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@ CABAL TIMES / ISLAM / MIDDLE EAST1 The Secret, Generational War on Circassians and Kurds BY HAMAD SUBANI · FEBRUARY 19, 2022
Last Updated on March 19, 2022 by Hamad Subani
This post is an extension of a... View More@ CABAL TIMES / ISLAM / MIDDLE EAST1 The Secret, Generational War on Circassians and Kurds BY HAMAD SUBANI · FEBRUARY 19, 2022
Last Updated on March 19, 2022 by Hamad Subani
This post is an extension of an earlier theory discussed on this website, which demonstrated that our secret rulers are Phoenician in origin. If that is indeed the case, then many major conflicts today may actually be Phoenician operations aimed at decimating their historical enemies. The Circassians and the Kurds (among many others, such as certain Turkic groups) can be considered as such “historical enemies.” Out of finger-gnawing fear, it seems that the Phoenicians continue to be terrified by these now poor and stateless people. And with other dumb people committing their entire nations and resources to the Phoenicians, the Phoenicians are more than happy to continuously fight the shadows of those who once threatened them. On the other hand, it is unlikely that these targeted groups are even aware of what they are up against.
Just as the Phoenicians are obscured from history, so are their historical enemies. It seems that the common denominator among these “historical enemies” is that they have always been fiercely independent people, and they are now Muslims. Of course, Circassians and Kurds are not the only ones. But this analysis reveals that they occupy top positions on the hit list.
This article uses information and pictures freely available on the Internet and on Wikipedia. The truth was always out there. It’s only much-needed analysis which is always missing censored.
Most readers have a fleeting recollection of who these two ethnic groups are today, or where they tend to be located. Of course, these two ethnic groups are not perfect people and have their own faults. But the organized persecution these two groups faced, from ancient times, is actually a carefully coordinated program, still being operated by the same old perpetrators. And many of these genocides and persecution have been completely obscured from history, so that a pattern is not readily noticeable.
The Circassians Circassians commemorate the banishment of the Circassians from Russia in Istanbul, taken on 21st May 2011. The Circassian people are an ancient ethnic group associated with the Caucasus region. They are also known as Cherkess or Adyghe. They are sometimes associated with the Muslims of Chechnya.
In an exhaustive review of a theory of Miles Mathis and Gerry on this website, we learnt that the Phoenicians had destroyed an advanced civilization in Anatolia known as the Hittites. The Hittites were probably the first humans to use iron alloys, which is maybe why the Phoenicians targeted them (after appropriating their technology). According to some suppressed (1, 2, 3) theories, the Hittites were predecessors of the Circassians. There is also a theory that Circassia is a reference to Kassites, who could be an even more ancient ancestor group, who competed with the Ancient Spookians for control over Mesopotamia. Some say that they may also be related to Cimmerians, a group which clashed with Greek-Phoenicians.
Hattusa during its peak. Illustration by Balage Balogh. Enter Islam. In the earliest phases of Muslim-Arab expansion, we see frequent battles with the Khazars over control of the Caucasus. Eventually, most of the Caucasus became Muslim.
Original Circassia is in green. Circassians were later forcibly resettled to the brown regions. The Kurds A Syrian Kurdish fighter at a house on the Turkey-Syria border. He was preparing to leave for Kobani, Syria, to rejoin the fighting against the Islamic State. Now let’s talk about another group of people, the fiercely independent Kurds. They are not Circassians, but their history and fate seems to be closely intertwined with that of the Circassians. It is established that the Kurds are an Iranian people. So were the Mittani, who established a kingdom in northern Syria. Prior to destroying the Hittites, the Phoenicians had destroyed the Mittani.
But it seems the Kurds lingered on in other regions. In 401 BC, they routed Greek-Phoenicians marching into Iran at the battle of Cunaxa. Greek historians would later cover it up as a strategic retreat. Later when Persian-Phoenicians established themselves over Iran as the Sassanians, we find numerous reports of Kurds giving them battle. They inflicted a major defeat on the Sassanian King Ardashir I. Later they gave battle to Sassanian King Shapur II. After the Islamic conquest of Persia, almost all Kurds became Muslim.
In the 10th-12th centuries, a number of Kurdish principalities and dynasties were founded, ruling Kurdistan and neighbouring areas.
The Shaddadids (951–1174) ruled parts of present-day Armenia and Arran. The Rawadid (955–1221) ruled Azerbaijan. The Hasanwayhids (959–1015) ruled western Iran and upper Mesopotamia. The Marwanids (990–1096) ruled eastern Anatolia. The Annazids (990–1117) ruled western Iran and upper Mesopotamia (succeeded the Hasanwayhids). The Hazaraspids (1148–1424) ruled southwestern Iran. The Ayyubids (1171–1341) ruled Egypt, Syria, Upper Mesopotamia and parts of southeastern Anatolia and the Arabian Peninsula. The Ayyubids trace their origin to the Kurdish Rawadids of Azerbaijan. Of all of these, the most important are the Ayyubids. The Ayyubid dynasty was a Muslim dynasty of Kurdish origin, founded by Saladin. His father was appointed the military governor of Tikrit by the Turkic Seljuks, who were in constant struggle with remnants of the crypto-Phoenician Byzantines. His father later assisted the illustrious Turkic noble Imad al-Din Zengi, who went on to establish the Zengid dynasty, which ruled as vassals of the Seljuks. The Zengids operated out of Mosul and Sinjar. For some reason, both towns became the chief target of US forces in the Second Gulf War. The Seljuks were based out of Damascus and Aleppo, which have also been pretty much destroyed in recent times. Imad al-Din Zengi made Saladin the commander of the former Phoenician stronghold of Baalbek.