tweets promoting the hoax. Some tweets, such as one from rachida sahara @rachida_7, didn't even bother citing a source when claiming "Snowden confirms that Al Baghdadi was trained by MOSSAD." She simply attached that composite image, as if one picture proved a thousand falsehoods.

      The same contrived image gilded the hoax's first article in English, from Som Daily News, based in Somalia, East Africa. All of five sentences long, it was titled "Snowden confirms that Al Baghdadi was trained by MOSSAD." (Putting the non-acronym MOSSAD in ALL CAPS apparently made it more evil.) Four days later, the Som Daily News story was picked up by Gulf Daily News, the self-proclaimed Voice of Bahrain, headlined "Baghdadi 'Mossad trained,'" and by a blog calling itself The Real Syrian Free Press Network, headlined "Strategy 'hornet's nest': Snowden confirms that Al Baghdadi was trained by Mossad." Just to be safe, The Muslim Times then named both Som Daily News and Gulf Daily News as sources for "Baghdadi 'Mossad trained': Edward Snowden."

      Ten days in, the virus jumped the Atlantic. "ISIS Leader Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi Trained by Israeli Mossad, NSA Documents Reveal" at the Canadian website Global Research cited as its source Gulf Daily News, which had cited as its source Som Daily News. Having spread geographically from Germany to Iraq to Iran to Lebanon to France to Somalia to Bahrain to Syria, and linguistically from Arabic to Spanish to French to Persian to English, the readily adaptable Snowden Hoax was ideally positioned to infect North America. As a bonus, foreign outlets could now point to an ostensibly authoritative Western source, as happened the next day. As its basis for "Former CIA Agent: 'The Isis Leader Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi Was Trained by the Israeli Mossad,'" The Moroccan Times cited the lofty-sounding, Montreal-based Centre for Research on Globalization, a self-described "major news source on the New World Order" that runs the Global Research website.


      On July 19, scarcely two weeks after Kareem Al-Baidani cooked it up in Munich and the same day Time sought to discredit it, the Snowden Hoax arrived in America. InfoWars, the website of popular broadcaster Alex Jones, gave us "NSA Doc Reveals ISIS Leader al-Baghdadi is U.S., British and Israeli Intelligence Asset." It led off with an Editor's Note (never a good sign) stating that writer Kurt Nimmo's piece was based on "a document recently released by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden" (no link thereto), the validity of which "cannot be verified due to the exclusivity of the Snowden cache." So it was released (to whom?) but nevertheless remains secret. InfoWars said the cache was being kept by The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Guardian, journalist Barton Gellman, filmmaker Laura Poitras, Glenn Greenwald, the ACLU, Electronic Frontier Foundation and others, but didn't speculate as to why none of those privileged parties had breathed a word about the Mossad training al-Baghdadi. Those who had Snowden's ear and his stolen documents were strangely silent on this sensational story, whereas those covering it hadn't spoken to Snowden and were denied access to the documents about which they were reporting. Welcome to the upside-down, inside-out world of the Snowden Hoax.

      As it happened, on August 6, Glenn Greenwald—principal keeper of the Snowden cache—did belatedly weigh in on the story. Starting more than three weeks before, 10 people had tweeted intermittently to Greenwald (renowned for his intense daily engagement on Twitter) alerting him to the hoax, providing links to false reports, and respectfully asking him to refute the fraud. Finally, London-based freelance journalist Sunny Hundal tweeted: "@ggreenwald Just to confirm, did Snowden ever say the ISIS chief al-Baghdadi was trained by Mossad? Hearing it all over FB [Facebook]." Greenwald replied immediately: "I've never heard him say any such thing, nor have I ever heard any credible source quoting him saying anything like that." On August 10, Greenwald reiterated: "I've never seen anywhere where he said that, nor any documents that suggest it." At exactly the same time, down to the minute, Snowden's ACLU lawyer Ben Wizner coincidentally concurred in a single-word tweet: "Hoax."
      A few days after The Moroccan Times published "Former CIA agent: 'The ISIS leader Abu Bakr al Baghdadi was trained by the Israeli Mossad,'" it appended its own EDITOR'S NOTE, going InfoWars one better by using ALL CAPS: "Time Magazine has released on July 19, 2014 an article arguing that this story, which was reported by many Iranian sources including Iran News Agency, is a conspiracy theory from Iran and that it is not true. Nevertheless, it is worth pointing out that though the piece of news went viral on the net, Snowden did not refute the claims of the Iranian News Agency." In the quaint intellectual discipline of logic, asserting that a proposition is true because it hasn't been proven false is called argumentum ad ignorantiam (argument from ignorance). Since The Moroccan Times intrepidly elevates this informal fallacy to the level of an EDITOR'S NOTE, it's doubtful they'd be much impressed by Greenwald's or Wizner's tweets. After all, it wasn't Snowden himself refuting the hoax. So it must be true.
      Two days after Greenwald spoke out, his rival WikiLeaks horned in, tweeting: "#Snowden docs reveal #ISIS trained by Mossad—falsely claims #Bahrain gov affiliated newspaper Gulf Daily News." A link was provided thereto. "It is," WikiLeaks resumed in a follow-on tweet, "intentional fabrication by or accepted by the Bahraini government affiliated news site Gulf Daily News." WikiLeaks seemed unaware that Gulf Daily News almost word-for-word plagiarized the Som Daily News story published four days before. Over an hour later, WikiLeaks tried again, tweeting: "Ground zero for false 'Snowden docs show ISIS leader trained by Mossad' story goes back to last month in Algeria." This time the link was to Algérie1.com's "Snowden: « Le chef de l’EIIL, Al Baghdadi, a été formé par le Mossad » [Snowden: 'The head of EIIL, Al Baghdadi, was trained by Mossad']." The Algerian article was dated July 11—three days after Iran's Fars News Agency ran the story. Hardly ground zero, Julian.
      In any case, Twitter's part in the Snowden Hoax was instrumental. The first tweet connecting Snowden to al-Baghdadi was sent on July 8 in French by Karim, who in his Twitter profile calls himself an "Anti-Zionist patriot. Fighting against lobbies slaving France." His tweet contained no links, but attributed a quotation to Snowden that translates as "Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi (pseudo caliph) received intensive military training for 1 full year in the hands of Mossad." No source was cited.
      To measure its role in spreading the hoax, Twitter was searched to find tweets containing all three names "Mossad al-Baghdadi Snowden" within the 30-day range July 8 – August 7, 2014. The results were entered into a database, omitting only tweets where the sender questioned the rumor's authenticity. The goal was to capture tweets promoting the hoax, not doubting or disputing it. A total of [B]1219
      tweets were compiled from 1016 unique senders. Nearly 89% (903) of senders tweeted just once, accounting for 74% of the database. Among the 11% who tweeted twice or more (113 senders for a combined 316 tweets), only two hit double digits: @kelpo1002 (27), who tweets in French to more than 1K followers, and @AnonOperations2 (11), who tweets in English to 560+ followers. Based on this analysis and on a visual review of every tweet collected, it seems unlikely any were generated by automated methods such as bots. These have the look and feel of genuine tweets from real people.

      Spikes on July 10 and July 14 correspond to publication of, respectively:
      croah.fr: "Snowden confirme que Al Baghdadi a été formé par le MOSSAD"
      somdailynews.com: "Snowden confirms that Al Baghdadi was trained by MOSSAD"




      Links for relevant page associated with each website:
      somdailynews.com/snowden-confi…di-was-trained-by-mossad/
      croah.fr/revue-de-presse/snowd…-ete-forme-par-le-mossad/ (claims >100K page views)
      globalresearch.ca/isis-leader-…-documents-reveal/5391593
      beforeitsnews.com/alternative/…mossad-video-2993768.html (claims >40K views)
      lesmoutonsenrages.fr/2014/07/1…-ete-forme-par-le-mossad/
      syrianfreepress.wordpress.com/…di-was-trained-by-mossad/

      Link to complete database in raw text format, which may be copied and pasted into your application:
      pastebin.com/6eBZZ3qj


      [HR][/HR]

      In conclusion, more than 30 days after its initial outbreak, the Snowden Hoax continues unchecked. Any notion that WikiLeaks might halt the spread was quickly dispelled, due mainly to their clumsily worded tweet: "#Snowden docs reveal #ISIS trained by Mossad—falsely claims #Bahrain gov affiliated newspaper Gulf Daily News." Some readers missed or misunderstood the throwaway "falsely claims" and took it as confirmation of the hoax by WikiLeaks, the organization Snowden himself has praised to the sky: "They are absolutely fearless in putting principles above politics. Their efforts to build a transnational culture of transparency and source protection are extraordinary. They run towards the risks everyone else runs away from."
      No surprise, then, that among the replies posted directly were these:
      Sheba ‏@sahi_100: "I could well believe this."
      Naheed R ‏@naheedR: "Doesn't surprise one bit. They all look like bad actors."
      Abdul Rahman @Engr_AR: "Agree, shame on Mossad."
      nu2twitr ‏@4in4mation: "Filthy Zionist Jews are Behind ISIS Terror Group."
      Within 24 hours of posting, WikiLeaks's tweet had been retweeted 465 times by readers to their followers, and marked as a favorite 155 times. (In contrast, Greenwald's by then three-day-old tweet still hadn't made it out of single digits for either RTs or favorites.) Abandoning the orphaned "falsely," some readers extracted the first clause as a standalone, unqualified endorsement, attributing to WikiLeaks the very untruth that WikiLeaks had sought to expose.
      the hermawans ‏@KerjaInterior: "RT @wikileaks: #Snowden docs reveal #ISIS trained by Mossad."
      Riswandha Risang ‏@r_risang: "Snowden docs reveal that ISIS trained by Mossad – Wikileaks."
      David Plater ‏@PlaterDavid: "'@wikileaks: #Snowden docs reveal #ISIS trained by Mossad.' So @foreignoffice @StateDept What does yr intel say?"
      Hell, David, at this point, after the feverish onslaught of a month-long infection by the Snowden Hoax, it might be a relief to see a tweet from the verified U.S. Department of State @StateDept account conceding, once and for all, that Snowden's phantom NSA documents and imaginary interviews do indeed prove that Mossad trained al-Baghdadi and that Operation Hornet's Nest is real. Maybe then these loonies on the Internet will give it a rest.


      Nah. Who am I kidding? They're like the alien seed pods in Invasion of the Body Snatchers. They're here already! You're next! You're next!



      [/B]


      ¨°o.O ( على كف القدر نمشي ولا ندري عن المكتوب ) O.o°¨
      ---
      أتمنى لكم إقامة طيبة في الساحة العمانية

      وأدعوكم للإستفادة بمقالات متقدمة في مجال التقنية والأمن الإلكتروني
      رابط مباشر للمقالات هنا. ومن لديه الرغبة بتعلم البرمجة بلغات مختلفة أعرض لكم بعض
      المشاريع التي برمجتها مفتوحة المصدر ومجانا للجميع من هنا. تجدون أيضا بعض البرامج المجانية التي قمت بتطويرها بذات الموقع ..
      والكثير من أسرار التقنية في عالمي الثاني
      Eagle Eye Digital Solutions
    • وشهد شاهد من أهلها :)


      ¨°o.O ( على كف القدر نمشي ولا ندري عن المكتوب ) O.o°¨
      ---
      أتمنى لكم إقامة طيبة في الساحة العمانية

      وأدعوكم للإستفادة بمقالات متقدمة في مجال التقنية والأمن الإلكتروني
      رابط مباشر للمقالات هنا. ومن لديه الرغبة بتعلم البرمجة بلغات مختلفة أعرض لكم بعض
      المشاريع التي برمجتها مفتوحة المصدر ومجانا للجميع من هنا. تجدون أيضا بعض البرامج المجانية التي قمت بتطويرها بذات الموقع ..
      والكثير من أسرار التقنية في عالمي الثاني
      Eagle Eye Digital Solutions
    • Dr Jeeni كتب:

      وشهد شاهد من أهلها :)

      جزاك الله الفردوس اخي الفاضل :)

      كرماً لا أمراً الترجمة لو تكرمت ..

      محبتي الاخوية واحترامي :)

    • الخليل كتب:


      جزاك الله الفردوس اخي الفاضل :)

      كرماً لا أمراً الترجمة لو تكرمت ..

      محبتي الاخوية واحترامي :)




      أهلا أخي ابحث في جوجل عن "سنودن داعش" ستجدها مترجمة


      ¨°o.O ( على كف القدر نمشي ولا ندري عن المكتوب ) O.o°¨
      ---
      أتمنى لكم إقامة طيبة في الساحة العمانية

      وأدعوكم للإستفادة بمقالات متقدمة في مجال التقنية والأمن الإلكتروني
      رابط مباشر للمقالات هنا. ومن لديه الرغبة بتعلم البرمجة بلغات مختلفة أعرض لكم بعض
      المشاريع التي برمجتها مفتوحة المصدر ومجانا للجميع من هنا. تجدون أيضا بعض البرامج المجانية التي قمت بتطويرها بذات الموقع ..
      والكثير من أسرار التقنية في عالمي الثاني
      Eagle Eye Digital Solutions
    • [INDENT=3]
      لا بد من نهاية
      لقصة هذا الشبح...!
      المزيف...!#
      .
      بما ان هويتهم مكشووفة تقريبا..!#
      .
      فلن يستطيعوا ان يمارسوا خداعهم..!
      إلى وقت طويل..!
      والامل بالله كبير والفرج قريب بأذنه..!
      .
      تحياتي لك
      اخي
      صفاء العشري
      [/INDENT]
      كان تبغي..., الكلام اللــــ،ـي عليه كلام...!ْ صك قلبك ...ُعن قلوب العــــ،ـرب واستريح..#$ْ مر بعيون خلق اللـــــــ،ـه مرور...؟ الكرام...#ْ مايضرك ملام ولا يسرــ،ـك مديح...!#ْ