Amirs of Caucasian Mujahideen
Fri., 12.01.1430 Hjr / 09.01.2009, 09:20 Djokhar time РусскийEnglishtürkçeУкраїнськийعربي

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Apostates Complain That Mujahideen Don't Fight in an Open Field

Publication time: 5 December 2008, 17:24
Chechen apostate interior minister Ruslan Alkhanov complained during a meeting with his colleagues that Mujahideen evade open battles and prefer to shoot in the back instead. As an example of such "cowardice", he mentioned the recent killing of Sadulayev family in Agishty village, Chechen Interior Ministry spokesman told Regnum.

Unfortunately, Alkhanov did not mention whether he considers poisoning of amir Khattab, mutilating bodies of Mujahideen and taking hostage their relatives as cowardly acts. Also, it would be interesting to ask military experts, regardless of their affiliation, whether elimination of active enemy agents and informants during a guerilla warfare is considered "shooting in the back" or a legitimate military operation? And what do military experts think, should a smaller military force take to the open field and engage a much greater force in an open battle during such guerilla warfare? We guess most of our readers know the answers.

Such seemingly naive statements by the apostate minister are not a surprise, because Muslims know that when kuffar don't have any argument, when they have nothing to say, they start to use emotions.

Alkhanov claimed that 10 Mujahideen were killed and 28 detained during the last month. KC would remind in this regards the most recent incident, when two unarmed young Muslims were abducted and murdered, then declared to be killed in a gunbattle near Jokhar. Apparently, these two men were included by the apostate minister in his report.

Regarding the numbers of detained Mujahideen, the murtadd failed to mention how many of them were not hiding, peacefully living at their homes for years. According to media reports, most of the people detained recently left Jihad in early 2000s, and are prosecuted by puppet authorities for fighting against Russia during 1990s and early 2000s.


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